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m«ny dtvtrtt, fafcinatlng
VehNiM XCVIII, Number 1
Unlvvralty of Calltomia, Lo« AngclM
Monday, AprU S. IfTI ^
---i"
and significant ttoriet and features
p
Including:
1 News . . .
i .,^
Entertainment . .
Sports . . .
ilceway system
to iinlc UCLA with
IWestwood area
•ui.
r-rlX^
V\
'^ Mmkroom anrbnc? CMy Editor Pal
^Mly Ukcs an in-depth look at the J^C>
It jxar affair wtth the bomb inaliciijM||i
ycador bfliMers. Haracwint <>*^ «ml«uAi-
atoai. WIm» tiwac actentists are
Todays KM W«4finienl Index UM>k%«l
Una WrrtmuMerS brilliant new movie
Seven Beauties, starring (naticarlo
r.ianniili (above) and Robin and
Marian, which tteih from a rieh lecend
givfs uh a eopr movif.
All the worlds a court. Mo, we didn't
win, but the %port% Staff hB% come
through again wHh material on why and
how. Plus assorted other features. Bejim
pace H.
LKXA Daily
BRUIN
AnfMi *Hrmmf^f
MCVMI
1
ApfM s. iwn
KfiDo/ r^mt mmcmpt tiunng hok<tm\»
mnir^^tm k>f*omftng noMM^^a and trv^
wctoa ^lms» i<i*> ^ng949% Cmtttorma
to0mmjnmmuon% ^omfd Smtond (im»%
-X.
■I
Stumbling along into spring quarter we find out
numbers have increased drastically since we came
together last summer So we take the liberty of intro-
ducing ourselves once again as we dust off our type-
writers for one last quarter together
Brattt HolliH
haul Hw
Mei Atrm
Special
Tliankt
C•f^y ^ithman
MMm Kurl/
Jm Ndlhan June*
AUir Mil hMii K«rh»lmg
MttlNiri HopfMN^
)«ft I out^
Mug Ml Cormaoh
ChtMi »*«int»f
n«hht« l*anith
AU«fti Pf»fNH
Ilia I (Miue
Mil»«f
JamM P«l(t >
Wfll#fl
_ ...,•
^ -t'
JaQu« Kamptchrqai ■
. Pal Mamaay
i»ohy ^yan
wi#MS9i SoHifwatfti^n
Patti SuMtvan
~^piiHay DuWtawior-
Dantai 0'Haa»li
IHapHa Kaya
Jiff Mciaod
Cmtte PiHiman
Rathovtcfi
Mary a•«^ MoMMl
■vefHi
Jama Wtfod
to^ tulle)
Caret ttsn >
AolMin Wala^
tailla Wataoalw
tori Wattiart
Hur\ Wttrfman
f ranii >NMMi9i
Jodi Zachowy
Ir«l»v4 Aaalslsnl
McM^ Zoat Moiaay
Pnvr (tiMitii
Hotly Ktirl;
Joa^«ia Atpat
Larry lona
Si*^'* Srovpai,
Mancy erowi^
Caeiy Conn»»»v
Pawy Croai
Mika Oabht**'^
Paniaa Oorrtihfift
Mw hiitir DHva'
Siaprtar^ * lacnmarin
The Cover
Sprint means the re-
turn of singing bird%.
Or maybe we're juM
more aware of them
Anyway, we recenth
sp<itted a KIVIPC heli-
copter, which graciously
took us aboard for this
bird's eye view of the
campus nn phoio hy
».....r~.
wio*t w^w a
_ Paul ^wmn
MaMy Hovmmjtmi
tMtk Ptihin
CiHiaitaOrt«»
aamfy CMia '
Pihiia OtaaoT)
Marlf ( avtna
SoiOflMaa
"Man %ttQmmama*a
Aevaftlainf tieff
Jim pfRMt
Hafhy Priinna»>
Tarola Coiaman
<•»*'•- ^ I*' wa>w
(ir
•'.«! ( I'llinrra/
i<«y MararfN
NaM. V
•.J»iM ilani>rtw.«.
Alitor •'
^. ott Ml
Hua '
W« •pp#ar •v«ry
w##kday. But w»
wouldn*t without ttM
gracious attlstancs
«f^ ItM foHct yy»rt-
Ing ■ihJ dupllcBtlng.
Many thanks to
thosa who taka tha
tima to 0at us into
print:
/krifMH Af>«oa«r»
Mwiri Alh<#»a»»r«
Ciey Oev«a
ifiiia ipep<
0try 'MNa
Ma#« Hanaea
i aa namaa'x**
Jm^ha Ma"»»«'
i ■«■« 4A^M^^ii
kaifPMv^P^
t'*"
, p#
^m iiae«<*«v
Myra Pa**^*'
Ala« Moa*
4» . ■ ■ r'
i «•'■<■
■^B"
*" •> Lori W
DB Staff Writer
A btlieway system linking
existing bikepaths at UCLA
— frwiTti liw wirrnimrtmjLjygg*"
wood .community has been
approved by tbc Loi
Angeles City Council
-The system will lerve a
tefni-^ircular area extending
a mile south and west of the
campus Construction is not
expected to be^m until
June, and ayJcs for City
Councilman Zev Yardslav-
iky estimate (hat the system
could bf^-^WNfpleted by fall
quarter ,
**Tlir bikeways in West-
wood Witt accomplish two
things." Yaroilaysky said.
"They will make transporta-
tion far safer for many
citizens who drpcn^ on
bicycles as this mode ot
transportation, and they will
encourage an even greater
number ol people to use
bicycles, and leave their cars
at iiome "
Planned <ti^l^73
>. A pian tor some sort ot
bike route was first initiated
in \9l} by Coulity Super-
visor Ed €delman and ^Ith
District Councilman Marvin
irMMle. tdeiman then held
the 5th District City Coupcil
seal, which includes West-
wood
Inadequate tunding pre-
cluded further progress on
the project, according to
Jackie Brainard press secre-
tary tor Yaroilavsky Work
on the hikeway ccincept was
Msumcd last June when the
Bicyck Advisory Committee
was conyaaa^, consisting of
four representatives trom
Mayor Tom Bradley's office
and one representative ap-
pointed by each ol the 15
citN counal members. The
Assembly
L
1
eogmeering. traffic and city
planning departments were
also represented
Wcstwood chosaii
The Westwood bikeway
system was chosen among
40 possible bike routes with-
'*in I OS Angeles because the
committee "thought it was
most needed there (West-
wo<xll." said Bob Mirct. a
commrttcc member and pro-
ject assistant tor Y a ros lav-
sky **We tound that West-
WmKJ had the greatest num-
t^er ot bike riders," Miret
added
Hike routes, lanes and
paths wiH be included in the
hikewav system. Bike routes
and laneT utilize existing
roadwavs. shared with aiiio-
mobiles The bike route is
marked by signs near the
roadway, while the bike lane
is actually painted in the
streel The bike ^th is
separated from the roadway
and IS reserved only for
bicycles
• Four rotttta
The bikeway IS 1 network
of tour dittercnt routes de-
signed to 'tic into the UCLA
biiicwayi One route will
p»'0eccd from Santa Monica
Boulevard to campus, up
^ast holme to Hilgafd A
second route will r4in from
SaACa Monica and WeH-
wood Boulevards and arrrve
at campuft via Tiverton and
Le Come
(C€ay»Mad oisPage 1)
delaysiuntfing of EOP
Sy C^liris Bowman
Sacramento CorraapMiaaal
SACRAMENTO A state assembly panel, angered over the
University*! recent cutbacks in next Fall's enrollment, has held up
paiiage ot state funds for UCi economically disadvantaged
students
Assembly members who reviewed UCs budget last Tuesday
Ushcd out at DC officials for what they called "a sellouf" to
(iovernior Brown's proposed jero-enrollnKnt budget
Earlier this year, the University asked for an additional $4.4
million to provide next Fall for a current over-enrollment of
2,186 students Brown refused the request, and UC^^en
compromised by cutting it^ anticipated FaB enrollment by nWre
than 1. 000 students The cutback was accomplished by cloMnf
a|»plications earlier tliaa tiaiHil on some campuses.
-I'm offended that these students have |ust been wiped out,"
said Assemblyman John Vasconcellos (D-San Jose), chairman of
the Ways and Means subcommittee on*cducation "You've got ua
there's nothing we can do to save those students now," he told
UC officials.
There was a general teeling ot frustration on the panel over the
inability to get those potential UC stsidenti back on the
enrollment lists.'
That feeling apparently ^(feakened a previous solid majority
support for Governor Brown's proposed 50 per cent incroiae in
state furds for UCs Educational Opportunity Program (EOF).
r^Pm not ready to do it," Assemblyman Gordon Duffy (R-
Hanlord) said when the EOF increase came up for a v<«a.:
It was clear that the EOF measure- would have died then had
Vasconcellos called for a vote Instead, it was held over for a
vote today
"The Umversity has sold ou| to the stale," Duffy continued
(€o«li«Mad on #9|a7)
Six schdlirs to speak on Bicentennial
News from other campuses
UC Je^rRefey commemoTaTes lts:1()8th anniver safy
Program opens
on Weilnesdsy
Without firewprki, m Jity
off from work, and hot dogs,
the American Independence
will be celebrated here with
a swp'part Bicentennial Lec-
ture Series entitled "Through
Six Lenses - Redtscovermf
America after Two Hundred
Yean** starting Wednesday
DHiCQidnf~Ihe relevance of
the Revolution to the Amer-
ican society, Henry Steele
Commager, a John Woodruff
Simpson lecturer at Amherst,
will begin the series with his
topic "Can the Spirit of 76 be
Revived*^ Wednesday. % pm,
Tm Vk)yt t Audit on u m
±t
^
ly rar«l Smn
DM Stair Wflaar
BERKELEY - UC lerkelcy commemorated
ttf lOith anniversary with a three-day
celebration Apnl i-3 Thyndayl event,
entitM Alumni Day, featured such speak-
«is at Glenn Seaborg. Nobel laureate here,
fflm cntic Pauhftc lUiel, author ^^mko^
West, wjnemaker Luti Marttni and Judge
Uooel Wihlon On Charter Day, Apnl 2,
the public iMard frae laatures by Anhur
Schlesinger, Americain historian. Lord
Oliver Franks. Oxford provost and former
amhaaaiU^r to ^^^ United States, and
David Saxon. NMitnt of the kkuytnuy
af Cahfomia The fbiai and bogiHt dny w
itiofi was an open-h<Miag on camfnti.
100 activities were
coiBHbng of afwti
folk dnacMiB An (
to
to the
parmitting.
••«••
BERKELEY - In an noaon unp
in Cattfomia, Daan Sanford Kadiah andv
the faculty of the ionh Hall law school at
UC BifMl^ iHve haan taken to covn by
thf iani ^luiitm^ Here — Tha Bnall Hill
Student Association hai JM « tutf <^^'
manding that all hiw iohool fvulty meet-
ings be open to the public
^ ••••a
DAVIS-^SHadents at the University of
Cahtornia received a total of M5.9 million
in financial aid for 1974-5. an inaaaair of
approximately $8 Mfnn over the previous
year
p/^VIS— The R\egent8* Committee on
riiianni has approved a S405 increase in
tuition for out-of-state students at the
Umversity of CahlnnMn. Tl» current $1,300
fee will im-rfinar ID %\MS.
College and university students may^
enter a nationwide on«i«tiuon forthe
innovative tian/dnipi/piB^aai/
ifivnntion. Interested itudents (or laaaa ^
\) should Boiify lov«al«ff Work-
iiarnaiiiTnat Esfo Conmittee. P O
iox 231, TariMa, Cahfomui 91336 (213
344-3373).
PEPPER DINE
ahkr to earn
rinrnrncca-
Students here will be
tn credit during travel
thev design and carry
out on their own, necordixi| to an. an-
nottsoettiem by Dr Robert Gordon, dean
of the Schoil of Coiritinuing Education
here.
SAN DIEGO An opportunity for in-
depth study of baroque muaic wilh ainater
muaioant is beiof efleiad this aHHoer at
UC San Diego Extension in La JoHa. The
three-week program, entitled ^'Basically
Baroque,** ia iiiiiinlii for July I^^RfBil
9
PENN— Tht Nationai Federation of In-
dependent BuaiMas (NHl) wiU offer a
toul of S7Jii m mtmtmMm ^id other
prizes to winnerp of its Adam Smith
Bicentennial iany CmBhI The theme a#
the conteil, which ia MB to bi|h.iLhaal
and cotter Jil**** » ""» Future rf
Capiuham: Tlie Market Economy vs. The
Planned Economy in America's Third
Ceniilry " Deadline for entenng the conteH
IS June 13. Information .can be ubetwe^
from the Intcrcollifintr SRiiies Institute,
14 SoMth Bryn lUawr Ave., iryn Mawr.
PA 19010
"^"Cwnmager holds honorary
degrees from 34 coUesaa and
untversittes.
include Majority MtJi mnJ
Minority Rights, The Amer-
icmn Mind, and The Com-
monweahh of Lemnung,
Page Smith, a
faaaof emeritus, wifi spenk on
The Amcncan Revolution
at a People's Movemen!**
April 14, 8 pm. in DMM 147
-<^
Smith, presently an author^
and chicken rancher, uught
hiilory and chickenology at
UnivenUr eC CalJornin, Snn*
u Cruz.
-t
hy Ike UCLA Bi-
centennial Committee and
the ^mmittee on Public
Lectufcs. will study the Bri-
lifh view of the Revolution
and women's role in the Re-
voTbtion Admioainn ia firae
-I!
ii «i
" iU
A.
-j ; •
T7-
*•'■
^.•if*^
c
■■>
KS:
• ..•'
^
THE STUDENT
COMMITTEE
FQR THEtARTS
SI STUDENT
TICKETS^
at Kjerctioff Hall
Ticket Office
$2 STUDENTf
TICKETS
at UCLA Central
Ticket Office
650 Mtestwood
fQUCLA' ID
Card and
photo fO
required lor
purchase of
all tickets
\
$1 TICKETS ON SALE NOW
Fri.. April 9. 8 30 pm-JRoyce Hall
MARIO ESCUDERO, Flamenco Guitar
a musician of taste and refreshing
thoughtfulness (New York Times) 4 .
§at . April 10. 8 30 pm - Royce Ha/
PHILIPPE ENTREMONT. Pianist
Works by Mozart Chopin and Ra¥«f
Sat April 24 8 30 pm - Royce Hall
ERICK HAWKINS OANCE COKIPANY
With Composer Lucia Diugoszewski
and Xt\e American Youth Symphony
conducted by Mehli Mehta
Sun April 25 8 30 pm - Schoenberg HtiW
MUSIC>OR A WHILE, early nriusK:
ense.m'ble skill, taste yitahty and
T)a{urain«ss (Boston Globe)
%2 TICKIETS ON SALE NOW V
Sun April 11 8 pm — Pauley ll^avilion
ODORI FESTIVAL presented by The
Japan Foiklonc Dance Ensemble. 40
Sensational dancers, singers^and ^
musicians
Tues . April 6 B 30 pm Royce Hall
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
¥vith LILIT GAMPEL. violinist .
■ iPrograrn will include Overture to
School for Scandel (Barljer). Concerto
tor Violin ar>d Orchestra (Tchaikjovsky)
and Symphony No d (Dvorak) .
9lkM^ grave. Ihm
(or a pile ol tfifi
ef a
one oouM actufiy tai). was put
a shovel, and o£^ el a DoroMiy
David Geffen to teach managementislass
By Barry Grey
DB Stair Waiter
Dmd Gcffcn, the 32-ycar-
old wunderkind of the music
and movie businesses, will
teach a non-credit GSM semi-
nar this quarter on the busi-
ness side of the entertamment
industry,^ .~~a
Gcffcit wtf recently promo-
ted id the post of vice chair-
man- of Warner Communica-
tions, Inc., the conglomerate
that owns Warner Bros. Pic-
tures and distributes numerous
record labels He retains his
SHELLEY'S
STEREO HI Fl CENTER ^
EXPERT REPAIR SERVICE
UBEHTY TCICn AGEUCY
Open Mon & Fri TllftPM
former post at the same time,
that of board chairman of
Elektra/ Asylum/ Nonesuch Re-
cords.
The executive's business re-
^fnitation was buih on his guid-
ance and close personal friend-
ships with such recording art-
ists as Joni Mitcfhell, Jackson
Browne* Crosby. Stills, Nash
and Young, Laura Nyro, Tom
Waits, John Fogerty. Carly,
Simon and others
Geffen said he wjU center the
course on the business end of
the industry TI want to show
how these businesses work," hc^
said) to help those students
contemplating careerS; in this
field. Geffen siu? the counc
will not deal with the indua-
try*s creative aspect at all.
He plans to bring in experti
from the recording and motion
picture businesses, but has not
yet decided whom he will ask
— he is wafting for the firtt
meeting of the class to gauge
the subjects that most imercit
the students. ' *^
Geffen has been wamiag to
teach the seminar for aooK
time. **1 approached the school
three years a§o on it. They
weren't intereited Then this
year, 1 was a|>proached ^y
t}iem,- he said.
The course meets IRfednes-
day evenings, beginning April
7. from .4 to 7 pm in the
Architecture BuHdinf*s room
ti02. Enrollment is by sign-up
at the first meeting and max-
imum enrollment is 150.
DISCOUNT
PRICES
TeqiJilla Sunrise Ruf h Party
Delia Sigma Phi
Band
Tues April 6
9PM
eSOC
B20 Landfai>Ave.
479-9)41
MRrC MEN'S WEAR
Special SncinQ Sale
Famous Brands
JEANS
1/2 OFF
Ctmbad Pr^Pesadikeh
CfiassFdic Booksale
Tanya By Shneur Zaiman of Liadi
The classic teaching of nr^ustlcal Chassldic Judaism
Complete in a one-volunr>e bi-lingual edition
(Hebrew-Englis
888 pages
Regularly $20.00 ~
for Pesacb $15.0^
L'C^*»**aS!K:*, — — „_
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No Gimmicks
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Monday f ridoy
9 30-f 30
Soturdoy
^306 00
lOfSS W»yburn Av«.
W««twood 477 4254
My Prayer by Nissan Mindel _._^^,.
Authoritative analysis of Jewish prayer as service cX
heart and mind
s * ,
323 pages
regularly $6.00
for Pcsach $4.75
Complete Festival Series by Nissan Mindel
(Chanukah. Pesach, Shavuoth. Succolh. Purim) (
detalM account of the festivab as observed 'n the
home arKi synagofue l
Regularly $4.00 I
for Pesach $3.00 ^
Other Chassidic books 20% oft
Chabad Mid-City Center
420 No. Fairfax Avenue Los Angeles Calif 90036
655-4735
Books ordered by mail and paid by check wiUbe sent with
paid hy Chabad What nvjre couid vou want?
\*
as^sai
B
i-.-i-
J.
To depict society, politics
Italian films to be used in history class
By Jefr
m Siiir Raporttr
ftalian filmt will be med in ain
experimental contemporary Italian history
course to be UMght by ProiMMr^ Nikki Keddie
this quarter.
The course, Hislory I98Y. wiB focus on the
major probleflM of tOGial and socio political
history of luly since Uk \%W%. At each claaa
meeting a film wiU be fthowo, followed by a
bdure and a discussiibn.
Accordmg to ILeddie. the films that will he
shown will include '*some of the greatest
of the post-World War 11 neo-realist
** Keddie added that the films wiU
irate the social and political problepis in
Italy frbm the turn of the century, aiul that
■■ay of these problems **go beyond t^ border
of) Italy and raise questions for all of human
Open eky
O^ of the films, rfobcrto Rossellini's Open
City, is the first of the neo-rcalist school. It
alwi Aima Magnani in a story of Catholic-
Communist cooperation in the face of the
German occupation of Italy dunng World War
U. ^^
Ako to be shown is Vittorio de Sica's Bleyele
Tliief, a story of the p#or and unemployed,
which almost entirely taied anateur actors.
Keddie said that two other De Sica films will
be screcnai — Uoikarto D. a story of.4>ld age
in poverty, and the recent Gariao of tiM Fioai'
CofliWi, a tak of a Jewish family whose
wealth and sutus doei not save them from the
gradually growing ^ebccutions of Mussolini's
Italy
In the film Ssiorsd and, AboiidoMd, Pietro
Germi telb "of the plight of a sadiwrd gtrl in
Italy who IS savagely atucked wben she tries to
break with Sicilian tradition and refuses to
marry her seducer.** stated Kaddie
Other films include Faderico Fellini*s auto-
biofrapbical work, 1 Vltataii It is the story of
i group of aimless young men in a provincial
town, and of one in the group who eventually
leaves for better thinp.
Mafloao iooks at the impact that is feh by •
Northern Italian and his wife when theV leave
their sup^-modem surroundings for his old
Sicilian home There he is fc>rced to live by the
niks of the Mafui and to carry out a Mafia
scneme ^- ^ . /
Tht Orgnniiar ts an early film about late\
I Ml century labor history
Kiddie will toach the course in Moore 100
on Wediiidiyi from 2-6 pm Students will he
asked to write one or two papers^ aad there
may be one exam, Non-UCLA students may
enroll in the course, but UCLA students will be
given seating preference There will also be two
texts assigned to the course.
UNFORGETTABLE
itfAi u''*t' i> iin §*pefieiic#~'
rCMlLIMG, UMFORCEXTAOLE
;;i I
' ■•« , y
txptritncfl
rJILABC TV
i
(tXtlMMAfK'rUtfS
ROBERT DE NIRO
TAXI
DRIVER
4
■V
m
tn Mtooi^satAiuiiG meicr
< •«CI»««>
^1 w roH I
4
. ..tv
Rotary Awardt
Rotary Foundation Edwttt^
tional Awards are available to
"'Students of sophomore stand-
ing and above for studying
abroad in 1977-78
Applications arei^vailable
from local cboplert of Rotju7
Club and must be completed
and returned by March 15«
1976. Applicanu are evaluMed
in terms of academic kiitory,
extracurricular activities and
future potential according to
Ruaaell Johnson, granu chair-
, mail of the Witsh»re RoUMry.
Chapter
The awards, or grants, in-
clude tramportation, education
and living expenses for one
academic year kbroad and av-
eraft about $5,000 - S6,000.
Award winners are expected
to be "ambasiaflors of good
wtir in other countries, John-
son explained The purpose of
the awards is to •^promot-e
undersunding and friendly re-
lations between peoples of dif-
ferent nations,"* aa defined by
Emary International. For Aca-
demic 1975-76, an estimated
$6.5 niiUion was awarded to
750 students throughout the
world.
More information itid ap-
iplications are available from
the Wcstwood Roury Chaptc.
ii^itei
liewlQwPS4iiig)ttfBaesa¥e^
^L^ SanHfandsco
|2tMckwqL TZTjcts.
When the muon cumes up, P%A tmmm fD down And .
Gnnningbiids hacwnt Barvain Birds nightly^ ^
t Aliips. Sunday*. h<)l " ^^ "*
Vnm LA. to San FmcMOo. Oakland
or San )omt. Or HpUywond Burhank lu
San Fmdtea. C#U^our campus rep Say you
want the ihnrmfhfht
I.M.
<« Aiigtif •'
Smnhme
BurtHmH «^X
' TW TiMn A Sal ! TIWP» a Siai ■ Tlwr» a Si
•JOwm
-4
•Mftm
' RMpm
aMl.
TheR
• : •
of Spring
The new Sprir»g sandnla from Rooia.
Li^tweight soks^ foam padded im^)lea atid
hned with great Canodkan leathei.
Roots Snndala. A holiday for ymmMti ^ "^
K-
>f -
fSe Smh Root, In cSdor for men^nnd
iCOMMMn (yf«taM»t«T roMlSMi.
3C
anion
cftiMrtfi
W C. fields
and He
•omtont.
lipteTpoltcy
t:- *l
iie;l
T-R<K>t. In cedar, chestnut ikt)A ^Mtmu
A ladnre on
U^. Water poNey*
2221E by Dr.
alaemrtrln
The Open llbiai;lw i nJM irir
^ «i JOHN fi4A«U V -JAkK TASSC^ Si^
%J/y\(ltSPN-AUWB&Al PICTURE [JSaSSgrVl
lO^lKXOR^aiNAfiOK*
■^T"
iiie rKNMny
Advance Jewish
IMPROVISATPNAL THEATRE WORKSHOP
under the direction of Armond Votkas M.F.A. UCLA
Monday Nights Beginning
April 5 6-8 pm
474-H»t or 7i»-TM1
Roots
am
1
^ .
u\
■■>-
V
•r:-" " r
-/■
-■»-■ t iiOf
..•AND5i9r5
-V— "■'
H9f|i His a n«w quarter and we are alt btck from a short (and pdasibty sweet)
vacation I've been down the Rabbit Hole, tol crazy Tea Party, played croquet
with the Queen, and even danced a Lobster Ouadriile; but the most fascinating
experftence made me think of the coming quarter with a bit of interest It was just
after ttie Caucus Race
»"■
I had a fattier curious chat wHh the Mock Turtle, he was quite beeMe himself
with gr^ You see, it seems he used to be a Real Turtle and go to school in the Sea
with the Fishes and other Turtles. Between sobs, he told me how he loved to study
Reeling A Writhing: Mystery. Ancient & Modem; SaaOQraphy; and Drawling &
Fainting. He also got to take extras like Music. French, and Washing (how anyone
could take Washjng in the Sea I'll r\9i9r know!) He was especially fond of the
different branches of Arithmetic Ambitipn. Distraction. Uglification, and
Derision ^
The Mock Turtle was mostly sad because he never had anything quite like
ASUCLA LCCTUHE NOTlt to help him along the way. He knows that Lecture
Notes a^ a good supplement to Realing & Writhing, something to keep one in the
swim, scf to spaak; and t>esides, Lecture Notes provides a great rendition for
schools of Fislies. Turtles, and People, too'
So don't be a Mock Turtle, start the quarter in a Heal way buy your
Subacriptioh m6w for ASUCLA LECTURE NOTES at the Students Store
and just think, you might even get an A in Uglification this quarter*^
LECTURE KOTES PARTIAL CLASS LIST
Spring 76
^6.00 Anthropology 1f
6.00 Anthropology 22
7.00 Aatronomy3
7^
7:66
Bacteriology 6
1^^
'Qoidschmidt
Jura
Eit^rting, Romig
iology1Q3
Martinez
7.50 Economics 101B
7.50 Econonnics 1 02
7.00 Economics 121
7.50 Economics 160
6.00 Engliah90
650 EnglishTTS
Jones (#2)
Jacobs
Ellickson
Darby
7.00 Physics 68
7 00 Physics 6C
7.00 Physics 10
7.50
ISfverman
7,0a
A-
7.00 Biology 1 A
TOO BiologyiB
7.50 Biology 2
7.00 Biology 110
7.00 Biology Ml 32
7.00 Biology 136
7.00 Biology 144
700 Biology 166
7.00 Chemistry 1B
7.00 Chemistry 1C
7.00 Chemistry 1C
7.00 Chemistry 2
7.00 Chemistry 11 A
7.00 Chemiatry21
4.00 ChemMry24
7.00 Chemistry 133B
7.p0 Chemistry 153
7.00 EcofKKnics 1
7.50 Econofnica2
7.00 EconomicalOO
7.00 Ecooomica 1 01 A
7.50 Economics 1 01 A
-^taff
Staff-
Harrison
Peteraon
Grunstein.OrevJ
Tobin
Ray. Roberta
ECkert. Nagy
Davis (#1)
Har(jwick(#1)
Keeper (#2)
Farrington
Trueblood
Brown
Smith
Foote
Weat
LaForoe
Allen
Johnson (#2)
Ellickson (#2)
:k(#1)
leographylAI
7.00 Geography 1 A .
7 .50 Geography 1 00
7.00 GeologyT"
7.00 Geology 1
7.50 Geelegy 15
6.50
6.00
6.50
6.50
6.50
History 1 B
History 6A
Hiatory 1 39C
History 174B
history 1 768
7^ Klneewlogy 12
7.50 Klwertoiogi 130
7.00 Linguistical
7.00
7iX) Philoeopriy3
Berger (# 2)
Terjung (#3)
Walt4»f
Foeter (#2)
Kieffer(»1)
Ror>an
Hoxie
Hemphill
Shaw
Weiss
Senders
Hegberg
Gregor/Zemicke
Keenan
Thorne
HMI
7.5a
700
7.50
7.50
7 00
7.50
7.00
600
600
600
6.00
6.50
Psychology 10
Psy€tH>k>gy41^
Psychology 110^
Psycf^olofly T25^
l^syctTotogy t27-
Psychology 127
Psychology 127
Psychology 130
Psychology 135
Psychology-149
Psychology 165
Sociology 114
Sociology 131
So(?iology 145
Sociology 150
Sociology 154
Gekelman(#2)
Heteerman(#1)
Cheater (#1)
Malamuth(#l&2)
Gi:eiUer{iil)
Roberta/Houston
' OarrK)f>~
-^ Q^fDon^ t-f -
>feinnch (#2>
Malamuth (#4)
Jeffrey (#2)
Kanouse(#1)
Bart hoi
Pepleu
Horton
Lopez
^fy
Bonecich
Study OyMee
Mcth 2A, 28
Math 3A. 3B. 3C
MelhaiA. 318. 31C
11A, IB. 1C
Iff! the Studenla* Store, % level, Ackermefi
7*.46-r.30: IH 7:4S-7
-^—r.
-^■^-T-
Panel defays^funds . . .
fCentinucdtrcMii PagcJ) ^.
•n^hcy have played along lyith the govemor tfrlowcrtng thrtr'
expectationk Ihat'ik a icll^ui." _ -^ .
UC Student 'Lot>hy co-director Jeff Hamerling said it was this
kind of attitude am6ng at least three of the five subcommittee
awmbcrs which beld up passae^ of the EOP fuiub
. Brown's proposed 50 per ci^nt EOP increase represents
S245.000 in state 4unds<t to be matched by the University The
$5.00.000 would provide additional counseling, tutoring and other
support services tor UCs |,000 EOP students
Lett .RKMilli. the mcaiurt cicarrd the Senaie f inawct wb-
committee on educatton^ — %kt toughest obstacle to passage
DC Vice-President Donald Swain dismmnri charfet that (he
University's cutbacks were a '"i^llout ' to Wmmn **We had every
chance to make our case to the Governor" he told the Dativ
Brum, "l think the Governor believes UC is ipo bif aad.icrvcf
too many students aed that the quality has suffered as a reiek."
UC Vice-President Chcstfer McCorkle said UC needs an extra
$i million for instructional support for an anticipated Fall over-
enrollment of 1,014 students
Governor Brown say« he believes the University can absorb
these siudcnts through its own resources.
Tv^ assured them (UC) that we will do wlmt wt can to atisorb
tlMte 1.000 students," he told the Daily Brum Thursday
^'AU they have to do is juggle their hours around."
Brown believes one way UC can meet the over-enrollment
preMne if by increastnf the average teaching workload of
professoU^ which, he implied, has been too Ught m tW fWdt
At a news conference Ias4 February, Brown iBjiiji;! the average
teaching load of roughly six hours a weet "at least ought to be
looked at" by the University
UNIVERSITY Of I
PARIS - SORBONNE |
SUMV/liaw ^allt
Veer
Und«rgraduat*t tn phitbtqphy
and raialig maiort Mm 30-32
cr«ditt m raguiar Sort>onrm
(Pant IV) couraM SONY
Ra^ IV aQraamam »naM>as stu-
danta avoid cumb«nbma pr»-<^
intcriptton and attfod Pant IV.
jtot provincial linivaraitiaa Di-
rector aaaittt with houaino. pro-
grama, amaiaa.^ Ommmimtion
language ra9law Sapt 1S| —
JurW 15 Eatimated Mving. air-
tara, tuition faat $3200 NV
raaidantt $3700 othert Prof D
Bianteanthip Phltotophy Oapt
sue Hum PaltiL.NY. I
{tt4) 257-
AMERICAL
iy
1434 Wefiwoo4 Beelavaf^ e SuMr g elet Afieilcs. C
Celt Dey er NIelit - (SI S) 47g-S72t
I
1
Environmental Workshop
An Environmental Manage-
ment Worjcshop, in which ftu-
dents Will assume roles tn the
public and private factor, is
being offei-ed this quarter
through the School of Public
Health.
Participants will portray
politicians, industrialists, air
and water pollution manage-
ment specialists and waste con-
trol engineers in art effort to
simulate authentic environ-
mental problem solving. Slint-
ing with a realistic situation ;n
a mythical af«u students will
awke decisions involving ac-
ceptable pollution levels, de-
velopment ^capacities and (he
regulation of industries
Participaal actions will be
computer analyzed, and the
results recorded in a news-
sheet format Eafib week, the
outcome pf the previous meet-
ing's deciteea, with the com-
puter's analysis, will be made
available
Clunis Davos. of the School
of Public Heahh is offering the
course M pm Thuradays Stu-
dents need not have experience
with computers.
PEPPERDINE UNIVERSITY
presents ;'
PROJECT OCEAN SEAJRCH !
^An encking opportunity tb explore the ocean world and
'man'i vital relationship to it
^ with
JEAN-MICHEL COUSTEAU
Three summer oceanology programs, with optional
extension credit, at Malibu, California, Catalina Island,
California, or Wuvulu Island in the South Pacific.
Km MO«f •NK>aMATION AND AmiCAflONI CAU Qt WaiTf : f«0>€CT OCEAN
blARCH P«ppefdme University, School o* Coniinuing Iducaiion 1035 S Vermont A^
i, CA. itaM . (213) 971 rm m «n-7S7i
I
■i
leven Commandmenti
of good butfrncft
• • •
A CUSTOMER
-el^
CRESCENT JEWELERS.
in service lo the ITniversiiy romfnuniiy
_Juf 30 ycart. otfer^ ito trieads ai UCLA
— students, faculty and staff — special
' consideration on all purchases*
including watch repairs and jewelry
refiairs).
We offer a 10% REDUCTION to
—^myunc *Ao^^w^ '^
m any
A CUSTOMER
M not ikpmdmt on m—mt are
A CUSTOMER ..«:
tt OP
^^K tt the purpoK ti Mt
^
A CUSTOMER ^ "
dMi ut « faw when he calb • we are not domg hm
^ favor by «rvinf hi«. *
A CUSTOMER
laapirt a^ our
-noc an outi
ACilSTOMER
M noc a cold fiatiaoc— he m a Rcah and bload
with feeltnf* and «MMm IiIk our own
Please tell y<MH salesperson yot _
frcmi UCLA at the time of puuhaie
(before the sales ticket is written up).
and we will be delighted to give you
yoLir reduction, as well as establish
a new friendship, or renew an old one
•rwriM "SAIX^ nr S^tn wll> prwrd mn« handwr
No rrtfoartivr rrducbon
_A-CJLliIOMIJ ^ _
M a per«sn who brmfi ua km
61) thoar wants
:h wits
Y' -'••' "'
"~^
It our fB/b to
A CUSTOMER
la di^BMRJit-^ (*^oat fourtaous and atf^nn
vr
m€ em fiw iufi
A CUSTOMER
K
Wf
A CUSTOMER
m iIk idititonil of dMa Mid every oe^
ueiuelers
student
i
•
4
\
■•t
•
1
i
A iarge bovvl of any of our h«arty soups
with braad n butter
A mMil in tts self
IJi «NN atudant I.D, card
Good lUon.-Fn from 2-5 pm
at th9 \^^a»twood Village Soup n Su^h *~^ ' "
lOSBOWeybum Acfosi the street
477-aoa6 0«er Good Through Mey 1976 ^^om BuHocks
•
I
Tlie Political Science Department
announces the following special couraet as pirt of the depart
fftlQl curriculum for the
SPRING QUARTER 1976 \_
FiesiHMfi temlwari — Consent of Instructor — 1st meeting of cl.
PvefeeMMis: Completion of or concurrent enrollment in P S 1
PolMical Sci«no« 4A - O Farrtlly - MWf 1-3
PWCSIOCNTtAL 9fOm94ATlON POLITICS
PcMittcai Scmncm 40 — Ji«h-W»-12 bm
TWlffifetttil^TS AND TMf ADVERSARY
-• '-A
RoliticfPki^no* 4C - C Zoppo - MW 11*1 SH Sni
CONFLlCl^O OIRLOMACV - TMi CRITICAL ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
mc
— Open Enrollment except whecii. indlcalad
PoMtlcal icmncm 110A - 0 f«rr««ly T »-12 BH 4355 (Cl)
OpTOOUEVILE'S DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA
40 - S Krwn«r ^ M 12-3
AMffMCAN FOet ION POLICY MAKING
Pomicai Sci*nc« 1 1M — D
II8M
if
- MTWTh 9 BH 3211
ticai Sci«nic« titC - B CamptoMt - T 7 io~ BH 4366 (CD
POLITICAL THEORY AND THE PSVCHOLOOlSTS
Political Sci«nc« 13eA - C ZoppO - f »-12 SH 126^ (Ct)
NOCLIAR E><ERGy and international STABILiTY - THE US APPROACH
«
PoMttcai Sci«n6« iSiS — {> Wilfcinaon - Th 7-10 1-3 BH 2209A
THCOMiAT POWERS AND THE MIDDLE EAST
Political fciawo» i39D - R Komomu - MW i-3
NATIONAL 8CCURITY AND ARMS COMTROl
PoMtical Setanoa 146A — R Sandoval - T i^ QSM 2276
PRIMITIVE ACCUMULATION THE PROBLEM OF CAPITAL REALIZATION
PoMticai Scianoa i4Sa — D Nplianwhi - M 3-6 BH ia2lA (CI)
POLITICAL LEADERSHIP _ /
.. >,., J : ■ , -
tSSB - S Ztntkmr "W 2 b ttfi 3'6S (CD
ANO POLITICS IN ISRAELI SOCIETY .
Political Sciaoca 16SA - J ¥Maa»ar - MW 3-5 BH 3153
NATIONAL HCALTH POLICY
PBWica! Sc»a»»ba iffB - J h»k M 9-i2 Bh 4355 " -
THE EXEROSe Of POLICE DISCRETION
Saedliafs lor MaiefS «:- Students mast have s m«|or ir^ Political Science
artd upper division standing, a 3.25 GPA at the upper division level
'^-'irr Political Science courses; ar>d two upper division courses in the
field in which the seminar k offered . ^
I
I
!■ t
—-Sii.,
«97A Sam 1 w/212
D Smiei T 2-5 MH 127
THE PCOCRALIST
1f7A Sam ^«/221 ^
V WMIanalatn Th l2-3 OSM 3343e
STUOICS IN DiALECtlCAL METHOD
167A. Sam 3 «/3M.
C NMSP M 3-6 Sh 1216
ftiAX WSaER ECONOMV ANO SOCIETY
iv
ism.
a. axaSM m%4 wnmrn
STMATEOIC DOCTRINE ANO NATIONAL SfqURlTY
7a. Sapi.'t '
P ilBBar ^ 12-3 OSM4343C
CONFLICT MANAGEMENT •AND ARMS CONTROL
lers. Sam 3
N KaetawSiT 7-i0 BH
PSVCHOLOOICAL ANO CULTURAL DIMENSIONS OF INTWNATfONAL COMFLlCTr
1S7S Sam 4 W/231A
T la^ MS 5146
POLrriCAL <iaWL i a or international ec(
1S7C Sam 2
T Sfoam M630-6X BH 4966
POLrriCAL SOCTALIZATlOW-r ~
■•■• '< ■;
1ST0.
Th
OEVtLOPtNG ANO ADVANCED COUNTRIES
"^ ixmgftm M 24 aM217S
NATIONAL SSCUlMTy - SOME CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES
PMMaM SMwwa ten. Sam 2
F SNaMwaS TTh 1-6 an
1
f PfMg T 1^ QSi
THE COMMMATIVE
PMaeil Seianea itTf Sam i
E.Sfifattart W6IS-10 BO MB6
mvmONMENTAL POLICY AND ADMINISTRATION
pfiiiimi s istF s«p 1
E Marmw F S-19 RoNi 3127
poLmcRL Bcowoiecs or auesAus
P Barm^ W3-6 BH MM
.ICT
OF STATE OOVERNMENTS
/^
1 -x^ '
Westwoo(U)il(ewav
f:^.
ix.-.wUj}«*.^.
•^««»' »■— .»— ■i»»<H»— 1»"
f r^onlinurd from Pajr M
The third bike route ^lil
travel from GayUy and ic
Cojitc 4e~Ohto and Scpulveda
The tifiar route cuts through
the Federal . Building parking
lot and various UCLA parking
lot».
State gas tax monies wiif^
used to fund the bikcwav pro-
ject, estimated to cost $86,000
Upon the recommendation ol
YarosUvsky, hall the total was
allocated by the ctty. and the
remainder by Los Angeles
County at the urging of Edd-
man
The state gas taxes returned
to the city and county are to
1
be used b> them ar iheir dw-
cretiefic noud Bramard Ac-
cording to Miret. part of -this
moQcy will also be used to
develop'^other bike paths in
Los Anjeles
The ■icydc Advisory Com-
mittee collaborated with the
Planning Office here and the
Westwood ChaTTrbcr of Com-
merce in developing bike
routes for the Westwood area
Bikeway proposals were initial-
K"'drawn up by the Bureau of
Engineering, with assistance
from the traffic department,
after considering various
feasibility and traffic safety
studies
The bikrwa^ system pro-
posal/ was approved by. the
Public Works Committee after
receiving approval from the
bikeway iU)mmittec and mm
thirn sent to the City C ouncti
fmr the final ok
Campus
Events
J.Krishnamurti
Relig'tbus taacher aofhor
educator w*U, give a -senea^Ql
talks and disrusstons in the
Oak Grove Memers^Oaks.
OJAI, CA at It a m
Talks' - Sat -Sun Apr 3- 4
Sat -Sun Apr 10-11
Sat -Sun Apr 17-16
Discussions —
Tues -Thurs ' 6- 8
Tues -Thurs~T3-1.§
Seating op(^gras8cancelle0 in
case of ram
For serious listeners only
Please, no stTratl children no ^
dogs, no photographing or -t-
taping permitted
No entrance fee Donations
welcomed
Knshnarpurli Fownctation
X 216 Ofat,-GA. 93023
Tel (805JM6-5347 S
t805r646 2726
(C onflnued from rage l#|
Wtrnr iMri applications art avail
able n(Hiv April 16 Murphy TIH accept
ing men as well as women
— Cr«i Cssianf IsBSHr llqala Tmt s
ttiree-month bikf ride from LA to Oregon j
and tr>en east to Virginia is now bSMf
Qjgani^ed Contact Shen at 3#-2016 for .'...
information f
— isiv Qaaaai students planning to
take Music 60F aml/o< HOP wfYich are
open to all University sttidsnts are re
quested to^tiring tt>etr guitars to the tint
class mWting
fprlai IslMiif Clau liiatriDi wiH tane
Blaos f^don-? pm April 7 Gate 4 Pauley
NvMon Tnd 11 am-1 pm April 9 Kerck
r>oft 400
— MllvtskM SyafStsy OrcSsttrt. jWiH
psrform 8 30 pm tomorrow Royce Hail
TypH isS -FssMlMi is
RIMt. of Atro-Bahian Candomble 3 pm
today Schoenberg 1200
-Xis IM Ifim el 78 St flMlvii. by
Henry Steele Commager 8 pm April 7
Oodd 147 Free
Wm T|M m Msrs m% OMIarsi TsfMlar
part of Ptiotography Viewpoints 78 SyMssI
Slavin. Fulbnght fellow and^ authsr of
Nnsfil 8 pm tomorrow Moore 100 S2 50
for students senior citizens members of
UCLA Arts Csi«ncil and Friends of Ptioto
graphy. S3 for otfiers
^Jtsitliaw Woritwertli tejiow Exete*
College Oxford author editor and lecturer
will speak on^ William Wordsworth and the
psychoanalysts 430 pm April 7 Bunche
12080 Free f^
^fnMMM si IncMfifl MliS SsImI FSytlct.
4 pm. tomorrow Knudsen 8-172
— SilM SMi Ssailsar by. Or Yjevgeny
Livlbh 4 pm tomorrow Knudsen 12006
-JswMi OaiMiNMi Is mi U88i. a Soviet
scieritist'^ view by Or Ye^eny Levicfi 8*
pm tomorrow Haines 30^
For
^/Aartan
Love is the greatest
venture of all.
«. '
SEAN
GQNNERY
AUDREY
HEraURN
• . a
91A»V
: r;i»
AND MARIAN'
NIOX WILLIAMSON
OOMOLM ELLIOTT BONMIMMHI'
KENNCm HAICM IAN NOLM
~ RICHARD HARIUS..^
A RAY S7A«fcRKHA«0 SMf PHtSO t^^m^ . m^ k |C>HN SASSV • »^«mr r„.^,. aiCNASD
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TsKts start at the Worthwest cowiar of the doptrtmsnt (Ai^
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til Thsater Arts Extension bodks start at ttte Soutti end of tf>e
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since faH maybe this time a won t 6e Quite so contusing
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188% Communications Program with tt>e University faculty and staff and
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Pting a rtctnt UC praduate and interest in
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fillHIM
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(JCIA"~"
BICENTENNIAL
EVENT
Can The Spirit Of 76 Be Revived?
• ■ ^ w
in the UCLA BICENTENNIAL LECTURE SERIES
Steele Commager
V
■^.'
John Woodruff Simpson, Lecturer, Amherst College
One of America's Foremost Historians
Led a distinguished national comnuttee in drafting the
^____ Df CLARATION Of INTHIDEPENDENCE
Ipr the World Affairs Council of Philadelphia
r
Other Lectures in Series in Do<ld HaN 147, Wednesdays, 8 P.M.
April 14 -«PACE SMITH, Professor of Historical Studies Emeritu$r<^ Santa Cruz: THE AMERICAN
REVOLUTIOt^-AS A PEOPLE'S MOVEMENT
April 21 — J.R. POLE, Vicfe Master, Churchill College, Cambridge University: THE AMERICAN
REVOLUTION THROUGH BRITISH EYES
April 28 — ROBERT KELLEY, Professor of History, UC Santa Barbara: TWO HUNDRED YEARS OF THE
TWO PARTY SYSTEM — HOW HAS IT EVOLVED AND WHERE ARE WEf
two additional lectiures in Miy
No Admission Charge
Wednesday; April 7 8 PM Royce Auditorium
(this lecture only)
Presented by UCLA Bicenternial Cclj^KiMtiee and Committee on Public Lectures
J
•-r
-•«-
PublicCordially Invited
DC nuclear research:
A matter of
life, death
$400
/
ly Firtrkk Htsly
"T- Di Slidr Writer
Whether nuclear energy Mfme
day solves the world's energy
prohlemt, or whether it hecomes
the tool of the world's annihilation,
tiK University of California will
have play ^ a key role.
The \}Q ich year funnels nearly
half a hiUioo fjB^eral dollars — a
quarter of —the 4Jniversity*s total
operating hudget — to naiifimJ
lahoratories devoted primarily to
nuckar wwyoni development,
eaergy iwiarcli, and hasic physics
work The national labs at Berkeley
and Livennore in the Pay area, aa4
at Los Alamos, New Mexico arc
"operated** by(thc UC for the federal
govemmem. -^ .
The nation*s entire nuclear weap-
ons arsenal has been developed by
UC employees.
DunngAthe three deca4« of the
University's involvement in nuclear
wocit f or the government, vanous
UC bodies have exami^ned this un-
usual relationship But questions
still remain. What are the goals of
the labs today? How do lecrecy
and the conception of materials for
war fit isto the domain of a
university? Who are the sdentiftt
who work at these labs? And who
their real hots?
secrecy it crested the world's first
atomic bomb during World War
11. Now a one-industry town of
16,000, Los Alamos still has the
prestige of the UC name And it
still designs bombs.
"We in the nuclear weapons'
business want to jupport the
natioi|al policy of having a defense
second to none, Naiyrally, we hope
wc never Jwwe to use time thinp.**.
Speaking is Duncaki MacDouggU,
a toft-apoken chemist m his sixtier
wfio came to Los AkMiai nearly 30
years ajo. Named the assistant
director in charge of weapons in
1970, Macbougall is the number
iwo man at the lab behind director
Harold Agnew«
-The amount of money going into
weapons work has been decreaaing
the past few yean, according to
^MacDougall. Meanwhile, the non-
' According to the head of the
lab's energy program. Fdward
Hammel, in the early seventies '*it
began to be pretty daqah clear
nuclear energy was having its own
problems." At this point, the lab
undertook rgM^r projects in non-
nuclear energy sotirces, rnctudihg
solv, geothermal, and "^si^percon-
ducting" electrical transmission
hnes (which reduce power losses).
- nosh Hammel and MacI>Qugall
say the lab's -background, in weap"
ons work gives if an advantage in
its growing energy program, a
major part of the ^Research EN^
vision** now funded at a level o\
about S70 million per year (this
cninpani to about Jf 80 i^illion for
weapons) ^ We've got the expertise
to help the ration's problems."
MacDougall said
Los Alamos first became in-
Editor's note *- While researching arid photo-
graphing this story. Bruin News Editor Patrick
Healy conducted more than two dozen personal
interviews in OakUmd, Berkiiey, Liven
mui ILos AUtmoM, New Mexico.
'-mare.
tf
• • • •
thousand feet above sea
level, spread out over nearly
50,0(io acres in the mesas of
northtm New Mexico, is the L.os
Alamos Scientific Laboratory. Ji_
coujilc xs( states mmi almoat a
thousand miles away from Uni-
versity Hall in Berkeley, Los
Alamos was under the auspices of
the UC wlKn in ahnost complete
weapons programs are growing at
Los AlaoKM.
While for many years weapons
wmrk was the only game in town at
~"l.os Alamos, and though weapons
' itill comprise more than half the
lab's effort, other fields of re-
search, particuUu-ly in energy
sources, have been expanding
rapidly Los Alamos has dramatic-
§/Bf increased its program
develop nuclear fusion reactors,
aad m recent years IpMlnoved into
fields not directly rekrted to nuclear
physics
volved m energy research, Hammel
said, in 1952, when Project Sher-
wood began exploring the pos-
sibilities of controlling thermo?
nuclear fusion (the source of
energy in an hydrogen bomb) to
produce electricity rather than
dcatruction But it was not until
1971, when Congnti voted to give
the Mtioaal laboratories the au-
thdnty to do non-nuclear work^
* to
chotomv that it might seem tp be.
according to David hreiwald. an-
other member of the management
staff in the research division **ln
terms of manpower and cost ef*
fectiveness. in. my opinion it is
good to have both these activities
at. the lab •
**Take for example laser fusion
(the technique o( using laser beams
to cause small fuel pellets to under-
go fusion and release energy, n ap-
p^ently also can be used to-
simulate, hydrogen boinb explo-
sions) It's ultimate goal is pro-
viding peaceful power 4 o the poor,
so to spaak Meanwhile, there are a
lot of military applications," Fr^
wald said.
According to the official par-
lance. .Los Alamos and the other
special UC laboratories are "oper-
ated for the Energy Research and
Development Administration (El|t-
DA) by the University of Cali-
fornia" ERDA is the federal arm
which provides the bulk of the
fundmg to the labs and holds the
contract with the University Re-
gents
UC. ERDA. and Uh officials
agree that the UC actually has Very
little to do with the day to day
management of the labs. Lab pro-
p»ms are planned in negotiations
directly between lab^ officials and
the ERDA office in Washington.
DC. Univervty Halt is not con-
sulted "at this level.** according to
Uke off
Putting
work side
erf^rgy and weapons
by side IS not the di-
L+vermoreJ administrator. Dale
Nielsen, who laid, **We feel we am
the University**
(C «tf«tinued on Page 12)
Tiuo phages of the Urmterstty
of California's special nu-
dmar laboratories exploding
the fiist atofTtic bomb iif a
New Mexico test, July 16,
1945 (photo uppm right); and
today at Loe Alamos tryeig to
produce energy from ther-
monuckar fumon with the
iphoio teft).
I
••
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it
I »
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f ^
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The ingredients
of a great University:
Researching, teaching, cind
nuclear weairons
(Continued from Ptf « 11)
AUhou|0 weapons-related
work if dMfified. Nielsen said
the Regents are npt Itept iir the
dark about the labi* activitiei.
**There ia nothing going on at
the kboratohct that the Re-
Sents do not know about,**^
fielien said.
University HalKs tntilage-
ment functions at the labs
include choosing lab du-ectori,
ninniag a VC personnel pro-
gram, maintainiog the guide-
Hnei for purchathig a^ con-
tracting, and providing the
kgai services of t^ jkneimt
counaeTs office, ■rrnnliim ^
John Perkins, the Uiiivenity
Vice Preaident for business.
The University President,
David Saxon, has two advisory
Umt report to hm
■iK
h-B
<<
■■IV
gottl ti
for the
lime we a lot ol military
applicatifMH
MMP—— iM..MI * I I II— III I I II i^W— — — ^—
direction of research at the
labs, Saxoii said.
The ififlueilce the UC can
exert over the type of work
done at the labs is limited to
choosing lab directors when a
vacancy arises, and terminating
its contracts with the govern-
ment.
As Los Alamos weapons
chief MacDougall described
UC OMMifement of the Ubs,
''ERDA is our real boss."
Saxon maifitained that the
difference in mailafenient be-
tween the special laboratories
and an every-day, garden-
variety VC campus is not that
gr^t. Admitting that his office
has little to do with running
the labi.ofi a daily basis, he
asked, "What do we have to
do with the actual msnifwipl
of, say, tl^ UCLA- Graduate
Manafement program? We
need to know quite a bit about
it, to exphun it aad to defend
it. But we daa*t run it,** Saxon
o» Ikt 0peratioM of the kb-
oratories, and the Special Re-
search Pro^ecu Committee of
the UC Regenu is also sup-
poaed to keep UN on then.
But mom of theae bodies is
involved in determining the
■ ■ - i
DtfforcBoci neglected
Saxon neglected to mention,
aoMSg other differences, that
the campuses do not negotiate
directly with the government to
get their budgets, but must
make a request to his office.
For its role in managing the
labs^ £RDA pays the Univer-
sity a $3.2 million fee. Ac-
cording to the VC President's
ofhcc, this money goes into a
special nuclear science fund
administered by the Regenu.
Used mainly for building proj-
ects, the fuxM) recently fmanceid
new facilities for the Davis
applied science program at
Livermore.
Less than an hour's drive
from Berkeley in a faritiing
valley east of the San Fran-
cisco Biy. is the Lawrence
Livermore Lai|>aratory, the
only other research avtituti on
outside Loa Alamos for devel-
oping America's nuclear ex-
pioaivea. Livermore was built
during one of the crisis periods
.in the Cold War in 1952, at the
urging of UC icieliats such as
Edward Teller and Ernest
Lawrence that the nation
seeded to haaten development
of the hydrogen bomb.
The Uib made iu mark ia the
nuclear laea^SpM field when it
developed a series of compact
warheads, sUrting m 1959 with
the Polaris, designed to be
launcbed_from submannes.
Livermore has an even wider
range of programs than Los
Abimos, with energy work in
such fields af^coal gasification
The partiaK)/ con^ABtmi
containnmnt umml for 6
tor; E4
ward Teller, Edward
Harhmel; and the Los
Ahmoe liggpn Phyei^
Facility, a hpot occ^era
tor to probe the nuclei of
atoms. LAMPF photo
courtesy ^ Loe AJcvnoc
Scientific; Laboratory.
and oil extraction from shale
dj^posits.
""'.Jn the early years there was
a very close contact with the
University, as many oi tirf
scientists and senior manage-
ment came from Berkeley,
Livermore assistant to deputy
director Nielsen said. These
daya 4fery few lai^ employees
ate hired from within the VC
system
If thry dianged the
ktierhead, I,4oii*t think
moat Uvennore
esnpljpyces would know
the differtncr
Since the early sixties, Liver-
more has been linked with the
Davit campus through a joint
College of Applied Science
Currently there are around IQO
Davis sli^de^iti studying at
Livermore, according to Niel-
sen. ^^^%^
An amazing variety of peo-
ple constitute the 6,000 who
work at Livermore. ^James
Carothers. the associate di-
rector for human resources and
laboratory/ relations, gives the
impression that people are lia
imporunt to hira as techno- f
logy. A phyiiciat trained at tike
Berkeley Radiation Laberfa-
tory, Carothers went to Cal **
State Hay ward a few years
hack to get a masters degree in
counseUng.
' Carothers contends- laere is
only one disadvantage to the
VC running Livermore — uni-'
versity pay scaki are not as
high as those in private indus-
try. But the atmosphere aad
the nature of the w^rk, he
said, keep. Livermore's staff m
a university lab. *^ .
Uaivcr#ly
Some have said the hetrt of
a umversity is its open acoeti
to knowledge, and that the*
security reatrictions at national
weapons laboratories are there-
fore inconsistent with the
nature of a university. But
Carothers, strolfing around his
spacious office, from the wall
decorated ^fh a giant Mickev
Mouse watch to the full-length
blackboard on the other side
of the room, said he can J^er-
ceive no inconsistency *^hc
tradition of a university — not
necessarily the UC, any uni-
versity — wottid be
to ideas, to truth, to adhering
to objectivity in research.
'*In my mind thar is not
neceaaarily incompatible with
research which, judged fore
political reasons, is not in the
bmt imciesu of the country to
he disseminated to the lett of
/the world,** Carothers said,;
Phillip Coyle is a mechanical
engineer now involved in the
laser fusion program at Liver-
more. As he emergDd from the
new laser fusion program
headquarters, a building
wrapped in oae-way window
U) that thoae inaide can see
out. hiM aot vice veria, his
youthful appearance bebed the
tact tktt he has been at Liver-
more fliere than 16 years.
Thir is an amazing place,**
Coyle said, refernng to the size
and variety of programs
''When you change jobs here it
feels like you*re going to wqrk
for a whole hew company.**
A former school teacN±. in
falot Verdes, Coyle is aware
that he is now workig for the
UC "only iatofar as peripheral
tfiings — paycheck, insurance,
other benefits. If they changed
the letterhead, 1 don*t think
mpst Livermore employees
would know the difference"
Federal support for the UC
special laboratories exceeded
44^
government
value at $925 million
Other
The UCs arrangement witht
the federal government, though
unrivaled in sheer dollars, is
not unique. ERDA*s John
Philip pointed out. ERDA,
which mhriaiiml the defunct
Atomic Energy Comiiission
(AEC) last year, contracU for
rmcarch programs with several
other universities and consort-
iums of educational institu-
tions, including the Argonoe
Lab in lUinois and the Brook^
haven lab on Loog laland. But
only UC'does nacfcmr weafMa
work. ■ - ^^^-^ -i-
ERC^A aho has iU counter-
parts ih other governinent
agencies, Philip «aid,. noting
NASA*s contract with Cal
Tech to run the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Paaadena
Besides its national office in
Washifligton, D.C^ ERDA has
regional offices throvfhoiit the
country, including stations at
Albuquerque and Los Alamos,
New Mexico, and the SAN
(for San Francisco) office,
perversely located across the
Bay in
The smallest of the UCs
three independent Uboratohes
ia aho the oldest, and the only
one of the three that does no
ckastfied research. The Law-
rence Berkeley Laboratory,
then called siaaply the Radia-
tion Laboratory, became a
meeca for ph^icists in the
I930*s after a y bung, aggressive
phynaat, Ernest O. Lawianoe,
mi^nited the cyclotron, a type
of atom aM
rapidly ai
pioved and more powerful
^Pdatrons aoccleralai atomic
particles to higher energies,
gradually revealing more sec-
reu of the nucleus, the heart of
niatter.
The hib aevOa fiiir efforu
dunng World War II to the
* Manhattan District '- re-
workiag the big cyahWiua to
4 punfy uranium to bomb-gnHle
quality- ~ hut drifted away
from weapons work after the
War ended, according to Earl
H^Nia, 4eputy lab director
Separate froas camp«s
Nowadays the Berkeley lab
-- though located in the hilh
ahove campus, a separate Uni-
versity entity reporting directly
to the Presidents office — m
the most concerned of the UC
labs with basic research ia
nuclear physics and cl
Admimstrators and
ahke at the Berkeley bib say
they are proud of their cloae
conuct with the campus. Hyde
said many of the laboratory*s
staff hokl joint appointmenu
with a department on camfkis.
"^It gives us a special flavor
compared to the other aatiowJ
hboratones,** tasd Hyde.
.Harold Ticho, a UCLA
frtiysios professor who is on the
Lawrence Berkeley advisory
committee to Saxon, feeU that
this relhtion #ith Berkeley
matothe kb fundamen^y
different froin Livermore jaaa
Los Alamoa, which ''are aot
really that daae to the Uni-
versity itaelf **
Dmhi to iTiaam
While Livermore and Loa
AlaoHM are pushing S200 mil-
lion annual budgeu, Berkeley's
is inat a hair ovtr S50 milhon
to
t im- increase our programs,** Hyde
said, addia^ The budget
gOM up in racept years, but we
haven't been as siirraiiful as
^wed like to be *
In addition to nuclear re-
search and lU applications ia
medicine. Lawraam Berkeley
now has programr in ener|fr
including solar, geothermal,
and joint fusion work with
Livermore, plus a pioneering
program in energy rnaacrVa
tioo.
If you know the correct of-
fices m which to look, you will
find some of the greala tn the
hiatory of nucl^r research at
Lawrence Berkeley The lab
has had eight Nobel Prue
wmaers QmwjU-^^ ^amW ■■!
I think %ve*vefottm ommv
out of our national laba
Chan the Sovieta have
emetthem.
the first m 1939), including
Olehn Saabocg and Lum Al-
varez, aaar associate directors
Omt of the most ingenious ~
wetm a^ the lab, according to
co-workertr ii ane who never
went further in t
than a bachelor's
that haa aal stopped Albert
Ghiorao from having a hmd ia
the discovery of practically
every ekaoM on the periodic
table hryeed wanium.
Ghiorao — who wears an H-
P cakuUtor on his hip hke any
iophasnore engineenng student
you might run into at UCLA
— comes across as an en-
thuaiaatac man who loves hia
work. About his research,
Ghiorso said, *Thif is a lot of
fim I am paid to have fiw.*^
(Caathmad on Pag* 13)
r
I
»)«U
I
At Uvermofje and Los Alamos
Nuclear arms race far from over
This is a lot of fun. I
am paid to have fun.
3400 aMTTTdtr tat! year,
cording to budget figures from
the Univeraity . President's of-
fice. Lrvermort led the league
with an operating budget of
$179.4 miUibn.
And the ERDA prograalB
are expected to continue grow-
ing, both ERDA aad kb of-
ficiah aap, even in theae days
«f • "tftead^atate** Univcnhy.
In the current fiscal year, for
example, Livermore is working
OQ a>iiiBt of S19g.4 million,
« jump of 10 per cent in ernt
year
In addition to providing the
t>ulk of the operatic expeama
^••■^ emeey does coaK from
otfcw Meral agmmimK ERDA
^>«^» the three
^^hgmiavies lock«
^)«rrel. The UC halda thfc to
ndthcr the ptoperty nor the
^^^reds of milhooa of dolten
rth of equipment, at the
^rkelcy Livermofe
Dealing wMi ERDA
According to Philip. the
ERDA ofHcipl who oversees
the Berkelely and Livermore
UC progranu from the SAN
office, ERDA has inherited the
AEC*s technique of doing most
of its work through' contract!
to non civil service institu-
tions. But even though it hai~
farmed out the work to the
UC, ERDA still mainUins
doaer control over the opera-
tion of the hibs than Umversity
-AalL^r the^ Regents. ^—
: TThe day to day deali
The race is fiir from over
in the nudaar acpMmmlt
business, asaapihlg to ad-
ministrators ia the two^ Uni-
versity of California lab-
otatptin wkkk carry the
burden of the nation's nu-
ciaar defeat program.
*The doves my we've got
enough wea|[KHia already,**
Dmmaa MacDougall muaed
as snow fell oa the ground
outside his office in Los
AlaaKM. ''ite of the aaawm
ia that we*re not talking
about more, but better
of several 'Wea-
Dak Nicjscn at Liverlmifa
thilthcre i
oc-
^ lamoa
the labs are primarily with
ERDA, not the Uraversity,"
Phihp mid, adding that he is
concerned with **prognnB jmI
management.** His pro|ram
dutica, Phihp J^^ed, involve
makhi^ sore the^ha live up to
what IS called for m ERDA*s
contracts. Management con-
cerns detaih aach »m approving
purchases of materials.
ERDA*s SAN office
rupim^ two. Omem ei a
bank buikliag, acram the street
frpm the downtown, Oakland
BART sution. SAK* eiiipiayi
about 250 ptapte, inriiiiBg to
ERDA figures, m Compared to
6,000 in the agonal
The SAN dffioe
partraif of
;n; l^ord on the wall
am aal thmk the
basic flmds of the UC labs will
fhe qeyt few
for
I a lot
that still can be done to
make weapons more pre-
dictable. Another desire,
Nielsen said, is to ''make
weaposa-**eleaaar**^ hy ^e-
d ucingThe radioactive dehraT
they mlaaae ^m axpiaaiaaL
**One of om' gaah ia the
European theater ia to be
more selective,** MacDougall
He exphiiaed that the
year
and **Livermore and Los
AhMMa would gat
aad have a pie-spbtting
In recent years the programa
have been more complicated,
more expensive, aad there
have been fewer of them,**
MacDougall said.
MacDougall described the
praoem by which nuclear
wcapom are coacaivad and
created:
**Basical}y, the people in
the laba come up with the
* The defeaae depart-
caa and does make
too The
DoD could say it wants
nuclear handgrena^m. I
don*t my they have ^they're
too wen infocmad far liit.
**We haae a^Jal a€
poaiers
of large auclear weapons
may actually hamper their
deterrent capacity. *^ Ruaaia
invadea G^rmaay, could we
briag aormlvm to kill the
ammaa eee at wee aaam
tiaM several million Ger-
tacts in Washington, so that
the people in defense have
aame knowledge at what we
can do.
^*^lif Momtbody has a bright
I, .then we set up a phaae
Mady. Does it appear
the new device would give a
defense capabikty we do not
aow have? If the aaamar ia
yea, then we do a phase two
Hady,"* MacDougall said
If both the labs and tha
DoD are still enthusiastic,
ERDA is aaked to put up
the money, and phase three
conaiats of *nhe actual hard*
ware developme|l,** he add-
ed. ---=--;
Whether the particular
#aapoM pragmm ia devel-
oped at Livermore or Los
AlaflMa, VC scientists work
vn conjunction with scientisu
at the local Sandia labs run
by Bell Laboratorim. San-
dia*B pnmary rraponaibUity,
according to ERDA doca-
BMOts, is **nuclcar ord-
eemd — the arming, faaii^
and finng systctns uaed ia
V.S. auciear bombi e94
Nudear. weapons experts
Durban McmcDou^bM (ipp^
and Dale Nmbdn.
When a amspaaa system
raachm the actual produc-
tion stage, fabrication is
dooe at seven ERDA fac-
torim spread throughout tht
1
i
In 1973, the yea p^. though he does look
1
ment would a
>.-..
-— - ^ •■'
'jssiM
«^
*»^«
*m
/
:♦-.. •■
■ \
r-:
I
a
1
•
1
'I
I
'5-
'-^i
111-
• I
Nuclear labs . .
\ \
A Mw oibuM iron IM
grootest gang « Ihe West'llotive Sons:
On ColunilNa Records end Topes.
i Continued oii fmfe 13) .
He prctcrs pure research,
science for tcienot^ take; but
otoerved that much of the time
it does end up having practical
applicjCtioM.
Like thoac in the weapons
programs at the other labs,
Ghiorso feels he tf m competi-
tion with the Soviet scjcntwls_
In Ghiorto*t caie, it it a HMtlcr
of pride and braMmg rights
being the first to create and
obicrve new elements He and
Seaborg have traveled to Eur-
ope to argue data concerning
element 106, which both Amer-
ican and Soviet scientists claim
they were >hcr4ifst to ditcover
Ghiorso*s wo^ in the past
has led to the elements Cal-
ifornium and Lawrencium (for
Lawrence) He holds no special
dishkc for the Russians and
said he believes in detente, 'bu^
for his work. '^The political
battie adds spice." , ^
0 0 0 0 0-0
In the spring of 1970. when
war protests were disrupting
campuses across the country'
and some people openly won-
4ered about the propnety of a
untyerstty designing nuclear
weapons, a committee oi the
fK:uhy*s Academic Senate pre-
sented a report on the Uni-
versHy's involvement in the
Berkclc), Livermore and Lot
AImaos labt. -'■^
The so-caUed Zinner Com-
mittee (nanicd after committee
chairman Paul Zinner) report
included a number of recom-
mcndations, mpst with the
(poiMion theme oFb ringing the
labs and the University closer
together Out of the recom-
mendations grew a pair of
advisory committees to help
the University President main-
uuo contact with the labs.
Membersl^ip on the com-
mittees repfeieilts quite a
croM-tectiqn. Nine men, rang-
ing from a NASA official to a
Princeton physicist to General
Jimmy Doohttle to professocs
rn the \J€ system, sit on the
committee for Livermore and
Los Alamos. The other com-
mittee is concerned wjth Law-
rence Berkeley.
Piyjoaoplikal inwes
The Livermore and Lqs
Alamos committee meets three
or four times a year, according
to member Qrsbn Anderson,
on the faculty of the UCLA
(Continued on Page 17)
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1434 N. CtCSCENT HEIGHTS a« SUNftH STtIP
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ARE YOU PLANNING TO
RUN FOR
STUDENT GO VERNMENT2
•^L-
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If you are, you should be aware of the dates and
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available
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Kerckhoff Hall 304 by 4:00 p.m.
Friday, April 30, 1976 — Primary Expense
Accounts dOe by 4:00 p.m.
Monday, May 3, 1976 — Literature Distribution
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due by 4:00 p.m.
Tuesday, May 11, 1976 — Literature Distribution
Wednesday, May 5, 1976 — Primary Election
Thursday, May 6, 1976 — Primary ElectKwi
Wednesday, N4ay 12, 1976 — Final Election
Thursday, May 13, 1976 — Fir»l Election
Detailed information concerning the "Elections can be
obtained .from the Elections Board in Kerckhoff 310
or 304.
*«f»S!r
by Sludvit f.iiPiliriyii Council
T^
"*r^
'TT
''Iv^'- -
-i ^1 ii->Til>.- i^ .
..Virfr y
-yr~^ — J-
.j:i -I
>,
ASUCLA COMMUNICATIOIMS BOARD
ANNOUNCES THE FOLLOWING OPENrNGS
FOR STIPENDED STUDENT POSmONS
1 976-77 SCHOOL YEAR
e
I
\
Daily Bruin
This position serves as Editor & Chief of the UCLA Dally
Bruin^ responsible for all editorial content and
staff of 90 students
UNIVERSITY Of CALipCAfiNIA -LOS ANGg.L£S
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This position IS responsible for all staffing and pro-
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This position 18 rasponaitola for the entire advertising solici-
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the UCLA yearbook
SPEC»AL INTEREST PERIODICAL NEWSPAPERS ARE PUBLISHED TWICE PER QUARTER
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FOR EACH OF THE ABOVE PERIODICAL PUBLICATIONS.
EDITORS: ,
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• tMi on tfw flight of youi ctipteo finmt paymoni mum t9 mad* at mat 90 days m
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Vour monay is protociad m a ban* aacrow acoount and ^ a MOXXX) anaaty bond
Vour ftigfw aboard a Martina«r OAN-AiR or ONA lat inciudaa maan arxl opan bar «mih cboioa
occur, ft
tthan
- t
• »-
Life.-dcath
K aatu^ued froai Fag c 14)
Imiitutc of Geophyticft and
Planetary Fliysicsi Th< com-
mittee evaluates the technical
performance of the labs, he
said, but itill consideri the
basic philosophical lisiles of
the University's mvplvcment in
labaiatones which do %ecr€C
mtlitarv waalu — ^ ::-
^We look at it ttits way
somebody has to be the ad-
ministrator if the DC doesn't
do It. the government will get
the telephone company (The
Bell System operates the San-
dia labs) or IJmon Carbide
(which runs the Oak Ridge,
Tennessee plants)," Anderson
said
**1 believe Livermore and
Los Alamos are the best two
I Rational labs in the country
And I think the University of
California has to take a lot of
the credit It set up the man-
• r
-A-V-
"*7-^
Structure m the
ning,** Anderson taid. adding
**l think we've gotten more out
of our national labs than the
Soyicu have out of theirs.**
d d d a a a
Besides tlie three indepen-
dent labs. ERDA funds other
UC campus research in the
aiiUioas.of dollars, including
nuclear medicine .programs at
Davis and San Franciico.
At UCLA, th,e Laboratory
of Nuclear Medicine and Ra-
diation Biology IS S S3 million
plus program reporting directly
to the Chancellor Alto at
UCLA, ERDA funds a $1 mil-
lion joint physics and engineer-
ing program studying ptasaa
(matter which is so hot that it
has fundamentally different
properties than do ordinary
solids, liquids and
0 0 0 0 0 0
Edward Teller is
of the
nuclear physics, and in particu-
lar Its application to wca'poas.
Often credited with being *'the
father of the hydrogen bMBl^**
Teller faMMw the tremendous
opportunities for fusion while
working at Los AlaflMS, ^ep
before the first fission bovnib
had proved successful
LateT, It was Teller who
helped persuade the govern-
ment to open the second weap-
ons laboratory at Livermore
and to push the hycjlrogen
bomb project.
Forced by afe last year to
retire with the. distinguished
title **University of Cahfornui
Profess6r emeritus,** Teller be-
lieves nuclear energy is indis-
pensable to the future of
America, both for power and
for defense, And for Tellafr
who still frequents his office in
Livermore, the University of
^4HipaSttMI« ^nougn n€H t^lS nVM
choice of administrator, has
dope well with its labs
Coffee and pastry
Busy nowaiipi speaking
against the Nuclear Control
Initiative, Teller reflected on
the University's role tn nuclear
ranveh as hs h|d his after-
noon coflae and pastry of» the
patio of a fnend's home in
Beverly Hills.
^ ' ■• y ••.-r;.vx t'- ■ *.
'*On the whoic. the Uni-
versrty hns done a fnad j^h.
As •• administrative structure.
it works very well
**1 would not have derivad
this as the way to do it, but t
ajn very happy to tee it work
out to well,** Teller said in hu
Hungarian accent.
Teller had wanted the Uni-
sersity df ChicafD to run the
second weapons laboratory,
(Continued on Page It)
I
I
V—*
ALPHA EPSILON PI
Alpha Epsilon Pi, a young and pro-
* gressive fraternity. wiTt be having a
organizational meeting If you wish to
wmtL hew people and develop lasting
friendshif>s, comedo 4erckhoff 400,
«u
Wed. April 7 at 7:30 p.m. For more
info, call a2S-2i44.
r
1
■ l.» , <.II.MIL ■■
*■
OFFICIAL Un
ity NOTICES
bf
FlIOM: nEOIgTnAfl
RE MEgPONSMILlTV i^ STUOCWTg
IT* riappwaibii tor ofc— rvii
by Itw Wigialri
ssctlon of itm currant \ttm\m
1. tIaaaiSI rstalog
2. iBiiiiMli of Ctasw
a. Omcial Maicai aoenan of DaNy %f^im
4. Postort on aampiM buiian boards
9. FacSi of Mogistratlofi bfocfuivos
s. KfwoiiRiofit ifi Pvfsofi aaaahapss
*7. 9l«9lt^ation circulars ^ . *
*^ avaiiabU at Moglstraf't: . Window A or
Murpliy HaM; coNogo/ school/
of His
lUS
RE: OUAI^TERLY REGISTRATION FEE (suto^oct Is
irOO am and 3: JO pm. iN
tsos "^ wis wsst sfiiranos of'
Court and CIrols Dfivs Easl>.
REG pocSoli srs at mis location lar
padMt during His *W MAIL" psftod.
but did not rsglstsr must bring Itisir FEE. RiOlgTRATION. and
RiCONCILUTION cords 16 glop I for rtoaranos Is procasd la glsp U
and iia a^jyai psymsnt of loss to dis Casiilsr.
A. coirrtMUfNG STUDENTi (by oiaasiaido ^
Thoss fofommsndod rsglstrsflon Mnnas aid corrsldlod to imdsr-
gisdMSli am olbaur spp iiliilin mli la oiisiiS
ptlaf to dis aaslgRad appabilaiaal ta snroN!
l-s«sf4 ,. stisri 1:00 am. March n
It tuition » -
Exisndsd Unlvsrslty (snrollsd In S units or Isss):
Orsdutss
$220.00
$235.50
$2)0:00
$500.00
$11S.OO
$110J0
/
I.OSOI2
tosoll
QradMBtilsvsis5-S
B NEW AMD RE-ENTERING STUDENTg
•s prsparod ta pay rsglstrstton loss on His
AR^INTMEirr TO REGISTER IN RERSON, which Is
1. If paGiMf was rsoslvsd by ihsll
rsgfcjtsf on AprM J ar 2.
aMsrO:OOam,Apmi
1:gOpm,Apdf1
^V*a^V ^^V^Vf ^^^^RF^V ^$
OiW am. April 1
It \ou arc iitrd ot nadiM^d
v\t>mfns novHs iw biu^trii
phifs) v\hK'h end tn mad
h<»..v. V un^ mens, car
fu,.., . jraps fr*mi (ipcn win-
doHs fhtn read Colrtir
Shr will not prcMmi a ri*
touched picturc'of tht* world
Or pretend rTiarTTfr~R panv"
less But she wiM shon vou
the puff and ih( impurr
thf (^ariMv p«it«idiM v^bich
Hounshirs in an -rmprrfcct
world th<' |)lta^ur<*< to he
snatched tnim th( lavcs of
mortahtv
ThK PI K> AM) IMK
TMK RirtMNG SKKI) ,
$2 *»5
THt ThM>l K SIUKH
$3 95
TMI-SMACklK $2 95
CHER! AVn INK LAST
OfCHFRI $2 95
CIGI/Jll.lK IH
CARNUI HAVCHANC t
ACQl ArNTAXOS $3 95
MV MOl HLR S HOtSL/
SIDO S2.f5
THE VAGABONn $2 95
RKI \%. Of DAY $2.99
EARTHLY PARADISE.
^ •^ \ •5 95
New Jl i(cw IwelMlBrr
FARRAR. STRAUS «
GIROUX
Non-fssldsnt lifHIon
^^' REDUCED FEEg FOR RART TIME UNDERGRADUATE
STUDENTS
undorgrsdiMls stddsals* psspsfly Sdiiailasd far gan difw
■l»li lipra $50 rsdncdon of diogdysaRanBl Fooand/orlhs
non-rssldsnt tuition fss of $tSS por coyrss. Ouallllcstlon snd
s^^^o^^^won vor poci^i^wo MMay aaosaaiaaaasaah^
from ttis mhdaHim progrssa rianimmant of Ms/hor
Furthor. rsdHadaa of dis study isl to
ti;
RE: REFUKID RROCfiDURE
Rvldr to dio Rrst day of Instructkm. s atudsnl moy canool Ma/hor
tdjishHadaw upon wrHtsn natlas awd Pitaiw a* dta aiirrsni
card to fis iwiaiid Ottaa. 11>l Mbtphy Hag. Rahind is as
loss paid liy flow imdsrgradiiatss ars laS
rsfundabla f$50 Aocoptancs of Sdminlaw Foo; for
conlirtifing. and rs-onlortng studdnfa s sorvlcs chargo of $10 Is
■^w^^^io ww^ mo owmowi ot vooo pam.
On or aftsr dis NrsI day pf Instnictlan, a
of WNhdrawol (ovaNabts al a studonft
or school no.
ths 10th doy of ciassos for ths appllcabis qusrtsr m9%4 flls ths
RE: REOIgTRATlON CARD FOR CURRENT
iRgOaaPdls
Qusmrwd
RC: LATl RtOlgTRATION M RCRRON - ApHI g-1g
laldis
IMS an la MO pa^ ta bagbi poymant af I
LATl las
loflsasls<
at
day to
IsApflllt
RS: VIRIFICATtON OF gTUOCMT RTATUR
RC'CNAflOEOF
>**«»<•«■«
0fmmlimtiim»»mM
I
(
f
i
• 9
• ' I 11
-tr
a.
<
e
e
J
SPIRIT SQUAD TRyOMTS
Dance Team • Mascots i_
Cheerteaders — *-
Applications availabt* beginning Mond#y. April S
Applicaliont may be pk:li#d up at the
Campifi Programs mnd Activities Oftic«
161 Kar ckholf. Hali 025-7041
Application dsftcWina is Tuesday Apnl^ at 4 00 pm
A must be on file at CPAO 161 Kertkhoff HaM
Eligibility for participation in
spirit support activities IS as follows
1 Any regularly enrcrtfed students graduate or un
graduate ts generally etigibii to participate
2 Individual participants must be regularly enrolled and m
good standinl^ academically and admimsltratively during
the period of try-outs and participation if selected
3 Individuals are ineligible to participate on the same squad fdr
more than two. academic years
4 Participants shotJd havi» no permanent health problem
which would inhibit the performance of the functios involved
5 ParticipMMs mmx be capable of meeting the time demands
inherent Iff tfie programs w.thout compensation
INFO MEETING APIUL 13. 3517 AU. 3 PH
Nuclear
(C owtiimeil froRi.P«fe If)
btrt Chicfir WW aot intcr-
etted.
Asked how the University of
California canift to be such i
power in xufcktmr research. Tel-
ler iMd a twcKword answer,
'^Emett Lawrence.**
Teller agrees with scientifts
in the labs today who say thfti
f primary advantage of Ubi-
versity managenicnt is that it
**flMkes us independent of too
dote federal control.** The
Univernty also offers good tics
to the academic world, but
''On the whok,*^ Teller said, ''it
works m an unobtrusive main
ner and does not influence the
program very deeply."
• •
• #
w»-
The Student Committee for the Arts
is an organization which through Reg. Fee subsidy brings
unique and outstanding talent to UCLA for students air
minimal ,fiost.
7^
c;iiaiCfc\±£.V''-_w
^^
W»*"!"^''
I
There are both undergraduate and graduate sprmg term
positions open. Any students interested in serving please write
a one-page (minimum) statement of intent/interest with their
name and day/ni^ht phone numbers attached. Please leave
statements in B-324 Murptiy Hall and sign up there for aa
interview. Deadline — April 12. The committee will contact
each appficant.- < /
i^..
i-i.-.
I. ■
Not one lab adminstrator or
working saentitt, UC or Er-
DA official could be found
who would prefer ionufbody
other than the University of
California managing the $400
million laboratory program
that is such a key part in the
nation *s military and energy
piMH.
Lab adnunistrators like hav-
ing ^t^ UC as their bo». With
the actual objectives fad -di-
rection conung from Washing-
ton, Lot Alamos energy chief
Hammel said, "The DC acu as
a buffer to the vagaries of
Washington. We*re not so
susceptible to federal pressure.
Thtre may be changes in the
federal government — hiring
freezes, etc. But if it*s not in
the contract, it*s not feh here.
*The contract between the
C and the government also^
trmnioendt the adnunistiation.
Chanfes in the way the lab is
run have to be negotiated be^
tween ERDA and the Regenu.
At the other national labs.
when IERDA says j^p, they
jump." were HammePi words.
" Livermore'i Nielsen said that
having a university run a
national lab offers tbe ad-
vantage of' taking the profit
motive out of the country's
energy and weafMW program.
""Whtn ikt goiii— 11 lit looks
at ui, it can neglect that nag-
....^jHIg f eciiag^ it jets when deal-
ing with industry ,^^ Nielsen
said.
The advantages the Uni-
versity of Ci4ifornia derives
from running the labs are
iMU'der to define. Carothers,
the Livermore scientists/ coua-
Mlor, took a stab at answeriQg
It.
''What are the advantages to
the University t>f running
UCLAr Carothcrs asked rhe-
tohcally. Answering his own
question, he continued, ** —
Providing an educational nr>
vice for the people of the area.
I believe the Lawrence Liver-
more Laboratory renders a
service not only to the people
of the state of California, but
to the people of the country.
What's the gain to any pubhc
service organization? The only
answer can be in providing a
satisfactory service.**
Though some at Los Alamos
find it strange having to sign a
loyalty oath to the stale of
California, others appreciate
being considered California
residents so that their children
attending UC schools do not
have to pay the higher non-
resident tuition rates.
All admit that the UC actti-
Ully has very httk 4o do with
their activities at the labs on a
day to day basia. Perha^ that,
from the labs* and the govern-
ment*! iMHt of vie«i» is the
chann oi the
\
J'
SPONSORED BY PROGRAM TASK FORCE
ni iCERCICHOFF ttS-lKQ
■j ' ''i.
wm
II I II i I rf Mi III
•*Wi
r
HI
itlMinf an
! itfe-iri with the
BICENTENMAL
■■j'-y* '!,„^-"'»L.^«tti — M^e-^T" uiit^
M
ASUCLA prtsents
\'i
/>
BACK BY POPULAR DEM ANiJi
I
o-ik.
K
I
keep the receipts for^every thing you buy in
the Studente' Stores between March 10 andApril 30
AND YOUXL GET BACK
■f''.
•^
of all your purchases — including tax!
r
A ~.~
f-
> '•
Any number can pteyl Her« are tha Rutes:
1 Hartino today you kaap tha racaipts from ail purchases you make in ofthtf th# SttibeMs' Store in Ackerman
Union Of th« Health Scienoas Store EVERYTHING YOU BUY IS COUNTED IN KEEP YOUR RECEIPTS'
2. Any time after April 15. you can get a SPECIAL REDEMPTION ENVELOPE in either Stofe. One toa customer.
piaiaa -- that's all you'll need
3. Fill out th« fi»aiopi — if s easy -^ and put th all those racetpts you've t>een saving
4. Aflar April 30 (you'll see the actual deadlines in later laauas of the Brum), drop your filled-m. f illed-up envelope
In the SPECIAL BOXES in either Store
5 In a coupJe of weeits after that, you'll RECEIVE A CHECK FOR 1 1% OF YOUR PURCHASES IN THE mail.
^fi
Th9 OietTibacXs]
E'
*
How and Whan Do I Gat My Bonus Monay?
You OONT WAIT IN A LINE"
Your diack will be mailed to you and you can cash rt
anywhwe — tnckidina the SUidents Store, at no charge If
you re feeftng geiwoua. endorse rt over to your favonls
ct«rity. and deduct that amount from your inconrie Ux It's
raaWy all yours, the cheoU really uf good^ and you'll
raaMy get^ne. middle of May
EVERYBODY IN THE UCLA COMMUNITY
ISEUGlBLfl
UCLA
UCtA aMI la
Olek Md Jwie mm
YOU 9m CUOiatE]
Taxtbooks ARE INCLUDED in tha Bonus
Program!
If your Spring Quarter schedule is firmed up. don't wait
— get your books how. and get 1 1% of ttie«r price kMCk
This Bonus Program is done as a way of saving
"Thanks" to all o^ you for sypporttf>g ail of the ASUCLA
andean on — the way you've supporlad our Studerrts'
Store Prog«am Against PHferege, for example
While increasing the Security Peraennel. arwj im-
plementing a Get-Tough ^oMcy, the pMleraga progrem
Is working only because all of you ri^yf supported it
H'8 also saytng thefHiator putting up with the meaaand
inconvenience of the remodeling in the Students
Sibfe By fall, beai Stoi»a.and North Canipua will be
fiady for you — m <iemeintime. yo4ir support has
ffiaae tiuasiilsiii terrific Kerckhoff Coffee Houae —
thunHjt for that.
:ciPry
'>^
SAVE YOUfI RECEIPTS
MARCH 10 • APRIL 30
..Ht.oju i< I II sntfemfi
ii.''a»- W-*'
mHtmmm
^ • "Vi *
jL.
J
<
•^'■4
difcoumwnn coupon
on dry clMimng only
Expiret Apnt t. 1976
-tP:
^1 0 %
tlfscount with coupon
on dry oiaaning only
Expires Aprtf 9. 1976
N
Number 1 Dry Cleaners
1126 Westwood Blvd.
^ 478-6310
next to McDonalds
Complete Dry Cleaning and Laundry
t
Parking in Rear
thcyiid it in tl^c Streets ±jtt tiie Long Beacli G P
^m»
12
IB fifth
1 atel
ISO
Sovili Africa'* JWv SclMclttar.
fto Aiiip
1
to
tliat ia
city tff V.pm% Baacli, as Ettrapf'a
fkalaaaaMa Gmirf Frftx ciacua
to tOIMI
Mb ckcMa
«xpcriniBiil ttiaC —
It
CaHo
in
fbvy rod F
vli
ai
(»2),
to a
Mki
api^roval of the city
hi over tiwo doaan of the
Formula Om
to
a 2-
chv
-ar
' 'fn
INTENSE EXCITEMENT
ENGR. 6: DESIGN AND VISUAL
PROCESSES IN
ENGINEERING SYNTHESIS /
A NEW COURSE IN
VISUAL THINKING
creativity ar\d design are explored with emphasis
on visual processes. Visual concepts and tech-
niques will be used by students to create designs
of their own. Open to all majors — no prerequisites
— 4 units • . ^:
Spring 1976 MW3-5,F9-11
Instructors: < „
S.Dubowsky. D.L Mingpri
Boelter Hall 4731
H- He--
Ms CIto Is the wodd^ ttatat
iiHwiiiK catidintothe
wodd^s bifpatt ■ppciltf& flabi-
raMy aic have to be open 24
hours everyday to do this, or we
aid0ht mifls aafneone who is
starving and heeds one of our
nice fresh pita breads stuffed
with hot Wafal or aHPlM
Botti of these happen to be
under tt.OO Whkh is very
to liear wtien you're starving
/
'^'^^si-
mecLine
Qayley & Wfeyborn in the Vitoge
Eat he^ / Uke ^ / open 24 hrs.
*-
f ••
:--v-
Men's Store
WMtwood
Only!
NOW- IN PROGRESS
WamenSGet you
FOR .
IHE
lefty PogrMn,
scKcossliW mdifof,
wrifmr, wife and
'^ tn^olfiaf gfVas you
fho hard'hiffing
practical factt
ymt n—d fo:
I ayif Hiofob
"^ mofsfraf
• boof sax
discriminoffon
• gmf out of a
dmrnd-mnd job
• avoid iamilY
coraar-conf /icft
• ond much,
much mora/
11.75
i;2ijv^j^
^X
UT OF
^
WESTWOOD STORE ONLY
9»'^>f'
EVERYTHING MUST
■E SOU) TO THE
BMEWAaS
I ■ ■
Au
ITISKOWOR
KEVER!
^ A tmy ring u__;
__ ~- t4lt gold — diamond!'
ttartinf at $28 and matching braccfef
»,
194
Delicate gold creations of love knot rings all with precious
stones of diampndi» rubies saphtres, ^n6 aptk ^ with
matching aciet»sofies arp featured in the fir>e emporium
of handsome jewelry
are featur
at IIKanes.
GUARANTEED SAVINGS
OF UP TO 50% AND MORE!
AIm 14IC Cold lUlbfi
^*' Serpentine tracelef
"^'^ matcMm Necklace
$1^.
You've got to visit Shanes to believe -the vast selectioci ol
w whatever your desire may be.
prices.
And be$t of all are the
SMANE*S lEWaiEHY CO.
WESt
101S nOXTON
WESTWOOO VIILACI
477-Mt3
V
A'lJtvtftifia.if^
"^
-:j5Ar^
■ ^V>}
Rick Bccli€r»
4P^trick Hoaly
fa
-. I /. ■
Glenn S«W
« tf*^*'
Sprind Quarter
Available In Westwood
• '■ ' • . ' ' • ' • , ■
■ . ■ !
Covered par king al 10980 ^ - Union at no char(^e.
». },~ ,■
Wilshire Blvd. (Opposite
UCLA Lot 32) will be a-
vailable
UCLA
dents
Quarter
Spring
$27.00 per
Beginning March 31 per-
mits may be purchased
between 11 a.m. and
3 p.m. Monday through
Friday at 10880 Wilshire
Blvd., level P4 Jower of
space. Permit holders will
be allowed to use the Lot the parking structure. For
further information call
Ackerman
474-8271.
i
\ .
HI
I I
mm
I
I
dai/ bruin
The Unborn Child
By Sirphen Harrison
/
(iditor's note: Harrifoo i$ a
WUhom going into a laborious
defense on particulars, I would
like to make a few global com-
ments concerning David
^ France's artide on aboftiofu^
\ OPINION
f
y,
Probably 'tk>s( disturbing to
mcf was the author's cold and^
dNpassionate attitude w^here I
experienced Mr France to be
(lardheaded, condescending,
opinionated, judgmentM; seM-
righteous, ind lotally devoid of
compassion and understanding
for anyone who might be con-
templating an abortion.
Secondly, I felt a sense of
distrcff at the certainty, arro^^
ga»Ke, and "obfective" intellec-
tual logic with which the author
went about advocating "pro-
viff^" his viewpoints. Although
the question of "when life be-
gins" is a consideration that
each person must assess, it is
much more one consideration
among many. Nor is it an ana-
lytical consideration to be deter-
mined by rigorous scientific
as Mr France clunnsily
attempts to do, so much as it is a
consideration that each man and
woman contemplating abortion
must somehow con>e to grips
with for themselves. It is not a
legal consideration for courts of
law to "solve" but a personal
choice that each person must
make and assume responsibility
for rr^king. _^
Abortion is not a cut and
dried issue. It is not as simple as
Mr France makes it out to be,
and. itie considerations, what-
ever they might be, that each
person must grapple with in
cc^sidering abortion are com-
-pl^, manifold, and totally
unique. Most persons, in my
experience, take th^ consider-
ations quite s^riouily and res-
ponsibly. Abortion iS not an easy
or a pleasant decision for any-
one to make.
Although Mr. France intends
"to assert the humanity of the
unborn child," he neglects to be
concerned with what is to hap-
pen to that san^ humanity after
birth as well as the hunnanity of
its father and mother. He is
content to insure the infant's
arrival on society's doorstep,
but in the next monnerit, aban-
dons him there, helpless, to
MtgftMN
Tto Klalnow -Big Stick* Policy - **Spwk loudly but carry a wiall stick;"
fend for himself Somehow that involved in abortion. «"<^^<Y
does not seem so humane for me, he displays an obvious lack
rT>e. In fict. it seems downright of experience wtth people
irresponsible and thoughless. 4f Judgmentalism and self-righ-
one IS to insure the arrival of ah I tepusness can only exist in a
infant, then one had better be vacuum out of touch with the
prepared to assume responsi-
bility for what happens to the
infant. But, alas. Mr. France
provides us- with no such, action
and merely ignores the problem.
Overall, I would say ¥hat
David France's article lacks sen-
sitivity JQI^ the feelings and issues
of philosophy, the "unwanted."
seem to coagulate — at the crisis
^enters, suicide prevention cen-
ters, drug abuse cemew, psy-
chiatric hospitals, mental health
centers, rehabilitation centers,
the lailfc, prisons, penitentiaries,
a so forth In this way. he can
get some experierwJie with actual
living people wlW ire exper-
— 1,
Gallo protests ad ban
By Daniel Solomon
r
(iditor's note; Solomon is the Communicatiom
Director for Ett Callo)
The January-February issue of la Cerite carried
■wm' open lener to the UCLA Communications
Board by Roberto Rodriquez. Chairman of
MEChA advocating continuation of a Gallo
OPINION
advertising ban. This article was ttiwied to coin-
cide with ASUCLA's'' Communication Board
meeting when lifting the ban was to be con-
iidered. On Thursday. February 26. 1976. this
same "open \einm appeared m the Brum also
timed to coincide with a second Communications
_jrd meeting.
J^Jodriguez's„ot<Bn lettfrjy a diatribe
Gallo filled wUli "wtdiir words and
■''i:
■ *<»
fUrtements.
MEChA, third world stuents and their sup-
porters should certainly be sensitive to the isaue
df political censorship and staunchly support First
Amendment rights, yet they advocate such
censorship when it suits their narrow purpoBS*
Mr. Rodriguez's letter made a series oj al-
lagatiofis against Gallo ar>d the cor>duct pr tpc
ALRB election recently held on the Gallo Randi.
Lies gof^ unanswered quickly become the truth.
So I am taking the lib^ of responding to Mr
Rodriguez's charges. '
Mr. Rodriguez charged that Gallo discnminate-
ly hired Teamsters supporters or UFW uppOMntf
whMe rehiwng to hire UFW sympathizers. In the
next sentence ♦» dmtm Gallo fired employees
sympathetic to the UfW.
You can't have it both ways. Mr. Rodrifuez
Two workers were fired two weeks alter frepeat.
allcr) the GaNo ejections for trying to get other
workers to quit work. Ofie was kn€mr\ to be
partial to the UFW. Nothing was known about the
other's uffMon tytnpethies. Their union sywipilhies
had nothing to do with their being fired iy the
way. both of theae men were hired onif morm»
earlier. (Discriminatory hiring of Teamsters
oiyjb<r? I doubt iti) ^
Mi. Rodriguez ititmi accmm lo womerf wai
denied lif W organizers, while at the same time it
was feranted to the Teamster Union. In spite o4 i
Merit Mve't niiiM at the time thai growers did
not hmtlo pi^^ a««a, COo Jid iiideed
provide access to both unlbn^ Wf^ wai editorially
\iuded by the (^ludittn iee for doing sp.
Mr Rodriguez charges the UFW was not
allowed to post campaign material on bulletin
boards while tt>e^'feanr>sters were. The Teamsters
did indeed post material on one bulletin board at
one of OUT ranches, but Gallo management
quickly removed the fly«f« a short ti(n>e after this
was discover|»d.
The charges brought against Gallo will be dealt
with as soon as the Board is re- funded. Many of
the charges use fictitious nanr>es and are very
vague- We ai-e anxious to disprove them ar>d have
begun discovery procedures to find out what
substance, if any, the various charges have.
Generally, the UFW arn^ its supporters would
have the 30,000 students at UCLA believe the
issues are black and white. That aJ! farmworkers
^wM to belong to the U#W and that all growers,
are to the political right of Louis XlV. The ALRB
electiorw to date have shown otherwise. The UFW
is actively pursuing elections in California where
there is no u#>iOfi representation. This is good.
The Teamster strategy seems to be to hold onto
the contracts they already ha^e. In terms of gross
votes cast, therefore, the UFW is ahead 21394 to
11,071 The UFW lead is partially due to the ballot
choice of **UFW vs no union." Where farnr>-
workers were gh^en a ballot choice of TeanrHters.
UFW or no union, the Teamsters are ahead by a
small margin. Out of a total of 125 such elections
the Teamsters have won 6S (S2%) and the UFW
has won 60^48%). indicating that all farm-workers
do not want the UFW just as all farmworkers do
not want to belong to the Teamsters union.
At the ASUCLA Communications Board
meeting, approximately 150 UFW supporters
appeared. Placards were waved and the meeting
was characterized by audience wiicii|ering, fta«e
whispers »r%d asides The reaammtm^mien of the
Board's own subconvmttee appointed to study
the questtcin was tossed aside arni not coMidered
by the Board members in the face of the UFW
hard^ock of what the world is
I haW a suggestion -to n^ike. I
suggest- that, before Mr France
embarks on any further man- ^ ^ l^*^,^
hunts, he should put his money lencing unwantedness before
where his mouth is and do some he goes mounting his armchair
volunteer work at ai^iy ol the onto another hot and headless
centers where the consequences journey into nowhere.
Sour Grapes
By Christie Menadier
(fditof's ryote Menadier is an orgariizer for (he United farm
Workers o/ America. AFL-CIO)
It is very obvious, especially after the C<5mmun.calions Board ^
Meeting of February 26. 1976. that the United Farm Workers Union
contmues to oppose the actions of the CaUo W.ne Company It is
our contention that, even though the Gallo ranches held flections
supervised by the Agriculture Labor Relations Board, the company
flagrantly disobeyed the rules set up by the ALRB. continuing their
long history of union-bustmg activity Contrary to the case
presented by Dan Soloman. Gallo s chief l*R man, Gallo is not as
concerned aboMt their employees as they would have people
believe.
Gallo has consistently blocked the emerfBtKy appropriations
to
OPINION
In an about face, one subcomnfuttee
who on Tuesday night expfMMd a c«««em for
Gallons First Amendment lighO, took an apo-
liijnU itntlit- Thursday to the 150 UFW people
assembled. Interestingly, the report of the
meeting in Friday's Bruin contained nothing
(CosrtiMwd osi Page 23)
continue the enforcement of the Agriculture Labor Relations Ac^.
the only existing law to gn^ farm workers the right to have union
representation electens. Because of Calk) s actions, the boycott of
all Gallo wines, started in 1973 when the company signed a contract
with the Teamsters without the workers consent, will continue until
one of two things happen: 1) the Tean>sters are declared the winner
of the election, m which case we can no longer legally Doycon, but
will appeal the election through the proper channels, or 2) the UFW
is declared the legal represe«ative of the Gallo workers, and a
contract is signed The boycott is the only nr>eans of putting pressure
on Gallo that has brought them to the bargaining table before and
it is through the boycott and public pressure that the Gallo
company will be forced to sign a contract with the union that really
represents the workers 5
We solidly oppose any further activities of Gallo on tt>e UtLA
ctfinus. We think it is pretty underhanded of Calk) to o«er to
ipomnr an on-campus bentAl, not two weeks a^er the Commum-
' cations Board's dMsion to continue to ban Gallo from a^^ailiainB in
rafwpui publicatiom. It's wtfy dbmmmky an attempt to cresM^ the
impriMinn that "GaHo cares" about people, not to memkm the fact
thai the advertisenr>ents for their wines will be plastered alt over the
campus. On Thursday. March 11, Galk) was giving away flosay
pdsters of Carlo Rossi wines, with the caption "loin the hif
Culture." Naturally these posters did not say that Gallo markets
under the Carlo Rossi label to foil the boycott eHorts of the UFW.
The United Farm Workers Union and its suppsfiers will continue
to boycott aN Galk) wines (all wines from MndtMo, CA) and to
expose all the deceithil and iMegat tactics used by Calk> to expknt
their workers arui to fool the public Our posftk>n on Galk) is JrtiH
fhe same as it was in 1973, Until the ir>k is cjcy on the contracts,
boycott Galk) wines
wdkr HNi inMlcf«or
■ J
-^
to the Editor
In the March 12 article on
logging It IS stated that if a
middle afad man starts logging,
he stands a good chance of
dropping dead. Yet> it is dear
that many paaple with even ad-
vanced cardiovascular disease
we benefitted immensely from
)gg«ng and /unrwng programs.
J fortunately, other individuals
have suffered disasters when
raking up this form of enercise
What then is the explanation for
this seeming discrepancy?
The answer may he in the
jff>dividual determining what
exactly his own purpose is in
running or logging He or she
must ask the question, What do
I warit.to get out of running?"
The most common purposes are.
a) survival prolongation, b) en-
|oy menthol the exercise itself, c)
^ape from uncomfortable feel-
ings, d) esthetic corisiderations.
such as weigh! control Certainly
there jre other purposes, and
any^^gJ^^h persson may as hHTO*
her obfective many of the above
list!
If an individual has developed
cardiovascular disease, arwi at-
tributes this partially or totally to
lack of exercise m his past, he
may^jfttach considerable survival
value to'^l>is new found practice
el iOfging Consequently, such a
person may experience a sense
of urgerfcy in connection With
hi^ logging regularly It 4sk)gica!
that people with documented or.
suspected heart disease who
havebeen sedentary, and take
up a strenuous exertional prar-
tK:e such as iptS^^S '^ which 4
%en%e of urpaiicy is attached are
inviting disaster In addition, if
ar\ infury should interferr i^ifh
the jogger's participation ir his
eaafcitc, an emotior^al crises ca«
be precipitated, if this sense of
urgency exists.
A similar problem is in store
♦or the logger who K>g* fo' *"
escape.* He uses running as nr>ost
people use valujm What he
derives from running is tem-
porary relief from the anxieties
and tensions in his life The
price he pays is being depen-
dent upon running every time
he becomes uncomfortable to
relieve these feelings.
He nrwy also succeed in pre-
venting himself from becoming
aware of those fiaors causing
him to be tense in the first
place Furthermore, the tenSe
runr>er is more prone to injury
than fh* relaxed runner
The logger who |ogs solely for
the sheer exhilaration and plea-
sures which are to be found m
exercise has less at stake if he
canrK>t run" Since neither his
peace of mind rwr his survival
hang in the balance he will
probably only experience mild
disap^OM^tment at being unable
. to participate* ifi a pleasurable
activity
The more a logger is oriented
toward m^ exercise itself being
the goal, the greater will be the
benefits deiivad. and the fewer
th disappointments, anxieties,
injuries. arnSi calamities
Saaiud A. .terkman. MJ»
tesident UCLA Medical Center
by Mike Sproul & Oave Clark
Gallo speaks back .
from Faft S)
about the subcommittee's recom-
mendati€>n to lift the Calk) ban
UCLA students got only half the
I congratulate the UfW sup-
porters on a highly theatrical,
not-loo-subtle denwnstration of
coercion politics and exteiKl my
condolences to the cause of
academic freedom and First.
Amendment Hjghls on the UCIA
campus, where a small, highly
organized minority can deter-
mine what shall or shall not
appear in campus n
and radio
Creative Problem
Spiving Program
Spring Courses 1976
Pattomt of Prob(om Solving
Engr 11 <M Rubinstein)
Learn the basic patterns of reasoning and decision -making The
tools for personal and professional problem solving that is truly
creative 25 students; section
TliM Hill 6 MW 3-5 GSM 1264
MW 8.tO Engr 1 4114 7 TuTh 8-10 Engr 1 4114
_WJD-12 LS214^__^8 IyTnJ0,12E^^
MW 10-12 Engr 14114 t T»A ■' ^^^ '^^
MTWTH r2 BhVsO 10 TuTh 1-3 GSM 12^0
MW1-3 Engr 14114 11 TuTh 3-5 MS 5117
1
2
3
4
S
__ Patloms o< Problom Solving
Enar 12 (M Rubinstein) '
Apply the tools, concepts, and methodologies of problem solving
to relevant sociotechnical problems Prerequisite Engr 11 l^
25 gtudents/section Soction 1 - TuTh 3-5
Inf ormstton Proceeelog Sysleme
rPS M124/Engr MIOOD (L Levine)
f^m Jh.t a c'omput.r .s. wh.t .t c.n do. how " 5[»nr ^J-J/
yoo Should care Math background recommended 75 •lu<»«nt«
TuTh 8-1p. BH 2760 ,<
Viatnl Thinking j _ ...
f Learn about thmkmg processes other than the »«^*'"'™",
iS orws <ncr*-» your awareness of your "•'"/^"J^
MytTand capacity to think visuaJly 30 students Tu 12-2 Th 7-
11 PM '
The Artist on Oatti
H .story 1 98P ( F Bf odie) > --- of
Levn the technique of us.ng histoncal ff cts for he P^'P^/^
irt Chooae your own nwdnim and exiWnment w.th ••""<'•
Shmq^ constructing a portion of * b.ogr.phy, histor«:.l
n^. pC documentary screenplay or television script Tu 2-5.
GSM 33436
ri»ources m your field ol interest Lecture plus smell tecdont
P/NP grede M i MH lOO Discussion Th 9-iz
Design end Visual Processes in Engineering Syfrtheels
Engr 6 (S Dubowsky & QL Mingori)
Explores creativity and design, with emphasis on those aspects
involving visual processes Topics include visual think ingm
design idea sketchmg.^tsual brainstorming, visual prooiSfin
solving sketchirvg snd drawing techniques, and model building
Students. wiM use these tools tn creating designs of their own MW
Arcf>Mology Colloquium: ArcKaeology as a MoHsHc Sdenoe
Archaeology 200 (G Buccellati & J Sack*tt)
To be pfeser>ted m the form of a f»duate seminar, the course is
meant to stage the research procedure followed In team work by
different scholars who have a common intereat m a given topic.
student participation will be encouraged . The primary goal is to
set a model for the development of retgarch attitudea. Th 2-5.
Rolfe 2203 Consent of instructor .^..a— ^^
iliafglsi MiheiHilUJUiofi t Techwtel lieaiis - The JtaJMig^
Archaeology Documentation
CPS M197/Archaeology M197 (G Buccellati) ^ _;,
The course will focus on the relationship between archagoiogicai
data and the interpreter It will be construed as sn inquiry into the
ngiure of documentation in general, stressing the logic and
limitations of the rules of inference Th 10-12. Bunche 217a.
Econ 147 (M Intriligator)
Legrn the approach, techmqua*. and jw^catioiis oi mcorn^
melrtea to perform your own econometric study TuTh 2-3. ia,
Bunche 31 75
Moral Issues A ttie Professloffis
CPS MllO/Phil M154 (T Hersh)
^hMoeophical examination of moral ii
problems ansir>g in medicine, law, ent -
AoiKvsis of principles preiuppmsi in alternative answers. A
di^ussion of the relevance of moral theories to the resolution of
problems TuTh 12-2
. with sttentibn to
fing businees, etc.
AUP 25a (R Bickner) , . ^ _^^
The basic problems of value perception. tK>nrmrBi [""^J^J^
tion. and inlegfatton wm be examined and related to a ma^
Cerent isWirienvironmental P^'^iLi^^T^STa^??
cofieent of instructor in CPS Office. Arch, 8308. TuTh 1030-^2.
Sul>|ect to approval
CPS Mie9/AUP M189 (R Fertig)
Work with a commumty based organization and •«^2J^«
approach^ to perceiving and analyzing community problems
Seminar A discussions, reading A field placement Tu 6:30-
9 30 PM
yiMIMMlH
T
For roof* mto; Lynn Rosenfeid 825-4994 Arch , p309
mmiiwLUf ■'—"■■■'<>
Bob Bicknef 825-2077. Arch B309
./
til
(1
^nwif
\\
■Mb
-u^ i^
I L.
AUTO, INSURANCE
We never lied
vi»//,/ -
(fdkof i noie: ftpM » '
h#f« in K$otion Pfcfure/Tel«-
We can save moat t^^ktOmnxM up to 35% on student
discounted policies Can us ^n the Village for a
quotation
477-2548
agents for College Student Insurance Service
1100 Glendon, #1447 ( -Monty'^: BIdfl ,).
f mm iddiiHiftf thii IcMr o«
fvbuttal to tti« Iccicf thai ap-
pMTcd in d^ IM^r Wndm undm
\ the title XARP. ' TK* ma|or
fhrust ol the letter was a >tinf ing
critjcisfn of Rev Sm" Myung
Moofi. ^pMficaMy bb theology
v^ Ml \Mn6tfhm^idt^ intent or
OPINION
1
pufpoie. which according to the
author, Mr SKabbatai Zvt, it
pure capital gam I am not chal-
lenging Mr. Zyi'% right to criti-
dtm but I ..f»n chaisnel'V *!*•
ute of list aM rnininlormation.
- I wii a hind-raiser toe aev.
to the belt of my
knowledge, I wn6 my brother
By William Prrry Roto
and titter lun^aiaert never lied
or deceived the publ^ At a
nunar ol tect>-«M wore our 1.0.
cardt cstnplgia with a pMie-
graph thai ideiMiAed ut at by
miwonariet of the UnilKanow
Church. Socaadly, the monbort
of the church dwi't work for
waget of any kind but rather ail
material nmi6% #r#- mat ^ *^
Moon %n6 the Maliaitlaa
church I ^e>t^ once taw any
member doing without. People
were fed, dothed it>4 homed,
received medical attention and
transportation at no pergonal
^x^^m^ to the member This it
of and by itteH more than can
be said of the United States, ^t\6
I want to venture to say it it
probably true ahc of hAt. Zvf't
native country
Laitly, aov. Moon doetn't live
up in penthoutet or on a yacht.
I think Mr twk mmM bt wiieio^
chodi out thf tourcat of thii
Ijiformartan, m\6 if these tourcet
are tha ^iaina Nmw Vait Timctr
The i.A fimaa. aad The S^n
fiaaabco Ch#«nide newipapen.
I mmfM li^ • iaa^ie Mr. Zvi
an4 all readers of the DaHy
areiin that it was the same
KMirces that btatiiht the United
Steles ptibbc iti diMorted and
faNadout account of Viet Nam.
The thing that I ftrwi disturbing
is the criticism of Rev. Moon's
wealth. The fact thit Kev. Moon
ar>d the Unification Church have
material gains, i.e. property,
businettet, aren't 4mM96 Sut
why don't paophi e^ailion Silly
Graham. When he geU sicks he
goes to the Mayo Itea. Clinic
not Canaral Hotpilal. Ht fMai in
the firtt data tection of a mod-
(ContimMd oo Faft 25f
The Council On
nal Development
-:t
-♦,
I * •
Presents the Following Courses
For Spring Quarter, 1976:
^r\
- — ■"'/*>>"
4^
CED dourses are regular courses, taken for a grade and
may, where noted, fulfiH a breadth requirement only
under Plan "A'* in the College of Letters and Science. No
CED a>urses may be iised to fulfill requirenr>ents in Mani.
for courses listed as^ enroHment by "consent of instruc-
tor,'' a permit to enroll slip must be secured from the
instjjuctor bjefare going to the c^^putex. General
information, class schedules, etc.. may be obtained in the
CED Office73121 Murphy Hall, X55467.
I IMC !!■• UBSI IHI r««v«^ ii
This clw tvill be a continuation of the Winter Quaner Navap language course «CED
lOOBi The Spring Quarter cour^ wiil be « continuing develup^artf in iearninf
corwerMtional Nawafo ^^ course i» deigned tor beginning ^^tmets oi the Nav jfo
UngMagt. A» 4 languagr course, the HaM will aKo oH«^ Ifwighi into Na«afo tuhuf !► ^nd
theNavaiowayofWe. HeienG«ir«e «— 'ucW
Enrollment Consent Cemputer ID 92S20
Time MTWR 1-2 ^m toom Sunche 3123
E*amCode k - ^^^ ^
irtsiiil
.CfDli4 CaiJhtHLawliteratMfe: A f«4e%> Viei^
This cours*. «^itt ^•iipiof** selected works ^uxttt\ irv fiie ihfet; m^in Unguaues of ih*-
Car»bl>erfnf*^fof' \ nglish Spanish and French.' These works will be siud»**d under th*-
4^>eii of the signtfuani elements thai thev have in crimmon Identity Rat
froteit. Such < ommoe titiwiwl^ ite espet lallv important nt>i )ust he< aus*
aaoweilv mthe field of leneetacademic invfsfiKdtion hui b«'uau>e they are asso* »aif<l
«vith the most intense creativ ity in C ar ibbean Letters and An Sele< ted liter ars y^rkk^ *>l 7
contemporary Carit>bean authors yyill besfudi^as a unit Or Ian Smart. I e< turef
Enroll^Tl«fH4 Consent C ompi.fer iO 92%5
Time MW 10-12 pro ^ «oom Math Sfjence 5147
Ejiam Code I
Contact I Smart xS5989
Umts 4
gfeadth
Humanities
ry
. in die Tliird Wodd: MyttM A
The poipoyt of th» course will be to enamine revolutionary movenr>ents in a
jtnji of third world sociefie* For w^m^, the course will consider revolutionary
iiuMiewnii m golivia. Guinea-Bissau and the Middle East, with a vi^w to arwlyxmg f^
conditions which make for succest. pr lack of success, on the part of revolutionary
f^^ff^^mcots. Dr. Gerard Chaliand. Lecturer
(nrollnrte^t Consent Computer ID 92535
Time: TAt1:3g-3:« pro teoro Men s Gym 2in
ExaroCodelS Ueiti: 4
Contact: M Lofchie X536aJ or Ireadth: Socaal Sciencei
CED OMice. X554i7
^-"ii^-jr
Cf D 141 7 tike l^aweie in Hie Weiterw Miiiipiirrf A CroM-CdkvatStuAr
M Hit t^irtTT t^irianci in gr«a Mtd ttie United Stales
This course will present a crofs-cultur^l study of the Japanese in Anglo AifierMa ami
Latin America from the tirrie of immigration to the present In the process, we will
enamine this ethnic mtrKKity s social. polrtKal. reltgmus. educational/ and>r«MumM
activities in various countries of the lHHestern Hemisph<*fe Special emphasis wiH be
placedonthelapar^esecpmmunify mBra/il Mr fMobuvaTsuihida. Teachmg A->so<tale
PreieWK Hiroshi Wagatsuma. Ir>structf>r of ReccKd
Enrollment COMeoi Computer ID 42580
Time MWf 11 ^m Room GSM iM)B
Exaro C<i»de 4 Units 4 .
Contact N Tsuchida. X52974 sateadth Social Sciencet
,,'•'•> ■ •
Cfoui — , ^ te^
The course wM trace the begmmng^of modern Jewish naiionel»m Uxsm iH "ttcary
Drecur«ors « ttie laie IBih afvi 19ih centuries to the ^cmnh of a politKal mo^eroent
zionHTO wMdienibraces various id>iilng>ril religywe &n6 poliMcal trends and wh. ^
oilminaied in the r^-establ«hmen« ol lewifh mwliund - as rHIerted m luerarx and
Dr RuthKun/et f et Turrr
Computer ID> 92560
Room; Math^t*"*^** ^147
EnroNmcffii: Open
Trme T I t 1g-11 45 am
CK>1% fteedkig-aesearch
T his semmar will cover the reloc at ion er
yNifl II h wfM emphasiae a large .*•;
research paper using primary
ff^ruNmciii. Cor>s«M<t
IE
12
a. tUm^. ASJ955
Unita: 4
x>rtal Sciences
T
E«am Code
ContaO
* «. ..
CN
x«
c
^^^Tot' Amernar^s during ^ J
^ .jry reading and the wremg of a
V <>n»|Hjtrn ID
Unt»s 4
Breadth
Moreon CARP
ti onliiiued troll Page 24 J
9tf\ let,. not coedi. further, Billy
tures, i midtt-mtltion dollar un-
dartaking Ar>d last but not UBtt,
m% taaVM Billy Graham alto byt
dalm to betng an evangelitt.
i em not advocating, con-
:e to Rev. Moon s ideol-
ogy or movemenf, but I am
requesting that instead of con-
cocting eicpotes, check out Rev.
Moon for yourself, if so in-
clined, please do attertd an eve-
ning session at orte^ol his tJni-
fication Churches.
I^n this manner you will at least
get your facts straight as op-
posed to the second-hand infor-
mation that Mr Zvi defiends on
As lor Hev Moofi't anti-com-
muimt MtitMiicfiit, W teas teetd
a prKcMiai in a North Korean^
concentration canfip, a pir active
not too urtcornnK>n for thote
lybo etpaute a rettgious baftal.
As' a rtiatter of f4ct he
was beaten unrr^rcifully. 9ir^6 at
the present tirrie religious
leaders m North Korea ar^ sttll
being incarcerrated or killed
You see. there is rK> such thing
as religious fr^grfom in North
Korea In fact, the very act of
critiicism which Mr Zvi now
enjoys is non-exis'.ent in comr
munist North Korea Instead of
criticizing: I ¥yould ask that Mr
Zvi search his own heart and
find out how much humanism
exists in his heart! FurthernuKe.
I would like to know Mr ZviV
M
^n Tor rtuknif-a!
and ttis ettoft^ it awy
lor ^,-
tyfa^fng ^^6 implementing his
human concerns Since Mr Zv»
lias categorically denouf>ced
Rev Moon at a fraud, just for
my own edification I would like
to hear his alternatives
le CtHtU
ri VotK* ^•'■M. Location
^ I lair
MEN fc WOMEN
We Style Long Hair &
Also the Latest Full CuX,^
-i»i- ^r,i-T- ,^
J, Mr ShabbaUi Zvi step
forward with your plan for
wbi Id peace, a worid free of
starvation, a world if^it of war,
poverty, and racism. Please don't
lay more rhetorical ideology on
us. do It! Do it with your actiorn
and your deeds! A campus
heavyweight like you has got to
have a plan. Please. Mr Shab-
batai Zvi. step forward the
world is waiting!
Shampoo & Blow D17 or Df7 Cut v
Manicuring & Pedicuring
We alao color and give Body oanvi wavee
teeeevb Lt ceete A^. why pay fm)re'>
Weetwood VRIee« ecroea trowi U.CL^ #7»-777e
PMtdite Let #1 , ^
The Department of Slavic Languages
announces an
Undergraduate Seminar on Pasternak's
DOCTOR ZHIVAGO
• ' : . *
No Russian required
Slavid 199, W 3-5
Professor Thomas- Eekman
BuncKp 5274 ■ ,
Parallel seminars ire taking place at a jiumber of Southern California c^ainpuses. All the
participants will meet on the weekend of May 7-9 at the UC Lake Arrowhead Conferei^e,
Center fpr workshops with gii«»t speakers. For more infbrmation cail Professor Eekman
(825-8t5f1 Of come to the fwst nf>eefinf . '
}
>
1
Westwood
940 Westwood Blvd.
477-6867
Hr» Daily 10-9 Set 10-6 Sl Sun 115
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. A FOUR-cUy CONFERENCE WITH -
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April 15-18
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SPRING QU I ARTER1976
The Fretfmah Seminar Program « dnigned to enrich your first year
experience by a»»uring you immediate associalior. with one o< the
best (acuity minds on this campus, while also offering you the
continuing collegiate association of from ten to fifteen peers, w*!a»e
intellectual interests arc similar to your own. Those of you who take
advantage of this Seminar opportunity will also find yourselves
immediately engaged in the exciting, fascinating work of a scholar on
the frontier of his field, delving far be^h the suHace of survey.
analysK to explore the primary sources ol knowledge and '"vestigaje
problems for ^.hich no textbook ♦olut.ohs have as yet been
formulated. Fmally, these Seminars of4er you thechanceof ^»"«'«««
far as you dare to venture *rom your present disciplinary predispo-
sition, whether that may lie in the social, life, or physKial sciences, the
humanities or fine arts, blazing trails toward horizons you may only
have glimpsed before and always wanted to know more about
College of f.n«^m^eshmen will receive four units of credit
^
ANTHftOfOiOCY «C
"Moche Art ol P«fu A SlM^ ot Preco*umb»«n Symbolic
Connmu n icjt ion "
CbrMTopbef Donnan, Auooatc ProleHor of Anthropolofy
An investigation o* a Precokjnibian P«fuv««n ctvilizatiofi
through anaMii ol artistic r«pMMfltilion EmphjMS is piaod
on techniques ot cuhural itumtruction through kxmo-
graphic analysts farttcuiarly recommende<i to student*
interested in archMobf^r and^or art hbiory.
The d#M wiN nwet on Wednesday from 9.00 to 12 00 noon
in S12 Hainci ¥UKi. Computer ID* 12710 Enrollment is limited
to 10. Coffi^nt of instrucfof is required; see ProlcMor Oonoan.
Wednesdays 1000-12 00. 301 Haines Hall. extentiOA $1991
Department extenitfm: S4421.
**Mcd«rn Poetry %nd Religious Experience
Kichard K. Cross Associate Professor of English
The course will c*jifltef on the dialectics of faith and
-evident in the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkms. T.S Eliot,
and W.H; AiJen. but it will aho foncern itself with the
Dipnysian vis«on of OH Lawrence arid T^ Hughes ar>d with
the mythnriaking of W.B Yeats
The claii wi4l meet on Friday from 2 00 to 5^ PM in 3106
RoMe H^n. Cmwfftiin lO 33600 Enrbllment will be limited to-
IS. Enrollment* will be open ar>d may be done directly b^
connufter. Oepartrrtent evtenVion 53279
tNCt«H9it
"Rhetoric, lanfuif g. Research"
Ronald i ^recmtn. Associate Professor of Cngl»h
Siudsfits oltcn complain about the texts they af^ using m
freshman English I propote thai they learn a good bif about
research, different rhetorical modes *n<i u^es of languape.
audiences, etc., by compiling their own They will also
become acquainted with authors aitd writings, both classics
arid current, in a variety of mocbs ^ a variety of areas of lif«
an thought they, would each take a particular section of the
antholofy, or a particular kind of writing, a thomc, €tc., to
work on if>dependantly. reporting to thf group, offering
rationales and dcftme of their nlt<tir|n and tnduston agawKt
competing materials for available »pai£*^Thus logK, roiion«
mg, evidence would be a part of the experience. Writmgoul
queftitms on inar>y Icvdi »nd having to aniwer some from
their selections or thos^ of Of hers.thouW Kb«^ a ca»fyo*or for
other couTMi in their oollai» carocr. The course, thus, would
open new avernics of expforaiion while providing a variety of
different writing arni evaluative experiences
Th^ class will meet on Monday from 3:00 to 6:00 P M m
4343B GSM Computer 4 Da 33601 Enrollment is limited to 15.
Enrollment will be open and may be done directly by
computer Department extension : 53279
lr> the Professional School freshman seminars, faculty
members will analyze aspects of their professions from a social
perspective You will be imruiywd to the dvnamK inter
aaion of technology social cortditions 9n6 needs. »nd
professional practice The nwrfor substantive purpose of these
seminars would be for you to come to grips with the
imeHectual and normative LUiwpliJitty of applymg knowledge
to practical human pigfcllw^K A iimaiir/ but «nportam
• attirting you m defining your own acaoamic ar»d
/
*a
fNCilSN9iC
Shakespeare' The lr>dividual ^nd Socwty"
Charles Gullans, Professor of English
A study of four of Shakespeare s plays about the rights and
duties of the individual m relation to the state and society.
The dass wiW meet on Thursday from 3:00 to 6:00 P.M. in
2220 Rplfe Hall. Computer ID #33602. Enrollment is limited to
15 Enrollment will be open tnd may be done directly by
computer. Department extension 53279
f9^CLBN9«>
"The First Detectives"
Albert Hutter Assistant ProMor of English
An exploration of the origins and importance of detective
fiction Dickens. Poet. Wilkie Collins, and Conan Doyle — as
well as modern detective writers like Rayniond Chandler <nd
Ross Macdor>ald - will be studied in ^ effort to define this
finre *nd its essential contribution to contemporary fictional
fcKms
The cla» will meettJirWednesday from j 00 to 6 OOP M )n
3127 RoHe Hall Computer lp« 33603 Enrollment is limited to
15 EnroUment will be open itnd may b* done difertlv by
computer Deoartment extension 53279
iNCIJSN9K
"IWIark Twam Humor into Art"
Thomas WoitMm. AssiUJrit Prolesmrdf English
The course of reading will be chronologicai. beginning with
fheearly travel writings ander>dlng with the prolownoly tragic-
writings of Mark Twain's law years
" The claifwill meet on Tuesday from 2:00fo 5 OOP M ^3123
Bunche HMi Computer IDa 33604. Enrollment is limited to 15
Enrollment will be open and may be done directly by
computer Department extension: 53279
VtfMKIMMNTAl SCKNCE AMDMCINKMNC 9iA
"Wasting the West Historical Study of En^Kfonmenial'
Problems m the Western U.S." _i__
Richard E Lmgenfeher Professor of Geophysio in Rci«tence
CANCEUfD
CfOiOCYtO
"field Seminar — Geology of California
C A Nelson Professcy of Geology
CLOSiO
"The Revolutionary Peasant in China
Chfirtopf^ L Salter, AsscKiate Professor of Geogi4(>hv
The ^99i*ni in the Peciple's Republic of China has been
given a new role of political, economic trid social sigmfK ^ce
This seminar will explore the traditional role peasants have
had in China; note the chaHies in such roles and assess the
potential for this transf(»rmai.on trtflueiMiing oth^r develonms
nations
The class will meet on Thursday from 3:00 to 6 00 P M in
2221E tunche Hall Compute^ IDa 37649 EnroUment islimited
to 15 Enrollment will be open and may be done directly by
computer Department extension, S4655 ___
CiOfHYSICS AND SPACE PHYSICS
"Origin dnd Evolution ot the Solar System'
W M Kauia. Professor of Geophysics
-Thf pnmvy emphasis will be on our understanding, based
on astronomical, chemical. »nd dynamical data and theory.
«f how the sun. planets, etc.. fonned *nd have developed.
The poa»«hilities of other planetary systems will be taken
yp. The uibfect, will also be discussed as an exam^/le of
how scientific research and exploration (including the *pMC9'
programi ^rt moinrated (P/NP grading only )
The class witt^meet on Tuesday and Thursday from 10 30-
12 00 in 3853 Slichter Hall Computer I D« 40398 Etirollmem
will be limited to 20 E nroi\ment wiH be open and may be done
directly by computed Departmen: extension 51919
CfftMANIC LANCfJACK 9SA
The Works of tKorr>^ Mann*
wSfganK Nehnng, Associate Professor of German
Thomas Mann whose centennWI birthday was cf lekFited in
1975 IS the the mofl representative German man of letters in
the first half of the 20th century Hi> narratives belong to the
masterpi^eiof world literature The semmat wtfl dwcuss hts
famous novellas, such as lonio Krofcv. Oeatfi in Venice, Ike
Mood ^ tile YValiOiifp Timany of which were turned into
movies), his humerous novel EelblU«ii<alsoa mcxviei and his
.aesthetic *nd political legacy Dolrter FaiMlw. No German
required The works will be Te»d and discussed in En|t»sh
The class will meet on Monday from 1 00 to 3: 30P.M. .in 2135
Rolfe Halt Computer lt>« 41475 Consent of instructor ik
required; «ee Professor Mehrmg, Mondays 9:00. Tuesdays
10:00 323 Koyce Hall, extension 53955 department cwlff nsion
51855 Enrollnr>eni is Wmited to, 15
OgftMANIC LANCUACES 9^
"tma^n of Women in German Literature from lessing to
Hctaolt Brer hi
Ehr hard Bahrr Prof esior of German
The goal of the.serhinar is to increase the understandirtg of
the role woinen play in mafor works of German literature in
English translation from the Englightenment lo the present
and the development of defined sex roles in German
Inerature during that pencxi The discusswn will foc-us on
social stereotyping of women in each work arwl the degree to
which an author creates characters wfwjranscerKf stereo-
||ipes. Works included are. Lessing s Minna von Baiiihtkn
arid (nriKa CdMWk, Goethe s iplMBenia km Immk and Eaust I.
Kleist s fcwHiedlea, F Schleget s Ucinde. Hebbeis Maria
PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL
School of Arctifftecturc
and Urban Planning
ARCHITfCTUBi AND U«*AN PLANNING 9tA
An Invcstifalion into Ideal form in Architecture'
Thomas R. Vreeland. )r . Professor of Architecture/Urban
In what sense »s architecture an art form? How does rt
bea>me more than |ust a collection of ^actical d'wnemionsi
in wfvai way can it trarwcend ordinary building? Start™ with
tAM» elements such m a iuoneiy. a staimvay. a poack the
itudent 4mcmmn how everyday obfects can be tramformed
into archrtecture thrmt^ tf>e process of idealization. The
iCAl. Mrtk direct ubur giowand
of mind will be explored Discussion topics will include
awarenoMr. perception; immediate experience mejnbry
.imagery. votMning. reflection, and how all these processes
unite to'produce action and communicationi The^oblems
and benefits of being self-tt>nsCious about the mind will be
discussed ETufciWi will be uWd to iiurrease the student s
awarer>ess of hn own memal prcxesses.
The class will meet -on Tuesday arKl Thursday from 3 00 to
5 00 P M Conservt of instructor is rehired, see Shirley
Nounnan, 8237 Architecture, evtoilgivi 54619
•readth Humanities
School of Education
method uMdn partly MMorical.pi^ direct ^^^^
involves direct ixpaiimentitinn nmk A var«ty of tecnfttques
iMch at p^>et^ cuttii«. iolMip peM and ptetofraphy
The ciMTwill nMon IWedneidiy fvom 7:88 to 10 80 P M
Coment oTiratniclor is requKed; see Shirley Nounnan B237
Archincture. extension 54619
AKCNITfCTUmf AND URBAN PiANNMG «
Meamng^ mti Mmd tk* Role of
Johring"
Charles W. RuiHi. Associate Professor of An»iHrture/l rbar^
Architecture ii oMe of many fiefdi where miafery plays a
imjfimcant lole m proWen; tohrmg . Thn course wiH explore
that f#le >nd m so domg begin to repeal the :lynjm*cs ol
M^ as well m >otiie of Hie creative
HMXATION 98
"Edufation as a Profession '
Georbt f . RneBer Profe»or of Education _ __
A ^UcEiption and anaMi of varioui elements of education
asapMession and field of study D iscussioih of the educator V
oMfitioni. possibilities, and rewards ~^
The class will rneet on Tuesday ar>d Thursday from 9 00-
llOOi AM ir ^ Moore Hall Computer ID •: 294S8
Enrollment will mited lo 15. Conaem of instructor is
reqM»ed. lonuc i Prolessor Kneller 9 30-10 30 A M daily 245
r loorr'HiTI extension 58385 Departn>erM esteniiQn; SiJJ9
Breadth Not applKable
School of Engineering and
Applied Science
i._,....^
Engineering Its
Datiiel nose^'^-*!
^redirit ^ -
Role »r>d fiinrtion
m
Sor lefs
me Ji^
toward graduation though not toward breadth requirement
Mtisfaction. No student will take rruKe than a total of two seminars,
nor nrKKe than one per quarter, fine Arts freshman seminars will not
apply toward the breadth requirement in either College
In certain mstaricei theBoMessional School freshman seiriinars will
be considered by the College of Letters and Science as applicable to
the breadth requirement. (Details in April 5th Daily Bruin).
— Available only to freshman students.
— 4 units credit. Letters ^nd Science courses satisfy breadth
requirements in the College of Letters dnd Science
— These courses are informaf seminars. 2-4 hour* pm
— EnroUment is limited; IS students unless otherwise stated
— Students may enroll in one Freshman Seminar pef quarter
— Call the appropriate department for further information
— AtMlkmal Freshman Seminars will be offered next year
9
Schnitilfers Miia Ebe. Mutil's Tonka, Brecht s Mother
Ceor^e and CaiK«ian Chali Circic. C VVolf sThe Qoart ior
CkHrta t. No knowMRI^ of Cern^an required. All texts will be
read in English.
The class will m&m on Monday from 4:00 to 6:00 P M in 130
Hairtes Hall Contputer ID« 41476 Consent of instructor is
required, see Professor 8ahr. Mondays 2 00, Tuesdays 11 00.
322 Royce Hall, extension 53955 Departn^ent extemion 51855
Enrollment is limited to 15.
irtterested in folklore if>d general literature as well a^ those
who intend to i^aior in Armenian studies
Scheduling to be arranged Enrollment is limited to 15
^ter IDa 60812 ErtfoHmpnt wil! be open 4nd mav be
directly by computer Peftartmef^ ertension .SlSJfc.
I
»«LOSOfHy 98C
Sexual Morality"
Richard Wasserstrom,
CLOSH>
Pr
Law and Philosophy
■'^
RAUANfOC
Dante's DIVINE COMEDY { in English >'V
Ciovahnia Cecchetti, Professor of Italian and Chairman of the
Departmem
A reading and discussion of moit of Dante sOhrine Comedy
in translation Without neglecting its historical background of
medieval philosophy and political through!, the poem will
aho ht corwidered from the general point of view of its
existential context of personal and social isolation
The class will meet o" Thursday from 4:00>6 00 P M in 246
Royce Hall Computer IDa 46373 Enrollment will be limited to
12. E/^rollment ¥wll be open and may be done directly by
computer Departmerw extension 57670»w — ^
Nf At fASVOm lANCUACB 9iA
"Omar Khayyam A Seminar on Persian Poetry in English'
Amin ftanant. Professor of Persian »nd HislCKy
The enduring art of the eleventh cenfiiry Persian poet-sage
will be studled-in tfie light of contemporary philosophical
concerns and artistic ser>sibilities The students wHI t)e en-
-couraged to combine their analytical approech to poetry with
a recreative effbrt by retranslations of literal translations from
the original. This seminar should be of interest to students
with curiosity about poetry , existential literature, oorv-western
cuhurcs and the »n of translation of poetry
The daM will meet on Mol^y from 1 00 to 4:08P.M. in 218
Haines Hall Computer IDa 60810 Enrollment is limited to 15
Enrollment will be open ond may be done directly by
Department extemion: S1SJ8.
-^
NiAK EASTOm UNCU
"David of SanoMO: The Armenian Epic"
Avedis K Sartfian. frefenor of Armenian
Analysis of the contents and characteristic features of this
great literary maiter piece against the background of the
historical deyeloment of Armenian folk literature. TheEr»gli»h
translation of tf>e epic, «8hich wm discovered ^od recorded in
the late 19th cemury, will be the msm focus of the seminar.
The course wHI concentrate on rhe various Armenian versions
of the epk, as weU as the e«<entw» critical literature on the
tuMrr The tommar m deMpwd primarOy 4or students
PHIiOSOn^ 98f
Philosophical Analysn '^
Warren"^ Quinn. Associate Professor of PrnloMphy
This seminar is try introduction to the mefhodi am4 concepts
of conten>porary Anglo- Amencaf^analytic philotophy. with-
emphasis on some of the early work df Btrtfsnd Russell
The c(^ss will meet on Tuesday from 3:88 to 6:88 P M in
334K GSM An addttian^l^our is to be arfaofed Computer
ID« 66667 Enrollment is limited to 15. Cpnaont of instrucioi is
required; see Professor Quinn. Thursday 2 00-4 00 , J59Dodd
Hall, extension Si^-OepMrtnwni extension 54M1
sr ANI6N AND rotLivoum^ 9ie
"Contemporary Mexican iiteiaiU^e".
Idhn A. Crow, En^entul Pi eltllor -of Spanish
Analysis of contemporary Mexican novels, shurt stones.
essays, and poetry as a reflection of Mexioin^life No
knowledge of Spanish is necessary Works at^^n^ may be'
read in English jClask discussion relher than formal lectures
The class will meet on Wednesday from 2 00-S 00 P.M. in
3123 Rolfe Hall Co^uterJD* »4982 Enrollment is limited to
15. Coment of inslrbcUiLjjVequired. contact ProfessorCrow.
Tuesdays ^-2 P.M., 5323|to1fe Hall, extension 51036 or 514 K)
ff ANiiN AND PORTUOJEK 98C
"Stories and Storytellers
Stanley L Robe. Professor of Spanish _ ,^_
An exploration of the oral narratives cM'r«*nt amortg people
who speak Spanish, involving the study 6f traditional tales;
legends, and the storyteMer who narrates them The seminar
will examine the role 4nd social function of each of these, as
well as the- personality and repertory ol the storyt«»ller
focused upon Mexico tnd the SiHithwest United States.
including the Lbs Artgeles area.
The class will meet on Monday. Wednesday and f ndav at
2:68PM ir>3115RolfeHalt Computer iOii^ni Enrollment IS
Kii^iled to 15 Consent of the Inttructor is i«^ired idntsa
Professor Robe; Mondays A Thursdays 9 AM. Wednesdays 3
PM. and by appointment 5316 Rolfe Hall, extermon 51036 or
51430
TRESHMAN SEMINARS
m viewed by Humanists. Scientists and
Its role in and husbandry of human resources:
of "effort, work, comrol. and dedlion making Its function
in the coo^plex of societal proMeim. ^ _> _ . ^.
The dati will meet On Tuesday »nd Thursday from 3*80»
5 00 PM in 5225 Math Sciences Computer IDa 31170
Enrollment will be open and may be done directly by
compsiter Department extension $2514
ifvadth: Social Sciences — .
School of Medkine ^
of Phy
and
fNVSIOiOCT98
"The Living Heart"
Wilh'ied f.H.M Monwnaefts.
Medicir>e. Chairman of the .
Taking the structure and function of the human heart as an
example, the course aims at the interpretation of Life
' m the human body U
the nature of the
Likely topia: The heart as a viul organ. 'J»«
heart's contractility ; the role o< d»e heart in the d»tribul»n of
falood the nMurt and funcHam el kfrn^di the jildtadUfi et
the circulation: the purpose ol t^e letter In reUtion to
metabolism the nature ol disease as an alteration of tmrmm
structure and function, the mafor heart »"d circulatory
dimmm the ref»lBtion of the circulation fn the dli«ti*onaa
mixed hi«onuMogi<^'l ipprearf will be attempted, whic^ m
ohen the real foundation of scientihc knowledge Such
treatments may often correspond to the case >^»y^y
ky Conent Sciemihc-pliiBip^lcal
BmplgB iteture of tife. le^Mlring both
synthetical ippwerhrt. for the totaRiy of m
the place of Man. who,
h^tf>fs IS not unique as far as the
are
0
The deM will meet on Wednesday from 4 00 to 6 08 P.M. i^
$2-887 Cemer for the Health Soertees Computer IOi918m
Enrollment is limited to 15 A Permoiion 9o Enroi slip is
iMgded. pick one up horn Mel Homer, S3-299 Cemer lor the
Health Sciences, extension S5667
greadth life ScierKes
School of PuMk Health
nmUC HiMTH 98 '
"Virus Disease Discoveries ant*, rrmquests
Telford H Work, Prolessor of ln«eci.ousar>d Tripled Diseases
virus diHBHHr: turh » smaMpox. rahiet. mfluervia,
I. eiteephalitis, yellow fever and ^hemorrhagic
fevers, are exan>ir>ed in the context of viral eHoAegr. historical
discovery, medical and bio-geographyepid** ogical
elucidation, and their con^MeftthfOMgh the scientf^ uf puhiK
health The seminar ippiiiit erlR Invohre direrted stu^ m
tny^ift pgfiodicih literature, use of audiovisual matenah. and
MMiwi^al tfM^itt ii.iLinjilii«t aod gr^Mp diicunionv
The daM wiM meet on Tueaday and Thursdey from 10 00 to
12:88 noon in Public Health 41-295 Computer ID • 78950
EnroNmem is limited to 15 Comem of insuucior ii required
«¥ork in 41-295 Public Healdi, on Mondays 4
1i*12.eirtenaion 553» 6r 55154
School of
Welfare
SOOAl WfU
Thf C r>mmunity as
N-Aih^n E Cohen. Pr
With the imipart of
niiy life has he« oir
School of Engineering and Applied Science
Assisljrit pM»l«»ssoi ill f
ENONEERINC 98A
"Piasiu V ^nd You
Stephen I C annon
and Applied S< lence
Whac dte plasiitv a#>d how have they mtluemed y>i*^f »••••
styled How do plastKS lompari* ¥yirh mtMallits and tftdnu
both economically aiPidmethar^i.inv' Curreni trends m
plaatiis uiili/aiMin in this < t>untry art* also diM MNM>d j
The class will. meet on Tuesdav and Thursday from 9 W i..
11 00 A M in 5148 MaiH S« lem es ( omputri ll>»int»^
Enrollmeni will be open and m-iv h«> ftone djiei tU hv
computer Departmefit intension
greadlh: Not applkahle.
ENGINEERINC 9gC fPendlng Appro%al)
'(^yt lu *. 4nd BuddNpm
loivALA. OoKU«^. |i AsscM idle Pfolfsscir ul I nginefnr>n and
Applied S' - - '
t Compar I'.ui! and ii anslaii«>n between asp#" •- ' •» « yb»«ifu-«i'
and BuddhiM philo^phy , partu .^larlv neuf - 'KM antJ •'jjo
strudure Print ipal sources will V artilKial inielligenc »♦
(robolsr (lassKalweMe*!* logic T.ib«Man Buildhivrn arul
GregCKV Bate*on\,work on s< hi/uphrenia Ihis < our^e is ol
particular interesi k) philos<*pf%v Mudents _^
Call eetension'SJSn tor further infcjrmaiMX } ^1 .
CANCEUfD ^7~ -^rv^
educaiMm vvi'Ilim- i,i« •* "•' •••<»nN .imi wk « t*^ *<» **mpius mi'iii
^jy^ <*m«*rKi'<' '**^'l '■•'•' 'M al fMHpaiffiinN I hi* %rmin«ii
will anaK/4 h..( .•< n«nsiM <. oi »Hi«M'iii-«las ««»mnHji*ii\
Uvmg arvl i-xjilnn^ jiosMhlr iIimm imhis i«»i tvUum
Th4"Uss will nw-H <m^«Mlr><«sila> trtf«»i.1 00 lo 4 («)PM ••>
256 r>Kl«l Hall I fin'illMMm will In- lirniHMl lo IS I rwiillnMMi
will III- o|M'n and mav »»«• a..nv iI.mm iK li> « «»n^>ulr-^
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CALCULATORS
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styles in the ASUCLA Stu-
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janeys. sweatshirts, hooded
awatshirts. jackets, hats.
oocfcs. arxj carries a UCLA
gyifi bag or bike bag.
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tiat Nio.
Cat attar t pjn.
(at At)
I 111- •' • I ■ ■ I
HAHS OHRT
tn the Y18»0«
(2 BLOCKt PHOM CAMPUS)
flALJBtQH, PEUGEOT
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SKATEBOARM
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ROOM In
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27t-03tt or 27t-t471
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(
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STATItTlCAL FAST DEPEMOASLE.
SEVEN OATt A WEEK MANY TYPE
STYLES 030-042S. (SS Olr)
PtIOPESSlONAL Typlr«9 '^t
020-7346 2 3O-S30 9t 3S4-1047 altar
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AM
Enjoy UCLA'S SOUTHERN CAMPUS 76
a dynamic yearbook rich in color, coverage, pictures!
Wntch for detaits in the mail or tfilftphnnft R7Fv???1 — __ —
sou
Tkg
It if difficult to approiurh
*'fr-fonned bmadT albums with
an open mind, flaoc to nsoy
attempts of this l^ind in the
past have bsen turkeys, or at
best mediocre reflections of the
original group Solid Silver is,
fortunately, m s different clas*
This IS tk€ onginfti Quick-
silver, piut Dino Vaknti, who
is, of course, not an pngmal
iber (snd not a very wel-
eitlKr). The ntusie ts
not quite in the same oid ityk,
and some of it lacks that
unique element that makes
Qwclrsilver stand out from the
SsA Francitco crowd back in
the 60*s. But the albiim is solid
and even in its new style,
which is a somewhat simpler
and more straightlorward rock
style than either of the first
two albums.
The high level of musician-
ship is very much in evide
from the beautiful cnsp guita
playing of John ^ij>polina
and Gary Duncan to the much-
improved drumming of Greg
Elmore. Old-school Quicksilver
fans will especially appreciate
•Witchcf' Moon,'' s lovely
song built around the familiar
Cippolina- Duncan guiur inter-
play that made this >sik1 such
a treat in the first place.
Wkk m Ocemm Vkw
Commiry Joe McDmmkt
The most striking feature of
this album ts us incredibly
inane lyrics Some singers man-
to mumbk so success! ully
that you can never figure out
what they're saying, even after
replaying the record enough
times to turn the grooves into
aquaducts. Coimiry ioe, oo the
other hand, "CMiMMits s#-MMS~
ly that yot get the feeling he*s
proud of himself for coming
up with the worst words tiace
Black Sabbath's Iron ^Maa.
Country iocs voice, while
pleasant enougi^. neems to have
lott a lot of Its range < prob-
ably from perpetually smoking,
that ^'Jam^i^n Weed" he keeps
babbling about) and sometimes
sounds incongrxious ,^ia the
slower, string-backed numbers
l>e tongs themteWcs Vary in
quality only in that sonK ate
mota HMiiocfe than* others
Our hero tries his hand at
various styles reggae, quast-
disco, spiritual, revival snd
fven n~nice tailing ditty In
doing to. he sheds new light on
the old saw. ''Jndi of all trades,
master of none "
Included with the alburn. is a
poster of a toothy Mama
Whsle and her bouncing baby.
Iiitk Freddy Whale Vm-
blazansd acsatt the potter's
ti^ IS the sibum's theme: **Savc
the Whales Save the Earth **
Save your money
"i^ Peter Patrrmi
THE LOWER DIVISION PROGRAM
of the
COLLEGE OF LETTERS & SCIENCE
nir^Mnr! Stanley^. WolDert
>.■•.•
../
If you enjoy Freshman or Sophomore stanSng in the College of Letters and Science
and have passed Subjeftf A . . . You may still apply for^ admission to
k-1'^''
Quarter
WHAT JS THE LOWER DIVISION1»ROGRAM?
"The Lower Division Program is a two-year under-
graduate program organized in a sequence of five study
units of one quarter each. Students have the option of
entering or leaving the pr©gram at the end of each study
unit. Those remaining with the program havethe^
advantage of satisfying College of Letters and Science
requirements. Each LDP U>»it approahces a general
subject area through the integration of several aca-
demic disciplines into one comprehensive "unit" of
study. .11
Each Unit is under the direction of one faculty
member with several other distinguished faculty
-members also contributing thetr expertise. Within each
Unit, students will participate with faculty in iectures,
small discussion groups and seminars where they will be
encouraged to express themselves in writings and
presenlations of individual and/or group papers and
projects related tolfVe topics being studied. There wrfl
also be tutoriaf groups, films and some field trips.^
Students will be encouraged actively to participate in
an evening program where they will have the oppor-
tunity to voice their criticisms and give suggestions for
The Lower Division Program, as well as organize
functions and events of their own choosing.
What Unit will be taught this Spring?
Unit X Spring 1976
•^rigim of Li«e^
Malcolm Nicol, bepaitment of Chemiitry
The third unit of The Lower Division Program is a
natural science unit organized around the topic. The
Origins of Life on Earth. The unit will provide a broad
exposure to the life and physical sciences appropriate
for students with little mathematical and scientific
backgrounds. This rs not simply a survey of non-
technical introductory material from each field. In an
integrated series of intensive short courses in astro-
nomy, chemistry, genetics, physiology, molecular and
developmental biology, the students will learn to read
and to comprehend selections from the primary
scientific literature in areas of general, rather than
narrowly disciplinary interest. We intend that the third
unit will provide students with both some knowledge of
the problem of the origins of life and a better under-
standing of the nr>ethods of contemporary science.
What do I have to do to get into the program?
To apply for The Lower Division Program we only ask
that yoJwrite a two- to four-page «say telling us why
you feel such a program would be good for you, and
why you might be good for the program. The purpose of
the essay is to give us an idea of what you are like. For
this reason, the subject and content of the e«ay ♦''^e
been left up to you. Your essay should be sent to:
AdmissiorH Committee
The Lower Division Progi^m
2226 Campbell Hail
University of California
Los An§cle»^CA 90024
(825-7104)
:>-V
\
f^F.~><»»« M.f^' '
i
'. ,^^
'X**'
n^*.
t-
1
I
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
1
in
paefcA9»og and Ihippifto ^^ •*•© MM •ppti«nc»t tor 220 voiti
PACIFIC-KING t>i*»««.Mis>.L«.«.prt»»
4«2-
<
1
t
t
A T«n Day SemiiMr In Israel
SpMliMy planned for full-tiirw tacuJty
0%pmnur9 datt: Juna 7. 1976
Pric«: $850 includM hoMt and all accomodations
For further information contact
Rabbi Shael F. Siagal
Amarfcan Zionist Fedaratiilm
515 Park Avenue
New York, NY. 10022
(212) 371-7750
J
Wc Arc Trained To Fit Your
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Cosmetic opticisnry is s unique methol
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Cosmetic Opticians
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Contact L enses Too! ^
918 West wood Blvd.
478-6488
DIVORCE
ADJUSTMENT
GROUP
Coonseling Division
Psychological & Couineling Siervices
for those interested in exploring their
separation or divorce experience and sharing
their comeanm kt m grmip~9Mkig:
<>
Once a week, for two hours.
y>
Sign-ups now at 3334 Murphy HiUt,
Of call (82/5-4071
BOMBSHELTER
PATRONSi
f — ■
Remember the leisurely lunches on
the grass in front of Life Sciences?
The future of this area is undecided,
but the University a seriously jcpn-
sidering a plan to turn it into a con-
crete courtyard. We thinic that this
plan is unnecessary and unwanted.
We want a reasonable plan with
more grass and less concrete.
If you agree, please sign our petition
this weeljc at the Bombshelter.
Sjponsored by: ^ ^--w-^
BMea^cal Sciences Council
Math and Physical Sciences Council
Health Sciences Council -^n:^
toaincerinf Council of the ^
;fl§ineei
<l<y ^>>iiH<!wO Ai^e^iuiiuii
I ■• ^ ■■
'Seven BecHjties': qnepic struggle for survival
r
By Tomy Peyser
A tepia-toned still photo-
graph of Hitler and Mwieliai
is frozen on the sevaen in the
ephcmcfal grasp of history. It
suddenly comes to life, fol-
lowed by stock footage of war.
Planes crash, bombs drop,
bullets fly. A jazz score is
accompanied by a narration
which comments on the fight-
tng men: **^ ... the ones who
started early and haven*t ar-
rived and don*t know theyVe
not going to . the ones who
keep going and keep going just
to see how it will all end **
One of those men waiting to
arrive and find out what thc_
future holds is Pasqualino. the
hero of writer-director Lina
Wertmuller*s epic canvas.
Seven Bcaaties (at the Avce)
Pasqualino. played by Gian-
carlo Giannini, endures many
hardships in and around
World War II but he ultimate
ly does endurer The path he
travels is revealing, funny,
damning and unforgettable.
Nicknamed **Seven Beauties**
because of his unusual luck
with women, Pasqualino passes
mpst of his time trying to keep
hi$ sisters in Une and doing the
nipcessary business of a small
■f
r
ly^Adaai Parfrey
**Hiirt me!** cries Audrey Hepburn whc;n she
first sees Scan Connery in Richard Lester*s
ReMn and Marian. Hurt yoti, t^icy don*t Bore
you, they do.
RoMa and Marian is supposedly about the
autumniil return of Robin Hood (Sean Con-
nery) and his trusty second. Little John (Nicol
"AVilliamson), to Nottingham after serving'
twenty years in the crusades under King
Richard the Lionhearted (Richard Harris).
War-weary Robin seeks out his former hean-
throb. Maid Marian (Audrey Hepburn), who
also served time in a nunnery Cloistered
serenity has been Marian's habit for too loof to
return to Robin, besides, the Shenff of Not-
tmgham (Robert Shaw) is hot on her tail, so to
speak. A torpid batik for Miss Maid Marian
ensues * -
As such. Robin and Marian is a flagrant
bastardization of the Robin Hood saga, and a
poor one at that More than a battle between
Robin and the Sheriff, the film appears an
artistic struggle between director Lester and
scripter James Goldman. Lester (TM Three
Mnslietecrs, Help) has a powerhouse capacity
for ingenious comic direction Goldman (The
Mea la Winter) deals in archaic, cheap senti-
ment, Rcsuluntly, RoMn and Marian looks
like MoHtiy FytlMMi and tlie Holy Grail meets
GaMe ami l^«eaikard: a choleric concoction
What*s mere, it is dull.
Lester loves effect, hke having sweeping
vittas with ant -sized men nding through and
striking close-ups of drooling h^wks; but here
Giannini: dapper, elvgant. and cafrtt^Jtuig
time Mafioso. However, unlike
the virile young Viio Corleone
in GodlatlMr II, Pasquahno m
somewhat of a coward and
makes offers that are openly
refused
When he demands marriage
from his errant sister's punp,
Pasqualino is met with laugh-
ter and derision. He kjlli the
man in a particularly iniaeor-
ous fashion but still hopes for
vt^ndication by the prevailing
aMffd codes However. Pas-
qualiMO bnng further shame to
his fanuly and faces a jail sen-
tence. He eventually goes from
prison to a mental institution
and finally to a concentration
camp
Pasquahno is a needing, cap-
tivating and muhi^imensional
character He is dapper and
ekgartt roaming the streets of
his home town, a cigarette
effortlessly balanced in its
holder as he ceremoniously
waves to his countless women
admirers Fleeing from police
he yells from a seemingly safe
dist'^nce, *' You'll never take
Pasqualino. Seven Beauties
alivef** A momem later he is
captured and he bcgrudgingly
admits, **So, 1 was wrong.**
WertmuHcr*s Gkm, most of
which have surred Giannini,
frequently deal with tW deh-
cate alliance of sex and
politics. She sheers tlK twe
forces as having both liber-
ating and repressive peltfllial
and their uneasy embrace
forms the underlying source of
her dramatic conflicts, often in
curioMS
In Sevan Rtautics, Pasqual-
ino j;onfronts the grotesquely
obese and inhuman ^concen-
tration camp commandant
(Shirley Stokr) and tries to
win her over ' witfi his emacia-
ted charm His objectrves are
not wholly amorous; in his
desperate fanusies. he beheves
tiiat if he can seduce here, he
can keep on living His *'court-
fthip** in the sunounding atmo-
sphere of human decay and
death journeys into the darkest
regions of black humor, show-
t«ig Wertmullcrs giff for simul-
uneously depicting the sharply
comic and deeply tragic
Nonetheless, thts tension only
adds to the total scope oT th'
fUm and Seveii ieantics stands
mt M stunning orchestration of
how the soul can be betrayed
ail tile struggle for survival.
COnnery in 'Robin : not the Marian kind
i..
Ctmnrrr: hit M»d myth
they serve no disf:ernab2'* function Whereas
Stanley iCubnck in Rarry Lyndon used his
brilliant landscapes to vividly frame man's
fraihy in companson, Lester inappropriately
dwarfs his heroes in huge pastoral panoramas
Adding to the confusion is John Barry V syrupy
and cloying score, wrongly heroic during
unhcroic moments and generally overdone.
Connery's Robin is big, beefy, and gray
enough to physically convince us of his proper
heroic stature His line delivery unaffected,
usual hero-posturing eschewed. Connery turns
in an excellent performance Unfortunately, the
same adjective cannot be used for Audrey
Hepburn's Maid Marian Her portrayal has as
much meat as her body, which is to say, Ut|le
or none Hepburn belongs at Tiffany's, browsiag
over the big rocks instead of sleeping on them.
That brilliant Hamlei. Willuimson. takes up
his usual accomplisbed stride with his little
John. Shaw fhrts with danger in hu charac-
terization of the Sheriff of Nottingham No
snarling Sheriff is in order for Shaw, but a
shrewd man wirh a keen understanding of the
territorial imperative
Lester could not escape without infusing the
picture With some of his mordant wit, Par-
ticularly amusing is his depiction of the rriaal oi
sleeping and aaiktng, the dncomfort of rural
living and the tired fighting with very heavy 12th
Century battle^xes and broadswords
However. ReMn aed Matiae remains robbed
of Its potential richnes.s when haeiad over to the
poor, sentimental hands of Goldman and Lester
Enough of beaus and Fro^ ""
Lovers and other strangers collide in Ting Pong
Ry Wtfiiam Hamilton
The Onion Compasy <t0O N El Centro. LA.) is ahowcAsing
Ping Pong* <t >K^ comedy by Rick Talcovc. playing inielinitely
Tkt story conoerns a aajdle^aged coupk whose awmage « on
the rocks. They both ie^afendently decide to spend a weekend at
t|;ieir country coO^age wmk their respective lovers at the same
dae Wfhm Hieir fil» staAtnt son thom% ap, shn rTyaiHi^ to be
alone, the ground wotjIlJis laid fo^ •everaJ kikmaf
electnciiy.
Iloaratis of ei|>ottona I
— Whi!t ttTfv ilniiir utm ^fvAir^ rnr tti'h ncfl^ anfl fr>Uc''ri \ht sor^
reveals Ihs bisexualitv and goes to bed with the two lovers
leaving his contused parents to tight it out. The next norniaf the
two lovers decide they like each other more than their reipaclive
divorcmg partners, the mother and sen come to a closer mutual
undersunding than they've ever experieeoad. and the fartier,
ahaayS uptight and unchanged, goes hack to his beloved office.
The humor is fast, lardonic and at t^mcs reminiscent of Albee*s
WlM's Afraid of VIraMa WoeS?: the timing, entranccft and exits
are as predie as tlioir in a Feydeau farce
The second act, however, d^owiis into a aieudlin. tea r-fi lied
1 r J
and his vacuous pcrsonalii\ sceafcs to invite manyrdeai|
4rom his predatory parents
Despite roles that seem to have been cast tros CaMts Peepk
Play, all the characters, with the exception ef the father, art
affected by the •oa*s -coming out*' and they express a deeper
social interaction .n the last scene Ihe soe't passive perstmalif,
acts as a catalyst to the pent-up^ emetiens around him. alknaiag
him I lit ait end ultimately peace.
The C>niOn rompaay*s MMMt. stylish prcKJuction has Ulented
artists and coitMrnt dmtfCtiion bv Patrana Haee. It
marathon that seems to come t'
easilv The loft-spokcn "son, ^n^
the Mai iKarted characters tot)
the other head, it a ^fle
humor. Mletiianding an^ a regiisiic
»ften Tthe jMip of losing i^nd leavifi|
EMPORIUM® £
' Make ^our Own jewelry
f ronn the largest aelectibn
at the best pricea
6013 Hollywood Bivd
463-4855
{frmi& Parking m Rear)
The Council On Educational
Development (CED)
will be ronsidering course proposals JTor
the fall Quarter .1976 and the Winter
Quarter 1977, and is prepared to sponsor
mnovative courses of geriuine academic
quality which would be of interest to the
campus community. Such course pro-
posals will be due in the CED office no
later than Monday, April 1% 1976 <for the
Fall Quarter 1976) and Monday, May 17,
1976 (for the Winter Quarter 1977). If you
are interested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educational Development, 3121 Murphy
HaH.
"Whats A Nation Without Freedom''
,« I.
SONS OF
SASSOUN
MANUEL
Fighting For It*
A Colorful Film
Action - Love - Mueic
- Slafrtr>g -
LANA WOOD • PCTia Loaac if
April 14 thru April 20
vKiaaiiaejs sac. 7!3o: t:30
Sat - Sun 2. 4. e. I. 10
AduHs3 00 *9tiidenls2 00
Children 1 00
r ft.
^^^
'7~~r
^M:r
m
s
r
I
i
>,
■i
.V
I
.t
Biruin title dream destroyed by Indiana
— ■;
--;-L^
r ly Marc
Dft S^orti Writer
PHILADELPHIA - Geae
Bartow «rt alone, looking over
a sheet of tutistics. His Brums
had just been beaten by "the
Indiana Hoosiers, 65-5 1, to
end his dream of a national
championship in his first sea-
son at UCLA. _
Whik winning coach Bobby
Knight explained the victory to
the huge group of reporters,
Batow tat alone on the other
tide of a wall, ttaring at the
ttats in front of him.
He iiotfid the J 9 rebounds by
guard Bobby Wilkerson and
commented on the four-for>24
shooting by his own guards.
He mentioned the collapsing
defense played by Indiana and
Che fact that his Bruins .hit just
34 per oeat of their shots.
But the Bruin coach wasn*t
looking for eiicusetu **We feh
that with six to eight minutes
left and only six down, we had
our chances,** he said in his
poit-*§ame interview. ^'Indiana
'"It a great team and I don*t
think there is any doubt their
^efapaive plan worked.**
That plan, to double team
forwards Richard Washington
and Marques Johnson in deep,
iiras probably 4he deciding fac>
tor in a game the Bruins had
their chances to win. The pair,
who averaged over 38 points a
game, combined for 27 and
could manage only 25 thoU.
Meanwhile, the Bruin guards
flHtfired on 20 of their 24
attempts, many of them wide
open shots they would usually
make.
**Pact of our shooting might
have been the selection al-
though I think we were out of
our range on jutt a couple or
three. They (the guards) are
good shooters but they (the
shou) jutt didn*t fall,** Bartow
like everything would go right
lor the Bruins With lets t&n
Hdro miqul^jilayed, they were
^head 7-2, Washington had
five points .and Indiana center
Kent Benton already had two
fouls
Kmght then made the move
that ckMged the flow of the
game. He took Benson off
Washington, substituting for-
ward Tom Abernethy Indiioii
likras ahead 45-32 before the
All-American forward scored
In t4ie end, Washington
finished with 15 points (six-of-
15 from the field) and
Abernethy with a performance
that would earn him a spot on
the Ali-Toumament te^ ip^
nights later.
lJCLA*s last lead came with
7:56 left in the first half, as
center Ralph DroUinger con-
verted on two free throws fdr a
19-17 advanuae. Indiana then
his fourth foi^l and had to
leave th&^guflK^ Benson hit a
layin aad Indiana led by 10
again. , Bruins, behind sub
Gavin Smith, tried to rally one
last. time. Snutti hit a jumper
and a driving layin to pull the
Bruins within ^ for the last
time *
Now, with SIX minutes left.
Knight ordered Ikb. team to
slow the bail down and work
strictly for the layup. Scott
May converted two free throws
with 4:18 left but the Bruins
got break when sub Jim Crews
mitaed one with 2:45 left^
However. Indiana managed to
graji the rebbund and May
gave his team a 10 point lead
with 2:32 left when he layed
the ball in the hoop
In the next minute and one-
half, the Hoosiers hit four^ree
throws to two for the Bruins
With 1:01 remaining in the
game, Bartow took Washing-
ton and Johnson out of thc„
game and the dream wasiover.
Statistically, Smith, with six
points, was the Bruins* leading
scorer behind Wastiinstpn (15)
and Johnson (12) Starting
guarda Kaymond Townsend
and McCarter had four eich
and shot two-for-10 and two-
for-nine. respectively. Center
David Oreenwood had five
points but a team high 10
rebounds. -*
For Indiana, Benson had 16
points while May --and
Abernethy each had . 14 and
guard Quinn Buckner chipped
-in with 12. Wilkerson* had five
point's but had 19 boards and
seven important assists
(Continued ofi fag e 43)
Team takes loss calmly
By Stuart Silverstein
BB Sipwtt Writer
PHILADELPHIA — There was none of the
loud locker slamming, cussing, and alibing
often associated the losers* lockerroom. Though
they had wanted this one very badly, they kept
Early in the game, rt looked up
ripped off eight straight points the disappoint me nt inside, and were outwardly
before the Bmint could count- competed and very cool about the whole thing.
er. ^ But you knew this one hurt
Some of them blamed themselves for the
Idas. Sophomore guard Raymond Townsend
was cold early in the game, missing some open
jumi^fers from long range with the defense
sagging towards the middle to stop Richard
Washington and Marques Johnson. Townsend
had consistently hit the same thou all year, but
this day they didn*t drop. So he took particular
responsibihty for the loss on himself.
**lf this guard here hits some outside shots,
we have a chance of winning But they did n*t
Meanwhile, the Bruins could- fall today," he said
score just six points in the first "The coach (Gene Bartow) said, if they're
trven minutes of the second sagging, shoot. If they're tight, get it in to the
luJf. fowards. But they (Indiana) played it so when
Traihng by 12 with 12 we went into our power game, they wanted us
minutes left, the Bruins t|icd to to^thoot. They were very patient, and kept their
rally. McCarter hit a d^upfig^'^Rte,'' taid Townsend
layin and Wathmgton hit t^o Townsend's partner in the backcourr, Andre
McCarter, played for the first time as a
collegian before the fans of Philadelphia —
thote same fans who cheered him on during his
Cory days at Overbrpok High School here.
IcCarter had expected to win this one, and
p4id off in an Abernethy lay- seemetd stunnitf even aa hour after the game
Abernethy was a key in the
spurt, hitting basehne jumpers
from the left side when he
found himself open in the
Bruin zone defense and scoring
half of Indiana's final 12 first
half points.
When Wilkerton was fouled
putting in a rebound and con-
verted the free throw, Indmna
had iu biggest lead at 45-3?
jumpers and the score was 48-
42 with jutt over eight and
one-half minutes left.
Inrtiani refusing to panic.
**We didn't play to our potential,'' he con-
cluded, in almott a whisper Wc missed a lot of
shots, and they made them. I played terribly
we were just trying to hard,** said Mc-
Carter.
''People were looking for Marques and
Richard shoot. 1 wasn't trying to score, but
nm^^ we shouid have tried to get^ imide
more. Wc didn't And they (Indiana)- kniin
tpme- of our plays, like the back-door And I
jUst didn't have the touch from the field,*' he
added.
Johnson alto noted that the Hoosiers seemed
to have scouted UCLA extremely well, and that
it thowed throughout the contest Further, the
Hootiers were extremely disciphned, and were
always taking high percentage shots
"They've been drilled ai|d knew just what
to do. They didn't hurt us so much. jamming it
inside (presumably to center Xent Benson, who
jutt the Brums badly in the first game Novem-
ber 29), but on picks and rolls. They'd pass the
ball four ot five times and take advantage of
any defensive errors.
**Our shot selection wasn't bad — we just
missed A few turnovers really hurt us, as did a
lot of mitaed open shots by our guardt — and
Richard, David (Greenwood) and myself
"I feU we'd win until the last, oh 2:42 of the
ganK 1 feh that way all the way down the
^retch."
"Who wna the better team'^onc reporter
atked.
McCarter then picked up was over
'V-*»
'^^M-
{C9mttimmt4 on Page 43)
bri|in
r^ '■^■:T<\
/
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"5— '
r
Sara DeWitt in Virginia mooLf
-I— »-
THE UNCOMMON LADY FROM __
^ BLOOMSpuRY
HAWWiS GWOUf THCATWK
frtl> MONTANA A VCNUK
tANTA MONICA
4 aLOCKs NO or WILaMIWC
4S1-1MS
7^
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APfllL 1
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•UMDAV
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17
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position
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fARA D£ WITTS oms womam cv«
MINO WITH TM« CMiaMATIC VI«a*MlA WOOCF
** ASaOCUTlCV «MA»MtM« 0k HIMO OF
WI.TIMAT8 IM LITBHARY TMCATMC
I1AU^««A*» .^^. MCWACA-CKAMmcW
tJ SO/GCMCRAL t2 SO/STUDCNT * IkNiOII
^•g^VATIONt 0« AT DOOa
By MkiMal
;pi S^om WrMer
are in food^ petition tn the league
we can determine the outcome and
have rdy on anyone eltc to win," said Al
UCLA head voleyhnii coach.
UCLA (6-2) trails Pcppcrdine (9-1) and UC
Sanu Barbara (7-1 > m the Southern Cahlorma
intercollegiate Voikyball Attooftion (Si'lVA)
conference race, but the Bruins have the
opportunity to play the two leaders m the next
two weeks at Pauley Pavilton.
The Bruins Ibtt their opening match of the
conference to Santa Barbnra and were hnMn
by Pepperdine in four games before the quarter
^M*^ UCLA it on a one-match winning strnk
after winning in its latt match before the
«Hnrtcr break against Lnag Beach State in
three ganttt.
use it the next oppojaent on Wednesday
iifht in Pauley PavilionT with >epperdine
coming to UCLA on Friday aig^iit Since
Pepperdine plays at Santa Barbara on Wednes-
day, UCLA shouU piny for tiK conference
title either on Friday with the Waves or a week
from Wednesday in PlMdey Pavilion
Sanu BUrbara
**! fomae UCLA tyii^ forllHrooarerenoe title
with the winner of tlie Pepperdine-Santa
Barbara match, provided we win our final four
lonfoe matches at home," said Scatet.
If the Bruins should tie f4r the title, then
there would be a one match pUrvoff at i neutfsh
site for the automatic NCAA berth to the fitiMh
at Bali Stale University on April 30 and Ma> I
The second through fifth place teams in the
oonkrence will pU\ U.r one additional SCAA
berth in the Western Regionals m Pauley
Pavilion oa April 23 and 24
"Wc are healthier no>% I'len we na\e been all
ytMT," laad Scates "Wc are now practicing five
da3rt^d week and working very hard, so I am
not sure if we will he read> lor the matches this
week, but we will be ready for vhc Regionals
and the Nationals "
In the past Scates has tried to use six, people
and pla> ihem all of the time in matcfin. but
this year he is using ten or 1 1 players a ouitch
''If I didn't think I could win. I woii1dn*t he
usifig 10 players.** said Scates ^
>
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Women basketballers fall short
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"Wednesdays, 3-3 FM, starting Apr. 14^
Limited opiJMUgi lor those mlcrestcxi in sharing $
ongoing work or developing a persona! voice.
Adiancf signups required.
D0 Siports Wriltr
On March lltlu the UCLA basketball team
left Westwood la biglijiopet of bringmg bsck
to the UCLA campus another one oi thpse
rutioiuil championship banners. 1_^
But, lik^the tarn, they fell
throws. 9^ grabhttf a jaaM Mip 1}
Whert ^^h« Meyers, aad Trapnell left the
y# It put the sconag load on qyarterbncfc
Judy Lcwinter Lewintcr raifaaisd ably to the
uuk, hitting g of II shou enroute to 17 pomu.
— Mfyfrf played in her true All- American
ityle. hitting eight of 14 shoU aad seven of
- - - m our
■1,.
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Sf)eCC(l ^l/o/tfcfillOp : wiiA Videotape
Thursdays, 2-4 PM, 6 meetings, startingTpr 15
Register in person at
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3235 Murphy Hall Phone: 825-8454
A free service of Student and Campui Aflkin for
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6i6^r
The onjy obstacle to s Brum pass to the 16-
icam nationals in Feim State was s seeti-final
fMBe with the Long Beach Sute 49ers, the
same team that the Uclans had defeated twice
earlier in the season.
Basipars Mosher. sister of UCLA*s coach, let
State*s tenor v^hen she crashed into the wall at
the end of the court after just 14 seconds of
play. The intense playing didn't pay off — until
the end UCLA led practically the whole way,
but when it was all over Long Beach State had
upset UCLA, It'll, in a real crowd pleaser. It
was a crowd pkaser — fOf^^
a game with 50 fouls and 57 free throws.
Emphasizing that she was not belittling Long
Beach State's performance '(**They piayed a
90od ganw -^ for them.'^^ Masher was under-
standably upset with the officiating _
**l can*t remember a season where every gaoR
youVc sick to death of the officiating ^
**They*re trying to do a foad job, but they're
behind the play on a fast break. Even when, the
girls are dribbling down the court, the officials
can*t run fast enough to keep up with the
game.**
Mosher pointed out that there **haven*t been
enough close, pressure games . and the
officials hesiute on their calls.** The first-ysar
Bruin mentor added that she would be in favor
of virtually any chanfes necessary to upgrade
the officiating
f Tht Bruins led early in the contest, and built
up a 38-2j^ lead with just a minute to go in the
first half -7
It was then that Loag Beach Sute put on its
first of two late-half flurries. The flurry at the
end of the first twenty minute stanza drew the
4^rs to within six, at 38-32, behind Monica
Havefka*s II first half points The Brums wec<cJ
led at intermisiiion by ICaren Nash, who had
pulled down eight rebounds and tossed in 11
paints, aad AU-American Atm Meyers, whaaa
12 poifUs and gnit team defense had helped
th^ Brums* first half effort. Also, senior center
Leslie Trapaail had been an intimidating force. ,
Kven free throws while passing- off for seven
assists. The nest day Meyers showed her
versatility, being low scorer among Bruia
surters. The 5-7 sophomore, who repeaisd this
year as a Kodak AlUAmencan, steMd ttiefe is
more to playing well than noldiaf points.
Meyers playing excepuonal defease^ helped out
on the boards, and passed off for II assisu.
The ganw was only a consolation game in
the Western Regionals, pitting the Bruins and
the high sconng Las Vegas Rebels,
Meyers played s ftae faiae, though scoring
oiF i5^ from
the floor and six for six from the hne enroute
to 22 points (the 5-5!^ guard also pulled down
eight rebounds), and leaior Trapnell phiyed
with great enthusiasm, hitting six of eight from
b the floor and the line (**Trap*' also
nuinaged 13 caroms), freshman Anita Ortega
tossed in nine of 12 attempts from the floor
enroute to 21 points and nine rebounds, and
Nash hit seven of . 1 5 from outside and grabbed
10 Jboards.
In all, the Bruins looked sharp in" preparing
to go to Amarillo, Texas, ^or a touraament
which ismore prestigious than it would seem.
Last year, the Bruins bowed to the best team,
Waylaad Baptist, 7M1 in the finals, Ths year,
the Bruias went into the tournament with the
feehttg that they could do oSuch better against
the team that is one of the best in women's
basketball.
The eight-team tournament opened with
UCLA winning a dame-from-behind, 79^3 first
round game over West Texas State.
Lewihter put in 20 points in the win for the
Bruins, followed by a superb performance by
reserve center Heidi Nestor (six for eight), 13 ,
points and 14 rebounds; Meyers (1 2); Ortega
(12); and Tmpneli, et|ht poinu and 12 re-
bounds.
in the semifinal game^ Hi^ Irans piriled off
another 'Houduii,** oomhijt^.fnom eij^t points
down at the half to defeat Belmont Cdlkfe, 8D-
71. Lewmter hit 16 of 17 thou on her wayio
In the second hall, with these three Bruii ":55 points to pace the victors. Nestor and
leaders making their exiu via foul number five,
the Bruins fell to the spirited underdogs
The Bruins appeared to have the victory well
in hand, leading late in the game, 70-60, but
then the roof fell in. The under-publicized
Havelks ripped through the Westwooders*
defense late in the game, leading the 49ers
comelMCk. When it was all over, the forward
had sunk eight of 16 shots, lix of cijfht free
PrrxJuced t)y Joe Wi«; •
• rrn 1 '(
ai(. t )*»NK'aaMC
iyrafdnrof
I
t
A
inng at
Available at
Roxy
Pass It on
e release of eacn new
Boz Scaggs alDum is an
eagerly anticipated events
Silk Degrees is an amazing
record. even for Boz Sure
its soulful and mellow,
but It s also the subtlest,
most varied album Boz
has ever done. and his
writing and singing are
stronger than ever
If you re already into
, Boz. you know exactly
k what we re talking
5. about.lf you're not. you
' don t know what
' you're missing.
on. Silk Degrees'.'
On Columbia Records and Tapes
Trapnell combined for 25 rebounds, as UCLA
had more trouble than the first time in camii^
back to win.
So, in the fliiiak, of a second-place Soor-
nament, the Bruins lost and had to settle for
second. However, the team that beat them,
Wayhmd Baptist, went on to the nationals,
where it kwt by just one, point (6I^M) to
eventual champion Deha Sute
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UCLA farwmds Richard
Washington and Marques
Johnson arc expected to file
likely for Stair forwarcis
eligible to play college basket-
ball nest se*«en^ Once the
draft begins, they will lose
for hardship sutus with the ^ Jheir remaining collegiate
Holland
eligibility -4,
Par this rsMan, both would
probably have a preliminary
deal already arranged prior to
the draft since the two would
be at the owners* mercy once
Last week m Philadelphm.
Washington said. "Right^now I
just plan on going to LA and
Uking it from there Tve got
no pUins **
"I really want to finish
National Basketbalf Associa
tioa before Friday's deadhne.
Air that means is that the
two high-sconng Bruins wili be
eligible to be picked in the
NBA*s collegiate draft if they
choose to remain 4n the dralt
pool. -
Under NBA rules, s pUyer is
not allowed to be drafted by a
member club until his class
graduates unless he falls under
the hardship category. It is
expected both players will ap-
ply iof this status. ^ - j
If they choose to withdraw someone would make me a
prior to the draft, they will be great offer. Td have lo go This
Football coaches hired
New head footbaH coach Terry Donahue, whose team begins
spring practice one week froofr today, completed his coa<i:htng
staff by naimg five assisUnts and one graduate assistant rccepilv
The Five new assisunts are Frank Gansz. Rich Brooks Ted
""»*^» ^^»*" ^^^^' snd bon Riley Ed Keiinan, former
Brum offensive hne star and brother of tacjcle Rob, was picked
by Donahue as the head student assisunt
They replace Lynn Stiles and Carl Peterson (who went to the
Philadelphm Eagles), Jim Criner and Rod DoWhower (Boise
State), Jerry Long (UCLA Promotions Offic/) and student
assistaat Mike Flores (San Jose Sute).
Gansz, who served as recruiting coordinator and pass receiver
cch last year St OkUhoma State, will be m charge of UCLA's
offensive tackles and right ends Brooks, who coached at U(;LA
^Mtr4^7^ i*ndcf Twnmy Prothro, witfr fasaAieuthe .outside
linebackers.
.Hughes conies to |he Bruins from Michigan, where he helped
the Wolverines conripile a record of 2^-3-3 during his three year
tenure. He will coach the inside linebackers.
Painter, who will tutor the Bruin quarterbacks and pass
receivers, compiled some excellent crcde<itials in his two years at
Bngham Young. 4n 1974, he had the nation's number two
passing quarterback.
(Continued on Page 41)
' - 4^ ■
iUNBDLIEVABLE SAVINGS:
might be the last year for the
big money ** «
The Atlanta^ Hawki will
have the first pick in the draft,
followed by the Chicago Bulls
-Marc
I ^
HolUnd. UCLA's
un-
derwent corrective surgery last
WedneMlaj^ far a knee problem
that has bothered him **6n and
ofT since last spring.
The surgery was to repair a
tendon in my left kneecap and
DrYayaeny Levich
A laadtng activtat »n Iha atrugoia of aowal- Jewish icwnuats tor Um
•migrattqn to lara^i Dr Lavich was arvvaM m Moacow afid aafit to a
torc^ labor camp ..-, m* artic zona until prolaata ftom sciantiali «l Hia
Iraa world raaunsd tn hit waiaaaa and •migration Dr L•vtc^ tt now a
•anior scientist at tn« Wai/mann inttituW. HaHowUi. laiaal Ha w«ii ba
on campus , "^
Tu^aday, April 6
3 P M Opan Studant Forum
Laonard Memorial Canter
Knudaan Hall 2-222
6 P M. Oawish Nationalism in the USSR —
^ A Soviet Scientist s View *
Free PubNc Lacture
Hamaa Hall 39
I
a
c
j
%ciLJ^-Li.^'": "'. .^ »« •««)'»• • '•••'«'»' problem.'
'^},^1 l^f*:*""^: •»"• '' Cen.e.«el. Hospu.l .a Ingle
a
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9
CALCULATORS, C^ RADIOS,
STEREOS & COMPONENTS
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aa7w ofa^^navf stats couaotra 14001
PHONi oaoets accepted
pita I in IngU
wood.
Hollj^nd had the surgery per-
formed by orthorpcdic spectal-
ist Dr Martin Bla/ina
Bla/ina specializes in knee
problems and has perfprmed
surgery on many athletes
It IS difficuh to return to top
form following a knee injury,
but HoUand is optimistic. T
should be 100 per cent in five
aasatlM and at full strength in
time for next season." said
HolUnd
He was a part-time starter
for the UCLA team this year
and he is expected «to have an
excellent chance of being a
starting guard next season
~~Tt ^as been ■mfiaaiad^ that
Holland. Roy Han^ilton and
David Greenwood might con-
sider transferring from UCLA.
buu that IS strictly rumor and
none have indicated to head
coach Gene Bartow that thev
Would not be returning for
next season
-* Miciiaef JMNidDieimer
■ i
parrekiMS of
t
I
I
1
a
.<
e
e
I
eNROLLMeNT 15 STiLLOpeN
lACCjORO\N(i To Pf^e-eNPOLLMeNT
FiduRes) iN THe Fbu_owir4q :
sec 1
5ec. h
see: 10
11
MW 3-5"
TRB-IO
TKlo-12.
5^/1?^ MS
n
-f-
WOMEN'S
STUDY
PROGRAM
Courses Offered Spring Quarter 1976
AfHti 103
03007)
Engl 107
HM 1710
(43»7)
HM VtTL
(ssais)
lfiCyaiipaaaaalo%<lacture) F ElGumdi MWFS
Haioat 1 16 Pra raeyiaif Anth 5 or 22. A tyttematic ao-*
proach to tha study of tax folat from an anthcopologicai
parapactiwa A cnticai raviow of rOiavant fhoapsacai laauaa
aupportad by athnographtt matarial from traditional
culturat arrd contamporary Amancan cuftura
aawray ol Woniaii lf« Ultaralupa (tactura) K Row* M-Th 12 Royca 162
For non-English mafort primarily
•aciai Hlolanr ^ Womou In INa U.a. (lactura) j Janaan T/Th 12 30-1 45 Moora 100
Woman worh Tsd the mduttnai transition to modarnity laSO-praaant
III Twinaaai Caiayry gi
r, T Kaplan. T 1 1-2. Buncha 3l6i Conaant of Inttructof <COl) Enrollmam l«miiad
to IS. Maaaaa of Europaao woman hava t>aan cantral to tr>« graat socialist and anarchist
of tha Twtfiaalt* Cai^tury Thft^ourta will focus upon r«p.«a«ntativ« famaia
KS amj ranli and fila woman in tha movamant agatnat tha Czar tha Garman Social
Damocratic Party tha Spanish Civil War tha Italian Communiat Party artd in contamporary
Porlugal. Spam. Italy and Nortr>arn Iraland
HM t^a
Maaiavanaoffian. E Saarta. Tima and placa to ba anf^DUfwad
anroMrnant limitad to 15. CO* — —
Hainaa 130. COt
Taaiaalfi
M Stromal Th 9-12 maiws ?06 COI
Malanf •« yii Waawn. 1. Canaan T 3-5.
E Saarta. Ttma aruJ placa to ba anrKHiOoad COl
M aifoaai. Tf) 0^12. Haaiaa aia. OOi
af aaa Mtoiaaaaa (iaciur«) a Papiau I/Th 2-3 15. TOuaa 2290 Thia couraa
aa)^hotoo«eat maratura r«4avant to uwaaratanama c<*
inciudad ara tax -#oAa daaalaafaaift and rala conflict .
batwaan woman and man sa« diftarawcaa m intaMactuai abiiitiaa
m^^k^^^^^m^m%^9m9^^^^^9k^
laa
110)
ara lor
(
and achwvamant and tha imaaci of %m\^mf on aocial iniaractKin
af Waman'i laaaamlc aalaa (lactura). V
11-1. Hamas 220 Dtac Ta (62791) W 9 Hwaai 213. Diac ib (807^). «l^ 2 l38M aioo
Praraquisitaa Soc 1 . Soc 16 or Math 50 or Psych 41 or Econ 140 or Pub Health 16A or COl
A aamaa'aa>*a and aaoiaiaaiaai anaiyaia of aia lactora aMaoana woawn s aoa^aMic
Nitha world of woHi and famtiy Topica to ba iiiuiiiiaaiad Iweluai diwaarapWi
of woman s socioacooomic rolaa. «|poman s ci>ana*na aMkaa In aia aaaapa-
Btructura. woman's and mm%'% contnaaaan to Ifia aocioaconaaac atatua of aia
family, aia aacioaeawamic aaaiaon of woman without wmn to iiiaao^ Oiam. futura tfarnla
and aeciai poNcy a^lactmg waawn'a aiatua
I Hiraia M 1-4 GSM 4343C. COl
In W
. M StroOal. T 3-6 Buncha 3161 COl
For fuftnar intormation drop t>y tt>a Woman s Studias Program Off ica. voom 2807 Matn ScianQa. oroaai
aaia
NOtlCE On Thuraday. April 6 at 3 30 in aia Hialory Dapartmant Oraduala taynga> (aixth floor aMUPfia)
KIM III ■iiapaiHioaaarlaraaNWpaaiia^^P 's aaiaiwr^f^fPBWfaaidanii. Ariiiwi ania. ■■ "M i
Program wHl alact a atudaot faa^aaantauW to sit on.lhaiJiS Commtttaa lor akMnan^SlMUia*
aaonaofad by the Woman's S^udiaa Pfogram a naw aaadaaaa mmmam m ihaWlaaa of LAS
1
J
\
—4
i^
I
<
-^0i-
m
I
7.
n
[
w
PERSONAL
EXPLORATION
GROUPS
Counseling Division
Psychological &
Counseling Services
for thosf interested in expiring
mnd sharmf^TU»eff~cbncerns
in m group setting:
¥
Once m weeic for 2 hours.
SiMMvrpfiyHaU
■•% "H
for urfor motion and sign-ups
drop in or phone (82) 5-4071
Slip by Bears. 79-65
Weather fouls up tracksters
UCLA Students & Alumni:
Volunteer as a CLASSROOM AiOE of Of^-TO-OHi- TUTOR
We need 4>eople.iinp^'edg««t>le m the S<:i«r>ceis P E English.
Maf*h Fine" Arts or anyone ¥^h the desire and patierK^ to ¥Mbrk
\iwtth kids - . ^ : ^
3 or more Koors per w#©k — Transportation*
ASUCLA TUTORIAL
^^PROJECT
407 Kerckhoff Hall
82S-2331
Orientation Meetings:
. Thurt. April 8, Tp.m. Ack. 3517
SPONSORED BY COMMUNITY SERVtCES COMMISSIONS/
STUDENT LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL
•y Joe Y
DB Sforti Writer
The Stanford and Csltfornia trscl^ and fkkl
teams brought it with them.^^Not the talent and
skill to beat the Basin powerhouses but tl^ fouf
weather tJMt to often p^f^ their Bay Area
homes.
Oa a chilled afternoon at Drake Sisdium,
Saturday, UCLA slipped past the Bears 79-65
while use was drubbing the Cardinals 105-35
It was the opening Pac-8 dual meet for all
squads.
The Westwood tracksters had practiced in 70
degree heat all week while the Southern Cal
carnival was tounng Hawaii. Bm when tiie Bay
Area squads flew iii on~TridayV tlie stona ^"
clouds came with them
For or>e of the few times this saaaoa the
Bruins felt confident of victory going into a
meet But their UC rivals surprised them with
some feed pc^ormances and eaair iiach closer
than expected
**1t*s hard to figure why we didn*t score that
rnsay paints,** said UCLA head ct>ach Jim
Bush afterwards. **But the weather had to have
something to do wi<h it. It*s hard for anyone tto
do good when it*s this cokL**
One reason for the Brumes be loir par show-
ing was Bush*s line-up shuffling many
athletes didn*t appear in their top events. Grant
Niederhaus ran* the 400 meter dash instead of
the intermediate hurdles while Bennis Myles
was in the 200 inslsad of the 400
**These guys run the same events Aery
week,** explained Bush, ^'and after awhile they
get tired of them. So I thought Td switch the
hne-ups to see what would happea."
Bush also said that many of the Brums Were
still tired from final exams and that several had
missed workouts during quarter break.
"We'll surt looking better ncAf txeek;* he .
said.
Trojan coach Vem Wolfe also made hne-up
changes so an expected comparison of tile two
squads never materialized and nuiny fans went .
home disappointed
{UCLA*s James Owens had perhaps the finest
performance on an otherwise lackluster day as
he sped to a sleek 13:6 in the high hurdln. It
was his fastest time this neason aad only two-
tenths of a second off his school record
clocking of 13.4.
Sophomore Owens got off to his usual quick
start over the first three barriers and held ^f
the Bear*s MclCinley Mosley for the win.
Mosley finished in 14 1 while Philhp Mills of
UCLA was third in 14.3.
Horizonul leaper WiUie Banks was a double
winner for the fourth time this season as he
captured the long jump jn 24-10^ and the
triple jump in 52.8.
Jerry Hemdon, a 25 foot long jumper, was
oat of action again on Saturday He won the
event agaiait Loi^ Bsach Sute, last week, but
reinjured a haoistrtiig muscle on his last juiap.
*This tine 1 pulled it completely.** said
iSemdon **Before I joit strained it. 1 woa*t be
back' until the SC a»et but now I can work
from the ground up in letting it ksal com-
pletely.*
Looking at his injury on the brighter side.
Hemdon said, **1 won't be as fatigued later in
the season, especially atea the Olympic trials
coBK along. I also like being the underdog.**
The too meter run was supposed to be a
showdown between the UCLA's Jaif Haynes
^^ Cars JasMS Robtason, oae of the top half-
mileri in the nation' Buf
n slipped lhe~
event and vvk the 400 instead, a raoe which he
won in 47.5.
Haynes captured the 800 in 1:50.8 for his
fifth victory in the event this season. The Bruin
took an early lead and was out in front most of
the race. But Cafs Cirilo Morgi^n nearly caught
him on the home stretch with a good sprint off
the final turn.
Another duel that never caase about was
Wesley Walker vs. Ootson Wilson m the 100
meter dash. Walker, however, didn*t even inake
the trip south — he*s been in a Berkeley
hospital since Wednesday morning with a
dcvere faat infecuon that has spread to his
lymph glands.
Wikoa sped to a 10.5 win in the 100. a
ahead of another California speedster.
Paul Wallace Wallace avenged the loss a sJiort
time later as he sped past Bennic Myles to win
the .200 in 21.2. .^
**! kaow
21.4 •
said. Bush. **He wasn't wai med up enough
today. After the 400 meter he relay he sat
kround.**
Mike TuQy won the pole vauh competitiwr
with a leap of 17-0 while teammate Tim Curran
ipas second in 16-6. Tully attempted to cleir
18-0 three times, a height that would have been
a school record/ but he missed every time.
*The cold just shghtly effecU tlie |)tok.** he
explained. "What it effecu is the vaulter. But I
was stiFi pleased with iny effort. 1 a»ay not have
cleared 18-0 on a warm dayv**
**My technique looks really great now,** he
went on, **especially my run and plant. But 1
still need more velocity through the bOa and
technique on the pole.**
The UCLA wjeightmen also had a good
afternoon as Jim Nicdhart captured the shot
put ia41'-6V^ whik Rich Gunther continued his
finenwiion with a winning toss of 188-4 in the
discus. ^
With Niederhaus out of the intermediate
hurdles, Phil Mills was left as the Bruin ace.
He rripaadfd favorably with a win in 51.2, two
seconds ahead of Bear Rich Robsky.
^
Asian American Studies Program
Spring Quarter
Wemcfi hi iMsiIrs* 3232 Can^hal M 1-4
LC. MhaU
study qA the role o^ Asian American women as seen through: 1) Racia< dst^i
2) f» Eastern cuNure; 3) Krr\^kiMf\ history; 4) U.S.-Asia policies. Ahernative
lat styles wilt be explored
..1
5h
3232
Nal r
nrWcai tosnes in Asian Anicfkaii Studies^
3-4 ID H67t EsaM Code 28 inslructor: K. WagalsiHiM
The secor>d quarter oi the core sequence to the graduate progf acn in Asian Arnerican Studies. The
class will include lectures ^h6 discussions on major perspectives and problenn of the field. The
ytrr>\f\^f will systematically t^%^>^ and critique the literature on Asian Americans, id^Hify gapsaruJ
controversiaJ issues, ^r\6 develop plans of research that focus on these issues.
CEO 141 'n^he lapawete hi the WaHsiw Heiiiipiiin" CSM 3343a MWF 11 « K> 925M Eaaai
Code 4 lnstructcK: N. Tsuchida
A cross-cultural study of the Japanese in Anglo An>erVan and Latin America from the time of
immigration to the present The course will examine Japanese social, political, religious,
educational, and economic activities in various countries oif the Western Hemisphere. Special
emphasis will be placed of\ Brazil
COLLOQUIUM ON ASIANS IN AMERICA — Public Invited
All meetings in the series will be held in 3232 Campbell Hall,
3-6 PM
April 9 Busing in
*s Chinatown/* |ur>e Mei, Acting- Assistant Pr
/ ;
, History. UCLA
May 7 "History of lapanese in America." Yuji Ichioka. R
Studies Center. UCLA
lune 4 TO a€ ANNOUNCED
rh Associate. Asian American
fOa PUaTHft INfORMATtONCONTACi IHt a;>JAN AMLKieAN >tuOlf S CfNTER. i212CAMfa(LL HALL..
B^w^i pt iw i\ 'WTriPft i»ifr^'^<HT>ow ff^NCgeNif^o oTt>cw ui'WNT ^rfi¥iyif». Ci<
DATSUN
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Acres of Datsunt^
Student Discounts — Aak for
Pasadena Datsun
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
♦684-1133*
Sales
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at Sonto Barbara
N«w occepfing applications for
. SMmmof Sotsion
Storting June 29, 1976
Fcrfl Term-€*mm#n<ing S#pt«mb«r 7 , 1
Dosrtf programs leading to LL6 or JO Ocfreev Gr
CMfOfiM* Bar Exammations
-Bmins run by Rutgers for third, 106-92
Qualify tor
TtAHSMI SniDWTS ACCiPTCD
law School Compu!
7034 kiafnmdo Podf S^rro
Sofito torboro Co 93103
Ph (§05) 963-15*7
By Marc
DB Sporta Writer
PHILADELPHIA — There
Are very few tunes UCLA plays
a basketball fMBC without hav-
iag a chance to wis the
national tttJe. L«il Monday,
the Bruins found tbrnMrlwi ia
jUft that position as they play-
ed Rutfers is Ike national
finals consolation game.
Two . Bruins, forward
Marques Johnson and guard
Andre McCarter, took advant-
age^ of the situation and style
of the gune to lead the Bruins
to s 106-92 victory and third
-place in 4hc nation.
I
Johnson, dominating the
most of the time, scored
30 points and pulled in 18
rebounds, a career high, while
McCarter poured in i cnrser
high-tying 26 points and hand-
ed off 1 1 assists. '
The 6^'4 ^oi^^rd convert-
ed on II of 21 shot attempts
and eight of 12 free throw
attempts enroute to his 30
points. McCarter*f percentage
w|tt even better at he suide 1 1
if 19 shou.
Neither player thought mueli
about the gsHW iajBgoing the
oontsip, preferring \ to taBi a-
hout the future.
*^rai looking forward to the
Olyai^ici and repretenting the
Unitad Sutes,** the senior
fttard said. **1 consider myself
an artist and 1 would hke to
show my game to the reft of
the world. My style of play is
more si\iiied for the pro game.**
In the Rutgers contest, his
style of play was just fine,
w^wvwmK vs^v ^v^nasv snv^'0% ^o^^nm^o "^^f^
and down the court sfsintt the
winner of the East Regional.
After leading by as much as
I i points m the first JuUf, th^
Bruii^ saw the Sci^rl^ Knighti
go ahdid in the second half.
Rutgers trailed by just two, 83-
81, when Mike Dabney was hit
with a technical fouL
Tlmt seemed to spark the
Bruins, who outscored Rutgers
2D-6 in seven minutes to win
going away.
_|olMMgn hnt one year left at
UCLA but there is a ctenoe he
will be playing professional
ball neat usion.
'^I really don*t know," Joh».
•on said when atked if wonM
leave UCLA. **! really want to
finifh school but if someone
would make ow a great oflsr,
rd have to go. The ABA
(American Basketball Aaaocin-
tion— is on the verge of col-
Inpee and this might be the last
year for the big SMasy,**
Another Brain wlio pinynd
Ju4 final collegiate jams g-
gainst Rutgers was center
Ralph Droliinger, tbt oft-
■Hiigned center who^^loet his
starting job halfway through
the season.
HI indicated that he would
go through It all again saying.
**! fought the fight, I finished
the course and 1 kept the
faith."
(Continnsd on Page 42)
NORMAM MAILER Hoosjers three-time Michigan for title
i
ON THE GENIUS AND LQSi;
NARCISSISM OF HENRY MILLER
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ANDRD SmYAVSKY
ON HIS FIVE YEARS OF SURVIVAL
' IN A SOVIET LAHK CAMP
ii:r.n:i^
TOM
•THE CHINK AND THE CLOCK PEOP
FROM HIS NEW NOVEL
'EVEN COWGIRLS GET THE BLUES'
By Stuart Silvcrstein
DB Sports Writer
PHILADELPHIA Within
minutes of the conclu^ipa of
India na*s convincing 86-68
NCAA title-chnchmg victory
over Michigan, Hoosier coach
Bobby Knight was intercepted
in a Spectrum hallway.
The person 'who grabbed
Knight^s attention was not a
spoFtswriter.'
. Rather, it was the honor-
able, and chubby. Governor of
the State of Indiana. Otis
-Bowcn . Puffily -offering his
hand i& the coach in the best .
political tradition, he congratu-
lated Knight for his unbeaten
season "^and NCAA title.
Knight, fox the first time in
anyone's memory, seemed
surtled.
**The kids did a great job,"*
imim im \k i^vii •! im »mi
A Bantam Book "V Where Paperbacks Are Solil
he said. And then he added,'
r%ht kids did a great job.**
Whatever his basketbaU skills,
Kmght has never distmguiiiHd
himself in candid conversion
On this evening. Knight's
Hoosiers, or the **automoton,**
as one local writer described
them, fell behind early, trailed
at the inB; but exploded for 57
second haJT^^ints to defeat
^heir Big-10 rival for the thifd
time this ieneoB-
To be more exact, the ex-
plosion came with six minutes
remaining in the contest
Michigan's Steve Grote, who
turned in a fine performance
this night, had just hit two free
throws to narrow Indiana's
margin to 63-39.
~ College Player of the Year
Scolt May scored on an und«-r-
handed flip. Quinn Buckner hit
two free throws. Tom
Abemethy did the same. A
driving lay-in by Abemethy.
And two more free throws, by
May this time. And two nii-
nutes, ten seconds after the
lend was but four, it was hiked
^ 14, and Bloomington was
celebrating.
In this case, the statistics do
tell the story of tii pSs. In
Population
Institute
Intern
Program
*•
Action-study grants for college stutfsMi m state population/
environment problems
Orientation meeting Tuoa.. Apriri3
^ >Joon — At EXPO — A213 Ackarman - 825-0631
if
»i>
LEARNING SKILLS CENTER
'^RIL
Study & Reading Division
SK3 N U P - 27 1 Dod d 825-7744
—■^■mrnimt
M
12
Study
Workshop
V 15-4:30
"to drivt avi^ay th« 6mrk\
HELP for the BRIGHT
t
Brightn^M and Efficiency
are not the Bame
Individual Appointmonts
o Note making al
o Exam prep a Visual somnniBg
a Math-Scienco
19
Study
Workshop
1 15-4.X
26
Midterm
Exam
Workshig
115-4:30
L
13
GRE
Workshop
1-4
w
14
Gf^ Trial
Test
1230-4 00
Th
16
Bonding Group 3-5***
20
Reading
Group
io-ir*
27
Group
10-ir*
21
2B
22
Reading
Group
10-12^
29
Group
10- ir"
ng Group 3-5***
16
Science-
Math
Workshop
3-5
23
the first half, the Hootiers hit
only 45 per cent of their shots,
but in the second stanza shot
at a 60 per cent clipt-Indiana"
AU-American center Kent Ben-
sen, particularly, went berserk
in the last 20 minutes, scorinB
15 of his 25 points while hit-
tins ^i^^ ^^ eisht field s^^'
attempts.
Michigan, on the dter
hand, got off to a. rousilt]|
start, taking an IS- 10 lead in
the first eight minutes, before
settling for a six point halftiins
bulge. But the second half mnt
a disaster, ns the Wolverines
could only mensBr to score on
35 per cent of their shots from
the floor. And they were
swamped. ,-^-
-We just couidn\xfet the
running game going in the
second half,** said Michigan
All-Tour#hment guard Rickey
Green, whose quicksilver pene-
(Continned on Pafs 42)
Cot out for a
slice of Uf e.
I
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•
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I
I
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•
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f
I
NomacU watering th*ir com^li
at a Soharan oasis Gouchos
whooping it up oti th^
ktgmnUxm Pcanpao. CarpmX
w«av«rs working in th« Graiid
Bazaar of Isiohon DiscoT«r
lif«styl«s, traditions and b«auty
unchanged by tim* and
unknown to th« av«rag« tourist
Cut yours«li in on a r«wardtng
and challenging sites ol UAs
with Tr«k AdYsnt«Ar«s
Cm ■» hi. S«nd jns th» lelWw-
mg Ovaflaad Cuipping Tovn
and ExpedNiens howhurss ^
Q Europs Asia. Africo and ths
AmsricoB
Q Ruscio^CflMSMa
ScoDdhMTio
n South Amsrica
I
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Oty.
My Travel
>«
Mov into firif pincn
BatmM sweep Gnuchoe
Bv Marc Deflhs ' TW nn^sw frMM <«• rwa^k n^Mm^^ii ^^ wu.
Wf Marc
DB Byqtls Wr«lOT
h*s i bit early for the UCLA
to he thinking about a league title, but
could excuse the Bruins for letting their minds
iNMier. b*s been quite awhile since UCLA ted
a kfitiiiM^ shot at a conference championshtp
With thetf thrtee-game sWeep of UC Santa
Barbara htft weekend, the Bruins find them-
selves in a virtual first place tie with the USC
Trojans in the California Intercollegiate Base-
ten Association.
The Bruins are S-4 while the Trojans are 6-3
Both have .667 winning percealOBV altboiigli.
tte Bruins technically have a one-telf game
h because the Trojans lave played three lesi —
In addition, of the Bfuins* 12 remaimng
league games, only six are on the road. Of the
Trojan*s 15 games still to play, 11 will be
played away from Dedeaux Field
Both teams stiU have to travel to Sunford
but Ite Bruins teve already been to Berkeley,
phiyed one at UCSB and two at Dedeaux
Field The Trofans* only road game in CIBA
play .««• played at Sawtelle Field
The Bruins are in first place hscnupe of their
sweep of the Gauchos, coupled with USC
losing one of three games to Stanford The
Cards took the final game of their three 0mm^
series with USC Saturday.
Tte Bruinn B^ excellent pitchiiig from Tim
O'Neill and Steve Bianchi, combined with an
offense which produced 24 runs and 31 hits.
^0*Neill picked up his fifth win of the year
against no losMS on Friday when he allowed
the Gauchos ju'.t four hits in eight and one-
third innings, winning 7-^. SlitMrday*s first
game saw Bianchi take a 6-2 decision, upping
his record to 3-2.
Offensively, the big man for tte Bmmm wm
itertstop^enfnnlsd hitter Robbie Henderson
CoBchcs. . .
K ontinucd from Fage^7K
Painter also called all of
BYU*s plays from the press
box.
Rile>\ like Gansz. comes to
the Bruins from Oklahoma
State, where he spent four
seasons and was in charge x)t
linebackers and recruiting. He
wll coach the centers and of-
fensive guards at UCLA:
ICe7irian, who ptmytd for the
Bruins und^ ^spper Rodgers,
returns after playing proCes-
sionai football for the past two
seasons
In other changes, secondary
coach Dick Tomey has taken
over the duties of the defensive
coordinator, formerly tte job
of Stiles.
—Mere DeNiM
Tte junior from San Diego coBecled eiglM hits
in lTar%ntt, includii^ two dopMM
home run, and scored six ttnMi.
First heseman-designated hitter Ken G ,
was four-for-mne with one homer and five nms
hatted in while left fielder Dave Baker coBscted
three doubles in Saturday*s second game Firsi
baseman Bnan Visetti was also four-for-nine
Friday, Henderson*s home run tied tte game
at two and the Bruins followed with five ruiu
in the seventh inning to win going away.
0*Netll allowed three of his four hiu in tte
Gauchos* two run fourth innii^
Saturday, the Bruins got single runs in tte
first, fourth and fifth innings for a 3-0 lead in
the first game After UCSB ihoved to withiii
two on Bob Edson*s tnple and a single by Tom
Conkhn, UCLA scored twice on a sii^|le by
Gaylord and an error Edson and Larry Silver
traded home runs in tte eighth inning to finish
tte scoring
In tte nightcap, tte Gauchos chased starter
Bob Lizarraga with a five run third inning and
led 6-0 going into tte bottom of tte fourth
inning Then the Bruins exploded
BoMry Dalhis and Henderson singled snd
Gaylord "^Itcd his three run homer Baker
doubledrJi«ent to Jhird on Viselh*s single and
scored on a sacrifice fly by ierry Waters. Silver
. was hit by a pitch apd^Dennis Delany jave tte
Bniifu a 7-6 lead with a long home run to left
' Tte..Bruins scored three more in tte fifth on
a ^puble by Baker and an error but UCSB got
one teck on Edson^s second homer of tte day
Dallas drove in g nih in tte eighth and it
proved to te tte winner when Conkhn hit a
three run Mast to make tte score 11-10 with
no outs in tte mnth.
Brad Bees cnntie out of tte bullpen to save
/tte game for Curt Peterson by serving up a
double play and pushing Ite Bruins into first
pinoe.
-J — r
' ■! ' ' ' • ■ " —ytin I ill .
I
GVE US18WEEKS
ANDWELL1URN
Thi lir|sst Misctisi
sf tori dsnissn
BEASUMNG TOOLS
httocsHlrvl
AIR
EOGCS/T SQUAHS
METRIC RULES/ L SQUARES
CENTERING RULES
TRU^NGLES/CURVE STICKS
RULES
wsBttrs..
See them
at your
Bookstore
J o -
(212) 7»l-StSS
Before you Start to question the value of
your college education, consider what you can do
with It as an officer in the Coast Guard Vlte have a
lew select positions still open m our August Officer
^Candidate School class
After )ust 18 weeks of specialized training,
yoult take a marjgennent position with real
responsibility It could b^aX one of our Port Safety
or Marine Inspection units Or helping operate a
r^reational lx)atmg safety program You'll t)e on
the |Ob with the nation's tersmost mm\Urne law
enforcement SB^ncy Protecting man from tht sea
^nd the sea from man •
The Coast Guard is known for saving lives and
property Today our role is expanding as we protect
coastal sea-iife resources from depletion t)y fishing
fleets and intercept maior narcotics smugglers oft
our shores A Coast Guard jOb is a big responsibrttty
The rewards are excellent, too A starting
salary of over SlCOOOa year, post-graduate Iratmng
opportunities and excellent retirement tDenefits
after only 20 years if you decide to stay with us.
plus a^l the other benefits of military service Of
course, the personal satisfaction withs job w^il
done isits own reward
The Coast Guard OCS is a fMdsfiBpportunity
But applicalions for August classes will be closmg
very soon, so call Linda Rodriguez in Long Beach at
590-2257. She's got the answers abBut a Coast G»uard
career - ways you can mate your degree pay off
mgold. •
^
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<'.••'
8
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Intramural Spor^ JlCtterS^Ce StajlfOftf, USC
All interetted in men's
•oftMi teams must send »
representative to the tol-
lowiQf: Frmlcmity and
Dorni Teams — Monday,
Aprri 5 At 4 pm in MG 102
lAdependenUi — Tuesday,
April 6 at 4 pm Jn MG 102
A. B aifd C diviSMns wijl bt
offered.
Hi
4
•
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Haunting new poems that lay bartf
•w life we lead, by a poet 'of superb,
unforgettable power."
OUttOl OATCS
Edited by Linda Gray Sexton
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TIk UCLA men's tennis teain fortified ks
■limber one ranking in collegiate tennis iMt
weekend witli two convincing dual match
victories over the mix ion *8 second ranked
Sunford Cardinals (Friday) and third ranked
use Trojus (Saturday), by S-l and 7-2 scores,
respectively. The two dual-match victories
brought UCLA*s 1976 record under head coach
Glenn Bassett to an unblemished 14-0 and
increased the Brums* winning streak to 33 over
the last two seasons. Stanford, which defeated
use Thursday « 5-4, is now 9-2 on the season,
as are the Trojans.
The Bruins utilixed their superb team depth
and consistent play by their top three singles
layers, Peter Fleming, Brian Teacher and
Xayggn« to defeat their counterparta boSl|
Friday and Saturday.
Reming, Teacher and Taygan ijt all un-
defeated in UCLA dual-match competition This
year, while UCL.A*s fourth and fifth players,
Bruce Nichols and Jeff Austin, Jwve lost just
once. *
The surprise of 1976 thus far has been
'UCLA*s sixth singles man, Tony Graham, a
junior college transfer from Pierce Collepe^ ^ho
has yet to lose all season.
The malclKs oyer the weekend were con-
lesied at both UCLA*s Sunset Couru (after-
noon) and in Pauley Pavilion (night) on the
same 'Supreme Court* surface which was used
when UCLA hosted the^ Pacific Southwest
Tennis Open tournament last summer in
Pauley. Last weekenJ^s matches wttt the first
collegiate matches to be held in Pauley.
The third through sixth singles mtches and
saeond and third doubles contest were held on
the outside Sunset Courts both days with first
and second singles and first doubles matches
played in Pauley.
UCLA i.
1
I) letter Flenyiv (UCLA) def BiU Mot (S) 6-.
3. ^
2)Brian Todier (UCLA) def Pat DuPre (S) 6-
3, 1-6, W
3)Ferdi Taygan (UCLA) def. Man MitcheU (S)
6-7. 6-4, 6-2 ^
4)Brian NicMi (UCLA) def. Mark Mitchell
(S) 6-1. l-6/>0 ________
5) John Aaat (S) def. John Auicia (UCLAT^2,
2-6. 6-1
6) Tony Graham (UCLA) def Perry Wnght (S)
7-5, 6-2
DFIeming-Tend^r def. Mazc-DuPrc 3-6. 7-6,
6-2
2)Taygan-Steve Mott def MitcheH-Mitchell 6-
J^ ^ ^ -
3)NiclM>li-Atifldn def Wngfat-Gene Mayer 7-6."
UCLA 7, use 2
Peter Fleming (UCLA) def Bruce Manson
(USQ 6-3, 6^
Brian Teacher (UCLA) def Chris Lewis (USQ
6-3, 6-4 .
Ferdf Taygan (UCLA) def. Mike Newberry
(USQ 7-6, 6-4 ._. —
Andy Luchessi (USC) def. Bruce Nichols
(UCLA) 6^, ^3
John Austin (UCLA) def. Charles Strode
(USQ 6-7, 6-1, 6-3
Tony Graham (UCLA) def Hans Gildenieiilcr
(USQ 6-3, 6-3
Teacher- Fleming def Manson-Lewis 6-4, 5-7,
6-2
Newberry-Luchessi def Taygaii-Mott 64, 6-2
Nichols- Auftts def. Gildenieister^Strode 6-3, 4-
6, 7-6
(Comimcd from Page 40)
tration aad defense kept the
Hoosiers off balance all night:
**They plsyed a great second
half,** added coach Johnny
Orr "I don*! know what else
we could have done. They
made all those^ free^ throws
when tlM^ ImmI t# make them
and that*s wliy they*re a
champion *"
The margih of victory i^as
even more astonishing in light
of a concussion received by
Indiana guard Bobby Wilker-
son in the first minutes of
action. Vainly attempting to
All
Hair Salon
for Women and Men
V-
A short version of the pyramid
cut. This cut is supposed to be
abje to go through a windstorm
and fall back In shape.
1993 Sroxton Ave
Suite 242
(jfcove WKervlMNMe Record*)
Westwood Village
Mon thru Sal
473-31M
stop Michigan forward Way-
man Britt on a breakaway
layup, he took an elbow and
fell heavily to the floor After
several minutes, he was^ re-
mo¥»i' on a stretcher and
taken to Temple University^^
Hospital, where his injuries
were judged minor.
As a result of Wilkerson^s
mjury, the Hoosiers just **liad
to work a httle harder,^ ac-
cording to Benspa, who was
later named outstanding player
of the tournament.
"This IS a dream come true,"
he ad^ed. **And it has all come
through the grace of God . **
Third place.1^.
(Continued from Page 40)
:^ln his final game, Drollmger ~^
got a chance to start aad re- *
sponded with 12 points and 16
rebounds before fouling out
-^iftth 5i seconds left.
(!)ne other man who man-
aged to keep the faith, to say
nothing of hu sanity, was
coach Gene Bartow, who
guided the Bruins to a 27-5
record and third place in the
nation in his first year
at UCLA.
''It^s over," he saad in the
media interview are. "lt*B been
difficult. As I said before^ 1
wouldn*t recommend a steady
diet of following John Wooden
to a young ooaeh but tt*s been
interesting."
When naked if he was dis-
apimnted with finishing third,
Bartow said. "When you win
your leapK, your regional and
your city and you iMMe sqoie
great people — high daas peo-
ple—in your program, you*ve
done well. Pm sure our players
are disappoiated aad feel they
will be in Atlaata .aext year
(NCAA finals site) and V4
have to agree.**
That could be a wamii^
especial^ if JolMMon, whom /^
Bartow called "the OMit
dominating force in college
' MketKall- ,n m ..f fir-i A-.
final 15 games, returns fee his
final
"rf^:
' *"
,«•■
• t
Abernelhy the
(C ofiiinued froM Page 34)
Knighf liad thought that for
his team to win. it wpuld have
to suy with the Brums early in
the -contest. /^ .
*^We knew they were a better
team (Indiana had defeated the
Brums 114-64 in the season
opener) but we felt we had
Improved also." he said "We
felt we had to stay' with them
the first seven or eight minutes
because of the emotion they
brought into the game because
we ^d beaten them before
•*1 think the kcv points were
when wc xbrre able to come
lead at the half and then run
off some time and score when
the> had cut our lead from 12
to >ix. poiifts."
The key. however,. \*as (he
defense the Hoosiers played.
coHapsang on 4he bigger men
and making it tough to get the
bait inside Washington went
25 minutes without scoring and
Johnson didn't tally again alter
hitting a layup with 13 55 left
In fact. Smith's layin with
6:02 left was the final buck
the Bruins would scOie
UCLA's final five points all
came on free throws
So, UCLA* chance for
llth title in 1 3 years cn^cd
that Saturday afiernoort Iwo
days later. Indiana would of;
ficiallv pick up the Brums title
-•i rwiionai biiNinpiMni "> ^
Icating Michigan (o fmish a
perfect season The Brums,
meanwhile, would have to 'sei-
flr' for thwd m the nat.on
NEW! BIKE ALARM
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1541 WESTWOOO BLVD. Pallo #9
WMtwpod • 477-3640
r
. f
Bruins try to figure it out
(C ontinued from Page 34 1
—Oh, they're better,** re-
sponded Johnson "Thev
scored more points."
Assistant._cpat:h Larry Farm-;
er, himself a starter on the
1971-72 and 1972-73 undefeat-
ed NCAA title teams, saw the
officiating as a' significant
factor in the outcome Not that
the. referees favored one team.
but rather the kind of game
called favored the Midwestern-
: ersr ^- "■"' : , .::; . - ^y ^ , ■— p-rrTxr-:
Washmgton saw the kev as
Incliana being more succes.sful
m following Its game plan
piaying its type of game and
forcing the opponent lo tolU>w
suit
"Ihey |ust did «i better Wc
plaved better at the beginning
«JCl A led 7-2 carlv in the
first half), but thev ^ back
^Indiana^s a physical tean^
we play more hv fmesscr^*»ce!lent
^
**l don'i know it it
mental breakdown
been losing lea^r all
gotten away
They (Indiana)
team CX
vvas a
we'vp
season.
With rt
are a
aH the
4n~a^ f>bysical game l%r that, ff
the referdes call it close, the
fincase team has the advantage
If they call it loose, the
physical teiam has the advant-
ife. And they called it ^ loose
until the last two minutes
. That's not an encuse, that's just
'Iks way thiey called the 'game
**! thank our team defense
was excellent, and 90 per cent
of the time we got good shou
Bui, 67 per cent of them didn't
fall,** noted Farmer.
Agreeing with most of the
other members of the squad.
teams wc'^e^ played agaiaat
this year, they come the closest
to reaching their potential I
don't know it they're the best,
though." he said
Washington had httle to say
about the rumors* circulating
that he intends to go to the
professionals via the hardship
route in the hear future, giving
up his final year of eligibility
for the bia bucks
** Right now." he said, sfiitliiig.
**l iust plan on going back-^o
LA, and Uking it from there
I've got IK) plans
s
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Jackson hopes for majority in New York
Mary d«Ck Miirrill ' Jackson has loent StiUO.QQO manv voterf have inrftgatgrf nivhit ^tAi^.tbiH^ loi^wici/^n ««.r Pr*M../4»fl«t P^rH ..k.
•y Mary
DB
FoUowing hu big win in the
Mattachuictis primary. Sen.
Henry Jackson promised a
*'lan4slide** victory in New
York. However, today Jack-
••■■ New York campaigners
are hoping for 51 per cent of
the vote in that tute*s pri-
Jackson h|is spent S^UO.UOO
woomg Jewish and labor Moct
m New York, while competi-
tors Rep Morris Udall and
Jimmy Carter have spent
S300.M0 aad $70,000 respec-
tively.
The **ittop Carter" onovemem
in New York may contribute
to a Jackson win. According to
the Christian Scmmct kiomtor.
many voters have indicated
they are voting for Jackson*s
delegates They say however,
they are doing so to stop
Carter and enable Sen Hitbert
Humphrey to take the nomina-
tion in November
274 ddeglai
An estimated ^ to 25 per
cent of the 274-member dele-
gation of New York Demo-
crats could consist of dele-
gates who are silently, pra-
Humphrey and are hiding their
alicgiancr to him with uncum-
mmcd iUics
Udall IS counting on a win
HI WisK:onsin to give ht*> cam-
paign renewed impetus Should
Udall fall shon o( vict<»rv in
Wisconsin and come in second
to Carter again, he may well
drop out of the race.
But here again, the stop^
Carter- in t he- name-of- Hubert
Humphrey-movement may
help Udall to victory in Wis-
consin.
night's state-wide television
address m Wisconsin will give
hiro aa adfc there Reagan has
fa<^d a series of defeats to
President Gerald Ford (except
in North Carohna) and is ex-
pected to lose again in Wis-
coosui, despite his Uut-minuTe
media campaign ^
According to potls reported
in the Chris nan Scirncr Moni-
lur. President ^ord should win
comfortably perhaps by as
much as a two-to-one margin
And in New York. Repub-
licans will be electing a large
blo<; of uncommitted delegates.
•U of whom arc tied to Vice-
Tresidenf Nelson RockefeHer^
and can be eKpected toAuppoff
President Ford at the RcpuK
hcan convention.
HulMrt Humphrey
While Carter has received
strong backing iti Wi»consHv
and may well chalk up another
win there. Udall stands to gam
victory if enough lit>erals now
decide they want to cast a pro-
HumpK^^^y vote by temporarily
backing Udall < .-
In thr Republican race, for^
California Governor Ron-
iteagan is hopins that lasrt
Morris Udall
VohHiM XCVIil, Numbw t
UnlvvrsHy of CalHomla, Lot Ang«ilM
TiMMtoy, Aprtt 6. 197e
Regents hike out-of-state tuition by $405
Increase will take effect fall quarter
>'^-
DB Stair Wrilan
Davis — A tuition
of $495 a year for out-of-Suu
and foreign stadenu at UC
approved at the close of
wmk by the Board of
Beginiuttg this Fall quarter,
tuition for non-residents will
iticrease from SI. 500 to SI, 905.
It is the first increase in five
years.
Presidem David Saxon laid
the 27 per cent increase is
'"related directly to tlie iafla-
tieaary effecu of salaries and
pnoe laeraMCi on instructional
costs in recent years.** VC
officials snd ^k sute master
plan for, higher education al-
\pmt UC to adjust non-i
fties to n
The tuition hikes, coupled
anth euirent non-residc^ regis-
tration fees, raise tlie total
innital non-resident charpe for
iia^BrfniiMiM from S2,I00 to
S2,505, and from S2J60 to
St565 for graduate st«4esto.
The boost is backed by the
Student Body Presidents
CotHiCiL The council told the
Refents* comnwtlfc on finance
that untoas nMNHMaat tuition
is rajwd, tiK ! igillifn will
set arbitrary imits on non-
resident enrollment in Cali-
fornia*s exi
five per ccm of total enroll-
ment. The Univenij3f is op-
^Mii^ the bill.
During the two day meeting,
the Regents also were pre-
sented with the first annual
report on affirmative action
the UC system.
According to the study, wo-
men have benefited the most'
from affirmative action within
the UC system T-he- Regents
were told that measurable per-
centage ghins appeared in both
academic and total career staff
positions from 1973-1975
However minorities, while in-
This and future reports are creasing in number, have not
in response to a recommenda- gained a greater percentage of
tion made by tiK 1975 Bud- the work force since 1973
getary Conference Committee's
Supplemental Report. To help increase ntinority
pnor-
mprc
m
employment, a shift in
ities was urged towards
action-oricntcd methods.
According to the report, the
University strongly believes
that the emphasis in Affirma-
tive Action programs should
be shifted from expensive and
overdetailed paperwork to
act lon-or lent ed programs.
This suggestion partly re-
flects the scarcity of state
money for Affirmative Action
The University has originally
TIk Legialnture is currently
considering: a bill by Assembly-
man MitlMiei Worfnun (D-Mill
medical students to
requested $2,592,500 to aug>
men! the state's annuaf ap-
propriation of S250.Bit for
what IS called the Affirmative
Action Personnel Program
This sum was cut to S500.000
by the State Assembly, then to
S250.000 by the Committee on
Conference and finally was
eliminated by the Governor in
his final budget. "
Due to Governor Brown's
actions, the Regents, who had
counted on some increase in
state funding, were forced to
approve the use of SI. 000,000
in Regents' funds to help
shoulder the cost of what was
tt lined ^i>asic support for the
University's Affirmative Action
programs
In other action, the Regent
accepted a recommendation to
re-approve funds for the
struct ion of a school of
tistry on the San
Campus That project has
embroiled in litigation since
IfM. whm tkt environmentti
impact study was HmJengcd in
court
It was found that the Uni-
versity did not comply with
procedural re<|uirenMala of t%
^aliforma Environ WKninI Qiiiil-
ity Act The University
now submit the
impact report to the Stntie
Assembly and Senate bcibr^
the Califomia Snperior Cowl
will lift Its minnciM
dcvclapiewt td that faahy
The University. mJ(^
plymg with
David 8. Saxon
IS appealing the
•^sr
• .^
I..,
^^iMMM^pM^^i
^mm
~jnr^ ^T
-7T-r
1^
Jack
lajority in New York
/
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4
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/ ALUMNI STUDENTS FAGUlTV
Valuable coupon
\
I
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I
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I
I
I
iiiorvvin in race for Conors
DB Staff WiHtf
parreKNS of
PPOBieM 5ouViNQ
r^"
1
<
1
While NocJ S Hbrwihrwie
of five Democritic candidates
running for tEe 23rd Congrea*
tioiial District seat, Int aever
run for elKMd office, he if so
stranfti to politics.
Horwin served as a staff
nfKmher in Robert Kennedy's
presidential campaign, a field
reprncntative in Edmund Taf*
Brown's gubernatorial cam-
paign and was an utiitint to
former Rep James Roosevelt
(D) His father is a former
noayor Beverly Hills —
Terming himself a ** public
^^SK»tKr Mo^win^^iiilievcsr^
might better itpttacnt voters
(AccoRO\H(i To f pje-eNPOLLKeNT
sec V
HW8-10
4t30 etiQR.I
•aec^
HW3-5^
1144 Ci5M
•5ec7
TRe-lO
4t30ef4(4R X
6ec9
TR JO - 12-
41 H eNCflX
- dec 10
TR1-3
iZfOCa^M
sec. \\
T«.i-5-
SU^ M5
" ',._-i'"^.
■ -»((* _ _ ■
ihat would a veteran of pubbc
office.
^'Voters should ask them-
selves if they are completely
taffird with the way things in
government arc going." Horwm
iuud. lie descnbes himself as "a
public citizen who has never
held political offioe. who makes
no promises or guarantees, but
who makes a. couple of' offers"
~~^lt6rwin"i ^Offers** entail i
pAKlgt'^to do my best to rep-
resent the contftitiiency's mter-
ests and x^ seriously biten to
what people have to say. (iMi)
to senousK consider amving at
a decision."
^ ctocted. Horwtn would like
to see Amencan foreign pobcy
reevaitiafeii. i wouki enoeaTor
to reexamine the principles
upon which our polioes,,-arc
formulated," Horwm miA He
advocate iMx hmmc leleaivity m
givuig finiunnl Hipport to for-
aifp govemmenii.
Horwin said~ i more **pre-
ventive" approach to increased
cnme it asoHnry. *H think we
need to cveale more jobs for
people. If peopk dos*t work,
tiKy don*t feel productivr, thry
feel iiolMed," he said!
Horwin would encourage a
wide-ranging environmental
clean-up program that would
provide jobt aad at tiK iMf
jMf "*iiakf if prnfirililr' In
clean up Ihe environment."
Viewing poor nutrition in the
U.S as ^ top j>nonty issue,
Horwm favors an intensive pro-
gram to: ^iiseminate informa-
tion on a balanced diet
On the CIA, Horwin said, "I
tend to think if there are proper
safeguards, and if the basic
reasons for its exitience are
adhered to, then there is some
kind of viable rationale for
preserviog its existence."
Other Democratic donteiukn
M IlK noe for the 23rd Con-
gressional-District seat are:
State Senator Anthony Beilen-
son. Martin
T-' ■*-
T
The Council On^ Educatioiial
D e veTopnient (CTO)^^
will be cOnsiderrng course proposals for
the Fall Quarter 1976 arid the Winter
Quarter 1977, and is prepared to sponsor
innovative courses of genuine academic
quality which would be of interest to the
campus comnriunity. Such coUrs^ pro-
posals will be due in the CEO office no
later than Monday, April 12, 1976 (for the
Fall Quarter 1976) and Mcfoday, May 17,
1976 (for the Winter Quarter 1977). If you
are interested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educational Development, 3121 Miiff>hy
Hall.
~\\
7 Pint wHtc your
mother mnA tei her you're 0.lC
Then come quick to Mc & ^ .
itjfoa have to ge^ut
letter anyway) and have some tH'
our famous hot faApfei. or m^^
shiish kahab. or aamt aggplaiit
salad. \Me take all kinds of good
things and put them into a nicK^
fresh pita bread for you« add ^^
tomato, lettuce, and
t. and moat of these sand-
wkiies arc on^ 90C. Althovi^
shish kabab is ^130 and a nice
piece of steak JT
Conferences
held pn ecology
nKtLiife
% lltybum in the Viilafe
Eat hare / take out / open 24 hra.
(
The Oifiee.of Environmciital
and Consumer Affairs (OECA)
^planning two ecology con-
ferences on campus for sprang
qaaner. .
-The first will be held April
10 in conjunction^ with the
department of geography, ac-
cording to Paul Sonnenfcld of
OECA h will be about the
fiatural history of the Channet
islaafds There will be seminan
.ort the flora, fauna and impact
of man on the islands.
The second conference is
scheduled for May 22 and will
be hekJ with Vice Chancellor
Herman P Miller and the
Department of Geography,
Sonnenfcld said. The confer-,
ence will discuss urban parks
and life in cities. There will be
seminars and workshops at the
Sunset Recreation Center. It is
being held m conjunction with
the l^riends of Sanu Monica
Mountains.
The OECA nee^ volunteeri
to help ^lan and carry out
both conferences
Two Steak
dinners
$5.29
i.^ k ••»{
oeverage
»s »r>ctudeo
I
I
I
TWO S2.59 SIRLOIN STEAK DINNERS
AND TWO 49€ DINNER SALADS
;^^-^ FOR O-
siTTin FMm.Y stuk house
M k
I
I
I
Qua! ft y Food st
Rfasonmk$9 Prws
Th0t s what counts/
Julinn Shubnan
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Tuaaday. April t. IglTf
Voluma XCVIII, Numbar 2
9QhOOl fmr •M99QI dktNrtg holKtmys
•net daft totfpwmg holtdmys and •«-
^mmMtton p9rio<i,:ik by ttf ASUCLA
CommuntcMUona Board 306 East-
wood Pimxa Loa Angaim. CaMomm
9P024 Copyright 1979 by tha ASUCLA
CommutmaHom Bomni Smeona ctaaa
pommga mM at ma Loa An$ai9a Pom
Offtoa
Jamas R
Anna Young
PaHmr B B»r»on
Franii StaiNvontt
>tuftSii»iiHilii
taura Klamar ~
Howard Hughes
dead at age 70
Howard R Hugbn, the bil-
booaire tycoon who ipent his
last years m hoteb living in
mled-off saciiiiion.» died ymr
terday en route from Acapulco
to Houaton, Texas, where he
was seeking oitiical treatment
Hughe^, ftnerally acknow-
ledfid to' be one of the workfs
richest people, built a family
owned oil-drilling business into
a business empire spanning
television, BimPiM> eirhnet and
electronics that was eventually
worth over S2 billion,
A spokesman at Methsiilt
Hospital in Houston Texas
•iid Hughes wai being tfni
ported there for emergency
irHimehl when he died
Prop. 2 aids veterans
:f
^4— j-
DB iUair Writer
A pra^ram which provides
hundreds of California veler-
mm with low-interest housinc
will hah m June unlem a S50i
nuilioa hMid aMasure is pnaed
^ yoten on June 8.
The miamri, PrapMition 2.
■Wires conunuMWC of .funds
housing -Mid farm loans to
Cahfomia veterans
Under legislation effective
January 1, 1976, the maximum
loan amount is $30,000 If the
veteran doat mm. have sulfi-
down payment to pur^
a home at that amount.
he may borrow S35,000
The six aad one-fourth per
cent annual interest rate it
lower than what hanks charft,
according to Eay K.ovitv. a
director of the CiUzcAi for
Cal-Vet Housu^ -^-^-^ ■ " ^
DiaaMed veterans
DiiaMed veterans have fifit
priority for loans, with former
POW*s and MIA*s or their
Prograntrwilfcstudy
Japanese internment
By Floyd W. W
DB Stair Reporter
**In a recent article in the TV Guide, S.l. Hayakawa said
' that Manzanar wat a regrettable . mistake The question
we*re asking is, was itT
Kenwood Jung, aniftant coordinator of student-com-
munity relations for the Asian-American Centex, said the
Asian Students* Union is examining that question in
preparation for their twoHlay Manzanar Program slated for
April 9 and 10.
According to a short history supplied by Jung, during
World NVar Two American citizens of Japsaeae heritage
were rounded up, sent to what the government euphe-
mistically called **detention camps*" (such as Manzanar) and
held there against their will. Their properties
confiictad ^ the governmgt. thaae Amtncmm
end of the war in these cnmpt. **There is no way to estimate
the psychological or economic loss suffered by these
people,** Jung said^
Manianar largeH
Manzanar was the largest of the prison camps used to
^ Aiplnced Americans. Jung explained In tlK early
da3rs of residence in the hastily built camps, housing,
jaaitary and aKdical Cadliiies were nearly non-existent.
**The inmates made cita^t mt within the barbed wire,** Jung
said." ^ ' -~ -.^-«-* - ,
Almost *34 years later, the hitter memories of injustices
still remain in the minds of those iinpnsoned. As a rettilt,
each year the Manzanar Committee holds a pilgrimage to
the site of the original camp as a remembrance of the past.
UCLA*s Asian Students* Union, in a press releaae. said
they **iee the need to conduct education as to the true
nature oFthe camps.** To this end, the ASU is planning an
educational program on what they call the **Japanese-
American concentration camp experience** on Friday,
March 9, from noon to 5. *
Ta mm Rac Cairtar
**We*re trying to get the Buenos Aires_Room in the
Sunset Canyon Recreation Center,** said Jirag. **We*re
planning photo exhibits, skits by ASU mcinfcgit, apaakers,
and one or ^wo films on the Manzanar incarceration.**
Alto planned by the ASU are a keynote speaker and a
dinner later that mght.
The tnp to Manzanar is set for April 10, at 8 am. Those
who wish to take the four-hour bus ride to the camp must
pre-regiiter, according to Jung
*^We encouraged any indtviduali or organizations to
partiapate in the planning of this event,** aaid Jung. Further
information is available from Kenwood Jung at S25-I006.
widows Moaad Third priarif
goes to veterans released frOIH
active duty wtthm the last 10
years
Proposition 2 will not in-
cfcaae sute uxes because mor-
tage payments by the veteran-
homeowners cover the bond
iaaae repayments as well as
administrative costs of the
program, according to Kovitv
**Cal-Vet IS completely self-
supporting, and the bond issue
is entirely self-liquidating.**
lays ILovttv
No tax iMNiey
Kovitv nid the bond issue
will aat aaly aaat taxpayers
nothiiif:^Mt^vittptso be bene-
ikial to the economy
**The loans are used to buy
new hoQMa, and they give the
const nKflaa industry a boost,
which is right now going
through a terrible period/*
Kovitv said.
Ounng Its 54 years of opera-
tion, the program has enabled
ahout 295,400 veterans to bor-
row S3. 5 billion to buy farms
and ^omes in the state The
averite is ahoiit $23,000.
Applications ftyr the pro-^
gram are coming in at a rate of
nearly 200 a week, according
to Kovitv Moat of the appli-
cants tfre Vietnam War vet-
DATSUN
^ K .-J^^i.'i-m' ■-
"Acres of Oatsuns
ft
Student Discounts — Ask for Fleet Sales
Pasadena Datsun
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
• 684-1133 ♦
Kllfl
j^ms^i
fl/OO
ffak^iwn., PROM
S^uyuro a
PIsylf
TOHO lA BREA THfATRP
Always
straw Hat Pizza Parior
Is now closed for remodeting,
but . . .
.Watch for Our Reopening
Around
Kovftv said the Cal-Vet
housing honds have always
been passed by voters, but with
present voter skepticism, the
fate oC the prcacat neasurr
hangs tn rhe tatance ""We
hope It passes,** Kovitv said.
**we have many outstanding
peopk^ supporting it.**
The bond measure faced no
difficulty getting on the ballot
and is supported by vartous
butinessmen, hi^r tinions, jni-
nority groups, lenders of both
political parties and major
veterans* organizations in the
state.
Oppo^tion
In opposition to Proposition
2 is the Libertarian Party
Party executive committee
member and past state chair-
man William Westmiller said
that '"the foundation for our
opposition-ji that the proposi-
tion ttilMT money away from the
investment markel, and it
makes \X more difficult for
businessmen and mdivtduah to
get loans.**
The Libertarian Farty- philo-
sophy is individual and econo-
mic hbcrty for everybody.
-— — Michael Katokis ^~ ^-
At the ke House Tu«s. April 6^ thru to tha \ 1th
in pQ so dona
\
m
TOPICS*
Phi Eta Sigma
NATIONAL HONORARY SOCIETY
Welcomes AH Members to a
Cenersl Meef/ng
Ack*rfYian Union 2408
Thursday, April 8 4 pm
— Baifhmenis —
* Spring I ntramuraJ Tennis
* Mardt Gras Booth mm AL A
' Initiation Banquet
^C
UCIA
IMIIKfNIAi
rVCMT
April 10th
T
The
Exciting
Straw Hat
nzk ^^^^.
I «t
\ ^Can The Spirit Of 76 Be Revived?
First in the UCLA BICENTENNIAL LECTURE SERIES
by
i^enry Steele Commager
otctA«ATioN or
^wiHi W^w 0
m
ApHi 14 — PAGf SMPTH. PfClliiwi of lUlliUMl
MfVOlUTtOti AS A FfOni'S h40Vlt^fNT
April 21 - I « POLi. Vice Ma • ' KurcMI
m VOL L riON TH»oiX,H mti rts
S PM
. UCWfUCru/ JHt AMIHK ^N
Untvc^Yity JHk AMIMICAN
April M — aOanT KI Uf V, rigftwu ot Hmory , UC S«nu tvbaca TWO HUNMfO YtAMS €)f IHt
TWO PAMTV SYSTfM - HO^ HAS IT fVOtVfO AND WHtUt Aitt ¥¥ti
No Ad
Chari
iminion^Chafae
mtAa/f
PublK CordiaHv invit^^i
AprN 7 8 PM Royce Auditor turn
* ttkk ian%tta ot^)
hy UCLA iKawM^nnt^l C
■'» wr
^M****
m-
i
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2—
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1,1
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5
1 ^1 ^^^^^^*^^l^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^
1^
m
Wf^'-^
^*
^I«
^~
Here it is a new quarti^r and we are all bacK from a shoft (and possibly sweet)
vacation I've been down the Rabbit Hole, toa cpazy Tea Party, played croquet
With the Queen, and even danced a Lobster Quadrille; but the most fascinating
experience made me think of the coming quarter with a bit of interest. It was just
after the Caucus Race
I had a rather curious chat with the Mock Turtle, he was quite beside himself
with grief You aee, it aeema he used to be a Real Turtle and go to school m the Sea
with the Fishes and other Turtles. Between sobs, be told me how he loved to study
Reeling & Writhing; Mystery. Ancient & Modern; Seeography. and Drawling &
Fainting He aleo got to take extras like Music, French, and Washing (how anyone
could take Washing in the Sea I'll never know!). He was especially fond of the
different branches of Arithmetic Ambition Distraction. Uglification.ano
Derision
The Mock Turtle was mostly sad because he never had anything quite like
ASUCLA LECTURE NOTES to help him along the way He knows that Lecture
Notes are a good supplement to Reeling & Wnthihg. something to keep one in the
swim so to speak, and besides. Lecture Notes provides a greet rendition for
schools of Fishes Turtles, and People, too'
So don t t>e a Mock Turtle start the quarter in a Reel way buy your
Subscription NOW for ASUCLA LECTURE NOTES at the Students Store
and just think you might even get an A m Uglificatjon this quarter*'
tECTUflE NOTES PARTIAL CLASS LlSr
Spring 76
600
6.00
Anthropology 11
Anthropology 22-
Sever
Goidschmidt
I . —
WX) AstrononrtyS
750
7.00
7.00
7.00
7.00
7.50
7.00
7X10
7.00
7.00
7.00
7.00
7.00
7.00
7.00
7.W
7.00
4X)0
7.00
700
7.00
7.50
7.00
7.00
7.50
Bacteriology 6
Bacteriology 101
Bacteriology 103
Biology 1 A
Biology 1 B
Biology 2
Biology 110
Biology Ml 32
Biology 138
Biology 144
Biology 1W
cWnistry IB
Chemistry tC
Chemistry 1C
Chemistry 2
Chemistry 11 A
Chemistry 21
ChemMry24
Chemistry 133B
Chemistry 153
Economics 1
Economics 2
Economics 100
Economics 101 A
101A
Jura
Eieerling. Romig
Lascelles
Martinez
Staff
Staff
Herrisdn
Peterson
Grunstein. Orevi
Tobin
Ray. Roberts
Eckert. Negy
< D«vss(#1)
H«rdw»ck(#1)
Kasper4#2)
Ferrington
Trueblood
Brown
Smith
Foote
West
LeForce
Allen
Johnson (#2)
Ellickson (#2)
(#1)
7.^ Economics 101 B
7.(50 Economics 1 02
7 00 Economics 121
7.50 EcorK>mK:s160
6.00 English 90
6.50 English 115
7.50 Geography 1 A
7.x Geography 1 A
7.50 Geography 100
7 00 Geology 1
7.x Geology 1
7^ Geology 15
6.50 History IB
6.x History 6A
6 50 History 139C
6.50 History 174B
650 History 176B
7.x Kinesiology 12
7.50 Kinesiology 130
7X Linguistics 1
7 X Meteorology 3
7X Philosophy 3
Jones (#2)
Jacobs
Ellickson
Darby
Phillips
Sherman
Berger (# 2)
Tarjung (#3)
Walter
Foster (#2)
Kieffer(#l)
Ronan
Hoxie
Hemphill
Shaw
We^ss
Sanders
Hegberg
/Zernicke
Keer^n
Thorne
Hill
Gekelman (#2K
Heiserman-f#f)'
7.x Physics 68
7.x Physics 60
7iX) Physics 10
7.50 Psychology 10
7.50 Psychology 41
7.x Psychology 110
7.50 Psychology 125
7.50 Psychology 127
7.x Psychology 127
7.x Psychology 127
7.50 Psychology 130
7.x Psychology 135
7X Psychology 149
7.t)0 Psychology 165
6X Sociology 114
6X Sociology 131 *'
6X Sociology 145
6X Sociology 150
6 50 Sociology 154
10 00 Uglification
Study Guides 3.75 each
Math 2A. 2B
Math 3A. 36. 3C
Meth31A. 31B. 31C
C^m 11A 1R 1C'
Hi the Students' Stote, B level, Ackerman \yr\\oir\
•thufs 7:4S-t:30; fri 7:45-7:30; sat 10-4
Chester (#1)~
Malamuth(#1&2)
Greit2er(#1)
Roberts/Houston
Damon
Damon (#1)
Heinrich(#2)
Maiamuth (#4)
Jeffrey (#2)
Kanouse(#l)
Barthol
Peplau
Horton
Lopez
Freeman
Seeman
Bonacich
turtle
^-
%'••■
ASUCLA COMMUNICATIONS id^te^
ANNOUNCESTHE FOLLOWING OPENINGS
FOR STIPENDED STUDENT POSITIONS
1976-77 SCHOOL^EAR
I
?
Bruin
ADVERTISING MANAGER:
This position It responsible tor the entire advertising soitct-
tat ion effort for the Delly Bruin ar>d oversees a staff of
approximately 14 student
'■%.
'JNIVCRSITY OP CALIFORNIA - LOS ANGCLtS ^
TlW i>ntv«f«tty Communtty Carnvr Current Radio Station
GENERAL MANAGER:
This position IS respohkibte fpr all staffing and pro-
gramming of the station which operalai daily during
the aca#aaiic y
ADVERTISING MANAGER: f
This position IS responsible for all advertising sales
for the station
SOUTHERN
CAMPUS
UCLA VEARBOOK
EOlTOe
This positiorv4s responsible for content sales and staffing of
tr>e UCLA yearbook
m
SPECIAL INTEREST PERIODICAL NEWSPAPERS ARE -PUBLISHED TWICE PER QUARTER
ASUCLA'^'COMMUNICATIONS BOARD IS SEEKING AN EDITOR AND ADVERTISING MANAGER
FOR EACH OF THE ABOVE PEI^IODICAL PUBLICATIONS.
EDITORS:
ReaponsitHe for editorial content and a staff of appros-
imateiy 8 students
ADVERTISING MANAGERS:
Responsible for soliciting and recording ai' advertisir>g
WESTWIND
^•'•"•'♦y ^trm Arif Meps^ric
/cooper
EDITOR:
for soliciting artistic and literary con
butions and production of the magazine
EDITOR:
Is responsiote re- -V'^^'ig ••^.d
cation
*r,t^
It 1^ Tt>e
PICK UP APPUCATIONS NOW IN THE PUBLICATIONS OFFICE, 112 KERCKHOFF HALL
DEADLINE TO SUBMIT APPUCATIONS, APRIL 20, 4H)0 PM.
^^J^^
• FOR OTHER JOBS ON THE STAFF Uh IHbSb
CI IHt tUIIUHS AFIbH JUNE 1. 1!l/b.«
. / 1 «
m
rm,^
V
DIVORCE
ADJUSTMENT
GROUP
I AR MATTRESS
1976
Counseling
Psychological Sl Counseling Services
for those inieres^ed in explorlug ikeir
V^^^iom #r div€>rce experiemee mmd skmimg
ikeir comcerns in m group setting:
UCLA Thrift Shop
moiiey supports
medical educatioi^
p* »• iMn '*«^i»i4«. I
STATE Of TH€ ART
im9 9\
(Tti
iM
Once « week, for two hours.
4 M r«M» m IW ■ 7** MMM 1»«|
471' .ar'itf*
• -•■
or cmU f82/5'4$7i
AM Lirr. 4ipc Y
2?17 WdimhH Am..
■■Hi»l«V ■ Cirfif M703
By MklMBc DvvaJ
DB Stair Writer
FcaneH » one satisfied customer of the UCLA Thnft
Siiop. He comes m once a week, donates his old shirts and
h»y% a new one **I must have washed and resoAd him that
gold striped s»hirt a dozen times by nowT Anne Rauman.
chairman of the store, laughed.
Since 1962. volunteers of the UCLA Medical Auxiliary
have operated the UCLA Thrift Shop, located at 11271
Massachusetts Ave . just south of the VA grounds. Run like
any other thnft shop, the store boasts goods from all over
the Bel Air area and sells to **studeiits, people on hmiied
means atwf people who just like baigains," Bauman sai3T"
The money earned by the thrift shop, $43,000 last year,
serves to support certain auxiliary programs such as a
nursing scholarship Staffed by 20 women, the shop allows >
them to have "something to do with our time, as well as
allowing us to meet people from all different stratas^-
Eauman said
We'll Give You The
^meRib Off Our Back
All merchandise in the shop comes from donations And
they can always use donations Unhke more commonplace
thrift stores, the UCLA shop gives receipts on all items
received for tax deduction purposes
"People who arc hesitant about ht)w much to uke off for
donations like to come here Wc mark the items for what
we think we can resell them at and receipt them accord-
ingly." Bauman explained.
Z~ The shop sells everytiiing from clothes to furniture "We
don't carry newspapers or maga/ines, other than that we'll
take anything," Bauman said They also have a lot of
stealing. 'But 1 guess Bullocks does too.** Bauman added
Costumes
Customers run the gamit from sorority girls looking fpr
costumes to well-to-do people lookmg for bargains. '^We
could sell more better dresses^ if we got them We ha^ the
clientcl Lots of people know their labels." Bauman said
(Continued on Page 12)
Wek ^Imofttl
Includes
^O
Soup or Salad v
Roast Prime Ribs, Au Jus
(the way you Uke it)
Yorkshire Pudding
Baked Potato
Creamed Spinadi
Boll^ Butter
'
For A Complete Prime Rib Dinner
Plus — A Special Get-Acquainted Student DiMruunt _
SI. it off the price of
TWO prime rib dinners for TWO persons!!
I — "
Briag Ms ad — or — stow your student LD.
Dolores West — Open 24 Hours — Home of the "J-J'^
Jumbo Jim Hamburgers made famous at our sister restaurant,
Dolores Drive'liu Beverly HiUs
1 1407 SANTA MONICA BLVD., W.L.A. (At Purdua)
OPEN 24 HOURS (477 i06i)
11.
17.
4pHil4.
UCLA Thvtfl thop, located at 11271
on Hmlt^d
n
Would You Like A Vote On SLC
and
1
^ir
Would You Like To Run The
Student Welfare Commission
To apply for the position of Student Welfare Commissioner
p^ck up applications immediately at the Kerckhoff Hall
3rd floor Info Desk. Applications must be returned bv
April 9, 1976, 5 pm, to Kerckhoff 304. .
" Sponsored by ASIS/Student Legislative Council —
■^\.
r-wi
mi^^M
il
■c:
Arp foU qeo 5»\ce^ »ysdne
nm 9mL9> TAO SAO*
ptmimht
to •to««(.
"^^rr
•UtttOf
Tzi h. \
\
V
\
V^T
\
Toata Art Arrawfod by Acadaitdc D>icipllfn
and In Alptiabotlcal Ofdar and Color Codod *^
Laok^Mut Shelf tags ^ blue-tor -SprmQ) check the itkistration of
HiV shelf tiQ on this uaoe vou II bene1»f tron) uneterstandino it
Texts start at the Northwest corner of the department (An
thropology) and wind around to the next aisle and back and forth
ttl Theater Arts Extension books start at the South end of the
^ Stm and go West If you've been going through the text hassle
'^IM^fall maybe this timejt wont be quite so confusing
Em^-Sliolf-Bluot Cuffo %.^ ^^
If your books )ust plam aren t to be found look for thacii^d
morlMd Books Have Been Ordered - tt wtf! ti^ you
WHEN they were ordered how many of them and tt>e
approximate due date Hi not quite the same at actually
getting your book^M at least you know it DOES exist and
It s on Its way
Wiial Art "ail frlcaa"?
Saiiia book different price how conte^ Publishers set
bodk prices and prices go up They sat new prices We
bought at one price and we sell it at that original price
rattior than marking it up to match Hit ntwer higher
pflM of more rtctnt printings So watch for OLD PRIC£
ti9i and save
KEEP YOUR RECEIPTS because you can
gtt a full refund for a book you return if
you return it with receipt before Wed
nesday April 21 Used books brought to
our Buy Back department on the 2nd
floor of Ackerman will Ml Wk of llltir
original price if they ve oeeh adopted to
use in the upcoming quarter It s a
considerable moneysaver so don t ne-
glect It'
How To Dodptior • ttaM lw%
tfok over the above, »'» really complete Particularly check whethei there s^
Required on the shelf tag ho^mg your book If there il^ don t mess around
you re going to need that book Other books may be Recommended and you II
profit by itading them but if you re not rich buy only the books you mad And
don t forget about book buy back*
MiMe lo tpMii Ttxt coordln«lor«tt
If you ntat aptciai mlofination call Barbara Lynch 82^2827 or Cid Zaima t2S-
2320 ^f>A they'll give it to you They keep m contact witti the faculty to fill their book
trders make sure book wlormation is up to date on the shelves, and generally nde
herd on the whole Sl^tctiimic disciplmti tperation Thcy.ve been working on a
100% Communications Program with the University faculty and staff and what is
always complicated Procedure is gatting rather nicely straightened out so you
really can depend on tttem
VsT
•i'^
line
Vou Una Tlmt
Tilt difference batwaan real time and
tifne IS real hme ittraiwttve lint taut «, at
a rule. )ust an irritant That s whM yttt Stand
and 'stand and even if its a fine old UCIA
tradition yucky So at ttitbtginning of ttall
quarter a lot more regtsttrs are inaMtd it
dw bttt dapartitant — and Macditd aa ta
CASH Omy > CHECK OR CREDIT C/W
ONLY - RMJR fTEMS OR LESS EXPRESS
Watch for tM aifnt. ftl m iia ritM Ime and
ytur Sitrtttay wHI be ititrtanad
And if ytt can hack it. come It ma Store
early or lala tr on Stftirdays ^
And always '—.have your Reg card your
Bankamencard or Masterchargs. qrOriver s
iictMtiliia
WNIHolpYou
For the hrst couple of waakt of this
qutrter you II find parsons wearing big
n^n>% tags - and they vt statitntd in
the text department aisles They can teH
you where your books SHOULD be and if
tiey re not when Vtm WHl ^. Thty'H
also expitm btok prfcmttndtiitrtPatt
ntytltriet. ttd they re
know they'll
If Vou'ro RocNy Hung Up. HH on Iho Info
Seasoned career ewplayaai ctn answer your ttaaNtta and evtn on occa8aN>n try to
soothe yoi^.The Asucia hires as many students as possible but he knows you need full time
htlp. so thtfe dity are They know Xoit particular nttd| of Students Slaw cttltntrs
and ttiay know you're aknays m a t)Mtx>i So hang in there they II helo
FfM
During tie hrst two wtatt tf the quarter you can cliack your
watchful eyes of checkers so your totds ^xt free to ttl tie twita ytt atad m in
Store It mtMf dattiar - lor everyeta tut don t leave thmtt tvtrnitM. pliaai*
toKt booM wM bo
rtiumtd to INtlr pubiofitia trownd Idty lot
That means you should not stall tattiot your books II you wan iooioat> you untve to
get them by Spml Order wtttch is a dftt. Furtitrmore you'll miaa tia tit ftlund
period inciditiaily it you don t have the money fe buy your books htht now but
you I! be getting money tattr. don t foraet the Asucia s Cash-Now Pay Later
arrantamant YouctnctatadiackuptoSSOOO gettl»monoy.andwatinotturn vour
check in to tia tttk for two wtaks Neat rtghf
il%taiiMt^4_
Keep your /eceipls - they II te specialty
marked wtion jou use tiom tt Ilia buy itck
daptrtamtt iaJVmwntdttytt in tud Aprd
ytt ctt gm a ftdamptfon anualatt for them
and wfian tie whole program totar. pout tat a
check for 11"' of all your ftuiati Store
purchotts'
^ss-r
H?""a!"
<i.-*— ^•"
"-» ^^"-"-^ '8««>*^-' --'•
^=E
I
^
«'
daily bruin
point
c _>
What is a chairperson
by Kenneth L. Lee
s ncM«. le« IS 4 pro-
frl# SCflOOr Or *l>^lf>-
jtfing here)
Whaf if thn thing called a
chairperson that li emerging tn
our m€)derfy verf>acuUrf Are we
attempting to create a ne^
species of tnankind (or thoutd if
be perywkind)? Does it uc on.
Id
^land on. or put jm Hm pn
chair? Or » the piviii cMr
a figurative iKprgMipn w fhe
in many words ir>cluding
OPINION
iavor cH fellowperKinft. or
stble porfon pen«M. since
tome uufe fhe term fellow may
imply one of the male se»? Will
persomhip replace fellowihap?
In the sports 9nd protaii^m will
a fisherman, policcfnan. wea-
therman Mnd nsv\ frogman be
referred to hereafter as a Miei-
-•
(?■
,^^»
chairman, is o^ an eapremon
of a human being (or mmn it
r>ow be huponon)?
How far wtM fHis tnaumtmrnm
go in changing familiar Ktsafg^ ed
words in our mother tongue (or
IS It rK>w parent ton§iw|> Are alt
ng the
m^in tp become yrvainpj
? It not. wliy itogie out only
a few? WiU an InfMiman lr«h-
nsan ScolHnan. WeMMtsan. or
frenchman rH>w become an
Ingithperson. etc.? Mr hat about
the n^nnt fWmg Dutchman or
Man-of-^ar? AAil) man give wa>
to penon here skiof And will a
CiMan become a Gcff|MVion.
or a person from Oermany. o» a
Deutschlar>dtr» ir eiiai?
Must we now cea^ to show
kir>dr>ai^ tOL^Mir fetkMrmen m
person ^nd frogper»on, etc f
How jlioill Mivnan. ijukuman^
flHMMfi. brakeman. lineman.
fireman rodman. watchmar)
airman. boatman. Nonemar^
cattleman gateman leicpll^ne-
man to n^me a tew Will tf^e
coachrnen ^nd footmen in the
children s story Cinderella no^
be cHiMfed to coachperson and
? AfKl in fhe child's
will richman.
poorman beggerman also
be foiaiined? Will the song Oid
Mart River become Old P«fign
to give equality to both
WiM « mom be an ice
cream oerson who comes bv thi|
bouie m h« lor its) music
'^ <^»iii^g car on Sunday after-
jJffSa^i f ....;,/;-;: ■
Do we want our coitg<
f9%»n daughters r94^r9ii
or would
? WM file familiar
cry. -Hey. CuHigao-
r^e. way to "Hey. Cul-
Uganpervon or simpiv Hev
to rewrite ttie
ol coiift ofdgfvd
but wtH Mm Ihg h9ek
lioiv to di1v0 g
loggC
fr
ter
to as
Bible to have Cod creating per-
som in Its own image? Arni 9r^
we to lose our identity of being
part of -mankirKl? What word
will ^replace the slang exclama-
tion, manl* Of man alive!, or "I
tell you m»n," etc.? Must hisfof-
laiH Mnd archeologists now be-
gin to use terms like stone age
person. Neanderthal person, ^
half so that each woman could
hive an equal but senseless
portion? Must the colorful terms
cowboy and cowgirl, sf^wman
and showgirl also fall to the
cerworship of Solomon's sword
and be reduced to the expres-
sionleift term of cowperson, etc.,
in order to provide < eouity for
all? As asked by Columbia pro-
objection to the term Madam
Chairman?
Of course we must avoid
slander and disrespect to either
sex» but to embark on an imp
oromptu crusade against the
totally inoffensive root word-
-fwm is used in the sense of a
human beif>g, seemsTto carry
more of an aif or impetuoMS
Are we to end up ilping as*
Solomon threater>ed to do with
the disputed child 9nd split it in
JftMor iacQues^ ^arxun in outward show than of e
^••der's^ Difcsr of Nov. 1975, inorat conviction. In all sefknjs-
was Paul Revere really z Minute- ness, just what is this thing
person? And just what is the called a...<bairpefi<yif- ■-^'-'•:'/^-
adtj Ite
• by Austin
(f difor's note MsdnnH is a profۤsor here).
The evquHite beauty of the elusive A has been
t^nrshed The slashing hack of ^ministratiye fiat
has destroyed the singular elegance of its doirtiain
No lonfier does it signify the solid intention of
perfection, equaled with the integer 4.
Howr can an A mean anythirvg less than 4? It's
easy — strike down presumed inflation of grades
b» changif^g the domain of an A Simply appiv an
OPINION
admmaifative. horizontal karate chop, and the
mmus sifn cuts n to 3.7. Can this stiN be the
domain e^ in A? What a way to reduce presumed
grade inflation It gives no thought to the
unthinkable impossibility that perhaps some
Professors af>d TA's might aaually be doM^ a
|ob of bringing some sUMlerus up to their
iui capacity ^
i have alwavs enfoyed giving ^f% %, Even its
3e». pceiied sharply towards
reward for a star Thev were
even tun to form on tht grade sheets, drawn with
a nourish, poimir, ike an arrow, straight to the
of 4 iirt we fhe A't chastity has been
its peak truncated. ilMhed. orcumsized
•* *^^^^ fuMness. doAoeiered by tf>e thrust
o# fiat, opooinf «s domain to the realm of B
is had a beauty of their own. robust, signifying
fun to form on grade lists. Two bountiful
rounded mmmm^ik, 4fmm\ Kke bMH^ M good
with the lo«#id pen. A good i
be muoAnt as wdl, ofie bei formedrbigov
^ , aQOod base for springing forth life in
Of trie V can ie vnHaMl inrfd iiii « ^^
to the chilling curse
^ . ^ }^ ^^ P"l"«*"iiuw«l to the domain of
C StKk the «.nus sifii ■» iMn «hofe it hurts the
^ •'« ho%li«
J. Macinnis —
round C, not full circle of kh'Owledge, yet
adequate. The average student should be able to
go forth into the world with pride. But now the
connotation of a C is not good, ferhaps we
should adopt the NapoiaofHc appfOi<^. of awards
aAd medals to all that sMcceed, give the C
-' il»otner n^me. ttie bronze perhaps, not the gold
or silver, a level of distinction that signifies
genuir>e University graduate, but not with high
honors. But cut a C with a minus sign and it
drops to the doffuiin of D.
While r'm at it, a word or two about D's aiKi
F's. Now a D is passing, but depressing, a
deformed circle, but still somewhat sy metrical.
Jfid signifies a '1.0 CPA. W*-o cares if it is slashed
or partially surred with a plus? I ir>quired. a few
years ago. to a foxy sage who had been a Prof for
more years than I had en|oyed life, whethei to
' reward a student with a D or F. Give him a D, he
replied wisely, or you'll have him back neMt year
And tfie gift wai administered plaaiimhly
F's are not fun to fix to the form. Flagging
failure flaunted by two ftailif>g arnn. However,
with tfie F. the administrative slashes do pfoi^tde
additional useful ornamentation for whipping
students into shape. On rare occMiawi the F> is
given, using the John Carlin method. Such
mdents ne^ to be F'd slowly. The ph» sign
-giMCS them a glimmer of hope, bringing them m
to haoile for a D They can then be counselled, if
potential is rK>ted. or gleefully sent on tfieir way
telling them they had shown some iota of
acrnwpiihimiu. hei^nee the plus sifn. but know-
ii^ full weM that the coioiuter zonked them with
^ii.
• •^ W«thanotha»
13. a IiiiiOmI ^ pMO U,
lit
to be said lor a nioel
0.0, the old double-ought buckshot in the
britcf>es. wf>ich they need. The F- is ate useful to
indicate ^nd reward the complete wipe-out.
Thasie ncipiaiHi perfops should not be at tf>e Big
U. Ink can often be stroked mto succcm if you
Uke the tiwie. I have rr>et very few in ten yoars
that could not be saiied if given ■nwrtoii Then
the Prols git their fwrnrnd for their iw oSgrt by
cries ol inHaiad grades. Soioe f*s wore even
•ocorded id fed jguHlm oM dgft^tho tod Fte -
striking as OMidi ftpr as the hammgi and Jicm.
-h
\
The issue of PalestmiaM
(tdaor'i note e/ SuMJty is a
prq^esior tn the french depart
"*•"* '••re and member of the
America/ Third World Solidarity
Commaietl
OPINION
Because the liberation struggle
inside occupied Palestine is
gaming momentum, the news-
•wedia can no longer hide the
ugly visage of Israeli occupa-
<^fff!> The Mfifising of the Arab
- population in the West Bank,
during which even school child-
ren gave their lives fighting the
Israeli troops, had to be re-
ported However twisted.^ that
inf^mation spoke of Zionist
oppression and of Arab deter-
mination to resist It. The up-
rising did spread to that part of
the Palestinian population living
within Israel itself andsuppoiod-
ly /enjoying Israeli citizenship
their general strike of March 30
(fo protest the illegal confisca-
tion of Arab owr^ed lands m
Galilee to make room for Jewish
settlements), the clashes with
the Israeli troops, the six ^nore
Arab tpartyrs. all that again had
to be reported However
twisted, that information shat-
tered the lies and myths with
< f'hich. for years, the fjtf^&ple in
this country have been bom-
i>ardM by the mass-media jfi-
cluding. I am ^ad to say it/the
so-called "sanctuaries of truth"
teigr Idles the academic
instiiufions in case you did not
recognize them under that
label).
Even the blindest must now
•i-ealize that Israel which the
Daniel Moynihanv the Jacksons^
^nd other lackeys of the Zionist^
propaganda machine invite us to
imagir>e as a democratic"
LJay Hassan e\ Nouty
peace-loving lamb surrounded
by a herd of blood-thirsty Arab
^olves. IS no different from
Rhodesia or South Africa In the
three cases we are dealing witf)
three illd«|.s states that are the
products of Western colonial
aggression Hence the identical
features shown by the three
same racism, same ruthless re-
pression of the natives."
whether Palestinians or Africans.
Hence the course of Action to
be followed in Palestine as well
as in Zimbabwe (Rhodesia) and
Azania (South Africa): the popu-
Ijr armed itruggle until the total
dismantelmem of the military
and political apparatus of the
settlers' state and its replace-
ment with a genuine dofiiocratic
state in which all citizens ^ will
really be equal regardless of
their religious faith and their
ethnic or cultural background.
There is a d»^renf:e though
between Israel a^d its two re-
plicas in Southern Africa The
new*nr>edia will sometimes hint
to the evil nature of the latter
but never of the former The US
did nor oppose a UN Resolution
branding South Africa as the
aggressor m Angola while it
vetoed a resolution condemning
the l^aeli policy „ in occupied
Arab territories This is a re
minder that the ^mpenaU%t
ruling class in this country still
has the greatest n^d for its
Zionist watchdog in die Middle
East. ■" - r
We can therefore expecTthe
fiewsmedia to resorj^ to a variety^
of dfrty trlcis in order to defuse
the psychological impact of die
recent events in Palestine and to
hush-hush the whole issue But
we will bring It loud and <flear to
the public forum by a massive
demonstration m front of the
Israeli Consulate (6380 Wilshire
Blvd) on Tuesday April 6 at 4
pm All those who are con-
,»
I
Your
editorial cartoon
could be here
ApriTs Birthston^
A tiny ruf^
^4k gold — diamonHs^ r
starting ai $28 and matching bracelet
•Shane- ^«r4
Delicate gold cremimns of love knot rings all with precious
stones of diiigwdi, riiMeft, lipldiii, and m(ptt^ — with
matching accessories are featured in the fine OMporium
of haadtome jewelry at
AIm^ 14iC Gold It4
'^'* maicidng IMeHdare
$1MB
cerned with the cause oi justice
*nd fptedofn, all those who are
cofscerned with the future of
this nation must help to mobk^
Ite the public opinion agaltnt
the support given by the ruling
imperialist oligarchy to Israeli
coloni;»lism Besides being im-
rnoral that support is contary to
the best interest of the Ameri-
can people Come and foin the
demonstration' Down with im-
perialism and Zionism!
l-QQg live the Palestinian Re-
volutioni .
LOfif live
Koo Ve hmmrd Mbout n. mmn it on Tv/Mawim
RIDE THE RAPIDS
-^ * heur enve from L A »-^-
untMiiavabia advanturt unparaMiaietf
r
SM.UP^lUK » Oil »24«
tween the )ewish masses, the
Moslem maises and the. Chris-
tian masses in Palestine!
Long live the «>lidarity be-
tween the American and the
Arab peoples!! ^
rm
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A M ST w »«—».,
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BOMBSHELTER
PATRONS!
Remember the leisurely lunches on
the grass in front of Life Sciences?
The future of this area Is undecided,
but the University is seriously con-
sidering a plan to turn it into a con-
crete courtyard. We think that this
plan is unnecessary and unwanted.
We vyant a reasonably plan vvitK
more grass and less corrcrete.
If you cTgree, please sign our petition
this week at the Bombshelter.
Sponsored by:
Biological Sciences Council
M^h and Physical Sciences Council
Health Sciences CounciP
Engineering CoMOciJ of the
Graduate Students Assbeiition.
y
\
You've got to visit Shanes |o believe the vast selection of
or whatever yoWr desire nnay be.
Ahd best of all are the low prices
SKANTS lEWELLERY CO.
WEST
TTRBROXTON
WCSTWOOO VlilAOf
477-g4t3
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DR. ALFRED R BECKER
Wtfttwood v.iu9» Optometrist
10959 Weyburn Ave
0nb0r t^a i nmcnb
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If chMkis
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CHAN'S GARDEN
CantOfM^M A Mandarin Cuiwkm
ExcoMofitChin*^ Food, B—r * Wina
Ooetf tarvica^ rraa Parking at
Waatwood Canjar, ^nk ^ A»^>4^y
10055 LlfHfbf^i^irDrrWaatwoDd. L,A.
Phona; 479-77t5, 479-77M
Nimoy as Holmes
r
A little too elementary
I Phona; 479-77t5, 479-77M f
L i
""""""""• THIS IS A CfMTON. (CUT IT A USI |-r— —.<... J
Special Ed?
Volunteer to be a tutor for the emotionally
mentally and physically handicapped
JoinASUCLA's
Exceptional Children's Tutorial
Project
KH407 825-2066
ly Laura Klemar
As the curtain rises, the sound of a violin wafts eerily through
thick London fog, leading the audience to expect . Sherlock
Holi^ei (at the Shubert Theatre through May 2) to ke a fun
evening of mystery and supnies. But the fog it the ^tt part-«f
the production, which fails to deliver promised spectacular
■paiial iffiiii ni §— d iliiiiii — "^ — " ~ —
The ict itself (designed by Car! Toim of the
Royal Shakespeare Company) is authentic looking and colorful
(especially Moriarty*s underground lair); but lurking figures on
the sides waiting to enter can be seen and heard from a balcony
seat: not only distracting but a little embarrassing.
Sherlock Holiiiaa, written by Arthur Conan Ooyle and William
Gillette, finds the super slueth involved in a blackmail case with a
sizable cast of characters, including a swindling husband and
wife, a safecracker, an eavesdropping butler, an innocent victim
(whom Holmes falls in love with), a few thugs and of course Dr.
Watson and Professor Moriarty.
' CerUinly Sherlock Holmes stofies lean toward ^he melo-
dramatic, but this production goes overboard The characters
always end u^ screaming, or more accurately, barking at each
other Their movement!* htc siAi and overemphasized and a few
of the cast memfenen itomi^'noisely around the stage It is asiif
director Warren tntcrs hastried to turn the play into a parodf
"^y "J*J^« ^^ characterv including Holmes, appear silly
I itaofd Nimoy m the title rok and Alan Suet as Moriarty are
hurt by this overly melodramatic tone. Nimoy ^^^ *^»^ a
Mm4 Uiujce lor Moimcs since Hoknes and his ^ knowrF
television role of Mr ^$ pock caH fof similar qualities But
Nirnoys Holmes is not respecuble enough, he doesn't ^^sund
out as one of the world's leading detectives shoukj He does
however, succeed in portraying Holmes' snobby cynicism
^Sues, in the same respect, is not devious or evIH^ enough.
Moriarty appears unsophisticated and easily duped, which is
somewhat at odds with the character's nature,
r ^vr ^^ P**^^ <?f Sherlock Hotaws are the comic portions:
Oeoff Garland as the safecracker and Richard Ledcrer as
Waison^s butler handle these well It's too bad there wasn't more
Also enjoyable was the -showdown" scene in the second act
where Holmes- is trapped underground You know he will get
out, but you don't quite know how U nf ort una tely« it's not worth
seeing the rest of the'pla^^io find out.
V
by Community Services Commission
of the Student Legislative Council
•y--^ --
KARATE
FOR
WOMEN
Thursday 5-6
Women's Gym 200
Self Defense —
Physical Fittness
Steiger as Fields
What you W.C. is what
Steiger
portrayal
By John JB WiJ
Rod Steiger's humani/aiion of a great
comedian and Bob MernU's cnsp dialogui^
bring life and vigor to. Arthur Hiller^
W.C. Fields and Me, non at the Crest
Steiger's lack of close physical and
vocal resemblance to Fields is made
irrelevant by his obvious understanding of
the man Most p>eople know of Fields as a
hard drinker and hater u( women, small
children and dogs But through Steiger's
portrayal, we also learn that he was
driven to success b\ an adolescence of
poverty., pool hustling and carnival jobs
after running away from home at the age
of eleven r^
We see Fields as a man of self-defeating
bluff in his tales of sexual prowess and
resistance to thc^ ravages of alcohol There
IS not a gesture or vocal inflection to
Steigcr^t^ performance which dfi^ not m
some imy aid our comprehension of tie
emotions and motivations of this fii.nnat-
ing man
Based on the book by Carlotu Monti,
Fields' mistress. Merrill's screenplay
appropriately follows Fields' hfe -through
her eyes We see him from his early days
as the star of raunchy skits in Ziegfield's
Follies to his status as a bigh-priced
Hollywood star and up to his death from
alcohohsm on Christmas Day, 1946
There is a gifted touch of subtle and
stinging humor to much of Merrill's work
When Fields walks into the dressing room
of M prevtoof 'mistress, he discovers her in
best with a Follies skating star. Fields
responds by teUing the miB^*!|f you leaWy
loved her, you'd have Uken off your
rollerskates first f
The film, however, it not without its
problems, particuiaHy the miscasting of
Valerie Perrine as Fields' Chicana
mistress. It is not really Perrine's fouh
that she doesn't fit thic role, but her lack
of necessary spitfire and anger robs
certain scenes of their possible impact.
The film as a whole is too long «nd drags
espccuilly in the rnVdle Still, W.C. Fietds
Me ^ a fine study of a comedic
aad provides a magnificent ex-
of screen acting on Steiger's pan.
ourneying with Eisley through the 'Strange Hours'
By Robert Koehler
— Any new book by Lorcn
Eiseley is an event, a work of
hunui^nist literature of signifi-
cant proportions His new All
tlie Strange Hours (Scribii^r*s,
273 pages, $9 95) confirms
EiselcyY genius ta those al-
ready familiar with the manner
and thoughts of this anthro-
pologist author, and is sure to
stir the interest of those who
hour photo sm
..*-*
Bel air camera & hi-fi is now
the exclusive Mission Coun-
try Photofinishing dealer for
our area In just 24-hours* you can have
your Kodacolor film processed, prints
made and returned These are profes-
sional quality prints in silK or glossy
finishes No extra cost, no more waiting
IN TODAY BACK TOMORROW*^-
Mission Country Photofinishing is noted
for Jts quality, service and highly trained
technicians working in a modern labo-
ratory See for your3elf you won t
wait long'
nas ana holidays excepted
betokcomeiQ&hHi
B^vd . I III rifxpiai 90024.
wmmr^tmammwr
Are
As the subtitle of the booi:
("The Excavation of a I ilc**)
poetically indicates, this is the
searching, often painfully re-
called, autobiography of a maa
of his race through the science
of anthropology Almost ac-
cidentally though, his life has
been a continual search for his
true being
The book chronic let
Etseley's life from childhood in
a series of small but impcfffinn
incidents, from Eiseley's itin-
erant bote existence during
the Depression, to many close
encounters with death, which
remind us that our hours on
this earth are numbered
The Loren Eisclev embedded
in these pages is an excavator
irchcr in a world (^
mystery which is not \Q
be understood completely, hut
to be encountered with a mca-
soie of childlike wonder and
awe. This '•source" whicfc
Eiseley is yearning to find is ««
mysterious to us as it is te
Eiseley. because he never finds
-•it. '■-
Perhaps we can best under-
stand this man by his closest
•cquiantnacei: a gntty, wcf^
wise sailor always going some-
where a lene^ d6g ol the rail-
roads. an<^ a cal
Madeline, iKIp liveij o«l> ^^
ihe aiiention siie WHflVWJ ^""
hberty, the loneffness, the
mavtnck quality m any crea-
ture who IS searching* and
therefore, living, for they hold
in themselves a part of
Eiseley's soul
The book is a brilliant
achievement by one who has
ieen the profound changes of
our century with an inquisitive
eye and an insatiable appetite
for knowledge, and who blends
the scientist and artist m equal
doses, hke a reincarnation of
the Renaissanoe man.
Near the end of the book,
Eiseley's curiosity drives him to
ask himself ^hy he wrote the
book in the first place He
answers: **...! must tell tkL
•tory as T may Not for the
nameless name upon the page,
not i€H the traib behind me
that faded or led nowhere, not
for the rooms at mghtfall
where I slept from exhaustion
or did not sleep at aM, not for
ilto confustion of where I was
to go. or if I had a destiny
recognizable by any star No,
jn retrospect it was the loneli-
'-MttlL^ji^ not knowing, not
knowing at all.**
For us, and for Eiseley, the
questions, and the journey,
continue.
Tequiilg Sunrlae Rush Party
Delia Sigma Phi
Bar>d
Tuos April 6
9 PM
ttO Landlair Ava
479-9141
n ilk SI ) n\(,
Lay^r Cut
telancad
teeilKlMoasAi
Thruaat.S:30a»HoS«)WiaaeFf<.Mit:aOWi €7%-
477-
To c^mdemn the recent atrockies perpetrated by the
23ofikt tKrci^Mnt in Palestine _
To denounce the US aid to th^ Tloniit state
To support the Palestinian Lil>eratlsii struggle
The United Arab-Anfierican Congress, on behalf oi the Arab-
American Community of Southern California, is calling a
Demonstration in front of the
Israeli Consulate
ojB9 WwMwe «— > LA
on Tuesday, Apnl 6 at 4:98 p,m.
sponsored by Organization of Arab Sluidents •
4*
Are You Interested In
Being a Health Advocate?
Positiont for 1976-77 gr^ flow opon for ttudonts
living in dorms, frglomitiM, sororttlM, ttig Co-
op, gnd nuirriod studont housing.
Y.OU must attend one of the following nnandatory orien-
tation moet>{igg. at which tinrm spphcation forms will t>o
available:
Thursday. April •e OsMa Qsifima« Sorority. 652 Hilgard
Av . 7 00 pm
Monday. April 12 Rieber Hall Library 7 00 pm
Tuesday. April 13 Thets Xi Fraternity. 629 Gaylay
Av 7 00 pm
If you hsve gny questions, csll the heslth
advocate office at 825-4730.
Tne ciu?15H Ai^T5 ffuBc
t
>
i
!
V
u
J
NEEDS
ARTISTS
(^aiwtm® Ctlli,
....i
urc
others He n
to the
at 8:30 m Royce Hall Kenneth
Scbermernorn conducts the Milwaulee
New World Syroohonv Th^ JA^y^^f.^lA
vioun . . ^
30
O
f
I
X
I
r
J
f
i
nv in Pi8toti*s T<
virt
m
Liht
the Trhaihovsiiy conccno
the or-
CAtt tzS'tf 33 (oTw)^ asi-oHia (i^«fA);*?t-fiti Ifm^
' (
■^;^^
\
'f I
1
i
mi
Contestants Wanted
for Celebrity TV
CrosswpTd Puzziji Game Show
Call 466-1641 for information
"the CROSS-WITS"
a Ralph Edwards Production
Panel OK*s all requests
V
Student Lobby bats 1000
<
THE POLISH JOKE
is a sandwich
— r>f>liriou<^ talcp out food
262 26th Street, Santa Monica
394-5337
Owned and Operated by
a Very Proud POLE
Interested in teaching a class
to junior high kids?
Th« ASUCLA Tutorial Pro|*ct sponsors a Craativa
Taaching Program dt^gnad to giva UCLA studants ttvi
Of>portunity to taach kids in subtacts ranging from arts 4
crafts, spanist), and drama toaitronomy,aulo machanics
and psychology — You pick ttia subjact. Classas start
April 14. For mora Info call 825-2331 or coma^^by the
ot^: ICH 407.
sponsored by th^ community services commission of
Stuilem Legislative Council
y ChHs
Com
SACRAMENTO - The Sen-
ate Finance svbeommittee on
education, the toughest hurdle
in the budget review process,
has recently approved every
UC Student Lobby recommen-
dation on the University bud-
rt
••We're going on a vacation,**
a student lobbyist said in jest,
as the State Senate committee
neared completion of its review
of the budget late Monday
Indeed, co-director Judy
Samuelson and her staff of
nine student lobbyists had
reason to celebrate.
. The lobby, which apamtet
here on behalf of the UC-wide
Student Body President's
Councils won the subcommit-
—SI million state appropria-
Jion to continue the under-
graduate teaching program
The subcommittee alio adopt-
ed the lobby*s budget lan-
fM^ requiring the UaiMSfsity
to submit annual reports on
the progress of teaching eval-
uations, a major part of the
undergraduate teaching pro-
gram. '
— SI .3 million of state funds
to provide TA*s, facuhy and
other instructional support
next fall for an anticipated
overenrollment of 564 under-
graduates (The Senate sub-
committee did not approve
funditig for the 405 over-
enrolled graduate students-,
since it believes the graduate
departments could have better
sdiool at the current level of
state support
- S275,000 of state money for
counieiing and tutorial help
for UCs 8,000 economically
disadvantaged ^ ^
tee's approval on the following managed their enrollment.)
Items, in the proposed 1976-77
State budget:
— Continued funding ntxt
year for the \)C Davis medical
GSM 1 A expands
K^T*-^'
tir#4 of ^«|terday's hair?
tiAli? TO ID AY
For whaf 8 happening now
styling for men and women '
Jerry Redding's Jhirmack products
For ap|K>intment call 478-6151
tues. thru sat.
f*-.
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with this ad
1105 Glendon Ave Westwood Village
Due to an "enormous surge"
of students signing tip for
Management I A, the School of^
Management has added three
new sections this quarter for a
total of eight sections
< Accordmg to Shirley Mc-
Collum. administrative assist-
ant at the school, the new
sections will be TuTh 8-10,
TuTh 10-12 and MW 8-tO
McCollum estinrmtes that with
60 students in each section,
there will be approximately
500 students enrolled,
Paul Kircher, professor of^
accounting, expUined that usu-
ally in the Spring enrollment
tapers off. In the first two
quarters, over 1000 students
were enrolled with three sec--
tions in the Fall and five Win-
ter quarter
Kircher feels that the recet»!t
interest of students in Manage-
ment is due to a change^ in.
attitude Students areAm2[ch
more job-conscious than in the
past, and many students feel
that they could use what they
learn from the course in their
careers
Management I A has really
changed, said Kircher, as it is
not emphasizing **figuring** any
longer because this work is
now done by computer. The
course is now a ''why" course
that focuses on the varioui
methods and procedures that
are used in accounting,, with
special emphasis on the man-
agement of business and gov-
ernment.
— The state legislative ana-
lyst's recommeadaliaa that the
UC Board of Refsals deter-
mine whether more state
money is needed for tutorial
and remedial programs for
UCi minority law students.
This was done m light of the
minority jradnates* poor suc-
cess rate in passing the state
Bar examination.
According to Jeff Hi|per-
ling; co-director of the UC
Student Lobby, these items
should encounter no stumbling
blocks through either the full
Senate Finance Committee or
the liidfet review process on
the Assembly side.
However, ^tate funding for
enrollment growth could be
jeopardized by executive dis-
cretion. Governor Brown, who
has veto pbwer over whatever
budget is finally passed by the
Legislature, is refusing to sup-
port both the 564 under-
graduates and the 450 grad-
uates m his sute budget. He
says that the University can
suport these students with it
own resources.
Tlie Democratic-fovefjM)r
tfas ttimed down the Univer-
sity's original request of S2.25
million to provide for the con-
tinuation next fall of the 2 J 86
students currentlv overenrolled.
F
Students, Staff, and Faculty Are Invited To Celebrate The
T^econd Seder of Passover^
Thursday, April 15th
with HILLEL
Hftiel Memt>art
$350
fuH time students, staff, faculty
$550
r ratarvations and information on pasaover lunches and dinners 474-1531
(■'•^
Passover Seminars
MiaTOflY or T>«C HAGGAOAH AND NCW HAGGAOAM
April 8th and l?th Meyerhott Park noon
TMi aCDER Aa SYMPOaiUM
Aoriiath and 12th kMmymrhoti Park noon
6iiiGiNa OF FAaaovca
AprH 6th HiH9i 7-« 30 p m
HAOOADAH AND MIOaAaH
April ath Hillal 7-6 30 p.m
HOW TO DO A acDca AMD gONGa or THE acDca
April 8th Hillei 8 30-10 pm
aHASSAT HAGADOL - TIIAOITIOMAi. aTUOV Of THt HAGGAOAH
April l6lh Hill«l 4 30^ pm
Jewish dissident
speaks on USSR
A Soviet Jewish physicist who won a three-yi^ar struggle ^
leave Russia will give a free public lecture here at 8 pm in Haines
39
Yevgeny Levich, the 28-year old scientist, wilf speak on
••Jewish Nationalism in the USSR — A Soviet Scientist's View "
He will also address an O^n Student-Faculty Forum at 3 pm
in the I eonard Memorial Center, Knudsen 2-222 the same day.
Levich appicd for permission to emigrate to Israel in 1972 and
was subsequently dismissed from his post at the Institute of
Chemical Physics of the Academy of Science and Institute of
Applied Mathematics in Moscow
Despite previous exemptions on medical and professional
grounds, he was ordered in 1973 to report for military daty. He
refused and was sent to a camp for miliury cnminalB in the
Arctic Zone
Protests from colleagues around the world resulted in Levich*s
release from the caqip in 1974. However, last year he and his
family were allowed to leave the Soviet Umon.
His father, Benjamin Levich. a noted electrochemist and
highest ranking Soviet Jewish scientist to apply for emigration, is
sti^l unable to leave for Israel.
The younger Levich is now a senior scientist in nuclear physics
at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.
His visit to this country it being sponsored by the Committee
of Concerned Scientists Th^ evening talk is offered by ttie
UCLA Committee on Public Lectures and the physics
^anment
LYNN KINSKY, LIBERTARIAN
FOR U.S. SENATE
TODAY ACKERMAN 2412 2:00 PM
* Taxation is thaft — Rapaal aN tax lawa
* End govarnnr>ant ptying into citizana! Privacy
* End protectiva laQialation for businaaa and tabor
* No U.S troopa In foraign ani
* Rapaal all victimlaas "crima" laws
* You hava tt>a right to liva your Mfa aa you cho<
Come meet the woman vifho can help restore your individual liberty
In 1976.
Lynn Kiiwky, Liber4rian, For U,S. Seiilt
by Vojjnf LitMrtanan Alliance
Thrift Shop
(Continued from Page 4)
The thrift shop g^ Jots 6f calls from people askiiig if
they carry UCLA football team shirU. -OnJy if we fet them
in.** one volunteer said
The Goodwill shop down the street, rather than providing
the UCLA store with ^iff competition, actually invites
customers "It's food tWhave the shop m the area, people
get to know an area aad come in to shop with all of us -
Bauman said.
The shop has a furnWure division which haoAn all the
larfe obfcots they receiv^. Mattman are the hottest iteost,
tkey fet ikHB iar
friends provide their serfrioes wlien the worth of an
questioned
In addition, the thrift
a common Robin Hood
Goodwill and gives to
fOod-hearted and wants to
Sn docs rht thnft ahofi
»p and the Goodwin store share
Ifttk old lady robs from tiM
^^2?J?? verwi. -^he's juat
j|p paapk,** aee volunteer
Class trains registrars
Jane Fonda will attend - ; ~
.t *
Bf Jdf MiicM
Dl Staff Reporter
Jane Fonda will attend a
non-partisan daat far trainii^
deputy registrars spaatarad by
Awareness thb Wed-
_ Apnl 7. between 2:00
and 4:30 m the YWCA at 574
Hilgard
Tlit class is just part of the
Project Awareness effort to
*iBCMaiC the level of awareness
of student voters aad student
participation in politics."
ing to Project co-direc-
tors Phil Kramer and Steve
Smith.
The classes, which will be
free, are designed to train
people to serve at deputy regis-
trars. Kramer expbuned that
trainees will be Uught how to
fill out a registration form,
which is all they need to know
to qualify to be a deputy regis-
Umr. Deputy registrars are paid
35 aenu for each voter they
register
AIsp, on Tuesday April 13.
from 2-4:30 pm, another cfaiss
will be held in the Buenos
Aires Room at the Sunset
Canyon Recreation Cemer
CaaipMi groiup
South suted that any cam-
pus ateup that wishes to hold
a dan of lu own should con-
tact Project Awareness, ICerck-
ho/f 306. or call 825-4847. A
minimum of 10 people are
necessary to hold a cUms. Indi-
viduals unable to attent the
above meetings or arrange a
class of their own ctft contact
Project Awareness, which has
a Ust of weekly classes that are
conducted by the county.
Voters who have moved or
did not vote in the last general
election (1974) must register to
Psych students
The Undamnduate Psychology Association has estab-
lished a liason service to aid psych students and facuhy
members interested m the 199 independent study senes and
also to serve as an intradepartmental job opportunity
center. ,» -
The Independent Study Referral Service, operating
through the Undergraduate Psychology Counsehng Office
(1531 Franz Hall), has compiled a list of 199^ courses
available for Spnng quarter, professors willing to sponsor
I99'S and the aaenaary cnteria required by individual
professors.
The intradeiytmental job opportunities facet of the
service wilt tea primarily with volunteer work, with
students being given the chance to work with faculty or
grad studenu on experiments or projecu. In addition, paid
work-study and possible sununer jahs wiU be offered as
they becoihe available «;--
vote. The last date to register
IS Suaday May 9.
ProfHt Awanaan, in coh-
junction with the UC Student
Lobby, plans to conduct a
two-week voter registration
drive before the May 9 dead-
hae. There wiH be deputy
registrars in the dorms. Brum
• Walk, and at the fraternities
and sororities, according to
Smith
^'Statas haard"
Project Awareness will alaa
hegrn maintaining a "status
hoard" showing the number of
delegates that is pledged to
each candidate This display'
will occupy the giMS case that
IS on the first floor of Kerck-
*w><l,-aext to the^levator and
the copying machines
Another project is a forum
that would include all the can-
didates or their representatives.
This IS tentatively scheduled
for the third week of classes
Before the primary m June.
Project Awareness wiU distri-
hute a pamphlet that will clear-
ly bst the policies arid positions
of the various candidates.
Delegates «
As for becoming • dogate
to the Democratic Convention.
Thursday, Apnl 8 is the dead-
line for filing a declaration
with the County Registrar.
Project Awareness has the ap-
plication form.s and will deliver
th«5 completed forms to the
county The Republican appli-
cations still have not come in.
said Kramer, "but we do have
the addresses of where to pick
them up "
^— T
* ' ' ' .'
/^^i-
KLA/83: servii
the Southland
n
f
r
t
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
MMiMMuiial MM*a«lnu ant^xp^tng Mtatao m*i •ppi-i-^.^fof 220
PACIFIC-KING WIS w... tm s. Lo.
'I
u
»r«i«si«at ••■ipst Miai«(ri««
^ IriCir
>
L_
••««••«•« 7a«7aa«fli
u»c
• «li«rai«a a««ft
i^-
THE ASIAN AMERICAN
TUTORIAL PROJECT
•aanfafad m tutoring those handicapped by thalack ofa
baaic proftciancy in English in tha Asian communitias
Knowladga of a second language, though helpful is not
necessary.
For lurtfier IfiformaHon Inquire at
Campbell Hall 2240 UCLA or call 825-51 7|
by m« Commumty Smicm Commiision
ofm«Studant L«gitiatile Council
Campus events
at. in-
^ j^ campus includHig the
RfisAiltarss and ttit OSssrvaiafi Oacii 2
pm. Apnl S. wmi m ScHssiiSsiy Ippby
—Hti Ss|. tctivities includt an tthnic
cooliing wortiiaap. iiMa-2 pm April S.
Ack^rman 2401. a vtgatanan cooking
wortiaaop 1 pm ApH) 8 Acktrman
mi aa film aa iv I smn Ftaa i
April S Adarman a6S4
Irainwl imaria wiN Help you find .
tor your iiass. Opsi Saily 9 amITpm
Ktrckhoft 401 -'--^
^^- iLzJS?^ ^ iWiiprrpw Gait 4
Himf NvMsn and 11 am-l pm April 9
K«rckhoff —
iPd local voiumaar peiittens am
now through BXPQ Acfcarman A?13 sr cali
noon
-ailvtakM tyapSaat OreNtin wiM
ptrtorm 930 pm. lafNiM. fioyca HaN
This is the place for Rib Lovers I
By far the Best Ribs weve fried in LA
' ri€r aid tusmi ner
COAAPLETE DINNERS
from
Casual Dining V **''"" S2«7S|
NAMIT'S OPIN PIT BBO
I4S4 H, CaESCiNT HilGHTS of SiiNSfT STtlP^
fO AAiniite* Uown Sunset Blvd to
^ Loufl Conyonr Turn R.ght , And Vpu re Thart
trrof in 9tcrfftar,y's
invitation Corracf
4S4-11B
gantzada
:sliasy s
number on
a 474-9113 not
If larm wHti ttM
10 am-
Acker
infofmatMNi and
for graduali stu
m
now avaUsMa fsr a two-
PC SladSifl LaiiM m
$787 50 psr mam n
Map ■ r«evt UC grj
aducational
tor
ifg now
avattaMe DaadlHie'it Apnl 30 pidi up
applications at Aektrman information
^ ' - ■' " 3D< and
ai tpM a 79 la mit^m by
Hsnry Steele Commapar, 9 pm. Idmorrow
•lid 147 Free
-«aa TvB a StaPi at Sasand Tigasa
pwtof PHatorspfiy Viewpoints 76 by Neal
Slavin Folbright fellow and author of
^XlH .^ 9 pm tonight Moore 100 12 50
lor aadanti. senior citizens. msmSiu of
UCLA Arts Council and Friendi af Pholo
praptty S3 for ottiars
Mfdatmns tetlow Exeter
Qtofprd author editor and lacaaar
m Mfiiliam Wordsworth and tfie
psychoanalysts 4 30 pm tomorrow
av 7S. Naa spplicaliens avaii-
ant nse fsr dawaa and iasasn Acker
mm lam Voiymaari sft sKs lasdad lo
astribuit poatars in local iHappins caasn
swar SMaripr Srtak Visrt Acktrman ASH
for mtaraiitian
trt now avaiaSii m Profact
sllioa. Ksrckhoff 396 doadiine
«a nc 790 pm to
morrow. Patday Pavilion (jCLA atudaaa
free wilh 10 faculty trap wRft Aftdatic
Pnvdafe card 91 for alher stuianii. 92 for
a T<
4 pm today Knudsen^ 6-172
^va99 iptaf ovar
aN campas Nivaffss
^•t s^aawpff^^a ea BM^i^wi
- — - -^^^"^^^1 ^a^w ^^a
ssvanly. kmrnm^, aarriad
iw ana cp^p fsaissnts
diaa must attend an or»entL__. ^
7 pm AprH 9. Dolta Gamma. 982 Hilgard 7
PP. April 13 Theta Xi 62i Gaylay ar 7 p«.
April 12 fhabtr Liprary For information
Cpl ■S4730
3
^^^^^p^^WBS a Apai a rar waft m-
•■L!i""9ii ssalKt CM asssn st C5-
art avaiaailt
'Ch wfio art
iMp aaw-April 16. lairpfiy 22M accepting
aa aaa as women
- ■ - g
is suSmittad at any ima darins aa
firaan of a wiaiiimiim $750 are made
and iufy Forms are in Pa
^Mhe ride from Uha Snwi
and Sitn aaat to Virginia a saw feaino
aion at MSM for
ta
irt
rt-
Levidv4 pm^pday Knodien 1200?*^
— iaaa laaaakai a sa Mai a soviei
•eantiers viaw. py Or Yevgeny levich
m. Jonighi Niiaai 39
''^aaaap 8aaN dMaaae and ir
m ^^^^naarmp asaaaipay
22*1 ^^^ apiap .pf aa mett
^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^W^^^^W V^NM^^W ^^M^^aiV*V, wWr"
nar 9:99 pm. M 73SaJ0 pm Apnl 8
aivnatiunal Student Caala.
-Sptlaal Sptiiaw af aMSfville tad
Cartfto Ulai. in Minpts. a syslam study 1 1
am-noon. April 9. Boelfer 9690
-"•■aaaaaaaa. Amarican pptt will
pmat «9saap from ha aprki 9 pm
Aprs 9. SMPppt Canyon apc OpMar.
"Jm ■naraSid aad. part pi Pppd
Oar. 7 pm April 9. Siafea Hall
OAKLEY'S*
Man's Haircutting
at its best
Long a Short Styles
Appolntmenta
^1 QR 34245
lasi Qayley
(acroas Weatwood Thaatarf
}• _
Toward Reconciliation
with the Palestinians
with Arie Eliav
Member of Knesset _
Founder, Israel CoufKil for Ura«li-Pal«lini^n Reconciliation
Wadwesday, Apra 7
UCLA Ackermaffi Union
Maa's lounaa 12:at 9o 1:Jt
Hillei 474-1531
t
>
IP m Umvortity t
m vmp
Stsflid Sy
■s MS Sva
wdi
ALPHA EPSILON PI
Alpha Epsilon f\, a young and pro-
gressive fraternity, will be having a
organizational meeting. If you wish to
n>eet new paapia and develop Ia89i9ia
friendships, come to kerckhoff 400,
Wed. April 7 at 7:30 p.m For more
infu. til
The Department of Slavic Languagm
^^^'"^ — annaur^ces an
Undergraduate Seminar on Pasternak's
CX)CTOR ZHIVAGO
No Russian required
Slavid 199, W 3-5
Professor Thomas Eekman
Bunche 5274
; \
Parallel seminars are taking
participants wHI meet on t
Center for workshops with
AH the
at a number of Southern California
of May 7-9 at the UC Lake Am
for mem inforiyiasian caff -professor E^man
i
¥
SZLS
I n I »l
i.
• •'
i
»
V
V
*
■ ^ ^
I
•
■
istration Time
Summer Traveling,
T
pdCM through ASUCLA. AMMonaMy. you can avaU youraoM ol
•Mpofb tr»i»ol counotlWng by EXRO locatwJ wHh Iho Tr.1^ tofvtea.
Wtwih^ ymj nootf a tATA fl^iht. acoMMMtons ki London. AmaHrdam. rfankhirt
or PaHa, a EURAIL or BRnHAIL paaa, a aludant I.D. card, a Hoalal card, or lyal plain
Info atoift what lo aaa or do, coma talk wHh ASUCLA and EXPO firvt Wa'ra iocalad In
Ackarman Union on tha A laval Juat paal Iha naw antranca at tha frmt of tha bidMlM.
Our houra ara 10-4 Monday through Fflddy.
Her^ is a small portion of our flight listings:
FMgKt # Dapartuwa
<
MIn. Prica Max. PHca
UNREGIMENTED STUDENT TOURS
1C754
2L360
3Ld60
JunaT
Juna 8
£.5-"
V
k
EUROPE- Spain; GREECE, AND ISRAEL
Four mcrecfible Ttineranes to choose from'
1 Grand Eufopa — S.x Waeks $ 1 595 including arrfare England
France. Holland Germany. Switzerland. Austria Italy Franch
Rrviera. Spain and the Island of Ibiza.
2 Claaalc Europa - Seven We^ks $1695 including airfare
England France Holland East and West^Qermany Czecho-
slovakia. Hungary. Yugoslavja. Greece the Qraak Islanda
Italy Austria and Stj|i|zarland
3 laraal/Europa ~ Ten Weeks $1595 including airfare
England France. Holland. Switzerland Austria. Italy Graaca
and the Graak (alands Plus six weeks in Itraal Kibbutz
•aparience nature study center tounng the land
4 Europa/ltraal - six weeks $1695 inctu^n^ atffare England
France, Holland Switzerland. Austria. Italy. Greece and the
Greek Islands Plus two weeks in Itraal Touring the land
nature study center
CAMPING TOURS
5 (EIT) 3 weak Tour of Europa. Departure dates June 4 29
July 16 August 11. Saptamber 5 Price $358 Food kitty $40*
5L461
6L461
7^616
dM6l6
9M616
10M61
11C75
T2C75
13L56
TliL56
15C75
16C75
17C75
18C76
19L66
20LeS
21M63
22C76
23C76
24L77
25L77
26M70
27076
28L87
29M71
30C76
Junaf
Juna 15
Juna 15
Juna 16
Ju;'4a 16
JynalS
Juna 19
Juna 21
Juna 21
Juna 22
Juna 22
Juna 28
Juna 29
Juna 29
Juna 29
29
I
.ii i
6 (EIT) 3 wook Tour of Scandinavia. Oataa: Juna 20 July 15
August 8. September 5 Price $389 Food Kitty $46
7 ( EIT) 3 weak Tour of Ruaala and Eaalam Europa. Dates Juna
21. July 17. August 12 Price $396 Food Kitty: $46
8 (EIT) 8 weak Central Europa Tour. Departure dates June 15
30. July 15. 29. August 15. 31. September 16 Price $579 Food
Kitty $78
Julys
Julys
Julys
Julys
JulyT
July 12
July 13
July 14
July 19
7
2
-in
15
3
4
11
3
17„
11
11
12
2
6
5
6
9
10
3
2
9
8
9
2
^
8
4
2
9
4
Amsterdam
London
J.ondoh,
Amsterdam
Lorrdon
London
Amsterdam
Amsterdam
Amsterdam'
London
Amsterdam
Amsterdam
London
London
Amatardam
Amsterdam
Amsterdam
London
London
Amsterdam
Amsterdam
London
London
Brussels
Amsterdam
London
Amsterdam
Amsterdam
$429
$514.90
$379
$454 80
$379 .
$45480
w^^^9*
$538.80
$379
$454 80
$379
$454 80
$459
$550 80
^449
$530.88
$459
$550.80
$425
$510.00
$429
$514.80
$429
$514.80
$379 •
$454 88
$415
$498 00
$429
$514.80
$429
. $514.80
$429.
$514.80
-^429
$514.80
$379
$454 80
$379
$454 80
1459
$550 80
$429
$514.80
$429
$51480
$379
$454 JO*
$415
$488 80
$459
$550 80
S429
$514.80
$379
$454 80
$459 *
$550 80
$429
$514.80
MIGHLIOHTS Of TM€ RULES FO« ALL TQC FUQMTS
irtuf*
T
^ 15 \JJT*^ Grand European Tour Inchiding Graaca and
Turkey. Daparture dates June 6. 19, July 7 12 25 AuQust9 23
Saptember 11 25 Price $869 Food Krtly $8^
GRAND EUROPE TOURS
Round-trtp air fart from tha WmI Coaat-AH Intar-Europa Ak
Fara-Flrti Claas or Medium Claat Hotalt with privala bath-
DwiKt Air CondHlonad motorcoachas-Comprahanalva Sight-
Mamg-Servicas of Tour Manager or Local Hoat-Many Maala.
10 England. Scotland and Ireland from $1079 22 Days Visiting
London-Dublm-Waterford-Killarney-Ennis-Pfymouth-Bristol-
Stratford-Laka Diatrict-Erskine-Edinburgh-York
I* •ttgitx* (o traw*! No fWnHwnlup nitw or turn
-_ ^**?T**'.'**'*"* ^****^"<>o*tt>— ^a>JWi»riQf toyouf
on ih» MtM ol yoMT mtoteu ftnmimv'^^t mm b« nwda at tmmx^ day* m
^.y***"^***^** <" wfitfog and •r9 aubfact to Oatauit mm iraiiaiOi iMa
wwjowpofa for Mwoiiiad a— la wioy ba iroa^nd Mp to 1o diw of ^mm%im
AittH>uQh ma»a af^noona M.^ la,«a and no lOlMRda lor unu^
YouMi^m al^^ a Itertma.. OMI-Am or 0«A ,0, ««Mdoa mpoi. j;;^^
^
bamora
travel cotwasMng • IntamaHauM Travel M
lanlali. Itaahiu, Purrliartng • Traval tut
SATA Flights • Eurallpaaa • •ritrall
11
lanial and Graak Isles from $1549 22Days Visiting
.. ^ . . i-Tyrtjey or Egypt
a level ackM^n union (with EXPO)
triday 10-4 825-1221
-,/ V
Do yoi, have aay .pccal .nieresu. or • d«i« ,o dcvdoo <Me-»
yo»r The URA club program coasuti of over 40 suecial mi^r«.
?i:eV'i:;er%i:.'^^ar'rH.f3^.r*^^^^^
dub. cmAm weekly meeting* .n whK:h the dub member ota*
organize, .nd direct . v.r«y of programs and act.vTi« &
act.v,t,e. vary m Kope and nature from tn^ W^uctiS
cU..es. demo„.trat.o„.. ,o tournaments. (ilmJ^^T°^i
Snowpack Lodge
Mammoth Lakes
Semi-dorm
Nr. lifts 7 A 8
Kitchen
$6.00 per person
^1*0, Condo for rent
The clubs fall into four major areas The outdoor! chibi such
as Skeet and Trap. MounUineers. Flymg. a«d RshSTi^
r^creationa exper^ncet a«oc,ated With the natural wvi^nmem^
Fu. all offer quality •n«niaM>iial prognun. from biannin, tS
advanced The sports and games clubs such aT BolLl
L.cro..e. Bridge, and Wrestling, provide inform^ .JJ^f"'^
M«ruct.on and competitions within the club and with oX cS
ma schools, mostly on the local level The cultural du^sucij
OrganM: Garden. Photography. Soc«l Dance, and Spirts Car
offer an opportunity to further ones skills and exdm^U^L
Ihese pursuiU. ^»»-«""^ Meat ta
. ^»'>'e^««y «udentt. «a«r. and faculty are eligible and welcome
tir^ 'n^^"'!."' the University Recreation' Assc^u.^^^All
that IS needed is a vahd registration card bv students or a
[t^cTb.'":: wfi "'•'v''^ "*" •"" ^•'""■^ Information on all
Intramurals . . .
SAILING CLASSES
tponaorgd by
Th« UCLA Sailing Club
Baginning and Advancad MonohuU
Baginning and Advancad Catamaran
Bring $25 to Paulay Pavilion (Qala4). V,,
day. Apni 7 bafwaan 12 noon and 2 p m or to
•^•^J^OOFnday April 9. batwaigi 1 1 am and 1 pm.
Intaraalad instructors and aaalatant instruc-
•ort' maattng Tuaaday, Apnl 8. in KH400at 7 pm
Sailing Club (825-3171). Boatdock (823-gg78)
or URA Oftica (825-370a)
entries d£c May 17 for an all-
~4Conlinued from Page U) •
> TEAM GUTS FRISBEE
comers meet May 19
7 OPEN DOUBLES VOLLEYBALL ,6 be plaved on three
)^"^^ "'ghtsi. Pauley PavUion starting May ,24 Entries due
May M I his double elimination tournament is dipen to evervone
including varsity performers.
Dr Yevgeny Levich
iJT'^T^ ■*^*7*" '" ^"^ struggle of Sov.et-Jewi.h tcientigtt for If—
•migr. ion to Israel. Dr LeyK:h w»m arrested m Moscow andUn, \Tb
^ed labor camp in thearct.c20«e until protests from scientists of °he
ffja world resulted m his release arnt emigration Dr Levich is ,Sw.
S^^im'S^r'" •' "• ""i"^"" 'n«Sute.'Rehovott*.,sJ:rH:Tb:
Tuesday, April 6
3 P M Op«n Stud«nt Forum
Leonard Memorial Center
Knt/dsen Hall 2r222
8 PM. Jewish Nationalism in the U S.S.R. ^
A Soviet Scientist's View/'
FfM Public L^ctura
Haines Hall 39
(C ontinued fr<Mii Page 2(1)
« lookmg at in the I os Ah-
fctes area, but there are iiJso
few out-of-state prospects thai
could be making rccruiHng
trips to the Westwood campus
jn the commg weeki.
The .one difference between
football and basketball letters
of intent is that mosf high
school football prospects vfgn
on the first day. but basketNiil
players tend to wait untU the
beginnmg of May last year,
in fact, David Greenwood,
Roy Hamilton and Brad Hoi-
land did not sign umil Ma) 1^
..A INTRAFRATERNITY COUI
PRESENTS THE FIRST ANNUAL
TOGETHER
.'/•»■
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UCLA'S WOMEN'S
NEWSPAPER
Needs
photography editor
photographers
artists
production people
staff writers
- sports
- news
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STAFF MtETING
Today. Tues. 5:00 pm
Kerckhoff 117
625-2640
THEME: HtSTOffV
COPY DUE APRIl 9
//-
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All games played at
Pauley Pavilion
April6,7,8,12, 13, 15, 1976
6:00 p.xn to 9:00 p.m.
PIMM'S
Catch the coed action as
campus teams compete ,
for the coveted
Pimm's Volleyball Trophy.
w%
Pi|nm s« Volleyball and You — on uxibeotafaAelno.
qbBBrifc^
T
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-• , ^
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ti
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Call us for; /
information, someone to talk with, or someone
to listen.
825-7646 UCL-POGO
sponsored by the Student \A^ellire Commission of the
Student Legislative Council, the Program Task Force
and URC.
•cpR I CLASS i^ooM a
STUDY CONCCMTitATlON
•CP» 7 FHOTOGItA^HrC
MkMOiVY
•CWt 20 PRINCIPALS OP
MCASON a LOGIC
S10 CACH POSTPAID
UMMa THE SAMC
REVOLUTIONARY
METHODS DCVCLpPCO SV
ROGER CALLO. THE
DIRECTOR OF SOUND
^ MOTIVATIONAL
»CeCARCH (AS SEEN IN
PENTHOUSE. Vl\/A AND
' FLAYGIRL MAGAZINES)
THESE AND OTHER TAPES
AVAILABLE FROM
MEM INMOVATIODM
HYPNOSIS CC NT ca
(A DIVr^iON OFSMRC)
•OX 2 tS29 SEATTLE. MVA
111
BULLETIN ON REQUEST
FOR SI 00
(RKFUN&ASI^LE)
_ I
Intramural Sports
By Km KreA
Ol
* .. - •
INTERESTED IN TEACHING?
If you would like to pursue a careerin teaching, or if
you just enjoy working with kids, then we invite you to
become a volunteer tutor for the Chicano Youth
Barrio Project. You will be able to tutor students at the
elementary or high school level as many hours a week
as you want. All of the schools we tutor at, are nearby
the campus and transportation is available for those
who need it. As a tutor, you can either tutor an
individual or small group within the classroom, or
tutor at a community center in West LJVr where you
will be without teacher supervision: Whaf subjects will
you be able to teach? Most any subjects you desire.
Last quarter our tutors helped .students in Math,
English, Reading, and even in Spprts. This quarter we
also plan to have arts and crafts days at several of the
schools. Jutoring can be a great satisfying experi-
ence, and we in the project look forward to meeting
you. If you are interested, come by Room 406 in
Kerckhoff Hall and sign up at the door or call Carl
Melillo or Manuel Pacheco at 825-2389.
Sponsored .^Community .Services Commission - '
Student Legislative Council
Speakers Program Presents —
ARIE LOVA ELIAV
Israels leading "dove " & long time labor Zionist
Member of Knesset (Israeli Parliament)
• Former Secretary-General, Israel Labor Party (1970-72)
Member of Israel Council for Israeli-Palestinian Peace
• Author of;
Between Hammer & Sickle
Land of the Hurt
Shalom: Peace in Jewish Tradition
Wed. April 7
12:00 NOON
Women's Lounge (3rd floor Ackerman)
Sponsored by Aiyyirt>d Students Speakers Program/Student Legislative CouqcH
Heading the list for spring intrsmurals thu qusfter is combined
doubles tennis Thii event is open to all combinmtiont of doubles
^"^^ men. wiutn and coad^ Play will be divided into
•^•aaccd. mtermadiate and beginning dikmouM. Hoivever. space
IS linuted and sign-ups are on a first-coaK, first-served basis.
Sign-ups begin at 8:30 am tomorrow. Apnl 6, in Mens Gym llg,
*°^^jy "**^'' ^ P" Wednesday, or until all tpaces are uken. All
owiAm are played Monday- Thursday starting at 3 po^ and each
team' ii guaranteed five matches.
MENS SPOSTS
Independents: At 4 pro Tuesday. April 6, m MG 102, A« B aad C
^ivMioas wUl be offered.
WATER POLO — all teams must be represented at a -^o— ^m
St 4 pm this Wednesday ia MG 201 There will be A and I
divisions.
2. TABLE TENNIS - sign up between April 12 and April 2S
in MG 118. Singles and doubles competition begins April 27
J. HANDBALL DOUBLES - deadline te sign up u 5 pm on
Thursday April 15 in MG 118. A and B divisions offered.
4 VOLLEYBALL DOUBLES - sign up between Apnl 19
and Apnl 29 m MG 118. Action wiU uke place in Pauley
Pavilion May 3-May 6. A, B and C divisions.
5 GOLF - sign up before 5 fm April 21. There will be
individual, team and handicap divisio.-u The toumamem will be
held May 7 at Endne Golf Course.
6 BADMINTON — sign up between April 26 and May 6 in
MG 118; Singles and doubtos competition will begin the week of
May 10.
7. WRESTLING — sign Up and weigh in from 1-5 pm May 3
in MG 100. The tournament will be held at night May 4-6 in
MAC B and Pauley Pavilion. -
8 SWIMMING ~ to be held at the Sunset Csnyon
Rccrestion Center on Msy 10. Fraternity, dormitory and
independents should sign up at 2 pm on tiK
9. TEAM GUTS FRISBEE - entries due May 17 for an all-
comers meet May 19.
10 TRACK AND HELD ~ to be held June 2 in Drake
Sudium. Frat. dorm and individual competitors should sign^ up *
St 2 pm at the sudium on the day of the meet
WOMENS SPORTS
1. VOLLEYBALL — entnes due this ThufiAiy for three
woman teams Action to take place from 6-9 pm Tuesday! and
Thursdays in Pauley PaviUon and the Men*s Gym Play sUru
April 13. For two woman teams, entries are due May 7. Sams
location as three wonuin teams, with play surting May 11
2. SOFTBALL — s general meeting will be held at 3 pm this
Thursday in MG 102 Entries due April 15. with ptey SUrting
April 19. Teams conswt of 10 pUycrs, and there wilVbe A and B
divisions.
3. TABLE TENNIS — entries due April 23, with play surting
April 27 for singles and double teams Matches will be held
Tuesday and Thursday evenings and Wedaaidiy afternoons This
tournament will be held in conjunction with men's and coed Ubie
tennis. -^ —
4. SWIMMLNG — will be held together with men's swimming
finals and coed swim relays. EntriSi are due May II. with the
meet being held from 3-5 pm on Wednesday May 12 in the Rec
Center Pool.
5.* TEAM GUTS FRISBEE - entries due May 17 for an all-
comers meet May 19. ^^"
. 6. TRACK AND FIELD — entries due before the meet; which
will be held Friday, June 4 To be held m conjunction with the
men's finals « '■ m
COED SPORTS
I INNERTUBE WATER POLO - mandatory managers
peeting at 4 pip this Wednesday in MG 102. This will be the
only time to enter teams.
Games will be pUyed from 3-7
pm in the Women's Gym Pool
Monday-Friday. Teams consist,
of four men and three women
with A, B and C divisions.
2 TEAM VOLLEYBALL
mandatory managers meet-
ing at 5 pm this Wednesday in
MG 102 This will be the only
time to enter teams. Games
be piayed Monday-Thurs-
'tf in Pauley Pavilion.
The three men, tiuee women
teams will be broken dowm
into Xf^ttt divisions
3 BOWLING - entnes are
due April 15, and action stasii
April 19. The two men, two
women teams will bowl even-
ings in Ackerman Union.
Teams pay for the alley time.
4. TABLE TENNIS ~ one
man, one-woman teams will
pisy Tuesdsy and Thursday
nigitts and WadMfday after-
noons. Entries dne April 23,
•a^ Ptey fcts under way April
5 SWIM RELAYS ~ to be
held from 3-5 pm WedaHd^«
Msy 12 St tbe Rec Center
Pool Entries due May 10 for
the two-men, two-wooMn
events.
enPagelS)
i ir
TM ASUCLA
fully tM^^oftf «!!• Un|««f«lf y of CaS-
J
In Wm 0«Sy SfMlii lo mnfi
wte« SI«crlNih»«Ua ^m U^m SasU •!
MMttry. c^or.wlltiMi^rtgtw. r«e«.
ftH^ui^ or ssft. NMasf aw nslly aniin
nt mm aSUCUTCiiwiiiMmcaHont
■Maeated any of Sio Mf^
a^artlaaS or advortlaora f^n
aanlad In IfUa taatM Any poraon Sa-
U9win% that an advartlaamant in tfiis
laaua vtolalaa Wm Uomtif* poMcy on non-
Siacftmtnatlon tialod horain •houlS
tha B««alnaaa Managor. UCLA Dallv
arum. 1 12 Karckfioff Hai. 30S Waatwoatf
Flaxa. Los An«alaa. CalHornloSSS24.
^or aaaiataiaa wMH HmSm nimnm
notion problooia. eolTuCLA Howaino
OfMca. (113) S2S-44tl: Woataiao foir
(213) 4n>:
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Transcenderttal
M editatidnrif
A Program to Improvi
AN Aspects of LHs
PfoaFuMk
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WtLCOaK TO STOr av AMVTMi.
Wmi AT 10S9S STaAfHiSOac DOUQ
JONNaoM/nuai^ chanisu^ sts-
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(^.MiST.ip.,.
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wedding
announcements
kerckhoff ]2, '
82506|l
campus
•nnouncoreonta
Get
DISCOUNT PHOTO
FINISHING right
here on campus
o\ucia
mpus studio
^ so kerchhot* hall 875 061 ^ r?^>
oo^ri mon fr, 8 ?0 4 10
N4L Sas. aaa aai aUna mio
WHAT DOES A BRUIN
KAR GIVE FOR GIFtS?
UCLA clothing for children
and adults, bears, mugs,
glassware, watches, desk
accessories, jewelry, per-
sonalized shirts, trophies.
loglbeM helmet radio
l-«rvy. and as Sia aSiar '■nU.II.
•t mm Oypay Wafan: I la«o yoa
•ni in»a» y aN (^appofmlnt)
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ft A SI
VSS^A Cloo mmptt SOoc aacalloht
oonaiSon. Looi a#Bafa SS4S 1ft §»■■<
W^^' ^wfoot bicycta SSS Thomas
ASUCLA Students Store
in ll^$Hor\
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(IS A 12)
m a o%
forrMit
(10 A 12)
VIHtLC.
cat
lady tlamoaa cat tor on aaanJof ol
romonca and aoolacy CoM Motao SoN
orCo«anK27S-4Sta.
fS AS)
^oi and 2nd <
Soal offar 347-S27S
(10 A 12)
miM. MMTALa
^ COLOR TVS
T.V.'a • $7 so a
^AM.mnfina
■A**t«t,asAsa
• • • tkmu
NSW TyoawrHai. SCSI 2200; EloctHc/
cortrtdfo w caaa S2S0/Soat otfor.
THtTA XI Sprtnf nyaH. 128 Ooylay
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SMauUANI^. Oon*r fof tha now low
adilaad yool Know your ilfhWl Sand
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FOR Solo • Comploid pholof ropHlc
Matory of tha Clvl( War SSO Call
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Help SoM by ild»im Oaiors
THE NUTTRCSa STOMi
11714 Plee
HYLANC DONOR CENTEN
1001 Oayldy Avo.. Wootwooa
»nt. Solocf ColHomla WInoa.
l^aOvapa NMiSt12 W tSnd Si. Waol>
^^^^^^^^K % %mB* ^^^^^^9« w^^^^S9v9<
(10 OW)
CALCULATORS
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271
(12 001
oppoftunlti—
•PERSONAE*
Center of OfMMlc Afta
noAsi
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An oppo^untty lor aaiaot aludanla lo
portorm m pidMOf Umiod acholorahipt
aro avaiiabld to Iho loliowlr>9 worti
tnopa
#1^ A O)
v^Moorch subjects
INCBNSf USIRS Wa will pay yoo
iSt.tt Ftoiaat OuoNty Incanaa or Sl0.tt
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(14 A 12)
help wanted
TVRfST. IRvSMc
doy • Friday t am la 1 pm. CaM 47S-
(1SA0)
PULL
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Pitta babyattttnyaiindoy
474-7S14.
aSCRrrARY/TuMr la
S«h and 7th prodara. S to S hoora
.vM.adrnr. ^o^*ddT3. <«« *. m^.
(10 At)
TUTORS
I
0 ol 2 pm
4d7 KoroafioR.
Opawr«a ay
ORADUATS alMdani wonlod to do
(IS AST
TELEPHONE ACTORS- AOORESSfVE
AND PORC8PUL ^RSONALmr 1^
HOURS PER DAY |12J0 PER HOUR
AVERAOt STARTING ASM POR LES-
(1S A IS)
lom prior to dtaaoftollon
377-7S01.
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(IS A SI
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(IS AS)
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WET eradwata and lookinf lor foN
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UCLA. Cot MaotOioa
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laiaaaawn«alagiiiiii
OVIRSf AS JOaS Mimmor/i
Europa. S Amarlca. Aiiatralla. Aala
aN: AM Maiaa. tttt- SliOO monOity
Eaponapa paid, atghlaaatno FrooiMorm
Wflla: fmamadonal Job Canlaf
CC. aoi 44SS. Sirtalay. CA MTff.
TYPIST. Vb«li wllh olbor alodonla
a. astnf Co. 20 hra
la n to odnolM bom UCLA
'«« a o«
4 daya par
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ttma Inlawriawinf - ISon. S Ti
(1 torn -3pm) Slratii Hat Pisad Pi
(oomor of OoyNy 1 Woybom] Ml Slo
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FINANCIAL AM/ O root
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clai aktila. Coordlnata financial
ayalpm lor compwa of 3tO atudaoN
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CLASSIFIED >ID
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trav*l
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
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UOHTNOUM MSMIIAMCf MKVICf
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MOVIMO III sr Mf? W«
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HUTERNATIOM ALLY known arlMttMM
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rig—
contact hta
Lot Angalo* tfsolor
•C 474-
SIM.
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Auto Insuranoc?
Poymonlo-
AMAOW INSURANCE
ASUCLA Tr»v9l 8«rvic«
lh« ONLYIMIctel
UCLA Charter Flight S«rv«c«
A samniinfl
of Curo|>e fffghtt
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HYPMOSIt «n4 toN-Hypnodg. _
lndiv(duol«. ln-offlc« or ifcoll ordor
lowMt prtCM John (■.A.. MJl.) 47f-
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A PMIMAL ALTenNATIVe IN LOt AM-
QmLM%. PCELIWO TMAfNING CENTER.
COMEY AVE. 10034. t»4701
(IS Olr)
BALLET Pun mmy to Roouty 130S
WMlwood. and Vnlv YWCA. S74 HN-
0«fd AduHs. CIMM. doMy. Rtglnwgri.
Inlormodlotot. advai^cvd • lostona.
S21 tpadot r««M. 2 or mor* cIomos
wvokly lr«n« t«rsl«. 0»stingwi»h*d
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INTEGRATED MEDITATION
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(US) fTS-TtaC
RNfht*
1C754
11C75
12C75
15C75
17C75
1«C76
22C76
23C76
27076
30C76
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June 7
,
$429
June 21
11
$429
June 21
12
$429
June 26
5
$429
June 29
9
$429
-\Jun« 29
10
$429
Julys
•
$429
Jury 5
9
$429
July 12
4
$429
July 19
4
$429
lor
( »
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AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
RdfuMd? . . . Too High?
CancoNod?
Low Monthly Paymonts
STUDENT DISCOUNTS
39e-222S . . . ^Aak for Ron
NATIONAL HypnoeN IwiRiMH. Nbw at
th« Rarrlngton ^lau. W.L.A. 11744
Wilahira - 477.6925. 879-3387 With
mof than 30 yr« •iporlanca Halp
lo alu#y-rotaln-rolaa»#looa. Soo ovr
laiaphon* Yallow Rago* ad. tpoclal
Raducod tludont Rataa.
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LEARN to ploy prbtaaalwial rock piano
,. Ria koytooard atyla* ol IRaii John. Laor^
-- R«iaaal. Caroia KHif. A ionl MHchali
pH« pat-down bluaa. goapal. t%d maitow
Jan. DavM R. Cohan, 9964010. <473-
(IS A •)
AUTO tnsuranca:, Lowaat ratot for
or ■iwpleym. RoOort W Rhaa
-7276. S76-67f3 or 467-7873.
(16 Olr)
MOVING 6 HauMnfl. Larga A wnall loha.
Call Bill 455-1013 or Frod 455-1440.
, (16 CRT)
TENNIS loaaona Uniqtia aasy mn4
almpla looming tyatam Instant ToauMa.
CaM nowl 470-3026
(IS A 6)
ffkV UOI Omt tOOO n,qM» to
Summsr of rt • c«n>p«n9 launr •
'^vo' tfaikapSft • On«nt and Mt^Nolagt
• irowoi tmummcm • hoMH »
hooMM
HAWAII . .
iporSal MoRng)
VW MAINTENANCE SERVICE: SS6.0S
(T
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i|.
VW eNOa« WOMK: t7».03« (i
10.000 TTft^i jiiTonki 1 da
on oaehanfM. Uaotf jrw dlofnaala M.
"ntt CLUTCM wiTM iNOiMf aaauN.0
3103 Oooon aoHi BkNi.. IM Jaa-IJJM
'LA-HOMOLULU 9191 onm
*LA-HONOLUtU 9190 t«vo
Kam ana mbui atg
PLUS Car Rantals ! loollns Jitl
rail/Eurall paaaaa ... Accomoda-
tions...SATA flts.lntornatlortal
Student I.D. Carda...
FREE TRAVEL COUNSELING!
ASK US FOR ANYTHING YOU
WAr<T TO KNOW ABOUT
TRAVEL!
THE BODYMEN
Quality Auto Body
Rapair 0 Pakvtlng
(Oova or Gary)
CoSlolon? Wa prowtOv fOOl oowtooo foe you.
Maori ropalr of aomosllc 9 torMpn caro.
Wool L.A 0 lerpoal a^BMliie ihop 9*«o* • hoof
Btad.. «^oot LJ^
CONSCIOU6 Cloanlng and caladnf
dana dhaarfully with pmiaaatonal caro.
Enta^talnmant alao AnnI- 401-2033.
Kathy 474
(10 A 6)
WOMCN~laam to Ba
CaM F. Lavlna. 766-63Si
for
Bi a sofa,
run
TRA/EL SERVICE
Union A-213 (with EXPO)
• Frkfay 10:00-4:00
025-1221
i21±IL
FROFE9SIONAL OaaMMidaBair Sar-
<Hcas Wrwmg. admnf. mismli. study
daslpi 6 producBon to your rsaukt
fnants Call 400-1904 anytkna
(10 Olr)
^t S3 J9
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ta-99 hour (coofi)
tmji.) 99-97 hour
CALL 479<9931
TIC JOB
ECTOPY
lAI
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MOVING: Rasidantlsl. spsrtmants.
oRlcas Larga/small |obs Local 6 long
distanca CaM Bamay 3666780 siiiBiiis.
N saaa.
(10 Olr)
RIDING LESSONS ^^ iWMSiiB
•ludenta-FacuMy-FaiiiMBB-BlBff
•A.N.O.A. Aparo«oa«4aifif ootoailohn»ont
eHlldrofi 9
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ELECTBOLY9I6: Unwantad facial A
body hair parmananBy ramo»ad. Qmntl9
sala aialhod. frmm consultation. Ms.
Laal^ IBM B>iiBi99< Bl. 477^183.
(16 Olr)
TOmiB inattucBon an a
court Alao court rental.
472-
^ FOUND SOMETHING? |
I^R you've found a pet or artleio of!
Rvalue, we went lo help you return
lit I
I Juat come Into ttie Dally Brulnl
I CleaeillBd DsportBiinl and lei uat
I you want to pioee en ad Ri Bn^I
I Loet 6 Found bbRmwi. Aa a puRBcl
, aervlce. THE JOB FACTORY I
AGENCY. Wealwood BM^ wBI mRi
jltie Bd at no coat to yodi ]
11007
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N.V. 6 Oflant.
A.I.9.T. 1438 Bo
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SPECIAL Faros to Nio Orient. India
Raklalan. Bydnoy. Fl|l. Auckland A
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Tha Orlarit (8489^) Naw York ($166)
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RouruJinpa from Los Angolos to
LONDON 8340 min.
119
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CIEE STUOe^ TRAVEL
1093 Braalon A«a •224
Los Angalea. Co 80094
Call 213/477-
TRAIN A FERRT TICKETS
CARS. CAftlPER RENTALS
RAILRASSES. INTRA-EUROREAN
STUDENT CHARTERS
APEX FARE-SUPER DEAL
Loana/iafcicn any aoy any Europ city Stay
22-4S tfayt from
•ntertainment
8166 DURLICATE
Wedeeaday aftornoorTs Wild Whiat
BriBfa CleB 1688 Waattaeed Blvd.
(7 Olr)
»i..
TOURS 9 CRUISES
Mexico Macallan 7 mwa |t99
HAWAII Waiktiii 7 nil»« ^^9
ALASKA 7 r>fghta frcrri ^^
COLUMBIA Botago/Cartagono 9aaya Sott
vEX»CO Ma« Oty 9 dsys Sn
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">Q 8 rouPtnoa 35 Osys.-^ SSIS
^e 44 days Icowntnoa. 1 -oA crutoo 91999
Europa 49 tfovn 19 cauninoa 2 w«i crutto 91999
•^•twa.. 2-w«i 3 laland tncluotwo t409
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For IntoVmatlon
I 0B6 >16. 81.66 mm-
(TAB)
CLASSIFIEDS
' ■ ' — 1 1 1 ■ I . I. ■ I > i I I II I .J ^ I ■ II . I
•B^kJwtMmd^ hou^eeforrent
(90A23J
8188 ATTB Fym _^ _ .—•««,
aiV*ilLfV.*r ^■•^"^^'y tooBNiea:
*'^* : f*'^ •* S^ts NIonica
JAZZ RIAWO/AU. 9TVLt9
(19A9)
UCLA ^. ,.„,^
FuHy turnlshod avallabla on
8 aMa to 1 yr Ioom approsl-
BOAR0CR9 aaeded et
474-3371 or 474-6113.
(36 A 6)
ROOM and beerd for 8188 Le«Hh
1667 VOLKRWAaOM
sea 876866 213
^1A6)
8090 00 monttKy 478-4004
fSn A .«||
827Hllgard Wostwood 470-3048
(30 OR)
CNIMS9E MSBBlBi. » g neMae
laacfior. woU-eaporloncod artth CaM-
terele CradawRel Individual small
amM. 893-1908
BRITH TideiBn By BLA. Qrod BleBaBaa.
.^ ;. MdQRE
wIclnRy. 3B4'4786>
(24 066
(36 A B)
(36 A 6)
!•? JlTliia «»0/month Call Lkida
•. ai^K-lOrO Of Frank Lull at 306-6213
(96 A 6)
TWO biiiiaam himiahad
AwiBatola juna ». Nom^
FacuRy staff prafafioB. CaB
om and board
:chanaa lor tialp
I
1^ M6t ZtaMSTS^^M
ataaring windowa AM FBI BaoMr
Jtarao Tachooiolar Now MichoMoa
1669 - 06 6 4
070-7101
6»7-7t11.
•••ORTLEV^ross from Oykstra
Baohalars. sBiilaa. oi«a trsBromm 47*.
1760. 473-B624 *^
|A1 A 6)
(30 A 6).
LSAT.
Individual, small group instruction
ri'Jl**?**''^'"'"»'"»*«»»»<< 9schaior
8140^6lnglos 8109 Fool HmmtX of
10874 Undbrook 478-6864
(28 Otr)
CLEAN, swall ana badroom^Banla
FanfurmaRad For ona— baautl-
30 A 0)
S280 Den 92S 72O0L
House for sMa
OR A 19)
mifumimhad
la UCLA
WaBiBif
470-3373
(24 OBI
typing
1-BEOROOM. naw carpats. sleaa and
rffrigarator uppor. In W.L.A 8178/
(27 A 6)
TVBBJQ-F
werB et
t BEDBOOM bachalor. for loMa. 11714
►n Ava . Brontwood Call 478-
— -8011
_____^ _.<27A00
9RACIOU6 cantor hpll * tttrosiw 1%.
6eBi. fbepMoa. lermai dining loem 8
»eln from UCLA Only 863.800 Wynn
477-7661
(>1 A 0)
3 BEDROOM. 1% Bedia. L.R.. Biepieaa
■aporali dhUng roeai, BeMt-lna Naw
•eel Lovaly yard 8626BB. 698-1834
(31 A 9)
GARDEN studio >oard aahaefo far
chMd cara/halp w dhMtLiBBidty fafiBiy.
near campua. Evas 474.4714
_____^__^ (37 AS)
"*^ *** ^^'^ — "nimkispkn i.j
cook avaning moal for 9n^k%—t and
leunaan yaar old son Pratai -imili
Mco anvirofMnant. 484-3BB8
' /^7 A •\
FOREIGN Studant Roem/beerd lor
Reuaa/gardon choras Frivata room
BeBi. bachahirs housa with tannlai
swkwmhif pool Mr NNMar 71
893-0309 days
(37 A 01
74 FORD fc
Bl aslras 82786
epar|y 001^232
FOR
99
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(41 A 6)
NEW/U9C0
laaaad ui
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A
(41 A 16)
187 A 0)
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8192.86 476-6662
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S36-6736.''477-6663
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- - -^ 474-7014
(37 A 8)
72 FIAT 126
ABI/FM.4
179-6474
(41 ^ 6)
11793
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lA. ' "*■-
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and Bbidael. 66e/
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bathrooms apartmani 8148.06 nmrnt
UCLA Laurai 826-4700. work 828-8441
(28 A 6)
(32 A 6)
BEAUTIFUL Brontwood homo ^i—t
mBLE. Hght MwHi'ln asi __^^ _»„^_
guast- housa call aarly aioriMof or
avankiga 303-2380 Cloaa UCLA
(37 A 6)
68 CHSVILLE 86B8. 64 CRryaler
60a BoRo Rm 2173A Bngr I 466-3991
(41 A 8)
F4 RIMTO RueBt. aBi. di^
erf63-3749.
472-0634
(99A66
3B6-2684
2684
(26 A 6)
(own reeei). i
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Sias.iaa 876-1391.
fdaa i^4S
Oraduata studafM.
I99di9|
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haN In momhtg and haM bi avaoBif .
Offar saparats bachalor apt with
board, plus salary Hollywood n^mt
**""■ Contact Daa 838-3140
(37 A 0)
(41A9)
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to mi 14899. ANar 6 pai.
141 A 6)
(99 A 121
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Tarm papeie,
IBM 899-7472
(16 Olr)
473-4746
8112S0aoch
(1SA7)
MOTHER of 8 yr oMaon soaking u..^.
"^ " 1 Baa-hi^ EscsBant conditions
^62-8102
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71 CNfV Vogs OT Hatchback Air.
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961-4661
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199 A 9^
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80.000 mlloa. S999/Beet eRoT^Daye
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Lofal Beerelery. Noer ceaipwa 478
766S
(ISOlr)
EDITNBB. T
(IS A 12)
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FURNISHED w/bathroem Rrlvele
entry UtINtlas 9av Hills Jawlab
lamBy Mnal ba neat 8118. SMet 899^
bicyclaa
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993-0109.
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(20 A 6)
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(26A36)
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lai
2t8MWBS or 276-9471
iccurals
(19 OR)
epl OBrn room and bath Firaploee
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<«iA9)
GENTLEMAN R<
bif lo
WLJI
842-7621 . 699- »B9 Olada (7-8 aai).
(13 A 12)
RUTM C DI9SERTATt09l9. THE9EB
9TATI9TICAL. FA9T. DBRBNDABLE
9BV9N DAT9 A WB8K. BUNT TTFf
9TTLE9 S19-S428 ^ ^^
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494-6714 ^ «waaafa.( 4)
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room, 896 and 8138
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477
tKHiaa axchatioa
AS)
RBOFBSSIOMAL writer
(UCLA)wMI«pa
<>«ar
(MOB)
wHR B.A. In
WANT tamela graduate studewl er
profasslonal to shara ocaan front
condomlnlmum^ 4 levels 8266. 366
C9iA9| HAVE yea Bladba iiikpplnglaryeer
OUI9T Rrlvela room/bath KItchon
prlvllagas. laundry Waslwood Btola
lec^my or atedont 474«7122 eflar
8:18 p4n.
OHRT
* a%
for aama In Faclfic Fallaedoa/9ente
T6 (JMty16 6apl6).
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TAHITI SUPER DEAL
Jul 9-2 V tor Tahittan Foott«ai ^aSj
Far
. ^ — • ' '"■ — t.waw
^^^^^^H^B acwBBlH I^BBM B99B9l^HBB
^rmomrm for
GRADUATE RECORD EXAM
20 hr c
Mays
*'•<> BLBAT
DAT
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
9917
BEAUTIFUL room, own balhri
8188 mm
8 pjn.
(IS A 61
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(2BLOOU
haleioh, peuqeot
NtSHNCI, CENTURION
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479-:
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474-6147
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(1J99) laeeBenL
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143 A 12)
BaB 171 .6741/271 -BTU
(41 A 127
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real A reek, aelely Bera. rRn leebe.
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9{4
[flU 679-4444
cor^itm^
^■'- V'
UCU'S SOUTHERN CAMPUS 76
lie yearbook rich in color, coverago, pictures
•f-<sJU
1
I
-qffyr
.^.. .r^'
I
hits recniiting frafl
fly MldMMl
DB Sports
3 For coaches Gene Bartow. Tee Hunt and
Larry Fanner. Ihc 1975-76 regular kMuketball
S leaaon nuy have come to a cloae, but the 1976
high ichool ivcniiting derby is just beginning.
April 15 IS not only the day that income Ux
payments arc due. but it is also the first day
that high school and junior oaiife basketball
pltyen cai^ sign a national letter of intent to
the collcfe of their choice
As with the past precedent set by John
Wooden, the UCLA coaching staff has basic-
ally ignored the junior coUegjc pool and will be
seeking three or four high school seniors.
The definite area of recruitment is in the
front-line, and it is possible that UCLA will try
to sign four forwards The reason that front-
liners ar^ being recruited is that cemci Ralph
^ DroIUnger will graduate hi June, -^ad- Richard
^ Washington, Marques Johnson, Gavin Smith
j| and Wilbert Olindc are all scheduled to
l^gra^iiate after the 1976-77 season.
H Hunt has coordinated the Brum recruiting,
and UCLA ha« Krer> looitins a^l r«*«»«wth^
g
\
United Su^ps ior paMiMe candidates The three
most mentioned that t f LA is interested .n are
Glen GrunwakC James Wilkes and Johnny
Nash.
Grunwald ts a 6^ fofward-center from East
Leyden High School in Franklin Park, llhnois
Bartow and Hunt became acquainted with
Grunwald last year while coaches at Illinois
University and visited him while the Boiins
were on a January trip to South Bend.
Wilkes is a 6-7 forward from Dorsey High
Schopl. He helped i»park the Dons to their first
Lps Angeles City title and he was named co-
City Player of the Year. Scouting reports
indicate that he has ulents and abilities similar
to Washington's
The 6-6 forward-guard N^ash led Long Beach
Poly to the CIF tule and the number-one high
'school basketball ranking in the state of
Calitornia He won AIJ-CIF honors for the
second siraijjht year, being named co-CIF
4A Player of the Year
There are several othet players that UCLA
IContlMpd on Page 1 5)
-X— . »_..
TT"
^Qlum* XCVlll. Number 3
Daily
Untv*rslty of CalHomia, Lm AngclM
r
W
y, AprU 7, IfTt
Bobby KiMfM (1) and
Sondheimer Says
.. ^ -
Spfkers go for yet another NCAA crown
^
%■
UtLA might not have won its customary NCAA
basketball title, but the Bruins are still in an excellent
position to win their sixth NCAA volleyball title in the
seven year history of the event.
A I Scales, now considered the new Wlzifdlyf
W^stwood, has reached the time of the seasc^ when
he usually starts performing his magic. Scales (he is the
subject of. a feature article in this week's Sports
Ulumm(ed) has not won a league* title since 1971, but he
is iiF excellent .position- in 1976
* The Bruins are in a battle with Pepperdine and Santa
Barbara for the league crow^jD^ but the final taur
matches are in frirendly Pauley fivi lion where UCLA is
unbeaten this year It appears that the Westwood crew
gets inspired before the home fans and plays its best
volleybarll. ' . V - .
All-American Joe Mica may have turned the entire
laason around in the second game of the last match
against Long Beach State With the score tied at 11,
Mica was stuffed on a spike fVie Long Beach players
yelled "rudely" at him to celebrate.
Mica became angry and played to the form that
made him ^n All-Anr>ericin as a freshman Mica was set
on the next play after being blocked and put a
crushing sptke info the court. That spike fired the other
Michael Sondheimer
players and gave UCLA a 15-11 win m the game i>n6
the Bruins went on to win the match in three games.
UCLA should now have momentum going into the
final four laigiir matches in Pauley Pavilion against
use on Wednesday^ Pepperdine on Friday, UC Santa
Barbara th* following Wednesday and San Diego State
a week from Friday. It looks as if the earlier season
problems have beiwi corrected.
The team has lacked a court leader in earlier
matches, but team captain Denny C line has taken over
the responsibility for "firing the team" on the court.
The setters were *"timid" earlier in the season in
running the UCLA quirk oHense, but Peter Ashley,
David Olbnght and Sievt Suttich ^r^ finally showing
the leadership that Scates has expected them to
Getting a kiMer instinct is the mam problem stiH
facing the UCLA squad Too many times UCLA has
come close to wmrjing the game, only to lose on a
long rally or a team mixup. Against Pepperdine came
the worst monnent of thf season when the Bruins blew
a 14-8 lead in ganr>e three and lost 1^14.
Senior Fred Sturm and Mica i^re the players that the„
setters work to in clutch situations to stop the
opposition's momentum, ^n6 the twosome is starting to
come through.
The young players have now had three quarters of a
season under Scates ^f\6 assisunt coach Andy Bana-
chowski i^nd^ a^e ready to hJBBWi. .Preshnr>en Singin
Smith and K.C. Keller have made remarkable improve-
ment since last September and are now contributing
regularly. Sophomores Doug Rabe and Mike Conschall
have worked into the regular lineup. Itnlar Mike
Frainklin is still the best backcourt specialist in col-
legiate volleyball and a stabilizing, force.
The new Wizard of Westwood, always seems to peak
his team right before the Regionals, but this y^^r Scates
would like to bypass the .Regionah by winning tKa
league title.
Pauley Pavilion can be the ii^\6m% fadsr If the
Brum fans can conrie out and create the home court
advantage. "U was the Bruin fans that helped Us win
the NCAA title last year in Pauley Pavilion over Santa
Barbara ^n6 the Regionals two years ago over Pepper-
dine and use, so I just hope our students and alumni
realize what a great eHect then caniave." said Scates.
NCAA titles MT^ nothing new for the IJCLA volleyball
team, but Scales does^KM consider it a good year for
him unless he can count on having his traditional big
moment around the first Saturday in May.
Ford shrugs %ff speech
by Reagan with easy wins
fy Pwrt FarM 7
„ Dl $tafr Writer
auS Te^.X "rj^ln" ^^ »*^P"'"'<^»'> challcnrr Ronald Rcag.n". ,ele»i««,
wt^o^^n ^h.i ?"*"' '"*l "P'"''** " P*' «""»f '»»« Repuhl.cn vote .n
In t v^,* •*«•»•" •'ho tecr.ved 44 per cent of ihe votes counted
GOP collvJnnnn*..", ^"' ""^ '^' """*"■'* -^o"*! "'»'«"• delegation ,0 ,he
tion slots Reagan supporters
had won TTvc nominating posi-
trons with 65 per cent of Ihe
haHots counted Of the state's
154 nominating votes, 37 un-
committed delegates w^re
chosen before the primarv hy
the state's Republican pjirty
Ford's showing m^New York is
considered a victory since most
of the uncommitted delegates
are likely to support the Presi-
dent.
Speech lacks impact
Last nights pnmarv results
seem to indicate that keagan\
nationallv televised speech last
week, in which he attacked
Ford's defense polic\ and Sec-
retary el State Henrv Kissm-
(Continued on Pa^e |g)
D.™oc,« >««"nr^.»^»c>^JM^ *g .o,.. c..cHlnt, up .o ..„.n.y Cam, (Hgh.,. ^ ^r„^ ^
(c«m«r) had wneottt MlMn« In Mm 00I» In y— frjayt prtmart— .
investigation
Dead heat in Wisconsin,
Jacicson takes New Yoric
By JoalMia Al^er ^
DB Slalf Writar
While^ Henry Jackson scored a convincing win in New York, Democratic from
Wil^nsm "^ ^^"^^ *"^ ^""'"'^ ^^^•" ^^^^"""^ '" ■ "^""^ *^* yesterday in
r^'^^ !?! ^[. "if"* ""1 ^^ Wisconsin hallots counted as of, early this morning.
Carter and iidall each had collected 25 of the M W.sconsm delegates Despue-
Udalls claim to victory Ust evening, he trailedin the popular vote 37 to 36 per
cent, according to the later figures
rhough Jackson easily led the New York field with KM delegates, 32 more than
"^^^ ■ his nearest challenger Udall,
Jackson's margin ot victory
was smaller than he had pre-
dicted
Behind Carter and l/dall in
WMcaasin came George Wal-
lace with 10 delegates (Wl ot
the vote) and Jackson with 6
n%) Carter earned 33 dele-
t«les in New York, where 68
were uncommitted.
Carter's performance in Wis-
consin maintains his position
at the head of the r>emocratic
pack, though he is somewhat
weakened hy his poor finish in
New York
lidall. who has yet to win a
prima-ry. had looked to Wi»^
consin to bolster his faltering
campaign He will prbhably
have enough Inomentum to
(Continued on Page 13)
ring Instruction and activities schedules
ACTiyiTl£S
Electronic
•y Sally Gamer
••4 Frank Widder
DB Staff Wr«|cn
Los Angeles Police Deparr-
ment^uK qf^yi^ft^pc systeni
could* ha^^^horte/icd the week-
long UCI*C- 'investigation ol
the rape h^rt last January
Campus police pr<Kedures in
the rape investigation included
stopping, questioning and pho-
tographing some suspects Ten
days after the rape occurred,
an outside campus lead re-
vuhed in the arrest of 17-year
old Cecil Rohiason. a high
school student, for the alleged
oftt
.,.„ However, according to
LAPD tnd UCf D sources
normal police teletype com-
munication from campus po-
lice to local agencies through-
out the investigation broke
down and failed to aid the
initial search
»
Two campus police teletype
messages giving a description
of the rape suspect were lem
it
M
infallible
out statewide and could have
resulted in an almoit imme-
diate arrest, according to one
LAPD source
West Los Angeles police,
who did have a previout file
on Robinson, never received
^he teletype communiques and
^ere "unaware** of the case,
according to LAPD Sgt John
Huie
It was not until Huie re-
ceived a copy of the same
teletype mesaage from UCPD
in the mail a week later that he
knew of the suspect and was
then able io link the descrip-
tion «nth Robinton.
nding on what they
would have done, maybe we
would have had the guy in
custody sooner." Detective
Sgt Giraldo Ares laid. UCPD
r>etective Carol Zweifel said
the mail was sent to WLAPD
after other leads indicated that
the suspect may have been
fr6m West Lot Aageles
Both teletype descriptions
were teat lout to all police
ig^MM» frjdifn San Di^ to
"^ ■ " Td However, acoord-
^ to HuKc. the LAPD centrj^l
offke diverted the information
to downtown agencies, rather
tlMui W^ Lm AAfriaa.
Sometimes it giti to tiier-
ifls. couaty-wfde. city-wide and
local forces, we don't know,"
Huie said "Sometimes the
irlrtype goes on the hiink half
Ihe tMHe
Asked whether police
Student fee to pay^
for Wooden Center?
tnev reonvc
B Hokan-
•Ol
By Rokcrt W
DB Stair Writer
A crash effort to put a ipaoal student referendum on the
ballet of this year'i student government election to decide
^olJ^^^ ^^ ^^^ proposed John Wooden Sports and
Recreation Center is being made by both undergraduate
and graduate student governments.
At issue IS a propand student indenture fee to nay
approximately half of the estimMad $8 million coat of the
^w^' ^«^°^^>"I ^o John Sandbrook of the Planning
Utfice, if the referendum is passed, each UCLA ftadent I
would pay a fee of between four and five dolUrs per I
quarter The fee would last for the animated 2(Mo-3e-yeai-f^
iife of the indenture. ■
The other half of the money will be raised from nnvate
sources.
This fee would be similar to the fee levied in 1957 by
students to pay for what is now Ackerman Student Union
Technically, the authority to impose such i fee to pay for a
major conuruction project is in the hands of the Regnli of
California However. Chancellor Charles E Young said that
he would not recommend nor would the Regenu appmu
such a fee without the voioai consent of tJK atudenu.
To put a referendum measure on the ballot in UCLA
student elections, either a petition signed by 10 per cant o#
the iludenu or a fwofotion by both the Staim Lagislative
Council (SLC) and the Graduate Student Asaocaation
(OS A) IS aaMMry Both SLC and OS A ate cxpadad to
Uke acuon on this as soo« as an unorfiual toifc force set mp
hy the Chancellor yctier^y coraplMi ks ioh.
Mac B
The plan for the Wo^Mi Sforti
(named after necently-retirod UCLA
Wooden) will coaaiit of an ripaaiat Mac B
aai Hk new tporti and rHMMfoa ^Milding.
The center will be located oo what m
four It will inchide expHitfatf gym
offices for leveral University ITacraatiua
chibs and four mmt bamibmU courti.
The concept of a sports and recreatioo
the Westwood Maalar Plaaa Plha. The
Sandbrook. will create a **T
Sirathmore an^ Westw
Parkiag Lot
<
J
I
t^TTlTf » •»-»
'I
■»•■
I
Then comt to Mt & Mt •nd Jyil
wme^ ^^ cm9k our Imiious hot
foftiM (Ittic mmm iiwit from
■>
:4.
t
Mid •pket) right in the winlk^tk
j|«i^|Mi they arc food and hot
Wt M <^crTi into • fresh plU.
•#d lomc lettuce, tomolo. and
piciilt, and liol sauce If onm^o^
wmU, Of course, if you hove
to tta^ home and study. ^M
Oood frodas are
Flu study seeks subjects
ifcrv im^oftwiL
I
f
w
nfe&^iniie
(ksffiy & V^yburn in the VISaft
Eat here / take out / open 24 hrs;
By i. NaUm
Dl Stair WffHOT
Doctors in the Manon
Davies ChiWrcn't Chnjc arc
currently trying to coatact over
200 particifMnts in an innuenxa
•tady to obtain long-term data
on the potency of a ne^ vac-
cine.
The study was designed to
evaluate not only the vaccine
Itself, but aiso a new way of
administering it
According to 0r John
Zahrodnik. a fellow m the
Pediatrics and Infectious
Diseases department of the
Marion Davies Clinic, the%^c-
cine, known as hve attenuated
intranasal influen/a AB. was
given in 1974 to 200 studrnu
and entployees of UCLA
"Some were given the new
vaccine, which is two drops
administered in the nose; some
were given a plaoebo. a sub-
::,=x.
ttance mrvtng no medical ef-
fect, and %ht rest were given
the standard influenza vaccine
m^aion
**Siaoe 74. we have checked
the partica^MU on three dif-
ferent occMions and found the
new vaccine wmtkM jusi^as good
•« the stMMkard injection, and,
in fact, slightly better.** said
Zahrodnik —
Presently the doctors arc
trying to determine the long-
terpi effects of the vaccine
I o do this, they sent out a
newsletter to each pacLicipant
asking ihero to report to the
center -
**But some participants
moved, and others we couldn*t
get a hold of on the tele-
phone"
Zahrodnik said he hoped
that most or all of the volun-
teers would report to the
center dunng business hours
on WediiMigy, Thursday and
Friday of this week.
At that time, one blood,
specimen will be drawn, ami
each participant will be askad
to fill out a short questionnaire
concerning his or her experi-
ence with influenza during the
PMM MM ■llill
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
April 7 1976
XCV4II Numoor 3
•¥9fy mmkdmy 0uNng ttm
•Mcmpt aur$nff hohdmyt
vaccine
Infi. Student Center Tours
April Calendar
What are you doing this monthZ-
rrt.. Apr. M|i
Sun Apr 1 1th
Thu-Sun
An Evening At The Theatre
Sh#fl©clt Holmes at the Shut)ert
(incl trans ) $8.00*
Wh#l#-Wstching Tnp — 4 hrs
on a Schooner Incl Light Lunch
A Transportation $8 00*
Apr 1 S- 18th Lake iTahce. Lake Front Hotel.
Gambling A Lots of Fun
$70 00-
Set-Sun Apr 17-l8th San Diego Tour Overnigm.,S«a
- World & San Diego Zoo
• $35 00-
Fn-Sun Apr 23-25th Coas^^ Tour. Santa Barbara
San Simeoft Big Sur , Mon-
terey Peninsula $50 00*
Disneyland Express — A fuH
day of fantasy and fun Incl.
EntrarKue A 1 1 Rtdes S? OCT
Fri-Sun Apr 30-May 2 Sequoia & Kings Canyon Nan
PBTk Hiking & Sightseeing in
the Beautiful Giant Forest
S55 00-
fof More Information About These & Others
IGC TOURS Call or come to
International Student Centers
Tours A Travel
1023 Hilgard Ave 473-2991
Sun Apr 25th
9-6 Daily
Peckinpah to
talk in class
on Westims
Producer/ writer Carl Fore-
ntin, directors Howard Hawki,
Saai Peckinpah and John
Milius. and actors Warren
Oatet, Ben Johnson and
Strother Martin wiU be guest
speakers at a UCLA Extension
course this quarter conr
. cent rating on the sociological
Mud psychological impact of
Western films on the American
psyche
Entitled 'The Western
Movie: An American Epic,"
the course will show one
Western at each of its weekly
meetings, followed by corn-
menu tq^ industry people in-
volved in the production of
each film.
The course has selected from
a wide range of. Western movie
experience, from the clastic
aa4 River, with John Wavne
aad.du^cted by Howard Hawks.
^ tilt bloody and violent TIh
WiM ■— fii. directed by Sam
Peckinpah
Other films to be viewed and
discussed arc Stagecoacli^ My
I>arlittg C>Mcntiii€, and The
Wagoaiastcr (all directed by
the late John Ford, High Nooa
(directed by Fred Zinncman),
Shane (directed by the jate
George Stevens^. Hide The
High CoMotry ^aiso directed by
Peckinpah), and several
Western serials and television
episodes of Gvn«mokc, The
tone Ranger, Zorro and The
Cisco Kid ...
The course*s coordinator,
author Winfrcd Btevms, will
place discussion emphasis on
how the American value sys-
tem has been affected bv the
frontier images of Western
pictures 'L^'^
The course's fee is l56 non-
credit or $65 with three units
of credit Single lecture tickets
cost S5 75. or $2 50 for stu-
dents with ID. and are only
available if space permits
for more information, call
Ronnie Rubin at 825-6059
— >Rarr% Grey
^1
•cnoof
•na ^myi toHowing hoitdmyn mnd •«
BfmnmtKfn pmrto^ bf th» ASUCLA
ContmuntcMtiong Bomrd 30§ N%«|-
9§t§t Copyright WH by Itm ASUCL A
CotnmuniCMtiQni
It
GSM quarterly $
7.
i
fotmgt pmtd at ttm Lpa Angaim^ Po§t
Officm
Jmmam n
Annm Vouhq
Susan Kmnm
Ma«» EdNofi
Patridi HMiy
^•kM Stgnormm
a Barton
Frank StailanKH
•t Davii W
DB Suff Writar
The nation's economy, only
recently showing signs of f^
covenng from the moat severe
«an«on ^ncc the 1930^, will
continue to grow -but at i
rate, a UCLA School of
ment quarterly faiQmi
^ rcpoiti »:
Students, however, will iioc
have an easier time finding a
rjoh, even though the forecast
^ £!Z^*^.^* record employment
!ȥȤ ia -Ihe next two years
The report, prepared for the
school by Robert M Williams,
direaor of the UCLA business
forecaal/aiid Urry J KimbcU,
director of forecasting modeli,
^••ct its cautiOuT predictiona
on rapent economic develop-
menft'
^cofioflMc nrars km
been encouraging. The un-
f yluyreent rate has fallen
ilmriy. Inflation in February
was much lower Housing
surts were up sharply in Feb-
ruary; domestic automobile
sales have spurted ahead. Cor-
, potatc profits are up strongly
*Ad te stock market has nsen
dramatically,'' Kimbell said
Williams told the Aii/i
Buin that the job market for
graduating college seniors will
"not he as good as 1972. 1973
and 1974.^
**The rale' will vary quite a
bit by particular occupations,**
Williams predicted.
I hose occupations where
jobs will be more plentiful^
iccofdini to wmiaws are m
business-related position* and
engineering;
Liberal arts majors, an oc-
cupatmmi wasteland since the
early Seventies, will still have
the barest time finding joha,
*mce the traditional hiring
post, the federal goverhment. is
in the midst of severe curings
of financial expenditures
The forecast *s optimistic out-
look is primarily based on
consumer spending, which the
report said has benefited Irom
lower ux rates on prriaaal
income and iMver"^ rates of
inflation that results in in-
creMcd purchasing power for
family incomes.
Fears of inflation and a huge
federal deficit have kept the
ow economy growth
Marc OalHnt
Stvan Siivarttain
\mf}o>'
Jaff Lapin
Tony
Howrard Po9n9r — On
Laura Klamar —
Fartray
c«a»y
arandy Alaxandar
Luann Cunni
Bratt Hollar
ArtOlraclor
MichaaiLaa
wavio ^MVM^ay
Mumll
ivanh
Dtcli Krau2
U
Cattiy
Daniaa Ooroahaff
Alan Michaai
A REAL EDUCATION
ADD TO YOUR COLLEGE EDUCATION _
-TAKE ADVANTAGE OF EX PERIENTIAL LEARnTng THROUGH
FIELDWORK WITH "BRIDGING THE GAP"
•toniy takas one night a wMk! T,W ancwwrated
yoaaw m raaaing and math, or conduct amall classas
in ana and crafts, music. cuNural Thirtiai. ate These
young man and women must eventually return to
free" society and your worte can help make this
return more successful' Not only wiH yow bring in-
Valuable information to thaaa vourh« k..» w^
oat tho rh*rv^<> *^ .. "'^w youms, but you wil
Sorl? S? ! ° ^ ^°* '^ '"^•"*»« justice »«iim
works Were looking for people who can V^nSSw
Call 825-2415 or come by Kerckhoff Rm 406 an^Zai
the athletic department
1317 westwood blvd.
(westwood)
Ids angeles, California 90024
(213)473-6467
JOIN US AT BRIDGING THE GAP
I never take off my NIKEs. because they are the reason that I'm lean and
fft^mn. Id suggest stopping by the Athletic Dept for the shoes and
apparel you'll need to get in shape.
foreout frooi predicting qu^ck
••onomic growth for the coun-
try untii at least I9ii.
The UCLA forecait alio
calls for ccunomH.- growth in
1978. which contradicts other
rcpons that predict a busineis
slowdown in that period,
period. ^ — -^
CaUfornians will lace a ro-
sier economic picture than the
rest of the nation, as pergonal
incumc and gross product will
incraaae at sUghtlv faster rater>
here than m the rest of nation
Other predictions made by
the forecast incliidc
— Stock prices are predited
to fluctuate in range of K59 to
1.075 in 1976 and 925 to 1.200
in 1977. compared with ranges
of 632 to 8«2 M 1975 and 57g
to H92 in 1974.
^agcs maaiured by av-
erage hourly eumtngs in manu-
facturing industnet will in-
crease by K6 percent in 1976
and 98 percent in 1977.
Corporate profiu after
taxes win establish new record
highs of $83 billion in 1976
and SK8 bilhon m 1977. and
Whoiesak prices will nse
only 3.8 percent in 1976 and
73 percent in 1977, compared
with a 19 percent increase at
the peak of the 1974 reoetsMi^
Consumer prices are expect
ed to rise about 6 percent m
1976 and 1977. which i^ slight-
ly less than the 9.2 percent and
1 1 percent jncreases seen in
197^ i^nd 1974
I
I
\
Free Disneyland tickets
I isteners to the campus radio station Kl A 81 AM will
be able to call in to win tickets tor the April 10 Sprint
Hing at Disnevland from Wcdmsijav. AprfTT throuMh
Fndav, AprU 9 ' , *
A Datsun B-210 Coupt- will be among the JfN) prizes to
be given awa> at the ^Phng ' I arr> C.ro^. the MunklcuKJ
Junkie Bo Donaldson and the Hevwuod^. i>onald Hyrd
and the Blackbyrds and Papa l)o<> Run Run wiJI provide
entertainment
u "^o '^i**" ^ ^^*'^ *" ^^ ^'^"^^ undeii»rftiate dorms and
by Public AddMM at its Student Union receiving points
are happening at
.^t
xaur
at
iPt
<Pa[.
in the Village
We have to close for a week,
but
Watch for our Reopening
around April 10th
It's Different!
«
i
It's Exciting!
It's New!
It's Mysterious!
Back pmcks
Jo990r'8Shoe
Sportsuits
$9 95
$1695
Shorts and Socks
T-9hifti.
Riighyfrao^
m^
from $4 00 Ru^by Short SI— va
*
tl4 95
$1295
Westwood Vii
Gayley A Weyrburn
478-0788
PERSONAL
EXPLORATION
GROUPS
Counseling Division
Psychological &
Counseling Services
use iniereued im cxplmiki
^fuT snaimg fKrfr concerm
in a group sruing:
Once a week for 2 hours,
i334 Murphy Mali
for informatkm and sigrt-ups
drop in or phone (82) 5-4071
I
Are You Interested In
a Health Advocate?
Potitiont for 1976-77 are now open lor studonts
living in dorms, fraternities, sororities, tfte Co-
op, and married student Itousing.
Voo must attend on€X)f the following mandatory or.en-
tot.on meetings at which t«ne application forms will t^
available
Thursday April 8 Delta Gam'ma Soronfy 652 Hilgard
Monday April 12 RieberH.*! Library 7 00 Dm
Tuesday Apm t3 Theta X, fraternuy 629 Gayley
" 7-00 pm
If yoojia^e any questions, call the health
advocate office at 825-4730
.4^:..
wm
Half of jobless are youths
Teenage unemployment
IINGTON rAPurv^n... i *^.,.» ^ V^ ^
WASHINGTON (APhDcspitc
the improving economy, un-
employment IS at a record high
and experts say job prospects
for teenagers wiU be dim for
years One authont^ carls the
problem faaciai dynamite/'
The Joifit Economic Coir-
mittee of Congress, noting
predictions oi severe unem-
ployment through I9§b, lays ii
will resuh in increasing crime
drug use afid other lorms of
antisocial behavior among the
nation's trrnagiii
"If that isn't social dynamite.
I don't .now what is," savs Sar
t .1
^
Levitan, director of George
Washinton University's Center
for Manpower Studies. '
Levftan and other econo-
mists say today's youth— pro-
ducts of the postwar baby
I^SMn — are growing up without
developing adequate work ex-
pcnence, creating a generation
they say will burden soaety
with higher welfare fnynents
and other socml coat for the
next 20 ycar«.
''One of the most tragic con-
sequences of the 1975 recession
and the severe •■empioyment
projected through 1980 is the
fconomic, social and p?ych<>
tofical impact It will have on
«•»> young people,-^ reported
the Joint Economic committee
"Prolonged unemplovment,"
the committee said, •'increases
^ incidence of crime, drug
abuse and other forms of so-
cial behavior that can rum a
pcnoaV chaiMx of achieving a
productive life hi the future."
The Bureau of Labor Sut-
istics said that at the height of
the recession Jaat year about
3.7 million youths— divided
equally between teenafers and
those in their early 20's-^were
unemployed. The accounted
for almost one-fourth oi the
civilian labor force but almost
half of all unemployed work-
ers
Jobless rataa ior teenagers ^
and young^ aittks have trad-
itionally been higher than the
rest of the work force The
receion made it worse.
While the over-all jobless
rate has improved in recent
months -dropping from a re-
cession peak of 8 9 per cent
^t May to 7 6 per cem in
February— the teenage jobless
rate remains above 19 per cent,
with 3.7 million still unem-
ApriPs Birfhstone
A tiny ring
"•4^ gold — diamonds
«*n'ng at $28 and matrhing bracelef
•^ ,»
l«74
m^trhing ^ ^ '^"^ wphires and o^i - with
S19.M
EASTER *'tnwoooDBuo
S/VNGS *
\
9um. >nre. Of whatever your d«ire may be.
1
^'^ ^^"" «'" are the law nrices
SHANr-S IFWEllEtY CO
WEST
••IS MtOXTON
WfSmooo VIIIACI
USZrnyopic' on blindness
ly tea G<
• ^ Di Stair Reporter
While the Imemational World Health Or-
^mzation (WHO) u sponsoring World Hfcahh
Oay today lo make people aware of^he
•criOuaMli of blindness, little is being done on
this campus or in the L.S to promote such
efforts according to Arthur John Manger,
chie! of admimstrative manafement for WHO
Mlnger expressed disappointment that very
Itttk IS being done in the United States to
promote this event.
_ None of the organisations for the bbnd that
Mai^ contacted, nor the School of Pubhc
Hea th here, were interested in publicizing
World Health Day. The U.S. k myopic ^
jn^^^'national affairs." said Manfer. He feeb the
US. u too concerned with its own internal
art airs
The lack of consciousaen of international
health problems by the U.S. Md other coun-
jncf w too great aad there is too little support
for cures, Man^ explained.
ei^*"^ ""'^^ ^^ '^^^5 ^"^^^ ^^ WHO.
*u> milbon, at the same amount aOb^tad by
the U.S. for preparation for flu vaccine for this
country.
Member siataa
WHO IS funded mainly by the 147 member
states who contribute according to their groM
^litional product, population and income
There are four more members of WHO other
than the United Nations.
Manger explained WHO as an apolitical
autonomous part of the United Nations system^
The organi/auon^ began m 1948 to protect and
promote health of all peoples of the world As
pahtics would dilute clloiu and niaio; then
activities more difficult," WHO suys out of
politics. Manger said
^The mam prograais of WHO, as outlined by
Manger, include the eradication of smallpox b>
this year-Ei^^iopi. i. the only remaining
country where the dlMle is endemic.
World Health Days theme. "Foresight
K-Wmts blindness,- is aseocuited with WHO's
work in seven West African counirick
In these countncs a desease which rimci
bhndnem, onchocercusu. it passed by the black
nver fly WHO is spraying the upper Volu and
Its tnbuuries id prevent breeding of the fly
^. '^ world's explosive birth rate u WHO's
Njgit problem, according to Manger: WHO ia
coaAictmg research throughout the world for a
brwkthrough to reduce population. Manger
aaid LA County General Hospital is par
tiapating in this project.
There are abo active projects such as family
planning, contraception and education To
atfftpt the programs to various cuhural dif-
ference, the |Mel directing the programs is
multi-disciplinary Besides medical experts,
there are sociologisu and anthropologists
^^•^ ^^ Administrative Management for
WHO. Manger heads a department of benefit
coat analysis His department projects the coat
of a project and tries to use avaiUble resources
most effectively
Manger came to WHO in 1967 alter 25 years
as a naval aviator and commander This year
.ilwf ^" ''*^^«^»ca' here to get his Masters in
Pttblic Health He hopes to expand his know-
ledge of the heahh sector and his eftectivehcss
at his job.
Youth job picture . . .
(C c>fMinued from Page 4))
Vmt^^ox Macks, the sit-
"dation is even more grim Gov-
ernment figures show that 34.6
per cent of black teenagers, age
1* to 21. can't find a job In
the inner cities, the rafe ex-
ceeds 30 per cent.
"There's a lot of wasted
skilb as the yean go by." says
Nat Goldfingcr, the AFL-
CIO's research director.
-There's a genenAion of young
people out there who don't
have to get up in the morning
to go to work. Tbey have no
work discipline and are left to
baog aroiMid the streeu."
Goldfmger says that besides
the higher crime and other
problems that result, there's a
yy potential for political
problems "We're developing a
group that's alienated, who are
kind of cut off from the main-
stream of society."
The major reason for the
persistent teen-age unemploy-
ment IS sheer niinbers. The
postwar baby boom has
Mvelled the number of teen-
afers in the labor force from
4.1 million to 8.8 million over
the past 15 years. Each year.
>ther 2.5 million enter the
„ .-,■>.<■■.'
A Teacher! You GOTTA Be Crazyl
but I really want to teach"
How do YOU know
Sound familiar? How do you fMMy know unleaa you are involved m it We h^y^
to help you decide.
JatK>r force.
Alihougji the birth rate has
declined since the early 1960's,
Levitan says this won't affect
the work force until after 1980
Numbers aie not the only
reason for penistent teenage
unemployment Women are
entereing the labor market in
increasing numbers and are
competing with younger
workers for jobs. At the same
time, job opportunites have
dried up, as in agriculture,
once a major employer of teen-
agers, where the size oi the
overall work force has declined
in recem-Tewi.
The disappearance of the
neighborhood grocery store
and other small businesses that
once employed teen-agers, both
full and part time, has also
been ¥^actor.
**The kinds of job oppor-
tunities that kids had 25 years
ago have largely disappeared,"
says Goidfinger "Blacks, to a
gnat extent, are locked mto
central city slum areas and
especially feel the loss of neigh-
borhood stores"
One area that benefitted
from the recession is the mil-
iury Penugon olficuds say
the armed lorccs 4iave bad no
tl-ouble meeting their recrutin^
goals and could even afford to
be more selective on who they
choose.
But even thr ' mihury has
provided only limited job op-
portunities This summer, with
the 1976 crop of high school
gradvates entering the job mar-
ket, economists say jobs will
•gam ~ be at a premium.
To ease the problem last
year, the Ford administration
provided $^00 miUion for
840,000 summer jobs A final
decision hasn't been made for
this summer. Imt preliminary
figures indicate about $440
million will be spent to put
some 740.000 teen-agers to
work for the nine weeks
Eoonomiat Leviun says the
federal government should be
doing more, not only to help
provide summer jobs, but also
to increase long-range pros-
pecu.
To say the recovery will
Uke care of the problem is
painting too rosy a picture."
sa>rs Leviun in criticizing the
administration's policy of rely-
ing on private industry to gen-
erate enough work.
EXPERIENTIAL OPPOWTUNmES IN EDUCATION
Currently enrolled UCLA undergraduate and graduate stuoenta and alumm who
w% inteaaglgd in
1 Exploring poasible caiMra in pre-achool. alaanai itary or aecondary achoda
2.- Up-dating and up-gradir>g profeaaional akllla in education
3 Having a field experienqe if\ an educational setting
SOUND INTERESTING
COME VISIT
OR CALL
Educational Ci
4223 Math Science Building
-ll^fffflf] fjTIt
Advamtdr Ttmda^n, 4 - fi t^ N1 . si. , t r i iig 7\pi \^
Brgtnniitg \\\^itusdA\ . S - " |»M. >i.,,n Xpr 14
Limited ujjiuuikh Uh iluai«' lim n^H^ in .<hi>rfng
( ijiU Witrk or drwlopiim a p '
tn otii
Thursdayji, 2.4 PM. O.mmin^s. vtarting Apr l.S
Rrgisirr in^ptT.'ion at
Writing & Speech Dix I naming Skills Crntn
3235 Murphy HalJ . Plion< .^ 825 - 8454
A free service of Siudcni and ( lanifms AfTau^ fur ^
all rcj(ularl\ cnrullcd studcnu.
9
I
«
i
Mardi Gra$ 76
April 23, 24,25
SAVE 30% ON YOUR FILM
PURCHASES & PROCESSING
»»/MIU i\Kl. I I
voir
To art -^rnr^^^mad mah o. ..,,..ui ,„. ,'
^nii oHci Lti us send v.ou d /U Bxp roll ( nafl
Kodak Color N^ n for bOtf That's nqht 50^ No
he 50^ let's us know*
Own Ci 3*^ ' "^ ^ camera
^ftlme
'-rfflie.'c***-
P' iO <-^ 400 A <^, A Sn C'mnn f.ll ni.t
thP coup''- '!*'!->.% ,, ' ,.^.,L,
WWit/l
bU«
p It m your ci
mailbox
nrnmr.f ; s, . ..,.«■■»
5MM coiui Tiim, pjus dll ul
TO A
1FR
processtng It; „. .ave you ^' - ^r,,
from Ij^JIffr RMf... ♦- oy, 0351 chart,
GET ACQUAINTED OFFER-
.00 Plus 60^ Postage
20 Exp HMMB«$2 00 Ptus 60^ P •
.00 Plus 60< rosti*
.00 Plus 6'
/f^g^M.OO P
K nrfwrhr<
••>n r
cx;>.
:,*
'V yo free fresh roll of 20 exposure
•M. with your finished o
.'Ar. f-^'
Str«tt
CitY
■v»x
-srarr
TIT
^
y Bm9 a Dr. Jon Vog«r
OPTOHiETRISTS
1
' . r r
Evolution clues sought
'*'>•>
ALPHA EPSILON PI
■•*
rV
4
Alpha Epsilon Pi, a young and
progressive fraternity, is reor-
ganizing at UCLA. If yey^^ish to
meet new people and develop
lasting friendships, come to
Kerckhoff 400. Wed. April 7 at
7:30 pm. For more info, call
826^2844.
B. Pr«nk#l^||.D. MUdicaJ Group
Hair Transplantation "
Acne-Complexion
Plastic Surgery
Dermatology
Allergy
D» Staff Hnttf *^
B> studying'bniin csits from
ancient kkuUs. Harry J Jcn-
>on, profcftkor of psychiatry
anfl psychologv %t- the Schooi
ot Medicine here, hopes lo find
, clues Ofi l*e evolution and
nature of inteliiftaGC.
Siightl.v hald and casualh
drcs!»ed. the iO-year-old *cien-
XiMt was outwardK fnendty and
cheerful as he &aid **Nature is
an orderly baurt.- He ex
pijuned thai the evidence Ironi
over 20 yean of research haa
allowed him to i^ork out a
mathematical relationship link-
ing brain weight to hcMly
weight.
Jerison develops this from
the "encephalization quotient"
(EQ), ^kind of spmef IQ The
EQ IS the ratio of actual brain
Mie to the expected brain size
for a given ckat of animals
•oJy wetghl
The expected brain size is* a
percenuge of body weight and
an animal with a higher EQ
rating is considered more in-
telligent
Jerison thinks mlclligencc
evolved because ^he brain
adapts to particular niches at
particular times For example,
once the land niches were oc-
cupied by a lar^c and diverse
ftroup of reptiles, the dino-
saurs They were presumably
dayligiu animals and depended
on vision
ii a small mammal-like rep-
tikTlpet to invade the land
dominated by the large rep-
tiles. It. would have to find
empty niches The most ob-
vious niche wat to be a night
tinjeV animal.
ViSK^n. however, is poorer at
mght •Consequently, hearing
became the dotninant sense
Thir required modification
• • <•
• •
• • * •
• • • •
of the brain structure, and
It was through millions ol
years of evolution tha^t a
very significant jump in
brain si/e to btxJy si2r
occurred, according lo Jer-
ison
The early mammals devel-
oped relauvely larger brains
than their reptihan ancestors,
and other developments fol-
lowed.
Finally, the ^t^^ciopmcnt ol
communication am|^ language
Jed ti» siill funher/cxpansion of
the brain, the human brains
representing the last large and
significant )ump jn brains sue
relative to body si/e. Jerison
said
"We started on the rosd 5
million years ago.*' he said ''A
million years m just Wre that in
geological terms. Jerisoij
noted as he snapped his^ fm
ftrs. \ •
"We arc unique because ol
the recency of our evolution."
he said -There's nothing like it
in biology." he added To Jer^
ison. this-m^ hiS most startling
discovery. ^ • , •
"We reallv could look at'rhe
history of behavior by looking
at the history of encephali-
zalion." he said
"•The brain is really creaitmg
the >orld in which it livcs^
Jerison said. He added if peo-
ple's brains were' different, each
person would have a different
perspective of the world
Pnon, tpc fi^^onai AppoK,tm^,,i •••e^n. tenure on
Alim^^nc HMtt) Plans • Crm^, Cards CracM T#rms
Los Angetet
L ifci—i uud
Huntington
6423 Wiishire B»vd -lOS
5203 Lakewood Bivd
•101 Mevr^an St Sfe C
Marry j
•■fc iilphiiit sIimN.
OS
a» Sm r.'im%*f
^^guages
The Department of Slavic Lai
an/iouncei an
Undergraduate Seminar on Pasternak's
DOCTOR ZHIVACO
No Russian required
Slavid 199, W 3-5
Professor Thomas Eek man
Bunche 5274
Parallel seminars are takins olar^ ^t
paniap«,ts w,ll m^ on thJl^^llZty'^l ^***"' ^»*^*°"^» c*mpu»«. All the
Center fof workshop, w.th »mt iDe^kirT 7 " '** ^ ^'^^ Arrowhead Conferefice
(t2M151) or come to the »ir««2^^^"^ "^* •"♦^n^-tion call Pro*es«x
■J
^ASUGl^ COMMUNICATIONS BOARD
ANNOUNCES THE FOLLOWING OPENINGS
FOR STIPENDED STUDENT POSITIONS
1976-77 SCHOOL YEAR
S
I
i
EDITOR:
This position serves as Editor A Chief of the UCLA Dally
Brum, responsible lor all editorial content and oversees a
staff of 90 students
" 1
Bruin
ADVERTISING MANAGER
This position IS responsible for the entrre advertising solici
tation effort for the Daily Bruin and oversMt a staff of
approximately 14 student
Tht Un.w«im»rv ComfTiuoMy v^arrter Ct#ff*.nf Ra«N) SiMion
GENERAL MANAGER:
~^^'^ position IS responsible for all staffing »nd pro
. gramming of thestplion ^h.ch opffMts daily during
the academic year __
ADVERTISING MANAGER;
l!^** P^^S'^'O" 'S resp* '- f r for all .1 ;,,:,
' *for the station
! (Sing sales
«
SOUTHERN
CAMPUS
'-'CLA VEARBOOK
EDITOR .
This position IS responstM for content. salM tfnd staff ma of
ttie UCLA y^— — ^
JLl
fk. Ht>^' •*
.,mw<»«'v
«,: .■»
>('*
■1^,
'<^'C«,
HA 'AM D|^
f
JfWMKh Crtmrrvtjnity
X
1^ '*
J
INTEREST
ASUCLA COMMUNICATIONS BOARD IS SEEKING AN EDITOR AND ADVERTISING MANAGER
FOR EACH OF THE ABOVE PERIODICAL POBUCATIONS.
f
ADVERTISING MANAGERS:
^ .^ •' - ng and recording all advertising
EDITORS:
Responsible for editorial content and n staff of ;»ppfo«
•mately b students
fO' s
EDITOR:
ResponSll>H? for soncitrng ^xw
bulicina and prririuctirirt of rh«>
nj literary contf
'>e
■-SB
/^opcr
EDITi
Is fesc)bnsiot% fo- ct,(fi..^ ^rH -ootont u^ um putXi-
caftVi
PICK UP APPUCATIOfis NOW IN THE PUBUCATIONS OFFICE, 112 KERCKHOFF
DEADUNE TO ^UBMIT APPUCATJONS, APRIL 20, 4:00 PM.
•FOp OTHER JOBS ON THE STAfJ OF THESE MEDIA, roN!-CT ThJ EDITORS AFTER JUNE 1. 1W...
\
IT
^mmnfmmm'm,
^
-i
Child care funds vetoed
AP Prcbidcnt pord vetoed ii Nil Tuesday
that movM graint sutes $f25 niiftion to meet
De«kr. federaJ standards for staMin^ day care
centers
Ford urged C ongrcss to pa&v inst^d. #n-
administration program under which states
would establish and enlMoe their own day care
staffing stand;irds and set up the social service
programs they think best
In a veto message to Congress. Pord ,saftd^4he
measure ^woiltf perpetuate rigid fijieiai ^etetd
day-care standards for all the stales and
IcKalities m thr nation, with the cost to be paid
bv the federal taxpayer "
The House passed the bill 317 to 72, and the
Senate approved it 59 to 30 jast month
The siitn4af4* f|quire a ix^inimu/n humbcr of
adult workers to cire for cKildren between the
afes of SIX w^eks and hik v^ars at child day
care centers
Orjginally. a 1974 social service law required
that standards be met bv last October As that
date drew neai. backers of the suspension said
met
It. became clear requjremenis could not hg
The bill, as passed by Confim, postponed
the requiremenu until July 1 this year In h
veto message. Ford urged Congress to extend
the deadline until Octoter. He said this would
give Congress time to enaa a bill he proposed
for Federal Assistance for Community Services
under wluch ttlta could make their own rules
Ftffitf said the bill would deny the s
^^**^iiL^> '" setting standards and would make
day cire more costly to the American taxpayer
He said it would require the expenditure of
$125 miUion over the next six months and
could lead to a cost of $250 million more each
year thergalter
Ford also was critical of federal matchinB
rate proposals for day care costs included in
the bill he vetoed, saying they would further
complicate the problems slates have in ad-
mmistration of social service
programs
I he veto .jiras Ford's 47th since he
office
took
4j,
t
I
I.
The Council On Educational Development
"f-^tftfi.
Presents the
Courses
For Spring Quarter, 1976:
it.;.
CED rour!>e«, are reguldr couries. taken ^r a grade and
may. where noted, fulfill a„ breadth requirement only
under PUn "A" in the College of Letters ^nd Science. No
tEDtoirt^es maybe-used to fulfill requirementiin^an B
For courses listed as enrollment by "consent ofHnstruc-
tor," a permit to enrofl slip must be secured from the
instructor beforr" going to the computer. General'
information, class schedules, etc., may be obtained in the
CED Office. 3121 Murphy Hall,, X55467 —-^
iK4i>|( 4(4. 4c4e)|t9|c 4e4c 4c4t
CEDioac . , .
l(H«r Ih.. s,„.„« y...,„ „„,, ^,„ ,^. _, ,„„„„^.„J ,,..„.,^ ^^„, ,^^^J
Iinir MfV\K I J |,»ni
i nits 4
Hfrjclfh Humani!hnps
TID124 ^ ^. ..
TK. .A i_ t^'ibbean Literature: A New View
Z^'::::rzir''' ':r:::::i '"' ' ""^•^ ^"'^ -°"" *•" ^ --''^T,^' he
d>p^<. ol .h.«t«..«„, H«7«wi rt,i, they h„ve ,n common Idenmy Race «id
Froles, Su. h, om.„,n H..men, . .,e «pec,..ly .mporun, . no, ,us. becI^^'.heT^e^
l"h7h^r. ."•"' *""-''=*«^'^'"v-..«„.on bo. because, hey "r,«^:^«<
wi,h ,he mos. .mense , ,ea..v.,y ,n Car,hte«. let,er»and Ar. Seleaed lrter,ry workso^
. on..mp„,.,v C.„bb..n .u.hors w.ll bes.ud^d « a un.. D, ianTmlr,Tec.u°lr
tnrollmeni Consent r ..^ i-" '-"^marLLeaurer
r.me MIA, in 1/ Conr»puter ID 92565
lime MW 10-12 pm »rw>«» k^ .u c - -
t«am r,«4- a Koom Math Science 5147
Ixam Code 3 ^^^^^ ^
Contact I Smart x5S%9 • a,«^^k. lj
Breadth Hunnanities
■ I
iw. ■^•^"•^^•"•he Third World: Mvth» A ProMMNr^
~.« 4-1 "»"'^ **-•" r^- to i^^mme revolul^onarv movements m j bni^H
im^.m.n.s .n Bol.v.. C.u.n...-BKsau an.« "he MuM.e f.s, Tth rj^oT:.^^
— .*KII.,.UI.)pn, K<..n, Men s Cv^ 201
UumCuiit.lV , nets 4
<'."i-. M i,,..hM XMHH.,.,. H^,^^ soctaf Sciences
( I I) ( )Hh f \SS4#> .
<^?"*' ^'^''7?~'"«»»>*«-«nHem«phere:AC,«*C«||M,ri$hH»r
.■,am,nr th,s e,hnT mrno,^ f '"""'P^-on ,o ,he p,««„ M rt,e proc«s, we wT
-.v,.». . .;r .3^ oMhe w^r'H':r;: -^r'T' '-*' --"'""•'
l-*«l„n,heUp.n^commun.,y.nBu?i M, ^ r" ^J^"' •"^*'* **" "^
i.y.,iBr«il Mr NobuyaTiuchtda, Teaching A»$oc.a,e
InioMme™ t „„«.„, '^^'•*«*<" H"o»hi JJ, agaisom,. InMr.icKK o« Record
Im.,. MW( riam Compuler ID; 92580
-tJMmt.Hle 4 R<«>i» GSM JJ438
•<.>— T..K.....,,,a i::;-:: Soc«l sciences
ciDi;
,. . ... ^••••^**««'ol Modern Je%»ift|»NalK>naliMP
Ihr ,,HirM. ..I M.M. .». iHK.n , »,.,., |,^,sh n,.,.onaiKm tn.n, „s l.ier.r.
,»♦. ursors ,n t^H lau IB.h ..n.l m,», .,.,„u.„^ to the Kr,^,h .^ . po|.,„al nK.vem..n.
/^.ny ^hH h ...nr^. , .„..• .....I...... :,r-.....v.oos ami ,v,l.,H al tren<«s ami whn h
I ulmmat<Mi »f» Mu »♦• rstahl,
hisi(iri«ai.t^t%«>lt.i>NiM i.i((|(N iinifrTts
f nrollnw'tii ( >pf >ti
Iinw' I A le Mill 4S .»n.
f fcani ( (Mil* 1J
( «>nt,i* f K KiMi/ri X«>««#SS
as fetUMted in iilerarv ami
f)r KiiihKun/ei I e( tiiret
< ••ntpuict ii> 42SM)
KtMim \i,»ih s, ....... CI I'
I nits 4 ^^
Hfi'.iilth >rM mI \i ir*t\t t^s.
rh,s seminal *.,l| Mive, The , Ho, a„on r..
V^a. II I, ^.11 empMi^,. ^ 1^,^,
M-s*afihpa|H;i iisinKprtmar
( nnsent
C oni.tL
Relocation IxperieiM^e
Americans during World
reading anc< the wrMril at a
*^ompiiJi-f ID
Room
I nits 4
Breadth
Interested in teaching
«o iynior High kids?
t^. . '/ ! ^^^ '"**^ •?• «*»•«•» ranging from arte «
•nd psychology - Vou ptoh the .ub^ct CtoMM Mart
• L9aislatiw« Council '•'
II
r
auto-msurance
g>ecialiales
coliege students
Parking
■y Urn Gftrin
DB Staff Writer
In a compariton of nine
local college nmpMiri, the
parking fee here was found to
be the most expensive of those
compared
S^Md limits, loading zones
and special parking rules were
ako observed to be different at
IKTI, use, Loyola-Mary-
mount, Pepperdine and the
California State Universiues at
Los Angeles, LMig iaach.
i^orthndge and Fullerton.
dn this campus, a parking
petition must be filed giving
one's home address, clan in
■cl»ol, job location and other
information If a petition is
approved, $108 must be paid for
the entire fiscal yt^x. Permits
can also be bought by the
: quarter for $27
Loading 29at
Parking meters charge 40
ccnu an hour, and the loading
zone IS available for 20 mm-
ules only Parking fees are pro-
rated here..
The nearest UC campus,
, Irvine, charge $9 a quarter on
a pro-rated basis and $36 an
academic year for staff and
faculty members
"tinder the permit*s regula-
^}^^y parking for loading pur-
P*ief is allowed for 30 min-
ttlW- Night parking is allowed
when the permit is issued
Crosstown at USC, the
parking £k \% $25 per semester,
also oa a pro-rated system.
Teaching assisunts and other
staff and ficulty members are
permitted to park without
duu-fe, while visitors park at
r^b^ rate of $1 .00 a day Night
pttrking IS not permitted there.
At Loyola-Marymount Uni-
versity m Westchester, undcr-
gradujites pay $10 50 for an
entire year of parking oa
campus, whiir ppduaie stu-
dents pay only $3 a year With
that fee paid, night parking is
allowed.
What makes Loyola's poli-
cies unique is the array of fines
for any parking or traffice
violations, running the gaiimt
from $2 for incorrect display
of the parking decal to $17 for
tow-away and storing charfcs.
Cal Sute LA anaMcs $10 a
quarter for student parking
and $40 a you- for the faculty
On that commuter campus,
the parking meters c^mrm five
caitt> an hour or 25 cents a
^y. An lumnttea rule lo stu-
dents at Cal Siace is "pt
^^ sill" aLUmlliig 10"!
AMER-I-CAL
insurance:
1434 WestWQod BcMilev ard • Suite 8 • Lin An||rfn.r
Call Day or H^M - (21 3) 479.S72r'
Service spokesman Parking
space IS laealad some distance
from the main buiidmgs, and
ncar^ liarkmg is almost im-
P^MiNe if a student arrives
after g am
Pro-rated
Long Beach state ha?i park-
mg rate oi $1.50 a week or $li
a quarter, pi[o-ratcd. ,
Larry S MuUin, LB Suie's
parkiag administrator, said of
their jparking situation, *^ per
cent of our parking is quite far
from the campus The parking
we do have is temporary and
very deteriorated This prob-
lem will be alleviated dunng
tte summer with nc%r lacili-
ties.**' - ■• ■ - - — ,^
Twenty-five cents is all thai
is needed to park for one day
at CS Northhdge Facultv and
staff pav onlv $15 a year.
Visitors pay five cents an hour,
^y
but have a three-hour time
limit
There is no night parking
there, however, and no moU)r-
cycles or motorscootcrs are
aUowcd on campus.
CS pMllerton's version of
parking rules include a $r5 fee
per semester and replacement
of parking decals at no charge
if muiilatrd, a contrast with
tlK policy of charging a $.^ tine
here for tiK same oflcnsc
Pepperdine has a definite
pkrkmg problem, a parking
service spokesman there said
Being located on a hill, as
Pep4>erdirte is, doesn't seem
ytt^ -^envenient. especially
when 'no one has to walk up^
that hill frcyn parking space to
classroom Regardless, $30 is
charged to each student for a
school yearV worth ol parking
<n
£^.
SEPrSGIANf
SUBMARINE
15
C
discount on any
Giant Sepi
with this coupon
good' throxjgh 1976
•xhlbitioa
iikI s«la of
•ri9iMi
•rophic
( -
a 1 spanmng s.x centunes Goya Daum.e, c..,,.,* ,..v
.1h !Tn^' P'^-""' ««"o.. Caid*, hundrec. ,„. pZ . .
start at »] 0 00 mo$f iindtef $100 00
W^dn^sday A Thursday
AprN 7and8
11.*00 m.n%. to 5:00 p.m.
BombshaMtr Deli, Court of Sci^nca
South Campus
art engtn^erinq a i(*vi
'»fn J
open mon-fn g 30 5 30 wm 10-4
A.
^9m
-^
1 \
J
daiy biuin
tetters to the Editor
point
Task fare
I
-^ — - )
The UCLA Fmanrial Aids Usk
orre is t*1ng revived after two
quarters of inamvuy. The Task
Force, which was creaied last
year, is an attempt to reduce the
hassle financial aid an be to
students h draws students, the
Administration, student govern-
ment and the financial Aids
Office into a cooperative atrvio-
sphere Last year the Task Force
participated in statewide finan-
cial aid hearings, lome of which
wtrt held at U€LA last spring
Using testimony from those
hearir^, mformation gathered
by the UC and National Student
Lobby and from the student
body in general, the Task Force
will define what the student's
problems are and propcKe solu-
tions- Some areas of concern are
lack of organized student input
into the proce^^s and a lack of
sufficient piiblicity^r:=- r ; ^-
The Task Force can do no-
thing worthwhile if students do
not commit themselves to re-
solving the problems facing
them. As director of the Finan-
cial Aids Task Force, I am seek-
ing students who have experi-
enced financial aids and who
h^ve the time and desire to/
work to improve their Jot and
the lot of theif fellow students
Two slots are being hefd open
for members of the general
student body who show a dtijre
to work, and are on financial
aids Oher members will in-
clude Director of the Financial
Aids Office. Larry Oreyefj Na-
tional Student Representative.
Bxian Eisberg; a financial aids
offer; Student Body President.
Lindsay Conner and members of
the Student Legislative Council
The Task force will provide a
base for ainng of student pro-
blems and concerns, and will be
a vehicle for the Finanaal Aids
Office and Administration to
*york with students to solve
These problems
The Task Force has the poten-
tial of helping -students with
their toughest problems Too
often procedures are adapted or
certain regulations are formi^-
lated that impede or even block
ftudeiits from receiving the aid
they are entitled to. The hap-
because of a' lack of m-
lormation, and sometimes a lack
of coMOarn Now. throi^h the
Task Force and its work, ac-
curate student input will be
available and through the con-
tinuing efforts pf students, our
situation can only improve If
yoM are -interested, have any
questions or would like to talk
to me please contact me in 306
Kerckhoff Hall, where applica-
tions are available. Come over
^nd 141 be glad to talk to you
Oireclof. Financial
Aids Taili Force
Woman s Day
It ioolMd as though^rhe parti-
cipants in International Wo-
men's Day are more inclined to
Turn to the government to solve
their problems than to turn to
themselves.
Discrimination agair>st women
in this s< is still rampant
Intelligent people want to see
an end to rt. of course, but they
are going about it in the wrong
way.
Archaic ideas about women
start in people's minds There-
fore, that IS where the archaic
ideas must eriid and inteHigent
-oni*s begin We cannot legislate
""male chauvinism out of exis-
tence any more than we can
legislate its twin, racism, out of
existence The Equal Rights
Amendment is worthy of sup*
port because it -will repeal many
laws rather than bring new laws
into existence.
The problem of sexism must
be solved on a one-to-one basis.
It has been shown on a general
basis than won^n are as capable
as men are in every area, in-
cluding decision-making and the
shouldering of responsibility '
But too many women are lazily
taking the opportunity to take
the passive, helpless, childish
role because . they have been
told that as worr>en rhey can get
away with this nonsense They
insult their own individuality bv
refusing to open doors for
the/nselves or refusing tci pay for
^helr own night on the town
And they get "exactly what they
deserve After all. if yog are
going lu behave like an m-
competeni. you are Roing to be
(Continued on Page 1 1 )
frohlbWofi coffiMt to UCLA
Support from workers and students
J
(Editor's note, Sautman i$ a
member 6i the Progressive La-
bor Party here)
A Mexican worker crosses the
by bi^rry Sautman
In 1972 the California Legisla-
ture adds to this worker's
troubles. It passes a taw intend-
ed to drrve all undocumented
OPINION
Dorder. leaving a country wuth, immigrant workers from the
25 per cent unemployment He sta\e. Known as the DJxon-
pays hundreds of dollars to a Arnett law, it provides penalties
lor employers knowingly hiring
"Ulegals " The law also makes it
virtually impossible for these
— — -T-— -r-r ^r-T "^^^^^ «o ^^^ legalize their
coyote to guide hun acreis. In immigration statbs
w^k '!5 ^* *'"'** ^i^'^'l Actually, the penalties the
work m a garment shc^ jM. employers would have faced are
makes under the minimum insignificant and never applied
wage He is afraid to use many Yet, as soon as the law goei into
^1 services tor fear that his eflect. the worker', boss de
•Uegal status w^l be noticed mands tha^ all Latin workers he
\Z .^ ""'"^ '^^ P"^*"^ employs give him $500 each, to
up in ^mm.gratlon sw«^ He 'hold m trust" in case the bo^s
hears how they are often held in « ever finid The b^ a^L^
tt^^^vJ^'"'"" ^"1.'*.!! r* ^ ^^ »*- as an e^use t n^
^en shoved across the border hire anyone who "appears to
Hiss boss threatens him with the be" Latin -PP««" to
same fate if he helps fellow However, the Dixon-Arnett
workers ^organize a union Uw nm^ .jth W r«H;;;<j;
from tens of thousands of im-
migrant workers who take to the
' streets m large, militant demon-
strations, which members of the"
Comhiunist Progressive Labor
Party ^ped to organize.
The mass struggle forces a
court to declare the law uiv
constitutional. A fed^al mea-
sure, designed to attack un-
docunr>ented workers nationally
is then introduced by "liberal"
congressman Rodina, cospon-
sored by Kennedy The bill's
progress in Congress coincides
with a masshre step-up in im-
•Thigration raids. The mass media
abounds with calls for ridding
the country of those who are
suppoMd^f "stealing American
jobs/' As the capitalist economy
reaches its worst crisis point in
35 years, another racist current,
the ami- busing movement, be-
gins to flo«v.
(CoirtiMKdoaPagell)
Consumer complaints: yon can help
-■ /
Mifc* SproMi/D«v« Cteck
^:
(Bditor $ note; frtedman ,s the direaor of the
Consumer Protection Pro/ecf in the Ofiice of
tnvironrryental and Consumer Affairs here)
by Gar\ Freedman
discount. Our office contacted both the agent
•"^^^ company. The company explained that
The Consumer Protection^ Proi^' oTo£CA ^^e**^0""' ^njy applied to students with twelve
esents a summary of recent cc^uni 2^ ^aeTlf^rh "•* t^'*"^ for utidergraduates. They
A foreign exchante student ;it i »ri aT.^ZS^ tSL . * ^**^ "^^ ^ illogical, but this is
their policy The agent had m^ifi^ a mistake by
presents
A foreign exchange student^t UCLA cancefM
his auto insurance pobcy after the company billtd
him for premiums $14 above the price he aMad
•o when dealing the insurance agent. The com-
p»ryy had increased the premiums because they
OPINION
m^ had made the rn«take by not rating the
.H ^fi ^'^'^ male driver ' Deciding not to
pay the diHerence. the student cancelled - but
!!! L[!f^2:^ * ^*''**' '^""^ ^"^ o«H:e contact-
ed bcMth the agent and the company, and learned
fh« the company finalK «>roved an addit«>nal
22^ 7J^^'!^L !r*J!?*^' ^'^ ^^ ^^ the
parted that he had been insured
^e t^n •"•^ Jl*"^*^^^ company for $116
fnpre than was agreed upon w^h his agent The
ajtnt had allowed a hilMime student^^Jnt
rWh^ ^^ ^tndad. The company*
rate book defined the discount: lor studijnii
raystered for only eight units He repeatedly
2Z!r!i'^ 5!:^ on thia pomt. and ^^
•—•^ the student that he qualified kiiT^
not Maying within the limits of the discount, yet
r^ ■^^i*« a* a specialist in student insurance!
Our office suggests that you should question your
policy before you pay, and if your agent cannot
wisfy you. contact the company — they have
final authority on rate interpretatior>s.
One student bought a $70 suit for her husband
at a small retail shop. Even though the suit was
extra-large. It did not fit her husband. She
returned it for a credit at the store last De-
cember, but has not found another suit of
suitable fit to buy Retail stores need not have a
!!!S^l5ff*' ^"»'n policy, 9nd since the store's
policy oners only credit for returns, she will have
to buy $70 worth of ties and cufflinks if she wmm
to use up her cradH. Chack the store's policy on
returned items before you buy.
We iwork to educate and inform the studami
by mvetligating end reporting on Goniumir riflili
and complainti.
iJ^'^ ^•••* ^* Handled last Quarter, the
largest anHHjnted to $3aa0. while the smallest
•2]!2^;^ <o 75 cents, but many caiai can't be
"■V'^u a monetary valna.
Jt^'^ interested in in¥aHigaUng consumer
problems with us — you can ioin us as an
tnvettignor. Or ~ Just brir^ us your comumer
You can find us in KerckhoW 511
mui
am
^Mtm
More
K antinued from Page 1%)
■ "'■■ -^i*— ••a: — m^ woncp^
male chauvinism is still so ram-
pant
On the other hand, if a
woman behaves like an aduli
human being, eagerly gralM res-
ponsibility, makes decisions and
sticks to them, ukes the ini-
tiative, and IS assertive and
poiiad, any man who is a reai
"«n — a real human being —
will prefer her to the wishy-
washy incompaiant.
No amount of government
meddling can help ^ou. You
Have to help yourself by
developing the talents you have.
thinking things through for
yourself and taking your equality
with the man for granted
Alice U«e
every side ol every i«ue And
the pathetic truth is that tlie
man never matches the nnage
(Are our mefnortes so sh6rt that
we can'i recall the selling of
Richard Nixon m 1%aO
Of far greater importance are
the proposals and ideas a man
brings to the political arena,
with which to confront our
Cvter
Jimmy Carter left town qn
March 12 to the sound of ap-
plause and praise Like the
latter-19th century travelling
salesman, he made everyone
happy by promising everyone
everything in vague, but
,jiowing. teroH. In tune with that
sad scenario, it won't be until
the swindler is safely out of
reach (in the White House?) that
the fraud is discovered. When
will we ever learn?
It is only because we vcie on
a candidate s image, rather than
his concrete political proposals,
that Jimmy Carter can still be m
the running for the Democratic
nomination, in spite of being on
cerning those is a more difficult
task, but always possible by
looking at the candidate s past
political history and to ihe im-
plications of his current politica*
rhetoric. f
M anyone was listening to
Carter that Friday, ar>d can put
two and two together, the pic-
ture becomes frightening On
the one hand, he's going to cut
down on the bloated" federal
government. Of course, those
cuts can't conr>e from the Penta-
gon budget, which will probably
have to increase (because, as
Mr Carter says, we must "get
tough" with the Sovisii, which
will require more arrm) So
where are the cuts going to be-
made^ Let's see, there's Social
Security, Medicare, Medicaid,
food stamps, consumer protec-
tion programs (flC. fDA, etc.).
anti-trust enforcement, civii
rights enforcement, aid to edu-
cation, housing subsidies, energy
research, pollution control
When will we learn the les-
sons taught by our small-town
brethren of 100 years ago; be-
ware of smooth talking strangers
bearing many promisesM
Michael Quetne^
More from the PLP
Sorry Hanry, poMttea you KH^^tl
MardiGras'76
Qilly 16 days awaiT.
(C ofitinued from Page ia|
The mass struggle against the
_Rodino bill heats up and, is
staNad in Congress. However, in
1976. the Supreme Court re-
^•''*« the lower court ruling,
and declares the Dixon-Arnett
law to be constitutional The
immigrant worker faces new
government assaults
Where- can the immigrant
worker look for support in the
«'iiggl« against discrimination,
harassment and deportations^
Not to the liberal politicians,
who c\aim to be the champions
of the poor and oppressed, but
are really tf>e ones pushing anti-
immtgrant .bills Not to the
union heads, who claim to fight
for working paqple. but who in
fact preach the mptt virulent
ar>ti-immigrant chauvinism to try
to make native-born workers
belive that foreign workers are
the cause of risiog uriemploy
ment
• .j»
The immigrant worker can
only look for support to workers
and students May Day. the
world-wide revolutionary holi-
day. IS particularly the day on
which workers and students of
all countries show their solidar-
ity T>iat IS why one of rhe main
slogans of Progressive'tabor
Party's May Day march this year
centers on defeating the Dixon-
Arnetr and all anti-immigrant
laws.
With the decline of U.S polit-
ical and economic power the
world over continuing unabated,
the ruling dass increasingly feels
the need to create a fascist
nKivement Hisioucally, fascism
has been, and is, the form of
government pushed i^pon all
capitalist societies in decay
Racism against "foreigners is
the hallmark oi every fascist
movement The sudden reap-
pearance of the Dixon-Arnett
I aw IS jt sure sign of the bosses'
efforts in building farism In
California thK law wilt make it
impossible for a si/eable and
ever increasing chunk of the
working class to ever be union-
ized Anti-immigrant laws
amount to union-busting. and
the open control of the unions
by the bosses has always been
an essential feature of fascism
Therefore, everyworker and
student who marches this May
Tst in Los Angeles with the PCF
will not only be marching to
support our immigrant brothers
end sisters, blut also to defeat
the bourgeoisie's garrie plan for
all oppressed, people, a plan of
depre^^ed living standards and
of death and dfstr union m the
next imperialist WiJ this year's
May Day march can be a step
forward in squashing the fascist
upsurge and building a move-
ment for socialist revolution the
only a-lternative to living en-
slaved by ruthless exploitation
r
MANZANAR PILGRIMAGE
APRIL to, 1976
JV*
» if
y:^ r
^.n^^^"^'' '^^^^ '^^^^'°" ^^ ^ concentration camp where
110,000 Japanese-Americans were incarcerated during World
Warn. On April 10th there will be a pilgrimage to Manzanar
to signify what the camp experience means. There will be a
program with speeches and entertainment at the camp. —
For all interested students, there will be bus transportation
to Manzanar provided at a cost of three dollars per person
To sign up, contact Shiriey or Keiko at 825-1006 or come to
Campbell Hall 2240. The deadline for signups is TODAY Aoril
7, 1976 at 4:00 pm. > k
r •
In adcjition to the pilgrimage, there wil%be a
program on Manzanar at UCLA on Friday, April
9th, 1976 from 3-5 pm in the Women's Lounge
In Ackerman Union. The program will consist of:
• f^iitns • Speakers
• Songs • Workshops
PLEASE COME!!
ASIAN
STUDENT
UNION
Sponsored bv tt>« Asian Co*»
A».|in Fn.Kranoo Pr^,^, . ^^^ ,^,^ romm..n.> Server. QorrmHaaipr oi the bt^dent Legmiive C '
1
I
'^mmm
i
411
r
I
4
4
i
.w
.■It.
• &!!
1
• >
rnr-
I .
unipcrm only 2S$ |^
PM. CM. ■■« MiM dn im ot^ lii f
I
Libertarian eyes Senate
Kl DEVELOPMENT
team to Coofdinale MindtBody
tn Daily life !
- I
mm [flITSII illKIIO- tfevel^nl.ie» ii utiiii
byMasfer KOICHI TOHEI
^pril 12-16, /976
6 00 7 30FMKITtAlNING
7 45-i45PlW AIKIOO
WRIGHT JR HIGH SCHOOL
. 6550 W80TH ST
LOS ANGELES, CMIF
t/c AU LINE APtIL 8 ) lEGlNNERS Wf LCOMf •«
fOi IN#otMAT»ON W«|T| TO
Aikt4m Inttitwt* of Am«fico
3302 >«M*rton Bivd
Los Ano«l«t Co 900f8
Of Coll 733 33*7 or 39^ lOlO
LAST GALL
FOR THE CHANCE
OF A LIFETIME
o-ta TJZVT^ woffcshoD o( me institute f» RaMws Theatre San
om^ SiMe university to be new ,n LOMKM Bt^Jn^ ,
2B to July 23 1976 wwm'vwi. eiimLAM) from Jire
Wj|te rt coMegj oMit (or t,ose interested *i m»«-e«p«w« «,
Mn«i^ and e»aring. innovative mp>ck.Hw to SPFPruQ2.n '
rtsrre')s'r::^"r ''^^^^'^« - '-^
to oartcipate WonTW^Gl^^^2!5j^^2'^*'X' '"""^'"^
•TK. Harold p.n.^^«J2io c;^;:^:,:^^ ^-^
"•"•'y ot Buckingham Pmk-b tn* Ammi^ .._■ ^- . vawwi $
C«~e >vem»*^^^l~^L^- T*^ Emtussy. and other ex-
♦Wtonc literary tites ""^""^ •* '-'"o" "'M** and tnos to
EXCITING READERS THEATRE STUOV .n lf» en.-«»-« ^
;^«*s a» Oral im„D,«at«n. CfK«. *«..« ^ ^^ ^
WorttshQp proouctons
Tuning ty, all m PwoaWwn Oynwncs Oy Paul (kam
'■ — — ^""T^lBr
Dl Stair \%ritcr
Voters will have one more candidaie to
^on with in the IS Senate primar> election
here June 7.
Lynn Kinsky. Santa Barbara community
or^ni2er annnounced her candidacy for the
US Senate at preu conferences Monday aoS
Tuesday in San Franciico and Lot Aafeiet
Kinsky wf nominated by the Libertarian
Party, but will be running for John Tunnev*.
^i ti an independent ^^
She ad^d, 4 citizen can be hi. own
^te^ e»pec.al*y m a .malkr city hke Sanu
ICinikx »*« M?a^1cd a band of Santa Barbara
Uxpayers iq a property Ux strike
The strike, mvoJviii* approximately 6 000
S«Ma Barbara and Ooleta residents, caused
much concern to government officials worrymfi
about unpaid taxes Though not formally
charged, the delinquent taxpayers are all
ic..^ rr"^r*II ^^^'^^^^^^c ai part of the
kickoff of her campaign. Kinsky gave the
maline her platform yeiteitlay in Kcrckhoff
She claimed ma« bureaucracy in government
detracts from democracy
^•*The governmen4- is big enotigh to jet
everything they want and lake everything you
got, Kinsky said -^ • /
Decentraiization
Kinsky will run on the issue of radical
decentralization of government She favors an
emphasis on local government She said *-The
only way to restore these freedoms is to begin a
massive decentralization of government? not
only from the Federal government to the sutes
but to the counties, cities, neighborhoods and
to individuals themselves.-
-^. Jent tiatui
Though a member ol the Libertarian Party
Kinsky's independent sutus stems from Cal
iforma's requirements regarding the mclusion ol
new political parties on sMf ballots
^ In order for a party to receive recognition on
this state s ballots, a petition with 650 000
signatures must be submitted to Sacramento or
65,000 people ^ust be registered to that
panicular party, or two per cent of.the vote lu
a ceruin state office must be tallied
Kinsky, 32. graduated from the L'niversity o(
Wisconsin with a BS degree m chemistry She
UCSb''"'' ^^'^^"^^^ ^^^*^ *^ Dartmouth and
She IS national vice-president of the As
sociation oi Libertarian Feminists and treasurer
ol the Association for Rational Environment
Alternatives .
Health professor retires
By Jo4i Zeehowy
DB SUIT Writer
Dr Edward B 'Ned" Johns,
the Assisunt Dean of Student
Affairs in the School of Public
Health and Professor of
Health Education, will retire
thu June after 29 ye^rs here
As the asmunt dean, Johns
IS responsible 4br the Student
Affau^ office counseling stu-
ents, maintaining academic
standards and acting as Gradu-
ate advisor for the School of
Public Health.
Johns, who has been assis-
unt dean since 1973, was edu-
cated it Standford University,
where he received his BA. Ma
and doctorate degrees in health
education.
"cplaeeineBt
Johns' replacement as assis-
Untliean haaiiot been selected
yet. Thirty-four applicants ori-
ginally sought the position
**l am concerned that a de-
cision has not been made yft,"
Johns said H^ added '^vlr
health education students,
alumni and professional coUea-
gat agree we must get the
mM. But no decision to date **
Edward Nugent, assistant
dean of administration in the
School of Public Health, yinn
not know when the decision
will be made The principle
administrative analyst, Martha
Brija, IS also in the dark on the
subject ''I have no idea of
when the decision will be
made," Brija said.
Dozen factors
There are approximately a
dozen factors to be considered.
in the selection of the new
aisiflUnt dean of Student Af-
fairs. The most important fac-
tors are: that the applicant be
a health educator and that he
IS active in research and publi-
cation, according to Johns
Johns notes, however, thiti
the 12 factors are weighted
almost equally.
In the course of his distinc-
tive career, Johns was selected
by Presidem Nixon's Com-
mittee on Health Education to
serve as chairman for the re-
gional planning council in
Johns has served on nu-
merous- other national an
state health committees both as
a member and chairman. He is
the recipient of many distin-
guished service awards on the
national, st^te. university and
local levels
Textbook
Johns has been a prolific
health education wirter. co-
writmg an internationally usea
textbook, numerous articles for
health journals and working as
contributing author to several
encyclopedias on health edu-
cation subjects, among other
literary achievements
in his 29 years at UCLA,
Johns has seen the evolution of
the School of Public Health
In 1947 the health education
"unit- was part of the physical
education department— Today,
the school operates mamlv as a
gradujile program
In the future, Johns hopes to
see the health education pro-
gram develop, further and be-
come more viable. More fa-
culty members are needed
.jiirr
LONDON
DISTINGUISHED FACULTY The Wnrw^rv^ ,
I> William J Jidams OnmrtU rtrL, ^^ '* conducted by
C«nrn^icatioa1^U^D»i^':^":l%^'«i?«' * Spleen
Starlight Musicals D'-ctor ol The San Oago Opva and
^ G'lpii. Co-Oiraaor weHknowffi oroducer r^ „,« .--
«-«. ^ .«««n oroductons -Cudi^l^^tTH^.f^'
Sg'°t;?i:;°^*ri2;,*f ^3^.cK^s charter- «^
^1^^ u m cnaner mgms of ionger duration available
Quality educators
Johns feels that his major
xontrihution to the health edu-
cation fiel^ w^s 'turning out
quahty educators in top jobs
throughout the country I had
good material to work with "
be said
Johns is retiring a year
ahead of time/ as his manda-
tory* telremcni wa^ to come in
1977.
''I've put in 29 years here
and I'm still very healthy I
think I'm in a position to do the
things I want to do and have
some fun." Johns ^id
After retiring. Johns plans to
cut down his golf score and
contribute to the health edu-
cation field professiiw m small-
er ways, still keeping active in
M He may work as a health
education consultant to a com-
munity or professional health
agencies.
Hot tip?
TO GUARANTEE VOIM IMHRVATION
State FouTKlrtKxra^^
OFFICE OF CONTINUING Pni k:aTion
San Diego State University
SanD«goCA 92182
Call
825-2638
■"%
'(
^^HenryandWo arid Ji
\ . -,-
mmy
^^^ t^
(Continued from Page I)
^ rt to the April 27 Pcnn-
•ytvania pnmary, where he will
[ace Carter and Jaokaon. but if
be continues to pbure lecond
and never wir^, his camptM
«iyi are numbered. ^^
The Udall defeat was also a
»ct back for the presidential
uH^ ®^ Minnesota Senator
TT . ""'"Phrey, which
wou d have benefitted from
Udall stopping Oaner's in-
CTcatingly strong dnve to wrap
up the nomination before the
convention.
In winning the New York
primary. Henry Jackson
reaped the rewards of an es-
timated $700,000 campaign
but still finished far short of
the -landslide-* victory he had
predicted earkc^ m the cam-
p«fn, or even the 51^ per cent
nt had predicted this week
Donald Manes. Jackson^s New
York campaign manager, said
Jackson's predictions were
ifl^^ **»'»"> the troops" and
trr P^ ^"^ ^o"^<l be more
likely.
New York allocates roost of
J^-234. democratic delegates
through a dittrtct vote proce-
dure. 206 delegates are selected
by direct vote in each of the J9
eongreiMMl districts, with the
remainiag it delegates reward
ed in proportion to each candi-
rA .f^*«^"^« returns
L>dall, inheriting slates for-
merly pledged to Indiana Sena-
tor Birch Bayh. who has tia^e
popped from the race hmd
with Jacliijia and Carter m 35
districts. Uncommitted slates
^ere filed in 37 districts
The political fortune of for-
mer Oklahoma Senator Fred
Harris and Alabama Governor
Qwge Wallace com.nue to
wane.
Hams received only I per cent
in Wisconsin and a handful of
_ delegates m New York Wal-
laces losses in the South lust
month and his poor showings
cut back his Campaign plans m
fut^ure primaries
fact, said Wallace campaign
director Charles S. Snidery
gets down to hving within your
budget.
Udall wasHelped in Wiscon-
"n by Senator George Mc-
Govern, making his first cam-
paign speech of 1976 Mc-
fX^lJL *P««*^'n« to a crowd
of 2.000 gathered on the steps
Gowns designed individually - for you
Contemporary or Historical
Styles
L^ce - Embroidery
Smocking ' Beading
By Appointment Only
$«% Carrol, Det%iier /
P.O. tox 3721, V.N. CA nw
Special Ed?
Volunteer to be a tutor for the emotionally
"mentally and physically handicapped ■
join ASUCLA's -
Exceptional Children's Tutorial
Project
KH407 825-2066
by Comrnuniiy ^r vices Conimis6K>n
of the SCiMiMIt L0mtK.l:iti\jm Cnnn^il
Little crabs and little
lice an not exactly thrillin;
A little A.200,pal,and
you II have made a killin!
A.200.
« »• • J . %
?L ^ "^^ capifol. praised
IJ daw as a man oi intelligencev.
commitment, courage and hon-
esty, and called upon the vot-
erf^of Wisconsin to **give new
lor^e" to Udall's campaign
_ Wisconsin*<i primary is a
wide open presidential pre-
terence vote in which voters
may cbooae either party's bnl-
lot reft«fiess of their mdivii
dual party affihation The
•tate's 68 Democratic conven-
tion votes arc then rewnrind tp
each candidate in proportion
to the popular vote received
"" ««»l>*led from Associated
Press
Israeli dove
speaks at noon
Ane Lova Ebnv. the Is-
raeli Parliament's lending
dove, will speak on recon-
ciliation with the ^^alestin-
lani at noon today in tbe
Ackerman Women's Lounge.
EImv is tbe former sccre-
tary-genral of the Israeli
^MkoT Party and^bns au-
tbored several books. The
-Aiaoctated Students Speak-
er's Program is the event's
sponsor.
^- — -.^ . ^r^w^^ , fv/fVAL STUDENT Cmtrmm
OFFICIALLY ENDORSED CONTR I BUT IQnI^
^^i«6 ANGELES QfTY BICENTENNIAL ^"^
THE INTERNATIONAL WORLD
OF AMERICAN COOKING**
Amonthiy prntnntation of dinnnr n^^T^^^
Umunng countrmt whoaa diWhnS^^^L^fT'^^
can mnnu o»anna nm^ bncomn part of Amnri-
"ALWAYS ON SUNDAY^
BEGIN WITH
AII^npSt.I^ APRIL li_ GREEK DINNER
AUTHENTIC DISHES AND ENTERTAINMENT
Di k:Ac".f «"" ^"'''•' *"^ entertainment $5
PLfeASE PURCHASE YOUR TICKET in
Intj^rrijitionel Center
1023 Hilgard - Westwood 477-4587
Black Student Allianra
General Meeting
12:00 neon TODAY
3564 Ackerman
Topic: BSA Elections
>
I
arW TUflM*N . JCmiE ALLEN . ROGER E M08LEY . JO^ A t«»tK£R
■,aOlgYBECKEflMAWaH<Kt JONES -^.KHKHMA s^^l -...BviNG LERNER
TSSrSr*?*^ N-wjaRY GOLDSTEW I COLOR.,
i
"i^;?;-
*mi
TARTS TODAv
♦flHti
Ii?ifi777 IgbnilHWiHIO —
nttt
i#i
• .*. '/
. •'•»-'.-
mmm
wm
t _
•n
\
Whmn You Wmtu To Ma*« it
ffftfm Btg ^^mlity Out Th^rm
^otj pfrnprnrm by ftrxuhng »i UCLA
M^ '^.'^' '** "^joynough to MM. ,t .nywhrntm
"^ EVaVN tOEWENDAHL
A.B. MA. Ph.L F.A.C.T.A.
Former UCLA Faculty Member
Rehabilitation Consultant
Research Protect Dir«>ctor
Leader. American Caimr Societv "No Smoking" Clinic
'^'iiolil'? ^*'«"* ^''^ fv!;;yn on tape c«,«t^ or LP record for onlv
$10.00 (What you d normally pay for a de^My 3 cartons of c.ga°ettev,
One course you'll swear by, not at
"How To Become A No n- Smoker'
Send $10 00. check or money or^^Rb
A Aitoculct
P.O. lot 49SM
Also ^v^.Ubte ^t Vogue Record Shop. W«f wood Village
The Council On Educational
Development (CED)
will be considering course proposals fer
the Fall Quarter 1976 and the Winter
Quarter 1977, and is prepared to sponsor
innovative courses of genuine academic
quality which would be of interest to the
campus community. Such course pro-
posals will be due in the CED office no
later than Monday, April 12,iS76"(for the
Fall Quarter 1976) and Monday, May 17,
1976 (for the Winter Quarter 1977). If you
are interested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtair> the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educational Development, 3121 Murphy
.r XT ^^ ^*
"STUDENT NITE*
WISHING WELL EVERY WEDNESDAY
MONT ALL WCLL MIMKt
Monday Dance contest
Thursday Fashion show
DANCE AT DISCO DESTINY
EVERY NIGHT!
AFTE^ HOURS- FRI A SAT 2 m.m.h mm
-- ' k w
My RobtH Koehle
the unabashed good-natur-
cdness of The Bad New« Bears
(at the National) is something
of a breath of fresh air. It. is
almost the ultimate American
movie a purely American sub-
ject (little league baseball) wni- ,
ten and filmed in a very Amer-
ican way. without pretension
or airs and filled with good
down-home humor.
The Mory and sympathies
arc also drenched in red, white,
and blue The heroes are the
underdogs, ^ motly group of
runny-nosed kids organized
Ttito a team by a money-gruK-
bing LA City councilman and
managed by a beer-gu/zling
pooh cleaner named Butter-
maker (Waltier Matthau) BilJ
Lancaster's script shows Mat-
ihau's trials and tribulations as
he molds the Bears into an
almost winning team, recruii-
At Globe Playhouse
Down-home humor mokes 'Bod News' oood
1 Koehler ^^V^V^V^
news
copy INC
PRINTING
CCXLATINC
Matthau, O'Neal and tears: beyond i^mnmg or W^„g
i«i Tatum O'Neal as a come-
wick pitcher
That the Bears almoat win if
the point They have riaen
from selfishness and despair at
losing a game 27-0 into young
persons knowing thai the win-
or-nothing ethic espoused by
thctr parents is worthless and
empty The real values Tlie
^•4 News Bears opt for are a
sense of leamsmanship and
more honest relationships be-
tween parents and .children
The director was Michiel
Riichie, who has mad^c some
mediocre (Smilei and superb
(DownhiJI Racer, tlie ^rrmii
^■le) fables on winning m
America His work is char
acteri/ed by a sharpnes.s and
sensibility, decorated once in a
^iitr by an artfulness which
often gets in the way ol mcs-
^*»es T^ Bad New. Bears is
not so iirtich about winmng «i
It IS about people and R«ch-
»« s feeble sense of wnat ii
been replaced witinr
^tire seMe of fun
The visual style throughout
IS almost invisible it i>
plain, objective, and unorigi-
nal. Only rarely doCs Ritchie's
camera takes us into the sub-
urbia which surrounds the
•^•sehall diamond, and he loses
a lot of potential humor be-
cause of It Instead, he focuses
on the fjKSM of l^iatthau and
the kids, and the biting. biiierJ
»*tire in The Candidate has
^>een translormcd mu. simple
human comedy
Matthau and O'Neal V have
fallen into stereotypes (the
loveable slob. the__foul-
mouthed kid) which they are
^so comfortable with that you
know they don-t want to grow
as actors This and Jerry
Fielding's dumb, inappropriate-
ly heavy scovr are the onlv
tragedies m The Bad News
Bears, but they are tragedies
you can hve with
\
maginative, well-acted 'Richard
By Colin Gardner and Elizabeth .Sac|is
The drama of Richard ill hinges on the
Tiemesis that overtakes the entire House ol
York. Shannon Eubanks' Globe Play-
house production (through April li)
unites imaginative stage technii|ues with
strong perfornunccs.
Far from confining itself Jjo the in-
dividual tragedy of Richard, Eubanks'
reading emphasises the collective ca-
tastrophe of York. Although not self-
mdulgently themaiic, the supernatural pull
ol Margaret's curse subtly pervades the
action The usually Machiavellian Richard
IS in this case played with wry humor by
DeVeren Bookwalter, a protravai undeF:
lined by the sober characterization of his
eventual victims.
An uncluttered suge HactuaiK a hall-
scale reconstruction of the original Globe)
conccntr'aies attention on the power of the
word Full use is made of the emire
theater area, thus drawing the audience
into the drama.
Expressive lighting imitates Richard's
progression strong key lighting broad-
ening to full stage illuminanon and
diminishing again to near-darkness paral-
lels his rise and (^11 Light lingers at stage
exits alter a characters departure, fixing
the image oT previous action m the
spectator s mind Chris Kuhnis spare but
effective scofe. elect fonieally influenced, is
a refreshing departure from i he-customary
tabors, and trumpets which plague most
Shakespeare productions f\
The wailing queens and usually Amor-
phous lords are. lor once, sharply dil-
ferentiaied, Michael Ross-Oddo's Catesbv
and John Megna's Ratcliffe make a cheer-^
fully cynical and superbK devious duo ^
Mark Pini brings energy an4 under-
standing \o the usually colorless role of
the dying Edward IV Among the women.
Bronia r>earle. playing the thankless role
ol Richard's mother, performs wuh
armocratic disillusion and dismay; Sarah
Bouhon delivers an unflinchingly bitter
Queen Margaret, with one final moment
of controlled compassion
The directional technique provides an
almost operatic structure, based on the
"orchestral ion • <>( ,hc text The characters
are grouped tor duets, trios, anas and
chorales while the messafe is polyphon-
icalK projected r jr -^
•
Tuf cKumpk^: Buckingham's inspired
ana begging Richard to accept the crown
develops ini.) a comic tno involving the
lord M, ,nd Ratcliffe Again, the
battle oranun> ol R.chard and Henry are
dehvercd at (he atidience M|- fugue from
opposite balconies Richard's nightmar«L
lakes shape all over the theater in all
vcKal ranges some of ,t being intercut
with the tinai battle scene to s«Mnt a
traumaiK M.pfus.on.of past, present and
future
fcubanks^cuts are darrnig and effective
ClearK. Richard ||| chronicles the
growing puMk concern over the succes-
sion to the fK.rless Elizabeth I The final
hand-io-hand Confrontation' between
Richard Plantagenei and Henry F udor
therefore rcpresems a dialectical iuxta>
position no. onlv of York and Lancaster
Nil of decay and resurgence
.,«cu un ine mil ol decay and resurgence *-|'|,^, , ^ " . , «« . ^ w,,.
J^ H • • • ^» ^ ■■■"■'• *" w«-MarH«^e«Un Richard
'^*'f'l8!i*'"'**!I*^frtva«^e''>"chcssandDirtwaterFox'
35^
mtm
■y Prbcin* LofNf
Take a near lynching and a scedr outlaw
«ang and mix with a inckster hero and a
beautiful, tough but not-too-honesi woman
add a few chase scenes and a faithful horse thai
c«f^ at a whistle or whisper sprinkle with
Mf#»>rush. dynamite and an old pr,)sp«|«,
«dd a lew okMme words for chic shock^Tue'
Melvin Frank's The Doche« „m Dirtw.ier
Fo« (at the ViJUge) "inwaier
TT " ,*?• °' yo"' »»««• will eel
•ulefc Cwmtty Sara Lee is to Julia Child Both
are enjoyable one is more original, and
tneretore. a mpre dtttinctive creation
The film begins on the San Francisco
Barbary Cowl ,n 1882 with Goldie Hawn m
|Kt,o„ «« the Bluebia*. • ,o«gh dancehalT g. ,
r K*T ti *T* '" ^°"'^- G«^°V Segal as
Charlie Malloy. the Dirtwater Fox is m
jroubte J-.ught with an extra p./o?U' u'p"
a |J«^ ™^ •» Jmd.ng I, difficuh to explain to
a lynch mob about the milk of human kind-
ness.
There is a. brotherhood among outlaws
iou^ tUc noose ao l,e cwi assff^liffn .p , h,nk
job But brotherhood Mpt short oi $40,000
and Segal m «ff with the money Aiid to k loes
lor Segal who laughs his way from near escapes
to a near miss enter the Bluebird
With the help of the f>inwater's money. 4 he
BlMCbird IS transformed into the Ducheta Who
c^ but a duchess can take care of all of the
children of a Mormon millionaire'' And when it
comes to education the Duchess has a lot of
specialties Only she is not sure that slie can
leack them all to the children
The rest of the movie finds bothScf^ and
Hawn trying to sUy one step ahead of the law
and the outlaws They are the unhkeiiett of
couples The inevitable bedroom scene allows
Dinwater to explain that he has never paid for
•t: the Bluebird has sever ^ven it away
r !^*Z'i^ •*'^''"' '"^ dancing debut is delight-
ful Who can help but hM«ii at a fniit:be-
decked fruit cooing "You can touch mv
peahces, but ptoMe don^i MKh my plums^
if yov*re in the mood for any easv lau»h
Pro#»oed. wniten aad co-directed by Frank it
is a mixture of Msccniiful themes from at least
4alf a dozen other «»esterns Odds are the film
won r wm mmy awpji f<>r mnovattve cf
it the Bluebird, it i«
COPYMASTERS
^1101 Gayley Ave
LA.. Calif 90024
477-9443
^Mt to UCLA forking Lot and Bus Terminal
Sf a copy — da It yourself
OHs« i^K^ - <a^ ,nd Bood qualiiy
FREE PARKING
BINDING
STAPLING ....rr.
KXDtNG
<!,
ttrttf i&f yesterday's hair?
iriAII? TCOAT
1 , _ • _
For wttaf s happening now
styling lor men and women
Jerry Redding's Jhirmack products
For appointment call 478-6151
tues. thru sat.
^^ - OFF first haircut
- with this ad
1 1 0S Glendon Ave Westwood Village
DW vou bother
voir bloB this
to
Imoming?
■UlSOIitlltl
tottetr«Rtc«
^tm
l« r«a
'i- • muk
• Mi SMStfM w HMit - 1
It
R
««(
1
WANT TO
ORK THIS
SUMMER?
A chance for
$2,500
if you are
Hardworker
Independent
Can leave California
trrrrr
Tipan\ ftir a night
(■
>l*^^""««(ih»»
v..
Brown hears compkunts
<
1
c
N
We now give
UOU IOSS#«»
less time to wait for your Kodacolor film
and prints to be processed Now. just 24
hours* IS all of the time it takes for you
to have profe^^onal quality Kodacolor
prints Beautiful silk or glossy borderless
prints
IN TODAY 7Bh^KrT0NiGnf\0^''
Bel air camera & hi-fi is tr^e exc/i/s/\/e
new Mission Country Photofinishing
ctealer for pur area with reliable one-day
service Mission Country is quality photo-
4mfshing withj]ighly trained technicians
working in a modern laboratory
^ee for yourself, you won't wait long!
•Of course weekends and holidays are excepted
B belQircomeiQ&hHI
<?27\A>eflWOOdB«wd LosAn^«««f90024 (213)47 7 Q5d9 or 079 9616
'»tH9Cft S of UClA m WMfM^ooa MCultMonOOv SO«vj»aOv9''
Warvetslose payments
616^^
By CMt Bowman
SAcramcfito CofT«poa4MM
SACRAMENTO- About 30
Vietnam War veterans met
with the Brown administration
Tuesday to protest the chmi-
nation of sute educational
payments.
The students-veterans, nmmr
\y from UC Davis and Norths
ern California collegcf, said
they wanted officials to explain
... why the Cal-Vet Educational
\ Aitittance program was axed
from the 1976-77 budfet.
Currently, some 2,200 Calif-
ornia veterans are drawing
sute benefits of SI 00 a month
to help finance their education.
More than 75 per cent of them
are graduate students.
Because Governor Brown
has allocated no funds for the
program in his proposed bud-
get for the next fiscal year, the
program Iwill end June 30.
Following y noon rally on
Capitol grounds, the students
entered the Governor's office
and were invited to air their
complaints with officials
Wilhe Ellison, deputy di-
rector of the state department
of veteran affairs, told the
jtudents he could not answer
why Brown blue-pencilled the
\
r
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
L
Eiirop— n RaikoMli. Box 70
Bot«Mfii«.NMv1Nofli IITH
I m d tull time ituclfknt and I m
interested m doing £urop9 tor
pefnuts Pl«Me tend me your
fr«e brochure
Name
Addr«tt
City .
Zip
I
f
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
J
/
II
A terrWc way to ao Europat s traim
r« fast. cl«an on Oma. And Ihey go aN
o^tm tha Continent. ¥oy oan spaad ffom
city to city You can maandar ttiru tiny
}Ma§aa. Vou can wind up mountains,
m fact you oan oipkxe th« whole of
Europe by min. \^tent to Slop, saa
towna. oonub beaches'' Feel free.
Ttiere s a tram going your way when
you re'niady Id malie baciia. Lou of
statKNiaeven rent bNies if you d
like to wtieel it for a while You II have
a fantaatic trip meet Europeans, nulce
new friends, tPL
ttian most any other way of going
Student Rail^ass. two months S 195
In Britain, a variety of Youth
Passes from 950 to $120 By the
way you buy the passes here,
they re not available m Europe
See your Travel Agent
■1 .
*v
\
I
\
funds' However, Ellison
**lt was difficuh for us to sett
the program to the Governor
becauic it supported graduate
students.**
The Democratic governor
has warned post-aecoodary in-
stitutions that next year's biid-
fK picture is lean for coUeyt
students.
While proposing generous
funding for the cafly-childhood
educational prognun. Brown
has called for putting a cap on
the community colkft adttk
education Ellison said the Cal-
Vet Educational Assistance
program was intended to help
veterans finance their under-
graduate, not graduate, work.
Cahfornia veterans arc eli-
gible for state aasiftance once
they have exhausted their 16>
month federal GI Bill edu-
cational benefits. According to
Ellison, the state educational
assistance program is su^pnaatf
to finance the fifth and sixth
year of undergraduate work.
He said that many veterans
need more than four years to
complete their BA^ partly be-
cause they work part-time
while attending college.
**! was really counting on the
SI 00 a month,** said a «cond-
ycar UC Davii vetennary ftti-
dent The student, Bruce Bell,
laid he pays $4,700 a year for
tuition and living expenses,
and that h4| state benefiu wilt
be sorely
[.ecture today
on William
Wordsworth
The UCLA Committee on
Public Lectures and the De-
partment of English will
present Jonathan Words-
worth, a Fellow at Exeter
Colkfc, Oxford Umversity,
in a public lecture on
**William Wordsworth vnd
the Psychoanalysts,** today
at 4:30 pm m Bunche
1209B. There is no admiss-
ion chargeT
A sometime British Aca-
demy Lecturer, Wordsworth
is author of several books,
including The Music of
Humanity He was also the
editor of Bicentenary
Wordsworth Studies.
Police teletype
all the copy everyday
(Cootiiittcd from Page I)
son said LAPD has a person who r
and softf it to specific areas.
In the case of two separate wire reports being sent, Hokanson
said, **We*re not going to miss both of them.**
However, Arcs said, •'If they say that they read it everyday. I
can*t give them an excuse for missing the reporu.**
Huie added, **lt*s like any damn mechanical project; sometimes
it wmm up-
l|RCEDFRI
urchase of
7.95 Earrings
Birk's Jewelers of Westwood
950 Westwood Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90024
Phone 477-8009 - 879-5313
V*-*
•><w^'«>9^
UNIVERSITY EPISCOPAL COMMUNITY
Sarvicas
Sun . 6 pm Eucharist. SupQ^r.
Program
Tuesday s during Lent discMmon
group 7 30 p m
Wed 6:00 pm. ^nd Sunday night
Chapleint; Terry Lynt)erg & Jim Kellaway 47S-lg30
Music Or Malcolm Co^
L
H
x:
TOPICS'
Phi Eta Sigma
NATIONAL HONORARY SOCIETY
We/comes All Members to a
General Meeting:
Ack«rman Union 2408
Thursday, April 8 4 pm
— Rafr«shnMnts —
Spring Intramural Taams
CMirni firai Booth x^ith ALA
^nitiatton Banquet
UCU COMMfTTEE ON FINE ARTS PROOUCTIOlit
PRESENTS THE
4th UCLA FOLK FES tl VAL
APRIL 1#-.IS
FIVE CONCERTS IN ROYCE HALL
Friday. April 16. 1:00 p.m.
CANADA TO CALIFORNU
Wilmot MacDonaid
Balfa Brothers
Lily May Ledford
John Jsclwon "^
Ramon Rodri^aez
Robin Williamson s Far Cry Ceilidh Band
Tick«t» SS.M. 4.2S $ 75 2 SO ttud^nts
Cornbrad
Nevada Slim
RosaMaddox
Lonnia yoyan and Sons
Highwoodi
■7
\h
I \\
Saturday April 17. S:00 p.m
AMERICA S HERITAGE followaci
Th* Boys of the Lough
MiHe
lid
Iraa iraa FREE EVENTS irac fraa
;
, — /
Friday. April 16, 12:00 noon, Janns Steps
OUTDOOR CONCERT featuring CORNBREO. ARMADILLO and
ROBIN WILLIAMSON S FAR CRY CEILIDH BAND
Friday. AphU 6. 1:30 p.m. Schoenberg Hall 1^00
TRADITIONAL MUSIC COMPETITION vwth prizes for:
•olo vocal, solo mstrumental. group
rnstrumentaJ. group vocal, plus grand prize
Peter Feldman. M C"
- Enter by writing:
D. k. Wilgus
UCLA Folklore & Mythology Program
Los Angeles. Caiitofrwa 90024
Saturday. April 17. 12:00 noon. Janns Steps
.OUTDOOR CONCERT featuring HIGHWOODS STRING BAND and
PETE FELDMAN & JEFF CHERNIS
Saturday. April 17. 2:00 p m.. Janns Steps
' .■ . ' *^'
HELLENIC DANCERS Performance and Participation
Nevada Siim
Lalo Guerrj»fo
Wilmot MacOpi
SaNIi Brothers
BoMMaddox
SOMG SWAP
Sandy Ives
TheBoys of the Lough
Patty Hall
Mike
Tickefa $• 00. S.irlTS 2
by SONG SWAP
Mariachi Uctatarf
Lonnie Young and Sons
High w( )oda Stf»fHi Band
r"~'
¥
Sunday April It. 1:00 p.m. ^
IRISH AND SCOTS MUSIC
The Soys of the LouOh
Wilmot MacDongM
Enka Brady
Lily May Ledford
John Jackson
Armadillo
Erfka Brady
Michael Mendeison
David' EvMit
All Tickets S2.S0
?
•
/if
z
f>
AprM to. 2:S0.p.iii.
RELIGIOUS FOLK MUSIC
Stuart HambJtn
The True
Mike
LiiyJ^4ey Lddford
Dallas Turner
I
Saturday. April 17. 2:f0 p.m.
SPECIAL CHILDREN'S CONCERT
Sandy Ives
Ballet Foiklorica Mixteca
Slim
Lityllay La^lofd
Tlekets $4 $0 4.00. 3 50. 2.50 students
Lonnie Young and Sdils
RosaMaddox
Corrvbred
John Jackson
Tkkets S3.00. 2.50 students'.
childran uAtfur 12: li.tO
Wilmot MacDonald
John Jacksdn
Nancy Thy m
J3^^^^ TICKETS FOR FOUR CONCERTS IN ROYCE HALL
(Children . Concert not availabia on seha. bas.s) mciud.ng
•••«on to SIX WORKSHOPS 519.00. TT.OO. la.ii. 1
•Two tickets per 1.0. . full-time students only
WORKSHOPS AND
LECTURE'DEMONSTRAT
SATURDAY, APRIL 17 GEN^^L ADMISSION {m^mtmbk. at th« doar) $1.00
9:30 a.m.
LECTURE-DEMONSTRATION A - TRADITIONAL COMPOSERS:
D. K. Wilgus (m). Sandy Ives. Patty Hall. Dallas Turner
(Haines Hair 39)
WORKSHOP 1 - AFRO-AMERICAN SECULAR MUSIC:
David Evans (m). John Jackson. Lorviie Young and Sons
Mike Seeger (Dodd H«ll 147)
11:Ma.m.:
LECTURE-DEMONSTRATION B- LOGGER SONQS AND TALES:
Wilmot MacDonald and Sandy Ives (Moore Hall 100)
WORKSHOP 2- WOMEN IN COUNTRY MUSIC: Patty Hall (m)
Rose Maddox. Lily May Ledford. Sally O Connor (Haines Hall 39)
1:90 p.m.:
WORKSHOP 3 -COWBOY AND WESTERN MUSIC:
Charles Seeman (m). Nevada Slim. Ken Gnffis. Fred Hoeptner
(Haines Hall 39)
WORKSHOP 4-CAJUN MUSIC: Mike Seeger (m). Palfa Brothers
(Dodd Hall 147) ^ '^ |
WORKSHOP 5 -SCOTS AND IRISH MUSIC: James Porter (m).
The Boys o' th9 Lough. Robin Williamson. Erika Brady.
D. K. Wilgus (Moore Hall 100)" *
3:00 p.m.:
WORKSHOP «- MEXICAN MUSIC: Phil.p Sonmchsen(m)
Mariachi Uclatan Ramon Rodriguez Lalo Guerrero
(Haines Hall 39) '
^^r^ nt!^H I" ^'-^^^''^^^' '^•^^ S*^^ (^^ «oee Maddox
Oornbred. Peter Feldman. William Koon (Dodd Hall 147)
^^o ^^^S^n• ~ ''"'^^'-^ STYLES: James Porter (m), Aly Bam
Robin Williamson. Paul Wells Michael Mendelson Balfa
Brothers. Walt Koken. Bob Potts (MeereHeM 100)
4:30 pm
WORKSHOP 9 BANJO: Peler FekHnan (m) John Hickman.
Lily May Ledford. Mike Seeger. Mac benfnrd m^m^c Ma^i 39)
WORKSHOP 10 -STUDY OF COiMERCIAL COUNTRY MUSIC
Norm Cohen (m). William Ivey. Eugene Earle. Hugh Cherry
Patty Hall. Ken Griffis. frwi Hoeptner. D K Wilguii
(Moore Hall 100)
m.
itor
and Directed by D. K.
UCLA PeMM* ft
f»f WmMfH m
Ae«nc»M; alto m be« pihcm one houx
Liberty * Ti ^ _ ^^^^^ ^^
iMlort paifofiiMcicc. if available for info. 825 29^
0 c • *«atraf
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I
I
The Conference
A mini film "~'^---
Today noon AU 2408
Who Is Dead? Suspensful, provocative
Cannes winner
^thows tonight
• • •
your lunch
Campus MiniMriej. URC
m
<
I
'*'■ -
The Business Advisory Council
of the
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT CENTER
1023 Hilgard, Westwood
Presents Weekly Seminar
Thursday, April 8
''Financing Small Businesses''
Warner Heineman - V P Union Bank
Transfer of Engineering Technology
to Developing Countries'l^
Wm Aqltman - Montgomery Engineering
Dinner 6 30 Seminar 7 30-9 3C
All accredited students welcome
Phone in for reservations 477-4567
el Hm Y<
Gnuid Prue
ner at the 1975 Canaei Film
Festival, will be shown at
7. JO toni^t in Melmti
1409
Tomorrow, the Iranian
film "TlM Striiifer mui Hit
Fof." will be shown in the
same h>om at the same
time
The showings are free and
presented by the Gusuve E.
Von Or ueha urn Center for
Near Eastern Studies
the UCLA Film Archives,
ISKINNY?)
NEW CASV WAY PV1%
pouNiOf-iMCHfts ee
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to poor ••tina htl^*
tati<> MATE-OM' fMt
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fn'rv^ralft .iron QuiC<l
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fr»« OOOk on WifWmmWiWg mrif ¥Vat«
Or ~..pf 1^0 247 427 M llandoipf» Sr
MWM *•* your druggist tor-
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1
Can The Spirit Of 76 Be Revived?
First in the UCLA BICENTENNIAL LECTURE SERIES
by
Henry Steelie Commager
Mil'n Muudr'ut* vmpMN' Irrtuvr* Amhtrrtr 1
\lk< I ^«ATIUN Ol iNfWUf ftSOf NCf
Mil '*>«• Murift Aif^M^ t utiAcij of
Q.».^. I ^rtore^
rfi
in
MaS 147. ^(Pdnetdavs 8PM
V)' U - . MtTH ProteMor «M««MritirStudH-% Emeritus LC S^ot^ f ru/ rHf /^/WfaJC/l/N.
Apfii 21 - I R PCXf vi^.trr i^nurcniM CoMcfe C*mbrM%e LntvcfMW; THf 4Mfa/r>l/w
rwo P/^#ry >»yii vf - ho¥^ has n fvotvfo >^^/o ^hui Am wi^
Ford rolls on . . .
iConhnuad fruM Page l| «^
fer, had! httle negative effect on the President's campaifa.
In his oieil controversial piSiapr m last Wednesdays addros^
Reagan quoted fCissinger as saying: ^Tlic day tA the US is peat
and today u the day of the Soviet Union My j^ as
secretary of sute is to negotiate the most acaapSabk SMead kaM
position available.**
The speech, which cesi Raagan an estimated $100,000 apd
«Mas viewed by about 15 million people, touched off a Mries of
verbal jousts betwaca the two candidates before yesterday's
prinurtes .^ ^ ^^
In response to Reagan's req.uest that they debate their
differences. Ford said he did not think a debate **with a penoa
not familiar with the facts" would do any good
**! have an impeccable record of sundmg for a strong defense,**
Ford said "Any accusation to tbe contrary it froap lack of
knowledge or for political purposes.**
Reagan ratlaaaMMS
Meanwhile, Reagan, campaigning in 1 exas — a conservative
sute he figures to do well m - claimed his less ia Wisconsin was
really a victory
"This, in my view, constituted a very sizable victory for me,** v
said the former California governor, who has made similar claims
after defeats in six oi the first seven pnraahcs "We bad not
anticipated anything more than 30 per cent." _:_„
Asked whether a loss in Texas would knock him out of the
race. Reagan replied, **There isn*t any single stau that pa««aes
that power I think there are foiag to be victories for the
President, I think there are going to be victories for myself in the
primaries to cpme. But also there's a large number of states out
there who are goiag to choose their delegates by convent
uon we have a very optimistic outlook m a number of these
sutes. ^^
"The only thing we're talking about is uking this race ail the
way to the convention because I think the deciding factor is
gping te be tbe uncommitted delegations **
■Hfiif ea TV
Reagan said he^intends ^o fceep usu^ paid television spou —
as he did m Wisconsin - as a basic campaifa strategy, especially
in states in which he will not campaign in piisen.
Thus after eight primaries, Reagaa is trailing the President by
a wide margin in committed delegates The President has Uaed
up 251 nominating votes while Reagan, with his only victory over
Ford coming in North Carolina two weeks ago. has 66. Of tbe
201 officially uncoromiticd deiegales,;at kast 112 from New. York
arc believed to be backing Ford It wiH uke 1 1 30 delegates to
nominate a Republican candidate at the GOP convention m
Kansas City this summer.
Wooden Center . . .
(CnaHaaid fro» Page i)
plaza will connect, both by landscaping arid an elevated
walkway, the new James E West Alumni Center, the proposed
Sports and Recreation Center, Ackerrnan Union s^ a
parking structure. r"
il Icciuret m M«y
No Admtsuon C har ge
M^ednevdjy. April 7 8 PM Royce Auditorium
(th» lecture only)
Publtc Cordially Invhed
''«ne»»f«l b* OCIA
The cost of the entire project, excluding the Ackcrman Union
building Itself which will be funded and buih over a period of
yiars, is approximately $20 million. -
The idea of a student indenture fee to pay part of the cost of a
^ ^f^ ^^ recreation center caaK first from the Campus
Capiul Outlay Task Force (COTF) COTF it s Registration Fee
(Reg Fee) subcomminee which recommends to the Chancellor
whether or not to spend Reg Fee monies on conttructioa
projecu. ^^
Tbe indenture fee private donation pbm surfaced after last
months decision by COTF not to recommend to the Chancellor
the Mae ot Reg Fee money for the Wooden Center
Grads & Undergrads
Here's your xicKei to INVOLVEMENT
Admit one to any
University-wide presidential
advisory committee
Show time: by noon
April 30
in304Kerckhoff
This ticket /.
Adminstrai^we Ac
A : )rv Comrr
'V you tC
r^ r^ -} ri /-^ C^
:ain an ap;. . •
3 -^ r , a ' Ah
1 AcJ"- -^iStration
All students are encouraged to apply.
Applications available Ackerrnan Union Info, 304 Kerckhoff
Dorms & other housing organizaitons
For aetatts tail 825-8545 or . - KeroK^otf
^ CENTURY
PLAZA THEATRES
t Pr^
Hussein met by picke
LOS ANGELES AP Kiag Hu^*ein oi
iefdtfl liiived here Jui^dayao the siraias of
M^xicafi mariachi music aad sbouu ot "fatcist**
and "nraitor" from Pakaiinian pi^eU ouuide
the Beverly Wilshire Hetel
He brought a four-point plan for peace in
the Middle East that was basically neu pack-
aging for old Arab proposals consistently
rejected by Israel. But Hutsetn warned that
time •% running out" and the United Sutes, as
UraefsaMaa benetactor. "must think again*"
-^ Police and Secret service men kept the
pickets across tbe street; well out of rangt of
the king. Queen Alya and their two children as
the royal party was serenaded into the hotel by*
a full-dress mariachi band. There vvas ;no
violence.
Hussein wore a baadaar on his arm Prtc^a-*
Mimsier Zand Rifai explained that he bad
slipped and fallen during his eighi-da> tour of
the United Stdtti^ "bttl U't^ aqt sefiout^''_ _
At a news cororcrence and iuncheon speech
later to the World Aftairs Council. Hussein
described U.S peace-keeping efforts m the
Middle East as ''admirable but inadequate ** He
look a backhanded slap at Washington for
worrying too much about the mode ef
diplomacy and too Uttle about the substance
"The mode of diplomacy has proved im-
matenal in importance to the mmod ot the
parties," he pointed out. *lf tbe parties were
ts for
succeed Tf
prepared to accept the require
mem. any valid approach %k
not, none will succeed.**
Refcrruig directly- to U.S ^rctiiify of Sute
Henry ILipu^per's ttcp by ssaj approach. Hus-
sein said it has **really come almost to an end
There is ma> ^ the panibibty of ooe furtter
step on one particular front but this as not
bringing us any cloter to peace
fKiMinfer is a very able nuui who tried his
best under difTicuto circuflsstaasas. He «lab-
lished aMny personal friend s hi pt m tbe airea
Bur it is not a question ot ICittinfer or some
other man. It it a question of wbsSlHr tbe
Umted Stales is babitod him and can the United
Stales speak with one voice.**
.^Hussein's four-ppint peace ptan was an echo
of his previous trips to the United Sutes
Again he called for
~ "Appropriate guaramees for the sove-
rfifbiyx territorial integruy and political
independence** of all sutes in tbe Middk East.
including Israel;
- Toul Israeli withdrawal frbi|i all Arab
lands' txcupied m the June Ifi7 war;
Self-determination for Palestinuin Arabs
displaced by the sute oi Israel, including their
right to an independent /l^alestinun sute; and
The right for all Palestinian refugees to
return to their homes to receive compen^ition
for lost property.
Campus events
Tl
Tav showing points of m
ttrist •• m§ mitfltm €am$m. m^kiaMi sie
^tne Afts arts asS an OSswastM Sisk. 2
pm tomorrow mm in ScSiMHStii ISSSy
—HtH Bsv sctivitits includ^ an tfUnic
zookinq worliiMp. iisan'2 pm tomorrow
Acktrman 24SI. a vtfttarian cooking
worksSsp. 1 p«i same Say Acktrman
1SS4 aoS Sit Mm SM tor a Um heal
irrow Acktrman XS4 -
iSi Srili Miilp pjaaii nott
trror in sacrttary s pfiont numDtr on
invitatWf) Carrtct numfttr is 474-9113 not
464 9113
— €iaMiS CaMnraaip informal practct
tor *9mt^ saiaeas sns visiiort io am>
noon HtfiSays snS WasasaSays Aekar
man 3617
— faaMHSlpa information ani SaaSlwn
on extramurat tundmg for graSuatt stil"
Sants ano postdoctoraisr art avaiiaMt m
Sit Ftllowsfups ano Assistantsnip SactiSA.
liufSHy laas
consunfar investigator Visit Karcknoff 311
or cau S25 2620 voiuotaars art also
naaSaS for anvtronmaiail aaS tasd pro-
lacts
-^iMHiai AiSi iMfc Hm m mun% as-
pitcattons Uom iniarastsS saiSaas wim
want to worli vSJH SkC snS an SSMMftra-
•tion on stuSant financial aid proSlaaw
Applications are availaDit m Ktrcktwff
3BS tor information call Oawt Patttrsaa al
open ro aN Umvart ify stiiSasis art rt^
SMUM to brng Wmu guiian to tst first
take pla^e fioon 2 pm tasay Gait 4
^awiay ^avSifa mtr n am-i pm Apm 9
Aprd 9 aaS 10
SI IS tar students
art now avSilaSit m rtaiaii
IS offict Ktrcktiotr 3SS
IS tomorfow
irts and tntry
avaiiaiit mm m aN ossip
Prow lyiai mm SMO saaSSnt to
b»Sl*ofras>*«as a tomorrow For mart m-
formation contact Carai Wilson at
^
-fit
Day 7 pm
Canyaa Sac Caiaar
a MsS psft at FaaS
vs use 7 30 pm.
|f»t and April 9 PaMlay ^aviiton fnt
tar UCLA stySants wttfi 9 ^^facuHy fret
wss AtfSatic ^viiagt cant ottiofs S2
tiSiRS aspicationt for nmniit&i Sarm
sorority fraternity MarriaS Studtnt
Housing and
studtnts tfimitt
MaalMf 7 pm lamorrow OeiU
SS2 Hilgard 7 pm April 13 ThalS Xi
ter*^r ar 7 pm. April 12 fUaStf Library
^ Maarmafmii can S2S473B
""Startar SavS aaalicaiiona af^ avail'
aSIa now-Apnl IS MurpHy 2224
and tfanster
at aafMearmg lacaaMif y to So^aleping
canwtriai pia tSa lapKS. of tstt weak s
Siftiaass Advisory Council seminars
sjs #ai. isife 7jaaae pm
IP sraduate students for mavdUiSia Up CwJiJuSt ^sNaMM a aMMluldu^
•arwjwy aSKpocad to ciaSiisn isr Ssc- ^^ ^^ ^^^ * ^^^ ^^
israi a^psas aaS I'linnrig ippScasii!
may be suSmifiad at any tiiat durmg mi
paer Grants of a manmum S750 art aisSi
m January aiiiif Jyly Fonrs art m Ifit
Rtstarch CaaMaittot tn fh9 AcadtmK
Sasatc EKOQiliue Office Murphy 3i25
•^SMaa BraaaawHSip Caaar staffed by tor faculty staff and
tratoad mlaras will Palp you laid landing pNiitipie roles — profestionfal wife
for youi liaas Oppn SpSy 9 asM pai mmm. t»i0tm. npan every Friday sub
Kerckboff 4S1 - lacf fa sroap Sacsiian MwpSy aiS4
— SpiSi HaaHHp. praviRS *> s paraaa.
appn to as aappcisay Atian-Americaaa.
MS pai TpursSpys Caa^paa
Levering
gaaaed to re^mphasizt America s fouaSa- f aarpy by Robert M Zweio ^ofhrtion
tipn in^ apintaai iialpaa CaS tlay at 47a Caaaol Saaaarcb ineiiuite o7 St
S2t2 from 4-6 pm tar information naaa. Apnl S CHS
«
for a two-year term diitfi ttia^r^ -#Si Eto SlaaM general meeting to
UC StuSaai LaSSy m Sacremaala Pjtft
t787 50
beuig a
and focal voliinteer positions ar9
&K Ackerman A213 ar caS
Kerckhoff
4 pai. tomorrow Ackar
tor
ASv«ary
baSkM m AprM 30 piaS ap
applications at Ackerrnan information
Kerckhoff 304 aaS
bike ride tram LA to Oregon
and ttian east to Vagaiia « now bamg
ri al 34S-2D16 for
to
tairt aaaic SBF aaS/ar ISBF waicfi art at mt Saar
starring Wi
Ha«m JuPt Cbriaiia aad Lea iraiN
7 and saO pai Apm 9 SraPS SaSraaai. Si
a sit
lifiii rtia«afiail
130 m. lasay
A
asi7 aaS 24
"THE ASIAN AMERICAN
TUTORIAL PROJECT
ta •ngao^d m tutoring thoaa rtandicappsd ^Hi^lteli of a
b^mc proficiancy in Engliah in tha Aalan communitiaa
Knowiadga of a a^conc languaga. tnotigh haipful. la not
For furlhar fnfnrmagfi inguiri at
CamptaM Hai 2240 UCLA or eaM 0»«fl78
e
I
oO by tha Community Sorvicce Commiaslaii
90 »a taiasm Lagiaianw CoorK:il
Irene serata
Pt ballet
DANCING WirmUCttaN AT ITS FINEST
THC FUN WAY TO BEAUTY
laaa WESTWOOO BLVO (a ofWilanirvi
and UCLA-V W C A . 574 HILGARD
■fironN#w! 391-3959
l—^A.
• -?- ■
If
f
t
HAJtAKlItt
l..[ ^4^ . .
^^SH^i
^fSW4Pl^JTHJ HSTi
T^issfssmm\ xomymhi
MIFUf<£
1i
M^
JOHO lA BRf
SAILING CLASSES
aponaorad by
Thm UCLA Sailing Club
BaQifmlng and Advanced Monohull
Baginning and Advancad Cata'maran
iring $25 to Paulay Pavilion (Qala4). ¥¥adnaa
day Apnl 7 baf^waan 12 noon anidTp m or io
KH 400 Fnday Aprtf 9 batwaan 11 amand 1 pm
Intarastad instructors sr>d aaaiatant Irtatruc*
tors maatmg Tuaaday. AprM 6. tn KH400ai 7 pm
Sailing Club (825-3171) Boatdocli (§23-9978)
or URA Office (825-3703)
t
•A-
;■■ > •' .
mi
Wo can wmtm most studonts up to 35% on studsnt
discounted policiss. Call us in ths Village for a
quotation: —
477-2548
agents for College Student Insurance Service
1100 Glendon. »1447 ("Monty't" BIdg.)
I
/
Would You Like A Vote On SLC
and
Would You Like To Run The
student Welfare Commission
To apply for the position of Student Welfare Commissioner,
pick up applications immediately at the Kerckhoff Hall
3rd floor Info Oesk. Applications must be returned by
April 9, 1976, 5 pm, to Kerckhoff 304.
Spnnsnmd hy ASIS/Stiidant lagislativa Council
A'/- „. t.
k>\
» *
\
<A^
2P.
■>. . k.
-t — "^ —
-^
Swimming finaia
\<
^
juIie chrisHe • goldie hawn
'J
leegraqt
spontorvd by Film Commission/ Campus Ev«ntft^
Student Legislative Council
ENGINEERS
Friday, April 9
Ackerman
Ballr
7 & 9:30
Grand
f !•
i
q 5^ a 3
2 a> c H)
2 ^ ^ CD
"^ i QJ
— CD <D
(CMtinued from Pasr 2^).
of the meet was turned in by
senior Steve Baxter. Baxter
was the team leader in points
wilth 25 on a second piace
finish in the tOO butterfly
(49 I) and third in the 200 with
a hfeiimc best of 1:48.36. Sen-
ior Clay Evans was lOth in the
100 fly (49.43) while Favcro
after placing fifth in the fruel-
ing 1,650 free. CMK back to
place 1 2th in the 200 fly.
"Rex turned in one of the
more difficult doubles of the
meet," commented Hames.
Other 9ruin finishers were
Tim McDonnell (fourth in the
200 free). Scott Gordin (sixth
in the 100 and eighth in the
200 backstroke). Lance Mich-
aelis (ninth in 100 breastO
stroke), and Jim Doyle and
Kurt Krumphob (fourth and
11th in the 1650^ free). UCLA'i
400 and iOO free relay teams
also set school marks (2;59 62
and 6:34.63) in placing fourth
and second.
In the breaststroke. the
world's top two swimmers,
Stanford^ Jon Hencken and
Miamrs David Wilkie. dualed
in a preview of this summer's
Olympic games Hencken de-
fended his title in the 100
(:5604), but Wilkie. who'll
swim for England at Montreal,
came back to break Menckens
world record in the 200
(2:0074)
Other winners included Ten^
nessee*s Lee ^.ngstrand (200
IM). and Matt Vogel, (100
butterfly). North Carolina
State's Steve Gregg (200 fly),
and IndiaMi*s Briai? Bungun
(three meter diving) and Jim
Montgomery (100 and 200
free).
Z2
- D
f S c
i 3 I
$1.at the door
\<
^ Qi Qi ^ - (t ~
"" ~ ^ — 5 =3 -^
5 5
<D m
^ CD ^
D _.
OD O)
Inside lane .. .
(C onlimii^ from Page 21)
The better known M clear is toMgh in the 100, and probably will
only run there Thai op^m the way for Tennessee^ Reggie Jones in
the 200 But. in the U.S , where speed merchants abound
everywhere, the possibility o^ upset is very high.
Chuck Smith placed fifth in the '72 Games/200 meters and is
back on the Olympic trail again, training with UCLA coach Jim
Bush. Auburn freshman Harvey Glance tied the world record of 4 9
m the 100 last weekend, Larry Brown ranked ninth m the world at
200 meters, but the -U of Arizona student trailed lones in sixth
k» short, the rest of the y^orld JwiU wait ind see. each country
training their one br two liopes while the American heavyweights
slug It out at the trials in £u«ene.
Predicted Olympic Medalists; 100 - Gold. Williams (USA) Silver
Borzov (USSR), Bronze. Leonard (Cubai if healthy or Riddick (USA)
200 - Gold, Quarrie (jamaical; Silver, Williams /USA) Bronze
Menr>ea (Italy) , t •
i ■«
akers Program Presents
ARIE LOVA ELIAV
.\
•'•
rsrael's leading "dove & long time labor Zionist
Member of Kneset (Israeli Parliament)
Former Secretary-General, Israel Labor Party (1970-72)
Member of Israel Council for Israeli-Palestinian Peace
Author of: ^
Between Hammer & Sickle
Land of the Hurt
Shalom: Peace in Jewish Tradition
Wed. April?
12:00 NOON
Women's Lounge (3rd floor Ackerman)
Sponsored by Associated Students Speakers Program/Student Legislative Couri(
US. no longer invincible in sprinte
TT
Hni
In 1972. United Slates sprinters Eddi^ Hart ind
Reynaud Robinson, who both had a piece of the
world record at 100 nr>eters. mn§m6 meir heat and
left only. Robert Tjyior, the "number three"
sprinter on the U.S. team, to represent his
country against Valery Wmum^ of the USSR m the
100 at the iOlh Olympiad at Munich
iorzov, of course, went on to win the gold
medal in both sprints, leaving American claims of
having the 'World's Fastest Human' ih the dust
But, that was 1972. Anf>erica is again readying its
dashmen for the Olympics, and again. Borzov will
be waiting But, the question is. who will be on
that starting line with him in the Olympic final,
and who will win the gold medal m an event that
used to be pretty much conceded to the U.S.
sprinters in past Olympiads
The cold facts are that the U.S. no longer has
the cream of the world's sprinting crop The retl
of the sporting world has caught the U.S.. not so
much in depth, but several countries have that
one man who can win it aW on a given day that
might be the Olympic final
And some -of them are iri the U.S^ either
competing, training or both. A favorite in some
peop^'s eyes is Don Quarne. who ran foe USC
some years back and went into the Munich 200
meters as the favorite until a pulled hamstring
eliminated him in the Olympic semis. He came
back with a vengeance after Munich .and de-
feated almost everyone he met at either 100 or
200 nr>eters last year There's little question that
Quarrie will be op that starting line when the
Olympic final, is ibout to start
Still another crosstown prodigy is James Cilkes
from Guyana. A foreigner like Quarrie (who is
from lamaica). Cilkes is tearing up the track scene
right now and the Bruins will have their hands
full with him on May 1, when UCLA an<^ Troy
Tfollidc vCilkes' performance in the NCAA and
AAU ftM^ets art also convincing enough to
indicate that he will make the Olympic final in at
least one of the sprintS/»«^ _ -
Hasley Crawford of Trinidad winner last y«ar of
the NCAA 1w- yard dash at 9 35 is also working
out in the U S even though what he'^predirted to
be an undefeated season, indoors ahd out. has
fc**" spoiled by a Florida high MJioolef named
ttouiT«>n Mc I ear Alto in the ct)a«^ after B<xzov
are Europeans Eugen Ray (E^t Germany) and
Pietro Mennea (Italy) A hopeful note US
supporters was Mennea's sound victory over
Borzov at 200 meters in the European Champion
ships last year atter which Mennea ^as clob
beted by Americans Steve Williams and S«eve
Riddick Silvio Leonard, who in 1974 was ranked
first in the world in both dashes, is also in the
picture, but only if he heals well after lerribip crash
irtlo the ^npat in Mexico City atler winning thf
Pan-American Games 100 alters.
So. that's seven spots — seven men that will
challenge the American trio for supremacy at
Montreal and the World s Fastest Human title
But. the question is. Who will the threr Amer
lean be?"
Ar>d that is probably the toughest question to
answer There are nine lanes (probably) in the
Olympic final, and it figures that one of the
above-mentioned gents will be knocked off in
the semis ' UvS. ipaidllirs figure to all make
the finals due to thek higher level of competition
all year and the bftjtal Olympic JriaU that they go
through to qualify for t^e games.
Anyway, rt's. time to start )i^<»ssing who will
finish where in which event All signs point to
Williams, formerly of San Diego State, as the
surest bet an^ong US speedsters to make the
Olympic final in both events Williams had the
second fastest time in the World world at both
distances last year But aher that, it is a big n>ess
The little known. Riddick of the Philadelphia
Pioneers has quitely .carved a big name for
himself in most experts' nrundi and many have
picked him to b^ right with Williams at the tape
I'll pick him to be theie/ too
(CcMitiiiiied un Page 2U)
All- American . . .
(C ontinued from Page 29)
**(jettmg stuffed is part of the game because; I
know that I'm not perfect and I will learn from
my mistakci. I try to like it (being blocked) in
stride and do better on the next play." said
Mica ^ , ._
PMley PBYiiftoa imm ^
The fans in Pauley Pavilion can have effect
on the outcome df VoileybaJl matches, including
more than basketball games, according to
Mica. **Thc more emotioftal the fans are, the
better it is for voUeyball,'* said Mica ''Unhke
^Bskctbail there is something to cheer about on
every play. In basketball you are playing
against a clock and there is nothing to do whep.
you are way behind, but in volleyball you can
come bAck and win even if you are down two
N^ica has set definite goals at UCLA. "last
year my goal was lo win my first NCAA title
this year the plan is to wm^another NCAA
title, and the long-range gMl is four NCAA
titles, but I am not looking \hc4cl/* said Mica
Personal desire
Team goals ire mof'e important to Mica than
individual goals, but he d^es have a personal
desire relating to Washington and Johnson on
the basketball court "H^ichard does a steady
job of contributing and Marques can come up
with the flashy -play, so i would always like to
play volleyball with a combination of both
skills**
By the time his four-year career comes to an
end, Joe Mica is going to be one of the most
famous number 3rs in UCLA athletic history
: difference!!! i
MCAT
OAT
LSAT
(k>9f 35fMrft
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Sm«I1
:ATGSB
: OOKT
: cm
: FLEX
m
CturMS tttat art
c§i»*f»»it»?
DATSUIU
44
Acres of Datsuns
ff
r
>
Student Discounts — Ask for Fiaet Sales
Pasadena Datsun
101 S Arroyo Parkway
! 684-1133*
I
@V«W«'*
LOAN.
aits|
TUNE-UP, LUBE & OIL $0^95
fNOINI
OVItHAUl
w/»atTf
$
195
A-1 AUTO SERVICED
7957 VAN NUYS BLVD. a^- -^-p
»4»<ouMAciTY ,^.^ » o,«co. 894-7075
9
I
FOREIGN STUDENTS
A second Seminar on Taxes for
Foreign Students will be held April
8, 1976 at 7:00 p.m. In the Inter-
national student Center, 1023 Hil-
gard Avenue, Westwood. Informa-
tion regarding both Federal and
State Taxes will be provided, and
assistance in completing tax forms
will also be available.
>f>o«»orwd by OtSt and FtA
•:
fl
f
mm KRfiN
PRINIMIi
641-5501
rain
670-6677
grapt
' 'i*.' W» '.T ( r NT H
'r* MM/
AiV^.
£aarMM»<t
staff Women
get InvoKred with a
Tape t«cit>t»*^ tof 0
rtvt««r) •! ci4S« 0
ff
im *v
NirLMEOBOS
SAT -VAT
to* Owg^— CaMornip
7n> «77.3ttf
/ ' :V
Chancellor's Advisory Committee on
- the Status of Women
Volunteer Task Force
on
1 ) Career Ladders
2) Hiring Procedures
3) In-Service Training
Please tend the following information to CACSW. 2147 Murphy Hall
1) name, telephone extension and campus address
2) name one of the above three task forces on which you wish to serve
3) your reason<s) for wishirig to work in this area and any expertise you feel you can contnoute
4) times you are not available to meet with the group (the group will need to meet for
approximately two hours per week)
-* —
-;i-z;iiiz
i
I
TZ''
I
<
}
SALEL_
Sanford
Markers
3 for 1 .00
Accent with R^ad-Thru Colors
*>-.-•>_
^
r
an
lUIU
BOOKS
MAPS
CUfflNGS
R9Qu\ar\y 49C each — a great duo' Major Accerit
marks with big bold strokes Pocket Accent has a
n^row tip for fine print Don>underline - Accent'
Color of cap is color of ink yellow shocking pink,
orange, turquoise. flMorescent ye^iew Packet
Accent is pink or yellow only
school supplies b level ackerman un»on 825-7^1
open mon-thufS 7 45-8 30 fn 7 45-7 30 sat 10-4
!
4^M
BEER BUST!
— f-
Every Thursday
Nite
BAMam
m\ Drinks
j^*
r f-
E¥ERY WEDNESDAY MIGHT !
MN 8pm til 2
We have BACKGAMMON !
and FOOSBALL !
ufi37 m im
W.11 478 7555
WllSWiRE
ZW}k rm\ch
s
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1''
1166060 TOT
Status
By Rich PerHman
DB Sports Reporter
What spon uses goaiiei, curved sticks/ a Urge/ieki and hi II
men per team'* Why. field hockey, «f eomml
Actually, the sport of fiekJ hockey, the aeooUd larfest outdoor
team sport in the workl, is a relative o( the popular ice hockey
played in this country. But unlike its winter counterpart, this
sport does not enjoy the benefits of frowing pAitJc^Mition that
are making tbt ice ^ort uxMiduptcad^
To remcmdy this, student Dia Knefer, a field hockey player
for some nine years, is organizing aa informal club under the
auspices of the URA to teach and play the sport every Sundy on
the Intramural field at about 3 pm But to get field space from
the URA, Kneger has to provide pi^obf of interest on the part of
UCLA students.
A sign-up list wilt be provided at the Intawation Desk in
Ackerman Union Kneger encourages everyone who would like
to learn ai»d pl^y this international sport to sign the list
and thereby get field space from the URA
Kneger, a player with the Washington DC team, had to miss a
tnp to Europe to continue her studies here at UCLA but wsflU
to replace the void with a club here, something she was surprised
to find left out of the sports program in Westwootf.
"In foreign countries and on the East Coast, field hockey is
really big," she cpmmcntcd. "and I think that many of the people
here j^ill find it fun and exciting to play" Kneger, playing with
•OMe friends on Sundays, has been overwhelmed with requests
from onlookers to learn the game and wants 4o surt a club for
aU those who want to learn.
Basically, the game is played much like ice hockey, but withoujt
aU of the extra equipment, save for a stick and shin guards Field
hockey sticks are curved in a scmi-circle at the bottom, as
opposed to the relatively flat sticks used on the ice For the
novicer^the shin guards serve an obvious function Only the
goahc has special padding from head to toe to help him or her
(yes, the game is co-ed, at least on this informal level) reject the
balMrom the goal, which is half the size of soccer nets
It's one of the world's biggest sports, but since the kinesiology
department cut it from its activity lists years ago, /leld' hockey
has all biit disappeared from the playing fields MX UCLA. Som^.
there is a chance to get it back U if you'll sign up if the
Information Desk You won't regret it
The 'Super 10' . .
K ontinued from Page 27)
UCLA will be playwif
enniai NCAA power St Louis
University in Southern Cali-
fornui in 1976
St. Louis, winners of ten
NCAA championships and
three runncr-up finishes since
the NCAA began holding soc-
cer championships in 1959, has
defeated the Bruins four timet
in the NCAA championship
round smce 1970 The Bilhkens
have also beaten UCLA the
past two years in regular
season play in St. Louis
The Bruins will also meet
NCAA Division II powers
Chico State and Haywjird
State, along with the Uni-
versity of Nevada at Las Vegas
in pre-season play in the up-
coming season, according to
Gay.
The Bruins finished with an
11-6-3 scasoii in 1975, qml^
ifying for the NCAA post-
season playoffs for the nmtll
consecutive year USF defcaled
the Bruins 4-1 in the first
round of the NCAA Far
Western Regionals
Pnor to the 1975 season,
UCLA had never lost mdre
than one ^me ih regular sea-
MM copipetition.
# • •
Sophomore forward Peter
Fredericksen was named as an
honorable mention AU-Aroer-
ican selectioi5f Ik^ the country's
soccer coachrt:
The Bruins placed four
players on the All-Far West
team. They arc freshman mid-
fielder Raul Zavaleu, sopho-
more fullback Leif Redal, sen-
ior fullback Terry Lippman
and Fredericksen
GRADUATE
STUDENTS!
Graduate students who in-
tehd to run for GSA office may
pick up petitions in Kerckhoff
301 beginning at 8:00 am April
7, 1975.
IMPORTANT DATES
Petitions available
Petitions due
Candidates meeting
Primary Election
Final Election
April 7
April 21 at S-OOpm
April 23 at noon
May 5,6
May 12. 13
^
Hake steals show from Cowan
•y Marc Dcttat
Proving his nickname of Flake is well
jmtificd, Steve Biaarhi Male the show as the
Brum haaehall team defeated Southern Cah-
iotm Colkfc, 6-0, Monday night
iianchi. who usually pulls his antics on the
jnound, put on his act from the pavg taa
Monday mght, serving as the public aMrcit
announcer It's safe to say he wiiy never replace
John Ramsey at Dodper Sudium "^~
He suited off mildly After two inninp af
play, the aaarc was -UCLA I. Whoever 0"
After that he worsened, improvising on the
aaoKt of the Brum hitten.
In consecutive appearances, third basemaa
Earl Battey became **Earl Batman.** '*Earl
Jumor" and "Earl Schie^ " Shortstop Mobil
Cox earned the Ugs "Mobile Cox" and "Wallv
Cox."
Silver
When Larry Silver went in to play the
outficWt^he was introduced as "Hi-Ho Silver.**
Left fielder Tom t^anna was introduced to the
sparse crowd at La Palma Field as "Tex
Parma." '•Tom Thumb? and "Peter Pan."
Center fielder Steve Splitt became "Banana .
Split,- while right fielder Jim A uten somehow
was chnstened *^un Laurel " Second basenan
Bobby Dallas became "Bobby Munchkin" (he
IS 5-7>. while Brian Viselli, who wears his hair
in a natural, became "Harpo Viselh."
Kenny Gaylord boQame "Gayley Kenlord.
and Bianchi abo nianaged to get assistant
coach Glenn Mickens. trainer Dave Lambton
and manager Oary Lynch into the game.
However, he was only following the lead of /
head coach Gary Adams. The second year
NEW-
WHILE-
U- ^
WAIT
Xerox Color
Copies from
Original Copy
or Errlarged
from
35 mm
SlidM
Multi-Copy
' in Michaels
Artiat Store
915 Westwood sTvd
Laa AwjaHa
477-422f
A chapter of a major new book
be one of the first to know about
RHYTHMS
OF visror
Tha Changing Pattarwa oH laBaf
by LAWRENCE BLAIR
t
A Book-of-ttf-Monfh Club
Attmrn^tm S^t^ction
Comifig in May, $t.tS
"A difficult book And an
important of>e. -LyaW \^taon
RHYTHMS OF vrSlOW f« a naw
viaw of the umvarsa that
profoundly claffftea the mystical
and psychic sciences.
Sarx) your nmmm and address to
SCHOCKEN BOOKS
on AWE P 50'.
200 Madiaon Avenue. NY. 10016
OH9r 0Mp$fm April JO, 1976
coach liBfiiad to uke pre-game intield with the
^■i and put on a show almost as tunny %%
BiMnchrs.
Adams was UCLA^s captain^ »l|^rtstop and
most valuable phiyer in 1962. afij he enter-
Uincd the troops with his impersonation of a
shonsiop He also let himself in for a lot of
ribbing from the players ' his own players -
who rode htm verballv from the bench
11-14
AHEAD STEREO'S
Prices are much better than
the so-called Discounters
I
iMMtt Prtcts hi L.A. Qi
HOURS
^ n i SM.'iia Syn 125
While all of this was going. on, the Bruins
were winning Iheir 21st game of the year
against 14 Imscs But is was more important
than just a win against a non-conference
Opponent It marked the return o( pitcher Ed
Cowan
An All League selection last season, C ow^n
had been held to just 22^ innings m 1976
bccanse of a sofe arm But Monday, night he
threw very well, blanking the Vanguards
(Bianchi fiially found out) on just five hits He
never allowed a Vanguard to reach third base
If Cowan feels no after-effects^ from Monday
nighi the first-place Bruins will be in even
better shape for their last 12 league games A
healthy Cowan, to go along with Tim O'Neill
(5-0. I 58) and Bianchi (3-2. 2 87), would ^\c
the Bruins a formidable surting threesome
down the stretch
four in eighth
The Bruins led 2-0 when they exploded for.
four runs m the eighth'inning Two scorai on a
triple by Gaylord, and the other two came on a
home run by Cox. The Bruins also stole six
bases to run their seasbn total to 70. just 10 off
the school record
The Brums travel to Orange County H5 plav
Chapnian College at 2 30 pm this afternoon
CLOSEOUT SPECIAL
Tli« IMrwoed n«c«iv9r
raeore rliawfai wNh ADC
and • pair of dual • /full tl ^
■paainrt. each capabla of thalUng
up your Kouaa ara spacially
tor a limitad tlma ofily.
$189
LNilTtO OUANTfTltt
-. HEADPHONES
^fitala Ltalaffilfia
Comfortable
r
$3.99
Hkf ti2M
KENWOOD
1033 TURNTABLE
SCHWEIZER
RECORD CLEANER
f
I
Kaap your racords
clfaipi and sialic fraa
$1.99
n%% S3 so
a«« list M
•alt Drfva • Oatapad Cua
Machaniiw • Ntngad Dual
Cover CoMntaf-waightad
arm
AHEAD STEREO
'ARZANA
881 ?0?J 881 064b
HOILYWUOIJ
/426 Bt-viTlv Blvd
93^ auu) »jl Hb/j
..A. INTRAFRATERNITY COUNCIL
PRESENTS THE FIRST ANNUAL
•^
\
1
All gamM played at
Pcniley Pavilion
Aprilft7,8;12, 13.15, 1976
6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
PIMM'S
Catch the coed action as
campus tecmis compete
for the cov!e(Ml
Pimm 8 Volleyball Trophy
Pimm'B. Volleyball and You---an unbeatable tno
I
r
^^^r^mwfjm^^m
■V — -*==
u •*
4
I
5
CLASSmi EIM D
TIM ASUCLA
fyjty •M^pofls Hm UffHv^vslty of CsH
Adv«rttolffif s^c* will fi«i M !!••#•
■"■Mrtli tn •!• Daily ■NAi lo anyom
«l»« tfltcrlMlnalat mn tHa toatls of
•ficostnr. 99^99, iMllSfMl Oflgtn, rooo,
MM A9UCLA
y flllio
•#«*f1loo#Of odvortlsor* I
IM tlilo looMo. Any poroon too-
Mot ofi o^ortlotimiit In mis
ispoMoy ofi ooM*
•tolo4 kofolfi oIiomM
In wrKny lo
»fiOfor, UCLA Dolly
I. lit IUraMio«Niit.Mi«taalwootf
Mom. Loo Anfoloo. ColHomlo •Mt4.
For ■milium mm houolng gHerlwil
»«tl«A problomt, coll: UCLA Housing
'"^ 1. (219) •2f-44f 1; Wostsldo Foir
announcMtiMits
liMmi WIULMHOUMMO.
MMN. ALL THOM MfTKflCmD AMI
wiLCOMf TO rror by Awmm.
[ AT ItMt rmATNMOflf . OOUQ
CHAMMAN - 47f-
compietc
printing „
service
ivfiriM-tiinK
bindiliiK
liilo
121 krrikholf h^ll
BniMHinctn^iito
identification
resunte photos
o^uda
mpus sffvcfi
ISO kerckhoif hall 8250611 k271
op^n mon-fn 8 30-4 30
MICnOMO^
PUM.IC MOTId Is
■wr«liM»OlM
«l ■» UCLA
m
»fl«M«M
•m <gi Oi tmm^gm.u, mm m 3 ml.
flAWJ
TMCTA nOponlliMli Forty W(
' ^ 7. • iw.
(1 An
UCLA toMno Glooooo Doo. o^
IMI, tofl. oiv COL Sdnf Ul li
O^ 4, «taA. iMI 7. ta noon - 1 pm,
•r li KM 4M. Mtfoy. Apif •. 11 ook
tS»-3171 or tlft-«7tS 9m
, (1 At)
■■"■■•■^^^■""■■"■■^
WHAT DOES A BRUIN
BEAR WEAR FOR ACTIVE
SPORTS?
It7
"*
All)
•JD.
MAM.
MIUMOSCIIMTItT, 'I with you Mio
^BBOT ^B 1M9 flBQMlt IMS WPflVIWI Of SM
UC .A tWBiUhirts. sw«at-
^•nts. jogger's outfit, t-
•hirtt. shorts, racing trunks,
••••t socks, and carries a
UCLA gym beg and beach
towel.
(•Ai)
ASUCLA Students Store
Ackefman Union
iT aio Ml Niamey N
itortlnf April 12lli. Inloroctod? For
It At)
FA4«JI - Shorty. M^pim of I
liAT)
ThMi rm In lovo. S.D.
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tMAMOM: 0 Hufo ortn«i towt «
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Ipp.^.
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(• A 7)
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bo.
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27tti g4. tun. Aprt 11. ot El
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aiAT tia Wm aum. try N miomiolly
»l^iprtnp7 UCLA MKOrttoa «« ba
MMMnt «*|»«llnt Apft IMh
por nvfO'^nonon ano mnlal
by 222«i Murphy by 3:tt pm Fritoy
Aprt lif^m. '
't ATI
MAY fownaond. Tho
at you loot <|yortir boa
M a •%
VMILC
ool nooi
loty alomoaa eat for mn avonlng of
tM m
ft A
FSYCHIC
(tAlt)
»
\jp • -^
•ocial •v«fits
An Eooy Way ta
AntSlorta
€wary Suftday and
Pmut LinOamar
13M N Upmuttttng
4 BNis mm a» ^mtimn
il-TttI
Sox
Qroup LaadT
rfonywotto
r Sunaat Plvd
for rant
Id a 90)
AanOWHtAO eo^ln In ^«lot oroo.
Sloopa t. ttt/2 toyo. t1tt/7 toya.
tt7-14«7. ^ jj^
for sal*
CALCULATORS
Ti sa It. Ti sa ti. n sa tt.Ti ta i
m • proit ai
T«
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Com dTt-Mtt lor
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»»d«lniaMppaMa
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Fr. Miiiiilwp. Iltit
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ftt Ati
(21t)
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MATmcaaca all mew
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11714 Plaa Mad. MlTVafiMuya
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HVLAMO DOMOa Cf MTEH
leot Otytpy Avd^
.Iltit
).477
(12 0lr)
KIMO tIZff
acvtaLV NMi Mon'a
froa bolratyllng. For
2T1«t2tt Tuaa • SoL
Info coll
(12 oa)
(It A 12)
MCCAaTMCY TlcbHi. Ill ond 2nd
oanlar. aaal oflar. 947<€27t.
(10 A 12)
opportuniti—
■AaaiTaV.BiAet
< •MMH.r
• • • AMe
•PER&ONAE*
Center of Dramatic Arte
Announcea
An opportunity for iaiact ttudants to
parforiTi ;n public* Limtod teholafahipi
liabia to tha foMowing work-.
m on tha boiit fundamontola
ClaeMo/
cartrldpa w/caaa. $2t0/baat offar.
u
*^m a •«
MAauUANA. Don't lot Nio now !•«
»nb<aod youl Knoar your rtghlif Sond
for now boob $2.tt plua ltd toa Ip
Oda fV. F.O. aid SItSI. LJC
(C.L. IttSt Vanloa. LJL)
(ItAtt)
•aaOFtSSIOMAL ACTMie*
Spacializinfl in public parformanca
•Diaf CTafo*
How to work arlth tha actor
WOODCN adfffdii - Kosi, a .,^
hatchcovora. nottlnp t rppo. funky
crotoa A boiaa. oldl bornwood. ttV
You got to ioo your work porformod
•OAMCt*
m aody Awpriniii tnd Hatha
V
Mm
Cti DAMICL aoQifia
(I-Spjaj
If
t7t.tt. Can t
n«ASi
(12 A t)
aCA Black/ whita TV $40 FHvalo
lor BofbOfO. 27t-1tt2.
(It A t)
Tex OS Instrvmeiit'
I WaaP tt boy poopla Ip
(212) tt2-1t77 tom - 1
(12 A t)
Tunia-iiMi Tiantit«.« Titna
CMIYM
K>PULATIOM
tapo, Atl2
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dubjoctd
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auaaiestEO
11
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FOa tola - Complota
blalory of tha Civil War.
S:2t.
pattt|ropinc h#lp WWltOd
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(It At) ^
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477
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^vffllK
CC. Soa 44tt; Barkaloy. CA. t47t4
TYPIST. Work with oMior atudonta.
Mad. bia. SMbiB Cd. tt bra.
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draa. Nuralnf ttudant or
tvanbiBa 47t-7d7S.
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TUTORS
1-i,
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boM bi
ASUCLA T
117.
C«U«M«I
ORd/or on
FX>.
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mmf FMdPMdl LM. ttt ttn.
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CLASSIFIEEMD
tipip wanted
^pnric— offered
icesofferad *"wel
travel
(It AM
377-7tt1
notion prppoaol.
(It A i)
OiaL td driaa ehlldron M.T Tbura.
aftarnaona. Mmc bobyaltllng tunday
t Mmiddii Cor padaoMa. 474-7tl4
(It A •)
477-2771
m^jn
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Swimmeis finish third in nationT
I'
J
Fniitratibn and dMappoint-
mt are the bat words to
describe UCLA's third place
finifh at the NCAA Swim
Championships at Brown Um-
venity.
Third place is nothing to be
Mhained of. but the Bruins
^»d beni a pre-icaion second
place pick and probably had
the best chance of ending
USCs rcign of co|lcaiatc swim-
ming which now stands at
three consecutive champion-
shipt.
TIfc Trofant again ran away
with the title with 398 points
Tennetfce was a disunt second
with 237. UCLA finished with
23« ahead of hut year's ftS.
Indiana was fourth with 199
and Alabama fifth with 135
USC'a point i^oal was 54
ahead of last year's winiiin^
mark when the Torjans prac-
tically clinched the tncet in the
opening race, thei 500 free, with
41 points. This year, USC
to wait until the sixth event,
the 400 IM, in which the Tra-
jaai tallied 51 points by cap-
turing four of the fin^ five
placet, led by Rod StraciMn*s
winning mark of 3:55.64
Junior John Naber was
again the Trojan and meet
point leader Naber took two
more titles, the 100 and 200
back, to give him eigh! NCAA
titles in three years and is
within one of the NCAA
career record of nine, set by
another Trojan. Roy Saari. '
Naber was denied the record
this year when Long Beach
State's Sullivan Awatd winner
Tim Shaw uptet him in the 500
free iir -»" new NCAA and
American record time (4:19.05).
Shaw also took the 1.650 ftee
in 15:06.76, ari Amehcan and
NCAA record
The Trojans got firsts from
Joe Bottom (50 free), and new
CLASSIFIED
NCAA aad'Americar/ records
^00 IM. 400 free
and 800 free relay teams.
After Its fine performtMe at
the Pac-8 finals, UCLA was an
outside choice to upeet USC.
But after the rtiiiitrr in the
medley relay and 200 biwtt-
slroke. the Bruins found them-
selves chasing second place
Tennessee instead of the Tro-
jans.
**We had a miserable first
day and pretty good last two
days. Some of the fsyi just
didn't have a ^ood ^meet We
were hurl when we didn't pick
up more points in the butter-
fiy."
UCLA wat expected to score
big in the butterfly, its best
event. Steve Baxter. Ken Wills.
Tom Blanchard, and Clay
Evans were all capable of win-
ning, but in the end only Bax-
ter and Evans could score.
"We're happy with third
place, but we're disappointed
we dtdnt get second.** said
« dittrattght coarh rtfr<>gf
Haines
In the 400 medley reUy,
UCLA just mis:»ed qualifying
for the championship finals.
But in tlie CMMrialiM fllMMi,
the team of Bruce Hardcastie.
^ip Virts. Clay Evans, and
Dan SteplKMon finished first
m 3:21 26. which would have
placed them third overall
Then in the 200 brcaststroke.
two Brums. Lance Michaelis
and Andy IC,nox were disqual-
^ ificd Michaclis. who was cited-
for an iliega) touch in his
qualifying heat, would have
probably won the consoiai*p;i
finaia, while Knox, who woiild
have placed fifth in the conso-
lations (eleventh overall) was
tabbed for an illegal kick
Tim Mcdonncll, Dan Steph-
enson and Steve Nelaon. did
finish third, seventh and ninth
respectively in, the 500 free
(Stephenson first in the conso-
lations), but neither Kurt
Krumpholz. Rex Favero, or
Jim Doyle tallied a point.
Coupled with. Tennessee's Jim
Kennedy's 28 points in diving
(first ii Of meui ^spd^aj— d-
at three meter), UCLA could
not make up the Vjrii* ^ndr
margm —
"We outswam Tenaetaae %
mn ■;
four poin^sr but the divjng
really hurt us,** said Haines
Some of the Bruins were still
feeling the ellccts of nagging
illnesses suffered during the
coune of the season Art Mor-
rill, who was stricken with the
flu just before the trip back to
Rhode Island, placed tenth in
the 200 IM (1:52.69) and 400
IM t4m€iS) Bruce HaidM-
tle. still bothered by a cold
from the beginning of the sea-
son, was 10th in the 100
(5192) and fourth in the 200
backstroke in his best mark of
the year (1:5043)
Kip Virts, who missed the
Pac-8^ finals along with Hard-
castle, turned m lifetime besU
in both the 100 and 200 breaft-
stroke, 56 91 and 2.04 29 re-
spectively, where he finished
fifth and third.
The best Bruin performance
(C ontiffiued on Pa^r 20)
trav«l
travel
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Fully furnlahad. a»allaa>a en
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10974
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(MCNr)
aaoFiaaioaAL waer mm a.A. ai
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(99A0)
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T^ ^^" ^^ ^i«^
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Th*M« tpacialtat
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FPOFES8IONAL COLLCOf TYPING
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T»rm papara. Th«»lt. Dtvtartations
Faatuy -FoMltii Languapas. tciancM.
••aPi. TaPlaa. Diagrams. Muaic. EdIMng.
_ XaroBtng.Prtnting. Binding.
9aidtnl Palat 30t-31»1
lnBtM4>« iitllltlaa. % Pleea le UCLA.
,_B|B|raia' Qa^'4#a■^70^ awa^
'■•'"''' ••-^■!^... ^.^ . <MA7)
WOaUN la
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^Ima mt9m. Vary
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«Ma la UCLA. $ao tad
WTO wr 091-OOM.
QUIL- le ahera a Pad
taPataM^tlOO.
da A 19)
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440 y§9ftmn. 1 end 2
$900 and up. Flraptaea.
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THE GUIDANCE CENTER
9917
for subli—
WAHTBD: 1 ar 2
a ^Bee^Ra ife^w
479-1199.
■ /
^SupeiiO'
M >>;
'^
-4...
■y Hiiioi^^K
DB Spom WHtor
Taking notice of the in-
crcaaing popuianty of lopcer in
Um United Suies on all leveia,
10 Pacific Coaat CoUefts and
univci^iiic* have formed a con-
ference named the Pacific
Coaai Supar 40 i.«af-ae to
begin play m the fall of 1976
The Super Ten conference
afiil, be divided itno two five-
Maai Borthern and southern
fubdi vis ions.
Oefcnding NCAA champr^
Umversity of San Francisco
(USF) which easily defeated
■atia^il contender Southern
Illinois to bnng the collegiate
r i0 a Wdi Cdiif
for the first time since
1966, heads the northern scc-
tooa. Sanu Clara, San Jose
Sute, Sumford and California
round ' out the north.
UCLA, Cal Sute Fullerton,
San Diego State, USC and JUC
conference to open pby in fal
Saata larhara compriie the
90uthem section
Two two subdiviaioai aie for
f^graphicai purpoaeo only
Each of the 10 teams in
Super 10 wUl pUy the mne
remaimn|{ schools once
UCLA has formerly doia^
mated the Southern CahforaUi
lnier6ollcgiate Soccer Associa-
tion (SCISA), comprised of
UCLA, San Diego Sute
Wcftmom (NAIA school). Cai
Stair Fttllerton, USC. BioU
College (NAIA) and UC River-
side The Bruins have won or
tied for the SCISA crown
■even times since eoubbshmg a
NCAA Division [ lOGcer ^t€>>
pam upon coach Dennis Stor-
er'i arrival at UCLA as both
socoer and rugby coach.
The majonty of schools m
the northern subdivision of the
new Super 10 were members of
the West Coast Athletic Con-
ference.
^^By fonmaTTlir ana con-
ference, it will be easier for the
lamel of coaches which raiake^
the selections ol the four
schools enienng the NCAA
Far Western Rcgionals." said
UCLA aaa^ Steve Gay Ga\
a^aa idafilaA iice-presidcni ol
Super 10 with Califomias Bob
DiGra/ia serving as president
'•Since moot all of the top
NCAA Division I soccer teams
on the coast have joined the
Super 10, the panel of coaches
will most likely choose the top
two or three finishers ba9ad on
their won-loss recaaia in our
conference and perhaps choooe
♦ wild card team from the
neighboring Western states.*
Prior to forming the new
conference, the four Far
Western Regional learns were
99i9Cted based on overall sea-
son's records and the quality of
teams played
(C ontinued un Page 22)
CLASSIFIED ilDV
housing needed
itXMn A board
exchange help^
MATUai
aaai m a«i Ak III Ml
#79
(97 A 91
house exchenoe
|99a9)
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(37 A 9)
houee for sale
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born* It clooo lo atonohonfw. Kli
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(990 19)
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Super-soph Mica still stuffing 'em
-•^-'.Ti-Ji^
iy Mkluicl Sondhdi
DB Sports Hrilfl:.
Mica on the voMeybafl
I
Joe Mica on the voMeybafl coitrf it.i
combination of Richard Wa^Kington and
Marques Johnson on the hasketball hardwood.,
Tk€ iophomore AU-Americtn has the grace
and smoothness of a Washington and the
fla^hiness and power of a Johnson
The fy-}, 175-pounder froni Seattle. Washing-
ton cane to UCLA last year as the most
hearalded prep in the country, and his new
reputation has him as one of the premier
college players. Tonight at 7:30 pm in Pauley
Pavilion use wilj have* to contcr^ with the
talented Mica.
Freeman A II- American
Becoming the first freshmen All-Amcncan in
UCLA volleyball history in 1975, when he
helped in the Bruins to the NCAA title over
1
r-
^^ \JCIA- ^^-^ wtH-begnr its feor match
home quest for the conference title 7:30
tonight in Pauley Pavilion against USC (1-10).
A Brum victory would clinch the cellar for
use /and it could be the last match for Trojan
coach Ernie Mix, who is , under pressure to
resign.
It IS a key night for UCLA since Pepperdine
(9-1) is playing this evening at UC^ Santa
Barbara (7-1). The Bruins meet Pcpperdtne
friday and UC Santa Barbara next Wednesday
flight in Pauley Pavilion
UC Santa Barbara, Mica is now rouridmg mto-
top form this <^ason after an early season
: '^injurv to hjs right hitting shoulder
**The shoulder mjury hurt my confidence
ea^dier in the year, because I was too worried
about the soreness.** said Mica.>**l started
- changing mv shots and it affected my play, but
^ now there is no pain and I should start peaking
t' in the next two weeks.**
». Confiderice is the key word m^ vol ley ball for"
Mica **Confidence IS a large^part of any sport,
and I play more to my potential when I have
confidence When I lack confidence my shots
«9g usual!) off and I don*t play well,** said
■ M ica,' ■■•■'■-- ■
r
Leaning towards economics as a major, the
blonde- haired Mica resides in Hedrick Hall on
tlie seventh floor with teammate Doug Rcrbe
-* — 'Because of the twosome, one can usually find a
Hedrick Hall section at home matches In
Pauley Pavilion A fah chtb is just a small part
of the recbgnition that Mica has received for
his volleyball ability. -^
Covar-toy
• __ lltca was the cover-boy on the first issue of
Volleyball Magazine. He has become one of the
flsoat popular athletes in the Northwest because
tlie 1975 NCAA finals were shown on Wide
World of Sports. He is constantly being
pursued by USA volleyball officials in the
hopes that he will play for the national team.
**Right now. 1 enjoy devoting my time to
UCLA volleyball, and that is what I am
working hard for/ said Mica The riaitonal
program does not have enough support for the
players at this time and 1 think it is too
political, but maybe later I will change my
mind if things improve.** «
Because be is now established on the UC1.A
team. Mica believes his role has changed this
year. **! can contribute more this year, es-
pecially in leadership to help get the team
going If we do lose, I tend to blame myself
and think a large part of the reason was due to
my play," said Mica
Higb iciioai Career
Mica concentrated on volleyball during his
semor year at Rainer Beach. After participating
as a center on his high school basketball team
.He also ran track. His last season he was voted
Northwest Regional Volleyball Player of the
Year He had scliolarship offers from every
major volleyball college in the country, and he
IS positive he made the right decision.
**Everything couldn't have worked out better
at UCLA,** said Mica. '^Academically, the
school iT what 1 want, plus 1 am playing
volleyball for the best coach in the country (Al
Scates) Also the members of the team make
jilayij^g^^at UCLA a lot of fun.**
" As with All-Americans in other sports, the
opposition tends to ,key on Mica' ahd takes
special pride in stopping him Mica-^n accept
being blocked." but rc<»ents other players yelling
at him He took his revenge against Long
Beach state in the last match when he got mad
and played his best volleyball of the season
after a 49'cr player had verbally insulted him
(C ontinucd on Page 2 1 )
.^'
Experimental College Schedule"
Spring 76
All Classes begin week of April 12
For information call 825-2727
>
MONDAY -
Jyggangiaw
Leader Cory Comer
i-lO WG122
U8 MMIary History tiwaiai. Pert IN
Leader Michael H Thompeon
7 30-10 00 laan'sGym Room 133
ral CM Cli*iiail
Leader Marvin Smalh^taer
*-6 Doddl75
;tlon lo BIrdwetchfif
Ror>«ld W McCierd
730-^30 ^ ^ Klliaay?30
Leeder Steve Cohen
7-10 WomeniGymlOS
Leader Or Kent M Perry men
7- to boddi54
mmmH9 lo en Oveidue Society
I aadar Mtke Burnt. John Heelh Sle«t Roae
7--10 HeineaJOi
rvaiOfy Cw MtiylMH affd Bwoa HwalE
Leeder Bruce R Dowma
7-10 Hainetl46
Fun ProMeip SoMnf
Leader QIann Zucman
7-10 Hairwt2lO
^aycMc DeveMi|MMefil
Leader Richard A Bobnck
7:3D-P30 Ackermen Union 3564
TUESDAY
leader Theoaophical Society Internetior^
7 30-9 30 young Halt 4203
7-«30
Michael Long
frmnz:
Hall 1420
Leeder Dr EMioft Fishiyn
730-9 00
In Man
Hal Balyoz
7-9
TA/Q Comae!
Leader Qaoive Hauekenecht
7 30-9:00 Ackermen Union 2406
AW Schara
7 30-9 30 Ackermen Unton
LeailBr Paul S
7-10
Leader John Qoert
7-9
213
Franz1176
Sproul Hall
Kinaay247
\MallerR Brodi
216
7-10
Henry Fie Ida
hckmmmo Union 3664
jonn Hawei
7 30-9-00
aeaCi
in Ciano
12-1 Backyard Women tOym
Michael R Houle
Sproul HaM
Rotort Ean Seibort
Lutfiar Oimon
Leeder Terry Batlard
730-9 00
The Study of CyMural
KirteeySl
3-4
THURSDAY
Haines 206
Avis
210
OoddSO
ixir>e W Sitmmer M S
M.
S Apel
1S2
12-r
2i:
Heinee 216
Leader Karen E Nielianow
7 10
Leader Yynf hue Liu. PhD
7 30-9 30
AdeefUMfoe In Fi
Leader Hew>erd
7 10
The HIelory olUCtA
Leeder Ben Browdy
6-9-30
Water P<
Leader T(
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Leeder Deborah Rub
7-9
WEDNESDAY
Leader OkKia Hogan
Water and Your LNe
Leeder Tom Burton
730-9 30
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Qary
Leader Lirtda Nakeii
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by
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Leaden Grant Qodall and Timothy Ryan
730-930 Hainee206
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Leader Richard S Greene
7-9 Meth Science 5127
■haaaHl
Ctiartet Devid Brooks III mn6 aa-'
tistant. Lucille Evens
6-11
The AetaHenal Crtila: What la lie
sPnoi M the ^Coee (^
Leader Jim ConeMJine M S S W
7 30-1000 Haines 210
Oretlfy^Mf Alternatives for 6«iceoeat«l
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630-9 30
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SATURDAY
Clark
SUNDAY
TalCM
Leader Jaiaioa Sutton
12-2
On Beyond Futiipa Shock
H Ed hterper
7 30-9 30
175
fmm,
Ridley
Poeriman
Sharon LHawoW
TobO(
216
f3l17
Comi
ith
16
ii^CCIAL WORKSHOPS
Laaiiar Ouha D Molner
May6.May11.MBy20 Tobei
■^iJhj.-- . .1.
rntmrtl R t P P A n
' t tf » • •
.•4-*r
Students' Stbr6 Wf by phony $2a1>ills
Slipped by yesterday and last week.
By DavM W.
OS Stall Wrilar
Two b^pw S20 bilk, actiuOly
SI biBt with esnKrt of
ty taped on them.
through the Student Store yet*
terday aad one day last week.
I* Store offkiait report
The aherad hiSi, turned over
to the Secret Servipe hy cam-
pus police for investigation.
■Mtft the first ume this par-
ticular scheme has he«a Mcd m
the Studenu* Store
The scheme, which is sii
to o(ie used by bill defacers in
Lot Aa§eAes for over 30 years,
involvei the placing of the
numeral twemy uken from the
comeri of a $20 bill and then
taping those corners over the
numeral one on a $1 bill.
That bill IS passed to a cash-
ier, usually in a busy depart-
ment store, and the S20 bill
miniis the corners is taken to a
hank, where it is rcpUoad hy
••other S20 btH.
Students* Store officials saiid
that the money lost by the
store will be absorbed by the
ASUCLA
Store security officer Gary
Mould said that all cashiers
working in the store and other
ASUCLA cashiers on campus
have been made aware of the
doctored money schcfme.
Mould said the particular
bills pawed through the store
were ''done very wcIT aad are
hard to detect by an untrained
eye, especially if the cashier
accepting tiK currency is work-
ing la a husy department
Mould saad the store
made aware of the situation
after money taken from a cash
register was checked yesterday
Bank officials aotitcd the store
last week that a similar bill
had paik^ftcd through the store
Ucla Daily Bruin
VoltifiM XCVIII. NumlMr 4
Univ*raity ol CaNtomla, Lot Ana«tM
Thiiraday, April t. ia7«
■♦*-
Much material one of a kind
University libraries house diverse CQllections
^ Dl Sudr WrUar
Hidtel in the subterranean depths of the Unjversity Research Library, a
searchiag idiolar can unearth t recipe for curried blubher. copies of Dime
Deuctive Magazine, and a photograph of Lon Chancy in TW Pti— toi of tiK
Tht UCLA Library Ssfttcm is compoaed of 19 libraries, with coUecuons
totaling 3,500,000 volumes. **The explosion in publication has cauaoi
excitement — and dillkultMi^*' said associate umversity bbrarian James Co)u
adding. **What we have here in the University Reaaaich Library is a very large
colkction, with a geaeiml reference lervioe and central
circulation lerviee.*
Originally designed to serve faculty and graduate
studeats, the Research Library opened its. stacks to all users
in 1970, Cox taid.
to think of the Research Library as a kind of
in all directions in the wheel,** Cox commented.
Located in the Research Library are the graduate reserve
aervioe. the systenu department, various library exhibitions,
two branch Ubraries and special departments
Residing on Floor A of the Research Library, the
Department of Special Collections protects rare books,
maps, pamphlets, — misrnpts. photographs, ephemera and
artifacu.
The materia] is here for tkt student to use,** James
Mink, head of the department, said. **Peopk shoukl feel
here. #«C much of this material is unique and
of a kind. It simply cannot circulate. Baeeinee 3fou
can*t browse throinh special collections, wc have a staff
who have been selected to interpret the material and gtude
you in its use.**
The department recently received two collections.
Donated by Gilbert Harrison, recently retired editor of the
Mew Rtp%d>kc and former editor of the Daily JKdJn. one
acquisitioQ mrhiiBi books by and about Gertrude Stein,
letters from Gertrude Stem, letten from her life-long companion Alice B. Toklaa,
photographs and oil portraits. The other acquisition contains prrannof papers of
Ralph BundK, nnderiecretary of the Umted Nations and an alumnoi ci UCLA.
The mntenal, said Mink, documentt Biinche*s entire career wuh **all his personal
Book damage
is on the rise
Despite a law m the Californui
Education Code, malicious cutting,
tearing and injury of^ hooks and
magazines are increasing, according
to Frances Rose; head of the Cir-
culation Department in the Uni-
versity Research Library.
Administrators are working on an
electronic surveillance system for
detecting uncharged books leaving
the library, but they arc unable to
arrive at a solution for halting the
mutilation of books, said Roee.
Students come to the library
prepared to cut out articles and
pictures, she commented, since **the
materiab have obviously been naoUy
razor-hinded.**
Rose attributed the problem to
frustration from long copying ma-
chine hnes and competition in
classes.
grant from the National Humanities Endowment for research on artists of' the
thirties and forties, said Mink,
In the Department of Special Collections, there are not **any collections per se.**
Mink said. **We collect the literature of the people — popular fiction, detective
stories, mysteries and science fiction **
Wuthering Heights, The History of an Appie Pie with Duties for the NwMep,
Dime Detecitve Magazine and first editions of Deeeortei^iwoirks all receive spaoc
in the hbrary's holdings.
~ tt*s fli pMT . -«
■ **! just happen to think it*s all great," Mink said, glancing araund his
departmem. **It*s been my life 1 thmk the happiest I «m is
when I see people who want to nae the edllections u»ing
them -
Down a multi-colored heA on Floor A in the Reaenrch
Library, where hberally distributed **Wet Paim** signs arc
carfied ont by the pervading odor of paint, the Theater Arts
Reading Room collects research material on motion
pictures, radio TV and theater Film and television
journals, screenplays, television scripts, film festival
programs, production stills, portraits of personalities,
motion picture programs, storyboards and production
materials are included in their collections, according to
Audree Malkin, head of the Theater Arts Library.
Ranking as one of the **nine finest** in the nation,'
according to Malkm, the Screenplay Collection covers the
years from 1922 to the present Included in thu compilation
are the MOM feature fUms from 1924 to 1947. the Dr.
KMdnre series and 23 Walt Duney cartoon continuities and
shooting scripts dated 1937 to 1939
With scripts, story outlines, memos and shooting
schedules, the Star Trek archive contains Gene Roddcn-
for^e three
berry's **complete files for^e three ymn^iff prednction^
the series,** Malkin expUmed. Other archives are Room 222
and the Mod S^nad. with the fauier*s scripts '"prafupely
Malkm emphasized that the screenplay, television
^^^ radio script collections are non-circulatinfi *'and are for
research and reference purposes only.'^ Covered by common law cop/nght, the
scripts may not be cojpied or rcprodoced.
Included in the PhotOfenph Cottectioa are the Peart WhUc seriak. piMlographs
of Theda Bara, Loo Chaney in TIk PtMniom of the Opera and a 1914 portrait of
rnrrnpondfilfls and files, speeches and papers relating to his activities in
in and copy the book. They
call
hooh-toed office. Mink
to UCLA, 1946-1949, it Mema to me
tho^ifKfwUy *'Now, a stndent can
a joke np in the Reference Department. They
in, xerox copies of the hooks they
the bhfary.**
of Hie ilncfc f t
forward, he tapped
ThnTk n^ Fd Mke to
hooks ont. Books are a loooii of oitr cnrmaHion's
a mood of thnt
Oral
program of the hhimry as a '^re^y
in "going
The Theater Arts Library "^viil be moving to tne second floor,
have additional reader epnoe and where we can consolidate some of the
collection,** Ae and. Wmttmiy, circulating books are loarted on the fifth level of
the Research Library.
Across the haU from the Theater Aru Reading Room, the FoMic Affgin
icnmenu and pnmphlet collections at its
of Ikt PMk Attain Service, ej
docoments are coieclcd from the Uniied Nations;
orfawxations; individnal foreign countries with emphasis on Africa, Latin
AflMfiea and ocher ThM World eonoinoi. and ail 30
Cnlif<
Mink views the oral
i.*.«^a«^M
I
-f-ssfi
V
^
I
•*t
1
f
k <««M f. It IklXr.
JESUS CHKST
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Mtfl
Cites wishy washy' attitude
'Dove' calls for puli-baclc
By Mike Da^lgiaii
DB Staff Wrilar
Charging that hit government has adopted a
''wishy-wathy** attitude taward the problem of
Pakstinian Arabs, Israeli Parbamcnt member
Axk Lova Eliav yesterday called for Israel to
give back captured territory in return for a "^futl
peace.**
Speaking in the Women's lounge, Eliav, an
11-ycar member of the Parliament and former
Secretary-General of the Israeh Labor Party,
defended his views, in spite of their dis-
agreement mth present government policy **I
am criticizing my government as much as 1 can
where criticism is due.*'
•;•» W', i iJ ^1
-' -^•
**the whole of Israel is the land of our fatheii;
and we have full historical hghu to the wMe
of It -
The doves, however. §o OttT ttep further by
granting that the Arabs also have i right to t))e
land. **The land of our fathers it the same as
tlHi^4aiid of theirs,** said Eliav.
Solution
The only long-range solution to the problem
of two national movements claiming the tame
piece of land it to halve it, so we will have a
nation-state of our own and they will have a
nation-state of their oam."
Eliav said. **lsrael should now make a
general declaration of intent, saying in essence
that Israel is ready to give back the territories it
took in the war of *67 to the Arab countries
turrounding us. in return for full peace ** He
characterized 'full peace* as being a negotiated
peace with a signed treaty and esublithed
diplomatic relatipns
according to Soviet «lewiah physlcial
Yevgeny Levlch.
Though he is known as a dove for his stance
on the Arab-Israeli conflict. Eliav said that
being labelled at a dove does not in any way
tuggest thjit he wishes Israel to immediately
withdraw its troops from occupied areas.
Eliav said both doves and hawks agree that
»t^
Such a declaration of intent will fulfill many
purposes.. according to Eliav First, it will "win
back the minds and hearts of many countries "
Also, it will be fL call for the Arabs to answer/
Finalfy, it will be an indication^
of IsraePs willingness to com-
pronuscL
-We will sit with anyone.
even the PLO, on the one
condition that they recognize
us as equal partners.** said
Eliav.
Eliav emphasized the need for the PLO xo
abandon its idea of having one secular Pal-
estiman state. He said that this type of state
would be one **where everyone lives happily
ever after, hke they do in Lebanon.**
Arab leacen
Although the .declaration is a necessary first '
step, according to Elmv. it will not immediately
solve all the problems^, in the Middle East. **l
don*t think for a minute that this declaration
will bring about peace with the stroke of a
^en..
[pliav said that he hoped Arab leaders were
(C ontinued on Pa^e 4)
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UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Thursday. April 8. 1976
Volume XCVItl. Number 4
^*ft>lt9hmd 0¥Ory wootidoy during ttm
Khomt yomr 0Kcmpt during hoiidoyn
mrtd doya tollowtr*g, hottd^ft. ond •»
ammotton ponoda by ttto ASUCLA
CommunicBt*on* Boord 306 Wost
wood PiMia Lo§ 4»ige<et. Colttormo
aO094 Copyright f 979 by tho ASUCLA
Communtcouont Btmni Socond dan
poaMae amd at me Lda An§0m Poat
n-iea '^ ...
J^n\
]
TO THE UCLA JUNIORS
WHO TOOK THE
ENGLISH COMPOSITION
TEST ON SATURDAY,
. MARCH 13, 1976
There will be an article in the
Dally Bruin announcinqjhegroup
test resultswhen gradingTiiasbeen
completed. Please do not call the
Learning Skills/Writing Center re-
garding individual test scores until
notification in the Daily Bruin that
scores are available.
Thank you for your patience.
Office of Undergraduate Affairs
?13fi Murphy Hall
Jamaa nictMalM>n
Stuart SHoiifin
Poanar — On
Laura KhHnG7 —
-rr
T
J
I
Library System open fa all
• •
of tlK pofitical spec-
tnim«** Ryan commented Col-
iMttOflf of puaplUfli covering
current bftuef encompua the
status of women, ethnic
groups, gun control, prison
Mimi and "^wHatever peopk
turn their interests to in to-
day's society.** she said.
Ryan receives occasional
**odd qutttena,** ranging from
**ilMy wmmy goau are there on
an Oregon farmT* to **ianti-
tnMt atpeds of haiebaU ** Her
pamphlets, however, oogmmmi-
ally cover odd topics, including
a recipe for cumed blubhw,
information on the tango and
''chaos and control m poetry.**
For anyone desiring to prepare
cumed blubber, Ryan ex-
plained that the department
lacks a subject catalog,
people go to the
are advised as to the
on
, <i>irtts a nibacnption to a
magazine, mt wA them to
out a little card with as much
as they know about it We
refer the card to bibliographers,
who do the total selection.**
McKinky described the
problem of magazines stolen
and mutilated as *i'ataitic **
Peopk take a particular arti-
ck or cut out pictures, she
laid, adding ruefully. ''It's fre-
quently done. There's a
popular misconception that we
can go out and replace ihe
mugazine or that there are two
or three copies on reserve
That's not true. It may be
difficult or impossibk^ to re-
hart apBToach to take.**
ropdnr pintt
The perux^cali liction
the first flaor of the Research
Lihraiy, ii a *>opalnr plane*
commented Margaret McKin-
ley, head oi the dBpartmint.
"Peopk hke to come and sit.
We'd hke to have more space,
but it iM*t there**
-Magazines and newspapers
are ordered by the department,
amiled to ttiem and prepared
there for pubUc uae, McKJnky
explained. "If ^tomeone re-
Behind double doors on the
floor of the Research
U Room 2161 Ts reading
area enntains a blue onental
nig, peniidiwli with Chinese
characters on the coven
murmured conversation
behind
newspaper pages
Man-Hing Chen, librarian m
the Onental Library, explained
that "our books are m Chinese,
JaMmme and same Korean."
Also called the East Asian
Library, the collection ranks as
*'one of the 12 largest Onenul
bbranes m the United States,**
Chen said '^
In general, the library buys
ohly books on social sciences
gap humanities Chen helad
ism, archaeology, art.'
history and literature as
specialized fields **baGaiHC that
IS what the professors are in-
leretted in " The Ubrary server
hiilory. art, Onenul
or ''any other faculty
or students who are interested **
Since many small colleges aad
universltiei do not hivnrrr
oriental library, the UCLA
branch library also shares its
resources with UCSB^ Occi-
dental, Pomona College and
Caiifoniia State Universities,
nid Chen/
Reference department
Head ol the R^ercnce De-
partment on the first floor of
the Research Library, Ann
Hinckley directs the loans of
2,000 books per month to
countries all over the world,
including the Lenin Public
Library. Discussing their bor-
rowing policy. Hinckley men-
tioned that It took two years to
boffFOW^ ^ book from Red
Chimi.
She feels t^at the reference
desk it most important, where
the activity is "lo frenetic that
we never scheduk ourselves tor
more than one hour except at
jnight." Questions vary from
"Who murdered the nephews
of Richard the Thirdr to "Did
Skyigh have flush toikts and
what was the coatT And,
Hinckley said with a smik,
they also accomphsh "a lot of
detective work. It is much
fun-
Also available in the
Reference Room arc encyclo-
pedias, dictionacice, biblio-
graphies, indexes^ ghstracts.
the printed catalogs of the
Library of Congreu and other
works
Ornate struct lire
In contrast to the straight
lines of the white, rectangular
Umversity Research Library,
the College Library, buih m
1929, incorporates Italian
Romanesque. Byzantine and
Mo^orish Architecture mto its
ornate structure. Christened
Powell Library, the holdings
are oriented toward the under-
uate
The College Library ccmtains
(CmMinued on Page 12)
toldr
cx»mG/o & hi f i
N.
ot be! oif comero
We now give
you less..*
lesstime to wait for your Kodacolor film
and prints to be processed Now. just 24
hours* IS all of the time it takes for you
to have professional quality Kodacolor
prints Beautiful silk or glossy borderless
prints
IN TODAY BACK TOMORROW*
Bel air camera & hi-fi is the exclusive
new Mission Country Photofinishing
dealer for our area with reliable one-day
service Mission Country is quality photo-
finishing with highly trained technicians
working In a modern laboratory
for yourself, you wont wait long!
and hohdayiart
•Of cou
t orwci**^
rou ¥• timMrd ^out il mmn it on TV'^0¥m%
RIDE TME RAPJDS
3 iriour driva frOM L A
ynbahavaoia adwantura uoparellaiid •xcupinafil
♦or Ifiloifmation r»««rvation brochura onilhfs and
OUIOfD RlVf B TOUm (219)
r
THE ASIAN AMERICAN
TUTORIAL PROJECT
IS ar^oaoad in tutoring those handicapped by the lacK^of a
tngic protrciency m English tn the Asian communtttes
Knowledge of a second language, though helpful, is not
iry
For further Information Inquire at
Campbell HaXi 2240 UCLA or caH •25-51 7S
Sponaorad by th« Community Sarvicat Commitaion
of the Studant Lagitlativ* Council
I
tired of yesterdmya hair?
t1Ai» TCIDAT
For wtiafs happening now
gtyiing for men and women
Jerry Redding*e Jhirmack products
For appointment CBlk 478r0151
lues, thru tat.
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with this ad
1105 Glendon Ave Westwood Village
Vou ttoeorrm » non
Wht> YOU Woni Jo M««r« '
M ffw a« ^aohty tfui Tf*»'* -_
You 0fparm o^mtfpmf t UCLA
long »fH»ogH »o '•••*• " an</mtm9
ot
fVI^YN LO£WENDAHL
.A.B. M.A. Ph.T. F.A.C.T.A.
<___' " ■ ■ . . _
I Of m€f I '<' I A Facglfy M««ber
aehabiliution Con*ultjni
...sn^-. Resejrrh fro^ Dire< tor
"Leader Ameriran Cancer Society "N© Smckmg" Clinu
Su Private Se%»n5m with f velyn on tape cassette of LP record lor ailli
110.00 {mhst you d normally pay for a deadly 3 canom oi cigaretie*
One courw you'll %weaf by, r»oi at:
I _ 'H6*v To tacome A ^k>n-SnK>kef"
Send $10.00. checi or
a amm
rx>. loi 49sm
AKo jvaiUhW 4t Voicui *<>' >ni Sh<»fj ArMwcKHl Villrffr
:
AHEAD STEREOS
Prices are much better than
the so-called Discotinters
•
HOURS: "f 11 •
CLOSEOUT SPECIAL
Tkt
wNIi AOC cartrMei^
ofduait /tuM
aachcapaMaol
up your houaa tn apacAsNy pricad
IMMTID OlMMTrrm
HEADPHONES
$3.M
lis
KENWOOD
1033 TURNTABLE
SCHWEIZER
RECORD CLEANER
m
«^BB> eV«Vv
AHEAD STEREO
i
- /
■,'j
I
3
<
I
i
&
.rx**
UCLA TAY SACHS DISEASE
TASK FORCE MEETING:
THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1976
4 PJ«., AU 3517
(or call 775-7333 or X55720 for mom Mo.)
— C6m% learn and halp in this important naw madicai prtigrmn
— Volunteers are needed lor coiimiufiieellefia (on and oft
campfis),
others about lay Sachs Dtseeee. and
at the time of the screening (April 26-29)
The sucoeea of this prolelype pnefiMii for the pfawvition of
genetic dAeaaaaa depends upon our willingness, as students, to
make it work on this campus Preventative medicirie is the best
kind Tay Seche OiaMea is completely prswewlablel
H0tp us to h%)p othmru — volunt—r a little tirrm.
THE INTERNATIONAL STUDENT CENTER
OFFICIALLY ENDORSED CONTRIBUTION TO THE
LOS ANGELES CITY BICENTENNIAL
"THE INTERNATIONAL WORLD
~~ OFAHrERlCANrCOOKlNQ"
A monthly presentation pf dmner. music and entertainment
featuring countries whose dishes have become part of Ameri-
can menu
. "ALWAYS ON SUNDAY"
BEGIN WITH
SUNDAY. APRIL f1 — GREEK DINNER
AUTHENTIC DISHES AND ENTERTAINMENT
6-9 pm Dinner ahd entertainment $5
PLEASE PURCHASE YOUR TICKET in advance.
Internatlohal Center
1023 Hilgard - Westwood 477-4587
GRADUATE
STUDENTS!
«»■•'"■"
Graduate students who in-
tend to run for GSA office may
pick up petitions in Kerckhoff
301 beginning at 8:00 am April
7, 1976. 1
■.'iP'
;•#»*
liyiPjORTANT DAXE$
Petitions avai
Petitions due
Candidates meeting
Primary Election
Final Election
April?
April 21 at 3:00pm
April 23 at noon
May 5,6
May 12, 13
Israel Parliament member
Classic pure ootton
knit shirts. . .warm
weatho* favorites
The warm went her perennial returns. . .
C09l. comfortable and absort)ent all
esMon polo shirts in shi^rt sleeve modeK
with collar and placket fron t
A truly tasteful Miction of all «ilM
duren and lisle in rcfiMcntal typt
stripes. bUzer stripes as well as solid
Mors in fresh new shadct.
•8
(Continued froni Pafrli
beginning to tiWI «we fcalirtic About the
Middle Eastern situaMti Calling the Middle
East ''potentially the moit daafftrous spot in
the world,** tliav said. "Anyone who is a realist
nad IMS a dfMin of parading over the ruins of
Tel Aviv rcahzes that he won't have a Cairo to
go bmek loT
Even if iirael were to suie their intent to
negotiate, they would not withdraw immed-
iately, according to Ehav '*Until a peace is
negotiated and a treaty is signed, we will stay
put with our armies.** He said under no
condition would Israel retreat from occupied
territories before a treaty is signed.
Eliav criticized hawkish views on the Mid-
east. He considered arguments such as "All
non-Jewt hate all Jews,' The whole world is
against us,* and 'All Arabs arc killers* as bong
hawkish He behcves dove arguments; to be
more sophisticated than this
Eliav explained his support of a position of
moderation by saying *Wc hope that out of
moderation will come negotiation, and out of
negcMuition will come peace.**
He added, however, that Uracil cannpt afford
to take a moderate position unlesi it is
speaking from a position of strength. "If you
want eventually no have morie moderate policies
from Israel, for God*f sake, don*t make it
weak.-
No longer science fiction
i=—
v^
Genetic Engineering gains respect
By Jdfiey Brows
DB Stair Reporter
Test'tube babies, mutaott,
cloning — previously science
fictional lingo — now comprise
part of the vocabulary of the
recently emerged fieid of gene-
tic engineenng.
Dr. Robert S. Sparkes, chief
Take ninety pennies
from un<ler your pillow and
come to Me G Me. For 90C you
can have your choice of over
seven dMIerent Mnds of pita
sandwiches . . . everything from
our fanrKMis h<it falafd to
ag^hmt \Me mrt the workfs
tinieet raalBamnt. but we cater
to the biggest appeMes. Where
else can you eat good nourish-
ing food, and flH up too. for 90C?
ine&iiK
Gaytey & Weybum in the Village
Eat here / Uke out / open 24 hrs.
of the division of Medical
Genetics here, defined genetic
engineering W the attempt **to
modify in a predetermining
way the genetic makeup of an
individual.**
Tlieoreticar at present, gene-
^ and chromotonal modifH'
cation represent one method of
genetic engineering. By in*
jecting or removing a gene or
chromosome from a cell, a
particular hereditary trait can
he introduced or eliminated.
Dr. Sparkes commented that
there is much pubbc concern
regarding this procedure be-
cause of the uncertainty of
deciding who should be noodi-
fied and how the individual
should be changed.
in cotton stretch.
TFI) I K.MJi i
tINC. ESI
WoatwoQd
las shown)
.solkS brass buckle
VAUGHN
At BATH m OATS
Another method, cloning,
involves the removal of the
nucleus from an egg and the
addition of another nucleus
from a different somatic cell.
At present, cloning has only
been successful with amphi-
bians, and then only sometimes
have the cells developed. The
^ purpose of cloning, explained
Sparkes, could be to develop
genetically equal organisms.
Sparkes admitted that not
enough is known about cloning
or its success with other than
amphibian cells
Mutation constitutes an in-
direct method of genotype
change After muutmg a num-
ber of cells, the desirable muu-
tions are isolated and lelec-
tiyely propagated. However/
BwlitioDi came an imbalance
in the genetic mskeup of a cell,
added Sparkes, and most lead
to diieaae.
SpMlMa conuliented that ge-
neticists are **aot ready to
undertake any of thcK lð-
ods regarding humans.** Sever-
al qtiettioitt remain to be an-
swered, Sparkes said^ before
any modificaliott can be r^
considered.
Heredity comprises only paft
of an indivklual*s phenotype;
environmental factors must be
analyzed to determine their
effect on an individuafi char*
acteristics. In addition, ex*
plained Sparkes, although ge-
netic chnnfes may be .accom-
plished in the future, society
must judge whether these chan-
ges would he 49fmBbk or even
permitted.
Unaware of any ynatic en-
gineehag experiments here. Dr.
Sparkes reported, however,
that UCLA does have a genetic
clinic in which couples are
informed as to the probability
of occurrence or reoccurrence
of a genetic problem should
they have children.
[>r Sparkes estimated that
*Vhile it is hard to predict
what will happen in five or 10
years or more, it (genetic em* .
gineenng) does not appear to
be a practical matter for the
near future."
Bank ( RFDIl ( AROS
WFLtOMFD
fi7W4
ill OBMtt
The Council On Educational
Development (CED)
will be considering cour^ proposals for
the Fall Quarter 1976 and the Winter
Quarter 1977, and is prepared to sponsor
innovative courses of genuine academic
quality which would be of interest to the
campus community. Such course pro-
posals will be due in the CED office no
later than Monday, April 12, 1976 (for the
Fall Quarter 1976) and Monday, May 17,
1976 (for the Winter Quarter 1977). Jf you
are interested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educatiuiial Developmgm, il2l Murphy
Hall.
Dissident calls tor greater freedom
Dl Staff Writer
If the Soviet Union allowed
emigration, the "Jewish minor-
ity would undoubtedly leave in
OMaa esodliii** Yevgeny Levich,
a Soviet Jtmmkk physicaal, told
the Brum Tuesday.
Levich, wIk> gave a pubbc
lecture on iewiili .nationahsm
in the USSR TM«tey night in
Haines Hall 39, said minonties
in the Soviet Union (Germaaa*
Lithuanians, Tartars. Jews,
etc.) were supporting a nation-
al movement for greater civil
hberties:
Tht 2^ear-old scientist said
tiMt in the Soviet Umon today
there is ''no treedoro of emi-
gration,** and a pcnaa who
wanted to emigrate is a subject
of **severe harassment " He
added that for scientists emi-
gration is practically impoa^
sible
Lcvich applied for permis-
sion to emigrate to Israel in
1972 and. was subsequently
diifllHrgBd from his position at
the Institute of Chemical .Phys-
ics of t|ie Academy of Science
and Insutifte of Applied Math-
ematics in Moscow.
In 1973, despite two military
exemptions (high priority sci-
ence job ' and medical unfit-
ness), Levich was ordered to
report for milita^ duty as a
private.
"^Everyone wbo has educa-
tion is reserve officer,** he said.
Xevich said that, he had pre-
vi^ssly served as a second
medical grade officer but was
told that a ""aacret Soviet law**
eaaMad tiK nulilary to call him
up in an emergency.
Levich refused to be drafted
mB said that there was no
emergency since tk€ Soviet
Umon was not at war. He also
requested a trial. Levich was
told, however, that he could
not have an open trial becaaae
the law was secret
A month later, he was for-
cibly arrested in the street*
while he was on his way to the
Moscow Cancer Dispensary
where he was a rrflaf patient
Levich was sent to a camp
for nubtary criminals in Tiksi
Bay in the Arctic Zor^ and
assigned to heavy unskilled
labor under mtolerablc con-
ditions, according to a letter by
the Committee of tTohcerned
Scientisu, Incorporated.
In the bwracks, Levich said
the temperature was "practic-
ally always below freezia^«aiid
that everyone bundled together
to sUy warm.-
Protests from Western sci-
entists eventually resulted in
Levich*s release. **1 was un-
expectedly released after a
year," Levich said The fol-
lowing year, he and his brother
Alexander, together with their
wives, were finaHy allowed to
leave the Soviet Uni6n Their
parents remain in the Soviet
.Union, despite high-level So^
Viet promises that they will be
allowed to leav^.
The harsh treatment Levich
received was apparently in
retaliation for the activities of
hs father^ Benjamin Levich, a
noted elect roc he mist The sen-
ior Levich IS a cortesponding
member of the Soviet Aca-
demy oi Sciences and the high-
est ranking Soviet Jewish Sci-
entist to apply for emigration
Levich was sponsored by the
UCLA Committee on Public
Lectures and the Physics de-
partment.
■■^
I
1
PUBLIC WORKS
mPROVISATIONAL TM£ATR£
"Hilnrtous and touchtng"
WWM tamu t» nMFj
A pertactrnample of the
creative process in motion'
MM trntfum SMT* mmcA ountot
Fridays and Saturdays at 9 pm
The Church in Ocean Park
235 Hill St (Santa Monica)
Telephone 399-1631
L
DIVORCE
ADJUSTMENT
GROUP
Counseling Division
Psychological & Counseling Services
for those interested in exploring their
separation or divorce experience amd sharimg
their concerns in a groiip setting:
Once a week, jor two hours.
Sign-ups now at 3334 Murphy Hall,
or call 1H2fS'407l
I
I
^
•^■'mvi
4
■m
1 '"
GIVEUS18Wra<S
ANDWELLIURN
1
.\
%
'i
I
\
Before you start to question the value of
your college education, consider what you can do
with it as an officer in the Coast Guard We t\aye a
tew select positions still open m our August Off icer
Candidate School class.
After )ust 18 v^eeks of special tzed training,
you'll take a management position with reij
responsibility It could be at one of our Port Safety
or Marine Inspection units Or helping operate a
recreational boating safety program You'll be on
the jOb with the nation's forenr>o^t maritime law
enforcement agency Protecting man from tfie sea
and the sea from man
The Coast Guard is known for saving lives and
property. Today our role is^tapainiw^ as we protect
coastal sea-life resources from depletion by fishing
fleets and intercept major narcotics smugglers off
our shores A Coast Guard |Ob is a big responsibility
The rewards are excellent, too A starting
salary of over $10,000 a year, post-graduate tramtng
opportunities and excellent retiicmant benefits
after only 20 years if you decide to stay with us.
0lus all the other benefits of military service Of
course, the personal satisfaction with a )Ob well
done IS its own reward
The Coast Guard OCS IS a golden opportunv.
But iffUfiliiiM for AufMl classes will be dosing
very soGO, so call Linda Rodriguez in Long Beach at
590-2257 She's got the ansiwers about a Coast Guard
career -ways you can make your degree pay off
infold.
•r—'-^--'
,'*•"
' BW -«t -W .-tf ■<
'Mabiourhhed Mind'
week programsr
■; ' ' '*■■
ri
Special Ed?
Saxon harassment disputed
■-!
#e — .
:i.
. >■
frofect
KN 4i7
-jr i" ■■■■■ ■ iigrn
.IN.J*
mu-
vo*-
»^ '' ttie Graduate
l....r. fcpreseDtmg
» tC Sjin Dicfo^ad-
^tko tcadi^imi-
V€ied Tuesday
ttiidents. who
GSU joins
AFL-CIO
(AF) ~ Tbe mcttvm Grid-
iMte SOitfmi Umm. daim-
1^ SiO of Ikt 1 J75 poM-
fiadyio mmifmg at the
laiveniiy ei CAitforttia at
San Diqpo. a JMUBf up
with tiK AFL-CIO
Affihtnaa wmk the Aokx-
lean Federation ST State.
County Mid Municipnl Em-
pAoyvrs «•§ voted Tuesda>
Lnsi January. tlKLgroup
threatened to strike r
conditions. ^
memben 4o 12 per cent of
the icnchtng of
nates.
fw A i
Dinnef >«•#
%iMmtlib*ftk*ml
TWO prtm« rm 4lMMr« ffir TWO
Mi« Mi ^ . ar . <IM» yMT ila«H« I.O.
IMptm Wtki - Open 24 Hour* — H«Bt of the "J-r
bo Jim H«mbiirf*r« imi^t Umom at o«r tirter restaurant,
Dolorc* DH^c-Im, Beverly Hilb
f SANTA MONICA iLVD., W.L.A. (At Purd^)
OPiN 24 HOUUS (477O06i)
STONED
Got the munchies?
Call
M
4»f ♦t.taa A»ii H> — 4iP« K. •■> 4ia9 M «» itay i *w •••» i
Pina
Infffl
Al^MU
Walk your bike?
' AUTO
INSURANCE
YES — you rieed auto insurance
All the more reason to contact us for discounts
up to 35% to most students — another good
reason for being in college
See or call us in Westwood
477"?54«
Agents for College Student Insurance Service
noo Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (^Aonty's Building)
^^^1 S
r
The Hillel Grad Group
Requests the Honor of
Your Pi#i#nc«^ac A
Night of Food and Film!
Saturday. April 10 7:00 PM
at the URC, 900 Hilgard
Full Dinner
FollO¥ifod By
Bye Bye Brav^rman
$3.50 ffiambers $3 7$ non-membaft
For raaarvauons call 474-1 S3 1
>
1
: -1,
/r- ,
f RCnCB CliOUBUlG ^Z^
--t*
i:' \
French
Gabs
$26.00
Beige - navy
brown
K>?38POXTON AVF
(ABOVE
WHERE HOUSE
RECOPDS)
WESTWOOD VILLAGE
479-7556
APRIL
LEARNING SKILLS CENTER
Study & Reading Division
SIGNUP-271Dodd 825-7744
lAMILYPlOT
O CENTURY
PLAZA THEATDrc
ot *tm*c m Aywmut .
cn»
,^WlW.I,.li..£^
"to tfrlv* wmrny th« timrki
HELP for the BRIGHT
Brightness arul Efficiency
are not the same
ImflviOuat Appotntmonts
oNoltmaiiinQ on— ding
O Exain prm^ o Visual tcrsoning
a Mat^-Sci
^-1— »-
M
T _;
W _^
r- ^^
F
12
13
14
15
16
Study
Workshop
1 1M30
ffOfHRBP
M
Raidi
METriaf
Tftt
12 30-4 00 \
ng Group 3-5* *•
MMi
Worksnop
19
20
21
22
23
11M30
firivp
10 ir*
Group
10- ir*
2S
27
26
2S
MidHfW
1 1S-4 30
10 1?^
Sfwp
i^ir-
*'^nl■nll■
<9 SSSBMRV
>
bng Group S-5***
■
A tervica of Student & Campus Aftairs tor an raguiany anrofi
.1
4
4
^
i
jyj-',^.
*. ♦
5 CnNTlNlinuS YEARS TAMRRinnf WASS
U ' MAS N!!V^ '
H, M IN Cv
AUN BATES in
KING OF
ifl"'«f) iloUlttf surrci^ pocket ol Mork) Mjt ; thf B<
veiK] Aian B4te<> m\o t hiftiiv •'•ty tin> h town lo
1 »tf J b< • <- f.4*« tied *nc tht
ut ifec iocji 4^yiurr na^e ;4Aen met' pUce The resuHin£ nier
k'"" -^fs us some oJ the -Tust ^" *»•"•"' ^«. .#«,.. «
-n the reality of th# r^Lmini J. .J. L *
jnd the nmalr^k hjve ttt^ j%y<um «re c*n rc«lh
shjrr Bates contusion abouf <*hich people are reiNy nsane
in our ofMion RIMC Of HMR^S •'. 4 t4it treat :unny and sad
jt fhf same time
This waclf tMBauuiui luin nj'> itkateneo octaihc a ^tant
and turned the mov^e world uf%«de dovn
' EXCLUSIVE EMQAQEMEMT >
UA CINKMA CKNTKH « 474-a#S3
.V 2:« • ^ii • MP
4 H
f
Committee on Public Lectures
and
Cultural and Recreational Affairs
Present
Samuel Menashe
In a Poetry ReqtSag
I . '
Thursday^ April 8, 8 p.m.
Sunset Canyon Recreation Center
Students sit out dectiont
» _ ■ -^ * ]_
Candidates fail to muster
support among students
fCPS) ••Ife^ •
He*i paralyzed from tile waist
down, but the other candidates
arc paraiyicd from the waist
up-
Georye C Wallace sayi that.
A law student at Auburn Uni-
versity in Montgomery, the
thin, long-haired, former coun-
try-singing ton of George C.
Sf._ ii ftumping mightily for
rirtdy Ibis election year, ad-
dfcuing Wallace fundraisers alJ
over the countr> "almost every
weekend,^ according to a
spokMMPoman m Wallace cam-
^ftign headquarters, "We*re
very enthused about our
chances,** Wallace Jr declares.
*'Wc iMve definite solid core
support acros*s the country,
and there are no plans for
withdrawal.**
Fellow Alabamian law stu-
dent/Joe Watle^r disagrees.
Watley and several University
of Atetema friends have put
togettier a damninf. investi-
gative MWH^ of the Wallace
ynrs h Aiiteflla, and «
couple of huge labor unions
have repnnted the booklet and
distributed tt m leveral early
priiMvy sutes. With Wallace
fairisg^poorly ir^ these contests.
Watley and coaipaay ai^ tak-
«f iOMr oJ^rUie^ credit.
**1 think it*s having an im-
^poct^* Watley claims. **For the
r»rst time-, people are beginning
to question George Wallas on
his record in Alabama. For the
first time. Wallace is being put
on the defer^ivfi.'*
Young Wallace asd Watky.
both studenu deeply iirmi
*« this year's burfeoning ekc-
tcv^il shenanigans, are note-
worthy simpiv
NOW PUYINC
LEONARD
I
ALAN SUES
I
Students. Staff, and Faculty are mvtted to calibrate tt>e
SECOND SEDER OF PASSOVER
witf> HILLEL
THURSDAY. APRIL ISth
S3 SO
faculty
$550
RESERVATIONS AND INFORMATION ON PASSOVER LUNCHES AND DINNERS 474-1631
PASSOVER SEMINARS
NVTOaY Of TNI
Apcii at and taai Maya^ti^a ^torti - Nooet
Apeil lOtn
p m
Wo. its not ihat
Were 3
KsHFm
aren*t many other students or
young people who have seen fit
to enter the political fray in
1976. In fact, reports from
around the country indicalf
that, like maay adiriu, many*
students have decided to sit
this one out
Jimmy Carter, sweeping vic-
toriously through the earlx
primary ilales and frequently
mentioned as the chief con-
tender for the Democratic Par-
ty nomination, has been unable
to muster much student re-
sponse even in New York,
where in 1972 George Mc-
Govem had over 40.000 stu-
dent volunteers pounding the
pavementT aaswenng phones
out political lit-
jump on his bandwagon, but in
every case, the numbers are
much lower than in 1972 ot
196S.
Why? Many studenU say #
lack of an imiie in this year's
election — no Nixon or Vietnam
laar to rebel aaaiaai — ims
forced auuiy of them to opt for
any thing other than polities'
this spring. Harvard senior
Joseph Fay, a ftnisat coor-
Morrla Udall, tha only
wWi a -Marar
aim wmm In Iha pd-
marlaa, had pot togathar
wonc forca wiiicn num-
1,500
' "It seems in impossible
dream at this point, to fet
students involved,** Jerry Ciar-
pelh, a Carter student coor-
dinator iR upstate New York,
told The New York Times
recently ** People say even their
friends don*t want to get in-
'Volved.'' Howard Leibowitz,
, another Carter volunteer, ech-
oed CiarpcUis "^feelii^ **tt*s
like pulbng teeth to get volun-
teers, but we*re getting our
slmre Studentt are just not
very active,** Leibowitz ex-
plains
Just before the New York
primary on April 6, Carter*s
statewide studcm strcMfUi was
ofimated at ^OQCmly Ml
McGovem students as
paigaed in Brooklyn akme in
1972 Moms Udall, the only
candidau with a **liberar label
still alive in the primaries, had
put together a work force
which numbered L500 stu-
dents
The story is the same in
other primary states Each
candidate has been able to tear
a cehain number of students
awav from their studies to
dinator d urine the short-lived
campaiaa of R. Sargent Shri-
vcr, attributed the low number
of sttttfents applying for leaves
at the aarmally highly polit-
iciaed Cambridae campus to
the lack of a Eugene Mc-
Carthy-type candidate who can
stir young peoples* feelings.
''Without MMk a candidate or
laaae, it is difficuh to recruit,**
Fay aayt.
The economy, particalaHy
the grim student job prospects,
has apparently failed to stir
anyones* farhags either. **TIk
ecottoaiy is a remote iHae,**
offers Rkhand ^artawa, a 20-
year-old New York student
aiM> suppans Fiad Hams. **lt
affecft Biy parealiTar ac*^
me.- Anotker New York stu-
dent, Wilham Hartuag, says he
became outraged about the
war ater Jbe *^ound out what
was happeaiBg»** but he doesn*t
feel the lanK about the econ-
omy. **EconofiBcs isn't as clear
cut,** Hartuag eapiaias. "I can*t
say 1 know wkat slwaU be
done.**
In the wot, Uaivcrniy of
Utah senior Fappy SkoA, co-
/e^^aUT*
We Style Long Hair &
Also the Latest Full Cut.
Shampoo & Blow Dff w Dry Cut
Manicuring & Pedtcunng.
Wa Mao color and give ftcxfy o^rm
u
Lai»l
Hair Siyiis/s
WOMEM ^
No
ordinator of a program de*
signed to encourage students to
vale, thinks young people are
^more concerned for them-
selves personally than cawKS
this yaar.*"
Althou^^hblTsays lief pia^^
gram, **Partiripatibn *76,*' is
goittg ''rather wetl,^ sin im4*
little activity on campus in the
The economy, partlcularfy
the giim student lob proa-
pacta, has apparently
failed to atlr anyone's
feelings either.
way ot students getting in-
volved in the presidential caaH
paigp. *'They*re more interested
in getting into law school,** the
^ political science major says.
Many political pundits feel
that tl^ cohscious act oi re-
fusing to vote, not to be caa>
fulled with voter apathy, is
catching on with adult voters
this year And possibly with
students as well At a recent
mas rally involving some
I O.OOd students protesting bud-
get cuts in Albaifiy, New York,
one budding student politician
took the mike and urged the
students to get out a^id register
to vote He was promptly
hooted off the platform.
"No one is stupid enough
anymore to think they*ll have
any effect, whei^^s in 1972
they thought they would.** says
student Richard Agnss some-
what bitterly Several polls
Imve predicted that over half
of the Amencans eligible
to vote will stay home this
year, leadfng some experts to
ulk of a new ".cynical ma-
jority,** and others to assess the
non-voting situation as 'bright-
ening.** "^^ '
Octobv, a ipeaker at
iewdoin CoHege in Maine told
students they were "pohtically
apathetic ** Rising to the chal-
kage vi proving it isn't ae,
soRie students staged a mock
Democratic ccmvention in early
February in the^owdoin gym.
complete with students rep-
resenting 387 delegates from
the 50 stales, the territories
and the District of Columbia
After hours and hours of long-
winded speeches, on-the-fleer
political arm twisting, many
gatherings of small cabals and
much chaos. Hubert Hum-
phrey emerged from a saMlie-
fiikd room the victor on akaat
the lOth ballot at 2:20 am.
On the other hand, some
Unrversity of Texas students
have uken a different tact to
show off their politics this
year. Calling themselves 'Stu-
dents for Nixon-Agncw and
Now Reagan (SN AN R),** the
group has sponsored a ^'Cans
for San Clemente** drive, as
Laat Octot>ef, a apeaker
at Bowdoln College in
Maine tdd atudentg they
pepg "politically apattie-
ic.-
well as campaigns entitled
"Pennies for Lon NoP and
"Children's Crusade for Pres-
ident Thieu,** saying they were
the ex-president*l "favorite
chanties" With the entry of
Reagan into national politics.
SNANR also showed the film.
-Bedtime for Bonzo.** which
stars the Republican caadiiair
and a chimp
''We felt this campus needed
our eclectic political view," one
of the SNANR students ex-
plained
Soliah prosecutor
seeks weapon link
tAP)The prosecution in the Steven Soliah hank robbery
trial began 1 uesday to try to lipk ammunition and a
weapon found at Patricia Hearst*s San Francisco house to
the robbery scene here.
U.S. Atiy. [>wayne Keyes said evidence would show that
ammunition found at the Crocker National Bank robbery
scene came from the same machine that sumped out
ammunition found at Miss Hearst's house.
During a courtroom argument outside of the jury's
psaKDce, Keyes made that comment and said an FBI expert
from Washington would testify to that effect later
Soliah, a 27-ycar-old house painter who became Miss
Hearst's cooapanion during kta fugitive days, is the only one
charged m the April 21, 1975 robbery in which a woman
customer was shot to death
Siaae tbe triafi outset two weeks ago, the proaeculioa
htt aaii^ to tie Soliah ui with Um Hearst and the San
Francisco house where prosecutors say the two hvcd with
fugitive Wendy Yoshimura.
The defense said in lU opening comments that Soliah fell
in love with the 21 -year-old newspaper heiress and tncd to
help her. It has alK> said the prosecution's case is hand aa
speculation
In Tiiaiaay*s court session, defense attorney Sheldon Otis
fought without sacBsm to bar imraiaEUon mia maiaBBB of
a nine-millimeter pistol and some ammunition found with it
~at the Hearst haaae.
Earlier, one prosecution witness who was a gun collector
said oae of the robbers runmng from the Crocker Baali la
suburban Carmichaet appeaiai.to have iMSa aanyiai •
Che
fact it » the same type cl ammunit
evidence of nothing,** Otis told US District Court Ji
Philip Wilkins when the jury was absent from
courtroom.
Ocis said that one tool^aad 4w machine stamps
250.000 cartndats, and that introduction of the pirtol
amunitioa would **allow the jury to engage m speculation -
tut Wilkias held the psegacution oaaU §o ahead with its
testimony on the ammunitidn
or charismatic candidate
JUMP ON THE
BRAN WAGON AT
PRONTO MARKET
The easiest and cheap-
est way to comply with
Dr. Reuben's suggestion
in his book. The Save
Your Life Diet", that you
ingeat at>out 24 grams of
roughage per day is to
supplement your diet
with BRAN.
BRAN, which is the
outer husk of wtieat. is
widely aold in health
food stores (usually for
600 to 990 per ib.)
TRADER JOES BRAN,
in a 1 lb plastic bag.
will sell for only 25C per
lb.
Mix the Bran in your
orange juice, pour it on
your granola. add it to
aoup. stew or green
salads
PRONTO MARKET
open 7 am - midnight
t0850 National Blvd.
r FROM HAWAII
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND
CECILIO & KAPONO
Saturday. Apia 10
iMitlfilvofiNy
tialn Thoatra
asao. a 10^00 Ma
Make Checks Payable To:
CSUN
18111 Nordhoft Street c
•* Northridge. CA P1324
Enclose Self Addreagad Stamped Envelops
for Further Information Call (213) 108 8003
IHOTsni- Coneart aiilOwg *** Vea Aahod For N
CECILIO ft KAPONO
In Concert At . «
LA VeUME COLLEOC AMN. S 10:00 Ml
toao Third Stfeat
U Vorrte. Calif
iicaoiron ■
' FUST ANNIUL QUEEN NlkRV INVmTIOIUL
GREAT EGG DROP
(lt*s net a soup! or a chicken's contest!)
Easter Smdv,ApnlEI976
The Qaaaa Mary CHaNaaigs Yea te Net Break the Eggfl
Participating Sdads^UCU.USC.CSF. CSU.CSUUI
RULa
1 Eac^ oontaslam win supply a t)oa/oontain#r
oonttruciad ppevieua»y hy Hhseelf or If
enterinrg at a group, by net ssare tfien four
2 The hOK/coniaifier ean not be ooneiructed
from metal
3 The box / container can be no larger than 6' x
4 Tha t>ox / contamar caonet be ettaoOad to any
type e< aofaobuta
5 The^reg Might will be approKlmateiy 25'
PHIZES
to the Ouaen Mary Muaaum
Itt PrM9 ' S P
5 Dozan Eogt
4 Minuta R>de »n tha Oueen Mary Moiisopter
3 Coupena Good for a Oeee«i Mary Hat Deg
Otnnaf far 2 at Lord Neleen's ^aataurawt
1 Liva ChtcHan
Prizaa will be awarded m tlie following
1 gox/containar that protactad tha
breeding
4 Moat unuaua< t>ox d««ign
5 SmaNeat box
mr ctutCH >VkMn
T^"
aTMTJOjl^
irfl^KkR^
t
J
f
daily bruin
Letters, letters, letters, letters, letters , letters
Who needs Lm Vefas? UCLA
has its own gambiiiif catmo
right on c»mfHi%, bcHer linown
as the ASUCLA vending
machines,
The ath€r evening as I was
exammmg the deltoogs *^ *
^ftudent owned and operated"
sandwich machine, I noticed
several students p'aying the
ganr>e Put in your money Press
a button SQnr>etimcf you win,
■dflimti you lose. Intrigued^ I
decided to play along
First. I put my 60 cents into
the sandwich machine for a 55
cents egg salad sandwich.
Pulling the sandwich door open
carefully. I pot my sandwich but
no 5 cents change. Down 5
cents, up one san^ich Next I
Irted. .Jny luck at the coHee
machine I put in my two dimes
k>r a IS cents cup of \i:<^^. Not
only did I get my coffee but I
also got 10 cents change. Ah, so
now I'm even.
To top off dinner (and suc^
cunnb to my wildest gimbltng
urges) I opted to blow all of 20
cents on a bi*ttermilk twist
Thrusting the two dinr>es into the
^o-^xn\^ bandit, I pressed the
buttermilk button. The button
stuck as 1 heard my dinr>es clunk
into the regialcr boK. So the
wheels of fortune had again
taken their toll.
At least at UCLA when you
play 4he machir>ei yo«» «f^ end
up with an egg salad sandwich
and a cup of lukewarm coffee
instead of losing your shift. So
move over Sands ^f>6 Riviera,
and let Don findley cut the
n4. SalQviftn
Graduate StiMfent/Engmeering
Shocked
I was shocked to see that in
this supposedly ''enlightened"
age, the Oa//y %r\jin would give
legitimacy to the lecherous ex-
ploitation of women susftested
by Martin Tedesco and Harold
Silbermann by printing their let-
ter. The hriMn%'^h9A taste was
uruierscored by the celebration
of International Wonr>en's Day
on Monday of that week.
Their proposal for a Bruin
lofdeilo would be laughable if
it were rnN for the fact that
capitalist society encourages
such attitudes in the nan^e of
Almighty Profit Messrs Tedesco
and Silbermann imply that wo-
oden are re^onsible for the
rapists roving this campus be-
cause they, don't have enough
sex with the so-called anxious
males. They would treat women
as m^f^ Chanel to be bought
and sold to satisfy the sexual
whims of the "superior" male.
This sort of degradation of
women is what .one would ex-
pect to find \t\ a concentration
camp; in capitalist society, it is
glorified as the "world's oldest
profession." Such attitudes are
typical products of an exploita-
tive class structure created 'by
the capitalists to justify oppres-
sion. For the ruling class, profit
always takes precedence over
human values like dignity. Ted-
esco ar>d Silbermann did rK>t
invent this; their propwal only
by society. True liber-
ation cannot occur until the
capitalist system which creates
such attitudes is ji^itrtiioyad.
Long Ih^e the Sacialist Rev-
olution!
represents the decadent morality
of a capitalist state to which they
happily subjugate themselves.
They should b? pitied,
Atrocities like the Bruin Bor-
dello will continue to be per-
petrated against wonrten as long
as this facist mentality is ac-
The unborn MHi
By David La Franca
(Editor's note: La france is a junior here majoring in Math
Computer Science.)
Mr Ralph Alvy. in his 3/9 Opinion, has brought to mind some
points which require clarification^
It seems he was not convinced that the unborn child is human.
Mr Alvy is human, and yet he. too. was once an unborn child.
When did he become human?
Centuries ago, men thought that humanity began at birth. But
with medical and scientific advances, this notion has been discarded.
The Supreme Court seems to have set the date, more or
arbitrarily, at six months after conception^
r>
/
y
OPINION
Mr. Alvy, as a philosophy mafor you should be trained to think
Jiffcally. So answer me: Why six months? Why r>ot seven, or five? Is
there any one day vyhen the fetus suddenly "beconr>es" human? Any
one day when it is a whole lot different than it was the day before?
Yes, there is such a day, and there is only or>e — the day of
corureption. Logically, we cannot pick any other day and say. "Today
fhts is human; yesterday it was not."
^. Mr Alvy, I do assert that the "fertilized Cff'* is a person. You
have given me no reason to thinji 6tf>erwise.
There was also the question of seli-defense. I have aUvays feh that
in order for a person to act in seH-defense there must be a willful
attack on that penofi. Unless some sort of malice is involved, the
threat to one's life dbes not fustify the taking of another's. Thus a
man who. as a last resort, kills an armed auailant, acts out of self-
dcier^e. But if the same man, stranded in the desert with only
enouf^h water for himself, kills his companion so that he may
survive, he has resorted to barbarianism.
There was another argument, in a letter to the editor, which
brought back the well-worn discussion of the dangers of illegal
abortion. Once again, let me point out that our concern should be
to protect the innocent unborn child, not thote who would murder
him.
It was also implied that outlawing abortion would not prevent it. I
would be surprised if it 6*6, seeing as murder and rape and larceny
have been illegal for a long time now. and yet they continue to exist
in society. But the r>ational statistics indicate that the 19Z3 Supreme
Court decision greatly increased the number of abortions per year. 1
must conclude that outlawing abortions would greatly reduce them.
True, no law has ever eliminated the crinte. but this is a poor excyM
for making ihe crime legal.
We cannot allow the killing of one person for the convenience of
another It cheapens the value of all human life. It marks the
beginning of a dangerous trend, which must be stopped soon« or
eke the feeble Grandparent may follow Baby.
An honest answer to the Gay question
Bv Mkhatl Shiffman
an h
a ^lidenr
Editor's
here )
I am a Cay Marxist actively involved in
bath the struggles for Cav Liberation and
Socialist Revolution These are separate
struggles as both liberals and some
degenerate Communists would have us
opinion"""
believe Capitalism r>ecessitates the ex-
istence and perpetuation of the patri-
archal nuclear family. It thrives on the
institutions of racism and sexism in order
to mystify the underlying class strufgln.
Cay oppfvnion is the result of patri-
arcfial sexism; therefore, it too is a
necessary characteristic of the capitalist
fflO^ of production
Cay liberation is impossible
Socialitl Revolution, and Socialist Rev-
olution is incoiTtplale without Cay Liber-
ation. Only throuirh the revolutionary
struggle for the liberation of all op-
by SoGiilist ilevolution.
of Cay nf>en and Itibiam be
eliminated.
UCLA, its Cay Pride Week, and the
resulting letters and cartoons in the
Brum, have not been a dissappointment
to nr>e. I expected the lowest possible
form of socio-political consciousness and
that's exactly what I've seen. It has been
trated through the "invite your
w to speak about your libera-
tion " speaker (Dr West) during Cay
Pride Week, West was one of the co-
ordinators of the late "Violence Center "
Moreover, it hai been reinforced by the
conspicuous abience of support for Cay
struggles by the numerous so-called
Communist organizations on ^mpus.
There are two opposing Communist
positions who. for the most part, rt-
mained at the sidelines when their
leadership was most necessary The
licist Youth Laaaiie4^Y44.
position seems to be tfie dosest to being
correct on the "Cay Question" amofifM
on-campus organizations, still hn %\^ff
•cant flavvs in m views. Unfortunately,
they don't fully realize the relation
between Cay opprtHion and the Marxist
of dan. Unforturnately. they
do r>ot see the need at this time for an
IruieperKlent Women's (or Cay) Move-
ment; but in relation to the Revolutior>-
ary Student Brigade (RSB) their position
is almost correct.
The RSB, being the student lackey
group for the Revolutionary Communist
Party (formerly the RU), has the moU
'sickening" position, worse than that of
most petty-bourgeoiv psychiatrists. For
them Cayness is some type of indiv-
idualistic reaaion to Bourgeois deca-
dence By violatir>g "every principle of a
Marxist Methodology, they are able to
derive the mott reactionary program in
the Left movement.
Back to my Cay Sisters arui Brothers.
On lune 27. 1969. the NY City Vice squad
raided the Stor>ewall Inn. a Cay Bar on
a norn^lly docile group of FafpBli ar>d
Dykes proceeded to box them biMe the
bar and pelt them with rocks and bottlea.
An uprising occupied tf>e next 2 nifhts,
rt>aking itself the first Militant Cay rebel-
lion titKe the da<itl>pmaiu of the Wo^
men's Movement. Two of the moft
influential organizations in the Cay
community have co-opted the spirit of
the Stonewall Riots by opportunteticatly
choosing to hold a march, which is
traditionally held on June 27. in con-
junction with the July 4th Bicentennial
celebration. It seems to be the second
line of the song ''We're ;u$t like every-
one else; we chooae to celebrate our
There are allematives for thcte actKi-
ties, but they necesMUte leadership from
the Cay community, in the interests of
the Cay community. From where will thii
leadership arise? Will the Cay Studawtt
Union take a position on the fofiwrtto*
of an ahernaHve event? Will we. ai Cay
•ludtnts. fight for llie puMfvatiow of the
SfllUT of the Stonewall RebelNofi?
-¥«i;-fhere are a bunch of ftft^a B**^
Dykes running arour>d, for it b necettary
that we pro^de leadenMjp mi radical
activity, in order to aid in the if Wei'
Ihe Bureaucratization of^ the domin^"tt
the politically oomdoyi Cai)r
"come out" en
Bureaucratic resiliency
By Waynr Frecdman
(fdffor^ Hole, freedman n a
mmior in potkical science herei
Once again tf^ Campus Park-^
ir^ Service has loined forces
with the UCPD in still anoibor
example of bureaucratic rK>n-
resiliancy
It was my mistortune to be
rear-etided two weeks ago by a
OPINION
feeble old man in a yellow
Volkswagen Last Friday I picked
up a nice, new, shiny bumper,
minus a parking sticker. Mon-
day morning I parked my car
facing head-buT in Lot Eight —
so the gate pass would show -^
-__ with my icafd key visibly dis-
played in tf>e wiruiow. Three
bours later I returned to firnf a
parking ticket signed by Officer
Hayney attached to my wir>d-
shield. It was flapping in the
breeze.
I told the cute blond behind
Window Three in^jhe Campus
Parking Service that this was
"... an upsetting turn of
.events
She smiled, and replied in
a moat understanding manner
"Co to Window Seven"
Well Window Seven was closed
until a pleasant lady opened it a
few minutes later. She took my
_ '^tirket along with it's mailing
envelope, and returned with a
mimeographed excuse form on
which she filled m the appro-
priate details.
"Please go to Window Three,"
^ ^he said.
So I stood in line at Window
Three again tnd drew the same.
blond. She handed me a parking
form. "Please fill this out//
"You mean - 1 §ct a new
Yes!"
Next to me an irate dorm
riiidant on crutches was arguing
that he was disabled. The cuie
blond behind hts counter was
igroaing with him t>ut I
can only give you a temporary
iNnni . . .^ So it goes.
I asked rT>y own cute IkMe
blond. "How many personal
tragedies do you deal with every
day?"
"About three-hundred and
fifty," she blinked.
."Do you like your job?" I
aiked.
The look she gave m rripunic
implied that I was crazy "f doo'i
even drive, ' she* said.
"Well how do you get to
work?"
"I bum."
"How can you stand all this
heartbreak?" I asked. -
"I'm heartleia/' she blinked
again "Heate see the cashier "
, "But I'm innocent,"1~prO'^
tested
**Soe the cashier, anyway."
Well the cashifr wasn't blond,
but she did charge me t¥vo dol-
lars for a new parkmg sticker.
"Piffle go to Window Three."
she said The cash register
tolled
I spent a tew more minutes in
lir>e for Window Three behind
an irate female. She — finally
Q^ii^ To ooTo rr youiTLutWY"
eM)ut>M TO ffSCA^C THum yo^ ^^^ ^
■■t«rr>'
stomped off. disgusted and mut-
tering to herself I stepped up to
the window . . "Uh-oh ...
look who you've got." said
blond number one to blond
number two, who was standing
opposite me on the other side
of the counter.
"Howdi.'* I greeted her She
disappeared for five minutes or
so and returned with a new gate
pas^and parking sticker "I only
-«^"-
need^ the lot sticker, not the gate
pats, so do I gef a dollar off?" I
asked
"No," was'~l*er solemn ref^ly
"What about an envelope for
me to send in Officer Hayney's
ticket?"
"Sorry," she smijed once
more and indicated that tt was
time for me to n%ake way for the
r^evt hard-luck case That did it
"But I'm paying $2.00 plus
•thirteen cents postage to exon-
erate myself from a $5.00 park-
ing ticket!"
She Ioo4ied at me as if she
understood but jdidVi't ^ care.
"That's the system." she said,
shuffling some cards . . .
"Yeah. I Ruess it is/' l
turned to my car ar\d symbol-
ically stuck the sticker on my
bumper I was tempted to do it
upside-down
This morning I parked my car
head-out again, with the rear
bumper aigamst a^jconcreteiyiff-
rier in the darkest corner of Lot
light
•luck. Officer Hayney.
ENTIRE STORE SALE
5DAYS0NLY
Every Artist , Every Album, Every label, Every Tape
I.
All Ip's 6.98 list just 3.88
All tapes $1.00 off
All double albums $1.00 off
• ,»
For UCLA students only. You must bring ad or show current student I.D.
Starts today, Thurs. April 8th through Sun. April 18th
Open till 11 pm tonight and till midnight Fri. & Sat.
We'll take your used Ip's for cash or trade (only in good condition)
Volume discounts on TDK, Maxell, and Memorex recording tape.
11910
and
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TODAY
Sproul Hall Library Conference Room
• 2 do Be on Time
^
4
H
C
TOPICS!
PAi iF/a Sigma
NATIONAL HONORARY SOCIETY
Welcomes AH Members to a
General Meeting:
Ackerman Union 2408
Thursday /April B 4 pm
^ Refreshments —
* Spring Intramural Teams
* Mardi Gras Booth ¥vith ALA
* Initiation Banquet
VM I1N,|( .< )V\|
um\nn tops in style
TTITIRY. SOME yt TITIKS AKK LIMITED'
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For casual living, try our
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Cap >lft'ved T-top with zip
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• BAN SBftNAI|DI<WO
•SANTA ANA
!<>»» MONDAY THIKH (.H SAT! HI>AY »:30 AM loZm PW
NDAY mm AM TO CHW PM ST MV "IN ABL.1 .
Library System .
♦r
(Cootinufd from Page if i^-^
a dupUciitc colkction, which
means that **we have very few
unique titles,** explained Hiram
Davis, coik^ librarian. The
new book shell, located in the'
rotunda, repreacfits the **faitett
material av^^Me." sa^ Davis,
adding that jlifS boolm sic ob-
tained directly ^frooi 9ome of
the Westwood bookstores and
do not fo through procesaiag.
He described the new
shelf, which contains 1,1
titks, as **very heavily used **
News Room
Opening off the rotunda, the
newhi room contains current
issues of various newspapers
from Europe and the United
States. Also located on the
second floor, the audio room
maintaijus a collection that
includes poetry readings, plays
and popular music. Although
the audio room "^offers sup-
port for some undergraduate
music programs,*" Davis de-
scribed us collectioD ai *^v€ry
limited •*
Posted at strategic locations,
the signs bear little arrows and
the legend "Physics Library"
Following the arrows around a
comer, up the- stairs, around
another comer, down a hali«
up more stairs, down a hall
and through # door, _m__
knowTedge seeker eventually
will discover the Physics
Library in the east wing of
Powell Library.
"These arc temporary quar-
ters," explained Wally Pegram,
head of the Physics Library
"•When we move back to
ILinaey Hal) we will have ex-
panded quarters."
Growinf denMOid
Directed toward ^ upper-divi-
sion and graduate students, the
library is experiencing a- grow-
ing demand from undergradu-
ates in the sciences, said
Pegram "We find the library
quite adequate People who
use It say it*s a great httle
disciphncft of the physics field **
Also head of the Chenustry
Library, Pegram feels that the
library, situated in Young Hall,,
will require additional space in
the ^fmr future." tie described
the library as *^iyell-used and
crowded,** adding that *'a
crowded library tends to be-
come noisy.** They are plan-
ning now for additions to in-
corporste quiet areas.
in RiNMRi J90
Powell Library, the Education
and Psychology Library serves
National 7echmcal Informa-
uon Service, said Mathies. S)w
described this collection at
unique to the campus, as is
their Journal Supplement Ab-
stract Servioe £rom the Am-
erican PsydMlsficsl Aiaocia-
t*on.
Former feologist John Hill
is band a( the Gaoiegy-Gco-
physics Library m the Geo-
logy Building. Htt selection of
Caitfomia guidebooks are
"^richer heavily used** by
visitors and feologisu m
Southern California. Hill
grinned, turned in hit swivel
the Graduate School of Educa-
tion^ HK^Oepairt menu of Psy-
chology and Kinesiology and
the Program of English as a
Second Langunfe, explained
Lorraine Mathies, head of the
library The library is **always
expanding,** she said, since
they have to *^keep up with the
growth of publication. We
can*t stop or be sutic, and it>
very expensive in terms of
buying materiar."
As a depository for docu-
ments in ERIC (Educational
Resources Information Cen-
ter), the bbrary receives re-
ports of research in the sodsl
and behavioral sciences which
are distributed throughout the
ALPHA EPSILON PI
BAND PARTY
Friday, April 9, 9pm - 1am
Sunset Canyon Rec. Center - Vista Room
ADMISSION FREE
BE THERE!
chair to his desk, and selected
^•^ ^^^^^^^^Mw^mt uBK aiiay oi
books. **You can grab one and
take off It makes a good
orienution,** Hill commemed,
gestunng with the book.
The t>tifk of the Geology
Library's acquisitions are seri-
als, which Hill described aa
three umes as iroportsat as
ordinary monoj^phs or
books: Presently, t&y Itfe "*just
about filled to capacity with no
"Plsse ^o expdnd,- Hill said.
"Weve reached a nasiy tMe
— iMve you heard those words
before?* Ik asked, laughing.
The Geology Library a also
responsible for phyaacal geo-
graphy, "so people from
Bunche Hail troop all the way
down here. And if they don*t
find what they're looking for,
they're mighty frustrated and
disappointed,** Hill comment-
ed, adding, **So we have a
pretty good physical geography
section.** Books on paleontol-
ogy and lU subfield, paleo-
geology, are collected by the
library as wdL
Glancing down at thetfssii-
pus from the heights c/ the
eighth floor of Boeher Hall,
Rosnlee Wright, hand of the
Engineering and MatheoHtiGsl
Sciences Library, descnbed her
collection as 7^mpus-wide **
Serving the seven departments
of the School of Engineenng
and Appbed Sciences, fJbe
mathematics department, me^
teorology and astronomy,
Wnght buys in *Nery bread
fields.
(Contimied cm Page 1^
E.B. Frank^l, M.D. M#dical Group
Hair Transplantation
Acne-Complexion
Plastic Surgery
Dermatology
Allergy
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531-7420
Hands, Hands, Hands
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Beverly Hills
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27i 1121
THE WAY WE WERE (PO)
Mm«. - M. ppsfi 4:00
Sat. - Swffi. MM! 13:30
Brentwood I
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tat 26tK St i '
Santo Monico '
829 3366 829 3367
iUQCYiAOY
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477 0988
AU THE PRESIDENT'S MEN
13.30. 3:00, St JO. 3:00. 10:30
fH & S«t.
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Century
Plaza I
2040 Ave of Sto
553429)
THE RIVER NIGER
Odtfy 3, 4, 4, t, 10
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3040 Ave oi Star
553 4291
FAMRYPIOT
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W.C PiaOS A ME — PG
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396 4215
Adult SI 50
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tot AHl !• ~ W^iM'» P^pp«/I
Mm. A^rif It — !•»«•»• /CKincti
1«M. Ap^ 11 — BvMlki
Hollywood
Pocifjc
•1 1
ROMN AND MARUN
0(1% 13:30. 3:30. 4:30. 4:30.
4:30, 10:30
PfiJSmt 13:1S
ly Jmb4i RIcluirdsoii
The preti nedia is having an
orfftim over AM titt Presidenfi
Mea. The media is rc-living its
days of giory. phasing crooked
pcottdents and digging out the
bigptt story of the century.
On TV news there are films of
George McGovern and the real
Woodward and Bernstein go-
ing to premieres of the movie.
So let*s remind the press for
the ziUionth time that XV) the
press did not *'crack the Water-
gate caaer (2) Woo impwi ami
Bernstein*s articles were not
picked up by newspapers out-
side Washington DC^ and (3)
Wpodward and Bernstein*s ar-
ticles became significant Qnl>
after the Senate Watergate
heariqgiii when everyone looked
-^ock and said, "Oh look, they
were right after all.**
With that chore out* of the-
way. we Mn ulk about the*
movie, which tsn*t had con-
sidering the most dramatic
action is typing.
Carl Bernstein started in
journalism as a copy boy at
^ashmj(txm Star when
was 16. Bob Woodward came
to the Washington Post green
out of Yale. Neither was
exactly the cream of the Wash«-^^
ington press corps when they
stumbled onto Watergate.
Woodward and Bernstein
are celebrated by the movie as
two dogfaced reporters who
were persistent enough to
crack their story, despite the
flak and disbelief of their
editors.
Woodward and Bernstein
did work hard They pursued
linlikely leads, pushed their
way through doors, and gen-
erally did wkot^lew reporters
have the sumina to do: dig.
But the movie*s biggest flaw
is -the -covering up" of Wood-
ward and Bernstein*s misukes.
When an FBI source surted
wavering on them, the real
Woodward and Bernstein went
to the man*s boos and txpmmi
him as an **anonymous source**
— ^ clearly unethical. When
Woo#«Mi. and Bernstein
President's Men': Watergate under ttie bridge
ardson named H R Haldeman as one ward and R^rn«t^»MV •*. r-n .. <-:_^ :. ^^
named H.R Haldeman as one
of thft five men controlling a
secret *fdirty-tricks^ fund, tfeg
movie oMkos the mistake the
fault of their sources. Sup-
poiodly, the sources wavered
hocgMic Haldeman was such a
powerful nian.
t» 4act, Woodward and
ward and Bernsteia*s attempt
iO get pnvikied jnnd jury
Hitimony The two tried to get
•oaie jury members to talk
The next thing tiKy knew, the
two reporter! got hauled be-
fore Judge Sirica and chewed
within an inch of their ethical
lives.
fail to find it.
-^ Jite movie uaed the audi-
ence*s hindsight unfairly We
all know that Nixon and his
men resigned and that Wood-
ward and Bcm4tein*s stones
were eventually vindicated. The
film portrays the Post*% Editors
dummies who believed the
conung unraveled.
H you do not know l^wmr
Watergate tnvm, bone up be-
fore you go to the movie The
film fails to tell the viewer who
Donald Segretti is or the r'^)^
of Howard Hunt It drops
names endlessly without ex-
plaimng who*s who.
background
oi tie newt-
room. For iiieer nostalgia, llMr>
movie cannot be missod, which
explains why the press and
politicuins are flocking to am
It.
But seen purely as a movie
— a thriller at that — it is
entertaining but not very sut-
penseful Scenes of Redford
^ti6 Hoffman dashing acroM
the newsroQm appear a httle
phoney as if director Alan J.
Pakuia got tired of all his
action shots centering on type-
writers
But the movie really holds a
person to his seat - extra-
ordinary ^inoe the dialogue is
the ojnly thing thot develops
the plot The lack of scenes
showing the President's Men
takes away from potential sus-
pense We only hear about the
President's Men, we never sec
them. Shakespeare can build a
suspenseful drama without c|ver
showing the principle char-
acters, but Pakuia cannot
Maybe the saipense is des-
Bemttein jumped the gun
the HaldenMn story (they
turned out to be right, but that
came later). T'he two reporters
played a con game, telling
sources that they just wanted
^^confirmation** on it — a
rather risky method.
The movie completely de-
letes any mention of Wood-
Because the movie brushes
over Woodward and Bern-
stein*s **finer** moments, the
value of their experience is
lost They are two guys who
got the story in spite <^ them-
selves. The Watergate cor-
ruption was so massive, 4od
growing so larfe, thot not even
two bumbhog reporters could
Nixon people and doubted
their feporters. Alter all, here
were two punk writers out on
a crazy story, botching their
way to glory Who should
believe them? Again, the
Watergate story was so in-
credibly massive that even the
disbebef of newspaper editors
couldy not prevent it from
But for the advanced Water-
gate buff, AU tbe rfiiidwl'i
Mas is a delight The movie
opens with Nixon's helicopter
kiading at the capitol building,
aod Nixon walkiag onto the
floor of Congress. Shots oi
televisions showing vintage
sceaes of Jerty Ford nomina-
ting Nixon in Muimi fill the
ending anyway.
Robert Redford is effective:
the pOMMloJuag efforu to make
him a jgood actor paid off.
Dustin Hoffman is actually
weaker than Redford, but this
is because he was given less to
do. The strongest character is
Jason Robards as Wm Bradlee,
screaming and swearing like a
classic grouchy editor. But the
best performance is given by
Richard Nixon himself, with
his huge faoe and sweaty brow,
lying his way to an Oscar
nomination
It doesn't radically alter tkt
of the Americoa news-
but Al Hm Prriidmt*s
IS delightful and valuable
recent nnetajgis. You remember
tboee food oM days: Senate
committees* ooreating testi-
momas, new
vealed daily and kichard M.
Nixon sneaking out the White
House door into historical
ignominy. ~~Z-
Ah, Water^te. where is
stiagf?
thy
Style and Restraint
By Rkbard Coats
For nearly 50 years, Alfred Hitchcock has terrorized audiences
with his unique ulent and imagination for killing people.
In Tom Curtain (1966) a man has his head stuffed in a gas
oven In Saboteur (1942) an enemy agent is dropped from the
Sutue of Liberty. In North by Northwest ( 1959) another villain
falb from Mount Rushmore. And. of cooiie, there is the lady
who gets carved up while uking a shower in Psycho (I960)
Yet while Hitchcock is a master of terror and suspense, his
creations lack the impassioned torment of an Edgar Allen Poe.
To him. Psycho was a "fun** picture, and he views all his
brilliantly executed horrors with the cool deuchment of a retired
Enghsli gentleman *
No other Hitchcock film is more dominated with his personal
brand of whimsical drollery than his latest, FaMly Plot (at the
Plm Century Plaza).
Controlled neither by^traditional^ eomedy nor suspense, FaaRy
Plot is vintage Hitchcock: done is a playful, tongue-in-cheek style
that has afed to distinction There is little intense emotional
impact in Faaly Plot, and for this reason sook may find it a bit
of a falhng off for Hitchcock. Nonetholaas the story is enfaging
and told with a rare clarity and precision that results in a most
enjoyable film
tbe slory ooMems a peeudo-psychic (Barbara Harris) who
■lays pnvate invaai^tor with her cab-dnver boy friend (Bruce
Dem) But this avem§e couple is up ^maet a not-so-average
couple of high cUss kiioippni in Kartn Black and William
Devanc What one pair knows the oHwr doeea*t. Their parallel
Stories ooesnoaoUy bump mto encb other and finally collide in the
end.
Tbe JKlton w carried by Hitchcock's tried method of suTliirtoii
'•■^■■'^ ^^ i^^lTTKnPHWBTWcrvthing I hus we are rriiM^
eyualh an-ious for the dOipBr Ibnt baunu Devane and Harris as
in Hitchcock's Tamily Plot'
for the food fortune awaiting Devane and BhK:k Hitchcock
plays off the irony of the fundamental misundeffilanding between
the couples and thereby maintains an unusual tension throughout
the film.
Hitchcock bos ahways cared more for the visual design of his
film's than for the acting, so the perforiaofleas ol the four
principles in Faaily Plot are more nicely uniform than they ore
individually ouuunding. Harris and Dtvumt seem to e^joy their
roles a httle more than the bigger name ston Hick oad Dem.
but the major concern for the acting is to convey the storv. and
this they all do well.
Ernest Lehman's script moves along quickly and dearly,
though it cootnian oae of the few sore poials o# tbe
The dialogue between tbe couples about what wtfl
the Ughu go oiit comes acroas as a ttibad aii^mpt to updau an
isstitinRy oW fashioiwd story.
Not supriainify, tbe real quahty of tbe film is fotnid in tbe
classic toMcbos 9i Hitcbcock's filnMBOking. Tbe priies
often, as wben a bislMp is abooiaid with
•olgm^ religious cereflMMS, wlwn Dem and Harris roB down a
moonum road in burlsetiood fear, or wImo Dem tSMks through
And. as always, Httrhcock creases an coding seeae of
interest.
Faaly Plot may weU be Hitckeock's OMOt lights
several years. It doesn't have the intsoaif; oC Tile Hits, tbe
punch d Psycbo, or even the creepiness of Frevy. But it does
have style, Hitchdocfc has proven here that be can make a wM
and 4musing film with as OMich ciboracier and finiab as a
terrilying thriller.
pieces ol th- maca^*'^'' but ^c*s s»'f' hav.ig fun making
riuartoimng
,.'.. IV- 1. ..-i. -.U-
■ - - .-r
T"
Ji
Ja to«»'»»"<'« ^» ♦• iff
Los Fell:
Hoily«vOOd
NC 4 2169
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THISTOtY Of AOai
A^NNS WESTWOOD I
ursncK
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Wad Apr 14 . 400 ilMM/ShMt 1b»
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272 8239
Plaza
w«stwood v*Moo«
477 00t7
479 9077
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TAXI
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Regent
w^-.twood Vti. »^,
ONi PliW OVH THi
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UA Cinema v_L_
Center I wi««^rf4*-^bmy
4/4 4I'>4 , '
BARRY LYNDON
,. I. 2:1S, S:90, i:45
UA Cinema ^"^■f*» a^^^ winner f^
Vwenter II the man who skied
''" '''''^'' 2, 3:40, 5:20, 7:00.. 1:40. 10:20
4 '4 4 16^
UA Cinema
Center III king of hearts
Westwood
474 3683
t. 4^ 4, %, 10
UA Cinema
nter IV_
SCMT OP A IMOMAN
1088<? Well worth Ave
Weitv ood
474 4)98
X 4, 4, t, f 0
We St wood ™* ADVENTURE OF
10887 L.ndbrook SHERLOCK HOLMES'
west^vood SMARTBI MOTHER
477 0575
«» ~»—
VAGABOND i couip go on singing
7bQ9 Wilthir*
3t7-3171
(1t43)
pint ••n* Devk
JEZEBEL (1930)
A^liMIU
'*m.'^^:?^M:
Village
96) Broxton
Wc«itwood
478 0576
THE DUTCHESS AND THE
DIRTWATER FOX.
2, 4, 4, 4, 10
WHIZ KIDS
HAMMER HEAD
FEGAUSUS
Hm Imif
DANCE Confest
SUNDAY
• SIOO cosh
Winners COrDpete
•n the ^ooU
S300 cosh
Kentucky Fried
Theat'^e
10303 w P,co Bivd "BEATING A DEAD HORSE
556 2663
»He bMt of KFT't
ioftt 5 fMir«
^« A Set • 00 A 10 00
April 14-1S
SIADE
April 19-22
SAVOY BROWN
«S<6-3?00
CONTINUED
r*^
Library . . .
I
i
fron Pifc 121
The Techfucal Reports
aucroform. if a ipecuU collection of reports
4pttr on contract, uitiaiJy for the United States
Government. Wright exptained This tpaetal
coikctian covers many technicai fieUls. social
iMiioat, physical sciences and life scieooes and
' conuins 600,000 reporu, said Wright
The Physics Library, Chemistry Library.
Geology-Geophysics Library and Engineenng
and Math Sciences Library are grouped into
the Physical Sciences and Technology Li-
braries, coordinated by Alan Benenfeld Ad-
ministratively, this arrangement is umque in the
UCLA system
Benenfeld plans to ex-
amine the different
policies in each library
and ^'make it less con-
fusing for users.** In an
era of tiglitening bud-
gets, there is concern
about duplication, he
"commented. **We also
need to study how the
collections address the
teaching and research
needs of the campus.**
Limited capacky
Entering a steady
state« the four Hbraries
arc **at the limit of
physical capacity,** Ben-
nenfeld said, adding, ''ia
this steady state,, li-
braries will move to-
ward becoming more of
a working collection
father than an archival-
working combtaad ool-
lection."
The arrow on the tign on Bundle Hall points
nio wn a tn^t oT slairs: AFTfie end c^a^wfiie^
waUcd hall, the UCLA Map Library's doors
sute unequivocally in black letters: CLOSED.
Opening at 10 am, the Map Library is the
*1af|pest map library west of the Mississippi,"
said Itbrahan Carlos Hagen, toating his long
hair away from his face. Over 300,000 maps, mm
well as atiaaes and aeriel photographs, reside in
the library.
Within the cartographic information center
are 13 collections, said Hagen "Most obvious
are the flat maps.** travel giiidrt, however, are
ua^^ ^tremendously in the spring when students
are preparing vacations to Europe," Hagen
commeiitad.
Boat-owners, planning trips to Alaska or
4lawaii, utilize. MHy^igation/ maps. ""And a
ibrir|eoplc from bouny and life sciences
plan tnps to Central American or New 2^-
land,** Hagen added. Other mrri iarlMJi
motion picture studios. **From Walt Ouney
and Twentieth Century Studios to the sinaiieat
studioft. they come kmc,'* Hafen decland.
Big fnkkm
Restricted material is alto hamai in the Map
Library Acquisition of nmyi can represent a
**big problem,** siad Hagen, especially when
countries experience poli^cal problems. Chile,,
for example, has suspended completely
Chile, for example, ban suspended compktely
tlic MJg oi mnya. H4gen
pradiclod that the oc-
currence **wiU be hap-
pening more frequently
in other countries'* be-
cause of guerillas, whose
basic need is knowledge
of the terrain.
Hagen held up a
document from Mar
laysia, commenting, **|
have to be directly re-
sponsible and sign for
some of these OMipa.**
The document rend, **I
undertake to keep the
maps/air photos pur-
chiied by mc under
lock and key and not to
make them arrriMbk to
unauthorized persons."*
The restricted mate-
rail, including maps
from **all over the
world,** muft go
through tfa^ United
States Embassy to
guarantee that the material will not be used for
to get the map.** Hagen said. When maps of
foreign countriet need to be discarded, he must
shred them rather than recycle the maps. **So
with the political situation in the world,^
Hagen summarized, ^^acquisition of maptt
becomes more difficult. You have to plend with
the countries and go through all the red tape."
Almost every week, writers request help from
the Map Library to •*give authority to their
stories,** said Hagen. An author working <m m
mystery story needed to see a , map with the
border between Switzerland and France. An-
other writer wanted to iiieiniiL an island.
**Because we have such a lar^ iimguc col-
fCantiMMdonFagelT)
riZZAai
;i«*.
<y
1076 GAYLEY • WESTWOOD
^478-5117
Whole wheat or white pizzas
Salads Submarine sandwiches
Beer and wine now available to
compliment your meal
Open for lunch and dinner ik
ENGINEERS
I
j Buy any medium or large pizza and get a
I pitcher of beer or a half liter of wine
jfor 99C
' Present this coupqn
Offer Expires April 15 " J
I
. I
•— — —————— ———__«._i
ybrilX slQcic fyii
K ■irtniiiifcomPageU) ._
lectK^a,- Hagen explained, "^eop^
from all over Califorma come here
We're the main resource center for
Scripps* Institute of Ckeanography -
He gnnned, adding ''And we fet the
moat exotic requests! We can always fulfill
the request - thnc*s what annues people **
Rismg from his dMir, Hagen showed off
iHi Mnqr. Aa area with diafting ubles, a
projector, a calculator and tracing paper
encourages people to use the maps in the
library rather than take them home Book""
cases reaching up to the ceiling and down
the length of the room are crammed with
files contaimng mnpe from aties all over the
world. Hagen pulled out a map from a
German city that drafters "must have spent
hours on.** He pointed to the tiny windows
and doors of the buildings, scaled to the
exact size and etched in delicate colors
Over the bndgc and through the Sculpture
Garden,, the Art Library sits aloofly at the
top of wide, white ilairs Joyce Ludmer
explained that two separate rooms ar^
connected to the library The Elmer Belt
Library is a spccml colleaion of rare books
that rail haxe a bearing on Leonardo da
Vina and Resaiiiappi thinking,*^ she said
Gesturing to the massive furniture and
ornate antiques in the room, Ludmer smikd,
commenting, *'It is unsual, isn*t itT*
The other room is the Index of Chnstian
•Art, which is an iconographical tool com-
piled by Princeton The Art Library is one
of five hbraries with a copy of this tool. The
room is filled with grey filing cabinets
containing cards with little reproductions.
The cards conuin "anything in the art media
~ gbss, ivory', >etc. so that if you are ^
doiag a study where wouU like to see, they
have compiled this mammoth collection,*:
Lhdmer exphdned. **The cards lead you to
books which have larger illustrations **
Other tools in the Art Library include a
dipping file ahd a one-artist file %vitn art
exhibit catalogs. Some ''very special items,**
such as original illustrations and lithograph.s.
are raged *The collection ts mostly reicmich
and non-ctrculating, so it*s available to
everyone,** said Ludmer.
A new policy of exhibits^ has been initi-
ated, with art historical exhibits and student
art exhibits on display In the spring.
Ludmer plans to show Yugoiiftmn graphics
and icons •- r
The eighth largest college and university
business library in the United Sutes. the
Graduau School of Mam^MngnHLibrafy. it
lieadcd by a librarian who keeps textbooks
on roerve for studenu beanMe ilK **jnst
doesn*t see how a kid can come to school
and buy four 29-doltar books plus eat. live
and buy some clothes If we have to give up
something else to fit the textbooks into our
hllftfl -MM- ^'^ -■ ** 1
Charlotte Georgi singled out the library's
computing and information science col-
lecuon. their investment and finance col-
lection and their accounting collections as
"very good ** Their best collection, however
IS invoked with the schooTs Manarmcnt in
the Aru program, which teaches managc-
nient of museums, dance coinpanies. orchc^-
traa and other such groups, '^e'vc publish-
ed four nmer bibliographies in that field
which arc much in demand UCLA surtcd
the MUnnitment m the Arts Program," she
said
Numerous people use financuil informa-
tion from the GSM library, commented
Georgi -They have money, and they want to
imfm a, sa they read up on these things **
(Continued on Page 18)
.loor A eljna^niii'wiii uafary. \gia
of tp«elal Coll#e«iofis prolvcts rara
Campus Events Film Commission of the
Student Legislative Council Presents:
Ackerman Grand
Ballr
§ IS
MORF BFST
FILM FISr«^
THAN AN"
OIHFR
MOVtI.
i*,irr»-
'<tlW flillrfM ^Ut^
i: :' ^.1' * ,i.i; ill :, '.•nt\ Ii.
fffir
rnfmi I'M lur»»*
rskv Hrinhi VMa Htm
I.
Friday, April 9
CLUB GUIDE COmiNUED
r
April 6 - April 1 1
JOHNNY HAMMOND
Li^thons^
^"^ JO PIER AVE. ■
HERMOSA BEACH INFO TEL 372 6911
1
an PiM ii?i .
Imj Iuui
Ki«r
«•! I I Aits MAMNMt
TROUBADOUR *-^:'
•'Ml' I S«nt« M«nirtt^»lyd
- — '
AN PONe'S
479-mn
l^nch dinn#c of«*r th««f r4 •ncor««
f notic cockto*! ¥with Conton»ft« Cuttmi
^OR THOSE WHO APRRtClATE OUAiar
V;( ^h 'WOODBIVD 4 b • SOurn Of WHSHHIf
'•»•%
soMBAY ROOM RAMADA INN
^MitK t AwNk^MM hmn
• ••ti««*ia<>t* ^,
-tt«» 1
'*« • «•!«»» •
.HAN'S GARDEN Cm.fn«M«.»dM«od«rmCu.*«n«l
lOaSS bn^i»«ii Br W«twd. 90034 iKc«ll«r«t CK«*WM Hmd. %—r mnd W«ff««|
4yf-77aS^4y»»-y7»S Stm fwHitnf mt W«twd C«ftt«f §mnk ml kmm*
r
DHABA INDIA FOOD GARDEN DINING
«' A Win* P9it,»i tatmtmtt f«*«'i«i;
Fairfax Yugoslavian Restaurant
Oriftwl Katm
n Dmly •■c«pt M«w^«y 4pm t« IOp«*«
i%tn4mf% A Hmttdmy^ Ipm *m »Opm
IGYPSrS INDIAN RESTAURANT
JUNIORS
THf aOLLS aOVCE Of OfLICAl
47S-S771
Le foyer De France lunth S2 oo, $2 25 12 50
» 0t5S Lm^bromk 0, Otnnmr $3 75. %4 25 S5 25
4y4.0»4S Mr W ¥,llm^
ielVtitSivUs
N«a - Td 47S-S223
RESTAL'RANT MIFlNb
iUI7 »MM«WNW« WtA
(Am«M I^ t , •• JBIII ■!! It iHMk A
OiO VENICi NOOOUE CO.
>>»v* % WB *m 7 m pm
fm 4»iNWft Uim St «S
Wflo m^ LA 4y4.»34S
LPOTPOUKRI
Th« lnl*rr)afK>n«t f^^^taurant
imarnai tonal fHitfarM C«n«af
ttlf
477.46f7 i0»>l3a4
tiff
Soup n Svch
lOMO W«y^im« aL
477-fdf5
1^ *•■*
EAT OUT TONIGHT!!!
f.. -^ J ' ■ -i.
r -■>.
h>ffk:i AL t/nOrtiP^NOTicEs Library system^
f
3
u
3
MCrCOtOCUMC ^^ ' ' r—*-^.
12. IfTf (an# vitli •!
ft»ap«ili^iiit:J0lo11:
Mi# FfMvy (H»IMf •■ctp^«<). M«fi-pf«M:r«pl(on drufs will ^
•I. LOCATIOM: ^Mln ^mMI^m FliM AM Mattm I1.W.
10 tpiHpDfK toy
jCoti— f< frMB Pafe 17)
Vahouf documentf, teoti, correvf;^-
Are —intainrd
in the library in a coBection on Crhtt Toch
aad Efidi Z«h1, two AuHiiin enigre comh
munity cofnpoten. Fry iHMBMlai. CoS-
lidMai of Yiddish theatber iMMia (Jotepk
Rumshintky collection) and folk MMa aiid
of the British islet are alt» MMHi he
I
C^catii/e Ql//titing QAOups
Advanced: Tuesdays, 4-6 PM, starting Apr. 13
Beginning: Wednesdays, 3-5 PM, startirig Apr. 14
Limited opmings for thoae intcrealed in sharing
ongoing work or developing a personal voice.
Adoamce signups required.
5 Gain confidence, increase expressiveness in our
Speech Q^fo/tfcsliop : withmkotape
TTiursdays, 2-4 PM, 6 meetings, starting Apr. 15
Register in person at
Writing & Speech Div, / Learnt ng Skills Center
3235 Murphy Hall Phone : 825 - 8454
A frcr tervice of Student and Campus Affairs for
all rrji^larlv mrollfd students.
S
I
s
s
Music of American film and TV
such AS Alex ^k>rth, Alfred Newman,
Harry Lubin, Edward Ward and Henry
Mancini includes iteoM such as Mancini*s
manuscript for the *Pink Panther*, said Fry.
Located in 1102 Schoenberg Hail, the
UCLA Music Library houses complete
works of composers, periodicals, scopes, disc
and tape recordings and microforms of
music manuscripts and early prints, ac-
cording to the head of the bbrary. Stephaa
Fry. Special music collections include music
manuscnpts and documents of contemporary
composers, including Fannie Charles Dillion,
Rudolf Fnml, Cohn M^hec, Mary Carr
Moore, Gardner Read and Eugene Zador.
Fry said. .
The newest library on ;tjM campna, tha
Architectivre Library. , began a* an office
collection Located logically enough in the
Architecture Buildmg. the Architecture Library
is headed by John Greene. **We*in not noom t«
be genenO,** he declared. ''SeircrnI
which are now in the prnoaM of hci _
hy a committee will decide which* way we go.*^
One collection, the Library al AfChimctun
and Alhed Artt ai Los Angeles, rn mains hooka
that are **of hiaiohcal nature now. bnl wem
contemporary when bought,** Greene coas*
aented. The i oitictinn was started in the 19Vs
by the Allied Arcfutecu Aaaoaiation o( Los
this group as *Very influential in
Che Los Anfcles area at the time,** Gsnaw said
that the asodation was involved, for example,
in the design of the Hollywood Bowl. The
collection was given to the School of Architec-
ture and Urban Planning at UCLA in 1976 and
cosiiiCa of architecture and urban planmng
with **heavy emphasis'* on southern Cahfomia.
A famiUar slogan to the head oi the Law
Library, Frederick Smith, is that *^he library is
(Continued from Page 19)
Campus events
~lkl Tar, Mails ivailaMt in Karcfchoff
101. lor a om-69i trip on cross-country
skis. 0 4S am, April 10 moot m front ot
Ackarman. woit tntnnct Frtt
^fMf aiy, will foaturs tn tttmic cook-
iat workship noof^-Z gm. today, Acksrman
2400. a voQttarian cooking workship 1
pm today Ackorman 36|4. Itw film IM tv
noon. -today.
1
Ackerman 3617 and
drams aod cooiody on m ispic of
aooo. AprM 12. Sculptun Bardtn
fiOluring Grotk dmotr sad
0-a pm. April 11. imomatidnal Stuiml
•f ia>
loiait
Dock. 2
lobby
trror in socrttary's phone RUiiaor oo
invitation Cornet mrnibir is 4744113 not
-T«a.
•n tht ctntral campus, i
Fioo Arts arto and tbt Obsorvotiiw
pm. today, moot w
13
'■i*Hi'
^u-M.", ,-^
* . .
^i
Conig visit our new A16 Stcxre
in West Los Angeles CQpene^MarCli
20) and well give you a free gift!
Convenient ioGatiori: H161 W. Rco at Sepulveda
(easy ac(3ess from both San Diego and Santa
Monica freeways] ). Phone (213) 473-4574.
Come see our complete stock of backpack-
ing, camping and climbing equipment by some
of the finest names in the field, like Kelty; Lowa,
Snow Lion, Vasque, Sierra Design, Chouinard, •
Trailwise and many others. And of course, our
-own A16 Tfents, Backpacks, Sleeping Bags and
^as. Bring this coupon in
for your free gift.
you can't come,
^^^W ^^ '^B^. sendafriendi
tsr tofOiOR atudonts Mid
Nitofmal
vistors 10 001-
intof motion and doadtinos
so oxtramurai tooiioa tor o^sduali sbi-
dants and MaHdoclaiali ara avadiili io
tha Faiiowships and Assistanliila losaoo.
Murpiiy 1221
— CaoHMMr frmatm. |oin OECA aa a
OBOoymor invaatioatof Visit if^orcktwff 311
dr coll S25-2t20 Voluntairs ara also
noodMl for tnvironmontol and food pro-
iocls
Tait Nws. is tsbbn ^
from Nilpoolad slodooli wlio
wont to work with SLC arid ttw administra-
tion on studant financial aid pn
no availoMa m
call aaoa ^Msftoo at
vs use 730 MR.
tomorrow Paoloy Pavilion Fraa for UCLA
studonts witn ID, faculty froa mm AlMolic
Pnvijady card^ alliors g^
'— 4hhi asMi MhbhSi Pris'''S- ^'M te
takmg appHosaona for mtoraalad dorm,
sorority, fratomity. Mornod itodim Hooo-
iNI ofid Co-op rooliMai. lolMlid slo-
doMB must atiaod ao ariowimoii oiaotioa
7 poi. tonigm Ooaa Qomma SS2 HMoard. 7
m Apnt 13. Tkota Xi. fil aoyHy or 7 poi.
April 12 RiaOor Library For lofortwoaow
coll 82M730
•■IH loard. appicationa ara availoMo
oaaAyi la. ilyphy 2224. aoBSpaai aaa
aa wan as woman
airoa oioiiili biko rida from LA to Oragon
and tfwn aoot to VirQimo is now Moq
oroowiiod Cooaofit iasn at
to
wf)id) ara
toka
11
Aworanaaa offioa. Ki
io looHr
m rrwoci
M P»|C If)
,. :v
lilt
Outfitters
bP€ClAL
^TUDfNTRATC^.
Hm L.A.'S FUNNIEST
MUnCAL HIT
£3 . MDn. ami Thurt. at aJO
^^ Sun. 015:30 a a 30
*^ frt,mB:30
^^ * ait. 01 7;ao a io is
P^oaam Siudom Momif ication Ca»T»
•t Lot PalwioB aoK Offic*
•WE MAY ALL REX)ICE .p©««
wit. ctiarm and plvnty o4 tonfM* m c
..A <ltliciou« bit of
nth
L.A. r$«nm
4EET
Tbr Now Lm PWam
466>479a
Librarp . y',—
K omisiurd fr«M Page la)
the laboratoiT for the law smdem** Students
aad faculty, he explained, must cbn&ult a larft
succwainn of volume!^ for « brief time for legal
vaaaaidi. Ver> little "subsiitutabihty** is al-
lakred Smith added ''You have to have a
specific case NoctMng else will do We have a
tremendotis pressure to fet things back on the
shelf, keep track of them and keep the readina
The law library, according to Smith, is
-heavily used by outside users - He feels that
the feneral laymaa u demonstrating an in-
creased interest i in law.
bMMc 4omn
The double doors announce: ATTENTION:
The English Reading Room is for the use of
upper division undergraduate students and
graduate studenu ta the English Department
ONLY
la addition to a non-circulating collection,
explained librarian Kitchy Williams, the Read-
ing Room contains a listening room. with
phonographs and Upe recorders. Next to a
poster of beaming Shirley Temple, the graduate
students room includes an opaque projector
and typewnter.
Campus events
■•»,..< . ■
._ -The Reading Room houses diaoeflBliaiu aod^
•criAia. with a **heavilv-yaar* reference aiaa.
The lighter side of literature., however, is
repreKrited by a tahk with Mad aMiazines
scattered on it Tilly's my coolnbution,- said
Williams
Brian informal ioa
Featured in the Momedicai Library m the
Center for Health Sciences aar attain In
formation Service, wllh current bulletins and
conference reporu on nniromfnrc topics; a
Rare Book Room, and a Special Materials
Room housing pnnts, portraits, slides and
museum objects. '
Louise Darteng, head of the library, said that
she receives "a lot of student complaints
People from the upper campus come down, here
for reasons unknown to me and make the
library over-crowded.**
The Bio-medical Library also runs an unol-
fioal **Oali«i Bureau -^ Darling admitted that^
We get complaints" from male medical
students that "these girls are running around T
According to the rumors that she has heard,
female students pester the male medical sSih
dents with questions
• ' •
(C ontimaed from Page IS)
pf osROios aoo onwY sioolis wni
•vaiiolli Noor w oil campus libraries
Priz.es tota< ovfr S800 doodltne to sutMnit
bit)iiograptiies is tomorrow For mors
trttormation contoct Carol Wilson at 825-
3431
formally atfvaoeod to cooiiiaBy for ass-
toral dogrMS and rogitlorod Apphcaaoo
may be submittod ft any time during itte
year firaols of a maximum S750 are moio
in January and July Forms »rt m the
Resoarcli Committee m the Academic
Senag Eiecutive Office Murphy 3125
trained interns wIM llOls.you find funding
for your ideas Opon OsKv 9 am-4 pm
Kerckhoff 401
and local volunteer positions are avaitat)ie
now Ifirougti EXPO Ackornion A?13 or call
825^1 ^^ . >
gamzed Io ro-ooipliasae Amarioi's foonio-
tion m ipiiaoBl valaos Call toy at 479-
jcmc rr 01^ e^ P^ wr mvormoaon
— uc iBMMl uliy 6oaa«lv Ppfltaa is
now 9¥tmk tor a two-y^Br ttrm wttft ttie
UC Studfm Lobby m SacfMfimnio P§ys
S7B750 pm month rBQuiremrth inctudt
being a noperif UC groudste ana mioroat tn
§tmaUonol issuos Pick up tppf'cationt m
KercktHfff M OmOkne t$ ttiy J or cati
If
now ava»tat)»e for a two yoof Irm witft tf»e
UC Student Lobby m SacraOMOle Pmn
S/S7^ POr N^oai HOiONOONOlS NHMe
tMing a roeoM ttC fraoaoli ondintortfSt m
educationof iosiiss Pldi up applications m
Kerdthoff 308 PooiNno ts May 7 or call
CoMfHtlee Apptlcffleot for
Presdiential Advisory Committees »rt now
available Deadltne is April 30 pick up
applicatttms at Ackerman information
ank Kerckfioff 304 and fiousmg associa
tions
- RLM
— tlHapiB. starring vyarren Bootty
Goidie Hawn Jujie Christie and Lee Grant
^ and 9 X pm tomorrow GrooO aoliroom
SI at the door
-WmI SMa ttory starring NMaai VlOOd
and Ricfiord aeyoior SJS and 930 poi.
April 10. Melfiitz aoditornim t1 50
aud
iitfrtum SI 50 for atnOinti others C
—Haata SeaiPiii^ lipisn wiN preoont i
senior recital. 7 30 pm. April iv
Ssrg Little Theater frm
of engmooring technology to iseolBpiii|
countries are the topics of this woolis
Boatnoos Advisory Counpi SMNOors dm-
nor f^ pm talli 7:«^ao pm. tonight
International Student Center
— ipllaisl Sperallee 9I SiMlfeyvllle lad
CvlylB LalMi in iiiMiois. a mUm study. 11
am-noon today aooHgr Ml.
preoont reodtngs from his works. I pm
tonight Sunset Canyon Mac Cooir
-The nnonrtaai Moi. port of Food
Day_7 pm tonight Kioior Hoill
^CMhi Iv WaPM. a diociiision group
for faculty staff and student woolen with
multiple roles ~ professional wife
mother student, noon, every Friday tub-
lect to group decision. Murphy 3334
— AfipB FiNaMMp. growing as a person,
open to an. espoaaMy Asian-
715 pm Thursdoys. Campui
Chapel. HI Loworhip
~Alr fmmaa aai Uam §1 .,-.^-
Eaergy by Robert M Zweig Pollutioa
Control Mooooaeli institute of Rn
noon TooiOffOW CHS 63^105
SSarw Yadfti Minister of Culture
Education Israel will diSGMOS poScy ol-
ismotiVes in loraoli oiMiaoo, 24S pm
tomorrow CalHomlo Moom. Foeulty CoolBr
Free
-aana Feed bm Pi laai IoMMm. port of
Food Doy 3 pm -tomorrow Ackerman
?40e
tomorrow Ackermap 3517
-aawlwiil a aa Cl||. how onu
noon vsmorrow Ackerman MIS
^Moalc Iron the First AomtIooos. by
Charlotte Noth 6 pm April 12 Schoenberg
Lane Thaolor Free
--MM NiiliiS m4 CarpMHiavprlHL in
internahoool porspocbve 4 pm April 12
Deans confoasaso room School of PuONc
Hoalth
- mpi fao laa^ aod
3 pm April 12 AckouoOo
.,, ■„., > ^ >., ,1 , Mi Us 1 pm
April 12 Ackerman V$a
—Warn Noopar CaaMilp 1 pm April 12
Kerckhoff 400
— FoadL 80 MMroallaOBl Maai noon Apnl
12 Ki "
tomorrow and April 10
-HI rmeif iMep iwppwwe M Ysor Fead on
Its way to the table noon April 12
Ackerman '"■^
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WESTWOOO
479-7282
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FarelgR Pellcy-aod US China
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13B Ffee "~ ' ^ -^
Ma 3 pm April 13. Oooas
conference room School of Pubhc Haolth
MEITMS
—f%k Eta Sigma general meeting to
discuss events for spring quarter and plon
intramural toamo. 4 pm.
c^.
1074
Deiicate gold creations of love knot rings all with precious
stones of rfiiwiDndi, rubies, saphiresp and c^fMik — with
matching accessories are featured in the fine emporium
of hawAoim jewelry at "
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Also 14K Cold Italiaffi
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You've got to visit Shanes to believe the vast aaiection of
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And best of alt are the low prices.
SHANE'S lEWELLEftY CO.
WEST
ins MIOXTON
WESTWOOO VIUACI
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And these two woys octually aPair you 22 dlffetgnt options of tfwi^ to do m
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On the C3<her hump >$t^ offer long-term. piogKsms for a semester, t months or o
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Tennis .
(rontifiued from ^t^22)
nettcrt found competitiOD
iy Uckiag, as idMii such at
UC San E>icio and UC Saou
Cniz were lurd pretaed to win
ftingk gamca, much loi laatrh-
ci.
**lt was almost embaraiMif
for «•«** remarked Coach Bill
Zainna. ^The cospetition
jmx hining the ball until they
miiBed. In fact* against UC
Santa Xruz the total game
• tcore was 72-0 They're not
really good tennis players."
Although the finals were
rained out, it may have been a
blessing ia disguise as it pro-
vided the team with a aiiich
needed rest before beginning
their rigorous series of match-
es. ■ •
The Sanu Barbara Gauchos
will prove to be worthy com-
petition as their team is actual-
ty more halaiTfl than USC.
However UCSB just doesn't
have the top players to give
_LfCLA s really good aatdi.
The Brums blasted UCSB ^1
in their initial match; and this
meeting should follow suit.
Candi Kembler is the Gaucho*s
number one player, but she
was ^hBibarassed by Cindy
Thomas 6-1 6-1 nten tlsy m^
.paead aach other m the pre-
vious match.
FoUowing UCSB, the wo-
men travel cross dty to meet
use ia a uk¥iead match
(Channel S tape delay tuning
at 1 pm, actual match begins
' at 1 1 am)! The meeting should
bring together a couple of hot
newcoroert in UCLA's
Smith and SCs Barbara Hal-
quist HalqnMt vein, con-
vincingly over Cindy Thomas
in the two team's first OKcting.
and the match should be a
good one.
Problems could arise for the
unbeaten Bruins (9-0 in league)
as it will be the first time in
UCLA women*s athletics that
an event will be televised, and
the women could be under-
standably nervous Addition-
ally, the first meeting was no
Cakewalk for the Bruins,^ as
(hey had to sweep the doubles
to purll out a 6-3 decision. USC
is coming off a tough loss to
CSU Long Beach and is up
against the wall as far as
league sundinp go. They must
beat the Bruins if they have
any chance for first plnat in
SCWIAC play.
As W noar, UCLA stands
12-1 on the year. Their only
lost was at the hands of Ari-
zona State, as the Bruins
dropped a tough 5-4 decision
when the vaunted UCLA depth
broke <k>wn and failed to pro-
vide any victories in the num-
bers four, five and six players*
matches.
4CoHtinaid from Par 21)
have to do things like running
we only have tinK to
said coach Okawa.
No iitiiliiilipi
^ ^ tMe o€ finnncini aid
for fisaatn in then
aan% trouhM
exactly a boon to the
either. Soooli hkt Air
and Fullerton. which offer
MiMiKiWpt to fenant, can, of
course, persuade the batter
fencers to attend their sctooit.
""ftnt we^ treated all rigltt.
Many schoob treat their IMMM
better than we are tmaaid« hM
Td have to say that ^ are
treated fairly, ifil not
out Its lair," Okawa
-f ^
*-. -■
making do^qulte well
By Mfta
One thu^ that nwtt be un-
derstood about the fencing
team is that they are senous
athkw and not just a bunch
.i>f guys who went out for Up
team because they had nothing
better to do.
They don't have a milhon
dollar budget or a surplus of
scholarships to hand out, but
they work just as hard and
take just as much pride in their
competition as some of
UCLA's more l-enowned
athletes. ,
'^Maqy people thmk fencing
is a *aioe' qK>rt like horse-hack
riding*" said coach Heizaburo
Okawa. ''But it's a hard spon
— you need stamina, speed,
good coordination and intel-
Opponent As in all ffiiiie fvapi-
— ^ the first fencer to receive
micIks against him is the
The time limit for ail
if four nu nutes.
%m
Ifs
**lf you come to practice and
you saw the beginning class, I
can understand how you coukJ
get the impression that fencing
isn't a very tough sport," said
Dennis Grable, a member of
the fencing team.
''But if you watch somebody
who really knows what he's
doing, you can see how dif-
ficuh fencing it and what it
takat to be a good fencer,** he
a senior at UCLA, is
prohably the outstanding fen-
cer on the teaaiL la the 26th
tnninl Western IntrrcoHrgiafe
Fencing Conference Chaih-
. pions^iips held March 5-7 at
Long" Beach State, he uiiB the
foil competition; and . was
iiaflHd the tournaments oct-
atanding fencer. Dave Shelton,
a junior, won the saber com-
petition, as UCLA took second
overall in the tournament. The
Air Force Academy, tradition-
atty a strong fencing school
won the WeHain title.
Besides the foil
ber, tlK third weapon used in
fencing is the epee. The epee
probably most closely resem-
bles what would happen in an
actual duel You can hit your
opponent anywhere on the
body, but the touch must be
made with the tip of the blade.
The sword is electrically wimd
and hooked up to a scorer that
registers a point every time the
^P ii ^%tfi\\A against one's
hi the foil, the target
defined by a metalhc vest the
fencer wears over his torso. At
in the epee, a-tonch must be
oiade with the tip of the blade
for it to be a legal touch.
The foil also has rules of
right-of-way, something like
those of boxing in that the
fencers are not just randomly
flaihng away at each other
Rather whoever initiates the
stt:u;k has the nght of way
until he is parried -^ his attack
IS blocked Then the defender
can maneuver for his attack.
The tnher is the heaviest
weapon and the only one that
isn't electrically scored Touchr
cs can be ma^ with the side of
the blade a-ny where above the
opponent's hip There arc two
judges positioned behind each
fencer to watch for any touch-
es. Action in the saber » prob-
ably the fastest in fencing
Three fencers per
^n tournagitnti. such as the
Western Conference Cham-
pionships, and in dual meets,
each team is represented by
three fencers in each weapon.
There is an - A,B and a C man
competing with each sword,
with all the A fencers in a
certain weapon competing
agMHl each other as do the
irs and Cs. The team cham-
pionthip for each weapon is
determined by combining the
performances of the A,B, and
C flMin. on each team. In the
Western Championships, UCLA
was fourth in the epee, second
in the foil and third m the
saber in earning their second
place finish. As far as dual
meet competition is concerned,
UCLA is a" TiMiher of the
Southern Intercollegiate Con-
ference, which consisu of eight
schools on the West Coast,
such as Cal Sute Fullerton
and Long Beach Sute
UCLA sent two fencers,
Dave Shelton and Dennis Gra-
ble to the NCAA Champion-
ships heki at Philadelphia dur-
ing the last week of March.
There were some 50 schoob
represented, each one
DATSUN
^Acres of Datsuns"
Student Discounts — Ask for Fleet Sales
Pasadena Oatsun
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
'SS4-1133*
Foreign students
A second Seminar on Taxes for
Foreign StudenU will be held April
8, 1976 at 7:00 p.m. in the Inter-
national Student Center, 1023 Hii-
gard Avenue, Westwood. informa-
tion regarding both federal and
State Taxes will be provided, find
assislance in completing tax fomit
will also be tYsffsVr:
m
than one fencer m
Grahk, who was
the only fencer from the watt-
esn Umied Sutes to reach the
sixth in the foil
Shelton took 25th in the
Kostiler Sah o\ the tarth Coffeefe
r Is Palestinian-Israeli
; Dialogue Possible? ~^
Mahmoud Ibrahim Yoav Peled
Graduate Students. Political ^%^f\Q^, UCLA
Saturday, April 10 9:00 PM
URC 900 Hilgard Los Angeles
•Cosher Earth Food, Entertainnient
_ V^ilM
NYU, Penn Slate
.aapnnr-in the Ivy Langve, are
invariably the fencing powers
in the nation haennse of the
high school fencmg programs
in those areas This year's
NCAA champion is Wayne
State, and^ was no exception to
this rule.'
The accomplishments of the
UCLA fencing team arc even
more outstanding when our
fencing program ^ is compared
with that of other schools
across the country For one
thing, the team can only work
out from 10 to 12 each morn-
ing because Pauley is occupied
with other activities the rest of
the day
**Only being able to practice
in the morning makes it very
hard for us to ge^ together as a
team because so manv of them
have classes then. So. they
fConftnued on Page 2i)
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AGAPE FELLOWSHIP SERJES O...
^GROWING AS A PERSON'
(especially for Asian Ameiicant!)
^ probably the moat important aub|octs you can study
on this campus identity & purpono
• inter-peraonal relationst»ips
being a mal and whole person
~ a apecial 8 week aoHea deaigned for all peraof«a:
April 6 - May 27. 1976 Thursdays at 7.15 p m
Campus Baptist Chapel. atS Leuoring Drive,
loa Angelna. Corner of Levering & Gienrock
479-3647
For Information calf
AGAPE FELLOWSHIP 387-78ei
i
by AOA^ FCLLOWSfHP
\
Carhpus Events Film Commission of
The Student Legislative Council Presents
April 9
Shampoo
April 16 Rolleriiall
>r*
April 30
Brando/Dean
The Chase
East of Eden
May 7
Love and Death
May 21 Tommy
■f ./
June 4
June 11
Blazing Saddles
start the Revolution Without Me
ANca in Wonderland (Disney)
Coming This Spring
Ackerman Grand Ballroom
Friday Nights
4 ,
f
n.
r
f
I
O'Neill
loose
I
>
5
SPANISH SPEAKING MENTAL HEALTH \
RESEARCH CENTER \
COLLOQUIUM SERIES
PRESENTS
Dr. MANUEL CASAS
UCLA Counseling Center
A PROPOSED
THERAPEUTIC MODEL
FOR THE SPANISH
SPEAKING COMMUNITY
Date: Monday
Time: 2:00 pm
April 12. 1976 Place: 313 Kinaey Hall
Phone: 825-6886
■y Marc
DB Sports Writer — ^
in many of today's coUegiate
sports, a freshinan iin't happy
unless he it not only playing,
but starting, for his Leaip
Sophomore pitcher Tifll"
O'Neill the ace of the UCLA
staff. IS not one of tbote piay-
ers. — ^
Not only didn't he start as a
freshman, he wasn't even oo.
the varsity, despite Mag the
CTF 4 A PUyer ef the Year as
a high kchoel lenior ^^-
And O'Neill, who is 54) this
laaapn. is just as hapf)^ 1i^
spent 1975 on the junior var-
sity.
^\...mMk 6-1 last seaaon.** he
said while riding home from
MfHMiay's fase wtth Southern
Calif orM^Xollefa. ^1 didn't
mind being on the JVs at all. I
got a chance to pitch a lot.
rather than sitting around, and
Women netters face
tough schedule ahead
By Gregg L. Reoeau
DB Sports Raportar
After battling the rain and not much else at the AU-Californla
tennis tournament last weekend, the women's tennis team will
enter the most griiehng part of its schedule when it hosts. UC
Santa BartMra today on the Sunset Courts at 2 pm.
Starting with the Gauchos. the women will have five dates m
the next nine days, including one with highly regarded Stanford
and a rematch with arc^ rival USC
In traveling to Berkeley for the three-day tournament, the
(C t>ntiniied on Page 2#)
¥ I '"
Pick up your portfolio and
take a merciless look. If you re hit-
ting the mark creatively but not in
execution, take a look at Canon.
The good things youve
heard about Canon SLR s ar eirue
One of the best things about them
is our line of nearly forty lenses
from fisheye to super-teJephpto.
including aspherics and our^k-
clusive fluorites They represent
the optical state-of-the-art This
means they has/e sharpness and
contrast aruj they don T have flare,
distortion or annoying aberra-
tions Mechanically they can t be
topped ; .
Ou,r camera bodies are a
beautiful blend of form and func-
tion They II help you work surer
and faster because once youve
run through the controls, opera-
ShupGC
Surer.
fOBtBC
tion is second nature The meter-
ing system common tQ.Xf>e F-1 and
FTb measures only the center
12% of the finder area Consis-
tently No matter what lens is in
place Whether you re into the
Zone System or' shoot from the
hip. you II come to rely on It
Best thing is. a Canon is
priced within easy reach There s
no time like a Bicentennial year to
declare your photographic inde-
pendence and picture America
with aCanon Your dealer will be
happy to show you the profes-
sional F-1 . the remarkabie FTb or
one of our other fine SLR s the
electronic EF or solid TX Visit him
soon. ^
■} t
1 think tt*s poyiag off now.*
tt cenainty ii. in addition to~
his perfect record, he has com-
piled «n earned run average ol
I 58. He IS 3-0 in California
Intercollegiate Btf<ielK^li As-
sociation (CIBA) play, and in
his first league start ever, he
shut out use, 9-0
Q*Neill came tp UCLA froaa
North Torrance High School,
and he caroe because of head
coach Gary Adams 'M
wouldn't be here if coach
Adams wasn't. He wasn't sure
where he'd be (Adams had
resigned from UC Irvine and
was not yet officially the
UCLA baseball coach), but he
told me not to sign — to wait
for him
••I came to UCLA for three
reasons. I came because
I thought I could play, because
I would get good competition,
and it was close to home.**
fn his first varsity appear-
ance, O'Neill held \}C Irvine,
Adam's old team, to one run,
jn six innings In non-con-
ference games, he pitched well
enough to draw the starting,
aiaignment for the second of
the three USC games
Just prior to the series, Bd
Cowan, UCLA's big pitcher .n
1975. was sidelined with a sore
arm. Suddenly. O'Neill was
number one
**l was going to start the
second game," O'Neill recalled
"When Ed was hurt, coach
AdaaM asked me if i would
Mrt the first game, and I said
*rd be glad to ' 1 wanted to
beat tfcem at Dedeaux Field
anyway."
, Not only did he beat them,
he shut them out on six sin-
gles Since then he has de-
feated California and UC San-
ta Barbara and started a game
against Stanford, which the
Bruins won m 1 1 mnings.
**! kview r had a shot at
starting, but >^so knew we
had a 4ot of seniors." he said
^I figured if my fastball was
moving, like it has been, I'd be
in there. All I had to do was
throw strikes.
*^ut I didn't expect to be
this good so soon. I knew I
could that it wasn't out of my
realm of capabilities but I
didn't expect it this soon/*
How did 0*Neill end up at
UCLA? Besides wanting to
play for Adams, he didn't get
college offers -at least until
after the CIF playofEi.
-We beat Lakewood Cfeffow
pitcher Floyd Chiffer's high
school) in 18 innings.** he said.
**Peopk still tell me it was the
greatest high school gaaK ever
We won It on a pop fly single
by your's truly in the first
inning of the secoiuj game.**
In that playoff, which began
at Anaheim Stadium, the ganw
called after 1 1 innings with
ao score. Four days later at
Dedeaux Field, the gaibe was
lyed. and CNeilTs run
single in the first was
the only time either team
laored. He also pitched all 18
innings.
**! was drafted on the 24cb
round by Kansas City. I think
they offered me $1.50 and bus
fare Really. I guess they fig-
ured I was going tp coOefe.**
DeiiNie hit stuoona tba
son, O'NeiM feels there it a
dtfTerence between high school
hitters He hat
even changed his matiaw,
dropping from itraiglic aver-
to thrte-i|aarters.
*^ln higl^ icbaiat yo« caa get
by with a fastball— all you
netd IS control,** said 0*Nct&^
"tn cm
manv mr
t
Ruggers finish third
'.a:
»•'
.fConfiniied from Fi^gc 2t)
^ The BATS were seeded frnT
at Moaterey, ahead of the
Santa Monica Rugby Club
(comprised primarily of ex-
I^A stars; and UCLA,
whom the BATS defeated, 17-
6. in early regular taaion ac>
tioi at Golden Gate Park
^ T he BATS have imporved
tremendously m the last few
years.** said UCLA's acting
player-coach Skip Niebauef.
who filled in this past seson for
Dennis Storer. Storer, who has
coadied tbc Bruins to five
national crowns and two
runner-up finishes in the last
ten years, bat baen completing
his doctorate work in higher
education this year and will
most likely return as coach
The BATS have leveral ex-
Stanford football stirs and
have gotten to tbe stage where
they ai? practicing more re-
gularly and developing better
and more experienced players,
according to Storer. '^
**The club teams are com-
peting more seriously than in
previous years,** Storer said
The BATS hadn*t beaten
UCLA prior to the 1976 sea-
son, falling to the Bruins at
Monterey last year, 12-6.
'Mt is getting harder and
harder for a collegiate toun to
defeat the top club sides,**
Storer. a^dM.
— The BffSiat had some trouble
gaining momentum during the
1976 campaign with a new
coach, several new players and
tiumerous injuries.
After convincing wins over
the California Rugby Club and
Paimerston College of New
Zealand (30-9), tbe Bruins fejt
to the Los Angeles Rugby
Club for the first time ever. 1 1-
4. However, tbe Bruins played
that wtr If without Niebauer.
Del Chipmaa, ioba Fowler,
JeHry Scott and several other
starters. •••
1/
BUSINESS
; ± U
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The Bruins rebou
iaaiast San Diapi Sute, IS-
12, UC Sanu Barbtva, 41^.
and f:olkgiate nval Calitorma.
1,2-i in Berkclc) before falling
tdl9^ 8^TS, 17-6. at Golden
Gate Park The BATS are
coached by San Francisco Ex-
■ -"i .
_Mmuwr sports writer Al M^m^
Tbe Northern Caliiornia trip
was followed by wins over
Stanford, 38-17, Long Beach
State, 22-11, USC, 19-17. ^r^d
the final regular season victor >
an upset of the Santa Monica
RugBv Club, 9,7
mmt^mmmmM
TUNE-UP, LUBE I OIL $94%
""" •*' ml
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35
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OVIRHAM $
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A-1 AUTO service:!!
8947075
7957 VAN NUYS SIVD.
Falashan Jewry Shabbat
with Prof. Howard Lenhoff ^
■ ►
(University of California)
Visiting Profeaaor Watzmann Institute nf Iclanoa. tMB-l
Hebrew University 1970-1971. Techmon, 1973-1974
Friday, AprN 9 6:30 pm
with liByer LBirin Film 'The
RaB^fvatlont
I
>
1
to
--- _ r^ . . Wlio Are Vie Felaahaa?
. Aithought their origins are unknown and legends
the Queen of SHatoa. the Falaahas are thought to t\av%
from mainstream Judaism at the time of the destruction of the
first Temple (Sta B C E ). and relate only to the Five Books of
and other writings down to the Book of Ruth
474-1 S31 HUM
900 Hiigard
-^
AN EXTRAORDINARY REALISTIC
STEREO SYSTEM AT 99^ OFF!
^^> V
728.90
Rmmlistie STA-22S AM-FM Stmrmo
Rmcm/vr with Auto-Magic "
FM Tuning
Tv^o Rmmlistie Optimus-SB Wmlnut
Vmnmmr Floor Spmmkmr Systmms
Rmmlistie LAB-tOO MmnumI Turntmblm.
Bmsm, Dust Covmr. $39.95 Vmlum
Ellipticml Cmrtridgm
\ ■ ■
[Therm's Onfy Onm Ptsc0 You Can Find It . . . Radio Shack
BFHJINS ARE WELCOME
1112 G«yl«y Av*.
atmammaA ^%
47S-2329
RadM
JSaeli
Vt
ATlO<« COMMkNV
',, .y., . A.
/ *
P
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P-4- — L
■•^:
CLASSIFIED
— P
AOVftnTIMiO Of FiCCt
112
unications Board
Atfir«irflalng tpac* will not b« ifia«l«
■wMatola In th« OaNy Brutn to anyovw
who dtscrlmlnatvt on th« batit of
•ncaatry. color, national origin, race,
PiMtlnn. or aaa. H»mmf Iha Dally Bruin
mm Iha ASUCLA ComniMnlcation*
■mp# Jim Invaatlgatad any of Ifta 9f-
vicaa a^vartlaad or advartlaart rapr •
aanlad In thia laaua Any paraon ba-
llavlnf that ah advartlaamani In thia
taaua wloltat Iha Board • poMcy on non-
tflacrlmlnaliMi alatad haram should
Ciwmunlcata osniplamls in writing to
mo' Bualnaaa manmgmr. UCLA Daily
Bruin. 1 12 Karckhoff HM. MS Waatwood
Plata. Los Angalat, California §0024.
For aaairt'anca with houaing discrimi-
nation problams.call UCLAHo4«sing
Offica (213)S2S-4491 Wastsidal^alr
Housing (213) 473-jg4t
announcetTMiits
THIS WEEK PHI KA^^A BIGMA l*ilA^
tehnitv will be molding 9Pnma
mMM. ALL THOBE NrrBRESTEO AM ^
WELCOME TO STO^ BY ANYTIME.
WEUE AT lOBlB BTIIATHMOflE. OOUO «
X)HNBON/HUBH CMAWMAN - 47f-
f
Afn
(**"*»^
wedding
announcements
kerckhoff ^2^ *
82506|l
campus
announcMnents
Graduates
PERM A PLAQUE
your diploma
^x^mpus sf ucf lo
/ 50 hetikhott haJJ 8^5 061 1 »?7;
open mon-^fi 8 .30 4 30
OCTAo^M
cniMM.plei
BiMiday. %m
MSa^a W^wr ^^f^Wt fv^MW w^^Of
ipa HMMfb. M7.73^ ^ ,,,
MHIMHWUMUAMMnanUPWII* 1
aubLIC MOTI
af aw UCLA 1
aiiaiiii. caMn
(S)«wiaw«ti
aw POMWaiali
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UCLA
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HOW DOES A BRUIN
BEAR DECORATE HIS
ROOM?
With UCLA blankets, pen-
nants, clock, helmet lamp
and radio, glassware, mugs,
bears— and sleeps in a UCLA
Dearwear,
ASUCLA Studefits' Store
Ackerman Union
Pfonal
for sale
ffCUnOBClENTItT. M
•I Bib
Marina
ibli~y«M IM
•IBib
9l fUfhl I
(•ABI
CALCULATORS
Ti in IB, n an ki. Ti BB ft2. Ti SB j
mm
iptMB UCLA
atbrtlng April 12tli lnlaraaUtf7 Fbr
MlbfMiiabon and raBtbbvBbi^i boiMb By
M24 Murptiy By 1:00 pm. FrMby. ApHI
lb A »\
BEEB ELECTBOWICB
CMI 472-9000 Mr
ONLY Tha BoMb fUtam adM
Ni Thb
\
10 A 12)
PSYCHIC, nbtton^ rbCOf
i01<4028.JOO-9000.
M UbiliiBi.
10 A 1S»
MAY Ibl aOOICSTOIIC {
A Mbmi
■Im. TiMM
7th SL LJk
trm % w.
(10 A 12)
BYBONandChuchofl
«»«ll WlibM Ob' ybiJ mmH
I? Why do you hm^ vmh bfi
uww wwv^ar wno t^^w
B ObbO Baby »obM.
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your
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btBib
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CbfHbf. Lfvb
(OAO)
YESPA Clao mo^bO iOcc aacbllbnt
condHMw. Low wiBibBi t240. 10 ■piii
girls' Paufbbt bicycia Its. Thomaa
o«Bbn - ratbit $000. Only $446. E«biiln«a
(212)000^1. OB A ID
WATEMBED
frama ISO
bracalot. tOO 303-1200
(10 A 12)
CATHY; Ara a law syllablas In tha
aaubi paraonsi all wa JWbn lo you?
Byron (It's cofntng)
(OAO)
HAPi^OltiMBlb
to know H«b
BH7
rt t'vb
MATTIICSaCS AL4. NCW
Soaa up to 40%
Twbi MM - Mb.«
^bMOalstMJi
(OAO)
b«
Bia Big U? LppBIrb *or a naw
aaparlanca? Try Spring Ruati. UCLA
mM btbrt ruMBnB AprO 12Bi
By 2224 Murpliy, t try BruM
WbNi Thurs and Pridby from 12il0 M
2:00 pm for Informbtlon and rbflflMabfi-
(OAO)
$111.
THE MATTRESS
11714 Ptaa MM. MS7VanNuvs
4T7.41b1
C%
KINO SIZE awtartoad incfuoaa ntti^^.
(10 A 12)
WK^K, wiNnsbHon mo^^mb ^^^^^t oa^^^^
aanai v*naaran s i uapnai ^ro|aiH« 9^^-
2004 Acbarman, Don't forgaCi Tom.
(• A 0)
for rent
LAKE Arrowhaad. BuaBc cbbin,
utiful location FIraplaca. Slabp S.
SOO 3 dby waakand. $100 waali.
4220.
» ^M>
MCCAflTNCY Tichata. tat bnd 2nd r<
247-0270.
(to A ta)
MUl4M,19MriMS
•Ausmt.asAM
• • • AMO
ABBOWHEAD cabin In quiat araa
Slaaps i OM/2 days $1S0/7 days
*^^^^ (tOtrV
SRUIM T.V. RENTALS
COLOR T VS
WbbtUy/aionthly
OBt b dby
SMpli^wtilla TV a - $7 JO b
CbB: 270-1292
MOTt:Our
crai
NEW TypbwrBar. SCM 2700: Elbctrtc/
cbrtridga w/caaa $290/baat offar.
SacBbrb BMIir 47S-f404dbNy
POR Solb - Complata pholoBraphIc
hiatory of tha Civil War. tOO Call
202-3203 bNbr 2:20.
(10 A 0)
WOObEN BbuMT- Kbfa. 0 apooN.
Iibtelicovara, noNlnB 0 ropa. funky
crataa 0 boiaa^ old bornwood. 031-
#«n rs^s
021S.
. SOUO 14 K. spM
(0 A10)
10'
MABBBOTH COMOO. Nbor ORi 7 S 0.
2 BbBrbom, 2 boBi. )acum. TV. aMrap.
iMy/waaa. aaw-ana. ,, ^ ^^
- $24.00
$70.00 CaN
(10 A 0)
BENT-A-TV. 01BJB
atudant diaeounta. Dallvary to t:BO.
470-2070. 2203 WaatwooB.
ftOir)
Texas liittniaieiif'
lorbplo
Tibnsa MttB Tisast Mt.» naaM mm
CMIVVS .=^X)
• 4-la«al OMck 'O
NCVIK
CUSTOM
2-<
$1
Inch
Only
(10 A 14)
rtfiancwf tsa M
USSI
ROLLIFLEK tL-20 w/caaa A accaa-
aoftaa: UV: Zaibb Mmmn/nX caaa. UV
$120. 200-7414
nmncus
(10 AJI«)
TEXAS InatrumbfiM
$00 9r babt bffat Wblarbad. haatar.
$20 200-7414 nllaa. ,,„ ^ ,j
MOVING Oala- Fumltura.
mlaoallanaoua Sal/Sun 12 noon - $ i
2100 Boacomoaa Road Bai Air
(10 A 0)
EQUIPMENT
CALL47S 77*1 3M W«si a« ban Olaf)a f wy
TEAC A
13
(10 A 0)
ADMIRAL rafHfarator WMta. b
condition. $00 or bast offar Cbll
477-7044 boab. ^^ ^ ,,j
STBREO bompononla: Sludont dib-
riB Abt
H^.— 21
branda. Valloy 001-004$. 001-2023
(10
(IE AS)
nt. Salact Ca
MMI.S013 W
Ca
B
WInob.
SL.WbM-
(lOOlr)
PBNPEB btrbt
apk
477
(RRE-CRS)
no A 12)
RCA Blbek/
party Aak for
T.V. S40. PflvpM
27S-1032 ■' ' '
(10 A 0)
wanted
CM
Royal
**. .. 1
nsAoi
MARMUANf. Don't lot ttia
youl Know your flMMil Si
$2 OS p«Mb tSO Mb
IV Pia 9m
M Ml III! I MbmRi Pr. BMwwIWB. IH^*
CvBfObb Abb.. illi»brbldb. Cb. OfSBO.
(714) OOO^MO fy^ ^ ^,
Ipr $0 yr bM BBy
(12 A 0)
wanted
ffBlp Rolf By Holplffis Owidfb
•a*$SO/iNBiiRi for RIood PtbamB
HVLAMO DONOR CENTfR
100r~Gbylby Avf.. Wobtbrood '
47S-SSS1
CASH or
your
11010
Sundy). 477
(12 Olr)
SEVERLY HINs Man's
traa halrstyling. For ai
271-4230 Tuaa - Sbt
Intobbll
(t2
CMHHwrtuniti
4/12. For biforinaBon
(1$ A 0)
MUY tor aiounlblAarrtng,
MMrb lannli. wbbbanda
ra.20: ,1b 070-7001. ^^^ ^ ,^
•PER80NAE*
CwntRr of Dramattc Arts
AnnouncRS
An opportunity tor ablbct studants to
porform in public' Limibd schoiarahipa
arb b¥bilbbla to tha following work-
shopa:
in on ttia baaia fundanriantals
>HAL ACTING*
SUbrlaliTing in public partormanca
•DIRECTBiO*
How to work witt^ thb
You gbt Is laa your work 0brformad
tn Body
and fimthm
CbM OAliftL ROGERS
(1-5 p.m.)
■ S2S-1333
Intar-
I NEED SO koy paopla to
03 A f)
(213) 002-1077
POPULATION Inatltula
Eapb. A212
n^ A 01
PERSONAL ASTROLOGICAL REAO-
<tis»
(13 A 21)
roaearch subjacte
INCENSE USERS Wa will pay you
Pbiaat OuaNty Incanaa or $10.00
In
Dl
12.
(14 A 12)
EARN $7.90 AMOSTOP
CALL MIKE AT
RREATHfl
PROGRAM
(14 A 12)
hato wanted
SUSY OvO
2tador2rd
1-4077
(18 A 01
EOUII^MENT
sy-
«14I A m%
PART TRIE pbiMabi opon m Wm
Rutlarfly Sakary. aasw hours. $3 -$8
par Hour CaN 470-OOSE.
(10 A 12)
WANTED: laraaB atudant lo 0im I
In Habraw. call Toily at $70-0022
dpylbwa. ^^^ ^ ^^
TEACHERS at aO IbvaN PbiblBw bnd
»rs Boi 1002 Vbwibbair
(IS A 12)
AUDITIONS Straat mualclans. ofio-
mmn bbnd. aMa aBow pbbpla lor Sundoy
elrcua V Dofbn. 2B0-0141.
(IS A 0)
JUST Gradubta and Ib^blnB tPfJc*!
BoM work? Growinf Mad. I«b.
Cb. naadt smart aggraaalva fi
SIprt $000 plua banaflta Your
fwwa ba wb pt^ow 10 nilnuAba
UCLA Cab I4aal Qrmt* 200-0027
(1i A 0)
ENGINEER
Tachfiolacy litcarparalad. •
of crricoiip Is «
i»catia«i«
aarla«i«ral conlrollars i aUara
This soiWlsw Is ki an
• aaw mm af
OVERSEAS JOBS - aununar/yaar round.
Europa. S Amarlca. Auatralla. Aala.
bfc. All flalda. $000- $1200 monBdy
Eapanaaa paid, alplitaaalng. Fraa Inform.
WrMa: InlarwbBanbl Job CbfHbf.
CC. Roa 44B0. SarbbMy. CA 04704
TYPIST Work with othor atudanta.
Oroartnp BMd. Ina. BIMiig Co 20 hra.
waab. $i2.7S. 10 ailnaMa trooi UCLA.
Caff Naal Orabo. 200-O827.
^ta a m%
4 days par
$4M. $23-0022.
to ba arrangad.
(H A 0)
AIDE for aldarty lody
Waatwood Mrmm. Nursing aludawt or
Nwdllar praMi ibd. Eaamnpt 470-7470.
^ (1SA0)
TELEPHONE Solicitors. Parmananl
lor Inlarvlaw Aak lor Halan WO 1710.
(1SA0)
o
TUTORS
^
liim 1
or va waVw wHa f'a'H
1-S. jM
0 af 2
407 Kai
1 BaMB IMM bi AMl 2017.
pm. ASUCLA TuMfMI Rn
CA
m baobh ar.i/or bw
Pbibbr P O. Boa SISO CuNtb-CRy.
(1$ A 0)
Mlcfibii) bic^. lor B/B
070-
no Aot
^=CtASSIFIED^D
(10 A 0)
loai phm M dlaaartatlon propoaol.
S77-7SS1. 7
<1$A0)
GIRL to dflva chlldran M.T. Tlmrb.
aflarnoona. Ptub BoByaNtHiB Oun<lay
A BMndoya. Car bvaRiBM. 474-7014.
(IS A 0)
477-9TTS.
$2.S0 pbr Br.
Mb typing br iRof^
ORlbRdTRl
M wbffO M DobMr't
BdbfMs tor Bud.
0 lb 0 houffb woab.
(1$ A 0)
(10 A 141
Mr b
2010. (
mmh. 274-
ri4 * 14)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
TooY
Lobr
LIONTHOIISE RISURAMCE SERVICE
-1101
on r^^. Wrilo: SBoRb KubM. 40
Sbylatbn St. #10. Cambrldgb. MA.
/Id 4 P.»
IndlatRiipla. In-offica or MaH ordar-
iowaal piMbi. JbRo (RJL, mJk.) 470-
"^ (10 Qlr)
A PRBBAL ALTERMAT1VS Rl LOS AN-
QELES PEELINO TRAIfMNG CENTER.
Sm COBIEY AVE. 00024. 033-0701.
(10 Olr)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
TBBHIgR?
tow MoffiRRy Rl
STUDENT DISCbllNTS
Adii tor Rpn
halp wanted
MATtOMAL HgpbbBli InaBluM. Now bl
Rm Barrlnftpfi P%mf. W.L.A 11744
Wllahira - 477-0020. 070-3307 With
mora than 20 yra mupmri^ncm Halp
to study -rataln-ralaa-alaap Baa our
lalapbona Vallow Pa^aa ad Apodal
oarvicaa ofter^d
RIDING LEMONS
iM-FpcyRy-f BmRIbb Rfff
•A.M,t A A#p«av#artblftf ••loaiislunaAi
•na ar««al»« iMIdpaa J[
nit
WBNis RtoRO^Off on
ItMurancb?
ly PbymonM-
ARROW INSURANCE
SALLET F
un woy to Saauty 1200
m^ UMa. YWCA S74 MM.
TWCA. S74 HB-
0 laaaona.
$21. Spbblbl rbMb, 2 br
|iy**Y; Irono Sbralb. Olatlngulahad
(IS Olr)
RITE GRATED MDITATION
WORKSHOR
A aataas smi.. ««
AUTO Inauranca Lawbbt rblaa for
Of amolowaaa. i^^^art tb IH^^
-7270. 070-0703 m 4077073
(14 Olr)
MOVRiO A HauOng. LbrBb 0
CbB RM 400-1013 o.
400-1013 or Frad 40O-14d0.
(10 Olr)
TENNIS lobbona UnlBUO
Nbipit Ibbmlnf syalam Ino
CbB nowf 470-2020.
bbby and
(1SASI
CONSCIOUS Ctbbnbig «•
EMartalnmant alao. Annl-
KbBiy 474-0100.
d iMifJbB
401-2022^
(1EA0)
iWMM-laam M ObMbpi
CdBP 1 ■>Bis too" HM
MbMM tbr
In a abM,
vn S>*MIB.
(10 A St
HOW TO MAKI
1 Taaala Oiracior. iObb-tlbbt biiwiaisr
2 tyiilWMi C^wa fi iiUpNi. tttb/wk
3
4 Ti
5 Daeiar'a
t.
7 TypaTV
t. Oat pibbans Uanab IS.
•- **br
TOOBi OTMBBO
THE JOB
lyCTOPY
RB
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MOVING: Rbbldantlbl. bpbrtmanta.
(tOObr)
ELECTROLYSIS Unwbfilod tl
Pfoo boobuRotlba Ma
Rl. 477-21B2.
(10 0^
nsoor)
NOUSCRARiTIMO
mom
MRf OSS- f HAVE TRUCK • MX TRAVtt.
OS A 0)
(IS A0>
Diacoufrta lor
Auto-Llfa-Homaownars and Bantal
inauronca Villaga OHIca W9rn9r
Boblwabw. 1100 OMiidbn SuMa 1S31
477-2007 i70-f1ft1
(10 Olr)
HARICUTS $2 By boanaad hairciiRbrb
I bur larhnlBua . Paul BteG »bB4 r*b
"^' (tfOIr,
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MOl/lflC?
THa original'
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CARPUS SERVICES
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CbB 470^4B7f
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and cbra BBbBbbl 474-
0100.Jbbfc401-»S ,,,^,^
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(pamai ksbnga)
fhghU * <Jai«» wttn dap4riu«a*
thru Ociobar slay 2 lo ?i
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HAWAII EaehSaf i 4 2 viwaat ttaa
NYC Eac^ Tim « ? 4 3 «Ma«it ttaa
ORIENT Many bam tram Oaaa
<^' ' 'A fm aaar 2M shonar Nabngs
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'^^itrim' ■ ^ a»y Kianii saWnris
^"•* •^ Hicr if oMv 49% luN
TRARO S PERRY TICICrrR
CARS, CAOORCR RENTALS
RAR^ARRCS. RrTRA-EUROREAN
STUOaUT CHARTERS
APEX FARE-SUPER DEAL
lijwwa/wbim any day any Curop f s^y
f9-4i osyv from »4f)',
TOURS 4 CRUISES
Mf xico "'■istian 7 iMia* 4199
HAWAII waaaN. 7 aMoa ibaa
!4fXICO Mmi City a
HOMO MOtbl, tbdbM
uoo
'Di;«9 roun%- n>vff9'
m u4 roa
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• '••• non •ii/dar* 'aiai avanao**
• *9— anarka ao« ^oog -.
I
' s to crabta an miarruiturai
• nga if» s raiaiad -ly
Hi anc to do ^ - L
10 f9^
av4 ««M»«
STUDENT TOURS*
44 dbya O
Curapa 4b bays 13
Hawa«i 7^*41 3 Ml
bill ibiiiindl
TAHITI SUPER DEAL
Jul A 21 Ipr Tana^i a^w^ 'a^l
trovbl
ESCAPE
TH^ WORLD
tiatKi
I** ^as « I
A 90(
><«• Mrr««>«'
OVERSEAS JORS AaM. AuatralM.
AMcar Eurapa, OouM Amarlea Aboocu>
potiona $000-$2.$00 Inaaluabia aa-
parlancas Oalalla 204 Inlarnallooot
**^^'* ' null.
0ONTDCLAV1 I
Ob by Phono Now Flighta to |
JMTf) BOMM bbiadbb ($21S») I
IHbW (040B») M«» y^Hi (|tOO)
I iwffisbiais phanal aanbmi^bans Can
WtSTCOAOT OTUOBNT tllAVOL
AVCOCamsr
ni
-^: $0.70. 407-1000, 21SB W.
I
Cai Jat Cnartar
EUROPE 1070 i
a At low at t334 00 rouna Utp LA or SF.^
IP •R^B^^Bp^^ ^^^^^^0* W^^^P WaB^^^RWHi 9 v^VSS^R^^^^^V*^H
ICbanar bigbN tro«n Oaai Coast 4 Cntcaoo*
^Ourapa alps awatiaaia LA la mawaiiI
i IS law as tiM 00 (BsMWi T«»). ■
~ Wnts Of Call ■
I CAL JOT CHARTffIS (41ft| OM 1434 S
a fIflO Oraan SI . San Fransoctf CA 94123 Z
CARS Rl EUROPE
RENT OR BUY
CIAL REOUCTIONS TO
TEACNERS 0 STUOfNTO
FRfiftCATALOO
lUROCARS
•UNSET RLVO.. LjL SBBI
271.
Roundtripa from Loa 4ngala9 to:
■MIM
LONDON $24B
adn.
ZUERICN 0410.
bdb. $. 10. 0 12
idM.
FRANKFURT $200.
bdB.0Ml4bdb
k
NEW YORK
AND HAWAII $100
mBi.
\
All fhghtf t\m¥m to
ba boobad 70
4^
tr ad^nca
Sludant Eurailpabb
A RhtrNi Pbba $100 |
PBBMprasrbM
0 bdd. bd. bbO
212/ «
M-»10
RilliiHI T4
IBBBT Am
MTbOTMbM
. CA 01240
rta ft0^
l2t3]47S-4444
i
■fc- •■!■■
^— T" -Vj^
.J
r^tASSIFIEDvID
travel
tutoritm
typing
CMA#T€II9 «fi# vacation p«ctnq|«t
on Pon Am 747 to
t.
^lAliO
•I 477 -€377
)
CoM Larry
(34 AS).
Cat Jack (213) 273-7t22
(23 0«n
mtMCH Tutoftng Ma«««
473-3373
<»Oir»
(a4 0lr)
:IAL Farot to ItM Orlanl. India.
Faltlatan. tyd(i«y. Fl|l. U^uckiand A
-2141
r23 Adl
RccoMoen
Thur« . AprN 22, 7 pM.
Cnanoa Flaoiior
194 A >^
4
4K'
^
.— f
V
i
i
I
'Ik
- V
i*'
ASUCLA Travel S«rvlc«
«!• ONLY official
UCLA Chartar Flight Sarvica
A sampling
of Europa flights
LAX - Amslardam
June 7
June 21
June 21
June 28
June 2S
June 29
Julys
Julys
July 12
July 19
1C7S4
11C7S
12C7S
15C75
17C75
18C76
22C76
23C76
27C76
7
11
12
S
9
10
8
9
4
4
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
JAZZ PIANO/AU STYLf S taam Joy
eieedwg your own tMnq. JidMaid Ap-
pieech lo fud*maniary/ad»ewda^ mui-
cal diaorottcarioaia. RraadfUidln I
f lor eeal pretaaiienal I
€73-3575.
/94 Otrk
Prmpmr9 tor:
QRAOUATC RECORD EXAM
20 hr didaa bogmt May 8
Alio OLSAT
a OMAT
aMCAT-
#DAT
a Career Plenning
9 tbtortng
tHE GUIOANCE CENTER
3017 Sente Monka Blvd
829-4429
I* wf le W% tiMf. M will
^V UtI Ow*r 1000 Ntgnts to ehoam tor ftufoiw
Swmm«r o< 76 • aampiiig iouf« • ■luOy ibuf**
trawal pMMgM • OrMpf «lKt Mttfdl* fan pMtiaiM
• tiawt inturanc* • . i)oi*< aoeomoiMMMW- arid
intorrnatiort
HAWAII . . .
(partial Hating)
weeMy departure*
'WA-HONOLULU flM ana wmm
-LA-HONOLULU titt two wmkt
K'aoi and Maui atjo avail
fLUS Car Rentals Lisriws...arH-
Irefl/Euretl pattet ...Accomoda-
tlaffie...SATA fItS:.. International
Student I.O. Card*:..
FREE TRAVEL COUNSELINQI
ASIC i$% FOR ANYTHIMG TOU
WANT TO KNOW ABOUT
TRAVEL!
asqcia/^
TRA/EL SERVICE
Aekorman Union A-213 (wtlh EXPO)
ly - Friday 1(h00-4:00
S2ft-1221
CMINCSC Manderin Foli»ft« native
laachor. woll-oiporloncad with Call-
lerele Crodontlai individual, aewil
reep. 888-1846. f JM Qirt
MATH TaHftwgfcy MA Orad.
Immodlata sorvic* Vicinity 3e4'<y788.
(24 Olr)
LBAT, odior laet
Individual. Bmall group instruction.
Acadomic GUiMImico Sorvioot. 320 Soudi
Robortson. 357^390.
(24 Otr)
,_ ^.,0
VOLUNTCSII le tutor handlcaiipad ctdl
dron — 32S-2S88.
(24 A If)
»yp»"g
MUTM: 8ai»clHc
lorffi papora, niiac
823-27t2.
is
tkma
TYptMO: Faat
•ona
S234
at
Phofiat474-
(29 0lr>
EDITING of MA
raaum^. Call MUa
117S3 WRatilra. tuMa 14.
■^ -. '' nt At)
TVPINO Thoaat. atai -for ttid Pro-
foaatonal and Studont. tSC/paya - OS.
Tacftnical Amanuanais -389-2884.
(25 At)
SEAT ttia tyalam
Ocanpa County
(714)
)ONi a Mo^h
Cel JHn at
(as At)
CUROFE.
Clanaga Slvd
N.V A Oflanl. TQC
A.I.8.T. 1438 So. U
LA 882-2727
(23 A 28)
LICHTMIMC TYPING CO
Ttiaait Spacialisi
ff9 E«ttmat««
PMOFESSIONAL COLLEGE TVPtNG
SPECIALIST
T»rm papar*. Titaais Diaaartationa
Faaluras -Foraign Languagat Sctancat
Math Tablet Oiagramt Mustc Editing
Counsaling. Xaroimg. Pnnttng. Binding.
Student Ralat 388 3191
f
m
i
271
(» A 9)
PUTH C DtSSEPT AXIOMS. THCSCS.
STATISTICAL. FAST. DEPENDABLE
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK MANY TYPE
STYL»» M..«42S ,^ ^^
PROFESSIONAL Typing IBM SalattfU.,
educational, sciantlflc. ptliar. Dee't
waft, call bafora lOam. aftar 4pai. 388-
^^* mo*)
PROFESSIONAL wrilar with B.A. In
EngSah (UCLA) wM typa and adN
BPCBOT. aecurala IBM typist - r—-
8841
KAV: Typlfif . editl««.
fnth^
<iiOlrY
fia WTi
4
Lot Caaoy doS. Term
diaaartallofia. ale Call 384-
7587 tor fraa aatimaM. .^ q
apts furnished
lo UCLA 728 Qayloy
Aea.. Apt. •307. pHena 473-fiti
(28 A 14)
IF your ara tm^kinq a
It malura
Volar an 1 and X
8380 and up. Flaaplaca. awl-
bar, diahwaahar, fc ale any, pool, aacurity
/9« A at
luxury
UCLA.AduNa.no
Sacurlty Wwh
478-8450
(38 A 8)
$188 ATTR. #um.
Separata garapa Laundry facHltlea.
2312 - 33rd St Santa
(98 A 8)
UNUSUAL. baautWul.
apt. Real
ceurta. Fully furnlahed. available e«i
8 MOO. lo 1 yr Moaa. ipppi^l
$270/eie. 478-3887.
(98 A 8)
998 QAVLEV. Bcroaa froei Dykalri.
Bacbalpw. alnplaa, ona bodrooma. 473-
1788, 47S-8SS4. ^^ ^^
FURNISHEO/Unfurnlahad Bacbalor
8140 Slngiaa $185 Pooll Haart of
Waatwood 10824 Llnifcnofc. 475-5584
(28 0lr»
wNb aatra kiioiion,
le UCLA. SS88 lad. uttHbaa. 278-
3879 or 831-8488. ^ ^ ^,j
IF you mim aaakbig a
raaldanca anionpat matura prolaaaleiiei
paopla. saa 440 Vaterfn. 1 and |
badroom. $350 and up. Plrapiaoa.^
welbar. diabwaalior, balcony, pool,
rurtty 473-8SBS. .
»A8»
^ apt mifumiiiied
VENICE-Marlna arae, 8188
■pM., room to buMd
822-7138
> ^ (27 A 14)
refrlfaralor. uppar. In W.L.A. 8178/
(S7AS)
1 BEDROOM, bechalor. fer MpMi. 11714
Goahan Ava.. Brentwood. Call: 478-
(27 A 88
levnp. OM VaMca
Cat okay. Na wly
8102.50 478 8883.
(27 A 8)
aptSa to share
SHARE. Own room. %
CaS 382-2138
$88-8118
(28 A 8)
WUH famala aludant to abara with
lamiH 1 badteeai ^.. wefk to UCLA,
call 478 1831
(28 A 14)
ROOMNMATE naadad (e<
apecioua turnianad • bn.
StaS. Joa 878-1381.
I).
(98 A 121
FE8t.«LE le abera two
bathroom* apartment. $145.00. near
UCLA. Laural 828-4708. work 828-8441.
(28 A 8)
OWN
(MA121
fumlahod. front
backyard. Tbaaa
Mb. $112 Seen er
beck ant.
UCLA on
478-8744
lae a ««»
a tai
Inlmum. 4 lo'
Timr
•eehare
OmI Ray T
with yeimf eaaculiva 821-8888
(28 A 8)
W08MM lo iiiara
Palma area Vary raaaonable. Cell
anytima. 708-3427 _ ^ ,^^
(28 A 13)
OIRL to ahare 3 bedroom apt with
2 othar* in Palma. $108. 888-288f: 870-
(38 A 13)
RO088MATE naadad Mill Malal> IS
mlnutaa^walk from Ackarmah Wf
porklwf : diahwaahar Or>iy $110/monlh
(28 A 13)
paraon $110.88/
Sea. CeNForraat
(28 A 8)
;i for SMblsiisi
I " J
X
15.
FABULOUS FURMIBHED
W. HOLLYWOOD JUNE 18-
(28 A 8)
SISS/ew. FuNy fumlahad.
Includint diabea. TV. alarao. Write
SbeUe Kuebl. 48 Beylalon St. 418.
(28 A 8)
FACULTY-STAFF
. «r
Apr. 18. 478-4877 am/i
'28 A 8)
$788. PACIFIC PALISADES Ocean
:u4ala 3 kadroem. 2 batti
wionen. view
Mey let
(28 A 8)
houses for rent
BRENTWOOD - beeudKd
le 3 badroom. 3 baBi
Apdl 18 - Sipliliai ■ 472-2484.
(38 A 14)
(30 A 0)
PRIVATE houai. Chelea
By owner 470-3an or 472«a888.
(38 A IS)
HOUSE tor Rent.
4
478
<30 A lat
b Ona
A. MSSB-ISTSerFfenk Lute 1388 8112.
(28 A 8)
Can 8
CLEAN, amall
Pant
S2S0
Santa
30 AS)
MAR VISTA AREA by owner. 3 bd/
aiad dan. I^Hi be. aiaiiy
1718. $77 JS8.
(31 a 14)
5
(31 A 0)
(21 AS)
house to share
8)
Qary 47'
house to
Pacific
m A 14)
(22 A 8)
MBLPf
pay tt a Mfbl
bafbroom uaa
714
for couch apaee and
Call Patrick or loava
174.
(BS A9)
YOUNG Attomay't femlly aeeks 3
bodroom apartment or bouae (
8489)
CaS 821-8882.
rnji a ^e%
AWARE, raaponalbia, neo-ameblfif/
llvbif. S
542-7821
»n,f
- WL.A Jebe
gloria (7-8 am).
(33 A 12)
FUR8MBNB01^
May28.Aui.28
ooroom api. noaeae vai
4a Unlv prad coupM
271-S47S.
house exchanflo
H4AVE you tried bouaaawoppbif tor'
tummmr vecedon? H'a muab mar* com-
ibaepar and more fun then
We fieee an eaoapdenel bewaa In
England'e Waal Country and eie leoking
for aaoM In Pacific Paliaadee/ Santa
w 9mmmmf 78. (July 20-Sapt 5).
M PeSiedaa (10 yra) 8 want
baeuMul mailaaal lowna m i
ki 0 lae renMbif houae, 8
11 beda. pert of It 480 yra. oM but now
borne la eleae to Stonahenpa. King
Arlbur'a country, QIaelanbury el Holy
(keP and T.8 ElioTk Seal Cokar Herdy
country la only W-hr'a drive Swap
eM8 • a VW bua (pfe# tor cemptop)
and eemtortebla ealaon tor.
(8), portacftb, Mph cbeb
pan. Our chOdran ara 18. 14, 8 Good
dbeet beto aarvlca to London (2% bra).
WffN* Tad 8 BeiBem SraiinbeRi. OM
(?4AS|
87«<4272:
entertainnient
$198 DUPLICATE Brldpa
Wedneadey afternoona Wild Whiat
Bridge Club 1885 Weatwood Slvd
(7
fS*A*) HORSCBACK rtdbif M Bw
full day ratea For IrvtoVmatlen e«d
call 455 J15 S1J8 dM-
Pdi .A >-. - •
(TAB)
room A board
(28 A 81
ERS
474-3371 er 474-8113
ROOM and beerd for $188
HNperd Houae
827
(28 Otr)
room and board
exchange for help
ROOBI
In
Aid)
Am OARDEM
• IS)
PET OJC
477
i«y a •«
(S2ASI
EAUTIFUL
r^ aei
LIMNT
aeperete becbeter epi.
HoMy
838-fl4S
■WTsr
ffyifi
••. . t. I
n
..(
_j
Despite earlrBliminatlon, basketballers satisfied
DB Sparts WriiBr
* In retrospect, even thougti
tht w<)a8en*8 baskcttMdl team
was upset ia ilw opsMiaf faaie
of the playiaffi iris year, it was
s highly satiAetory season —
and next year couid be better
iaaior Karen Nasli M the
Bniisis in scoring with a 15.3
ppg sveragB. The pre-dental
maioT was fourth on the team
ia rebtoirnds and fourth in
assists. Nash should return
next year as a starting forward;
if she does,, it will be her
fourth year on the team and
her third straight as a starter
Fsashman Anita Ortega was
a sparkplug for the Bruins at
the other forward, replacing
Veniu Griffey when she de-
parted after just two games.
Gnffey left the school for
scholastic roasons, but is ex-
pected to return next year If
she doesn't, Ortega should be
wkki to carry the load. The
first -year Bruin out of Los
Angeles High tossed in 14.3
ppg
Ann Meyers was third in
scoring (14.0), but she did so
nuiny other things well. Meyers
led the Bruins in reboundf»
though the 5-7 star usually
played guard. Meyers, who
rapeated this year as All-
Amencan, also paoad the
in assists, the area of
fouls, steals, and was a great
defensive piQiar.
Senior Judy Lewinter will be
sorely missed next season. The
enthusiastic 5-9/2 gward quar-
terhacked the Bruins* offense,
when a fast break mm unable
^iirinatehalizeibr This run-ani-
gun team Lewinter led the
team in both field goal (54 per
ce«) and free throw (77 per
cent) percentage while passing
the Club) mmi scorii^ 14 points
per game.
»
Another graduating starter
that will be severely nmmi is
Leslie Tiapnell. Basiias being
asststai^ tiaiMr for her team,
*n'rBp^ finished secoi^ amof\g
Bruin starters in field goal
percentage, second in rebound-
ing and was a big force in
pn8H8B8iB play
3C transfer Heidi Nestor
played well as backup center
during the season The 6-1
pivot, who will be a seiuor
next year, figures to have ^ a
pretty good Itot at dH Start-
ing spot aext year This year,
Nestor was third on the squad
in scormg, sixth m scoring.
.Lofi Allen is smaU (5-6) for
a forward, but her presence
was feh on the beards. Beth
CLASSIFIED 4D
rocmi and board
exchanoe tor help
room for rent
ARTIST
mXJL
ilieiMaeldeaMaM
S7S/monPi
(SPA IS)
(27 A 81
OIRL le 4nee ebMdren MT Tbura aUtOO fOr SalO
8
1871 . 288 SB "** ^
•toerlMp/wlndewa AM FM Backer
•toroe. Teebemalar
2S8 8 4
mernlnp ar
uca^.
(27 A 8)
AUDI -73 189L9 (now bi Tl) 2 4f.,
4 apd. FM. elocli. lecbomeler. XbH.
888 CRH. $2888. Cad 2894188 er 8S8-
878-7181.
837-7211.
HI AS)
Ml API
porty
^232
FORCIQM Student: Reem/board fer
^euae/perdee eBbfee. PrIaeM reem/
fSFAS^
room for rent
^''SS PRfVATl aelM, Or. 'a tiema. Oerdtn
view, immf enlaa rally Priveey. Older
P' I. Ralarancea. OLS-SBFS.
199 a 88
QUIET bedreem. beHwoem
riiiilnii88ereaw7|
(99 A 9)
ffd. PHieM
888 end 8128. Aeroea treei
477-
78 ORAM TORINO 4 deer. ab.
Siasemaae. 84888 er meoeneb
Euinlnji II I 8SBI (41 A 14)
1899 FIAT 134 Spldar cenv; aieeir
aeund; body noada aoma wk: Cell
HI AS)
(41 A 14)
841-7244
71.
1717.
BBNAULT -74
(41 A 14)
472-4744
HI A 13)
72 PUT 198
TOVOTA
•n 9m 4*dr.
H1A9I
HI All) ^
(29 A 9)
1983 OLOBMOBH.! F-BS Ci
gBa8 ^^M t^^M W^B
)eb-eair8:
2173A Bbpr. I. 488-9881.
H1A8)
Ml AtS)
MJMBT Private room/bath Kitchen
pPli^apea. lauwdry. Weafweed Mela
'•cutty or aludani. 474-7122 efler
72 SUBARU (
81888 888-7S88
reflablto trana.
HI a 8)
1871
lAUTiPUL
Ml A 8)
(28 A 8)
271'
n CHfV Vapa OT
^mBw i
(41 A 12)
21).
lee A
HI A 12)
HI A 12)
•!•••
(28 A 8)
HI A1S)
1992 OLOSMOBILS F-BB
878. LlfRI
B^P ^^^V^B*
HI A 12)
nb Ae%
B7 VW
47b4lB8.
Mooie hit over 50 per cent oi
hcsliou (21 for 40) in limited
aaioa. NaMcy Jacksda oaoie in
off the bench to lead thit Bruin
offense well, gi^i^g Lewintcf
fasts. The 5-3 guard cmmM be
Lewinter*s successor to the
(Buarterback pasttioa; she
third a BBBists this
Patricia Ericksoa, who will be
s semor next 3«ar, b in a long
hne of returnees, the Bruins
(19-4) lose only three players
Reportedly, recruiting is go-
ing very well. With a new crop
o( good players, a large num
ber of returning players and
several players from aa 11*2
junior vanity vying for next
year's squad, competition for
the 12-person vanity should be
good. This should strengthen a
squad which, though tough,
has as yet failed to quahfy for
nationals.
The hst of JV players who
appear to have a $ood chance
to make the varsity team next
3Mar, depending on their sum-
mer development, is virtually
as loMg as the squad's roster
Eueryone on the nine-person
roster scored in double figures
at least one pmt.
The JV squad was headed
by sophomore Devon Scott.
who poured m 17.5 ppg» in-
cluding a high of 28 points
Janice Wri^t (14.1) and
Jeamne Cardiff (10.6) had top
games of 26 and 24 respective-
ly. At 6-5. %9ttn Munsterittat)
is improving her rebounding
each game. Her high rebound-
ing gBBse was 25; is imr high
soohiig gpatf she npjtghed 19
points. Cindy Harvie quarter-
I
I
>
I
hacked the smbbbsbM JV*s om ^
offeaea, hallhawked to no end £
on defense and in ggaaral
helpad the team's effort im-
msMBBly. What Harvie lacks m
height (5-2), $he makes up for
in hustle
At this pointy it is very dif-
fieHite predict aim will ha aa
next year't rosier, b«M every
indication is that the team win
be imiMrovad . over a tsim that
was %C in Pauley Pavihon this
year.
Next saaaoa, besides im-
proved player quality, look for
improved officiating. In all
likelihood, there will be either
one or two male officmls for
the game Men have the ad-
Vantage over women in the
refereeing job due to more
expeneBae.
Although the Bruins en
a certain amount of
this season, there could he
a taller squad next season. The
Bruins* lack of size nUHle its
impact felt m a couple of close
games Hpad coach Ellen
Mosher sailf, however, thpt she
b not wilhng to sacrifice quick-
ness for height Indeed, the
Bruins were one of the quick-
t^st and best-conditioned teams
on the West Coast.
When Meyers fcpaa8Bd as
All-American this year, she
was one of two Wmt Coast
players to accon\plish that feat
t|B . other was Nancy
Dunkie of Fullerton The
award has now been given by
Kodak for two seasons, and
Meyers (whrnTl freshman last
year) remains the only frosh to
win the prestigious award.
aiftoe for sale
T
• 1 ■
1878 MUBTAMQ MeBNeb. Pe
mp. AuMmaSc. Maw Pieo. M
eandMan $1888. GeH eRar
888-8434
amr tlaar
sas pm.
(41 A IS)
73 CHBV Lu«: SBMI, dma. ew
SSaSS er baM eBer. CaN a
473'78B7.
wriiiSBii
Rw 12«8
HI A P)
Mrler. AM-FM alarao eaeeette Beat
•Mat. SSS-^SS. let A i»i
bicyclee far aele
roCLM - 10'
NMMt s ea noan
S8 Near 817W
SpJb.
83 CM WINDSOR Prel
(42 A 1*
cycloe, acoolora
foreelo
73 PMfTO
472-
TASMHA 73. RO 388,
8F S712. 8888. pr/ply
HI A 12)
(43 A 14)
1974 HAMtrr 178
(1J99). aiiil8l8i Mi
erbeti Tom 391-7731.
143 A 121
bicycles for sale
74 HONOA 2P8 C9 9989. Si
flieebenlcal condition Aak Hef
9997. 497-3888 laeaa nmm 8
HS4 8)
YAMAHA riSPP t»n49f 3.888 m|lee.
1874 purchaaad 1875 ^ainnp. beeb
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Houston eying Tellez for head track
• !•
sltlon="
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By 4oc V!
DB SporH Wrifer
Tom lelku, UMstant tracit
field coActi at UCLA. !<»
clot« to being named bead
cOAcii at the University of
Houston. Daiix Brum sources
report The announcement
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14 Qomt as-early as Sunday
~1kccofdiiif to Harry FoukeT
athletic dicector at the Texas
school, "no final decision will
be made until April 15, but
Mr. Tellez is being very highly
considered There's no denial
that he is high on our list "
Fouke said he approached
T|Jlc/. "after his name came to
ffrom several outstanding
sources. We have a very high
rcgsrd for him and we feel he
is an excellent coach.*"
J.D Morgan, the athletic
director at UCLA, would not
comment On Ihe possibility of
Tellez leaving, but he did- say.
••Our coaches arc often inter-
viewed for jobs at other
schools. It's not the first time
it*s happened and it won't be
the last time
"I don't like to comment on
a coach before he takes a job.
But after he accepts I like to
praise our people **
If Tellez IS chosen, he will
replace present Cougar track
coach Johnny Morns, who is
retiring at the end of 1976
coUejiate season after a long
imd i^istmKuished career. —
"Morns has been the coach at
Houston for 21 years and is
leaving |only because he has to
""The state of Texas says you
must retire at the age of 65,"
he explained in his slow South-
ern drawl, "unless vou have the
approval of the Regents, ath-
letic director and president I*m
68 now, and I've had three j}f
the extensions alre^ly. That
was enough.**
But Morfb won*t retire from
track. "^HZTT-Icis accepted the
head coaching position at
Houston Baptist Coriefe '^Vd
g- aiy if t couldn*! stay in
track.** he said
The past three seasons
Houston has been In tkt
Southwest Conference, where
the Cougars have recorded two
sixth and one seventh place
finish But earlier in Morns'
career they were a track power,
finishing in the national top
ten on six occasions.
Morns has coached seven
Oh mpiif including hurdler
Lee Yooder, distance man Leo-
nard Hilton, and quarter-miler.
■taMilMiBi
Bruin spikers beat SG
By Michael SondheifiMr
DB Spoits Writer
UCLA successfully began iu foul- match
quest for the Southern California Inter-
collegiate Volleyball Association (SCIVA)
conference title with a three gaihe to one
victory over USC last night in Pauley Pav-
ilion before its largest crowd of tiK year
2,146.
The Bruins (7-2) have a first place show-
down with Pepperdine (lO-l) tomorrow
night at 7:30 pm in Pauley Pavilion. The
Waves beat Sanu Barbara (7-2), 1 6- 1 4, 8-15,
15-11 and 15-11 before an overflow crowd of
over 3,2(X) in Sanu Barbara. Tomorrow
night is the Waves final match of the season,
so a Pepperdine victory would clinch the
automatic NCAA berth to Muncie. Indiana.
A UCLA win would virtually tie the Bruins
for the conference lead and mean UCLA
would only have to beat UC Sanu Bviwa
next Wednesday and San Diego Sute next
Friday night in Pauley Pavilion to force a
one match playoff with Pepperdine.
"We were flat after the first two games,
but Fred Sturm kept us alive with his
spiking,** said Al Scales, Bruin head coach
after last night's victory. "We made too
many errors at the net and we will have to
work on our misukes in practice.** jk
The Bruins won, 15-7, 15-6, 6-15 and in
15. **U was nice to finally win a cloae fame
like the last one,** said team captain I>enny
Cline. *'We have had trouble in the close
games once a«e hava feached 12, but the
crowd, really helped us tonight when they got
behind us.**
One sad note in game one for UCLA wm
an ankle injury to 6-5 Mike GottadMyt
Gottschall sprained his ankle on the third
play of the game while blocking at the net.
and was sidelined for the rest of the match.
After UCLA got a 1<0 ka4, USC ran off
ten straight points for a fO-l advanUge and
won 15-6.
UCLA had early 5-1, 10-2 and 12-3 leada,
but USC rallied to cm the score to 12-11
After an exchange of points, USC led 1 5- PI.
Sturm lied the match at 15 off of a Cline
serve
Cline gave UCLA the lead on a missed hit
by Hill.
he
Olan Castle ^ > ^'
**Thm were IB to ■ 45
plications (or my jjob,'
continued **But no
has been nude yet Moat ol
them were real outstanding
**1 have applied at Houston,**
said Tellez yesterday, *^because
i -thmk I want to be a- haai
coach. I feel that the Univer-
sity o( Houston will offer a
challenge to me It has all the
things Vm iooluag for as a
coach the people are really
nice and the department is
pro|p-esaivc.**
Telle? said that' it will be
cxtrenkcly hard to leave South-
ern CalifornHu an area he*s
lived in all of his life. He grew
up in Orange County and at-
tended Whittier College, where
he lettered in track and foot-
ball. Later he coached at
Bueru Park High School and
FuUerton Junior College.
**i have many friends here,"
h^ continued, ** ai)d all the
people here have been most
cooperative. J.D Morgan is a
fantastic athletic director and
the type of persori I hke to be
associated with. I can*t say
enough about hint**
la seven mmmm at UCLA,
the 42-year-old Tellez has
gained a reputation as one of
the finest field coaches in the
nation. Some of the -outsund-
ing performers he has coached
irK:Iude high jumper Dwight. — r-eplacement if TaBez k^iviC
encc Taylor. James Buns, Mi-
lan Tiff, Harry Fi
Wilbe Banks
A leaditag track expert called
Tellez **one oi the fineit tech-
niciaaa in the entire country.
Hm tthag of world claas per*
formers is an obvious indi-
catioo of his talent and de-
ilHatioR to te^ ^vork.**
Jim Bush, the head Bruia
track and field coach,
*-He (Tellez) it ooe of the
coaches in the country. But he
wanted to be a head co|k:h. He
his ideas of his own, and when
a man is so stropg in the
beliefs of his own methods he
should be a head coach.**
Bush said that Houston
would be a good place td
coach ''They have good money
there,** he said. ''There are Ian
of oilmen, and I urulerstand'
they*re going to build a new
track surface in their football
stadium.
"I don*t think his leaving
will hurt the program that
much,** Bush continued "There
IS a list of ten people who
would like to have the job if he
leaves. They*re all very quali-
fied.
"With the athletes we get
here, all you need is a fine
coach. UCLA is close to
utapia for track aad field ath-
letes.**
Bush said that one person
was prinury in his mmd as a
Stones, pole vauher Francois
Tracanelli and long jumper
Finn Bendexin, all Olympuns.
The list of Tellez* tnple
jumpers is* also impressive and
includes world clasien Clar-
but he refused to divulge the
name. A source close to the
IXaiiy Bruim fpeeiilates that it
may be Rick Sloan, a former
Bruin decathlon man how
coaching at Washington Sute.
Ruggers take college title
but lose national crown
•y Hi
UB Imports Wrfter
UCLA*s collegiate rugby dynasty still Uvea,
The Brums captured their ninth consecutive collegute national
championship and finished third in the nation*s final rankings,
behind national champion Bay Area Tounng Side (BATS) and
the Sanu Monica Rugby Club. The Bruins finished above all
other collefe teams but lost the nationals at the Monterey
iioumament over spring break.
UCLA finished the 1976 season wHh a 13-3 record, bringing
the schoofs won-loss mark to 239-29 since Dennis Storer*s arrival
here as co4ch ten years a§a.
UCLA*s bid for a third straiglht undisputed national champ-
ionship (includes both university and club teams), ended on
March 20 in Monterey, California, the site of the annual
Momerey Rugby TottraaflKnt. The BATS defeated defending
Monterey champion, UCLA 9-3, m the semi-finals of the nation's
most prestigious tournament before trounang the Sanu Monica
Rugby Club m front of over 6.000 fans on March 21 for the
championship.
UCLA had defeated Sanu Clara, 12-4, the Old Gaels Qub of
San Francisco, 20-6, and a highly ranked Wellington, New
Zealand club. 4-0, to reach the seans.
(ConthNied oa Paft 23)
GET A REAL EDUCATION
ADD TO YOUR COLLEGE EDUCATION —
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF EX PERIENTIAL LEARNING THROUGH
FIELDWORK WITH "^RIDGING THE GAP"
valuable information to th^M youths, but you will
get the charge to see how the juvenile justice system
works We're looking for people who can sincerely
commit themselves to this type of volunteer work.
CrtI 825-2415 or come by Kerckhoff Rm 406 anytime!
It only takes one night a week! Tutor encarcerated
youths in reading and math, or conduct smaii classes
in arts and crafts, music, cultural studies, etc. These
young men and women must eventually return to
"free'"7dctety and your work can help make this
return more successful! Not only will you bring in-
\
\
JOIN US AT BRIDGING THE GAP
L.
7~T~
- ^
m
XCVfN/Miimb«f S
University of CsNfomte, Los Angeiss
FfMsy, Aprs t, 1S7S
f
m
Mardi Gras opens s
SIS
n
\
Sy Sara C
DB Stair
Promising to be an '*Experi-
loe in eatertainment,** with
'live entertainment, ndet,
» celebhtiet, booths and food,
UCLA Mardi Gras is prepar-
ia§ for its Apnl 23 opening.
Mardi Gras, which runs
April 23-24-25, is an annual
campus camiifal Sctigned to
support Unicamp. Unicamp is
a ttudcnt-run summer camp
for underpnvikcged aad dia-
betic children sponsored by the
Univerfity Religious Con-
Javdved in the lJmvertity*s
lapfort of the camp are flMat
of the \3B itadent orpaaiza-
here and over ASSS attt^
involve^ group
designs, builds atid operates a
booth There are over 60
*
haoths offenng exatement and
part la pat I on for everyone at-
tending, emphasized Patty
Oertel. Mardi* Gras Public Re-
lations Chairmaa.
The three BMua booths are
ipoaiorod by three different
fraternities in conjuoction with
three soronties. The booths are
Funhousc, Lambda Chi and Pi
Phi, Minsky's, SeU Delta Chi
and Chi Omega. House of
Horrors. Phi Psi and Kappa
Kappa Gamma.
Pizza , wonton. frozen baaa-
■■§, hamburgers and corn dofi
are juat tome of the dettoiaMi
the food hoothf will provide.
MoM^ieod wiS^he eooked or
prepared by HoSiola. said
Oertel. Bottle Bang, Panda
Pitch. Friahee Ti
no are leoK of the
booths.
''Uaiqtie, aolhiag ^ktc like
it«** it the way Oertel
Mardi Graa. CtkSii
toes, including Mayor
Dr.
J<
will fodoe the^ various
aeln« If
will be theOnuid
diversified'
day will be family days Those
teisions will be specially geared
for children Extra clowns,
mimes, a magic show, cartoon
characters and different rides
aad shows are soav of the
spectal entertainment Prices
will be lowered thoae days.
Smcc Mardi Gri|^ is three
davs this year, with the addi-
tion of a Sunday session. Oer-
tel said hopefully about 60.000
people will attend the in-
volvement ot the community it
essential, explained Oertel.
Community support through
attending, donating materials
and planning determines the
sucecat of Mardi Gras, said
Oertel. This n the only event
where students are ahlc^ to
participate with the commu-
nity. T hit it tffod for commu-
nity relatioat, Oertel said
Mardi Grat hafiat Friday,
April 23 at 6 pm. Operatioo
will be exteoSed thit year to
Sunday, from noon-4 pas. The
caraiaai • MaiiaOad on the
North Athletic Field There
will be plaa^r of campw park-
ing and it will be free oa
Saaday
Ticfceto art on tak aad can
be purchased at Kerckhoff
Hall Ticket Office or thMOgfl
Mutual Ticket AgnMiat. For
further information call the
Mam Om a«ee at n^JSST
s:
Lehman Bnghtman (ahove) aod Deaoit Banks, American
ladian leaders, will speak at 7M tonight la Dadd Hall 121. They
will alM show the fitaa, The Loo«M War.** Baakt, aad Clyde
Sellecourt founded the AoKricaa ttduOL Uovtm^m (AIM)
Banks and Russell Meaat were co-defendants oa charget
ttemming from the 1973 takeover of Woaodad Kaee, South
Dakou. Thote chargat wmm idiaaMtaed hagassr af FBI uo-
:s it earrently wanted on charytt ia
founded the Aommbb laSiaa Catoia Ctlir at UC
Berkeley Brightmaa was arretted for hsfSofiss isoltt bat
charget were diaoMaad. Their appcaranrfc it oa-ipaanaad by the
Native AaHBSBOt Slodeat Aaaociatioa aad Frogram Taik Force*
m pwt af Attericaa lodlM Calt
Cuhurr Wegk, w^mmni by the Natiw
involvn aSiiMli hma aad
area in daaMoatratiooa of ladtaa cakare. An
Amfricaa ladian rock group will appear at
s
aiffat at 7:€0 pat ia the
a Native A— kaa left
't
I
I- • /,
» •
I
I CASINO NIGHT RUSH PARTY
1, TRIANGLE FRATERNITY
^1 Friday. Aprils / 5l9Landfair Ave
^ 7 PM 479-9657
ICVIM
f. IflPI
^.dL
I
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/a 3ar6eraJ
PIZZA
^^^^^ aetw«#n Bcrrington ond Bondy
11113 Witshire Btvd GRt-01^
\f Ouftng If 10
•mmmmrn ji irf ar im» 4auQ>
CoiimiM'<<M>iOwt aetrtf JO0 Wm^
moo6 Pif Lot futg&tm OaMdmif
MMM Coprftg**t ^979 by urn ASi4CL^
tt mm L99
Lu«m> CurwiHUmwi
Michael LM
MurriM
Dtck Kr«uz
fif
— — •* ..... .»
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«■
«
ZEN AND JUDAISM
WMkend Workshop
SponsbiwS by
Zmt\ Carilar of Los AngalM
Leaders
MAEZUMI ROSHI Zen Maeter
RABBI DON SINGER HMal RabM
OR. BERNARD CLASSMAN Zm\ Monk
7 pm April 23 lo 3 pm AprM 25
At Hidden Trails Camp
Agoura. Calftomia
Dor^tion $50 Couples $80
Students $35
Child Care NmMmkilm
for further information arxj reservations
caM 3B4 8D0G
- o«
( .
Cflity Coofwlly
PHty Croat
MMm DmN^
MkrfwMt DiMil
Ft
K«r Oarin
io* NatfMn Jofwt
Atafi MichMi Kartwinig
Moban Koppany
Dabbia Paniah
Oumn
Paul
Tarn McK>n
Maal
Marty
-" Mark Rubm
ChrtaUattMa
Owi«a< 0>la«m
.^.T
IMectneSliinfOinisCentint
MilMEPRESKNTSmr
Todd Simm\
Rflbart WalBh
»•»*
E^Jk
TODAY AT A SELECT THEATRE NEAR YOU
Par
ukTiwmmi^m sat i2«9am
WUTWMi Bmin 477-Om
DAILY 12 JO • 3:M • S 10 • S^O A lO.JO rw
LATf SHOW rat SAT 12 4S AM
DAILY 12 )0 • l.aO • S:30 • 0:00 A la JO Pitf
aiT erCMMBIGI Gagt Orwt HI fir 11 35
DAILY 0.-A9 A 0:19 MO
LATI SMaOPrai . SAT I1:J0PM
an IF aMtrar v.ntia^ D' .e -336^5*9
DAILY A:4%A0 1^PM
lATl iMOW FfM . SAT ll:MP««
fo> Two 332-M50 V
aHHY: lt:»-lTO0-S10>«:«0 4iaWPM
aa.VEi DTT StuOo D««t-I«i 39S-I2S0
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LATI ONOW Fill SAT IIIOPM
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rWL. SAT 11:30
4 n*2i
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l-7:Ji4 0E4SO«l
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rai.sAT. uriSPM
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AMERICAL
lUMW^
•SiilleS^LofAi
I em Pf •r Migin ^ <ai » 4yB-By^
THE ASIAN AMERICAN
TUTORIAL PROJECT
it wngmg^d in tutoring ttioaa handicappad by the laci ala
basic proficiency in English in the Aaian communities
Knowledge of a aecond language, though helpful, is not
iry. ,
For fudhar Informatioffi lii^Mlra at
CampbaN Ha8 ^^ UCLA Of call t2Sr&178
Sponoofod by tt>o Gofhmunity Sorviooo Commiooion
of tho Sttidont Logiolotivo Cour«i(
rm
ASTOMSHMar
"ASTOmSNlllGf 'Tax> Onvor'
hos muKlt-tonang, skin prick 11119
tuiponis thot builds liki an air
roid Bron." -Ch«ria« CnampUn
L.A. Timmt
X d UMBIA PfC TimtS pfr%em%
ROBERT DEN IRQ
TAXI
DRIVER
«wr««rv K i Irmm >Wil»« Hrwhl \Bti
WEEK!
.1
Campus Eoootl Film Commlooior of mo
Sludorvt Logtsiativ* CourwIt^^iaMnls:
Ackerman Grand
Ballroom
Nn.«>k«
Friday. April a
7&9:30pra Adm.$1.00
tetaM is. 4mm\ mak. ^aionit
to Mo 6 Mt whore wo
llio bast falif €l in the w^d. 1|^
oofftc garbonto boons,
grind them good »n4 flnc. ^6
aU kindt of spices ond tofiio
sag* aad shape them into smalt
patties which we fry right in
froiit of you. We toss some into
a alee fresh pMa. add lettuce.
taaMlo. and a coyplo pic Mas.
iut that! all we do. We don't eat
It for you. %«
Oayley & Weyburn in the VUlaao
Eat here / take out / open 24 hfs.
ENGINEERS
monday night, 7 pm
kerckhoff 400
consumer projects:
landlord-tenant
negative heel shoe follow-up
. ground beef labeling
7kr\r\ more
-t— <-
-w
And ' /-T' V.^-_
Cuhural and Recreational Affairs
4
I
1
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<
•J
Presents
A Chamber Quintet
playing Shostakovich,
Ives, DeVienne, Gould
Monday, April 12, S p.m.
Sunset Canvon Recreation Center
■ *'^-
1
I
STONED
Got thejTiunchies?
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Stones cjt dianoandb* rubtes, saphires, «ind opalft — with
radit< hmg accessories dire ff^atured in the fine erwpcHium
of HandtMie leweiry at Shanes.
Abo I4K Cay Hafian
"S'ScipsiiiimtracelH S1S.it
**$*" matrhing Nf-rkUce $2a.it
You've got to visit Shanes to believe the vast »e*«rt'^n of
pakit rifc^tr or whatever your destre may he.
And best f)f ^11 «ifc the laair (
SHAN£*S IfWfllEirY CO
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101 S MOXTON
477-WJ
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jMusic performance: whei^e to go and how? I Performance .
t ic
.,»v I
_u_; — 1 — -
>- i-
-Cd.
I
By HoviN PcMJier
^ The trumpet player ihook his head wistfully as he
•J put N^iif horn hack into its case
^ Tm no expert — hell, I'm not even a music
major. But it teems to me that performance here
iHi*t what It could he For a music department, there
just aren*t too Hftny people makinf music.**
The quantity and quality of music made by
Hudents at UCLA is a lentitive subject in the music
depart mem, ^iMMaatf — grtidgingh', hedgmgty, and
oilen anonymously by both faculty and students But
the picture that cmerget when they do talk is of a
performance program that was never very -flMMf,
hfts hit rock hoMom in the past two or three years
hecause of a muhitude of causes, and will probably
^ improve significantly as a result of curriculum
S: changes next year.
*! Certainly the scene looks dismal this year. After
^ barely surviving for several years, the UCLA
\ Symphony Orchestra effectively ceased to exist this
^ year vi(hen director Mehli Mehta had to cancel its
S" annual concert for lack of personnel.
^ ^^^tT using its entire budget on a small production
^ with a cast of four, the UCLA Opera Workshop has
had to limit itself to performances without an
orchestra — which it pretehly couldn't muster
anyway. In December, Martin Bernheimer of the Lot
Aiifekf Times referred to ^'the dcchne of opera,
among other things, at UCLA** as the year*s **moit
disheartening development in the ivory towers.** "
Enrollment in the University chorus dropped from
155 in winter 1974 to 54 in winter 1976 Dunng the
same period, enrollment in alt the music depart-
ment's non-ethmc performsiiee courses dropped from
555 to 240
Clearly, performance here has run into problems,
among them the retirement of l^ey people, a lack of
famiedf effort and directed programming, and, a
College of Letters and Science rule limiting the credit
Its students may receive for performance classes.
But the present suuation, according to some,
represents neUhei drastic decUne oar iacij^ieBt
oiaaster.~ ' '■ — ^ -^ '^'"' '^-"^ ■ ■ — --^-
**ln many ways, performance here has improved
since I came fie re ten years ago,^' said music
department chairman Frank P'Accone *'And we're
probably getting better quality music majors ;thaa we
ever did before. - i
**You have to remember that UCLA* has a
depaErtment of music, not a school of music. We give
of Arts m music, not a Bachelor of
Oa PtHMo &y flantfy Qm»
O'Accono: bring porformonoo up lo por
Music, which is a conservatory degree.**
The difference is in balance and specialization. At
school of music or conservatory, the course of study
is heavily concentrated in music. At this campus, *
music major must take 96 units (out of the gradua-
tion minimum of 180) of courses outside the music
department
"Personally, I think the balance should be shifted
in favor of the major.** said D*Accone, "but the idea
of a liberal arts education m music is sound I went
to music school where only a fourth of my studies
were non-musical When I suddenly deaded I didn't
want to be a performer, I had to really scramble lo
catch op with graduate students who'd had a more
rounded edueilion.**
"The department here was origiuially intended to
be a music education department, back in the I930*s
and 40*s,** D'Accone continued. ""But a few_tap-flight
compoaers like Schoenberg and Roy Harris and
some top musicologists gradually began to chaagr
the department's image and emphasu. By the I9ii^
UCLA had one of the best musicoloiy ^>^ com-
position departmenu in the country, and it*s only
been in the past few years that steps have been uken
lo bring performance up to a comparable level.**
That you chooae a liberal arts education says
something already,** offered Susanna Watling, a
Master of Fine Aru rsniJidnU and departmental
teaching assistant who works with Mehli Mehta and
tiK orchestras.
"There are problems anywhere you land, but Tve
found a larfc coUeye atmosphere with lou of ihingi
goii^ on has hiin m^d for me, jygt in terms of
by Paul I
OTVfiv. iPWinQ aiMippoinioQ
lifelong commitment to music. When I came here, I
had no idea thUjjMinted to be a performer,** said
Wajthng, a flutist who won the S2,000 first prize in
last year*s Frank Sinatra classical instrumental
competition.
The curnculum here is not designed to a^ttract
performers,** noted Scott Shepherd, a percHiiDnist
who has won this year's Sinatra first prize in popular
instrumental performance, and like Watling a T.A.
in the department Shepherd came to UCLA in 1973
after ggpikinting from the University of Redlnnds
with a performance degree — something UCLA does
not offer.
**The breadth requirements at a place like Red-
lands aren't nearly what they are here, and there a
music student has to study so many hours a week
and do a senior recital,** he said.
**The liberal arts music approach isn't necessarily a
bad thing, but it's a factor in performance or the
lack of it. People like to blame the department, but
it*s really the whole University of California
approach.**
The UC approach is one reason why Mchli Mehta,
the father of Los Angeles PhUharmonic director
Zt^bin Mehta and a renowned conductor in his own
right, has had difficuhy pulling a group together '
-What a lot of it boils down to,^ said Shepherd, -is
that there are a lot of musicians who aren't capable
of meeting Mehta's standards. The people who are
gomg to be as serious as he requires and invest the
time are not that hkely to be here because the
c;umculuni is not for them **
Actually, the orchestra picture is only half as bad
ax it seems. There are more than enough woodwind,
brass, and percussion players to sustain the depart-
ment's respectable band program. But an orchestra
has to consist largely of stnngs, and the violins,
violas, cellos and basses just aren't there.
Mehu, 67, IS a wiry, exciuble, and usually excited
native of India who moves and talks ripidly and
with great animation. He is also, by his own
description, a bitter man.
"The sute of performance here is nil,** Mehu
exclaimed in an empty orchestra room. '*Not good,
had or indifferent but nil. Students are here for four
years of fooling, and simply don't want lo make an
effort to learn about music or learn their in-
struments In classic music, you have to make an
effort.
**ln 12 years, we have done all the Beethoven
symphonies, Brahnu, TrJMiilrn^iky, — preat music
that a serious musician should be willing to go mtles
for the opportunity to play,** he continued.
•"The opportunity is right here, and they refuse to
take advantife of it. Blame the studenu and no one
• mm
Among both facuhy and students, there are those
who feel that some of the blame belongs to Mehu,
though none will say so publicly.
Mehu IS, of the old mercurial rant-and-rave school
of maestros. A casual ohMrver might be appalled to
walk into the orchestra room and hear Mehta
shoutflif **Can't you count? You don*t know music;
you don*t know mathematics; you don't know
anvthing!"
-WcU, Mchirs like that,** anid a member of the
factlhy. -and moat of the kids accept it. If they're
good, lit makes them work harder But I think
recehtlv. that appronch hai driven out a lot of the
iMaer players. Instead of goading them, it just
fancMy remind!^ them that they aren't up to snuff.**
tK course I howl the musicums out.** Mehu
conmdad. **But it never mea — i the
'*if I were a <dkflipn who devoi^ joung musici
they wouldn't come from all over town to American
Youth Symphony Rehearsals every Saturday.**
The county-sponsored American Youth Symphony
has indeed thrived under Mehu^s direction, to the
where some faculty- members wonder if he
i*t negkcted the UCLA groups for its sake.
**People are going to knock Mehu, but I can't,**
said Anahid Nazahan, a jumor music major and
flutist. *4 came here expecting the sort of orchestfl^
that a university of UCLA's suture should have, and
we get about four violinists a night. If I were a string
player, I'd be here every night.**
Eventually, the problem becomes the same for
both director and students: it is hard lo make music
where none is being made. Musicians like to be part
of a functioning, quality group, and dishke sittmg
around waiting for people to show up. **Nobody
wants to come as long as there's nothing going on,
but nothing can happen as long as no one shows
up,** says a viohnist who doesn't attend orchestra
rehearsals very often. **It*i a terrible rut for a
perfornung group to be in, but Vm not about to
waste hours every week in a one-man attempt to
save the orchestra. Something more has lo happen.**
Something more apparently will happen. Mehu
retires at the end of this year, to be rephwed by
Samuel JCrachmalnik of Washington, who will also
take comflMUid o( the Open Workshop, replacmg
Jan Popper who retired Inat year.
Most of the people involved agree that Mehu,
who has had great sneoMS with the symphony and
chamber orchestras in the pnst« would not be able to
rebuild the program were he to sUy. Mehu says
simply, **! leave UCLA a very disappointed man.**
^ Krachmalnik wilt immediately hnvesome ad-
vanuges over his predecessor. Next year, lor the first
time, music majors will be required to particippta in
a performance organization every quarter.
**lt's hard to believe,** reflected Opera Workshop
director John Hall, **that we've never required
performance before. It's ridiculous lo think you're
educating people in music when they don't need to
play or sing a note.
"Next year's freshman wiU be the first class that
Wolng: worHod about ttio
oa ^ttoto fey MMMfy OMv
Ofl#S tfOfwOQ
"But mo
have
aiwnyi i
nade a serious at after the rehearsal
will have auditioned to get into the department.
We've never required that before, either," he noted.
"There are four good people coming in that look like
Opera Workshop prospecu. In the past, they nught
have graduated without my ever knowing they were
ahve.
*^irs a big step forward,** Hall said. Once you have
people making music and people listening to it,,
everything is helped, including the academic program
in music. Maaic is fnod for music.**
Along with the performance requirement will
come the elimination of unit credit for muaac majors
in performance claases, largely because credit for
them would intrude on the breadth-balaaoe ruk
governing the department. While the end reaall wiU
be to make music majofi work harder, most of thflB
welcome the chaape.
**The department needs a perforaMMMe require-
ment. That's obvious just from looking at an
orchestra rehaanal,** ohaerved Nazahan.
If uniu won't be a problem for majors, they have
proven to he a thorny eaoagfi pfaihlHi to natt-
majors.
A rule effedad in fall 1974 by the Coiafr of
Letters aad Science -limiu its itiMnMi to six units
(three two-unit coorpea) of ped'onaaMe CMiit
The rule, aocordii^ lo Letters aai SaiHHi Daaa
John Burke, was haaad apon a belier '^ tkn iMaky
of the oaAiyi in limited credit for acadaaniBaly aaa-
substantive courses. We have no objection to
PM aeipation, merely to exceaaive credit. After all, a
student who wmimtd m a saeooe and pla^^ in taioar
three orpmizatiofu m^ghl aaaiy graduate with 40
units of music credit, aearly t fourth of his total
uniu. I dpa*t think anyone would cpMiiar that a
well-ronaded education.**
i%m who diraali the Uni>iarsiiy CI
Madngal Si
(Continued from Page 4)
*^ln^ieniisofpeTformaarr ptactke and aicademic study,** Weiss
id^the choral groupi are every bit as academically subsuntive
as the piano and voice classes (which are an unrestncted two
units), and la|^e just as much time and effort But I had no
chance lo tell Letters an<l Science that — I wasn't called upon to
give my opinion **
"This was not done m gay underhanded way,** said Burke of
the rule's implemenution. -We recognized and discussed with the
College of Fine Arts the pnsiihlr effects of the rule on its
programming. There was a faipaaae from the music department,
but not a very strong one.*
Pasticipation has dropped along with enrollment Weiss saw
limits to the idea of performing strictly for fun.
-A sttident already uking a heavy course load isn't going to he
able to commit his time to a lia»«onsuming class he gan*t get
credit for.
**rm not concerned about the number of people in the groups.
What concerns me are the numbers of students effectively denied
the experieaoe.**
There u no doubt that the Letters and Science rule has hurt
■aaic performance But it caa seireely account for afl the
damage D*Accone is quick to point out that the ethno-
musicology performance groups are doing quiu well and the
majority of theu personnel are non-majors
In any case, the department is attempting tg get around the
rule by cutting its performance classes to one unit, a simple step
thai will immediately allow a Letters and Science student to uke
twice as many performance courses. The music department is
mko aMkmg performance clashes strictly pass-fail - in the past
they were notonous easy A's, if only because instructors were
loathe to make a value judgement about performance effort.
**Il could be that we are finally feeling the cutbacks in music
education in public elementary schools during the I96(rs,"
suggested Watling, whose parents are in music education Music
instruction was all but stopped m Los Angeles while the current
(Continued on Page 4)
Earthquake
A moderate earthquake
centered If miles west of
Ne^ hall slioo k Sout hern
Cahtornia at 7:21 Thursday
morning, but apparentK
caused no daaiaT, olTiciaU
Scientists at the California
Institute of Technolog) said
the quake's intensity was 4 7
on the Richter scale but was
not caaiidind an aftershock
lo the 1971 Sylmar quake
Residents frqiD Santa "Bar-
bara to Balboa Beach re-
ported the tremor, whose
enicenter was five to ten
miles below grounds level
CARP
Present and past members of
CARP (Collegiate Association
for the Research of Principles)
who are interested in talking
about their experiences, please
contact Carol Starr at the
Daih Bruin, Kcrckhoft 110,
telephone 52385
Talk to us!
WHEEL
POTTERY
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In fact/ It «» the'thmnest tipped pen you can buy Aiu^ ;
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only 69c^anel is no\w anaMilt at your college book slef«
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I-
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A french jean store
_ for
men
and
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940 Westwood Blvd.
477-6867 ' ^
Hr»j Daily 10-9 Sm 10-6 & Sun. 11^
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1317 westwood blvd.
(westwood)
los angeles, California 90024
(213) 473-6467
I never take off my NIKE'S, because they are the reason that I'm lean and
mean. I'd suggest stopping by the Athletic Dept for the shoes and
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Back packs
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Grads & Undergrads
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advisory committee
Show time: by noon
April 30
in304Kerckhof;
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All students are encour9ged to apply
Appllcalfens available Ackerman Union Info. 304 Kerckhoff
Dorms & other housing organizaitons
i
I* ■
(
Here is Your Opportunity to
Help Change UCLA
<
I
This year, student^ have teen making recommendations on the
budget, proposing innovative courses, and shaping UCLA's educa-
tional policy through service on Academic Senate Committees. In the
coming weeks we hope to start work on the promotion and tenure of
faculty members, and push for more exp>eriential/fleld-based learning
opportunities. If you are interested in these projects, on the positions
listed below, stop by Kerckhoff 409 for an application and information.
Our phone number Is 825-2759. or 825-2815.
Positions Available:
— Director. Otpartment Academic Advisor Council. Stipend Awelleble. The student
in this capecity works through the departments and the undergraduate student aeeo-
ciations to affect decisions made at that level. Deadline ApriM6.
-^Academic Research Cpuncil Students are fseponsible for reeearching important
iMMaa. iofffie of which are liated above.
The Studetit Educational
Policy Commission
^ SEPC/Stud«nt L«gislativ« Council
Some rivers cant be dammed...
some people vMoril be brokela
"•n
Ann.lh»«M
IS
A Scinay BeclamiaHke Jones Production
GLYNN TURMW • JONELLE AUEN • BOGEfl E MOSLEY • J09EPH A VWALKER
i»».i» imtim^ i» JOSEPH A ^IffR i>.^.ii>-mipM.>>,f^in,.»
SCNEY BECKEHMWI and IKE JONES * d— >t,KRISHNA SHAH -i-lRVING LERNER
CaOR.ci
JERRY GaOSTEW
.i«jp> ^g^,^ ♦lipqoLgysvgitM
NOW PLAYING
MUc's
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CtiilHryCity 553 4291 OMMrtiiMMil) MiS»mrtHa2184
MusMm's Mi PlKUic s MLI8H Ciiilwy s IflHHi #1
OliiwIiiiiilliMplitg^STT? Lfltai^pm»74147 LoifeMch 425 6431
#1
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EdNwd t QMHI CMIBI #2
iMWHiiiifTrmr"
Sounds i)f music.
(CbntliHied from Pafc 5)
college generation was in elementary ichool, and ttfmg
instruments need to be started earlier and studied long than wind
instruments at a rule, at toat to obtain musical competenot.
The quality of instruction has suffered herf in recent years
Monetary limitations have aiade instrumental "inatruction a class
affair »nacead of individual.
*^heridon Slahai ts aa excellent flute teacher.** Naiariaa said,
*'but there*s a limit to how much you can learn in an hour a week
with three other students sharing the tioK.**
The situatipn should be dMi^fed if the department finds fundi
for ^a return to individual instruction a change already
approved in principle
**There*s no question but that good individual instruction,
especially with a name teacher, will draw talent to a irilool," said
cellist ICathleen Hood, whacame to UCLA to study with Jeffrey
Solow Solow has since departed
Money has affected performance in. other ways '*The
performance budget here hasn*t been increased in years here.**
noted opera workshop director Hall. **But coats have still gone
up"
John Hayes, the music department's productions coordinator,
explained that rising building use coats have cut rehearsal time. **lt
used to be that a group might get two rehearsals before a
concert, for example. Now. in order to spend the same amount
of money, the group has to rehearse from four to six the
afternoon of the concert, which is pretty tiring and probably
hurts the quality of the performance.**
The costs, levied by Campus Activities and Services Office
(CASO), includes an auditorium manager, a maintenance,
upkeep, and repair department, and things hke lights, risers, and
instrument moving if necessary.
"Most of the big idef«attes,*^:s8id Hayes, "have been in the
auditorium manager and maintenance upkeep and repair, the
things we can*t do without.**
There are fewer student concerts now than there were whe
UCLA was on a semester system. Whereas performing or-
gi^nizations once gave a concert every semester, a concert every
quarter proved too expensive and too hectic, so the groups were
cut back to two, and later one. full-length evening concert per
year, and an occasional noon concert.
-Whenever your frequency of performance drops, said Hall,
the group is hurt. People join performing grouprto perform, and
if you do your big concert in the fall, you have two quarters with
nothing to look forward to7 " -ii„ ^
Hall noted that performance has been hurt by the retirement of
its three biggest figures: band director Clarence Sawhiil, Jan
Popper, and Mehu.
**When someone like Sawhiil "or Popper retires as a full
professor making over $25,000 a year, you can*t just go out and
get another fuH professor to replace him The rules say you have
to go down to the bottom of the pay scale, and of course you*re
not going to get someone of the same suture.** Hall explained
**Popper's retirement was terribly debilitating for the opera
workshop because it was so protracted We didn't replace him
right away, so we had ip keep asking him out of 'retirement* to
conduct, which is not only dtppaiing to the man. but detrimental
to the program Vou have to hire a year in advance in a
university system, and we weren't even thinkii^ a year in
advance.**
Hall talked about a lack of "focus,** a terra D*Accone also
used. **We*ve never really decided just what we wanted to do
ahaut performance before Right now, we ought to have next
year*s performance schedule planned completely.
^If we caaparate and decide what we want, we caa have
anything we focus on In the past we*ve given a lot of support to
faculty performers, which amounts to subsidizing careers. The
UCLA Baroque Ensemble and the Performing artists play
wonderfully, but should that be a surprise? They're here because
they play splendidly The people who need performing oppor-
tunities are students hke Susanna Wathng, who isn*t a half-
shabby flutist herself"
-One way to aid student performance~li~t6 spiaad jcholarship~
BMiey around. Hall said, and publicize its availability
-The funds we have from outside ^sources — Sinatra. Henry
Mancini, GU Rodin. Gladys Turk — are just phenomenal, if I
were giving away money hke that, Pd let the whole world know
Thai attracts people.**
Six new scholarships for string players are offered for next
year, four of them by Dean Speroni of Fine Arts from an
anonymous source.
-That's just what we need,** said Hall We have to go to high
schools and recruit people the way the band and choral groups
have been doing for years. We have to publicize the department
and what*s available**
-Thw year, for the first time,** D'Accone said, **we*ll be sending
out single brochures outlining all the departments programs and
available scholarships."
"There are problems, but I really think things are looking up,
said Hall "If I were pessinustic. Id leave*
dalybnjin
DB Editorial
No CorTtribution
I UII6M 60MeOMe HAD SuPPO^TTD CX>NTRQd'S Ofi
MUCLEAR POU)e*? PlAMTS uiHEN {T COUNTEC
THINGS MIGHT K blPFtREKjT -TDosy/
Raaaarch on all of AflHilea't nuclaar wwapoiia aystama la
dooa at ona of two nuclaar laboratorias admlnlalarad by Iha
Unlvamlty of CalHofnia at Uvarmofa, CalHomia, and Los
Alamoa, Now Maxico Wa ballava tha Univaralty should not
ba Involved In raaaarch wfilch could contrlbula to tha
daatnictlon of tha human raca.
UC wm always baar a parmanant scar from Ito aaaocl-
atlon with tha Manhattan Protaci which raauHad in tha
^avalopmant of tha original atomic bomb. Wa raallza this
scar aiaa ac^tilrad 30 yaars ago undar far diffarant
circumstancaa than axl^t today.
If UC had not boon Involved In tha davaiopawnt of ttia
first atomic t>ofiib anothar univaralty would hava probably
fulflllad 4ia-.aama hmctlon. H ftm IMltad ftalas had not
baan Iha first country to build and axploda nuclaar
weapons tha world might now ba a vary diffarant place. It la
alao apparent that at the time It waa Inevitable a nuclaar
device was goiiig to be built by someone.
However, the timea have changed and nuclaar weapona
raaaarch la not In keeping wHh the apirlt of a unl varsity.
Tbia Is not only true of Ha deatructhw appNcaUona, but alao
Ha aacretlve nature mtHi the small number of students It
Involves.
The American pae^ia mf paying for nuclaar weapona
rsaaarch and It la In Ihalr name that the declalon to cany
on auch raaaarch waa mada. Tlwretofe, It ia they who
ahould bear the full feaponalblffty of what they are doing.
The University of CalHomia should sell its nuclear weapona
laboratories to the fadeial government.
(idkor i note Iwasski ^nd Oya
domari are memben o/ fhe
Asi^n Student Union ar UCLA.)
On february 19, 1942, Presi-
dent franklin D. Roosevelt
issued Executive Order 9066
which authorized the Secretary
of War to begin the forced
removal of people joA Japanese
A true American tragedy
By Alan Iwasaki and Merle Oyadomari
ancettry from the West Coast to
be interned in "relocation
camps" for the duration of
World War Mr 110,000 deemed
dangerous' people: U.S. citizens
and immigrants (Asian immi-
grants were denied citizenship
by law), men and women, the^
elderly 4fid infant. ^H were
I
herded first into hone
and then into makeshift bar-
racks, surrounded by barbed
wire §nd "proteaed" b^armmd
militia. Japanese Americarn were
uprooted from their commu-
nities and lost their property and
poMessmns, to be placed ,in
(CairtiMHNlonPagcSV
ot iKr IcNiorMi
Umigf«rd r^orUh rtprf*fwt 4 m4iimM:^ optnmr* o4 llir /^^i/v Hmm fiSa^igt Saifd AM
vk jni< trM<^ r»pr<"i»wt tKr optnkm mt Sir MrtlMr m4 4n mto^r-mtv^uH^ wlUcI Sm «i
Ciirrmt lU,is Hruin fdllorMi ScMrd ingmWit jnr Jim SitiBwf 1. •tftor-iM-rMH:
tiMtim: ASw IIhmI. n^ws «>di««>r; fHrr 1 ■>!■■. ■JSwid rfirrrlor: St%tMi VSvrffM*^. ipor««
Em MmmM. iUM f«pMwn(4t»-
* AMXILA C omm«M«M aImmh Btn^d
AS wMUriai tmkmim^ mmH W Mpi^^pMrr' ' himm m*
TH» Udity Brum iwan ^ tKr rigNf to ^Mf Ittgtou
wM kr nmin Mien m cdkmmm. Capy k aiw «t noon I«m> day% Im4o«v dfkmd
at tmtf mMwfidk nor rimtm^n^^ mtdrnt mtf cIrcuNNUncM. Ai mmntid
D^ils, Hrinn
mu
FRIDAY NIGHT PROGRAMS - SPRING 76
•^
APRIL 9 ARIiEMIAN NIOHT:
APRIL 16 FtLM FROM CUBA
Music and lecture. 700-10 00 p m
Armenian Dinner (S2 50). 530-8:00 p m
-LUClA- — 1969 - by Humberto Solas. 7:30-11:00 p m.
Cu^n Dinner ($2 50), 5:30-8:00 p m
APRIL 23 BALLET FOLiaORICO: Music and Dance from Mexico. UCLA Dance Department. 5:30-
\ tJO p m
lean Dinner ($2 50). 5 30-8 30 p.m
APRIL 30
FILM FROM MOROCCO "lOOl HANDS" — 1972 - by Souhel Ben Baraka. 7:30-1 1 :00 p.m
African Dinner ($2.50). 5 30-8 30 p.m.
MAY 7
IAN NIGHT:
Music arnj Songa. 5:30-8 30 p m
Persian Dinner ($2.50). 5:30-:8:30 p.m.
V...
MAY 14 FILM FROM ETHIOPIA ^HARVEST 300Q YEART' — 1075 — bf Haifa Qerima. 7:30-
11:00 p.m.
Ethiopian Dinr>ef ($2.50). 5:30-6:30 p.m.
MAY 21 INDIAN NIGHT:
MAY 26 FILM FROM SENEGA).
JUNE 4 IRISH NIGHT:
JUNE 11 FILM FROM CHILE —
Songs and Orchestra by Nauahad Music Club. 5:30-6:30 p.m.
Indian Dinner ($2.50). 5:30-6:30 p.m.
"XALA** — 1974 — by Ousman Sembana. 7:30-11:00 p.m.
African Dmr\%T ($2 50), 5:30-6:30 p m
m
Music and aongs by Se-a-cran Sidhe. 5:30-6:30 p.m.
Iflah Dinner ($2 50), 5:30-6:30trm.
i'
MEXICO "LETTERS FROM MAlMltlA*' -^ 1976 - by MtgUal
Littin. 7 30-11 00 pm
Mexican Dinner ($2 SO). 5:30-8 30 p m
The filma will ba introduced by
Mr. Teshome Gabriel
Film Dapartmant. UCLA
EVERYBODY WELCOME, ADMISSION FREE
xm^en
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT CENTER
1023 Hilgard A¥a:, ¥»aalwoad. Ph 825-33S4
tnt%
dar at a
oftHa
aiudant Oant^ t GoMncH on Programming
a
^JL
**■
•m*'
A
1
^Executive Order 9066^
J
^
Jthroughouf \ht dirterts ^r\(i
^ fiKumtamous ripsm ot the Unt-
Jtcd Suiei ~ 4 true AmecKan
^trag^dy '
■ul Ih^i WM ihirtv hve yrar«
400. We are told that it was a
tragK mistake and that we
ihoyid lorfef the pa%t ^nd look
Ml our bright future In fact, the
. artuai exeiutive ord^r ^as re-
b^ Pmiidim ford^lwi
Wh> dtg up fhi> yMtv-
unafe irxndent/ Wliff %^
r qiwupi are a pnmw
example of the treatn«H»i ot
mMomy ptoplf tn the hiom •<
^the U< ^ hfMon ot wifctml
^ opipretMon eiplanmsfi arul
•Tdtntal ol rttmociifci t^lhii. The
P gevernnieftt Hut put fhe
H tt •
t5v~XfnericiT
monopoly capitalist ruling clau:
the fat cat ''^'{»orate owners
who selfishly .un^rol govern-
mental policy to protect their
immeme profits Thete profits
are frcrni the h«Hti ol woHimf
In a CipMlgl Vfttmnj a united
claa» ot oppremd worken it a
real threat to the corporate
ThgtaiMe. they pro-
BUckft as
t*' thai igfciii the
lo
<
ese 4yt^4\ »
^.ment that forced tUtk» into
j slavery laurnrhed » ge«liKidlil
^ attack on the Native AmericaffH
arK^ put them K>r\ revervatiom. ft
is the s^tnr epvernment that
CKploits the LatirH> farmworkers
^fM^ the wHne governrr>ental in-
terest* that attempted to win
lontrol in Southeast Asia. Whq
. ^ » this Government? It certainly
iifi^t ofie that acts in the in-
terests ol working peaplt god
April %h, the
Uiiipfi M ptr
ot the con-
of
^mertcarn. Tliere wiH
be *Oii|ft.. speeches ^iy{!t films
thai wilT shed light on this dark
pit^ in our history CxMne M\d
loin us! Learning from this in-
cident, we will try to understand
the real nature ot The camps in
the context of American capital-
ism. The program will begin at 3
pm in tfie Women s Lounge,
Ackerman Vn%or\. Free.
te^
Th9 i^Mults art concfushfv, Jacic Nichoison wlli b% Iha naxt
•ccaptkig for Jack
ntofthaUnl-
■ -.^.^^ ^ '.-•.*■, ^ ».^-x*
l*V V> V-» WW \\ \
I ';.
The Hillel Grad Group
Requests the Honor of Youi* Presence For A
Night of Food and Film!
rday. April 10 7:00 PM
at the URG. 900 Hilgard
Full Dinner
Followed by Bye Bye Braverman
$3,50 members $3.75 non-members
For reservations call 474-1531
Henry the Eighth was a tutor (tudor),
Why notl>e one, too!
The Chicane Youth Barrio Project is now
accepting applications for volunteers that are
willing to tutor in the Venice area. Tutoring is
done in the elementary and hrgh school level,
and transportation i.s^available,Jf needed.
If you are interested in signing up. why not
come to our orientation meeting. Tuesday.
April 13th at 3:00 in Kerckhoff 400. or stop
by at Kerckhoff 406. You can also call Carl or
Manuel at 825-2389 for. more information.
~^ Sponsored by !h« Community S«rvicM CommttaiorV
Slijd«m I nHiiHv Councii
/
WOMEN'S LOUNGE
ACKERMAN UNION
FRIDAY, APRIL 9
3-5 PM
PROGRAM: The Japanese-American
Experience in the WW If Relocation Camps
FILMS: "Subversion"
?
-iri>
WRA"
SPEAKERS
SONGS
— portrays the camp ex^
perience of Japanese-
Americans during WW II.
— A film widely shown
during the t940's to jus-
tify the relocation of
1 1 0,000 Japanese-Ameri-
cans into cohc^entration
pamps.
SOLIDARITY SPEAKERS
c,
The Public is Invited!
».V«M<' •"•<V<'»».,^^ /
Voleybaliefs attempt to ride the Waves
DlS^ortt WrilOT
The UCLA voUeytMiU iqiiad
1 **must win** ftituatton at
7:30 toflUfht in Pauley Pavilion
against league-leader Pepper-
4smt. A victory by the Waves
(tO-i) ffpttld five tJicin the tiic
and an antocaatk berth into
the NCAA final on Apnl 30
and May 1 at Bail Sute Uni-
venity.
The Bruins, 7^2, following
Wedaetiay nifhtV victory over
use, can tie Pepperdiae for
the Icagiie titk wiih wins to-
M^ next Wrrtwiiiy afaimt
UC Sanu Barbara (7-2) and
Friday night against San Diego
Sute at Pauley Pavihon
-If the Bruins win their final
three matches, then there
would by a one-match playoff
oa April 19, probably at Cal
State Long Beach, for the
NCAA berth The loser will go
into the Western Regionak on
Aprir"23 and 24 at Pauley
Pavilion for one additional
NCAA berth.
RMiHC «■ iMlilM
Everything ii riding on to-
nigfat*s match for ua,* laid Al
Scatea, UCLA head coach **lf
wm loae to Pepperdine. then we
win fmv^ to win .» iiet,o«k
to quahfy for the nialioiiak.**
The match tonight is so sig-
ttiflcam that Theu Cabk Tele-
vision has Goaoefled its sched-
ukd tennis ms^h^to come to
Pauley Pavilion to cable the
volleyball competition.
UCLA blew the first match
to PepperduK in foui; games.
The Bruins won game one.
blew a 12-9 lead in game two
and ''unbelievably" lost a 14-3
lead in game three. The Bruins
alao led late in the fourth
pane, but loat.
''Both teams ait improved
over the fint meeting, but we
wijl win tonight if we can
execute to our capabilities,**
said Scates /'Our blocking and
passing must be on, plus we
wiia need better serving and
less misukes than againsi
usc-
Tbe Bruins had their largett
crowd of the year, 2,146, on
Wedaesday, and over 3,000
fans are expected tonight "The
crowd was the best of the
taaaon on Wednesday and real-
ly helped us in the fourth
gMM,* Mid Scates. "Hf the fans
are behind us tonight, it could
ratUe the young Pepperdine
players. '^
Pepperdine is led by 6-4 AB-
American candidate Ted
Dodd. Martin Nora at 6-5. 6-4
freshman Mark Rigg, 6-1 Todd
Silk, 6-2 Jay Andenon and 6-3
M^ike iekins are other hitters.
Freshman Rod Wilde and JC
transfer Steve Grater do the
setting for iitt Waves.
••We need our best effort of
the year to defeat UCLA m
Pauley Pavilion,
Cohen, Pepperdine head
coach **Last time we beat
Santa Barbara and UCLA
back to back, but thu time it
will be much tougher since
both are on the road."
Scates pUns^to go with AI1-
American Joe Mica arid All-
American candi,date Fred
Sturm as the power hitters,
Denny Chne and Doug Rabe
as the middle blockers and
David Olbright and Peter Ash-
ley as the setters. Mike Gotts-
cftiall, who sprained hi& ankle
against USC. couid be ready-
for front court action Singin
Smith will replace Gottschall if
he IS not ready Mike Franklin
will be backcourt duty, with
Steve Suttich as the back-up
setter
"•if we can beat Pepperdine.
I think we wm ucic^ii Santa
Barbara and San Diego State
to force a tie tor the league
title. ** said Scates "If we tie lor
the title. I am conhdcni we can
defeat Pepperdine m the one-
match plavoft and gain llHf
NC AA berth/*
RaJn-drenched Ducte emerge from clouds to face UCLA tracksters
By Joe
Pi Sports
The fun bunli through tiK
laapariag rain clouds. Below, a
•herd of runners charges out of
woody 'acres and breezes across
m dirt path The eye catches
only Hath of green and gold as
tile lipht fades away.
Sii^h is an image of Eufsae,
the keyendary track Valhalla of
the Northwest and the home of
the Oregon Ducks. It*s a city
where everyone runs and where
no one forgeu Ike track and
M4 lefKry of the past.
Coach Bill DeUtager^ brings
his tradition and rain-drenched
Ducks into Drake Stadium
tomorrow for a 1:15 dual meet
with UCLA Both squads are
undefeated, Oregon holding
down a 2-0 mark whik the
westwo^ claa is 6-0.
Impfaasive
The string of Oregon track
aocomplishments is quite im-
pressive. The Ducks have cap-
tured four NCAA titles (1%2,
*64, *65, *70) and have con-
tributed 28 athletes to the
Oljrmpics. But they have never
downed UCLA, a fact that
slacks out in tbeir minds, the
Imiia hold a 7-0 edge in the
Eugene waads. He captured
NCAA mile and 5,000-meter
crowas while a student there.
In the late 60*s he became an
assistant coach under the le-
geadary Bill B6werman~the
man responsible for most of
the Duck's track success.
But Pellinfer wasa*t as
blessed with good fortune as
his predecessor.. Oregon has
reduced the quota of track
scholarships since he took over
in 1973, and the NCAA has
put its own hmit on athletic
grants.
They're a really proud track
school," said Jim Bush,
UCLA*s head coach. **lt really
kiD them that they've never
beaten us. It gives ihMB more
to win this waekend.*
docnt feel his
team can break the UCLA
af 40 straig^ dual
queitii
ICLA
""in the early 60*s** Pellinger
explained, *^Oregon had more
track scholarships then any
other school in the country.
But next year well be limited
to 14 hke everyone else. That
spreads the talem around to a
lot of schools
**A larger num^ of colleges
are emphasizing tjaciL now
and upfradiag tl^ir programs.
There are a lot of good pro-
grams now"
^ But Oregon is still a haven
for distance ruimers hoping to
foDow in the footsteps of Steve
Prefontaine aad Kenny Moore.
The Duck mob this year is led
^Iby Man Centrowitz and Gary
Centrowitz is a tranrfrr from
Manhattan who decided he
liked naaaa^ ^mdtr tall trees
instead of tall htiilrtii^. He
has a beat of 9:41.5 at 1,500
laeters aad 19:45.0 ia the
5,000 He win severty Mt die
Bkruin distance crew of
the
the former event and 199^9 in
the latter. But Bruins Jim
Niedhart (65-1) and Rich^Gun-
ther (IW-5) offer him stiff
competition.
**We*re gonna have to do oqir
best to beat the Ducks.** said
the ever-cautious Bush '*we
kiyw how good they are in the
distances and we need every
second aad third we can get **
Bush explained that his
Bruins have been tired the past
few weeks 'M should have
never scheduled awiea! dunng
finals,** he fgid * Blit U^
Beach State waaM to meet
so badly. We ^ven*t recover
from it yet.**
BRLIN TRACK NOTES:
Last week's 79-65 victory over
Cahfornia extended UCLA*s
dual meet win streak lo 40.
The Bruins have now won
60 of their last 61 dual con-
frontations going back to 1971.
The Bruins* top intermediate
hurdler. Grant Nif tisrhaas, wHI
probably not compete against
Oregon because of a minor leg
injury He strained his right
upper hailistnng attachment in
practice three weeks ago.
**lt*s really more of an ag-
gravation then anything,** said
Niederhaus. **1 shouldn*t have
run on it last week against Cal.
it was the first time it hurt **
Niedeiliatts worked out
hghcfy this waek, but hell be
running in practice again on
Monday. He may be hack for
the Sunford (April 17) meet
aad is expected to be 100 per
cent in a couple of
the U
J«rry
tnpl^ lumper A
opening height against Ca4ifor-
nia/ high jumper Jason Mcisler
hopes he can get back aa the
winning track against the
Ducks.
**t was overconfident. **. laid
Meisler **! didn't bother to get
up for the meet I thought I
could go out. and juYhp 7-0
without even thinking.**
Owcaa,^3.6 clocking
in the high hurdles last week,
equals the third best m the
nation this year But it only
ties him for the Pac-8 lea'd
with Mike Johnson and Tom
Andrews of USC
Steeplechase and Luevano
go together in Westwood
By Paul Farhi
1>B Sports Writer
vultures of the track and field world can be found hanging
around the steeplechaMr water )ump They are the spcctatori. idle
athletes and mohtly photographers who hover patiently about the
pit waiting to see the steeptl^haser confront the harrier, step on
top and drown or at'ieast sec hiin get sufficientK drenched
so they can watch him run scjuishingly onto th^. track They are
track's equivalent of the fan who watches a car race so he wcm't
miss the crashes.
What the vultures obviously miss is that the stceplecfEise is
perhaps track's toughest event though it may lack artistic merit,
ft IS 3.000 meters (240 yards less than two miles) of water -
jumps and hurdles, a cross country course made plastic for the
track which runners must negotiate |ust over seven times during a
race; It is shprt enough to require a miler s ^ed. though long
enough to demand a three-miler*s endurance And if the distance -
doesn't waste the runner, the barriers 35 in all invariably
do . '•
UCLA junior Mark Luevano. for one. knows the feeling
**There\ always pain and agony m the steeple, no matter how
fast or slow you run it. I can run the race feeling relaxed, but by
the time I'm finished it feels lik« every ounce of energy is drained
out of me Usually after I've run a mile or two mile I have
enough left to jog a little But after a steeplechase I always end
up with my hands on my knees. I've never feh like jogging after
one -
Luevano. the Bruins' top man in the steeplechase, should
know. In three seasons he's run the event 10 times, with ahett of
t:57.6. T|omorrow he faces his second and toughest tett af the
ye^r in Gtry Bargfer. whose 1:40 best leads the distance mad
plechaie.
»'
H
1
I
Falathan Jewry ShabiMit
with Prof. Howard Lanhoff
VIsJting Pr
(University of C«lifornia)
Wfiizmann Institute of Sci«ncs. 1969-1
University. 1970-19JJ, Tschnion. 1973- 1974
Friday, April 9 6:30 pm
with Mey«r Levin Film The Faleshas"
Ra— rvtlons
t:^
i-i — i t.
a
Who Ars ths Falesheif
Althought their origins srs unlcnown and legends go t>sck to
the Queen of Shebe. tt>e Faleehes ere thought tp heve seperated
from msinstreem Judaism at the time of the destruction of the
first Temple (586 B CE ). and relate only to the Five Books of
Moees and other writings down to the Book of Ruth
474>1531 HiHal 900 HUoard
<
f
1
; •
— -li bk
■4
University of
San Fernando Valley
COLLEGE OF UW
Armouncing:
FALL SEMESTER 1978
• Fui-tifne 3-year day program
* Part-time day and evening programs
f ht* s< hool ts •
RJllY ACTRf DITED
by ihe C (xmrniriet- oi B.ir Fx.iminrrs,
'. Slalf BaL_Dl C .ililuuua •
Tel: (211) 894-5711
8353 Sepulveda Blvd.. SeptiWeda. Ca. 91343
■i
V, ■■:,■•- u
i -
PERSONAL
EXPLORATION
GROUPS
for those interested m exploring
and sharing their corKerns
in a group setting:
Once a week, for 2 hours
Counseling Division
Psychological and
Counseling Services
3334 Murphy; Hall
for information and sign-ups
drop in or phone (82)5-4071
French
Gabs
$26,00
beige - navy -
brown
1093 BROXTON AVE.
(ABOVE
WHEREHOUSE
RECORDS)
WCGTWOOO V'lLLAG
479-7556
Cline and Stumi -jhey'reiBed to Mfi^^
By MEhasI Sondhomor
♦"
inccnuve, more emphasif on wmniiif
inherent team IcatatlHp mtc three at-
tributes that usually accompany UCLA senior
- athletes Those traiu fit seniors Fred Sturm
and Denny Cline of the Brum volley hall team.
Both are having their gmttest overall seasons
at UCLA, and their common goal is to dose
their last volleyball season with an NCAA title
/fnf^MM^ at Ball State University The
tiwsome will play the biggest regular season
■MMcfa of their careers at 7:30 tonight in Pauley
Pavilion against Pepperdine Neither one has
ever played on a league champion, makmg
tonight*! match vital.
**This year's team resembles the 1973 squad
teknt-wise (the 1973 team was the only UCLA
liiuad that did not win the^NCAA title), and Al
(Scales) can use anybody that is hoL while not ^
hesitating to substitute,*" said Sturm. **Jhe
difference on this team from 1973 is that i>
everybody gets along well, works hard, knows
the game better and noost imporumly, does
what is necessary to win.**
"Obtectivcly I would say that this year*s team
is a lot deeper than the championship teams of
the past two years, with just as good players,**
said Cline. **The last two years we were good,
but other teams were rated better. This year we
have to^show that we deserve to be rated as the
best.**
Baeketbal basl sport
_Ba.skctbal' was probably the best sport for
the 6-3 "A, 165-pound Sturm at Palisades Higlt...
School and the 6-3. 170-pound Cline at
Newport Harbor High School Both turned
down several "small schooP scholarship offers
to come play volleyball for Al Scates at UCLA.
The basketball talent has remained with Sturm
and Cline, as both were recently stars of Brum
intramural championship teams.
. Sturm was an all-star baseball player in
junior high but turned to basketball and
volleyball in the tenth grade He was the
scorer on tiK "B** team in temh grade
flioved up to sixth man on the varsity in
llth grade. The highlight of his prep tMisket-
bett career caflM" m llie City semi-fmals at
Pauley Pavilion against favored Reseda and
former UCLA performer, Greg Lee.
"We e»€re down by eight points with two
minutes to go but came back to get a one point
lead in the final 20 seconds,** said Sturm, "Lee
was then working for the winning sliot, and 1
forced him into a charging foul to give me a
one-end-one situation at the free throw hne 1
made both shots to clinch the game in the
greatest comeback rve ever beep a part of.**
In his senior year. Palisades lost in the semi-
fiaals (the Dolphins lost in the finaU his junior
year), but Sturm had an outsunding ydiir He
was second on the team m Kormg. rebounding
and assists In volleybelL Palisades won the
National Junior title as Sturm started with
UCLA teammates .Mike Frankhn and David
Nichols and. former Brum AU-Americans John
Bekins and Chns Irvin.
--^^ AUrielk career
CUne was a two-year varsity basketball
performer on an average team and he was
mainly the playmaker He was also s three-year
member of the varsity jcross-country and track
teams, plus ^ played two years on the
volleyball team started by Denny and his dad'
His senior year he was captain of both the
basltetball and volleyball teams.
While Sturm's high school life revolved^
ffiarnly around athletics, Cline spent all of his
spare time in some kind of school activity.
Clinc was salutatorian gf bis senior class "I
wbuld have been valedictorian;ncx,cept I got my
only B in physics during my senior year.** said
CUne .
Journalism and student government were
part of his main high school activities. In
journalism, Cline was. both the editor for the
n
.front page and the editorial page of the school
publication He has indicated that he would
like to someday pursue a writing career and
will probably wnte for the Daiiy Brum next
year stnce he will need two more quarters., to
graduate
Sturm and Chiic came to UCLA for iimilar
reasons,^ but were recruited in much diffe^nt
ways
•^My parents wanted me to go to <i UC
campus, so I couldn*t pass up the opportunity
when Al contacted me to offer a scholarship,**
said Sturm. "4 was-tired^ of playing basketball
because it had ahrady fulfilled a need for me
and 1 had been a UCLA fan from way back, so
I accepted the chaaoe to play volleyball for
what I consider is the top athletic department,"
Chne first had contact with Scates by a
letter, which ironically began "Dear Dan.** "I
was excited when I got the letter, because I had
been a UCLA fan since I was four yean old.
and I could follow the family tradition since all
of my relatives have gone here," said Chne.
Scates might not have offered Chne a
scholarship if it had not been for his sister. **I
bad been invited by Ernie Hix to come and
visit use. and by the lune I had left that day,
the Trofeos had basacaMy offered me s full
•dMarship,** said Chne **Whik I was away. Al
called and my liMer answered. She told him I
bad gone to visit USC. Later that same night
Al called aaata and ofliered me a icfaolarship to
UCLA-
Sturm it a left-handed outside hitter, while
Ckne it a middte Mocker and a quick hitter.
Be^ are noted for tlwir consistency and the
fact that tliey seldom make mia^aket Sfiinn*s
biggest thrill came fenr yean apD in tiK NCAA
finnii at, o( course. Ball Stale Unrvenity.
TMi er Wt
**^!t was the thrill of my life to be s part of
the champioMhip team at a freshman,** taid
Sturm. **We were down two gaamt to none and
behind 8-3 in the third game to a San Diego
State team we had not hemen all year, but we
came beck to win in five games **
His bigfeit playing thrill came leal year in Come May I at Bafl Stale Umverssty. Sturm
the NCAA fiipnli in Panky PaviHon yiait VC and Cline expect to be in tiK NCAA finals aiid
Same Barbiya wim he played bnKnntly for be a pert of their third dmapietHhip
every mfante ef His nmtcfa Chne ht|ipani< to teams at UCLA Also tht tweaeam wmM like
puiy the gienicai mnidi of ins ble m the MJAA nocntng Better than to be reeefnirr ' ^ tkt
finals last year. Atf-Toumnment mm for iheir four years el
**WiniHng the NCAA's loc ism (wo ycao arc dedication to UCLA volleyball
my greatest moments at UCLA,** said Chne.
**The reason 1 play my best in the NCAA's it
the size of the match I play as hard as I can in
every match, but it ts not the same thing as the
NCAAV**
^ Fan clubs
Sturm is s kinesiology mSjor who will
graduate after the fall quarter of the next
school yepT/ One of the biggaM turpritet at
UCLA for 'Sturm came during a match thit
year when he found out he had a "Fred Sturm
Fan Chib,** headed by a girl named Shauna
West She wears a "Fred Sturm** t-shirt to
every match.
Chne alto has a fan club that has started this
year. His nickname it *The Hammer" on the
UCLA team, and when he ^ts a spike mto the
court in Pauley Pavilion, his fans surt shout-
ing, -Hammer. Hammer. Hammer.**
Sturm's motivation this year is probably the
of his volfibyball cateer. -The meat
ipointed I liavc ever been wm when we
didn't win the title in 1973 and when I didn't
win the two City betketball titles in high
sehool. I hated the feeling and I want to make
sure it is never duphcated,** said Sturm
Cline IS a political science major with a
minor in anthropology and geology. He is the
adKilar on tke team with a 3.7 grade point
avamfe, erMcli he claims would be 4.0 except
for volleybelL This yemr he has added the title
of captain of the UCLA volleyball team, which
captain it a gmtif3fing
said Ctine. **For two yean I heve had te tone
down my activity on the court, but new I
responsible for what is fonig on am
our poim of view to tlie relnee."
Sturm and Char plan to foiew the tmdition
1974. senior captain Bob Leennad was NCAA
MVP, and aaaion Mike Noramnd and Jim
Me^gn atnde the IB Tirnrnimiwl^iaam Last
year senior eaptain John i^fcins was NCAA
MVP and tanior JelMi Merren mnde tlH AM>
THE WIZARD OF OZ r
•nd Dif«ct«0 by Wmmm Alan LmnOm
(213) 477.Mai
April 10 and 17
SI llJisaiafia 1:30 am
AprB 14, IS and IB
Wsa.. Thyfs.. a M. al 1:30 pm
iiwliilsw slip
Also at Mutual Wallichf and LIhSfly
QBOUP BALCt: <213) 345-7170
I
I
«
I
UICSTWOOO PUMlOUSE
^ i'
10886 Le Conte Avenue. Los Angeles. Cariforma 90024
SPANISH SPEAKING MENTAL HEALTH
RESEARCH CENTER ~.
COLLOQUIUM SERIES
PRESENTS
^ Dr. MANUEL CASAS
UCLA Counseling Center
A PROPOSED
THERAPEUTIC MODEL
FOR THE SPANISH
SPEAKING COMMUNITY
Date Monday — Aprrf 12. 1976 Place 313 Kineey Hal
Tin>e 2:00 pm -- Phone 821
The Council On Educational
Development (CED)
wilf be considering course proposals for
the Fall Quarter 1976 and the Wmter
Quarter 1977, and is prepared to sponsor
innovative courses of genuine academic
quality which would be of interest to the
campus community. Such course pro-
posals will be due in the CED office no
later than Monday, April 12, 1976 (for the
Fall Quarter 1976) and Monday, May 17,
1976 (for the Winter Quarter 1977). If you
are interested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educational Development, 3121 Murphy
Hall.
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fashi(»ntHl ^vi together* with women of similar
interests *'
iBM^iiftc hom mudi mmrm fvw ooiakl
if yo« wara wHli us. Give «§ a call laday at
(213) 87f-ftn and lal us laU
vouaRE
3 D r . r »
Lfni Ahifelen Chapter o/HmdaaMih,
1<§9 South Robertson Blvd
Luevano takesitJn step. .
(C ontinucd horn Page 9)
i iC flMtl Iks event if men-
uUy at well ai piqnicatty
hard." layi Luevano "In a
mile you can plan out your
attack, like thinking you'll run
three easy laps and then kick
tn a iteeple there's no point to
kick. You can tncrcsse your
pace, but turmag on a Mfs
kick isa't easjrr Every time you
try to generate speed. therc*$
going to be a liurdle.**
All of which means that
efficient hurdling becomes ne-
cessary, making the steeple-
chase the only distance race
which requires technical skill
as well as sheer endurance.
Ideally, the runner tries to
use as little effort as paaaiMs
when clearing the three-foot
hurdle, while at the same time
trying to hold most of his
runniag rhythm. Some, like
former world record holder
Kerry p*Brien and Olympic
gold medatist Kip Keino« ac-
complished that by steppmg on
tof of the barrier.
' Luevano prefers to jump
each one without setting his
spikes into the wood. "My
ankles are too weak to absorb
the shock of stcj^ping each one.
When you step them it*s hke
jumping off a thres faat waft.
When you hurdle them iTs like
you're just uking an ei^tra loaf
stride. Stepping uses mmt
energy because it's two mo-
tioas — getting to the top aad
coming down. When you hur-
dle there's no break When you
step there's always a break."
Sometimes at the start of a
race when the herd of
is so thick it becomes m
to step the hurdle to avoid
sinking oae's spikes into anoth-
er runner. At a recent race, a
runner coming off the first
hurdle said he heard a scream
from the runner directly in
front of him. Lookiag down,
the trailing runner saw the
open wound his spikes had left
in the other's Achilles area
Luevano remembers a sim-
ilar incident in a race agaiast
San Jose Sute last year. Just
after clearing the first barrier >^
his traihng hand was fM^ ^Y
the spikes of a San Jose runner
coming off the hurdle. The cut
made him more angry than it
hurt him He went on to uke a
20-yard lead after the first hip.
If styles vary over the four-
to-a-lap hurdles, form over the
THE INTERNATIONAL STUDENT CENTER
OFFICIALLY ENDORSED CONTRIBUTIONTO THE
LOS ANGELAS CITY BICENTENNIAL ^^^
"THE INTERNATIONAL WORLD
OF AMERICAN COOKING'*
A monthly presentation of dinner, music snd entertainment
featuring countries whose dishes have becorT>e part of Ameri-
can merto.'
"ALWAYS ON SUNDAY"
BEGIN WITH
SUNDAY. APRIL 11 — GREEK DINNER
AUTHENTIC DISHES AND ENTERTAINMENT
6-9 pm Dinner and entertainment $5
PLEASE PURCHASE YOUR TICKET in advance!
International Center
1023*1ilgard - Weetwood 477-4587
OMMUir (Mllt3)AMl4f1 rouRIXMN
Theiv% no hody
m me nvney piOL
fiaMILYPlOT
v^'jS^'
KAICNBLAX • BRUCE DESN • BARBARA HAHS
i-1l€ MOB nriE»r » ^CICK CAMNMG
STJUITS TODAY
•
I
\ fL\
4S2-W2I
171 I
siasitTf
\
pit IS well Mih onivcr-
jliLTlK piiU f^^*^^ ^ anoth-
er Chfoe-foot wali, is fiUed with
two and one-half feet d water
immediately beneath the hmx-
rier and slopes upwsrd to track
level 12 fsec awsy
**WiM I ippfnarh the pit,"
lays Lttevano. **! try to ac-
oelBrmlc. 1 put my kit- foot on
top of the hurdk and push so
my bocSy is going forward, but
with as bttk height at possiWs
— mejlir four or five inches at
mdst. I try to land with my
nght foot in about one or two
iaskss of water to absorb most
of the shock.
Intramurals
Play in the combiaei doubles
tennis tournament begins next
week. The teams should be
equipped with rackets and a
can of tennis balk, and show
up at the south tenms courts
on the day and time that you
sipMd up.
Mss*s'
SifB-itps for iMMifMa] dou-
bles are due this Thursday,
April 15. The deadline for golf
sign-ups is 5 pm April 21.
There is a 14.00 entry fee for
thu tournament which must be
paid before you may sign up.
This fee is pa^abk at Kerck-
hoff 140 and your receipt must
be kept to present at MG 118
at the time of sign-up.
The entries for women's soil-
ball teams are due Thursday,
April 15. Play begms this
Tuesday night in three on three
voikyhaii
Coed volleyball schedules
will be ready this afternoon
There will be practice for those
wishing it in coed innertube
water polo next week Coed
doubles bowling sign-ups will
be taken all next week.
Oorjit
lam to
Buroptm
Igggthm
ufoSr
sdiodnM
lirliDfll
SSSOthroDfli
laiielS»aii3
joawibo
tOftilM.
If you are 1 2 to 23. our
youth fare is made for
you S360 round-trip
New York -Luxembourg.
" throuah Jur>e 15 $410
Jur>e 16 through
Sopleiiiber IS. From
Chicago. $401 through
June 15 $451 from
Jur>e 16 through
Septemt)er 15 Otrect
flights from New York
and Chicago to
LuxemtXMjrig in tt>e
heart of Europe. Fares
subject tooower nment
approval see your
travel agent, write
orcaH
lcOtar>dfc Airtir>ea.
630 Fifth Ave . NY .
NY 10020
100-555-1212
HSBJUmC
CN
*««wlMaHMKpi
^PiiW«ii««l
i.
Netters host injijred Beaf^
Dl Sforts Wrker
The last time the Cabfomui
Golden Bears defeated UCLA
in a dual te^nrs match was
1953 The Umted Sutes under
Prcrsident Owight Eisenhower
wak then engaged ia the ILo-
~ UCLA -CahTonita learis awt-
ches have hardly been a hattk
since then. The Bruins have
swept to 43 coasecotive vic-
tories over the Bears, s ma-
jonty by overwhelming 9-0 or
8-1 scores.
It k highly unlikely the re-
sults oi tomorrow afternoon's
aMch will differ from scores
oi the past.
UCLA k the defending na-
tional chanipion snd currently
the top ranking team in the
country with a 14-0 match
record entering tomorrow's
action, and a 33-match win-
ning streak spanning the last
two seasoes.
California, currently 12-4 on
the season, will be without top
singles pkyers [>oug King (tu-^
roor in right shoulder) and
Richard Fiager (broken finger)
lor at least a month.
King, a pre-season All-,
AaKhcan, missed California's
matches with rival Stanford
earlkr thk week, whkh the
Bears lost 9-0.
''Rkhard broke a fiagtr in
an aBto accident about a wei^
ago, but had missed earlier
season matches for disciplinary
the season's enA. — "^ '-
**it*s amazing that UCLA
could lose NCAA singles
champion BilK Martin to the
protesiaaal tour after his fsssh*
man year and come up with
yet another great player in
Peter Fleming."
The Bear coach indicated
that Fkming and UCLA's se-
cond and third singles players,
Brian Teacher ( three-tifliie^ All-
Amencan) and Ferdi Taygan
(two-time All- American), may
be the top three collegiate
pkyers m the country
Without King and finger
a^niiahlr the Bears will ma^
probabfy ^lay junior $tev<e.
Pompan of^fliSarhy Encino at
first singles, junlof Steve Hahn
at seooad singles with fresh-
man James Harper, junior col-
kgs tfjasfer John Hubbell and
so|»homores Dan Tieraey aad
Bnaa McCarthy rouniiag aut
their bneup
UCLA osach Gknn Bassett
has indicated that he will most
likely give Fleming and Teacher
the day off tomorrow as s
rcsuh of Calif onua's injuries
**1 will prahably move
Taygan from his usual third
sing^ position to the number
oae position and move every-
one eke up s spot I will be
able to give Steve Mott and
Luu Enck a chance to pky in
BMtch competition at fifth and
sixth singles respectively. ••
DATSUM
"" Acres of Datsuns""
Student Discounts — Ask for Fleet Sales
Pasadena Datson
101 S Arroyo Parkway
•684-1133*
\
BBO
Mardi Gras 76
OPEN SUNDAY TOO
Thi% j% fha p/oce for R^b lobars /
By ior the 8esf Rib% %va Va irimd in L A
Herald E «#mi»>#r
COMPLETE DINNERS
Casual Dining •'^•'^ $ 2 • T S
NARRY'S OPIN PIT BRQ
1434 N CtlSCINT MEIGHn Of SUNSET STSIP
10 Minutes Down Sunset Blvd to
Loofel Conyon I urn K>ght And Vqu te Ihere
^1
I
«
>
a.
Kosher Salt of the Earth Coffeehouse
Is Palestinian-Israeli
Dialogue Possible?
Mahmoud Ibrahim Yoav Peled
Graduate Students. Political Science, UCLA
Saturday. April 10 9:00 PM
UtC 900 Hilgard Los Angdes
Kosher Earth Food, Entertainment
Hillel
**Without our two top play-
en, we icaad bctle okaaae af
victory against USC fwhoai
the Bean play today at USC)
aad UCLA,** said California
coach BUI Wnght
**The Bruins may be stronger
than they were last year with
the addition of Peter Fleming,
John Austin and Tony Gra>
ham** added Wnght. "Fve talk-
ed to saoK coaches of teaios
which have already lost of
UCLA this season who k>elieve
this year's UCLA team could
develop taio oae of the beat
coUe|iaie iquads in history by
Special Ed?
Volunteer to be a tutor for the emotionally
mentally and phyisicaify handicapped
Join ASUCLA's
Exceptional Children's Tutorial
Project -
KH407 S2S-2066
by ComfTHinity Services Comfnis&ion
u^ the Siuclent Legtslative Council
\ rsAnCwilmAkeR
/
1}}4 Westwood Blvd
Westwood. Cjlif 90024
Phent (2U)47J9S49
. ii-.riHfi sANDAis &C17S r<)in HI'. pilK^C<; \^^
oriA blUCfCASCS
MAfHlK foois ,ir,,> CKAFT IM<TIUK'TU>N9-i
**^ '•I.I »♦• • /. 4.,. '
V.W."
oub|
TUNE-UP, LUBE & OIL ^Oi^
USB-
JOB nJEWLi
♦35
INOINI
OVtBHAUi
wr^aan
$
195
A-1 AUTO SERVICES .
894-7075
7957 VAN NUYS SIVO
»ANO|AMACITY
/
FROM CHICAGO
>
AN OFFER
YOU CAN'T
REFUSE...
=1^ PIECE 0"
NOW CHICAGO PIZZA
AT ALL LOCATIONS
PIIIA0
•ifiiPifrf !|Tri Y
701 S Western
7826 Beverly Btvd
10982 W Pico Blvd.
12423 Wilshire Blvd
1612 Montana Ave
1789 S La Cieriaca Btvd
8351 Santa Monica Blvd
1603 N UBraa Ava
11700 Venice Blvd
3409 Overland Ave
921 Sepulveda Blvd
10251 Santa Monica Blvd
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
^uuu^*^**A*4^s%*4n?^AS'*u'i*A*A*a^r4's^s*s\
— ' -MT —
WHO CAN RIPUSim
Vou get one doHar oH our new dek:K)us C htcaQO-
Style Pizza' it s a tendet. thicker crust, p^ied with
cheese toppad with a tasty sauce AND your
tavome extras' tt t>aAias and buddies (ogaMr
tor a he;^ zza t more like a meal' Bring
If dOo (or one doNar o(f but this oWer
expires AprH If, 1f7§ -so cor.ie on down
and ic "ig soon' ijqb 4/1/76
\
UlAL LiWll J XLU
CtHERAMA DOME
SUiltET ■— I
vftVT
f f.f f^|P,f4l.fJ*^4»
" 4
STARTS TODAY MOUTWOOO • 4M-34t1
<^mm
.. /
Jia-
i»^»i*»—
^ — nKT »NHll*L QUEHt MAW INVITOKINAL
GREAT EGG IXtOP
[irt not a soup! or a chickon't contoslj]
Easter Sunday, April 11I97B
Tho Qu—n Mary ChallongM You to Not Broak tha Ego!!
Participating ScImIs: UCLA. USCCSF. CSU.CSULB
Batmen travel to Las Veg
; I . -.
UCLA'» varsity baseball team (21-15) will be put to lU levcrcit
thif weekend when it iriveli to Ui Vcgai to pUy a ihree-
icriefi with UNLV. The two leami will meet for a 7 pnr
RULES
1 Each contesiant mviII supply a t>ox/cor|tainer
oanatTMCtad pravioyaiy by hiinaotfi or if
■marting at a group! by not more thtin four
paopla
2 The box /container ran not be constructed
from metal
3 The box /container can be no larger than 6 x
6 X 6
4 Thebox/contaif»ef cannot be attached to any
Type of parachute
5 The drop height will be approximately 25
PRIZES
1st Prize - 6 Paaaaf to fhe Ouesn Mary Musaum
5 Dozen Eggs
4 Minute Ride in the Queen Mary Heticopter
3 Coupons Good for a Queen Mary Hot Oo^
Dinner for 2 at Lord' Nelson s Restaurant
1 Live Chicken
Priz^ will be' avvarded
calaoorits
1 Box /container that prot
breaking
2 Oldest corvfaatant
3 Youngest contestant
4 Mo9t unusual box design
5 Smal4ett box
in the following
the egg from
For a complete set of rules A prixe Information^ call (213J 435-aa71
TnC QUCCM MARY
v-_
BIG
things are happening at
xau7
<PaL
\
<Piz
in ttie Village
We have to close for a week,
but
— f
Watch For Our Reopening
Early Next Week
It's Different!
It's Exciting!
It's New!
It's Mysterious!
■T'-^-
^
smmut HAT MZZA MiACF ^yo
\A^Mtwood Villago
Gavtev & Wovburn ^
478-0788
game tonight and play a doublehcader tomorrow at noon
The test will be whether the Bruins can keep their minds on
the games Us Vegas can. to tay the least, be distracting to
visiting teams On top of that, UCLA is in the middle of a cloM
league race, and the players can ujic the break from CIBA action.
The Bruins afc currently in second (8-4), percenUge points
behind USC (7-3) In laafae action this weekend, USC traveb to
Cahfornia (4-5), and Sunford (2-4) hosts UCSB (1-6). Both seiies
are three games. ' , .
Curt Peterson (3-3, 2.51 ERA) will be on the mound for the
Prums tonight, and Tim O'NeUI (5-0, 1.58) figures to finish up.
-^ Tcimorrow's pitchers figure to be Steve Bianchi (3-2, 2.87) and
Ed Cowan (3-2, 4.02) ^
VVinnai tacksters in only home meet
Some 150 athletes from 10 Southern Cahfornia schools will
challenge UCLA's women's track team this afternoon at Drake
Stadium when the Bruin's host their only home meet of the year
The Bruin's, under first-year coach Pat Connolly, have gone
unbeaten in two Southern California Women's Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference meets this year and figure to wm today's
meet as well. ;
"if everything goes normal for us — no upt dr dowoa — well
wm It," said Connolly.
The Brums will be without Evelyn Ashford, their top sprinter,
who IS expected to be out a week or two with a mildly pulled-
hamrin^ muscle.
USC, San Diego State. Cal State Los Angeles and Cal Poly-
San Luis Obispo figuce to give UCLA its strongest test in the
meet. Also sending teams are UC SanU Barbara, Cal State
Northndge, Cal Lutheran, Long Beach State and Cal Poly
Pomona
The meet begins with field events at 11:00 am. Running evems
begin at: 11:25 with the 880 medlcv relay. Admission is free.
THIRD
ANNUAL STUDENT
PHOTOGRAPHY DISftAY
April 1 0-25 in ALL STORES
Prize Winning Photographs
OTKJ Entries Submitted
by Students, ages 1 V-22
TT:eRaAD\A/AY
PRIIIIINfi
641SS01
670-6677
rainbow graphics
•iWSl Wf^ST rFNTlJRV BOULFVARO L OS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA 90045
GOLD'S
GYM
MoyS, T976
7:30 FM
Tick«t« StO S7 50 SS
TiCRITS NOW AVAIiASa
TNffOUON
Sp«c»ol PmrUtrmoMt ay ;
KEN WAUft -M» Univ^fw
aiU OCANT Mr W*»
^A AW
CUNT aiYtaU Mr U S A
-*■
Skaters drop leaguepbyofff
"" ' • ' "D» Sporu Wrfitr
UCLA> almost toul domi-
nance over USC in sports this
year did not remaia ini^ for
the ICC hockey team, as the
Bruins were defeated in the
Nat-of-three series with their
arch rivals for the champion-
aiiip of their Southern Cahf-
ornia inter-collegiate hockey
kague
TiK InHM won the regular
season, with USC placing sec-
ond Unfortunately for the
Brums, they could not repeat
their regular aaaaas success.
la the first game, USC
jumped out to a 1-0 lead, hut
UCLA tied the game o« a goai
by Steve Mahnkovick. USC
scord three third-period goals,
however, and won the match
4-1. The Bruins protested the
ehgibihty-^f a Trojan skater,
but their claim was demed
In the noMid game, factng a
^laat chance" situation, the
Bruins came out ready to go,
especially Lloyd Calloway
Calloway scored four goals in
the nuitch.
It waa a thriller, and late in
the third period USC trailed 5-
4. Wkh 40 seconds to go, the
Bruins pulled goalie Rusa Mor-
reale m order to give them a
sixth attacker. The gamble
faid off, as Shawn Elder, the
-^Club^s top scorei^ tied the
game with only 13 seconds
remaimng.
It was Elder^s fifth point for
CATCH
night and sent the
into suddcn-dcath overtime
Here the Bruins ran out of
breaks as UJC scored three
minutes into the overtime per-
iod to give them the maic^J and
the league title
Despite failing to wm the
league titk, il waa a fine year
for the Brum team, both artis-
tically and sutistically. It fin-
ished 15-«-l overall and 6-2-1
in IcafM.
Elder finished as the team's
leadmg scorer with 55 points
on 27 goals and 29
Calloway ^.aaiad up »#- i^e^
team's top goal scorer with 3fO
He was the club's number t^p
scorer with 40 poukih
Georfe Tuttle was the ciub's
number three scorer with it
goals and 22 assists for 3t
poims. followed by Dave Is-
raeli, with 12 laiik mi^ 23
for M
Smashing
•MdacioiMi, liberating. Jaunty and diverting.
Giancarlo Giannini acts Paaqualino wWi
AU-time UCLA records were
set for most points, goals,
and penalties m a sea-
as well as moat points.
Sdals and assists in one game
y an individual
i
CELEBRATE LIFE
Palm Sur^day* April 11, 1976
6.00 pm. — Supper, sing, sacrament and
the film. "BARRABBAS"
. URC Building (Cor. LeConte & Hilgard)
Good Friday Spiritual Retreat at C Amp Colby
in the San Gabriel Mountair^^
leave URC, Thurs April 15 at 7 p m.
Return URC. Sat. Apnl'l? at 2 p.m.
Cost minimal schoalrships available
CaBMflie Finli for htio: 474-6669
UNITED MfTHOOIST CAMfliS MkNISTKY AT U.CJ..A.
(»••
Liru V^^tmuUer s Seven
Beauties
A VCO CENTER CINEMA
^7
}
«
i
«•!■
belQlr
CQmciO&hi4i
SPRING SPECIALS
H«raaf# |u&t o few of the exciting April Specials ovdUoble from Bef Arr
Comoro^ Hi-Fi, the Weat Coo^st s Fi neat Photographic ond AudioCenler
A
NIKKORMAT FT2
NA/ith 50mnn f2 lens
Reduced
from List
$411 SO
Jh% IMduKmaf fl 2 fi tht kieast pridid J5mm single lens n
camara m the Mihon family of fine optical products The FT 2 uses tf^e
same lemti a tlie more a^aaat Nilion F 2S producing photograplis
of equal clarity ytt, tlic R 2 costs hundreds of dollars less The Wihon
specialists at Bet Air Camera i Hi Fi can create a custom Nikhormat
system to meet your individual photographic natds
220 SL
with 50imnr> f 1 8 lens
fc>
Only
$139
95
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1239 95
The experts at Bel Air Camera' A H4 fi have found a low priced ibmm
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camtra with sensitive throafh (he Ions mMtring for coaMrtifit^
accurate exposuras aad shutter speeds to 1 lOOOM locand The Vivi
tir 220 SI alw lis a duraHe Copai shutter self timer built m hot
shoe and a unnrersal screw lens mount
Sankyo XL-2aS ^^vitac 200
Automotic
Electronic
Floth
only
$17
95
Li%f $34^00
Si^aswi
VOU Cjn SStil feMMtllMl MtMtl Willi Higl)
li yte ew MaMi MS Saansg fttntin it
m mm tMw Tiat balii Xi »S
• 220
iftia m6 w iiKiPSic laiaar iw
film and mmi ^nc Mm imi lay wy
Supe 8 camm cmmtt ttt
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iisf S24 95
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tiiai2MiailMiasr9«ltiaaay ftiMiD
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OLYMPUS 35ED
Compoct 35mm
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Ah Vif^ifor F/oshes
A voi/Oble Af Low
Oiscounf Prices
Ikt ¥fvitar MO IS «t eia ilO
camtra Iw tlw ac^ o« Nit^ pwtiii hi
t|itt yoM we
. moMn e out
vou (iP Mi ttt Imtt-e aaS • mmm
nanR wi§aHii wen plitaaMiai flMt Ml
dimct wMHiM T%i liKiiiwa a Bal An
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HWrfHt
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iiu'^ JD^U n tut pBivc- Ljmefi
•"w mi mam Incaii mmf m
ft aHNnawiiv a ciiiw* mt
ctad and to ricei rt wi J&mm film
riicJ&iO laalviti a »# OMMy 2ulM) ttiK
«ltll CI
carrtrW wScS wa He cvrtct apelwf tor
awtoctfClMmi TSttaSirCimtrpAHifi
ti^ant mwto m to eipKt at JHO and
ai am 0mw camiDa^ i
• U
QircomeiQ&hHi
Q97 We<*»'*"HH Bl»f4 ios
fj^v tyy
-tTTff-
24-Hour
Kodacoior
»«•
7 Block ^outhof UCLA in Westwood, Hour!> AAondoy— Soturdoy 9 6
•1^
MMaMMI
ma
!:£;a-^*;£^
g' l\ "'.. ■" 11
.^-^_
CLASSIFIED
NflMlia
If
$1
■Qr RMll
OiAOLINC 10:30 A.II.
•ili 4. W«tf.. ApHI 7. ta noMT - 2 pm.
RCNTATV 110.00
•l«id«iit #t«couf»la 0«4lv«ry l« 0*.
47ft.Jf7|, 23M WMtwood.
ItOir)
WtNCMAJCNia. n wifit MfplM *
CItOir)
fttthr •Mpporf Hm Uff»W*f«Hy •! Cau-
l's pirftay Ml non-dtacrti
■pM« Will not hm
In Wm IMhr Bmln •• anyone
wtio dlscrlnilnaUt on tH« botlt of
»«try, color, nollonol ortf In, roco.
oc 80H. MoNKof vw -OoNy Bvwn
Iho ASUCLA CommunlcoUont
pooMfOlocI any ot Itw tor-
I oHvortisotf or o^ivortlaort ropro-
■•flilotf In ttilo losuo. Any porson bo-
llovlMf MMt on o^vortlsomont In this
lOMM viomiM Mw Boortf '• poMcy on non-
4locrlfnlnollon slolod horoin shoMkl
OMHUMMIooIV OOHipMlntB In MIVIlMlf lO
tlM Buolnoos Monoffr. UCLA DoMy
•ram. 112 Kofdrtioff HM. Stt Wootawod
I, Loo Anfolot. Colli orab •0024.
171 or
<1A§>
notion pnWiiwt. coll: UCLA
Otflco.<213) 020-440 1; Wostsldo Fol
Hoymfl (212) 473-3040
i
fWBT AC^UOM'NOW PVOil* SiWOt noM* RMOt
cryotol, pIctufM^yo toapo PMoor pooli:
mm^mt, toipa HIkofo. 297.71^ ^ ,^
church SMvictts
>
IMSTWOOO FHonda MooMnf. (Qm-
VWCA. 171 IMiii i. Vtollor* laloonw.
*^^-^ (4 0.rM)
SUNDAY MKoo: 0:M. 10 00. 11:20
Unt— raily CoPioUc rowlii (O m i ilHw<|,
%m Lutioyon CHaptl (Obytoy/Slnrtli.
"*^^ (4 0lrM)
AimOWNf AO cabin in quiof orop
ftioopo «. $is/a#ppp. f iit/7
2i7-14<7.
■flUIN T.V nCNTALS
COLOR TVS
wooofy/inonwiiy
OOtaPoy
•lock/MftiHa TVs ■ $7 JO %
CoN: 27f.1ta2
l»OT|;0«ir pr«gM mo
Id UCLA
PON Solo - CoiwpiiH photoffopnic
History of tho Civil War. $00 Cfll
(19 A 01
FOREIGN STUDENTS
Th«r« mtm thr«« $300.00
gr»nlt-ln-«ld awards frorn^
Jho Barouh-Slagal Endiw-
NNHfit Fund avallabls to
ragistantd non-lmmfgranf
foraign studants witti wnrnf-
gancy naad for asslstanca.
Appllcallons ara availabia
\n OI8S, 297 Dodd HaN,
DaadUna Is April 10, 1976;-
(Ann A 15)
naS WCtK PHI KAPPA SIOilA FPA-
Tanamr will ac holoimq sppino
aUSN. ALL THOSC INTf RCSTCO AaS
WILCOMC TO STOP BY ANYTIMC.
wrac AT 10020 rniATHMoaE. douq
JONNSOM/aUSH CMANIMAN - 47t>
**• f Ann A %\
UNtveaamr luthcpian
CHAWa.
laasolaii, ApHI 1l«i.
Sproul HaN at 10AM.
MOtfi ffoiy CoMHMMMan iaaaapiRS
at 10:20 a.ni. In Iho Chspal. Comor pf
SbnaPmiofo snP Qaylsy.
(4 SO)
IVBtTWOOO-~Oaliaio 2 i
•Mat. t2if . 020 0000 ii».
2T§-MSF—
MAIS)
MAMMOTH COnaO. Noar
2 biirssm. 2 balb. lacusH.
Day/swoS. 340-2000.
oiii7ai.
TV. sisrsa.
ItAia^
for sala
t.B.M. Typowrttor, ttonPo#d modol.
aooulllul complololy ovorhsulod.
nffkM onP looks llko now. $2f0.0S/
MHO w sill aNsr. Aflor S oelaMi OS-
••^*^- (10 SIS)
liatchcovors, notting A ropo, funky
cralao A basos, old bornwood. 031-
••^ i«n /%*»«
SOUO 14 K
alMin. rtnfi
dlMb^ -IS
STOJS. CaN
ir
ftSAt)
VtSPA Clao mopod SSaa. oscollont
»*Ha Poajoot bicypio $••■ Tbaaias
(to A fS|
KIMO SIZE
PLANT talo. Hundreds of Indoor A
raom by
1S-6. 2115
(1 Mask «ssst aossrty Qlon A Olympic)
(10 A t)
(10 A 12)
ONLY Tho
Know whon iho
IS A 12)
PSYCHIC.
spWHial iiioMpliyslcal Tsroi
OOV
(0A1S)
■MfLITaV.
•«*r«ittiMT»
PAM, MIssod f icoptlonsl Chlldron's
Tutorlol Proloct orlontotlon mpoUnp
r? Don't wdss H Monday' Tom.
(•■•)
AMD
MCCANTNEY Tiekals. 1st snd 2iid
Soot oNsr. 247-0270.
(10 A 12)
ADMIRAL fofrlporstor Whito.
^ condition too or baa< affor. CaN
477-7044 ovos. IZ, '^ (10 A 13)
STEREO a
»onts: SlMdonl#«^
TRIANGLE Casino MfM. Rush Parly
' ' lanlfM al 7PM St f 10 Landtok.
(OAO)
complete ml^-iitj
1
prinirng S'SftttLJ
service ^S^^^
i\|M-viiitiK ,^^^^VE-^3M
bindiiiH Cs^^^""^^-™
mimro-diiio ^\Xk~ "BTu
ll'l krnlifiitll hall /Vir^^LJ
X J
. .
-
campus
1
Minouncamafits
HI Nooky Soar ^1 mn> you. (How about
fSASI
WsRsTa LspSisra, tuH faoo hoknoL Soot
aftor 472-7470 or 472-f2a0 deythno.
(10 A IS)
CUSTOM-maas sMmo
$120 oaeh. 020-0440.
woalarf Onir
(10 A 14)
brands. Vslloy 001-0045. 001-2023
021-0072. 0SS-S8S1.
(10 Qm\
VIOLA $375, wRh
It c
4-
$25. Bs-
004775.
(10 A 0)
FENDER strot and
Ampaf i
477-0070
(PRE-CaS)
(10 A 121
ALPHA EPSILON PI Danoo Party %m
lompht St Ow Rac CaaNr. Uso band.
Bo Thoroi
. (OAO)
LAST chaneot Spring Rush stans
ly. Apm 12PI so coaio byaridn
m 2324 Murphy by 3M PM. ^ . .^
fa A oi
ROLLIFLEX SL-20 w/easa S
sodos: UV; Zoloa 20mm/f3.2. oass. UV.
Tex OS iRstrvmon
oppoftuniti—
WAMT la
OOM
Tisnai>tiS4i nsnti sttst rtsnta
QOIIVVS300 ""
(12 A 2S)
pan Ni
WHAT DOES A BRUIN
BEAR WEAR TO CLASS?
UCLA' t-shirts (hundreds of
styles in the ASUCLA Stu-
dents' Store). cu8tom-im-
prmted t-shirts, football
ierseys. 8¥»aatBhirts. hooded
sweatshirts, jackets, hats,
socks, and carries a UCLA
gym bag or bike bag.
PARTY tonloht 0PM RIobor HaO. Rm
405. Frso Boor ond mhiotf drkiks. Btkifl
fpsr aam plsss and pass Ois wasd.
fOAO)
MitortainmMit
NOVUC
12
7
4/12
bi
p.m.ki
(IS A S)
^ov laiaoffffMiion
115. $1JM
/■■ilCUS
ausaiess EouiPviENT
llSn Soma MtaMca Bi WLA
CALL 470-^711 1 »l W— t ol Saw DUpa Pwy
(12 A 0)
(7 A 14)
$1 JO DUPLICATE Brldpo Monday nNs.
Wodnosdsy sftornoont Wild WhIsI
Brides Club. 1005 Wostwood Blvd.
(7 Obi
•ocial events
•PERSONAE*
Canter of Dramatic Arta
Announces
An oppoflumty for soloct
porform in public' Limtod
srs svstisbis to ths following work-
shops
•ACTII
Strsss in on tl«s basis fundsmontsit
ASUCLA Students' Store
XSkerman Union
DISCOUNT PHOTO
FINISHING right
here on campus
mpus studio
J 50 her<khoff hofi B25 06J 1 w27
open monff B 30-4 30
DROP-IN ENCOUNTER
An Eaay Way to Moot Iho
E«ofy SunSsy and «Madnaaday Nna S^ P N
Paul Lindaman Cwpsrtsnsi
1380 h apautdMoAws
4 ONia, asai of Fainax Naar Sunavt Olvd
MAY Isl aOOfCSTOm ffanasHy Bis
iROPESOIONAL ACTBOO*
isiizing in public porformsnca
A
sta. Taas-
7BIBLLA
tvaurs. Pioon lo
•rao rt »s.
no A 121
How to worlt with tho sctor
You est to SOS your
CALCULATORS
Tl Sa 00. Tl SR 51. Tl SR 52. Tl
•DANCE*
In Body Awttppnass srtd Haths
p«bi
SATURDAY NITE
ENCOpNTER QROUPS
by Tha Topsngs CanHsr
aa a «My of waatinq rwm
craosva aaiya of
[no nasd to
nita • 00 PM ai atthar of
locattona
4*,' i42
T«
llkov aoms ionics Blvd W.LJL
ROES ELSCTRONICS
CsN 472.1511 IPr
CaB DANIEL aOO
0-1
JOSH
RCA Black/vMiHo T.V
porly. Ask lor
$40. Prtvsts
a
(10 A 9)
(212)'afi-10T7 Oai
FOR
C13A0)
OM
(10 A 0)
POPULATION
Bflpo. A212
MARIJUANA. Doni Ipl IRa
IJ7JI0 AND STOP
ALCAREaaaBAacH
MIKE AT 200-4424
INCENSE USBal; Wo will pa
If fi»
$10.00
12. asonlno Coi 415-4S7
(14 A 12)
15-27 ma.
for
/
(t4A1S|
wanted
r
Halp SoH by Halping Olhars '
$5-560/ month tor Blood PlaariM
^jNYtAMO OONOR CENTER
II Gaylpy Ava.. Wfcsiwoea
.ite^e
). «r#
(12
aaWBNLY HMs Msn's IMbstySst
hroo balrstylinf . For n»ors Info coll
271-oas Tuos - SaL
OaON)
SUM IpfMs Mb as
ki Mssiea. MsMpi: Fr Miniilin. 11210
Cyproos Asp.. RIvorsldo. Co 02ftSS.
(714)0SMSSS. ,,,^,,
EARN U 00 hr WhNs ptaykig
lor 14 yr. oM boy
(TSASI
tieip weiitecl
ONIL tor HfM
daPy, 3 days
(to AO)
(15 A 14)
LIGHT (but dlllfont)
kooping
271
MS a on
FfldPf . 0 om lo 1 pai. CMI ATS-
C1SAS)
70
FULL Omo lypisi E<
0S2S/mo. Sanu Monica. Carol 202-
(15 A S)
PSYCH.
CaS472-1ISS.
(15 A 0)
OVBRSBASXMS
Europo, S. Aaiarlca. Auatralla. Aala.
Ff
CC. Bos
TYPIST. WorkliwMh
aiiiiiiia Mad. hia. I
WMk. il.TS. IS
Ca. SO bra.
M« a ot
BODY
Is 1^. Bas 27207. LJL CA.
ftSAO)
AIDE tar
aroa Nurshif sfadant t
Evonkiii 47S-747S.
(IS A S)
TELEPHON8 SaRaWars.
(15 A 0)
ft^AO*
N^ now ^—k 52.05 plus
Los IV. P.O.
B(CX.ISS«
104 las la
(10
LJL)
lAiSI
lor rent
TUTORS
1-S.
0 at 2
407
117.
srS/ar an
Tmtm
P.O.
fISABI
coy^im<^4
halp wantad
SALE MINDED?
$$$ EASY MONEY $$$
ur ijiui'.iriy
CALL RON GLOBUS
930 2410
T
472
(10 A 0)
CHCR
lam prior to disss rtotlon proposol
277-7001.
(IS AS)
OIRL la drivo chlldron M.T. Thuts.
sflsmpoiaa. Plus bsbyslNing Sunday
A MppaaM- Car avaHabls. 474-7014.
(IS A SI
ARY/Talar la wmk bi
7«i afadsss 0 la 0
(IS A 0)
Hi AS)
NUNT
7 yr aM
id aM M Bav. HON sahaa
la NMB afaa P.NL 2-S diya
Sapi SaL apan. (714)
0 p.m. - ^
tNOiNaea
CIS A SI
ml CITICORP, la a
In toiaeammuntaaHona
lain
CA
aaAOUATE stuPonf wsniod to do
Contury
Lid.
11.
<15A0)
TELEPHONE kCTONS- AOORESSfVE
AMD FOaCEFUL PERSONALITY 3-4
NOUaS PER DAY $12.50 PER HOUR
AVERAGE STARTBiQ. ASK FOR LES-
LIE. 023-7000.
no A IS)
M« a m\
PART TNOE pisMim apan at Ois
Butlorfly Bokory. oosy hours. 52-Oi
000 470-0082.
(15 A 12)
WAMTBO: IsraaN sludsnt to t
laMoassw, call Tany at 070-0S22
**'^***' 115 A 12)
TIACNBRS at aS
Bas 1002 Vanci
CIS A 12)
(tOAO)
JUST
Ca
and looklf»f for fuN
UCLA
au^v
10
(10 A 0)
helpwented
SECRETARY OENERAL OFFICE
am •••dlwIOuol wHh Iron I offlcs
•PP^rmncw far proproaalva nsllonsi
Gompony Eacollontaolory Ssnoflta
121-5151
(15 A 15)
iCee efflered lervicee effere<l tutorino
^i
H>. iritoimum
ICINKO S
ftp
days. 2-0 p.m 2 sMMron (3 snd S yosrs)
Isnts Monies, own tronsportstton
(15 s 15)
PARTtt.asofSeo
typing
pr47S-4110
(15 A 15)
SK>VIMO A HauSnf. Laiia A MP
CaS BM 401-1013 or Frod 405-1440
nsoai
RIDING LESSONS
tNiaopla-f acully-f amlBaa- BIbN
•ANSA Aparevaa risinf aaiaSMahmaai
•aro««p laaaon* anS privalaa ehiidr.n s
TENNIS
court Alaa saarl
arsa. 472-7003
an s
(10
$4JS.
4 Bays p9r
FREONANT7 Wo
1111
(lOOlr)
HOUBBPAINTINO - Orods Profos
la bs or
-111
(15 A 0)
70
•ervicee offered
doom
VW HAINTBNANCI OEPVICE $20.00
A
A
ctUTOMsrrrMi
lor
Aata-LHo-Homaownora snd Ronlsl
laatfCancs Vlllogo Of.flcs Wornor
WaOliiauii 1100 Oliwdsiii SyRs 1801
477-2007. 070-0101.
(lOOlr)
WRITER
^y%o , ofvsrs halp
(10 A IS)
OK>VMIO ki ar aof? Ws
no A 0)
MAaiCUTS ^byBsa
0S7-4Sai.
asad II
PaulH
(lOOlr)
qvSTOM Carpahlry
- All faaals •§
^BeseM
BBSV VeiBB
0105. Jaok 401-S02S.
s MM
Raal 474-
110 A SI
MOVING: Rssldonlloi. spsrimonia
LaaalS
(10 OP)
ELECTROLYSIS Unwsntod fsclsl A
sals molhod Fros consultstlon. Ms.
1CS2 WiSlwsad BI 477<21#$.
(SOOlr)
(10 OP)
t^K^tnc?
7aavss
CABIPUS BCflVlteS
VTON lEXPRESS
MOVERS
Movlng.affid Hauling
;t3
aidi ss^3sas
II 551-3S27
MAiw^eAiv ^ypneeM it^ceeise* ppee^ ei
ths Barrlngtan Plass. WLA 11744
Wllshlrs 477-0025. 570-2207 WNh
mars than 20 yrs. ssporlonea Holp
to •tudy-raloln-rslSB-sloop. Ooa our
lol^hons Ysllow Pogos sd. Spoclsl
(lOOtrl
TENNIS
CaN nawf 470-
Uplpus oosy ood
I
bpnaal aaapsoBRg
Control Cantor of Hollywood. 0221
HaOywaad Bkid. SuMs 512.
4S1-
t^m rum%
WEODINO
lo
iilioi
aalfie aippad-Off on
iT
1 •• -
Aaaow iMauaANCB
BALLET: Fun way ta Boouty 1205
WbaOa^dd, and Unto. YWCA. 574 Hk-
Oard. AduRi Classos dally
Intormodlotos, tt4^mncm6 • lasi
$21 Opsclol ralss. 2 or mora
wookly Irons Sorsts, plattngulahop
(10 Olr)
110 A 14)
GRAO
housa ki
2015. (Loo
loatafound
•ar a
MM. 274*
ria s V4I
arrEQRATED MEDITATION
MNaia of SgM sno
Apditl. ^Pi
dU) S71-78S0
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
Low
LIGHTHOUSa aiBURANCS SBRVICE
204-1101
FOUND. Last
of Ro4
473-407S
BfTERNATIONALLY
Mia lo boPysH
AUTO Inaursnca Losrost rstos for
skidsnta or smpioyoos. Robort W. RRos
020-7270. 070-0702 or 407-7572.
41SOkr)
contoct his Los
5150.
M474-
(10 A 0)
(17 SO)
I FOUND SOMETHINCr? |
j.lf yoM'va found a pot or pfBclp of!
splup. wa want Ip aplp you raNMR
lit I
I Juat coma Into tha Dally Bruini
I CIBPOMM Pppprtmant and toN ual
.fif«i fMiiC IP ptpop pn ptf ki aip I
I Last a roaaa obRiiwh. Aa o puBaol
J optMbp. TMS JOS PACTOMV |
I aosMCY. wpoapBBB ai«a.. wai mni
MNo BB Pt RP eopt IP ypid
Bnlartalnmont slso AnnI- 401-2022.
474-0100.
(10 A 0)
tiiterlnfl
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
TppNIili?
BTUOeNT DiaCOUNTS
THE aOOVMEN
Qusllli Aulo
Wopolr A Polnllng
470 00 M
(Oasoar
■ ■part r)apa4r af
WaWL A •
(24 OP)
Individuals.
a«
RkiB. A
r--
MJL) 470-
dOOP) I GRADUATE HtCORD EXAM
(10 A 0)
COOIEY AVE.
PHAONKLNOa S KUB.^
=
M. Biaaas. papam. 474-
(10 A 12)
pai
•9 <
aafv rpisli baso org
asms. BHaf
0B«
1 2:20 -0:20 OMI saan.
(10 A IS)
Ml LOB
CSNTBa.
1
(lOOlr)
M> hr class bagins May 0
A*«o GLBAT
eOAT
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
SB17 -
FRENCH
(24 A IS)
MATH
by SLA
VlckUty 304.0700
(24 OP)
tUP*
TYPPSG - F<
work St homa Wsatwood rosldonl.
474-0200
(SSAO)
RUTH
Isrm I
020 2702
(20 OWI
TYPING: FaoL
474-
(25 GHr)
117S2 WOshks,
aaiTNiO of MA
;aM 477-
14. ^F^
i'n A 01
Thosos. otol -for tho Pror
HTNING TrPidiO CO
Thaaia Opacialtat
^rmm Eslimalaa
PhOFEailONAL COLLtOf TVPtNG
5FECIALI0T
Tarm papart Thaaia Oiaaariottona
Faalurat Foraign Languapa* tciancaa,
Math Tab4a» Duigramt Muatc fdlltng.
Counaolmg. Xaroaing Prtnimg Ompmg
__ jtMdsnt Psiaa 200 31 St
271
(2SAS)
RUTH C DfSBBRTATldNS. THESES
STATMTICAL. FAST. DEPSNOABLI
SEVBN DAYS A WEEK MANY TYPE
STYLES 020-0420.
(20 OP)
adwcsllonol. solontlflc. othor Don't
7215.
(25 OP)
aaOfSSSlONAL wnior with B A. In
BngSsh (UCLA) wM typo snd sdR Isrm
wass, sic. Oosr 25 yaam aa-
IBM SrtiBPIt. Ml ■Ml ■ ■ i Vl^
•^'Y paimnp. wampadmm mMs.
(SOOP)
SPEEDY, socurslo IBM typist too-
KAY. Typing, sdltlng Englloh
^ ^- j^^ p
-747t:
CSS OP)
^
I Soorolory. Noor oompuo. 47S-
lOmNQ. Typkig
For
(25 A 20)
yS ilS5 or 270-0471
Hans.
•aHars. EdN
.1747
mom
TVPBIG. LotC
Ihosas.
7007 tar
N. Torm
ols. Call 204-
(25 OP)
mueic
cotim^ >
__j
M
""1
»» ■ 'l
-CLASSIFIED
4
CMMrrnvMitf t
911 Pmm Am 747 Id
M.V.C t1«t
CM Mek (2t3) 273-7822
Mf CIAL PacM to Mm Or»«fit. India
^■ktotan. tydfMy. Fill, Auckland A
-214^.
ftS A t)
travel
trflv#l
• • •
ISC
HARTERS TO EUROP
A8UCLA Trovwl S«rv«c«
Ih* ONLY official
UCLA Chartor Flight S«rvlc«
A Bampllng -^
of Europafflghtt
LAX - Amstorctem
#of
1C754
Z^1C75
12C75
15C75
17C75
18C76
'22C76
23C76
27C76
mc7t
Jun« 7
7
$429
J^tm2^
11
$429
Jun«21
12
$429
Juntas
5
$429
Jufwli »
$429
Jiifwft
10
$429
Julys
6
$429
Julys
9
$429
July 12
4
$429
July 19
4
$429
Kr %m Om tOdtf fUpMi lo oHoom iof fiMop*
turnimr of '7C • camping tmtm • gludy
tnwvHMeMpM • Of«an( and I
• traMi tn«u«and« • ' hem
•nd
HAWAII..
(psftUM HstlnQ)
1
— on Amarican Ajrtinaa and T.I.A -
Stay 4-40 MHtia. LowMl Fawa
05 day* advafioa booking raquirad
Summar-iong ftighta filling fast
MBka Your Raadfvationa HOm» b
M* eHff«t from flw only nation-«Ma« non^H
rofit siudant travel organtfation Sarving th«^9
TOURS & TRAVEL
Spring Summof » '-" CharWm'
to
-Lond
-8h«nn«jn
•Paris
-Madrtd
-Ffonkfun
-Boisaaia
■Zurich
Roundtrtp from S299 00
Hawait and Naw Vorh
Roun - V69 00
rturtft frotn
Nigntt troai
LAX/^AAlt A
OdiliRS.SgnFranciKC
V«ni 10 Lure
Trip:
7/aa'i
51
9429
t^iif
73
499
wm
94
4i9
7m
44 '
439
M/19
99
439
A/OA
10
.439
A2B
70
439
9 04
79
439-
9/12
94
439
»•§
46
439
•««
71
439
9/12
79
439
A19
92
439
9/09
73
439
A2i
99
439
1^12
99
^
9/04
43
4^6
WM
91
4M
im .
37
419
9/09
»
419
9/24
54
429
may if-craaM
r 1-20%
ISC also runt local mrmm lours
by car and bus a' mimmMrr rr>«l
CatI Us for Inlormation
473 2991
9 6 Dally
• » • •
OVtnSCAi JOBS. At'^i,
patlona l§00-|2.S00 Invaluatola •■-
partancaa. Oalalla 2f<. InlamaUdiMl
Wa. ttlM.
)f onty 10
Sarvic* too inctudoci Airport tan CMlra
Swaont Travai 9at»|pas ara for siudar^tb
J thm UCLA Commtjntiv Uu tht 6th Ymi*
wMAH I CMS (partial listings)
Oyt9r 300 flights A datas with daparturas
from Aprtf ftiru Octobar slay 2 to 21 «moIis
'LA-HONOLULU $Wt ona
•LA-HO«OLL>LU tMt Iwo
,. lUui in|d Mstt) s^ a«aM
PiXn Cm PI«nlAl9 LMdino...aHt-
rall/EurAll passed ...Accomoda-
tlen9...tATA flto...liiteni«tiofi«l
ID.
H
fnCf TMAVEL COUNSCLINQt
ASK US FOM. AMYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW AOOUT
TRAVEL!
Hpnt Travai aat»|pas ara for siudar^tbflB|
•nd pabpla ira«a«iing through ttta world ^H
CIEE STUDENT TRAVEL
1093 Broxton Ava «»224.
Loa Angalaa. Ca 90024
Call 21 3/477 -ZOefiT
CiUlt IM ffUflOPf
nCNT Oil JiUY
9Ff CIAL neDUCTIOMS TO
rCACMf M i STUDCNT9
FUSE CATALOQ
euaocAfis
9UNSrr BLVD.
271
To
LAX-
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Campus
Tofitfht in Royce Hall,
Spmnish flamenco guitarist
Mario Escudero plays a reciul
consisting of s^ome 19 pieces.
The concert begins at 8:30
Tomorron^ nrght in Royce
Hall, pianist Phillipe Entre-
mont will perform Mozart.
Chopin and Ravel
Speculum Musicae. a cham-
ber group dedicated to the
performance of modern music.
Little Theater and admission it
Abo free is the Q\mdy% luik
FoundMoo Vocal Awards
Concert Tuesday at noon in
Schoenberg Hall Auditorium^
which will present some of best
voices Ml llui GMnpus, pre-
sumably along with their own-
ers
Movies
Elizabeth lay lor has been
taunting him all evening by
I'
tr
y
The E>aiice pcpartment presents an evening of Asian Dance tonight UH^
tomuirow night in Schoenberg Hall Auditorium. The prvfnMi
inc *^MlingUn^ from |ava (abc»^e), bcgirts at 8: 3Q and Student tickets
Sl.Si
plays in Shocnt^erg Haii Sun-
day night at 8 pm The pro-
gram consists of works by
Druckman, Martino, Wuori-
ncn and Shoenberg's Kammer-
sinfohie arranged by Webem
for violin, cello, flute, clan net
aiui piano.
^ The same evening in Pauley
Pavilion the Odori Festival of
Japan performs a program of
some ri^ery colorful Japanese
folk dances
Monday night, Charlotte
Hcth will lecture on Amcrrcan
Indian music as part oi the
Music Department's Bicenten-
nial Lecture Series. It begins at
8 pm in the Schoenberg Hail
playing footsies with another
man When they are alone she
tells him, "Why, I oughtio just
take you outside and strip you
naked."" He remains composd,
stares intently, straightens his
tie and says tersely, *^ou 411-
gnat RK.**
It nuy not be his most re-
membered line or his most
memorable movie (Reflectioni
in a GoA4cn Eye) but* this
venomous comment is certainly
part of the brilliant screen
career of Marlon Brando, a
carer, that is the focus of a
retrospective fllm series at the
County Museum starting this
week
T^a^ht VHa Zap«la (1952)
win be shown with JvIm Cat-
lar (1953) and tomorrow night
Oa the Waterfront (1954) and
TiM Wild One (1954) will be
•creened.
Among the other films in the
program (21 in all) are Oae-
Eyad Jacks (1961), directed by
Brando.^ c; uyt and Dolfti
(1955), Last Taago in Park
tl972) and The Godfather
(1972)
Screenings wiil be on Thurs-
day, Friday and Saturday
nights at S pm m the Leo S.
Bing Theater through May I
Shampoo, the movie that
proved that only hairdressers
know for sure, will be shown
tottifbt at 7 and 9:30 in the
Ackerman Grand Ballroom
Admission is ST. The movie
stars Warren Beatty, Julie
Christie and Academy Award
winner Lee Grant. /
Music
This weekend offers greater
mterest m Classical music
events than Popular. Sidney
Harth replaces iiiling guest
conductor Mstislav Rostropo-
vich m a program of Tchai-
kovsky and Prokofiev at the
Dorothy CKandler tonight,
Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday
at 2:30 pm ^
'A-free program of Bach,
Mozart and Beethoven wi41 be
performed by Academy Award
winners Leonard Rosenman
and Elmer Bernstein with the
San* Fernando Valley Sym-
phony at Reseda High School
tonight and tomorrow at 8 pta.
Pianist Byron Jams plays Ha-
dyn, Beethoven, Chopin, Cop-
land and Goltschalk in the
Auditorium of El Camino Col-
lege 8 pm tonight. West Afh-
^J^biffand(^ariatf^
CHARLES CHAMPLIN, I a Ttmr.
^Seaa Connery, Audrey Hepburn^
Robert Shaw in a |H)werf ully
roiiuin tic film full of
!twirhng action,
rousingly exciting in
the old swaiUibiickling
tradition.**
\,
— .■»'■'"
JAY ( OC kS, Ttm
**Sean Conner y and
Audrey Hepburn are
su|xrrb together *'
AUDREY
HEP»JIIN 1/ J
1I0HN AND MAMAN'
hnoTwiiJMMnN
wutan mamm
MCHAiin HARKS .
Now Pbying At Specially Selected Theatre?ir =
MOI.LV WOOD
Hollywood Pacific 4M»<S211
WCftTWOOO
AvcfT C«»>t«r C»f>«m« l..4ra^7 1 1
rdw«rd\ 0)v*-ln 447 0171^
AflCADIA
S«rrt« Anit« 1 ft 1, 44»-4?00
CKRHITOS
UA Twin a. 924 1019
CMATllMOflTH
Winnctha Drtw«-m 4. i49 bftOb
LA MAailA
^iii«<p I >•! Ofcia
l6s anoklcs
C«ntin«l« Oi¥« »" *>'0-tb'/
MONTCLAia
Montclair Cin«rn« J
/14/fr^« 39 34
wco mvtuA
»-i«sta Driv«-ln 1. 6^? 7Sil
aaooNDO acACH
a#utnto«v 2. 3^0 6J9»
ai^aMNIAN OAKS .
LA n9¥n» ?•• 131 1
wear coviMA
^■■11 rmama ttta ISTB
r
can miiiic will be executed by
the African Mufic Eniembk
tonight It 8:30 pm at the Mod-
ular Theater at X:alAru
The Ambamdof Auditor-
ium ieriei will feature the
renowned Cleveland Quartet
Saturday evening at 7:30 pm.
* On the other side of the
cultural spectrum, Bachman-
Turncr Overdrive jaflBM. tonight
at the Long Beach Arena at %
pm while the Marshall Tucker
■sftd perfornui at the Holly-
wood Palladium, 8 pm.
Theater
The weekend theater fcene is
plentiful New productions in-
clude a modern verkion of
Shaws Heartbreak Homc at
the Westwood Playhouse
Murray Scbimrs comedy All
Over Town at the Callboard
Mojave
a *'New melodranur at La
,Mama HoUywood, A Dmi
Ma4c oC DteaMsAi at the new
Matru theater aad TIm VIgi,
a story about a gardocr ac-
ctited of ttealing Chnst'i body
froiB the tomb at the Holly-
wood Free Theater (free ad-
mission to all).
I I.I ■ i« iii I
'lyii "MX* '
DR Stair ft<
die. they jot fm^K
Continuing iknomt are
jie^y'i Children, about *'thc
dtsilhttiofied generation of the
60*1** at the Huntii^liMi Hart-
ford and an unrecommeiKM
production oi Sherlock
Homes at the Shubert Thaatfe.
The^ Mark Taper Forum it_
presenting three plays in repcr- ^
tory: Aad Where SIm fiiipB
Nafcoiy Kmows, tracing a wo-
man*s life and thd many men
in It; AslMi, the study of a
young couple trying lo have a
baby and Crom Coviiry, con- «
cerning a woman's journey
through her soul.
UVA head fears
veteran apathy
"^way" ouy describe the phght of the Umied
Veterans Association (UVA; if no veterans
show they care about the organization,
according to Randal Winter, acting president
0i UVA
At present, the UVA w functioning with
Winter as the only member ol the UVA
aaoctitiye board. _^___- ^
Otiando Bonner,
according to both Bonner and Winter,
innner said he is 'rather happy to be rid of
the UVA thmg hacai^ n's hffni a
^rvc taken a lot of peran
Vmmmt, **lt*s wrong the way psopii attacked
me for meswig up the UVA. lt*s not what I
didr I didn't do anything. It's idiat the
veteraiu didn't do.**
Bonner said he neadad lo 'take a brink "
from school this quarter beoniar he doesn^
fatow the
will
cause group
to [ust
dway
Milwaukee Symphony
No, the Milwaukee Symphony did not play the '^SchUtz
Serenade- or "100 Bottles of Beer," but they did perform
Dvorak, Tchaikovsky and Piston surphsmfly and marve-
lously well Tuesday nigbt m Royce HaB.
Sixteen-year-oid prodigy Lilit Gampel executed with
dytiamic flair Tchaikovsky's €<mcerto for Violin and^
Orchestra. Minor quibbles could be made that Miss
GampeKs pace was too deliberate and her tone a trifle
scrawny, but these shght annoyances did not overshadow
the overall success of a deeply feh performance.
The Milwaukecans, under the baton of Music Director
Kenneth Schermerhom, read Dvorak's Symphony No. 9 m E
mirtor with, a great sensitivity and bno. The Largo was
afforded special treatment, the resuh 1)eing reUixed and
breathttkingly beautiful. Schermerhom does not forsake
nuance foh^dfive- m his conception of the popular work.
Martin W olt ma n*s English solo was i wonderfully idiomatic
contribution to the Largo.
The concert bipm with an animated rendenng of Walter
Piston's Toccata for Orchestra. GinasUra's danoe, with lU
characteristically Argentine colors, was an even liveber
encore.
H'
term's UVA presi-
dent, IS not attending school' this quarter and
therefore cpMSOt hfAd office Winter, vice
Mcsident. took over the duties of presidem
last week.
According to Bonner, executive board
liiembers were pressuring him to reitpi last,
quarter. ^
''1 did not resign as president,** said
Bonner. **! wcNild never rei^. 1 had no
maion to. As tar as Pm concerned, my term
has ended anyway **
Last quarter, the U VAV Iflictivity resulted
in Susan Melton, first vice-president on.
Student Legislative Council, freezing the
UVA budget. She riainwrt the organization
was ineffective and that there was not
canitfh interest on the part of veterans
. •«■ ssaHi^esan ^•^'^^f^^'^'.^-rx.mi-
Disputes between Bonner; Winter and
executive board members also hampered the
orgamzation By the end of last quarter, the^
only two members left on the executive
board were Boimer and Winter
Nothing wns "^accomplished** last quarter.
warn to
UVA presidenu. ••Every person who 'has
been president of the UVA has either
flunked out of school or suffered from poor
gmtfssr said BoMMT.
Winter disagrees with Bonner "^Pm opti-
mistic about getting veterans to"^ participate,*
he said. Winter, who plans to graduate this
quarter, addsd that if he **nunks out of
UCLA, it aertainly won*t he l^ecnuse of
UVA.- ■
SailUi^ MMHlhafa
At this point. Winter said, he u ""actively
•seeking board memheffi** to appoint to office.
He said he cannot conduct efficient elections
until veterans realize the UVA is in
In order to mrmirigt wteran pnrtiapa-
tion. Winter has oifMaad a UVA-s|paMored
petition, to be arcuiated by vetaegns on
Pniin Walk during the second aii^ third
taisi^ks of school The petition, to be signed
by any registered voter, calls for addition of
provisions to ^jSeaaie Bill SHPiN expanding
(C dntinucd on Page 4)
'1-
'■» ..M..>.^.*
Ucla
Brum
-r
VoitmiB
, Number 6
UfUwrslty ol Callfomlii, Loo Angglgg
Mdfidtey, ApHf 12, 1976
UCLA nuclear reactor aids
cancer research, teaching
•y Jins Ft
DB Stiff Writer
Since 1959. UCXA
its own miclear reacior
has done eswrythiag from
afyzing mmm rocks to helping
The device, caBed an Argo-
naot mirhf mnctor, is pri-
■■hty aead to teach graduau
*
And it offers a prac-
tical OKthod of relating text-
hook HlMry to experimenu,
rdii^ to r
h Assistant
bau|h.
Development
Students are able to test and
observe what they learn in the
classroom on an actual model
Areas of work include reactor
cofc danga, reactor kinetioi,
radiation shielding and reactor
plant design.
The renctor also provides a
versatile source of radiation,
and together with OMnciated
instrumentation, it allows re-
searchers to det^mine which
elements are present in differ-
ent materials. Such experi-
flsents have included cancer re-
search, production of radio
for mediciiie and anal-
yMiA of moon samples.
''Other than instruction, the
biggest thmg here is moon
rock radiation,** Ashbaugh
said. UCLA anaiy/ed Apollo
moon samples and was first in
the country to analyze moon
rocks collected by the Soviet
Umon. By placing the rocks in
the reactor and measuring^ their
radioactivity, scientists are able
to find out which elements are
present on the moon
With radiation analysis in
constant demand for research,
the School of Engmeenng
shares its complex arith other
vy/fe i 'faff .7^r^'//f . f0QHmt$0f9
TiFFANY&CO.
' atVCaLY HILLS
9808 mVUmmL boulevard • Zl^ lOSl? • TCL: (213) 27
ments, especially
icine, geology.
physics.
UCLA
those of
zoolgy.
Each
to place materials for
into the fcactor and then re-
cord the aflacu radioaaivuy
has upon tlHiL Tl» oiniplB
saves energy aaid ImI hy hav-
ing throe to four poopk use lltt
\ lar ahont six
FttU powar is
engafsd during about 50 per
eaat of tiM t«ie
Since UCLA is onl|y otte of
four schools in Caltfonca with
a reactor (the fitlMs nas UC
Berkkley, UC Irvinf and UC
Santa Barbara^ it
facihties to ot
universities. Tha , California
or TadMlMy ■ a
To make the lending ar-
rangement favorahii fa hath
the other ichanls and UCLA,
the government pays for the
outside institutions
stths in a SKMNM) a
for UCLA, which gaai toward
In \mk. UCLA was the first
American umversity to offer a
course in auekar theory. The
reactor was hnilt 17 years aga
at a OMt pf S303^3O. It cost
S44 aa hour to ran or approx-
imately $100,000 a psnr, one
fourth ol-the Scho«l aC Eft-
kilowatts. I
hy the
or
at
I — -f
>. l
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
.h*' "* •"'» I'O"' P«'ion«l cffacu horn* M* ar* (MCiabiti m
r'AV^IhlC-KING 1215 wc4t 6ih tt . t«v
4«2-M«a
17
^n 1 ri n II >i ■ i ii
HAIR DESIGNS
^( >R M£N * WOMEN
Qua Iny- Pride
|i>ur Clfcocft Needs are alwayt
curiAidered Numero tlfto!
'CASA DE RGBERTL
-I !«*< Sanu Monica HIvd. WLA
*""'"« •>> Mr Rotwno 477 ^22„_By Appc
''Acres of Datsuns"
Student Discounts — Ask for Fleet Sales
Pasadena Datsun
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
■ . • • 684-1133 *
>4K.
::-Jtr
THE ASIAN AMERICAN
TUTORIAL PROJECT
IS engagedrh tutoring those handicapped by the lack of a
basic protoency m English in. the Asian communities
Knowie^Pjf a lacond language, though helpful, is not
necessary ,
For further information Inquirt at —
Campbeli Hall 2240 UCLA or call 825-5178
Sponsof^cl by Xf\% Community ServicM Commitaion
of th« Student Legislativ* Council
FKI
rroMfMGl
MOST
h~
iOia
^35
INOHii
OVIIHAUL
W/MUIfl
.'I
A-1 AUTO SERVICED
7957 VAN NUYS BLVD. ««. -^--
•MQUfMkan r^uM^^mm^ 8947075
AUTO
INSURANCE
YES — ' you need auto insurance
Ail the more reason to contact us for discounts
up to 35% to nnost students — another good
reason for betng in college, ^m
See or call us in Westwood
477 ?54fl ^
1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty's Building)
LA 90024
1 .
sulo-nsuraiKK
special lates
COKQC students
Crime and punjajiipcnt
Vandals damage—
x-ray machine
By MklKOc Duval
urn SUIT Writer
Tint Department of Radiological Science reported that over a
two day period period iatt month, someone entered an unlocked
raaai and iorced a hypodermic needle into the high voltage cable
connected to an x-ray maching. The action rendered the machine
inoperable BacaMC of the high v«ll«fB aapibiliues of the cable,
the department warned that such an action might lenously or
fatally injure persons meddling with the equipment. DaaMfe was
estimated at $100. as well as considerable inconvemence.
Sproul Hall received a bomb threat at 12:12 on March 20 The
call possibly made on a upe recorder, came through the front
desk, and the person receiving the message said the caller
Sounded as if he were trying to iasitate Richard M Nixon.
Police, with the aid of refidcBti, searched^ the building but found
no bomb t\J^'^
# • ^
Police ruled anger as the apparent motive in the breaking off
of an antenna in parking lot 8 on Monday.
— ■■. , . • • • * •.
Over the break, a Richer resident had her stereo, turntable, two
speakerf and 40 albums stolen from her room. There, were no
Mfps oi forced entry and the toul loss was plaoad at Si .650.
# • «
Someone recently entered the Jules Stem Optical Dispensary
clinic and stole six pairs of sunglasses valued at $175
• • • •
Eight basketball hoops attache<^ to backboards stored m a
Pauley Pavilion storage room were stolen from the backboards
last montli. Total loss was $203.
__ • • • ' '
A California license plate was stolen from a car parked in
structure 14 The plates were personalized and securely bolted to
4he car. Total value tost was $79 _ _
> • • ■
Powell Library vending machines were the scene of an
.apparent pastry theft last month Pastry was missing from one of
the trtachines and strewn on the ground alongside a foot long
2x4. No apparent motive was given,
• • •
- Last weekend the Wilson Pavilion had a $100 modern
abstract Calder print stolen from all the wall to which it was
bolted.
• • • '
— A botany professor had a nme inch wood statue stolen ftom
his office. Monetary value was placed at $25.
Placement Center
hosts Peace Corps
AMEIH-CAL
By Debbie PaiMi
DB Staff Writer
Repreiaatatives of the Peace
Corps, searching for volun-
teers, begin a three-day re-
cruitment drive todiTy at the
Placement Center.
** We're looking for people
who meet the requirements for
specified positions and who tee
an opportunity to be of service
as a valuable thing in itself."
said Mark Robbins, director
of the drive. Robbins. a 2i^
year-old UCLA graduate,
served with the Peace Corps
for three years in Africa.
Interviews and applications
will be available at the UCV.A
Placement and Career Plan-
ning Center through Wednes-
day from 9 am to 5 pm daily.
Robbins is interested in
graduating seniors majonng in
urban studies, public health,
biology, chemistry, engineer-
ing, secondary and special ed-
iicatioa^ business, Enghih.
French and nurttng.
Volunteer pai(|Hli
The Peace Corps esUbliilHi
volunteer profects at the re-
quest of the fovemroenu of
other countries. These host
countries specify the require-
ments volunteers must meal, in
larmi of tIdUs, abilities and
education
Recruitiaf volunteers re-
quires a very personal ap-
proach, according to Robbins.
An aDDisiai it imerviapad on
Mid is in-
of the
The current Peace Corps
proframt for which Robbins
will be recruiting volunteers
will begin with three months of
training this summer.
The training, conducted in
the volunteer*s a—^gptf^if coun-
try, emphasizes language study,
but also includes studies in the
history, culture and socuil and
political systems of that coun-
try.
Tiro yaan
Corps amignments are
two years in length. Volunteers
receive a monthly living al-
kmaaoe based on the sundard
of living in a particular coun-
try. In addition, they arc re-
imbursed for vacation, travel
and medical expeasm.
Volunteers receive a $1,800
readliwCment allowance upon
completion of the assignment
The Peace Corps is becom-
ing inrmaaingly popular today
among college seniors, accord-
ing to Don Stewart, Lot An-
geles representative of AC-
TION. ACTION is a progiaai
formed in 1971 which includes
the Peace Corps and VISTA,
among other ggfiatiit.
According to Robbuis, the
rowing iaiinin may be at-
tributed to the attention mul-
tinational employets have
pvn to mdivifluah' who have
"^2f " ^"^ ^ace Corps.
^■^ experience of holding a
JJip^^iWe job while ia ihs
Corps, which requires moch
pMMHd initiative,
m
i
»>i
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Voluiiie XCVlll
April 12,
Jim
Ann« Vouvig
Paul
'^1
Mm'c OsMint
Stuart SMyerMMn
QiannSski
J«ft Lapm
Howard Poanar ~ On
iJHira Ki»m«r —
Mary Anna
BrarKty
Luarni CMwnlnpham
ArtDI
Mtchasi Laa
CapyEdHof
David Whitnay
Mary Balh MurrMl
a
i^jk^^^^M ^^r^taJB
OavaOouid
Holty Kuelz
Joahua Aipar
Larry aona
MN«Oaah(lan
Alan
9¥fY
hr ma ASUCLA
LM
Otfiem
aaMarMa taa
Mardi Grttsfum^
.J . *■ ^
seeking donations
'•\
exDiaiaad R<
tea
^^^wKt • • • aps
Goifs today rmli Che
It prestigioas bastaass
for
£Kt ^ has Mt
last oa
•ad getting a regular job,**
l_ ^ III — '- —^a <■
fund
By Mkhael
DB Staff Writer
The UaiCamp fund raising committee will
make its presence known on campus this week.
ia an eCfort to gain student donations. This
week has been designated as UniCamp^und
Raising Week, and will be marked by
tilimerous campus activities.
UniCamp. now in its 41st year^ is a non-
profit camp staffed primarly by volunteer
student counselors. Approximately 800 under-
privileged or diabetic children are sent to the
mountains each year with the money raised by
UniCamp through Mardi Gras and fhriwigh
donations.
Most of the (pvents will take place on Bruin
Walk, beginnmg today with a balloon saie at
II am. On Wednesday, the Penny Lane compe-
tition will allow students to compete f^ the
group of their clioicc, eKher Greeks, dormies or
independents, by placing coins along a tape
line. Thursday will be highlighted by e bake
sak. and the activities will be finwhed Friday
by ^^Paint-Your-Own-Eatter-Egg"' booth, also
on Brum Walk, and a water balloon fight at
noon on Janss Steps.
in addition to the specific events, there will
be collection tables set up on Brum Walk, in
the Coun of Sciences and near Bunche Hall.
The will also be UniCamp volunteers collecting
donations in several of the parking lots and in
most 10 am classes on Tuesday and Wednesday
morninp.
The fund raising committee has also set up
collection jars in various locations around the
campus, ia particular the Mardi Gfai
aB af the shuttle
Due to the timing of the Spring Rebate
Program, fund riusing week will be a drive to
^oUect both money and Students* Store re-
ceipu, according to the committee. It is there
hope that sludents will donate thevr recapu for
books they intend to keep.
Along with m fund raising activities, Uni-
Camp will be holding its first counselor
recruitment meeting at 7 pm tomorrow in Rolfe
1200.
Concert, lecture ^nd pow wow
mark Ipdian Awareness Week
By
DB Staff Writer
to "create a better
between Indians
and non-Indians,** aaaaaiMig to
Orie Sherman, American In-
dian Culture Awareness Week
sangid from an attorney V dis-
cassion of Indian injaslioes oo
April 8 to a concert by Paul
Ortega and Floyd Westermaq
a» April 10
Sherman, a member of the
Native Americaa Student As-
sociation tpaawarwg the thn^
day annual event, considerad
thf turn-out ^'pretty good,**
aldtough she had **wiriMd that
more people would come.**
From the Nava)o nation,
John Echohawk ex-
is work oa April 8.
it involved in actios
the Peabody Coal
an organization that
**ttiiiastly planted themselves
oa Indian land for moMBHy
.** according to Sher-
an Indian acton workshop in
efforts to improve the Indian
image, according to Sherman.
In downtown Los Angeles.
Baba Cooper helps with an
alcoholic rehabilitation pro-
gram.
Also taking place on Friday
were i edaoert by Rod Harris
and Lyttlebear, a singH^
group, in Schoenberg Quad
and a Native American arts
and crafts display and tale.
Sherataa deach^ the oaMSit
at **well-attended because it
was a tunay, ipriaa day,**
wlule the aru aad crafts Aav
was a terious effort to thoar
the iMHral pubbc Indian art-
work and give ttudents an
opportunity to tell their work
Supported partly by a grant
from the National Endowment
for the Arts and presented by
the UCLA Committee on Fine
Aru Productions and the Na-
tive American Student Asso-
ciation, an Indian powwow
will be held on Saturday, April
17, from 3 pm to 7 pm. Sher-
man said that a pow wow is an
**Induui fonnal social gatimr-
iag. People will come in cos-
tames, daace and sing.** The
lead dancer for the men will be
Renny Howard, and Salina
Howard will lead the daaciag
for the y
Irene serafa
rlnillet
DAHCINO mrmUCTION AT ITS
THt FUN WAY TO MAUTY
138S WESTUKXX) BLVO (t oi nuanirai
ana UCLA-y M^ C A S74 HILQAflO
Enron Howl 391 -asit
This is the plocm for Rib Lovmrtl
By for fhoB^sf Ribs we V« frimd ir} LA
Haraid E»am«n«f
COMPLETE DINNERS
CasuaJ Dining
from
NAMIT'B OMSI MT BBO
IL4J|4^N. CKESCENT HilGHTS of SUNSfT STfflP
10 Minutes Uown Sun»#t glvd to
louflCor^yon Turn Right And Vqu re TKara
$2.75) I
i
• It I
DAY
Apri 13, Tuesday
12:« AU Mm The Pru^am DtaT
^2.m AV Jn7 Xontrjupa u S Ttietr Iffwii m
rm KH4» "No»ToC«irjl«i«d«M VourTwai
vas AU aai Olen *f ChUanii
4 00 AU JS17 "In— ^eiui fo«a imymi^nm UCLA
)00 Owam'-nnmm.P^ Mmkcthm
Aprl 1< Wrdnas^gy
af iMg
SMnkM
ir««d tor the W«r<d
CeMornM §m* CouftriM
^ruW/ViMiUblii QuelMy Qotmat
• ,_-
\.:^..
mnim
641-SSOl
670- 66n
rainbow graphics
5«61 Wf ST CFNTURV aOULFVARD LOS AMOfLES, CALI^OaNlA gCXMS
SPANISH SPEAKING MENTAL HEALTH
RESEARCH CENTER
COLLOQUIUM SERIES _^
PRESENTS
Dr. MANUEL CASAS
UCLA Counsoting Cantar
A PROPOSED
THERAPEUTIC MODEL
FOR THE SPANISH
SPEAKING COMMUNITY
Dala: Monday — April 12. 1976 Placa: 313
Time; 2:00 pen Phono 825-BBBB
Hall
aa acre for Cahfomia laad.*
Two **¥w> yoong aad la-
voh^** Indiaa women dta-
Marcuse said he saw
UCSD Saxon protest
LA JOLLA AP — Marxist Herbert Marcuie tays he
aanghag with studenU ia their confronutioa hMt November
23 with David Saxoa, president oi the U^versky of
Cahf onya. ^
The 77-ycar-oM phiaaophy profeaeof cmcntus, a defense
ohaisi at dtMiffinaiy hmnim for 10 slaitats. said he
"iherirtdr by^oa'
*1 caaiidefad his laipaaan to be evasive, 1
at the yfery end, ptMaaaHas,* MaMaae MSiiai Thttrsday
la his fait visit to UCi Saa D|ega oaapas as pMsiiaai
af Iht matsaPidi aanaai. Saxon was ami % a cnm4 af
lim with the
-^_^
April f . Lois Redelk Reed ^ as he mad la
j Commissioner calls for restructuring
LA Countygovernmenf termed
"T!
J
/■-
<
mi
ly PatrM
i
Lot A
which
A. Ri
SUIT Wrltar
County govern-
I structured im « way
can only lead to in-
aocoFdiof to Fraii>
»«eiBbertif
the Pubhc ComoMnofi oo
County Government.
Rahinoviu. who it deputy
director of the Conunittion,
said in a talk laii Tbwaiay
by Th«^ UCLA
I
r
School of Architecture that the
fublic has httie know-
of or confidence in the
county government
Rabinovitz is a USC in-
structor of public adminis-
tration, urban planning and"
political science. She said,
quoung from a study made
by the commission, *'The cur-
rent ;^county structure encour-
ages closed, narrowly consti-
tuted, short-sighted, frag-
I-
-ff
It IS NOT Chicago-Style Pizza
or Pizza-in-a-Pan
or Paper-thin-popular
It's just good old TRADITIONAL
ITAUAN-STYLE PIZZA . .,
with medium thick crusts (thicker if you ask),
chMM, sauce prepared daily and fresh
tngi'^^li^nts like mushrooms or peppers.
<i:^axJL22ii C7i
wo
UtaU
uyi \^xom utaLu
i«4<GLCNDON AT LfNDaBOOK)
«At. FAKKINC WSTWD CTt ILDC.
477.2MI
mented and inefficient gc^vrm-
meat:**
The quality of the people in
Lot Angeles it a flMJor raiass
wi^ the city does not coUapte,
according to Rabinoviu. She
^Mcribed the state of county
government as the ''structural
equivalent of a horse drawn
vehicle trying to adapt to the
demands of the modern era,"
Rabinovitz said
Under the current charter of
county government, established
in 1911, the fivf ciccted super-
viiors have pemtr equivalent
to the three branches of the
federal government. "In other
words, if a veto were to take
place, the veto. would be done
by the same people who ori-
ginally passed the thing in the
first place," Rabinoviu said
Sevan million
Lot Angeles has the second
largest budget of any county in
the United Sutes — $3 billion.
Los Angeles serves ieven mil-
lion people, with 84,000 pubhc
empioyees.
Rstenovitz said that ii
of allocating a county budget
according to the needs of endl
section of the county, the su-
pKVmon operate on a "divide
by five" rule She said the $3
billion dollars are divided into
five equal amounts and given
to each supervisor to be used
m his district, jlfmc districts
might need more money, while
some need less, Rabinovitz
said
The 1.4 million people in
each of the five districu have
very little Knowledge of whaT
goes on in the county govern-
ment, according to Rabinovitz.
Very few people attend the
meetings.
Eight minutes
"Most of the voting is done
en matte," she said A number
IS read. and the supervisors
vote Without any other discus-
sion. "They JO "through a cou-
ple of thousand (measures),
within a period of eight mi-
nutes per Item.'' Rabinovitz
explained
The recommendations of the
commission included nnn pm
tisan election o| a county
executive for a term of four
years The duty of tltt execu-
tive IS to "direct all operations
except those of depiartniinii
^^•494 by indcpendcnti)
elected officials." Rabinovitz
said
County legislature
Rabinovitz alto MPiMnd a
need for the conversion of the
Board of Supervisors into a
county l^pglnture of nine
district of equal population.
Rabinovitz hopes that the
commission's recommendations
will be on the election ballot m
November
In terms of public interest;
Rabinoviu !»aid, "This issue
isn't as sexy as nuclear power f
Other problems discussed i
included the lack- of representa-
tion of minorities and women
in the system apd the general
administrative needs of the citv
as a whole
14-year-old pointt toy at neighbors
PROJECT AMJGOS
needs volunteers to
A. tutor Spaniah-apnnking L.A. city tchooi youtha (agna 6-17)
•n mnding. math. apnllfr>g. chemiatry. ate Be a companion to
youth
•. cmata rntemst cerrtan for nffmnntary school claatrooms in
subjactt of your intarait auch at Biology. Anthropology,
•tinctricity. nie ^.^^^
C. halp conduct a Jr High Arts A Crafts dnati
0. act as muralists for our higti school scholarship program
•ow ?nr * ^^^*"^ community soccer team for youths
c Orientation MMtIng Mon. (AfMH t2) ^
^ "^ Of Tuot. (ApfH 13) 3:0a
in Kardihoff Halt 500 825-2217
SWAT
saonsoreo by student l«oisiatfve councn/csc
MIAMI AP - A 14-year-
old boy wielding a toy pistol
in imitation of a television cop
^show Acariy triggered a real-
life tragedy as edgy members
of a police SWAT team rushed
to his apartment building in
response |o a call from neigin
bors.
Officers said Wednesday that
Jblinny Barcena was re-cnact-
mg antics he had seen on the
"TV series •*Starsky and Hutch"
when -he pointed the realistic-
looking gun at a group of
elderly neigiriMrs Tuesday and
said -Don*t move This is the
Ina
f-N-
TT~^
v
<,i-^-
ASUCLApfMMMi
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND:
f
YOUR MONEY
Got 11% tecit of aH you buy inlho
Studontt* StofM in Aclcorman and tho
Mod Contor botwoon liarch 10
and April 30, 1976.
h0r9'S how
1 . Savo your rocoiptg from aH purchasos
2. Mid-Apill, ptcfc up a rodomption on
3. Botwoon May 1^, rotum H wHh rocoiptt.
4. Youll got a chocit for IIS of all your purcfuiaot
including tat — in ttio mall
fwltce"
Johnny, described by his
mother as having a learning
disability, then retreated to his
apartment, and neighbors
called police.
• AJI nine members of Miami's
Special Weapoj^a and Taaics
Squad and abdut ' a dozen
other officers promptly arrived
and surrounded the building m
what became a two-hour
stMiAoff They were especially
nervous because three area po-
licemen were killed in an in-
cident less than a week aao.
One SWAT member worked
himself into position to fire
into the window of the second-
floor apartment where the gun-
man was believed ta^ht hirk-
tng. A terrified woman was
brought down by ladder from
a nearby apartment Police set
up a roadblock around the
area.
The situation was further
complicated when Johnny's
mother who was away from
home — iMvd radio reports
about a search for a gunman
r
in the building. Police said the
mother, Josepha Cruz, tele-
phoned the youth, saying, "Be.
careful, donl open the door or^
someone might do you harm."
Johnny obeyed his mother.-
refusing to answer a police
knock on his dooj or respond
to their calls from a b»ullhorn
outside
The crisis finally eased when
the boy's stepfather, i^ite Cruz,--
arrived, grabbed the bullhorn
and explained the situation to
him, police said Johnny w^"
questioned by authonticf^ and
released to undergo a mental
Examination. officiiAs^iiiid;
"My God, this kid wouldn't
harm anything," said Mrs
Cruz She said neighbors ap-
parently didn't raeofnize him
becavK the family has hved in
the neighborhood only a brief
time and he usually was in
scIkkh.
Mrs. Cruz said Johnny regu-
larly watches '*Starsky and
Hutch," a show depictig the
violent adventures of tw«^.
young undercover policemen. \
^
L
.i-^
TO THE UCLA JUNIORS
WHO TOOK THE
ENGLISH COMPOSITION
TEST ON SATURDAY,
MARCH 13, 1976
There will be an article in the
Dally Bruin announcing the group
test results when grading has been
completed. Please do not call the
Learning Skills/Writing Center re-
garding individual test scores until
notification in the Daily Bruin that
scores are available.
Thank you for your patience.
Office of Undergraduate Affairs
— ?1.1S Murphy Halt -^ — '
X52531
UCLA
-•-e-
for emittion complianon, tlic
complex it monitored 24 hours
a dmf for pnmiik
or kakafe.
Unng a Cail-tala
mXbi '*acramr any peculiar
bAppening, luch at a quick rise
i* power, abnormal water
flow, improper instrument
function or potential radio-
active lead, retulu in the re-
actor immeduitely thuttini it*
•elf off
Aah)>augh claims this pro-
hibiu any IraJrajr of radio-
active water outside the com-
plex. There has ctniy been one
teak m the. iiaaor*a Wmo^,
and It was <^uickly captured by
a drain system The water was
found only slightly radioactive.
HMrever. the reactor's safety
if being chaHenged by Pro-
15. the Nuclear Safe-
Act If paswd by Cal-
ifornia in the June pniqary.
the propaaitiun would curtail
reactor ioatruction in the piir-
•ttit of aafety, according to
Ashbaiigh.
r-i^^
nAlliJKUM ITALIC SET
tn CofiTt^ms a fountain pen ftvc
^ OtMi£ niiy Mnd m$xructim
mAtmrtnunond^ytnifmj^
I C0(Uf( foci ftfirti oriend
|l cktck tc '"^nuftc Cffrp,, i}2
■ >Vf5r 22 St.. NY, N.y toon
m Add 50 cents fpr ftanddnsf.
Should the imtuitive
Ashbaugh sees a short term-
increaae in money for research
but a long-teilm decrease in
graduate nuclear enrollment
While most of the material
uaad m the reador is heavily
radioactive, it has a short life
when uken out, hMting only a
day or so. aeeording to Ash-
baugh. Radioactive materuils
with **half-lives** last up to 30
years.
Any contaminated water,
either from th^ reactor or from
washed hands, is stored in
sump tanks where it is boiled
down and cooled Conumi-
nated gloves: and shoes are
placed in barrels and buned m
Nevada.
The energy in tbe reactor is
derived from a process called
"nuclear fission** m which a
neutron is absorbed by a uran-
ium atom, cauaiag ftsaion. or
sphtting Releaiad heat pro-
duces electricity, and newly
created neutrons resuh in more
nuclear fissions. This eahin
reaction creates energy.
!i
dN EOUCATtONAL
DEVELOPMENT-
(CEDl
to announce thgt
CEO lOe FWvolutiona in
tho Third World Myths &
Prospacts. Or Gerard
Chaliand. instructor, wMI
bm QtiBtmxl duxing iH^
Spring Quarter 1976
^he first class meeting
will be held Tueeday. April
13. from 1:30-3:00 p.m in
the Mens Gym 201 Thoee
wishing to enroll in this
cleea should contact the
CED Office. X55467. 3121
Murphy Hall for permission
to throll slips, and further
information
PERSONAL
EXPLORATION
GROUPS
Counseling Division
Psychological A
Counseling Services I
r
>
f
for iho$e iniereHed in explormi
mml skaring i/mr conetrm
im m iroup setting:
Once $ week Jor 2 kauri,
3334 Murphy Hatt
for injorrmukmremi Ogn-mpf^
4rap in or phone (82) 5-497!
I
\
imu mm.
women returning to education
for women who want to make contact with others who ihare their experience
Tuttdays 4-6 p.m. startir^g April 13 WRC
personal growth group'
using transactional and gestalt techniques'
Thursdays 10 12 a.m. WRC
Study and discussion group
pclsiK.9\, social and sexual issues of feminism
consciousness raising
how being female affects your life
transactional analysis growth group
Thursdays 7-9 p.m. WRC
Staff peer counseling
for UCLA staff empioyMS — call for an
appointment with a staff peer counatlor
CALL OR DROP IN
Women's Resource Center
Kinaey 190 Mon^ri 9^ 825-3945
olOEEP^uiOTia
mm iwm
I
1
4
J
I
f
Extension seryjceanalyzes manuscript
'■ ■ ■ 1^
Professional editing provided for $100
wmmj^ HaitzeU mid, md^tm, ' mdi people " — ^ • ^ ,
Tl^v hoa» th«^ i«^«.«t k.«^ :i m/:^ vL„ ... '■"^"'"■" ^•'■^ •'^ prc- Deed
they feel heat pottnu^J but
have iMK place to ao. Far a
%\^ Ik. the Minmcnpi
An^Uyai Service, a hWMT^ of
tiK UCLA Extaaaiaa Wrttcr*!
wiU provida
writer! with the i
of praiHuonaJ laacher-editon.
g 'The tervice is **a low keyed,
t penoMi thniii. h provides a
2f penon with a ■aauicnpc the
Iopportunit> to hav^ tWo hour-
long confereaoM with a
^ teacher-editor.** taid Jamet
J Hartzell. coordinator of the
I Extcoeioa't wntiag pro-am.
JK The aythor tuboMs
to the tarvioe and oae of 10
madfr it ihtnltt
aad chcB
HartzelJ ^
They hope ihey doa*t hane to
§0 isto fnunaar aad ponctua-
tMMir
Tkt tervice*! iatcBtion it that
following the ateetiof. the
writer will return hone and
take the suggested actions.
Whnthe writer faek hit work
is laarfy to be read aftia, he
brings It back The rewrite
mutt be completed withm um,
montht.
The service has been running
about three yean. **The peopk
who have been throi^ have
been plaatad. They feh they
got their OKmey's worth,"
Hartzell said.
The teacher-cditor-readers
ibctr job seriMt^. '^It it
Mfgeration to say I spead
^ kaan on one novel-length
wort of fictMMi." said Maryan^
Witt, oae of the teachen in the
prognua. Hartzell feels the fee
'*Oyr laadti i art
intiaBalt; their time
They do it becaute
«fc^ •»w> warh m the writer's
arc onented to-
r^^ .
people
Witt likes the teaching part
of the tervioa» taying **It keept
Bie Biuch mmt alert. It's ex-
citing to fiad a good piece of
work aad tae the person oMike
a good work oL't oi it.^
Though a number of manu-
has dtah
with have been pubhtIM,
Hartzell cautioned the raaiHt
"act m a capacity as editors,
but not as true editors. They
are not involved in any way
with telhng^-* He doesnt be-
beve they shouM be put in
tadi patition
The 100 w so writers who
ufsed the service last year
^— ^i^ i# ha **aidei:^ those who
have thought t long time
about whtiaa but only now
— — 1 V— r-
"~X-
have gotten the lime," Hart
lell said These are the people
whose relatives have told them
their work is good and it oujht
to be published They get an
honest evaluation from tic
* he added,
writers include profes-
•ioahb at well m aon-
cmnm mcomr mog
►#/
ntrnmrr
r »*»? Muct
jtn orrte
itw
MnasraaKr
mm
• I 'i MuO^
TOOTNPASn
SrtAY
«i ttri otuci
tOOYAU
snuT
-i 1 ">
tt-17
LTSailfVI
fttTf
mua.
§• ■iTf wruc^
SHUT
•7.
I
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Wt WIT
ittCMiir
■OXED
nvttOKs
2188
^^om
Wt7
n
■itfTf
4
PONcf(
CKiUi
• t ♦« 3»*
a.t.
T?'
l<:
sua
I t Tl MtfCS
/UUCMI
1" I ifal"
m^
•> tITf MV&t
t>i»m
MYADK
VfT/UMHS
»•»"!
Taatns
59* rr5=L4«4
iffm
IMI
tf-tti
It IITf MUCt
coan
fi lAawt
3x77
^twct
nroiT
w69*
17
U_
are
viously puhiilMd authors who
waal to be published in dif-
ferent fielda, Others include
proiittan who feel papers they
have been advitad to pubksh
eterans
professional
wvioe providat far
*iJ typet of BMaaiftipti
whether they are thort ttoriet,
novels, nonfiction,^ pUys or
poetry.
CCooihMMdfrMi Paget)
veteran benefits, particularly schokstic beaefiu.
Winter has only been able to contact five veierant on
campus to help htm arculatc the petition but said that i? he
had to he would call every veteraa oa^ caaunit to ask for
their help.
Winter stressed the imporunce of "stimulating the
interest of vets** on campus to become involved in
"politicaP acuvities caaBerning them
The petition n a tett-run for thjs quarter's UVA
according to Winter.
Winter's goal as president is to create enough iateres^ on
the part of veterans so that the UVA would "^ able to act
on political and social events in our community **
Bonner u skeptical about Winter's presidency
He is an advocate of UVA's autonomy from the Office of
Veteran Affairs, (OVA), the administrative ofike deahna
with veterans aa; caibpu^. t . *
Bonner expresaed fears that a weak UVA would be taken
under the wiag of the OVA and that the UVA presidem
would merely be a puppet for Tom Grant (OVA admini-
^tor) and the OVA.** |f this would happen, according to
Bonner. veterans would have no orgamzatioo of thair a«n
to turn to ""Ml ««a~
In reviewing his dealings with student gownment and
SLC, from^ which the UVA receives iu budfct, Bonner ated
the irony of an autonomous UVA. **1 noticed that student
government itself wasn't really autonomous from the
Administration. Student government does the job thit lie
Administration can't do and doesn't wittl to do*
Bonner aade jio further commenu.
^ Winter termed the "whole autonomy affair" as •Twillthit "
Hf said that the UVA "can't function" without the OVA
aft^I?^ u ^1^ **" •.•^V^ "^ information about veteran
affairs He beheves the UVA and OVA should coexist
rm recruiting some people out of the OVA to help with
petitions," he said. ^ ^n
Basically, the problem doesn*t Jhjp m the philotophy of the
«ianization Grant and Melton attnbiite the iaactivity of
the UVA to veteran apathy.
"^ " *'" t« hard for It to keep foing."-
-.^"^ .**?? '*"- " is -quite pouibfe" the UVA wUI be
i«r^!^ '' ^T"} '" ''*" *»"•"«' "Mo« veteiut have
learned to fend for themselvei, aitbouah 1 think the
or^nization can make it eaner for them," he said
Winter remains president this quarter to "see that the
structure «rf the organization continues There needs to be a
jwsKJent (or a teader) to piwHi wpuu. to ma.nu.n the
j^lA^nice Itself and not to let the organization die out "
Thebest t>ook for ar^yone Who
wants to go to Europe this year
without spendkig a fortune.
Tht nmN 1976-77 •d«tion ?
of this bntwlling trav«4 *■
g"*^aryian all th«
infornwtiun you OMd
to SM Eurdp* on an
•nflation-fifhting budget
** ^'"i»lv raviaad
ev HanuBftl
••wwliiifl Wfifhout •
txpanta accounts
LETS GO EUROPE is
not for itudvnts only
•t t fillad ¥vith monay -saving
tips that anyone can caih
»n on Includad 9n 27
countr»as plus spacial
lotions on Itrati. Turkay
Moroccp and tha U.S S R
n
$4 95.
md
New this year
from the adftors
of Lat^ Go: Europe..
A refrathint mm kMk
•t Europe's most traveled trm
filled with side triae lo
•niefi vitiafat and ttia
countryside at wall at iha aaat
^M^t cowempi of die elite
TTfn niaiihMuiiu^
tJoth at hnnknitgn mom
HAWVAWO tTUOaaiT AOf tiCtta
PUTTOil
301 Pmk Am. aeufh Mum Ylry t , IM tUttOOl
-t-
1 ! -■
^^\ '^
It's a\
Super Spring
^^ in the
ASUGLA Students' Storef
and here are some great buys in
Active Sportswear (or men, women
-r
1.
graat wlrulbreak^rs rag. 15.00
The newt: mgl^rmmmd ailk acrMn full color photographs,
imnmnm on the back, with tho theme replayed on the
front — Your choice of a motorcycle, aurfer or aeitboet
deeign on white nylon.
The heaica: (or. why thia Is a terrific buy) there'a a zip
front, front zip pocket, the hood hea a drawetring and
the wriata and weiet are eieelieiMd for maximum warmth
_8tes XS to L. for m^n mnd women. Come aee thia now!
swMitshlrto
Sizes amal) througli
extra large, ao there's
certainly at least Q|ne
hers for you Bright
and dark ^dora: eaay-
fitting raglan
of course.
I
\
•horts for men aatf women — your
of your fayorUe torew label in sturdy, white cotton twill with
contraat piping BmSc wiist. curved aids seems for maximum
comfort and mct^on Sizea email through extra-large ,
i
Bob Wolf atfiletic shoes for men, women —
You're out in front with theee lightweight well-built ahoea in
white with bieoli stripes. And you re out even further m front
by buying them now and getting 10% off with the coupon
Sizes SV12; eieewheie. 12 00 — IMi». 11
of ieto Wolf Super Pro Al
axolraa Aprs It, ISTS.
7711
t,. — •»-
M. W I 1^
■^"^■■^ip
here's exciting new
^*\
Fashion Sportswear —^
see them ail — for men, for womeni
Super Spring
in the
ASUGLA Students' Stq
— 1
T-J
kvr....
'■'in A
\'' -^
h-J-
Western sWrt for men
— solid color all cotton body,
with prmt yoke and cuffs —
MiOfl0d colors and designs ^
Pearl buttons on front and
pockets Sizes small through
extra-large [t's a great buy'
»i
*vr
i\
-K
A
\v
H
8.50
men's women's jeans, regulariy 14.00
• very special purchase, so take advantage of it
now while quantities last Natural or celery with
contrast top stitching Waist sizes 28-38.
• 1.
4
13.00
Cotton knit Jumpshorts —
iutely terrific for warmup arxJ
»!• beach, or ju|t lolling around. Button front.
drawatring hood, front pockets Navy or
natural, sizes S-M-L. By Toad Grown of San
Diego.
9.00
drawstring pants — tor men. tor women.
Soft, carefree crmkle cotton in natural, light blue or
p~ch Sizes S-M-L Pants, 9:00: shorts.
7i>0
\'
\ '
^ i
ASUCLA Student*' Slor* SPORTSWEAR, to i&mk.
union.
I
"1
<j« —
; ,
■ ! ^
great AcceitaHes Tor you wi9i
hard-to-beat looks at
hard-to-t>eat prices!
It's a
Super Spring
in the
ASUCLA Students' Store:
vinyl-strapped <^nvas tot« - outside pocket
with a famous sinpe. top zipper, exfmtbabte siee. winyf
ptfHng an^ a ahouMerstrap ttiat s adfustable Tan or brown
13x15". •
iBook bags — me abaoiute
for students — atrang fabric beoit bags with double
•houlder straps Various bright colors — low. low price
fy
rings
1.00
Vary special jewelry buys!
B^^jnga. regularly priced 3 00-5,00 - now 2 00 per pair OoM or silver
plated, roufKl or trendy squarw. AaaofM rings. v£y S^imfrSJiT
•tones, stara. tw.au. lots of designs Only o^d^TSSl
R«gularfy2.89.
•o save a buck!
I
/
men s women s tatemis
zofis wrth tatami tops arxj fMtM%6
— from Royil Tfvnd. contour^ rubtar
•tiidei^' Stoie gPOBTSWI
i*MM>i*
-ZZ44
7^
V r
1
■^^1.
$t
♦ r
^
%
J, ,...
' i
h.-
\ ■
Good buys, good ideas, good things from
everyone's fi^vorite department — Bearwearf
!
fJCLA t-shirt with genuine
hand-done tie-dye. just 5 50
• n.c« bi« UCL|^ emblazon^l on the front tf ift fie-dy.na
you re into, yobll recoon.»e the handwork Sizes small
through extra-large, for men. for women
s@«Cial^!Ml» of
pewf©r4lk« reproductJons
LM»-tong mementos of UCLA, in early American (teugns
«»-*— for youraelf, for gifts, for a Bicentennial, too.
I--
NfERGEDES^
Jaguar
17-oz. mugs
36-oz mugs
. tO-inch plate
• 6-inch plate
" Porringer or candle holder
r^ 9 00 sale 7.75
reg 15 00 sale 12.75
reg. 10 00 Sale 8.75
reg 4 00 Sale 3.25
r^- 6.00 sale 5.25
wri,rtr
^-'■y'^
•xclushr«ly ours: th« orMt UCLA alli^rmjnH k^
'*«i-i •
BAZA^
3.75
7.00
ef eMff
J
'I
N
30.00
ASUCLA Stud«,U' Slort BEARWEAR, b levirt, •ck.rm*, union, 825-7711
open Mond«y.Thur,d.y 7:45-7:30; Friday 7:45-6:30; Srturd.y 10^
chooM your own Imprint ttnlflii
from our coStction and watch it
pnrairtalid bof or* your ayoa
Come ••• Mm Bruki Pramwi FraMar do MaaiwNI
Yeuc»ioo— laHJcfciWrtjWiMiiiilfiuintheB— ro^^
f''*!^*'''"" ~ ^'^ •* •• ^"'9" J'o*' <•«»« from
•■•■*"•* — •»d ICa piM on your ahirt in aaeaaiiL
Lone aiid ahoft atMM t-Mrti. ataN tor aduita and
Inetoda UCLA, aporia. noatalgia.
mrorrMlwa.
UCLA warm-up suit <~
ExckMlwoly oura - a Mm quMty
nylon warm-up autt M i«y«| Mm*
wMk fold trim. Cm«M dMaihng.
••■*•*"-•*'•• *or man arxl woman.
^*"* — "•O' or roy*! nyten UCLA
auN. 29.00 aal. ^
If
0 ievi, iclMrinan union. 825-7711
-"■ \ II J
Mm*..
op«n Monday-Thursday 7:45-7:30; Friday 7:45-6:30; Saturday 10-4
■^ . '-.JL
i
•r-
It V a
f Spring
in the
ASUCLA Students' Store!
t
J ■
f
S i,
■4
m
the Confections department
has more than cookies and
candies — how about useful
Closet Accessories?
A shoe bag that hangs neatly inside the door; a utility
bag with shelves that hangs alongside ypur clothes,
and really organises your Closet — dress bags, and
an under-the-bed utility chest AH these things will
create space for ypu t- and they're matched in
colors and strong vinyl so they'll last and last
JXnd. now you can save, cause tr
are all specially priced?
12-pacKet shoe bag - re^. 6.30
Under-the-bed chest - reg 6 30
57" jumbo dress bag - reg. 6.3d
5-8he(f utiHty bag - reg. 1 2.30 "
531
5.41
5.31
10.42
Art & Engineering Supplies puto good things right up the wall
SPECIAL
SALE
+
Chalk Boards that talk to you — i3xi 7" framed chaik
boards with natural wood edges, and individually wrapped Some
have cork at the bate wttere you can leave pinned notes; all have
hand silk-screened designs, it's a fresh new idea you'll find handy
in your home or your office.
Sayings The Graffiti Board. Bitchy Memipw. Dumb Things to
Do Today; Hot D«Im . Phone
^'^.?'']!f' ft.^-*^' ^ •* °*"^ ''°«** ^'^' '*♦ ins.dee«:h other
- all wrth full color photographic sowies that are thematicallv
coordinated so when you hang them, you'll have a hao^MM
grouping of lovely art. ■•""■"
Themes: Feathered Friends: Circa 1900: Children's Count-
" TS^^"^ ETKj^ni,^ Specie.: Country Farm
A Vaniitting Heritaoe.
1
ASUCLA CONFECTIONS, b level; ART/ENGINEERING SUPPLIES,! level, ackerman union
ii
it's a see-through world in
the Gift Deparimeni witi
elegant acrylics
r
I
i
I
«
>
\
F^eguiarly 2.50 — ^rom Rogers, colorful,
durable plastic trays with positiv#>lock
l#9* ^or ttack*ng.
Not shown: Rogers Extenda-FIlM SpMlal
Hagulahy 1CX) aachf For horizonui filing and organizing
build ft out as long as you naad to kmp things in plaoa.
j-
Qood-looking. simple and affectiva framaa for H^at about
anything — and they're great ih groups, too Think about tham
for your own use. and for gifts For aarving and for the kitchan:
a cookbook holder that lets you read the recipe easily
without splattering the pagaa; a chopping board that saves
counter surfaces, and a cracker and chiiis aarvar with
really adequate space Very Specially pilcedl
Clear acrylic frannaa
SxlO' smQla Iranw (
5x7" single framaa
3'/^x5'' sUngle fraifna
1 print)
Sold
«or
7.00
^50
150
1.50
Our
price
6.39
1 39
1.39
r acrylic chaaaa-n-crackert
tray "Chop Chop ' design in
yellow, graan, orange, blue or
brown; 8^x11"
r cutting board with pebble
'Chop ChaspityChop
10.00
500
Sook hoMar tioMa laicla. dook books.
nawapapers, etc.. any size from
pamphMa to large volumaa
ASUCL
7.00
849
4.59
6.39
i
f
s
Chroms by Cross
The finest name in writing
liiatrunftanlaf Quaranlaad l&r
life, raaaonably priced. Pmn
mwmmM, %M — iha eat ie 00.
_j
GifTS. SCHOOi SUPPLIES, b
^
t-shirU for
men, women
,...,^....,
•mall to •xtra larpt
T-«hirtt and mmrk^n
in«y toa purchaMd M^rataly
4
f.
■I ■-'-'
get a special-price 2.89
t-shirt in Sportswear, and
we'll show you how to make
your own original designs
with
lAflKEH
f iR f AB|K.
OiCORAYtf
markers
Brand new from Sanford. Glad Rags rrmrkmn that let you paint a rainbow* Twa*v# colors all
washable and colorfaat - you can uaa tham on fabric or leathar. on light or dark colofi Tha
material you paint on will rwr\mm aqft and natural — which, of course, includes thaaagimtaH-
oorton t-thirta Ift at Simple as coloring paperl Cetera. iMse coat
set, 1.00 each.
ASUCLA Students' Store, SPORTSWEAR, SCHOOL SUPPLIES, b level, ackerman union. 825-7711
open Monday-Thursday 7:45-7:30; Friday 7:45-6:30; Saturday 10-4
■ ••
LstiiJJired for beings g,
Mosr sflit Tri closet' due ~^
to fear of discrimination
Women
(CPS) ~ A drMM profestor at the Untvmity
of Ddamre recenUy iott hu job, cwa thou^
hif record w%g eicelkm madW «m popdSr
wntk yudenti Sut Richard AttmiMcc^i tin
Pf"""*"^ tl^OK facts: ^ot only im he ny.
Wr was an outspoken gay who urged lay
ttu^nu to stop hiding and -^eene out of the
Aumiikr s finng, tktt result of the fact that
the university* preadoit did not want to -fcad
about the bedroom activities'* of a faculty
member, u only one exampk of what can
happen to profMon who dare to admit they
•tmpfy tor coraiof 08I, \mmtd from speaking
to campus groups, harassed in a myriad c5
wayr In many cases, thry are not allowed to
•ppeal decisions made against them. Cay
■fMrmiciaiis are still conuoversial enou^ that
even incfaer unions are leery of supporting
them too enihusiasticaDy Then theit arc those
f»y teachers who are not fired because they atv
no^ allowed to teach to begin with
By no acans are all gay professors dis-
criminated against But the threat is great
cnoj^ that most gay professors are stiU m the
clo«t. The stigma can be so diimagihg that
even many tenured gay professors arc unwilling
to come out. A gay professor at Hunter Colkw
in New York estinuicd that one fourth of the
faculty chainng depanmenu are gay A ^y
professor who conducted a survey of the
aations English professors found that over 20%
were hiddcfn. bisexuals or homosexuals.
Many gay faculty members emphasize tlm
their administrations and colleagues either leave
them alone or defend them if prejiidioe shows
Itself. Administrations have supported gay
profesaon when state legislators have tned to
uke action agarnst them Administrators have
spoken out against other administrators if they
lelt a gay faculty member was niisiieHjiiiI
Kit naany administrators attack gay teachers,
often in blaunt ways, as in the Aumiller case
The -real horror.- said Martin Duberman. a
giy. tenured, well-respected history professor at
Lehman College of the City University of New
York, lies before tenure. "There's always
grounds for getting nd of someone if you want
10.^ No one's scholarship is A plus.**
"What IS really msidious,** Duberman con-
tinued, ''is that tlMs administraton are not
•ware of the depth of their own hontophobia
(the irrational fear of gay behavior) They
really think it is a matter of schoUrship which
•ffects them when it u really the fear or
knowledge of sexual orienution that repulses
them. You almost never find a case where
sekaal orientation is diaoMai. But if 4hey
*M^ somaooe U gay. there is an mmr
Stuart ^^SK^Bfer. chief Jiychologitt at iiie
Emery University School of Medicine, in
Atlanu, Georgui, is mmther victim Stienger
tame out publicly in the spnng of 1975. in an
Allaau newspaper interview Shortly after-
JJ"««1«, he leanmd that his contract would not
"■•••^ bacaase he had been "uncoopera-
"My coming out sent shoclt amum through
the Umversity," said Strcnger -I represented
the menul heahh profession. I was a heallhv
- "y y^'uZ!^ ^^ rhslhiigiag mr stetee-
type, rve been doing an extraordinary job.
irttaag raises and ptaim. I thought the U,nivcr-
sity had more sense than to do something so
blatant and obvious."
Both Strcnger in Georgia aad Aumiller in
Delaware attempted to fight their dismissals
through their administrations* grievance pro-
cedures They both discovered that they might
as well try to swim through a pool full of
feathers. The administrations did not even
consider their positions as grirvable mallm.
Both professors have Imd to go outside the
campus aad into the courts to file suit, being
defended by their mpmiive chapt^ of the
American Civil Liberties Umon
Some university administrations, when
deahna with a aav profeasor, show a sudden
f^\%rt^xc for schoUrship and work quality The
fa^^hatJanet Copper, ji coUegB Hbrarian' had
•••Wished a program to provide mongoloid
•ad brain AMMfed children with hbrary serviee
which attracted internauonal attenuon, did not
keep her from lon^g her job at a college in
Af^alachia: She was an ouupoken leslMait
. Louie Crew, a weU-pubhshed Enghsh pro-
^ |5y/ ••<* outspoken gay activist, received
*" uaMima^ recommehdation from a SS-member
committee at Am^ncan Umversity m Washi^-
ton. DC. for aa apfk>ihtment. But tha 4aaa
overlooked Crew and hired someoae who had
not lacetved a si^gk volt of confidence Crew
has filed s formal comprint with the Wastaia-
ton Human R^Mi CommisBion
Crew is lucky, in that Washington is about
the only area that has a specific law prohibiting
hiriiig discrimination based on sexual prr-
ference la some sutes. sexual behavior as-
sociated with hooMaexuality is still s felony
Gay professors have few outleu. other than
the courts, through which to fight discrimina-
tioa. The major IsadMr unions, which help
bargain for faculty-administration contraeta, 4o
httle to insute that gay professors aie protedid
(CoHftmatfaaPagtU)
MAKE
IHE
MlUi
FOR
THE
MSCkIM;
yours!
U#fy ^oyroMi/
svccess#ul*edilor,
wrH%r, wala and
wNifaar gives yov
fhe hard'hiffin^
^rwcfico/ locN
y9¥ ftaov $9:.
I
r
3Durs
m^ LEm aini>i pnlJlfH^
1.1
ditcriminafion
• gaf out oi a
dmtBd-mnd /06 I
• ovofd family
, coreefKOfiliic#s
• and much.
jT7n
I
B^O
>|^;
^WOIS: tiwlPasmMlM Hisllli a galMy ..__
•tcvcLca ^OHmrraD m CAai^ua auiLDHsoa
Fli» aalsly Wigiiisasm pfaaMi f^ nSHiniagBii of any irall,
^Sispaftafi
TiMaialsmrt
touna In vlalaaafi ef
betnggiiayatei
hy •!•
!
i
FHOH: 0«as ef ^
UCI^ FOI.ICV MLATIMQ TO OOQg OM CAJiPua
AOorrcD FEoauAiiv 17. itro
nio UCLA eampas Maws me iMiii af aia CNy el
Law* etdtaaes 77.C
1. Dags may nal ai
A. •eeiiffvaioalwHliereaahiaa
eaa ef wtuon is feSsMetf ay s
2. Doas may not be tsmeiad
I
I
%%
3«:
¥■-
(•
hi sislagea af ttUi ^
aad aifiied oosr aio aio ^
10
of
.J
*lw»s haws been wrHinf poelry «bf
thousands of years — Mt look at
th^iblo Hebrew poetry is Wm
hasle tar rtvymod poelry as we
know it today Thie tong traditiofi
has boon Iwpt al«vo m the 20gi
oa^ury by poets sucy as Paul
Celen. AM Klein. "-", f sorii. li
name fuet a few «¥e shell looii
togetfior et Hafepsw. gsfoavi. and
Yiddish poome (in trantistion and
in aw onginai) and see how tfw
poow doett with djflsssia Jewieh
themes such as gw holocaust
liturgy . and |oy. l.od by Fred Boain
•nd friends liawaa^s. ra^g p.m
In
AMoM-Ti
H was the leitM of our
tfwt sueteined tfwm — but
cen we find kn Mttalmm to add
ind faeeamg to aur lives
A opaaths. not s redlcet.
cieparture in saerch of Jewieh
IB. but not
jfsaeisai, aao (
of iiturgy and phMsiusliy The
course will bo eclectic yet di-
rected, wefking not so aiasli tor
of inquiry
teflon, and Faith as s
or
rabbinic student at HUC. and
at UCLA Httlel.
MOIiDAV
Nusech m the Jewish mueieel ert
of devoning (praying -cherttina).
Students Witt tesrn the widely
dtversified metodies of Jewish
riWei Hebrew reeding knowfodge
"•ad en fneprsaaibls urge to e»-
pfess oneeelf weeeMy e
mended Led by Jey
7:X p m
This auaflar we ers continuing
ear Bet Midreeh on
dasees will be held stmul
ly in'MeyaUHl
12-1 p.m with aie tsimud
from 1-2
The weekly Toreh portion will be
m aepgt wUh MabM Oavid
rof Doginrwrs ee wee es
t those who have previously
lible. Texts wMi be baai In
ieelligrephor HewMbei
boa> (beginning end
celMgrephy, ao conw i
how tfw scribes do it.
7:ao-e p.m.
A coufie for aioee mieroeled in
leeming tfw neture. hielory. aad
practice of Jewish hanaiie end
Mt»<ycie newewuiiies. His shaM
piangroup oelabfaMans of iheee
wwnw, as we oaaaidar ftwii awc^
k>gicei impMeaflens Led by
OaeM Bmtyi^ end Cheim Soidlor-
Wler. Ohaelers of UCLA hum
end Qery Ofoonobeum. HabkliilL
Intern et UCLA Hillel
Tuoedeys, 5 46-7 p.m
of you eeto cen
horeaaie
luaHy to aaa It In «:
sotting You eleo mey Warn
Tueedeys 8:4g-7.15 pm
af Wm
iin tfw ti
Cfwim
UCLA
Tuoedeys. 7:3oa p.m.
elgw
At leeet 70 ^ ^
the HabMa ktiarm us. for every
'•'■• of tfw MMe. This tmmenee
uterature hee psadueed aama &I'
our moot intriguing teles and
•••'♦as^efid iplaus examples will
be studied in our ssesiuiis We will
toNaw dw tele frv^* ite
afigia tafOugh tfw I
tuiv ef the 2nd and 3rd
he m ifigiieh
■aehg^DufW m
tad by Rabbi
•arfwr. Olrector. UCLA Hillel
i
\ m
mm%v
LA. CA
TfW flliirat
parfofm Yiddish. Lsdino. end
oy ssimi Aeh
p.m.
-;
'dtflW
Thuiedaye. 7 Ja>l0
Led by
gw IM af gw
I).
in
to soofch for
leJudeiemraegyal
'••gion? Led by
Levy. Esocutive Diraalar.
ilegsiss Hillel
«
1. 7:dD-a p.m
i ■ *»
if
/
1
r
First funds for cam
Pa'gn
-r*r
2
w
s
Brown receives $100,000 for his birthday
"'^ ^T* A«sclilM tem JuMi Milli (O-) San fUt£ in weeks to come but hk **ani«i full ^mm im #•«*- ^r c
'*•" Dkio '--- u^ Z.\i^ . I ^ -f-^ lull iiMt M terms of SacrameBto and pott]
if-*.«i« n . ^TT. campiup ■■• «io definite fund rftimfe taed ■■■m* for hu Pe*.^^ '^
lov» of nqfuire thom» ofwirtilklf
-*T-
f.
f
CaliforDui Governor Jerry
Brown turned 38 yenrs old
J^merdny. with contributors to
his Democratic Presidential
nwpaifn turning over their
§m $100,000 in fundi.
Brown, who declared hit
intention to seek the Dem-
ocratic nomination four wnaks
afo, celebrated both occaiiont
in customary fashion: he spent
the day working in his capitol
office Sacramento.
The Governor's fledgii^
campaign got aoM a«€ good
tcm JaaM Mills (D-) San
Diego
Milk gave hit cadonement
to Brown, saying the Governor
*•!• the Moat promiimg new
public figure oa iir political
horizon.**
Miiis originally supported
Jackson because he thought
Brown was man going to enter
Any of the primaries Mills will
^ ^mmad ^achairmani of the
Brown campaign executive
committee, a spokesman for
Brown's campaign* said
Of the $100,000 Brown has
irws thil week when he re-
ceived the endorsement of a
prominent California supporter
of Senator Henry Jackson,
State Senate President pro
to ran on March 12, $40,0Qt
km coiQe from supporters at
private weekend meetings.
Brown will hold similar week-
end meetings throughout the
sute in weeks to come, but his
campnippi hat no definite fund
raiting goak MMt Brown has
not daoi^id how much cam-
pftigning he will do.
Brown has no plans cur-
rently to campaign ouUide of
California, hat the Governor
will make hk decisioit when
he starts to actively campaign
next month.
As of now. Brown's nami
will appear on the ballot in
California, Maryland. Ken-
tucky and Nevada. He k con-
templating entering the pri-
mary ifr New Jersey.— —
A tpokaiMa for kk
full hlMI im terms of
for hk
bi4 mmmi umpiipi nlBiiii
opMMd and hiring a suff
In addition to hk ilrrady
opened Los Angeles office.
Brown plant to open officet in
San Francitco, San Diego«
Sacramento and potttbly
Fretno
Cathy O'NeiU. an untwoaM-
ful candidate m 1972 for the
State Senate and in J974 to
warned the Governor MTWtete^
tary of state, has been nanwd
at Brown's campaign finance
director. — F^ FarW
Japanese art exhibite^at Wight Art Gallery
?*3Sf%£* !.'^*'" ^J^L*^ ? stern, oi-y ti« *« work. «,., k. ' ^
. _ many of the
Governor's decisiohs to ran in
prinariet were still pending,
but campaign workers were
Gay profs . . .
(Continued from Page 15),
from hiring discrimination, even though they
have all uken sUnds condcmmng such dis-
crimination. It appears that only two schools.
Long Island University and Pratt Institute -
both private schools — have contract pro-
visions protecting people 6rom discnmination
due to sexual preference Some faculties may
iwant such provisions in their contract with a
university nidmimstration, but do not want to
jeopardize the contract if the administration
resists on this point At a community coU^c
connected with the University of Alaska, the
faculty dropped their requett for a provision
Tftrotccting gays when the administration refused
to budge.
**I can't conceive of an arbitrator forcing an
adminktrator on that issue," said Tom Mannix
of the National Center for the Study of,
Colkctivc Bargaining, located at Baruch Col-
lege in New York. *'It*8 much too tentitrve and
controversuil to even be appeakd hi court. If a
tcacher*s choice of lifestyle differs from what is
considered normal, and 4t attracts attention,
that person is going to be m trouble. 1 don't sec
any consciousness-raising that will change
administrators' minds.*"
-Most tehook,** taid another faculty arbi-
trator, "haven't developed the courage to deal
with, ditcrimination against gays.**
DB Stair WfkOT
Tkc love of nature in Japnn-
tM art k tkc tkaar of the
j^urrenc ^[kibilion ^ the rred
enck S. Wight Am Galkry
The exhibit, entitled ''Birds.
Bcattt, Blotsoms and Bugs
The Naiure of Japan.** is the
creation of Harold P Stern
director of the Freer Gallery of
Art in Washington. DC. in
cooperation with die UCLA
An Council. Among the 175
«rt objects included in the
ihow are many lent to Stem
^y pnvate collector! and mu-
seums throughout the Uakad
Suies This u the fint and
eurrent plans to rtn^iigii oiiliMa of
m the baNot here, m Mefyland,
SPRING QUARTER
oa^ Ua^ *^ •'<>«** ^^ be
exhibited together in this
country.
Stern, a well-known wnter
lecturer ^a^^-^^^»i»»«»* » ^h. *
fu^ui ^ ■ iiiBiiutant m the
field of JapMMt art. wi^ most
recently responsible for the
f.**P^y «^ ^^^riml Treature.
■I ine Smithsonian Institution
nils show IS the cuiminauon
of nearly two yean of pkn-
ning. F"M«-
-Lovt
f
Tlgar. ^ Mo Jokuehu. ina^jaSL*
CONTEMPORARY ART SURVEY
presents
16 April — Hans Haacke — slide lecture/discussion
23 April — Lawrence Weiner — f ilm/lecture-dlscusslon
In the catnip which accom-
paniet the e&iibition. Stem
'tresses the significance of
nature in Japaant art
"A love of nature has always
guided the thematic develop-
tnent of art in Japan," Stem
wrote. This is becautr JapMi,
"was spared the intrusion of
"•^^O'ca' i^dgetry much
longer thin most developed
and cuhurally endowed nationt
ci the world." he said.
"In a time when all the
world has surted to reawaken
tQ the importance of nature, it
IS informative and rewarding
to learn timt birds, beasts,
W«»smt and bugt have always
been and remain today a tradi-
tion in Japanese art and hive
survived the onslaughts auide
by man against his natural
environment.** -v—
The March opening of the
show was marked by Stem's
lecture, dunng which he dit-
cust^ the exhibition and the
art of Japan.
, Among the works in the
show, dating from the 12th
L_.
Century Hetan Dynatty through
the 19th Century, are screens.
P»pier mache. ceranucs,
bronzes, stow carvings. Uic-
quers, enameb and stencils
The gallery will observe ex-
tended hours, Tuesday through
Sunday 1 1 am-5 pm during the
•how. which will run through
May 23 Admission it SI to the
general public and fiee to all
currently registered studenu
^eek essays for $100 Camap prize
...^ *'- ^"t' '* ""■'^•^""y *«»M offered lo the winnini
cmr«. .„ the Rudolf C.m.p E«y Compet.uon for 197^"'
iponsored by the dep.nm,nt of philosophy
_Entr.e. of MOO words or Ic. on any ph.loiph.c.1 topic
Ihi^r, £i*^ The competition u open to all .tudeM.
who are caixlidatei for degreed at UCLA
Ewayi must be typed, double-spaced Mn4 may be
submitted to the graduate secretly of the ph.lo.ophJ
^^department. Dodd 329. on or before May 14
ARE YOU PLANNING TO
RUN FOR
t
30 April
films
STUDENT GOVERNMENT?
f
t
7 May — Mel Ramsden — slide lecture/discussion
14 May !— to be announced
I
JLyou are, you should be aware of the dates and
deadlines listed below:
^^i
(r\
21 May — Douglas Huebler — slide lecture/discussion
28 May — to b« announced
4 June — Robert Barry — lecture/discussion
Friday Evenings 8:00 pm
Dickson Auditorium 2160E
FREE ADMISSION
Monday. April 12, 1976 — Petitions for candidacy
available
Thursday, April 22, 1976 - Petitions due at
Kerckhoff Hall 304 by 4:00 p.m.
Friday, April 30, 1976 - Primary Expense
Accounts due by 4:00 p.m.
Monday, May 3, 1976 - Literature Distribution
Tuesday, May 4, 1976 — Literature Distribution
\
Monday, May 10, 1976 --Final Expense Accounts
due by 4:00 p.m.
Tuesday, May 1 1 , 1976 - literature Distribution
Wednesday, May 5, 1976 - Primary Election
Thursday, May 6, 1976 — Primary Election
Wednesday. May 12, 1976 - Final Eleciwn
Thursday, May 13. 1976 — Final Election
1
i
i
^^B
1
i
^^H
^
PTF. SLC. 8CA
Detailed information concern
obtained from the Elections
or 304.
the Elections can be
^oard in Kerckhoff 310
/
•■T-
i. .
>
f
3
"^[J
r ■ «
L..
r
,/
^feiy bfutT
DB Editorial
UniCamp
A case in point
by John Jay Shaw
I
ThUw^^k w all hmw an opportunity to do
•omoltilfig wtiich wMI bonofit hundrodt of diobotic
undoipilvllogod and oxcapttonal chHdran this suimnar
by donating to UnlCamp.
Ttia UnlCamp fiMidralaIng drtva will ba visiting
ciassrooms this waak and aM hava booths ^ up
around tha campus so wa can haip sand Ihaaa IMa la
«amp In tha San Bamardino moumalns.
Thasa icids can uaa our spara changa, so plaasa
donata what you can.
(BdHof's note, Sh^w i%&
»nd h mafonng in 6>o/ofy snd
economics here,)
ll IS without question that in a
societ>' which adheres to the
principles of a republican gov-
ernment, the proper working of
the system can come about only
if the electorate body, m whom
#ie uftnnate power resides, is
we^ infgrmed of the iiHies at
hand.
It is in this context that the
m&m media tsfvn a valuable
function to society, for it not
only has the potential to present
to the subacrlbsr a ifiore or less
objective reporting of events
Mnd issues, but aho invariably
provides tSaiS ^ypt of forum in
which opinions may be aired
THESE GREAT Hn^ & MAIIY MORE
THE BRECKER BROTHERS a^MD
a^CKTOBCl
•PABLO CRUISE
Ltf«(in« -
•SVVEET
G«M us a Wink
• XiHH DENVER.
Windsong
•TOMITA
Firabird k-^--
•WANTED! THE OUTLAWTS
Waylon Jmnntnm S 0#i«rt
•DAVID BOWIE _
Station to Station
*SILVEV1 CONVENTION
•LONNIE LISTON SMITH
RctloctMMW of a Goldon Oraam
•HUFUS
Featuring Chaka Khan
•JMMY aUFFETT
•JOHN KLEMM€R
Touch
•ISAAC HAYES MOVEMENT
D«co Connaction
•LEE OSKAR
Laa Dakar
•CAPTAIN ll TENNILLE
S«ng of Joy
•ISAAC HAVES
Groova-a-thon
•ERIC dARMEN
Eric Carman ^
••ARRY MANILOW
Tryin' to Gat ttta Faaltnf
•ME LISA MANCHESTER
Battar Days. Happy Endtnfi
-BAY CITY ROLLERS
Rock n RoM Li
•NATALIE COLE
I
• THIN LIZZY
•DOOBIE BROtHEUt^
Takin' It to tlw Btraata
• LOGGINSA MEKINA
NattvaSona
•LES DU DEK
Las Onfall
•BOB DYLAN
•ONE FLEW OVER THE
CUCKOOS NEST
•CHICAGO
GraataatHiti
•LAURA I^;YR0
Smaa
•THE SYLVERS
• ELVIN BISHOP
Struiiin' My Stuff
•OUEEN
A Mi#it at «ia Opara
•OLIVIA NEWTON' JOHN
CamaOnOvar
•DIANA ROBS
Diana Raaa
•FLEETWOOD MAC
FlaaCwoodMac
•METUIIN TO FOREVER
PRESENCE
•SAMMY HAGAR
Nina On a Tan Scala
*L.A. EXPRESS
L.A. rspfwi
•AEROSMITH
Aaroamilti
ATHER REFOflT
•TED NUGENT
Tad NMfant /
•DAVE LOGGINB
•NILS LOFGREN
Cry Tpm^
•IC1S8
Country
•EAQLES
Thatr Graatait Hl^-
HUNDREDS OF HIT
iVMLABLE
•GARY WRIGHT
ThaDf
TITLES
Johnnie Taylor
Faet^ and insights in retrospect
by Holly Kurtz
(ldinqr'% note; Kuru is j senior here mj/oHnf
m poikicai sci^oCM, She is 9 suh wrtimr for the
Oeikf Bruin/
Finally in my senior •-year, my three dMic» iait
quarter all fit together intellectually, tuppUmBK
inf each other with facu v%6 insighik
In datsroom df>cu>stoni, I found that they fit
OPINION _
view of the institution, not the student In our
entire discussion, we could not agree on any
reasorn from the student's point of view for
havmg a ma^or.
Then presfol In another dasi, the profesaor
took h« place r>ear the podium, launched into a
discussion of professor evaluation forms »n6
readily confirmed the proclamation that under
graduafes have very little say
The instructor eKpiained^ "M ^ piniemar look*.
way: in bluntly pointing M
that undergraduates have quite a sfiiall poMam
lit po^ffeir on oiIb cainpus.
The following paragraphs are a reflection on
thoie dassroom dbcMitefis.
In one dait^ we started a debate about the
purpose behind undergraduate mayors. My first
thoufht was that they help a itudem prepere for
a caraar, or at least channel hts or her interests
into a Md that could lead to a
That idea was met with a snoar. "A B.A. Hal
You know tHM w« fat ym nowhere, lust look at
ww |Pw Rsaniat, •came tfie tw^kf tfom aviar
maiwbui of the dass
Induding the opinions of students and the
prolan or, the conduiions we mmAe centered
apoMwd two raaiom lor Having a maior:
1. The traditional nberal arts education alms
to mold a wall-rounded student who tpadalizes
In one area.
2. Undaigraduates maiors laad to
tiiat porpetuate research in each
Majors ara a way of insuring the
and Tears" pltaQMonon: "And vviian I
I'm pona, lliarvll be one child bom in this
to carrv on/
Tliore is nothinf wirong with these two raaiOi«
wom tlie point of
bad to iaMow colleagues in his department, but
be does good on student evaluatior>s, the col-
laagues will say, "Students don't know ar^thing."
"If he does poorly on the student evaluation,
the coHaafMCs will say, "See, even thf students
think he's bad ' "
Tba instructor continued with a half-|oking
smile we came to kruiw so well. "I try very hard
to impress my colleagues, ^ni^ you guys — well, I
reaHy don't want to say this — but you guys really
don't matter."
Though his words were meant to be slightly
exaggerated, many professors would whole-
heartedly agree with him.
Wbaie dOas that leave us, asiive pay out S210
p^ quarter, run for the mailbox at noon on the
first enrollment day, wihd try to get as nuich as we
can from daaos tta we hope wM banaUt m in
the future?
What's the answer to rh age-old question of
undergraduate teaching versus graduate %n6
protasorial research^ No one has the answer But
« a iMMa, prestipous institution like UCLA, it
saams dear ttie laRar elements have priority.
That does not memn undergraduates pat ibao
lutely nothing out of their four years here; It |MSt
moans they have to work a little harder for an
aducadon arni not tmnd loaiNf ibo dMt onoa bi
a wfioe.
prasented with alternative poli-
cies to those tfiey may already
consider to be best.
OPINION
A ne^^iitper is a case in
point. It provides various sec-
tions throughout where the ob-
jective reporting of events may
We presented, while providing
space elsewhere for the presen-
tation of opiniorH, interpreta-
tions etc The newspaper has an
obligation to its re^i^er^ to
*gpfrate the obfoctive from the
sub^acti^L in an explicit manner,
for if this separation is ambi-
fuous, the reader HWt with no
guarantee that he or she can,
establish an opinion based on
the facts of an event as they
occurred. Thus. ^ is withLin ^«»
right of the editor to remove
from his or her staff reporters
who fail tQ make this distinction.
It is with thisTh mind that I
turn to the column by Leone
Cherksey in the D^ily .$ruin
Viewpoint. March 10. Ms Cher-
ksey asierts that she has been
dismissed from the staff of the
Daily Bruin for her political
affiliations rather than for a lack
of credibility as a news editor It
is in this reader's opinion tf^at m
attempting to deny the charges
against her, Ms Cherksey is her
own worst counsel.
R#ther than addressing the
at hand. Ms. Cherksey, you
ttrike out on some irrelevant
tangents to vent your disappro-
^ of pOOple who have no
bearing in the nutter Granted
you may not approve of Donald
Findley. the ASUCLA Director,
you fail to present any evidence
to justify your dragging his name
into this issue. If you have
brought his name up for no
other purpose than to take shots
at him, then I wiN strongly
question your ability to refrain
from resorting to such question-
able tactics in your position as a
news editor If, however, Donald
Findley is connected to this
issue, why didn't you provide
the evidence necessary to illu-
*trote'#iit? If this is the case^ you
have betrayed your responsi-
bility as a reporter by failing to
present all the facH relevant to
the case.
At this point, you undoubted-
ly still could have salvaged the
remainder of your column and
returned to the issue at har>d —
your dismissal However, you
chose to do otfierwise, opting to
ventilate your frustrations, with
the Daily Brum editorial policy.
lUther than s9mehow con-^
necting your dismissal with the
editorial policy, you continued
on this tangent, taking a swipe
at a student editorial published
in tf>e Viewpoint section. (DB
2/12), an editorial you lambasted
as "racial tripe". Two considera-
tiom: first, If this editorial was
really ary obviously asinine; piece, -
then why should you obfeci to
its publication^ If your opinion
IS universally agreed with, then
readen cannot fail to recognize
it idk^what it is. That you raided
such an objection, however,
places you in tfie unenviable
^position of striving to be s€>me
quasi-leader who cannot trust
her own supporters Second, the
UCLA campus is a heterogenous
mix of people; no two opinions
are alike As long as the Mu-
dent Body must support the-,.,
publication of the Daily Bruin, it
has an obligation to serve all
members of the studem body.
However, you seem deter-
jBinad that the Daily Brum
should abandon ^this represen-
tation of all views ar%d replace it
with a single miruied endorse-
merit of your own. Thus, this
is convinced that behind
the cloak of objective reporting'
and struggling agamst repres-
sion', you Mte surreptitiously
striving to further your own
limited epds. and heme this
community has fared well by
your dismissal ,*«*-
I
\ mmlfiWi iwM far t»meX^
^^■Mfii
•^HrillMi
•^
■->
O'
Ir^- ■,
I
J Law and the Equal Rights Amendment
f
By Bathsuz, Cissidy
(idkor'i note. Cauidy is s membm of the Young
SocMu Alliance }
In a recent Daily Brum article Gary ^an ium &I
the Revolutionary Student Brigade argued that
wromen should not support the ratification oi the
Equal RifHli Amendment because it will destroy
protective legislation.
OPINION
j
I
I believe to oppose the ERA in order to "save"
the protective laws is an utterly defeatist strategy,
capitul.-^tion to the opponents oi women's rigfns.
It ift an. attempt to run away from the fight
against tex discrimination, which is used to divide
working people. By examing rhe history of
protective, legislation, we can better understand
why this is true.
Most of the protective laws were pMiod In the
-l«te T9th and early 20th century as l>«it of the
working-class struggles for shorter workdays,
higher pay, and other demands. These Uws were
seen, at the time, as a way to curb -some of the
most ruthless employer practices against women
workers,
-""taws setting maxinrium hours, for example,
were aimed at preventing the boss from working
women until they literally dropped irony ex-
haustion Such laws, of course, were needed for
both men and women.
Bocause these laws applied only to women,
setting them off in a special catogory, employers
were able to use them as a tool not for pro-
tecting wonrten, but for discriminating against
them. They served to justify the labeling of jobs
as "men only" or "women only "
For all their praise of jprotective Uws. the Mi-
EI^A forces fait to point out that these laws don't
provi<le needed maternity bencfits^The pattern is
doar: when a law "protects'^ one section of the
work force — in this case women — its primary
^ect can onry be to discriminate, rather than
benefit.
Von Euer also stated that "ever since the ERA
first came up 50 years ago, working women have
ney^er rallied behind it." He i^s three years behind
the times! «
In 1973, the AFL-CIO reversed its position of
opposition to the amendment. It did this under
pressure of the growing sentinwnt for equality wr
the ranks of union women.
The new AFL-CIO resolution suted that the
ERA If "prodiefy-tHe kind of dmar statement of
^ national commitment to the principle of equality
of the sexes under the law that working women
and their unions can use to advantage in their
efforts to eliminate employment discrimination
against women."
In passing the resolution, the AFL-CIO took up
the question of protective laws, pointing. out that
many of these laws were already being struck
from the books or aNered as a result of other civil
righn legislation
In T%9 the Equal EmployAficnt Opportunity
Commission (EEOC) established guidelines that
declared niost protective Iaw5 in violation of Title
' VII of the 19M Civil Rights Ad. That law included
a prohibition agAintt sex discrimination in
employment which were drawn up under the
pressure of working women filing complaints
mst job discrimTnatton.
Communist fully exposed
By Reza Nagem Ab^dy .:iz::-.-^'.-
(idktKS note Aba^ *ra student here )
for years now, the Irahian communistt have been charging our
governnr>ent in Iran with undenmcratic laws and all kinds of exotic
murders. \Nhike moit of their acoiaations are pure fanaticism, it is true
that our people do not en|oy freedom of expression as fully as do
the American pM^Ae. Unfortunateiy, this stiff price if what many
nor)-communift countries have had to pay in the poft-World War It
era to prevent the body and the soul of their people from
Russian slaves in forced military takeovers bf i
OPINION
By 1972. one-third of the sUtes had totally or
substantially repealed their protective laws.
The Senate judiciary Committee, which made
recomn>endations on the ERA. felt the pressure
of women and men unionists on the question of
extending rather than erasing the positive aspects
of protective laws.
Thus the committee's majority reports on the
ERA states, ** . . . such restrictive discriminatory
labor laws as those which bar women entirely
from certaih occupations will be invalid. But
those laws which confer a special benefit, which
offer real protection, will, it is expected, be
extended to protect both men and women."
This Senate report reflects what is the most
important factor that wiH-determine the future of
the ERA and the protective laws — the power of
the women's rights movement and the unions.
The employers and the government can be
counted on to do everything in their power to
thwart implementation of the ERA, if it is
ratified, |uft as they have thrown obstacles in thie
way of ratification. One of t^eir tricks has been to
so^ divisions over the protective laws. They tell
women, you can have your ERA or you can have
the protective laws, but you can't have both.
This is or»e more reason we have to begin
today to mobilize the maiority pro-ERA sentiment
among feminists, unionists, Blacks, students, and
all who support equality for women. These are
the forces that have the power to determine if
aiKi how the ERA will be implemented.
The Government of Russia wants very badly to capture all of Iran to
the Persian Gulf, whereby it can have free access to tlie open oceans of
the world. In fact, if it were not for the help of the United States
government after WW II and the free spirit of the Iranian people, the
Russians would haye ney^er left the Northern part of Iran where they
fud been stationed, and pe^h^ps they would have taken the fett of
Iran. Iran would not have been an independent country as it is
today.
While our country is not as free as the moft democratic stale, ft
certainly is ahead of the nxMt liberal communist states in granting
human rights and liberties, many fold. Take East Germany, for example,
which was one of the most liberal communist states in East Europe until a
few years ago. Each year about 5000 people gictpt over the Heavily
guarded Berlin Wall. These free souls are quoted as saying that their
friends and relatives whom they had kriown all their lives suddenly
disappear never to be seen again or come back a few years later
from a labor camp where they served because they had said
something against the state (party) Of course you can also think of
the people of Czeckoslovakia. they tried to free tfiemseWes from
subjugation by the Russians. We all know whait happened to them
Ilie-4tussian Military took over their country very quickly
If Iran falls m the hands of the communists we wfff stand to lose much
more than we gain. Once we go communist it will be impossible to
make our own decisions. The Russians will dictate to us the decisions
which are in their own interest. A living proof of this daim is what has
happer^ to alLthe communist countfi^es borderir^gJtuMia. Uan^if^now
a frierid of the tinited States and the U.S. if one of ours. For the sake of
freedom and for the sake of all the freedom loving people of the world,
let's keep it that way.
r
the great naturals,
wrinkles and all
Soft, heavp^reight cotton tops^d pants that
are totally retaxad and superbly comfortabla.
Shown here, just two from a collection ttw!
includes robes, In the Sportswear department
Natural cotton, pre-waahed and rmmr,
iror>ed.
Slip-on top, 16.00
Drawstring pants with pockat 9.00
Books ouggeeled for medHaUmi ...^,.,.,,^
TM Book: How to En|oy the Rett of Your Life — Oenni
McWiiliams. 1.S6
TM Di8Coyerir>Q inner Energy and Overcoming Street —
Blooiwfield. Cein Jafte. Kory. 1.96
TrentatiiUsiiM Mtditation — Mehtrisni kkmmm ^egi,
1 .Sd
tooks SDOfttwear D level aclierman ur>ton. 825-7711
rmn^-ttiun 7 45-7 30 fn 7 45-S;S0. ail ^A^
I <
Woodward and BernstetfH true American folk heroes
/ V
by
Falotica
*•
(idkor's note: fsfofico i% a
irmhman hie hat not seen Ail
Tfce PrestderHi S4en).
I must diMsree with Mr.
Richardson's review o4 the
movie Al Tlie PieMenl'f Men
and with hk opiniom of ^ two
VS/ashinpon Po§t reporters. Bob
Woodward and Carl Bernstein.
In the beginnins of his review,
Mr. Richardson "reminds" his
raadaH o^ three things:
1.) Woodward and Bernstein
did not crack the Watergate
2.) Woodward and Bernstein's
articles were not picked up by
papers outside of Washington,
DC ^ —
3.) Only with the Senate
Watergate Hearings did the
Woodward and B^nstein arti-
cles gain significance.
Mr. Richardson's first point is
not only fabe, but it contradicts
his second point. Woodward
and Bernstein did crack Water-
gate. As Mr Richardson's own
second point shows, no other
paper in the country gave
Watergate the continuing cov-
erage from lune through. No-
vember 1972 but the Washhiff
ton Post. Mr. Richardson's third
point is simply false. There
would not have been any Ser^te
investigation if the S^ashington
Post had not constantly given
Watergate front page status.
Mr Richardson alio says, and
t quote, "The Watergate cbi^
ruption was so massive (hat
not even two bumbling report-
' ers could fail to find it." .1 jwill
^ ignorii.. .Mr Richardson's char-
acterization of Woodward and
Bernstein as "bumbling report-
er!" except to say that any two
reporters who win ihe Pulitzer
Prize for their newspaper have
proven their competence. But. if
Mr. Richardson is correct, and
the Watergate scandal was too
big to miss, then why did all
these big shot journalists miss it?
Why didn't CBS or Time mega-
zin, or the New York Times
expose Watergate? Why were
CAMPUS
O) O) "^ tD "^
?J?3
c 2
QS'mS
m
5 5 Ceo ^ •
do ?S m^
CO
m
Of^
fwo Dumofltng reporters
the on(y or>es to write about the
scandal? It is very easy to look
back with 20-20 hindsight and
lay it was ir>eviublc that Water-
gate would be uncovered, but it
isn't true Many administratiom
have been able to cover-up
misdeeds for decades, at the
only recently revealed assassi-
nation plots on Castro and the
wire-tapping T>f Martin Luther
King prove.
Mr. Richardson's larfnt com-
plaint with the mowia ii its
"cover -up of Woodward and
Bernstein's mistakes. It is true
that HoMywood does glanrHKize
its mtiiirlf., but It ii WHlaiding
to imply that Woodward and
Bernstein's foibles were crucial
to the narrative of the book or
the movie After <all, the real
flory is not how wron% Wood-
ward and Bernstein were, but
how right they were. If Holly-
wood chose to igr>ore their mis-
lakes ar)d to concentrate on the
good they did, I don't think
that's a misrepresentation of ilia
J- ' - -^ ■ C
fntf viory. Both men should be
complimc»nted for admitting
their mistakes in their book,
evan if Hollywood didn't
Finally Mr Richardson ad-
maniihai readers to "bone up
on Watergate trivia " becatiae tte
movie doesn't eiplain who
Donald SiBiaHiand Howard
Hunt are My Cod. if he doetn't
krK>w who Segrefti and Hunt are
by now he must have been
kidnappad ar>d spent the last 4
years in a closet This ii a
cal movie ab^tM a contemporary
event, ar^ tile audierKe is not
expected to be completely ig-
fKHant.
Anyor>e who raipailA to a
review is r\fyet aHoiead the laat
-'•apa^ ^Ib aaiiat^' at the end of
this letter there will be an
editor's note attempting to
refute what I have written. But
even in these cynical times,
when it is easy to c'arp and
disparage. Bob Woodward and
Carl Bernstein remain heroes.
I-
f
m
I
i
I
I
I
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?
Psabns 2 and Acts 4:25
/n the next to tttelaatverse m the Btbie Gods re¥etation of Htmaeli to
man. Jaaus Chntt aaya SURELY I COMB QUICKLY. AMEN " The
Apoatf John anawra: E^EN SO. COME. LORD JESUS
K
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In Ine eiMl ©f aiia
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to make
iia,eiie«i
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'TlieBenof
out of Hit
HI
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aie naNW ef Oea m
10 aig aBeift N. Omb a.
Mnf lerth fruit and not hav# to b« cut downl
Why l« n thai wo do not pay mort attention, why do wo not
tlfuiaily drum tucti oelamn, ovon loiitMa truth. Into our hoarts
■anOd Why It It that m our tooch^ng mr\6 pveaoBleg wo dent
fact that Chrlot "eeaMBi to mako up His lowoit*^ Ihora will bo a
ma •^alw iin ate Ughlaam and die adchod. balwoon him that
God and Mm mot tofvoth Him net**^ Melachl 1: 1C elc In our da
ippian diet NMdh of dio loechlngt of Chrtat to hW diaclploa m
parablot \m leifattBa. fertekon. and not appBod to em Mmma
proMonMl 11, In our loailniony and witneaalna eio leRod aa
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of Bofng aaBiafed In Bio and oy Bio
IBe, as wo do In trying to
hevo aiMh a Big laB ef ''taedhia Bie Bfoa of Bio
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lef hem aie iMeBi ef Bio
Rev. ai4-17.
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la daBia a." M la net Hia
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=3l;:
.!.-;■ ■
-Aida atudenta^ faculty, staff
*♦»,
!•
* =■«■
Ombudsman solves grievances
•y Canny
DB Staff
Donald Harttock. the
UCLA Ombiidtoian^ fvorks
within the system to solve
tpQcific gnevaaaM of students.
fmmhy inemben and saff after
the individual directly calls
upoo tiK servioes the office cia
provide
*To iisteQ, to discern, to act
and to respond to the initiator
of tiK inquiry or gnesaaoc as
my undersunding of the duty
of the • Ombudsman,** said
Hartsock This quote is froai
the application he filled out for
the newly created office of
Ombuteaan in 1969
As OmbudaaMn, Hartsock
docs not fo out into the
Umversty community seeking
coiBplaiBls. Tkr individual
iaitially come to him for
ite mmtm /
"^We iovcstigate all angles and
report hack to the individual
Then we act upon what he or
she wanu as to do (if they
have a valid complaim ),- said
Hartsock 'They call the
shots.*
all the
•teut any action the
Ukes. ''We don*t
to cnpple the individual
by making his 4muQn% for
Haitaoek
nuMi*s olfice, evolved from th€
Cfvation of the Campus Review
Board, under former Chancel-
lor Murphy's adnu/ustration.
This board evolved into the
University Policies Commii-
stimulating the concept of a
campus Ombudsman*s t>ffioe,
said Hartsock. This later step
was under Chancellor Young.
Fmcc Corps
When the office was created.
Hartsock was still in the Peace
Corps apd had to answer
eleven questionnaire items as
part of his application sent
from hu islnad base in the
South Pacific. Hartsock said
his views have not changed
since he filled out the ap-
pbcation seven years ago.
*'Many people just don't
know where to go to deal with
their grievance/' said Hart-
sock.
'*We first off discern the
nature of their grievance.**
There arc three ^revelant areas
of complaint: policy, practice
or personality. Each has a
different "style of going at it**
Haruock said. **Many times
something will start out as
what we think is a pobcy or
personnel situation and soon
find out that it is basically a
pcr^oaality^^oaflicjC^
I
flict
IS
When a person c^mes into
the office, ihcy are aakad to
ttate their jponiplamt and not
write k •*IfVttey come in and
$n asked to fill out a question-
^Mwe, this seems to be the first
ttgn of a bureaucratic maze,**
said Hartsock.
All information which is
fof reaohang a con-
oftoo not initially pre-
•aid. Some-
do not re-
nize that certain informa-
tion would be beneficial to
their oaaa. Tlir Ombudsman
assists in presenung previously
ignored infornoation to i%>
votved parties.
'•We never turn anyone
away, and meet at the individ-
ual's convenience,** said Hart-
sdck.
/•Grievances having to do
with different types of evalua-
tions (by teachers or super-
visors) seem to be the common
thread running through the
confbcts we deal with,'
Hartsock. In tbeae situatu
Hartsock makes sure that the
^valuation was fair to all coa»
cerned and that the conse-
quencoi of the evaluation
process were oaderstood.
In summary of bis 1969 ap-
phcation he said. The Usk oi
an ombudsman is herculean,
but the humanizing of a cam-
pus, any campiu, cannot and.
win not come about by the
efforts of one man,** but all the~~-
members of the University
community must be behind the
effort. **Tlie honor of even
considered JiLJiaQt
ifyi^g. but the advent df
ombudsman
celebration.**
■ /
■A
For Tibetan school In India
i.ama students seek sponsors
\
is a cause
**The Ombadsman is a
n^diator, Fcsolver. catalyst
purpose IS to see that
indiidti^ academic,
arc oted for ntuC said Hart-
sock, concerning how he ap-
proaches his position
"When the s)rstem tends to
disregard or dehumanize its
iioanes, students, faculty
1/ or adnunistraton, then a
iidf)y a flaarnfiaL"
The concept of an Omhuds-
'Wcstwind' now
available, free
Westwmd, a literary
magazme which pubbshes
this fPoek m the Student's
Store, libraries and the
publicatioms office in
Kerckhoff The pobhcation
is free.
tonight -
kerckhoff 400
consumer projects:
landlord-tenant
negative heel shoe follow-up
ground beef labeling
By John R. Fi
DB Stair Ri
SuLty-three Tihiiaa hoys at-
tending the Tihatan Cotl^ for
Andrew Hamilton, 1912-76
Andrew J. Hamihon, 64. who retired last June after 37 years
as head of UCLA public relations, died Apnl 8 m the UCLA
ilospiul after r heart stuck.
*'He was incredibly dedicated to UCLA,** said James Ward.
public information officer Ward worked for Hamilton for 10
years.
The UC Regenu in November had designated him as Public
Affairs Officer Emeritus, the second time ar ementus title had
been given a UCLA staff member. Emeritus titles are almost
always limited to facuhy, said Ward.
Dcscnbed by Ward as "very energetic and nRJS|t content when
working." Hamihon tras an excellent wnter. As a
magazine writer, Hamilton's stories were printed in such
publications as Rmdtr's Dtgest. Westways, and LaSes Home
Journal
A graduate of UCLA in 1935 and managing editor of the
Daily Bruin in 1934-35, Hamilton spent two years as a reporter
and feature writer for the Los Angeles Times before loimng
UCLA*s News Service in 1937
In 1973 he was given a Distinguished Service Award by the
UCLA Alumni Association He was a member of the Greater
Loi Angeles Press Qub. the Public Relations Society of America
-OOd^SipBia De4ta Chi, the prpjfssioaal journalism saciety.
Hamilton was the exact opposite of the stereotypical PR man.
according to Tom Tugend, senior public relations represenutive
for t.he physical sciences aad engineering
^Andy wpa Hihapoken, not pushy, not a back-^pper
you Hii^t say he wdi almost shy/ Tugend said Hadrulton could,
however, be tough when it came to getting out a story or
(lefending UCLA, TugeBd added
Hanulton is survived by his wife and two children
Plam for memorial tervices are pending.
to provide moaey to survive
and preserve their 1,300-year
old culture.
The aid to the children
would provide them with a
well to supply water for the
crops. This IS essential to their
survival because the commun-
ities support thiaMelves through
agriculture.
For the construction of the
well S7,000 IS aeeded, aad they
have abcNit $1000 The
ort to help the Tibetaas is
being administered by the Ti-
beun Aid Project (TAP).
^ CMaa take-over
Eileen Cooley of the UCLA
dejMirtmcnt, has woilnd
with TAP in order to preserve
this culture, which is alr^dy
exunct m Tibet. Since 1959,
tHhen China took over Tibet.
fh^ Tibetan monastenes have
been destroyed and their books
burned. -^-^
The CoQege for LaaMM ia
Dehaidim, India maintains a
commumty similar to the reli-
gious commumties of the Mid-
dle Ages m Europe. The
monks and their students live
in a semi-secluded iilc study-
Jag their rehgion
sophy.
The number of Tibctaa re-
fugees who. were able to teve
Tibet after tl|e commumst in-
vaaiaa is over 100,000 Half of
thaae people were children m
desperiie need'^ of qdiication,
and only a few can attend
school: According to tradition,
the parenu usuatty try to sead
at least s son aad a daughter
to schooL'
The ancient Tibetan ctihure
the purest form of
Ihism in the world The
ctilture IS preserved by a mia-
ture of written and teachings in
these schools.
They bekeve it is not enough
for an individual to laad a
book; ooe should also becoav
acquainted in an intimate way
with the teacher In this way
the ultimate essence of the
teachings of Buddha is passiwl
from one generation to the
next by personal contact.
New Zealand, Switzerland
have given some
aid to the Tibeun
moat of which has goae to the
ancestral schools There arc
also mmny pen-fnends ia the
Umted Sutes who have seat
monev m theu letters.
Bav HMdlehMS
five to ten dollars a aD an
individual needs to buy medi-
cines The Tibetans suffer froai
but the coun-
they now hve can-
help them because these
countries already have too
amny problems with their star-
ving milbons.
Thoee inteswlid in becoming
npen-'friends should coquet
Eileen Cooley m the UCLA
dance department
f
'Wild Child' screens tonight at 5 pm
French director Francob Truffaut's 1970 production. The
Wttd ChBd, wiU be the first presenution in the UCLA Fihn
Archive's spring screening series today at 5 pm, in Melnitz
1409 Admission to this and all subseqiiaat screemngs is
free.
The pnnt of The WMd Chid to be showb was deposited
with the UCLA Film Archive by United-^rtists at
at Truffaut's request. The director's coandy Slaiaa Ifimss
Was deposited under a similar arrai^MHal after the flfan
had lU first U.S showing at UCLA several years ago.
The WBd Chid is based on the true story of a 12 year
old boy, abandoned by his parenu in a French forest when
he was still a toddler, who wts captured and forcibly
brought back to avihzation near the ckiae of the 18th
Century. Jenn-Piene Cargol plays tht hoy, aad Truffaut
tumieif start as the sciemiM who was jiven ihr task of
reeducating the savage youth in the ways of human society.
ft
\
1
Mardi Gras 76
OPEN SUNDAY TOO
Experimental College Schedule
Spring 76
AH Classes t)egin week of April 12
For informatbn call 825-2727
MONDAY
LaaOar Cory Comer
S-10
In Man
HalBalyoz
Teplesin
John Qoers
7-e
WQ 122 TA/Q CoiHact
Henry Fields
7-10 Ackerman Unioii!
IN
Hauskenecht
Laader John Ravel
Leader Mtcheet H Thofnpean
7 30-10 00 mansOymlloom133
Tel CM Oi'uan
»r Marvin Smalheiser
Ackemian Unton 2408 7:3(>-e:O0
Klnaey247
Michael R. Hoide
^eapea
Lammr AW
Oedd175 7 3t»30
Schara
Ackar man Union 3904
ir Spaan Qano
12-1 Backyard Women's Qym
SpfOuiHall
Leader Steve Cohen
7-10
Leader Terry Ballard
Liittter Otmon
Haines 208
Women's Gym 106 7 3t>O«0
KineeySi
Earl
i.aadiar Or. Kent M. Rerryroen
7-10 00dei94
THURBOAY
le
Maxir>« W Slimmer. MS.
W MoClard
Young 4008
7-10
MiHa ■urns, jonn rtanei.
«i
7-10
Richard A Bobrick
0
TUESDAY
7-8
r
WEONEBOAY
7-10
7-e
fCH400(1stnt)
AU2408
OlorieHogan
Oram Oodae and TlwHn Byen
7:8B«:30
iha
Leeder Mehard S
7-9 MaaiBeiena85i27
7-10 Hatnea2i0
A Macro-Anelysis Semtner
leader Avis
S4
RoneieS. Apel
8:30«Jg _ _ Helnea2lg
Leederv AMan BaMnoe4tz and Jen SaiNh
710
QraCe Bee Clerk
7-10
OyhatonHaM Firaalde Lounge 7:304130
Liu. Ph D Leeds r Oary
DoddHaWaOlA 7-10
10-12
andae- tUNOAY
3181
A170
7-'HI
g^JO
efUOA
Kir
Men's Oym ggl
8-11
7JO-10-00
OretHylng AHefoetlvas for Si
On Beyond
178
7-10
21
BoOert Earl Setheft
Ed Herper
TedBMed
OoddlTB
Tom
30
Or Elliott FieMH>
rjOOiK)
7-1
7-10
7-8:30
Franz 2288 7«10
Mictwei Long
Paut.S.
Buriche3117
HalnM7ia
ItIB
7-10
10
^•i;o
i21g
by ahjoenf
LegMletive Counei. B i P R A G
-^>*-^- — »►
] Campus events
^c
9p^
m.
t4 AcfctniMfl 3^T7
;!
w Ktf ckhofr HtN «V i»
tptfH, ai
ApniM.
a psINMrfi af tni
|v tut WafM
CaMTOl' crMVliaN
11 m^ am Apnl 14
"'•i •• B"! ttfadaa iy aaa aamai
TnfMMt «M it iitMi s a*
iMar IliM 1400 fraa^
- Tli MMHl a CzacH Mm v1«i Rmeh
•iiMitlaa aoiy wilt fea alMwn afttr an
^"•raiycliaw by tia aifartai. Jan Kaiar 5
m. ^moTTom MaMlz 14M frm^
fey &<a Katan awfl
^^^' ^^^w ^^ V^HHUb •^^^
li aa ftnviM laHHr a Hwmii
•Stic discusfuon greua/daat on facial
tfMM. 7H an. Maa^M i^im am
^^^^^^^^^B ^^^P« ^F^R^^ INH aHai l^kll
**^ May 2^ aai tawaritw. aaaa-1-aai.
Aprn 15 and M pai AprM 16
4BI Can CS^Q31 lar raaarwaliaii
la ar-
Caa.'
O*, 7JI
Afrtf n.
laarning ar practicino social or ditco
•
informal
sttfiaaii aiia visitors. 10 aa^
lys and
mformatiaa and
rai tundaig tar
ctoralt art
FaHaarthips and Assistantship Section
.ilurpity 12B
Cmiwi hmmm, lain QtCA aa a
-ttRBiMMr Nivartiaalar ViaM KarddialV 3n
or call 82S-2t20 Voiuntttrs art also
for onvifonmanlal
and Jsa r
S>7 ga. Aprti a Caaa Fraa
wvNiars wM praaant a pragram al
and classical works noon tomorrow
Fraa.
wifl aaftaiaLi a
vanaiy of caaaaaiporary Amarnp mmc
in idzz. rock and popular stylaa aritli
apaciai faaat arttan no UC Jio laMsrs
•JB pat Apm 14. Rayaa ■adMBf^ai. UCLA
4X 9m,
Ti
3
SI ottior
U
. . 1312
CM. wPf mwt 7-f pM.
s Oykstra Racreation room and 2
f 6ym m lor all
and pracudnf am-
S2 oanaral
-■•ale tram no FIral
Charlotit Hattt. I pm.
Lima THaaiar Fraa
T«k fapaa is takmo
Ivap studants wdo want to
wMti SLC and laa atfadaialnnan on
financial mi
Haaa art awaiiaMa ^ NaialMr
i/iferaiaiaa Mil Oavt
intarwaliainl parapactiva. 4 p« mm.
Oaan s conttrtnoa roam. SeHaaf of Mle
■i ~ Mai Ttar ini ad
3 pm laiay Adttrmni Jm
1 Ml
or
pm April 14
April 14 6w rzm
mm at
talMoa applications far
aanrtly. fraternity. Mamart
ing
MHi must attand an oriantaiioa ^
7 pm^ tonigftt 829 Gayiav ar 7 pn. 1^
morrow ftiooer library far ailanRaian
can 82M730
Mi'lB lavd. applications art availaPit
aow-April 46 Murphy 22H.
m wall as women
:l
bM rida from lA to Orafan
and than aaat to Virginia • aaw being
organized Contact Sbari «t 3«-2016' tor
mformation^
Faraifa Pallcv aad ttt-Cblaa
lelaliaaa by William Hmton 7 30 pm
tonigm. RoMi 1200 Frtt
— ^a HMs B|l 3 pm. tamorrow. Oaan's
contganta room Sctiooi of PuMc HaMfe
Ktfcktioff 400
11 Tear Faid. on
today Ackar-
Mnda. 5-7 pm. Wanan's 0mi 200 Kung
Fu. ISM pn. IMC • Ml: Saeting/Pi«ol
1-2 pn. RMa Ronpt Horsabockndmg. 7^
pm AU 3617 Ftying. 7-9 pai. IM 4M;
GardOA. ovary afternoon Horticulture
Kerckftoff 400
-AFaaavn
Its way to me taWa.
" 1 ■ __
take Music MF and/or
Ofan to att Mamniliy nadanH art rt-
^10 briofJNair OMiiars to M first
meeting
about what you can do to save sea
mammals, naon-2 pm today AdHnMai
»17 — «—
^4tm Im CMMraa. 1 pm. Kerciiiioff 4n
-Ijaw la lat Fat aod let Tear Taatt
MaaiMHaali, 1 pm tomorrow. Ackaraun
2401
3JM pm. Fiaid 7. Karate S-7
6ym 200 Skaal/Trap. aaan-1
p. nana 6ym ti G. llaiM. 5JMJI an.
MAC I-I4I: NMMmg nain-1 pm Ma« Sm
10^ Judo 2-4 pm. MAC I 146 AikMi. 74
pm MAC I m WraaHino. 7-1 pm. MAC I
lit Cbaaa. l-lt pn, Maaa Gym 122. Sociai
Oanea. 44^ ^n. OyMra HaM Hac Hm
Sailmp. M pm m 3617
to praduate students lor reaaarch who art^
larmaliy advaoGad to candidacy tar dac-
torai degreea and rtgistered AppiBaiaa
may be submitted at any time during the
year Grants of a maximum S750 ve made
m January and July Forms art in lie
Maaiarch Committee m the Academic
Senate EKOCut^ve Office Murphy 3125
trained interns will help you fmd funding
for your ideas Open daUy 9 am-4 pm
Kerckhoft 401
3617
— Tbe Fraiaal Mm, pton tomorrow
Ackarman 2401
wdl
WU Ejiecutfvt Maetmo. 3 30 pm AU 2401
Fiahmo. 3-4 pm A4J »17. Hatha Yaoa. 5-
6 IS pm. Womens Gym 3M; Tana Nliai-
biali. 6,164 pm. MIibiw fiym at SSmr
Sacoar |>io pm. Wonana ^^ar-ftnat
mo/P,stol 1-^ pm. MM Mmk J^2-4
pm MAC 8 141. fiaMxy 77 pm «ana
Gym 133 • WaMr Ski 44 pm, AU 3617
of ttie literary
Royce 154
row Ackerman 3617
Pistol. 3-5 pm
to. 54 pn
pn. MAC #110:
3430 pm. tomorrow BoaMsr MO
Iry lack Maaaat 3-4 30 pm April 14
7 A<r mm
: Womans Karp-
200 Aikido 74
,^ ^ ^ 74 pm MAC I
-^ M.^ I*.*r^' 5 504X pm MAC I 146 Kum
■* ■■5' ^" *"* M. MAC B 146. CiMaa, 6-10 am
MM MO ato« Gym 122 ^^ ^
ease
costs of vacation
By Jeff MMcMI
OB StafT Ripiflw
Spending nights in a youth hostel can help redtice the coat of a
cation for thoae who enjoy bicychng, canoeing, honeback
riding or hiking.
A night at a youth hostel wiU coat between SI -3.50 in any of
the 151 hoatels m the U.S. or in the 4,500 hoateU oveneaa.
American Youth Hostels Inc. (AYH) is the organization whidi
administers U.S hostels.
Hostel accomodations are relatively simple, with a bed,
mattreaa, blankets, hot showers and a kitchen, including the «Me
of itove and pans, provided. There arc separate dorms for men
and women, and there is a common recreation room
h is naccasary to apply for membership in AmetiiGia^ Youth
Hostels in order to take advantage of the hostels Senior
membership J 18 yrs and over) is $1 1, and membership for foreign
-nauonali ii $«.75 The coft foj thoK under IS yaars is S5.
There is an exchange agreement between foreign hostel
organrrations and American Youth Hostel which enables
members to use foreign hostels and members of foreiM
organizations to use U.S. facilities.
Tbt Hostel Gwkif tmd Hantfboolu a publication of American
Youth Hostels (AYH) supplies much information about
"*hosteling- and bsts the hottels in the U.S.
According to the handbook, every hoitakr is required to carry
with them a AYH pass, sheet, sleeping sack (to put on top of the
noilat>4 TflMUfcaa^ and persoBni^ eating iiu iiwil "
Beaervations must be made in advance by sending a sel^-
addmiid svpmpcd envelope to the houa^parents in charge of the
hostel The hoy|iq»rent will then reply on the iMMUnii iii
re<}ucst. Betcrvatii^s must contain one night's deposit for each
.— P^"'^*' »n<l ^ received by the hous^parents at least one week in
advance.
T*he maximum length of a sUy is three days, unless special
permisai^n n okuined from the houaeparems. Hoatels arc closed
from 10 am to 4 pm They can be used during the day for 50
cents a day.
The handbook also provides information about ways to plan a
tnp, hoateling equipment and cycling tips AYH also sponaova
pre-pianard packaged trips with a leader.
Further information OMi^be obtained from the Loa Angeles
Council, 7603 Beverly Blvd. LA 90036, or caU 933-4412
Meat voluntoor positions are avt
tfirougn EXPO Ackarman $2^2 or caH
art domg or
gamzad to rf-amphasize Amarica't tourv
m sptrftuaf vaiuas Gal Ray at 471-
from 4-6 pm tor
now ivailaoif for a two-yoar farm with tha
UC Student Lotiby m Sacraaianto Pays
S767S0 par month Raqwramants include
baing a rocant LX: graduate and imtroat m
a^cational «aaaa Pick up applications m
Kerckhoft n Daadtene is May 7 or call
ttifs waaa Win
taature Jaff NaMaa laaaiimg" ort ttie fit^
of Midway island noan. MmU H gaadia
-Yla M|a to Eampaai UMnMhl wHt be-
b9 Dr ViraM IMnaiMi of UC
3 pai. AprM 14. RaacHi Itac
Laaa-laafa laal Flaaiai film
iacture aad danaaaaaaan 34 pm. Apni
14 AckMMtt Sir
7-1 fdL
7:31
HaOia Vooa. noo«v2 pm,
Karala. S-7 pm Waawv
Courts
I Sym 2m, Taaais
24 pm Saaai
TaiiraawiBt 1 pn UCU vs
Caaaiir Harr. Taam Hawdbalt 231^4
ttym 200 GaiEiBB. 2-7
days. Kerckfioff 400
-•nda lip im
toniQM Haines 211
itarate 10-nddar tiaawM fipai
kat 10 Mi-7 pm. Cndiat ^Hca.
pai. Horiicullure Garden
Crtc-
2-7
MtBi; frat offers umhrgrail awani
The International Music Fraternity, Sigma Alpha Iota, ts
offennf a $100 music potential award to currently enrolled
undergraduates at UCLA
Appbcation forms arc available in Schoenberg 2449 and
should be submitted by Apnl 30. 1976 ContesUnts muit
submit a 10 paft paper concerning the fiekl of music
education, which may be written independently or for an
undergraduate music course
MCENTENNIAL
* ♦
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION AS
A PEOPLE'S MOVEMENT
Second in the UCLA BICENTENNIAL LECTURE SERIES
PAGE SMITH
f
Formar Provoat. Cowall CoMaga and Profaaaor of
Hiatorical Studiaa Enr>aritu«. UC Santa Cruz; formmr
of Hiatory. UCLA, iacturar. farmar. author of
AaaClly Upaa A MM; f^ayghliii al «ia
In AMMfleafi HManr; co-autfKK
(ttoMi Chariaa Danial)
coottnuaa WEDNESDAYS. 8 P M Dodd HaN 147
AprMM J R POLE Vioa I4aai»f ChorcfiiM Collaga
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION THROllOH
AprM ai ROaMT KELLEY. ^ nfaiiui of HMary UC
TWO HUNDRED YEARS or THE TWO PARTY SVSfiM- HOW
HAS IT EVOLVED AND
No Admission Chargs
r,ApfM14 fPM
Miller time.
>M III I 111
J^
-r
t
i >
ZEN AND JUDAISM
Wsslisiid Wofkshop
Sponsored by:
oILm
m^
i[
MACZUMI ROSHI Zm
RASSI DON SINOCfl HMsf Rabbi
OR. BCRNARD GLAMMAN Zm Mofiii
7 pm April 13 to 3 pm ApHI 29
at Hidden Trails Camp
"^ Agoura. Cafifornia
Donation $50 Couples $80
Students $35
CNId Care
For further information and reservations
please call 364-8996
California Law Institute
at Sonta Borbora
Now accepting applications for
Summer Session
Starting June 29, 1976
Fall Term-commencing September 7. 1976
Oegfee prpgrams leading to LLB or JD Degrees braouates Oual»ty tor
wahfornia Bar Examination*^
TRANSfES STUDEMTS ACCEPTED
low School Campu
)034 Alam*da ^«ldr« Sfrr«
Sonto Sorbaro Co 93103
Hi. rSOS) 9S9.1S67
The Council Onjducatlonal
Deveiopmeht (CED) ^^
will be considering course proposals for
the Fall Quarter 1976 and the Winter
Quarter 1977, and is prepared to sponsor
innovative courses of genuine academic
quality which would be of interest to the
campus community. Such course pro-
posals will be due in the CED office no
later than Monday, April 12, 1976 (for the
Fall Quarter 1976) and Monday, May 17,
1976 (for the Winter Quarter 1977). If you
are interested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain^ the appropriate
forms in the Office 6f the Council on
Educational Development, 3121 Marphy
Hall.
Stitdem Committee for the Arts
And
Cultural and Recreational Affairs
Presents
A Chamber Quintet
playing Shostakovich,
Ives, DeVienne, Gould
Monday. April 12, 8 p.m.
Sunset Canyon Recreation Center
An updated 'Heartbreak House* is not a home
My Mary Aanc Cartaino
To Georfc Bernard Shaw,
World War 1 Europe was
HcartbrtalL Hoest. The ever-
present watchdog of Englifh
society, he saw the decadence
of the leisured clattei as the
cause of the war. According to'
Shaw, the real tragedy of
Hcarthreak Hoeac lay in the
frivolity with which the cul-
tured classes frittered away
their energies when there were
more important things to do.
The Westwood Playhouse-
version of the once-contro-
versiat drama (running now
through May 9) unfortunately
fritters away most of its energy
updating a story that should
have been left alone. Director
Gwen Amcr has a formidable
crew of actors with which to
^work, but she distorts many of
thaw's intentions (and makes
tile ending intooionsenBe) by
trantplanting the play from
early twentieth-century
to an American beach house in
The plot IS concerned with
one Captaiii Shotover (played
convincingly by Donald Mof-
fctt), his two beautiful grown
daughters Ariadne' Uttcrword
and Hesione Hushabye and the
comings and goings of their
assorted friends, husbands,
lovera and m-laws at a week-
end houseparty The aging
Shotover, in despair at being
unable to control his houM-
hold in the face of his strong-
willed offspnng, retreats into
madness, and his ^'seventh de-
gree of concentration** rum.
Although Joan Van Ark
serves the worldly Lady Ut-
terword well, Susan Strasberg it
badly miscast as Mrs Hush-
abye Her friz/y-haired, flower
child image already teems
dated Robert Loggia plays the
slick Hector Hushabye, Hes-
lone's philandering husband,
but unfortunately when he
turns philosophical at the
pUiy*s ead, he never gels patt
the surface.
Tige Andrews makes ditpar-
ingly short work of Boat Maa-
gan, turning him into a cyn-
ical, hard-driving loud-
mouthed American buMMlt-
nan, and his mtendad wife
Eliie Dunn (Rebecca BaMingj
ia effective at a shallow young
pleasure seeker Alto of note is
William Baaaett at the charm-
ingly indolent Randall tetter
word
In spite of the inevitable
problems in the Americaniza-
tion of the play, the technical
jupectt. of the production fare
better than the performance.
Set designer Jean McMatter
pistcrvn Shotover*s nAutical
house cleverly and with class,
Jean-Pierre Dorleac*s cottumes
are well planned and even
better executed except for
the AmeriOHi flag pinned on
the lapel of Boss Mangan.
SImw might just turn over in
his grave ^ '
'Kennedy's Children' : what were you in '62?
By AdaM Parfrfy
A myriad of repent nostalgic
films and pU^ have posed the
question, ** Where were you in
the Sixtiesr Robert- Patnck>
Kennedy's CWMren, now play-
ing at the Huntington Hartford
through April 25. dredge^
deeper,' asking, "Wliat were
you in the Sixties''^
Patrick's two-act play, how-
ever, it hopelessly embittered
nostalgia; perhapt best teen at
an emetic for the despondency
and alienation of the Seventies.
It all takes place in a typically
depressing New YorlL saloon
where five disillusioned main
characters straggle in
drinks in which to dfown their
tormented hvet. Always un-
communicative with one an-
other, the characters are intro-
duced by way of successive and
excettive jsoiUoquies to the
audience.
Wanda (Barfcara Rush) it a
tchoolteacher who yearns for
thote Kennedy-Camelot days
of yore. When Wanda talks of
Jack Kennedy and wife, her
voice lowers into inaudible
reverent awe. A speeded Viet-
nam veteran (Michael Sacks)
gets a paranoic fit as often as
he pops pills. He*s another
child of the Sixties, a product
of a vile and pointless war.
With a familiar sweep of
Chekhovian self-pity Spacyer
(Don Parker), a homosexual
finds life a decadent and
destructive carnival. He's an
actor forever stuck in thoae
ofT-ofT Broadway ex pen mental
shows. We've seen the ungrati-
fied activist before, but never
at finely detailed as fCaiulani
Lee makes her Lastly, there is
a brilliant turn by Shirley
Knight as a vacuous wisp of a
woman who dreams, not of
becoming a human being, but
a Marilyn Monroe-type sex
ipmbol.
The unending poetry-tohlo-
quikt are employed by play-
wright Patrick too self-con-
tciously, and it it a testament
to the ffCMiircefulnett of the
actors to wangle aay empathy
otit of the audience at all
Patrick's anxiousness to plumb
the depths of profundity teemt
tee faicile. flip and forced to
convince.
The aumy
always build to an inevitable
chaax, aad, in this repetition,
there lies a gnat daeprr of
boredom, no matter how juicy
the content As performed at
the Hartford, the first act it
slow, if intriguia^i aed tht"
tacond act gnnds mercilessly in
fim gaar all the way.
Kii%lit:
ef Mareyn
Under Cbve Donner's expert
direction, KtMMdy's CMMrca,
though not entirely succettful,
IS an interesting two-hour
lament for thote dead souls
whose ume has jutt patt
Margaux Hemingway chapped in 'Lipstick'
By Toay Peyacr
Boy OMitt giri. Boy rapes girl. Boy acquitted
at triaL Boy lapct girfs younger titter Girl
thoen aad kills boy. Girl acquitted at tecond
trial.
Chns SawMdna it the bey, MarpiiiJt Hem-
iBfway, a leading fashion model plays the girl
a Iradiiig fashion model. Her younger titter it
played by Manal Hemingway, her younger
tiitar.
Directed by Lamont Johaton, written by
David Rayfiel prodeeed by Freddie Fieldt and
prctMlad by Dino De Laurentiit, Upatlik (at
the Mann's Wettwood) is an ill-conceived.
poorly eiaflad aad imbedlk movie. Its only
saving grace it that it it to bad that people
should eatily tec* through its irresponsible
advocacy of violence at a meana of probkm-
solving.
The story is as impiaMtibJc at Hie acting
Relationships are awkwardly defined, the
dlilngiif II fnrrfd ^and iinrrihirir inri the
overall nevaaMat ef tlie drama is totally
unbelievable.
V
CoBtequcntiy, it it apparent that the filai-
makert awe. aot intertaiad in doiag a itory
bigiiiiy er MMMy; lipHliB it pure exploita-
tkrn. The oafy difTerenoe between thit aiovie
Maaa] exploiMMa efforu it that the
Mt hitger, the leek m flicker, aad the
it by a aa^ ttudio.
»OTte*t having been made it the totally
fraudulent attaaipl to patt it eif af an '^anti-
^ ^ ^ of th^
d yea do not find retribution in
courts, yoa had bantr taek it out on the
ia ao way begins to diicaw the recent
ia rape aad itt iaipiaaiiaM withia the
aatiiaal ptyche.
At eae *potnt dunng the tnal phataviiii af
Hemingway are atad at avidnn
pheiegnHpiM which thi
of naaaal aPaaa. Her aMataqr (Ann
i. Hhey're
and they afen*t meant for
The taaK apphet to
Htfiry flM Elgtifh wm a tutor (tudor).
Why not ba ofM. tool
The Chicano Youth BBrho Pro)#ct is now
accepting applications for voiuntaars that ara
willing to tutor in the Venice area. Tutonng is
done in the elementary and high school le«ei,
and transportation is available, if needed
if you are interested in signing up, why rK>t
come to our orientation meeting, Tuesday.
April 13th at 3:00 in Kerckhoff 400. or stop
by at Kerckhoff 406 You can also call Carl or
Manuel at 825-2389 for more information
Spontoftd by the Cammumty Sarvioaa Commi
Student L*gitiativ« Council
e
f
10%
discount with coupon
on dry cleaning only
Exp4raaAprtll4.1S7S
10% "^
discount with cogpon
on dry cleening only
ExpifeaApfeis,1^l7S
>
\
{
Number 1 Dry Cleaners
1126 Westwood Blvd.
478-6310
next to McDonalds-
Complete Dry Cleaning and taundry
Parking in Rear
J.Krlshnamurti
Retigiou't.taachar. authof.
•ducalor wi'li giv9 a tariat of
taikt and dtscussions in Sis
Qmk Qrovt. Mainar» Oaks.
OJAI. CA at t1 am
Taiki - Sat -Sun., Apr a- 4
Sat-Sun . Apr 10-11
Sat -Sun . Apr 17-1S
Discusaions -
Tuat -Thurs S- S
Tuat Thurs 13-15
Seating on great, cancaltad in
caaa of rain.
For aarioua litlanars only
Plaaaa. no amall children no *
dogs, no photographing or
taping permitlad
No antranca faa; Donations
waicomad
Knshnamurti Foundation,
Sox 216. 0)ai. CA 93023
Tal (SOS) S4S-6347
rS06) 646-271S
■ ■<.'»..
SAVE THE
WHALES
COME TO A PRESENTATION
BY GREEN PEACE FOUNDATION
TO FIND OUT WHAT YOU CAN DO TO
HELP SEA MAMMALS
FEATURING: A GREEN PEACE
CREW MEMBER ON A 1975 ANTI-
WHALING EXPEDITION.
FILMS AND SLIDES OF
VOYAGE AND RUSSIAN
CONFRONTATION.
' »^* . '«* .w^ ».-pw'\
». -I^MP^ III ■! »»>
:?
'III. «i
I
Quarterback^ nose guard top priorities
(( iNiiinurd from Pisf 35)
<
e
phasi» on defense according to
new dcfcfssrvc coordinator
Dick ToflKy: *i have worked
for football coaches before
who have said that defense was
their top priority, ^ut they
lodged on it,** said Tomey
*HJoach Donahue is the fin»t
person 1 have coached for that
kak ever followed through. If
there is a player we want for
defense, then coach Donahue
will give him to us if the player
docs not object."
I
Following that reasoning,
split end Jerry Robinson will
now be strict In an inside line-
backer and running back An-
thony Pao Pao has been
moved to outside linebacker
lomev hm>^ ^ strong dekfix
returning wiih seven starter^
and has established a defensive
goal
team play the great defense
and we are going to work hard
on trying to do it this year **
Heat guard is a **wide-open
position Frazier's back-up
Steve Tctrfct will ftt -ffy»~
opportunity, with JC transfers
Willie Nevels and Randy
Grounds also tried at the poai-
tion
-We must come out of
spring practice with a §ood
feeling about the nose guard
position^ so-thai will be the top
priority on defense for spring
practi. added Tomey. '•
two weakest surting iMt
son, but they are the two
stronfcst going into the spring
Itaywond Bell and Pjad
Vasiar return at inside line-
backer and Robinson has tre-
■^ndniH |ik>tential. In the sec-
ondary, starters Oscar Ed-
wards, Pat Schmidt and Har-
old Hardin return, with ex-
perierured Levi Armstrong and
Johnny Lynn batting for one
remaining spot Riverside JC
transfer Frank Corral is set as
punter aad he will prsbaMy do
the place kicking.
Mmi tolcfitc4
The 1976 Bruins are prob-
ably the most talented football
team in the tchoofs history,
but with a schedule that in-
cludes Arizona StaiC Arizona
and Ohio State in three of the
first four games, only time will
tell. One tiMig is lor. sure.. If
UCLA wuis iu first foiir^iMMi
thiji year, there will be no
wko is the No. , 1
in the country
Eight footballers drafted by pros
•'I N\ani the I CIA football
team to pUiv (he great detcn.sc
like in I hi i)nd half ilgainst
I'SC and the Rose Bowl
against Ohio Stale," said To-
mey. *•! hose are tfie only two
limes I have seen a UCl A
Pete Pele will be the only
starter missing from spring
drills as the defensive tackle is
missing spring ball for aca-
demic rcasiins He should no!
get behind ci^me tall practice in
August, because Randy Cross
two years ago and Phil Mc-
Kinnely Last year missed spring
practice, yet were in the opeiH
ing game Im^up-r^ -
Experts considered the inside
line back ing and defensive
back field positions to be the
By Michael Sondheimer
DB Sports Writer
Eight Brum football seniors
were drafted last Thurday and
Friday during the 17 rounds oT
the National hoolball League
college player draft.
Nose guard Cliff |-razier and
center-guard Randy Cross were
the highest UCLA players
drafted, both going midway
through the second round.
Frazier, from Missouri, wiill be
going home, as he was taken
by the Kansas City Chiefs.
Cross got his wish of staying
on the West Coast, as be was
the first pick for the San F-ran-
ciscb 49*ers.
Jolui Sctarra
All-Aroerican quarterback
John Sciarra was selected on
the fourth round by thl^Chica-
go Bears as a defensive back
Sciarra, who has been con-
sidering playing -in Canada,
could be given a trial at quar-
terback for the Bears, especial-
ly looking at their poor signal
calling over the past five years
Wide receiver Norm Ander-
sen was also taken by the
Bears. Sciarra and Anderson
were one of tlie best combina-
ALL WORK
I
• 1
i»f
PLAY?
What are you
-V
your spare
1^ time?
The interest Matching System is a new service encourag-
ing extracurricular activities among students^ith similar
interests. The Stud-ent Legislative Cc
this program) wants to maf^fTmfPstaf^ffCLA a s^^
as well as an academic expeiidiice.
Brochures are available at
* Ackerman Informanon Desk
* Lecture Notes
*Doim informiation Counters
* SLC Information Desk (3rd floor Kerckhoff)
We encourage your participation Jn this eixciting
new service — act now!
For further information call 825-2339 or 825-4505
tions ever to play for the Bru-
ins and coiiid also click tn pro
ball
Offensive j'uard Pbil Mc-
Kinncly was drafted by Atlanta
and outside linebacker* Dak
Curry was taken by Dalliks.
Former UCLA coach Dick
Vermeil selected two of his
college players for the Phila-
delphia Eagles " inside line->
backer Terry Tautoia and
kicker Brett White were taken.
Vermeil has felt that White has
been one of the best collegiate
kickers the past two years and
has one of the stronfen kfs he
has ever seen. "**'
A total o( 33 players were
taken from the Pac-4i confer-
ence, but only four from cross-
town nval use Chuck Mutt-
cie of California was the third
pick in the draft to New Or-
leans. Another **big" name
from the Pac^ that was
arancci, never ptayed lootDall.
Oregon's Ron Lee. an All-
American basketball guard,
was drafted as a defensive back
by San Diego Quinn Buckner
of Indiana and Waymon Britt
of MichigM^ who battled for
the NCAA basketball title,
were both drafted by Georpe
Allen and the Washington
Redskins.
m CAMPUS
■^
*
i
NTeifs tennis teaiWlfretches streak to 34
Hy Huntrr Kaplan
DB ftpMts Writer
**At kast we 4id as good as
Stanford against UCLA.**
stated Universay oi Califasaia
tennis coach Bill Wright after
the nation's top ranking Bruins
routed the Golden Baifar-i-4
on the Sunset Courts Saturday
afternoon
The UCLA tnumph in-
creased its winning streak to 15
consecutive dual match vic-
tories in 1976 and to 34 span-
ning the fawt two seasons.
Most of the Cahfomui'i ten-
nis players were not bom when
the Wmm teit defeated UCLA
in a dual tennis match m 1953.
44 straight
The Bruim have now won
44 straight matches over
California, which is shocking
considenng tennis irtnadi have
usually been ranked among the
top twenty teams in collegiate
teimis. ~- .
CaMonua was hardly in a
position to achieve winning
results last Saturday without
the services of its top two
pifyers Doug King and
Richard Finger. They will be
out oi the Califoriua hneup^or
a few more weeks with should-
er and broken iiQgar i^jfuries
ivsptctively. '^^—^ -■-■-
As a taauh of CaMomia's
injury-pkgued bneup, UCLA*s
gaMi Glenn Baasett gave
^three-iiiae ITCLA Al-
Ta«y Graham at
suth singles Graham has been
hampered with a sore back
during the last week, but hopes
to be ready for this week's
tourney to Berkelev and Palo
Aho
Feier Flemmg ran his singles
record on the season to an
unblemished 9-0 with s 6-3. ^3
win over Steve Pompan **l
played well enough to win,"
said UCLA's first-year star,
who transferred to Westwood
iMt y^u from the U niversity of
Micl *
Wright shooli his head in
disbelief while watching Flem-
ing for the first time in'
a UCLA uniform **l never
thought UCLA could be this
devastmg in 1^76 after losing
Billy Martin. Wnght said "I
think they are better than last
year's NCAA championship
team. They liivc OMire depth
this year. When a team has the
luxury of using players of the
caliber of Steve Mott and Luis
Enck as substKuics, M m dif«
ficult for any opposing coach
to be cofident "
Junior Ferdi Taygan. who
would be the number one
player on most collegiate
teams, defeated Steve Hahn 6-
4, 7^ at second singles.
IncraQwle avdHig
*'lt IS an incredible feeling to
play here a| UCLA.** said
Hahn *UCLA*s players are
one step ahead oi most every-
one else It IS very easy to get
psyched before and durii^ a
match It IS ama/ing when you
think of the super star players
who lu^vc competed on 4hese
courts from UCLA and USC,
Arthur Ashe. Jimmy Connors.
Jeff Borowiak, Haroon Rahim.
Charles Pasaretl-and so on
down the hne "
UCLA won all six singles
nuitches and two of the three
doubles matches in straight
sets, losing only at second
doubles where Caliiiornia\ Jim
Harper and Brian Mc( arthy
upset Fleming and Mx>tt. 6-2.
1-6. 6-1
f
RESULTS ICLA (tl C Al r-
<•> o
Slwgle% f) Peter Fleming •
(I CLAi def Steve Pompan 6-
3. ^3
2) Ferdi laygan (UCl A) def
Steve Hahn 6-4 ^ ^
JU Bruce NjcIkjIs xiLi Al del
Jim Harper ^-3 6-2
4) John Austin (UCLA) def
John Hubbell 6-1. 6-3
5) Steve Mon (l^LA) del
DanTiern^ 'I, 7-5
6) I ui& Inck (UCLA) del
Brian McCarthy 6-2. 6-4
Doubles: 1) ravgan-NKhols
del Hubbell-Hahn 6-2. 6-2
2) Harper-McCarthy (Cal) def
Fleming-MotI 6-2. 1-6 6-1
y) Austin Fnck def Tierne\
Paul larvrn 6-2. 6-2
I
Track results
ican Brian Teacher the day-off
at the second singles position
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11 •
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■'*•■»•
Chinese Foreign
U^. - China Relations
■ . t
A Talk By
WILUAMHINTON
Lived in China 1945-1953
met with & interviewed CHOU EN— LAI &
& TENG HSIAO-PING
Author of FANSHEN, IRON OXEN,
HUNDRED DAY WAR
Monday, April 12, 1976
7:30 P.M.
Rolfe Auditorium 1200
Sponsored by Associated Students Speakers Program/Sit!; CPA Fund;
, A^ian Graduate Student Assoc: US-Chtna P^oplg^ Fri<>nfkhip A^son^tmn
I
f I •»«««»
t " . ■
. •
"'^tam
-t
itJ
c
%
^->m
THESTUDENT
COMMITTEE
FOR THE ARTS
$2 STUDENT
TICKETS
at UCLA Central
Ticket OHice
ti50 Westwood
Plaza
UCLAIlr
Card and
pholo I 0
required lor
purchase of
ail tickets
$1 TICKETS ON SALE NOW
Sat Aprfl 24 8 30 pm Royce Hall
?RICK HAWKINS DANCE
COMPANY
with Compoilr Lucia Oiugoszewski
and the American Youth Symphony
cofidu/qt«d by Mehii Mehta
Sun April 25 8 00 pm - Schoenberg Hall
MUSIC FOR A WHILE, early music
ensemble s^tH tasle vitality and
naturalness < Boston Globe)
Tues May 4 8 ''0 pm Royce HaH
GRAND UNION
a rich mixture of fantasy parody games
and reality ( Washington Pott)
Saf May 8 8 30 pm Royce Hail
WILLIAM WINOOM IN
THURBER II
a return engagement of Mr Windom in an
entirely new production based on the life
and times of the quiet colossus of Amen
can letters
Fn May 14 8 30 pm RoyC« H«ll
BILL EVANS TRIO ^^
an iniellecturai skilled and serious
musician (who) has never lost touch with
an essential r>eed to swmg (Leonard
Feathpf »
Sat May 15 8 30 pm Schoenberg Halt
ERIC ANDERSON, guitar and
SUNDANCE,
Byroft ^•Htnes new group - dynamic
musician and group
SAt May 15 8 30 pm Royce Hall
GARRICK OHLSSON, piamst
a powerful technician a strong musical
mind an interesting arttst <Herold C
Schooberg)
Sun May 16 8 00 pm Royce Hall
N1COLAI GEDDA, tenor and Mertm
Kat/ pianist
works by Respight Prateila Caseila.
CarfMNSli Duparc Faure Oebusay ef>d
Tui
S2 TICKETS ON SALE NOW
^r. May ' 8 30pm Royce HaH
STEPHEN BISHOP-KOVACEVICH,
pianist
his playing is tiuiy oeautifiii (hashing
Ion Pri^ti
S«l fun*. 12 8 30p#n — Hr;vce Hall
GUITAR SUMMIT II
- ja Ber[>ey
Kpsvi and H%tti Elha SAn#y'Btfi«
>q of Quitar Q>^»H
Banana^oys celebrate. . .
I
wc
to^ cmo-
gamcs But
tionally ti
match like the ont tonight
After dropping The opening
fame 15-11. Pepprrdme came
kmdk to take (he second Build-
ing an fl-6 lead in the third
fsme, the Waves afiptMcd to
have the HMinentuni to sweep
past the Bfutn^. Btii tJC'LA
broke their attack and the
team from Malibu never fully
racovered
**Whcn we got out to the big
tead everyone surted sundiog
around,** explained freshman
Riff Wc had a few ba4
passes arid soon UCLA broke
us Fred Sturm was lerving
realty, tough.**
HoHM ccNirt advantage
'^The home court advantafe
made a lot of difference.**
kidded Rod Wilde, another
Wave freshman, thinking of
the 3,000 plus fans who packed
into Pauley Pavihon to witani
the contest *'We faced the
same thing in Santa Barbara^
Nora offered his own ex-
planation of the Waves* de-
miae. '^We got just a little two
fancy in the third game,** he
said **Wc were playing too
fast, our passing went down
the drain and our sets started
floatinf way back.**
The senior also felt Pepper-
dine had a temper control
problem. His team was
assessed a technical for pro-
testing the referee's decision,
crucial foul came in tfie^
third game as the Waves con-
tested a cUm^ iinc call oii a
Doug Rabr lervc
•^Thc refs reaily got to ui
lonight." Nora lud. *'Wc havt
to learn not to let them bother
us and keep on playmg. But I
swear to God that serve was
mm. V6 put my life on «t.**
The story was obviously dif-
ferent in the UCLA locker
room as the ^HhMHMM ^leyt*^
celebrated their most gr^^ifytag
win of the seasdh.
"It was a big lift,** said team
leader Denny Cline "But it
was more of a downer for
them than an up for us.
They*re a young team and now
they realize they can loae. That
will help us if we have to meet
them again.**
Cline felt that Pcppcrdine's
lack of emoMaal control was
a key to the match "When
Harlan Cohen (the Waves
coach) looses control, the team
surts io 4eoie it too.**
Two other key elements' of
the Brum win were Sturm's
improved serving and Rabe*s
good outside hitting.
**! just moved back a little
farther,** said Sturm, **and my
serves really started moving.**
Wiiiii win
**We pieeded 9 win in a big
match to give us the confi-
dence we need,** Sturm added.
**1 regard Pcpperdine as the
best team m the conference
besides us.**
'^Fve been working a lot on
my right side hitting** said
Itabe **Nqw it*s starting to
come around. I finally learned
to come out and smack the
ball without doing anything
fancy^—
Rabe explatned that UCLA
stiU has to improve its defense
and blocking but that the Bru-
iaa, **are definitely the class of
the league. It was just a natter
of us putting It all tofether
When we can do that, no one
«aa Slop us.**
Like their Pacific Coap ad-
venahai, tbe Bruins had
trouble holding leads on Fri-
day night. In each game, the
Westwood sptkan wauld pull
out to a comfortable margm
and. tiKB let the Wavm aalaii
up
**! think a lot of it is psycho-
logical,** said sophomore Joe
Mica **We don't play to our
potential unless there's pressure
on us. We get to game point
and we think we can get the
final point by the other teafli
making a mistake. We have to
learn to be intense all the way
through.**
Mica felt that going five
games was beneficial to the
Bruins ""It lets us know whal
kind of ^hapc we're in and it
lets Al Scales know what Pe^
perdine will do in tight situa-
tions in caae we have to meet
them aigain.**
UCLA will no doubt face
Pepperdine again. If both
squads win their retiijaining
conference matches, they will
meet in atliayoff to decide the
loop titlist. The Bruins onfy
hepe the Waves won*t be too
high.
Waves tost lirBnrin unifercurrent
tC onlinued from Pafsr 34)
rare techical foul when Rigg made an obscene
gesture to the referee after he had ruled that a
Rabe serve had hit the hne for a noioit
Pepperdine made one run at the Bruins to
cut the score to 10-6. but Rabe an^ Joe. Mica
combine for two points and Peter Ashky niade
two fine serves for points to give UCLA a 14-7
lead The final point came fittingly on an ace
by Mica as Brum tans came pouring onto the
court to celebrate
-I thought we were in control the match all
•nf the way even though wc lost games two and
four and I think it is very important to the
team that we were able to co;neback after
blowing game four to play so well in game
five.** said Andy Banachowski, UCLA assistant
coach
UCLA began game one like it was going to
"ride the Waves" out of Pauley Pavihon. David
Olbright and Ashley served UCLA to the early
lead, with Sturm Cline and Mike Gottschall
dominating the front row action The Bruins
led 14-5 when it looked as if Pepperdine waa
going to pull another of its **miracle** rallies to
win the game
The Waves got six straight serving points by
Martn Nora to close to 14-1 1. but a Mica spike
stopped the momentum and after a side-out. a
Sturm dink shot gave the serve to Chne. He
made a fine serve and Dodd hit the spike out
for a 15-11 Brum victory.
Game two was tied at 10 when Pepperdine
took advantage of Brum passing and setting
mtsukes to score three straight points and won
IMI
UCLA tell behind 11-6 in game three, hut
fallied thanks to the 4ough serving. of Surni.
Sturm served four straight points to cut the
score to I1-fO. Two outsUnding play by Denny
Cline gave the Bruins the lead at 12-11 forang
a Pepperdine time-out and bringing the first
standing ovation of the season. Pepperdine tied
the match at 13 on a block by Nora and Dodd,
but then Sturm got to serve again.
Sturm's first serve set up a Mica spike Vml.
the second forced Dod4 tO hit a spike out lor
the game
The Bruins lookad hke they would win the
match in four games, jumping to 6-1, 10-5 and
13-8 leads, but Pepperdine is a good come from
behind team Dodd served five straight points,
mainly on Rigg spikes to make it 13-12 aad
after a Sturm spike made it 14-12, Rigg got
four straight serves to send the match to five
games
**We have the tendency to go flat when we
have the big lead and 1 think it is a case of us
just not having the intensity yet to play a full
game.*' said Scates "When the match got tight
^we surted playing well again. As for game four _
it was a case that we ran out of substitutioaa
and couldn't sub in to Map momentum."
Santa Barbara on Wednesday aad San Diego
Slate on Friday are going to be tough oialciHi
to win to tic Pepperdine and the Bruins then
still must defeat Pepperdine for the NCAA
berth, but Scates hkes the poaaibilities.
**At the end of the laaaoa I hke to have it
tough to get the team ready for the Nationals.
We will be up for Sanu Barbara and San
Diego and should if we play well. The team in
tPaabk is Pepperdine, baeauae they have to sit
for almost two weeks,** said Scates.
Students. Staff, and Faculty Are Invited To Celebrate The
Second Seder of Passover
Thursday, April 15th
with HfLLEL
Hiilel M^bart fuii tima students, staff, faculty
ations and mtormation on paaao(#er lunchat and dinnars 474-1531
^ Passover Seminars
HISTORY or TMC KAGGADAH AND NEW HAGQAOAH
RABBI DAVID BERWER
Mon April 12 3rd Floor Ackannan 12 noon & 100 p.rt^.
THE SEDER AS SYMPOSIUM: A STUDY OF THE MtSKMA
I'M GCIDL
HIM
\
Mon April 12- 3rd Floor Ackarrnan 12 noon ^ 1 p m
^Women neftei^ rally over USC, 5-4
ly Gregg L.
DB Sports Reporter
Reeliag from two consecu-
tive singles d^feaii^ the UCLA
women's tennis team rallied
behmd the iSraag play^ ^-oi
Susan Zaro and Jenny Geddes
to nip the use Trojans 3-4,
Saturday at USCs David X
Marks Tennis Stadium
The victory kept the Bruins
undefeated in league play and
all hut clinched a first place
finish for the fenMk netters in
the Southern California Wo-
men Intercollegiate Athletic
Conference (SWI AC) tennis
race. But as the score indicates,
the' victory was in doubt lip to
the fitial doubles match.
The afternoon opend on a
sour note as USCs Barbara
Halquist, who ts currently
playing ai welf as any col-
legiate player in the country
devoured Paula Smith 6-^, 6-2.
Halquist*s serve and return of
serve proved to be 4fa0 much
for Smith to handle and the
freshman from La Jolla never
was in the match.
In the first set in was all
use as Halquist played super-
bly Combining big first serves
wih cnsp volleys, she moved'
the ball from sideline to siiile-
linc, forcing Smith to play a
tunning game, the strategy put
the UCLA woman on the de-
fensive and had her struggling
to hit balls she never could
^uuilc '•farh The rallies were
remarkably abort for a wo-
men's nrutch as Halquist usual-
ly forced Smuh into a hating
error
Smith made a brief come-
back to open the second set by
taking the initial two games
I he lead was short lived, how-
ever, as Halquist swept the
r.ext six games and the match
It was Halquist^s second con-
secutive win over top collegiate
competition as she scored a
three set victory over Tnmty*s
Stephanie Tolleson in her pre-
vious match
In analyzing her losinit ef-
fort. Smith cited a few factors
that damaged her play.
"I was extremely nervous
out there." commented Smith
"All through the match 1 was
thinking about my parents and
friends watching me on TV
And I wanted to make sure I
didn*t do anything stupid *'
The match was the first wo-
men athletic event in Bruin
history to be televised and the
women were naturaUy nervous
Smith did appear unaaaally
tight ftn the court, tempering
aar ftaaiiks and confining her
between pomt^ activities to
shuffling back and forth along
the baseline Nanaally a gre-
garious sort on the coart.
Smith seemed intimidated by
the TV cameras and did not
play with the abandon that
usually characterizes her ^ak.
The fact that this was her first
away match at USC didn't
help
**The home court atfvaalage
was the mam thing", said
Smith "I think playing at our
Sunset ceufts: because the set-
ting is nicer and Pm used to
playing there I think playing
at home really helped the SC
women".
Imteed. the Trojans did ap-
pear much more confident m
they aaiiiF ^cieaiad the UCLA
women in the top three singles
and appeaiad to have the okk
mentum to pull one of the
upsets of the saaaaa.
But. through the magnificent
play of unsung performers
such as Gaylee PoliakofT and
Jenny Geddes. the Bruins bat-
tled back to turn the tide and
chalk up their second league
victory over the Trojans
Mi Geddes played extreme-
ly well as she humbled Robin
Trumwell 6-0. 6-0, in the
singles and combined with
Susan 2^ro to soundly defeat
SCs Halquist and Linda Rene
6-3, 6-4 in the No 2 doiihl»
match It was an all impartant
victory and proved to be the
margin of victory in the match.
"Jenny and Suaan played aa
well today as they have all
yeax", remarked a relieved
Coach Bill Zaima "And Pm
very pleased about how the
girls fought haek after being
down two love It was a
win
The aMtch did prove that
the Bmiar have a airoag
enough team to depaad on the
lower part of their hneup to
pull through even when their
top playeres falter It also
showcased the guttiness of the
women as Zaro played extreme-
ly well on an injured foot and
jRim Nilason came back after a
tough loss to play very strong
in the third doubles
The Brums will meet UC
Irvine Tueday on the Anteaters
home court beginning at 2:30
pm. The match should provide
a breather for the women as
they wdl tangle with the ex-
tremely Ulented Stanford Rob-
ber Rarons FrRhy and it will
•hoavaae some or the^top wo-
men coBegiate tennis players m
the nation
I CLA <5) vm. USC (4)
ffafqukt fUSa df
Pa^la Smith (UCLA) 6-1. 6-2;
Dmne Desfor (USC) df Cindy
Thomas (UCLA) 6-4. 6-3
Gretchen Gah (USC) df Kim
Nilsson (UCLA) ^ 6-3.
Susaa Zaro /UCLA df Mary
Ann Colville (USC) 6-1. ^^; »
Gaylee Polmkoff (UCLA) df r
Leslie Allen (USC) 4^. 7-5. 6- R
0; Jenny Geddes (UCLA df ?
Robin Trumwell (USC) 6-0 6- >
0; 1
Deafor/Gah df . Smith
Thomas 7-6. 6-4, 7-6. Zaro/
Geddes df Halquist/ Linda
Rene 6-3, 6-4; NilMoa/Laune
James df Allen/ Thim well ^¥-3.
^7. 6-1;
I
Intramurals
.
Oflar aaplr6a ApfS It
tennis play
begins today, on the aouth
couns Bring yourself rackets,
and a can of balls at your
Mt^Md liaK aad you*re ready
to go There arc still a few
opening left in all three divi-
siona, ao if you are interested
come imo the IM Office.
'^•a's The last day to sign
up for handball doubles is this
Thursday. Apni i^, to come in
and do it! P;u^..ce times for
men*s water polo are still avail-
able for sign up on Wednes-
day. 3:00 to 6:00.
cepting some vonevball triples
applications Play begins
Tuesday night and there is a
schedule available in MG 118
So come in «nd see when you
are scheduled to play. Wo-
mell*s sflfthali entries .aae due
this Thurskday. April 15. and
play begins Monday. April 19
Coed - Coed volkyhaU play
begins this week so make sure
ycNi know when your team
playi.^ Coad doubles bowlinir
W
We are still
ups are being taken all
thii acck in the IM office
Coed Water polo play will
begin next week
Become a part of
the action. Write
You don't have to pay $95
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Thk tprmf/ summer icaion fashwm calh for the
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Housing (213) 473-
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resume photos
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Optimism reighs as spring foptbafl l>egins
Sy MidMMl
DS Sporu WrilBr
Fiicinf the pfBipBtU of hdv-
ing to frt his tCBOi rcbdy for
what could be the toughett
schedule in UCLA foot^dll
history, firft-ycBT ^lesd coach
Terry Dumb hue begins spring
practice today at 3 pm on
Spaulding FieUl
The Bruins will practice on
Monday* Tuesday, Thursday
and Friday f9r the next five
weeks, with spring drills ch-
maxmg on Ma.y 15 at Drake
Sudium with (he annual intra-
squad scrimmage.
Optimism is the beot word to
charaaenze the attitude of the
UCLA coaching stafT. Dona-
hue returns 14 surters from
last year*s team which upset
previously No I ranked Ohio
State. 23-10 to win the Rose
Bowl and 45 of the 60 players
in umform on New Yearns Day
are back for the 1976 seasoa.
Two mukim pHorttict
There are two mam pri-
orities for spring practice, one
from an offensive standpoint
and the othorfrom a dctcnivc
point cfTvUtm. Offeumvety the
main goal is to find a replace-
ment for All-Amencan quar-
terback John.Sciarra and de-
fensively the mam objective is
to find a node gm^rd cai^ble of
replaetng All- American Cltff
Fra/ier to anchor the line
^^ Heading the list of returnees
for the Bruins is Heisman Tro-
phy candidate Wendell Tyler
With his whole senior year
ahead of him. Tyler is already
the all-tiroe UCLA career rush-
ing kader.
**WeQdcH lyler has a chance
to becoflie a great football
player.** said backficld coach
Bilhc Mathews **He has the
Ability and now it is a case of
Wendell getting the job done **
Having the job of running
the veer bffense will be either
Sciarra's backup quarterback
the pBft two years. Jeff Dank-
worth, or^ sophomore redi^hin
Sieve Svkieh Dankworth will
begin spring ball as the num-
ber one quarterback and the
key to him protecting the job
will be how well he can throw
the ' football m Donahue's
"jnore wide epcn trttacic^ Th»
3Mfon. Bukich is noted for his
passing, so his chance for No
I depends on his running abili-
ty and capahihtics ot executing
the veer attack.
^To the average fan our veer
offense will look the same, but
we will add a few new dimen-
sions and make some adjust-
ments," said^^ Mat hews.
Offensively the main posi-
tions up for grabs are split end
and the running back spot with
Tyler. Jiaa^JirowB hao ihe^ia-
side t rac k at ru nnfn g baclc
— finoe he is a senior, but he will
miss the first week of spriog,
drills due to a tonsillectomy-
Rose Bowl hero Wally Hen- '
ry returns at flanker, with Don .
Pederson and llick> Walker
back at tight end. The line has
fiyc veterans in center M itch
ICahn. guards Keith Lck and
Oreg Taylor and tackles R^>b
Keziriab and Gus Coppens
Dcfciife NialBr emphafk
Donahue' plam. a major em-
(C ontlnudii on Page 2t|
ra?
Small squad produces big results for women tracksters
ly PmI FarW
Di Sportfl Wrildr
Track teams usually arrive at
meeu by the buiload. With a
team the fizr of UCLA*i wo-
men*! track team, a large lU-
tionwagon seems about all
thafi BBBMBary.
the
with lesf than ft dozen compet-
mg athletes But whik the squad
lacks numbefB, there seems to
be BO short^ ai taient. In
their cmb, tht didK '"quality,
not quantity" never had it 30
good.
The Bruin wouhm proved
the point by methodically win-
nmg their third meet of the
year agaanit a fafgle of
athletes from mne conference
schools laat Frdiay afternoon.
In four IDBBIB, UCLA, under
fifH yaar coach Pat Connolly,
had loBt only oiibb, tiMit in a
meet at Redlandf CoKkfe when
injuries and fcntdMf ffBdMoed
the team to. leff than a con^
petitive level.
**No. ive don*t have a lot of
depth this year.** said Con-
nolly. **but the quahty we have
makes up for it.**
Only H0A mmmn
In Friday*! bbbbI. only eight
BruiM fBBBBd points. But the
points they did ioore — 1 14 —
were enough to beat faeaad
place use, which had 93
points, and Cal State LA
(CSLA), which fiiMked tlHPi
with 19.
It ofiglM have been a lot
^ner BMtfgm, too. UCLA was
without top sprinter Evelyn
Ashford, whoae pvIM kmih
stnng mfck will keep her ovt
of cofli^Blfiipa until at
coUeaiatc Women's Athletic
April )§.
Alfo missing were enough
people to run m three of the
four relay raoef. As it turned
out, the sole entrant in the 440
yard relay was winning oae,
with Dtanne Kummcr anchor-
ing the team to its mediocre
49. 1 victory.
Iltoa-Brile
Kummer, junior from
Chicago with an UltrarBrite
smile, WMf kept busy mU iday.
She ran in four different events
and, including heats in the
100 Bttd 200 meters,^ partici-
pated in a total of six events.
In the 100, she finished
fcNtrth in IT .9 behind winnipr
Roflyn Bt^iant. a national and
■Bar world-class sprinter who-^
rmf for (CSCA) In the 200.
Kummer finished second in
24.5 to Cal Sute Northndfe*s
Sandra Howard (23.7). She
picked up another second place
in the long jump with a leap of
l8-4>/^ behind CSLAs Vickie
Betz. who had a wind assifted
winning jump of 19-10. Brum
sprinter Gayle Butler finished a
step behtnd Kummer in both
sprints. Connolly says Kumnrier
win probably concentrate on
the long jump in the season-
ending championship meets
While performance m the
rally fell well short oT
spectacular, the meet's best
iMBrk was an important one to
both the Bruins and the Amer-
ican national team Javelin
thrower Karin Smith's tOs& of
181-2 topped the Olympic
qualifying staadard of 180-5.
making her only the third
Anierican to do so
In fact. Smith had another
throw over the 180-foot mark,
and several more in the late
lliOs She won the event by
more than 40 feet
Ranked tMrd
Though coming oft an injury
to cartilage in ber knee. Smith
figures to make the American
team tor the Montreal
Olympics this summer Cur-
rently, she IS the third ranking
American in the lavelin behind
US record holder and former
Bruin Hathy Schmidt and
Sherry Calvert, an assistant
track coach at USC.
**lf figures to be pretty dofe
for the team.** said Smith
**l think Tm going to have a
lot of competition from two
other people for it "
The freshman from La Jotia
was one of only a Brtitns who
competed in a iinglr event
Almost the entire team
doubled or tripled in different
events, usually with good re-
suhs
DbmMb wim
One such Brum was hurdler
Jan Lester who double wins in
the 100 and 4i0 meter low
hurdles In the latter event, she
barely held off San Diego
State's Susie Niehues to win in
63.5 Her victory in the shorter
race came a little eaaier with
her winning time of 14.3. a full
four tenths of a second to
spare
Freshman distance runner
Kathy ClMaai. who ran her
fourth straight middle diBlMHB,
tared almost as well In the
fimt kaM of her doMMe the
800 meters Chnsaifi fiiualni
SBCMd Ml 2;I4.I to MicMe
HopfMr of CSLA who held os
to win in 2.137 In the I:
Bieters. Chi
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Pavilion fansiielp BruinsTlife Waves
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^v P«u4a Gibson
t^)
By MldMMl
DB Sporti Writer
AnytHMiy who doesn't believe in tlie home
court advantage shoiHd have been in IPauley
Pavilion laat Friday night as UCLA kept its
voHcyball title hopes aiive by beating Pepper-
dine three fames to two brfore an all-time
regular season crowd of 3J0t.
UCtA (8-2) defeated Pepperdine (10^2^ 15-
li; 11-15, 15-13. 14-16 and 15-7 to keep the
Waves from clinching the Souther Cahfornia
Intercollegiate Volleyball Association (SCIVA)
conference t-itle.
UCLA vs. UCSl
Now UCLA and UC Santa Barbara (S-2)
meet on Wednesday night in Pauley Pa vilioa,
with the winner hkely to tie Pepperdine, whicIT
completed its regular WloiW for the loifye
title. UCLA iwa A remaining home match
Friday with San diego State (5-6) and Santa
has a Friday home match with Long
ich State (5-6), but the winner of Wednes-
days ffiatch should force Fepperdinc uHo » one-
match playoff for the conference title and
automatic ^fCAA berth
Friday night was the biggest match of^ the
maon for koth teams and they played that
way. It was the loiiftst match in the history of
Pauley Pavilion, lasting two hours and 4%
nunutes and the spectators got to see outiiiaad;?
ing volleyball.
Conditioning was probably the deciding
factor in the outcome as UCLA middle block-
era Denny Cline and Pom fcabe were playing^
juat as well in game five as game one. but
Pepperdine middle blockers Ted Dodd and
Mark Rigg were not jumping nearly as high at
the end as in game one.
**We were a lot fresher at Che end ot the
Itch, than Pepperdine," said UCLA head
lough time blocking becauae tl|t pepperdmc
players were fresh, but as the match went
on.their players seemed to wear down and
started blocking for poinu **
The Brum fans were -up" for the match and
cheered wildly, throughout There were mo-
ments when the Pepperdine team seemed
rattled because of Ihe crowd and the UCLA
fans were instrumental m a game three coma-
back when the Brums trailed. 11-6
Great ■■thMiiim
'*Our fans had great enthusiasm tonight
(Friday), and really helped us," said Seated
••Our players can hear the crowd yelling on the
court and when the fans are behind the teanu
we seem to play with a little more intninity;'*
~ Pepperdine aiaisunt coach Marv Dvnphy
was not particularly upset by the loss even
though It costs the Wave* the chance to win the
SCIVA out-right **! think weneeded a lots and
I am just happy it didn*t come againet Santa
Barbara,*' said Diinphy. "The loss should mmkM
tier team for the nationals and I expect
• r
before^ extradition hearings
Speaks on injustices
that we will have to play UCLA now for the
NCAA berths
Pepperdine had the psychological edge going
into gave five, because the Waves had rallied
from 13-8 and 14-12 deficits to stun the Bruins
16-14 as freshman Rigg served the final four
points.
At the ilart «f fame five, the Bruin fans
reacted the same way as if an opponent was
threating the lead of the basketball team
cheering as loud as possible
•y i«iMi R. Kn
DB Staff R(
Dennis Banks, the co-founder of ihc Amer-
ican IndiAn Movement (AIM) with Clyde
IciWMirt, gave h« hMt public tpaech before
faah^g-aa- Oregon court which could extradHc
him to South Dakota
During his ipC6ch Dennis Banks told about
some of the injusttom of American history
against IndiaM such as not being a atizen of
the Inited Sutes until 1934. He believes ^that
Indiam have been forced by the system to take
drastic measures
Many Indilin lives have been taken because
of the greed for natural resources. Banks said,
**Everytime the white man discovers something
on Indian lands the laws are rewritten."*^
The Indian people, culture and religion
would go underground if the govenupent tried
to destrov them, according to Banks.
Three
Dennis
three thmifs:
would study the treaties with the Indi
there iiMM be laws enforcing
He
Ri^paaJ of the act m 1934
policy of native AnmriflMM. Bftaha caBtti it
biffsat^ thelt of land from Indians^ He said
this haemiae many poor whites obtained Indian
iMid rights by marrying Indian people
Life story
Banks is bow writing his life story In a booh
entitled Let Thtm Em GrmMs The title is a
reminder of white man injustice against In-
BadJES does not believe that Indian people
are going to return to the old ways he wants
better re^ervatiooi Mid Ihc yrfltrraTiao o<
Indian culture ~ ~~ ^"^
ISm
coach Al Scat«. ^n the beginning fveliad a
Crowd motivation
The Bruins motivated because of the crowd
came out hot in game five jgnd gnbbed an
early 6^ lead on the serving and spiking of
Chne and blocking of cabe and Fred Sturnv:
With the score 7-2. Pcpperdioc was asessed C
., : (C ontinued on Page ^%) ^
to ^o
To make the Bureni of Indian Affairs
independent of the Secretary of Interior
because of conflicts of intereet; There have been
too OMny conflicts with the interior department
bocatisc of natural resources. Banks said
-T^-^EsubJish Congressional committees which
Banks fled a 15-year sentence, baoMMe he feh
his life would be in danger in jail He displayed
an affidavit from a law student which said
Wilham Janklow. the ciirrat^^attorney geneni
of South Dakota, told the law student that the
aaawer to the AIM problem **was to shoot the
leaders.-
B«y chib
The Indiaa leader was conviatcd of having «
billy club which he claims ha^acquired dunng a
(Cootiniiad from Page 9)
Waves not high for Bruins
By Joe Yogent,
DB Sporfs Writer
A young Wave cocJ kissed the game ball as
a megaphone blared cheers. A bugler even tried
playing Charge but he may as well have
sounded Taps. Nothing seemed to work for the
Pepperdine volleyball team on Friday night.
The Waves dropped a five game decision to
UCLA, a lengthy affair that lasted nearly three
hours. The loss dropped Pepperdine into a
viniial first place league tie with the Bruins and
UC Sanu Barbara (UCLA and UCSB play
Wednesday in Pauley Pavilion).
**Tlie pressure got to us,** said senior spiker
Martin Nora trying to explain his team*s
defeat "^We didn*t play wisely and we ended up
playing their game instead of ours.**
Pepperdine had downed Santa Barbara two
nights earlier in a tough match on the Gauchols
court. Nora felt that contest took a toll on the
Waves.
*'We may have been tired from Santa Bar-
bara,** he said. "We had a tough match up
iws didiT! go fuU foree tonight "
Teammate Mark Jtigg. agreed. /'Having two
big games in a row was tough,** he said. **We*re
well coached, so physically we could go five
(Ct>ntinued on Page 30)
Ducks almost quake Bruin spikers
-n-"
By Joe Y<
DB Sports Wrher
Oregon isn't home for seis-
mic tremors but it severly
jolted the UCLA track and
field team Saturday. The Bru-
ins prevailed 82-72 but the
Ducks came very close to end-
ing the Westwood schooTs
dual meet win stnng at 40.
*^lf we could have done a
little better in two or three
events,** explained Oregon
coach Bill Deilinger. **we
would have been in good posi-
tion to beat them.** Deilinger
said those key events were the
hurdles and the high jump.
With James Owens aiid
Grant Niederhaus side-lined
with minor injuries, the Bruin
hurdle ranks were thin But
Phillip Mills filled in nicely for
his more renowned teammates
as he recorded a double win.
He captured the high hurdles
in 14.4 and came hack an hour
later to take the intermediates
in 514
MMi* il ■fpilBii
Despite the success, IdHb
was probably the most
pointed athlete at the meet A
aaiive ot Wcw Zaokad, he!
1
hoping to make his national
Olympic team in the longer
event .
•*! needed a 50.5 to qualify,"
he lamented. **This was my laat
chance because the deadline is
this week. 1 used a faster stride
pattern than usual and I used
too much energy I wasn*t
ready to run that fast today
but I*m pretty annoyed bccatwe
I know I can later in the
season. I tried to get an exten-
sion but they wouldn*t give it
to me.**
Jason Meisler won the high
jump with a best height of 7-0,
a clearance he attained in a
jump-off with Oregoii*s Greg
Fries.
"It s the best f\e jumped all
season,** said Meisler. "I finally
feel like myself out there. It
was the first time Tve been in a
jump^ff and it was a lot of
fun. It helped me concentrate
because I knew I hod to gtf nil
a really good jump to
Sixth
For the sixth
too Willie Banks
wins in the
jumps He won the former
in 53-1 '/4 But he was nearly
disqualified . in the triple
Banks fouled on two of his
three preliminary jumps and
landed oddly on the third Ihe
meet officials ruled it a foul
because Banks hadn't landed
with two feet together - a
violation of the rules.
But after heated protest
from Banks and the D^l A
coaches, the officials checked
the NCAA rule book and
found that a jumper can land
anyway he desires and still
have a legal jump Banks was
allowed to continue.
''The official in the tnple
jump pit was going on AAU
rules,** said another official
Mort Tenner. *'But when he
got the NCAA ruk book out
he discovered he was wrong.
There are a about six dif-
ferences between the two rule
books and it really screws a
kid up**
As expeclad, the Ducks were
particularly Mong in the dis-
thay took firs'
1.50) and
Bruins
Mark I Mm— a aad Boh
..J
4 — '
event in 2^-1% and the latter T
Ducks* feathers.
I uevano took second m the
steeple with a good clocking of
9:03 8. four seconds behind
Gary Barger of Oregon, one of
the better steeplechasers in the
country.
Tm very upset.** said Lue-
vano afterwards "I had him all
the way and I stumhkd on the
socond to last water jurtip I
wai planning to uke him from
there hot he accelerated after 1
tripped
Mentally prepvoi
The Brum junior leit he
wasn*t mentally prepared for
Uie race despite his good phy-
sical condition. Luevano ran
crisply throughout the race
while the virus stricken Barger
look^ clote to death
**He told me that I would
turn rf Id poieed
him early. " I uevano added.
"But I wasn't mcmally into it **
Thomas finished behind
Ducks Greg Taylor and Terry
Williams in the.5.08B with a
time of 14:14.4 It was the first
time TlMunas had run in a
meet since the season opener
against Arizona State
Dave Voorhees of Oregon
recorded impressive finishes mi
the shot put and discus thrtyw.
He won the discus with a best
of 201-8 and wound up
to UCLA's Jim Hied-
hart in the shot with a throw
of 61-3' Both aMKha were
bests for the Dodi
the have
**l*m not sorprnad ft all by
the throws,** naid Deilinger
**He*s been throwing that lar m
practice. Mk ha aaadid this
meet was to get the
"SmT" ^
Daily Bruin
Voluino XCVIIl, Numbor 7
Unlvorglty of CaMBmlB, Lot AngolM
TuMday, AprN 13, 1976
Women scientists say bias still exists _
claim 75 backed with statistics, cases
professors, 11 of whom are women. Out of 31 nontenured professors, ten are
By J
DB Siair Wrtiar
Chemist Tnna Valencich frequently hears statements **from mak colleagues and
tenured facuhy members that *tt must be easier mom to get a job if you're a
-^ /'hroOMMi — look at all the Affirmative Action.* But I know situations and statistics
- -ttmt say that is not true.**
Hf^ed for three years at UCLA. Valencich **had no chance at tenure I was tokj
the depanmem couid not joatify hiring another phpMol Ohemist. They hired two
the next year, but that year they could not ** She shrugged her shoulden. **^I don't
know. I juat don*t koow.**
In a tightening job market and in the aftermath of the puhlictzed push for
Affirmative Action, the opportunities for femak science professors are questioned
by some women professors at this campus.
Aocording to sutistics compiled by Richard Cohen, aeaMlOBt administrative
analyst, three tenured profemors out of a total of 155 tenured professors in the
physical aciences are wooKn. From a non>tenured
workforce of 32, one profesaor is a woman.
The kMK female tenured profesaor in the physics
department, Nina Byers, feels that more women are
iwpondiog to *Hhetr won intellectital interests and
-committing themselves to a career in science.**
'^— ilMough she contends Ihat *'there is nothing sexual
Ohout the work thai -mohai it more suiubk for pne
aex than the ochar,** Byers said that poopie "Mr given
the feeling from their cultural environment that
women are unsuited for
Sitting in her office on the lower level of the Botany Building, Elaine Tohin
conaidered, ''Once yoo gH women on the staff, it*s kind of irreversible You can*t
have the kuid of men^s iNithroom conversation at facuhy mrrtinp — INfl* can*t
say things like, 'We shouldn't hire her hpcaoae shell get iharriod and have
babies**
For a couple of yean, Tohin feels, thaw were extra funds for hinng women
Now« however, **that*s not ihe case. Because of the tight job market, it*s harder
for everyone, and laas people are willing to give preference to women.** she said.
Ementus science professor Mildred Mathias feels that '*not very many positive
things** have happnotf for women scientists.
Commenting that **women have come along in scieaoe slower than in other
fields,*" Mathias feels that overt discnmmation may oocor in some departments.
**lt*s not trve,** Mathuu said firmly, *Hhat wooien who gn imo science are
'guaranteed a job** She
The aeiaaee departments gt UCLA, according to
Byers, are ''lacking** as far as equal represenution of
woflwn are women are coticerned She feeh that many
deportflKnls **do not seem concerned** ahout Affirma-
tive Action. "^''
Croaung one hhm jaaar d leg xnrer the other, Trina
Valencich leafed throtuli a currem edition of C^efir-
istry mmd Engineermg News. She pointed to the >ob
section, commenting, **Yoo tee equal-opponumty-
action eanployers, applicants for women and minori-
are ancouragDd — that*s ponuve.**
Valeaoch scttf aan « problem for wonan out of
luate sdiool. **There are 46 facuhy mmtkun m IIk
chemistry department, with two women. This is the
and of my temporary pnailM. The other wooMn hns
an MA and so is untenurad.**
the situation witn other flKmhen of the department, which **nioally
talking to male professors.** Vakncich was told that the lacnlly wmim the
peaaible. **which is usually not a wofnan.*'
^ With her temporary UCLA position ending in June, Vakncach has expcrienoad
numerous interviews and talked to other women als^. searching \w >oha.
"Sometimes it*s a rknar Ihigg fh^ department had no intention of hinog women
f think women were seriously being conaidaind.^
it B ntit a leiBBgd^pBiirtBir
not consider, however, that ''militancy'* will advi
women sciemists. **! have too many things (to do) to
go out marching and being militant."
In framed glass outside Clara Sai|gD*s office m the
Life Scienom huilding. a oolkction of misaddi
envelopes, including letters for **Dr. Rohert
ipul **Mr. Clara Szego,** is disphiyad.
Szego rnniwi di that she is "so b«ay that l^s«cn*t
had time to look and tee if Tve ever hMl ^t-
ehminated against.** Comadering the importance of
**makiiig a contribution," Ae said that she dOM not
participate in **meetings for awareness and con-
Deacrihing herself as "a member of the human
race,** Saego feeb that it is "taxless to be fiiiiin| like
that. I do not hke haii^ caBid chmrpannn. I am
provoked at the Inm.
"Excited, ovefjoyad, mm aggrosead^ m ner work,
Szego dislikes "tokaniam,** preferring "opan
petition.**
Margaret iUhhtoon, ehnnmn of the ChmMBors
ndmsory committee tm the ilatiis of
dM AdminiBtratia
interest ig hning
qualiliad wonmo if they conid find
•aid. addaig» ^'tliey havent
H£W*s Waliinal Center for
indicatiMt ihnt
la the hk scaenoeL accofdmg To Cfit^
Tcir
".-y-y— there arc
at the 1974 level of 24 pcr^oent. The
raohs of assntant prolmior, iKturer
— overall, women's salaries increased 5 8 per cent
increased 6.3 per onit from 1974 to 1975. The
oontmuad to eacned the average saUnes of wginen at every Mndrmir rank and
at tfti^ -inmimttnnnl it it. "''
115
sixty per cent of men and 42 prr cent of wotnen were tonnrad.
■f'*^
1
-a
<
mi
;3
ypu'tm h—rd tout it. 9—n it on TyjidoMms
tude TMmxprDs — ~r~
3 hour iuiwi from L.A.
unlwH«wibl« •0wtntur« unparatMad •MCttBmtmH
for Information roa^rvatioo. brochura on thtt and othor rHfOit. oaN
ouioco m vm Toum (iis)
■|PBMii*Mtoi
••■MPS* i*»iai»t—
VSO YOO ••
u«c
•skaraMa B«Oa
California Law Institute
at Santo Barbara
Now accepting applicataont for
Summer Session
Starting June 29, 1976
Fall Term-commencing September 7, 1976
Degree proarams leading to LLB or JD Pegrees Gra0uates Qualify for
California Bar Examinations
TRANSFER STUDENTS ACCEPTED
Law School Compu
30;i4 Alomadq Pad?* Sarra
ionto Borbor^Ca 93103
Ph iMOS\ 9*3-1 »47
TRADITIONAL
MUSIC COMPETITION
FrT.. April 16 — IrSBTpm.
SchoenteiB Mali 1200
Prizes for so(o and ^roup vocal, solo and group
instrumental, plus special grand prize
entries taken by: D K. Wilgus
Folklore & Mythology Program
1037 Grad School of Management
UCLA FOLK
rsamrAL
1
^ ^ •
Bicentennial
Music
By UMy Stetc
DB Staff Wrilar
A teriet of eight evening
coeoerts celebrating the Amer-
ican Biototennial compriict the
Contcxaporary Music Festival,
to lie held on caimftis during
April and May. ,-~^~-^
In previous yean, festivals of
the saoK nanie featured works
hy major 20th Century histor-
ical composers, as well as more
recent compositions. For its
third year, professor Henri
Lazarof said, "We decided to
emphasize the internal forces
in the depanment of music,
with its composers, performing
organizations and individual
performers."
Lazarof, the FestivaTs co-
ordinator, also invited per-
formers from other UC cam
puses and neighboring college
and universities — Davis, Ir-
vine, USC^Tal Aru and Oc-^
cidental — to participate.
The resulting schedule of
concerts covers a wide range of
American music: classical,
popular and jazz. The UCLA
Jazz Ensemble initiates the
At...
Festival on April 14, followed
hy the Csrvalcade of American
Popular Music, a variety show
which, m part, honon lyricist
Johnny Mercer. Other UCLA
participants include various
«M1AMM(^I<
faculty
temporary
the
r £i
Performing Artiil^ Umversity
Chorus, Men*s Glee, Madngal
Singers and Symphonic Wind
About 90 per cent of the
works to be perfonnad were
composed within the last five
years, the remainder, by such
eemposers as Copland, Ives
and Barber, within tiK pail 25-
30 years.
The highhghu of the F0it»-
val, Lazarof feels, are the three
conceru, on May 8, May 22
and May 25, featuring VCtA
faculty and student composers,
where a number of choral and
instrumental works will be
pftmiered.
Lazarof conunented that this
years festival was **quite dif-
ficuh to arrange because we
have no other sources, no
other repertoire — Europe, the
Orient — to choose from. lt*s
stnctly American. Also, it's not
an easy thing to t>ring in all
these people — there are a
few hundred involved. lt*s tak-
en a lot of coordinating — we
started planning a year ago —
but it all evolved.**
Parallehng the concerts, the
■uptic department has orga-
nized a senes of six free public
lectures on aapects of Amer-
comings
P*s* ^ current^
^uhy maoiharB.
Harmoa will lecturr
complete the scries on Apnl 2$
ai 8 pm on April 6 in Scho^n-.
berg Hall Link Theater
Detailed -fchedolv for the
Contemporary Music Festival
are available from the music
department ofTice, Schoenbert
2449
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Volum* XCVII)
TuM0iy. AprN m
•chool ymi. mo9pl during AoMMiKt
Bnd amy9 totlowing hoiktmyt. »nd •«-
•minmtton pdrto^ 6r <^ A8UCLA
Lm Angmmt. GMMorvNIi
90024 Com^ngM 1976 t>y lim
ASUCLA CommuniomttonM Bomrd
Afigmima Pomt Officm
Rare Armenian art
in Research Library
A collection of rare Armenian art and nuinuscript wntmg will
be on llisplay this week in the Sp>ecial Collections department of
the University Research Library.
The display will uke pfane at 1 pm on Tuesday. Thursday and
Friday of this week. It will be accompanied by a slide
presenution and a tour if enough pcOpk att^d. There is no
admission charge. . " ^ "" '
The manuscripts date back to the I330*s, and niost were
produced by one of the most important Aiiaeaiaa .iUumBatoa^
Toros Taronatst: ^^— ^ — ^ - — -^-^=_-_^^___ —
**The painting and nianuscripts depict the four goapels of the
Bible in Armenian, and they were made for an Armenian
princely family," according to Dr. Avedis Sanjian, director of the
Armenian Studies program.
**The manuscnpu and iUununations are oade on parchments
(caif skins),** said Sanjian. "Every page of the four gmpcli have
marginal decorations written m gold or bhie ink.**
The UCLA Raiearch Library owns about 11.000 Armmiab-
rehited items, says Gia Aivazian, aitociate librarian in charge of
collection development and cauloguing, **and this collection we
will be displaying is the single moit valuable item the hbrary
owns.**
The manuscripu were given to UCLA by Dr. Caro Owen
Minasuin, a collector in Iran when the University bouaht oart of
his library in 1968 ^^ ^
The dispky is sponsored by the Armenian studies program,
which was eslahiithad in 1969. The program offers courses to
graduate studaalt m Armenian history, t^iigtmy ^inf literature,
studenu in Armenian history, language and literature.
Ere Mand«4
AUo9 aaavt
Paul Hfnoflil
Qsoff Ouinn, ■wiitint
FfMik
u
iiitn» ncKmi poa roiia cowciUts in tovcf mali
iiiil«ai^<<ari— taataSISWtWiaMWI^ tl«.W>iyjl.l<Ji.
r>t.titft'. At u< LA C«n«r«t T .ctiat Offtc* 6&0 W««|w«odf f*tai«
I i ftnmi nil M !■> im <Maiiiii>iaH>laa«y^ii| Liaan;
A||< M%o M\ bos offic* ona hour b«for% paHarmaoct if
.»v.« ., f For info i?^ ?953
University Episcopal
Community
recalling the week the Chri« defnomfrated for all time that "the road
to lK>lir>ess mutt fwcMMrMy paw ttirough the world of action" (D.M,)
TiMid^r, 7. Jg p.n». *'Amohiagia|iiiy and asMfKin"
Grad Hudsiia Hoyslng • CaN 475-1830 for addiaw
WMbasdar • p.m. Com#nunity Eucharist. Chapol
Maufid^r ThMwday 12:05-1230 EucharlM, Ch^al
6 p.m. Fraodoai Sadar. Upper Rodin Eudiariit, 5u|ipar o«
the Lamb. Chaptatn's House call oHice for r«Mfvatfo«i
Good Friday 9 pm Tenebrae, Chapol
Holy SMufday 10:30 p.m. First Samka of EaMcr. tifhring
of the New Fire, party followt.
Easter Day i p.m. Quiet Eucharitt Chapel.
Cnaplam Tetry tynberg,
Q^^ H9OT
(at WWNAnif 475-ia30
1? nnnn
MR MATTRESS
— ~"" cacA
1976
Ir"" »., ^ 3fl1] 7*«a3»(4^t
STATE Of THE AHT
Aia Lirr.
2217
Til. 14 wi %«.iiai
./i^w(viw(rf(vfrffv(vwMfrfr-*rv(<^['/n'i«»ijrrv^r'
ofSciencesiandscaptn
Mj Robert Wi
Dt Siair Wi
A three-month debate over
the fate of the Court of
Sciences ended k«t Thursday
with a decision l^ t|ie Faciliucs
Planning Committee (FPC) to
wpptQ^ controversial schema-
tic plans for Che Court.
The onginal laadacapiog of
the Court (between the loan^
shelter Deli, Life Sciences One.
Parking Lot C and the new
hialeruiar Sciences building)
was leveled dunng construction
of the Molecular Sctcncca
building m 1973. — —
For the hMt thiae months,
FPC has refused to let ap-
proval of the schemauc draw-
inp put forth by Jere Hazlett,
exacutive landscape consultant
to UCLA, be voted on. The
delay and Ihe controversy, has
cantered around two poanlde
plans for relandscaping the
Court of Sciences. < One plan
taUs for more grass, the other
for more concrete.
New fciiliiat
In order to relandscape the
court after completioa of the
arw buildingrrrCLA MiK ask
for approximately $200,000
from the State to pay for
development of the site. For
this to happen, FPC miul
approve a set of schematic
drawinga for the project, show-
ing what the cottrt will look
like alter rdandscaping aiul in-
cluding estimates of the cost
and length of the project.
The original plans submitted
to the FPC by Hazlett would
have hmited the **greenscape**
to trees and islands of grass
surrounded by either benches;
or huihft. Hazlett explained to
FPC at its January 13 meeting
that this design was the most
appropriate, given the dif-
ficulty of maintaining the area
in the past.
However, at that nwrting,
aad for the oe^ two tnonths,
leveral members of FPC
strongly ohyaaad to the plan.
These awBhers were Donald
Ftndley, executive director of
ASUCLA, Martm Nishi, grad-
uate student l>ody president;
aad i indaay Conner, aadar-
graduate student body presi-
dent.
^ ^
Nishi and
maintained that students would
be best served by returmng the
Court of Scienoai to ili pie-
coMtruction laadwapf, rather
than replacing the original
with concrete
spbt in opinion caused
of a criw for FPC.
THE COUNCIL
ON EDUCATIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
(CEDl
to anrK>unca that
CED 109: Revolutiona m
tha Third Work): Myths k
Prospacta. Dr. Qngrard
ChaliarK), Inatructor. taM
ba offarad during tha
Spring Quarter 1976.
Tha first claaa meeting
will ba \\^6 Tuaadey, April
13. from 1:30-3:00 p.m. in
the Men's Gym 201 . Thoea
wiehtng to enroN in this
CiJMe ahould contact the
GEO Office. K5S467. 3121
Murphy Halt for geiiiiiMiuri
tn'^^-nation.
im> j
Unlversitywill ask for $200,000
•<— *-
The committee has almost al-
ways acted as a whole in ap-
proving or rejecting proposed
construcuon and landscaping
protects, or as one nwraber pel
it. **(FPC) has been a rubber-
stamp committee lor the Chan-
oeilor par exceHance" In the
next two meetings of FPC, the
Court of Sciences issue was
lo allow '^further dis-
Before hut Thursday's FPC
flKetmg. the landscaping was
informally discussed among the
involved parties. Meetings were
held between Chancellor
Charles E. Young, the Paln-
niag Office and represenutives
of several graduate student
councils in hopes of reaching «.<
comproimse The Chancellor
also met with the staff of both
the Phinmng Office and the
office of Qimpiis Architecu
aixl Engmeert mvolved in the
protect for the same purpose
I
r
'w iHs ^rfpapv a*
0« «•
**! hai« net with repreiaau-
ttvcs of student govenment,
repfesentatives of the students
involved in the area and fol-
lowing conversations ^t^ith
those groups, with people who
arc either members of this
comnuttee or staff to it aiKl
discussed what, in their pro-
fesstonal judgement, if any, of
the recent proposals could be
OBodified," Young said.
Chihng the saaK week, the
graduate councils of engineer-
ing, health sciences, ' life
sciences and math sciences
passed resolutions supporting
the ^'more grass than concrete**
position. Also, just prior to the
meeting, a petition calhng for a
return of the Court of Sciences
to its original landscaping
gained over 850 signatures.
And. squeaking in ihe night
before, the Student Legislatiye
Council unammously passed a
resolution rsoaaMeending the
same ''more grass than, con-
crete** position of the graduate
councils.
At the mrrtii^ the plan
presented to FPC by Jere Haz-
lett, executive landscape con-
sultant to UCLA aad a mem-
ber oi FPC, did contain more
(Contimicd on Page 4)
WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW
OF SAN DIEGO
1
3
nitwmmttnmimi
school wHh twe
litinpsyou.
win
bs acratfied tor andseiic
round. SHira ciinlcular
2.
4.
Fii|Awii>ibyths
CofiNaltlas of ler
Examinars of fis State
ofCalHornia
qUTMITNBITI
ln2]^or3yrs
KITNENTS
hackorou
actMMS
In 3^'? or 4 yrs
Graduate with a luris doctor
(JD ) digras and oualify Itr
ths Cakfdmii tar EK«r>ination
Mi « cm m CATIilMI
V4.I an BMa. am csa
lattPfSBifMi
iBiihiLfii.ttiai
IT14I
SMrlwMI
FALL SEMESTER STARTS
AUGUST 26. 1976
tfSf'T&V.
.c-
? /f^
>
.C'^
FOOD FAIRE
April 14
Braad for th€ World
'W5rtd Hur>gar Campaign
Knyaaan Dairy
County Agricultural Com
mission \
CaWforrMa Baaf Councii
AJtadana Dairy
Janst Stapt t100-2CW
Stala Fruit/ VagalBaia Quality
Control
UCLA Viitaga Food Co-op
ASUCLA Food Sifvtca
^rawhon Natural Foods
9etitrm«r t Sausaga
and mora
Entertainment Samples
BRIDGING THE GAP
ORIENTATIONS
W*dn«sday.jAprll 14 ThuiMay. April 15
K*rckhoff Hall 400 Ackarman Union 2408
2-4 p.m. 4-€ p.m.
for Panny Lana for Camp Qonzalaa
and S.R.C.C.
Tutor Incarcerated Youths
Sponsored by Student Legislative Couru:il/Community Services Commissior
ji/t f r llt//9 / jtt/4 f'h/tt 0t
BCVCRLY MILLS
.^laa.
"^
- - — " •■ - ^- * '
*5r
V-iWP *
-J
ifEDITATION
PROGRAM
ua
Democratic caucuses held
1r 1i sol required lo ine fkt
iforaM'B 43
tricti a tlie fint
the 2i0
1976
.•»
f
liwiiifad by Mihirifffai Mahesh Yogi
rkl Meefint for Frmcthioiim of
TM Profrmn
Noam^ Thursday, April ]5tb
Act^ennan L'
Caftfomia Gcnrenior Jerry
Brown, fonner Georfia Gov-
cmsH Jimmy Carter. Senator
Henry Jaduoa (WaihmgtoiK
aiyiMMiii Morns UdaU oi
Arizona. Alakaaa^ Governor
George Walteoe. Senator
Frank Church (Idaho) and
former Oklahoma Senator
Fred Hams ichedukd caucuses
m att 45 diftncu. wkilt ami-
abortion candidate Ellen Mc-
the 23rd
Dwtnct Caticia «m tkt ap-
pearance of Jerry Brown's
father, former Govenx>r Ed-
BffvwB. Natav Umi he
known the candidate
kmfer than anyone excefit
Jerry's mother,** the senior
Brown asked the caucus to
send him to New York so **!
can at least fet to see my son a
httie more often than here in
Cahfomia**
-If thcyrr aartaferettFd
moufh to arrive here on time
let tliem mm SMak," hellowad
lima tin
100.
prevaikd,
however, and the two were
allowed to talk.
The ballots were coulvfed
Sunday night, and Pat Brown
topped the list of recom-
mended delegates, which ako
indisded Assembl3faMm How-
ard Berman. Beverly Hills
Councilman Charles Aronberg,
CCLA facuhy member Rudol-
fo Alvarez and UCLA student
I
Every Tuesday N
L
Each congresmpaal distnct is
tour to seven delegates,
will be aaaeded to
in proponMa
to tile vole sHMed in ilmt
diiuict m the Juae I primary
the ■■iiiiir'i smsemide smer-
mg oemmtttee win ciooK its
"otted
iBC ten
by Sunday's cnacaKS, though
oc-
gfier the lest candidate
had spoken and chairman Ber-
■ea wanted to allow two tardy
candidates to speak. The cau-
ct» erupted into angry shouts
that the late-
be denied tiK
tumty to
Of the ten delegates cAecied,
eight were pert of a siMe rep^
resentiqg the esubhiind (al-
though (saendly liberal) Demo-
cratic Party meaikni. Fonx are
attorneys, seven are men and
the one nunonty member
Professor Al
FPC decision . . .
', III I' III II >i» ' —'
bySdM^KlMi
Han, April 15, 1:30 fjm.
UfctlMl
ticfcgfi aaaMMB at
(Continued from Page 3)
^greenscape*' than previous.
However the modili^tion was
limited to the southwestern
comer of the Court of
Sciences. Young indicated he
fully supported the revised
piaa, and added that this was
the jfnost workable compromise
between the professieanl re-
commendations of members of
the staff and those student
groups that had objected to the
original plan.
However, sevciml members
of the graduate councils pre-
viously mentioned voiced the
continued opposition to the
plan. Don Hoit, a member of
the gmdaate Health Sciences
Council, objected that the
modifications to the plan were
not broad enough and left too
much of the origmal plan in*
uct Ybung replied to this,
**We are not going to start all
over agpun. We are here to
not start
For the next hour objections
were raised by different mem-
bers of FPC and repraeau-
tives of the gvMiuate stadim
councils presem. For the most
part, the objections were
answered by either Haziett or
Young.
At one point during the
debate. Young said **I knoar
there are a lot of people who
will not be happy with it (the
modified plan) but we have
spetid enough time and energy^
Oik this.**
The debate' effectively ended
when Martm Nishr, graduate '
student body president, said he
would support the plan if he
could be assured that after its
approval, some modification
would uke place to include
more lawn. Haziett refused to
give any such aseasaaees, and
Yoimg added that Mishits sup-
port *Vouid be what it would
be under Che circumsunoei.*
The voce was uken after this
exchaafi, aad the plan was
approved four to three. Votmg
in the minority were Nishi,
Findky and Nancy Seimon,
voting for Coimer
At the close of the meeting,
n«ial rt^rocQUtives of the
gm^aaii Hadeat councils, exr
pressed their feeling that the
compromise was a good one.
Colette Rudd, chair of the
graduate Biological Sciences
Couaefl, said **! reaOy appre-
ciate your coasaderation; you
have tried to aooaaMdase our
4nterests. Fm not saie what ^^'
elK you could have done (to
the plan).**
r
• ■ ^.
We H aorK) you a tree bODMt! on
if youH saod ua 25C k>r handiif^ and
Seed Growing, P O Bos 2162. Costt
A)»ow 4-6 wks for (ielfiifaf v Offer exc)tras
SaadGrowwig
Adctreasit
CA 92626
31 1976
INSIDE EVERT
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IN TODAY BACK TOMORROW^
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4TS-8566
WILSHIRE WEST PLAZA
10680 WILSHIRE BLVD
WESTWOCX). CALF 90024
Hearst to unilffp
of partAcipAtiQf in an
bank robbery last mootli,
will undergo 90 days of
Cycluatnc observation be-
K Ae is sentenced by U.S.
Oiflthct Court Judge Oliver
J Carter
Charter, boafcvci.
=f
^ «.v
jvompted by Haant's at-
^rn^ F Lee Bailey, was
viawtd as a surprise and
appeared to confuse Heartt
wben It was read to the jaoi-
courtroom.
lenipp-
rarity sentenced the mil-
lionaire heiress to the bhui-
imum 35 years in prison for
the two counu. but said he
intends to reduce that sen-
tence, no matter what the
resuh of the psychiatric stu-
dy IS.
by iaiky's
Albert Johnson, who sat
her m the San Fran-
Fa^eral Buildii^i's Cer-
emonial courtroom
day morning.
Hearst was convicted
Maich 20 oi willingly taking
part in the holdup of a San
Francisco hank branch in
AprH 1974 In returning the
WHiict. the jury refected her
contention that she was un-
willingly fafaad to partict-
paie in the robbery by radi-
cals who kidnapped her
from her Berkeley apart-
ment ten weeks before.
In making the
Carter laid he received ex-
tensive psychiatric reports
filed by Hearst lawyers,
which warranted further stu-
dy aad balaariag by a team
of federal peychiatrisu be-
fore a decatkM on pruon
suy could be handed down
Campus events^
, Tiirt. lasting ap
wm\mmi • mmtm mi mmtm mm
teoHttMs. Mrvitss mH m»mmm 7mi
wMl bt osaiMlii at 10 sip satf I pn.
Wnsnew iw< AyM IS Sign up m wtumm
SI MS 1^^ NlilfSflOS dSSk.
Tsw. el Wt nnsrwieii of
vsv
your
Unicamp coun-
t-tlMris. avtry
Spftt. Wn dsy to^sy
rfw Aokff man lieiia aMPse
NIra s ii^iMiif si
Of call
|0»n OKA as a
unvtttigalof Vitit Karckttotf 311
Voiuntaart ara also
tnviroiMMNllS Sili ^m6 pro
2 pM. AprN 15. mm in
feavflsihy Frta _
art now svaMaaio m Karckhaff mk
Hat « April 22
mj IMtayfeai final two rMular aas-
saa laeMHs m% vs. Saaia aartara. 7 ao
p.. tsaanaar aai vs tan aisfo Stata
7Ji pai. Hm ti. Paalsy PavMian UCLA
fraa with 10 facutty (rat wtth
waaP far tfit Warii,
Coundl Stala fruit /VagalB-^
Contrtl Ertw^an Naiursi Ftais aa«
aditrs. 11 aaihS pm tomorrow Jantt
iy •t ladal
Oaaat ClM». 7Ji pwaagmphi AprH n.
wtnitas wyw Bi. Aayaat mtaratiBd ti
\9^fntn^ or praetlcing toctai or ditct
dancing tt ^
AMI Taai Vsraa it taking
^icationt from i tudvits wtio want to
work Witt) SLC and Hit adnNnistratian on
studanf financial aid praMsaw. ApaMca
tlaas ara availaMt in KardHiaM STfor
iaiaraiaaan caN Oava Patttrion tt 825^
will Pa
taaiag applicationi tor
sararMy. fratarnity
¥ititort 10 aai-
Mardi
1124
aa mt appNcatioa
wfiicti
candidaia aad la
taaw »f7
^ Paaaaapa information aai
tjrtramurai funding tar pfiiaali Studanf
and pssKiUHise art avaitabia m eit
Ftliowslilps aad Attittanttnip Stctiaa.
Marphy 1221
aa afiaalaiton mooting.
7 pai. taaaat. aisiar Ntirary For informa
aon cai fc —
— ^Mv iSPl appiicationt art avaiiaDi«
aaaH^ani a, aaapay 2^24,
as B«N ss
art tvaHaPla
to graduatt ttudtnts tor roaoarch wtie aia
formaity aiaaaoaa Is caPMacy for aoc-
lorai asfraos sad ropitftrtd Appftcattoa
4Confinu^ on Paae 7)
MP m
^ Banks' speech
ISAovie series
starts tonight
Wa^naada/a Film Arch-
Iva piaaentatlon, tfia 1M2
Zapalar ata^Ttno Marlon
Brando, «M ba iia Mrat »n
a aadaa of nolabia INma
ol INa ItMa aetiadulad
for acfoanlr^g Itila aprln0.
Tha mm wli ba hakf at S
Miln MaMU 1409. Ofhar
Waw In iMa aarlaa a^
incUida Otto Pfamlnoaf a
crfnw ItirlNar INfliafa ttia
fidaawiili Eiidar Micfiaal
Oofdon'a "I Can Oat N for
You Wtiolaaale" and
Samual Fullar'e Koraan
War alory ^Raaid ttayo-
(C ontinucd frum Page O
fiibt between the police and some protesters
According to the police, the fight was started by the protesters
However, Banks daims the fight started when an Indian woman
was pushed by the pohce from a flight of stairs
Th< Indian woman, Sarah Bad Heart Bull, was sentenced to
one to three years in jai) for her involvement in the fifte. $|k
was also given 24 hours to find homes for her four younger
children. Banks said in a iLii Genu interview last month Another
son of Sarah. Wesley Bad Heart BulJL was aAkfedly killed by
Darold Schmiu, a wiiite man
Daroid Schmitz was released without icrviat a jatl sentence
because the prosecutor. Habart Gates, claimed there was not
enough evidence to convict him. according to Banks. There were
SIX eyewitnesses to the murder, four of whom were whites, he
said in the March intenvew The actions of Gates which led to
the protest resulted in the fight and jail sentence for Bad Heart
Bull and Banks
Lehman Brightman, founder of the Americaa Indian Studies
Center m Berkeley, was the other speaker last Friday in Dodd
Hall. Brightman said Indians should not celebrate the li*
centennial, because thePe two centuries have been a time' of
lor
CI
(KLK
■CCMTENNIAL
EVENT
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f
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f
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION AS
A PEOPLE'S MOVEMENT
Second in the UCLA BICENTENNIAL LECTURE SERIES
PAGE SMITH
Foraier Provost. Cowell Colleee mn^ Professor of
Histoncsi Studies Emeritus. UC Senta Cruz; Former
af Hialary. UCLA: lecturer, farmer. eMSMr af
Ae e car Upon A NM; DeagHltfs el Sie
4 WeaMfi la Aaierleaa Nlilafy; co-author
(with Charlea Daaiat) The rmckm
<
continues WEDNESDAYS. 8 P M Dodd Hell 147
AprM21 Jl^ POLC.ViosMaslv.CNiraNMCeaiei
TH€ AMERICAN REVOLUTION THROCiGH BRfTlSH
AfTfl Si aOSaWT KELLEY. PipIsssui of History, ix:
T¥^ HtiNDREO YEARSOf THE TWO PARTY SYSTWI
HAS IT EVOLVED ANO WHERE ARE ¥VE?
MsyS
12
RACE, AQE ANO SEX
REVOLUTION
MARY SETH NORTON
UC
Of TH€
No Admission Chargo
^rA^ATJW! r,y '7C^H
THE fffiVOLuuuN A5 A WAR Of
J
I
daiy bojin
t
Letters to the Editor
polnf
J -.;
Penalties
]
J-
A» a humble freshmarf I still,
undarstandingty enough, have
*€fne oi youthful idealism
Therefore, I feel obliged to
poLnt out the trifling, trivial,
tripe which this "newspaper '
prints. A prime example » this
letter. Am i surprifd that ii is
iiere? Hq, U jt only barcly^
surd eruMigh to be printed
' Ever buy a pillow? There was
a tag attached: DO NOT RE-
MOVE UNDER PENALTY OF
LAW. The criminals who openly
defy "law and order" vt the
way that they are due to the
alienation of the degradation of
the conglomeration of the amal-
gamation of dalmations in con-
fragation on education below
their station in the natign, with a
supination in tf»e creation of the
obduration with tf^ constipation
of a generation depraved in de-
privation, re^kied m denigration,
owing to the emigration of
Croat ion subjugation, obsessed
ifHh infatuation of the matura-
tion of sublimation.
HBi r • Rooifl
IWUfor: Hirtory
1*^1
liliX
t>#fpHe all The titillating at-
tributes of the A and the B
observed by Professor Madnnis,
there is more to grades that sex.
J find no erotic pleasure in the
balls of the B when I ^m told by
my prof that I aaually iy^eng^d
"a high B plus." It is FRUS-
— TRATINC »n6 infuriating to get
a flait {and there is nothing sexy
«bayt flatness) B fvhen one has
no grade lower than a B PLUS in
a course and an A minus on the
final. Before my prof thinks I
blame her for the offensive B,
let me say ttiat I tfo not. As she
A ^ told me, 'It is tf>e system "
There are plenty of 4.0 CPAs
walking around that will drop
(alas!) with the institution of
plusses and minuses. The de-
floration of the A hopefully wilt
be an incitement of students to
achieve their "full capacity."
N4oreover. the new system wilt
_ fKowr that the high B plusses.
and even C and D plusses
__ *"^"8 "* «''c achieving rrK>re
than has hitherto bmmn ri
Slavery
A hundred and fifty years
many Southern plantation owfv
ers thought their Black slaves to
be less tfun hunian. t doubt that
any of them considered looking
at the Black man, studying his
biological makeup, to see if he
might be human after all. It was
corwenient. indeed profitable,
f^or them to assume he was not.
in order to justify oppressing
him in slavery.
Now mppote a certain land-
cmnef. ahead of his time, real-
ized that he had been enslaving
human beings. Suppose this
knowledge brought him to free
hit slaves, renumerate them as
for back wages, and continue to
employ them at a good salary if
they so desired.
Are we to believe that these
former slaves are human beings,
while those who still serve other
masters are not? Is a Black man
human of hinriself, or is it some
plantation lord who 4lecidesL-^
' The answer is obvious now; to
thinking men and women it was
obvious a century and a half
ago But men still tried to play
God — they denied other men
their humanity when it served
their purpose to do so.
In the end, it was seen that
the Black man's humanity had to
be the final argument in de-
ciding the slavery issue. The fact
that the plantations would go
bankrupt Without slave labor
could not justify slavery The
condescending platitude that the
poor Blacks would be unable to
ifnd work if they were freed was
seen as hypocrisy. So slavery was
abolished, because the Black
man was human. j
It is with sadneta, more than
rage, that 1 notice men in the
present day once again trying to
play God. I read that "the ques-
tion of when life begins is a
Consideration that each person
must asaeǤ . " (DB 4/5/76)
How can anyone believe this?
We are not talking about the
right or wrong of not going tb
church on Sunday; we are talk-
ing about people! 1^ am asked to
believe that one woman carries
a human being in her womb,
while another woman, only be-
cause of what she believes, car-
ries nothing but a blob of Jelly. I
can never btlNive such a thing—
a person is a person of himself,
and anyone who declares some-
one else to be less than human
n merely spewing oui empty
words.
Why do I believe in the hu-
manity of the unborn child?
Many biological arguments have
appeared in this paper already.
Let me put forth a logical one.
Even the U. S. Supreme Court
thinks it is wrong to kill the
unborn child at, say. eight
months. If we have a human
being at eight months which, I
am sure everyone would agree,
did not exist a year ago, when .
did he arrive? Going backwards
in time, there is very little dif-
ference in the fetus from one
day to the next. Yet we know
we must reach a day when there
is a big difference— the day
when human life began.
The only such time, the only
sudden change, is on the day of
conception, when an organism
which was or^ly half human be-
came completely human.
Sadly, the question of human-
ity seldom enters the piaure
when people argue for abortion
But a woman's "right to choose"
it iXM the issue. Arguing that the
world would be hard on an
unwanted child is hypocrisy. In
the end. the unborn child's
humanity mu^t be the final argu-
ment in deciding the issue of
abortion.
It can be no other way.
DavU U FfMm
Sci
see ihe splru o{ caaada at tiie
^lonual Great Cai^ilian4^
Seal Bmt&fiflSIau^er!
Mjltt OK the £iivbnjiiBiBQt
If A 6xcitln| (snlturBl cvodt you AoiiU scft bIsbTT
Education: is it worth it?
By Dan
(Editor's note: Zellman « a teniw in English
here).
It's spring quarter . again and time for some
malcontent senior to pen the annual opinion
column in the Daily Bruin passionately claiming
that their so-called "educatioin" has not only been
a sham ar%d a travesty, but a waste of time artd
money not to mention perspiration. Before
such a thing happens (and it may have already)
let me remind you all that outside of the cloisters
OPINION
in the Powell stacks and Moore 100, there lies an
educational aspect of UCLA that few of us take
time to seriously examine. Let us pause over our
cheesebaskets and reflect for a moment. Things
like . ,
Coffee outside the Gypsy Wagon a half hour
before a final in a subject with which you are
totally ufftamiliar ar>d finding out that that genius
that sits in the front row is |ust as r>ervous .as you
are; the turkeyfiext door in 412 who played his
stereo so goddamn loud you couldn't think, but
turned out to be a purveyor of sonr>e of the finest
Columbian this side of Bogota and a great
pinochle player once you built up the courage to
kruKrk on his door; the suspense of waiting for
your number to flash on the wall of the reserve
reading room arni the exhilaration of finding out
that one chapter explains the third study question
for the final; the thrill of victory in getting a Lot 8
permit, the agony of defeat as you draw an
annual 31; that guy in Bio IB who made your day
just by gkncing in your general direction; that
Zcllman —
girl in English 120 who shyly asked to borrom
your nolcs^ from you yesterday; finding out that
your capacity for Wild Turkey is not what you
thought it would be and spending a lot of time in
the bushes behind Sigma Nu that night; talking
for two hours about Keats to a professor who
called you by name, offered you a cup of coffee
arid turned out to be one hell of a nice guy once
you decided to crash his office hours; the
professors who weren't so wonderful; that
phenomenal guitar player in R€>yce Quad lift
quarter who showed up this quarter as a TA In
Engine^ng 10; those surly Students' Store
employed you met at a party laft year and found
out weren't so surly after all; your first night away
from hon>e in Sprout ilacping buck naked astride
Sonne total stranger; your first apartment calamity;
your first 20 page paper on sharecroppers and
typing that last footnote a full t^ree hours before
it was due; the shock of getting a C in Jazz; dorm
parties; Greeks you loved and Greeks you hated;
that crazy hut you didn t know from Adam who
threw his amis around you in Pasadena last New
Year's Day rmd on and on ,_.
UCLA has irnieed taught me more tTian poetry,
political theory aryd Pt ^ ^nore than Spanish apBT
Spinoza. It has taught me to deal with people
compassionate bureaucrats and violent
humanists, grumbling TAs and mu(nbling guest
lecturers, crooked bridge players and loving
friends. As another graduating senior with nebu-
lous career objectives (as my father puts it) and a
well-rounded personality (as my mother puts it)
and a worthless shit piece o* paper (as my room-
mate puts it) I, one U 941 94 600 can hardly wait
to try my hand outside the Ivy. ,
Repairs: A right, not a privilege
(Editor's note: Hornaday is an
assistant dean of students here.
This information was compiled
by the Housing office on cam-
pus).
The first thing to do when ym^
have a significant problem with
OPINION
rental property is to report it to
your landlord. A landlord has a
statutory duty to provide a ha-
bftal dwelling which indudet:
1) Effecth^ protection against
the elements;
2) Plumbing facilities which
function properly, indudir^ hot
and coid running walei and
3) Working htating facilities;
4) Properly maintained electri-
cal wiring;
5) Sanitary building and
By Bill Hornaday
grounds, free from debrs. fHih,
rodents, cockroach«^ etc;
6) Adequate gwrht^L recepti-
cles;
7) Floors, suin^rays arxi railinp
in good repair.
These obligations however do
not necessarily apply where thf
tenant has r>egligently cMgd
the untenantable condition
While the landlord may want to,
and in some cmm have to, re^
pair the condition, the tenant
may be charged with the
of the repair.
The lining has ^
time to correct any of these
deficiencies. A rmmamMe time
may differ depending on the
problem. The \am presumes 30
days to be a reasonable tin^e to
make repairs, but for some
PJ25**"* (eg . an o^mdkmmg
iSMt) a reasonable time to re-
pair may be one or two
For your protection, you should
make all complaints in writing
and keep a copy for your re-
cords.
AkKough preferable, a polite
iplfiNMch does not always work.
Here are some alternatives that
may be available to you:
1} Withhold the rent;
2) Seek help from the kxal
authorities;
l^cpair the problem and d^
dua it from your rent;
4) Sti|f and mntk»re'
^Move out.
vcfore deciding on which
remedy may be appioMt to
your situation, you should sit
down and think about what you
are getting yourself into
^All Imscs and rental agree-
ments indude "an implied war-
ranty of habitability." if the
Undiord violates this obligation,
(Cnidii III— Rr?)
iiimii M
More letters to the Bruin
-..J- ,. Tt
Bniinwear
^Editor's note; This is an
htter to the business
the sti#dan( Moroji
I am writing to call to your
mention a moil stupid, absurd
and frustrating policy you have
in the studont^Sore. Recently,
my girlfriend and mMolf t»M to
purchase a girl's T-shirt from the
Bruinwear soction of your store.
I was informed that I could not
purchase a T-shirt in the Bruin-
wear Section witfH>ut an em-
blem fmbossad onto thie shirt.
There were other shirts ii\ the
store which could be purchased
without emblems, but the plain
_lhMt i wanted was in this Brum-
wmr soction Since all the shirts
In the Bruinwear section are
plam to begin with,.! tried to
fanii out why I could not pur-
ciiMO one plain without having
to have a damn decal branded
into it. I loW the salasporson I
was quite happy to pay for the
OMt ci the amblcm and r>ot
have the decal put onto the
shirt. The salnperson said this
was impgiiiblL and that all shirts
in the se<ttion had to leave the
Upre adulterated by a decal. I
aikcd the girl if she knew why
this stupid rule existed, but she
^*|j*^ y^ aatmmm hy referiog
me Ib^he manatar ol the Bruin-
waar section. I asked the man-
ager of the Bruinwear section
why the stor^ had such a strange
code whan selling shirts She
1^^ «♦«« it was the policy set
by the store busir>ess manafar. I
aakmd^ hm whm% I could find
^^^^^^"^^i^ ^H^MaHer ano *ne
told mm, **You won't be able to
him as he's having busi
^ • MM ^
do you hold your bus-
•wng*, on the #th fiole
of the Riviera Golf Club?
Why can't you sell shirts with-
out branding screwball decals
onto them? Are you afraid of
competition?
I am aho sending a copy of
this lener to the Daily Brum and
*J^^J^P«ng a copy for myself If
^f^^re Is no sotid action dis-
played, I will contact the student
'^^^ service and go from there.
More housinjg info
s events •
at any IMS iuhag te
lUrcktioff am. BsailMw 9 May 7 or caM
J January aai July forms an in ga
Basaaith t^swmmas la lis AcaaMaic
Ssnatf EMtcutivf Offlct. MurpHy 3125
MMi Mvas wAl hslp you find hmtam
Jirjjw itfoas Opon iaHy 9 aiiM pn.
•vaiiaMt Otadlmt is April 3D. piek ap
•ppiicitioy at Acktreian information
aatk, MiSlMV 3M and fioutmg astocia-
ry-jaa BaimaaaL ■ Caoch film witti Frooch
•yyts only will loshown aftor an
'•'"••Ijisa ly ifco atnaaai. Jan Kaiv. S
P"*! wasv, woaitt taM rfos
-•>■ apife. tftrodod ty Elia Kazan ana
ttarring Marlon Braatfo mm feo sHowfi 5
pm. tomorrow. MMMCl MM Frot
you ma^ have the r^ght to
hold your rent However, the
l^odbrd's breach must be "ma-
terial." UMortunaioly, the law
has hot daAnod what ' material"
mearn. The seriousness of the
dataci and the length of time it
haspersisted are relevant to
dacmng H die broach is ma-
terial
For example, there/is a lot of
difference between a loHet that
does not function and a few ants
which came in during a rain
Remember, you must give the
landlord a sufficient amount of
time to repair the defect before
you consider this remedy.
State and local housing codes
are usually enforced by the De-
-partment oi Building ar%d Safoi^
Violations which create serious
health h4^ards can be rafeiied
to your local Health Department
Additionally, certain deficiencies
may constitute a fire hazard
(e.g., trash uruler stairs) If so,
violations may be enforced by
the local Fire Department
r Where the landlord refuses to
repair deficienaes in basic ha-
Vftabrhry fsee fn^st paragraph)
mm avaiiaMo tor a .„,
UC StuiofN LoMy m
.1717 JO NioaMi MogiPMoaM incluili ••.,«
a rocoet UC qra^uaf and intorost in
•^' " iamm ^lek up ippatailDii m
-*4aip lolM. WIN pofom Lindi WtiMi
■ml Jaa tumiii,!, siagars aaS gviiBniS.
>7 am. Mmmtmm Coop Fros
tne ilfhl Ii)
repair the problem youTMif md
deduct it from your rim. Un-
fortunaioly, the deduction can-
not be for more than one
month's rent and you can only
use this rentedy once a year
The above ramodias should be
given much thought before be-
ing put imo action Putting pres-
sure on your landlord could
easily force you into a long,
personal and troubleieaaa con-
flia The landlofd may try to
evict you as a troublemaker
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>..<M
SPIRIT SQUAD TRYOUTS
Dance Team • Mascots
Cheerleaders
Oogtnning Monday. ApcM 5.
may ba pickad up at tha
p9o§nt9m and Acthrfllat Omoa
1S1 Kardchofr H^ S2S-7041
Application dosdiirw is Tuosday. April 20 at 4 00 pm
a must ba on file at CPAO 161 KercMhoff HsS
CliOitiilitj for perticipation m
sptrit-SMppert aattainas is ss follows
1 Any regularly onrollod students -- graduate or under-
graduate ~ IS genorslly eligible to participate
2 individual participants must be regularly enrolled, and in
good standing — acadamicsl^y and administratively — during
tt>e period of try-outs mni participation if isisctad
3 Individuals are ineligible to participate on tha some SQuad for
morf than two acsdswic years
4 Participants should have no permawewl heelth prot>lem
wtiich would inhibit tt>e performance of tf>e fur^tions irwolved
5 Psrticipanis must be capabte of meeting the time
inhOfnt m m^ twhnwmmu ^ttt^nui rnmaowaet.on
Actor Gloncarlo Gionnini: the eyes have it
My T<iiiy Peyser
-I do characters f^ich are very different from one another but
very different from myself I think the characters I'm offered
are more interesting in themselves than 1 can ever be,"
He was smoking eucalyptus cigarettes as he slouched on s sofa
St the Beverly Wilshirc Hotel He was westing a bnght green
jacket, light brown pants and dark giaiscs, the latter which
preserved his anonymity For a moment, he could have been
sayiw. Then, he took off his glasses. .
He was Instantly transformed. This~i^f6t, Cohttncnfal
Anybody suddenly became the Italian Everyman: the passionate
but poiitically confused Mimi from the Seaoctioa of Mini; the
fiery, would-be anarchist from Love and Aaerchy; the aggressive
veiss of the proleuhat m Swept Away and the time
gangster Pasqualino who survives wars, prisons, mental
institutions and concentration camps in the recently released
Seven Beauties. He is the most electrifying lulian actor of his
generst^m and star of roost of director Lit»a Wcrtmullcr^
fUnn, Oiancsrlo Gisnniiit ■'^"] ^7^ ^^ -b7_
Gisnnini, who has received Isvtili prstse for hii work m Seven
BsoMlte, siso surred in Luchino Visconti*s last fihn, LTnaocfte,
which will he entered in the upcoming Cannes Film Festival.
However, Gianmm is anxious to test himself in other areas
besides acting. With Wertmuller writing and directing her next
four movies for Warner Brothers, Giannini will produce with an
option^ to act. In addition, he has plans to direct. t
At 33, Giannini already has a stunning list of credits and his
future possibihties, appear boundless.
Born in the small town of Spezia, he moved to Naples at 10
and to Rome at 20 to attend the university. **! was a student of
electronics aiut while waiting for a job to come through m Brazil,
I enrolled in the dramatic academy in Rome. For the fun of it.**
On entering, Gianmni landed the title role in RoMeo and Joiftct
#nd toured in the play for 3 years throughout Europe. '*I worked
in the theater for 9 years,** Giannini said (speaking through an
interpreter), **and I would like to do other plays but I now prefer
worktng^^ m movies. Film is a very young medium and it is a
different kiiKJ of acting with very different demands."
After completing his tour with ReoMO sai JiiliSt, Giannini
acted in T#o Plus Two No Longer Makes Foer written hy Lma
Wertmuller They got along very well and decided to do a movie
tofether Although they both had worked on other films, it eies
his first starring role and her first major directorial suOBSSS. The
movie was The Seduction of Muni.
*The story was set in Sicily and I started out by realizing that I
knew aheolutely nothing about Sicily or Sicilians. So, I went toj
Sicily with a movie camera and tape recorder and studied how
the people talked, looked and moved. I begin becoming my
^i begin becoming my characters with e«-
temala. Once tlie oytside of a character is
constructed, you can go inside and give him a
souL^
••■^
J
bay
^€itmm imk.
With externals. Once the ouuide of s character is
constructed, you can go inside and give him a soul**
When Giannini later performed in Love sad Anarchy, he
recalled how he approached that assignment in a different
fMhion -! wanted the anarchist to look completely different
from Mimi, so I changed his outside completely 1 tried to hide
myself under a mask of freckles and a beard and even a changed
complexion. I put four pounds of lead m my shoes to make it
rd for me to^ walk, to make me walk like the dHwsctcr 1 was
1t^ asy TO change your thoughts In Trnit of a eehieri;
hut your own movements arc harder to alter Since the- people I
>play need not move like I do, I prefer to give them new
moven^enis."
Gianmni regards the character Pasquahno in Seven Bianiiss as
one of his most difficuh roles. ''There's always a point in every
story which I call the dramatic knot, the scene or moment where
the essence of the character is revealed Pasoualino*s decision to
seduce the concentration camp commandant was the key for me.
It was in le^pa «^T*^>*'ng gmtrsgiirly iemimae an^ coaijqUjn j
dealhlv situaiion.** —
Giatmtni sfs^ shout how the men he pisys ii kassd on an
aemal person. ''We (Una and I) met him when we working on
Love sad Aaerchy One day he just started tsttuag sad ktt wound
up telling his whole life story. It was absolutely fsaiastk If we
had shown everything that happened in his life, the story would
have been completely unbelievable.**
The real Pasquahno ulked with Guinnini extensively about his
life and was on the set every day of shooting. "We wanted to give
him a special credit at the end of the film but he didn*t want it.
This was understandable considenng hil Mafia connections and
the movie being such an unveihng of his life. Before the film
opened in Italy, he disappeared As far as I know now, he is
still living in Naples with hts 10 children and a an extra in
movies.**
Guinnini spoke about some of the general motivating forces
behind the n^aking of Seven leeaJias: "In Italy, many things are
still trying to be understood about the war and this is one of the
reasons we did. the movie Our films never propose Jo chanfc,
they pose probletns, they pyt you a situation to be analyzed
With the complex political problems in luly and around the
world today, all we are doing is trymg to expose some of the
dangers.**
The title of his latest film applies to the nmgic and charms his
character poMMaics J^hich give him unusual success with women
As for Gisncsrto Giannini*s overall achievemenu as an actor and
a building producer-director, one can tell that he, too, has the
Seven
On Campus On Campus On Campus On Campus On Campus
This week
Today at noon in Schoenberg Hall, winners of the 1976 Gladys
Turk Foundation vocal awards will sing in a free concert* Liss
Tureuky, Andrew Adams, Bennett Hirsch and Chris Nichols in
the clanacsl division, and Amy Grove and Lauren Mitchell in
popular. Between them, they have collected a few thousand
dollars from good old Gladys. Awards concerts tend to fill up
rapidly, so getting there early might pay.
Today at 3:30 in Royce 154, Georfss Borchardt, heed of a
New York literary agency, will give a lecture about the role of
the literary agent. Admission is free.
^^ko free is historian Page Smith*s lecture in Royoe Hall
tomorrow night at 8 pm. Smith will examine **The American
Revolution as a People*s Movetnent.** looking at it from the
bottom up as a pheiKMasaon of the streets rather than the
legislative chamlm.
The long-awaited graffiti exhibit will be in the Kerckhoff Hall
Lounge Wedassday, Thursday, and Friday Friday begins the
UCLA Folk Festival, with concerts, lectures and workshops,
among other tliags. More about both events later tha
Two exhibits in the Frederick S. Wight Gallery of Dickson Art
Center will run through May. **Bird8, Bsasis, RIosMai
Bads: the Nsture of Jspsn,** consists of rare scrseas, ceramics.
eaaaHii aad other yaditional Japanese foraa. The other exhibit
is by grsduate and undergraduate students who are not
caadidaiss for d^gssss this year.
The gstlery is open Tuesday through Sunday, 1 1 am to 5 pm
dero himself. Each work re-
vealed a different facet of Es-
cudero*s compositional abihties
— lyrical melodic bnes, wide
skips in range, use of con-
trasting rhytfaais, gypsy
ihemes, aad a broad angk of
percussive devices,
£acudero*s skills are equally
diverse. From Manuel Ser-
rappi*s **Recaerdo a Seville* to
ha own Hieditacion,** Eseu-
dero exhibited tight control.
lush dynamics, sensitivity with
tone color, and sweeping im-
provisational melody lines.
. A few of Escudero*8 more
ardent admirers might have
held their applatiae until Es-
cudero had the cluuKe to fimsh
each of the pieces he was per-
forming. Althoagh without
doubt Escudero deserves a
warm reception, it was nonthe-
less quite a distraction.
-Mary
Phillipe
Entremont
Pamela
Scanlon
Pianist Philippe Entremont
took command of the Royce
Hall stage Saturday siMa«d
with the iensitivity and^energp
required for tasteful interpre-
Utions Mozart, Chopm
Ravel
a better
rapport with his instrument
than Ivith hi^ audience,
est a vil
ty, he m nonetheless a
superb flsiararo guiterat.
His Friday recital in Royce
Hall was comprised ef
nineteen works in a
than four minutes long, and all
but four ooanposed by
Entremont begsn with
Mozart*s SoneU in A major,
1C.331 He laeintained the lih-
ing style typical of Moiart by
keeping the melody flowing
and the undeHyii
marked but
Senior reauls are rare on
this campus, which is a shame.
Within a few years they will be
common events, which is good.
Sunday night in Schoenberg
Hall Little Theater, sapmae
Psmels Scaaiea Mastralsd
most of the virtues of the
leciul s
In Chopin's Bettsde No 4 in
F minor. Opus 52 and Sonau
in B-Ant minor, Opas 35, Ea-
tremoai had a few dilficultim
liiiy>^iii»g the tempo sad dy-
Llisagri hut overall be
s good resding of the
rbcally
She mng songs ia lour
languages, (at least two of
which were French) and sf
the MfB with flutist Si
WatiiiV in Moiart*s ''L*!
saro
Barbara Goorevitch in Ralph
Vaug^a Wilhaaw* settam of
some of Blake's Sai^ of la-
ead Experieaee. Both
RavcJ*s •*Sonatine" turned
oat to be the higUiibt etf the
pfWgpsOi. Entrefnofrt*s
was expieisiwg;^ cbA .
foraMT in perpetual ssaiiaa.
His pcrformema of RsveTs
'^Gsspsrd de U Nuit,** was
efaatty effective Enireamat's
tiae of the varied ilj ■■■■"'
tempo and tone colors of tha
extent his mastery of Ravel.
Headon.
Scaalea's eaiaretura voice
was precise end expressive
with s very few aoiahk ex-
Her
m with
very rapid bows,-eatnamm and
exits. She got considersbly
aMae pssMaahk ss the evening
apase oa ~ aad sa^g to better
efiect. Having the balk of s
recit#l behind yea caa >e sn
enin^ening expensBR^
Alpha Lambda Delta
—7"— Meeting - ^ --
for planning of spring quarter activitiea
Refreshments will be served
Thursday, April 15 3:30 pfn AU 3564
(go through Wonien's Lour>Qa and then to rights
I
BBQ
This is fhe p/dce for Rib lovers/
By for the Best Ribs we Ve frimd in LA
H«rald EKAmtner
COMPLETE DINNERS
$2.75
from
I Casual Dining
\ HARRY'S OPm MTVM
I 1434 N CtESCENT HilOHTS at SUNSET STtIf
I 10 Minutes Down Sunset Blvd to
^k Laurel Conyon Turn Right And Vqu re There
I
Ii
Population
Institute ^
Intern
Program
Action >studygrsnu for coHege Students m stsis poputation/
eovtronment prohtems
Orientation maaang Tubs AprM 13
Noon — At EXPO — A213 Ackerman - 825-0a31
TUNE-UP, LUBE & OIL ViAK
COMPLmW/farH ^ "^
Wis
A-1 AUTO SERVICER.
79S7 VAN NUYS BLVD. oo^ 7*7^
OTY r^^m.m»mM 074-/0/1
t
~H#nry Vhm Eighth wn« tutor <tudory,
Why not be one, tool
The Chicano Youth Barrio Project is rrow
accepting applications for volunteera that are
willing to tutor in the Venice area. Tutoring is
done in the elenr>entary and high school level,
and tranaportation ia available, if needed
If you are interested in signing up, \etiy not
come to our orientation meeting. Tuesday,
April 13th at 3:00 in Kerckhoff 400. or stop
by at Kerckhoff 406. You can eleo call Carl or
Manuel at-«25-2389 for more information.
CouncH
I
t
ICST SrUO READING
rilOCRAM
. riK ff r AtM flirt 1
Hit kM
tk€ Amnmi tiMiiBli 9l UCLA
AoMriii^ to G«ry HmM rvali
IM READS profn* wtM te olf«r«<l
tion were tiM
mt pMiMiti The evslustioM
on 12 0Mmntlive quarten
ml R.E.A.OS dMM* ImM tor LCLA
gtm^mm. A unmnv (csiiue ai Um
READS «Mfw»«
aMo«ri«i aniMMi lo be
I fiMk
For (urtllcr information on Spring
Quarter clnaae*. contact R EA D.S..
6l3,Nevaaa. SauMlito. CA JM%^ »r««op
at the tabk in the Uiident store
Temporary, Fart-TlfiM Work
AftUCLA
flfMn
• 10 h«y
•jq>«f»«non h«tpfu< bul not nnrniMii
• PM or fill out AppliCAtiOfvin lUeohlioM Att
a?
FV#|r
OAKLEY'S*
Men's Haircutting
at its best
Long & Short Styles
AppOMIMMfltS
2R tnei on 3424S
lOtI Gteyl#y
(across WsstWood Thsalsr)
I
''
in s cls¥tr and originai tl«-ln
Amsficsn atcantannial
ASUCLA prvtantt
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND:
"•[.l^.'erf
YOUR MONEY
Gel 11^0 back of all you buy in tha .
Studartts' Stores in Ackarman and the
Med Center t>etween March 1Q
and April 30,
here s how
1. Save your receipts from all purchases.
2. Mid-April, pick up a rademption envelope from either Store.
3. Between May 1-8, return it with receipts.
4. You'll get a check for 11% of all your purchaa^ r-
including tax ^ in the mail
Tliaiiias Tnf ousn ^o#lfy
Jew9 have been writing poetry for
thousands of years — |uat looit at
the bibte Hetoreyttt poetry is the
basis for rhymed poetry as we
know it today This long tradittof)
has been kept al»ve in the 20th
century by poets sucy as Paul
Celan. AM Klein. Nelly Sachs, to
nmme just a law We shall look
together at Hebrew, german. and
Yiddish poaoM (in translation and
in the original) and see how the
poets dealt with different Jewish
thamaa such as tfie holocauat.
liturgy, and |oy Ledby FraSMpIn
snd frieruja Mondays. 7 30-9 p.m
MONDAY
Nusach is tfie Jewish musical art
of davening (prayir>g-chanting).
Students will learn the widely
diversified melodies of Jewish
ritual Hebrew reading kr>owledge
and an irrapraaaible urge to aa-
laaH^bcally are recom-
Led by Jay Hayman.
Masts Mondays, 730 p rn
This quaflar wa are continuing
our aat Midraah on campus Both
claaaaa will be held simultanaoua-
ly in Mayarhoff Pant Mondays.
12-1 p.m wHh the Talmud cIsm
from 1-2.
and calligrapher He will t>e teach-
ing both beginning and advanced
HaSMw calligraphy, so come and
laam how ttie iortiai do it Meets
Tuaadays. 7:30-9 p.m
MpatfHBaDn to Judalaai
A course for thoee intereetad in
learning tt>e nature, hiatory. and
pfsctica of Jawiah holidays and
life-cycle cafSfson^aa. ¥1^ shall
pian group oaiifcistiuin of thaaa
awsfila, aa we oonsldar their thao>
logical implications Lad by
David iarnar and Chaim SsMlar-
fe»lm. Directors of UCLA HiNal
and Gary QraanaSsum. Rabbinic
Intern at UCLA Hlllal Meets
Tueedays. 5 45-7 p.m.
It was the faith of our fuia^mi
tttat sustained ttiam,— btft wtiat
can we flr>d in Judaism to add
value and meening to our llvas
today? A creative, not a radical,
departure in saarch of Jewish
faith with rataranoa to. bat not
Taknud.
of liturgy and phMoaophy The
course will t>e eclactic yet di-
rected, woft(ir>g rnyt so much for
answers as avenues of inquiry
incliidad: Can Qod be daflnad?
Reiig«oua aapsil
•ring prayer: Grayer ar>d
tation: and Faith as a comstsiNy:
Sustenar>oe or asM-daluaton? Lad
Qary Qraswsbsum. fourth year
rsbbintc student at HUC. and
rsbbinic intam eX UCLA HNM.
.7:
The weekly Torah portion will be
■iMdiSi in depth with Rabbi David
Bamar For k>eginners aa wall aa
those who have previously
atSla. Texts will bsSsSi m
— -* ^— — Ai-«-
ana Bngnan.
Tractate KldduaNn. An anamina-
tion of TalmuSIc taata dasMng
with marriaga. Taali wNI ba pro-
<nded EngMah. HiSfsw and Ara-
fiislc. Lad by- Rsbbi Chawn
^^atasaof you wtK> can already
speak Hebrew, here la Siaspplsp-
tunity to uaa It in an informal
settif>g You also may leem some
new wordil Led by M«mi Aah
Tuaadays 5:45-7 15 p.m
Continuing our study of the status
of the woman in tridlSuiial Ju-
thla Quarier we witf analyM
lar
ia
artist
aa study in
of inan and women) ,
snd counting s woman for a m4n-
yan In dealing with thees q%me-
tiona. we will sttempt to under-
stand what mbtivaiad Itia rabble to
formulate their decisions and will
tp search for
m
Waters goes wild
» m. ^ ^ t
• ••• •#••<
Loose batmen take two
from Nevada Las Vegas
ly Msffc
'In sports, a winiunf tesin is s loose tcsm. This
UCLA bssrbsU squad has been a winner — sad it hss
been loose.
Whik the Bniim do not 'rag* their oppoaaals much ftesd
cosch Gsry Adams frowns on it. for the most part) they seem to
delight in picking on esch other all the tioie.
Whether it*s on a bvs, ia a resuurant or on the field, the
Brums are always trying to stick a barb in one of their
tesmmstcs. Last weeksad in Lss Vefss, the favonte urfct was
third bsssBMui Jerry Wsters.
Every time Waters collected a hit, he collected ten times as
SMtiy insulu — and Saturday afternoon he wsa irven-for-mne in
the Bnuns* doubkhesder sweep of the University of Nevsds, Lss
Vegas, 8-6 aai:„i3^. The Jlebels was 4-3 in ten innisp oa
Fridsy n%hc.
In Saturday*! firsl fsaae. Waters was a perfect five-for-five snd
rsoeived more abuse than if he had gone »ro-for-five. Three
times he doubled, prompting a tram mate to tell him to mix is s
single oooe in a while.
In the second game he added two more hits, including a triple.
That day he drove in three runs snd scored five times.
in that second guae, the Bruins set a new school record for
•lolen bases in a season. By stealing four bases in the first inning
(two double steals), the Bruins ran their toCsl to S2, bfcskiag the
standard of 80 set in 1969.
That game slMri>rovided more |iroof Ahst Ed Cowsn, Isat
sesson*s AJl-Lesgue pitcher who hss been bothered by s soiv
srm, is resdy for lesgue competition.
Cowsn sllowed seven hits while wslkiag |vit one sad striking
out eight rebels. With a stsif of Time 074eill, -who lost his Hnt
")SflBe of the sesson Fridsy night in relief, Steve Bisachi, sad
Cowsn, the Bruins would be in good shspe for the fecoad hslf «{.
their Irsgyr sesson.
lt*s s lot essier to be IcKMe when you*re on top of your lesgue
sad UCLA is currently tied for first place in the CIBA with
use. Both teams are 8-4 Stanford (5-4) moved ahead of
Cshfomia (5-6) for third place last weekend by sweeping a three-
asme §cnes from UC Sanu Barbara (1-9).
To show just how loose the Bruins are, they itspid the first
.jmnuisl Bruin LeMans Saturday night in Circus Circus. Adsms
arranged for the UCLA team to nde the bumber cars for two
consecutive turns, and the players alternated crashing into each
other and. ganging up on the head cosch.
The LeMans was something Adams* tesais st UC Irvme did
when they pisyed Las Vegas, and the head cosch hopes to hold it
esch time his UCLA tesm visits the Rebels.
Tonight, the Bruins will travel to Cal Suie Los Angeles for a 7
pm game agsioat the PisMos. Tomorrow they host Southern
Cslifomia College at 2:30 pm on Sawtelle Field before returmi^
to leagufc action Fnday against UC Sanu Barbara.
CONTACT LENSES
FiTTEO _
REFITTED
Westwood Village
DR. ALFRED R. BECKER
Optometrist
10959 Weyburn Ave
ADJUSTED
POLISHED
GR9-?111
fives within tf>e tradition itaelf Led
by Rabbi Chaim Seidler-feller.
Co-director. UCLA HMIel Meets
Tuaasaya. 7:30-0 p m
At laaat 70 Intarpwiatlons exist
the Rabbis inform us. for every
varae of the Able Thia imawMa
Ntarature has producad soma of
our most intriguing tales and
stories, and various aaan^las wiN
be studied in our ■issiens ¥Ve wiN
follow Sm tale from its Biblical
Ofloln through tt>e Rat>t>inic litera-
ture of tfte 2nd and 3rd centuries
Texts wNI be in English snd no
previous background in Midraah
la fsquired Led by MaSM OavW
Berner. Director. UCLA Hillel
TuaaSil^. 7:30-S p.m.
with
Taught
Jigs
■MMM
SOO Hilgard Ava.
3rd floor
LA. CA
Beginning Hebrew, for
no previoua backi
by Mimi Aah
7:30-0 p.m
The SNrat Hayam Chorua will
perform Yiddish. Ladino. and
laiBsS laSi Myaic aa was aa Mtur-
gicai sattmoa by a vaitaiy of Amar-
ican. European, and
Ability to
Meets Thursisys. rji^io p.m
icrmcai
iaa of tf^ origin of Biblical
m
bobks Is JM0alsw raaSyaBibilosI
religion? Lad by Rabbi Richard
Levy. Executive Director. Los
Angeles Hiltal Council
Ti— rtiyi tmrinm
begin the
12th EnroMatthe
ing If you eani make
come tha naat or
hatdatURC
Of Aprs
itthia
C
<
S^p
.-•^
• •.
IPUB stolid support ""imbbi^ sports
K\ the tunc approachsft again fo< g girl,
cheerleader ^nd mascot try puts, it ts my opinion
that rule x>^e6^ to be istliiylad requiring the
spirit support group members to attend UCLA
<>poru (both men and women) other than football
Pre»enfly the spirit support group<^ are only
required to attend ftootball ^rk6 basketball home
events, ar.d it is seldom that or>e will ever find a
cheerleader or songleader at other events.
\ The main reason offered for lack oi attendance
at Spring sports especially is that the spirit
support groups do t\q\ have tin>e because of
academic commitments.' It is said that in the fall
and winter quarters it is very difficult for the
squad to make events and that they ara lacrilicifig
— other things to perform. ~
The r«asor>s offered are correct, but the ex-
cises given for not being able to attend women's
basketball and volleyball matches, plus men's
volleyball matches and track meets, do not stand
MP
It is sspacially amazing to me that arguments
can be given that the cheerleaders ^t\6 song girls
^f^ not P9a6 for what they do They claim that the
[>»tty Bruin members 9re paid and so ve Student
Council members, but the spirit support groups
^ are volunteering their tinr^e. They nwiy be vol-
unteers, but they sure get good seats to watch
events, and they don't complain when thsy gel
on television.
It is my bflief that the spirit support groups are
very helpful to UCLA teams by organizing the
crowd. They are official representatives oi UCLA,
ami it is good for the public to see them at
cwsfits. When the cheerleaders "do their thing" it
makes events more enjoyable from a spectator
standpoint.
UCLA ttMasms sssd the cheerleaders to
tf>em when »nd how loud to cheer Once the
students get going, then they are behind both the
n>en's and wowsan's leann the entire event
There were big crowds at both ,nf>en*s volleyball
and track last weekerui. but there were no spirit
support members in uniform. I think jT have a
plan to make everyone happy
For sports other than lootball and baskscball. a
schedule should be designed between the head
song girl and cheerleader to have at least two
spirit support members attend the biggest fall,
winter and spring sporH events. Since there ve
14 eligible spirit members, 6r\e would only have
to attend a limited number of events each
—quarter.
This would mean that additional time would
r>ot be taken away from classes, and the afhl<^tas
of the so-called "minor sports*' in the men's it%6
women's program would know they are ap-
preciated
In my opinion, the spirit support groups have a
big effect in the eruKmous home court advantage
UCLA en)oys in most sports. The spiritj support
squads were l:^ hslps at the UCLA-q^ tracks*
meet and NCAA volleyball championahips last
yeaf ind at the women's home basketball game
against Caff State Fullerton this year.
Because there is no rule in the present laws
which require attertdance atsporn other than
football and basketball, most members take the
time off and attend very few events in uniform.
The people in the Campus Programs and Ac-
tivities Office (CPAO) should seriously look into
my idea, because I don't (hink it is that difficuN
to implement.
Intramural Sports
COM«N ED EK)U BLES
TENNIS - There arc still s
few openings left in this tottr-
nament, so if you are inter-
ested cotne into the IM Offke.
Doubles teams thst signed up
for Wednesday will not have a
match this tacek due to s
woQ)en!s teimts match, but you
will play next Wednesday as
planned.
Men's
Handball doubles entries are
due this Thursday, April 15.
Golf entries will be taken
through Wednesday, April 21.
at 1 fNn. There is a $4 60 fee
for participation^ in this tour-
nament, to be held on May 7.
The fee is payable at 140
Kerckhoff, and your receipt is
required to sign up at the IM
Office
Volleybal) triples play begins
tonight The schedule is avail-
able in the I M Office Wo-
men's Softball entries are due
Thursday, April 15. and play
will begin Monday, Apnl 19.
4 •- -V—
Costf^ bowling douMci sign
ups will continiie^^throitgh Frn
dsy.
ON CAMPUS
c/) CO -n OB -*
^ • • «.2
/
teioir
TC-67
CASSETTE-CORDER
wttHh-H^ alactret
Automatic ihuf-o#f
Tone control
Lfr>e input lipr
$69
Vol
FREE
12 Certron C-60 Tapes
with purchase of Sor>y TC-67
I
I
I
I
I
Si^ V
b«loifCQmaQ<;hHi
'"■ ^ — '■ IU\If$\9i J f J^i
-M.s^n momno* \a^^ao.
THE STUDENT
COMMITTEE
J-EOR THE ARTS
SrSTUOENT
TICKETS
a Kerchoff Hall
Ticket Office
S2 STUDENTI
TICKETS
at UCIA Central
Ticket Office
650 Mtestwood
Plaza
ilClAlO
Card and
pnoto i 0
rtquired tor
purctiase of
all ticksu
$1 TICKETS ON SALE NOW
Sat . April 24, 8 30 pm - Royca Hall
ERICK HAWKINS DANCE
COMPANY
with Compoaar Lucia DIuOoazawakt
and tha Airnancan Youth Symphony
conductaO b^ Mahh Mehta
Sun.. April 25, 8:00 pm - Schoanbarg Hall
MUSIC FOfI A WHILE, asrty music
^naambls " **skitl. taata. vitality and
naturairisaa (Boaton Olobo)
Tusa . Msy 4. 830 pm - R#yos HsM
ORANO UNION
"a rich mixture of fantasy, parody
sr>d rsality " (Wsahington Poat)
Sat.. May 8. 8 30 pm - Royca Hall
WILLIAM WINDOM IN
THURBER II
a return angagament of Mr Wiridom in ef\
entirely nem production baaod on tha Ufa
and times of the quiet coioaaus of Ameri-
can u
Fri . May 14. 8:30 pm - Royce Hall
BILL EVANS TRIO
"an inteliectural. skil^d and aarioua
musician (who) has navar lost touch with
an aaaantial nss^ to swing " (Leonard
SAt . May 15. 8:30 pm - Royce Hall
QARRICK OHLSSON, piamtt
"a powerful technician, a atrong musical
mind, an intsraating artiat." (Harold C
Schonberg)
Sun . Msy 18. 8 00 pm - Royce Hall
NICOLAI GEDDA, tanor and Martin
Kaa. pianiat
works by Respighi. Pratalla, Casaila.
Csrnsvsli. Dupsrc. Fsura. Dobussy snd
Turins
$2.50 TICKETS ON SALE NOW
Sat.. Msy 15. 8 30 pm - ttphossbsig Hsil
ERIC ANDERSON, guitsr and
SUNDANCE,
Syron Barlins't now group - dynamic
musician and group
$2 TICKETS OirSALE NOW
Fri.. Msy 7. %:90pm - Royce Hall
STEPHEN BMHOP-KOVACEVICH,
"hit playing is truly baautiful' (Wi
ton Posh
I
>
f
Sat Juna 12 8:
GUITAR SUMMIT N
fssturing Lsufiiido Alwslds. Bsmsy
KssssI snd Hsfb Eiiia. 9»n#|
lino nf Quitar grssta
■^-r*
^iti
m*
1
1
CiASSIHED^D
Pm ASUCLA CiwiUMiyEiMim
twWii't p^iay «« nan «i
A4v«rtl»ln9 ipatg will not te
tn Mm IMly gmlN l»
•«ie««lry. color, national origin, roc«,
nf Nio ASUCLA Communleotloiia
9mmi4 Hm InvMNfolod any of Itta aor-
vicot advarllaod or advortlaora rmpf-
aonlod tn thi* tsaua Any poraon bo-
Itovlnfl thai mn odvortlaomofit In ihit
Im voof^d's poNcy on non*
illon alafod horoin ahould
covnptBMW in wfwng 10
Bualnaas Managor. UCLA Dally
ilTifaiiiiiiilfllii mwniwui
Plaaa. L— Aii«ofaa. CalHornia •M24
For atililMMa mHtt houalng diacfiwil-
natlon probtoma.caU: UCLA Houalng
Offlca. (213) tlS^atliWoatalda Fair
Houatng (2U) 473-
aniKMincMnMits
FOREIGN STUDENTS
ft
Thmr% ar* tlir«« $300.00
m#nl Fund avallabl* to
rogltt«r#d non-Immigrant
forolgn studontt with %mmf'
Qoncy nood for mmMmnem,
Ap|»llcatlons art avaHoblt
In OiSS. 297 Dodd Holl^
Ooodlino It Apdl 16, 1976.
(AnnAIS)
LOOSE SHEETS 4<
BOUND, REDUCTION
LEGAL SHEETS - <
121 kerckhoff hall
825-061 1 ■25a
campus
announcaffiMfits
A8UCLA Udurt Notes
AraHorol
Watch th« Bruin for thd com
list of clAMM that will hava Lacturr
NolM Tfiaaa ara notat takan aa
Iha Profaaaor wanta tham to ba
caratulty typad pioofwaad. illua-
trnlad and raady for you in Iha
Studantt' Stora Notat will ba
availabia on Monday. Wadnaaday,
Friday and Saturday Chack wHh
tha Lacture Nolaa Countar as waH
aa in your first aat Sfnalas to find
out a^tan your spacific nolaa will
ba availabia Lactura nolaa ara a
haip thay lat you pay
to what's baing said,
mnd thm/m not axpanaiwa. .
Bur UECTUf^E
WOTM of^.♦.
Orr With
1D0^.HM6!
Ltolon to vio
Ouoon!
WHAT DOES A BAUIN
BEAR WEAR FOR ACTIVE
SPORTS?
Graduates
PERMA PLAQUE
your diploma
IS ASH
osucio
^ C9mp us sfudie
150 kefckhoH hall 825 06/ / «:
open mon hi 8 30-4 30
r-A-TV $10M
alMaofit diacounta. Oallvory la
lioin
i^imOWMtAO cabin In gulot araa.
•laapa t. M§/2 daya. HM/T .daya.
SS7-1447. m^^
mmum t.v. ncMTALi
COLOR TV ^S
;-*.
T¥/s - 17 JVV
Caa:27S-18S2
li0T|:0«ir adaaa aia
CREATIVE WRfTINQ
NOVCLl. SCftCEN-PLArt,
TU-CVISION
Apis It. 7 - ia
•lis
^•rsoffurf
OCAM OailL
^Maomo.
yaa'ia sM yaung anaagli
»na alaa. Ttaa M«d.
(• A 12)
4/4 ILf. M
■i^ * 4/*t Satbartaw
Taaaan. Ax. MTao.
Taylor. SUPO iat4.
fiAia)
HOMinaaai
tflari
Ma^^fi anaoaaaaWt
playlid, aula,
wdiat ciaay lamala
aatCaaSafi
(•Alt)
f, ffi HIT—
r« A tat
MAMMOTH COMOO. Moai
t bodtaoai. 2 baSi. mnm
bay/waak. 24a>2aat.
r MH 7 a t.
. TV. atefoo.
(•A 22)
forsate
ftTf PfllMOLf IS. laclM
liaSQ. UCLA laWiii CM
2SS4a«a.
(IS A It)
S-7t10
iSaaaspanalan
• i
(10 A 1t(
(It A If)
$100
(10 A It)
• Ml
YVSP
(• A 12)
Vou NniMy gal
Wbala
f » ^r^v*
ai yav.
••Alt)
Coma to tha ASUCLA Studanta'
Stora Gifts and Confactions dapart-
mants. and gat goodias for mak»f>g
up your own Eaatar Baakats' Bas-
kats. plants, cuddly toys, candiaa.
artificial grass-it's all thara B
Itval. Ackarman Union. 825-7711
17.
aaS (tit) 27i.tttl
ItAit)
mosictiittti
^J^ ^ InmiacMlala. 2270 or boat
(10 A It)
KEMTUCICY:
TOM - unonrr
474'tttt.41
WA
It A 14)
only ttSCat 2
(It A
# yau aai a UCU^ niiwinai. sbMla,
aapaclally cloaaoa '20. '40. ^tO SlT
I.B.M. TypowrNor, atanaarS
SoaulNwl complololy
laaka Ilka now. tSSt.tt/
Aflar i a'«
(tA14)
(10 a It)
CSAIO EHWLICM • Cong ralulollona
VWIMO
47S-74ISar
CNUCK. Sryon: Voo m
adlon ooac Iba
»llo^ my h
(•Alt)
'aaiaar
(1^ A It)
Yo»
H'a
Only
(It A 14)
(tAlt)
IIOLLim.lX
aortas: UV
tilt. 2tt-7414
SL-aS w/<
(ISAM)
ALAN - Happy
21 at SinbSayl
laa
Tex OS Ifistrvinaiif
it A It) ^^j
tlSBfl
■LVIS TIekots
>rt. PIral
t
owllabli for aa*'' 'mf
«MilfVS 300 ^^Zl
forsato
(It A It)
halehcovort, nottinf A rapa« funky
eraloa A boaoa. old bornwoad. ttl
hattucsscs all mcw
tVISJS
THE MATTRCSS STOfIC
11714 Plaa akiO IBSr ¥«!
4n-4iai
S AMTKHII OaM Cbabi ISkt and 14M
gold. Soaaonably prtaad—niMat aoll
Caalaet Ia»or Jtl 0108. (tg a IS)
FBMOCN atrat and aaaa (P«f -CBS)
477
(IS A 12)
opportunities
^PERSONAE*
Csntsr of Dramstlc Arts
Announcsi
A apaclal thr—
(Aprill 2th thru aOtti)
Mub^act AUOmON TECHMIQUn
Tha .following aub)acts will ba
*What tt)a csalliif dlisslor Is
■BSKWB 'VOv
*^*-*''— idsfiiiisiii liiiii sHltli
Ih
FHday at S P.M.
SS7-SS11
WANT la
tt bi
2 pm.
(tSA
COMBDV
for
-7a«7.
USA
MABKBT Boaoarok^aya lit to aN
(12 A It)
PBBSOMAL ASTBOLOOICAL BBAO-
Tha koy lo undaralBndbig yaar
Cola (2111
»** • ■"'1.
roeaarch subjects
BABN 17 JS AMD STOT BAD
BBBBABCH
AT
f^AIS)
(14 A It)
UCLA SWOftlOhif^S. BWOBt-
pants. jogger's outfit, t-
Bhirts. shofts, racing trunks,
sweat socks, and carrioa a
UCLA gym bag and boach
towal.
r.
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
Haip
WM^ w^v ay
HYLAMD DONOR CENTER
4 . -
1S01 Gaylay Ava.
47S-00S1
(It a It)
S«MliT gin Id do IgM
bi our bania About IS
TaL 2S7 1174.
(It A 12)
lis
tSJtISir
477-
Ca.
(It A It)
IN JACKSON HOLE. WYO.
aspandlng bwalnoaa (212) tt2-1Cl77
^'^'^^'^- fit A IS)
BAevSII f BR la com lar taar y«ar iHd
FIvo aflon»oona/wook. 2t1-7t07
(iSAiei
(It A 11)
•••"^"ISs A 11)
-latsSila
atudont frani
(It SIS)
SALE MINDED?
$$S EASY MONEY $$S
CALL RON GLOB
930-2410
(IS A IS)
Ui%
,u A1S>
M(V. S1SJS PWm NOUH
n^Aisi
BBCaCTART ■ OBNBRAL
t«i m <ys«siis.
(ISA HI
^:o»f-wugj
CLASSIFIED >ID
icaaoffarod
-f — ■
icssoffsrsd
ices offsted
Hall far
Tal. 47»-4477
(HAM)
PROFBBSIONAL Bdfting lor
(1SA1S)
Jab RBBUSWS Manuocrlpl adltlng-
tsoa papar imarlog. 11712 Wliabira
#14. 1 aai - 1 pm. 4T7 tSli.
(10 A It)
AI IBMI10M
af
Pm da
S
Df,
(It A It)
MOVING: Roaldanllal. aparHnonta.
S lang
(HObr)
nt
ANROW MaUMAMCf
fLSCTROLYSIS
aalo w»otbad. froo
Unwaalad faaial S
Bt477.t1SS.
(l^Qlil
tbo Barrlnglan RIaM. W.L.A. 11744
WlloMfO - 477'SSIS. 170-2217 Witb
IS yra.
MS Obi
AUTO
ar 4S7-7f71.
(It OH
ANrrMia
ritOtr)
TMB lAIV WAY fO OBT A JOB
jmtmmm
(It Ob)
VW MAINTIMAMCi SCRVICt
^asporloncod/lo« ratoa. 471-
(1^ 1 l^l
iSC
iNTFRMATtONAi. STUOfNT
I ^ f re
t HaaSng. I^rga 1
410-1012 or Fffod 410-1440
(10 Otr)
»enviMG T<
u«iiT*
tNOS
MATTRBSSaS • UC
(10 oar)
i
oaay and
ad laaaRai
M.
(10 A 10)
lostAllDUfid
la ar la mum ol a Mslaisia RT 41^
watal •p42don.2iao or a Motorola
•attd atato O-iraak laps dock madal
HTAISI
• 4 Da<»v
TQunsi rount' rouns'
joiM us roa
r**mmum ■*t\mrim€tt MoimM 4ft
tioo
(.an* 1mt%om
• S<»>.-.~».
FOUND SOMETHtNOf
BALLBT: Pan way lo BoaiHy i;
and UnW. YWCA. 174 HS-
aneod. • loaaona.
ly Irono Sgrala. Dlatingoi»h«d
(iSOIr)
s pal or
SM amn la
iaat eoPM Inla Iha Dally Oryln
nt and laM ua
an ad bi Bia
you woffH la
Laai a RpMH
THE JOe RACTOilY
(IS A It) i
AUTO INSURANCr
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
TooHlfbT
STUDENT DISCOUNTS
PRANKLIMO A KUR Edtlo'lal 9mm-
rgi
ml
(IS A 11)
474
m* vary roroly hovo orgaams Sriof
0S42 2:20 -0:11. Cat aaaa.
(HA 11^
aeeeeeeeeee eeee
RIDING LESSONS
•A.M.I.A. Aaay—4 rtoinf ••l«ail*liM»«Al
md art»ala». o*iiiar««i S
4S4-47tf
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«taaaia.S4
-1111.
Caalral
411
palar al Nawywaad
MS Ob)
'h-JOH EXPRESS
MOVERS
RIeh
nt A14)
ILaaLaaaar).
nt A14I
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
TaaY
-11B1
iJRa sd si no coal la youl |
ridss wanted
«• 4 ^l 2^ SMOe
S«auo4a a Kina* C«n«of< 4 U) s ^ i\; m,
Slua«r«< rm%m non aiutfcni tmtm% •wailaM
At* tour« IftcluO* (r«n«»iK«iHon Mght
*" a •niranr.* f««« •nArka »f>^ lodging
jr^tntghf trip*
Our goat (• to craala »n tnl«rcultura«
••» ^»ngm In a r»lsa»d ffi»nd»yj,
' •p^•^• arxl lo do fh.» at •
mlti»mom cpal to you
473 2991
^ • •
-L
NY S
A.1.S.T
OVBRSBAS JOBS. Aala. AaatraUa.
IMAM)
. OT^^««.
ASM
I.C.A. tSl
Ca.
la ^aatwoad or Mar yiala
(21 A It)
EURORf from 13
N.Y.C im.
Cat Jack (212) 27»-7SM.
(SlQlr)
M.71.4S7
tISIW.
In
OS OH
Ov«r 300 fiigntB S daiaa wltfi
*rom April thru
rtur»«
•l^tiaVi
ASUCLA Tfovel Servloe
wie ONLY olflclol
UCLA Charier Fl
AlBBipMllfl
ol Europe fSghts
• s«
Juna7 7
Juna21 11
Juna 21 12
Juna 2S 5
Juna 2S S
Juna 29 10.
Julys S
Julys S
July 12 4
Julyta 4
1C754
11C75
12C75
15C75
17C75
lacTs
22C7S
29076
27076
.aOC7S
Mai
Mai
$4»
$42i
JX S/lft-S/tO •
jx §r^^^^/^^ •
JX S/28<S/3i IS
JX s^as4^7 10
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TO 7^13-4/24 4
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HAWAII
rsM/Bucsl|
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IJ>.
ASK US FOR ANYTHINO YOU
WANT TO KNOW AMOUT
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io rm^fot s
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CMS^1S4i^ IS
UN s^ip-r/tt s
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ON 7/14-4MH 7
UN 7/174/71 S
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pf »aa-ans s
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PF S'1S4A>1 11
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HK. SANonoK. MmoAPom isaaw Hsis
Mr/«w IS
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S4
12 <
^a-***!
•-«* J
TAHITI SUPER^lDEiSL
JmI 0^ lor TaMBan NasnM mSs
Linda flam Of,,
CM A 11)
CISC STU08NT TRAVEL
10S3 BiaaMri A»o •224
Loa An^oiaa. Ca 10024
Call 2ia/477.
corflfiu^^
II 111
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CLASSIFIED AD
..il^v.
travel
Cmt Jtt CiMrtar
low f« SMtOt roMid trtp L.A. or t.f ,
(to itffo^ also •«a»t«toi« l.a. u nawaiiI
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■J
Team handbaO
Doc T
•y
DB Sports Ri
Ore oi the fastest^gr owing
team spoils in America imimf
IS temm hmndbah Unheard of
in the U. S. up until ten yemrt
ago. the game is now being
played on collegiate, national
And OlympK levels.
Naturaily, the growth of s
taoB sport such as thu one
cannot he compared on the
8AIBC scale as the ^owth of
individual sports like, say.
tennis or saow skiing '^,
while one should not expect to
surt seeing team hand bail
oamei struck up nightly in
JMHI of his or her home* it is
stiii evident that team handball
is beginning to make aa im-
predkion m the American
sports scene.
When you first view a game
of team handball, one of two
things might occur to you.
First, It might look like some-
thing you*ve never seen before,
or. secondly, it might look like
several games you*ve seen be-
fore Actvally. yon would be
justified in either case.
Ntarly IM yaon oM
The game of team hiRithall
originated in Europe (mainly
m the Scandinavian countries)
in the late 1800*8. It was in-
troduced when men began
playing soccer using their
Summer Olympic Gsmes in
Munich. The United Stales.
ttoonng signs of being s new-
•••w to the sport, fimshet
14th out of the 16 countries
that entered
With the growing interest at
l^^^erlevels of compciifioa,
howcvci. the t:^. S. Team hopes
to do better in this year's
fames hacRRse it will have a
bigger and better crop of ath-
letes to choose from
Most of the suppon for the
Olympic Team comes trom the
eastern United Sutes, where
the sport of team h#ndbal) was
ftftt introduced m American
and where most ofHhe interest
lies today There are only two
teams this side of ChicaRO, and
UCLA has one of thaai. The
other is from WiHamiftf. a
rnllppr in Salem. Oregon
Recently, the Bruins hostM
Willamette for a series of two
games, aRd the teams spUi the
doubleheadcr The Bruins lost
the first game. 14-17. and won
the second. 32-23
Team handball first came to
UCLA five years ago and.
although It IS still considered a
club because it does not recave
University backing, last ycaf
the Bruins fimshed second in
collegiate competitioR and fifth
in the overall national rank-
ings.
This year, some of the
UCLA team members traveled
to tlie West Coast Olympic
training camp stationed in Ore-
gon to try out for the Olym-
pics.
HoM clinks
The mam goal of the hand-
ball teams on the West Coast
IS to strike up the interest in
other cottpfm and unij^crsiticN jr
so that more teams will form m
and. eventually. £ league will i
be organized. '
In order to do thn. UCLA
has conducted cUnics for var-
ious schools in the area which
have shown an intertst t riar
ting their own team.
Their mo^ recent trip was to
San Luis Obispo, where the
Bruins put on a demonstration
and gave advice to the students ^
who were interested in taking f
part in team handball com- &
petition S
Since then, the game has
been refined and has taken on
chaffactenstics of several team
gaiRes played all over the
world, such as basketball, soc-
cer, hockey, water polo and
others. In fact, it resembles just
about every team sport imagin-
able except, ironically, the
traditional game of handball
which most Americans arc
used to.
Several rule changes have
been made over the years to
make the game more condu-
cive to international compet-
ition Among these has been
the reduction in qumber of
players from the original II to
seven in order to accommodate
indoor as well as outdoor play.
Olympfo sport
Team handball first entered
thic Olympic scene at the 1972
By Michaef
Di Sporto Writer
Doug Rabe is the pnost un-
likely starter in the UCLA
volleyball hneup But when the
Brums meet UC Sariu Barbom
tomorrow night at 7:30 pm in
Fauley Pavihon. Rabe will be
a key figure
The 6-3, 165-pound soph-
omore from Huntington Bench
High School is the lone starter
who is not on scholarship, but
the way he has played m the
last three matches agaiRtt Lanf
Beach Sute. USC and espe-
cially Pepperdine. he deserves
to be.
Rabe was i junior varsity
performer^ last year, and it was
not known until Fall practice
whether he would be able to
contribute to the varsity He
reported in the Fall 100 per
cent improved over last year
and closed practice for Christ-
mas vacation as the starting
middle blocker with Denhy
Cline.
ARhie faijMry
An ankle injury in January
allowed Doug Brooks to regain
the No. one position, and
Brooks and Rabe had waged a
battle for the position up until
the Long Beach State match m
Long Beach
'*! decided to sUrt Doug
(Rabe) over Brooks because he
had done a beter job of block-
ing in the Pepperdine match
the Friday before, aRd DoRg
now key fquie
match
afainst Lonf Bench.** said Al
Scales, UCLA head coach
Rabe had the best match of
his career last Friday night
against Pepperdine Not only
did he do a fine job of block-
ing, but his hitting was out-
standing.
Last year Rabe was known
as a '^whiffer'* because he usu-
ally did not hit the ball hard
enough for it to hit the court
Without being dug. This year
he has developed into a fine
hitter and can now **criish the
oners'* as well as any of the
middle blockers. """
**I have worked hard to get
in the lineup because 1 enjov
playing for UCLA,** pAid Rabe
**lt is a great feehng to play m
front of a crowd like the Pep-
perdine match and win**
At Huntington Beach High
School. Rabe was an outstand-
ing basketball player and also
played volleyball He was an
all-kaguer in basketball and
recently played on the same
intramural championship team
with volleyball trammatc Fred
Sturm.
Mgftit thra
His biggest thnll in sports
up to this year came in high
school in a basketball game
HWRit croit-town nval Mar-
ina that was shown on tele-
vision
**lt was during my sen. or
year, and at the time Mi
was 21-0 and No. one-ranked
m CIF. while we ¥vere 18-2 pnd
rated No four and had lost the
first time 55.-53.** said Rdbe.
"The sunds were packed two
hours before game time, and
we beat them 64-30.**
Rabe came to UCLA be-
cause he wanted to go to s
good liberal arts college He
moved into the Hedrick Hall
dorms and he was put into a
seyenth floor dorm with a
fellow named Joe Mica Last
year Rabe watched Mica per-
form from the bench, but now
he IS in the lineup and the
twosome usually play side-by-
sidc.
Hedrkk HaR
the Hedrick Hall dorm resi-
dents come out in bunches to
cheer tor Rabe and Mica **We
have great fans, and it is great
when thev get behind us and
start yelling.*' Rabe said *"Our
fans really helped us afaintt
Pepperdine. and they can have
the same effect against Santa
Barbara **
Ribe's bigpest thrill tor now
IS playing in a higb -school
basketball gaaie on television
against Marina, but he says
that his greatest thrill would
change if he could start on an
NCAA championship volley
ball team that would win the
finals come this May 1 at Ball
State University
Ooug Plaba
CLASSIFIED
141 A 13)
!
mmm^m
TT
I'
u
3
President-elect Holland ready to assume AIAW duties in June
• __ _, ■ . '■■ .; ^, , I , I « 1 ■ n I ' "^ 't '. ■ ' <? ■'■ 1 f4f — -■ '' --"s:=: — : =^^
!«■ t ■■■ ■
/■ -I ,■ I •# ■ • • .
J.l
»• ». _ . l*'
< , ■ .1 ■ iW 1^
-iw
,1k I. a
II
:,rr
DB Sports Writer
On June t. Dr Judith Hol-
land, dirador of women*! atb-
ktaci here, will take office as
ynmtmUMkKM, of the AIAW
The AIAW presidency
three-year office, encompi
president-elect, piwident and
pait president, that the director
"actively toiight after and
wanted."
**i ran last year and lost to
Lois May berry. After that, I
told myself I wasn*t going to
run again,** recalled Holland
**The fpeech 1 made was dis-
jointed and gave me a bght of
being unorganized, but this
year 1 planned a speech and
made copies.**
It was probably the organ-
ization and directness* of that
hmmgy fpeech before a dele-
gate assembly of the AIAW in
Scottsdale, Arizona that
clinched Holland*s election tlM^
year
Currently, the A. D. is still
accepting congratulations, but
she has also Uken a hard look
at the AIAW to see which
areas need to be improved.
Not to be critical of past lead-
ers, Holland will stress a dif-
ferent approach geared toward
better management.
The AIAW office itself is
just one example of an area
where better numegement can
be implemented. There is a
full-time executive secretary,
reepsaeible for communica-
tkms between between three
presidenu, that Holland feels
should be **impofpered to make
certain decisions.**'
At a time when women*s
athletics is fwviiig actively in
all directioai, communicatK
are a crucial elernent tb its
growth.
**AII the indications are that
the AIAW it MM prompt in
making major decisions,**
charged Holland **We need to
reorgamze and become respon-
sive to phone calls. A TV
cootract for tekviina ceruin
loet
oi a long delay in de-
m making.**
A continuing problem th^
AIAW faces is that of finances
The organization is almost
entirely funded by the member-
ship dues ($500 for a large
school, $300 for a small school
M|d $200 Jar a j unior college)
the 714 schools pay each year.
This is just beginning to
change, as the AIAW is now
making a silbstantial amount
of money from iht variova
national championships it
sponsors. Holland leels these
two areas of revenue are not
sufficient to fund the entire
organization and other afflM
need to be tapped.
For all these problems, the
president-elect does not claim
to have all the answers. A pos-
sible solution to a solution
may lie in her proposal for a
cabinet of advisors who would
constantly give her "expert
advice."
There already is an executive
board competed of regional
representatives^ but Holland
feels an additional group
formed for ideet, orgmization
and planning will largely help
her in her presidency.
Perhaps the key to Holland's
whole' outlook and sueeeMes is
Mmmed up neatly m her pen-
chant for organization.
Upon coming to UCLA last
July, her primary goal was
ergani/atton Organization was
also important to her recent
election, and it will be crucial
to her upcoming presidency.
Another area, of the AIAW in
which she plans to implement
this quality is m the meetingi.
She feels much time emi be
saved and more decisions
reached by limiting discussions.
All these chaa§m will not
occur overnight, and, as Hol-
land aclcnew ledges, *^there is a
lot of work to be done.** The
idea behind the three pres-
idents, the long-term commit-
ment j|f those j»»)ni« it thr^
most crucial facet of the whole
organization of the AIAW
As preiidcnt-elea, Holland's
role in the first yenr will be
similar to that of vice-pres-
ident, which translates to
**nothing.*' She would like,
however, to be more produc-
tive in her own area of re-
sponsibility, the regional repre^-
senutives, and b4tl4r-a solid
relationship between the re-
gional and national organi-
utions.
This means standard region-^
al requirements regulating
qualifications for the national
championships.
- **Any chanfBs we^can jnnkr
which help women's athletics
will help UCLA The better
organized the AIAW ai, the
more it will help UCLA, also
in the area of TV contracts.
My president ako givct
UCLA an identity that it cmm
and is willing to take on a
long-term commitment.**
-— FracticaBy, ^ hotwvar, the
staff of the DWIS here will
have to take On her duties
whenever she is gone While
she IS president, she hopes it
won't hamper the good re-
lationship she has with her
staff, coaches and athletes
The nmin goal Holland wants
to aooompbsh as AIAW piet-
JdeM k to Imw j^ orfun-
ization better than she finds n
Brum
/ 1
t3^
XCVUl, Number 8
UnlMfslty oH CalHomla, Los AngelM
WedMsday, ApH1 14, 1t76
Devoted most of his life to prove his Looney; theory
ptayoff to be decided
^1
By Michael
DB Sports Writar'
Sanu Monica City College, Cal Sute North-
ridge and Cal Sute Long Beach arc the three
laading sites if a playoff is needed to decide the
Southern California Intercollegiate Volleyball
Attodation (SCIVA) conference title among
Pepperdine (10-2), UCLA (8-2) and Santi
.Barbara (8-2).
The Daily Brum has ItMBtd from SCIVA
Commissioner Robert Newcomb that the
co9dkt» involved have requested Tuesday, Apnl
20, as their first playoff date pnority, with
Wednesday as the seeond selection, Monday as
the third choice and Thursday as a last resort.
UCLA and UC Santa Barbara play to-
morrow night in Pauley Pavihon, and each
have matches on Friday night at home, so both
would. like next Monday to practice if they win
twice to go into 4be one-match playoff
None of the coadiet want the date next
Thursday because the Western Regionals for an
of the Regionak,*' tttd Al Scates, UCLA
coach.
*'I am currently checking into many locations
for the possible ^y off site,** laid Newcomb.
**I want to find a plaoe that is close to the
schools involved, so that a long driving
distance will not be necessary. Cal State
Northndge is probably tht best neutral site for
all three !!ams, but if UCLA and Pepperdine
are in the playoff, then Santa Monica College
is about equal distance between the two
schoob.
**We vifere not thinking about the serious
possibility of a playoff until after UCLA beat
Pepperdine on Friday night,** added Newcomb
**Now 1 will be making numerous phone calls
to try to reserve gymnasiums for the pntiihlr
playoff dates, and the coaches will probably
decide which date and place is the best.**
According to Newcomb, another consider^
tion will be financial in site selection. **Therk
will probably be a modett charge for all\
additional NCAA berth will be in Pauleys Upecutors because we want the host school to I
Pavilion next Friday and Saturday nights "We be able to pay for aH services, plus it is good
will defimtely not pUy next Thursday, if there for volleyball if outsiders can make a little bit
il a phiyoff, because it is too dote to the surt of profit," said Newcomb
Author denies Shakespeare wrote pla};s
ENTIRE STORE SALE
THIS WEEK ONLY
Eveiy Artist , Eveiy Album, Eveiy label, Every Tape
All Ip's 6.98 list just '3.88
All tapes $1.00 off
All double albums $1.00 off
• I , ■ ■
-J
For UCLA students only. You must bring ad or show current student ID.
■y Carol Starr
Dt StafT Writer
Like skeptics Walt Whitman.
Charlcii Dickem. Mark Twain.
Sigmund trend and Charlie
Chaplin. 87ryear old s»DCial
scientist S Calum Gilfillan
believes that William Shakes-
peare was not the real author
of the famous works which
bear his name.
Gilfillan became a doubting
I homas in 1920. when'an Eng-
lish schoolmaster:!; I MThomas
I ooney published Shakespeare
liJentified, once described by
British novelist John Gals-
worthy as "the greatest de-
tective story of all time"
While Gilfillan is an avid
believer in Looney's theory, he
has spent most of his life re-
searching and writing about
sociai cautes and effects He
has published 50 articles and
live books, including his recent
autobiography An L'giv Puck-
img Swans(fnf^
Reflecting on his past, he
af only two known
Dorm lottery returns In May
for lucky returning residents
•y Mfteiwie Duval
Dt Stair Writer
Once lipMn. the UCLA undergraduate resi-
dence halbwill hold a lottery for dormitory
spaces This will happen if returning residents'
application exceed 40 per cent of the total
spaces available m the four undergraduate
dofUM. The other 60 per pent of the space will
be available to new students.
Applications for returning residents will be
out on Apnl 2S and due on Mastfay. May 3,
according to Stephen^ Salm. resideaae halls
administrator ShavM more than 40 per cent
reapply, a lottery will be held on Wednesday.
14ay 5, m the Rieber Hall conference room at 5
l^k -Tile waiting list will be posted on Friday,
May 7, and the assignments will be sent out on
May 24
Usinf a preliminary source. Salm expects
about 59 per cent of the cmrent residents to
reapply.
**I think everyone reapplying should keep in
mind that all 400 returning residents on the
waiting Ust this year had been offered spaces by
the Winter quarter.** Salm said Last year wat
the first time tbe lonery was held
Only one waiting list will appear this )«ar. at
oppond to last year wlwii a wao&mi bst was
posted a couple of weeks later. **We only
admitted 40 per cent tbe first time BaoattM oi
a certain attrition rate, we will give places to 47
per cent so we wofi*t have to go through the
publishing of another bst.** Salm said.
Owing to inflation, prices will be increaiad
by $61 for the upcoming year, Salm said For
the 20-meal plan, which 85 per cent of the
students use. 1976-77 rates will be $1407.
including tiK $12 student association fee which
all residents are required to pay. The 15-meal
plan will cost $1362.
Next year, all residenu will be required to
(Continued oa Page 1 ))
Starts today, Tues. April 13 through Sun. April 18th
Open till 11 pm tonight and till midnight Fri. & Sat.
We'll take your used Ip's for cash or tnde (only in good condition)
Volume discounts on TDK, Maxell, and Memorex recording tape.
11910 Wllsh*r«
between Barringtor
and bundy
477-2523
li
said, ^1*01 a pretty obscure
pe rs oar; trat 1 ha ve acco m-
plished 'SMMething In my lite-
time Tve only made two to
three thousand dollars from
writing, yet I knew how to
invest it. 1 think it is also
interesting that Tve never had
an automobile in my life Even
when I could afford one later
in life. 1 never needed one "
Lectures
In between writing a book
called Lead Ptmoning RmneH
Rome and swimming daily.
Gilfillan occasionally lectures
here He spoke last month at
the Faculty Center on Loo^
ney's theory, which he can
elaborately recite from memo-
ry
"In his book, Looney - a
most unfortunate name.— 1-
dentifies 17 traits the author of
Shakespeare*! plays and son-
nets would have to have had:
he beloafcd to the higher nc^
bility with Lancastrian sym-
pathies; liad a food classical
education: knew law; was a
lover ol music; had a great
love of the countryside and
outdoor sports, was a Catholic
of literal sympathies; was an
eccentric aid a time- waster;
knew French; loved Italy and
was a finished poet by 1595/
when "^Venus and Adonis** and
**The RafC oi Lucrece** w^n
published and signed by
Shakespeare "*
According to Gilfillan, Loo-
ney further combed the records
of the ElizabetlMB period to
find someone who met these
requirements He found only
one person who did — Edward
de Vcre, I7ih Earl of Oxford
High personages
Accepting the necessity for a
peattdonym because his works
reveaM loo much about hifli
personages and events at court.
Gilfillan said Oxford selected
the wmmk Shakespeare for var-
ious reasons. As a chaaspion
jouster. be was once comment*
ed in 1578 by Gariel Harvey,
who exclaimed in Latm, ''Thy
countenance shokat tpaars.**
In addition. Gilfillan believes
**Oxford paid a large amount
of money to a man called
Shaksper (soft **a**) to use his
name and chanae it to Shake-
speare. He was chosen because
he was a man easily bought off
and coiiM keep a secret well
He also had connaeliMM with
the Globe Theater, of which
the Earl of Oxford was patron.
Shaksper may have been an
actor or a business manager,
but BOt prominent He was
atisiroro •
'o long
It IS also possible that he
continued to receive money
from Oxford In his widow's
will It said pay (unstated) sum
to my dumb man' There was
no further indication of who it
was, though logically it must
haVe been Shaksper **
Cambridge and Osford
Gilfillan stressed repeatedly
his contention that Shaksper
4iad no formal education or
familiarity with court life,
while Oxford graduated from
both Cambridge and Oxford
Universities and lived at court
from age 12 Considering the
plethora of references to law,
classics and nobihty in Shake-
speare's works, he feels "it
would have been an utter im-
possibihty. especially for a man
with no education, to have
written 1 1 plays and two
poems by the time he
years old.
**Scholars have fo\tnd early
dates of .when Shakespeare's
first 1 1 plays were produced. If
Shakapcr kiad written them, he
couki have only been 30 at the
time. "Who in the workl could
have done that? Oxford was
many years older than Shaks-
per when the plnyt were pro-
duced."
Tr«s Mantlty
Gilfillan cited additional rea-
sons why Oxford was wise in
concealing his true identity.
Reputedly a lover of Queen
Elizabeth's as a young man« he
received from her a large pas-
sion to maintain a dramatic
workshop for apprentice play-
wrights **Even though Oxford
didn't want to gn« sway his
secret, numerous people knew
it. Some even called him W ill.
However, he did succeed for
several centuries," Gilfillan
While trying to support his
theory, Gilfillan pensively das-
cnbed **incidenu of extraor-
dinary coincidence between
Oxford's life and Shakespeare's
plays and sonnets.** In the
initial 17 saanets, for example,
he said it is known that tbe
anthor feh itfwiily attached to
the young Earl of Southhamp-
ton, Henry Wnothsiey.
( C ontimMd on Page f )
Residence Halls project
to open 700 loving spaces
The UCLA Rasiisaas Halls Buikling Commiticc has
irarlMil the final stafes of a pasisai fkmmt% §md€ whidi
win provide 700 more bvii^ Wf&om in two years, according
to Stephen Sains, Rasa
T\m fMic. wlMcii wil be sant to the
hopes Ik will take it to tiv Jine lUpals
arrai^ for two faciiifirs to be comptotad ^ JMOarv or
lilliiiiti ai 197t.
The facilities will haw two MMam siiiiss with a
room and baclwaMi Mliahsii- Jnst like an
easapi for a kitchen,"* UHm said Tentatn^ loc stint 9m
them in tlie iMJiJir of Lot 1 3 and at tte soirtjl md af LotIL
n.n.n| will ti aairfisd in expn^l^lMns at
and Hednck Halls.
Author sayf^ Chinese believe
WWIII will probably occuj^
toal doctors take
strike vote over
care dash
% 'WH
—I
orkiag t# prcvcfii^'Hina'i
own larirty fr
Micli •
•urtc to A
Interm und rctideni
af three Lo* An-/
EARS HERCED FREE
.with purchase af
7.95 Earrings
tmnmt v«k
pmtem care
o4 the interna
¥aie Tuctday at
CMMty-USC Medical C«ii-
Hurbor General
TIk doctors wiJ)
%.ou Tlittrftda> ai Martm
HMpiul. where
clle> staged an eifht-da>
iftMt a year agn..
Dr Mart Chassin. efeiiir-
o^ tkt I JOD-member
"s jotm council.
taitf fte §fpftp hnd (aiied to
aalLe mmmm^ul progress in
rts . aegotiat!ons vitth the
IS ishether
will con-
tMoe a doctorrcontrolled
to lOBiprove patiem
SI I million for
care The
aalted lor an
m Xhit fttad. but
aasociatioo e&-
id
rgoing
• worker s
I
^vset relations.
tliM M tHe
tik xwp
with
•iMiy* ly If72. this
rapfivt ted dH^gii to ''all-
out struggle." tati Minton
Taday tfcere m m aaioa bet-
ween CHiaa aad the Soviet
UaMa, •■» ifkrvr or area in
wtticb tliey kawe common
interesu,* be
At tte
revolation. koarever, The^
Amtnemm em^m wm tke roam
enemy of tfMr people of tbe
•'arid,'" Hifliaa mad. AoKncan
poary bad to aadnpo chaage.
and, "irooKalyr Niaon was
ia Chiaa, aooMdiag to
Hintoa, NtSM receives the
credit for revcnaag bottilitv
relations wttb Cbia# " The
to
Hifltoa. Hart mm be lectkd is
tiMt of Tj
note.
H I at aa eapiaiaed tkat the
War ill
be a
nuckar war or tke ead of the
TlK% fed tbat, ac-
balf
of tile baauia race will be
UCLA Daily
Seeks fee foriVooden Centef
Proposed four to six dollar —
fee will soon be voted on
ly RobOTt WaM
OB Stair Writer
Tbe Capital Outlay Task
Force (COTF). a subdivision
of the lUpatration Fee Com-
mittee, bat recommended to
tbe CbaaecUor a four to lijif
dollar tncMiMe in registratiaa
fees in tbe form of a itudeat
indenture fee to pay for tbe
proposed Wooden Sports aad
Recreation Center
With the cbaaoe that pnvate
funding for half of the coit of
tbe planned Waadcn Sports
aad Recreation Center wiU fall
through. COTF has recom-
airadcd that tbe soon-to-be-
voted-on student Mienture fee
be'avaWe of picking up the
difference.
Tbe decision was made bv
fee Tbe fee would be set for
four dalwt per ftudent per
quarter The fee could then be
raind to na dollars per stu-
dent per quarter to a
imum of S6 milhon
However, several mei
of COTF expressed
that tbe Cbaaoellor would not
waar AS vigorous a fund raising
campaign with 2 of the S4
milbpn sum potentially avail-
able through the student in-
denture fee
fia bMHlKe
**There's no incentive to raise
the other S2 million when the
funds are already situng there."
cnticized Scott Taylor. COTF
member.
diaiiee C ▼(
COTF after iaho Sand brook,
administrative assistant to the
Chancellor, informed tbe usk
force of tbe possibihty that
private funds could not be
laind to pay for a full half of
tbe $8 million cost of tbe
Center.
*No gaaiaalw'
Tbe Cbaaoellor feels very
confident that he can conduct
a fiaadraising campaign to raise
a minimum of $2 million, but
can*t guarantee S4 million/'
Saadbrook said.
**Cbuck (Chancellor Young)
can not show a piMC of paper
guaraaieeing 14 miUion,** be
In light of tbit, COTF de-
to recomaead an ''ex-
pandable** student indenture
COTF then decided that it
would recommend the **ex-
pandabk** indenture fee if the
fee could only be raised in a
case of "extreme fiscal ur-
gency** or if tbe Cbaaoellor
•bould have to seek aad re-
ceive Regent's approval for tbe
increase
Furthermore the fint com-
mitment of pnvate funds
would §0, at Sand brook said,
to make ''the other side of tbe
iccter-tottcr do down.** AkO,
tbe money raised by the stu-
dent indenture fee would be
used tolely for the conttraction
of the Wooden Sports aad
Recreation Center, aad not for
tbe renovation of Mac B. tbe
construction of an elevated
walkway connecting tbe major
AUTO
INSURANCE
YES — you need auto insurance
AM the more reason to contact us for discounts
. to 35% to most students — another good
reason for being in college
See or call us m Westwood
477 ?S4«
agents for College Student insurance ^eHHcf "^
elements -of the Westwood
Matter Plaza Plan, or aay
other part of tbe plan
tp to GSA
Though COTF can only
make its lormal recommenda-
tions to the Chancellor, it will
be up to the Graduate Student
Council (GSA) aad tbe Stu-
dent Legislative Council (SLC)
to draw up the actual wording
of tbe ballot measure on the
studem indenture fee How-
ever, Tbe Chancellor will be
•afgnting to tbe two student
bodies through their presidents
what should be on the ballot,
and we (COTF) will be recom-
mending to the Chancellor,**
said Martin Nishi. GSA presi-
dent and mcm)>er of COTF
COTF recomrnendations will
influence tO-^ great extent the
nature of the ballot measure
COTF also made three other
recommendations to the Chan-
cellor, mainly in response to
the replies received by the task
force to a letter sent by the
Chairman. Robcn Rivero. on
March 19 The letter was ad-
dietaed to some 17 administra-
torirstudent government mem-
bers and heads of different
recreational organizations^ oa
campus
StipvlatkNi
One recommendation stipu-
lates that a board of governors
be created to administer the
center The board, which
would have a majority of stu-
dent members, would decide
how the facility should be used
and guidehnes for the use of
the center by non-students.
Another recommendation
made by COTF would post-
pone the collection of the in-
denture fee until the building
was completed
Tbe final recommendation
made would insure that at no
t4me during or after the con-
struction of the l>uildiag wouM
there be a loss of student
parking spaces
This new set of recommen-
dations has several implica^
tions for the Westwood Matter
Plaza Plan, of which the
Wooden Sports and Recrea-
tion Center it a part. First, the
present funding plan for the
project would not include re-
novation of tbe Mac B build-
ing, which originally aat^part
of the project.
Ako. if the Chancellor's
f u nd r a IS 1 ng campaign p roves
more successful than antici-
pated, the Chancellor would
not be precluded by COTPs
recommendations from apply-
ing tbe extra money to other
parts of the Westwood Mi
Plaza .PbuL
These fonaal recommci
tioat would allow the
sibility of the CbaaosBor toli-
citiag either Reg Fee monies or
funds from ttadeat government
to go taawiit tke Flaza Plan.
SHELLEY'S
EXPERT REPAIR SERVICE
Op«n Mon t Fri Til 8 PM
Ui:>uwUNT
PRICES
Snomrpacfc Lodge
Mammoth Lakes
Semi-dorm
Nr lifts 7 4^/
ia.a9 per person
Also. Condo for rent
Ml-fISS aHer 4:it
,);
f
m
I
tir»d of yesterday's hair?
tiAlf TCIDAT
For what'a happening now
atyling for men and women
Jerry Redding*! Jhirmack products
For appointment call 478-6151
tues. thru sat.
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with this ad
— i
1105 Glendon Awe Westwood Village
I
I
SEPI'S GIANT
SUBMARINE
15
C
discount on any
Giant Sepi
with this coupon
good through 1976
POTPOURRI
THE INTERNATIONAL RESTAUHANT
1023 Hllgard, Waatwood, Ph.: S2S-33a4
Nwflaa you to try N't SPRING OUARTER MENU
[ imaiifjigOCIiaia^'
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fin
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briten! tlpa
)
liorm
CiNCtMn
Sw«tt A Sou/
IGMnai
ft«Mtt ASeer 1
j
Luocti A Dlno«r knctuom. Soup or
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Ofinli 11 29f haalthy lunch $1 00 ChaTs
Caopuccind 1 60 deaaartt 40
not antrae. dr»nli
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"Work? This Summer?
"HA! NO WAY! i CAN work during the school
YEARI" HOWEVER — IF YOU ARE THE TYPE OF PERSON
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SUMMER IN ORDER TO VACATION IN STYLE ALL FALL,
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• 1
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LA 90024
'%:
I
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"^
1
<
I
\
[
SD anooamits
Summer Sessions 1976
•f varying lengths during the ;
iMnths erf June, July 4 August
Undergrsduste A GfMduste Progrsms.
Workshops Semtnsrs — Dsy snd Evening Courses
«■
Ulbenl Arts coowss in pipciMlHjjf. iniinixtionjl ivfeMm
SdlOOl of Business Admmtstration Mmtnart and coun^-
worii for th9 B8A and th« MBA programs
School o# E^ycalMiii cOMXiiiorii. ^yfhmtme^ m sucti
t
s AMiitent Proffam — CmntftcM9 Prqgt—n
icatc Prapwn for tnc
School of Nyrsmg f AJIiod
^•rr<
cmll 291
m
Gestener
« Corporation
Announces A-
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Special Showing
Thursday^ April 15, 1976
The Beverly Hilton
.9876 Wilshire Blvd.
Beverly Hills, Calif.
— &30 am to 6:30 pm
FEATURED
* Electronic Scanners
* Silk Screen Duplicating
♦Table Top Off-Set Duplicating
* Copying
* Binding
attcfid pleaM.' forward Mornuiion.
ta^OMNa.
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Gestener Corporatio
9MW Beverly BhrcL
Los Angeles 90057
3t5-MS1
Efki cation Seminar Ends
■^' ^ I
Israelf minlsfer lectures
on 'the crucial problem
of education' before 10Q
tkml "intcgrsu (ormai mud i«-
" Yadli.
n
"In a %em€^ wc are trying to
modulate the kibbutz educa*v
iioAsI expcnence to an url
»ctui _
Bj Ca/lkf C<
Dl Suifr Wfiicr
Education oi the diMdvan-
"the crucial profcitni of
educati«i,** wm a focal pomt
.of a iKture by Aharon Yadhn.
ittaeli Minmer of Culture and
EJacatioB. last Friday in tht
Faculty HoMs. The lecture,
•policy Alternatives in itraeli
Education,** made a public end
of a tkrce-day colloquium ipr-
fsnized in cooprration witC
tbe National Council of Jewish
Women (NCJW)
Imafration withm the system
and elements affecting the
mimster*s pohcy decisions were
discusied before the crowd of
over lit.
The WCiW^s conMniiment to
education for "benefit of chil-
everywhcre" was a key
E'sther R L^nda, na-
tional preiident of the Council
gave for the groups support of
the Israeli six -man exchanfc
Support wnt specifically given
by the NCJW RcMMch In-
stitute For Innovation Ijd Edu-
cation at the Hebrew Uuver-
sity of Jerusalem
Main tht»e
The mam theme of the col-
loquium was racuil integration
in the school tystem and the
nHMMSent of education that
must effectively reach varied
cultures The purpose was to
"exchange findings and to ex-
plore ways in which researjch-
ers and policy makers can
work closely together,** said
NCJW representative^ _
Yadlin cited three criteria
affect ling his policy decisions.
These are, the values "we ad-
here to, the knowledge derived
from research findings and
reality; the appqrt unities, de-
nMMids and constraints imposed
on us by the society or reality
we live m."
Yadlin IS concerned with
evaluating educational systems
**We must invest in sound longi-
tndinal research, but our policy
decisions cannot^ wait 10 years
for the results, not only be-
cause a minister's term is up at
the end of four years/* he said
Relrvancy
Yet Yadlin spots problems in
evaluation relevancy "What I
ara struggling to articulate is
that with the best of inten-
tions, research findings that
hear on education are some-
umes not able to help where
they are most often needed."
the minister said. Yadhn re-
lated all three enter la to each
issue Teacher education, test-
ing, television for early child-
hood and the family, and cur-
riculum development are prob-
lems of Israeli education which
are confronted in his lecture
Another edlication obstacle
the Israelis are making prog-
ress against is the development
of new educational institutions
**ICibbut/ education
the distinction between the
fonanl and infonani, between
the cognitive, affective and
interpersonal through a con-
ception of a society that edu-
cates, and not a school that
educates," the Minister ex-
plained
Yadlin himself is a member
of Kibbutz Satzerin. located
near Ber-Sheva. Israel
Israel does not ajjp to iron
out all differences and pro-
duce a uniform national
product with regard to inte-
gration. Yadlin said. Israel
wishes to absorb differences
into "a common culture." He
said this IS an attempt at **cul-
tural stynthcsis** but he feels
"this is ^process which ntfll'
take ge ne rations "
Israel is **living in a con-
stant state of belligerency."
Yadlin said He added. "Raids,
sabotage and boycotts are the
normal scene in which babies
are bom and children grow
up." Yadlm feels as a result.
"We must not learn to hate "
Education must provide the
openmindedness to continue
recognition of "signs marking
the beginnings of peace.
"The issue be»g discussed in
our colloquium, educational
policy and research, is vital for
policy makers and academics
m all societies. It is my hope
that we are only beginning thir
conversation today," he said.
History of American Indian
musiq explained by professor
By Chris
An intimate group of 60
partially filled Schoenberg Hall
Monday night to hear Char-
lotte Heth. acting assistant
professor of muaic, spin the
tale of American Indian munc«
the ronds it has traveled and
where it is today.
According to Heth, the
source of the munc is ex-
phuned in folk legend The evil
■ngpc demon Stonecont was
tricked to pnis by seven men-
struatuig maidens. As he pro-
onadnd. each maiden
■Mi to progicsBivny
■mil at the last he was uken
aad burned, the onlv way to
kill inch a WemL
As his hfe was iicknd away,
Stoaaoaat*s fhnt hide cracked
the people the
hiraait the
and faith of
the Native American.
Hcth, heradf an Oklahoma
ulk by
_ that,
while distinctly Indaai. had a
to a
ditty
aai oaly differ fiaai
said, ''bat aae
rated milk caas for turtle or
abalone shells, and ghMS or
phMtic beads for those pre^
viously handmade from wood,
sheQ, or bone
Heth explained that soaK of
the elder more traditional
Indians are uneasy with the
changes, but that the structure
of Indian cuhure has maia-
tained a flexibility rarely fouad
in the European traditions
brought to Amenca by the
white man.
^ The recordings evoked the
aK>od of a more suble period
in Native American history.
Words of one sa^g, iaag ia the^
English traaalntion. could
bavc. with a different arranga-
ment. been from a modern
American middle claas ballad:
"Hey, sweetheart, I am
thinking of you. I amader if
you are aloae toaight. I won-
der if you are thinking ef aK.**
Heth illustrated the time-
lemaam of the maaic, that it:
today remains crucial in the
fabnc of Indian culture. *^!t has
maintained its integrity^ she
said, **It*s aot old, past, or
faded away. It^ mmk that still
fully exisu. in 197$."
to be replaced on the
Witness identifies Soliah
in his bank robbery trial:
(AP) — A bank teller todav identified Steven Sohah,
Pauicia Hearst*s lover before her arrest, aa mm of the
oNccnity-fthoutiag bandits who held up a Crocker National
Baak branch fattt April 21.
Patricia Tommeraason said the saw a ifceigpn ■iililinf
robber run down the center of the baak seeaadi aflcr a
group of bandits burst mto the bank, shouting and fihi^ a
-m She did not say Sohah fired a
Soliah. oaoe amMod of haitaM^ the .
eM^gid aritb taking pan m the SIS.CNnT
b " - ■ -
m ooun today the man you have baea telling
Jf ^^«rt thet you saw runningT aaisad AgM. U.S. Any
- Ni
•Yaa, ilr.* she lephed.
-WaaM yoa descri^j^ what he is _
"He has da a Ughl Mae suit aad ._
ilf ^^ ^'^ ^"^ ^^^ WHkim thea said
-T^ -— ^ wiU shpw - ' - -
«y Un^ OpmMwm Idaad by atte of fear
the baak, but that Soliah. a 27-year-
He is the oa||y
it tfilf
Only one of its kind in the nation
-T"
_ti-
—hawSchooi^ums out street^lawy
(CPS)— For years, a stmt in
law school guaranteed an m-
salar t&iaiance Law students
renounced all interest in world-
ly affairs, retreated to a book-
lined enclave of torts and
briefs, and emefpd three years
later, ready to slmg le^daae
with the best of 'em
But their three-year live bur-
mi in classic cases prepared
amt lawyers for only ceruin
kinds of litigation million-
doMnr divorces, upper income
tax returns and trials of kid-
napped heirenca, yes. Indicted
13-year-old heroin addicts, in-
junctions against picketing pro-
testers and evictiaas of 20-
member ghetto families, no
Besides, there were all those
expensive law school debts to
ptty off and ^ a comfortable
position waiting with Higgens.
Matlock, Johnson, Johnson
and Johnson.
A good street lawyfr~«^as
too hard to find, decided a few
attorneys They wanted a
school to decrease the shortage
and at a reasonable price to
students. Enter the People's
College of Law.
"If you want to become dep-
uty district attorney or work
in the legal department of
some corporaiioa," the school
catalog says, "don*t wiaste your
time and ours by appiving
There are other schools for
you - all the others."
The People's College of La^
in Los Angeles prepares itsti30
students, nearly half of wl^m
are women and minorities, to
work for social change It's an
alternative to law schools that
stress ehtism and competition.
Its founders say And it's the
semes-
ohl> one of its kind
Students pay $350 i
ter to attend the new,
which is aaaccred.it,<;& -Call
forma, unhke most stales, does
not require attendance at an
accredited law school as a
prerequisite for taking the bar
exam
The school^ fu^i year stu-
dents are given conventional
dnsaes to prepare them tor the
.state bar-administered First-
Year Law Examinations The
students must pass these to
continue studies in an ua-
accred^ school
But-in ihr next three ^reifs.
they uke classes that many say
the> could find mm here else,
dealing with tenant-landlord
law. consumerism, immigra-
tion, police bruialitv. sterili-
zation and racism
**We're trving to turn out
tullv t/ainrd* propir lawvtTs.
State requires warnings to lUD users
•
SACRAMEVTO (AP) ~
Women have the right to kfiow
more about intrauterine birth
control devices before they use
them, (he state said in pro-
posed regulations Tuesday
The regulations, which wiH
be the topic of two heartM
next monthi are aimed at safe-
guarding the personal rights of
the patient and the patient's
right to know, said Health
Department spokesman Boh
Nance
Although the regulations do
not endorse specific models of
the device, typically f copper
ring inserted inside a woman
for birth control. the> do re-
quire a patient's informed con-
sent. Nance said
The regulations also require
the patient be provided with a
card that advises her to con-
tact a dbdar immediately "if
suspected undcsired reactions
occur" to the device
The patient would also be
ad viied that the device's lot
number is imporunt to record
and keep in case any trouble
arises with the device
**Some lUD's have not
worked that well They have
caused women great pain and
have worked ag^rnst their
Assembly passes bill aiding
rape victim after the crime
health in some cases. There
have been pregnancies." Nance
said when asked about criti-
cism of the device
He added that many clinic %
simply routinely prescribe an
IDD for t woman as "an in-
sunt solution ' He predicted
the regulations would be "well
received" because of their
emphasis on caution
The federal government is
working on 11 [>s now and in
the near future probably will
be isMiing a list of approved
models ol the device. Nance
said
Hearings on the device ttrgu
lations will Nr held in Sacra-
mento May 7 and San Fran-
cisco May 10
lawyers who will go back to
thar communities to practice.**
says Henrv di Suvero. a laculty
member and moving force be-
hind the opening of the school.
I he. emphasis at People's
C ollege ts^n^i on past grades
B A *s and^4 SA T scores are
not even required but on
the ability lo learn, the lacultv
say I he school is virtually run
by students Extensive parti-
cipation in the school's legal
clinic IS mandatory. Remedial
writing classes are available, as
IS tree child care AM classes
are held in the eveninE. so thai
( C c»nttnurd tm Page II )
I
V
I
By Chris Bowman
Sacmniento C(
SACRAMENTO A bill designed to
upgrade hospiul and pobce aaatment of
tape victims sailed through the State As-
sembly last Wedaeaday.
The le^slation by Senator Robbins (D ~
Los Angeles) was approved five to zero by
the Assembly Justice Committee.
It would provide rape victims free hospital
testing for pregnancy and venereal disease,
require hospitals m large urban counties to.
aaunuin proiMsiaaaii trained in examining
rape victims 24 hours a day and mandate
special training for police to sensitize them
to the victim's emotional needs.
The measure has already cleared the
Senate floor, and a committee consultant
said it has a high chance of reaching the
Governor's desk this session
The bill was introduced this se«ion i^s a
resuh of the Cnmiiud iusuce Committee's
1974 hearings, which revealed many short-
cominp int he state rape laws and pro-
ced ures
Robbins said that the committee's testi-
mony showed that half of the hospital.
iminations were "inadequate" for gather-
proper evidence for prosecution.
•'Frequently the examining physician will
» fail to check for such things as bruises on
the arm, skin samples underneath the finger-
nails of the lape victims." said Robbins.
Robbins^-hUI requires physicians to use a
tlandardi7ed rape examination check hst to
be developed by the State Department o^
Health
The Los Angeles Democrat said that the
bill, SB 575, complements a 1974 rape
reform statute which protects ra|K victims
from having their pnor sex lives disclosed in
court
Womens groups, including the National
OrgMi I iition of Women and the Bay Area
Women "Against Rape, arc backing the bill
These groups are akk> endorsing other
rape reform bills pending in the Legislature.
tadadtng one by Senator Robert Presely (D
— Riverside) which would prevent addresses
of rape victims from being released to the
Pf^»
JXSU
R.t.A.D.S. Sine TED
BL!^T SPIED READINf.
PROi.RAM >
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BE A PART OF THE ~
EXPO CENTER
TRAVEL FAIR
APRIL 20 & 21
We naed voluntaaratohalpaatup
arvl taha down the exhibits and
run travel films Come to EXPO.
A213 Ackerman or call 825-0831
aa soon as poaaibia -
Dr Anthofiy Bats A Dr. Jon Vogef
OPTOMETRISTS
(JCLK
BICENTENNIAL
EVENT
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION AS
A PEOPLE'S MOVEMENT
4
Second in the UCLA BICENTENNIAL LECTURE SERIES
PAGE SMITH
former Provost. Cowaff CoMoga and Professor of
Historical Studios Emontus. UC Santa Cruz: former
Proiaaaor of History. UCLA, locturor. farmor. author of
laHa Adaaw; Aa a City Upan A HM; Oaaghlaffa al Iha
Praadaad Land Waaian In Aawflaaii Htaiafy; co-author
(with Choftaa Oaniol) Tha CMehan Baoh.
aarlaa contimiaa VVCONESOAYS. a P M Dodd Hall 147
Agrtl 21 JR POLE. Vic* Maator, Churchill Coltoga. QamOndaai
THE AMERICAN RCVOLUTIOfi THROUOH BRlTtSH EVtii
April ai PIQBBRT ICELLEV. Prcdsaaof oi History. UC Saota Bamara.
TWO HUNBiMD YEARS OF THE TWO PARTY SYSTEM -> HOW
HAS IT EVOLVED AND
May 12
WINTHROP X>ROAN
RACE AQEAN0 8EX
REVOLUTION
MARY BETH NORTON
UniwrsHy
THE REVOLUTION AS A WAR Of
Of
T
UC
OF THE AMBPBCAN
Cofn^H
TKM FOn tWOMEM
No Admission Chrgt
W«dnMday, April 14 8 PM
PubSc CofdlaSv I
by UCLA
on PubMc
Dodd Hall 147
I
•
it^
t
i H.ll
r:
poinf
Letters to the Editor
lUCamp
Abortion
( UniCamp has long had iht
*^ unique and well-deserwd dit-
2 tinction of being UCLA's ' o<-
X ^*cial chanty," and, M such is
^ the only campus-ortginated in-
* nual fund raiting drive to re>-
J ceive oHkiai administrative sailc-
I tion and support
i' Unkranip. as I am sure rpoit ot
^ you *rt M¥/ATt. ts a summer
camp in the San Bernardino
Mountains for diabetic, educa-
tionalty a^^ generally under-
privileged children — run en-
tirely by students. It depends for
"Its fir>ancial support upon volun-
. tary contributions from the canr>-
pus community ai;id the pro-
ceeds from Mardi Cras. which
the students will stage on cam-
pus April 23, 24 and 25
IfTi r«ppeMfiii a ptrticularly
critical year in the life of Uni-
Camp because it has become
neceuary to make a number of
capital imptovements in the
camps For that reason I have
afpstd to allow them to a^
proacK faculty for classroom
collections on two separate days
instead of the usual or>e, and we
have extended Mardi Gras from
two days to three. Finally, I am
breaking preca^M by asking
the Daily Bruin to publish this
letter over my signature urging
all members of the UCLA com-
rnunity to donate gerterously If
you i^re not approacf)ed directly
during Camp Drive Week, you
can send your contributions at
any time to UniCamp. 900 Hil-
gard ~ Avenue, Los Angeles
California 90024
On behaH of the very hard
working students, who year-in
and year-out solicit support for
and operate UniCamp. I am
pleased to take this opportunity
to appeal directly to each of
you.
ChaHcf I. Y<
I would iike to commend the
vour^ woman who wrote^ into
the Brum letters section (name
withheld) on March 10th con^
cerning David France's opinion
that abortion is unjustifiable
tt%uf69r.
I too,, am i-arrier of a genetic
defect and had a therapeutic
abortiorr right here at the UCLA
Medical Center to avoid bring-
ing a child into the world that
would be severely mentally re-
tarded I thank God that the
doctors here were able not only
to discover the defect, but to
detect it in time for me to have
the option of abortion. I am also
thankful that the option of abor-
tion was open to m^ J had a
brother who was born with the
defect, but was born before it
xwas discovered and, also before
abortion was a legal and accept-
ed practice I lost him five
months ago, he died of the
complications of pneumonia.
Because of his mental retarda-
tion, he was susceptible to many
cofds and pneumonia; that is to
say, he could not hold his head
up to prevent the infection from
going into his lungs. He was
only la years old. Does Mr
France wish that anguish and the
anguish of a lifetime on. another
child and on another set of
parents? Is he personally willing
to iFHTur all the costs of bringing
up a "vegetable," if I were to
forego abortion and bring such
a child into the world? I will sign
my name and Mr France can
contact me through the Brutn'
office if he wishes to oblige.
AKa Moore
luniof, EiigBiii
**! uy. Major. I was always
S^^^^M i
Mw m « la irMM
Music Department
The April 9 article on the
status of the UCLA Music De-
partment's performing groups
seemed to regard the UCLA
orchestra as an organization
strictly limited to Music stu-
dents. It also appeared that stu-
dents are reluctant to do any-
thing for which they won't, fet
academic credit. These are dam-
aging attitudcf, as witnessed by
tfie orchestra's moribund state.
The orchestra should represent
the entire University community,
and students and faculty alike
should participate. Academic
credit should be beside the
point. At my alma mater, in
whose orchestra I played for
eight years, no one got course
credit for any kir>d of perfor-
mance, arni, with a student body
less than a third the size of
UCLA^ we manifed to give
three concerts a year.
FurtFier, though it is almost
incorKeivable that anyone r^^ed
defend Mehli Mehta, I'd like to
say a few words in his support. I
played in Mehli Mehta s orches-
tra last year,Mnd n was a plea-
sure and an honor to do so. If
Mr. Posrter believes "Mehu is of
the old n>ercurial rant-ar>d-rav^
school of maestros" his experi-
ence of truly personality-bruis-
ing conductors must be sadly
lacking. Far from being abusive
to his musicians, Mehli tolerated
behavior (and some playing)
which should neyer have been
inflicted on him. It is a t^re
conductor who can combine
teaching with performance pre-
paration, and Mehta is such a
rare musician. He says he is
leaving UCLA a disappointed
man. I am sure that UCLA miisi-
ciani will in turn Und his de-
parture very disappointing in-
deed.
others fun and skilled. I believe
the Brum accurately refleaed
this balance in its daily reports.
Thanks for a fine jlob. ■-
R. t. O'Ncfl
&md Appifd Science
The Bomb
Thanb
Although somewhat belated, I
congratulate the Daily Bruin for
the excellent coverage of Er>-
gmeer's Week
The School tried to give the
campus community a variety of
events — some were instructive.
Congratulations to Patrick
Healy and the Brutn for a very
ime piece of investigative re-
porting on UC nudear research
activities. THE DESTRUCTION
OF MANKIND brought to you*
courtesy of the University of
California. I hope the article
stimulates a reasor^ed debate of
the issues, not just inflammatory
rhetoric. Should a University be
learning the arts of war, or
should it rather be learning the
arts of avoiding war? Or does it
have to be both? Or either?
Adminirtralive Analyit
Conception doesn't necessarily mean personhood
By Ralph Ahry
I- -f
(Editor's r>ofe: AIvy is a gradate UuderH
here mafonng in philosophy )
Mr David La France has anempted to
defend his antj-abortion star>d (D§
3/5/7S} against my objections (DB
3/9/76) in his 4/8 Opinion as follows:
OPINION
"Is there any one day when the fetus
suddenly becomes' hunf>an? Any one
day when it is a whole lot different than
It was the day before? Yes. there is such
a day, and theie is onJy one — the day
of coTKeption. Logicalty, we cannot pick
any other day and say, 'Today this is
human; yesterday it was net/" Once
again, Mr. La France argues in an absurd
way. while at the same time accusing me
of not thinking logically when I refute
two of his arguments in my 3/9 Opinion.
Now It just does not follow from the
alleged fact that it h impossible to
exactly determine the instant at which a
fetus becontes a person, that the fetus
was always a person Rather, what seems
more plausible to conclude is that our
concept of a person may be such that
there will be cases in which its ap-
plication is difficult at km/L To see how
Mr La France's line of argument is
invalid, one has merely to consider a
couple less emotion -packed examples.
For instance, consider the Pope's head.
Two things are for sure; (1) the Pope'^i
head is not hairy, and (2) some people's
heads are hairy Now let us suppose that
for some reason the Pope starts growing
hair on his head at the rate of one 8- inch
strand o4 hair each hour After a while
we wiN refrain from calling his head
bald and after a longer while we will
start calling his head hairy But it is
•mpMiMe to pinpoint exactly the instant
at which the Pope's head becomes hairy
I doubt if there is such an instant But it
does IKK follow from this that our hair-
rowing Pope had a hairy head right
from the beginning of the hair-growing
experience, lllliiffri thK is exactly what
Mr. La France's way c4 arguing would
lead us to conclude. Rather, it seems to
powt out that our concepts of such
things as baldness and hairiness have, as
it were, inexact and fuzzy edges.
Let us take a more analogous case, an
example I previously used in refuting
or%e of Mr La France's arguments —
namely, the seed- and- plant analogy I am
^^^^ ' * 'mpossible. to
pinpoint the exaa in^iani at which a
given seed becomes a plant — a point at
which it IS a whole lot different." as Mr.
La France puts it. than it was a second
before. But if we take Mr. La France s
tine of argument ^ itlfr^^ would, in
the fae«^ of this ( ,ky. be forr*»H to
concli^de that a set* u is a plant as soon .j
ft IS planted in moio i«nile soil (^1
course that s nonsense. So. ^ain. Mr La
France has failed to give ur a good
reason to believe thai Hie fetus or the
fertilized en » a person.
Mr. La France also lakes issue with my
attack on his p9sition that it is always
unfustif table to kill a fetus (in virtue of it
suppoacdiy being a person), that does
not guarantee that all abortions are
unjustifiable; for the fact that carrying a
fetus to term threatens tf>e life of a given
nr>other certainly justifies killing the fetjus^
person or not. Mr. La France rK>w arguet
that "unless some sort of malice is
involved, the threat to one's life does not
justify the taking of another's." thus even
the ntother whose life is threatened by
carrying her fetus to term is unjustified
in killing the fetus. But requiring malice
on the part of another person in order to
justify killing the person in self-defense,
is requiring too much. Certainly it is
!P.f>^f^'"^t> jujstifi.able to kill another
person in self-defense, even when one's
life is threatened without malice on tf>e
other's part. For instance, consider the
following attackers; the criminally insane
killer, the drugged killer, the sleep-
walking kiMer, and the hypnotized killer.
Whether malice is imrol»^d with any of
these attackers seems irrelevant if kiUinf
one of them is the only way of protect-
ing one's own life. Killing another person
in order to save one's own life may be
unfortttnate when the other is non at
fault, but It may nonetl>eles» be justified.
D^Wv Brum
Their watch word is Hypocrisy
More letters
By Mark Joseph^
^s fioler /ose^ is a Senior here ma/on^g m
CTriewritiy'. 7
After five quarters of r^admg edkorials by
members of the various socialist /communist
groups on campus, I feel compelled to respond,
•ipecially to the leners by Barry Saut man, Mike
Shiff man and Steve Edwards in tfie April 7 and •
OPINION
Interestingly rnm^, km aoMie 2M er so Daily
Bruim. Sautman's article is flie4irst I've read by a
Socialist ^or Communist) which dealt with facts,
and facts in light of historical perspective . rather
than mindtei rhetoric replete with "bourgeois
oppressions," 'imperialist aggressions." "fascist
•'•^•••••orH," and '"ruthless exploitations;" or at
least it did until the last three paragraphs
The opiniorH of Shiffman and Ediwards are
much more typical The only hUtorical fact in
Shiffman's article is mention of the June 27. 1%9
NYC not. aruj he apparently uses it to condor>e
violence. The rest of his article is dreary diatribe,
where he anacks both present society^ and son>e
of the campus revolutionary organizatioiii.
Ec^ard's article is iundatrd. Though only a
small tetter of about 200 words, it has no less than
seventeen phrases which are semantically null,
but emotionally packed, from the "supposedly
enlightened" in line two to the "faadst mentality"
near the end of his article. His letter points up
other HiMfs of revolutionary rhetoric. One is the
complete lack of humor in the revolutionary
mowemefit. In five quarters I have yet to laugh M .
anything they have said. Edwar<^ refusing to
recognize that the bordello article was a joke
shows arK>ther flaw, namely that revolutionary
rhetoric is very willing to take what anyor>e else
says and force if to fit into their oiivn world view.
The last mistake they make is their seeming
concern for some oppressed groups
Let me relate an event that occurred last
q"4ner. i^oiii the. nimh week. I dMamed a
peMOfi from my church, which I drculeted in
two of nty dasae^ The ptiUuii was to free Ceorg i
Vint, a Christian pastor, from a Russian prison
camp where he's scheduled to be executed about
mid-May. (No, there is no fUQn, Read the Culag
Archipelago,) Anyways, I got about 40 people to
sign It, a number of whom were hostfle to
Christianity I figured I'd take the petition o^^er to
.the socialist book tables between Rolfe and
Campbell halls, because if I rea4«4heir editorials
correctly, they're the or>es whojare really fighting
for freedom. Well, none of ^tf>em sigr>ed my
petition One guy said. "Religion has been used
against socialism in the past" Number one. I
wasn't talking about religion, I was talking about
one spedfk truly oppressed person and number
two, since what he said translates "I care about
people, but only in so far as their ideas agree
with mine," ail Mr Edwards implicatiofit that
socialism (unlike capitalism) cares more about
human dignity than profit (or any other idealogy)
fo up m smoke. Another guy wouldn't decide,
and referred me to a girl sitting at the table She'
read the petition very carefully and then said, "I
never sign petitions." Question: If she rwyer signs
petitions, why did she bother to read mine at all?
I'm sure she would have signed mkie HI It had
been to free some unfairly m\priior>ed labor
leader or Marxist here in the U.S. HetKe. I see r%o
consistency between their talk and their actiom.
I think tf>e underlying reason that socialist
argument faik to persuade me is that they have a
mistake^ at the very roots of thmk philosophy. As I
can see, they believe that you "change people by
changing society." This is simply not true, at a
quick survey of human history will show. In
reality, one can only "change society by dianftrtg
people" I, of course, believe the only effectual
change^Jis that wrought when a person reconciles
himteH to Cod by faith in Christ. Feel free to
respond, but please, base your arguments on
what Christ taught, not on what men (who
haven't dene much of what He said) have done.
You want some propaganda? Anx>r vtncit omnia.
Tme
Write a letter
Why it It that ti
e^h givmg exams that
iust tee long and too
detailed for anyone to finish
adequately m a short amoum of
time? For ir>star>ce, let me point
to a very^ specifK example In
Dr. Harrison's Biology 2 dass,
each quaner the TA's make up a
very "obnoxious" and oveHy
thorough midterm, which cofv
sists of 50 quest lorH. 9B p9r cent
of which is fill in. and on the
average there are three to four
different parts per question This
gives you a grand total of ap-
proxirnately 1S0 to 200 quet-
tiOTH.
Now this nrtay seem trival ar\d
perhaps familiar to you. but let
Tiii|»ifir Out That th«> amount of"
time altoned to complete this
exam is approximately 40 to 45
minutes, depending on how fast
everyone is seated and how
quickly ttie tests are 0atted out
This averafRt out to about 5
questions per minute.
My question is, is it pottibii
to adequati^ly complete a test
like this with any efficiency?
Why is it that teechers give you
an exam that should take t¥vo
hours, and expect you to finish
it in of>e hour? Is this a true
measure of one's ability? How
does a teacher expect students
to perform to their abilities and
assert their knowledge In any
subject if they're not given
ample time to regurgitate arid
(especially with a fin in t^t)
re^l this erK>rmity of informa-
tion with absolute accuracy? .
Or is this time factor ,)ust
another way tf^ BkAo^y Depart-
ment It tpybig to "weed" people
'^ut of the BtoAo^y
el lack of
for students Rut,
no eaoise for this undue pMs-
sure and dltcririiiwgtei) IfiMu-
ence, hargyag tleleiif b ofdv a
ptepRratory course for payche
tofn^ ma^mn. Then what is their
motWe? I wortder if anyone can
tell me why ttmm b of the es-
serK»?
I
I
K. L ice
I ^found It curious that K. I.
lee'^in his editorial, "What is a
Chairperson" (Oaify Brutn, April
6, 1976) failed to note that the
final syllable in person is as
much a reference to a male as
the man in chairman, horseman.
Gern>an. etc The word person
Should b^ changed to perchMd
so that we would have a| our
substitute non-sexist words
chairperchild, horseperchild,
Cerperchild, etc Where the
extra syllable, in perchild as
compgpgd to man, is objection-
able, or>e can turn to the non-
sexist "one" as in "Old One
River " All problerrH are solv-
able, but it is nacttaiy to be
careful to be tet«blve to anti-
\
In conclusion, it seiM that
Mr. Lee should also turn his
attemion to the myriad sur-
names that end in man, such at
Friedmart, Hauptman, etc I have
left the "sur" in surname be-
cause its spellinc "sur" ratfwr
than "sir" may we It out of the
sexbt category, but I coiifess to
feeling a bit ur>eaay about that.
I hope this letter will ptowe a
helpful step in the desexificaelon
of our language.
y
the great naturals,
wrlnklas and all
Soft. hMv)nM!PiQht oelton tope erK) penis Ihgl
•re totally r^iaxsd Bnd supertMy comfortable.
Shoitm here. }uet two from a coHoction in tha
Sports w—r dispartment Natural cotton, prp-
washed and
I
tNp-on top, 1«.00
Diwratiing pants wWi poctot, 17JM
TM Booii How 10 Enfoy ttia Meat of Your Uia —
MdRriaaMta, i .ee
TM: DIaoowerIng Inner Cnargy ar>d
Cain, iafla. Kory. 1 gg
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EOUCATlONAl CENTER
k
•«<t.l^-
Uft L'i'm
By RuberU kaye
DB SlafT Reporter <
Anna Baron. 82-year»-old,
lives m two different w
When not attending' c
here, she's m the world of the
elderly. Eastern European im-
migrants like herself in the
Fairfax district — LA's Jewish
quarter
••Fairfax is my home Here 1
am among my people But I
see all too often a sadness that
is of the loneliness of bid age,"
Baron said.
Living alone since l%6.
Baron is determined to be active
and independent Not hanng
been to school since she gradu-
ated from the University of
Vienna m 1918 with a degree
in economics, she decided last
summer to go back to school
to pursue her interest in politi-
cal science Bar oaV motive is
to challenge and - to be chal-
lenged. Rd^emng to herself as
a watcher of people and poii"
tics, she said, **] have aliMiyi
been interested in politics -- it
is life.**
Baron be^ns her day at 5
am by readink the^ ILos Angeles
Times and the New York
Times, and then watching the
TodiO^ Show She ahwys
catches the morning news and
seldom misses a television
commentary, documentary or
pohucal specuil
Active mumd
**Going to school is the
surest way to keep my mind
active until my time is up,** she
said, adding, •'I haven't fch this
good in many years. You can't
believe what a joy it is to
surround myself with these
young faces and i>right minds
everyday How can one ever
grow senile in this atmo-
sphere?**
**I am too old for a degree,**
Baron said She plans, how-
ever, to continue taking class-
^s^ as long as possible, hi
addition to political science
courses. Baron is also panning
4o take some languaft clasics.
She now speaks four different
languages.
Baron grew up amidst the
^a small vuiagc in
once part of Poland, she re-
calls smuggling families out of
anti-Semitic Poiaad la the
early Twenties Refusing the,
"sutyi and prattiie** of Ger-
man citizenship. Baron was
later able to get herself and her
imoMdiate family out of Gerr
oumy in 19^7, when she came
to the United States.
CoMctiitmtion camps
She lost many relatives to
concentration camps, though
*"lf there had been an Israel,
the Nazis would not have
killed SIX million Jews." Baron
said years later in a debate
with a professor.
*•! am lOU per cent behind
Israel," Baron explained "I
have observed this country
gr&m from A pile of reeks mto
• floww fvden I fail to lee
how anyone can condemn iu
right to exist.**
••a senior citizen^
feels that -people make them-
•elves om Being young or old
is a question of thoughts
When you think you arc old
then you are ** To keep m
shape. Baron does nothing
special other than eating little,
waking early and walking -I
guess 1 must walk a good three
miles a day - that's 21 a
week," she said For other
senior citizens Anna advises
'^Do anything thai keeps you
moving, reading and thinking
And^ she added, **enjoy your-
Scientist can't sue avejr
plufonium accident case
1
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^j^rf
Vl»^<
yv^
A' -)
^V
* M.
^.
. ■ ^i.
Dismul
"^M *
'm
-*. *- -•
•^;-
.1II.-1 a.m.
starring
Andrae Crouch & The Disciples / Love Song
Barry McGuire < oaidrm oi tue u^
Larry Norman • Mustard Seed Faith
Honeytree • Ernie Rettino & Debby Kerner
-BHI Parable • Daniel Amos
Cbico Holiday « Children of the Day
->i!^^
; / ; / / ^
^ilfEBlCA
^CTAKA^^
Advance Tickets
So buv wnur iir-)i«kt9 •arty'
Person
S9oe
The University of Calif orma.
responsible for the. health
of a saentist who inhaled ra-
dioactive particles in 1971, is
not liable far suit by the su-
tute of limitations, according
to a spokesman for the ruhng
judge
Denying a $1 million suit
filed by meullurgist Saul E.
Bramer against the federal
government,- U.S Federal
Judge A Andrew Hauk ruled
in Los Angeles the University
of California was responsible
for the health and protection
of Bramer: The University.4>p-
erates for the government a
nuclear laboratory in Los Ala-
mos, TSiew Mexico where the
accident occurred
However, the statute of limi-
tations prohibits Bramer from
any legal action against the
University, according to Alex
Good, law clerk for Jadgc
Hauk Good said Bramer wait-
ed too long after the accident
to file suit and^ added, "he
physically nunifesu no adverse
conditions that would imparr
his health at this tirhe.**
Donald Reidhaar, of the
University General Council in
Berkeley, said when asked to
comment on this OMtter. Thi
not at liberty to give an opin-
ion at this time.**
Bramer was observing the
opening of a plutonium heat
source, a power source used in
satellites, when the endawd
operation developed a leak,
according to Dr G. Voelz of
the Los Alamo^^^^cientilic L|ib-
oratory The leak weirt uh-
detected for thirty minutes,
filling the air with radioaaive
plutonium 238 dioxide par-
ticles
Although nine people were
exposed to the particles, which
can cause possible lung and
bone damage, only Bramer has
taken any legal action
Bramer was unavailable for
comment.
— Jim Peltz
haw . . .
(Continued from Page 5)
students can hold onto current
fobs . • ■ s
'What We're doing.'' savs
Student Mario Vasqu^z,*' is
demystifying the laih, saymg
that It's not for the chosen Ich
A traditional law school is very
alienating You go to UCLA
and you feel the fear Pro-
fessors use the Socratic method
of teaching We don't play that
kind of game We say. 'Here is
the principle of law and this is
hovv It applies.''
The real test for People's
Coflcfe will come in two years
with iu first graduating class
Then its ability to produce
gratfaates who can pass the
Caiifurma Bar Lxamination
reputed!) one of the toughest
in the country will be
Mardi
Gras
2£
Lecture on human
evolution jt Royce
"Current rcnpacuwH on
Man's Evolufia«ary Past,
an illustrated lecture on hu-
man evolution, will be pre-
sented by Donald Johaa-
SM, archaeologist and di-
recior of the International
Afar Research Expedition in
Ethiopia, at 2:30 pm, Sun-
day, May 16, m Royce HaU
The lecture is part of a
Mries presented by the
UCLA Committee on Fine
Arts Productions in co-
operation with the L. S B
Leakey Foundations for Re-
search Related to Man's
Ongin and the UCLA Com-
mittee on Public Lectures
Though merchants frown quizzically
J4ewJyork absorbs f loodoff $2-bills
NEW YORK (AP) Ntw
Yorkers proved th«t money
still uiks as they nMM to the
hanks TMiiay, nmcted out
their hands and opened up
their cash registers for the i2
bai
Some merchants frowned
quizzically in their first en-
counter with the aew deuce
note, but not oac out of 13
who was asked for change
without exphmation refused to
do so
And M Gotham, where a
quarter's change cheerfully
given is as, rare as a parking
space, that was something
**ls this the new oaer cigar
Hoft proprietor Norouui Stem
beamed -We're going to put
thu one up.** Then he calHl
past the stacks of aromatic
stogies, **Georfe, 1 jiMt got the
fim $2 biUr
The aew NO. aach Tho«as
Jefferson's picture on the fmat
and the signing of the Dec-
laration of Independence .on
the back, was iwnad on the
third president's birthday to
commemorate the Bicentennial.
The government instructed
banks to hold onto the bills
until Tuesday.
in all, S225 million worth of
them were put into circulation,
with a toul of S400 nulhon
expected by
lint still waM^l enough
""We've had a steady parade
the doors nptaid,** teller
Elwood E Petjerson at Morgaa
Guaranty Tniit_iaid barely an
hour into the morning. "It's
not only the horteplayers, but
they want to give them to their
grandchildren as well.** He said
he'd given out $600 worth.
Some bank branches hadn't
received the new hills, and
of
to give out aMii dtta five of
them or to ptowiii ikm to
titer than regular custooMn.
''Tve waited ou #• or 19
people this aK>rnuig, aod SMit
of them asked for at least
ooe,** Citibank teller Milt Ed-
wards remarkad. *They want a
souvenir. I faen. At the rate
they're going, they
r-
Shakespeare as Oxford . . .
(Continuad oa Page 12)
<CootiMMd frofli Page 1 1
-The writer was at least 40 when he wrote,
sonnets urging Southampton to marry. In lact.
Oxford, then 40, was urging him to marry his
daughter Their ages correspond, but Shak-
sper*s age doesn't He- was only 29 By the time
he became 40. Southampton was already
married.**
According to Gtlfillan. moreover, Shake-
speare's sonnets speak of the ''Dark Lady**
who can easily be identified in Oxford's hfe ai t
Anne Vavasor, one of the queen's ladie»-in-
waiting He was injured in a duel over her,
Gilfillan believes other parallels can be found
if one closely examines the play A/am /p/, which
he considers almost autogiographical While
Hamlet was a prtnce in the Danish court of
Elsinore, Oxford was the premier carl, and his
brother-in-law visited Elsinore '^Oxford had
access to his notebook, in which the names
Roaencrantz and Guildenstern appeared And
even the orthodox Stratfordians pointed out
that Polonius was a caricature of Lord Burgh-
ley. Queen Elizabeth's powerful C hief MiniJOer.-
Irt the play. Hamlet stabs Polonius through a
curuin, and m real life, Oxford did the same to
Burghley's spv. but was acquitted "
He then added emphatically that not only
were Hamlet's best friends Horatio and Eran-
cisco, but Oxford's favorite cousins were
Horace (later called Horatio) and Francis de
Vere ^
Though Gtlfillan claims that Looney's theory
Ji addely supported both m America and -tn^
England, there are i^hll many who remain
devoted to the generally aoceptedlBOtion that
Shakespeare was the real author of his works
David Rhodes, professor of Enghsh here,
said, "I think Shakespeare's life was extra-
ordinarily well-documented" He added that
Shakespeare was known to have had a fine
education at the Stratford Grammar School
"Though he left there at age 16. he received the
modern equivalent today of a masters in
c lassies from Harvard
**Lying behind this desire to oust Shake-
speare from his authorship is an academic
snobbery iP^ople ihmk) if you don't have a
4M«versity adueation, you can't accomphsh what
Shakespeare wrote
DATSUN
"" Acres of Datsuns''
Student Discounts — Aik for Fleet Sales
Pasadena Datsun
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
> 684-1133*
^■■Ai
fluto-nsuRMMe
lotes
fftfv ^#V^HPtt^#'
AMER-ICAL
1434 Westwood Boulrvard • Suhe ••Lot Angeln, CdHandi
Call Day or ill«M - (11 3) 47ft-ft721
FRIDAY NIGHT PROGRAMS - SPRING 76
APRIL 9 ARMENIAN NIGHT:
APRIL 16 FILM FROM CUBA:
Music and lecture. 7:00-10:00 p.m
Armenian Dinner ($2.50), 5:30-6:00 p m
"LUCIA" — 19M — by Humberto Solas. 7 30-11 00 pm
Cuban Dinner ($2 50). 5:30-8:00 p m
APRIL 23 BALLET FOLKLORICO: 'Muaic and Dance from Mexico. UCLA Dance Department. 5:30-
8 30 p.m
Mexican Dinner ($2.50). 5:30-8:30 pm.
APRIL 30 FILM FROM MOROCCO -laPI HANDS" • 1972 - by Souhel Ben Baraka. 7:30-1 1 :00 p.m.
African Dinner ($2 50). 5:30-^:30 o,m.
MAY 7 PERSIAN NIGHT:
Music and Songs, 5 30-8:30 p m.
Persian 0\T\T>mf ($2.50). 5:30-8:30 p.m
MAY 14
FILM FROM ETHIOPIA ''HARVEST 3000 YEARS" — 1975 - by Haile Gerima 7:30-
11:00 p.m
Ethiopian Dinner ($2.50), 5:30-8:30 p.m.
MAY 21 INDIAN NIGHT:
Songs and Orchestra by Naushad Music Club 5:30-8:30 p.m.
Indian Dinner ($2 50). 5 30-8 30 p m
MAY 28
JUNE 4
FILM FROM SENEGAL: "XALA*^— 1974 - by Ousnian Semaotie. 7:30-11.00 p.m
African Dtnnef ($2.50). 5:30-8:30 p.m.
IRIBN NIGHT:
Muaic and songs by S#-a-cran Sidhe. 5:30-8:30 pm
Ifieh Dinner ($2.50). 5:30-8:30 p.m.
JUNE 1 1 FILM FROM CHILE —
MEXICO n^TTERS FROM MARUSIA"
Littin. 7 30-11:00 pm
U\r\f>i^ ($2 50). 5:30-8:30 p m
- 1978 ^ by Miguel
The films wilt be introduced by
Mr. Teshome Gabriel
Film Daaartment UCLA
EVERYBODY WELCOME, ADMISSION FREE
at the
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT CENTER
1023 Hilgard Ave . Wiestwood. Ph 825-3384
*■ -1
KaspaMt
Ov Via iwiacvistionai
^OsfHir't Ceunal on FroerBrnminp
TUNE-UP, LUBE t OIL $04%
BtAKi $oe
ovnuiMii
i
195
A-1 AUTO SERVICED
7957 VAN NUYS BLVD. a-^ -^^-
I
<
"8
1
The Business Advisory Council of the
International Student Center
1023 Hilgard, Westwood
Presents Weekly Seminar
Thursday, April 15
new Product Development —
(Engineering Students)
Management Consulting -
Michael Rothbart, Charles Roberts
Barry Brennan
Dinner 6:30 Seminar 7:30-9:30
All accredited Foreign and American Students welcome
phone for reservations 477-4587
*l*layers mS.A.
' pmtentt
THE WIZARD OF OZ^
ProducK) and Oir«ct«d by yA/illiam Alan UindM
J\ckm\ Informatton 4 R^Mrvatlont
(213) 477-2424
AprU 10 and 17
Sals, at t1:30 am mn4 1:20 pm
April 14, 15 and 16
Wad.. TtHirt. a ^f\, m 1:20 pm
iiwllllli S3.50
Also at Mutual. Wallich'i and Lit>«rty Aganctaa
GROUP SALES: (213) 345-7170 .
UCSTUHMN) PLflYHOUSE
10886 Lc Conte Avenue Los Angeles, California 90024
PRINIINfi
641-5501
670-6677
rainbow graphics
5651 WESTCFNTURY SQULFVARn l OS ANGFi FS, CALIFORNIA 90C>4b
THE COUNCIL ON EDUCA-
TIONAL DEVELOPMENT
(CED) will be considering course pro-
posals for the Winter Quarter 1977, and is
prepared to sponsor innovative courses
of genuine academic quality which
would be of interest to the campus
community. Such course proposals will
be due in the CED Office no later than
Monday, May 17, 1976. If you are in-
terested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Ecfucational Development, 31 21 Murphy
Hall.
0nt>0nbainm0ntr
Changing Room' : working men drown to
Vou-y ft— ra about II. mmn U-o^TVittovrnt
WIDE THE RAPIDt
By Karen Green
David Siorcy's TIm .
ing Room, currently st the
Odysiey Theater (121 1 1 Ohio
Avenue through April 30) is a
pUy which breaks an impon-
•nt *'rulc'' of dramatic form in
that It has no plot to speak of
It also proves that, at least in
thc;ater. succois need not de-
pend on following rules
One ricason this pla> can
work without a plot is that it
possetset another important
element -a story Story and
plot arc often confused hut
they arc two- different things
The story is what ihc plav is
ah^ui. the p'ot is what hap-
pens in The Cluinging Room/
very little actuary happens. .
In the locker room, or chang-
ing room, of 9 semi-pro rugbv
team, a lanitor cleans up and
lays out the team's, towels,
shirts, socks and jock straps
^Fhc pUytTS^smm m to change
for the game, fool sround and
shoot the breeze, go play the
game and change to go home
That's just about it as far as^.
plot goes A player is injured
in the course of the play but it
happens offstage The team
wins, but that too happens on
the field and not in %b£ theater
un
Why does he seem so
happy? The high scht>ol
ci. a mild man. an educated
man. having iHtle in common
with his rowdy teammates
why does he share their desire,
love or need for this violent
sport*'
Ihcse and other questions
go unanswered, but they are
indications ol the complex
world that lies behind the story
»'l the plas The C kanging
Room Dffcrs us a look at that
^^l)rid b\ presenting it in a
rcalistn style, wjth sensiiivitv
humor and hurfianness.
The **team'* of actors, under
the ftkOted hand of director
Wiriiam Devane. does well at
dramaii/ing the atmosphere «#
a locker room I he kaleido-
scopic effect of the players
running around the room get-
ting last mmmm ti|m
However, whai iiic pla> is
"about" goes beyond the ac-
tion, or lack of it. that we see
It IS aboui these men. middle-
class working men with dif-
'Cfiarvf ing Room' ^^^m: playing to win
fering degrees of mtelligcrKt
skills and sense of humor but
all with -an interest in the
litilation rugby's violence pro
vides (Rugbv. a fooiball-likc
game, is played without pad-
ding, in short pants, even m
frce/^ing cold weather. J
Many questions may have
been aroused in the audience's
minds by the end of this play.
The team's 'doctor" who
walks with a limp was his
injury caused by piaving rugby.
mnA IS rhjt w'h> he is there"^
trainer just before the game
sparkles with electricity.
I here are a few minor prob-
lems, such as the inconsistencv
tome of the actors display in
their attempt to use the English
dialect and accent, but this is
not a hufit ictback On th.
whole, the Odyssey should be
commended for doing lustice
to a very good scnpt
J--J^\ A* ^
•y Howard Posner
Graffiti has long since gained a son of respectability as a
verncraWc, time-honored underground an form It gets collected
published in magazines, analyzed by experts and washed off
walls
Today, tomorrow and Friday from 12 noon to 6 pm the
Ackerman. Union Women's lounge will sport poster boards full
of graffiti collected from all over campus m the last two months
I ne exhibit IS part of a program intended to explore the attitudes
of potential audiences tor the arts
•-The bathroom is really the last bastion of privacv we have
loday, notes 'Eun McElroy. a graduate in arts management
who instigated and organized the project -We lock the door or
close the sun. and we're completely alone When someone writes
something on the walls of a restroom, he or shc-is probably beM»
more open and honest than at any other time." ^ -'""^
Thus, says McElroy, a study of graffiti can proba6ly tell more
about what people think than can opinion surveys
••It's socuilly acceptable not to be straightforward We've all
been at meetings and listened to people talk so as to disAMC
what they really mean It's like talking m code You doTut
exan f^. the i^6^/^^^ /.ousn^ ^-^ A^r^^^.if^
when you re m public, even U voure talking anonymously The
barriers are down for someoru writing graffiti.
"I'ntil we find out what rvactlv. what people are feelinu
audience surveys are meaningless.;'
McElroy- took a simple appr(»ach to aisembhng his exhibit he
taped posterboards to the walls of oa^ ,„ restrooms around
campus and let people wrr htm But like everything else on
this campus, the project met uith complications
"You talk about communication." laughed McElroy --f didn't
kMm there was a third shift x .ustodians here I u'lked to the
teid of one or two ol Hie custodial shifts and explained the
^rq^ect, but the third shift never ..und out about it So I had one
group of custodians putting the bi,ards up and another iync
taking them down Wc fmalh got it straightened out "
One of his boards was writicn upon with feces, makm£ it
pretty useless for display purposes •*— .
"Every time we had a reailv good board, with runnin*^
dialogue on it, someone wovkj steal it and take it home"
Still, what remains is interesting enough -|t ranges from the
most beautiful, poetic stuff, to the ugBett. filthiest, most racisl~^
iarbafe imaginable The filthiest and most racist graffiti we
collected comes from the Restdrch Library "
^ The blandest of the boards come from McElroy's own
Graduate School of Management "If that's they're idea of
expressing themselves, they're ki pretty sad i^h^ptr McElroy
grumbled "^ .^
McT-lrov found that women's grarfiti differed from men's
I he women tend to be more helpful One will write about a
problem, and others will sugfest solutions
"For three straight Saturdays. I came here at 730 in the
morning to monitor some of the graffiti flow in the women's
restroows I'd knock on the door, and say "Hello! Is anybody in
there* he said, illustrating his I'm-obviously-a-man bass voice.
Once he met someone coming out of a stall
"She looked at me and said, I'm going to rape you ' T was just
completely taken aback I offered to leave, but she repeated. You
don't belong here I'm going to rape you.'" related McElroy a
little flustered even in retrospect
As It happened, she wound up accompanying him ort his
rounds, and wound up signing a few of his boards with the name
^oyesca ^ ^
"I'd kind of like !• neet htr afmi.^ taid McElroy -^he was
really interesting.**
Hailey*s 'Where She Stops' : nobody wants to know
r%. .. ^7 Adam
Oliver Haileys And Where
Ske Stopt N«to^ Knows
playing in repertory at the
Mark Taper Forum with Ashes
and Crati Co—tij might be
seen as a permutated Candide
for a woman. In it, Eileen
Brennan exhorts, "This may
not be the best of all poatible
(worlds), but it's not bad." One
can well apply this line to
Hailey*! icript.
Wlurt She ^tgps (playing
through June 27) epicatty
traces the life of one bright
wm—n from four days to 84
years old. Lou Gmmm eomh
ptetes the cast by playing the
27 men in Brennans life Hai-
ley^s humor m soft and subtle;
not broad enough to fill the
empty and nearly propless For-
um staae. and it's certainly mt
as wildly ex
ta ire's farce
IMUHive as Vol-
Parfrey
You can't accuse Hailev of
bombarding his audience with
S^Ofs of puffed-up gags
though Within there lies a
great deal of beautifully re-
strained sentiment and fun It's
the bare-boned structure that
rattles, thr sheer sketchi.iess
occludes real empathv for
Brennan and any of Gossett's
characters.
Brennan, who can be seen to
*^^??^y *" * number of Pet-
er BofCfcmcyvich films, appears
•« amalgyai of Diane Xadd
*y* E"«n Iwwyn one with
Wmo and an appealing human
weakness. Through all the
years of her Hfe she hardly
changes: (God tells her early
on that her existence will be
willy-mUy) she's always search-
ing for im¥%
Gosseti has the tough )oo of
creatmg over two dozen char-
acters. Seme of them work.
like his reurded gardener and
bull goote lM«y. but others
don't, and if it weren't for
GMKtts quick chMpr ttrumry
many would appear identical
Couldn't the Taper afford
more actors'^ Or is this H alley's
#QCept that all men are
Perha^ Director Gordon
Davidson could have rhiaiad
up some of the logistical haze
shrouding this affair His fran-
tic ttagifif with his actors run-
ning through a prop-ciirtain
appears simply
And Where She Slafs H^
ho#y knows may not have had
the potential in the fir^ place,
hm 11 I a »ubiv tiy Ijuiilv. WfgH
see much better from Hailey in
th* firt..r, Student tickets are
•«'«*• (^ I ' TV
J3.50
9 nouf onva ffOfvi L A
untoaliawabia adwantur* unparaii«i«d anci
J?L!!^'^^*2!} '•^^^t'on brochor* on fhit and
QUiPf D RiVgR TOURS (^ig)
}
This Year You As A Contestant Could Win
$100,000
on NAME THAT TUNE
Staff membert of the rmtionai TV show NAME THAT
TUNE will be interviewing for poasibia contestanu. For
information on preliminary musical test call Ralph
Edwards Production 466-1641 Call between 10 00 AM &
4 00 PM Wednesday S Thursday. Apnl 14 & 15
I
WHAT IS IN YOUR UCLA FILE?
DO YOU HAVE THE RIGHTiinOOK?
Hear a discussion of pr C\/gisiatlon
on this matter wjJV \Vohancallor
Harold Horowi^^X^Jn Bycal, ACLU
Lagisiatlve D\ C/^
fw^c BILL 1586
Pr .PcD), Carpenter (R)]
We^^14 April 1976 — Noon
Law School, Rm. 1337
ACLU - UCLA CHAPTgR
ZEN
WEEKEND
RETREATS
Shasta Abbey
^
P O Box 478. Mount Shasta, CA 96067
(916) 926-4208
J
University Episcopal
Community
rwilling ihe wMfc th« Chrw 4MMiM»««d «Of all lime th« "the r<Md
lo hotmeM muw rwrMurily paw through tht woiU of adton" tOM.)
CtM4n-
: TucMiay, ; jop.m
Crad SiMdMN
^N^ontt^&lf S p.m
M«in^ Thunder 12 ».12 JO ludieriK. Chapel
i p.m Fraadum Seder, Upper Room EueharM
the Lamb. Chaplain » Hoim caN oMiot lor
Coed Friday f p.m. Tcnahrar -*^^el
Hoh' Saturday ie:JO p.m. F.r» ;Mrvice ^
ol the New Fir«, party loNom.
Fa<t«ir Day 6 p m Qum (ycKariM. Ch^al.
JJu^^
ONice
• jiiiiF •' ^- m ui
av <»
I
4-
■ s
:■#-
i
Two dollar bills
1 1;
9
<
«
I
I
:w -*•
(Continued frofli Psge 9)
The cycf of a tupermarkei cashier widened with surprise as she
i9w9k HM H[|^e afls idLclaiRied, "Oooli; 8 %2 iwH **
She loolMd iBfo the rows of oaei, lOi. and 20f and checks in
her cash drawer, however, and called out. "Hey. Ruby, what do I
do wich tCT,. Ruby had the answer
"III uicc ''cii^ he sud.' stuffing the greenback into hit wallet
aad giving her two in return.
In a city known for brusqiieness, the New York deiicateMcn is
known as the ptnandr of gruff service, and a cashier at one deh
did nothing to aher that impmnon.
ftinching for two singles, he said in a tone that invited no
reply; **That's the new one. isn't itT* His glare notwithstanding,
he was asked where he would put the new bill. ~
"Oil,- he scowled, TU find a place for it -
During a meander through mid-Manhatun, shop owners, a
■•WMCand operator, a shoe repair man, a resuuranteur and a
Broadway theater cashier, among others, regarded the $2 bill
variously, with excited comments to co-workers or with
puzzlement
A street-comer hot dog vendor took the bill and inspected it
with mterest
-Is it Americanr he asked, drawing a chortle from the next
customer, who reached for it and offered to uke the unwnnklcd
note himself That was enough for the vendor, who plungsd it
into his pocket.
-No.- he ghnned tnumphantly, "I want it for my collection.-
A cashier at a fashionable hotel off Fifth Avenue rushed to tell
her boss that she'd just gotten her first $2 bill, then pouted
-I could make a lot of misukes because IJm going to think its
S5, that's why If you put one on the SI pile, we're going to think
it*i a SI bill, so where'rc we going to put them?-
The first one, she said, would go home with her.
At a Broadway theater, the cashier scooped up the bill from
his tray and mused, "So they've got the new ones out already.
Who knows u it's good?-
] Experiment with chfckeiis
raises more than feathers
T
(CFS) - Was it art, or was
it just butchery'' Months after
Don Morgan's performance,
adinimstrators at the Univer-
sity of South Carolina are
settling for the latter
Morgan presented ,a concep-
tual perfornunce on food pre-
pnration for members of his
studio art course The per-
formance included wnnging a
hve chicken's neck, plucking its
feathers and gutting it.
Morgan claimed that the
purpose of the display was to
txpoK students to the process
of food preparation **I believe
that we fosptt sometimes that
for every item packaged in
plastic in the meat counter,
someone hnd to kill^ he ex-
plnined
After Morgan's performance.
atocher student decided that
he was also pasung through
his animal death period He
propMad that studous in a
sculpture clau bring their cats
into the school's gallery The
cats were to be turned loose
with mice from the biology
department.
That's wliere the head of the
art department drew the line
and forbade any exhibits that
included the killing of an an-
ioMl. Morgan clainied his right
to freedom of speech was vio-
lated by the regulation.
Administrators have alleged
that Morgan's display may
iMve been illegat, but the stu-
dent legal counsel rebuts tiMt
charge, claiming the admini-
strators are -going out on a
hmb** mhet) they say butcher-
ing in a sniaol m illegal
Meanwhile, Art Dean John
O'Neil asked, "How many
chicken throats do you have to
cut or necks to wring before
the ilMck value of it is com-
plete? Another faculty member
chimed in. The seeds of
Charles Manson arc implant-
ed -
Morgan, however, is still
sure that the performance was
art. and has asked the school's
student senate to in^
■f.-._-
Pop guitarists
to play in Coop
Acoustic guitarists Linda
White and Jan Tadasugi will
sing their way into the Coop
froin 5-7 pm, WcdnesiJay,
April 14. Their perfonnance of
contemporary pop songs is
part of the. C«op concert series
which provides enterUinment
every Wedneainy from 5-7 pm.
TT-
'1776 as people's
iTX)vcment' tcxiay
Dr. Page Smith, history
professor emeritus and au-
thor, will speak on "The
American Revolution as a
People's Movement" tonight
at 8 in Dodd 147.
Smith approaches the.
Revolution from the point
of view of the masses of
people, rather than the tra-
ditionally recognized rich,
landowning patriots.
Farm Labor Board suffers
from lack of state funds
(AP) - The financially strapped Sutc Farm Labor Board may
have troubk getting funds even when a new fiscal year begins in
July, its chairman says —
Roman Catholic Bishop Roger Mahony, here for a luncheon
club address Monday, said there is "a very good likelihood" that
the legislative funding deadlock will continue into the next fiscal
year. The Legislature has refused two thirds approval of funds
needed to continue AgriculturaT Labor Relations Board
operations the rest of tlus year
Activities of the board, which conducted 400 union representa-
tion elections last fall and winter, thus began grinding to a halt in
February as funds ran put in the dispute over grower demands
for amendrnents.
Mahony predicted that if the funding deadlock continues
Cahfornia voters will provide a "landslide victory" in November
for amnitiative proposed by the United Farm Workers union to
lock the farm labor act into the sute constitution ^
That would bar the tlMfd or legislature from making any
amendments themselves, he warned
Judge will speak
to women's group
Candidate for Superior
Court Office No 28, Ro-
berta Ralph, will be part of
a workshop entitled '^Legal
Rights of Women" to be
held in the Alumni Lounfe
of Kerckhoff Hall today
from 12-2 pm The work-
shop is sponsored by the
Women's Resource Center
Ralph, an attorney with
16 years trial experience, has
been active in the women's
rights movement and has
helped draft legislation on
women's nghts She is presi-
dent of the Women's Law-
yers Commission and Judge
Pro-Tem of the LA Munici-
pal Court. She was. recently
honored by the LA City
Human Relations' Commis-
sion and she has given
courses on sex-based crimes
at Whiuier College
Spring Quarter Parking
Available In Westwood
*
Covered parking at 10980
Wilshire Blvd. (Opposite
Union at no charge.
V
■-?
UCLA Lot 32) will be a-
vailable
UCLA
dents
Quarter
Beginning March 31 per-
mits may be purchased
ft
between 11 a.m. and
_ r
Spring 3 p.m. Monday through
$27.00 per
space. Permit holders will
be allowed to use the Lot
Ackerman
Friday at 10880 Wilshire
Blvd., level P-4 lower of
the parking structure. For
further information call
474-8271.
—j-
^•ii Tm Nnt. OMditnt tor
IS aatfv loiay turn m your
ftppfication m KtrcHhott JM It is an
opportunity Ip mmk mmWmtLC mimt
A^mmmim on tuiaMl mmemi aidi
""^ '^^^ •ifli FnffMi. ttiit wttk will
pmmi laHL s Caaan Mm 7 ao-ii pm and
a Cutefi 4lmMf S3M pm April if
lnt»«^nationai Studtnt Center $2 SO for
dmntr
-^•••■rfa ilirary Imtrt iastHig ap
pfMNiiiliiir 4f aNawiit and ommnm Wm
iacmtm. itfvMH and coHactioiis 7mi
wfM to condudad at 10 am and 3 pm
toiay aai toniorrow tea m m
at iht M Nfeffnci Ml
•mmm Tav. at iit
Oanct. laaiiiring oliapaiiPL,^^
daatii. 2 pm tomorrow mm in ScHaan-
lift lajby Fraa
-^•fcw ter ChiMmv. for SLC officai
are now availalNe tn Kerckhott 400
Ima it April 22
—IKIM Vftteytoll. final two regutar
son mmamh 41 1 vs Saala lorbara 7tO
pm tpnigm and v« San (Nige State 7 3D
pm. April 16 Pauiay PaviLon UCLA stu
dents tree with lO faculty tree with
A0itetic PrivOaga card. II for other stu
tonts S2 for adaMt
-4ICU Mardl firv iwa^ Cnw. ap
plicationt f now available m the Mardi
fiiai aftet. Adiwaian A>20i now Apni 24
10 aW datatts or^ tt>e application
— Baltfale Statai Baarg. which shows
each Prtsidtntial candidate and Itia
amount of delegates pledged from states
which have had primarias » now up m
Kerckhofl half naar Mie ali»iiai on me- first
floor
— iaiM an pi^aMMBi IS. noon today
Ackerman Grand Ballroom, ,
—Feed Htn. a potpourri of food
and experiences will feature n^ ^
hvet from Bread for the World California
Beef Council State Fruil/VegetaPle Quality
Control. Erewhon Natural foods and
^^ am 2 pm today Janu slepi
Dance Chi6 7 30 pm- midnight April 16
J((omens Gym 200 Anyone mteroMd in
learning or practicing social or disco
dancing is welcome
~^*|Mafc CoMwaiinL infor.aiaJ practice
for foreign students and visitors 10 am
noon Mondays and Wednesdays Acker
man 3617
—FeNewifclpe. information and deadline
on extramural funding for jraduate student
and postdoctorals are available m the
Feffowships and Assisunuiup Section
Murphy 122B
•■Iw Baard. applications are avadoMa
now April 16, Murphy 2224 accepting men
as well as women
^'^-Cfcaoaallarj Pumn hmt^. are avaiiabif
to graduate students for research who are
formally advanced to candidacy for doc
torai diBrtti and rafiatifod Appncatior
way be laiiRiaad at any itme during th«
year Grants of a mammum 1750 ?rc made
in January and July forms are m the
Research Commttfee in tne Academrc
ON CAMPUS
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Campiis events
^ecutive Office jlMrjiiy 3125
. ^^^ ^^^^^^^^^P'^SHw;' Staffed bv
uaioed interns mU im$ m ^ UMilai
^ yaar ideas Ooan ^^ 0 ^ '~^
CXW Aciierman A213 or cad
. loin OECA as a
^mSriUrSa^ Visd Kerckfioff 311
^^. *•• n IN memoi and vpod pro-
•f M>dway loload noon
rr.^,!^ ^ fiaipiBB liviaoiL wm oe
JidSaMOd By Or Virgii Memoianu of UC
••rtwiey 3 pm todoy Bundle um
—Bala Laofl Itage lest Fittlag film
'*•••••« aaun 3^ pm today
ioy Womens 6y0
to t^ auartsr aad
presonfotioo. 33i-4
AcliorRian
(MM pian
a
pm tomorrow
M Pii. aoanr Thurs
f
r
?S^^i^^. *? * »*o-jmar isrm with Wm
UC Student Lobby m firriwinuj Pms
S787 SO rnonta TSaowwiiM MdMto 3m
a recent uC graduate and mteresiTn
sducational iOMmo. hcb im aBadcakon n
Kerckhoff SIB Doadine rtTlto; 7 "call
orZH^^! Caei.iitee Appiicatisnt. for
TlSSS^mi^*^^ ConwMtioss are mm
avaanis Oaidlme is April 30 pafe uo
applications at Ackerman mforniatton
^ •^•'ckhoft 304 and boaomg s«ocia
RUM
'."*** if!?* o^wted by Eiia Kazan- and
starring Marlon Brando wdl be shown 5
pm tomorrow Mefmtz 1411 frm
CIKMTI
— Cair Bartai. wiH present Lmda White
ano Jan lakasugi singers and guitarists
>f pm tomorrow Coop Frse
--JJCU Jan EnanBlB. wiii perform a
variety of contemporary American music
in jarz rock and popular styles with
JBWial guest artiats ttie UC Jazz Dancers
f^^'^*^'' ^^ '^oyce auditorium uCLA
ftudoms. facyay sta» and aom
SI ofHor rtiftiim r fsnorof
Bry leak
lEMtaAIS
(•arn £iirastiBe Ireai Um.
3^ 30 pm today BooHer
»»«» projoct doinlipanwi is Wm tape of
• mmmm Advisory Counal
1 90 pm dinnr and 7 30 pm. la%
tomorrow International Student Coiilor
-Tba Ma al Ppiaiiai ib<6^7B noon
April 16 BaacHa IBBI.
Oridaan BiBaal W idMaBai CaaaiMoi
mis weeii will feature die film Apafe al
■"■■B. *•«»> diaoioaion led by Mariana 1
Sasneti Associate Director Education
fularos Internationa* to follow noon
iiwarroof Moore ^ Woet
--India and Pskittan incklfi Tswsrii
BttMM. 2-4 pm tomorrow BundM 4206
--Aopaaii tt km PrsdMaaa M Jt^m, 1
2 30 pm tomorrow Boefter B600
— CMlaaiparanf MMIa. semmar and fNodoB'
smn wttti Hon Mr Oharam Vir Smtio
Oaputy Mimeior of intormalion and Broad
costing Government of India 2<4 pm April
16 Bunche 426B
mstiww§
— TaaMil JUa groops wdt meet 10 am
'mon-1 pm. loaiorrow and 3-4 pm April 16
Math Sciofico 4223 Call 825 2031 for
reservation
—Uti9i Oaoaa Qua will meet. 7^ pm
Tuesdays Oykstra Recreation room and 2
3 pwt. Fridays Women s Gym m for all
intaroalad in loormng and practicing bail
room dance
--^•■■l Canir Mr PiOMdHl all volun
loors or interested iludonM mvited 7X
pm tonight Ackerman 2412
. . -•■P M Take Me MCAT sr BAT j^ pm^
ly GSM 1270
lottery
(C iMituiued frcNR foge %)
have a UCLA [D card For STfint time, the dorm meal card
will he part of the ID card . :
Despite the increase in costs, Salm reports the UCLA
underpaiUi^ dormitories are $100 below any of the dormitories
on the other etfht UC campuaet. Salm also noted prices in the
dorms have risen only nine per cent in the last five years a
record he feels is -good considenng we have maintained the ^me
level of service
^Gm4 job*
-I feel the staff does a food job with good management Fhev
run the operation very efTiciemiy," he laid Salm altril^utes the
reason for the $100 difference between the campuses to rhe larie
conference business UCLA has in the summer 'Ir's very
profitable for us,** he %aid ^
Last year, following the publishing of the waitrng list 57
returning applicam* petitioned the Residehee Hall Assignment
Review Board for a reconsideration of their applications Ten
people were granted spacei, -according to Susan Kielb. chair-
person ol the board >9 new applicants also petitioned with 12
fetting places
^ The guiding principle of the board, according to Kielb is
whether or not matriculation at the University is jeopardized -
Reaaons for many of the petitions included financial need
adtninistrative errors or inequities, medical and psychologicai
needs, as well as convenience and tii
I
1
Let's test the testers!
._..,- N'
%
m
ETS (Educational Testing Service) puts out
scores of tests.
Do they also make scores of mistakes? -
Don Lesser, Student Financial Supports Com-
missioner, wants students to examine the
testers.
If you've had problems, we want to know about It.
Pick up an ETS Complaint Questionnaire at the
Ackerman First Floor Info Desk, or call:
825-7608.
Sponsored by Financial Supports Commission of the Studeri|t L^islative Council
r
r^fi
-%-^-
I .
Wilkes, Nash head basketb
i
i
.'u:
, - •
J
1
J 1 MidMd
^ DB Stair Writer
JMKt Wilket. Johnny Na«h,
Gig Sims and LaVon WiUiaott
are the top four praapadi on
tiK UCLA high ichool hMket-
baU recruiting lift, according to
DaiJy Mmm lourocr Today it
th fint day to tig» a National
Letter of Intent, but none of
the four are expected to sign
i^ until at katt late next week
— Head coach Gene Bartow,
^ ffacniiting coordinator Lee
I Hunt and assistant coach Lar-
^ ry Farmer have been entertainr
, ing possible prospects the past
J two weeks and the coaching
£ threesome are hopeful of land-
M im *nhrec or four top pro-
^ spects.**
"I think that from the best 1
c|in telL recruiting is going
very welir said Bartow ''We
teve iMd four players that are
excellent prospects antLall
highly recruited in for campus
visitr wmi I expect to have
three or four more players in.**
Forward appears to be the
position of major emphasis in
recruiting. **We are recruiting
OMtnly forward-center types,**
said Bartow. ''We like the guy
who can swing over from for-
ward to play center since we
run a lot of double-low pott in
our offense.**
Concerning whether UCLA
would recruit any guards, Bar-
tow said, ^In all probabihty we
will not recruit any guards, be-,
cause 1 feel we have four good
ones coming back.**
JaMt WykM
James Wilkes is the 6-8^^0-
Los Angeks City Player of the
Year from dty champion Dor-
sey High School UCLA
actively been recruiting him for
Che past two years, because he
reportedly has the abihty of a
Richard Washington. Bay Area
papsrs ciotm that WUkes will
go to USF. but Daily Brum
soveas believe he is ail but set
to attend UCLA.
^ Johiui NasB
Johnny Nash at 6-6 can play
either forward or gmrd and
has similar talents to UCLA's
Gavin Smith. He was co-CIF
4A Player of the Year at Long
Beach Poly where he helped
lead his team to the CtF title.
UCLA has an excqllcni shot of
landing him, biit sources close
to Nash behevc there is a food
possibility he and his co-ClF
Player of the Year teammate,
b-l Michael Wiley, will go to
Long Beach State. Arizona
litatc and Oregon have also
3een mentioned.
At 6-9, Gig Sims has the
talent to play either forward or
center He was CIF 3 A Player
of the Year at Redondo Beach
High School and the leading
scorer in the division. .UCLA
reportedly has the msidc track
on landing him^ but Nevada
Las Vegas and Pepperdine arc
pushing very hard for him to
be their starting center next
season.
LaVoB WilMoas
From Denver, Colorado,
La Von Williams is the main
out-of-state prospect the
Bartow crew is looking at. The
6-8 Williams is the best player
to come out of Manual High
School since Brum Larry
^armer. UCLA is in a tough
recruiung battle with Kentucky
and two other schools for Wil-
liams.
Sources report that 6-8 All-
CIF 3A selection Darrell Al-
lums of LyMPood High School
is the next highest player on
the Bruin recruiting bst. Al-
lums could be the sleeper pro-
spect in the country and there
is a strong possibility UCLA
' ould offer him a scholarship.
Sources report that 6-9 high
school AU-Amcrican Glen
Grunwald from Franklin Park,
Illinois, IS no longer on Bruin
recruiting lists. The sources
indicate that Grunwald wants
to stav close to home because
of his family ties He was an
outstanding prospect, but re-
cruiting reports indicate Sims
is the same type of player and
could be better m the long-run
"A blue-chippcr** from the
Southern area is reportedly
visiting UCLA today and his
status depends on how recruit-
ing goes with the other players.
Kiki Vandeweghe, a 6-7 All-
City forward from Palisades
has been mentioned as a pos-
sible Bruin recruit, but scouts
claim he is one step slow for
UCLA to consider him. If the
Bruins do recruit a guard, it
would likely be Rich Brannmg
S>i Marina High School.
Brannmg has reportedly
ruled out UCLA because he
does not want to spend the
next three years sitting behind
Brad Holland, and Roy
Hamilton.
Bartow, Hunt and Farmer
repedadly looking at two
or thre^ more out-of-ilate pro-
spects and how well things go
in Southern California will
determine whether the Brum
cooches seek help from ouuide
California.
**In my mind the cr<^ from
California is good afm,** said
Bartow. "There might not be
the play^ with the national
reputation of a (David) Green-
wood or a„(BillJ Cartwri^,
but there are some good play-
ers who are outstandiag collefr
prf>spects.'*
Bartow added. "We hope to
have all of our recruiting done
^y May I ana we plan to sign
three or maybe four players /^
• -•■ .w ■■ '- - ■' '■* '-■ ■'■ i .I — ■ .1 _ ,.f -I. ..l—MiMtii 1 « |i J« « ■ I ■■■■i -■■■ . .; — - . ■ , I ^ I I 1^ |i ^ - . ■ ..■■^■■.^ - »
Barinra- sparkplug Sato piays-kig at 5^
By Gregg L. Reasau
DB Sports R<
Gary Sato*s volleyball career
Js full of paradoxes. For
example, he has total respect
for UCLAs voUeyhAll coach
Al Scates (whose team boats
the UCSB Gauchos tonight at
7:30 in Pauley Pavilion) ycC
when offered a chaace to play
for the Bruins, he declined
He*s a local boy, having at-
tended Santa Monica City Col-
lege, but he opted to travel
north to play his volleyball for
UCSB. Sato says that unless
he relaxes completely before a
gear he does not play that
wett. However, once the match
gets underway, he is a study m
perpetual motion, clapping,
diving and yes. even at 5-6,
spiking
Sato, like many other col-
legiate vojileyball players is a
newcomer to the sport Yet his
contacts with the greats of
veliqitott lliive been numerous,
some in nK>st unusual ways
"You know. It's really
funny. ^ related the littlest
Gaucho, "but I can remember
back when 1 was in kinder-
garten, Al (Scates) was a coach
at our elementary school One
day I was crying and he just
picked me up and sat me on
his lap. 1 was^eally too young
to know who he was . all I
I'emember ahout him was some
big guy with short hair,-
Rudy Suwara, former UCSB
volleyball coach and one of the
sport*s legendary greats, was
Sato*s first big influence as far
as developing his skills Su-
wara was the volleyball eoMii
at Sato*s junior high and gave
the Gaucho hu first exposure
to the game. .
**! came to UCSB because I
had known Rudy before and
knew he was a great coach.**
said Sato. **But when 1 got up
there his contract had run out
and he wasn^t rehired It came
as quite a shock but I decided
to stick it out and play for Gus
(Mee. the present UCSB vol-
leyball cooch).**
Sato hasn't disftppointed
Gaucho fans as his alt out
efforu and toul disregard for
safety have nude him a crowd
favorite His greatest asset is
hu outstanding quick neu both
ill digging opponent spikes and
in getting in position to set his
"iBammates His biggest thnlls
come, however when he spikes.
"I just love to hit Although
I'm usvully quite a few inches
shorter than the opponent
blockers, I try to go over the
block V\\ reach really high and
either hit off the blockers*
hands or find a hole through
their defense**
Sato is one setter in the
Gaucho*s 6-0 offense (an of-
fense Santa Barbara's coach
Mee changed to this year be-
cause of the abundance of hot
setters on the team). He is also
the sparkplug, the man who
gets things roiling when UCSB
goes flat His defensive abilities
are among the best in the
country and his setting has
been superb this season
Sato bears the scars of
UCSB*s loss to the Bruins in
the NCAA championship last
year but acknowledges that the
circumsunces are different this
year
**We don't have the revenge
motive last year's team had
when It played UCLA (the
Bruins beat UCSB m the 1974
NCAA championship fmals
also).** commented Sato.
'*We*re a new team, a young
team and it's really fun UCLA
Min^t the t,horn in -the side they
were last vcar **
"To us UCLA represents the
money, the city ahd all its
hassles, whereas W!C represent
the cool, kickback wsy of life
A conflict of ideologies, you
might say.
**A1m. for the most part, the
UCLA players are assholes,"
continued Sato "They yell at
you during the match and the
game pets to be a drag. I really
Intramural Sports
CoMhiiMd DowhUi Tennis ~=^ If your tennis team is signed up
for Wednesdays, you will not have a match today due to an
iiitercoliegiate tennis match
Mas — The last day to sign up for handball doubles is
tomorrow Sign-ups arc now being taken for singles and doubles
table tennis The last day to sign up is April 23 The last day to
sifB up for the May 7 golf tournament is Wednesday, April 21,
at 5 pm
Women The last day to sign up for softball teams is
tomorrow and play will begin Monday.
Coed - Coed doubles howling sign ups will be taken in the
IM Office through Friday
Great expectations...
ti untinued froia Page If)
Mirch and vastly-improved
freshman Ken Buttkc
In the butterfly, UCLA will
be bolstered by the return of
freshman Don Palstra. who
misied the Pac4( and NCAA
fnials with a shoulder separa-
tion With veterans Ken Wills
and Tom Blanchard returning,
the fly Will again be one of
UCLA*s strong events next
year. i —
UCLA had trouble in_the
freestyle sprints this season
mainly because it faced some
of the nation's top sprinter*
Haiiits thinks iiH tw. dil-
ferent story next year
"Steve Austin and Peter
Spurzem have the talent and
potential to be very, good
They just have to believe in
themselves.**
Stephenson. Steve Nelson.
Taylor Howe and Jim Doyle
should also give UCLA
strength in the middle and long
distance freestyle eveais.
In regard to leiiruhlng.
Haines indicates that a couple
of very fine drvers have shown
an imerest in attending UCLA.
This IS one area where the
Bruins have been particularly
weak and could mak^ the 4if*
ference in championships Jeff
Jafenburg and Tony Bartle of
ing suPuibaM 5mi!i riup oi
•^ s big personal satisfaction
out of beating them **
Sato IS an econoaiGS lii^or
who plans to go into coaching
following a shot at proiBMional
volleybalk Aad ■tliinMli hell
^ o«r of tbc soMUIest pbyers
to play profMieailly. he isn*t
too worncd
"Pve always had to try
harder because Tve always
been smaller than anybody
else But lookii^ back now I
think it*s been this disadvan>
uge that hna pmika4 mm to
where I am now.*
Which, for a ^-5-1. « «
pretty high
P
>
I
look who's
coming to town!
s — ....
Colobrata ttie Bunnie's time of yoar with a fun and affectionate gift from tt>e
Students' Store for instarice chooae from a nice selection of attractiwe
baskets in the G>ft depertment (priced TOC to 1 95) which you can fill with a pretty
plent Of a cuddly stuffed animal The animals'' There's a Mttle duck nemed Sooe.
1 79. Omeltle a newly hatched chick. 1 99 rat>biU Bentley and Bormie Lou. 2.19.
ar>d other rat>bita from 1 45 Make your own gift — it's fun.
We've s lovely selection of itvmg planta. too.
You can alto make traditional
there are cdored baakels. artificial graaa and
candies ir\ the Confectiooft rfi^pa f-tmert. all at
aenaible pr icee. Conne aee«
b i«ve(. ackennen umon. 925-7711
5W!fTl
Philadelphia are also reported
interested
r^r^n mr^r^.1*^..r• 7 AK.7 -IT. fr. 7 Afc^ ^ ,^. in a
»<••»»•••■•«>
K--
-^LASSI Fl E I^i D
<
>
• VI
MAOLINC 10 JO A.M
No
TIM ASUCLA
tuHy supports th« Untvorsity of Colt
>0'''N0's poMcy on non-^ioof|iiiiii0||0f)
Atfvorllsmg spocs will n«l h9 mags
•mNiMo In. ttw OoMy •rwin to owyow
writO dlscriminsUs on the i>atlf of
•ncostry. cotor. notional origin. rocc
MMfton. or to«. MoMhor Iho DoMy Bmin
nor tho AJfUCLA Communicattons
BoorO has invooHgaloO any of tt«a sor-
vicat advartlsad or adwartisars fptm-
santod tn this taaua. Any parson l»a-
iiavinf IMt •n advartlsamani in titis
iaa4ia vtolalas tha Board s poHcy on non
discrimination statad Karain should
cawnnunlcala complaints in writing to
Ilia Businast Managar UCLA Daily
Bniln. 112 Karckhoff HaN. 300 Waalwood
Piaxa. Los Angalas. California 90024
For aaalstanca with housing discrimi-
nation problams. call -UCLA Housing
Olflca. (213) ^SOf 1; Wastsida Fair
Houaing (213) 473-3f4t
announcwnents
FOREIGN STUDENTS
T4i«rc ar« thr*« $300.00
grants-ln-Ald awards from
tia Barouh-Slagal Endow-'
mant Fund avallabia to
rtglatarad non-Immigrant
foraign studantt with mm^f-
gancy naad for aaalstanca.
Applications ara availal>la
In OISS, 297 Dodd Hall,
Daadlina Is AprN 16, 1976.
(Ann A 15)
aUSINCSS Opportunltyt Stuff mnv-
ISO par 100. immadMa aamiiifa.
Hwnpsd iddriiiid ■milopi le
UEA-a, P.O. Soi m ipwio Say. CA
CAMfl A avi
IS.
complete
copying
service xerox
kerckhoff \2\
82 50611
campus
ASUCtA Uctura Notas
AraHaral
Watch the Brum for tha co
li8t of ciaaasa that will hava Lacturp
Nom Thaaa art notas tslian as
Sis Profaaaor wants thsm to bs.
uily typad. proof raad. iiluar
•fid f<asdy for you m Sit
Studantt' Stora Notat will ba
aval labia on Monday, Wadnetday >
Friday and Saturday Chack witbi
tha Lacturn Notas Counter at well '
as in your Sfst sat of notes to find ;
out whan your sfMcific nolas will
t>e availabla. Lecture notas srs a
- tremendous help— ttiay let you pay
total attention to what's twing taid.
and they're rK>t expensive.
^r LECTURE
W0T£5 of^.-.
Off WfTM
>lmHEA06l
Ualan to ttia Rad Ouaanl
HOW DOES A BRUIN
BEAR DECORATE HIS
ROOM?
With UCLA Diankets, pen-
nants, ciock. hairnet lamp
and radio, olaaaware. mugs.
in a UCLA
campus
Get
DISCOUNT PHOTO
FINISHING right
here on campus
asucio
mpvt ttudio
for rant
■H 1114.
mm Seal fii.is as m-
■d. Alao ptiTBhees epllow.
ft Ma)
LAICI Anys
iSt ) day «
dSSi
«iMd SuaSc eablii. Saa-
n FIraplaoa. Slaap S
waaawS. $100 waali ••#-
«• aaat
SfMT-^-TV tlOJO momm Slaf«a/NM
47S.J571.aaSa Waatwood
* (SOtr)
'50 ktfrekhoH hall 825 06 f 1 u2/t
open mon hi 8 30-4 30
AMMOWHf AD cabin in quiat mrm»
Slaaps i $S0/2 days tlS0/7 days.
r.
ASUCLA Students Stora
in Uruon
Aucnost Of umcuumSd
^OSLIC MOTICI to iMMOy §»«•» NMt cmrtmitt
nMrctMnai** willed ha* »••«« in ih* oiMi»ay
ml Wm UCLA ust am
(*)
IT.
tat m.m..
<1A1i>
BIIUIN TV RENTALS
COLOR TVS
sat t day
Slack/wtMis T V • $7 SO a
CaN: 27^1032
NOTt:Our
Itti
to UCLA
WCSTWOOO-i
saif
2 foofii alSoa
, 279-aSBF->
CREATIVE WRITING
NOVELS. aCNEEN-PLAVIS,
TELEVISION
Ap«S IS, 7 • 10
>S410
IS A IS)
MASNNOTH CONOO. Near SNt 7 A S.
2 fcadneom. 7 baai. facunt. TV. ataiao.
Oay/waaH. Jsa-asos. ^^ ^ ^^
for sale
education
acoiNNiNQ and Adtaaead elanat In
Slaaipd Qiata at Waalan Waiasiiaa.
474.7SSi. aail Waalwood Sivd.
(•ASSI
personal
MAaav - Mippy Aanii
waaryf Ifs toaan
m. 1 leva vom.
^^^* ft a 14)
Pf PhTs left kaap motkinq hwd and
do a |oa for Sia kMH Loaa S klMsa,
Tl»a LaaM. car.. ^^^^
ear oaacati. FIra S yp
fSAU)
J
CHUCK Kaaa'ffrom FrasnoKI'm aorry.
coina dewR la and Sear baMiiuufii. Mf .
Suaaia and 1 wM inaaa H ,iip la yoa.
P^rvanad NMa sinaar ^ ^ ^^
THANKS la Sit ia««aou8 pkls of CM
wvi9^B, sfa^RS HappSt Ai|p9is ^^M, sas
AlplM Chi OmafB for a graol Mma
•m SraSiais of PM OaMa ThalB Coloifiy.
(• A 14)
electhonic iTEna
Ti SA 50 A - las.ao
■* anttrf Taxas Instrumants Ur^m
Sanyo otmm w/FM - $87 24
Jansan 6X9 coax 20 oz - $97 00
compiata Sanyo and Craig iinaa
Saoord a CaN:
(Taiaphona Anawanng Sarvica)
VOX 70 - $150.86
Also typawritars Oy Oiiwaiti * Smith corona
Eiactronic gobOa by HPaeM I «»tll not ba
unOarao4d< Thasa itatna sro sll aNANO Mina.
^"""•"" SILL 824-2873
S^Th 7pm-l1pm, F 8-11pai
(ffnsst suOtact to cnanga)
474-8787.
878. 8 tt
EhoL
(18 A IS)
1878 PPINOLE 18. Indudas Irallar
$1280 UCLA
(IS A 18)
SHCaWOOO 8-7210
acouadc suapanalan maakacs. 8 monttw
824-1828
(10 A 18(
STOLEN
saw larpa brown Honda 780 balng
loadad Into truck or oPiaiwIas
Irom lot on aasi sida of Law
Monday, April 12. batwaan 10 mm^
4 pm. plaasi oo8 Larry QMSart, 478-
8182 82S-4S41 iMa^i^Mt
*iw, azo-aaai imaaaapa). ^^ ^ ^^
(aASNSA PhN you dM
MAMUUANA Don't lot tha now law
yout Know your rIfMal Sand
aeoli 82.88 plus 184 tax to
Laa IV. PC Soa 28881. LJL
8 (C.L. 10888 Vanlea. L.A.T
(8 A 14)
PisyM. cula.
for cuddhf. of»oc8onala.
(8 A 18)
Come to the ASUCLA Students
Store Gifts and Confections depart-
ments, and 0et goodies for making
up your own Easter BaakatsI Bas-
kata. planfii. cuddly toys, candies,
artificial graaa-it's all there B
level. Ackerman Union. 825-7711.
KENTUCKY:
TON - UaOCNT
474.8888.41
(8A14>
MONEERSaa
2 yra old. I
824-2488
8278 or boat
(18 A IS)
# yeu aio a UCLA
••poclally claaaoa *a8. '48, '88 Si-
Lafs
(8 A 14)
(ISA
BLVtS Tlcfcalt avallabia tor sold-out
>rt. FIrat coma first sarva. 278-
8 and 10 p.m.
(8 A IS)
ISM Typawrllar, 9fn4Br4 modal.
Saautlful complalaly ovorhaulod.
works and looks Ilka naw. $288.88/
Aftor 8 o'(
AM-FM
S-lcaok sNrao. racoffd
arm $280 SM
i^
(10 A 18)
WOODEN SarraN - Kags 8 spools
liatchcovars. nailing 8 ropa. funky
cratas 4 boias. old barnwood §31
/'«n A«»»
MATTNESaES ALL NEW
Sava up lo40S
T«pif«
run
snsii
THE MATTRESS STORE
11714 nsaltad. . nrr va«t i«My« t^
a« awi»itlSH »anarama Ciiy
477-4101 tat-^IOI
3 ANTIQUE Oold Ctlaln-IOkt and 14kt
gold. Paasonalily pricad— must sail.
Contact EatharJB2-0l02 .^^ ^ ^^^
VIKING motorcycia boots, man's slia 8.
WaSars LaoSiars. full faca balmat. Seat
effar 472-747S or 472-5386 dayttma
(IS A IS)
KINOSIZE
sturdy. $100 883-2148
(18 A 18)
STEREO (omponants: Studantdlt-
counta.'' Paraonaksad sar>floa. 28 ma|or
brands Vallay S61 0S4S. 881-8023
Hodywood 831-8873. 888-8881
(18 oa)
WINEMAKINQ. h /awing auppSaa S
a«|ulpmant Salact California WInas
Tha Qrapo Nut 8312 W 83nd St. Waat-
chaatar. C^a 80048. 848«4Sa8.
(18 0tr)
opportuniti
^PERSON AE^
Center of Dranfiatic Arts
Announces
A special three week workshop
(ApriM2th thru 3pth)
VMblact AUOrriOWTfCHNIQUES
The following subjects wilt be
covered
*What the casting director Is
laaklng loc.
*Qa«RaHd at awfMt
stand In your ««p.
mti held Monday. Wad-
neaday and Frtday at S P.M. CaS
' -x^ SS7.3S11
A (18 A 18)
MARKET Roaoarch pays $10 le all
Inlaraatad
|ia A IS)
PERSONAL
Tha key to
y<
(118)
looks Ilka naw $288.88/ I^^^iHaH
oNar. Aftor 8 a'alaafc SSS- 88%^S#MSa%S
h subjects
HEALTHY
Who wloh to of tool tha ospaneea ef
pranalal cara and dollvary hava an
af UCLA and LAC/
use Medio
ba plaan to
thair aooond or MUrd Saay end will
ISIS. For
R.N.
er 8M SI7I aat 2803
SEVERLV HMa Man's
fraa halrstyllng. For mora Inio call
271-8228 Tuaa - SaL
naCHr)
CASH or Irada
11810
Sundy). 477
(12 0lr)
tialp watitad
r
Help Soff by >^pin§ Oaiers
$S- 860/ month tor Blood Plasma
HYLAND DONOR CENTER
1001 Gay ley Ave.. Westwoad
478-0051
(16 A 14)
OVERSEAS JOBS - mtmm&r/]
Europo, 8. Amortoa. Auatralto. Asia.
Wrtto. I
• fas ivivav^s.
fitor. Da
CA. 84784.
81 S8:
S7<
(IS a IS)
JANITOR 7
aasspar
11:
477
Co. 1SSB
(is A IS)
IN JACKSON HOLE. WYO
I n—4 a coupta of 9»rH tor ttUs
M 4 3S fmn ato, »n«allleoot.
MlO-aapt . wttk aood aay If Nils
• bnaf foauaw S
HlOf OUTLIA
eapendlfig bualnoaa. (818) SS2-1S77
(18 A IS)
BABYSnTaa la aaai tor tour yaer aM
Sin. ^^99 aftofaaaaa/waeli. SS1-7SS7
(18 A IS)
•dhoel aachanga atudont from Sea
787.8448.
nsais)
SALE MINDED-?
SSS EASY MONEY SSS
CAl.l «uN globus
JDLASSIEIED^D
>
^
balp watitad
(18 A SSI
a<4 pwm. a
(SsbdSya.^,
tranapoftotlon.
iiCTOaS- AOQNESaMB
AMD FORCSFUL FtRSOtlALrrY a<4
HOURS PER DAY 812^ PER HOUR
(ISA IS)
SECRETARY
anerp mapviaaei
compeny.
281-8181.
GENERAL OFFICE
il wtth front oftica
progroaahra national
* >nt aatory. aonafiu
(18 A 18)
offered
PRECISION Haa Cut StyOng
effor. by Oragg Hall for two waoks
only el SaM prtaa. Tal. 47S4477
(18 A aS)
PROFESSIONAL EdHIng for Ihoao^
MJ^. 888^
^ (IS A IS)
JaS RESUMES Men«aartp« odNNig-
tarai paper tutoring. 11788 Wllahlra
n4. 8 a* - 8 pn. 477-8888.
(IS A IS)
af Sm
no
Dr.
(IS A IS)
THE aOOYMEN
Quality Auto Sedy
Rspair 8
478-8888
(Oaaoar
laaarf rapalr a* damaatic 4 f«
Wast L.A •
sara
(IS A IS)
M^VINO: Realdontlal. apartmanto.
MS tops. Loom S laai
(18 081
ELECTROLYSIS: Ui
aato atiNiai. Pi
faolelS
(ISQIrt
Iha Barrlngteo Ptoae. W.L.A. 11744
- 477^^SSS. 878-8887. WNS
(MOm
er4S7*7S7a.
(tsoar)
HousapAiiniNO
vw
MAINTENANCE SBRVtCE: 888
traval
• • •
iMnrs PENRNMMrr wavniq
Cutting and Hairstyling
ISC
uc
HOUSESfTTIMQ: Two
(18
r/aaportoncad/low ratoa.478-
(ISalS)
MOST
CaN SM 488-1013 or Ffod 488-1448.
mom
TOURS a TRAVEL
SpHnfl Summvf 4 Fan Chmnmn
^ r»0<»n
Shannon
Pan.
Madrid
Aoundlrlp from $2SS 00
Hawaii and Hmm York
Ro.iodi, », tl6B 00
<c*
t'fr
.>••.. N*^
v<t^
Aulo-Llto-Homaownars and Rontol
Inauranca Vliiaga Olflca
^■SlMlii. 1180
♦^-•887.878-0181
SuNa 1881.
TENNIS Laaaona Unla«o. aaay and
(IS A IS)
(18 Mr)
MOUIMG ?
PaStrsgLld R«„naMatoto»
Oar SM «o^- 7 ^bmb • ^^^
CA88PUa SERVICES
Aak tar . . Joan
SSS-S31S
'^ aisc 'un« If.
• ' mrtti but a
• tours
• urn coat
■ ^>^<8>^
s«A
? -
Cail U« for tnlor'^^alton
9-6 Daily
• •a #
OVERSEAS JOBS Aato. Auatralto
Aatoa. Eurepa. SeuSi Anwrtoa. Adooeu-
petlona 8888-88.888 InaaluaPto as
Dotalto 884 IntornaMenel
loelAfound
Wa. 88184.
183 A
BALLET: f%M way to Boauty. 1888
•"•■■■*' and UnN YWCA 874 NS-
Intormadlaloa. advaneod. 8
881 Spaatol ratoa. 2 ar m
•f^ly ^^^ Sarata. Distlngulahod
(ISOar)
LOST
14)
NAWcuTs aaay
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTONCYCLi INSUfUMCf
MeluaadV^^TM Niah?
Law MonBily PaymaRM
STUDENT ofscoufrra
W IWS .. Aak lor Kan
In-
naif.
A.) 4?S-
nsoai
ba famm of a
•pdaaan-aiSS er a Motoroto
aeNd atoto 8-lrack Mpa doek model
1181. NeaaaaSana
117 A 181
FOUND SOMCTHINQ?
M yaa'va taaad a pal ar afBsIa ai;
iMtaa, «to taanl la help you
R..
Jaal coma Into the Deily Bmln'
daaeMed Peparii
ysKM atont la plaoe an ad In Bial
Laal S PaiNid PBlaain. Aa a^auBS
aandee. THI XM PACTONV
AOCMCY. WsaNiaad BMd.. «« ry
I Ma ad at tie caat la yoid
COSMY AVE.
nm, A
(17 A 181
(18 oa)
mOINQ LEtSONS
»A.M.8.A. Approvodrtotoa<
ridea wanted
^rvAfl iCflS. (partial itatingai
^ y ^00 UtgtMt A dataa witn «fmpmt\urm%
f*o^ Aofil tftrij OctoOar stay 2 io 21 ^mttu
en s^isa^as n
JX S^lft-4/90 S
JX S/21-4^17 t
jx s/2»-a<ai IS
jx s^aaa^ ^
an 7/a»-io/ss m
TO 7/19-8/24 •
an 7/is-a/o* 7
an 7/2s-s/ii 8
JX ifTt-fm •
70 S/Sb«^SS IS
71 s/as-s/as ia
72 a/ss-a^ M
m s^os-7/as r
80 %nm^^% ie%
SI 8«Pa^SS 18%
M 8n4-7/as 8
m 8^tS-S/1S 8%
73 S/t1-S/«S 7
74 s^ta/as IS
78 S^1-S/04 11
7S 8/21-4/12 12
77 v/as-a^ss 7
7s s/as-8i^a4 IS
7s s/as-a/12 11
a« s^as^is Tk
^1
on Amartcan Airlinaa and T l A
Slay 4-40 Waaka.
■ 66 days adwanda
Summar-iong flights fillmg fast
— Maka Youf Roaarvations HO¥lf«*<
IHARTEM TO EUHOl
pim
fom alii4ant
IJUL/l»Anis
aa#««ng th
aato47
4 Isnfd
Var* to f«r«
Malroaa to Weal
er Stor Vlato
(t1 Aig)
-ttis
-1111.
(isoa)
-Cai Jat
trio L.A. or 8«
Of HoNyw«
818.
VTON EXPRESS
MOVERS
NMR
ssi-sa27
4418) 880^1484 I
00 CA biiaa Z
sad N.VX. 81SS.
(818| 878-1
M s/as-a^ 18%
81 7/884^12 IS
as 7/S4wa4 8
84 7/SM/ia 7
85 8N8»St rk
UN ^lf-7/17 8
CM a'144/17 8
OMS^is-a/oT 12
\m ^fn-irn a
\jH iim^fv a
CM 7/14^88 7
UN 7/17-^81 a
CM 7/21-S^M 7
m a«4-^is s
\jH s/ta-a^ 7
m a<is-8^ 11
Ff 8^1241^ 7
FT 8/14-4/18 a
JX ^22-8^1 «a
m 7/1S-MM s
«/!»
''28
44
4 fS
a/fs
48
4/2*
4/08
ao
8/2 f
4^28
70
aai -
804
• 78
a/ti^
"ISi
a«
s/aa
84>r
-46
^28
aa4
71
%ru
b'la
78
8/28
S/18
81
4/28 ■
ass
73
4/at
MM
M
IMS-
8/12
M
7/24
ao4
43
7/24
8^12
51
7/24 -
s/»
37
438
- ■ , \
■ J
418
81
CIEE STUDENT TRAVEL
10S8 Bioaton Awa 8224
Los Angalas Ca aSOBS
Can 21^477-2
All i.c^8a.
CNARTBRS
7a7 to
nSQM)
nsAia)
(18 oar)
fia 4 14)
fiSAiS)
171.
EacfiTi
ORIENT .
irm tor 0¥t 200 thoflsr llsangs
1 8an Ffonciaco Naw Vofk.CIMaaa8
>4Mfaaiaivaa«aiitoasaaifM
TRAMI a PKNRT ^nCMSTB
CARB. CABPER NSilTALB
RACPABaSS, WTRA-CUNOPEAN
STupcarr CHARTvia
^^^ FARE-SUPER DEAL
""^ ^*i* ' kamsS
TOURS 4 CRUISES
Mexico MHsasn. 7 nns* aiaa
ULASWA. 7 «*aM. 4»M SSZ
COLUMaiA
M8XICO. Maa Oi^ 8
HONQKOWn IS
STUDENT TOURS
t-aa. a
TAHITI SUPCr'dEAL
^•■ti 1m Tanaton Naawi aaSs
8811 (aayaL dTS-isii (eMa|.«S Mae
APT ^^T "^MF WOP' ^'
^_. I ooHTDamvi
toey aaanas year a ^^hi* mm mmm^ ^^^m mk
^^^^^ ^^ ^^^^^•^ 1^^^^^^ ^^or^wf eai^M aaaH
nfr ^ r?!T I '^•^•^filSJJl!!'^
rwA
TOTNE
TAHITI
cot^tmi >
JIM M*}r\
^T II I » " ■■ •" — ■" ■
T I ^
CLASSIFIED ^D
' HiTL
•»
A8UCLA Tr»v9l S^fVlM
th« ONLY OM0M
UCLA Charltr Flight
Asampllfig
of Europe flights
LAX-Aimliniwi
nighti
1C754
11C75
12C75
15C75
17C75
ldC76
22C76
23C76
27C76
• of
Jun«21
Jun«2l
Jun« 28
Jun«29
June 29
July 5
Julys
July 12
July 19
7
11
12
5
9
10
8
9
4
4
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$4ai
IMOirt
VOLUNTMWto
(M A 18)
2844 ora43-t687.
«MA18»
HAWAII
(I
)
,.^ :
'LA-flONOLULU :
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SwTmmers^ "Great Expectations" f alLshort
DB SMiMU %^rM^ !!!^/*I?** ^"* f'^V ****^' •'* ^^ poicmmJ to score s lot for • Amcricsii co-capuins Tim Mc- rmmi be omt of ^Ir itell
Vf lob H«W
OB SiNMU Wrildr
If you were to write a book
about thtt ycsr*» UCLA iwim
leam. **Grest Expeastions**
might be sn sppropnate title
Tbe Brmns. who could have
hsd tbeir best csmpaign ever,
fcil just s bit ibort of the
greatness most of them ex-
#8B8ii^lo scbieve
^ Afler ks8t year's third place
finish, followed by s fine re-
cruiting ycsr with no grsduat-
ing senion. the Brums were
picked to finish second this
season But « combination of
untimely luck and injury ul-
umstely kept UCLA from
reaching this goal.
The Bruins finished tbe dual
BSRSon with a 7-2 mark and
second place in the Pac-8
Throughout the season. UCLA
experienced an unusual amount
of sickness that took its toll on
many of the swimmers* per-
formances. In the Pac-8 finals.
UCLA might have topped USC
if five of its top performers
weren't sitting in the stands
shaking o^ colds
UCLA also seemed to have
bad luck whenever Tennessee
was swimming, sapscially with
Its relay teams In the dual
meet 'with the Vols, the Brums
had one relay disqualified be-
fore the race even started and
had another lose on a missed
final touch At the NCAA
finals. UCLA had the third
best overall time in the 4(X)
medley relay, but that mark
caoBe in the low scoring con-
4olnttons instead of the finals
Coupled with two disqualifica-
tions in the breaststroke. the
Bruins ended up third again
this year behind Tennessee,
whom they had placed ahead
of last year
Still. UCLA did enjoy a fine
season In finishing third again,
the Bruins bettered last year's
point toul of 185 with a school
record 223 They also set school
marks in all three relays (4O0
and 800 free and 400 medley),
along with many persoiwi
nurks
"We're satisfied with our
performance this year." said
coach George Haines, "al-
though we*re disappointed we
didn't getHMcond We weren't
ready to swim the first day of
the finnli. But after that, we
probablv swam the best of any
o( the teams there **
Haines wrb eapscially pIsMstf
with the freshmen who asserted
themselves well against veteran
tompetuion. In both the Pac-8
and NCAA meets, the young
Brums earned the brunt of the
icoring.
**The Ireshmen really pro-
gresoed a lot this year." Haines
oaid "Dan Stephenson really
came on well for us late in the
year He swam better than 1
first thought he would. He has
us
Although the freshmen ex-
celled, noaliy of tbe Brum vet-
erans didn't perform as well as
expected
"As a swimnKr gets olier,
be sometimes wants to coach
himself more I'm disappointed
lor tbem because nuny of the
gays had the potential to have
really great years.** Haines
said
Tbe Bruins will be short-
bMi^d this year as they gradu-
ate 8ix.^oeniors. including AU-
Donnell and Andy Knox
Other All- Americans leaving
are Steve Baxter (tba year's
leading team NCAA scorer).
Brad Anderson, Kurt Krump-
boiz. Rex Faverro and Clay
Evans.
Looking ahead to next year.
UCLA wiO be as strong if not
stronger than tbu ytta Tbe
freshmen with one year of
experience should continue
where they left off at tbe
NCAA's. With the remaining
Brum veterans. l/CLA will
■g**u «^ OMT VM me enmrnpefs
to break the current USC reign
in collegiate swimming
"Well be somewhere in tbe
top three," Haines said op-
timistically
Bruce Hardcastle and Scott
Cord in. who both pincsd in
tbe finab. give UCLA tbe best
backstroke duo in the nation.
The Bruins will also be am
the top teams in tbe
stroke, where sophomore Kip
Virts will be pushed by Lanoe
Michelis, Art Morrill, Ken
(Continudd on Page 1 5 )
I
8
r
FWd:
InsidB Lano-
U.S dominance threatened in 400
Although there are events the USA has
dominated more in Olympic history/ per-
haps the 400 meters is the race that most
people would consider the American
ilronghold of the last decade. In no other
event m the past two Olympics has the USA
superiority been so overwhelming
At Mexico City in 1%8 Amerkam Lee
Evans, Larry lames ^n6 Ron Freenrvin swept
to gold, sliver ^r\6 bronze medaK. respec-
tively, as Evans set a world record that siilK
stands with his 43.86 time In 1972 at
Munich. Vince Matthews took the eold'ar>d
ex-UCLA star Wayne Collett copped the
silver me6^ Only mb injury to anotbar
UCLA star/ John Smith, the world record
holder at 440 yards, prevented the second
consecutive U.S. whitewash
But, this is 1978 ^nd the Games at
Montreal will reflect the newest truth in
track ^n6 field: It is possible to beat the
Americans
But to do so IS a tall order for any pf the
world's great quaner-milers, even though
foreigners have been ranked at the top ol
the pile for each of the last three leasom.
^since Matthews was ranked Jirst for his
OlympK victory at Munich) by Track mtd
ffkl News And those leaders ^r^ rurinmg
%fMi ready for their try for the Olympic
gold, come luly 29 at 4 pm.
1974 world leader Alberto luantorena of
Cuba &i\6 last year's top-ranking 400 man,
David lenkins of Great Britain, l>oth had
excellent records and will be the toughest
for the three Americans who travel to
Montreal to defeat luantorena r^ 44.80 at
the Pan-American Gamsi last summer to
visibly damonstrate that his coaBabm
in)ury was successful. And fenklm
his stock by winning the National AAU
title over all the Amertcam — and he had
to defeat five other ranked nrten to do itt
-nm iwiuii
There's no question that both of these
men v^ brilliant in the«r own right 9ir\6 will
be more than just contenders at the Games
In fact, many have put the "favorite" role
on either one or both of these foreign stars.
Add to luantorena v\6 lenkim the likes
of Belgian Fons Brydenbach, ranked second
in the world to |enkif>s for 75; ^ephen
Chepkowky of Kenya, tabbed as the num-
ber five perforn>er in the world and any
number of other great performers like
German iCarl Honz. who ranked first in 73
^rui It looks tough for the Americam all
over
But, the U.S. will be heard from. I predict
the awesonr>e riatural talent in this country
win ppsdiice the Olympic gold medalist in
Momreal If that seems irrational m light of
what I've/ust finished saying, let me have, a
couple of paragraphs to. do mmm ex-
plaining.
First off. luantorena's time of 44.80 is
hrillianr But he lost that race irtthe fan-Am
fif>al by alnr>osi four tenths «of a second. He
lost It to American Ron Ray, who posted
the fastest time in the world last year in that
race — 44.45 — which is also the ^fourth
fastest elearically-timed 400 meters evet:
There's no dMibi in my wkn6 that Bay's
fantastK victory m Mexico City will carry
him on to the Games He's got the talont
»f\<i has now proved that he can prndbitt
under pressure, tomething he didn't ohow
m |uf>e when he finished last in an NCAA
semifirul But he proved it in convincing
fashion at Mexico City 9ind will do the
in Montreal.
Frcmi there, it's anyone's gueoo as to
the othai Anwricam will be, so TN venture
mme. UCLA graAisBe Bonny Brown has too
nnuch talent not to make it to Montreal and
if he wanu the gold badly enough. he'M
P«^obabiy get it. He beat a Jot ol imifh
people last year and is able to dtiasi a
larger portion of his time to training now
Stan Vbwon is proving, slowly, thai he can
run with the bast ol them >le beat Brown
at the AAU last year w\6 finished third to
lenkms. Virion also ran a sterling leg on
the US world record mile relay team last
summer.
Old standbys Maurice Peoples ^f\6 Fred
Newhouse w^ still tough, Newhouse
ranking ninth last year and PooplBi 10th. It
looks like when everyone seems to pats
them by, they come up with^^ialL best
performances USC star Ken RarxHe also has
to be in the running. After all, he ^d beat
Brown iiwios in a row last season.
Finally, H must be merwioned that current
LCIA quarter-miler Bennie Myles has an
OMtside chance Myles' position is much the
same inr Herman Frazier'i (Arizona Sutc,
who beat Myles in the season openir>g raco)
In that both had outstanding early mmtm
efforts, but have slacked off lately.
It's a biased view, I admlc, but I think that
both will do very well v\d when any athlete
can make it into the Olympic Trials finals,
'ne IS very oniiflBPOiBk '"-efti/
» ■ \ , ■■' i •).*' ""
Only time wiN tell Hr #M US., but thg
r«8t of the world should be forewarned —
the i^mericans will be coming 1- and they'll
have to be dealt with for a foreigner to win
a gold ntedal tn 400 meters, oonMllbig that
hasn't happened since 19S2.
U.S. Team Prediction Ron Ray, Benny
Brown, Maurice Pwplni.
Oi^'wplr Me4al PriilcMsn: Gold. Ray
fU.S.I; Silver, lenkms (CB); Bronze, luan-
torena fCuba)
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VoHeybaHers host Ggudws Si another "biggest match"
- ■■ - w~
TTrr
t
e
1
My Michurl Sondheimrr
DB Sport% Wriirr
UCLA pUyed its biggest volleybiill nruitch of
the HBMn Ust Friday night when it defeated
Pcpperdinc in five games Tonight at ^30 pm
in Pauley Pavilion, the Bruins (8-2) will pUy
even a bigfer match when they try to keep their
title hopet alive against VC SmMi Barbara (8-
2)
The winner of tonight's match between
UCLA and Santa Barbara should tie Pepper-
dine (10-2) for the league title, provided the
Brums can beat San Diego State Friday night
in Pauley Pavilion or SaqlAJBarbara can defeat
I ong Beach State at home the same evening
VC Santa Barbara, under second year coach
Gui Mce. has been the "jinx" team for UC I A
m regular season play the past two years, but
the Bruins wai be sUg^tly favored because the
match IS in Pauley Pavilion
I ndefeated at bome
UCLA IS 6-() at home this year and ha» not
been beaten m Pauley Pavilion Tor over a year
VC Santa Ba/bara beat the Bruins last year in
Pauley alid have won eight matches in a row
over UCl^AjTn regular sea&on pla>
Vice's team this year has beaten the Bruins in
the_ finals of the All-Cal and Santa Barbara
Intercollegiate tournaments, plus winning the
league match in Sanu Barbara in lour games.
The only UCLA regtitar match victory oyer
Santa Barbara during this time was in the
NCAA finals last year at. Pauley Pavilion
"Santa Barbara is the quickest team we have
played, plus run a similar oflense to our own."
said Al Scales. UCLA bead coach "We will
beat Santa Barbara if We can plav the same
way a* against Pcppeidine."
Gaucho quiekiie^
The Gauchbs used their quickness in the first
match to set up numerous one-on-one hitting
situations lor outside spikers Eric Pavels and
Gary Hooper. wfi(T Continually hit the ball
through the Brum block Santa Barbara setters
Gary Sato. Matt McShane and Scott Carlson
were able also to run quick plays in the middle
lor 6-3 Russ Jones and Joe Cdlligan
Santa Barbara also got fine bench work Irom
^7 blocker VJ*W Kyc and backcourt and
lerving specuiiiu Bill Richardson. John Corbcili
IS now seeing considerable aaion at an outside
hitting position The person who has hurt the
Bruins the moii is the 5-8 Sato
"Gary it an otitsUnding player and probably
the fastest on the team," said Scales. "He has
the same kind of explosion as our former All-
Attencan Toshi Toyoda "
Moekiiif and defen^^
Blocking and defense were the keys to the
UCLA win on Friday night against Pepperdme
and they will be the big factors tonight The
Bruins blcxrked a season high 27 balls for
points against Pepperdme. including 10 by
sophomore Doug Rabe If the bAock is not
working, then backcourt saves will be needed
to keep the Gauchos from scoring Hitting will
also be impoctjttit,
Denny Cline and Rabe were the top per-
centage hitters against Pepperdme and ^fike
Gottschall also spiked well, but A II- American
Joe Mica and AH- American candidate Fred
Sturm d^d not do well statistically
"It might not have seemed like it, but Joey
and Fred actually had off-nights against
Pepperdme ' said Scates **One thing it did
prove IS that no one has to carry this team."
Setting big plus
I he setting was the biggest plus for the
Bruins against Peppcrdinc as Scates was very
happv with the play of David Olbright and
Peter Ashley. Ashley is now setting so well, it is
doubtful Scates will remove him from the gaiiie
when he has to go into the front row after
Gcttachall has run out of rotations
"We will have to play our best match of the
year to beat UCLA in Pauley Pavilion." said
Mee **We played, very well the first time in
Santa Barbara, but the Bruins didn't have .Fred
[Sturm)" We must try to neutrali/e the spiking/
power ol Fred and Joey if we plan to. wiir,-.
"I Icel that we are now playing the best we
have all season and arc improving each match,"
said Scates "We played wfell against Long
Beach, better against USC and the best agatnst
Pepperdme Wc need the same kind of intense
effort to beat Santa Barbara "
Vo4ufM XCVIII, Numtor 9
'x— «t
UfiiwfsHy of CflMoffite, Los AhqoIm
Thursdoy, April 18, 19n
Risks of nuclear power weighed in debate
Speakers Program Presents
A Debate On The
Nuclear Initiative
Dr. Peter Gotlieb
Ph.D. - MIT jPhysics)
Director -
(Proposition 15)
vs.
Mr. Bob Bolduc
Project Survival
Environmental Science
at West Coast Univ.
Member - American
Nuclear Society
regarding Prof. 15.
Wednesday, April 14 12 NOON
Grand Ballroom
vored by Associated Students Speaker Proirann/OK dent LeyisUtiv<» CounrtI
ly Mike
Di Swa Writer
The risks ^ ntidear power, both in
terms of safety and potential for dam-
afc, were iief tkt mmm cowered in
a debate oo Use Nuetoar Safeguards
Initiauve ytmniay.
Speaking for tbe initiative, which is
Proposition 15 on the June ballot, was
Bob Ooiduc of Profect Survival Dr.
Peter Gotlicb, the director of Environ-
mental Science at West Coast Univer-
sity, spdk( against it.
Bolduc*s view of the findings lo date
on nuclear energy is that they are
characterized by **uiKertainty ** He said
uncertainty is even present in the
scientific community, citing a petition
signed by 2300 scientists which called
for g ^'diJMtic reduction in new nuclear
pewai plant starts before flMjor prog-
ress IS achieved in the required re-
search.-
Safety
One major concern to those who
favor the initiative is the safety of
nuclear power plants Bolduc said,
''Should a major cataitrophe occur, it
IS estimated that between 3,000 and
33,000 bves will be lost due to nuckar
.radiation**. —
**lt IS not the probabihty of a major
accident -that concerns me as much as
the dire consequences,** ftokiuc
He also said that there tnay eventually
be cancer-related deaths from wmdtmi
power of which we have no knowledge
yet.
^ Ootlieb minimiied the risk of such
«i accident, saying that nobody has
ever been killed m connection with a
Malfunction at a commercili nuclear
plant. **Nuclear power is the safest
Activity known to nan,** he said
• * Coal
**We never ulk about the safety of
eaal, which m the only alternative,**
Gotlieb said Two hundred miners are
killed annually in minmg aocidents,
and half of all miners woukl ultimately
develop black-lung disease, he pointed
out
Bokiuc said, however, that any com-
parison between coal and nuclear
safety should be cooipared over the
whole cycle, from mining to produc-
itofi. He cited a statistic showing that
**nuclear power outweighs the danger
of coal, especially at the mining level,
by a ratio of 40 to I **
UaMHly
Bokiuc raised the issue of present
liability laws covenng'a oaaior nuclear
diMflter The Price- Anderson Act
pataad by Congress set a ceiling on the
amount that utihty companies would
be held liable m case of such a disaster.
Currently, the ceiling is SS68 million.
(Cii m i M raft 12)
Or
iMii
State government
hits Proposition 15
By CMs
UC SacraMcnto d ^
SACRAMENTO — Passage of Proposition 15. the
Nuclear Power Plant Initiative, woukl arrest California*!
economic growth and mean ''disaster'* for the job market,
the state government reported this wtek.
The Commission for Econonnc Development, chaired by
Lieutenant Governor Mervyn DymaRy, said Monday that
by 1980 California coukJ expect to add between 100.000
and 150,000 to its unemployment rolls if the nuclear
initiative is approved by voteri June f.
The commission sufT study focussed only on the job
impact of Proposition 15. Its conclusioiu are based
on public bearings in February and staff reports.
The nuclear initiative will prohibit construction of
additional atomic power plants in the state until the
Lcfiriature, by a two-thirds vote, affirms that the industry
is capable of meeting rigorous safety standards.
The report said Uwt without adequate electricity for
Tiitiiilr]. a resuh of rettnOions on nuclear pmmu piaala,
economk growth wiU **coaie to a halt by J9i0, if not weU
before.** particularly in aianufactuhng.
Thus, Cahfomia would kiee much of rts ability to provide
new jobs to haadk an increasing labor force, and the
current number of om mittioa lUMBpteyei couki double m
t9M), the report said.
The report tBnrfwffTt *Tke aiaption of Propoekioa 15
would eabetantiaUy inhibit aaaaaouc fpewth m
pepitsent a diiaelcr for tbe working
ef this suu.**
Provldet support reseirch
UCLA project aitls limbless
By larry C
DB Slair
Twenty-six year-old Diane Fields has no"
arms or legs. **When I was bora, the doctor
fainted.** said Fields. **Tbe nurse had to deliver
Speaking without hesitation, she talked
about her disability and the limiutions imposed
upon her hfe. Throughout the years, Fiekls hai
had her share of inquisitive eyes aad pointing
finfers from both chiktren and adnks.
**l don*t mind kids because they are naturally
cunous, 1 do the same thing,** mid Fiekls. **lf 1
aee loif itt . I kwk too. What dee are yea
going to do'' Kids ni answer, but it*s adiilU
who really upset me.**
"Some of them look hke they* re going to get
in- 4 wreck They*D be driving down the street
and really crane their necks to look at mc. If
they want to know something, they could ask/*
wheekhairs,** Fielit said with a slight laugh of
frustration.
She neirtioned elevatori as her biggest
problem. **A lot of people arc really funny HI
ask them to pMb the elevator button, and they
will. They*ll push the oiitiiif button and the
doors will open, but 1 caa*t push the inside
bmton because theyVe already left.**
A4apl to piuMi—
The problem of aiapting to high door knobs,
steep hills and slow elevators is no easy task —
not aaly for Fields, but lor mmny wheekhair-
ridden individuals with less severe limb de-
ficiencies
i
Dymally said be ngpni with tbe conclus but is aot
Uking a stand on Proposition 15 because of safety
A legislator on tbe 15-member commission,
Floy^ Mori (D-PlM«ntoo), mmtd tbe « .
HBMHKVt, saying that tiK initiative by itaelf cowM act be a
'^sigmficant deterrent to future mtammmc gpgwit*
When Fields was a child, many people
thought she was helpless. ** People need to give
me money and that*i what I really hated,** she
explained **Wben I was a kid, they ahaayg five
ne quarters, nickeb. and dollars. It was like
saying to me, *You .paor httle thing, here's a
little money to buy tMM caaiy ***
Sbe has Tr^«^f^ to rite above many bnnb
and often critical comments from children and
adulu, but there is use intiitit sbe has not
forgotten.
One day Diane and ber girlfriend went mto a
resuurant and tbe waitsoi aoHHiitiely Innk
them to tbe back. Tbe reason for this seclueion
was obviont, to the firli PHfnniei by moving
up front A wknm muttered, '"Sbel nnkc iBt
pnnpie nek **
**lt*s pathetic,** said Fields, "but a Inl ef
think that way ** Fi
left.
Helping these people adjust their lives to a
structurally complex world is one function of
the Chikl Amputee Praetbetics Profect (CAPP).
Organized in 1954 by Dr Milo Brnnks, CAPP
provides clinical assistance for Mnib-deficient
youngsters and their parents.
The Project, located in the UCLA Rebabdi-
tauon Buikling in Westwood ViUnge, houses
tbe specially trained CAPP staff Tbe pediath-
ciaai, tberapistt, astflBnl sneial workers and
prosilMtie angineen ^nvide limb daficicni or
amputee children with tbe guidai
vation to develop bves that will be as
prosperous and rewarding as possible, ac-
cording to tbe
Welfare
InrCAPP
Department of Heakb, Edncatien,
(HEW), said Bmnks. Tbe HeaHh
Mental Heahh AannaisCrauon oT HEW
vides gmnu far snch pranranv as educational
As an undergra<htate here. Fields survives tbe
cromied hallways, ati
tbrwigb fiiuil exaaM as
4o. Sbe is sionlnr to ber fetknlr daesnMies in
Tbe Prafect ireato
it tbe leigsii entpemni cbnic in tbs U
Stales, nrs a cbaiMMr for as tn el^r nn
get —it fcniing than any
for ibildfiiB'i work," says
of CAPPs
to prove
Over 7i par cent of CAFPs
trsatnsent as s resnb af
Tbe
wbeelcbair **UCLA isn*t Ibe greatest f6r
-» 4^
.,.««■ •« «•
I
,?
1
n
li.—n tt on TVIklovmt
RiOE THE RAPIDS
3 houf dnv« from L-A '
^ ■ JSS'JSHSinSZmlSrSS^ broctjur* on this and oth^r n¥»f«. CAN
U
3
^
for national tournament
go ur
i
I
SKI MAMMOTH
April 23-25
with the UCLA Ski Club
Sign up in the Ski Club Office Kerckhoff HeJI 501
By Friday Apnlie
I TYPEWRITER
47«-7282 WESTWOOO
New Brother Portable
New Adier Portable
Smith-Corona Elec. Aut.
CITY
479-7282
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Checkwrlters 69.95
Hand Held Calculators
CorVUS 500 w/clMrgw
Electronic Printer
Elec. Printer w/m«n
Teal Printer 121P.o.«etm*»,
" " lyr. warranty
and REPAIRS
B.nt AmriC^rd 1089 G«yt>y Ave. Mwter Charg*
12.95
84.95
98.00
119.95
OFFICIAL Uni^ity NOTICES
RE:
for OIReM
Tlie pmceduft lo
Is ••
* ■ cei^ss Offlee. 191
1). DO NOT %€HD WRiCTLY TO RRUNi.
tor 95 leflers per
Hai (est
ilC: Reg^straHon In
ftydswli wM not be
coMeee/ school/ dhrtelofi
1134 Murphy Hell, for
trallon Is
m OPPfOAL NATURE Of«p.
After Apf« tt
LATE tse N
10:90 em
The study Met ol
REGISTERED
Uet (as el
RE
Of
^■•ns o< S^idy Llet (by ApsV m
I e*o aio ooi oMaRed m risms as of Ae«« if
a t^idy List Coffd (fio tee) wMh ttie
of tbe
edvlsor Stueofits »«, Lew Medicine end Dentl.ir, •nroll rs
by -^ •
By JIm Curran
DB Suiir B^^eff
UCLAV top dehMM, Mike
Hartman siid Andy Demetri-
Oil, wili compete sgainst 63
other colkfc TriRM at. the
National Debate Tour in Bos-
ton April 16 through the 19th
All teams wil confront the
formal dcheie question: The
federal government should pro-
pose a program to control laad
Hartman and Demetriou are
prepared to uke the affirm-
aljvc and negative tides of this
qVHtion using ten file boxes
CRMlaining 15,(X)0 4x6 index
cards of evidence. Tour of-
ficials will ask them to take
both tides of the quettion.
Format
The format uted hy the
Tour's judges it timiliar to that
employed by the NCAA for
the basketball finals Friday
and Saturday will tee the
original 64 teamt teaieddow
to 16 finalisu. The teams will
coiapMe in quarterfinal, semi-
final and final rounds on Mon-
day to determine the wmner
UCLA's debate team last
won the tournament in 1970
Hartman, who along with
I>emeinou it a senior, hopes
that -after six years, we can do
it again ** According to a poll
of debate coaches across the
country, the Bruins are cur-
rently ranked 7fh
*This IS the most exclusive,
the biggie of ail debate meets
in the country," taid Hartman
**lt it an honCr even to be
invited.** Other California coK
kgii 4o iMUticipate are Loyola
Univertity, Sacramento State,
use and Redlands Coliege.
Redlands is considered one of
the top three or four teana
nationally, behind Harvard.
Augustina College in Illinois
and Northwestern
NatJoRRl taxbaae
The basis of their positive
argument is that the federal
government should create a
breeder national tax bate to'
equalize the dwparity between
the aty dwellers, who finance
city tervtces through . their
taxes, and suburbanites who
lite the services but do not pay
their share of the burden.
The debators use all the
research facilities available to
them on campus, particularly
the University Research Li-
brary, Powell and the Law
Library Hartman, who claims
to work ''about 20 hours a
week on research alone,** cites
debate at '*the best possible
learning process m school, par-
ticularly if one wants to attend
Law School. In debate one
learns to research an istue,
analyze it and argue it —
which u just what a lawyer
must do :**
Law career
Hartman enjoys debate not
only for the future help it will
provide him in pursuing a law
career bui also for the compe-
tition and travel opportunities
It provides.
WHEEL
POTTERY
CLASSES
THE
POT
FARM
828-7071
KING or
HEARTS
F.v» ront.nuou\ yt«rs in C*mbr.dg» M
' ^*^ "ow become fh* iong«it
•'^e'- .ir thejtrc history
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
PARTY! PARTY!
For Good Times at
the Delt House
Live Band
Frozen Refreshments
»^»
-^.
Delt Daig's & Bullfrogs
Friday April 30 8 pm - 1 am
"^
649 Goyley Ave
Get Wet —
Succumb with the Delts
• < .' . . ,
The debate tcm coach, Har-
ry Howell, will not go to Bot-
tom due to a rww^ ;iw^-.
Mardi Gras
article changed
The Daily Bruirt made an
incorrect attribution in the
Mardi Grat article of April
9 Theu I>elta Chi H spoff-
sonng Mintky't with Chi
Omega.
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Volume XCVIII Humbm 9
Thunday Apni is. Wft
t^
awiglwg E
Patrtck Mealy
Anne Young
Sueen Kene
Ouinn
Prn^ SlQi
Frank Slaltworth
Merc DelNfw
Stuert SHvemtin
Glenn SeMt
PtiOtD El
Mifl Lapin
Tony
Aaaoclate Indai Edltort
Howard Poaner — On Campua
Laura Klemer
Istant Inaas Eailar
Adefn Partrey
nMVK Wfvlart
Mary Anr>e CarlairK)
Karen Green
Luenn Cunmnghfr
Bfett Holler
Aft Dvactof
Michael Lee
Oevid Whitney
^
Mary Beth MurrHI
EvantaEdi
imrm Wigod
Dick Kreia
Aaalatant
ZoeaHolMy
Oeve Gould
HoMy KJV12
tiBfr WrttafB
Jmmm Alper
i^vry Bono ^
9iawe Saawr •
Nancy Browi
Leone ChaHwii
Cathy ConneMy
Pany Croat
MNw DaiX|iwi
Oeniee Doroehetr
Micfielle Duval
Ker Oann
aaVy Gamer
Barry Qrey
Wia4
Alan
' ^' 'aaetf every
icAoo/ ^oar.
a^itf aars iMMMPifif 'Haa^fbyt a«*0 •>-
*'^«na»n» pmriotn. by ftw ASUCLA
CommuTcaffona aoero JOf Weaf-
y5>y ^Hieca Lcm AnfeMa Cstifomt^
90094 CapHpMttWayaieAaUCi/
paidafrnffM^^MtlUVf
Workers neeii^wft
says VP candidate
The Uottad Statet
|M(|ilicai party which ' ,
workers in order to tolve maiiy
oi lU prnbiiiM, iriiiwiing to
Willie May Reid. Socialitt
Worken candidate for ¥W»>
la hu tfOKk iMiday in the
Men*t Gym, Reid outlined bar
platform, which advocatet a
worker-dominated ecoiiomy to
better provide for the common
»_ ^«_
mant
The economic tyitem would
be permanently reorganized^
into a tociaj one. Reid laid.
Everyone would be able to
participate in decitiont. Equal-
ity woukj be a way of hfe the
believes.
"Ratioaar T^^ng
Reid said government tpend-
iag thould be planned in a
"rationaP way, net for profit
Under her tyttem, the SIOO
bilhon now allocated for de-
fenae would be spent for h<
iag» chikJ care, tchooii
■Kdical reacarch.
Conoeming civil rights Reid
Mi the example of busing to
integrate public schoob in Bos-
ton, to which many officuilt
and the white community ob-
ject .She laid government itaet
ht lack of weahh at an excwe
to ttop the expMMion of btit-
Mayor Kevin White of
ton bebevet m baaing, but does
not have enough police to
protect the Blacks, according
to Reid. Pretident Ford re-
fveed to give police aid to
White, the candidate taid She
feeb that if the law « not
enforced, intente aggravation
ariaet among thoae who want
buaing.
The capitahtt economic tyt-
ten tuppretted civil rightt.
Reid said. Reid taid. "Minor-
itiet and women are needed
very very much by this tyvlem.
TlKy have certain purpoaet in
aeciety. They are the meaat of
maximum profit for the own-
en of the economic tyttem.
laid Reid
Minorities and women will
tuffer more than in proportion
to the population, Reid taid.
They will continue to suffer
and bear the brunt of the
economic criait to the owners
can profit, according to Reid
SHfleriag
The Democratt wmi Repub-
licans protect the private pro-
perty iyiUm, Reid said She
reiectt Pretident Ford*s warn-
ing that every AaHftean ihoukl
accept leu financially
She warned that citizens are
tuffenng for the greed of the
rich. The nch, according to
Reid, will not accept a de-
cneate la thei? wealth/ They
will not "give one penny, while
we give ap more and more.**
Reid alK> tpoke of her tup-
port, of detegregation, the right
to have an abortion and the
Equal Rightt Amendment In
the catet of deiegrcgation and
abortion the policiet are law,
but many officialt try to rr-
verte these lawt, the taid.
The moat effective meant of
*^rying the handt of govern-
ment official! to carry out
revenalt,** Reid taid, it public
pressure on thoae officiate She
emphasized the organization of
groups at a means to achieve
thit. She taid, *The bigger and
broader a coalition, the more
powerful it will be and the
more certain a victory"
AUTO
INSURANCE
YES — you need auto insurance
All the more reason to contact us for discounts
up to 35°c to most students - another good
reason tor being in college.
»ee or call us in Westwoc
[ 477.?S4R
Agenis for College Student insurance SerTTct
[•r»,»
^•5M«iniri
LA 90024
'*. 4> ^daUi^AL.ijBtT-LA,
Charles Cotson
BORN AGAIN
Hoax or Hope*^
One mmn finds tha Raaiity
of Easter in his lite
MMlk^^^lciCM*
Moh-SatlOam-llpm
Sun2'«pfn
.aiaMof
THE
EXPO CENTER
TRAVEL FAIR
APRIL 20 a 21
Wa naad voluntaars to hatp eat up
ahd take down the exhibits and
run travel films Conr>e to EXPO.
A213 Ackerman or call 825-0831
es aoon aa poeaible.
I
r
J
.jn^f
WANTED - College Students
Coma to IDAHO for an unforgattabte pack trip by fiortaeaca
thru tf>a Idaho WMdemeas Araa Enjoy tha majastic baatuty clean
air and pura watar of tha rugead Rocky Mountains unspoitad by
ci«rHization roads or motonzad vahiclea Wa ara offer mg special
anvifonmental 5 day pack trips avary Monday starting May 1 thru
^MO^fi lirjm-00 par peripn plus 1% aeiea taa^ We lueely hofsea.
maatt tents guidea. — evarything aKcapt for your •laai;>ing bag
and paraonai geer Coma alona or form your own group Reaefvationt
should bia made new Call or wnf
Peck's
P.O aoM 57
CheNia.M.
(2ee)
(A
Reid, involved in civil nghts
activities since 1957, said im-
plemenution of needed rigtits
will have to employ means
more sophisticated than used
in the repeal of Jim Crow
laws
it
GENUINE
MANDARIN CUISINE
Beautiful Dining Room
A Cocktail
KING FAR LOW
(f Of mar Flower Drum}
10P74 W Pico Blvd
Weat Los Angeles
Phone 474-158P
Lunch a Dinnmr
Mondayi
E.B. Frankel, M.D. Medical Group
Hair Transplantation
Acne-Complexion
Plastic Surgery -
Dermatology
Allergy
Phone tor Personal Appomtmani • Madicai Literal ure on Request
All Medical and Health Plans e Credit Cards Qredit Term^ Aya»)am*
»105
Los Angeles 6423 Wilshire Blvd
Lakewood .5203 Lakewood Blvd
Huntingtoh Beach 8 id* Newman St ste C
• 656-6533
. 531-7420
1714) 540-6805'
I
Campus Events Film Commiaeion of the Student Legialiitive Council Preeents
ACKERMAN GRAND
BALLROOM
1
•»«»X>iN HOUSEMAN amudai>aas johnogck mogesgutm
IVALPH NCHAn06Oi
FR I DAY
APRIL 16
LAS0024
479-7742
aann 9^1.1111
■» I 111 I-
I
m
u
3
UCLA STUDENT
^
lofm$co'B
_ACTOFOUTY
Chekhov's
mSHT BEFORE THE flltit
1.00 Off ^^^
LL.Mi Alt J MHC)V
O TO
1211 Fourth Str«M
For rvtorvation c«ll
NT*^ IN ARFA'^
'lUi y
jrib
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'»nr1 f )T hMr
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♦Hours:
MON TU6^<^ WE 6
THURS & hRi u ^,y.
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(no appointfTient
■<K
408 KERCKHOFF
p'.^ne a^:> j'>yt> or 8^^5 2643
R E.A.D.S. SI
BEST SPEED READING
PROGRAM
LA (Spw) - Tlie «.£ A O S ft«fNd
Reading Program IMM tam iilMia4 as
the best avBilabie reading prograin bf
the AMocuucd Siudcau of U^LA
According 19 Gary Mould, evaluator.
1^ READS program will be offered
exclutivcly by ibe ASUCLA Siudcni
Sum
Factor! wHich influenced the deci
•ton were the low.
guarantee and
raiaa of caurtc
««■■ kMii on 12
of READS c
•tudenti A unique
READS
ailuwtog
finaia.
For further information on Spring
Ouartf;r classes, contact R E A DS .
^ij N«vada. SauiplM*. CA. MMS
« tiM labk m Htt ittiMl ttan
I IS Its SIX
to be
on«y-back
ily higii raading
TIk evaluation
<9uanen
held for UCLA
feature pf the
:h.
to
l^osthetlcs^^^
DATSUN
utomobite. OMMorcycIe. lawn mower, «ad e
incidents
The profrei#i¥c tUfet of proetbetict <«^>i —m—
dunng wsrtime. Brooks laid. in World War I, tbt UaSed
Sutei was not involved long enough to produce a
tuhtUntial volume of amputee victims who could be
studied Dunng World War 11. however, amputee soldiera
were returning home en maaac.
By the end of World War 11, General Omar Bradley and
Paul Magnuson, medical director of the Veteran's Admm-
istration believed there should be ^mtmiku^ better for
returning servicemen other than crude steel, wooden and
leather implements.
The war had generated a great deal of medical intercit in
prosthetic development Prosthetic research schodt were
esubhshed at UCLA and Berkeley with federal funds and
the moral support of lodividunli such as Bradley and
Magnuson. A few years kter. detailed reports were issued
showing numerous ways of ihaking prosthetic equipment
The postwar prosthetic devices were molded from plastic
and much lighter than previous models These new limbs
were comfortable, easier to dean, and more attractive than
their meul ancestors.
This new technology in prosthetic research made it
possible for children to be fitted with artificial hmbs. Now
instead of having to settle for modified versaow of adult
prostheses, amputee children are pvea. «ew Inibt made
especially for them
When a limb-defiaent baby is born, the parenu are
overcome by shock, confusion and deep feelings of
loneliness, according to Yoahio Setoguchi, CAPPs currcm
naedical director.
The immediate houn following the birth of a iBaiformed
infant are extremely crucial, Setoguchi rmphiMwd At this
time, parents formulate and expreu very personal feelinp
toward their offspring. They are concerned about their
child's reUtionilMpi with other people, the performance of
their youngster in school and the long-term health aad
happiness of their child If these feelings are negative for a
prolonged penod, they may seriously hinder the child's
capabilities as a future proathans waaicr.
If parents caa receive emotional support and comfort
during these intense momenu of grief, with ^assurance that
somethitig can be done for tlieir child, this wUl certainly
encourage healthy and progressive development of their
youngster, Setoguchi explain^.
It is the usual procedure for a pediatrician and medical
social worker from CAPP to work as a team during this
first hoapilal visit. (If a hospiul visit is not feasible
cons ulut ion at the home is a beneficial substitute).
"We should be there — if possible — within the first 24
hours after births Setoguchi said. -The most lonesome and
possibly the most helpless time for parents of physically
Acres of Datsuns
»»
student Discounts — Ask for Fleet Sales
Pasadena Datsun
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
'684-1133*
The Beatles
Yellow Submarine
shown at Hiiiel
Saturday Night April 17
8 30 pm 900 Hllgard
474-1531
nmi of yaslarday's hair?
tiAII? TODAY
For whafs happening now
styling for man and woman
Jwry Raddlog's Jhirmacfc prnrtuiili
For appoinbnant call 47g-6151
tuas. thru saL
3.00 • OFF first haircut
with this ad
^W Westwood VlSi^
Prosthetles^or limbless
' (Continued from Page 4)
^■■iicapped children fc at
hirth — particularly if the
factor doesn*t know what
tieatments are available.**
Positive ciMiate
Physicians and social work-
ers can create an atmosphere
for positive change in the
parents* attitude simply by
holding their child If they can
observe their baby being treat-
ed as something beautiful sknd
valuable, very often their at-
titude shifts to a positive tone
"If we can show the parents
that love exists and the child
has worth, then it creates a
very meaningful experience for
them," Setoguchi explained
Judy Leventhal, a medical
social worker. ' conducts a
**p^rejjt-group" program in-
volving parental awareness of
^their youngster's growth and
development through adoles-
cence **It's an experiential
•PPrpachr she said *'One of
our goals is to assist parents in
helping their children feci good
about themselves physically
and feel good about showing
the world how theV are."
Parents arc also encouraged
to express thcK feelings toward
^thc prosthesis ititli ^^c try to
convey to the parents that a
prosthesis is not something
they have to give their child."
said Darlene Talbot, another
medical social worker "Wear-
ing a prosthesis is not neces-
sary for them to be good
parents "
Introduced .
Limbs arc usualiv introduced
to the child when he is between
eight and 10 months old/ says
Susan Clarke. CAPP's senior
occupational therapist She
works With paticiits who are
. missing upper extremities and
4ooks for signs of readiness in
the child before a limb is pre-
scribed These signs include the
abiiity of the child to sit
properly so that his arms are
free to play
When the limb is fitted, the
therapist wants parents to feel
comloriabic with the limb in
terms of putting it on their
child and picking up the child
with the limb attached
"Our main purpose here is
to see that kids develop as
normally as possible. ' said
Clarke **Wc do this by acting
as consultants to the parents
and their children and encour
aging them to promote active
involvement with their kids"
Proficient
When a child becomes pro-
ficient with the limb, entering
school may be a difficuh time
for him in terms of being
cnticired or teased about his
new limb J his is where the
therapist can be most beneficial
bv assessing the child's cap-
abilities and making recpm-
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with
McHng Domocfptic CandtdaW
CongrpMkMMil Campaign
Limited Paid Positions Available
450-4557
C
I
•Uc-i
Mother's Day Special \
nicer than a phone call
more thoughtful than a card
send an
Orchid
5
\^ Vw'-^
— /
Y"
'*! don't mind kida
naturaay
I do 1
"tt I aao
I
too. What
to dor
mendations to the teacher
about assisting the child in the
classroom
While the school is a serious
testing ground for an amputee
child. It has also led to some"
comical moments" for Fields
during her high school days "I
got to school one day and*
when the uxi dnver was lift-
ing me out, my (prosthetic]
legs fell on the ground Here I
am up in hif arms, my legs are
down there, and my panties
are showing with the kids afl
around.
Senior year
"It was my senior year and I
was pretty well known by
then." Fields said, blushing
"All the kids shouted. I 00k
at Duine, her legs just fell oiV:
I was so embarrassed A lady
finally picked up' the legs so I
lifted up my skirt and jus^f
shoved ihem there until I got
to the bathroom to fix them "
On any ^ven day, Duine
and her wheelchair traverse
many steep hills at UCLA with
little difficulty by shifting her
weight from side to side
"When you watch Diane in the
wheelchair going up and down
the ramps and over the curbs.
It's a wonder she doesn't go
over on her head," observed
Clarke)
Sometimes Fields falls off
her wheelchair and waits pa-
tiently for someone to come
along and help her The wait is
KontiiNied on Page 61
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Last Day: April 25, 1976
c
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A CAREER FOR ALL REASONS
F/y with
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TWA representatives. wiH be in Lot
Angeles lo discuss |0b opportunities
tn the Flight Attendant (steward/
stewerdiM) poeitior). Bnefmgs will be held ^^
to describe the job.^nd brief imerviews will be conducted
«fish to apply, it is recommended thet you have ae^«rai hours
To
with those who
ly. you must meet the foliowin9
MimmufT' «o« 2D H^iflhi S 2 to S 2, wi«« proportional* w«)OM U S C(lt*«»Hit«ip or '
pOMWioo Of a U S p«rm«n«nt rwi^nt wi«« hlO^ itnool diploma Of aquivalont
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wilimg to ralocata fo any of tf»« following cittna Hmm VoHi Chicago Kjio«aft City Lot
AngoM. and *^n ftmnctfc A0plica«Ha wfH> havo boon rotcrvtawd for tfiia position in
>^ PMt aiH montt^t aro not atigiblo for conaidaratior a? th>ii omd
INTERVIEWS AT HYATT LOS ANGELES INTERNATIONAL
6226 West Century faiva ai enirance lo LA
Airport
Monday Apm 19 Tu«40«y. April 20. ar>d Wed-
n«»dey. April 21
10 00 AM 200 P M and 6 00 P M m the Geld
Room;
MO TELEPHONE CALLS. PLEASE
EOUAi OW»OaTUf.lTY £Mp.C'€I» Mrf
Help foLlimbles
(Continued from Pafc 5)
"usually not very long,** she said. ^'becauK I always mmkt h a
point to fall down where everyone it.**
TnuMformed
Behind a door marked CAPP RESEARCH LABORATORY
IS a room where tdeas become drawings, drawings are transformed
into models mad the models are eventually, fitted as new bmbs.
The laboratory is smaH, crowded and busy The designers and
engineers who work msidc spend many long hours planning
measuring and building artificial arms and legs. Sometimes they
redesign, rebuild or start from sctatch.
What were previously just ordinary blocks of wood haw
reshaped imo limb-like sculptures. A tennis shoe protriides from
the end of a small wooden leg; another leg has a black dirss shoe
attached to it. Mounted on one of the walls is a* framed board
displaying various clamps, pulleys, wrist sections and wire cables.
Someday they will be combined into an arm, allowing a small
child to pick up a spoon with his new ^helper**
Tool and dyemaker
Carl Sumida. a certified prosthetist and orthodontist has been
designing prosthetic devices at UCLA for over 15 years Working
with him is Oscar "Bus** Johnson, the tool and dyemaker
**! lake Carfs drawings and make them into prototypes,** said
Johnson. ''A prosthesis is then fitted to the patient and put into
application**
" Sumida and Johnson work as a manufactyring team the same
way pediatricians and social workers operate as a team of
medical counselors "I know what I want, so it's much easier to
design.** explained Sumida.
"I design a prosthesis with an idea of how it can be maderTve
always believed that any prototype one makes should be the final
product; it should be durable. We make all prototypes like the
finished product; therefore, we eliminate one possibility ol
rejection, which is fear of breakdown," Sumida said
Shuffle cart
An* invention which has not been rejected is the shuffle cart It
is a small wooden and plastic vehicle enabling a toullv Umblcss
child lo propel the cart with his body By shifting his weight
upon a wooden platform, a child causes the platform to move up
and down The platform is connected to four wheels with rods on
each side
As the child moves his torso from side to side, the platform
pushes the rods up and down causing the wheels to turn A child
can steer the cart by pressing his chest against an upright, plastic
post mounted on' the front of the shuffle cart.
Sumida designed the cart this way to give limb-deficient
(Continued on Page 13)
70 per cent of CAPTs petiewls
nital deformHIee; the remelntfig
•viipulee patients ere
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State outfook also said bleak
Feminist loubts ERA will pass in 76
GOING TO LAW SCHOOL?
By J. NailMii JoMi
OB Stair Wrilar
•he didn't think the Equal Rifltti
Amendment would pais thjti election year,
Superior Court candidate Roberu Ralph tpoke
to a imall gathering in the Alumni I ounge at
■o^n yesterday
Speaking to akovir a dozen people, mostly
women, Ralph said more women^s rights
legislation from the sute capital docsn*t look
iMpeful
*The climate in SacnHBento is not food.
Legislators have htftf enough o( wo lea's
hfbu,''' said Ralph "Many of tlwro say it is
Mtroymg the fabric of home life and the
kids**
Ralph said the national icene is" even less
hopeful this year ''There is a great national
f;fTort to undo the Supreme Court's abortion
decision,** she said, **and the ERA doesn't look
like it will pats tins year, either Perhaps when
we get out this election year, things will be
better** -^ —
Ralph spoke at a workshop entitled **Legal
Rights of Women** and said the only rights
women presently have under the Constitution is
the right lb vote. This, Ralph said, is a resuh of
different interpretations of the Constitution.
**We need the ERA because we need a
bedrock of constitutional guarantees,** she said.
Ralph said the recent opposuion encountered
by the ERA comes mainly from conservative
po\ip%^ such at tiM MorHMM and Catholic
churches
'H'hey want to keep women at secoad-dOM
atucM," said Ralph **They say the amendmeat
is aflMKt God's way and would break up the
Ralph also discMeed three new state laiet
which arc of vital impoclMKe to women:
— New Community property legislation,
paeeed in January 1975, which now allowi both
spouses to have control over personal property,
— New Credit legislation, pmmai m January
1976, which forces banks and credit agencies to
give credit to any quahfied person, regard!
of sex and status, and
H M, you ahsuld asrt^uily catmt^^ anrsflnf In
• unlqua 3-day wof1uihg|p»a#fnlnar bmkng oUsrsd at
tha Lm Amrtig Htfton Hotal, August 2-4, 1S7S.
Ths ob|«ctiva of thia progrmm ia to brMgSriiS pip
bstwsan collsgs snd Um school atudy. SInos ths
first yaar la oftan tha nMt Important for purposss
of tutura smploytnanth |^ aaaantial to know how
to atudy aflscthraly at iha vsfy't>aglnfling of your
law school caraar. For Information call (213)
S31-77BS, or wrila:
Lagal PrapMs1Mn« Inc.
471 South Ogdan Driva
Log AnoBlaa. CaiiiDmia 90036
I
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r
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New Prohale kfMlation, pa«ad in July
1975, part of the community property law,
which would allow the debts of a deceased
spouse JO be passed on to the nearest relative,
instead of to the wife
**This law (probate law) is designed to close
one loophole in the community property law.**
said Ralph, *^which has no requirement for
disclosure by the man of his bntiaaii." Ralph
said if the husband dies and he has debu, the
creditors would want to know when they would
get their money If the wife doesn't know about
the business, Ralph asked, how ca9 shesay the
debtsr
**This new law would allow thoae debu to be
passed on down the blood line,** Ralph said
Literary agent must
know what public wants
k
Marsha Niks
Stair Repatlw
*s Borchardt. hterary
;nt for such authors as Jean
Paul Sartre, Albert Camus and
Samuel Beckett, said that mool
importantly the agent must
know what the public wants to
agent is essential, (but) the
is not a nuracle worker.**
Borchardt «told a small
crowd in Royce Hall on Tues-
day that a hterary agent serves
as a intermediary between the
author and publisher.
He said the agent should
also have some knowledge of
fegal and business matters in
order t^ successfully handle
complicated contracts '*The
writer doae not absolutely naad
a literary agent m order to
succeed.'* said Borchardt.
•"However,** he said, "the
literary agent is needed when
things aren*t going smoothly.
As soon as problems anse the
Explaining some benefits of
having a literary agent,
Borchardt said, **There is a
psychological element at work.
It is difficult for some people
to defend their own interests **
Tlhother problem Borchardt
discussed was that publishers
are more willing to read manu-
scripts received from a reputed
agent He said, **Sometimes
they'll read a manuscript from
an agent within 48 hours**
Discussing the author-agent
relationship, Borchardt ex-
plained that having an agent
allows an author to have a
personal relationship with
someone who acts as an inter-
mediary between himself and
the iaige impersonal pubhshr
company. He said, *'Having an
agent enables them to deal
with a person aad not simply a
recorded mes!
Borchardt added, **The
*S and the*^ author's
interests are merged, but a
good agent thinks of his
author's interests first "
Commenting on the profes-
sion of the literiary agent,
which began in England about
70 yean ago, BorchArdt said
**lt is easy to become a
literary aaent by just appomt-
ing oneself to the job, How-
ever, there are only 100 agents
listed in the Literary Market'
place.
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dolybnjln
Letters to the Editor
poinf
LMBTlfiaOSfS
i
m
I
it. Wait a mirrute ler*i
give credit where credit n due.
My good friend Mike Sond-
Neimer's column, "Sondheimer
Says/' o^ April 13, asking for a
rule obligating spirit support
members to attend minor sports
events, had one error that I
think IS worth correcting and
will help to further Mike s point.
As one of the student ma na-
! fers of the UCLA Track team, I
too, felt the uplift of that eight-
clap just before Willie Banks
htfioric leap that beat USC last
year But. sorry to say, it was not
the work nor the idea of the
1974-75 spirit squad It was the
product of iyte^mmember . Alvm
Cilmore, ^nd former cheer-
leader atnd idmitted track buff
Terry Haugen With help from
the Rally Committee ushers at .^
Drake Stadium, these individuals
organized and executed that
cheer and perhaps helped
Banks that little bit more that
m^de the difference
• don't want to demean the
cheerleaders, song girls or mas-
cou. but let's present the facts
as they trt They dtdn'i cheer in
uniform against USC lat ye^r and
maybe they won't on May 1 But
those of us who were here last
yeir know there is someone
who cares, someone who really
does have the Bruin, spir it
Fall, Winter aipd Spring quarter.
PerelmaH
Ainrtion
Forcing a woman to afk a
man's permission to terminate
an unwanted pregnancy makes
about as much serne as putting
the decision to excise a painful,
prosute gland in the hands of a
woman, pun intended. This is
ludicrous, immoral, and adds
insuH to iniury.
Frankly, I am sicK oi reading
the r>egative, falsely moral min-
utae and hair-splitting pompous
preachings of immature, unreal-
istic childtesi mtn who are talk-
ing about something they have
only rtad about, or heard about
in Sunday School.
That s not to say that you have
to have been there fo have a
respomible opinion; however,
many of the reactionary.
Fundamentalist, irrational, it-
revponsible^ Bible-thumping
opiniorM I've rewi in the Bruin
are so far removed from the
reality of the situation tfiat they
dictate a nrnxe experiential,
^pragmatic approach. What I am
saying in effect is, don't nrK>tor-
mouth about something you
know nothing about, as Stephan
Harrisofi astutely suggested in
April 5's Bniir).
Do your homework first, fel-
las. Volunteer in a child abuse
clinic or attend a f'arents
AnonynxHis meeting. Then re^
port some intelligent, respon-
sible opinions.
I think I'm a reasonably qual-
ified critic as the 31 yev old
mother of 11 year old daughter
In the inimitable words of Flip
Wilson's Ceraldine "Don't write
a check with your mouth that
your body can't cash."
Anioinette MaHe Hale
Undergraduate
r-
r
n.
^'Returning to our roots
ij
by Mark Peters
(Editor's note Peters is a junior maforuig Jn
communtcation studies).
In light of the Asian Student Union's own
action oriented goals, I was disappointed to read
Alan Iwasaki and Merle Oyadomari's "'A True
American Trafedy" (Daity Bruin, April 9. 1976).
Through its failure to consider the existence of
OPINION
«!*■
In response to the continuing
trickle of mindless anti-abortion
drivel in the Dai7y Bruin.. IwokM
just like to say this
Men do not die in childbirth,
Women Dof
Hoosier
Editor:
As ^ longtime^ (and presently
very happy) Indiana basketball
^an, I am most distressed to read
(Continued on Page 9)
alternative explanations for the wartime intern-
ment and by its reliance upon negative-identity,
the article is more likely to promote alienation
rather than "solidarity" amongs its readers. At
best. It encourages the adoption of a highly
monolithic view of Asian history in America,
which certainly cannot be. seen as promoting any
of ASU's own objectives.
The article asserts that E.O. M6 was but a
prinr^e example of how, in our system, " they
(America's monopoly capitalist ruling class)
promote racist ideology that reflects the material
divisions in the class (of oppressed workers) to
keep the working people of America divided and
confused" I think this sort of grand scale
ideoiogy certainly must promote nrK>re rhetoric
than any positive action. By failing to look more
critKally and ob^Ktively at what were the causes
of that "American tragedy." one wees a resuhant
proliferation of either demagoguery or gross
superficialitY/..
NBC's "Farewell to Manzanar" is a recent and
sufficient case in point However welt-minded
was the undertaking of that program, the end
result was a tragedy of its own Kevin Thomas, in
his review for the Los Angeles Times, stated it this
way " 'Farewell to Manzanar' is devastating in its
emotional impaa but does not go nearly far
enough in its examination of the underlying
^^_^^Z^ crucial aspects of one of the least
underrtMd and most tragic episodes in American
history And with regard to television's inherent
effects in dealing with such issues, Thomas states,
inevitably the family portrayed becomes
symbolic of all such families when their ordeal in
all Its complexities and ramifications is to this day
so pitifully little known to most Americans. For all
that It touches upon Farewell to f^anzanar' is
neither honest or probing enough It won't do —
not by a long shot."
Like "Farewell to Manzanar," such articles as
A True American tragedy' promote ItHle
towards their gbals The reliance upon broadly
conceived external oppression to promote in-
group allegiance is painfully misdirected Daniel
Spitzer, in his November 25. 1975 H^'am article,
What we respond to are crises,' makes a
perceptive analysis of ludaism s negative-identity
response to the Holocaust. The analogy, I believe
IS not as illusory as it may aMcar on the surface
Spitzer writes, "^f we must refy on the Holocaust,
or a history of suffering, to give meaning to our
existence as lews, then we may as well give it all
up If we also accept Sak> Baron's lachrymoie*
(Cofitinurd on Page 9)
^-
What's in a name: folded, spindled and mutilated
(Editor s r}ote, Hoeppr^er is a
socio/ogy ma/or here and is a
research assistant in the Social
Service Department of the Rand
Corporation)
Last fall I entered UCLA as a
iumor t had raised a family to a
relatively independent state, and
I wanted to go back to earn a
bachelor's degree Clearly my
decision would involve all sorts
^u wnut ancu uKt
of ad)ustnr>ents on my part, and I
looked^ forward to the university
experience with some trepida-
tion. 1 had weathered all the trials
and tribulations of university
depersonalization until I rar^
afoul of a cybernetic challenge
to my seM-identity The old com-
puter test-score card. With a
new twist.
It seems to be a poli
by Marie B Heoppner
nnaior universities such as UCLA
to give multiple choice tests
utilizing computer score cards
when classes are very large
Cor>seQuenfly it becomes neces-
sary to translate one's name into
computer language. The task
required for this particular card
is to conven a full name into a
name-code consisting of the first
last name, first
UmOFTrtMNClL/ MARKOMLYINCmCLlS: aUUHNQ 0 K
^Q^ ^^« ^'i-i- iwriM LirriR circli Aiio LiiriR kwition ciwli
irai — ' — i.Wf jTfii — :
© © ® © ® ©
® © © g)
>iniT limn - "^
eaQ
IMBOLI lAllTlAL <- l# HQM MAMlC *
©©© © © © © ©
kfTTgg ^QgtnOil
LfTTF'^
3Q
t
X
letter of first name, and middle
initial The assumption is that
this prodecure is designed so
instructors can post test scores
without identifying students by
name
Instructions are as follows.
You are given nine circles con-
taining three letters of the
alphabet each m sequence.
These are to be matched to the
appropriate letter position
shown in three more circles,
each of which display a dark-
ened one-third area to corres-
pond with each possible letter
position for the 26 letters of the
alphabet printed in the nine
previous circles There are four
lilies of such letter and poaMsn
codes So. for exagaple. let's say
your last name begins with H As
in the sample below, go to. the
circle which contains the letters
C. H. and I. and fill m the entire
circle with a number two pencil
Now go to the three letter
position circles on the same line
and fill in the circle which shows
the correa posaion (the shaded
area) correipiwding to the
placement of the H in the circle
you have |ust filled in This area
should look approximately like
12; 30 on your watch If it does,
you have four^d the correct cir-
<k ^or H Repeat this ptOGMS
fBWf times and you should have
the first two letters of your last
name, as weW as your first and
middle mitial — your correct
name-code.
Or>ce this identification pro-
cess is completed, tf^e test may
begin and the usual format of
filling in the A. B. C. D or £
circle for the right answer can
be followed
• • •
To make my long story short. I
passed the test but failed the
nan>e-code. On the mid-term
On the final I got better and
managed to pass both the rtame-
code and the test However, my
sense of personal triumph was
short-lived when I saw the
POi**d tctt-scpres and realized
that because I had coded mys«lf
a* NONA )rrect) on the
mid-term. aruJ as HOMB (cor-
rect) on the final. I had earr^
an F for the course. In ofhcr
TK.
wfli W rtm m Irttrft or r
tlrum 99%9n,0s IW r%|il to 4rVN> fftrlom mtd
C«pv ^ Air «l iiMn IM 4m
More on £0. 9066
id i ifcoiPtii)
ifcaary c^ Jewish history — _,
ir^^'o^ one tearful' evwtt to
•iBiiier — then we will have
doomed ourselves to disaster
after iMBde after dettruaion. I
refuse to believe that there is
Mobility in that kind of suffering,
and I Mt no salvation in that
sort ol martyr f dMth."
••Nbi than "solidarity" senrv
Inars groundsd in the World
War II mternmem itaue, I with
ASU's thinking, as denK>nstrated
in the artidt. had been more
broadly empirical^ historically
kaMd and positively oriented
fWftneis their aiaiftance in the
alien registration earlier this
year). Naiv>es like General De
Witt or Poston, ierome. Heart
Mountain, etc. evoke instant
recognition for most sanset. But
how many are equally familiar
with such names from early
Japanese American history as
Computer
/Continued froai Page B)
words, HOMB had no mid-term
score to add to the final score
for the cumulative ^ourse. grade.
And. of course. HOtSiA had also
flunked — no matching final
•core. I had flunked twice.
Where was my name^ Was
HOMB's F on its way to final
transcript alone or in tandem
with HONA's? Couldn't a com-
mon denominator be found by
adding up NA ♦ MB all over HO
(multiplying of course by base
10) to equal a curnulative
passing score? Yes. but I'm the
only one who knows it. That is.
both of me know it
Arnr>ed with HONA's mid-term
(retrieved from the trash- bin at
point of flashlight), and knowing
^ ^opMgi. Mlnoru Yasui
(^ Togo Tanaka?
— ^(tupi for areas of this coun-
try where the internntent issue is
stiM largely unknown, prograim
Wie "farewell to Manzan^" oa-
tensibly have lomt useful pur-
pose But for the more sophists
cated population of this campus,
articles like "A True American
Tragedy" won't do. "not by a
Jongjioc'' From ASU fuembers.
•••••••hmg more thoughtful is to
be expeaed.
One of this country's fnore
perceptive observers, in a not
altogether different sentiment,
sums the dilemma in this suc-
cinct fashion. "Would that we
Hurry up and shake the cobwebs
out of oiir heads, break ou> of
the rhetoric and cold war ideo-
logical blinders of a b|«wie era,
and surge forward by returning'
to our roots." (Eldridge Cleaver
LA. Times, January 10. 1976)
More
HOMB's score is in the com-
puter somewhere, I've called the
department offices tci try to
straighten this out. In vain —
they're closed for Spring break
Now that I know how to code
a computer test card, I've
learned that it is important to
remember how to do it right. 1
truly believe that everything will
be alright as sooh as I can reach
someone Or at least that it will
get fixed before I graduate. It's
just that rK>w I'm not so sure
that I can still count on that one
thought that used to make me
able to wake up in the morning,
look at the world, and prcKeed
with the day — the fact that J
know my own '^arr\e
(Cniiri— ei from Page S)
iboiil local criticism of a man,
wfio^ only fault is having suc-
ceeded the greatest coach that
ever lived, for leading his team
to "only" a 27-5. third-place
finish in the NCAA. Such an
achieverrvent is more than "re-
spectable "; it is fxcellant. And
the unjust criticism of Gene
Bartow, a fine coach in
my opinion, will serve only to
undermine his recruiting efforts
and thus erode the Bruins' em-
ience in basketball
Think about it!
lay
Munice,
for a change of pfH f
next fall .
ANNOIJNCINC. TWO NFW' SPECIAL
SEMESTKR PROGRAMS
ATDRFW lINIV'KRSnY
The Bryaaels Semester ofi the European
Economic Comnunity
I lor pt.f^noniK .s polttif mI s( If ni »« hisloiy
mrt)ors) — nov\ in th** fdlj .is wi'li hs iht* sjHinu
"" .. A unique rind I hrtllfn^iny nppoi limit ; i<,
stufh finH fxperipntf I hi- mnvrmfiil i4*v\'iiilH
Kurnpt'.in politiiHl Hn<{ **(.itn<imii. inlefifMliuo.
Tke Tlieaire Semester
Internship vMth fh*- \v\\ Jithi-v Sh^kesprru »•
Fe»ti\rtl H prMrnntnnM (Afffirs K(^utt\-|
rcpcrtnri i umprinv m resMli»nr#' im Drew'*
llPllUtifulU for***.'*"! * .trnrxii. mii» hnur ursi •»!
New York ( jl v
Students Irnm VfHir i «>ii»^* ti,i\ > |>.ii < •. t|>.M. .. im
Oipew*3 f»iher »#»ni»*sl»T pr»>vr.in»s in fhr p.int |l<»i
fuU tr;«nsierahl»' > r#*«iii I The Art Semester m New
York City. TIm Semester in London "n < nmptr.itK «
politKHJ ftcienrp. ;«n(i Tbe L'niled Nations
Samaalar. Consult your art iir p<ilili<al s(.i#*n(e
depart masft for in format inn Jtiniut iheac. ttr v^ritr
these di»partment<i h\ Drj!»v\ lur ifilormHrinn *m<l
a^pli^iifion
SUMMEJI SCHOOL TOO*
|unr7to|iil\ J (uly h t<» AlJ•-:ll^
anihrop<il«iie\ .iri 4istTfin<Mnv tM»i«4n\
. ihrmislr\ ni onomii <i. Kn^lish lilm. hi!»ini ;
lanu 'hrm*if M s. iiiut»i«. philosophv
politK rii s( 1* phviboloi^v rf*liui(in
sorinlfiuv fhi'iiiii* /»m»Imi;v
lirtit< ttitl ih*'Ulrf nn I iifuiHis I ''
< ♦inn.ri'»"ii; lUst tin tumt iiwtn 'In |> rs# v
Shor» Hi' i'nti-nnittl limilnuirhs n < fiilini^ fti\
' fJfP/M/S
"^
lor in
V\ lltl'
<m OI rffifilir ritiifn')<»' «in\ ftiovi
U€an Robert At kerman
1 nn ursiH
Madi»on. New |erse\ B?B4§
Seeking out the ''greys'' of Prop. 15
By Mlk« Odaka
(Mux's note. Odaka n a graduate student m
the school of engirteering ar^d n tk9 pfmi^gm Oi
the UCLA Arr^erican Nuclear SodBlyj.
Never before has the voter experienced a
political campaign such as the or>e about to
begin. It all centers around the last proposition of
the June 6 Presidential primary ballot, the
fifteenth one, appropriately called Proposition 15
But why should this diHer from any och«r ballot
tsiue? Why shouldn t we continue to demonstrate
[^ ^r^^'^^^ procets by readir^ that helpful'
little elBClion guide on tf>e night before we vote?
The mcne persuasive argument ahvays seems to
^^^ on which one we read latt. How often
have we wonimed whether a yes vote actually
meant voting no, or was it the other way around?
OPINION
The fifteenth proposition actually has two
names Not what one would call a first arni last
na(ne, but rather the name you would call
lomsofit depending on whether you were happy
or mad. One name is the nuclear safeguards
initiative and tfie other ts the nu( le^r shutdown
initiative- The safety of our childrens childrens'
children is what tome people have called it
Others prefer to call it the choice between
preventing a tiny foreign oil country from buying,
each and every week. 100 per cent of the
common stock of the top ten U.S. corporations,
or the prospect of the singular beauty of strip
mining vast portions of the western United States
Between now and )une 8, the public will be
sufficiently inundated with the pros and cons of
the proposition, but everything will be dramatic-
ally presented as being either black or white The
subtle lofitt of grey will ne^er come to tf»e
forefront. Everyone questions the viability of
nuclear electricity but no one wats to talk about
the prospect the future holds without it
While at a conference at Los Alamos. New
Mexico last week, I was able to listen, first hand,
to the disdain the local residerHs have toward
Californians. Apparently the massive <:oal plant*
m the "Four Corners area" are coloring the
friendly skies of Nevy Mexico from Santa Fe to
Albquerque and beyond. S<nce there isn't a maze
of freeways or an industrial jungle pervading the
wide open expanse of New Mmiico, ift diffKult
to understand tf>eir disgust, until you've m^n it. I
Mw It No mewiif fkme it a ban on coal plMi in
California.
N4any environmentalifti would much rather pay
the tfvbled or quadrupl[id^*clil^ of the more
expensive coal electricity but what if f^w
Mexico supplements these increaies by fevying a
tax on their exported electricity m return for #io
privilege of further polluting their skies? How
large of furor would rise following « lifting ol the
ban on coal plants in California, ai the position
implicitly necessitates?
Furthermore, the advertt of unacceptable cost
increases combir>ed with compounding pollution
may inadvertantly turn publK opinion against
environmentalist groups such as the Sierra Ckib,
making it impossible to pursue the badly needed
wildlife preservation programs These subtly grey
considerations need to be weighed against the
imminent onslaught of the black and white.
Unfortunately, fj^ procBii of weighing one type
of risk against another is completely foreign to us
We are all familiar with the everyday risks of cars.
planfs, earthquakes, etc. i.e. namely we are
forced to ignore them, or end up in a cuciioo's
nest worrying about them Low probability -high
consequence risks are so very different to
comprehend because our everyday world pre-
dominantly consists of high probability-low
consequence risk To get some kind of feeling for
the risks we all implicitly agree are acceptable
let's recall last ThursHdv s 7:21 a.m. earthquakf
here at UCLA. Life continued on normally,
however, had the quake been severe enough to
cause a massive failure of the Stone Canyon dam
hidden high up in the Westwood hills, UCLA
would be under a 2S-foot wall of water ar%d 'the
Village" would no 4Qfiger exist (UCLA report
ENC-7423) But this risk is small and is called
acceptable. The risk of nuclear power has been
accepted as being rnuch much less than the risk
of living at UCLA» but can we affort the luxury of
being Mi^rong when we vote yes or no on )une 6?
Seek out the greys" of -the proposition, and
ten^per the exaggoMtd fcHack and white argu-
ments with a SocratK interest. It's well worth the
risk
I
I
>
I
3
More letters to the Editor
the better
'
Who really killed RFK?
T»o say it was Sirhan
Sirhan all by himself
is a gross simplification,
according to ex-
Congressman and RFK
aide AI Ixjwenstein.
Was there a clever
cover-up by the L.A.
authorities? And if so,
why?
Find out what evi-
dence leads Lowen-
stein to his unsettling
conclusions. Its all
documented between
the covers of this
month SOLI.
Also between the covers, youll meet Sylvia Kristel
and find out why she found working in Emmanuelle II
far more erotic than in the originalfilm.
Plus: an insider's look at the burgeoning condom
industry, an environmentalist on. the excesses of the
ecology movement, a conversation with a king
(Idi Amin), yet another insight into TM- and so
much more, we cant begin to tell f
Just say "oi r'At newsstand now.
J
1
I.
i
T-^ r
r
. 1
J.
Avco Center
Cinema I
4 ''
ROSIN A MARIAN
13:00. a:M, S:4S, tiOO. 10: IS
fil ixj'
Avco Center
Cinema II
A. .r.
NEXT STOP, GiTEENVVfCH
VNlAGi
DM»y S;SS. •:00. 10 25
MAS«iii 1:aS, 9;4S, 5:55
• :00, 10:25
Avco Center
Cinema
,475 07 M ,/
Pork If
SEVEN BEAUTIES
1:90, 3:40, *«0, •:M, 10 30
Beverly
Beverly .Dr» we
at WiUhire
2754464
HESTR STtBET
Sat ft Syn 2.-00, 4.-00, 10:
PoCiiK %
UES MY FATHER TOlO JME (PGy
Beverly Hills
WiKhire Blvd ot Connon
1 bik East of B«wCrly D
27*] 1121
THE WAY WE WRE (PG)
Mm. . M. afpn 4:00
S«t . Smi. mmm 12:90
Brentwood I
2524 wviiv*i,»e
at 26tb St
Santo Mo<^<co
82<?^3366 " 82v jjo7
THE COOFATHEI
7:45
Brentwood
2524 w.ivh.re
or 26ft> St
Sonto Moricp
829 3366 929 3367-
•iAZING SADOIES
4:MA10:I5
MAN WHO WOUM)
BE KING
• 15
Bruin
*^'e>»*wood v<«oge
4 77 0^8
AU THE PEESIOmT'S MEN
12;30, 3:00, 5:M, 4:00, 10:J0
^i,tf
Century
Plaza I
2C4C A.e o* Sto
55 3 429"
TH<
FAMHY PLOT
1:30, 3;45. 4:00. 4;15, 10:15
4.-00. 4:10, 10:20
p ..
Century
Plaza W
2G4C Ave o* S*o'
553 429)
THE RIVER NIGER
3:05. 4:35. 10:05
OAUOINE
1:35.4:30
•mmCmnm
Cinerama
Dome
Vine
mANTOM Of THE
PARADISE — PG
©^ 12:30. 2:30, 4 30 4:30
4:30. 10:30
Mirfnifiit SH«w Pvi 7 Set 1200
Crest
Cinema
474 7iM
w.c
FiaOS4 ME — PG
Ooihf 4. 4, 10
2. 4. 4. 4, 10
Pfi A S«» 12:00
■WW
Fox Venice j-i
*7 - M^ 1^^ ^.«.
620 L'f^roi^ B^^d
396 42)5
S) fj^i
If
ti -
Hollywood *-•
On^lfi^ ROMN AND MARIAN
raCinC •>«» IISO. 2:30, 4:M, *:M.
•11
4:30. 10:30
M7S«I12:15
» . •
I r I SONS OP SASSOUN
LOS reliz ^••--^
H2} ' Manual Um« WMd Pm%m imtf M.
%9mm 4 21
OISTANT THumni
^ »
..i-^.
enbGPba innnGnb
jsay-
The Folk return at long last to UCLA
The laurth UCLA Folk Feftivat — the third was m l%5 -
bcfiBs tomerrow at noon with a free concert on Jans* Slept and
eadt Sunday night with a concert of religKuis folk imisic m
Rovcc Hall
Between those mto events, the Festival will include five
concert* in Royce, three concerts on Jams Step*, 12 workshop-
demo nst ration*, a film and a tra4iUonal mu^ic competition. It
thouid be a busy wcckejid
The traditional rnusic competition takes place m Schoenberg
•Hall tomorrow at 1:30 with prizes awarded in solo and group
instrumental and vocal ontgories, as well as a grand prize
Performances can be in any traditional style, and backup
instruments are permitted Fntrants should see Festival Director
DK Wilgus in 1041 GSM.
Other free events include three Janss Steps concerts Saturday
At noon. Ed Lowe, Pete Feldman, the Gypsy Gyppo String Band
and one-man band Don Davis (an experience in himself)
perform A^2pm, Hellenic dancers will invite people in t6 join
them, and at 3pm there will be an Indian pow wow
The lecture-demonstrations and workshops on Saturday cost a
dollar at the door, and include
—Traditional Composers, with Sandy Ives, Patty Hall and
Dailas Turner at 9:30 am in Haines 39,
—Afro-American secular nmsic, with John Jackson. Lonnie
Young and Mike Seeger also at 9:30 am in Dodd 147.
— Logger Songs and Tales, with Wilmot MacDonald and
Sandy Ives la Moore 100 at 11 am
'Chac'one up for Rolando Jdein
By Robert KodUn
Rolando -ICein*s Chmc is sure-
ly among the most mysterious
films made in recent times It
IS also oiie of the most highly
acclaimed works^ ever made in
the Third World (among its
awards. Best Feature, Bdn film
of the the AmorioM md Rett
Director at the Virgin Islands
Film Festival)
But if his film remains poeti-
cally cryptic and remote at
times. Rolando Klein, the ar-
tist and human being, strikes
one as fresh, clear and toully
unpretemious. With his fir^i
feature (which screens in
Royce Hall tonight at 8:30) he
has become an important fig-
ure among emerging interna-
tional filmmakers.
Though a Chilean who has
filmed a contemporary crisis
among Mexico's Mayan In-
dians. Klem lives in a classic
California home up the hill
from Hollywood Boulevard.
Raised in an upper class
home. Klein "always had film
as a hobby I did a lot of home
movies as a kid My father had
an 8 mm camera that was
really a tj[eat
"^But l/took reading, poctrv
and filni as a side interest I
knew I was going to be an
engineer once I was work-
ing in engineering. I had this
thing in the back of my head
saying. If you don't give it a
try at the movies now. vogll *
never do it ' Because of m\
academic background. I
thought that the only wa>
you could learn movies was
through the university "
After travellmg through Eu-
rope for a year, Klein chose
UCLA for film study *M hmi
just arrived in the Stales I
flew into LA International
Airport, rented a car and
drove into Westwood it's a
ver\ weird old town, Wesi
wood It looked like Di%mt\.
land ~
At i;CLA. iir found that he
had to he **instantl\ creative"
because of the quarter svstem
Ke was pleased with the work
he did here, making trims nr\
^hat he termed "Ami>r..:.'v
black man in prison Never-
theless, Klein said, ''I realized
that I wasn't karmna much .
the classes were p^wty dull
Film school as an academic
thing IS ver\ new. We were not
IcaTmng the right things I
have nothing against UCLA I
think those two years could
have been more usefur in learn-
ing about the movies, that's
all" ,
Stints at the American Film
Institute. Roger Corman's New
World Pictures and a trv at a
It blew .«»y inind. I saw that
here was a cuhurc that had
exactly the same roots'"
This fascination with religion
and Its interjningimg wjth
Mayan magic ts at the hearf
of CiMie, and provides it with,
its utterfy unique qualities ot
mystery and poetry. "Alter
much research using the Ma-
yan bible. The Popol Vuh
("Book of the People'H^s his
mam source. Klein wrote the
script about a group of villa-
gers who appeal to the ram
Klein ^Irrrttng triiar':
ftrst feature film that fizzled
provided Klein ¥Mth invuluaWc
experience
Then came ( hac "h realK
started with an interest m
Gurdieff and Eastern religion '
Klein related When it came m
the Mavan cuhure. he "realized
that here uas a philosophy, a
cuhurc thai suppo^iedK emergeed
compleicK independent from
an\ other cuhure But I found
that II had the same basic
principles of the Eastern and
Wrstrrn rclij£u»ns I here is the
c«n^..n,rn^c >oc,*.> " .nd . hr,n of .h,.. ,,ru o( .rc.t.on
mixMig n
god. Chac and a wise dtviner
to hrmg ram to the^r parched
fields
The making of the film was
as amazing as the film itself
With independent financing.
Klein made his film m the
remote village of Tenejaps m
southern Mexico, using the
villapers themselves as aciorf
Since they had never seen a
camera before. Klein ex-
plained. *ihe\ had no con-
ception of themselves on the
screen That's what mt9$€% yP
cverv actor in HolKwood**
}hi ialyiyocss of twu yr^
but the filming was not
without Jits problems. ''We
wpuld have a call for cast and
crew, at 6 in the morning and
some men would have to Walk
tor four hours from their ham-
let, only to be four hour^ late
After some of that, you have
1 to concentrate the main actors
m the village.
^ **l was concerned with the
fact that we (the crew) were
disturbing their natural cycle
of life that I was admiring at
the same time when you
bring in a ^rew with 35mm
equipment, you commercialize
the whole town. Ifeut I realized
that the culture shock was
an unavoidable experience"
This paradox was something
that Klem learned to live with
The tragedy of the invasion of
2()ih century, technology into
these people's lives was ac-
tually a new kind of magical
experience for a verv magical
people "The moment a truck
arrives in the village, the kids
crowd around it, look it all
over, touch the mirror as
fascination
Though understandably re-
luctant to serve up Ckac's
complex themes, Klein reveaW
that he **wanted to make Cfcae
in such a way so my children
coirld watch the film and un-
derstand It without even read-
ing the subtitles The emotions
>n the film are very simple
Troubled people seek a ceruin
"fcian. the man does certain
things "
The screening at Royce Hall
tonight IS part of Kleins fight
to get the film out to a large
audience, which, he feels, is
ready for ihe kind of special,
off-beat adventure Chac pro-
vides. All his time is now spent
marketing a film which is full.
as he says, "of a strangeness m
a cuhure that n just around
the blodi from our mrnm"
Though the probtems of an
independent filmmalier trying
to get his film seen are some-
times beyond the endurance of
mere mortaK. the excellence of
Chac IS proof enough that
Rolando Kelm is an artist who
I .1. ^'""*^ i" Country Mwc. with Pwty Hali. Rok MmMox
Fred Hoeptner .nd Glenn Ohrhn m I JO .n H<..nes ^9
_^-Ca,un Mutic with Mike Seegrr the Bait. Brother* Md
Marc Savoy m Dodd 147 at | 30 o.vincn ana
Will^'^n"t 'U•^'^^"'• *"" ^^'^y^ of 'he Lou,h. Robin
-^TZor S^ ^ *^PJ^ '*'"«'» « ' » '" Moore 100.
a nim of Doc Wation and Gary Davis m Haines 39 at 3 Dm
»r7r^!^^A;""*^^"l?"" S***^'- ^"^^""^- J^Ho H.ckm«n and
Warren Argo a: 4:30 in Haines 39,
ath^**!!!"^'*' ^""'"'^ ^"*"=- ""^ C"*^"*- ^''m. Hall and
owen at the tame time in Moore 100. and, '
»A^,^""""..*f"V'v*"*'' "»* Mariachi Gclatan. Ramon
Rodngue? and Lalo Guerrero in Dodd 147 at 4 30
Concerts in Royce Hall feature the artists who are here all
weekend for perfornMMMH mi workshops.
1 V* ^"•••y- coiicerts of religious Folk music (2:30 pm) and
Irish and Scottish music (I pm) ^ill occupy th«e haUowed halb.
rvi rtif**"* ''"'<*"^"» con^e" '"kw Pl^ there Saturday at
^.JO^ Other concens are at 8 pm tomorrow and Saturday nights
nckt? „".'". ^i** «?Voe 4*.1». concens are $2 SO.IIIil sSr«
tickets (not including the chiBJrers concert) run $13 for students
At Matrix
Lackluster ^Diamonds'
>
i
t%
^'11 he seen, heard from and
•y CaHn^ Mpn
If IS not made clear in the play why George Birimisa's A Drttt
Ma4e of DiawonA is so named but the Matrix Theater*s
production could well have been called hrtmd VWli Peylaa
Place Director Ann Bowen has squeezed every scandalous tidbit
and every piece of Freudian significance out of Birimisa's play,
which IS about the nuking of a homosexual in a small California
town dunng the 30*s and early 40*s
The play traces the progfCM of Joey, who spends his childhood
alternately with his mother and stepfather, at a Catholic school
for boys with his two brothers and with his Aunt Martha None
o( these places is very a^gteiome Joey's mother either smothers
him wuh love or hinu darkly at what wiU happen if he continuaa
doing "nasty and dirty" things His stepfather is a bully who
molests Joeys sister. Violetu The CathalK school is run by a
priest who terrifies Joey with threats of eternal damnation Aunt
Martha's place isn't bad. except one of her lodgers is a
hoflMsexual minister who seduces Joey
An this IS very entertaining, but it is rather difficuh to uke
Kriously In almaM every scene a skeleton is dragged out of the
closet or something shocking or perverted happens.
The acting is ftac. but there m loo much of it Steven Reich is
engafing as Joey, especially in the earlier scenes, but the cast in
grarral tends to overact. The screaming and crying and fighting
become a HMttMoay «f hysteria ^ if tiK aaors were more secure
in their characters they would probably ^ tmon subtle Quentin
Yeager and Shaun Macnanisra as Joey*s brothers behave hke
they wandered in from a Daad End kid movie and Uniiill
Sheas ts too coy a Violetta. SMIa StcpteBMB, kMMW, is
outstanding as their mother One can ahnoal fed her frazzled
nerves and crazincss
The play's basic problem is that it can*t decide wimflbm to he
depressing, repulsive or amusing At times it is all three
SMCOCfsfully but mostly ic is confused and confusing In omt
aeeat the 12-year-old Joey is lasiai bating m bed when his
mother bursts in and screams, -NASTV* m a way horrible to
hear 1 hif scene is repulsively funny enough, it doeaa^ seed tbr
Sttch ofrvioos and heavy tnnrbfi aake A
'»♦ •A»J».»Af .VAf ^.?
DiMiwiAl.lllllnK.lMgMble tt«o amuMg.
MANNS WESTWOOD I
UrSTICK
l:M, 3:M. S:M. 7M VM
MANNS WESTWOOD 11
LIPSTICK
a:M, 4:M, « 30 •:je. 10 M
MANNS WESTWOOD
DOC DAY AFTEtNOON
3:00. 4:30, 7:00 f 35
l\
An Ariko Th»atr#
Meralta
9632 Cu)v«r gUd
-Ctf*v»f City
55V-4aSI
K*gwiar Xwnmuii S2 OD
Coll *hmaum *or iKow ftrnm*
FUNNY UOY (FO)
§:§§
i«b«rtl*dlwd
TKi WAY WE WEti
4:30. 10:S0
Monica I
!332 2«d S****-*
■'to MO'^K o
45 1 8686
Wmnf •! 4 Atadatwy Ai
iAtRY LYNDON
t
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•322 ?f.d S»re»*t
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4 5 I 8686
HiSTit STtKT
THE STOtY Of AOELf H
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.<'(
A I ,,, , r*.;,.,. ^
Music Ha
V^.36 W.Khire BUd
2^4 6069
THE ROMANTIC
INGUSHWOMAN
pl«M Mlini't
AMAKCOtD
*v1<iMn \
National
0^25 L«ndbrOOl( Dnve
4 79 2866
lAONEWSiEARS
-. 4, 6. t. !•
Midnlfhf SK*wt ffi §t %m9
NuArt
Theatre
77S-d379
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4/90TMM- WiMf'tJ
4/91 MM U4v V«f»i
Tils
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Pontages
469 7161
Outfifi
AU THE PtESIDENT'S
MEN^FO
13:J0, 9:m. S:M. 4:00, 10:30
<i<*dft%ht tkmm ^ 4 Set 1345
PtlC'fi< \
jm
PiCWOod <^ABIE AND lOMtAtD
772 8239
SUNSHINE SOYS
za
A/estwoed Viiiogi
477 00P7
479 9077
ifi MsrtMi ScafWM't
TAXI DtlVBI
A lo#m«Ml^ 7t>.
Reaent
^••tttirtXMJ
272 03L
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ONiniWOVBITHi
CUCKOO'S NBT
THIMAOICRUn
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4/11 'iwmt AWAY"
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Toho
La Brea
LP ft'eo o-* Ni«tt^
A/E 4 7347
HIDDEN FOtTtiSS
pin*
JUOO SAGA
UA Cinema
Center I
4/4 4 I % 1
WifMi«f •# 4
•AMY LYNDON
r.%$,$:dQ, 1:45
UA Cii
Centei
.V ♦• , t ^ y O O
474 416*>
UA Cinema
Center Ul
J89<? jA/HI-vo'tb A..
4 74 36«3
;:
KING Of HEARTS
3, 4, *, •, 10
UA Cinema
Center IV
r0889 Well -worth A^v
Westv ood
4 74 4:98
UA
Westwopd
10887 L.ndbropk
Wcstwood
477 0575
ROCKY HOtROt^
PICTURE SHOW
2. 4. 4, t, 10
THE ADVENTURE Of
SHERLOCK HOLMES'
SMARTER BROTHER
JSmm prtnHf
VAGABOND t-*^"* Mi^bv" I"
YMV^MOWmU ALICE ADAMS (1935)
ISO* Wiiihir* tmd AMatr Cinfar lagM* in
'•' "" PLYING DOWN TO RIO
276-9W7
THEATRE VANGUARD
wu,...^*^ CINEPROBE SERIES
filfnt by K«n iac«bt
-TwM. ApHI 20 • PM Mvly
$2.00 G*ff>«rol AdmiMion
$1 50 Stwd«ffitt with ScK«d 10
^^-
'>!
Village
96' Bfo*to"
Westwood
478 0576
THE DUTCHESS AND THE
DIRTWATER FOX
2, 4, 4, a, 10
J
WHIZ2 KIDS
MANOAU
fULOOY
TIm Tr^ W«IUr SKmv
■vary TKwft C«rHb»Mii Hip
ft G^O^ I
DAN^ t .' ,,n|,, •
>i>NDAr
4
Kentucky Fried
Theatre
B<«o
556 2663
»K« best of KFT t
t«ftt S y#ort
BEATING A DEAD HORSE
ff* A Sttt • 00 4 10 00
A^l 14. 17, It
BUDDY MILES
pkft
BOBBY KEYS
AfKil 1«-22
SAVOY
BROWN
April 23.2S
aCHICANO
454-2200
H»iiywd
Nuclear initiative debated .
(ConUnmti jfom ?•§» I)
Bolduc said th4t this figure
if DOC bkely to be anywhere
near the actual damafCf ia
such a ditaiter "You take
every itatiitical survey that baa
been done and the figurei
come out between $7 bilUon
and $17 billion. Should aM»-
thsng occur, you and I would
be compenMlad for three penti
on the dollar." The initiauve
would remove the ceilinf «n
liability, according to Bolduc
'OutragcoM*
Gotlieb said the claims of
$7-17 biUion were outra-
feous ** He also said that the
limit under the Price- Anderson
Act would incrame as more
reactors are built By 1915,
according to Gotlicb. the limit
would be $1.3 bilhon
According to Gotlieb, the
government is allowed to *'rc-
consider** liability limits ih case
of disaster and injury.
Gotlieb said there is a great
need for power today. "This
country is faced with a tremen-
dous crisis on our supply of
energy," he said. Gotlieb added
that the crisis is due m part to
-our style of life and our di-
matic conditions*'
Cnaaarvation
•^hrs country needs to de-
velop every source available,**
said Gotlieb He said that
eventually, **conservation will
Uke its toir and nviclear
power will be implemented
anyway.
"We will have a lot of
trottbk, a tot of anguish, and
less safe nuclear power m the
long run if the initiative
passes,** Gotlieb said
Bolduc said there are al-
ternatives to nuclear power.
sttdi as coal and conwnmon.
**We cooltf solve all of these
Sroblems through the next IB-
D years through cooservauon.**
According to Bolduc, Prop-
osition 15 would simply as-
sure that if nuclear power is
used. It would never have ad-
verse effecu.
*Mf Proposition 15 passes
and .1 am proven wrong, the
only thing that could poaaihfy
happen is a .slowdown of ttlttt
industry*s growth.
"If Proposition 15 does not
pass and we are proven rifhl«
then the course of history has
been set and is irreversible.**
Children's books
class begins today
An Extension series ex-
ploring the process of
writing, illustrating and
editing books for young
readers will begin tonight
with "The Lively Fossil:
Folklore and Children's
Books.** It will run on
Thursdays through June 10
from 7-10 pm in Rolfe 1200.
The series features dis-
cussions with authors on the
concerns, motivations and
rewards American profes-
sional writers find in their
market
Admission to each lecture
of ''A Labor of Lpve The
Creation of Children's
Books** scries is $3.50 for
students and $5.75 for
others.
OS
•y C»v»»t.# G'tie
-«t-
A 14 DAY SEMIKAR IN ISRAEL
Specialty planned for full-tinne faculty
Departure Date June 7.- 1^76
Price $859 includes air fare, hotels
and all accomodations
/"~) For furttier information contact
• Rabbi Shael F Siegel
AMERICAN ZIONIST FEDERATION
515 Park Avenue
New York. NY 10022
(213)371-7750.
rood Week
Food Week ended yeater-
day with a noon-time rally at
Janaa Stepa featuring a
t>and and free food dlatri-
buted by the Knudaen Dairy
Compariy.
The aeven-day aeminar,
which waa UCLA'a reaponae
to National Food Day (AprH
B), waa aponaored by Pro-
gram Taak Force.
UCLA CHICANO LAW .
STUDENTS ASSOCIATION
TOSTADAPLATE
.v^
SALE
<
^^ — with rice and beant
\
GRfiNiZAims i«%Mi£iatafi
AT m
PLACEtKNT MO CAREEIi
PUUNHNC CaHEH
APHtl tS-n 1871
r
A
Thurs., April 15; 11-1:30
Law School Patio
$1.25
California School of Protessiona!
Psychok>9y
Car Is Jr Restaurants
IBM Corporation Oata^ocessing
Division
Tsssisi
Lincoln National Corporation
Sutro a Company
Intersil Inc
Joseph Magntn
Motorola Communications &
Elactrontcs
York Life Insurance Company
Altstatf Insurance Company
.New York Life Insurance Company
Price Waterhouse & Company
FrUiy
Litton Industries Data Systems
Division
Metropolitan Life Insurance
/■
Llmbless^^^
(CoaliMMrifraaiPagc*) fT - '
children exercite and a MMe of involvement
with their proMhesu. Individual involvement
with . device alM increase, the body strength
01 a paiimt.
^v BaHrfactioa
"You waat patients to participate in the
development of a limb; otticrwise there is no
satisfaction,- Sumida said ^-Participation is
so rewarding to the mind and bod> -•
The final reward is illustrated by Fields
and her abihty to maneuver herself in and
out oi her wheelchair -The hardest thing for
me to do IS transferring from the chair to
bed. or from the chair to a couch It took
many years because I had to build up
strength in my arms. It's nothing now
because I really wanted to master that and I
finally did," Fields said
The progress made by a child with a new
lin* is a gratifying experience for a aiaft
member -Ultimately." Setoguchi said, "my
satisfaction is to see tfHae Itids |pww up and
come back saying, Doctor. I got a lob "
Setoguchi said one of his ex-paiients is a
teacher in Watu, and another patient is a
lawyer -|t's the fact that we can put kids
into the mainstream of hfe where they're not
receiving aid for the disaliled and are abie to
do things en their own "
Fields is one of those people who does it
on her own -One thing I have that keeps me
going ,s curiosity and hope Tm cunous as
hell so I wont give up on anything because I
^anrt to know what's going to happen
tomorrow And I always have this hope that
thinp will get better.
•^rm this way and that's how my life is
gmiy to be I'm either going ro nuike it or
not
Campus events
trtis «vMk will
Cutian f ttm 7 30- 11 pm and a
CutMin dinner 5 30-S pm tomorrow Inttr
national Student Center 12 50 tor dinner
— tWiirW USnry Taiirt lastinfl appro*
imattly 45 minutes and covering tr>«
tacilitiet. servicM aNicoltectiont of URL
today Sigs up m advance at the \m.
Reference issli
Tew of the Department of
featurmg choreography and t>ailet
2 pm. today moot in ScHsenSerg
loSSyFrae
— iWMan tor CwiliHy for StC
are now available m Kerckhoff m
line IS April 22
-^aClA WNwiiil final regular season
-^ match vs San Oiego Stale 7 JO pm April
16, Pauley ^'avttion UCLA studwits free
with JO faculty free with Athletic Privilege
card SI for other students 12 for adults
—•CIA Itardi trw Ir—idi Crew appli
cations are now available m the Mardi
Gras office Ackerman A-209 no¥^ April 24
Open to all details on the application
— ■elefate Statei Seartf whicn snows
each Presidential candidate and the
amount of delooates pledged from states
which have had primaries is now up in
Nuclear. ..
<C <mtiiiyed frum Page I )
The commission lield a ticar-
ing on ttie job impact of the
nuclear issue February 24, at
Vhich nearly all witnesses
spoke against Pra|Maition 15
A major pro-initiative group
boycotted the nteeting. saying
the membership on the com-
■MBion was weighted in faviv,
of the power companies.
David Pesonen. chairman of
Calif omians for Nuclear Safe-
guards, yesterday called the
report -a blatant distortion of
the facts by a commission tiar
is dominated by utility com-
pany executives and others
who have spent hundreds of
thousands of dollars trying to
defeat Proposition IS."
A utUity executive on the
commission. Robert Moms of
San Diego Gas and Electnc
Co., took no part in the
discusaMM or decision on the
tssue. the comnriMon said.
Kerchhoft hall near the elevafor on the first
floor
-frw iMai sponsored by itie Saeiai
Dance Cktb 7 3D pm-midnight tomorrow
•omens Gym 200 Anyone interested in
learning or practicing social or disco
<»encing IS welcoine
— lagNoS CsMwiaiBi. informal practice
for foreign students and visiiors 10 am-
a6t7
now through EXPO Acherman A213 or call
11
new available tor a two*yer term with the
^^^^••f Lobby in Sacramentp Pays
50 per wonai Requirements indnde
^•"•a^essr UC graduate and mtoreet m
eeucatieaal Issves Mi up aaalication^
Mrckhoff m ^mmm H SyTor ...
-r- •"'•• ^^^w^W" SfW UWOTTT1V3
on extramural hindmg tor graduate student
and postdoctorals are avaflaftle m the
Fellowshipi and Assistantship Section
Murphy 1228
Cmmmi Praitfloi join QECA as a
consumer invettigalor Visit Kerckhoff 311
0/ call 825-2820 Volunteers are also
needed for environmental and food
protects
rMMaii Mil Tms fePH. » tMung
applications trom students who want to
work with SLC and the aSaiWMUation on
students financial aid preMsais Aapiica-
tions are avaHebfe m Kerckhoff STfor
information call Dave Panerson at
_-»l»tew»de Caaiailttae AppUeetleas for
PraiideMial Advisory CommiiiHS are now
avaNaMi^ geadline is April 3D pick up
applications at Ackerman information
desk. Kerckhoff 304 and haaaiM asso-
aattons ~"'^
RLMS
-•as MUr and TIm Apartwd TJD pm
April 17 Alelnit/ auditorium $150
will perform Spanish German
and French works of the Baroque period
and the 20th century noon* tomorrow
SctHMnberg auditorium Free
8€MNMIi '
applications are
and due tomorrow Murphy S?4
accepting men as well as women
— Cfeawetars Pmmi FmSi are available
to graduale students tor research who are
lormaRjradwanced io candidacy for doc
local degrees and registered Appiicahon
may be submrftod at any time during the
year Grants of a miximum S7SD are made
in January and July Forms are m the
Research Committee m the Academic
Senefe Executive Otfrce Murphy 3125
— SaMMt SrsMaMMilp CeMv staffed by
trained interns will help you find funding
for your idoas Open daily 9 am-4 pm
Kerckhoff 4D1
leHraeSlpi leterestlenel Offertenliiet
and kical voMinieer positions vt available
will feature the him IgMa if
. with discussion by Martena T
Sasnett Associate Director Educatiag
Futures International noon today Moofd
3rd flgwi
— seminar and dis-
cussion 24 pm tomorrow aaasRs dM
2.30 pm today Boelter 8600
r-;l5dli sad Pakisisa: NMiiag Tevards
•awn. 2^ pm today Bunolie aasB
-TIM Ml M
lonal
_ and Engmeerifig
new nrrtprf Development this Mask's
Bosmiss Advuary Cenasd. SJp pm. dM
nw SRd 7 X »M. IMk. Miatit tntomatu
Student Center
TUNE-UP, LUBE I dl $OiM
iBBT"
OVIKMAUL
w/raan
A-1 AUTO SERVICER
I.
79S7 VAN NUYS SIVD
»*NoaMAarr».«ia»«
.11
894-7075
University Episcopal
Community
recalling the wcdi the Chnti 6mmmmmm4 «oe «N mnc thai "the road
IO holinnt mux necewarily ^m through th« wofM of action'' (D.H.(
PUBLIC WORKS
MFfMnSATIOML THEATRE
Hilarious and taacMflf **
BOMMi isaia £4 wmn
A parlact exampte of the
creative procass m motion
saMM aaaci avftaar
Fridays and Saturdays at 9 pm
The Church in Ocean Parte
235 Hilt St (Santa Monica)
Tcleptiuiif Ȥ 1MI
Grad Studems Mayeiaa - Calt dTS-taiO ter addi«M
Wedwday S p.m. Community EudisfMl, Cliapat
Maundr Thyridiy 1205-12: JO EudiorMl. CKapd
i pm Friadsm Sa^ar, Uppgr loom EudiarMt Sappavr«|
t^ lamb. ClMplilRrsMMK caff oinc«ASr f«i«rvaiion.
Good f rid^r 9 pm T|
Holy Samr^ 10:30 pm Hm Sarvkc of £«t«r, Liahiint
o* lae New rife, pony Imioivs.
Day 4 pm, Qhmi trnhmm, Ch^uL
Kaplain T^rry lynaerR. ISO Hilaaid («C ¥^r»rKNmc) 47S-ia»
>^H^ Hours Mn»rf«^-SfiH»v %.1J ...^
CLUB GUIDE CONTINUED
.^:..
KUAO
Pri ApfN 14 - fMi. ^e« 10
THf SWHTHIAtTS OF THI tOOtO
A TNM HANDSOME EANO
TTpaiiiiH *^Ma. apHI JO
AtT iUKlY a THi JAZZ ttlttihtunK
Li^thous^
^^ 30 PIE RAVE ■ _
MERMOSa BEACH INFOTEL 372 6911
II tea 17
UTAH
■OYSOf TMi
[ecurs '
UUhalitl
HWilttH
M «r
«.t ITAMK BAW-HW MAWDOLIWs BUUKII AMU RMtMD*
f
TROUBADOUR
voai s«<M«
I A 37a.aiaa
OOtYPtfVIN
MICNMlPtANKS
Sliowt eit
•:30Md 11.00
THE STONER
2n3SlWWrA«»
Wwll.A.«S889
477 TlSe
1/2 aak MM«fc«#
. 4»
MJfONO'S
Lwndl. dinner oH»r tH«otr« •ncor»t
Eaofic cocktoil with Con«on»«w C^itirn
»ts^
FOR THOSe WHO APPRECIATE OUALfTY
ISOO ^fSrwCXXJSlVD 4 SIOCKS SOUTt< Of VlWlSMHIf
r'^"^Ii!2?!lBAMADA INN
•> tMtHt — Hi* ivowMuMy
^yn*ii
<^HAN'S GARDEN
IM9S UnrfbMk 0> w«wd. «00M
MMbA IIVDIA FOOD GAIOeNDiNiNG
Ik ' I- ■■• t •
tmm-»mt
Fairfax Yugoslavian Restaurant
LA
la
[OYPSYS INDIAN RESTAURANT
I>tt4**i ^ ^
to
JUNIORS
TNi aoLLO aorcf or oolicai
47s-sm
Le Foyer Dp Frame ly^p, $, oo, $2
, 25. 12 50
^0%%% Im^wnmk Or 0mmm Sa 75 14 25 15 9<
474-0*4S W W VlHmmm ^^ ^^^ *^^*
UPetASwiSM
' Okitf — Tai ITS is 1 1
S!iS^iiiS/1;iSJ MiRJNt ^
OlO VENICE NOOOIE CO
*ae !• yp^it
siee
St«4 U 474-eS4S
1023 Hilgard A«w>ua
fin
Soup 'f% Such
tl-«^K
at*
• ••«'• T
IW
. A
I J
»{
n
tr
mi
5
Spend the
-Shabbat of Passovei^
at Hillel
Friday April 26 6:30 pm
services with Neil Daniels
followed by Kiddush and dessert
Hillel 900 Hilgard 474-1531 I
35 in a row
This is the place for Rib Lovers!
By far the B€st Ribs weve fried /n LA
^.* Herald Examiner
COMPLETE DINNERS
Casual Dming *^^^ $ 2 • 7 S
NARRY'S OPIN PIT BBQ
1434 N CRESCENT HEIGHTS at SUNSET STRIP
10 Minutes Down Sunset Blvd to
Lourel Canyon Yurn Right And Vqu re There
fC onrlnuetf froM F«ge 19)
tioB that $tlmf llBve the ulcnt and depHi to
repeat as both NCAA and Pacific 8 championt.
Led by three nationally ranked players, Peter
Fleming (Number 29), Brian Teacher (23) and
Fcrdi Taygan (57). the Brmni have the iKree
top coUegiate piayoi in the country, aocording
to many tennis ceadM.
FIcnung, a tnmifH from the Univenity of
Michigan wiM> sat out last year because of the
NCAA tmmUr rule, Imi exhibited a power
fMi with good quickness, balance and anti-
cipation. Fleming has won all nine smgles
matches he hM'playad, along with all four
doubles matches with teammate, three-time All^
American Brian Teacher.
Rcming is one of the uUest tennis players in
the world at 6-5, and boasU a pulverizing serve
and one of the best returns of service in the
gaflK, aocording to tennis expert and former
Australian tennis sur and later Davis Cup
coach Harry Hopman.
Behind UCLA's ranked trio of Fleming,
Teacher and Taygaii (a two-time All-American
from Framingham, Massachusetts) arc sopho-
more Bruce NichoU, freshman John Austin and
sophomore Tony Graham, a steady junior
college transfer from Pierce College.
NichoU was a highly-ranked Natioi^l Junior
player since entering the 12- and under
divisions and looms as a potential All- Amer-
lean, having won 13 or 14 singles matches this
BraxMan Oavte Cujipir Lula
G'
Austin, the brother of former UCLA All-
American Jeff, has swept to 14 of 15 matches
-this season in singles while capturing nine of
11 doubles comeits with Graham (6-2) and
Nichols (3-0) respectively!
Teacher is currently 8-0 in singles and 4-0 in
dories with Fleming, to be the only un-
defeated Bruin in 1976 at this stage m both
singles and doubles Taygan is 6-0 in singles
and 4-2 in doubles, teaming with both Steve
Mott (3-1) and Nichols (1-1)
Graham hat won 12 of his 13 singles matches
While seventh man Luis Enck, a Bfa^ilian Davis
Cup sur teaming with Nichols, is 7-0 in singles
and 7-1 in doubles.
UCLA*s 15-0 season's record appears to be
more impressive, considcnng the Bruins have
yielded just II individual matches (singles and
^doubles included) all season long.
The Bruins have thrashed Arizona Sutc and
Stanford by 8-1 loores. Southern Methodist,
Anzona and USC by 7-2 margins, and San
Jose Sute, Pepperdinc and Brigham Young by
9-0 scores All of the above UCLA opponents
were ranked* in the nation*s top ten in various
preseason potta.
k »•
FINALS TONIGHT AT 6:00
U.C.L. A. INTRAFRATERNITY COUNCIL
PRESENTS THE FIRST ANNUAL
Intramurals
The last day to sign up for
men]s handball -doubles is
today The signups are uken
in the IM Office. MG 118.
Wedoeliay. Apnl 21 is the last
day to sign up for the one day.
May 7 golf tournament This is
how you do it: Go to
Kerckhoff 140 and pay the
entry fee oi $4 60 and keep
your receipt, then uke^ your
receipt to the I M Office and
sign up Sign ups are being,
taken for uble tennis through
April 23
Women
Today -is the last day to
enter a women's soft ball team.
The schedule will be ready
tomorrow afternoon an<t play
will begin Monday
TONIGHT
TlM siMy •( a mmm tf
I'M tatna a aytttriHH
MtfaaaianiteycMaf
TWn., April 15, tzJtpjii.
Royct Hall
$2 JO, 2J0 tiarfMl*
tickets
\]
U's a bird (Mike
Tully, top), ir« a
plane (Willie Banks,
left), and it's faster
tfian a speeding
bullet, (Benny Myles,
right). Ifs the Super
Bruins ...
Wn
There IS a
difference!!!
Hair Sty lists
MEN 4 WOMEN -
W« Style Long Hair A
Also the Latest Full Cut
3hainpoo & Blow Df> or Dry Cut
Manicuring & Pedicuring
We also color and give Body perm waves
losesvb Lt Cems Ave. ^^y P«v more?
^^ ^ jfroMU.C.LJL 47S-777S
r^rtUng Le4 rt 47S-7770
Our
HO'8 RESTAURANT
1 1 14 Gayley Ave 479-7M5
addition to Waatwood's finest dtntr>g
Exotic Sizzling Plataa
LITTLE SHANGHAI RESTAURANT
1101 Gayley Ave 479-6353
Chinese SZUCHUEN "Hot" Food
HIP BAGEL CAFE
10^5 Kinross Ave 477-7230
Bagels Galore ~ Sandwictisa all served on hapslB
5S off wHfi orHer of S3.00 or mofe (atid tNs coupon)
at any of these restaurants.
f
Olympic Br* ■
'njisnv OiymiMS WastUngfon 'OLV*
:i .1 '
Somt* thini!^ nfVi:r (*hiir>i»
I hr>t hinted ,it in l«^I •
' p.itfnr tor ' ii u»i>l
with which fiM»pcn milk
and truit cam! thi- >\ci\
HiccI Itkv*^ fht" c-|.i»!Ui
bctT hiH»k had U) a watt
tht iii\cntk»n of rhf berr
can by Amtrrican Can in
I9^S
When cmployt wcy
SainpMin was dt'Hibd U) invent
rh> pfnultinuitdy tun* tumaj tinil
'»ui U'd in unitini! ^ irs t»t rhir?wv
fhrtMts wirh the* ci»n{em.N ut nulluHis ui
cifOlv
I' - skill and maenuity and the result
jUiit can t he imptoved upon The same g< Oly
^' uni»> never chaaat; AareiNbeer dcie^n t c
V.-'lvnipia r»e\er will
^.HA ,
t
I
iliii'«ini art mm laaaer.
Beer di n-^mt art any
■
VONin*ffK IIS llSin#
«l«^ flMt#t»«i«
fin* tjT' iti^' ♦"
MCAT
OAT
LSAT
: GRE
: ATGSB
: OCAT
: CRT
: FUX
: ECFMG
: NATL MED bos:
2 ? 124 So Seputveda Bivd S
• L A CA 90025 •
(213) 477-391t J
Grads & Undergrads
Here's your ticket to INVOLVEMENT
.^^ffiiUKsr-'
Admit one TO an
University-wide presidential
advisory committee
how time: by noon
m 304 Kerckhoff
m
e
I0( w^« 9
• U ^
All students are encouraged to apply.
Applications available Ackerman Union Info, 304 Kerckhoff
Dorms & other housing orqanizaitons
'l mmi*
■P"
I
':-C:
CLASSrFIED A D
rr :.: ■
Of.ADLmtL tO:30 A.*'
TIM AtUCLA Ci
. fully »MpptrU lti«
•omia't patoy «•
A4««rfl«lfif spac* will not b« mm49
•wMflM« In m* Dally Prutn lo anyon*
wito dltcrlmln.«t«t on !h« ba*it of
•ncotlry, color, nollonai origin, roc*.
rolHplon. or toi Humm Mm OaMy ftMlM
nor tlio AtUCLA C««MlMilep^MM
•••rd iMi Iwiiipiimig «*y o« IIM MT-
vlco* odvortlsotf or odvortltor* rmprm-
•onlod In this is«u« Any porton b«-
llovlnf tiMl on •d«orll»«m«nt in Itii*
Imam vIoAalM Pm •oord's poNcy on non-
PlocrlMilrMtloii ifUd horoln alkaMM
OMMMMMdCSto ^MiBBA^Rta In Mili^^s ^b
th« Bualnoat Manogor, UCLA Oolly
-^ruln 1 12 Kofcltfiolt Hal. 301 WoolMoud
^laxf . Los Anpoloa. California tP024.
, aallon probloms. Cf II: UCLA Housing
Offlca. (213) t?S-4401: Waalaida Fair
(213) 473'
passport
identification
resume photos
ofwc/o
mpu% 9tvdi
150 kennnoTT nan 825 06/ / m271
open mon hi B 30-4 30
lUCMIMffltS
FOREIGN STUDENTS
Th«r« ar* thr»« $300.00
gr«nl»-ln-ald •wtrds from
lh« Barouh-Stopal Endow-
m«fit^ Fund •¥«llabl« to
rogUtorod non-Immigrant
fortftgn atudonts with mfmr-
goncy naad for aaaiatanca.
Applications art avallabia
In OiS8, 207 Dodd Hml^,
P— dllna la Apm 16. 1976.
(Ann A 15)
rustic WOTICI !•
mmrmhmmmm mttttti
91 ■!• UOLA
■USiNltS Opportunity! Stuff envm
lopaa. IM par Itt. ' fili lamlif
P.O. Wm Mi
Bay. CA
(AfNi A20)
^If^AT DOES A BRUIN
BEAR WEAR TO CLASS?
UCLA t-8hirts (hundreds of
styles in the ASUCLA Stu-^
dents' Store), custom-im-
printed t-shirts. football
jerseys, sweatshirts, hooded
sweatshirts, jackets, hats.
socks, and carries a UCLA
gym bag or bike bag.
Bearwear
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman' Union
$110
aar
(AfMi A21)
wedding
announCenients
kerckhoff ^2, ■
82 506|l _
MAKE Monday niflit
Incoun>ar Oimip lad' by
" faeONalafa. Saa your-
salf and laam lioar aHMfa aaa you. In
WLA. Information: 4fft-1)42 or 472-
S7i1.
If A rt\
campus
annoMnctnents
wwMMHMQ and
SiBlnod Qlaaa al
474-7000.2911
<SA»|
ASUCU^ Udurt NolM
AKtHaral
Wotcn thp Brum for thp complolp
list of clPSPPt that will hove Locturp
NotM. Thooo are notoo tokon oo
•10 nrofoooof wants thom to bo.
carpfully typod. proofrood; illus-
trated and raody tor you ^ tfts
Students Store Notes will be
availobte on Monday. Wedr>eodoy.
Friday and Saturday Chock i^tth
•10 LoBlufo Noloo Coufiloroo woN
OS In your Itrst sot of noloo to find
out whon your spocWc noloo wtit
bo owdlobio- Loclufo n<ftoo oro 0
oadDMOhotp thoy lot you pay
ollofvttofi la whot's bolng oaid.
they're not OKponoivo.
Our LECTURE
NOTES tm .
Orrwru
>(m heads!
Pfonal
ISO yaara of
It A it)
104.
(•Aia>
TwoandlMlf
It a lano
liAif)
1*'
f MILYN #
* *
t«HAPPY BIRTHOAYIfl «
MILYN I
♦0»»»0»<iO»<i»a|f
for
Ll»yd. coiay.
(• A U)
OCA* MmOwOs nnfar. LaTt pat friaky
Lava ya. Traa Wom
<• A IS)
4?4-§707
in. a ft.
(tOAtOI
itra MiiMDLi 10.
aiSM. UCLA
(lOAiai
DO you
har by
Day CaO
474
<aAao)
iNtiMfOOO 0-7210 foaeiior and
<10 A 10(
m mm .
Fun Neuoa 10 - and Om
CbL
10
(•A 10)
r
(to A 101
ONLY ONE DAY
latha
1
Tlia Mm oMnaa an
■AaUUANA Don't
fer
oppoftiifiHi—
^PERSONAE^
Cantor of Dramatic Arte
Announcas
A spociol three week workshaa
(April 12lh thru 30ai),
AUDmON TECHNIOUai
The foltowing subjects will be
covered:
tlia now law
aa.M
Lor IV. P.O
.L. 1
ia< tea le
1. LJt
l-A.)'
no A 20)
What Mie easHng director lo
■^
SKMNA Cirt ... Won ahew yeu In ,
weya, thet wa'vo pol tteo aplrn ler
" Chl-a.
It A 10)
2 yra old. Imoiaculala 2270 or boat
ailar 024-2402
(10 A 10)
at t WM.
1
(It A 21) TSmJSL^
MAtai
Tex OS iRSffrvMenf
,<12 A 22)
KA^rt airthday Carol Meftonold.
la A 10)
Til
Tianti-MajiTisnH-MM MARKET ftoaoofcb poya 210 to oM
OTOLfN
•aw larpo
ce«ifeo.so() """"S
• 4-la«al OMck •SMianrfii • 12
NCVU^
(12 A 10)
Miwiiwiinnii ■ itr ji
H you
70t boinf
ol Law Oc^wm^
Monday. April 12. botwaon 10 am—'
4 pm. piaaaa caO Larry QNbart, 472>
2102. 020-4041 (nMsaaa*).
^ * (0 A 211
U»M
IV - Mairt OnM rt your bim (I
Wall- PM. ton PrancMoi to lovafy bi Om
-y iiiiMUi.
•iitortainfiMffit
nmncum
OUSlNEOt EQUIPMENT
IHSiSawWM 01 WLA
CALL 471- yrai »at w— tgisanowpoywy
*•-• •*-*•!
7447.
(tOAtai
chMibfecto
$iao OUm.lCATE arfdpa Monday nMa.
Wadnaaday attarnoont. Wild WMal
anoga Club. 1098 WaalwoM aivd.
470-aaH. f7 0WI
•v«nt9
•I
ApiO 24. 1
rotrool. aeliKaey
(aA2t|
for rMit
14
ati.00. AO ffo-
(tM2)
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NBNT-A-TV. atOJO
atuOont diooounta. Dallvory lo 0:00.
ftOlr)
ARROWMtAO cabin In eulol arooT
tiaapa 2. atO/2 days. 2180/7 days.
207-1447. -^ ^. .
anUlM T.V. HCNTALa
COLOR T.V -S
T.V.'t - 27 JO a
CaO: 270-1022
aA22)
•" ~ for sal#
a A 101
Tbanbt fer Nie
weN to find
MA fOI
(Itatil
O A tt)
MXPO
rmm^ Pair. T,
10:02 lo 4:00.
aAtai
aA2i)
CaEATIVE WfUTINQ
NoviLa, acatBN-PiAva.
TCLCViaiON
12,7-10
0110
NAa: Year
TryPaaabi.ll
ELVIS TIcbofa aveileMa for
^Irat eooM first
OandiO
OM
Piei Ut
aAtai
(tOAitI
Cofvio 16 «w ASUCLA Ohidofilo'
Olfloa
ondfot
ua yoMrawn
rtificlol orooo-it's oil tharo B
*''''*tO •bdipononta; ttuOanl dia
brands. Velley. 001-0040. 001
ntaoi
"i
It toloet
0212 W
Ce.
(laObr)
cof^in^4
(11 Ob)
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CLASSIFIED
wmntmd
aeae2.asiUl%n„iaaM
fttAta
2 bM
tbru Mo«. 224/1
247 -
ftOAtai
no A 101
(12 A 21)
IXBiOA
CuttHia and Hairstytmo
(It Obi
aUTM C.
STATiaTICAL. ^AaT.
OAVa A
^AffT
-1221 or OTf^lto.
(10 A 10)
at Ob)
MOuaaarmMQ: Two
-till.
Waaaro.24
(tOAtO)
(tOOir)
iMor/oaporlanc«a/low
'M0/47S-0022.
470-
I AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE iN<;iiRAMr.
SALE MINDED?
(to A 21) MOVMM
CaO aw
(10a 10) MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE SST-t
(10 Ob)
TBMaMt
$$$ EASY MONEY $$$
CALL RON GLOBUS
930 2410
•Too Vaung
UOMTHOMaaiMHmAMCfl ttaviCE
— 1101
(2oosn
aaoraaaiOMAL wruor wiai a a bi
-— '^ (UCLA) wM ^sad aOH lann
tMEOV. accurala laM typlal
(10 A 10)
at Obi
KAV:
UC
■oMAioutid
BnflUh trad.
I FOUND SOMETHING? "^
iJLi!?'''* •••^ • a^ or araole af!
It** ** """* ** ****^ **** foHim!
XEROX 2' 2C
N' •^I'tiini.,!
^JYTiri KINK OS
OAV.
•lueteaaie Into Mm OaUy arulal
Claaaaied nipartMisiii and toll moI
(looir)
fit A on
•eurt. Alao aourl ronlol. aronlwood
MO OWt
jyoo wool lo
I tool a Faufid
an ad bi aial
(ttaiO)
Auto-LHo-HoaMoamora end Ronlel
HMuronca Vlllapa Ofllaa Warner
ftaObMan. 11^ ^^^>^^ ^ _ TT- ,
077.2007. 270-Oiai. ^^
"''"^'~"'' (lOObr)
m 407-7272.
THt joa FACTOaV I
I •^■■••^'▼. aooaauud abig.^ wai runi
[^^•tfal^oooileyoid {
I 2:
iBLUV
(tOQSr)
aaaaosiAUTv. 2-4
OAV. 212J0 FIR Noua
aTAanNQ. aok pop Laa-
ri^nNQ.
(to A tor
aBcasTAav - ot mciial offioT
Onerp inolvldiiel apNb front
fer
221-0101.
r
(12 A 12)
Help aeM by Helplna
2S-$60/nionih for tlooi
HVLAMD OONOH CEMTCR
1(X)1 Gayley Awe.. Wostwood
MOl/|«G?
FuOy
CAapua aaavicf a
NouaaFAiNTiNa •
en 4.12-72.
474
n7 A 101
at oar)
(It Ob)
IS or aw feaaw el a
•P42OHK2100 or a aioiofole
alela O-lfeak '
Ita aanw M22ait01 ae
■^^ HTAtai
(tOOir)
Aualrella. Aala.
OALLET: Fun way lo aoouty 12M 4 laa
Waabvoad. andUato. VWCA. 274 NO- t. Oar
Inlarinodleloa, advanood. 2 laaaon*.
woobly. Irona Oarata. PlgWnoalBb ■ 4
(toaor)
NUr
Malreaa le Wbaboeod or Mor vielo.
"^ aek. 201-7007 aaa-
at Ata)
LlOHTNlfUG TVI
Thaw* Opa«_^
^raa EstUnala*
FOOPEOOIONAi COLLOOff TVPIIiiO
2PECIALI2T
Tarm papart. THa«i«. Olstanaliont
*a9viiaatt**^tti'BABii L.AdiAA^^^^^a ^— * — ^^
MaOi. Tr^- ~- -'
(22 0lr)
FaawKtai a aua.
ccaaa
474
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(ttAoa
Itt a 10)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTOaCYCLC INSUMANa
rruocNT Diacouarra
2tt1.
aaA2a
122 A 121
MATNTularbiibyMJL
T JL Type
474
at A 22)
(MA 22)
•f*«a*i
•*•»«•
aa oai
11.
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aUTM:
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aa s sa
laoVlMO: aaaldentlel. epoi
a^A^ MJL) 470-
(itooi
CNiMeat
aoob)
Cell
I Oh 104
(tOObri
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
RIOINQ LESSONS
•A,N3.A. AppravodrldlaeaalaOOabaMai
• \
Aaaow aiaufuaica
■Lecraotvaia: Mnwamad
(212) 002-1077
fttAtOI
-ttw
rttoot
iFrapafO for
oaAouATc aEcoao exam
A«» atSAT
• SttAT
• atCAT
a DAT
THE OUIDANCI ClNTBil
I, W.L.A. 11744
t70.2207. WNb
t%m
eenbaleaBaaaOao
iM ear tUTNTi
ItOObr)
ItOalOl
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(toain
(to A 21)
jAMrroa. 7:aa-it:aa aa^
^^^w» w^^^a^o
Had. 077-
OMar, ay wroao naa wer
only ot bad prtaa. Tbl. 472-4
I
ItJLIil
atAta
(toAoa —
ff««1
««aAtii
>tOt1aai2a7.
rtoa
(tta2l)
VTON EXPRESS
MOVERS
I oacoooi-tpaiL
ttTOt
04A12I
(It A 121)
A-
~^c.
CLASSIFIED JtD
« t
^^
hsv999 for fMnt
t
ASUCLA Travel S^rvlM
•m ONLY oMoM
UCLA Chmn^ Flight S#rvlc«
A xmiHinQ
^ Europe flights
• flf
Ov«r SCO fitghto A daiM with tfMarturM
from April Mivw OMigsr iMy t lo >1 «MM
1C754
Jun« 7
11C75
Jun«21
12C75
Jun«2l
15C75
Jun«28
17C75
Jun9 2t
18C76
JuntSi
22C76
Julys
23C76
July 5
27C76
July 12
30C76
July 19
III MP !•
Owar U
• Onantandl
liV UK 0«r IflM
Mformation
HAWAII..
'LA-MONOLULU fV« on« wwk
'LA-HONOLULU «1W l«»o «*w<ic
•c«ui*and Mmji atao awati
FUlS Cmt W Lm^tng..MfH-
rall/Eurall pass«t ...Accomo4*-
SATA fHs...lnt«rnatlon«l
LO.
FUCE THAVCL COUN8ELINQI
ASK US FOM ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW A90UT
tTHAVELI
^A/EL SERVICE •
^ Uwiofi A-21» (Willi EXPO)
lioiid»y - FfMay 10:00-4:00
OVERSEAS JOSS. Mio^Aytftte.
SSSS-tl.MO. IfHraliMbto •n-
i—. 0«t«lto 2§#. lfil«rnaltofMl
(21 A 23)
I
li
*
t
LOWCmI
WI1 (S^F*|. 47S.isi1 lOTMl.
ESCAPr - SEE THt
474-
flSOIr)
W Vv « > I
;harte^s to euroi
— on Anmncmn Airlin«« and T i A ~
SHy 4-40 WMkt. LcMWMt FsfM ■!
•6 days advanoa t>ooking raquirad 2
Summar-kKio MigMi Mling faat H
NOW" H
ftilBlia Your
roM tlutfAnt
k from Lw Anffll
I from CfMafo
LAX/^AMIt
and Nmt Yofli to Eur«
430 April 12
43g Apnl 12
43i April It
40i April ia *
430 i^nt 10
430 AprM 10
4» Apnl23
430 April 23
430 April 23
40 Apnl 28
430 Apmat
51
^siw NNw ivwy lAC'
1-a
MiclutfKl Airport mm
full
OtoV MP I* 14 1
:iEE Student Travel
ITWVWIHnW IHrQUg** SlV fWWJ ^B j
CIEE STUDENT TRAVEL ■
1093 Broxton Ava 11224 ■!
Loa Angalat. Ca 90024
I Call 213/477 -20S0
'(Above Wl^crdlOiM
M
JX Vlft^H) 0
JX 4^22-4^17 0
JX 0^22-4/31 It
JX 4^24-4/07 It
■M 7/04-10Alt 14
T0T/134i/9« 0
■n 7/144MM 7
OM 7/244/10 0
JX 7/37.4/07 t
LAS- 70 S/3O4AI0 10
^44 71 a/30-0/30 H
72 0/30-0/04 14
m 4/04-7/20 7
io &m§fn 10%
01 »«O4I«0 ttib
•t 4* 14-7/20 0
00 0/15*4/10 0%
7t 4^1-4/00 7
74 0/21-0/20 It
75 4/214/04 11
70 4/214/12 13
77 4/aO-»00 7
70 0/»4l/O# 10
71 0/244/12 11
44 1/244/10 TVb ,
00 4/9-0/00 10%
00 0/20^24 12%
00 7/00-0/04 0
01 7/044/12 10
00 7/344^1)4 0
44 7/244/12 7
00 0/004/24 TVb
LAX- UN 0/12-7/17 0
Alio CM 0/14-0/17 0
CM 0/14-4^^7 12
UN 0/10-7/24 0
UN 7/044/07 0
CM 7/14-0/Oe 7
UN 7/1741/21 •
CM 7/21-0/00 7
^ 0A>4-0/1O 0
LAX-« UN «/.12-0A}l 7
FWA Pf 0/154/01 11
Pf 4/304/00 14
Pf 0/124KtM 7
LAX- ^ 0/14-0/10 0
ZNfl JX 0/224/21 It
PF 7/13-0/28 0
TAHITI ^^^^^
(10 a 21)
HOAtll
osso viBw. a
(SO A1SI
Nouss i« ai4
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.7S. 4S7-
2112 W.
(2soin
EUMOPB-
ISCA. 11S07
t99
CAWS IN EUHOPB
SSNTOSSUY
SPECIAL RCOUCTIONS TO
TEACHBilS A STUbfiNTS
PStE CATALOG
EUNOCAflS
BLVO^ LJi. Oi«
271.4a0i
EUWOPC Irani S090, Itti
anO N.Y.C. $100. Milor
CaO Jaeii (210)
. Cai J»t Chanar
■ BUNOPf 1070 I
■ As low •• 0330 00 round trip L.A. or O.F^
X ID LOMDOM. AIM roiMid ifipt to phamkmiht!!
JniMCM. MMMO. AM0T0NDMi4 ONAptOtLS
tChartor fltoMt from East Coaat A CMcaoo*
to feuropa alao available L.A to HAWAIll
Sia low aa tiOOOO (Waawt Trtp). •
* WiMaor Can S
I CAL JOT CHAWrmS (4 TS) 003-1434 |
a 2100 OHaan 01 San FrarKiaco CA 04123 _<
CNAMTESS mn4 vacation
on Mon Am 747 la
. CaM Karry
HAWAII Each Sat 1 4 2
NYC Each Tua 1J2. 4 3 waalw 0141
ORIENT Many datoe from 0401
Contact ASTrA for oi»or 200 thorlar Hattnga
Dspon from San Franciaco Now Vorli.Chicaoo
*CiianarfN rag raqaifa 06 day advanea boalUnQ
'*'** "^ *LI*5J"* "^ W «wN 0O« fut
TRAIN A FENNY TICKETS
CANS. CAMPER RENTALS
RAILRASSCS. INTRA^UROPEAN
STUDENT CHARTENS
APEX FARE-SUPER DEAL
Laava/ratum any day. any Etirop city Otoy
22-46 days from 0406
TOURS A CRUISES
MEXICO Mazattan 7 niiaa 0tflO
HAWfAii Wathiiii 7 ndaa Jmo
ALASKA. 7 mghis from mmmm
COLUMOlA.Obtooa/Cartotww.0daya 0040
MEXICO Man CHy 0 days |tT7
MONO KONG. I44aya. from Sh
f4K.0ANOKOK SINGAPORE 10 davt it#la
•OMEMEDITERRANEAN ..r/Ma 15,
STUDENT TOURS
Campmg. 0 coumnaa. 36 day* 0|
Eurdpa. 44 day*. Ocountrlas. i-wli cruiaaOl]
Eurapa 40 day* 13 courttnaa 2-wk cruiaa OK
Haiaait 3-wk 3 island
TAHITI SUPER DEAL
Jul 6-21 for Tahitian " ^^
•24
l-U
[fISJ 47S-4444
OOtrrOELAYI
Book by Phona Hmt FlighlB to
(tt70«^) SmBI AMdHao (Ono«)
Tha Ortant (040S^) Nov Vodi (0100)
($100)
o^ ttighiB
■nOiiiiilHiii CaN
W14TCOA0T OTUOOIVT TRAVOL
^AVCOOamar
tit
EUROPE. IMWI, N.Y. 0 OrlaNL TOO
AI.S.T. 1430 S4. U
LAOn-2727
(29 A 20)
fNTf«NATlONAL STUDENT
sraviNC
MMUNITV
t^
r r iM » r CI
A Daily
TOOPf TOURS' TOLJRS:
'0<N Ut fOP
^hvalrv Shsrtork Mnimci 4 9 %9 OT
MNai* Walrhing
Lu»>th on • Schoon*'
La** T»ho» 4 tt. ^f I?
Jf 4 IT It IJ-
nia a Rmga r;»n,on « JC i . J5i OTi
vrit '■!• non aiudan! raias s«aliat>i«
<>u«« :«. ..-^ •ransponai>or< MgM
Malrtg • •9«« anarki and «o<lg«ng
Our ooa4 la Io craala an JniprcuHurai
• 3^ tr a raiaiad friandiy
--• and to do 'Ms at a
>Sl *r you '
^ J ^9<*1
^ • • •
(212)477-
agtefumishMl
(SSA1SI
._ ^ $117.S0par
toalcoNy. Oraat Waal NoMywootf l»I — f'* gf potior 2 OaBRoan, lai«t
"•■"• Wi*. 1 Otiroaiw. 007-0911. '"• * "^ •■•^ 2iS4871.
(SO A 21) dOAISI
$1M. N44r alora S kNa. Avallabia
I.
(MAttt
COM 477
A If)
MINUTES fr^di UCLAI SIfiflaa. fyr-
iitanca • raaaonabia prlca. 2tt1 S4.
470-21201
(20Olr)
ISSAISI
yURNISHED/UmyniNiitO
$140. Sl«i«laa $1SS. P**!. Haart af
S i^tfi 4
2Mi»4plflym.
ipua afiO ijUI.T.
000 GAYLEY. acraaa tram Oylial#a.
479-
•pt ufifumistfd
BRBNTWOOO. 2-
It. Pool, laottul, aaiMia. to-
pwy tHara. 472-7427
«7 4»4»
$1Sf .SO Oolwio 1
IS7A1SI
WLA $210.
17. HMNac on WBi. 477-
aptSa to shars
T.Y.
$13
(SO A 18)
C»A21)
OIIOJS/i
(20 A 90)
E-'0«aira4«ilR2l
la UCLA. $11t.
$ aMnvtoa trooi aai
(SOA
47S^10
(20 A IS)
•pt. 0E7.SO pNm wBllllaa.
S SJB. ^ay. COS Tam
CM A IS)
$1SS^i
A 10)
forsul
SUMSIER: 9 P— P<4 9m
10 la SopL 0. OSr JO
no A 10)
2NMIVAROLaw
ttiilot piMa M afMtf y lof CtilNomla
Sir EaBm. JMm «al It
BA. Jmn. 291 HaflaSi SL 0 4
tEmsr
housafforsala
pt OBI oaniii
MOBILE
$i.
O'bSS'. I/Imth pall4.
191 A IS)
(••A1S) housa to shara
f«9 A »«1
TO
(2iAt1)
Mar P.
^ola OK. $00-0190.
ISiASil
WANTBO
(S7A1S) ^^iSJ
r92A
oissjs
(SiAISI
nraiALE fra^ artlal. 2
i&
CStalS)
hoiising
(S9A18I
MAIS)
room A board
ROOM a«iB
(20Olr)
41SI aKchanoa for hato
^(^fin^c d
Nettei^ working for 35 straight today
»y 1
DB ^i^orts Writer
Can the f|BtiBtB*$ number-
ranked UCLA tennis tesfli
he defeated this seasoM? WilJ
UCLA*$ grsBictt alMime dual
■Mlcii winning streak be
halted''
Tkicoe questiGMS^ HBill OMot
prob^bfy be answered in Palo
Alto this Saturday wKen the
BniiMi, currentlN 15-0 on the
iCBSon and winnen of 34 con-
secutive tennis matches during
the last two seasons, face the
nation's second-ranked Stan-
ford Ordinals (10-2)
However, before the Brums
tangle with Stanford, they
must face the CalilsfMS Bssn
in a day-night ^match today m
Berkeley, beginning UCLA's
first rosd-trip of the obbsmi^
Third, fourth, fifth and sixth
siRgles matches along with
second and third doubles con-
tests will be played outdoors
this afternoon First and sec-
ond singles ar)d first doubles
matches will be held indoors in
Harmon Gymnasium tonight
for the first time in the UCLA-
Califoreis oenet, datini back
to 1928
The Brums, under tenth-year
coach Glenn Basoett. easily
deieated CidifafRiB hm Isoi
Saturday. E-I. and hold 44-
match winning streak over the
•esri going back to 1953,
when California triumphed
twice by 5-4 scores
California joined UCLA this
season in acquiring a "Su-
preme Court" indoor tennis
surface in order to hold in-
door tennis matches, which
have proven successful at Suuh
ford since 1974
California drew over 3000
specutors earlier this season in
a match with rival SunfordL
won by the Cardinals. 9-0
Stanford has held indoor
matches against UCLA and
use since 1974, drawing over
7000 fans in Maples Pavihon
for both the UCLA and USC
matches last year
** Indoor tennis matches are a
potential source of added
revenue.** said Cahforma's ath
letic director Dsve Maggard
"Sunford made over 120,000
from its UCLA and USC
matches Imot year, held in
Maples Pavihon" Stanford
tennis coach Dick Gould said.
"l think UCLA will greatK
improve their attendance next
scaoofi for indoor tennis
*'TenRiB H very big in South-
ern California, with UCLA
and USC perennially bbmn^
(he top three teams in the
country. UCLA attracted largr
crowds for the Pacific South-
west Tennis Open last Septem-
ber I wouldn't be surpnsed if
UCLA drew over 8000 apunot
USC and us Next year *
Whether the Bruins have
played indoors or outdoors
tbtt scBSOii. the resuHs have
been superb Even though
UCLA loot iBot year's NCAA
singles champion Billy MartiR
to the profeioioBal ranks after
his freshman season, the de-
fending pationai champion
Bruins have given every mdiCB-
(f ontlMMcdonPageU)
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UCLA defeats UCSB in
games
5
I
By MidMMl
DB Spom WfHw
UCLA mov«i oae -"rfr rtnrr to lU firtt
Southern CmliforaM IntcrcoUcguite VoBiy^all
Aitociation (SCIVA) coufemMe titk since 1971
wben the Eruins defeated Santa Btrtara last
rn^i, three games to one in FMlliy Pavilion
before an all-time regular ttMon crowd of
4J12
The Bruins (9-2) mutt defeat San Diego
State tomorrow night at 7:30 pm in Pauley
Pavilion to tie Pepperdine (10-2) for the leagve
title and force a one match playoff for the
automatic NCAA berth to Muncie. Indiana.
Sanu Barbara lost, 15-12, 8-15, 15-8 and 15-
12: This meaM that the Gancbos (8-3) must
(tualify for tiie NCAA's now by winning the
Western Regionals next wecliend m Pauley
Pavilion.
it was a close match all of the way. but
Brum consistency was the ultimate factor as
All-American Joe Mica had an outsunding
spiking match and Peter Ashley and David
Olbright did an exoelknt job of setting the
UCLA offense
**We had flat spells and played good and bad
at times, but the serving of Joe Mica was
instrumental in keeping us in the match,** said
UCLA head coach Al Scatcs. ''Fred Sturm did
a good job of digging for some more points
and Doug Brooks came in and did a fine job of
blocking-* _.
-We feh the key To the match was our
serving and passing, because we wanted to
serve to the middle to make UCLA set to the
outside, but they beat us serving and passing,**
said Gus Mee. Santa Barbara head coach. **We
hope UCLA wins the league, because we would
rather play Pepperdine in Pmtky Pavilion in
the Regionals instead of the Bruins **
i-'*'.
«n _
Santa Barbara started game four the
way It bcfan fMW two It was 7-1 Gauchos
before Inria eeach Al S<^es called time-out.
Sturm was off on his spiking and Brooks waji
off on his timing.
Sparked by a great save by Mike Franklin
and four straight serves by Peter Ashley, the
Bruins rallied to 8-6. Two serves by Mica and a
spike by Singin Smith tied the game at 8.
After an exchange of points, the serving of
Mica put UCLA ahead 13-11. The fim aerve
could not be saved and the second serve was
overpassed and Cbne put the ball into the court
for the point. After a Gaucho point the icrvr
went to David Olbright.
On the next serve, the ball came to Ashley,
who made a perfect set to Sturm, who hit the
ball off the arms of the Gaucho blockers for
match Doint.
UCLA continues to piay better volleyball
each match, but the volleyball squad had better
remember what happened to the haitolhttll
team against Oregon after the Bruins had big
wins over Washington and Oregon Suu. It
would make San Ehego Sutp*s regular seaaon
and give the Aztecs momentum going into the
Regionals to beat UCLA in the final regular
•eaaon and give the Aztecs momentum going
into the Regionals to beat UCLA in the final
regular season match of the seaaon
Concerning a let-down tomorrow night
against San Diego Sute, Scates said, **We*re
not looking forward to Pepperdine. because we
know we have to beat San Diego State to get
the shot at Pepperdine."
Mica said. "We've let-down too much in the
past and we know we have to win to pet to
Pepperdine, so we won't be looking jpoal San
Diego Slate"
I
f
<M)
Rnd your comer of the sky at
Because of the recent fire
at our 360 N. LaClenega store,
weVe temporarily relocated
In our ottier Jeans West store
at 372 N. La Clenega Bh^d.
- -<» V.
You'll find
the some selections
of jMffier
free 'n' easy clothes for
your casual
^ way of life.
For example ...
On him:
WoihodclMmpiRKJcli^dioans. $23
wHh our wcnhmd dooim bkaor $30
slick print shirts $17
On her:
\Maahod domm lwin-bo« pons. $20
shown wtth uriiMK puiO¥^. $10
-fe
^
X
iWlUi ii. lut iUl
I ■ ' II'
Bruin
VelunM XCVIII, Number 10
Un<v»nny of CaUfofnte. Lo« •jitn
Frtdn. AprtI If. IflTf
All-purpose ID card
approved for next fall
ly Marto Levtec
DB Staff ripirtii
Tlie long awaited student photo identifica-
tion card, replacing most of tbe other student
cards now in use. has been approved by
CKanceUor Charles E. Young and is currently
in production for var mnx fall.
The new photo ID card will not, as onginally
planned, replace the registration card and must
be carried with the student's current registra-
tMM card to be valid, according to Lyle
Timmerman, matiite dean in charpe of tke
project.
It will, however, serve as a library cai^,
ftn^tmot hall/neal card, athktic pnvilege card
student healthulemification card.
The ID card. srMaM to make lu applgr-
last fall, had been delayed until now
beca^ise the cost of the proposed project had
exceeded the budget
Initial funding for the changeover of appro-
XMMlely $50,000. includes the start-up cost and
nrrciMry equipment, but will not resuh in any
registration fee increase
C feral Umti
At least S29,000 will be provided by funds at
the Chancellor's discretion, a combination of
registration fee* and a general fund stemming
fro^i state support, .according la *W DeMore^
budget analyst in the Chancellor's Office
An on-gomg yearly cost of approximately
SI6,00e will be divided among the departmenu
bcn^^kiag from the conversion, including the
Ubranes, the Residence Hails, Intercollenate
Athletics and Student Healtk.
Working much Uke a credit card, the ntw
system ir expected to be "more effective,
quicker and less error-prone,** according to
Timmerman.
The card is also anticipated to pToyi4€
savings to students by chminating the costly
abuse of services by non-legiumale studenu
especially apparent in Student Health where
only a registration card is requiaad al present,
Timmerman said.
Tfmm saved
Tlie bigpnt advantage to studems will be the
tine saved in lines, espacinUy in such aicas as
Student Health and the Registrar's office
where, at present, all forms and petitions are
handwritten, Timmerman added
The ID card will also be used for admittaaoe
to football gMMi, replacing the old athletic
privilege card AH other athletic ticket proce-
dures will remain unchanged.
The photo ID card, however, will be good
for four years, or as long as the same con-
tmuous sutus IS nuiinuincd A pouch wiH be
supplied to each student to carry the ID card
and registration card together. . -
The canto wiM be issued to all continuing
students for approximately two weeks be-
ginning May 24. Supportive picture identifica-
tion will be required.
Calls baliot means of change
'Register' - Jane Fonda
ly Michelle Duval
DB Siaff WrMcr
Speaking m generalities on
emotionally popular subfccts
for her US senatorial candidate
husband Tom Hayden. actres.s-
pohtical activist Jane Fonda
encouraged students to register
9n§ Wte as a means of chang-
ing the system
hondm urged a Hedrick Hall
crowd Wednesday night to get
out and "regiaier to vote so
that you can undeniund the
nHMs.** while she spoke afninst
big business, nuclear energy.
NixonN Watergau and student
apathy
MostK she stressed the im-
IMMlance of uniting together to
fight the corruption in govern-
ment, in order to put people
like "us" into office
"We can begin to build a
|K>wer base If we raise our
voices in protest we can get
people in oCfice everywhere
We can have' people, even in
the Presidency, who will rep-
resent our interests. We can be
represented if we begin mm to
^***** ■ puiiiitai Movement.
Fonda said.
Slie continually pointed OM
MK ptnmn cannot solve
tkt proMcfli. If involves getting
people in government who are
ni/era. whose whole lives
gi^tn to developing move-
Jane Fonda
mting that Hayden\
campaign will be difficult, tkt
tnid **Tliere*s nothing tlie mai-
ler with Tunney except he^i a
to tlie
very _ ' '
laent on to ex-
plain that Havden*s dreams
storefront offices in
communities all over Calif-
ornia, rather than Tiiniiey*s
three offices in government
buildings
**Every community should
have ont (office), and they
ilHMM be flMMwd by NaderV
Raiders-type people, pe^k
with integrity, idealistic, in
touch with penpli Ptonpir vIm
would hold town wfmflm^ to
hear wlmt the pMpk thmk.**
she f'liaii
WJien arftiid atout tiK
ghettos, slie said ^i pnopie in
the flMloca 1lon^ troie. they
i"! §m their people in. aad I
don*t know ho>«r they're going
to giet aaywhete.**
l^cwiqg the control of b«
buttness IP the government.
sIk said. **The problem is wlale
wt have the very h«aic dis^
CTBtic nghtt, wt don*t have
control mm the acnaMBy, sad
if we caint have that, what
when aaited
hand's radical pm&L _ ,^ ,
"What wat sadical in the iTk
Tgw
Nayiea haaat cl
Lyte Timmerman
lAmerican Revolution
called a 'spontaneous,
inexplicable reaction'
•y Li
Di Stair „.,
The American Revolution was a spontaaaaaa and largely
inexplicable reaction on the part of a highly aroused yaap
of people, according to Professor Page Smtth
All revolutionary changes in history are the reaah of
movemenu, ^mith said ''Intellectuals and theoreticiaa
orate and write for all eternity and no substantial
transiorroation will uke place until the masaes are disoa^
to act - r— •
Smith spoke to a crowd of 200 in Dodd Hall Wednesday
night about what he believes were the real causes of the
revolution
A case in which the reasons given by most historians are
not the real reasons, he said, was the reaction to the Stamp
The Stamp Act provided for a tax on all printed
materials It was paMod by Parhamem to generate revenue
for England.,
*The traditional academic explaaatioa fMi» Then the
radical patriots drummed 4p pofalhr appMliaa to the
Stamp Act, which was rlrmaailrated in riols throughout the
•Su'^'" ^'""** "^ "^ disagrees with this interpretation
When the Sump Act was passed, he said, the |
made the best of the situation by applying for the
distnbutorships. They had prannii the act vii
before tu passage
•••ut when the word reached the colonies, all heU bn
loose. ^From iHlan to Charleston, people riotad in the
streets.
This reaoiea was jaet too nMiave to he inspired hy a few
radical patnou. Smith said **Mate^ anticipalad ^, nitiii
kaew what to do ahoat it." it was the beginninc of the
revohH* Snath ^^^
kcvoiutioas happfa aaly whea the ifeMMi oT paapk uke
"alters into their awa haada, ■iriiiiag to S^ith When
that happeaa, he agid. the radical intellectuali Bfwvide a
useful ideolapcal fraoKworfc. iat it ukes aiOTe than
iniillMiaih to nuke a rcvohition.
A^aiHMciaM^ the lanaa Tea Party oae al the gfine
events wWih i^vfcad the revolhitioa. lut in raahly, SaM
said, it waa a highly organized and planned piece of
gaerhMa theater.
Such eveau are h^d|r fyaihaic hat the real
the unorgahrred. aatti^ad raaillaa ml fht
Historuins prefer to say thai ealaaiau aaia ~ian«a aa'
by radical iaiattaeiaali* tmUk mid baea^ ttev d^ IL
aiasses are capable of taking actwn by
I
*
'9
.■ i
I
.^.■^— ^^"^
^mr^mrr'
mm*
UCLA SAILING CLUIT
OPEN HOUSE
Come And Sec Our Soats
•idw. Food, Fgn
April 1«, Sunday, 1.00 - 6:00 pm
At UCLA Boar Dock
For Info Call 823-9978 or
825-3171 or 825-3703
• >
LiiConM Aw« (Neat to BuMoeti t i«MM«o«tf)/
(213) 477 2424 Parking AvatlaMa MMt Ooor
Campus Events Film Commission of
th« Student Legislative Council Pr^amn^:
ACKERMAN
GRAND BALLROOM
•~9 -*• •- •»-
INTHE
NOT TOO DISTANT
H^ FUTURE.
WARS Via
NO LONGER EXIST
DUT THERE WILL DE
^:^ U
FRIDAY
7 & 9:30 PM
APRIL 16
ADM $1.00
Crhtre and Punishment
•f
Women robbedwRh
»y MkMb DitTsf
DB Stair WrUar
Two^yowf female niiiirii aMkUnu were
reportedly held up with guns placed at their
throau by two youthf one evening last month
* T^^" *^ ^ ^'^ RchaWiuuon parking iot
The two wmmn were steppii^ out of their
^'' ^'yp <»g oF the Mitpecu approaehed them
tad pteoad a blue steel automatic gun ap>
proximately three inches from her throat
Shouting an abtcenity ik tbe women, tbe
MMpact caiiad a companion to "get their purses
aad keys.**
The two men warned the women three times
not to move and then walked over to a brown
car where a third youth stepped out. The third
man walked over to one of the women and
asked what had happened After her reply that
»he had been robbed, the nun returned to his
car and drove off The ot^rs had alr^y idft
According to Sargent Joe Ares of the UCPD
Students build Vehicleg^
diviaioii, the mhhary wm -the fim
oaa with a gun this year.- He ako commented
that robberies occur very seldom oa the
camput. Owing to the vague descnpciaw of tha
iuapecu and their cars, no one has haaa pickarf
up as a renth of the hiriiiiiii
la additional criawi apand camptu last
week: '■
— . SMBeone pned open a drawer in the Center
for Heahh Sciences aad took the coffee monev
cardboard box. •^
T "^"-SS!*"*'*^" ttudent had a $1500 poru-
phone flolen from his car parked in Structure
8a. in addition to a $70 stereo
— The $12 seat was stolen from a resident's
bicyde chained to a wall at Mira Hcrshey Hall
- The loss of a $638 typewriter stolen two and
a half years ago was finally reported last week
I he report was late in coming owing to the
of the paper work
Diverse art exhibited
A diversity of artistic in-
t««U is represented at the
Undegreed / Undergraduate
Student Art Show currently
baiag exhibited at the Fred-
crick S. Wight Gallery
The bulk of the exhibit is
dedicated to the three-
dimensional, including glaia,
textiles, ceramics and sculp-
tures of mixed and unusual
■adia However, there is still
an abuniiaTc of oil and acry-
lic paintings, drawings in var-
ied media, and black and white
and color photography.
The final projects of the
industrialization course, Art
I^IE, are exhibited The stu-
dcnu were asked to construct a
^^ehicle- using one sheet of
m*»onitc, one 10^ dowel,
string, glue and a one pound
weight The students' work
resulted in a wide array of
••vchicles.-
Incxpensivc modular storage
units, hght-wcight folding
camp stools and alternative
shelters to provide for the
needs of mass housing arc
among the other course pro-
jects on view.
Samples of work from de-
sign courses, ranging from
fundamentals to light numpu-
lation aad graphic shorthand,
can also be seen.
Studenu were invited to sub-
mit works for the show earlier
la the quarter. These were
reviewed by chosen faculty
members aad a committee of
undergraduate and graduate
studenu for selection of works
to be exhibited.
Many of the works on dis-
play are offereti for sak. Any-
one interested in purchasing a
work should contact the artiM
directly.
A reception was held for the
show's opening laal Smidi^.
The show will continue
through May 9. Two other
exhibits of works by Masters
of Fine Artt candidates will be
held durijig the end of the
spnng quarter and fint sum-
Dorodlcfr
DB Pr.ot.. f,v H«nfJv Gnf*'
Intl. Student Center Tours
April Calendar
What are you doing this month?
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Volum* XCVIII Number 10
Friday Apnl 16. 1«7S
.'it. St«»btng«f
Patrick Healy
Ann^ Voung
Susen Kmr\9
'-^t\iH
Eric
(^90ffrmy Qumn
Alioe8horY
Paul
^•w a a»rton
Marc OeNtfit
Slutrt Si»v«fst«i«^
ii (..
International Student Cente
Tours & Travel
'1^"L "•' ^"^"^ ^'^ hohdmys
•^ <^5 HUkmmq ftohOmvt mna •!.
•r^at'on p9nods by fht ASUCLA
i. ornm(/f«c«#fon« hcmrtf :am ^^^
"w ^fis lot An§§tm CsMomm
^
Food Co-op to sell good
-. — f
' .._»_
■y J,
_ . , 0» Staff Write
S,^ r.!^ Co-op every Fr«l.y from II ^
p™ jn the white sM on the .ntr.mur.1 field
•cr«« from the Men". Gy«. mc»«|,„ ,o
Amlrew .^.e. of the OffJof E^^^
-«dCoiisunttr Affair* (OECA) ^^
wwk^y dtttribution on Thiinday atUnotmZd
SATURDAY NITg
ENCOUNTER QROU
'j
the •ai^'''^*^ '*™** *'•*** «^P •pomon
Prjc« will be marked-up .Ughtly from co-op
^mocT pnce», but are still aeneraUv lower
thM .upermarke. pncea. accordfng TbI^
.--T .. ''*'' '" •*" '«»«' cheaper than the
•uperm.rket. because we buy iT quant^
d^ealy from the central market' .n downfown
Lo« Angeles and avoid the middleman cxpcHM
^7v^^°'^'"i "** <*'"'■»»"«"'« «he fodd
■<"««. a co-founder of the Food Co-op,
tf-cnbed the purpoae of the group as tw<Kfold
!-^.J""? •^r'"'*' "^^fi** •«* ^ PO«t"ve
value of people working together to control
their own lives.
. ■ . • i. ■ ■■ ■ ' , -«
i The co-op started in 1974, now has 96
«nu ^' "^ » •ccept.iig aew members.
expUined MUte Kaaaae. Food C<M>p dire«or
E«:h member dapoMs $7.50 against future
purchases and muM work three hours per
month w one ipMific job. such as ullying
orden. puchasing, weighing aad measuring or
overseeing dntnbution.
If a member mu«ei a thifi with at leaat a 24-
hour notice to the 00-09. »wo make-up shifts
befoit ittt mtuibci may Order ^
by Tha Tapanga Cantar for Human ^
!?!?■ '"*^ r^ *" "^ *?»-'" •"coonte, group. •• a «ay of fMaHiil
11
f
9lPwMm.
for bfochurw can
466-1342
e
Tenure threatened
by Arizona Bill
r
.heir futures less secure ^Ln^'ILT^^^nZT''"''' -" '""^
e^trfl . *"""*' *"""«?'« «n"re provisions and make it
^e lelLC '" "edLs been introduced .n the ArizlnH
Rep Elwood Bradford, who .mroduced the bill, says he thinks
the tenure system .s hindering university education "A cm-m
number of^the facuky think that whenever they a^e hJed ?i^v
can do what they please.' . . ' ^^
A fellow l^gisUtor and supporter 'of Bradford's bill says thaC^
J^.l"^!:^'^ envronmem has changed in the last f Jw ye«f
-a?.Lt'';°T**".°' 'r"**^ •»> -"«"* °f tenure un^esL^'
hi gone too far the other way." says Rep Dick Flynn -!2d
management doesn't have any leeway a. all In order t^mi-^
you have to be able .0 fire someone without spendlw'hr^^^s
•Bd five lawsuits to do 11 " P^"*""* mree years
n n a nieniber fails to show without phor
forfl^cd"^'"^"*''^ » cancelled and the dcpoiit
,. "^* ^ *® ^*k^ strong measures to insure
the morak aad vubility of the co-op and iu
membcn," expUincd Barnes **We now have a
dependable group of sincerely interested paopie
aad the co-op ig operating luccessfully -^
Membcri submit their **sliopping lists" on co-
^ ?^^,y^' '*'***^ •« ^»»«1 onto one
mtitcr h.t. Ute Wedne«lay night or early
munday morning, co-op members purchase
the food, which is distributed Thursday after-
"i^^^ ^*!f ^n«vers.ty Religious Conference on
Hilgard The co-op uf^ trucks rented from the
University for $4 per atght plus 16 cenu per
The
3017 Santa Monica Blvd.
SANTA MONICA
GRADUATE RECORD EXAM
preparation
20 hrs Vorbal, Math. Practico Ttting
Course begin* M«y a for June IS^ iMt
829-4429
Pow Wow at
Janss Steps
y^ UCLA Committee on
Fine Arts Productions in
conjunction with the Na-
tional Endowment for the
Arts, is sponsonng a free
Indian Pow Wow from 3 to
7 pm Saturday, April 17 at
Jaaas Steps
t
•t
h
wanted
Prcsem and past members of CARP (CoUeaiatc As-
in^lkTn. :»:J:^^"' of Prmaples) who JTTrJ:,
in talking about their experiences, please contact Carol
SUrr at the DaUv Brum, KerkchofT 110, telephone 52385
1016 QHndun Aot
•fciipWoiii 477 2355
Hours 9 30am to6Q0pm
f accounts invitad
Validatad Parktng m Buildir«
*
A(;txni:M\\NsH<)r
RICHARD BAIER
for hair
11949 Wllshire Bhfd.
Brentwood
Every TuMday Night 7:00
Female and Male Models
Welcome
LIMITATIONS '
on* ffM hair cut - on« tim* - Mch mod«l
•tylist* to cut tt>«ir own dMigns on modoto
lunher Mt
I
-IHH
This is the place for Rib LovmrsI
By for the Best Ribs weve frimd in LA
Herald Exammar
COMPLETE DINNERS
Casual Dining ^^^'^ S 2 • T S
HARRY'S O^BM PIT BBQ
1434 N CRESCENT HflGHTS at SUNSET STgP
10 Minutes Down Sunset Blvd to
louf el Canyon Turn Right And Vqu re Th^ra
io«»o
Greenwich VHIage, 195S
,w«eerK)uses and wgh adventur*. It was
SI'S!!! ^ .^'**' •'^ *«*^ It was gins
M^ drank wme and your mother back m
Brooklyn askkig Cod to forgive you
11
IfSAndAlmakee^ '^^
1334 West woad Blvd
Wesc wood, Calif 90024
»^Hof»e(213)473 9S49
jj . fi-.r.nf, SANOAli, t^elTS f'<)iJ< HIS pUKSeS HA'.s
^/V'^'J;i'*Lff?<*'^ '""^ CRAFT INSTRUCTIONS
OATSUiy
*
t
ii
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r
''Acres off Datsuns''
Student Discounts — Ask for Fleet Sales
Pasadena Oatsun
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
* 684-1133*
RMJLMAZURSK^ .^ ^r^i o i or, UKt-LNWlCH VILLAGE'
5-n^ LENNY BAKER SHELLEY WINTERS ^^
ELLEN GREENE CHRISTOPHER WALKEN
PAUL MAZURSKYMdTONYRAY
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WCtCEIITBICMaM HA
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542-5866 UA
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WANTED - College Students
ULiT!; ^^ ^ •* ''"90«J Rocky Mountains untpeiM by
mSr t-It. \,^-2^ '•'•^ P<u» 3% talM ux ¥V« supply hofMS
"JJJ^t^s 9u*dM - •v«rything sxcipt for y\ur ntmmping bag
^m^^iZL^ ©••' Coma alona or form yoyr own group Raaarvations
mm Call or writa
-■ I
Nuclear seminar today
Dr Mark BoUterli of the Los Alamos Scicniific
L»Wi»tof>, wttt Hir ieatured m a ipecuU nuclear piiyan
semiiuir entjtled ^What's in a Nuclei!^,* today at 4 pm in
Kinsey 236.
Lecture today
on 'Peronisnv'
\ \:j
Derby Day raises funds
Both sorority and independent priM will compete in speed
and skiU contests at 2 pm today on the intramural field for
the Sigma Chi Derhy Day.
All proceeds from Derby Day will be doaoSid to the
^•'^ Villafc oenier for the treatment and rehabiliution
^ children with minimal brain damage.
Sevcniccn of the IS sor^nties and an independent iesm
Will be participating in the evenu.
A little over $500 was collected last year, according to
Rich Rhea, co-chairman of the events
In nine years the 165 chapters of Sigma Chi have
contributed more than 1100,000 through, various fund
raising activities
The Utm American Ceii
ter IS presenting a Forum
featuring Dr Joac Enrique
Miguena. profcaaor of pol,.
tical science at the Univer-
sity of Connecticut, on ihr
topic of -The Cycle of Per
onism, 1945-1976.- It will be
held in Bunchc 9383 today
at noon The public
vited
ts in-
Mardi
Gras
Campus events
SKI MAMMOTH
April 23-25
with th« UCLA Ski Club
Sign up in the Ski Club Office Kerckhotf Hall 501
By Friday April 16.
"No excuse for violence"
GOOD I FRIDAY
"Father,
forgive
them"
"Crucify!
Crucify!"
Looking forward to
EASTER
^^. . W« 'nvite you to
CELEBRATE NEW LIFE IN CHRIST
^. Tri«il hk door pnzts.
ninit. travet information available 10 am-4
pi. April 20 and 21 Ackerman Grand
Ballroom
rhlJflf!?" ^'^ ^mntmtm (Maytrt
cnscfc •• draw aach waak for your op-
poiidiit. matcf) data, tmia and court as
si^nmant locatad m Kerckhotf MO For
information call Bart fee at 47M2n
-«C frtiif llfM PraiTM. ttNs week will
Pisent LMoia, a Cuban film 7 30- n pm and
a Cuban dinner 5 30-S pm tomgftt inter
natk)nal Student Center S2 50 for dinner
--^mitm tor CaadliKy tor SLC offices
•re now available in Kerckhoff 400 dead-
Una is April 22
—WCLA VaNasiai final regular teason
match vs San Oiego State 7 30 pm
Jonifiht. Pauley Pavilion UCLA students'
frst with 10 faculty free with Athletic
Privilege card SI for other studenfs 12 for
adults
--UCLA Mardi Itm 9mmm Cnv ap
plications are now available in the Mardi
Gras office Ackerman A-209 now April 24
Open JO all details on t^e application
--•eieiate ftatat leerd which shows
•SOI presidential candtdaie and the
Which have had pnmariaa is now up in
Kerckhoff hall n9Mr the alMtor on the first
floor ^ .
-, '"^'* •■••• Sponsored by the Social
Dance Club 7 30 pm-midnight tonight
MTomen s Gym 200 Anyone mtarasiad m
learning or practicing social or disco
<J«ncingis wek:ome
-"tapM OanMraMlBa informal practice
tor foratgn students and vititors 10 am
«r Jr^* »«» ^^nawtoys Acker
fnan 3517
--l5f""'^ inlormation and deadline
on entramural tundmg for graduate student
tlu "■?.*■''*'■•• «^ ivailable m the
u 2II?^?1 *'^ Aisistantship Section
Murphy 122B
applications are availaMa
tpday Murphy 2224 acceptim
formally advanced to candidacy for doc
lorai degress and rafislared Applications
may be submNlid at any time during ihe
yatr Grants of a maximum of S750 are
siids m January and July Forms are in
Oit Ussaarch Committee in the Acadamic
Sawsis Executive Office Murphy 3125
trainad mtarna will help you find funding
tor your ideas Open daHy 9 anM pm.
Kerckhotf 401
casting Government of India 7^ mm
today Bunche 4200 ^^
-A M af *Y 'KiiiS Ti
April 19. Math
4 pm
and kKal voluitteer positions are available
now^rough EXPO Ackerman A213 or call
In nilf^ JT"!.^ cJ'tcusaod by Dorothy
snf Bin Doyla. educators. 7 pm Apni te
iin auditorium
-TIM Caasm Nss^aMkim. mil ba dif.
Apf« 19J00 HIioafd Mi mm. April 20
PreMMMa. |oin OECA as a
conaumer investigator Visit Kerckhotf 311
or call 825 2820 Volunteers are also
naodsd for environmental and food pro-
jects
-4IC IMM Laftby CeJIrecMr PeaMed is
fwe available for a two-year tarm with the
UC Student Lobby in Sacranwnm Pays
$78^50 a month Requirements include
Jsni|Sracanl UC graduate and interest in
Jdocstlonal issues Pick up application m
Kerckhotf 306 Deadline is May 7 or call
— are available
iod due laiav Murphy 2224 accepting
D -•!?•••**• Caaialttee Applicslleaa 4of
Kreiidantial Advisory Committees are now
available Deadline is April 30 pick up
- applications at Ackerman information
desk Kerckhotf 304 and housing associa-
tions
,^ HM
. "J*"^ starring Jamas Caan will be
??!!? o J"^ •» pm tonight Ackerman
Grand Ballroom SI at the door
^ _ riMcuii
-«i^<Si* rock discovery sorias will
iTHiH T^'w*!^« a"*! )»" rock. 8:30 pm
tonigjtt Spfoul Entertainment Center Free
— ■■■ PerMraaaaa. lolf-choreographed
Students noon Apni 20 Schoenberg
auditorium •
SCMMAIIS
-Tb. Cycle ef Perealeai im|.7| „^
today Bunche 9313
'■•^^Mparary imM. somtnar and dis
cussion with Hon Mr 0t»aram Vir S.rSia
Otpoty Minister of Information and Broad^
Of ciaasicat himbk. tosture-musicaie wilt be
Pftsantad by NMmrd Feldman record
S^JLTaT^ '"'"•''"' *^^'''
part of Photography Viewpoints 76 8 pm'
April 20 Moore 100 12 50 for students
jsnior citizens, members of UCLA Arts
Council and Friands ot Photography 13
general admisaion « ^ y •j
SanMaBMBrtc BManMMNi al PMIHaei
•iisjNar in Argentina 1910-1900 2 pm
April 20. Bunche 6275
sad iriar la laraaH
4 pm. April 20 Bunche 3211
' _ MEETIMt
1 r^'"^!rL'*!?' ^^^^ ••" "••^ today
W pm Math Science 4223 Call 825-2031
tor raaarvation
T ■"'* f"** ^^ •'" moot 7-9 pm,
Toosdays. Oykstrs Recreation room and ?
J fm Fridays Woman's €ym 200 for all
interested irr learning and piacticinO bair
room dance
nooit April if Kinaoy 190
wiH moot and h^ a guast speaker 3 pm
April 19 Hamos 3M •
— CarlMlao SaMaaa TMMM^f. noon every
Monday 560 Hilj^d
Tsdsr's 6MMISS V
Hatha Vooa. noon-2 pm. Wtomam Gym 200
Karate 5-7 pm. Wamows Gym 200 Social
Oanoi 2-3 pm WosMM Gym 20: Tanms
- Singles Tournamant 2-4 pm South
Courts
WK>^-tH EfUCOUIITER GROUPS "
lH^t^lT/1 12 ^^^ ^^^ OPPOSITE sex
^ iTART A SBEAWINOFUL RELATIONSHIP
Phone: r!*!' '■•^•'"•" " ^«p^-"<:eo oroip L^LJTr^^^ ^ ^.^^
851.7131 ^^ ^ Spauldmo Ave . Hoi lyw^ DONATION
SWI fIJl * Wk, ••« ot Faff... N^ suneet Blvd $2^
N0« OPfta
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FIZZA
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The Beatles
"YELLOW
SUBMARINE'
SATURDAY NIGHT
APRIL 17
8.30 pm gOGHMgard
474-1531
daHy bfvjin
DBEditorial
We must have a voice
Letters to the Editor
Le«t Friday. In our zest to get ftie
University of Cellfornle out of the
nuclear weapohs business, we recom-
mended that the UC sett Its weapons
laboratories to the federal government.
This would be rather dlfflcuH, seeing
as the federal government already
owns the weapons labe at Llvermore^
California, and Los Alamos, New
•••xico. Under the contract between
the UC and the federal government, the
UC merely operates the laboratories for
the Energy Research and Development
Administration (£ROA), a government
agency.
Our error, tfu>ugh caused by Ir^x-
cuaably sloppy Journalism, is indicative
of the complexity of this Issue — the
ramifications of a university actively
Involving itself in warmaidng. We admit
there ars reasonable arguments that
the development of nuclear weapons is
a necessary evil. Laboratory scientists
and government officials have told us
they laei ttie University of California Is
Iheagency best suited to running the
deeign phas« of tfie weapons program!
On the other hand, there is little
dhect contact between the UC proper
and ttiese weapons laboratories. Deter-
mination of the kind of work and
weapons devised at theee labs is de-
cided by lab administrators and the
tederal government. University Hall in
Bericeiey, much less Itie UC faculty or
students, t\myt% absolutely no say over
what goes on at these labs from year to
y§%mf. And because of tfie specialized
naturs of weapons work these days, the
spinoffs to pure science and advance-
ment of general knowledge are minimal
at best
It la for tliese rtasons — mt%^ not for
any paranoia about the University
being a "Merchant of Death** -r that we
opf>ose tile continuation of ttie Univer-
aity's involvement in weapons woric.
Sato
(Editors n€Me: Posner is sn
associate editor in the Enter-
tainment Inden seaion of the
Daily Bruin.)
Things are not always what
•iwy iSSfn. Astute readers may
have noticed a story buried at
Nobody really did anything
by Howard Posner
the top of page on« in last
Wednesday's Daily Brum about
OPINION
social scientist S. Calum Gilfillan.
Interested readers would have
found that Gilfillan subscribes to
the looney theory, nan>ed after
the English schoolmaster who
dct^rrntned in 1920 that Shakes-
psare's plays were written by
hdm^d de Vere. Earl of 0»ford
^mmkm^ on Page 4)
Editor:
I want to clarify sorpe of the
things said m Greg Reneau'i
feature story on me that ran in
the Diily Bruin of- April 14
I did say that some of the
Bruiij players were assholes, but
I also said that several of them
were both great players and
persons, but that was not in-
cluded in my -feature story
Also some phrases and words
that were in the story such as
"ideology" and "kickback" are
not in my regular vocabulary I
really think that the UCLA stu-
dent body has gotten the wrong
impression of me.
I love playing volleyball -and
playing against UCLA in Pauley
Pavilion IS a great experience I
want the Brum student body to
know that I would rather play
against UCLA than any other
school
What I said was in reference
to a few players in particular arid
rKW the overaH sq^jad as the
story implied. ^^
Gary Sato
UCSS Voaeyball TeaiM
Women's Day
I don't always get to see the
Daily Brum, but I have caught
bits aryd pieces of the comments
generated by International Wo>
men's Day.
Certaifi of these blame sexism
on the Capitalist syst^ This is
wrofig. First off, the economic
*y«l*m in this country is not
capiulist It M lomething Uke SO
P^f cent imcht {pri\ate "owner:
*hip"/go¥Sfnment control). 18
per cent socialist (government
ownership ^nd control) Mnd
maybe two per cent capitalist
(laissez-faire. that is) But ih*i
isn't what Im getting at
Secondly, and this is what I m
getting at. sexism, ^nd m twin,
racism, along with other preju-
dices, are in the mindl of in-
dividuals Bigotry may exist un-
der any ecomonic >yngm. How
mviduals relate to each other on
a one-to-one basis is where
bigotry lies. The man who b#.
lieves women are ipso faao his
inferiors and nuist act helpleu.
passive and childish ^nd limit
themselves to a confinirtg role is
a male chauvinist, pure and
simple He is bigoted whether
he lives m a socialist, fascist,
capitalist or miited. economic
system. No amount of legislation
will change his little mir%d, he
must do It himseH The same
goes for whites who cannot
visually blacks in any but the
RiSit Menial positions.
I penonally advocate laissez-
faire capitalism However, in any
kind of economic system, the
only way to end discrimination
H for the individual to prove
herself or himself by productive
work.
94 tfw D^ §ru
Local
Society i€H
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More on who did or did not
Th« script, photography, direction
and parformancas ara practically
incomparabla.
NSC-TV
♦ ^ -
* -v^
I
-\>
Lina Wertmulltr b ^CVGTI
Beauties
.ahals what they call hint
!>tjrrinj;Gijncjrk)Gijnnini R,
MMM ■••« i aiMk t •« Will Hi Mart I iiyai, . I 20 ) 40 « • 70 10 K)
AVCO CENTER CINEMA
(CoRtiatied from Pafe 5)
Fascinated readers would
' have learned that looney »nd
Cilfillan based their conclusiorn
ori 17 reasons why. Shakespeare
could not hav^ written hrs plays
— for exaffiple, the Mrriter would
have neeiied a classical educa-
tion, been a liberal Catholic, an
"eccentric and time-waster," a
noble with Lancastrian sympa-
thies, and a lover of music, out-
doiQr sports, and Italy.
Informed readers might have
protested that Shakctpeare's
lack of university Latin and
Creek is a refreshing element iri
his writing or thjt there is no
reason Shakespeare needed to
be a Lancastrian Catholic, but
the point is academic since
everyone knows ShakcipMrc's
plays were written by Christo-
pher Marlowe anyway.
The important thing is that we
realize we've been sold fairy
tales by historians — uneduca-
ted country bumpkins, high
. school dropouts, kids raised irr
slunr>s, and undergraduates Mre
simply incapable of making sig-
nificant contributions to human
culture. It jusr doesn't happen
And in nearly every case where
people have thought it happen-
T ed, a r>ew breed of htstprijips is
boldly asserting that the impro-.
bably is usually impossible.
Went Give You The
Prmie Rib Off Our Back . . .
Well, AlmoMtl
f
Includes
So
Saturdays 9c Sundays
only through May 2
Soup or
Roast Prime Rib^, \u Jm
(the way you like it)
Vorlisliirc Pudding
Baked Potato
CreaMcd Spinach
Roll B* Sutter
For A Complete Prime Rib Dinner
PhMc Rib Dinner Served 4 P^. to I i P.M.
f lus — A Special Get-Acquainted Student Discount
SI. OS off the price of
TWO prime rib dinners for TWO pcrMOs!!
Bring this ad — or — stew your student I.D.
Dolores West — Open 24 Hours — Home of the J-J"
Jumbo Jim Hamburgers made famous at our sister restaurant.
Dolores Drive-ln, Beverly Hills
|1407 SANTA MONICA SLVD., W.L.A. (At Purdua)
OPEN 24 HOURS (477 106I)
iiife 1
fv
whic!h is only common sense.
MusiciarH are learning to
accept the overwhel mi r>g evi-
dence that the works attributed
to Beethoven, a rude, ugly, un-
cultured kid from the sticks,
were actually composed by
Mozart, an acknowledged ge-
nius who staged his own
"dMh" to avoid creditors m
1791, just when Seefhoven
arrived in y/ienm. writes profes-
sor Rockwell Davis of Quincy
CoNofe in his definitive Mozart
Mid the SalieH ENect (1%9)
Michelangelo, a lad with no
artistic background in his family,
could scarcely have painted the
Sistine Chapel ceiling, says
Roger Bloheard of the Pangloss
Museum. Using brilliant re-
search techniques, Bloheard
proves that the ceiling was de-
signed by the aficig Leonardo 6i
Vinci and executed by a team of
400 midgets equipped with suc-
tion-soled basketball shoes. The"'
technique is detailed beyond all
reasonable doubt in rmiom of
the Plartet (197S),
Americans, are hardly immune
from historical hallucination,
notes Harold lanos of the L^ni-
versity of Minnesota at f^4$hi^-
kee. jarKM, author qf V 1|W
Missing Lincoln (1972')> offers
overwhelming proof that Abra-
ham Lincoln could not have
been responsible for the Gettys-
burg Address.
"Lincoln was an illiterate/' he
says in chapter 11. All those
stories about him walking 10
miles in the snow to get to
school have -been clearly de-
bunked by detailed examina-
tions of the shoes he wore a$ a
child.
Actually, asserts larios, the
speech had to have been written
by a brilliant politician and
writer possessed with a know-
ledge oi his importance in the
scheme of history.
"All evidence points to Jeffer-
son," he says in Chapter 1.9, who
intended to use it if civil war
broke out over Virginia and
Kentucky's nullification of the
Alien and Sedition Acts. The first
line originally read Four square^
and seven (i.e. 23) years ago'
"This would give the speech a
date of ITWi which is just about
right," concludes '|ar>os.
Even this small sampling of
The New History should con-
vince us that we must constantly
reevaluate our store of know-
ledge. We may discover that
nobody wrote anything — or we
nrwiy discover that historical r^r
visjonists like myself are dead
wrong. Frankly, it doesn't bother
me. I didn't write this column
anyway.
LEARN SPANISH WHILE YOU
SEE SPAIN OR MEXICO
Two student tours conductad by Spanish
teachars (for beginnars or brushing up):
All around Spain. 21 days departing August 1 Santa
Monica College oflers thras lamaster units with four
pre-departure evening meetings $1068 double
" Mexico City-Taxco-Acapulco. 8 days departing June
15. $330 double.
ACE WORLD TRAVEL
11554 Santa Monica Blvd.. WLA
4777671
Missing it would be the most ridiculous mistake you ever madef
EXPO
CENTER
TRAVEL
FAIR
AMO SUMMER
OPPORTUNITIES
EXPOSmON
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY
10AM TO 4PM
ACKERMAN GRAND BALLROOM
• •PKialiy wmtktia Btmtop, at lh« door and win a f««
P"zx Jumtoiott^ EXPO MHa aiM Ml itwn, CapMn SpauWing
you ^
A service of me OMiet <^ Exp^mviental CtfuMlOiMi Pr
and Campus AflMfS
Hoat San DIeflo State tonight
Volleyballers go for
'W,>
By MidMMl
Da Spofto Writer
UCLA basketball team won
crucial back-to-back games
against Washington and Orc-
asa State, but for some un-
txplainable reason came up
flat against Oregon and were
soundly beaten, 65-45, in
Pauley Pavilion Tonight at
7:30 pm in Pauley Pavilion,
the UCLA volleyball squad
faces a similar set of circum-
itaacct when it plays Saa
Diego Sute.
The Bruini (9-2) are coming
off "big" wins against Pepper-
dine and UC Santa Barbara,
but they must defeat San
Diego Stale tonight to force a
one-match playoff with Pep-
perdme (10-2) for the NCAA
berth to Muncie. Indiana.
- Automatic berth
*•![ we want the automatic
NCAA berth, we must defeat
San Diego Stale,'* said Al
Scales, UCLA head coach.
"Our players were thinking
about San Diego Slate the
■Mnuie they hit the showers
"■fter^anla Barbara, so i don't
think we will have a ktdown.*"
San Diego State, under
coach Eddie Machado. is the
most improved team m the
league over the past month
The Aztecs (5-6) have added 6-
5 freshman Mike ;i>odd ta
their rosier Dodd, the CIF
Player of the Year last season
at Mira Costa High School,
has done an outstanding job at
middle blocker He is ahead of
brother Ted (Pepperdine All-
American candidate) at sim-
ilar stages of development
-v^'We are right now looking
ahead to the Regionals nexi
weekend in Pauley Pavilion,
but ^^ wilf be trying our best
to beat the Bruins," said
Machado "UCLA has an out-
standing learn and is tough to
beat al home.**
the
•*Owa
Scales plans to kave
Bruins **pUiy their own
•aMst the Aztecs -The way
Eddie mixes his lineups, you
cannot gear for one p&yer, so
you must play your own
game,** said Scales.
Machado usually itahs three
freshmen, two iumers and a
senior, with a freshman and
sophomore in reserve Besides
Dodd, 6-4 freshman Bob No-
wakowtky and 6-0 Palisades
freshman Richard Norton
start Norton and junior Steve
Baldwin do the setting, with
junior Peter Ogle, who has just
recovered from a broken hand,
ready to play in reserve.
Senior team captain Ron
McElhany is a middle blocker,
with 6-1 junior Rich Johnson
as the other outside hitter
Freshman Cliff AaM4tn and
•ophomore Tim Meredith are
top substitutes
UCLA will use the same
lineup it has gone with against
use, Pepperdine and Santa
Barbara
Pauley PaviUon has iruly
acted ss i home court Tor lie
Bruins. UCLA is 7-0 at home
this season, and all of iu best
nuiches have been in West-
wood
"The home fans have helped
our team tremendously, espe-
cially against Pepperdine and
Santa Barbara," laid Scales
**There is no question the fans
help keep our airenahn going,
and I even got excited a ccNiple
of limes against Santa
Barbara.**
I
Spend the-
Shabbat of Pasaover
•t Hlllel
Friday April 26 6:30 pm
services with Neil Daniels
followed by Kiddush and dessert
Hillel 900 Hilgard 474-1531
INTERNSHIP
GPPERTUNITIES
With
Leading Democratic Candktala
Congressional Campaign
Limned. Paid Positions Available
450-4557
^1
I
1
EASTER MEANS
THE BEACH IS
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the athletic department
1317 Wettwood Blvd.
(Wettwoad)
Lot Angeles. CalHaniia
! I I
(213) 473^6467
Bafore you slip into your suit and hand for the beach ba
sure you re lean and mean. Stop by The Athlatic Dapt
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If you're not sure how aak for the special AD training
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and romano cheeses.
Linguini: A most versatile and very-thin
noodle. Popularly, but simply served with
either red or white clam sauce.
VuiJizzL 1
wo ^iuui
xom
OtuL
1M4 ClaitfHi at
Val. Parklnc Wstwd. Ctr. BUg.
477-2941
ATTENTION
MINORITY STUDENTS WITH
CAREER PLANNING
CONCERNS
A repreaantative from the California Slate Pecsonnal
Board will t>e on campus to provide career information
for aN majors. In addition, a rapraaantatlva from the
State Department of Fish and Game will alao be hara to
provide aanaal caraar Mafwattaa for
and iaiany ma)ofs No sign-upe nacassary.
DalK Tueeday, Apia 30, ItTf
Tlma: 2-4 pjn.
For further inforniation contact: Randy
Affairs Rapraeentative. Placefaant and
Camar. BIdg 1G^«2S-29t1/
u. Minority
Plannir>g
TlM Gypsy Wagon
Is now
OPEN
SATURDAYS!
10:00 - 3:00
ASUCLA'a Snack Bar
in baautiful
North Campua
• hamburgara
• hot doga
• aandwichaa
• aoHdrlnka
• daM aandwichaa
and tsladi
• Wallar Whaafbtinnlaa
Vi^'
•fc
i
I
i
m
Sun. Aprl. 25 11:00 - 5:00 for MardI Gras
tiNi^ Itoy ,2 11M - 5:00 tor UCLA Opwi Houm
11
i.11 iiii 'i
Cantab prayifM for miracle
I
* ^-
i
njjgjIllKLutheran
otrothmore &Gavlev
By Jm Y<
0% Sports Wtter
Suaiord it a tduwl witikNtt
religiout afTiliations. Evca to,
iu tflMTk and field vmm wiU be
pmyinf hard this weekend —
it would take close to a mir-
acle for then to wm.
The Cardmaii take os
UCLA ia a dual aMCt at Palo
Alto with the Bruiat 30-40
poiat favorites to crush the
r-C — "
S '•
■ ' - ,'
i
ACADEMY AWARD
WINNER
BEST FEATURE
DOCUMENTARY
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^' ■
**We*re not deluding our-
hm with ideas of an upsct,"
taid Sunford head coach Pay-
ton Jordan. "We don't have
the depth or the personnel that
UCLA has We recognize them
as one of the top two or three
tOMBi in the country."
Jordan explained that his
Cardinals think in oerms of
individual rather than team
performances because of their
undermanned status. His squad
has to — Stanford is picked to
^6ih hMt in the Pac-« chart-
pinulupB in May.
**rm just hoping that our
kids compete very weU," con-
unued Jordan, -and that we
doti*t get emMirrasaad."
The encounters offers UCLA
a breath of fresh air. After six
hoae dual meets and nz weeks
AfMat top-notch oppooenu,
the Bruins arc tuckered out
**I should have never sched-
uled a meet during finals
week,- UCLA head coach Jim
Bush said last WMek, "I learned
a valuable lei6on.**
Bush plans td shuffle his
lineup against the Cardinals
and hold several pe<
• /■
SUMMER FULL TIME
EMPLOYMENT
EARN $2460.00
For; 1 Industrious 2 Dependable
persons who can leave California.
For personal appointment Call 479-4139
A JOB FOR ALL SEASONS
A CAREER FOR ALL REASONS
F/y with
TWA
TWA representatives will be m Los
Angeles to discuss fOb opportunities
in me Flight Attendant (steward/
stewardess) position Briefings will be held
i^ ♦•
Ltr?^'!'!!.?,.""' '"" """ ""•""•** *"' *^ =°"^"Cled afterward, w.th those who
wish to apply. It « recommended that you hM« Mveral hours available
To apply, you must meet the foUowing basic requirements
^^ZnTf f uT**" *^ ** '^ ••"*^ propoM.6n.f •..gn, US c......n.p or
POWM»i.on Of • US ptmmnf^ fw.itenf «.«• h.^ ,chool eip4om« or thiii .lini
!»»• p«f •!■ monmt ar* not •lig.bi* for conft.a^«iH>f> •« th., f,m*
INTERVIEWS AT HYATT LOS ANGELES INTERNATIONAL
6225 West Century Btvd at entrance to L A^
Airport.
Monday April 19 Tuesday Apr.i ?o and W9&-
nesday April 21
10 00 A M 2 00 PM and 6 00 P ^-^
Room
NO TELePHOM€ CALLS. PLCA9C
■^ »h# Geld
EOOA. wPt- », *
'»r'
The purpose is to give his
athletes a hreak fron their
regular events or to let them
rest up for the long awaited
encoiiiiter with USC May 1.
Top Westwood performers
who may skip action are Ben-
nie Myles, Grant Niederhaus,
James Owens. Boh Thomas
and Gary Nitti Their ahaaaec
will be a partial answer to the
Cardiaai*! prayers.
M)rlet, the Bruin*i top quar-
icr-oular, Wazed to a 45.« 400
IB his first meet, but his times
have dwindled lately Bush
exphiined that Bennie was ''juft
tired from fmaJs and things
will get bener - Myles may run
the 200 agMMt Sunford
Hurdlers Owens and Nied-
erhaus are still suffering from
ihght leg strains and are ex-
pected to return for the show-
down with the Trojaaa. They
long mtieage oMa on tkt
He is the grandson of Olympic
pole vaulter Sam Beilah (1 90S
and 1912).
James Lofton it ScairfonTs
top field evcnu perfiwai He
will compete m both the triple
Md long jiuaps but his
■pnrialry is the latter event, in
which -look ninth m tha
NCAA*s as a freshman last
year He has a bait of 25-3
1/4.
The CanTs landing weight
man is John Olenchalk, ^ho
has thrown 54-0 in -the shoe
and 144-4 in the diacus. la the
fall, the 230 pound Olenchalk
If a starting linahncker on the
Sunford football team.
Other Sunford performers
of note are intermediate hurd-
ler Matt Hogaett. quarter-miler
Akm Sheau and sprmier
Marvin Holmes.
don*t want to risk aggravating BRUIN TRACK NOTES- The
their injuries against the Card- UCLA wm streak now stands
*"^!: M I, ^ cr. '^^^ straight and is not bable
The deck shuffling invlovai to be broken this weekend
Jeff Haynes (switched from the Rich Owner heaved his dis-
800 to the 1,500) and Steve cus 190-6 against Orcaon InM
Beck (1,500 to the 800). weekend for a personal bm
SUnford*s only strength lies But the Brum lost to the
IL^^^?^ ^^^*' "^^^ ^"^*^*» ^^« Voorhees (201-8)
the Red Birds are led by Tony for his first defeat of the year
Sandoval and Jack BelUh. With Thomas and Nitti oiit
Sandoval, a senior from Los of the 5,000, two less exper-
Alamos, New Mexico, is a ienced Bruins are fillint in -
candidate for the Montreal AJhn Bakah (14:00.0 three
Olympics m the marathon mile), from India via Holly-
He s not bad in shorter races wood High and Dona Bosweil
cither, especially the 5.000 (15.W 4)
nf^*; i^^/'^A ^^ !^«"»^ ^"" y<=^LA will try to continue
a^inst UCLA Sandoval holds its new found depth m the
the Card s top times at one, spnms tomorrow |>otaQn WM-
IRfth and seventh place fin- most of the season, but last
irtcs in the Pac-8 six mile the week he was aided by Orhui4n
hshed BclUh as one of the top ing their f,r« sUruT^ 1976
University of
San Fernando Valley
COUEGE OF LAW
Announcing:
^ALL SEMESTER 1976
• Full-time 3-year day program
• Pnrt-tinio 4my and evenirtg programa
fULlV ACCRlDirtl)
In rh#« ( imimift- - .. m . i nin«fs
St. Iff B.ii ( )i V Kih »r»i, I
fel: (21 i) H*#4 '»71 |
8353 SepHlvetfa IM.. Stpilveia. Ca 91343
GRADUATE
STUDENTS
There is still time to run for
GSA Office this year.
Elective offices are:
President
1st Vice-President
2nd Vice-President
Petitions may be picked up in Kerckhoff 301
Petitions are due not later than 3:00 pm
on Wednesday April 21.
There is a mandatory candidates meeting
on Friday April 23 at noon
in Kerckhoff 301
--t
»^«
/ >
a
mm: tar
Batmen attempt to duplicate sweep ofDCSB
• ** «»«• WHtar i«.- A^.^.*L IT.r^ ^***' ^^m »ot ready to st^ I
w^*-
•1 stiU don't know if we can
wia It. We have doae a tot of
things right, hut V\\ know
more after this weekend*
Gary Adams. UCLA'i head
??_?* •••cfc* was trymg to
iMWcr a question on whether
or not the Bruins can mainuin
their lofty position in the
CahfonMa Intercollegiate Base-
tell Aaaoantion
The Bruins arc currently tied
with USC for the first place m
the CIBA. Both taMM have 8^
records Thii weekend, the
Trojans have a conference bye
while the Bruins, 24-16 overall
face UC Sama Baitefa (1-9)
three times.
Today'i game at Sawtelle
Field starts at 3 pm After the
gaaie, the team will bus to
SaaU Barhara where they wilJ
plmy a doubichcader beginning
at noon tomorrow.
Three-gane aatias
The last time the two teams
met the Bruins swept the three-
game series, and Adams is
hopeful of duplicating the ef-
fort this weekend. He will send
Tim ONeiU (5-1, 1 64 eari^
run average) to the mound
taday, with Steve Bianchi (4-2,
3.01) and Ed Cowan (5-2, 3.89)
getting the call tomorrow
With Cowan seemingly re-
covered from a sore arm,
the Bruins could have the
strongest pitching routioa m
the conference, although
Adams respects Stanford's
suff
"The most pleasing thing
Mlii yeaf JUa lo ha
m." Adams said -It has really
'^^n • pleasant surpnie.**
The Brums* offense has alao
heen pleasant, although that's
■^ much of a surprise Before
the season Adams expected
this area to he the team's
•trongest. and although the
ic*m hatting averaged over sia
nm per game.
Six kOM IWi
Wednesday Afternoon the
Bruins slugged six home runs
while beating up on Southern
Cahfornia College. 12-3. Fint
baseman Ken Gaylord aad
third baseman Earl Battey beh-
ed two each while second base-
man Bobby Dallas and left
fielder Dave Baker each chip-
ped in with one.
Gaylord now leads the squad
with six, one ahead of Battey
Dallas and shon stop Robbie
Henderson Despite missing 12
games, Battey leads in runs
tetted in with 25. followed by
Gaylord (23). Baker, Dallas.
Henderson and center fielder
Dave Penniall (22).
Another development Wed-
nesday was the varsity debut of
Raymond Townscnd. a surtiog
guard on this year's NCAA
third place basketball squad. A
shortstop, he saw action in the
late inninp and picked up a
couple of mfield hits
Defensive ability
However, Adams is not that
interested in Townsend's hat.
He IS more concerned with his
defensive ability — the reaaflii '
the sophomore will probably
be a starter in the near future.
il Sports
Tht Kbedules for mens handball, waier polo and softball will
be oui today after noon Mens table tennis sigh-ups will be taken
■s" w2ne^*:rAj?i. '^ '"^' ''' '^ '''" "" ^^ "« «°" -""^
Coed volleyball schedules and coed innertubc waterpolo will be
ready this afternoon The All-Cal competn.on will continue next
week alsa Coed bowling sign-ups must be in by today and
individuals are welcome
NOW AT A FLAGSHIP THEATRE NEAR YOU
Ho /^uuu ^ou 6819 UA Oa MM Torrancs 542 SIM
447^75
MaM
K4-772S
UA ciaaMt Lss
ttWTEP AATISTt
~~^m BOC ready to start him
y^" Ada«» itolad after Wa^
••iday game -Robbie (Hen-
^lerson) has done a fiie ioh
with the bat but has ha#i>rob-
Icms defensively We'll just
have to wait and saa."
Henderson has been mm of
the top Brum hitters all season
In fact, his .309 average trails
only infielder Jerry Waters
(344) and first baseman Brian
ViseUi (.312). But his range in
the iiU Taaraaeiid's
strength - has left tMKthing
to be desired, and because of
this the sophomore will prpb-
•hly be sUrting before long.
UCLA strong
UCLA seems strong at all
other pMiiions, with Gaylord
and Visellj at first. Dallas
(.297) at second and Battey
(.2S2) and Waters at third
Baker ( 2W), who had three
hiU Wednesday, and Pennuill
(•^ •od a team leading 19
■•••■" hases aad 38 runs
scored) are solid everyday
players AdaoH will probably
m€ either junior Larry Silver
(229, 4, 19) or freilMHin Jjm,
Auten (.257) m right, with
Dennis Delany (.253) liehind
the plate
As the DH. Adams will
protebly go arich either Hen-
derson or one of the first or
third bsKmen.
^^JCELEBRATE LIFE
^ WJTH
WESLEY FOUNDATION AT U.C.L A
, €000 NHDAV BfTaiAf ~ AMMI U
'• iaswe uac tcornw Le f nias iiilaiiij) m
1 poi Return Sat. at 2 p.iii.
O^erniphi 41 C»nm Co%y
iASTfa SUNDAY ~ ^SSin
' pm - "CeMralion ol Hi* lord* Supper
a.muh*-medi« prvMncation at
WesiwaadUMC •
1*4t7 WMthire Ulvd
\w
n
r-
KING OF
HEARTS
I
i
.nn.Dg
EXCLUSIVE ENQAaEMENT
0A»I.V2.«
ieMth of WHslMf«
IS H
##
If Pulitzer prixes were awarded for
films, I would vote for one for
'AU THE PRESIDENT'S MEN V
/ .
gHALIT. NBC-TV
REDFORD/HOFFMAN
'AUIHEPRESDENT^MBf
I
fO^
'•••
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ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
L«t US thip your p#rion«| effscU hoflis. mm mt^
iniernatK>n«t pAckAging and t^tppmB )M» alto «N
PACtFIC-KING iii«w«^M.«t:u.
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5651 WEST CFNTURY BOULFVARD I OS ANGFl FS CALIFORNIA 90045
ASTOr«SH»^
"ASTONISHIMGf Taxi Orivtr'
l«M imiiclt'Uiiiinfl, skin prickling
wi^tim IImC iNiildi like an air
lUd siren." — Ch«rl«s Champim -
C OLUM«A PK'tURES pirvrnis
ROBERT DE NIRO
TAXI
DRIVER
iSiakitiBci Srf«<k4-<.bk !k-MOT l%f^» Mrti^
IM (k%m. itO 4 00 too.
a 10 ft i*^jtnM
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OAltV 7 00«i4 0
OAILV 12 M. 3 30 4 30 kt ft 8Mt. 1M. >:
ft3i. a Sift 10 3onM s oo. 7 aa «•« ftraa
Women softbalers sti lifb^ten
By MUlc Tev(
DS Spiortt Ri^drlv
On a tembly cold aai ihady Wednesday
afternoon, at their hone field of McManui
Park (a itmpk ''no frills** field toarwhcre in
Culver City), the UCLAs women's lafthall
team destroyed another non-opponent, Cal
Bapiial, 20-L
The outrafedus final score is not so much an
indication of the Bruins* ability teven though
they are considered one of the top teams m the
western United Sutes) as it is an indication of
Cal Baptist's lack of same.
However, this is not to say that the women
don't deserve credit for being able to retain
their competitive edge and give their less
talented opponents the drubbing tiKy deserved.
**We*re 6-0, but we haven't had very much
competition,** mid coach Sharon Backus ""Next
week, when we play Riverside, San Diego Sute
and Golden West, will be a real teat," she
added
The Bruin's had a little troable getting used
to Baptist's relatively slow pitching, but by the
second inning that problem was solved as the
Bntin*s exploded for eight runs
Centcrficldcr Sue Enquist, who went iwo-for-
two with four RBl's, doubled to drive in two
1. 1 1 I
ntnt in the teeend, but the big blow of the
inning was a three-run homer by left fielder
SaUy McCaU.
According to her coach, Enquist is probably
the team's most well rounded player $he is a
solid defensive player and one of the taani's
leading hitters. Last season she batted .409 and ,
led the team m hits with 2t.
For the past MHion and a JMiif, tiic _
staff has almost exclusively consisted o1
Charlene Wnght. WadniiiiJay, ahc struck out
five on her wav to pitching a ooe-hitter.
Her only shaky inning was the third, when
she gave up a single up the middle (the runner
eventually sconng on a, sacrifice bunt).
Wright, ^ho pitched \\% of the Bruin's 131
itimngs last year, also had a better than averapr
day at the plate Wednesday as she collected
two baK hiu and scored three runs during the
Bruin's romp.
After the Bruin's added four runs in the third
and five more in the fourth to increase their
land to 20-1, the game was literally called off
because of a lack of competition There is a
rule that states that a game be terminated if
more than 10 runs separate the two teams in
the fifth inning Needless to say, that rule
applied.
UCLA crews face California tomorrow
By Mfte FlMgoM
DB Sport! Writer
This weekend is polluted
Ballona Creek oi Marina l>el
Key, the UCLA men's and
women*s crew will host the
Cahfomia Bears in what
promises to be one of the most
exciting dual-races of the year.
But the race will be run in
two different ways. On one
hand, the UCLA rowers will
•qwve off against ahwiyi
tough Cal. On the other hand,
the men and women's crews
will trade off in the running of
their races. At the early hour
of 8:30 am the first of nine
raoaa Will begin.
Foe ^llK women, it will be
OBly the second race of the
year in their Opeiv Eight boat
and the first fdr the novice
eight. --^y
As for the men, they have
had a more extensive schedule
up to this point. The men
rowers had five prennaon ra-
oaa, a season opener against
Orange Coast College four
weeks ago, and the San Diego
Crew Classic two weeks later,
this will be their first regular-
home race of the sea-
CONTEMPORARY ART SURVEY
presents
HANS
HAACKE
lecture/discussion
8:00 pm
Friday, April 16
Dickson Aud. 2160E
son. Cal IS certainly a formid-
able opponent, proving to be
the fastest West Coast shell on
the water at this point of the
season.
WooMn's erew plugs away
The rowers of the women's
crew team, with unfavorable
workout conditions, keep plug-
ging away Desire must cer-
tainly be there for so many
Bruin women to row every
morning at Manna Del Key
The women rowers accom-
plished quite a feat last sea-
son when, in the obscurity of
the summer break, a four per-
son boat captured a national
championship.
In ^on^ast, then men rowers
don't have the laurels to rest
on. With a rowing program
rich in experience and want.
expect * good tanaon from
several groups of men The
freshman program in particular
is strong, according to aintCaat
varsity and head frosh coach
Norm Witt, a bownaan on last
year's varsity eight.
In §MKral, optimism reigns
in crew for the men, as they
surprised the rowing world
with a very strong showing in
the San Diego Crew Classic
The classic showcMSd 14
teams, including some of the
very best squads m the nation:
Wisconsin, last year's national
varsity champion; Harvard, the
number one team on the East
Coast of last season; Wash-
ington, the top crew on the
West Coast, and MIT, always
a strong team, were among the
teams And the Bruins showed
the "" Classic**, had a good name
with a clasay performance.
UCLA surprised many crews
by turning in a good per-
formance. In fact., the only
school which outclassed the
Westwood oarsman among
western teams was California.
The always strong Bears plaoed
third, a tenth of a second
behind Pennsylvania, in an
early, early preview to the
nationals.
Before Cal can go back east
for nationals, however, it will
have to contend with a couple
of other strong teams Wash-
ington, last ymttt West Coast
top team, is certainly going to
be a factor. AIm, the Bruins
are going to start peaking
beginning this weekend.
X)HN ^
SCHLESINGER '
SEMINAR
Screenings of films and qutfst speakers'
Conrad Hall
Burgess Meredith
John Schlesinger
\
H
\
PTfr. SLC 8CA
2
SHERWOOD OSG
-EXPBaMENTAL COLLEGE
HdI>v«h»<. Calilorni* flOOM
t21S> 4«2««»
^ Jniins fece Cardinals for number one spot
Kaplaa
WrHer
Two weeks ago, the Bruins
routed the nation's second-
ranking Stnaford Cardinals, 8-
1 la a day-night match here.
They were the first collegiate
matches ever sttgad MMide
Pauley Pavihon.
T omorrow, nation's num-
ber-one ranked Bruins (16-0),
of 3i stiiughi mafrhcs
over the last two season, face
their toughest challenge of
1976 in the rematch against
Stanford's revenge-seeking
Cardinals (10-2) They are
coming off an impressive 6-3
win over the nation's third-
ranked Trinity University.
The Bruins defeated Cahfor-
nui yesterday for their 16th
straight dual-match victory of
the season and 45th consecu-
* ttve win over Cahfornia since
1953
Action begins on the Stan-
ford outside courts at I pm,
with first and second singles
and first doubles matches be-
ing held in Maples Pavilion
beginmng at 6:30 pm.
A crowd of over -» 6,000 is
expected tomorrow night.
At stake is the Pacific 8
dual-RUitch championship,
which the Bruin won last year
en route to both their fifth
Pacific 8 team title in the last
eight years and the NCAA
learn championship.
7 UCLA coach Glenn Bassett
Itts refrained from makins anv
comparisons between this
year's UCLA team and his
Bruin championship squads of
1971 and 1975
in addition, the tenth-year
Bruin coach has also shied
away from questions aimed at
getting him to compare the
current number one UCLA
singles player to Brum stars of
the past Billy Martin, Jim-
jny Connors, Arthur Ashe and
Sun Pasarell, to name a few
The reason for such restraint
is simpte^! according to the
Bruin coach.
''UCLA has had numerous
outsunding players who have
gone on to star in the profes-
sional ranks,*" said Bassett
"They have all been evaluated
in college on a single season's
perforaHMKe or a multi-year
career at UCLA I don't ne
how 1 can make an honest
comparison without having
seen Peter (Fleming) play on
the road.
**This a our first road trip of
the season and we are facing
the second-ranked team in the
nation in Stanford, a team
which had won 42 consecuuve
home matches since 1971. The
Bruins defeated the Cardinals
twice last year. 5-4, in regulax-
season and 6-3 in the Pacific 8
Championships;
''Peter will be playiog tomor-
row night at first singles before^
several thousand people in
Maplas Pavilion. I might be
able to make comparisons after
this weekend's play.** said Baa>
.sett.
Fleming is undefeated in
singles dual-match play this
season (9-0) and has lost only
two sets all season long.
**Peter has done a tremend-
ous job for us this season. He
didn't begin to get a nation-
wide repuution as a star play-
er until recently becanaa he
didn't win any prestipaut
national or international junior
tournaments, like a Jimmy
Connors or Billy Martin.**
STANK>tO
Singles:
Pat DuPre 7-2
Bill M^ze 6-5
Matt Mitchell 8-3
or Gene Mayer 0-0
Mark Mitchell 7-3
John Rast 9-3
Perry Wright 6-2
Doubles:
Maze-DuPre 1-3
Mark Mitchell- Mayer
Wright-Matt Mitchell 1-0
mOBABLf UNEUfS UCLA
Peter Fleming 9-0
Brian Teacfwr g-0
Ferdi Taygan 6-0
Bruce Nichols 13-1
lohn Austin 14-1
Tony Graham 12-1
Flaming-Teacher 4-0
Tai^n-Nichols 1-1
Austin-Graham 6-2
or Austin-Luts Enck
1-0
BLACK STUDENT
ALLIANCE
GENERAL MEETING
2 P.M. Today
3564 Ackerman Union
Topics:
Admissions and Elections
r
SCWIAC diamp wom^ netters host Stanford, Long Beadi
. -UCLA women's tennis team,
the new' SCWIAC champion,
will have its hands full when it
hosts the number- one Stanford
Cardinals at I pm today on the
Sunset Courts.
The northerners have beaten
highly regarded Trinity Uni-
versity once this season. They
should provide the Bruins wit4)
their toughest test of the sea-
son.
''We'll have to pUy the best
tennis we've played all year to
even have a shot at them.**
remarked coach Bill Zaima.
"We're pretty even with our
number one through four
players, but at numbers five
and six they are extremely
strong."
The team is returning after a
decisive victory over UC Ir-
vine. Although tfic women
played uninspired tennis, it
enough to topple the lonrly
Anteaters, who lost to the
Bruins for the second time this
season.
'*We actu^y were looking
forward to the Stanford
match," said Zaima. "It's ac-
tually a maaawe of our
strength that we didn'f phiy
very well and still won.**
UCLA cMi*t afford to be
sluggish against Stanford. They
are led by Pan American gold
medalist Lelc Forood Stan-
ford does not compete m
SCWIAC play (because in Zai-
ma's words, "they're too
good,**) but the autch will give
the Bruins an indication of
honr gnod they really are.
The Cardinals have . pinpad
only three imIgIms this saaaon
and arc undefeated. The Bruiai
are undefeated in conference
play. Their lone defeat canK at
the hands of Anzona State.
Tomorrow the women net-
ters will attempt to complete
SCWIAC play undefeated
when CSU Long Beach comes
imo town. The OMtch ooold
turn out to be tougher than
expected —Gregg L. R4
Oiympia gr«wino ComffSMy Olympic WMIVinQtfHt 'OLV*
n a world bafletsd by channe. ccvni»uier
tht' unchan|{tni; church ki->
On .» tiicctul4iav «v
C\iolx-r. I9IQ. MacC
RtMii'nft'lJ rcccivfd Patent
# 1 .260 M I for It A )(it*amin^
i»yniphtin> t»f Nphng Meel. the*
church kc^ wa^ umc'J hy rhret'
Kcn4.*ranon> of fKirsty colK ^lut
X'Jiv Jnnkcrv NiH uiuil rhr twisa-ujp
ua^ Its utility gucNtumc J. although thi-
viiM.nininatin^ Oly drinker will always
keep t>nc i»n hand for tav-Stuhbirs and
OkltiiiK- Kittles
The deM^n <^i thi%church k-ey ha»n't
changed because it was made wtrh skit)
injjenutfy and simplicity A great beer .
docnn t chanf^e ft»r many ofThe same
rea^4ins If it n dime ri^ht K^nni; m. y<»u II
h in uncKnnigini^ ^fWfdard of quality
SuiK things never chmtge Olympi.T
nexer will
KeiT ikiTMi^ ||Lt an\ Kefter.
14K&18K
Gold
and
Sterling Silver
Jewelry
At low. low, prices.
lalizing m fine
Italian chains, charms,
and bracelets.
DREAMS OF GOLD
1093 Broxton Ave.
Suite 202
Westwood Village
Pti. 478-8768
Brir>Q this coupon - 5% oft
with any purchann .
Hours.
Thur 12-7
art Tg-fntdnight
'l^HY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
££L
TKh qu#«tK>n IS the openinf wordi oA The Second Plalm kjH The Wble,
God Almifhty'i Soofc ^n6 reveUtion oi Hirmeff to m*f\ "A heathen is
one who does not believe in The God of The Bible ' They rage in order to
|et rtd of Hit Moral Law. ludfmenfi. His Ten Commandments
In Eiekiel 44 24 God says " Kr\6 in controversy they shall starKl in my
judfmenfs; 9rk6 rhey shall ludge it according to my )udgments. i^r\6 they
shall keep my laws vryid my sututes in aii mtfw aisembliec; iu^6 they shall
h«aowi my iihhifhi." Those interetied »r9 invited to consider some of
God's ludgments regarding worship, « there is considerable controverty
in this mailer these days
There was a mtm n^m^ Cam He came to worship God »n4 bpaaghl an
offering God did fiai want wfsat he brought arid would not accept tt
Cain got mad. Cam killed hi>*biUlher Abel The fir^l outcome of Coin's
was a curse ar>d not a WtMlng.— Genetis 4:3-12.
af>d Abihu were irwtied to ff%ikif a commar>d tipipmMfMfux
The King of Kifigi, Lord of Lords, even Almighty God. So with
Aa^'cm their father tnd N4oses »n6 i^vemy k^A the flders of liraef dlty
climbed Mount Sinai, afid there "They saw God, and did tat &nd drink "
Alter this marvehMis and super-neiMral tiiperif nrr they «i«ni ime the
Tahemacle one day to worship They made an oMering that was unaooap-
laMe to Gid — an oMermg of "Simpt Fiver' The fire of God la^ad on
I a curie« aeapi* eno net a alBHli^g. Maaa eaoifl N in laadHaJe*
r i 11; and In levMCM 10:1-3.
King David, die man aHar Cod's heart, in moving the Ark of God had a
K. God had oommawiid dial H
Maud lavHai. Thooa-
Uxxa caii#H haW al k. God finidi
iJin cnaplar. Mo oooat via MiaaMon§ or ooot
of thai which was laood
a cuna hHMad of a bla«lni)
Wfif U2tlah was ont of hidah's graaiart klnfi.
Hi sought 10 ohoy and plaaM GOd and
with hit poopla und nadon. Thara was 9
in
Ha had a
f.O.
diouldha
powerful army that put down alt their er>emies His n^mif ^tr^Bii far
abroad over the then known world He was respected Mnd (mtred He
went into the Temple ortt day to worship. He forgot his place and
ur>dertook to worship in his own way, though warr>ed and withstood by
the priests God struck him there in the Templ(f~in his act of worship
Struck him with leprosy* He was taken out »nd put in a pest ho%»se where
his body rotted until life left it! 2nd ChronKlc. chapter 26
Moses met God at the "Burning Bush." God said: "Put off thy #i00i
from thy feet, for the place where thou standail is holy "—Exodus 3:1'4.
God Mppearmd to loshua before the city of fericho and loahua said:
"What saith nf*y lord unto His servant?" The reply was 'Loose thy shoe
from thy foot, for the place where thou siandest is holy "-rfothua 5:13-
15
Thronly record «ve have of Christ striking any one physically when on
the earth in the flesh was those whom He lashed with a whip of cords and
d^oae out of God's House for profaning and misusing the sacred place
lohn 2 U-17
Read Acts SI-TT and team of aiioihai lu^^^^tent of God upon a man
and his wife who tried to enter the Church with ulterior motives, ratlter
than "repentance towards God. and farth towards The I nrd ktim Chfiit"
— both of them struck dead for "lying to The Holy Ghoai ~ and templing
The Spirit of The Lord." ^aier said N was bacaioa Saian had filled their
haam 10 Ma to CodI
lahn 4:21-J4; "Ibmo lalch umo ner, noman, baimvi ma, the hour
ye MO naonar m sna moimiaM* nor yai ai
Ye worinip ya knoor not wtioi ^ nil oia
Is, %vhen the true wowhippon ihaW worship The
In ipMl and frvfh ; f or The f athor taohadi loch 10 woithip Him GOO 5 A
SnWT; AND THfY THAT WOMMfT tm4 hAtrtrr VVOtSHir HIM IN
Wmn AMD IN TtUTK"
'Koap diy faai whan diou 900« 10 The HoiMa of Cod ' laii yoo
die tac<aaa ol ♦aoh. lEclnlmii i:l
■•wopa of poing 10 nonNp «ylih uli«: oMBhat, any a4iar
^■pBwaiina towards Cod, and faMb lotaofdl The Lord tmm Oir^l
aawaro of 'making an offaring of flwaapa nras. " Bomamhar Nadah wid
Abihut
Tna rattior.
^"
1
'* ■! 1)1 I
■«- -^..M..
V it I >
,••••»««••."
■r
CtASSIFJE Ol id D
^^^"~' "^■^~~» -—r^^^
Pfonal
lor
for
OCAOLIMC 10:30 AM
tMity >«M>f>y t> th« Ufiiv«r«lfy of Cali
_ tBfii not w# — ..^w
- — ■■ *• ••• Daily Brutn to MiyoMs
wNo di»criifiinal«t on tKo bosli of
MCMlry. color, niliaml •ri^ffi. roc*.
«•§••*. or w> MiMfcir flio OoMy Brulrt
M^rlHo AtUCLA Communicatlofit
Wmat^ hM inootigoiod any of th« aor
«!••• advorMood or advortisor* rapr*
••niod tn thia laau* Any paraon ba
Itovtfifl Miot an advarfiaamont In this
laoMa violdaa tha Boord'a poMcy on non
diacrlminallon atalad horain ahould
MMmMlaMa oawiilainta in tartHnf lo
mm Bualnaaa Mmnmgmr. UCLA Dally
Wmtn, 1 12 Karckhoff HM. 300 Waatwood
^t***. L»a Angalaa. Calif ornia §0024
•dtlon pffclowia. caff: UCLA Houalno
Offlca. (213) •25-4401 Wastalda fmtr
Houalnm (213) 473-
Graduates
PERM A PLAQUE
...... yo*'^ diploma
friond mn^onm can bava
CALCULATORS
Tl •• M. Tl til it. Tl M i2 Tl tM M
11
#• A t«|
f^mpvssfvdio
J'>0 ketckhoh hall B7S Otn -?t»
op#n monfri 8 20 4 20
AT7IMTIOM~l
I in
P.t.— Antf on OB Ira
W L A
If it ELECTROMICS
Can 471.a|it0 ittr
(It A It)
my 2lat tio
1*0
litTf.tfL ^
iMi. cond. $4M
opportMfiiti—
ft A It)
OO you hova a mom? t«iow nor yoy lp«a
^ ty aandtng liar mn orchid on Molhora
Ooy. Can Gamma Phi tota. tTi itil.
(•AM)
•UtJigS* Op#«rtiMiltyf tlwff anva-
complete
printing
service
birMiiii|t>
niiinrf»-<iiti<»
IL'I trKkhoff hiilf
WHAT DOES A BRUIN
BEAR GIVE FOR GIFTS?
-UCLA clothing f qr children
and adults, bears, mugs,
glassware, watches, desk
accessbries, jewelry, per-
sonalized shirts, trophies,
football helmet radfo
Bear wear,
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
trOLCN Motorcycia Wan«a4-ff yoii
•aw larga brown Honda 750 balno
g*y* "^to "^cli or ofhorwtaa ramowad
2T*J** •? ••* ■**• ^ *-•• School.
Mantey. April 12. batwaon 10 am—
J-fTl-f***^ •^ '■**^ Oilbart. 473-
3102. 025-4041 (maaaaoa)
• ' (t A in
474-0717
_^ (10 A Yt)
1t7J MtMOLE 10. includat trallar.
!lJr_y^*^ ••'•'^ Clyt Jack OOt-
lit A It)
t-7210 raoahpof and 3-way
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(10 A 1t(
tUMMCN KXPCmMCirrAL
•TUOICt MIOOIUM
•iXniiL
10
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aaol
(10 A It)
i^tloa far raaaarch Wind tdn«rall«n
!iyPl'*'.* *-»-»y»»H. tbi aaampt
12 1
•ntortoinmawt
••••a cm Oaf^ Party, m parttel-
5Ji«J;^d^^ilianid^
It. t:3t. %m * taar.
(7A1t|
jComt to thd ASUCLA _
Stor* Qiftt ond Confoctiono dtptrt-
»-*-ints ond gtt goodito for making
your own Etot«r BitiitM tat-
10. plants , cuddly teyt. rtncWto
irmicial g^to-lf 0 ail thtrt B
Union. 125-7711
(113) 3t1-1t0t'?J}ySi|^ "^^^ -
•1J0 DUm.tCATE addta ^, ,^
Waiinoaday aftarnoona. Wild Whiat
•rj^gClMb loss Waatwo«d Blvd.
tTEMEO componanta: tlytantdia
braii^. Valtay tOI-ttOt. tt1-2t23
"^-*— - ' 131-0073. Mt-tttI
(lOOtrl
WAMT la
•OCK LOVCflt., Oonl lata , __. ,^^.
[y^Jffwila. Pmi Wocfc Fatigraa. Old
torn
3 pm
<7
socialevents
(13 A 23)
"I AM" m
Apft 34. 1
(10A2t)
ralfaat. talyr^ay.
(•A 21)
••rvicas
for rwit
•nnouncomente
y^i^ #>— -nrniiittnif m ijj
•^: 8/11; t/1 Ackarman 34tt Oao
WEtTWOOO
fiaffa). ttant
rWCA. S72
472-7tt0
SUNDAY
_ (
Sun. 11am. Univ
UlS!!^ Nuit312 W. tlNd tl. Waal-
(lOQlr)
TYPtwntfEP. oM mink. feMlMaaa
(AOtrM)
WAIiOt for rant hwm tltJt. AM m-
buNt and lunad. Alaa pi««lMaa aafl^
tSO-4514 ■
(•MS)
(10 A 21)
•:3t. 1t:tt, 11:3t. umv.
SrtO iiiliwi Chapai.
(lA^O)
LAKE
uttful loqHfon. Flraplaea
••• 3 day waakand. $tOO
Tax Of Insfrvmanf
n A 3D)
exPO Can«ar Tfaaal fair. Tuaaday and
Wadnaaday. 10:00 le 41M. fiokarwajL
(2tand taMroom. FHmat Prteaaf
(2 A 21)
•ducation
ASUCLA LKlur* NotpTn
Arw Hcfwf
Watch tha Brum for the complalt
Ntt of clattto that will hava Lacturr
WolarThaaa are notes taken as
I tha Proltttor wants them to bt.
carvfuffy typpd. proofread illyt-
trated and ready tor you in the
Students Store Notes will pe
available on Monday. WednttdBy.
Friday and Saturday Check with
thp Lptture Noiao Counter as wpM
at If! your first set of notes to find
out rtihmfy your specific nolpo wMI
be available Lecture nolao tit t
tf'tf^ndous help— tfiey let you pay
total attention to what's being said,
and they're not expensive.
SUr LECTURE
NOTES OR^--
MAKE Monday nl^ht
•n on-9oint EweiawMi Oroup fad' by
aalf and loam hdw otttara aaa you. In
WLA. Information; 455-1342 or 472-
5701 .
_^ #» A 71 »
In
" ^AMt
MNT-A-Tv %%%m mmm. miSHimm
studanf diacounta. Oallvory le l:tt
47S-3t7l. 2333 Waalweed.
. (fOK)
AWKOWHEAO cabin In quiat area
tloapa 0 ISt/2 dpya. $1tt/7 days.
317-1447.
fOOlr)
™- — Jii SMjihoaM-sois
•4-la«oltkKk •OMomoflba •121
NOVUt
Cantor of Dramatic Arts
Announcat
A special three weak workshop
(April 12th thru aoth)
SMNaet AUDITION TECHMtOUIS
The following subjects will ba
covered --"
*Cold
474-7111. 2311 Waalwoed Blvd.
(S A20)
persoinal
MutW TV RENTALt
COLOR T V S
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Mack/whlta T.V a • 17 Jt
Calt: 271-1138
NOTEOwr
■tlMkHVlS wdh
lo UCLA
/IB/ICUS
BUSINESS EQUIPMENT
ItSOS Sania Monica Bl WLA
CALL 478 7791 JklW— tpfSan Ot«po F«»y
*Wtept ttie caattfig dirpclor la
looMnt for.
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271-3nf-
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PERUVIAN Alpaca Bu^a). ^
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AT LOW, LOW PPICBt
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(• A 11)
(^ A 11) 2;
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"^ ' ' " Thanka far NMpbit to
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aukLIC NOT Id la HaroOy ••»•«« l*Mt wr,_.,
MarclMftaiaa artNak Maa ^m»m In tha 6wal*av
«l iia UCLA Lmm ana ~ - -
Loaa. Jan (aOaa J W 9r
h
(•Alt)
LUCKY
BRING TNIt COUPON ^ t% Orr WtTN
ANY PUPCHAtE
MIAAOt OF COLO I
BFioMaAaa.. tuBa 33? I
ELECTRONIC ITEMS
Calculalor
Tl SR 50 A 156 50
♦ arrttra Tauaa Instrumants lina
1
tUBJECTt with vlalon in only mnm
aya naadad for alupy on dapBi paveap-
ten. Pays 12. tuaan. lAl-«33t.
(14 A 22)
SMOKttS^ WaM la ^idN Ftva cBnic.
c«i 125-3^14. M-f l-S.
(14 Alt)
II nmmr reina af Kety-
•••jrw* on Saturday Parl-
m A tat
Waahaood VMapa. PM. 471-17tl I
HOURS Toaa -Thufs. 12-7 I
Fn . Sat 12 - midnight I
Sun Mon - cloaad I
Sanyo raasaiM w/FM - It? 24
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•I
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BILL 134-2171
N-Th 7pm-llpm, P 1-llpm
'^■■" atibfact to changa)
PAID
for 131 ml
lam
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calt 131-7111 f«r
(14 A 27}
VOLUNTEERt naadad for doctoral
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end academic atraaa maaaure«mim
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na AIM
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ba Via aama coma Selurdev mamP^ Ma
"•ora df-ooi bluaa far yaul fM nilaa
you. Pam.
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eiilapar plania arown bv i^h
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•;J?g;,J^ "^ccid piayar f^
*™* ^^' •tt'tttl, 1-1 a«aa
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Lr
you eiafaf
(1 A21)
CREATIVE WRITING
NOVELS. BCREEN-RLAYB.
TELEVISION
ELVIS TIckata avallabia for aof#<e«f
1 and 11 p. m
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n^Alt)
lal and 2nd
347-1371
(10A3SI
WOODEN Parr^ . ir^yTT
e^at A boaaa old bamwood 131-
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iNANT
WHe arlah to ottaei ina a»panaae af
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*■•• aBer. 124-
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MATTRESSES ALL NEW
T
FyM
M JST.
El
MANN
SAEMKIS
SAE MK3A
•is^n
(10 A 23)
tits so
THE MATTRESS STORE
at aarrtiwaaii •■' |f •»»••"»• aii»a
477-4101
af UCLA and LAC/
use ^ " : -^ i^w
oa twan la taeman talia ava
ISIS. Par
R.N.
lairt.
cci^itimi
CLASSIFIEIM
••oninf a far Handtun *_
•^ ^2 30/hc Cat.tSt-IHl. .
(tSAtt)
J^Y^'yyWnp Per mor . tnfo call
(12
CASH 9f
lino
)
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[^J;j''»^'»oncaa/low roioo 471
^ no a 11)
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— * !? WMiONAL EdHNf fa^
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•tvices ofibr^
WRITBR
In
Jay 033-0317
(11 A 33)
I VW MANHTENANCE tERVICE: 131.11
(TwwMp. II , ,pi iLaaa<ianaa.>aba.
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I'a
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fill.
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nn.
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lost 4 foMnd
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(tlASt)
MATTRESSES - UC
kp M 11% on
V
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• HOUtEPAINTiOlG Qreda Prefaa
VwNs sRstf i^^M ^v^pv^wy ^^^^^^^^po vsa Mssv isee'^^ssttoii
HBSN^BttM MflAft ^^^^^ ^^^^v^^^^^^^^^^Pt^ ^HaBIS^^^ ^wVw^lS^tSSl
Sranda Don't •••"•PB* •••-••Tl.
Oonl
341.1111.
(1«Oir)
(IS A 11)
MOST Aula
PSYCHUTRIC ABar Cam Canlar
tSlaa/wft fart .
^Cat^erry er Atan at 131-
' Sl^. 1t-4. Ho Eip.
fit A IS)
Aulo-Llfa Momaewnara and Pa«iPM
Inauranca Vlllaia Offlca Warner
477-3317. 171.^1
(llOir)
^BOPEltfONAL
WrfPfig
• praduaSanla
CaN 430-1814
r
(It OP) !•?• "' "*
I ilyt yme Ifiio the Dally Bruini
I ClaaeNled Department afid let uat
I ypu wpfit to pipoe en ad m Biel
i '■^^ ^otHi^ cpBiawi. Ao a puBNcI
Olrt *l !!riS; "^^ ''^ FACTORY I
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1473.
(Stop)
XEROX 2' C
aiynn kinko s
SJi'^'trrsriTisr^s^^i "O'^'f^c?
- _ ear and ia -_
No houaawerk. Bavarfy Hflla area.
(11 A 33)
2S? 'O^^FWL PERSONALITY 3^
^.^■JAJIE STARTINQ. ASK FOB LBS-
UB.322-7SSS. ^^
(It A 11)
(11 OP) 470-4714. S la Tpai.
SS-SSO/monBi for BliiiJ Plasma
HYLAND DONOR CENTER
1(»1 Gayiey Ave., Wastwopd
Tha origtnal*
Pttwapylppad - BaaaenaMa roMa
Our tSi yeer- 7 Papa a weali i
CABIRUS SERVICES
^^^^^4 ^^^M • • • • M
3SS-S31S
4/13.
(17 AH)
mT^mLIZTZJ
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im REWARD le
M er tw rapgn pi a MstsisM PT 401
■>Bdl tpAldan-Sltl er a Matorola
aoiid atala •- track lapa dock fnedal
(17 A IS)
TYPBiCI. Lal Caaay Pa t. Tann p.^.r«
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(ISON)
ridss wanted
BALLET: Pun way le Beeuty 11
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$1210 monPMy
» raa Inform.
Inlarmadlafaa. atvancad 0 laaaena,
waakly. Irene Serela. Dfallniuiahed
(ISOir)
FRANKLM 1 KUB
TIC JOB
ECTORY
Mairoaa le Waatweed or Mar Vlala.
" rtt7 aae-
ai A1S)
t**i
tutoriiHi
MOVING; BaaiPanttal. apartmanla.
Lacal 1 lent
CCBea
i^^om
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m JACKSON HOLE. WYO.
at pirta far NMa
•0 0 00
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
TppHIgh?
BTUOCNT DISCOUNTS
• • • Aaa for Ken
ARROW INSURANCE
MATH TuiaH—fci, aaa
AISoBra. Pretapflity, and r>eomalr|.
(MASH
(34 OP)
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M UCLA
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JAZZ PIANO/ ALL STYLES. Laam Jay
ELECTROLYSIS: Unwanlad faciei 1
TYPING Sarvica ,
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HYPNOSIS and SaN- .,.
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(BJL, MA.) 473-
na opt
ISO DID
aiathed. Free aeni
Bl. 477-3133.
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~ with Call
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WHalNra - 477-1131. 171-3317. WIBi
A PBBJAL ALTSBMATfVE IN LOS AM-
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aieaa IRen 33 yra aaparlanaa. Help PBBCISIOW Nat CmI SlySaf
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laiaphena YaHew Pepaa at. Spislal eWer, by Orapt HaM ler twe
Batuaad SPMsnl BaWa. .^ ^^^ eaW M ImB aRaa. Tel. 471-4477
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rtSAISI
(ttOir)
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RIDING LESSOMS
•A.N.l.A. Aaaraaadrldtna ••taaiiabaM»«
— — ■— » •.- f ^"Opt rvea 999 »— »
eaRr m Bet pRea. Tai. 471-4477
(10 A 31)
iPrapara for
I GRADUATE RECORD EXAM
I aOhr liaaa
I ^^ •
bapina May 1
L.A1
®
LBAT
T
• MCAT
#OAT
• T
THE GiMDAMCE CCNTER
JBt7^ -
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AV
(IS A 31)
fAMITOR, 7:SS^1t:Bt eM
477-SStl
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(IS A IS)
fit OP)
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■ It I, I « I i-»i
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I
Campus
Today at noon in Schoen-
btg§ Hall Auditoriunu student
organittf Krittin OUon and
FoMik Shclton will play Ba-
roque and 20th>century works.
Admisiion » free.
Another free concert at noon
will feature Robin Williamson,
Cornbred and Armadillo. The
Janss steps performance opens
the fourth UCLA ^olk Festi-
val returning to campus for
the first time since 1965.
The festival continues to-
wiik a concert in Royce
Hdl at 8 pm entitled '*Cann4a
to California."
Further concerts in the festi-
val are tomorrow night at 8 in
Royce Hall and Sunday at 1
and 2:30 pm. A specuil child-
refi*s concert will be in Royce
at 2:30 tomorrow, a day that
alto hqtts ten workshops in
Hainet, Moore and Dodd
Halte
Anyone interested in enter-
ing the festivafs traditional
mntic competition in Schoen-
berg 1200 at 1:30 today should
contact DX WipM in GSM
1041
CN
■-''LsaJ'
.-. ""*■"
UCLA Foil Fcfthral entHes: Tlic Mor% o< ike Loogli (above)
and Dan Davis litilMl
Movies
it seems the pre- Easter film
slowdown IS already upon us.
No new films are being re-
leased this next week
Playing tomorrow evening at
7:30 in Melnitz Hall are Elia
Kazan^s minor classic^^Hd
River and Billy Wilder^s re-
knowned TIm AfMirtment Ad-
mission it $1.50 Tonight in
Ackerman Grand Ballroom at
7 and 9:30 is Norman Jcw-
tton's RollerbnII. The film sUrs
James Caan and John Houac-
man and is about a bloody
futunstic sport which becomes
the opiate of the people. Ad-
mission is $1
(ContimMd on Page 15)
(
Jr
^J^ob/^aiu/(£^llta/Ut/f
%
f
i
CIIARI I S< IIAMP1VN. I .A.
^Semii Coiwery, Audrey Hepburn,
Robert Shaw in a ixiwerfiHIy
nmiantii film full of
swirlints action.
rousiniiK exatiiiie in
the old swashhiK'kling
tradili(»n/'
l/RASAiKS. KMI I
"Hophuni and ( onnery
Robin and Marian you can*!
4ir»t»t! In Auilrey Hepl>ttrn\
Maid Marian, we can see what
makes a star Sean ( onnery's
Rohm Ho<»d is terrific "
A!^l>KI y^ SVKKIS. IlH- Vill^pr V«m-«*
"One of the nwisi affectinu
movie-ieotnit experiences of
recent vears "
SEAN
OONNERY
AUDREY
HEPHJRN
IKJHN AND MARIAN'
SH>IIV
-^NKlXjVUJi^^
HAMB
Now Plavmg At Specially Selected Theafrrs-
\
HOCLVWOOO
Molly wood Pacific 4%%i2l I
WCSTWOOO
Avco Cmnt9r C>f>9ms I. 4 75-071 1
AMCADIA
Ed«w«r<H Oiv«-ln 447-S17f
AMCADIA
Santa Anita 1 4 3. 44& 6?09
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CHATSWOMTH
W.nn«tl(« Orivvin 4. 34»^M0ft
LA MAOIIA
l*«fn«on Squar* 3. •910413
LOS ANOCLCS
C«n|in«ia Oiv*-ln 6 70- 94 7 7
MOMTCLAin
MMHciaif Cnmmm 2
7i4/a»a-jfti4
P9COfMVCIIA
FiMta Dviwa in 1. 99? 7591
OCDOMOO aCACM
Soutnoay ?. 370-9399
SMCftMAN OAKS
L^ Rama ^99 931 1
:%y coviMA
rt Ctnmm» 992 J9 79
-^'■M
aarunoAv
NALIm OCLA; 7:aO p,m.
al at tfMr «Mv SI 50
April 17
WILD RIVER
CMI Lit
THE APARTMENT
(1« Billy WiMti I IMOt
JaVanfiHi
Fta« ItocMwrrav
UNFAITHFULLY YOURS
M* NaffiMa Liaia OamiH
WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?
THE WONDERFUL COUNTRY
Hat*
RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY
dii SafT PvcJiiAaa^ ^tt?) Matrvcotor Lirwrnabcopt
119^ f5 -MM! McCiM Randotpn ScatI Manattt N«rtt«>
SUNRISE
FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS
Satrina PAvifiOy
NIGHT AND THE CITY
. *r JalMiHWittaOi
OUR MAN FLINT
tm IWHat MvMi I49ai 9iL«ia C«la>
Hfy 2^ . it^mii C«»«rf» 6«fa ftaiaii Lat J CaM
INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS
df Oan SMftf iiOti SiifwTtaai
NORTH BY NORTHWEST
aw Aiffaa wioii
} fi
»» '1* tA A • .- .yr^
mill ■ \\tmm^^n^,fi^
Ucia
VoHmm XCVIII, Number 11
Unlvvfsity ol CalHomlii, Lm
Holiday, April 19, 197t
Asian-American festival: *a creative union'
Wfllv
Ey F
DB Staff IfiflUm
A menagerie of performers, tights and
sounds, including celebrities Alka Ginsberg
aad Wav> Gravy, will participate totfajr at
nooB in the opcmog ceremonies of ^'Tsr-Oog"
OB JanM Steps.
Events for Tse-Ong, a spriag festival dedicat-
ed to America's birthday, will also include an
address given by Ginsberg in the Ackerman
Grand Ballroom tonight from 7:30 to 10
eatitied **A Life Empowerment.*'
According to an event descnption by Asia
Focus, the student group spoasonag TseOng
here, the purpose oi the feftival is to act as a
link of Aaaa culture and American cuhure
termed ^*apphed Buddhism. *\ However, the
four-day event is ''not designed as a proaely-
tizing effort but a creative union.**
The former master o^ ceremonies at Wood-
stock, Wavy Gravy, who was
recently involved in the Earth
Peoples Park aad the Hog
Farm communes, will conduct
a Dharma Oemobtion Derby
on. Tuesday in Meyerhoff Park
from 11:30 to I "We dont
know what they* re going to do.
we Will have to play it by ear,**
the Focus spokesman said,
"but we welcome all poets and
crazies**
Included in the opening to>
day will be a musical pro-
ccMton performed by the inter-
nationally known UCLA
Gagaku ease mhk and Bud-
dhist priarti.
The linking of Buddhism
and America's "^pionecnng en-
ergy** comes in the wake of
Governor Jerry Brown*s own
philosophy on "^Buddhist ec-
onomics/* according to one
Focus tpokcHnan
today include the fdm BmMMhb Ib Ifci rilpit^
Republic of rhlaa and a discussion with
Kenneth Chen in the Woaiea*s Louagi of
Ackerman Union from 1 10 to 3.
Following the film and discusaion wtt be a
talk given by Buddhist monk Dauca Vaiatii.
entitled **Ten Years as a 2Len Monk in Japan,**
from 3:30-4:30, also in the Women's Low^.
Moat recently, Gmsberg was featured as a
member of Bob Dylan's Rolling Thunder
Review musical tour and wrote poetry aad kaar
notes for Dyhin*s "Desire** 1>. He is aoifd for
his 4iterary works aad his associatioBS with
author K.en Kesey, poet Ezra Pound, and
singers Ed Sanders, Paul McCartney aad Micii
Jaiaer.
mr Grafy.
1b additioir tir
Foctts will present two well-known Japaaase
films.
Other events scheduM for
and the 1956
Award winning
Tuesday and Wednesday nigte
respecuvely. Both martial arts
films are free with tickets
avaiUdlk at the Film Arduve
in Mebittz Hall
Following Samnral on
Wednesday mght, there will be
a panel discussion with
Miyahara Sensei, a seventh
degree black bek and oaadi of
the American Kendo team.
. Other events include Oriental
brush painting* a lecture on the
Zen, world, a sitting with a Zen
auMler Kozan Roshi, and med-
itation techniques of Thai Bud-
dhism taught by Phra Maha
SamrMi. IIk four-day festival
will tnA Thursday wkh a ftln
festival on Buddhtsm that
show Snasaad, Zmk I
TW Mood id Zen^
Man and Nalwa. aad W<
In Sri
i*-
a«*ra-w«fMilfif aaiiiiiral on
J
Seen as protest of Gallo ad
UCR newspaper stolen
DB
Inclusion of a pann' advcrtisiag Gala Wine
was seen as having motivated the theft af
several thousand copies of the UC Riverside
'•Maspaper. the Highlander, from campus
distribuuon boxes last Thursday.
Copies of the weekly paper were stolen from
the It haaes on caapus *>robably beiwaca
10:30 and 11:30 pin.** according to Jim Christ-
iana«i» aduBrtiwng asanager of the Highlmmkr.
The paper was distributed to the boxes between
four aiid five o*clock Thursday.
Gallo ads have come under heavy criticism
recently from Mexicaao Estvante Chicaaa de
Azatlaa (MEChAK a Cbkano student
ization, according to Bob Wi
aHH^v of the Higkiamkr Wcalcatt said that
free rebutui spaas was offered to MEChA, hnt
of their gaad reputation and their good
with the administration.
A counselor in the Chseano Studies Depart-
mem, Juaa Lnjan, expraasid doubt that
MEChA was responsible **With electioas
coming up in the next week or two, politically
it UROuld be a bhader for MEChA to get
in that type of action.** Christiansen
that MEChA was
before and nothing
decided to run the
Acearding to Ch
of a ceiraft with
Two or
was in the farm of a
anpy of the fhgh-
that pirvious Gallo
**We*ve run the ad
to
I'
ftm ad
clw
MEChA, however, has dwned any involve
It in the tlielit Aoeaaiini to a
for MEChA, Miguel Lopez, any action that
organiatian irnnid take wonid have to he
voiad on lint by the assasharslnp. No snch
adian had evor oonse np for a vole, Lopez said.
An anonymotis telephone caller to the
Riverside Fres a- Enterprise claimed rcspoo-
sibihty for the theft Acissiding u> Andy Sao,
chairmnh of MEChA at RlHiisidt, a reporter
who liiadiart the telepiaws oaB aid the caller
to be -fraa hfCCBA.
lilt thtfi,
M nnt cagage in that kind of action
ate Ukely to be
"only if they are blatantly adit m
inserts ike the Gnflio
_ away,
to
^ for the
GaBo
A seeoad isana of the Higkkmder was
printed, in spite of a ahwiaiil cost to the
paper, according to Chrfltianan. He
to take a havy
Gregory to speak
Human ngas acuvwt and autins Dmk Grqaofy wiB
t a aasa-pan lecture saai apaaaw, aipaa^g '*
ia Fr^az 117S.
At 1 pa he wiU apaak at iht Law Schaai. Rmb 1345.
Concludiflf the Sfffia at 3 wlB hie a spaccfc in Bolle 13M.
Gregory*s appeaance here will publicize his Trans-
coaiMaal Food Run, sdMWsd to h^n a f aa an
Wednaiay at City Hall In aa effoit to aanle a 1
he piaM to ran JO mdm a dap la 73
his ran in New Yofk.
GfifOffy fint
and then a an aa-war
p
:•/
J
I
Five weeks of study, travel
and fun
in Mexico
For taachert. high school and college students Accredited
cleaeee in Spanish. Memcan culture, music, art. etc at beautiful
Momeirey Tec College 1650 includes tuition. t>oard. mom,
iaur>dry and trips. Earn 2 semaelers high school or 6 college
credits
For details and catalogue contact group leader Or Richard
Martin between 8 and 9:39 afiy evening at 471 Wt7.
noiBCiBii irom vBiiuon
How do
peckers bang?
Ill i>>
1
i
i
TOWING
^
TUNE-UP, LUBE & OIL $0^91
wss
JOt ncm.
♦35
moiNi
OVnHAUl
w/eaars
A-1 AUTO SERVICED.
7957 VAN NUYS BIVO. oOil TATC
s
By LaMi Tea
DB Staff RapatS
. UCLA Psychiatry pn
Dr. Philip R.A. May wanti to
save human heads fei^ studying
woodpcciierk.
Dr. N4ay and researchers at
the UCLA Neuropiychiatric
Institute and Brentwood Vet-
eran! Administration Baapital
launched a preliminary anato-
mical study of the wood-
pecker's head.
They wanted to know what
cnahlsii woodpeckers to ham-
mer their beaks into trees day
in and day out without getting
concussions.
**Clearly the woodpecker's
brain is protected somehow
from impact and vibration
injury,** wrote May, along with
Dn. Joaquin M. Fuster, Paul
Newman and Ada Hirschman
in the February issue of the
British medical journal Lancet.
There have been previous
.: J.*
A JOB FOR Aa SEASONS
A CAREER FO^ ALL REASONS
Ffy with
TWA
'■' -, ../.,
t
1 ■
r.
• 4 .
TWA re^resentatiNfds will be in Los':
Angalat to di^uss iob opportunities
in the Flight Attendant fsteward/
stewardess) position. B^nefings will be held
to describe the job. and brief interviews will be conducted afterward^with those jwho
wish to apply. It is recommended that you have several hours available. ■■•k^-
To ap)9ly. you must meet tt»e followrntf basic requirements i|:,^?
Mtnimum age 20, Hfight !^ 2' to 6'2" with propoMionat* waigM: US cltix«n«hip or'
poaaassion of a U S parmanani r«aid«ni viaa. high achool .diploma of •quiwaiartt.
viaion uncorractatf 20/200 or batiar. corroctibla to 20/30 or battar aicallant haaltti;
willing to raiocata to any of tha following citiaa N«w York Chicago. Kansaa City Loa
Angalaa. and San Franciaco Applicants who hawa baan mtarviawad for thit position m
tha paat six montf>« a«a not aligibia for conaidaration at this tima
INTERVIEWS AT HYATT LOS ANGELES INTERNATIONAL
6225 West Century Blvd at entrance to LA
Airport.
Monday. April 19. Tuesday, April 20 and Wed-
nesday, April 21.
10 00 A.M.. 2:00 P.M and 6:00 P M m the Geld
Room.
NO TELEPHOME CALLS. PLEASE
EQUAL OPPCmiUNITY 6MFL0VER M/r
v^
*
woodpecker studies, but **The
possible implications for con-
cnsston and injury to the
human brain seem to have
been overlooked,** the scientists
wrote. _- - ^
What they found could
result in safer helmets^ for foot-
ball piayen, motorcychsts, car
driven, pilots, soldiers, con-
struction workers and anyone
else whose head ts likely to be
hit
A key protective feature for
the woodpecker appears to be
a ught packing . of relatively
dense yet spongy bone around
Its brain. Accompanying the
bone arc shock -absorbing mus-
cles and shock-absorbing fluid,
the scientiMS found.
Woodpeck/cr research . sug-
gests «h improved helmet
would ht form-fitting, firm but
spongy with a hard outer shell
This structure is reflected in
modern packaging and ship-
ping techniques for fragile
items utilizing styrofoam
around the items inside an
outer case.
^ Hard sMI
**Yet that is not the way
protective helmets are made,**
May said. *" Usually they have a
hard shell, suspended from the
skull by a harness and sepa-
rated by an air space."
The ideal helmet would also
be combined with a protective
system to hold the neck in
place. Scientists have noted
that the woodpecker's skull is
encased by sling-like muscular
bands that hold the head tight-
"^— (Continued oaPaftt)
The Center for Afro-American Studies
1
presents
DRTARTHUR LI
(DR. MGLEFI ASANTE)
^afrman. Department of Speech and C ummunjtdtion
State I niversjty of New York
BuH >.ew Vork
Communications Technology and
Civil Rights in the 21st Century
When: Tuesday, April 20, 1976 12:00 Noon
Where: 3107 Campbell Hall CAAS Conference Room
Dr. Smith wds lurrTierlv director of the I'CLA Center lur At ru American ituUie*»
.,../-
1973)
* * *nPFN AWnFRFFTOTHF PI IRI 11^ * * *
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Volu«fw XCVlil Number n
It,
Pu0N»h0d •¥mfy mmkdmy dunn^i the
mttmmt ymmr. •Mcmpt during holnJayt
«fMf dmya foflowtng holtdmya ana •»
mtunmtton p^rtodM. by mm ASUCLA
Cotnmuntcmtion* Bomrd 308 }0fmt-
mood «•«. Lm Ang9f9: CmMomm
90024 Copynght 1976 by tha
ASUCLA Communications Board
S0cond cmaa poatmgia paid at tha Lo9
Angfa Podt Ofhcd
Patnck HMty
Aimtv Young
Stmmn Kmna
Ere
Ai*c« Short
P»u( Stgnorm
G»off Ckiirm
B B»rton
rf*fifc 8lBlllW0flf>
rc Ovliirvt
n Sil¥«rsliNn
Cmvmi S9I11
Tony
Howard P
LAuf» Ktmmf,
Adam Partrvy
Art
Michaal Laa
int
Oavtd Whitnay
PriacHia Logua
Caro< Starr
Laalia Suzu
Aoban Walah
Kim Wildman
ffnk Widdar
Jtm Zacbowy
MMia i^inaQOid
Hunlar Ki
Jaff
Mictiaai SofNihaifnar
PMIi SuMtwan
Joa Yogarai
Rick Backar
•mti iwanaoa
Tarn Moof«
Cttriatia ONIa
Hartdy QHIi
Linai Katdha
Ctmy fidNnm
Mancy Liitamhai
Jaft McLaod
' I wi I'
ttrBAMBINO
(The Perfect Lunch)
$1.95
• A cup ai homtffindt soup or a miibI
• A giMft oi wine or cotet
• H snndvMch on a frwh kalnn roll, your choiot ai hot mtnt
tnuihroonit, flfiiid
Scrvnd dnAy at
'fVaxdLzzLx J wo ^^^uui \^xonri i/tuLu
ia84 (CLCNDON At LINDBROOK)
VAL. PABKINC WSTWD CTB BLDC.
4r7.2Ml
n
r
>
I
r
t
DB photo ty Bruca Bfratt
u »
Derby Day festivities!
Some BWiiraeri of Stgnui Chi frBtcrrtfty
found egg on their faces Fnday afternoon at
Derby Day contestants try to drop half a
dozen yoiks into cups.
Alpha Zeu Delta sorority won the event,
but Alpha Phi sorority placed first overall tn
the contesls. ILappa Alpha Theu and iU^>pa
Kappa Gamma placed second and third
mpectively.
Proceeds from Derby Day are being
donated to the Wallace Village, a center m
Bloomfield. Colorado for treatment and
habilitation of children with miniitial brain
loss of humanity' feared
Fairytales lose readers
DS Slnir WrMv
Folk and fairy takt can help
children better understand lilie,
b«l fewer nad fewer children
know the famous mythical
chnracterSi Jane Yolen, author
of over 30 children*s books,
told about 150 pecaoni nt an
Extension clatt Thursday
**Ne¥er knowing Kang Arth-
ur, how can they be moved by
the great ktngfT she said to the
audience at Rolfe HalL
for the
increaainf ipMOMae of claaaic
folklore by today's youth.
Yokn laid the feared a U
of literature and humanity
because without the mythical
chniacters **the chiklren will
lose the symbolic language**
that helps them '^understand
their own supercharged emo-
tions.**
The characters **carry im-
portant mrttafTi to the im-
contcious" and are useful in
therapy. 9bc said. be self-critical because the
Yolen thought the **all- writer thinks ''everything I
American desire for instant touch is golden.** By being
**We leam more and more
. . . but if we keep losing our
pntt then we*ll have no place
to tund,** the said.
Yolen alto <fiscussed her
experience nt a writer ''I feel
Cod-crazed/* she said **At
long at the #ofdt keep com-
ing. I keep writing.**
In general she alto thought
publishers have been more
receptive to folk tales in child-
ren's stories, although **folk
and fairy tales tend to go in
and out of style every l5
years.**.
[>unng a question and an-
swer period, Yolen sugymted
that aspiring writers start
writing groups with people of
the taac ability level to im-
prove.
She taid it wat difficnil tn
cntical of other members of
the group, however, a writer
can improve on his own self
criticism, she added
The Massachusetts story-
writer discussed her writing
career, explaining, **I come
from a long Ime of Hory «1-
ters**
According to Yolen*s hi»^
graphical sketch, her great
grandfather wat a story teller
in a small Ruuian village Her
father it a newipBperfnan, her
mother. 1 short-story wnter,
and her brother, a journalist.
BBQ
This i% the ploce for Rib Lo^^mrsl
By for the Bo%f Ribs w V9 frimd in LA.
Heraid Examinor
COMPLETE DINNEtS
im.$2.75|
Casual Dining
HAMIY'S O^Bii PIT BBO
laaa m. cbbsccnt niichts ot sumkt itnr
10 Minutes Down Sunsot Blvd to
Lauf«l Cortyon Turn Right . . . And ^ou re TKora
BEIT Ml OR ASH
MONDAY, APRIL 19 12 NOON
35t4 Ackannan
THE MISHNA DEALING
WITH PASSOVER
with Rabbi Chaim Seidter-Fallar
HilM 474-1S31
- f»,;^-
FREE
Computer classes
Everyone is welcome to attend the free, non*credit courseein
computing presented by the UCLA Computer Club. Enroll by attending
the first class session. Classes start the week of April 19, and will be held
from 7:00-9:00 p.m.. except as noted. Computer time for class
assignment will t>e provided to UCLA students, staff, and faculty who
join the Computer Club. For more information, feel free to contact the
Computer Club (3514 Boelter Hall, phone: 825-5879)
siaTHucTOw
4 I
II
*}
I
■*-»—
1
I
Mardi Gras opens s
• If
n
>^*»it»
•
I
TO SUPPORT PROGRAMS AND ACTIVITIES
OF REGISTEREDORGANIZATIONS
i-
i
UCLA student's
'toes' voted most
Demented in city
moit demented part of tk*
tody. I think- ■•
Litbtn, known as Su Lu to
the radio world, achieved tht
dubious distinction of having
her ioiif -Toes- riae to Num-
ber O^, on the H4ET de-
memed toag Top Tea of Dr
Dcmcnto, thrac ivceks
By
Dl Stair Wfilar
The same toes that inspired
a hit anatomy love song for
Dr Deniento were twiddling
away on a graai kiwn gvinia
of PowetJ Library.
Their owner was attemptmg
to explain the history and
reasoning behind her latest
-T
THE CAMPUS PROGRAMS AND ACTIVITIES FUND
L
PROGRAM TASK FORCE
C.P.A O • 161 Kerckhoff Ha!! • x57041
effort, -I Love Your Toes. -
Between grins and giggles. Sue
Lubin said, -I wanted to write
a iove song because love is in,
but it had to be denxrnted. I
picked toes because they*re the
.-1 ,,,. ^' .,...(
H.
^V/'
Three Days Only! ^iJ-~^
and WadRMday
Sale of RCA Albums
I
■y-; - « -
\
8-TRACK TAPES
2.99
CONEY BLAND BABY
Stereo LPs
Roek
1.99
V
11
Op»n moo-murt 7 45-7 JO. In 7 45-« 30 sat 10-4
fmmmi^^^m
New
Though Toes" has dropped
froa Ok Jop^Tea r#lla» Sv Lg
hat a iii# aof^ that
last week caikd "Fly Away
TialBe Fljr atoitt the strange
sexual practkai of the Tsetse
fly.
Lubin, with her entrance
into the demented song com-
munity, is the first UCLA
student to achieve such faco9>
nition with the exception of
Dr.^ Demento. Demento re-
ceived a Maatar's I>egree in
Folk Music here. -'- ■
**!>. Demento^ first played
my scMig Toes* in a necttey of
demented anatomy soagi and.
in four weeks, it was Number
Oikr Lu said
The Sunday night after UC-
LA s loas to Indiana w«a the
night "Toes** became Number
One. "Durii^ tbe middle of the
T«f Ten that night Oemento
Mid that UCLA may not be
number one in basketball, but
it sure is v^txn we get to the
number one aong position,**
According to Lubin. stu-
dents in the 4oam^ on campus,
and at valley high schools
over 10,000 signatures
the sottg to be played on
the Top Ten. Toes became
Number One on my 20th
birthday,** Lubin added.
As she described the words
of Demento*s radio helpers.
Jungle Judy and Laughing
Linda, Su Lu laughed, "They
yelled *Happy Birthday Su Lu*
and the song began to play.**
The Aeiber Hall resident*!
career in lyric humor began ia
the sixth gmde as aa an^
9lh grade, Su Lu won a poetry
contest for a poaas cattad **The
Serious
LubiB worked on a humorous
camp production using old
taaes aad setbng them to her
own words. **The parents were
shocked that ei^ year olds
were doing this.^ Lubin said.
She added that she did aoc
It to sound too
didB*t waat aae to
The director said hi am really
proud to have bm At the
In addition to her owa
bnad of soi^i^ Lubtn*s
cal skills are ate lailKr
*n had takea piaao
1 quit 1 was
to 'mfnmm oa my own
the
(
aaPagtS)
Three UCLA scholarships
-l»r-..- fc.H S
Bridge club offers
y m I 0m ipi pii|i — ^»
•y l^athy
Dl Stair _ _^
Tte American Contract Bridge League ^hir
laaen UCLA as one of two local colleges
which will receive bridge scholarship* for the
^Vh^^ college year The student wmnert of
a ipacial bridge tournament will be awarded
S200. $100, and $50 scholarships for pbcing
fiiat, second, and third in the competition.
Students here can compete for a bridge
•fllMlanhip by playing any six out of a pirtiihlf
ten sessions Each lession is held on a Saturday
afternoon at 12:30 pm The fint sriiioii was on
April 10. The foHowing sessions Will he
contmumg through June 5.
All full-time undergrad or grad students in
good sundmg who have a C average or better
are eUgible to compete Studenu don*t have to
join the ACBL to play for these scholarships,
but any student with more than twenty ACBL
master poinu registered is not eligible to win.
This keeps out the **pros" and gives the new
student players a fair chance to win.
Camp
The tournament is bemg held at the Wild
Whist Bridge Oah located ^aJ433 West wood
THvd TSeieT an entry Ite of $1 per game
The student bridge ooai^ition is aa expen-
raenul program sponsored by ACBL for the
present cotlegb year
UCLA IS only oac ol the colleges to par-
ticipate in this program. ILarhi Kaitz of the
WiW Whist Club (ACBL), said -Thcre*s a
poisibihty of 52 colleges partiapating, two
roBagci from each of the 26 disttieii of ACBL
ia the nation. Loyola is the other local college
in this area to be in the program **
Studenu from this campus competing in this
tournament will be playing against other
UCLA students only Each competition is
considered "on-campus** meaning that each
competition in the- 26 districts is separate.
The schoianhip awards of $^. $100. and
$50 will be award<Jd through Uf*LA for either
the summer or fall quarter of 1976.
Ijiiu invites all UCLA students *\o come
pUiy in these games or just to come watch."
i
i^sity NOTICES 5
Is m
volunlwrs tor tur
v«y information Sooti. lost and lounS.
tattpAontt. ci«an up ano muc^ more Uaan
to airaryone appricationff avaitabJi T«i
Mardi Gras offica Ackarman A-2Qi
Traait Far doof pmaa.
informatKM) available 10 am-
4 pm tomorrow and AprtI 21. Ackarman
Grand Ballroom
ctiack i|s draw aodi wmk for ywir op-
ponant match diHa time «id eswt as-
signment locaiad m KarcKfwlf jM, for
information pall Bart Vat at 4794281
— HaaiBi tor CanSMnv. for SIC offices
are now avaMoMa in Kercknoff 481! dosd-
line IS April 22
-ttCU asra Bra irmdi Um ap^
plicattons are now available in the Mardi
Gras office Ackarman A-26B now-Apnl 24
l^pan to ail details on ttte applicatioo
^Salasito ttalas Saerg whicn shows
c^ praaidential candidate and ttie
of diHgdiai pladgod from states
is«a Hadjpniiiarias is now up m
Karcklwlf HsWilaSytea alS¥Slor on ma first
floor y
--4mlWi Cdaaaraain. informal practice
lor foreign studaiMs and vraitors 10 am
noon Monday 1 and Wadoaadays Ackar
man 3517
— faaanftlpB. information and
so extramural tywiins for graduate stui
and postdoctorah are available m ma
Feiiowsbips and AssistamsHip Section
Murpfiy 122B
— CasBHaars Htm Faodi are available
to graduate students for research who are
tormally advanced to candidssy tor doc-
toral degrees sad rifiotered Aspacsaona
may Pa stiammad at any time during tf>e
year Grants of a maximum of S7S0 are
made 'in January and July Fonas are m
tt>e Research Comminee in Ifia Assiafiiic
Senaje Executive Office Murptiy 3125,
framed interns will help you find funding
tor your ideas Open daily 9 am-4 pm
Kerckhoft 401
and local voluniior poiitiaws are available
mm flirough.EXra. Ackorman A213 or call
jOin OECA aa a
consumer invastinator Visit Kerckhoff 311
or csn S2S-2S2i Volwoloors are aiso
for
for a
\K 9lvaBMff LoSay in
S7I750 a monm
aoMs s raoooi uv
in edi
-Statavlde
tor
A|
Committosa sre mm
IS April 30 piek aa
Mications at Ackerman informalioii
UNIVERSITY OF
PARIS • SORBONNE
•UNV/Nwr
UrKlaryi
CiVOVtB 1^
(Pans IV)
Pans IV
m
auNv
ind
not
Juno 15.
ipt YS -
mwiad awag» a^-
•aaa $«» N V
$3700 others Prof 0
sue.
<t14)257.
desk Keckhotf 304 sad bousing ataado- today Metmu MOB Fre«
*'^ -Flaad awMM. directed ^
^V^aS Fuller and sUrnng Richard laSi
-EaSaaSar. i asg al Ma featuring fee sImm i am. aard ?1 BNMH vm.
Oarwin Gross tnaavaigBk master 7 pin Frie ^^-Xm ,€3^9mmi i«.
April 2r BuncHa SliB laaaiil 1966 Academy Awardwmmng
— ammpi Caaras directed by Vmcente foreign film with discussion to follow will
fttinnerii and starring Tony Curtis and
Debbie Reynolds will Be shown 5 pot (C otitinucd on Pago f )
ATTENTION
GSA SENATORS
The Graduate Students
Association Senate meeting
scheduled for Monday, April
19, has been postponed to
April 26.
There are many important a-
genda items to be dealt with,
and alt senators are urged to
attend.
The meeting (on the 26th) will
be held in the Founders Room
of Pauley Pavilion at 6:45 P.M.
In
to Mm. Carolyn arown,
a ActMaM Ofaea. 1t1 lUroklica Hm imtL
STSdi). DO MOT aaMO oaiacTLv to aaiNM.
of pi*aMaHi, bMHfif In
nm on Mondoya and Thuradaya only.
TMa la a aorvloa proetdad by Iha Olidalaw of
Aftolra. And, dyo lo a MMllid MdOdiil of
of roquaata. mm mk Wm yo^
to Itama of on OmctAL NATUIfi Mr
at: aoglatfoaon In
""^ ■
Itad Murpfiy Hod. for
Tliofo la a fSS LATI Im H
10:00 am
•'►
Study Uat (oa of April 10)
Tho aiudy ial of iwriMad nl OdloMoa O^FICtAL for
aaOiaTEaCD aaidanta on dia landi diy of ofoaMo; N la
and moUad lo aodi raflalapad alydoat N (
Ian doya, Inquira of Oia EnroamonC Ofaoa. 11J4 Mlurpfiy Hoa.
dua lo a paeslOli orror on Oio port of Oia UnfvoroMy
lo lao alydofira acadawdc dion toy Oia and of dio
of iwiOiBMaii lo ao aenaldarad for — laar of owy
f
Uat (ay ApfO SO)
aiudonda aiao ora not enreiad In oaMoa oa of ApfO 10
by ftOnf a Study Uat Cord ($10 lao)
advisor Slydonla In Low. Modlclno. and DanUatry anroN
by
't
SELF DEFENSE CLASS
FOR WOMEN
... ''•
U
PREPARE
MIND AND
SEX-RELATED ASSAULTS AND RAPE
Six two-hour sessions, beginning April 21, 1976
PLEASE REGISTER AT ONCE.
ENROLLMENT UMITED.
Counci
■ ("
1
I
<
,1 ■ y '
' ► ■ • .'--'si
i.#
\'^
Kf
THIRD
ANNUAL STUDENT
k\\W- PHOTOGRAPKVDORAr
^^ AprtI T0.25 In ALL STORES
Prt» WlnrUng Photographs
and EntrtM Submmwj
by Students, oget n-22
--BROADWAY
Sno««pack Lodge
Mammotli Lakes
Scmi-dorm
Hr.MH? itB
Kitchen
S6 00 per person
_Ai>o^ Condo for reru
641-t155 altef ^M
TVs
ihows:
sti male dominance
beioir
cxyrxTToA h^fi
OLYMPUS
35mm Compact Cameras
3SEC
•f you wcmt o fmm qua(>ty Oiymput 35mm compoct
Comoro ot on oHordqb*^ pf»c« f>ow it th« tim« to
com« «n ^o Bmi Air Cofn^co A Hi^t \Nm hov« th« 0«ym
pus 35 ED with o fthorp 36mm f2 8 Zo»ko L*n» which
shoots bfiUiont block ond w^it« or fontosttc color
photogrophs In Outomotic ftoshhil control coiculat*&
th« right omour^t o^fili light to •hmmot* horsh shod
ows. Th« Olympus «p*c*oitsfs ot i#f Arr Comoro t Hi
Fi or« oH#rmg comporobl* sovingi or^ oM Olympos
compoc* com«f OS including th# r»#^ 35 RD
Only
bzlQircomcrQ&N^
927 WesfWood Blvd Los Ange»e$ P0024 (213) 477-9569 or 879-9616
V^ itoCfc S -ot UCIA y> W<ot»M,guo »«Ou»l MorKJOv-Soturaov 0-6
Dl Staff Writv
Even though the tdevtsion industry it currently leaning toward
the Vie erf tiK wommn protJigonist. the ''iiioQHt formuk** for i
series like ^PoIicewMBgn** is ttill one of male 4nmikmMniL
according to Doug Benton, producer of the show.
His presenution laft Wednesday night imm a part of the
UCLA Extension coune, Television in Perspective What MakM
TV Proirams Tickr "*
-Poiicewomanr a popular two-year-old series starring Angic
[>ickinsofi, IS among the latest of Benton's works, which have
included **Dr Kildare,** '^Ironside'* and *The Rookies.**
Although Pepper Anderson, the policewoman role which
Dickinson portrays in the seriet, it a strong woman in a
'Hraditionally male role." Benton maintains that the most
favorable audience response occurs when she fcts involved m a
situation where she has Xo he sawid by a inan.
According to Benton female viewers Mpond more favorably to
the series than male. *>
Strong elMractcr
••If a woman iM a strong character and tells off men, you get a
strong negative reaction from men,** he said.
As a ^rt of his presenution. Benton showed one of the
"Policewoman" episodes, during which Pepper took an under-
cover assignment to break up a drug smugghng ring; Aside from
worrying a little about not having been to the hairdraaiar in three
weeks, she carried out her duties in an assertive manner
However^ true to, Benton's theory, she was kidnapped near the
end and had to be rescued by her partner, BiU Crowley
The story on which the episode was based was uken from a
true Los Angelea narrotics case, according to .Benton.
RcaHstic
"We don't make up the majority of our material,'' Ik said
Labeling his series as '^realistic police drama," he added that 99
per cent of the material comes from stones told to them by real
policemen Fred McK night. Police sergeant in the narcoiics
division serves as the show's technical advisor
"Usually the story has to be tailored to fit a woman because of
most of the stoTies we get originally involved men," he said
They can't be too much of a fataiy Women at home have to
be able to identify with them," Benton said
Richard Lindhcim, vice president of program research for NBC
and the professor for the course, revealed this week's program
David Victor, creator o^ "Marcus Welby, M D " and **Owen
Marshall," will discuss his views on the production oLa television
series.
'» -g^<
I;.
T
regularly 1.98
The big stu rdy pen you can have any of th ree ways:
ink cartridge, ballpoint or marker its a simpie^
classic pen that goes against todays throwaway
culture — It nr>ay last you the rest of your lifef
f^ftllable of course — and yours in fight bright
cok> rs All this at a savings now m ou r Penn Cent ral
Station
M .
COIWE^
"» ■ r
h y^^
see us at the
Grand Bailr
Ackerman
f IS
m
at
- •
>
r
Travel Fair! L"*? fp".' ^o-
We'ra the AS UCLA Travel Service
and hara't what makas us diffarent. and why you should
come to talk to ut about your plans
• yNm'm right here on campus
• Were the ONLY official UCLA service
• ^•'re part of ASUCLA. which means our profits go directJy
back to you
• Were the only aU-ttudent Travel Service
• Every member of our staff is an experienced student traveler
aruJ knows ¥vhat you're looking for
V•i•^-•^^^^^JC*^»!<<<•^^^^^^•>viv.^%%>^^^^^^^^%•.v•:.^>■<•••-. '^^
s
We have over 1500
flights to Europe!
We also have flights to New York
and Hawaii, and flights to Eaatern
Europe. Africa and Asia
We have SATA flights - with tHi
lowest prices available anywhere,
and many are exciuaiveiy ours
Our selection of student tours is
immense You can pick from Un-
reginr>ented Tours. Camping and
Hotel Tour arrangements. Es-
corted Tours. Budget to Lavish
Tours
We hmym travel counselors — the
expertise of our staff and EXPO'S
staff IS at your bidding And boy ~
are we handy!
PRIZES!
We'll be givmg away trairei t>ook8* if you wish to look over
a greater selection, go to the Students Store Book
Department Travel Section. ar>d broeiBe. H's on ttte B
level. Ackerman Union.
>k^
Hi
LeTsQ^
Three oo
■iirepe on $10 a Oey
^
in union (wim EXPO)
V^^^^P
Wed., April 21
We'll give you plain talk about
Charter Flights' workings
tf our pnc«t SMm higher than some commonly adv^ft'itod
•• • ^^^'yy <*> fl»^ you pric«« i»oaiiy svatiabis at th« time
wa adwailiM lh«m W« couldn t ewn begin to list sii our
ttights •¥«n If w took th« •nt*r« Daily Brum to %t\om them
to you
All pricM art regulated by the Civil Aeronautics Bear^
and neither we nor any other Travel Agency can dttcount
prices set on^chaftafs
Whit we CAN do is set up the most advantageous
arrangements fee you by carefully checking what is
available
We offer you the services of the EXPO travel library; mm can
arrange your itinerary through Allied Holidays Biefidefi
Tours Charter Space Management. Continental Expreaa.
CIEE. EIT. Kuoni Travel and Universal Tours There are
more Well do our t>est to get you where you want to go.
but It may not always be by a charter f hght Therefore ev^ry
destination may not t>e economically feasible by charter
JJ^^:^^ sign-up limit it •mmutabte Flights in reality
.^ftlt Up 5 to 6 months in advance
We really don't try to mislead you or imply we le the hot
_ Jhott that'll get you a super deal the week before you want
Z^STT ^^'X.""^*"'* ^ <*«>"• ~ tout what we CAN do iS'
pretty impressive. ar»d we reeliy don't have our heads in ttte
eieuds at>out charters
«w«i
I
r
4
i
I
i
■r T""*
Some examples oif our
terrific travel buys:
Los Angeles to New York
Jun«21
$99.00
LAX-Honolulu-LAX
Aug. 7-21
from $189.00
LAX-London-LAX
July 27-AMg. 2S
$379.00
*
-
-'''
■
■
i
,^.r V--
■
-V.
I
i
IV-
I
I
f
cant NwlM N le aw
MClWiN
^
i«
Woodpecker protection
Xuwof .Ww Clortm Circle; nottd EnvironmcnutiM
John Gof man
ProfcMor Emeritus, U.C. Berkeley
David Pesonen
Chairman^ Califormam for Nuclear Safegv^ds
Ian Forbes
Chairman, Oept. of Nuclear Engtneenng, Lowell Tech. Ir»$t.
A Discussion of Energy
Policy — Nuclear Safe-
guards Initiative
Friday, April 23
12 noon-4 p.m.
Ackerman Grand Ballroom
Spomored by Spe*ker» Program, O.f.C.A., UCIA Geography Depi
Z)
fy IB potkion to prevent
thcftnng injury and by rela-
uvely bttle ihock-transmjtting
cerebro-flpiiial fluid sur-
rounding the brain.
"Other people*! research in-
dicated roution of the head »
one of the most significant
iacton in producing injury. It
ipifr jM Utt fucn tim ymfm
hit. but that your head if
shaken in a rotary way That
tends to break the brain up,**
May said.
liiif I dHUfSi
The icsearchers have hcgun
tentative talks with helmet
manufacturers and hope the
study will bring radical
Xove Your Toes' . . .
(Continued from Page 4)
Ironically. Su Lu. who ac-
companies her^lf on all her
songs, was ^Hoo shy to sii^
solos** in her high school choir.
**This has changed in recent
years,** she said, "now I don*t
nund •* With this, Su Lu began
singing "Fly Away Tsetse Fly**
at a very fast pace People
>urne<tto hsten as they walked
Lubin claims no secret form-
uja for her songwnting, "It just
comes naturally. At any time I
can get an inspiration for a
soiig. jLDd I write the words
down. The music comes later.**
Su Lu*s quick rise his not
been as dreamlike as it might
seem. According to the Ethnic
Arts m^or, there is pressure.
** Right now I'm just wnting for
radio, but I am feelmg the
pressure from knowing that
breaking into the music as^
dustry is difficult. ** She ex-
plained.
Currently. Lubin has sent in
two other songs besides "Fly
Away Tiatie Fly." They are
"Barnyard Sex" and "How to
Potty Tram a Spider "
Tenutively, Su Lu is also
coasidering making a children's
record
"Fm not crazy."^ she said. "(
just want to make people
happy. Its a way of letting olf
pressure for students and
cheering people up."
-When people hear *I Love
Your Toes' they say *you*ve got
to be kidding. But people's
attitudes change after hearing
It,** Lubin said.
Diaaay Studios has looMd
them aone woodpecker foo^
age to study. May said, aad he
woiiid wclGOflK other fUm
donatioos as well as help froa
PmiiMui Thooas HoweB of
UCLA donated the wood-
peckers for the study and gave
his explanation oi w^ this
particular bird chooses to
thump his head agauMt a tree
hundreds of tiaei a day
Woodpockers bore and chi-
sel into trees because it is
-os~'^eetuM
*/
*.
CO-SI
There is no peace because there are no peacernakers/"
The Costs of Peacemaking
A Talk By
^f • - - . '
Father Daniel Berrigan
_ — One o( the firsl U.S. priesis lo go to prison (or in aa of conscience
-Author of Ifce Trial o( Ih, CMowvUle Nine, and No i»i5 to Manhood
Tonight, 8 PM,
URG, 900 Hilgard
and also tomorrow noon
lanss Steps
(ICIA
BtCENTEMNIAL
EVENT
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
THROUGH BRITISH EYES
THIRD in the UCLA BICENTENNIAL LECTURE SERIES
J.R. POLE
Vico Mastor. Churchill Collego. Dambridge Univoraity; Britiah acholar
who has mado an intonsive study of Anr>orican history aruj politica
a aHh'^ ?^ ^^I*^ t>»>K;oln and ttio BrUMi Worhlng Ctoaa; Th^
Ai^MiLia of Domocrocy (odttor) arid numoroua othor booka and
articloa.
source not available to other
birds," said Howell, referring
to the more elusive iwaots.
TarriSoey
^Woodpeckers do not have a
vocal system, so it is their wav
of announcing their temtory
and presence," he said "They
also excavate aailii^ holes for
the young."
Woodpeckers haiwu into
trees at approximately 35-44
blows per two seconds, a rate
iMter than the ordinary movie
camera speed can record, the
reaearchera said.
The woodpecker study may
pMiltvely aniply to the protec-
tion of people. May said,
talking (^17" promising kada.**
May did /not mention if he saas
the new helmet design thk year
or in five years. But if you
want to save human heads,
you canV be pecky.
Festival. .
(Continued from Page 1)
roie of the Buddhist Mate of
miad in the contemporary
world
Also aisnrirttid with the
fouihday festival is the ongomg
art disphiy in the University
Research Library illustrating
**The Three Streams of Bud-
dhism: from Asia to Call-
forniai** sponsored by Asia i
continues WEDNESDAYS. 8 P M Dodd Hall 147
KCLLBV. ^inlsBSUi of Hittory. UC Santa BartMra
TWO HUNDRED YEARS Of THE TWO PARTY SYSTEM - HOW
HAM IT EVOLVED AND WHERE ARE WE?
Mays
May 12
RACE*T2rA'Ji?SpT»r2Jsr °* ^**^ ^ •^•^
SEvoLu?fcr"^^ "^^'^^RatkjnsoftheameSIcan
MARY BETH NORTON. A«oci.f P^ol,^ ^ ^ia^. Comai
Uni
No Admission Charge
Wednesday, April 14
THE MfVOtUTlON AS A WAR OF LIBERATION TOW
byUCLA Bicamenniai UMnmitwe and ConHiUOaa on PubMc
InvHed
(CoMlnuad
ii
Campus evente
■,*.
li J"5*f^ ArcSMti
■"^ ■■■■ ■■■«* tfirwrtid Sy AMMO
on a iMt
Sm tonigtn. kcMm-
— Tw nm m • to aaa n 4
jwtriiis Itcutrt 33M30 pm
"IS "
« teeisl asass. 7^ pn OyHi. .
""» Stilmg 7.S s«i. AU Jit? Me
1 /I
Meditation Study
Volunieers nM^Ml ♦or Doaocal thcM wudy on M«di-
5^^ Cka «Mt mm 74 M
I pa, Fnaay,. m^mm^ ftym 200 lar ai
M tMcoMs SaS sraetiofis Ml^
workt viu St sfMtnttd by gradtiatf
sHigawu noon Apni 20 SchoanSarg
^•^ lUfiaay ISO
^JJJJrljS JSii. w>ill parlor n
m. Aam n Cm$ fST^ ■"^" *"'
gMtM PP. inSS^ iTiSt
«•/«••« 1-rsai. ama iCJ jyJTTi
»^^ WfaaHNiB, 34 pm aac B ia
tat.on. Personality and Academic Stress Measured/
Film series also prtfiemexi
o
r
>
■ .1'
'J:
1
N d lanaiiiiii T^as^ 4 m
IsSay. mm Scianca aaOA^^
^Z^ ^* J> ^awaisao wrt* It at-
^ ^i^har Bsaa Bafrigan. S piR.
.*P HMaarS and noon, tomorrdw
^ h Na
•f clBBsaa aaaie. iictura-ayaaaa «M la
prtaantad ly Howard Ftidmafl racard
and mmtc lacturar. 7-ia §m
^. ^"^ ^ 'Ml LsiSn tog
^mi.mntt ^laaiaii viawpotms ts a
1« 82.S0 far atu
Miaani of UCLA
^ a
S3 sanaral aaaasiai
a
1910-1030 2 pm
•Z75
i tptfar a aiaai
^ pm. tomorrow Buncht 3?11
■•J5* Witod aston. wMi dis
IN sieaa a aa ipaMa
ML 2 pm AprN r
Studasjjarsrr Campiai 111S
** ^ an aducationa aaia
, J*^* a» Apnl ?1. Acfcanm
womaTs aanfa
-JJJJMlie • to mmr. 2-3 pm Apnl
21. Aoaanair 3517
^[JM*I •• isii, rtvoiuiionary Bud
SST^* fT^ Mamawn noon.2 pm.
Aprn 21. Acktrman woman s loai|a
"'■at SavM Immi. Biiaaiai act a
[ndii. Napaf and Tlbal. an tllustratad
lyanrt. 2gM pm.
^^^^^m • manpa
■""^ ^M fcrti. arcnitactura. vwmw
snipawtino sa aMiiraad tactiirt. 44aa.
wmmmm. Adiamian woman's lonnfa
^iim^toihr_saa.aaaaa.w.
«r2!l!*! ^ •'•^ •** "Mt 10-11
^.!?^:;^ ^ toaaraa. 44 pm. AprM
atnd 10.11 am AprH 23 aaH
4223. Cai 82S.2031 for
uai
TMvi to.—
pw woaans Bym Mk Saoamo/Paia 1-2
ET ^sJ^V^ Haraaaacfc ramg 7a imi
JarcA^ff Co«a. Shop. 6aaKy^4-l0 im
AU 2400, Flyms 7-9 pm. KH 400. Gardan
•vary aftarnoon Horticulturt JBsrStna
•fMiag 34 pm aac a ia
Taaday
3JM pm Fiaa 7 Karatt 5-7
200 Siiaa/Trap. naan-i
^ , ,— ■ 3 304 pm. hfiti 7 Air atta
;*iM I^Sm. ana aaiii woman, Karaa
I^J ? ??^ *^» ^ "^ 6
140 Kung Fu 2 5 pm aAC B 14S Claaa S-
"JC B 111 aounaaaas. noon aoort
Lsw. ^naasaii 74 pm KH 400
May
H^toa naon-2 pm aamans Oya m.
js«. >7 pm aomant Gym tm Sacai
M pm. Womana Gym 200; Tanntt
Tournamaa. 24 pm. South Couns
Taam
200.
^Oto the SannBndsco
•pata
n7ftaa*9L 7Z7jMi.
^ _^. , ^ up. PSA fares gi. down. And
Cfnnnm|bgda hamaii Jsrgain birda niahUy
»^ Misra. Saadays. holiday t
Froai LA. to San ftaadaaa. Oakland.
^ Siajoaa. Or Holly wcxid Burbank t(
Saay^aoaop. Call your campua lap. Say j.m
want tiie moonfuahi Brndy Hodgp 47a-18ia
2^04 pm aaaaa Gym
pm Womms Gym 200
2-7 pm. Horticultufe Gardan
HoNvwnud
^* ^Al I lUiA 4 ^M TlMA A ^
i^ ' *I6 Konpo 5 3i)4JB pm
AjM^ w "^'^" ■ prvvi , iavvTl9 WwHf
t0^ Judo. 24 pm aac B AHiido 747m
Sailino. 1-5 pm. aorrit Cyp
Nortrtrapa aaraa Da Roy laoTDaai
Karat 10-noon Womana Gym 200. Cncka
10am 7 pm Cncka Pttch Garpaa 2-7 am
Horticulture Gardan
A:aO|Mn
1
fSAghcs
V
a an.
I
>
I
AMER-I-CAL
UCLA TAY SACHS DISEASE
TASK FORCE MEETIHG:
MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1876
4 P.M., AUaS17
(or CM 75S-7333 or i86720 for mofo Into.)
- Com. (..m and hrtp in W,t. Important n«»m«jic*lpfogr«rT,
- Vo*unt««, ar. nM(tod for oommunlcMlona (on and oft
campua).
others about Tay Sachs Oiaaaae. and
at the tima of the acraanmg (April 2e-29)
g^ic Oiaaaaas dapands upon our wtllingnaaa. aa atudants. to
make It work on thia campus Pravaatattva mad.c.na is the beat
kind; Tay Sachs Diaaaaa a compjetaiy pravantable*
Halp iia to halp olhafs — volimlaar s mna Snia.
, I
t
I
p^-
J
I
u
■x^
./ •
point
■■^.
DB Editorial
Good
4
k
New Policy
EIHcthf today, ttw Daily Bruin Is cluinglng pmrt of
;• Mi odltorial poMcy rogardlng tubmltlad lotlort and
£ columns.
£ Fonnsfly, tho distinction bstwaon a latiar and a
r ff*»mn/ras t>asad puraly on longth. Matadal undar 40
< typad Unas was publlshad as a laftar to tha adltor
^ ovar 40 Unas H was traalad as a coimnn.
I Wa hava^daddad to abandon this rathar afbltfary
^Va^a^ .^Z^ instaad raly on tha judgmant of tha
^adltorlal diractors to datarmlna tha placamant of
ri!!!'*!!.?" tha Vlawpoint pagas. In ganaral, submltlad
^opy will appaar as lattars; matarlal of axcaptlonal
qualtty or inlarast, as datarmlnad by tha adltodal
diractors, may ba ^blMfd as columns.
^ HH! U!r «*^"^ ••^^ "'*•" '^ •" malarial submltlad
ia still SO Unas. Publication of any matarlal, of couraa,
-.-^ 1^ guaranlaad.
by Jacque Wood
Wa walcoma your commants about this ravMon In
our adltodal policy. Wa hopa you 9hmfm our ballaf that
mia changa wIN Improva tha quality, raadabllHy. and
•ppmmrmncm of tha Vla%vpolnt pagas.
The road to hell is paved wan food intentions
ind thoie innocent dedicated clipboard wetldins
vblunieers have the mo*i noble ol intentions.
They want sufficient signatures to get hand gun
control on the corning elsction ballot. Two ROTC
boys were stopped by these Brum walk workers.
No, they didn't sign "Hell." one of them said,
"This is a ire^ country If they want to spend their
4t/f with a clipboard . . . well, it is better than
stealing hubcaps."
The ROTC boys were as innocent as the
llS'^^ture collectors. Innocent in that tfie real
point ^nd the extremely dangerous and frighten-
ing points were unnoticed: (1) Most crusaders are
rarely crusading against what they submit is their
problem. There have been "hand guns" and
"Gallbs" and "flounde*" since time began. Such
matters should be left to historians (who re-
rnember Warsaw) and the workers who work and
to dentists who look into millions of mouths.
Signature colleaors should always be viewed with
suspect and their "arpyiynts" should never be
accepted since the oppoiing arguments ^re noi
known or divulged. (2) We ^re a democracy. If
our eleaed officials do not pass the lauvs needed
then throw the rascals out.
We elected them because they were know-
ledgeable men. Referendums bypass our law
making structure by taking the issues direaly to
the people. Well, if you hav* ever probed the
minds of the people you'll find that it is square
Square like the idiot box they watch. Worse, some
A self-inclusive social commentary
by David Winkelman
•lections draw m little as 18 per cent of the
eftgible voters whoie votes »re our destiny Often
this 18 per cent has the same mentality as the
clipboard holders who know nothing aboot the
history of the ways of tyrants and toialiurian
governments who got into power by having
ur^^rmed slaves as citizens True, handguns are
only good for killing people. But so are 95 par
cent of the rifles and shotguns citizens kept
hidden under beds, in doiets and sometime in
gun racks. My suggestion is this: Get a law pmm4
that says a course must be successfully passed sn
gun handling, storage, firing und safety.
This course ccittficiie would enable a psrasA
to buy a gun without divulging his identity
Think, man! Crooks walk around with registered
guns. So, the gun registration laws g^e a farce and
unconstitutional. The NRA (Natiorwl Rifle As-
sociation) who have spent millions lobbying
trying to keep the government's sticky fingers oh
their guns %re not a bunch of stupid killers
In spite of the NRA some 40 lam have been
passed restricting the carrying, use, purchase
firing, etc. of guns. K4sfl of the laws work in
favor of the crook. For example, a killer ap-
proaches your car gun in hand. According to the
bw you miy then load your gun. Good luck,
citizen! You're a dead gun loader gg were all
those truck drivers shot in the head on the
Pennsylvania turnpike while parked. Yes, sign
those clipboards ar>d put a sign on your back
porch, "This house has no guns."
f
Q
(Editor's note, Winkelrr^sn h a
senior and is completing an"
individual mafor).
This is a self-inclusive social
commentary. It is in part, a
response to the article 1 read
several weeks ago in the Da/7y
Bruin about Erhard Seminars
Training, and mainly a respor>se
to a moving letter I received last
week from a friend, who is one
OPINION
(
*
I
6f the politically intense minori-
ty striving to slow down the
momentum of social ills per-
petuated to a large extent by the
politically indifferent majority.
Contrary to what was an im-
pressively biased approach in
the article on EST, I wn not
writing to mold any opinions,
about the organization- "move-
fnent -experience. There won't
be any decisions to make at the
end of this. 1 want simply to
share my perspective, (yes, I am
a graduate) about the kind of
experience- phenomenon EST is
for many individual lives and for
society as a whole. For purpoics
of brevity, I ask you to accept
one assumption in this process;
that basically EST is an experi-
ence concerned with individual
frowth and personal awareness.
That assumption is implicit in
this excerpt from my friend's
letter "|f'$ simple enough to
understand that change begins
from within. I can accept the
view that when we have ac-
complished understanding com-
munications and interpersonal
relations we will surely have a
Ur\er race of men and women
However, what does that do ior
the ecorKKnic situation of the
world? What does that do for
starvation, racism, sexism, labor
disputes, governmental abuse of
power, child care, profit mar-
gins? What does "self" have to
do with anything when it comes
down to it?" - :
What seems inherent in both
a person's choice to do EST and
in my friend's questions h a
search for at least partial answers
to very real problems. That peo-
ple are presently looking for
angers is nothing new to man-
kind. That there are no set
answers is also nothing new.
To me EST calls attention to
itself by being the newest and
moat dramatic way of seeking
the personal answers. With it,
possibly more than any other
similar experience, the line be-
tween personal concerns and
Unique and different
By Mark Tauger
(Editor's noth; Tauter is a senior, music mafor This is the first oart
of a two part series). ^
Mr Posner's article of April 9 "Music performance: where to and
how? presents a misinformed and linfair description of the UCLA
fnusic program His sources do not represent fairly the maiority's
feelings in the da|Mrtment; he cites untruths as truths; he presents
inadequate information in an effort to .JMPport a piaure guile
contrary to the actual state of affairs; and finally, the quotations and
Ideas presented in the article point to quite different conclusions
than the weak ones . Mr. Posner draws. t_
OPINION
(C onlinued on Page II)
Mr. PcMner (teicribes the music department m Ixking "focus" and
direction several times This is not the caw, the department',
program is quite clearly focused and directed - away from
performance. Of th* more than 17 ci«M» in the major, 14 are
specifically required, inlcuding 6 in theory. 17A-F. and 6 in music
r^.^*^ *" '^ U d«Mi ttkes «. much d.« time a. a
dil^ i^l J^' Jr.n? ^ '•'' ^°^'"«1 The wortc for these
cgstw includes rwt only daily assignments and papers, but also the
ammtopment of highly specialized technical skills, called musician-
ship. Musjcianship is part of the everyday ciasswork but no mu«cian
ever finishes working on musicianship. It makes the demands on
music students unique and different from th«e in other maioc*.
fJ^A 1'°" '° *'"*"<^ <^'«« '*">«■ homework and musicianship,
^?1^^ T*"!**'*^' '"""'' "^f^^ '° P'»«*« •"<1 perform. Now
competent performance presupposes at least 2 hours of practin
tae« '^o^ Pei^of^nce clasiesmerit only 2 units and performance
to ^ition. musK ma;ors must take mostly non-fiM|or ctafwST
^^ik A "f**"*^* '^'O'- 'o' instance, one can easily end up with
«trLil^°'^A*''*^ "^>°' °' '^i°'-'*^t^ Mo«c IS at least
rj*^ ** Chemistry or Math, yet somehow music majors do
not merit a comparable degree of specialization. The o«.c«l Veason
tor this inappropriate state of arta.rs is that UCLA gives a BA and
Tw'«!J'tKr.°'.'* "i'^P^P'* **> •«fe'^ly specialized in music.
levJr h,^ K."" ^^''' P**"* *« Vecializidin other maK>rs is
Tnrt^^Tf ^ ^^* '••' ^"*''"* •'* con.«,uence, of the
^r^' "'^"'* "^^ '^ '"«** what^s good fef them and that
performance is not really important
d^l^VllJ'."**''* ""^ °"*' '"<1*^*<*"*I» both in and outside of the
UoT ,t2 ^"TV'"'^ *«»>'«• concern about performance at
contfnuJ. iT't^"" 11^°* "^^ »o end and the hullaballoo
HUH '^S^L^' '*»•". »« l« clo^ when he quoted tohn
■n«My It performance is every bit as importtnt » the acMfafMC
S2«Lf .kT^. 'J^ 'r?^ • f^*"^ »ru4tp»n^, that
«J*|^«*d the students take hinory and «Me manMMnt dawcs
white .r;!A^i?ll'****' «^*^«T>ents from anato^rtTzooloty.
e«aaiy what the musk department is doiiw hu t^i^m A* ..nta
^performance. H ..iT^epartmenrSnS^ ::!?7nd*U"S;
performance, H siioiM prove its seriousness by eivinc the M^Mb
'X' iCer'^L^"^ ^-ognitK>n"r^::J^^
thedeoSJ^^!^ presented an unfair view of attitudes wwhin
me aepartmcfit He says: "Amone faoilb^ and ^.iki„i.
iHoae who feel some of the ^ M^^^i^""
(CniUliiiii — Piyll)
More dh EST
■ 11
world-other-civic concerns is
»»«^ more diitinct. There is a
■fJ!!::*«:»«^ on Me retpom^
tHltties, survival, and taljilaclion.
In th» way, the wmem widely felt
>pcio-polfticaJ rnpiiijibilities of
^^^ •^■iBi ate flow accoBiod or
choion on the basis of the value
^»ok related aaivities will pro-
wee in one's Me.
Within this rtirhomiiiy there is
•JT "**? "^*>^- ^ iliipln, welt
'"" * sophisticated upper
Nkely to afliect social
chawfe, are spemiing increoiiog
wpononal energy ar\d resources
on self fulfillment, (which is
toUlly healthy by societies sun-
d^rdis) while conditions in the
world around them (us), much
to our awareness and even co*>-
com, Mie becomir>g increasingly
More on music
^ructive lor hufnoi^ bemgs.
inauding ultimately ourselves.
i^^n^***^' ' *'*<^*''««e constant-
ly «Wiin thtt irony ..sl^illpg ^ ^
evolving way with my toiiao ol
pergonal and community res-
ponsibilities. Sometimes they
|orm omm unified concern;
•ometimes I form them into two
equally demanding voices
When I balance these two
nooA. or hi If ill them both with
o'jeactivity, I feel a satisfaction
When I don't, I am torn apart, I
feel guilt and frustration
It is a conscious process for
•ne^ Inevitably, I wiN both grow
and contribute Moreover, I
experience a similar process
going on with many of my
friends. In this way, I continue
to learn from and support them,
UX>. Thanks, Lynn
Firandi studenti
^^tter Jo the Editor
P^ Frernrh Education Ministry
'•cintly aniKMinced ^ans to cut
hack such courses as philosophy
Mod history in the universitios —
and focus on more iob-oHofMed
studies — in order to stem high
unemployment among college
graduates. In roapofiae* a fludont
strike has spread throufhoMUhe
f rench university system. Last
Thursday, 70.000 French students
marcf^ed along the boulevards of
Paris, protesting that such cut-
backs would lower the quality of
their education and their lives.
They proclaimed that they
weren't interested in being
pushed through a knowledge
lactory merely to be employed as
functionaries for capitalism and
the corporations.
To speak generally, I think that
this event poinu up the different
(CoaiinMtf frwa Page If )
Firs^ consider the insoluable problem facing a music maior
rfiirding praaicing in the first place. disoMod ahoJe Wo/S
consider the way Mr Mehta deaTwith l^STiJ^
Now besides the fact that this is not the case that Mr M^lta
^^."tl^ go back and apologize or som^ atmj'to^i?
e^ent of p^t.ng a gre^;' ^| SSSST f ^ ^^^^^^^
krSiTori::: '"^ i^r'?'^ ^^^^- ^^^ thit "r n^S^'
M TJS^'UZJ^^^ "''^ "^^7^^** and groups in this
Sd^J^«f \^ V^ ?«^'"» professor in a top^floor office
«K< Students are here for four years of fooling" he and hk
m^r?^^ i^L '^ ' ^**^ ^"•°" ^*^ "«' "^^^ ^>« opinion any
more qualified or any more repio»nutive of the faculty ^
If you Vote fi
orientation of ff9f%(^ wrsd . „,_. ^
can students during the current
economic crisis.
The protesting French students
feel that they are an integral part
of their society and are thus con-
cerrted with creating the best type
ofiodtypoailblt Tothem. if the
economy cannot employ studeivts
•^ philoaophy and history, the
answer is not to chanse the cxuri-
culum. but to ch«nfe the
economy In academic lingo, the
condifions of society (i.e. an
economic system that renders
graduates unemployable) are not
statK paran\exers, but dynamic
variabloi sub^oct to change by
human direction. In ihort, the
*ys^ '^w*' change to fit human
needs, rKK vice versa.
By contrast, the vision of most
American students is quite limit-
ed.. Rathor than question the
basic premises of an irrational
oppressive system of corporate
or :
nts instead scr.
in
rule,
to find a
that system. Raihor than
tofoiher lor a now society thaT
fits our neods, the anawor tor
iob rr\
niany is to c
<«her for a "secure
deteriorating market
Our aspiratiom lor ioaal and
economic luttice, genuine
"'^cracy . and freedom — a
we can truly call ours ^f^
important than fulfilling the func-
tionary demand of some rip-off
"^"*tmational firm. The business
^^ ^^^^^ akout IS building a
new society in which human
beings can live decent, creative
lives without war, hunger, and
repressive work. As a popular
ilOfan from the french student
r^llion of 1966 expressed it in a
slightly different context, "don't
change employment, change the
employment of life!"
>
r
I
1
s-m
if:)buM)te for 5lk^'^ Cor>irol sl^\\
never 3et etecied^) noti^(^ eiera^
Purpose doesn't equal Reason — E.D.
y«ar Wm gun lobtoy
I*--
V).
MM'M
\
The great HP 25 programmable
calculator — formerly 195.00
is now
'.'wU''>
-Jt^' '•*» -r
•«.>
Keyboard Commands:
Trigonometric functions 3 angular
^o6es (doQfoaa. radiant, grads) • Sin x
• Arc sin x • Cos,x • Arc cos x • Tan x
• Arc tan x • Rectangular coordmataa
♦* Polar coordinates • Decimal anpla
ilina) ♦♦ Angle in ^agmm (hours)/
minulof/tacondi
ijogarifhmic functions: Log x • Ln x •
e**10'
Statistical functions: Moan and
tliMidaid daviation • Posiiiva and
negalivo summation giving n.^x. zk^
IV. ixy
^-'^egiglaf stack • Last x register • 0
•ddnaaaable registers • Program "*"
fvwmory for storage of up to 49 slaps
Prograimiiing:
Program writing capabffffy ♦ Sbiflg
•iytwgtuliun or inspackq^aof a
P'ogpam^^ame (to diaploy
intermediate result) • Program editing
capability • 8 relational tatts:s<>,
**X ^^y. tmy x^o, j>o.jr*o. x = o
• Conditional branching • Direct
bfancfiing
I
Coming soon: fbm HP 27; sciMitlfic, financial
statistical, non-programmabia calculator — 200.00
atactiUMita. b level im Scnoof SuppIlM) ackeffnen union. a2S-77ii
morvthurs 7 45-7 ao In 7
Jfl^
ykri.
1 ASIA FOCUS PRESENTS
!
I
<
»^
m
1
cD,
>"• , ,v.
(m-
* 1
' /
MONDAY, APRIL 19, 1976
12:00 Noon
Musical Procession and Opening Ceremony
with Allen Ginsberg, Wavy Gravy, Buddhist priests, and
The U.C.LA. Gagaku ensemble
JANSS STEPS
1:30^:00
'Buddhism in the People's Republic of China" fOm,
followed by discussion by Prof. Kenneth Ch^n
(U.C.L.A. Dept. of Oriental Languages)
-^^ WpMEN'S LOUNGE ACKERMAN
1
\
1
' e
V ■;/■■
1
r
f
1
3:30-4:30
Ten Years as a Zen Monk in Japan
an illustrated lecture by Ven. Daizen Victoria
WOMEN'S LOUNGE ACKERMAN
7:30-10:00
A Life Empowernient with Allen Ginsberg
GRAND BALLROOM ACKERMAN
TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1976
11:30-1:00
Dharma Demolition Derby
- with Wavy Gravy, Allen Ginsberg, & friends
MEYERHOFF PARK
1:00-2:30
-iental Brush Painting with Prof. Ensho Askika9»
(U.C.L.A., Dept. of Oriental Languages)
ROOM 3517 ACKERMAN
2:30-4:00
The Sacred Image • The Buddhist
Art of India, Nepal, and Tibet
an illustrated lecture by Dr. Pratapaditya Pal
(Curator, L.A. County Museum of Art)
WOMEN'S LOUNGE ACKERMAN
4:00-5:00
The Zen Worid: Architecture, Gardens, and Paini
an illustrated lecture by Prof. Don McCaOum
(U.C.L.A. Department of Art)
WOMEN'S LOUNGE ACKERMAN
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1976
12:00-2.-00
Filfing the Vokl Revolutionary Buddhism
a panel discusskm with Howard Fast, Masamori Kojimq
Ven. Thich Thien-An, Dr. Miyuki M^usen and others
WOMEN'S LOUNGE ACKERMAN
2K)0-3:30
Sitting with a Zen Master Kozan Roshi
ROOM 3517 ACKERMAN
3:30-4:30
Naropa Institute: An EducatKMial
Model Combining Buddhist and Western Approaches
Joe Goguen (Computer Science, U.CX.A.)
WOMEN'S LOUNGE ACKERMAN
7:30-10K)0
"Samurai" starring Toshiro Mifune
1956 Acadenriy Award Best Foreign Film
followed by a panel discussion with Miyahara Sensei
ROOM 1409 MELNITZ HALL
free admission by ticket only available at Film Archives Melnitz Hall
;
THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1976
- •wM«tr'->y»I'**t^Mff»-n
U
7:00-11:00
''The Seven Samurai**
fflm directed by Akira Kurosawa, starring Toshiro Mifune
ROOM 1409 MELNITZ HALL
admission by ticket only available at Film Archives Melnitz Hall
ALLEN GINSBERG
TONIGHT 7:00 P.M.
FREE ADMISSION
A.U. GRAND BALLROOM
Sponsored by Program Task Force • with the Assocntad Students Spaak
Program. GSA Communications Couticil, riil»..y»l »«/! R^r- r^:*»;rt«3tl
12.-00-2:00
An afternoon with a Tibetan Lama Incarnate
Ven. Tarthans Tulku
ALUMNI LOUNGE
KERCKHOFF
2:30-4:00
Mindfulness Meditation Techniques of Thai Buddhism
with Phra Maha Boonma
RCK)M3517
ACKERMAN
•■«-
Studies Center. Cound
7.-00-10K)0
FOm Festival
'^unseed; Zen in American; Mood of Zen;
Buddhism, Man, and Nature; Weaak in Sri Lanka"
ROOM 2160
DICKSON HALL
The exhibit
hrec Streams of Bucidbann: From Asia to California'
will continue through the
4i^
Research
I
J /
", ■■■■ xT-
10%
discount with coupon
on dfy ciMining only
23,1t7f •
10%
discount with coupon
on dry ciMining only
ft.197t
Number 1 Dry Cleaners
1126 Westwood Blvd.
478-6310
next to McDonalds
Complete Dry Cleaning and Launary
Parking in Rear
AUTO INSURANCE
W^ can save most students up to 35% on student
discounted policies. Call us in the Village for a
quotation:
477-2548
agents for College Student Insurance Service
1100 Glendon, #1447 ("Monty's" BIdg.)
ATTENTION
MINORITY STUDENTS WITH
CAREER PLANNING
CONCERNS ^
A representative from the Califomia State PeiBOnnel
Board will be on campua to provide career informatiorr
for all ma|ors. In addition, a representative from the
State Dapaftmant of Fish and Gamj|^.will afso be here to
provide currant caraar Mormation for Bidcgy, Zoology
and Botany majors No sign-ups necasaary.
Data: Tuaaday, April 20, 1976
Time: 2-4 p.m.
Plaoa: CampbaN Hall 122a
For further information contact: Rarnjy Senzaki. Minority
Affairs^ Repraaamativa. Placement and Caraar Planning
Center. BIdg. 1G — 825-2981.
GRADUATE
STUDENTS
I
.'j
There is still timii to run for
GSA Office this year.
Elective offices are:
President
l8t Vice-President
2nd
Petitions may be picked up in Kerckhoff 301
Petitions are due rK>t later than 3:00 pm
on Wedneaday April 21.
There is a mandatory candidate's meeting
on Friday April 23 at noon
in Kerckhoff 301.
T5:
cnbGPbainn h0nb~i ndcx
\r
'Cross Country'
A compelling puzzle
ly Karm Graai
Copalry, one of three
shows now in repertory at tiK
Mark Taper Forum, is not a
conventional play. This uo-
ufual, four-actor piece written
by Sana Miikr ttarted out ai
a poesi.
Directed by Vici^i Rue« it it
a ttaaed exploration oi events,
people and emouons in a wo-
nian*i life CroM Coaalry m
DOC read, but seen aad felt,
though the words aic fK^ic
The piece is reminisdcnt of a
photograph being developed.
in the course of an hour i^nd a
haH, dM image of a womaa
McCain
Uirkk: a
■amed Perry forms. Perry it a
iaiightrr student, wife, moth-
er, teaflirr, lover, writer and
cross-coimtry traveller. As seen
through the eyes of her moth-
er, roonunate, friend, student,
hufbaad aad self. Perry tries to
find out what and who she is
We are all invited to watch
Craai CoanCry is alio bkc a
photograph in that it mirrors,
but does not explain its sub-
ject. CoaipiicatiBg tlui even
further, t!»e picture is Fn pieces
like a puzzle. Non-chronologi-
cal and sfgaimiad, Cro«
Country skips around in time
and space.
This type of theater is very
demanding both for audience
and actor We cannot tit Wck
and watch; we must join in,
thmk and feel, or the experi-
ence will be uiekM.
Frances Lee McCain is mag-
nificent as Perry: seasaal,
childlike, frustrated, mad, ec-
static, desperate and always
convincing. There is a wonder-
fully sensitive love scene be-
tween Perry and one of her
college students, Avra, played
by Sharon Ullrick There is
also a familiar and funny scene
between Perry and her dieting^
hottsewife-fnend Lois, playoj
by Rabin Strasser
Problems arise when some
poetry replap^ wlait ^ould be
prose. The Lines are hard to
follow m some places,, becaate
one wants to think over what
was just said instead of moving
on with the play Beautiful
lines are lost that should be
savored There is too much
content packe^ in. Some
should have been cut.
But CraM Conntry does
kave a willingness to explore,
idi admit the answers may not
always exist and to do so for
the most part, with a sense of
humor.
^€w Wor4d
SjhM a Tkt
Ffyimg DyUkmtm
Keyboard aum Lonnie Lit-
ton Smith*s place in the jazz
spotlight was assured by his
album Expnaalaat. His newett
aibunu VIiAqm of a New
WorM, is apparently an effort
by Smith to create another big
setter with the same aaontiM
Viiloat provides funky, eaty-
gotag tettingi for the tereae,
softly-textured taaad of
Smith's electric piano. The
result it a sombiaa, relaxiag
album, with the same effect at
a warm glatt of aulk at bed-
time This is a gnat altMim,
unlets one it tnking somethii^
new from Smith, which thit
album definitely iHi*t. In fact,
the chord progrettions on
tant tiads are taken directly
out of ExpaaiAaat. For in-
tianoe, **Soatet,** which atn
exactly the same propaitiaa n
^Summer Days** and **My
Luve" urr iiic pieviuus imum
more like a look back at an
old one. But despite the ap-
parent lack of versatility dis-
played by Smith, Viiiaat is a
highly listenable, enjoyable
album Check it out if you*re
after something cool and re-
laxing
* Eric SdMWck
One — Elvin Bishop, Joe
Cocker, ^ Roaer McOuinn,
Keith Moon. Alvin Lee, Lcabe
West, etc., etc., etc. Big deal:
they should be ashamed of
themselves.
-Wai McCaB
Tke »$k
Roek*mTfoM
MCA
Sieve Hmve
Ai
af a Nm WerM
This certainly isn't Ai
Graffiti Volume 534 but it
couldn't be much wane.
Myxoid rock'n'roll bones
achatf hstening to these lack-
hitter remakes of earlier
classics, like '^Pm a Man,**
"^m^ Do You Love** and "Not
Fade Away.** This is definitely
not the Bo Diddky who in-
ipind Robbie Ruhnttun, The
Stones, the Beatles and god
knows how many others.
At best the cuts are tedious,
at mm, latlelett. Of course, if
you're into albums featuring
ig rsame aack-up rnu-'
this might be The
it not at all a
had album, though it triet to
be Howe's prowess on tha
electric giuur is apparent to
anyone who has httened to Yes
for a few minutes, and he
thows it off on this disc
T
He alto plays
bass, mandolin, organ, tyn-
thnian aai faad old nykn-
tlhaa cinneal guitar (only the
hMl faiu iaepUy). Hit playii^
t« good, if nriratinaaiy iiapp)',
and the work of his iiidcawn is
impeccable.
The material, all by Howe, it
not intrinsically very toed, bitt
\
'Ashes', 'Ashes'
It all falls down
By Barry Grey
AiBti, aa aUqped ""play** by Bntish play-
wright David Rudkin, is jutt wliai it taaaia
like: a lump of nearly formlett rabttance that
crumbles at the touch. /
The play, part of the Mark Taper Forum's
Repertory senes running through early June, it
d muddled attempt to portray a youi^ London
couple's anguish over their inability to bear a
child.
The couple's attempts to ferMlize lead them
lo a sex clinic and every reference to sexual
matters known t- obscene and cUnical — ate
tossed around like confetti at a Macy's parade.
Colin the husbaad (Michael Cnstoftr) and
Arinc the wife (tyne Daly) are hke a matched
!»et of AaKrican Tourister Their mamaae is
hased almost completely on sarcasm. While
they publicly chide each other about their
proMna, they rarely confront it in private
It is ironic that in one of the few touching
moments, their frustration finds its way into
words by acadent. Colm tells Anne of the rare
hird that chose their backyard to build a nett
and lay its eggs. He disc ers the family cat hat
aten the bird and dettr ^yed lU eggs and for a
tleeting moment, the analogy to their own
NjtuatioQ comes through Colin nervously
changes the takject.
Jutt as Cohn is forever changing the subject,
to is author Rudkin. Had the playwright stuck
simply to Colin and Anne's inability to pro-
create (and alto, their emotion^ relationship),
the play would have been otfOy mediocre. But
Rudkin insists on throwing in a "heavy"
political me magi, thus provoking even the BKMt
lenient viewer to chuckle
Rudkm's political sutemem is tacked onto
the play's end without warning and it is
alienating After an hour and a half of hstening
to chit-chat on a non^fertile marr'mge, Rudkin's
outcry is reminiscent oi Peter Falk as Colum-
bo, pestering a suspect for the hundredth time:
•X)h, by thr way . . -
Edward Parone's direction is choppy The
nrcasm scenes with Colin and Anne are
occasionally amusing but ultimately without
much subsunoe. Crittofer's stage movement,
meaat as exuberam and lusty, is only forced
and annoying. Daly fares better — indeed she
is touching at moments — but hke Cristoier
she rarely pvn ut a ghmpse of her torm^t;
the 18 too preoceupied with being witty.
Rudkin fails to instill sensitivity into a
sensitive sot^ect, that making Aihn a waste-
land
Kood. but Howe nearly sinks
•he whole ship every time he
>pens his mouth. This sort of
singing would have kept him
out of junior high school
chorus Occatsonally clever
arranging and gaod produaion
<or numerous overdubs) sal-
v^ something in the vocal
lines, but the album would
have been considerably
had they left the voice
on the shelf
Qmem
tiedfM
varied enough to stay
ing. AU^ would be well aad
In the seemingly tired and
>om world of rock, one group
has lanaaftd to produce an
albttm of new and fresh ma-
hcrial The group is Eaahuid*s
*uecn, and their new afbum,
I A Night at the Opmm is highly
ntcriaining in a versatile inier-
^^y of mnical parody with
heir own sound of rock.
Queen displays some fine
"'^'gltnihin is thry krrp
creative effort, the album
features enjoyable variations m
style, including comical paro-
dies of old 30*s music. Add
imaginative character to at!
com positions, especially their
grandiose ''aptta hafrffe." "Bo-
hemian Rhaptady"
They prove they Can rock
with the best of them on **The
Prophet's Song.** Outstanding
musically are the excellent
vocals of lead Freddie Mer-
cury, the highly creative force
behind the group All band
members equally share the task
of wntmg. composing and
f*«»g«*»g with each contnbutmg
hit own flair.
Their music is simple with
life, character and wit that
elevates it above ordinary rock,
creating an emerumMg album
which
Mercury
;iated with bands like Z.Z.
Top and the J. Geils Band has
been quite spirited and widely
accepted Since the release of
Baby's first album, the att-kick
has been reduced to diaper
rash.
There is httle emotion and a
painful lack of creativity in this
poorly recorded album Its
main problem seems to be a
case of over-production Even
so, the vocah are mixed in so
quietly it is ahaail impossible
to hear them at poinu.
John SchelTs lead guitar
work is hmited to bhies hcks
played by every firtt-year gui-
tar student. Steve Crane's bass
playing along with the drum-
miag of Woodie Putnam saves
theae tongs from being total
abortiont. Several of the tunes
have good possibilities and
coaM be socoesaful on AM
radio.
At the beginning of *Born
aad raitad aa rocrn'roAU" t
voice-over tayr **OR btaihtiis,
here we go ^alid gaid!*'
After hearing thit alboai,
to f^onder where the
DATSUN
;- r
■ V
■,.*^
u
Acret of Datsunt"
A* <^MMl
Student Discounts — Ask for Fleet Salea
Pasadena Datsun
101 5 Arroyo Parkway
• 684-1133 •
I
Women returning
to education
Share your experience
with others
^n informal group
Tuesdays, 4:30-6:00
Women's Resource
Center
Kinsey 190
a service of OEEP — Student & Campus Affairs
p
I
r
UNEMPLOYED?
If you're in the market for a summer job with:
Future potential, practic<J ex-
perience, and great pay^ $835
per month,
and are independent and wiUing to work hard,
THEN maybe you should cafl
479-4139
for a paraonal appointment.
nnciV miitk — •(!. melodious
^^ ui^ytcicoiiuus. A ftnc
Up until now. the
Mother's Day Special
nicer than a phone call
more thoughtful than a card
send an
Orchid
anywhere in the USA
seated in a box with a
card and your message
OnfyS4.25
Call Gamma Phi Beta to order
474-9053 474-9094
474-3767 473-90711
I
I.-
1
<
mi
u
9
t '
..,:V.
* '•.■4r .
o
f-^-
»■♦
Now comes Miller time
t
^
■ ]87fiTtw
IHI Co M<»
— - -— — ' \ r-^ u-,^^ . ,. /
BasebaJlersm first by themselves
(y Marc DclUm
Dl Sport» Writer
Anytime one tcaa takes two of a three game
fin in baseball, the ^quiid has done i job In
iMl. that perceaUfB at .667 it food enough to
have the Brums in first place in the CalifonMl
hrtcfooiegiate Baseball Association
By taking two of three from UC Sanu
Barbara last weekend, the Bruins (26-17)
incfCMHi their league record to 10-5 This puts
them ofic-half game ahead of the USC Trojant,
who are R-4 in CIBA play.
" Hxiwever, dropping the one game to UCSB
could prove costly The Caucho* have won just
two of 13 lia0Mr games this year and USC still
has five games to play against ihcm
Four will come this weekend while the
Buiins are in Stanford for a three ^mt set.
The Cardinals stayed m third place (7-5) by
taking two of three from the Calilornia Bears
(6-«>
Friday's game couldn't have been easier if the
Gauchos had decided not to show up at
Saw<ftlir f"ie(d^. Although the fmat score was 14-
6. the Bruins, on the strength of three-run
home runs, had a 14-0 lead after seven innmgs.
At that time, sophomore Tim O'Neill was
breezing along with a five hitter but appeared
to lote his rhythm while his teammates were
having a field day against four Gaucho
pitchers.
The big guns were shortstop Robbie Hender-
son and designated hitter Bruin Viselh. The
latter was three-for-three with a three-run
homer uti four runs batted in while the former
was thrce-for-five with a three run luNae run
and three runs scored
A breakdown on the mound cost the Brums
the tint game of Saturday's doubleheader at
UCSB. The Gauchos scored seven times in the
fifth inning to wipe out a 4-0 UCLA lead. The
Unal was 9-6.
However, it locked f<K a while like ad
umpire's bad call might be the difference in the
^me In the third inning, left fielder Dave
Baker attempted to score from third base on a
ground ball to tecond baMtnan Chris Good.
The Gaucho'k throw ended up at ibe |ack-
itap and Baker, who had baaa Mocked from
the plate b> catcher Stewart Bnnghurst, got up.
touched the plate and surted walking to the
dugout
Teammate Dennis Delany had yelled for
Baker to touch the plate and after Bnnghurst
retrieved the ball, he tagged Baker, who ba4
started towards the dugout The umpire called
Baker out.
Coach Gary Adams argued to no avail and
the Bruins lost a run which might have been
very imporum When UCSB assistant coach
Orrin Freeman trotted bv Adams on his way to
the third base box. he turned and asked il
Adams "had ever seen a worse calt*
Wasted in the game was Vuielirs ' second
home run in two days, three hits by Dave
PennuUI and four stolen
INTERNSHIP
\
OPPERTUNrnES
with
,>
i'iVT
Leading Democratic Candidal*
CongrtMlonal Campaign
LifTHt«d Paid Positions Available
450-4557
e
n
r
ThUie mglitcap, piicher Ed Cowan held the
Gauchos to two runs (one earned) as the Bruins
took a 5-2 deciMon. UCLA got all the runs it
needed in the second inning, scoring three times
off loser Mike Rector ^ .
With one out. Jim Auten walked and scored
on a tnple by shortstop Raymond Townsend.
who scored on a double by Dennis Delany He
moved to third on a grounder by Pen ma II and
was thus able to score what proved to be the
winner on a passed ball.
The Gauchos threatened repeatedly, getting
nine hits and receiving five walks from Cowan,
but the senior was equal to the usk. stranding
12 runners.
The Bruins play again tomorrow when they
travel to Pepperdine for a 2:30 pm contest
Thursday night they will fly to Sunford for
their crucMl set with Xkt Cardinals
THE COUNCIL ON EDUCA-
TIONAL DEVELOPMENT
(CED) will be considering course pro-
posals for the Winter Quarter 1 977, and is
prepared to sponsor trmovattve courses
of genuine academic quality which
vA^ould be of interest to the campus
community. Such course proposals will
be due in the CEO Office no later than
Monday, May 17, 1976. If you are in-
ierested in malting a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educational Development. 3121 Murphy
Hall.
z
I
Jntramural
. Men
'The schedule lor the men's
handball mtramprals will be
m/L this afternoon. Handball
play will begin tomorrow. Sign
ups begin today for men's
volleyball doubles The dead-
line for these sign ups is April
29 The deadline lor signing up
tor the May 7, one day golf
tourney is. this Wednesday,
Aril 21. There is a $4.60 entry
fee payable at Kerckhoff 140
After paying the fee bring your
receipt to ^iie IM Office and
sign up. Starting times are
from 7:12 am until 9:42 am
Friday, May 7, at the Encino
Ciolf Course
^ omen
Softball play begins thii
week so make sure you know
Hhen your tenms are to play.
Grads & Undergrads
Here's your ticket to INVOLVEMENT
Admit one to any
University-wide presidential
advisory committee
This et will aMpyou to obtain an a;
Acad'^n?"" Pi^^n'inn p.nri Program Rpjjpw Board
;
how time, ty noon
^ April 30
in 304 Kerckhoff
our
IS\€^ «rp?5:
[•tulhUitiJ
All students are encotrrag^
Applications available Ackerman UnJon Info 304 Kerckhoff
Dorms & other housing organizaitons
bowling play
begins tomorrow night at the
bowling lanes in Ackerman.
Water polo play begins this
week so make sure you know
when you play.
^nr
r^j!^ P.?^ pc,4c
Kf^rrlrhoff
''Last Grave at Dimbaza"
I
most recent, secretly made film on conditions in South Africa
under aparthekl.
Discussion to follow on US corporate support for
South Africa
12 noon to 2 p.m. today
9383 Bunche Hall
>n^>f^ by Afriran Arftvkf Atcn VPTP
.•«'l*V»<«««»«*^'
r.
' _ 'I.,
I
J flowers^ave good times ^^t Bears have better
2 ^
I
!
2
ly Mike FlMfsM
DB Sport! Wriltr
On a clear day you can lee forever.
Saturday morning was such a day. and
the UCLA crew set their pmk iMfk
Calif onua*t rowen had been touted at
one of the top crews in the nation, but
it was not clear just how quick they
would be And C«l took five of eight
races, four of six men's, and one of the
two women's jaunts.
At Marina del Key, the weather ww
not the only thing that was hot for a
good-iized crowd. Under ideal condi-
tions, frve of eight races produced great
tinaHi^ including t^o Ballona Creek
course records. Cal*! varsity eight,
which UCLA head omch Duvall Hecht
labels as **one of the two fastest crewi
in the nation,** ran through the 2.000
meters of water in 5 minutes, 43
seconds. The time was just enough to
beat UCLA, who, in 5:45, fmished just
OM aacond off Waihingloa's previous
record time.
Calif omift*! jumor vanity rowed in
dttck-like precision to echpae the JV
course record With a time of 5:50. j
••>•
behind the varsity times, Cal ran away
from UCLA bv fifteen second*
Although the Bruins dropped the
two main events to their northern
rmMim. Hecht was pleased with hia
tcaiii*s results
**We*re probably among the top half
dozen crews in the country, but Cal is
juft amazing.**
Another quick race was turned in by
the Froth Eight Although Cal won
handily (6:09 to 6:17), both times were
considered quite decent. In the novice
four, the story was not the same. Cal
turned in a pretty slow time of 7:18.1,
but were fast enough to top the Bruins
Charlie Morrill, bowman of the Bruins*
losing four explained "the set was off
and we just couldn*t get going.**
In the lightweight eight race, Cal wat
again victorious, pushing through the
course in 6:17. The Bruin eight crossed
the finith at 6:22, the good times
helped aJong by nearly perfect water
conditions.
In the final race of the day, the
Novice Eight boats ripped through the
race to a photo finish The race, which
originally had been scheduled for
leading off the raang program was a
fitting end to a^ great day of rowing.
A few seconds after the race termin-
ated, the announcer blared that the
Bruins had come out on top, by two-
tenths of a second Few people were af
the finish line, so most did not know
the result of the race until the an-
nouncement. Then they applauded
UCLA men*s crew second win in six
races.
Interspersed in the racing action
were two women crew confrontations
The Bruins* Novice Eight, stroked by
Susie McCarty, made its debut with a
big hit. At 9 am. they surpised Cal by
five seconds. The 3:26 clocking over
the 1,000 meter distance was only a
couple of seconds off tfte varsity wo-
men's eight which followed.
At 10 am, in the race just before the
two record-setting Cal men*s times, the
freshman McCarty was hack **in the
drivers* seat " However, the Bruin
women were unable to close the gap
which Cal had topped them m the San
Diego ChMaic — aeven seconds.
^^^M
Head eonch Larry Daugherty hntf
nuxed emotions about the two races
Saturday He was pleased with the
Novice Eight's performance ("they
rowed a smart race, with good strategy,
especiaOy considenng the)f were behind
more than hall the race**), but was
disappointed with the results of the
varsity
**I thought that the race would he
closer this time** It wasn't but pro-
spects are good for next weekend at
UCLA doesn*t face as tough a competi-
tion as the Bears.
Next weekend the women go against
use on Friday at San Pedro (Lot
Angeles Harbor) and Long Beach Stale
and UC Sanu Barbara Saturday at
Long Beach's Marine Stadium.
Daugherty is confident that the week-
end will produce a good showing for
the Bruins* varsity eight, the only boat
competing m each race for the U clans
The men have the same schedule,
except they will be racing more shells.
Also. Sunford will be there along with
use in the competition for (he Har-
hack cup on Friday.
■>*''..<■
JEWISH \r\H
fESTlVALHlTVA
R.E.A.D^. SELECT
BEST SPEED READING
PROGRAM
LA iSptct The READS Rapid
Ras^Mif Progrsm km tara niMliri m
the hHi availabk roianf prnffmrn by
the AMooMBd tlMiiBli of UCLA
Aficapiibf to Gmry Mo«kl. ev«duaior.
(he a E A D S prapMn will be oAwii
cxclttti-vely by tiM ASUCLA Sf<<w<
Store
Factors wbich influenced the deci-
kion were the low coci, money -back
liiiarantce. »n4 coMMicntly high reading
r)ite« of coune grb^iiam The evaluation
wat baaad on 12 eoaaacmive qvartcrt
of a E A D S clMMa bald for UCLA
ftudenia A uOMfMC feature of the
RE ADS coiMBC a lU.MX-waaft Imgih.
allowiag MudcfHt to be doae prior to
Unmis .
t-ot turther mformatiop an Spring
Quarter clat»e». contact READS
MSIit«v«da.Sa«MaJMo. CA Mfll^S. orttop
ai thfc table in the ttudeni More-
'Pmtd AdvrntacmclMi
Experimental College Schedule
Spring 76
All Classes Began week of April 12
For Information call 825-2727
MO*iOAV
Cory Comar
8-10
Ml HHM)
Hal Balyoz
7-9 - , Schoenberg Hall 1420
WQ122 '''A/O
m
LMdsr MlchMl H ThompMn
7:30-19:00 m«n'tQym Room 133
rn CM ai'iMn
Marvin Smaihgmr
OSid175
8Mw»Coh#n
7-10 Woman's Gym 105
_ >f C yttiii
^^^ Dodd154
to Ml OwMtfiM SacMty
Mike Bums. John HMth. Stows RoM
7«tO
LfdT Bruo* R. Downto
7-10
L«a<tor Richard A Bobnck
7 30-0 30 Ackarman Union 36M
TUESDAY ^
(Starts Apgil 30)
Karan E Niakanan
7-10 Dykatra Hall Firaaida Loun9a
Laadar yung-hoo Liu. P^.D
7:30^:30 DoddHall2e3A
AflvafNHPaa hi rato HiMto
Laactor Howard Fatoman
7-10 Kmaay 3H
Tha Ntotory al UCLA Raaltotoai
Laadar Ban Browdy
0-0:30 Man's Qym 201
ir Qaorga HaualMnacrit
7:30-0:00 Ackarman Union 2400
AW Schara
:30 Ackarman Union 3564
Ifi
Laadar John Goers
7-0
•aWffiiwITiHui
Laadar Jotin Raval
730-0:00
SproulHall 7-10
Henry hiaids
Ackarman Union
JLinaay^47
Laadar Tarry Ballard
7:30-0:00
of
Kinaay51
aaoar: liwinna w attmiiwr. m.o
3-i RoycalS2
Laadar Susan Ciano
12-1 Backyard Woman's Gym
Latoio aavi cviotoa
Laadar Luthar Olmon
3^ _ Hainas200
THURSDAY "^ ^ „
toMPdawtoMno
Ronald W McClard ^
:30
Laadar Michaal R Houla
7-10 SproulHall
FRIDAY
Robert Earl
Avis
Haiftoa210
Daborah Rub
7-0
WEDNESDAY
SproulHall 12-2
RoMa2136
QtonZucman KH4<X)(1stnt.)
7-10 ensuing maetino> AU 2408
7-0
Otoria Hogan
Laiktor Tom Siiftofi
730^ JO
Laadar Gary
7-10
Linda NakaM
7:30^.30
Storts April 21
Roban Earl Selbart
Bur>che310i
Bunche3161
A170
Hall
Grant Godall and Timothy Ryan
7:30-0:30 Hainaa208
The CiiWMfal Cxpaftonoa
Leader Richard S Greene
7-0 Math Sciaitoo0127
COB HI TaefMilquee and MaBtods aC
.Rtoeelll
Chartos Davtd Brooks. Ul and aa-
statont. Lucille Evana
0-11 Rolto3106
Tito RatoBonal Cvtoto: Wliat Is tto ^isblsiiiT
Wlwl Is Bto Xoiar
Laadar Jim Contodine M S S W
7:30-10 00 Hamas 210
Oratllylng Altomatlvaa tor SycceestuI
Laadar Ronald S Apal
0:30-0:30 Hamas 216
LMmo Tao^Btof - MaMno ^ Walk
Leaders; Allan Rabinowitz arx) Jan Smith
7-10 Ackarman Union 2400
SATURDAY
Leader Grace Bea Clark
10-12
Oodd50
SUNDAY
Tal CM Ctiuaa
Sutton
175
Ed Hmrper
:30
Theopilus Green
7-10 AckenMHMion3004
TaiCMCMb
taodar Tad Wood
2-4 Odddi75
0-10
Mdtov
Franz i
Hainaa2i0
7:30^:30
il Society
young Hall 42d3
7-10
7-8:»
Milton Schwartz
Michaal Long
Or ENiott Fiehlyn
7:30-#1X) fmnz:
Paul S Sonwaatoto
7-10 Franz 11 78
Educational PoNotoO Comi
7-10 MalhSci
Flytog
Laadar. Waltor R Brock
7-10
•MECIAL WORKSHOPS
hio
„^..
210
730-11:00
May 6 May:
Mavll
I Firaaide Lounge
KmaayiOO
Council R I PR.AQ
1
Women netters ge^aced"
!sc^
S^r Gragg L.
DS Spqtti
For the UCLA women tc»-
Dis teom It was a buterswecc
weekend
Saturday, they fintihed
'WIAC temus play with a
perfect IO-# record by de-
feating CSV Long Beach 8-1
In domg to th^ '"rnjarfiill}
defended a title they IukI
fharod With UC Irvine lasl^
year.
However, their victory was
tempered with the realization
that they are far from bemg
Ihc best team m the sute
The Stanford Cardinal
fwept to a strong 8-1 victory
over the Bruins, Friday, and in
all but two matches the out-
come was decided early The
Cardinals showed why ihey arc
what Brum coach Bill Zaima
calls the '"best in the nation**
by straight set victories in their
eight individual wins and push-
ing their only loss to three sets
However, that one Brum-
victory almost salvaged the
afternoOB at Potila Smith
scored pBOiibly the biggest
Victory in UCLA women*s ten-
nis history as she upset the
No. 1 female collegian in the
nation, Lele Forood, before a
crowd that included her
parents and frierids.
Smith did kt the hard way by
coming back after an opening
set loss and battling a wind
that played havoc with manv
of their shots.
In the first set the Brum
dropped four of the first five
games, but at this point the
freshman took over.
She pushed Foroiod to 5-5,
and although she finally suc-
cumbed 7-5, it was the lull
before the storm
The No. 1 Bruin look ad-
vantage of Forood*s mistakes
to uke the second set 6<4, and
her momentum carried her fo a
strong 6-3 decision in the de-
ciding set Smith was able to
control Forood's * exceptional
backhand and iii»e<J a strong
serve and volley game to de-
teat the Stanford sophomore
. The win was obviously un-
aad Sfluth
ecstatic.
**lt has to be one of my top
wins ever,- gushed Smith "I
really didn*t expect it until I
got ahead m the third set She
was really tough.
**l was kind ol psyched out
at the surt of the match be-
cause I had heard so mi
about her And the wind was
rcaWy bad We were both mis-
sing at the beginning of the
match.-
Coach Bill Znuaa was no
less joymm for $mith*s victory
as he remarked **Paula*s win
bos got to be one of the top
ever here at UCLA. It'll mean
a lot to the program**
Ciady Thooias played ex-
tremely well in a losing effort
to Barbara Jordan the No. 2
VYOUOMMIVE
YOU ONW SAVE
YOUR
UR.
r or frtv wvocmmnmi wtHe to*
Maryland 30tS2
jwwof in the aatioa. Thooias
pushed Jordan to two stm^fM
tie-breakers losing both, and
the match
Tm finally getting my game
together, remarked Thomas ^l
»et up a httle bit and didn't
keep the pressure on her Also
my return of lorvifle was too
high If 1 could have kept it
lower I ^oukA have won **
- ThBBMtt was ahead 5-4 m
both seu and a timely shot
here or there wouM haw hoen
the^ difference She did lead
moat of the way in both sets
but she wasn't able to put
Jordan away on the most im-
portant points.
For the other Bruins it was a
trying day -We didn't play
Well at all today/ said Zaima
**Whcn It g9t tough they puUod
out the clutch shots and that*s
why they won They've got to
be the top team in the nation
The final outcome was not
really unexpected Staaford
has much more tournament
experience than the Bruin wo-
men and It showed In fact, a
measure of how touch the
Cardinals really are is that last
year's No I player Lisa Pa^idc
it now playing No. 4
The Bruins bounced hack
with a powerful 8-1 triumph
Saturday over CSl I B
Paula South continued her
winning WBfi with a three set
win over Long Beach's Robin
ICahn. Cindy Thomas broke a
personal three match losing
string with an impressive 6-1.
6-0 victory. A highlight of the
match was Shannon Gordon's
6-0, 6-0 victory debut for the
varsity A >unior varsity mem-
ber for the majority of the
year, she could help the Bruins
next year if she keeps improv-
ing.
UCLA will face Brigham^'^
Young Tuesday starting at 2
pm They are one of the top
ten teams in the nation and the
Bruins will have to play well to
win.
itwouldDottto
mHRMibtyou
EXPO
CENTER
TRAVEL
FAIR
S
FXKMmON
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY
10AM TO 4PM
ACKERMAN GRAND BALLROOM
;ialiy marked innaloiia at BM
pftxaf Juat go to the EXPO table and Mil tha«n Caplatn Spauiding sanf
you.
A serviced the Omca of EKpanmental Educational ProQrmm%.
and Campus Affairs
I
>
I
1
Mardi Gras 76
April 23, 24, 25
•«
I
Junioi's, seniors, graduates:
During Ring Week, April 19-23
there's a
S?-~-
14- karat
GOLD SALE!
t
ORDER YOUR UCLA CLASS RING NOW
Save 15.00 on men's rings
Save 10.00 on women's rings
whmn you purchase your 14-luirat goM ring
IMS
graduaSofil
r b t*»a4. ackcrman uniun. 825-7711
•b
opan mon-'iturs 7 46-7 JO; Iri 7:46-«:30: Mt W-*
I I
,mJ
'» ■! 'W
I
CLASSIFIED AD
T»M ASUCLA
tuity •%tpport9 Nm MhI— fHy •« Calt-
iDmte't pfljiey on non-dtecrlmto«tl«ii.
A4v«nt4lnf tpac* will not b« modo
•«oNoM4 In Mm OoMy •ruin to onyono
mhm 4l»crl(iitnot«« on th« boat* of
•ncottry. color, notional origin, roco.
Of Ml NoMhor the Dolly Brutoi
ASUCLA Conifnunlcoltont
*»«oo««olo4 mtf of Mio Mr-
«lco« advorllood or odvorlloofs ropro-
•ontod in this t*«u« Any porson bo-
llovlng thol on o^ortlsomont in this
IMMO vtotoloo Mio Boord'a poMcy on rton-
di»crlmlnotlon ttolo^ liofoln >hOMld
communtcolo coftiplalnii In iilllwt lb
tho Buolno** Manogor. UCLA Dally
Brum. 1 12 Kortkhoff Hon. 90t W4
^lasa. Lpa Aug olos. Calif ornio
nation probloms. oall: UCLA Houaing
Oftica, (213) t2ft-44f 1; WoolOi4oMl4
Nouainfl (213) fft gli.
aniKMincements
HIGH QUALITY
■■mil print! Wf A «M»lte««iM«
«a« lMrelil»««f Hall
•USINCSt Opportunity! Stuff onvo-
Ibpob. Itt por 100. ImmidioH oomkifB.
LIA^. ^.0. BoH 020 Morro B^. CA
*•*• ., (Ann A 20)
CAMIPUS RiMoa. BmniiiHi 2 m QfMO
Boete. tISO dktmm/y%tm htm. Fi«
Mb By piMno. Cafl Tany SS2-1000.
(Ann A 21)
campus
.1 II iuiii ic #iii#fng
* -
•brm«
ol study Bi
FIIANCE STAIN ITALY USSM
COTCNHAOCN ISRAEL
obdl
dNTtM FOR FOAEION STUDY
210 SOUTH STATI STBCCT
(«i CflMpMa fiMt le LAMO HALL)
(J11)
Gef
DISCOUNT PHOTO
FINISHING right ,
here on campus
pvs sfvdio
.. i«^rclbha'< ho" 875 0«lj
corn -non *'. 8 10 4 10 - ~
for rsfit
•or sale
opportmiltias
N*
In
port ol BM yaar-a
Oftwo. pIbMd COM 01404 Ipr
HAMOS for fwm
)14
txMii $1f.S0. AB f*.
(1 A21)
TA/O Cimbtlt 4/10
0/4; S/11: 0/1 AcHormon
:4/l?;
LAICf
2
tIBO
0.
Ml AM«
KFO Comar Trovol Wt^, TuobBoy ond
r-A-TV tIBJB ^
•Jj^owt dlacouMlb. DaBwoiy lb~0:BB.
ftOir)
CALCULATORS
nBR0OA,Bn0lA.SIISt.Sll0O.
11000 Sorna MmIoo BNd W L A
RttS ELtCTROMICS
472-aOOB tor
(2 A 21)
•- ; <
MAKf Monday iil^M
Ibd By
t your-
bow olhora aoo you. In
WLA. Information; 40S-1S42 or 472-
»«- n^r^
ARSOWHIAO odBIn in quiot ^rmm
SJbojN^O MB/2 dbya. f tSS/T #•„:
iUkL
UuiN TV. REMTALS
COLOR T VS
1B72 FMIMOLi 10. HwhiBM trbUdf.
$1»0. UCLA
NAnOMAL CSMTEM Iv STIUTBOIC
BTilOIIS. a b«i>-pr«m. tm •mmtm^
2B12
(112) 101-1040. Cdf lar Bppi
T V • - 07 JO a
CbB: 270-1012
MOrt Our ptiom am
(10 A IB)
(10 A IB)
^P^RSONAE^
Cantor of Dramatic Arts
AiuK>unc#s
474.700B. 2211
(•A 20)
parsonal
for sale
MABa Bro^Haaimot
daa Olucitf Buonla
I Buona for-
(0 A 10)
DCAM FMo. Tbofdis
L«
(0A1B)
HEY
of fun and
wMcoma trua. Q.O T
a A 10)
CHI Now Flodgos: Congratulotlonal
Hopo you had a graot Bma Saturday.
Lo«B. TlM Honorary Cfil.
a A IB)
JILL Knoadlon. MiBo whoopaa for ITt
your MrlMoy 10 It a vary good difit
a A IB)
CINDI - Wo dMnt
ChrtaS LorL
fOAlB)
ELLIOT
Acadatnic Yaar Abroad !:yg *;;
Summar Abroad
ATfVSSOMCAMFUS
TlACHWa WELC<
Yr.
•f SiBNM CM
a A IB)
Sportswear
Clearance!
or leas!
Largs pslsction of clothes for
men and women— tops, pants.
tennis wear, jackets, etc. Save
B big bundle now!
ASUCLA Studants' Stfwa
SPORTWEAR
41 lavai, Ackmmmn Mman
•2S-77ir
open m-tti 7:45-7:30;
III 7-.46-a:a0; sat 10-4
H
FA YE • NbWbMfT Tlioro'a no nood lo bo.
Van Niuya la lovoly an yodr rdiind.
F^ W you BO to t^-, «•! I Bo wiBdiia?
a A IB)
IdldndSndi
#1B AMM
MAIIIJUAIVA. Don't lot ttia now low
lor now Book SS.BO plua 104 loa to
Loa IV. F.O Soa 20001. LJL
(CiL. HBSl Yonioa. LJL)
(iBAia
a A 111
AZOV • Yoif'fo Bia
tiord bi Darby Oaso. NHho 0
CM.
- a'a^is)
DEAN LHtlo SiB Sla Mggy - Happy
21at YOM ■HMBE.Xo^io now an AncSnl
Loot yo*"-
a A IB)
DO you
nor By
Ooy. CoO
47
471-B171.
Doc lOfS.
nSAlD
f" i4i( a isr"oou)~ "]
AND
' STOILINQ SILVER JCWiR.RV *
^ AT LOW. LOW
.474
aA2B)
STOLEN Btotofcycto Wonlad H
aow largo brown Honda 700 Bolof
loodod bMo truck or dBioioioi
froM lot on ooal iMa ol Loi
Mondoy. April 12. botwoon 10 a
4 pm. plaooa eoO Lorry QM
3100.010^1 (niooaoBb). ^ ^ „,
social events
OFEN Donco • SoturOoy, April 17.
0:10. /teoa 21-lB S1.1B nn^ tei^
No boat bor Colonial Hooao. 4010
Whitaott Avonuo at RlvoraMo Drlvo.
aA )
aau^a thio coufom - 1% off with
ANT OUeCflASE
DWBAMO OF <20L0 '
Broaton Avo.
HOURS Tuop - ThufO. 12 - 7
Ffl . Sot 12 - mMMBM
Sun
I
I
botcbcovora. notting 0 rOpo. tiNllty
crotoa A boaoa. old bomwood. Oil*
1100
ByEmot
Wtillo. artUta B Br<
tooe
»).
WHAT DOES A BRUIN
BEAR WEAR FOR ACTIVE
•PORTS?
UCLA swaatshirts. sweat-
psnjs. j099#f's outfit, t-
SlM'^ shorts, racing trunks.
SM^aat socks, aad carries a
^^C^-A gyiD bag and baach
"1 AM** aPOrtMSoe
Aprs M, tSOBMBe
WtaMMLBW^BI
rotroot, Sotordoy.
aAii)
efrteftainment
ii JO oufucate i
SrHlfa CloB. 1BBS
OTB-JMS.
*
»ono. WNd IJhilat
rroirt
muolc
(IB AH)
MmI.B111W.«bBSL.
(It OH
(IB A ft)
Sola of
RCA Albumaf
TtAC 1141. 4oli SECOaOER. IBib*
HEELS. SNBUL SYMC. MEAS NEW.
Tee
$3.99
(BMaA IB)
ASUCLA Students' Store
IIJS;
TODAY
LRo
AMD TOaiORROW
ONLY
▼Itnw.MMI TfiOfI
• 4.IOVOI stock •OMamorlaa • 12
NCVUS
(Apfil 12th thru 30il|
ttatmmmmmam
CACL 474-7701
fOUI^BKNT
■omeaOi WLA
sat Waal •! ten 0«««oFwy
SNiRWOOO S-7210 raoittor and :
tpooboraS
024-1020.
itn a io#
L1B0 017S. lony TC-BM. OEM.
ST-4 US. Rocli *C - Biiwpat
474-lSBB.
CM A 11)
FUNO
(10 A 21)
ROCK LOWIS. Don't toko your
for gronlto. Fot Rock Fodlgroo. Old
I BultoBlo for fromlng. Dy Mio
F»o« I.R.
LJ^.
ftBAM)
. IBBl
rWAH)
TISR30 A
♦ tm^To
OSS JO
I
W/FI4 - 187 24
SXB COOK 20 oz - $37 00
asnyo and CraiQ Imoa
(T
VOX 70 - $1SQ.06
l^r ONoaWi * 8mN^ corona
Oy Httacht I we wot >o
CaU ma firai ^ — - ^^^^
BILL BB0-S71
Bl-Tb 7po»-11pni, F B»11p«
(Frtoaa aubfaef taabanga)
KIWO
%^
fit A IB)
(IB A IB)
STEREO componanta: Btodont dia-
Brondo. Yalloy. SB1-BB4S. Ml -Mil.
no OB)
MATTRESSES ALL NEW
,S«»iipta4B%
TMnBae - Hi.M
Fak Bali • fiBjaa
^eMsas sasa * HB«flB
kkif Oato • tlltjn
THE MATTRESS STORE
BWd.
ai Banlngtoo ^Wmmmm
tOBy
477'4101 fgai
4101
opportiitiltiee
7447.
(11A1M
AuomoN TECHiaauBS
Tho following tub/octo will bo
co^wrod
*WhBt tho CBotlng dlroctor |o
QotSna fM of I
In yeur iBBy.
and FrMey bI • F.M. Cei
SS7-JS11
research subjects
SUBJECTS with vlalon In only
aoodad *
Foyat2.
(14 A m
tk40BnW- WaM to
aaiM>»1i^k4-F0.S.
(14 A 29)
CTS
to
of alio
Stomas.
(14 All)
WB'pay 11
coll 1M-7M1 for
(14 A 17)
VOLUNTEERS
■-^-
Ftoka • Too B Wod
ooo. 7pni. Ml 7
(11 AMI
WANTED
cia o 21)
ILY HBN Bton*a
froo halratyllng. For mor^ ln«o coll
271'0210 TiMO - lot
(tsaei
help wanted
NEED LItoroto. aonaltlva poroono to
I'a
lift A»t%
' ns AMI
EARN TOUR WAT
YNROUOH COLLSai
CodociMO.OO and aom SMO 00 from
r'J^**^ ^**^ "^ sJHtTlM.
LA. on Aem 24 at 11:00 am
THonBaBioail
MBuM o owaA ^^^^^^ P^^
yeer Bote. Work 1% Booob,!
¥XF.FFieMe.yaBpm.
(ISAtt)
SlbS
nsA
(11 A
\ -
' f.
Hi '
CEASSIFIED >ID
help wanteil
1. 1^
(ISAM)
atoao-OBIS.
(IS A 11)
•ervlces Offered tutoring
Cob aw iMB-IOIl or Pfod 410- 1440
(10 Otr)
no. ol
Ffoo
470-:
(10 A 21)
Hi A 11)
port-
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
.Too Y<
NMURANCi MNVICt
-1101
(MAIf^
try. C^
••on, oic. Boot In
"**" 114 A 111
I. 7
ISO AM)
472-
Brontwood
(10 otn
BUTM TwiorBiB By MJL tt
ro. FroBoBlllty. oed O4
474
0^^m
^_ ^_ to UCLA
rotoo for ^ ■
f).4r7-
(12 OB)
or 4S7-7B7S.
114 Olr)
forOondl
Bi oromt Wo
^^"t HOUSEFAINTING - Orada Froloo-
(10 A 21)
(IB A Ml
(14 Olr)
lit Otr)
M-F. 10-4
(IS A 23)
'letR BOB oy Fvoipwta Oetora
SS-S#0/month for Blood Floomo
HYLANO DONOR CENTER
1001 Goyfoy Avo.. WostwoeH
471>00S1
VW MAINTENANCE
(Tanaao. i> 1 1 0 it.
ctuTCM wrrMi
1-11
CHINIlf Mondorfn Raking notlao
tooctoor, woll>oa|»oHoncod witb Coll
lomlo Crodontlol. Indlvlduol. amoll
CC.
Aootrollo. Aolo.
HMO
CAB47B4.
Aoto-Ltfo-Homa a wnara 01
Inauronoo. VINaeo Qtflco.
-iio^t
477.
OTB-etOI
m JACICSON HOLE. WYO
im Oood pay. 41 ibia
OUTLBA
pioi/inG ?\mf^
1 f '»«'»Vl
. 1 ^f a«K ti
Fidlw B^^^^id RaMHi
:r-
Oor Oei yoor- 7 llnF
lOWOOk
CAMRUS SERVICES
SSMS1S
THE JOB
f^CTORY
Propara for
QRAOUATE RECORD EXAM
90 hr cloaa bogma May 1
^^ BLEAT
aaauT
• MOAT
eOAT
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
MTf
BMTH
Tmaiii
MOVING: Roaldontlol. apartmonta.
BMB«
(MOtr)
LSAT.
tneHrldwal. amoll group Inatnietloo.
RoBortaon. 0B7<
(ttOkr)
;;; -t typing
BALLET: Fwn way to Saooty Ii
ond Unkr. YWCA. 074 NB-
aspoi
(111) M2-1077
(10 A IB)
BOd. 0
021 IpiDlBl IOM4. 2 or
arookly Irono Soroto. DIatlngulatiod
(It OB)
PRANKLM B KUR.
yrji
girt. Fhra aftomoona/wook. M1-7M7
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Ry HuRtcr KapUji
DB Sporu Writer
f ALO ALTO ~ UCLA$ lop
finked tcnni$ team needed
every racket stnnB and bottle
of fstorade it had to barely
edff the $ecoDd ranked Stan-
tord Cardinal. 5'^ in Maples
Pavilion on the Stanford cam-
pus Sslurday mght.
Over 5500 hifl% pBfftitBB
Stanford fans WBtcticd the
Bruins and Cardinal wacking
bBlls back and forth until mid-
ntghr UCLA*i^top doubles
of Peter Fleming and
Teacher outlasted Sun-
Bill Ma/e and Pat Du-
thriller to clinch the
a
team
Brian
ford's
Pre in
Bruins* 36th consecutive dual
tennis match spanning the last
two seasons, while bringing
their 1976 Btsrk lo a perfect
1 7-6
Although upset with the nar-
row lota, Stanford, tenth-vcar
coach Dick Gould, who has
turned Stanford tennis trom an
also-ran to a perennial astion-
al contender, isid; **Thi8 ranks
at one of the fstaiett .spectator
coflegiated dual nuitches I have
ever seen
**The fans lUyed at the edfes
oi their scats until the very
end.** said Gould. "I'm hoping
that indoor coUeBiate tennis
can eventually develop to be
ilie producer ol some of the
mote exciting tpniiB sportmg
events in the country "
As usual, the dual match
between the collegiate tennis
powers figured to be a thriller,
especially considering the
tremendous growth in populsr-
tty ol tennis m Palo Ako.
Mevcr had the Stanford fans
erupted louder than last Satur-
day, according to Gould, when
Gardinal sophomore Ma/e
stunned L'CLA three-time All-
America n Teacher. 7-6. 6-2, at
Mngkt in the
match of the evening agenda
In the battle of 6-.1 lanky
collegians with pulverizing
grounds! rokes. serves and vol-
ley game. Teacher was shocksd
by several calls by some of the
16 linesmen surrounding the
singles court inside Maples
I DCfe were twot cvnt wmcn
iMd enormous miMfirBnrr on
the match's outcome. ^
Tescher entered the Stanford
match undefeated (9^ in
sinBles and 5-0 in doubles
teaming with Fleming), while
yielding just two sets to . the
oppositmn in 9N|plM competi-
tion.
After the Teacher- Ma/e
match which included enough
brilliant individiai 'winners' by
both players to put an instant
replay csBMra on tiM Miak.
Teacher methodicBlly hit a hsU
into the stands m disgust
Maze's victory gave Stanford
a 4-3 lead m the team score
with ORly the Fleming-DuPre
singles match and Fleming-
Teacher versus DuPre-Ma/c
doublea Mstrh remainin£. TJM
Bruins had to sweep the two
remaining matches to avert the
ending o? their winning streak
^Tve never seen worse line
calls on points which were so
important.** said -leacher while
standing under a shower
**l thought 1 played well, but
c
r
i
I
-T
Ma/e was extremely hot, the
Stanford crowd was going wild
Ihere was little I could do**
Teacher's doubles partner
and fB^d friend. Fleming, who
watched the match in disbelief,
walked up to UCLA coach
Glen BtBMt alter the match
and said. '*Coach. Pm not
walking onto the court to play
first singles until those two
linesmen are removed (Fleming
pointed to the two men he was
talking ab<iut in reference to
the Teacher match)v
After a fifteen minute break
between second and ftrsl
sipgles. Fleming walked out of
the Bruin locker room, where
he had been conversing With
Teacher, and started warming
up
T he head oificial m the chair
at mid-court had overheard
Fleming's conservation with
Bssaett and several new Unes-
Rien called the Fleming mstch.
The most iMsviiy disputed
call in the Maze victorv over
Teacher occurred in the nine
UCLA S
point tie-breaker of the first set
when Teacher was serving with
a chance to take a 4-2 lead
T eacher angled a volley off to
the right which Mate returned
Teacher then hit another sharp
shot down the right side o( the
court which Ma/e hit m the
net After the point was con-
cluded, a linesiTian in the back-
court called the Teacher voHey
wide. '
Teacher asked the JiBBd
referee to ask the hackcour
linesman if he would vield to
the chair and the linesman re-
futed.
' With the tie-hfBBkcr dead-
locked at 3-3. Ma/c went on to
win the next two points on his
serve with the crowd chcermg
him on every shot Then Ma/c
swept the first five bb"'*^ of
the secoi^ set. while playing
what coach Gould called toate
of the best tennis of his career
**! knew BiU (Ma/e^ was cap-
able of turning in a great
perfoTBHinoe like he did to-
night,** said Gould
2) ani
4) N4arli
5) lohn
6) Ferry
44, 6-2
Wright-
laecher-
1) P^!^ fl^mifif fliCLA) dff. Fat DuPre 7-9, 9-4
4aaa (S) del Brian Tesch«r (UCLA) 7-9. 6-2
Taygan (UCLA) d«i, Man Mitchell 5-7, 9-4. 9-1
Mitchell (S) del Biycv Nichok (UCLA) 9^. 9-1
Au»(in (UCLA) def. lohn Rasi (S) 3-9, 9-4. 9-3
Wright rS) del Tony Graham (UCLA) 7-9, 9-0
Taygan-NichoK (UCLA) del. Mark Mitch^H-Cenc Mayer 7-9,
Matt Mitchell (S) def Luis Inck-AiMtin (UCLA) 9-2. 6-1
fleming (UCLA) del DuFre-Maae S-7, 9-3. 7-5
CLASSIFIED ilD
Mitoo torsalo
79 BAT9U«I. B-t19
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3
Volleyballers rally against Aztecs to tie Waves
f
r^
-«k. *-
f»
^3
By MidMei
DB Spoffti Writer
Al Sestet* UCLA votteyteM team moved mto
a pkyoff for mi NCAA benh tomorrow night
with Pcppcrdine by defemting San Diego State
Friday mght m Pauley Pavilion, three fWHa to
one before 2,479 fans.
The Bruim Ind their anticipated **let-down**
agianst San Diego State, but had too much
fire-power for the Aztecs, 3-15, 15-3, 15-4 and
15-9. The victory puts UCLA in a one match
playoff with Papperdine tomorrow night at 7 30
pm at Santa Monica City Colkfe, with the
winner automatically qualifying for the NCAA
finali o^ April 30 and May 1 at Ball Sute
University.
UCLA (10-2) and Pcppcrdine (10-2) tied for
the Southern CaUfomia Intercollegiate Volley-
ball Asfocation (SCIVA) conference title. The
two squads spbt their league mcetinp, both
winning at home, loth the Bruins aad Waves
were oabsilMr ^ home this year, so the matcir~^^xfforr to iwn
at neutral Sanu Momca City College is rated
as a toi^up.
Western RegtoMli
The loser of the UCLA-Peppcrdine playoff
will goe into the Western Regional^ next
Friday and Saturday night at Pauley Pavilion
to compete for an additonal NCAA berth
against Sanu Barbara, San Diego State and
Loag Beach Sute.
**rvc got the game plan already wniten for
Pcpperdine,"* said a confident Scales after the
match. **lt is going to be a good match, because
we beat them in five games in Pauley Pavilion
and they* beat us in four at Mailbu, so I would
rate it a toes-up.**
Scates was not happy with the way his team
against San Diego Bruin fans wonder-
ed if they would be viewing a **disaster** after
UCLA lost the first game in 15 minutes, 15-3.
when UCLA reached match point.
The winner in game lour came on a fine
serve by Petp* Ashley which led by to a block
by Denny Ctine and Joe Mica. Fred Sturm had
an outstanding hitting match, regaining the
timing that had deserted him iIk past two
umfkkm. Doug Brooks did an outsUnding job
Mike Gottschalll. David Olbnght, Singm Smith
and Mike Franklin had steady pcrformaaaii.
**! was not^urprised that we had a let-down,
but 1 was surprised that we played so poorly,"
said Scaics. "We played the entire match
without any emotion, but we did comebackin
gaoK two after we were cm harassed in game
one.-
TfeWLMig Peppcrdinc
Immediately after the match the players
began thinking about Pcppcrdine. ^\ think the
UCLA-Pepperdjne match will be a preview of
the NCAA finals,** said Sturm ^It will be a
great match and we will need a toul team
**'J.,vl.
**Embarassed** in game one, UCLA dinie
back m the next three games to play well
enough to win. There was iio Mnotion on the
court, but the Bruins were not in any trouble
the next three games. The most emotional
either the players or the fans got jjl night was
...I 'm f ■ ■ 1 — ■ —
**Qur whole team knows we can do it, so 1
think we will be somewhat loose going into the
Peppcrdinc match,** said Ashley **One thing we
must improve over the last matches is that our
hitters have been putting too many balls out **
"^Pauley Pavilion has helped us all year, so
playing Pcppcrdine at a neutral court will be
tough,** said Cline **1 think the team that sets
and passes the best will win.**
San Diego Sute freshman Mike Dodd. the
brother of Peppcrdinc A 11- American candidate
Ted Dodd, offered his view on the playoff **lt
is hard to pick a winner, but Pcppcrdine has
had trouble with UCLA because thev have not
been able to stop the middle attack. If Pcppcr-
dine can block well at the net, they can win,*'
said Dodd.
If The Bruins can defeat Peppcrdinc tomor-
row night at Santa Monica City College, then
they will have ten days to get ready for the
NCAA finals. The loser must then go into the
tough Western Rcgionals, where UC Sanu
Barbara will be very stro.ng- Scates says. that
UCLA IS improving every match, so' if hjs
timetable is on schedule, then the Bruins are on
their way to Muncie, Indiana
Tracksters do the expected
By Joe Yogerst
DB Sports Writer
P/flLO, ALTO ~ The only
thing unexpected about the
UCLA-Stanford track naeet
was the weather .— warm and
mostly sunny an unusual fore-
cast for the normally overcast
Bay Area
As expected the Bruins easi-
ly trounced their northern op-
ponents 89-56 behind good
yarfoimanccs of James Owens,
Conrad Suhr, and Rich
Gunthcr.
The meet was run alongside explaining some ol the lower
the USC-California dual mtfct
before !7,000.L_jn Stanford
Stadium. The Trojans humbled
the Bears 100-49 for their sixth
victory this year.
Bruin head coach Jim Bush
felt his squad was on its way
to recovering from the fatigue
that has gripped it the jiast
several meets. Tm tired," said
Bush **And if I am, my
athletes must really be tired."
**We perform accordii^ to
the competition,** he said in
■
Tellez to Houston
Tom Tellez, assistant trati and field coach here at UCLA, has
been nui^md head coach at the University of Houston The
announcement was mtide Saturday afternoon.
Tellez was one of many applicants for the post held by
lohnny Morris, who is leavir>g Houston because of state
retirement rule. The retirement age is 65 — unless approved
by the Regents — and he has coached for throe years on
extensions.
The Daily Brum reporlHl on April 9 that Houston was
considering Tellez. in his eight year as in assistant hofO, to
replace Morris Tellez will not take over his duties at HoMon
until the conclusion of the track ar>d field season.
l.D Morgan, UCLA athletic director commented on Tellez'
appoifHitient in a proptio# MMaiViOiit, "Although we ir^ very
sorry to lose one of the nation finest track and field coaches,
who has t>een in assistant coach
for eight years, at the same time
we »rt happy for him to get the
opportunity to be the head
coach at the University of Hous-
ton." it r^id "We wish him
groat success.
During his time at uetA. he
has coached Olympians fmn
Bendexm (long jump), world
record holder Dwight SlOfies
(high fump) »nd Fnncoii
Tracar^lli (pole vault). He also
coached world class lor>g jumper
Clarence Taylor, Milan Tiff.
lames Butts, f^arry Freeman »nd
Willie Banks.
PiliiiM
than average marks *'Wc knew
we had Stanford outmanncd.**
Owens, coming off a sight
leg strain, hla/cd to a 13.8 in
winning the 1 10 meter hurdles.
The Brum got oft to his usual
fast start but was nearly caught
at the finish by fast closing
John Foster of Stanford. Fost-
er was second in 13.9 and
Mark Davie of UCLA third
"My leg felt good today,"
said Owens who wasn*t sche-
duled to start **! let up on the
1st three hurdles and I went
over them higher then usual
But Pm statisfied I knew the
track was bad and all I wanted
was a time in the 13V.
In the 800, Suhr and team-
mates Steve Beck and Bill
Hemzen took an earlv lead in
front of a trio of Cardinal
runners. Suhr, ' a freshman
from nearby Los Altos, pulM
away coming off the final turn
and won the event in 150.7
**This was my first week of
speed workouts," said the
freshman Suhr. "and Km final-
ly staring to come around I
was very pleased with my first
lap
"The track is old but it*s in
food shpoe.** Suhr said * And I
really cn|oyed the air. It*s a
blessing up here Its nice to get
out of the smog"
lack, running his initial
the seaion, wowid up
in 1:51.9 while Heinzcn died in
the home straight to place
fifth Jeff Hayes, who had won
SIX straight to place fifth. Jeff
Hayncs, who had won six
straight 800*s for the Bruins,
skipped the event against Sun-
ford in favor of the 1.500
The Card*s Jeff Pahetti won
lbs IJflB m iiSa ai iiafiic^
Playoff ticket jnfo
The UCLA Athletic Ticket Office will put 500 student tick^
priced at $2 and 200 generaf admission tickets priced at $3
on sale today beginning at noon for tomorrow night's
volleyball playoff match between UCLA ind Pepperdtne at
7:30 pm at Santa Monica City College.
Only UCLA and Pepperdine students may purchase $2
tickets, with everyone else being admitted for S3. Ticket
purchasing procedures v^ as follows
1. UCLA students must present identification card and current
registration card at the Athletic ticket Office (Southeast corner
of Pauley Pavilion) beginning at ruxxi today arnl running
through 4 pm tomorrow to purchase 12 tickets. (If a student
does not have an Identification card, then current reg card,
plus supportive ID will be accepted.
2. One person may purchase ^p to foqr mtdertt tickets
provided he or she has the other individuals IDs ind reg
cards. __j
3. Students who wis^ to purchase non-UCLA student tickets at
^3. may purchase as many as tf>ey desire.
4. Should the Athldk Tichet Office sell out. tickets ire also on
sale at the Santa Monica Ctty College and Pepperdine
University ticket offices Left-over tickets will go on sale
tomorrow night at 6 pm at the Santa Monica Gymnasium The
rs will open at 6:30 pm. with all seating being unreserved..-
out to a larpe lead halfwav
through the race and easilv
beat the buffalo herd ihat iol-
lowed. Hayncs cm merged as
the runner-up from a tight Iv
packed group of five runners
Gunthcr, the Westwood
clan*s senior discus thrower
won his specialty with a heave
of IWM Bill Harvey of UCLA
was second in 175-3 while the
Cardmafs Mark Hill was third
in 160-11
James Lofton of Sunford
became the first person to beat
UCLA's Willie Banks in the
long jump this year On hu
third try, Lofton soared to a
24-#V4. Banks, who had won
the event six times in 1976.
had three tries to catch up but
co«id manage a best of onlv
24-4'/4
**Everyone gets beat* said a
diHappdinted Banks after-
wards. *Today it wis. my turn.
I did really well in the long
jump I was increasing on
every jump and I would have
fooe farther on the last jump if
I hadnt foukd.**
Banks, however. coaliBiied
his win streak in the triple
lump as he captured his
seventh straight win with a
best leap of 5M'/4 Kevin Mc-
Carthy was second in 4*- 10
while the Red Birds Clay Bull-
winkel was third.
firsts as Mike Tully won the
pole vault in 16^ and Jason
Mcisler took the high jump m >
6-10 U
A pair of victories in the
spnnts gave the visitors ten
more points Dotson Wilson
continued his fine
wnh a
K)5 win in the 100 while Ben-
nie Myles jetted a 21.0 in
capturing the 200
UCLA had three runners
entered in the 100 but Mike
Bush and Orlando Johnson
were disqualified after false
starts.
The Bruin 400 meter relay
team won easily after Stan-
ford anchonaaa John FoMr
left too sooiL UCLA had a ^
yard lead at the time hm u
soon incrcaed to 15 as Foiler
back-tracked to the baton from
Allen Shcals.
Johnson anchored UCLA to
a 40.5 win, more than a second
ahead of the clumsy Card
Fottcr and Sheats puHed the
nww up for tiie seooad time
this icatott.
The remauiiiig nrum wms
caine from Jim Ncidhart m the
shot put r62-9<4) aad Brian
Theriot in the 400 n^eter run
(474)
The win over Staal^rd ir>-
creased UCLA*s 4m^ mtti win
streak to 42 straight pver the
finished
Hfietti pulled Brviai
past five seasons The Bruins
liiitie high viw fVfniV the nave now captured 62 of
- capHircd two adjdmonal ktm 63 dual confrontati
I
Ucla
XCVIM,
12
A^ao, 1«7t
I Poll exposes student discontent with ISC
Heightens four-year controversy over
management of International Center
ly A(
DB Stair Writer
^jnyilLk
-exposing foreign ilttdent dit-
content has heighleited cpntro-
versy which has surrounded
the International Student (ISC)
since 1972
The dispute became puhhc
last October when William
Corinier. comissioner of re-
search and planning for the
Graduate Student Association
(OSA), questioned whether
ISC operations iaokjUed foretga
students.
The quMtionaire was written
by the camims Foreign Sttitail
Associauon (FSA), which was
aitabhshed in 1972 to represeal
the nearly 3^000 foreign stu^
dedb who attend school hetc.
The questiofuiire was setlt out
hnt (all quarter to about 500
foreign studenu. Of those, 150
were recently returned.
at ISC are
**heilcT uken
Cite of by otHcampus afenocs^L
such as houainf and emplov-
ment services.
'**! don't think they (loreigs
students) are getting the ado*
quale services which should be
.Mailable there (iSC)," PSA
coordinator Bcttina Schwet-
helm said. Schwcthelm con?
tended that ISC h«i a ^bad
■Mgr in the eyes of a lot of
foreign students** fs a result of:
ISC aMMifemcnt which is
iMBaaitive to foreign student
needs,
— inadequacy of programs
already provided,
— wasteful use of money from
the Umversity.
— not enough parking spaCtai
a ISC,
The ISC is a private corpor-
ation located on Hilgard Avo»
noc It is tied to the UnivCT-
»uy through a S54,000 service
coutract and through Univer-
sity employees who work at
ISC. Subsidized by registrataou
laas, the contract covers im-
dent servioik only and com-
promises part, of ISCs total
budget of $140,000. the rest^
the ISC money comes from the
snrrouiKiing community in the
form of doniitions.
A comphimt commonly ex-
pressed by PSA peraooMri aad
foreign students is that Max-
well Epstein, dean of UCLA*s
Office of International Stu-
dents and Scholars (OJSS), i|
ako^chairtnan of the Executive
VComttuttce for the ISC Board
of Directors. In addition, Mar-
tin McCarthy, Epstein's asso-
ciate dean on campus, is also
the director of ISC. Therefore,
a dUemma ariies, Schwcthelm
said> in which the fore^ stu-
dent who wants to complain
about ISC goes to the OISS
and must deal with the same
people who work for the ISC.
Dual role
McCarthy responded to
complaint and said, **l see it
an advaalagB.** He ex|
Ik cm therefore pass ahy sug-
gpitioa or complaint right **lo
the Board of Directors (of
ISC) and my superiors in the
Administration** In addition,
Ep<>tein sauL his dual role 4s
not a "conflict of interest " He
added his position ^'provides
certain benefits** such as a
**direct link with concerned
mimtinity pcopk.**
Th^^rar to FSA (MmfW
ISC mismanagement, McCar-
thy taid. ^^Mismanagement is a
difficult term to deal with.
There*s a great deal of lati-
tude.** McCarthy wem on to
refute nuaawaagement claims
haaed on **interviews with the
accountanu of the Center"
Epstein taad students who
Were making dauna ot mis-
maaagemem **mtut be laiung
the Daily Bmm too serioutly,**
referring to ah article last fall.
Epstein also said he would
refute mismanagement claims
*^ahsolutely and with compkrte
C4
Accordiitg~lo the question-
naire, half (54.5 per cent) of
the responding foreign students
feh mismanagement was the
main reason why foreign and
American students do not
maiie sufficient use of the ISC.
In addition, students answered
they behev^ the location (on
the south side ai campus) and
the lack of activities were
shortcomings
The questUMmaire revealed
ihat more than a third (36.4
per cer^t) of foreign students
surveyed do not even visit the
ISC, whik: less than a quarter
(22.3 per cem) visit once a
month; 28 per cent
comment on the subject Of
the foreign students who visit
the ISQ a majonty (68.92 per
cent) of them did not enjoy the
cultural and educational pro-
grams, while only a few (.08
per cent) did enjoy them. 31
per cent had no comment.
The .most overwhelming
positive response pertamed to
the mlahlishmcnt of ais Inter-
national Center on campus.
The idea was favored by 86.8
per cent, while only 1.6 per
cent were against it. In regards
to g center being established
onToflifin, a great majority
(83.7 per cem) of the foreign
students feh they would make
more use out of an on-campus
center, while 7 per cent feh
they would not.
The conclusion drawft by
PSA was that if **aMny kading
universitics» such as UC
Berkeley, Stanford, etc . m the
U.S. have aa International
Center on campus, why can*t
UCLA, which has one of the
largest concentrations of for-
eign students imoog the top
universities in this country,
also have aa International
Center on campusT
Open seven days
In reagoaae McCarthy sakt
"I would want to analyze the
situation first.** Before imti-
tuting a center on campus,
(Continued aa Pagt 6>
Pauley Pavilion burglars steal nine championship banners
By Ml»
DB Staff WrUv
A letter received yesterday afternoon by the DmJy Brum is one of the few
clues to the theft oi mne of UCLA*s 10 national basketball GhaflH>ionship
from inside of Pauky Pavilion this weekend.
The nine banners, valued in excess of SISOO, were dimoif ii (\ missing at 9
am Sunday, according to Detective Jim Pemhroke of the UCPD. The tenth
banner, from t^69, was hftter
found^ on the concourse,
between the upper and low-
er levels of seats.
Ray Zak, maiuiger of
Pauley Pavilion, believed
the theft had been carefully
planned. **Evidentlv, some-
body knew what they were
doii^** he laii. **lt would
be more apt to be somebody
that has a master key.** he
According to the police report, the theft occurred between 10 am Friday
9 am Sunday. There was no sign of ioreed entry.
Cormier, supervisor of Pauley, notified the camfMis pohoe Sunday
after he diiBaiired the banners oMiiing. He behsuid the burgU^s uaad
a ladder or a rope to get to the rooC« and apmiBd the door on the sacaad kvd
of Pauley. Cormier showed the Daiiy Bruin that it was very easy to open the
* door by pushiag the latch,
which was tawblc because
the plaster around the door
jamb had been chipped
The banners are stapled
to a piece of wood aiMl are
10 feet long. Bmmmt of the
length and weight of the
banners, Zak wm€ it was
hkely more than ost penon
wot involved, and thnt
a van or a truck was
need to carry the
banners away.
The pohoe report said in
oader to steal the banners, <Mk wooM have to eithei enter Pauley and chah a
ladder to the roof, or bring an extension ladder to the outside of the
and chmb to the roof. From there, one wmM have to
Cormier went on to say
that the only way to get hito
the Pavihon from the roof is
to have a key. He thougfK
any burglar woidd make an
effort to get all 10 hOMMO
Since the I9i9 bMMHr was
left on the concourse, Cor-
mier said the hoMHr may
have falta
door,, walk along a three foot wide walk, climb down two feet to a rafter ana
■'—'*—' "^ I— rn fiiTm fhnr hnk^*-*^ ^h^ tbrft i— prrviiaMf tm h— t^kgn
at least ear half hour
Z^ arthnated the length of a laMtf nteamary to loach the rool at 45 to 60
to Zak, a weekend building supervisor
Saturday.
Assistant Athletic Director Robert Fischer
attempt such a theft, "it^s very da«gMWi
d He addad tha^ the estreme hciyht of t
difficuh.
retrieve it. Therefore, ac-
ditig to Cormier, the
burglars would not have
bani likaly to have a
hay.
Zak said the
Mfciir to have
Sattirday night,
the
are no
W.rogt 2)
♦ ^1
T
i
Banners
tWy vo«M coftt ato«t S15M to
MplMe, Fitcker Mid
Yesterday aflcniooii. the Dmiiy
g
iif
Oiwr Emsmr wmk^md.
tjftke
om
tkart moikct. Wg mt fmppy to report
9km mM mt im exceiiem comHtim
_and mre to bt rtco^tred in the
two ot more ponies skttM
be Miected to bid o§mmii emck other
Aft^ om week, the wmmee of the
bid will be decided and u bestowmd
the prhniege of returning the bmnner
AU biddmtiwm trmmmct throueh the
Daily Bniia*! Fersdnml Section
ThtM "contriktmum^ eire to be
to the Daily Inttn Thev ore to be
■wfliiMift M the Vm-
cmrnp fiem^aising drtw.
(Tkc letter went om vo IM tte
art to hid OS tlM
receives tme unpt
hms been it^icted^
university.
irofli tiK letter the DoUy
Brum km had
cerieim
)
mtemions
we care to odd thm
were honorahie ff
ome mtmt odopt
^iotu to his felimm
the moment we
stepped on this cmi^ptts. We
the m^^poet of eemy
eetedtnt emd mhtmnus. in this
for the underprivileged children
^ he(p us mmd these kids to
this smmmer.
^ Mmipect/uUy v€mrs.
The Boys of Atmeriemm Bridge
i^^ UNffii Ediior^ta-Chiif JuB
Stebio^er laid the Ikdiy Brutm
«e«ld to DO way participate in the
plan outlined by the group claimuM
to have stolen the banners. Slebinaer
group
UniCamp denied aay
with the ortaaiili— . iuamu Stt».
aers, ^CKion Commutec ChairnMUi
of UafCamp. said -I can tcU you
quiu frankly that we wottlda't have
anything to do with it." She addad
chat UaiCamp would aoc a^xcpt the
gamed from such an auction.
Jacki Breger. director of Uni-
Camp, ako denied any involvement
om the part of UniCamp. She con-
demned the theft, saying that al-
though UniCamp apprecuites
port, they do not hke that sort of
activity
'C/
•■dsf. — '■
Return to Forever;
Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke, Lennv WTi
and Al DiMeola have created a musk that
presents staggering technical demands,
emphasizes interplay between musicians,
and insists on constaiu originality.
They've developed a
which is increasingly
imitated. But there s no
doubt who the masters
are. Return to Forever.
** Romantic Warrior.''
A radically originait
album on Columbia
Records.
tITlRNTOFOaEMJK
MMAVnC ^lAEtlOt
^.*
Berrigan to speak
on costs of peace
JJUvcBcad Daniel Bcfrij^n.
•we jaMHf priest who went to
pnson in 1970 for the burning
6f draft records, wiit fipemk on
*TiK Cofts ^ Peacemaking**
today m, Mon on the Jams
Steps. — ^
Berrifaa, along whh eight
otlicn, was convicted oi de-
stroying Selective Service re-
cords taken from Local Bonid
33 at CatoiitviUe. Maryland in
Ma\ 1966. He jumped baiJ
pnor to hit sentence, dodging
tW FBI for four months before
he was captured
Recently Father Berrigan
and h» pneit-te'other Philip
iin lentenccd to jail for
a grave in the White
Inwn m protest of the
nnciear aiiais race.
Tke speech m iponsored by
Campus Committe to Bridge
tlie Gap. University Catholic
Center, and the Waley Foun-
dation and EpiicopnJ Chap-
laincy of UCLA.
— Jhn WdBi
i»i
>.'
'■MT*
«r
Argentina topic
of forum today
The Latin Amencan Cen-
ter will present a forum
unng Dr Joseph Tul-
■ting Bcholnr from
University, on the
of **Soao-Economic
Determinants of Political
Behavior in Argentina,
\94i^\930r at 2 pm Tiaa».
day, ApriJ 2B in Bunche
6275. The public is invitad.
nWHY DO THE HEATHEN
2 Mi Acts 4:25
la try la
TNEYPi
MAVMQ MO
THAT Ml
PIUTVf
TNBM tA«>Nl UMTO HM
mOUt nUT THl
TNI LOHO OF TNi
— IndTl
Mlo
FAfTN.- TWa gnasM a«i a^lw aa
^Hto
IT-
TO
LOO« THBB
lanw
OD
N«w
MliT COUNnCL. AMD HAD CAUMD
nmom. tncm they nnouLO HAvt
™*"" «v«. «AY. Ai« mom THi tvn. OF
— ■»*,. 4-
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
xcvin.
Tiiaaday. Apni 20. 1976
12
ar m9 AguciA
•chool fmr.
wmee Pwm, Lot
MOM Co^right 1976 by th9
ASUCLA Cotnmunicmttont Bo&re
miemm^Lm
Annm Young
Eric
Qma^ QuNwi.
Tony Pwymr
tmry Bern
Larry
Police Chief threatens to wallc out
Law Students cross-examine Ed OaVis
By ToM
Wrtlan
Ed Davit, ipwi iiif on the
•ky rocketing criipc rate in
America, threatened lo walk
out several times Friday after^
' -n wbcB croaaF«xami nation
ky campw law ttudcnu be-
CMBi iMalad. Under the mviu-
tifoa df the legal speaker's pro-
gram, the Lot ^ngriri Police
Chief addrested taveral hun-
dred students in an atmosphere
dMCnbcd at temi-hottiie.
The mood was not helped hy
a bomb threat made an hour
hgiom Dms tpokc. A search
of the Law School by Llniver-
aity i^oiioe faiiad to
In hit lecture Davit c^led
the preaent crime problem "a
Wcttem World phenomenon,**
•• opfKMed to the comparative-
ly low crime rate in Englaiid.
**1 don*t think Americans have
wonc,** he
rather rhiafri in the jndkial
tyaten retlfictmg the powers
of tearch and seizure, and the
overabundance of probation
caiet, in my opinion^ have a
lot to do with the rise in
crime."
Davit ttretted pobce work
should be freed from the poli-
tic system. *Thit is not true
in America," Davis taid He
cited majors* offices as the
primary obstacles to police
departments throughout the
country. **lf the mayor sayt we
are not going to arrett gaya,
we arc going to arrett heterot
(heterotexuals). the police chief
says aye, aye," Davs taid. "We
poor pohorxhiefs are totafly
H>lH^te4.^-|le added. **T^e
average police chief, if the
mayor says out, is out.**
Dmii pointed to the beauty
of the English pobce system in
that ""They (the Englith) have
taken the politics out.** He
note the Enghth "don*t beheve
STUDENT JOBS
ASUCLA Printing & Duplicating
in «
ntz tor ri r U^rk-t
^
E.B. Wrmnkml, M.D. Medical Group
Hair Transplantation
ikcne-Compiex ion
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Allergy
All Madicai and Haairh Plant • Cr
Los Angeles
Maoicat Literatur* on Ra^yaat
Cardt/Cradft Tarms Ava»'abie
6423 Wilshire Blvd #105
6^'ft533
Lahewood
Huntington
S203 Lakewood Blvd S3 1-7420
6101 Hommmn St Sta C (714)
in leaving the law in the hands
of the lawyers.**
Turning his attention to the
American legal proftMOn,
Davis attacked what he called
the **legal oligarchy ** **! have
yet to tee one lawyer with the
guts and fortitude to sund up
aad criticize the judicuil sy»-
i«n,** he said. "I have never
seen a group so unwilling to
accept cnticism,** to which one
member oi the audience an-r
swered, **What about the police
LmentT*
went on to streu a
need for professional groups to
participate in bettering tlie
Amencan system. He cited hu
system w a model of public
participation Davis alio at-
Ucked thote in the law pro-
ftaMon for their lack of public
aittstance, saying that in spite
of the huge increase in crime,
•'the percenuge of help from
the bar has been damn near
zero.-
He added that ^ Your pro-
fession has been an ab>ect
failure in fighting cnme ** Da-
vis pointed to the LAPD po-
liceman as the ideal iaiage
toward which the Uw pro-
ftiiion should strive.
A quetuon and answer per-
iod followed his remarks Da-
vit wat atked about his treat-
a«nt of the Pink Floyd con-
cert last year. According to the
questioner. 545 arrests were
t, and all but 15 were for
lion of marijuana He
atked Davis ''Why bust kidk
for pot and let major crimes gp
(Continuai om Page 4)
SPtEp KEADINC.
PROGKAM
LA r&pKi Tin a E A^oa a«pii
tlM
•f UCLA
to Omn MiMit.
like RE ADS p»«pwM mtt
CAcliMivcly ky ilM ASUri 4 St«4cat
I
F-*cior» wliicli ianii«»4:«d tht 4mt'
umm w#rc Mm Ww mm. mtmtmybmck
Wm far UCLA
fealurt af Uh
fee d
to
M 12
of R r A D S
•ludern^ A
R t A DS
•llu«r«ng
fliUlh
Fur iurtiicr i«for«uitio« mi SpriMf
Quarui cImms. coauct ft E A D S ,
•I flir taMr in tltt MatMl m
lo 0ta«id
I
Gowns dci%fiod irnitvidually for you.
I
I
Planning for sumrr^fxyr fallf
Be original
■y apfXNntment only
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(213)780-4928 Van Nuyi
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AIR:MATTR£SS I
cncA I
^ *« •*« jat« ft««s»i«jti
STATE Of THE ART
RMVtl
AIR LiFT.aipt y
2?17a«owMH A««
a«Hi«lay. Caltf 9Am
Td U15) 145^1 Its
Miaaing it would ba tha moat ridiculous mistaka you avar madal
EXPO
CENTER
TRAVEL
FAIR.
AND 8UMMER
OP^ORTUNmi8
EXPOSITION
Today A Tomorrow
10AM TO 4PM
ACKERMAN GRAMD BALLROOM
Raoatva • tpactftily markad •nvaiopa at m« door and win ■ fabulous
prtza' Juft go to ttva EXPO table and t«ft mam Captain Spaulding
you
A aarvica of Vw Offica of Exparim»ntal Educational Pro0«ama.
8tiidam and Campua Aftairt
ACADEMIC YEAR ABROAD
or
MR ABROAD
^m
CFS REPRESENTATIVES ON CAMPUS
Jdents - Teacnerb \A^eicom«
TODAY APRIL 20 HAINES HALL R^C Rtl
FRA^
A F D I r A
PAIN
WIT7FR! A-
NH
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CFB
CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY
216 South State Stree*
Ann Arbor Ml 48108
CPB
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I
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REFITTED
^••HMOod Village
LUN [ACT LENSES
^» MHtiO ft BfCICft
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10959 Weyburn Ave
The Guidance Center
3017 Santa Monica Btvd
SANTA MONICA
GRADUATE RECOfID EXAM
preparation
20 hfi. Varbal, Math. Practioa Taatmg ,
Couraa bagins May 8 for Jiin^ 12 taal
829-4429
ai: I <4
Create Your Own Jewelry"
•■-^^/
I— J
^
of every Variety
GLASS • BRASS • BONE ' STERLING
SMELL • STONE • WOOD ' TURQUOISE
AGATE • NUTS ' PITS * AMETHYST
• PUKA •
JEWCLERS EMPORIUM (R)
6013 Hollywood Blvtf.
Hollywood. CA 90028
-UCTVLA^o
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^MOLLSALE PRICES TO THE PLBLIC
UCUV SPECIAL
-U.
6010
International
$2^88
t l6C
mm xfssh 66
By trwim Wi
D8 Stair
Johnson mod Richard Washington,
the AB-Aoiencan Bnan forwards who have
until lunt ^^40 decide whether they wtH turn
professiohal this year, will he interviewed 6n
^C-TV-LA today, when the campus station
coiiuiieii06i qi^nng .quarter broadcaiting.
The sho«r wiU air between 11:30 am and
12:30 pm on special monitors located m the
Coop (A-level Ackerman Umon); on the Royce
Hall porch; in the Melnitz Hall lobby; and in
the gypt> wagon eating area.
Abo tcheduled;^ a tribute to Bohhy Darin
with Video highlights of his last perforaWMW;
an interview With wnter producer Cy Howard
rWoa Ton Too; The Dog That Saved Holly-
wood), and a profile of mouon picture tele-
vision composer Ray Lewis.
The show is the first of 16 which wiir air
every Tuesda> and Tbaiaday for the remainder
of the quarter
Thursday's program includes mterviewn with
Patt> Hearst's psychuitnsu Dr Lewis West,
hasehall^ caach Gary Adams; foaihall coach
Terr> Doaahne; and a piece on the animal
expcniufWilioB unit at UCLA KiediaU Center
today
All shows airing over the sution will be
produced by students enrolled in Theater Aru
I84C, instTuctcd by ABC TV producer Frank
LaTourette.
The cIms to open to aU studenu regardless of
major, year in school, or expehHHC with TV'
equipment. Students learn to operate TV
equipment during the first waek of dan, then
they are on their own.
"You learn by doing,** says LaTourette, who
requires his sfajknu to work every production
job naownry to produce the programs; from
running cameras, lighu aad sound, to settii^
up monitors and runmng the television control
panels.
LaTourette requires this because e§ch student
must produce at IsMt one hour-long program
to air campus wide The students can do
whatever they like, but he tnes to keep them
aware of the station's stated purpose, which it
to inform, involve, and entertain the campoi
comniunity. — ,^
Theater Arte I84C caa he Uken three times '
fbr eight unite each tioK.' k weett Tuesdays
and Thursdays from 9 am to I nm in Melnitz
«all 1473.
Scientist^^^
S2888
Police Chief Ed Davis . . .
unattended^
^^ '<"PWWl'-d b> saymg that the question
typica] of the "linfortynaie, iimple-mtnded,
ral m>ih of victimleBS a ~
After showing the audience how drug-related
(primarily caased hy herom overdoses)
had jtuaped smce the rdaxakton of marijuana
hw m Cahfomia (ahow fOO deaths in 1975
versus 1 100 di^hs m 1976), Davis insisted that
^ ■■ foing to enforce the marijuana laws and
heroin laws as long as they're on the books**
The next member of the audience askad
Davw to expiaia the LAPD's former practice of
^o see the ID's of people leaving LA
nrlart. Davis said the questioning
""U). make sure they were safe."
a question on gun control,
that gun Luatiil was a coasttttmonal
three percent of the
commuted are cooimitted with gum. he
he fell ana coittral wmmiIH ii^ve httle or ho
SMeiE? 18-35?
effect on the cnme rate. **No place ia the world
has there been a significant drop in crime as a
resuh of gun controL** he said.
When asked why, in spite of the addition of
more mmohties io the LAPD, the NAACP was
compelled to set up a hotline on police
misconduct, Davis answered that the particular
hotline mentioned has the lowcM complaint
rate of all the hotbnes in Los Angeles. He
added that cnme in the Wstu area was down
25 per cent.
^ A member of the audience then aifced for
Davis to further explain a remMt he ■^•H^
several months afo. The reoMrk, according to
the questioner, connected **swinging maflMv"*
with juvenile crime Davis replied that his
words had been dmorted by the meduL IXxi^t
you know that you shouldn*t believe what you
read in the LA Times'!^ He said the con-
nection was ••a myth created by the L A.
Times "
ismmm
mmm
Creaft Canisr tor Human R*l«tioas is ttudyiiig Mala/
WW friaiKlshap rvlationshipt Opvratint yndar aramfiwvia
^ *^^J^ * •womb proha taekt to find OMt what is
-4t; how to halp ont fiml othan tansitiva to fm
«»•»¥ loow raiatiiailaai lurfi
ttw oantvf n p«inr>9 rataarch luhiaais whata fasts
ol achwvmg « fulfaimg raUtionthip Not aN
^"'*!!^ Thoat who ara wHI ba nMfM by mad
will b. for tha two paopla la meat on a
t Thafa is
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FREE
*> C» %3a3S
Of
^^^9 aiaaer Aa^
^of anfalas Ca
-"^^
Health Advocates wortT
DB Staff WHiar
For those who are fnistraiad
with having to uke the Un^
walk to the Student Heakh
Sarviai (SHS) only to have to
wait in a two-hour line, there
i| aa alternative.
The alternative is the Health
Advocate, part of a program
aperating in conjunaion with
the SHS. The program is de^
signed to provide certain
health services more easily
than Student Health.
The Health Advocate pro-
fnim is funded through reg-
istration fees and has a full-
time health educator, as well as
two student directors and 32
parttcipaau this ymi. Hwhh
~~iWvocatcs hve Tn and wofh
""Wtrh students in on-campus
livuig groups, including under
graduate dormitories^ Co-ops,
fraternities, sororities and Mar-
ried. Students Housing
Unk
One function oi Health Ad-
vocates IS providing a hnk to
SHS. A student director of the
program. Gary Dougan, said
people sometim^ do not want
to make the walk to Student
Health for minor ailments
Health Advocates can give out
non-prescription medication
and deal with these minor
ailments j iisf as if the student
had gone to Student Health in
the first place, according to
Daugan.
Dougan added that services
such as throat cultures, blood-
paHsure teste and sale of some
contraceptives are also offered
by Health Advocates.
Another function of health
Design'
studenf Tiousing
IS providing educa-
tioB. "^e're looking for ways
to reach out to the rawMMs
community, raising the know-
ladge of health,** Dougan said.
Aside from general health edu-
cation, Helath Advocates give
referrals and are trained to
The course deals with the
functions of the Student
Health Service and also
teaches students how to cape
with mmor iMnaasas aad emo-
tional problems. Other topics
covered in the caww 4mi with
sexuality, contraception, nu-
These are organized programs
with guest speakers, audio-
visual aids and other aids in
aducating large groups of stu-
dents The Heahh Advocal«
each d^uosc their own pro*
fraai'. depending on the needs
of thetr pahicular hving group
e
f
I
• i
groups, their interest in health
aad abihty to relate to health
matters, aad the time they
have avaihihk to devote to the
job
Health Advocates are re-
quired to hold at least eight
office hours a week, though
they are encourafad to be in
their living group as much as
possible, DoMfaa said They
also must fill out a form on
every patient and write a week-
ly summary of their activities.
Stipend
In return lor their services.
Health Advocates are sii-
pended Thu» year*s stipend was
SI 30 per quarter "WeJike J^_^
pay our Health Advocates be- ^
caaae we require so much out
of them," Dougan said "We
consider them as professional
heatlh educators,** he added
Prospective Health Advo-
are required initially to
fill out application, after
which they are given a group
interview fallowed by an in-
dividual interview The com-
petition IS heavy, according to
Dougan, with aaaally about
too appiflations for at most 15
new openings
I
i
five emotional counseling.
To acquire the necessary
expertise to perform these
functions. Health Advocates
are required to uke a four-unit
course from the school of Puh-
\fc Health
trition aiid basic first-aid skiUs
**lt*s like a crash course in
health needs of college stu-
dents," Dougan said
One responsibility of Health
Advocates is to orgaaize a
health education program iq
their living group each quarter
Neither a student's major
nor their class level has any
haahag onwhether or not a
student becomes a Health Ad-
vocate, according to Dougan.
Those wishing to be HcaWi
Advocates are selected on the
basis of their ability to work in
The application deadline for
next year's Health Advocate
positions is tomorrow April
21. Applications are available
at the Health Advocate office.
AL 553. in 4he Health Sciences
building. Further informatioa
can be obtained at the a^
information desk at Student
Health, or by calling the
Health Advocate ollioe at
54730
■\
The EXPO Qenter and ;j7
The National Tourist Offices of Los Angeles
present
THE WORLD!
\
.^■*
^ %
.N
AUSTRALIA
AUSTRIA
BAHAMAS
BRITAIN
CANADA
CEYLON (SRI LANKA)
CHILE
CHINA
FRANCE
QREEi
INDIA
IRAN
IRELAND
ISRAEL
JAPAN
KENYA
KOREA
NEW ZEALAND
PHILIPPINES
PORTUGAL
SCANDINAVIA
SOUTH AFRICA
TAHITI
THAILAND
See you at the EXPO Center Travel Fair
Today and Wednesday, 20 & 21 April. 10 am - 4 pm
Ackerman Union Grand Ballroom FREE!
or fill out the coupon!
/^
(y
and ihaN not ba able to atiana tha EXPO Trwai Fair
Return to FOTO €/#!«•»
tr
I-
1 T,.
Students discontented with ISC • • •
(CoDttmMd froa Page 1)
McCarthy said, he would want to
explore "^what the variety of needs
would be for faculty, students, the
community and the Adnunistration.**
McCarthy explamed the advantages
of the off-campus ISC is that is is
**always open, mornings and evenings,
seven days a week.*" This would be
impoasible if the center were located on
campus, McCarthy added. McCarthy
and Epstein were not sent a copy of
the questionnaire results and therefore
_^ould not discuss them.
Distribution
- The questionnaire was distributed to
J 5 per cent of all students from each
country so that ail countries could be
represented Most of the questionnaires
wer^^ sent to foreign students residing
in the dorms and those with campus
mailing addresses, due to lack of funds
The controversy involving ISC first
snowballed late last year when William
Cormier sent a letter to Chancellor
Charles £. Young questioning whether
ISC ofpamtions isolated foreign stu-
dents.
Qiieli involvemait
The letter said the ISC Board of
Directors had made an attempt to quell
an increase in foreign student involve-
ment in the ISC decision-making pro-
Through legal but unilateral actions,
the Board had nullified an unwritten
agreement between the Center and the
Foreign Student Aaociation to create
an Executive Committee. However, in
1972, an ISC Executive Committee was
created which mcluded students and
mrai responsible for making "all de-
cisions relating to the formulation and
implementation of policy," Cormier
said.
The ISC Board of Directors eval-
uated the Committee, said it was
**unworkablc" and discontinued it in
1973.
The ISC then created the Council on
Programming (COP) which is com-
posed of five students, including three
from FSA and one each from the
University*s undergraduate and grard=^
uate student legislative organi/.ationi.
COP is charged with planning and
implementing student programs for the
Center, i
Student directors
In addition, three directorships were
recently filled by students on the ISC
Board of Directors. Two of the stu-
dents came from FSA and one, Cor-
mier, from the Graduate Student Asso-
ciation (GSA).
**Thcy arc not too popular with the
(ISC) Board of Directors," FSA coor-
dinator Schwcthelm said of the new
appointees The other students who
were appointed along with Cormier
were Bonnani kakatf^, wife of the ex-
chairman of the Executive Committee
of the ISC Board of Directors, and
Tundan Adetoye. The Board presently
Imm 35 members.
**The fact that I and other foreign
studHli have accepted the nomination
of the Graduate and Foreign Student
Anociations to serve on the Board of
Directors indicates that we are cer-
Uinly willing to work constructively
with that Board to try to resolve some
of the difficulties, both real and per-
ceived, that have been identified by
foreign students during the past several
years," Cormier satd
Trust and advocate
**As for the role the student members
play. It will necessarily be a mixture of
part trustee and part advocate of
foreign student interests,** Cormier
continued "The threshold problem for
the new student board members will be
to try to clanfy to the rest of the Board
the exact nature ana extent of the
forei^ strident criticism," CormietuL
added, **Therc has not been adequate
sensitivity to forfcign Jitudcnt concerns
(on the part^^ of the ISC)." .
In his letter last year to Young,
Cormier was stronger in his recom-
mendations, "No longer can the legi-
timacy of the FSA be questioned They
are the appropriate body to represent
foreign students on this campus "
* A major issue facing the students on
the ISC Bx>ard will be decided on--
shortly in jjonjunction with the Regis- -
tration F.cat Comnuttcc. which recom-
mends to Chancellor Young how stu-
dent registration fees should be spent.
Cormier said the issue is '*OISS is
asking for an increase in funding," and
therefore. **Certain aspects of the
programs will have to be reviewed."
The following are the complete re-
sults of the 150 FSA questionnaires:
1- Qutstioniiairf results
2. Did you attend an orientation
prupam at the ISC? Yes — 50 4 per
per cent
cem: No
49 6
3 How frequently do you visit the
ISC^ Never — 36.4 per cent; Once per
year — .07 per cent; Once per quarter
- .08 per cent; Once per month
22.3 per cent: Once per week ~ .05 per
cent: Once per day - 13,2 per cent
4. What kind of programs have you
attended? Social - 24 8 per cent,
Cultural — 23.1 per cent; Educational
-r- 16.33 per cent; Never attended
35.7 jper cent; No comment 07 per
cem.
5. Which of these programs jitd you
enjoy"^ Which not? Social - Yes, 23 3
per cent; No, 45 7 per cent Cuhural -
Yes, .08 per cent; iMo, 68.92 per cent
Educational - Yes, 08 per cent; No,
68.92 per cent No comment —.31 per
cent.
• I. Are you tamiliar with the Inter-
national Student Center? Yes — 74.4
j^ cent. No -r 25.6 per cent.
— -6. Have you made any use of the
following services at ISC. based on a 1-
10 rating system, I being poor and 10
exellent'' Housing - 5 7; Host Family
— 6.6; English Language Assistance -
6.0; Expanded Orientation — 5.6;
Tours 6.3; Employment services —
2.75; Resuurant — 6.65, Others —
5.25.
7. Do you think foreign and Ameri-
can students make sufficient use of the
ISO If not, why^ Yes — 05 per cent:
No — 72.05 per cent. No comment —
27.9 per cent Why? Location — 20.2
(Continued am Page 12)
The Center for Afro-American Studies
'" ^presents
DR. ARTHUR L. SMITH"
(DR. MOLEFI ASANTE)
TherelSa ^
.' difference!!! I
of »ip»fi>«ice
Chun I
State I nivers \»'v\ > ork
Buftdlf) Stv% >
Communications Technology and
Civil Rights in the 21st Century
When TlJo^dav. Xpril 20, 1976 12.00 Noon
Whore: "UOr Campbell Hall CAAS Conteronce Room
UrtlN AI\U l-Ktt I U I Mt rUBLIC * * *
: MCAT
: OAT
: LSAT
: 6RE
: AT6SB
: OCAT
: CPAT
iECFUfi'""""
: NAFL MED BOS •
SAT -VAT :
bm^M f \4\\r\
Of
lor
2124 So SepuivvdB Bivd
LA CA 90029
<213) 477-3919
I ' t K * ' iO»«|Ai f INTfl'
Pot arrests not up
By Kcr Gafte
DB Staff Wriltf
Since the reform of mari-
juana laws at the beginnmg of
this ^ear, the number of mart-
juaaa convictions hat not gone
up, according to Bwx Pinek«
Lot Angekt city attorney.
Pinet evriuated the new pot
lawt and gave a progrcit re-
port on new developments in
the city attomey*s office in a
speech at the Law School yct-
terday
"Our office hat treated the
crime (illicit marijuana use) in
a proper way," Pines noted
Poftsc&t»ion of less than one
ounce of marijuana is con-
sidered a misdemeanor in Cali-
fornia. He added. "There is no
excuse to treat thcj^c cases as
felonies - . _^ .-^
Pines
OiVeaaet tibat are contkfered
misdemeanors include pctiy
theft, most vice crimes and
mmor traffic violations. Fel-
onies handled as mutdemcanors
include larceny, grand theft
autp, and fraud. The reason
for the treatment of tooK fel-
onies as letter crimes wat to
eate the burden of the distnct
attorney's office, which took
on over 25,000 felony catct m
1975, according to Pines
Under Pines, a new civil
branch of his office has been
instituted deahng with mari-
time laws, labor relations, aad
energy and conservation pro-
blems. Tins branch works
closely with the Airport Cdfn-
mission and the Harbor Com-
mission, along with other
He described his own job
saying, **1 am a municipal
lawyer. Tht municipal lawyer
IS a public lawyer mmi km to
make decttiont in the public
interest "
Pines has been city attorney
since 1973, after defeating
Roger Arneburgh. He will be
seeking reelection next year
OATSUiy
^ From the time Fines has
Uken office, the city attorney's
office has been split into a
criminal and a civil branch
The criminal branch handles
misdemeanors and tclonies
with misdemeanor penaltict.
Pines said of the restruc-
turing. ''We're an office that is
there to serve the public Wc
try to frame our advice to
management (higher offices)^
with rcipect to public inter
ests.-
"Acret of Dattunt
Student Discouqts — Ask for Fleet Sale*
Pasadena Oatsun
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
6t4-1
FREE
Computer classes
Everyone is welcome to attend the fr##, non-credit courMS in
^^ ^^ ^^^^ ^^ ■ • ^ _ -^ _ - ' ~ ^^^ * " ' "^y ' ' ' ' - ' — _.^— ^_„_ — . . — ^___ — , — , — _ — . ..I , . - ., ^..
computiiio presented by the UCl-A Computer Club Enroll by attending
the first class session. Classes start the week of April 1 9, and will be held
from 7:00-9:00 p.m.. except a$ noted. Computer time (or class
assignment will be provided to UCLA students, staff, and faculty who
join tne Computer Club. For more information, feel free to contact th«
Computer Club (3514 Boelter Hall, phone: 825-5879)
coiifisi
IV
ROOM
INSTIIUCTOfI
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A^ ^cm^momjtM totviNG
afW MOX CPI/B Pum mm
NMif AartltalM
Monday*
(■Micaf*
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4,—'
V*^v
WtafVatdav)
Speakers Program Presents
ii/f -i^f^
A'
^,\|,1 *!<>¥,;
DICK GREGORY
About to partake on a run acroiss the continental
United States- beginning in L.A. on April 21.
:.lf...
-_ V ^-i--...-sir:
. .' ^•' :. .
be appearing three (3) times on
TUESDAY. APRIL ^^
Franz 1178
Law School Rm #1345
Rolfe 1200
f Aseociated Students Speakers Progfam/58th Legel Speakers Forum/
Black Student AeMeiation/Kappe Alpha Psi Foundation
^.■aiyAl^^^.^V.
rr
.<£«»-
1
ck3ily bruin
poinf
..-e N
A continuing view of
the music department
by Mark Tauger
i
<
. •
m
1
0
:i
.j>'i.
(Editor' i fiofe; Tuger h a senior
muiic stu€ier}t here This is the
imcond in a two pjirt article)
K4r, Po§ner interviewed Su-
sanna Watiing as representing
the students, arid Or. d'Accone
reiers to her as such:^,"The
people who need performing
opportunities are students like
Susanna Watiing, who isn't a
half-shabby flutist herself."
(iditor's note the quote was
iffrtotnco to fonn rijiit ) now,
OPINION
whether or not Dr. d'Accone
said that, it is inappropriate at
least to describe Ms. Watting,
ione of the best musicians evipr
to attend UCLA, as not half-
shabby" in the Da//y Bruin, in-
appropriate to describe her as a
student :Wtc:tb<^ other students
when she is in fact a faculty-
level teacher, and in«ippropriate
to describe other students'
needs for performance oppor-
tunities in terms of her exper-
ience Mpst of the UCLA music
stents do not get the opportu-
nity to play in a tenth the num-
ber of concerts Ms. Watiing
does. Partially this is a cor^se-
quence of the irvdividual stu^
^nts' diffkukies iq practicing,
as mentioned above; partially it
is a consequence of the music,
depart nrtet^t's farlure to actively
involve more students in perfor-
beftnning for the UCLA pro-
duction of Mozart's Marriage d
Fifire, a production that despite
myriad difficulties was enor-
mously successful, sold out
every performance, and was the
first full opera dorte at either
UCLA or use in a significant
period of time. The production
was so successful that the de-
partment will produce another
opera this quarter. Now perhaps
^Mr: ^Sernheimer was not aware
of the actual state of affairs at
UCLA What begs explanation,
however, is Mr. Posner's presen-
tation of this quote. Mr Posner
tas an active interest in music
department affairs, certainly
knew about the Mozart produc-
tion and may have even seen it.
In this light his motivations for
quoting Mr. Bernheimer are
ambiguous at best, but by no
means reflect an intention to
describe the department fairly
or accurately.
Finally, consider the fol-
lowing: un unnamed faculty
member describes UCLA stu-
dents as "Kids." Mr Mehta is
quoted "Students are here for
four years of fooling," and Oean
Burke describes music perfor-
mance classes as "academically
non-subst ant rve. '^— These ind
^olher statements if) Mr. Posner's*
article reflect the attitude among
faculty an^ administration that
students are incompetent We
ate seen as unir>terested in the
material, incapable of derer-
No time man. there's a 6ay Sieve auction prtmiing on 42nd StroiL |Mi pi Hiiri Mm the
biddings
"Kick Back" and read
By Mark Joseph
(Editor's note foseph is a senior here, mj faring
in Chemlmry/ Philosophy )
David LaF ranee and Ralph Aivy have been
having an intelligent dialogue about the chief
point in the abortion issue, namely whether or
not the fertilized egg is a person. Mr. LaF ranee is
taking the more conservative side of the issue,
and Ms Hale attacks him in her letter At least, I
think she attacks him. because no one else is
presently writing anti-abortion letters to the
Hrum Ms hiale's criticism were both inept and
narro>iir-j7iiruied. j:— - ,■■,-. .,. :\. r .. .■ ;• ;•,"' '•"■. ;«■ ■ >
OPINION
In tf)e only effort she tniki^ at establishing an
argum^rH, sl^ev jumps from the staternent "Men
do no^ die in childbirth, women do." to the
conclusion that women should have the sole right
to determine whether or nol a pregnancy should
be termir^^ted. m one easy seep with no support-
ing arguments There are two mafor mistakes
her«^ One is the jump from "Some women die in
pregnancy^"- to "Ail women have the right to
choose abortion ' At best, she can only here
establish that women whose lives are endang*»red
have the right to choose abortion Furthermore,
her premise is specious Or Bradley, in his book.
"Husband Coached Childbirth" says that m 13.000
deliveries he has lost /^r,. mothers and zero
babies.
the second flaw in her letter is that she com-
pletely Ignores the very issue that Ralph and Dave
are discussing, i.e. the embryo's humanity It
seems that the final answer to this question will
carry more weight than other considerations of
rights. If the embryo aouaily is a person, I doubt
that there can be other than therapeutic grounds
for abortion.
About her explicit attacks on Biblical Funda-
mentalists, of which I am one: One, she orily
stated that, "we are far removed from the reality
-of the situation." and gave no reason why. tf ihe
'would like to present an in pendent argument
that a Biblical view of \He is wroiif, I would be
happy to listen and rebut, because I feel it is
right. Two, I seriously doubt Ms. Hale can define
either of the two words "fundamental" or
"Christian*' correctly, and hence probably does
not know what she is talking about when she
drops them in an obviously derogatory manner.
Three, ^o the best of my recollection, Mr.
LaFVance. the "conservative," has quoted the
Bible precisely zero times, arwj alluded to God an
equal number of times. I must conclude that Ms.
Haie wrote her lener just to attack (her view of)
Christianity. One of the labels she applied to us.
applies quite well to her rhetoric, namely "ir-
rational.". Until she forms a more reasoned
opinion, on either abortion or rehgion, she
should kick back and read the intelligent opin-
ions of Messrs. Aivy and LaFrance
Letters to the Editor
mance The department's reli-
ance upon faculty and a handful
of scholarship prize wmners
reflects the attitude, again, that
Mydients are incdmpeleni, unin-
terested, and that, to phrase Mr
Mehta. its all their fauft
Mr. Posrter presents two fur-
ther misconceptions. First. John
Hall IS quoted: "it's hard to
believe that we've nevei re-
quired peformance before." It-
sure IS hard to believe, because
It IS not true. The music de-
partment already requires two
years of performance classes for
all musK ma|ors. The depart
ment. furthermofe. does offer a
per for nuance maior. and makes
those ihidems take additional
performance classes, albeit with-
out resolving the tinr>e problemi
mentioned above Also, every
class, not fust.next yeer's fresh
mf»n. has had to audition to get
into the department
The other significant mis( ' '
ception sletns hoen Mr Posner
c. fton of the CritK Martin
Bernheimer. saying in D-
that The decline of Opera at
UCIA IS f= Txjst dis
heaneruhg d*^ve»<»i t m th»
h^ory towers Vet at that time
in r>e( emhff »*«h#jrsj|v wrr<>
mining specific course needs
and as having to be subject to
rules and guidelines imposed
from above. Yet we are ex-
pected to decide on a ma|or. a
decision iar more difficult and
important than deciding on any
single course, alone
Now consider these "non-siib-
stantive " performance classes.
Can one really say that inter-
preting Beethoven vocally, in
chorus for instance, is signifi-
cantly l€»ss substantive than in-
terpreting Shakespeare verbally^
More than that, how are the
administration officials in a posi-
tiqm to c^termine tor the stu-
dents that one class is more
substantive "' To be consistent,
t adfrnnistration should also class
as non-substantive Astronomy 3.
History of fa/2 and all the other
so failed "Mick" classes. Yet
F i\eiss among others
will make the point that the
music performance classes are
Ml ks at all
I have shown some of tf>e
IS in Mr. Posner k le
anc: sugg(*sted some alter-
' .it' ♦', I wcHild hope this article
♦ 'uK turther insights inter some
»t the more basic pro^ of
" HTHisic performance at UCIA
Comic Tragedy
I am a third quarter sophomore
and have never written to you
previously because people are
usually aware of the topics that I
have w<irued to raise In this
instant however a comic tragedy
has occured that cannot be al-
iowed to slip away from under
the eyes of the students
As many people kr>ow. I^t
Wednesday evenir>g marked the
beginning of the week Ibng
lewish holiday of Passover. Part
of the observance required for
this holiday (which celebrates
the freeing of the Israelites from
slavery) is the eating of unleav-
ened bread called matzoh in-
stead of eating anything leav-
ened. Mat/oh ran be eater;» ail
year long but the malzoh that
one eats on Pastover is prepared
\mdcr special Paaiover dietary
laws that are not in effect the
rest of the vear Oniy matzoh
that IS specfficallv kosher for
Passovpf <cin be eaten at Pass-
over time
Here the comic tragedy be-
gins I am fewtsh ana live in
4i xukignmr4ti^ W lyp«d jnd inpWtoMvd. mmrn If-^S msrmm%. tSr trtigHi
• It r 1 1 1 I A^^^m^l I I I I I ■ t ■ 1 I I fci^i^^^i— X— ■
Hedrick HaU Last Thursday
rT>orning at breakfast I found
much to my dismay that no
matzoh was being offered for
those who wished to observe
the holidailr: A friend of mine
after^ having asked the supervisor
about the matzoh was informed
that there was not to be any this
year But much to our delight
we found that at every m^
from then on matzoh nTpnnd
on the counter At Hedrick Hall
however the matzoh did not
appMr in its box. but was in-
n9»d put out on the counter in
a metal pan Without being able
to read the label on the Ma-
nischewitz box. which specM^
cally notes that the matzoh is
not kosher for Passover, most of
the Jews who live in the dorm,
myself included, presumed that
the matzoh was kosher for Pass-
over After all. why even have
matzoh at all if it's not to be
eaten at Passover Ah. but will
the ineptitude of the dorm ma-
nagement ever cease to surprise
me? Apparently not. for the
malzoh that was deceptively
displayed at Hedrick Hall Thurs-
day and Friday and the matzoh
that was sery,^ at Rieber Hall
Saturday and early Sunday
morning g^yg rio warning that
the matzoh was not
Passover When I asked a stu-
dent worker in Rieber Hall Sun-
day morning about the incident
he replied. "Somebody fucked
up, anyway Steve Salm said that
we vveren'i catering to lews;
listen I kr>ow. I'm Jewish too."
There you have it. studtvui of
UCLA and dorm residents, the
dorm has not only spent money
on matzoh that the jews cannot
eve,n eat but in essence it has
made some Jews violate some
religious laws that are very pre-
cious
This is not to say. however,
that tr>e dorm's do not make an
cHort to okwrve religious holi-
days Just recently the staff at
Hedrick Hall took the pains to
dry and 4acal easter eggs and
hid them all around the cafe-
teria Fridlay evening, for those
students who wished to observe
that ritual of Easter
I have tried to put a light side
to this Itftter and make it enjoy-
able rea^tog but I must end it
by sayine that I am hurt, humili-
ated and angry at the seemingly
deceptive actions that the dorm
has taken towards my religious
(Awa)
OaAy Bruin
W *# OiMy gnitn
-1.
>..
— rr
r
>'
More Letters .
fr.
^^^r heading four articles
opwcerniiif abortion, and writ-
ten by men, I .felt the need to
voice my opinion on the matter
— as a woman.
NassHess to say, abortion is a
controversial matter due to the
fact that lemt consider it mur-
jl^, and feel the r>eed to pro-
tefrt a fetus from the "cruel"
dmdtkens of a heartless woman
Mr LaFrance says that one
cannot pinpoint when a fetus
becomes human, and, there-
fore, it is human from the mo-
nr>ent of conception. (Why
doesn't he go even further?
Why shouldn't an e^ or spem
be comtbered hunan and be
"protected?") He indicated that
_the Suprgnc Court arburar%'
ohose six mfftnhs as a cut-off
date for abortion Tisk. tisk, Mr
la-France, you should read up
on your hunan biok>gy, A fetus
cannot live independently of
the pregnant wgman for at least
six months, and therefore, the
Supreme Court decision was six
months.
I contend that abortion is not
murder, for a fertilized egg,
embryo or fetus has no hu-
manity. A fetus certainly has no
contact with the outside world
or human society. It is not ex-
pmmd to human thoughts or
emotions. Any "humanity" a
f^tus prnmiti is. at most, an
abstraction
But the humanity of a woman
faced with an unwanted preg-
nancy is not an abstraction
Anti-abortion groups attempt to
appeal to emotion rather than
reason, but they always manage
to overlook the emotions of the
woman.
A woman has real emotions
fe^ fears, and real hopes and
aspirations for her future An
unwanted pregnancy is a threat
to her future — her life To
force her to carry a tetus and
bear a child will radically
change, and even destroy her
life. THIS is murder, Mr. La-
France
The fear of becoming preg-
nant at an inconvenient tinr>e is.
of course, very abstract to any
man. Obviously, he cannot truly
imae^ne the fear of thinking he
may be pregnant, and the hor-
ror of finding it to be true Why
should anyone sacrafice her life
for something ¥vith only a po-
tential for humanity?
Until science provides a totally
safe, totally effiaive and reason-
women need abortion as a back-
up mearts of birth control.
lust as it would be absurd to
force a woman to have an abor-
tion against her will, it would be
ridiculous to take the choice
away The only person who
should have any say in the mat-
ter IS the woman faced with the
unwanted pregnancy. She is the
only one who should make the
decision ^lel Mr LaFrance. not
the "Right to Life" group, or any
anti-abortion organization The
abortion issue is "a woman's
fight for the right to choose.'
(Ms.) falrkia C.
It has conr>e to my attention
that this fcbogj doesn't give a
dann abMft you unlni you
>^*ppen to be a iock' Recently, i
found out that a inmbiJi of or>e
of our all-mportant atnietic
team was aWosntd to pull off
one of the greatest con iobs of
all tme This individual is on ath-
letic probation. As everyone
knows, our men end women in
blue and gold are not allowed
tp do this ohen The person in
question realizes this also When
she failed an all-important mid-
term, she was quick to point out
her dilemrM to her instructor
He was very sympathetic and he
her to take the ~mact
same test over again The grade
iKe Moeives the. second time
will be the grade recorded. This
alone would be bad enough,
but our athletes also get free
tutoring services, guaranteed
dorm placement, pre-progranv
ming. and a service that has the
sole )ob of finding classes that
will be micks for the athletes.
These factors make nr>e realize
that this institution is no longer
a place for acadenic advance-
metit. It has. in reality, becone a
playground for a select elite.
Franfc Jyum
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peace
The Costs of Peacemaking
A Talk 6y
FATHER DANIEL
BERRIGAN
— One of the first priests in U.S. history to go to jail for an act of conscience
— Aumor of The Trial of the Catoncville Nine and No Bars to Manhood
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vrr-^«cfl
^■P
n
0nt/0rt/ainmcnb index
And now for something completely "Westwind
By karai Grttm
In a very random sampling
of UCLA studentji, exactly
none had ever heard of Wan-
wiM. It was a limited poll, to
M.JM»y< (toullmg all of six
people), but try it and tee if
the same results aren*t ap^
proximately repeated.
Why is there so little intense
in our own schoors **quarterly
of the artsT
WettwttHl has had a very
tenuous sutus here, at least in
the recent past The ASUCLA
Communications Board, which
allocates funds for all the com-
munications media on campus,
cut Wcitwind out of its budgtr'
a couple of ytars ago. It was
fortunately reecoed, but just
barely, by Dean Byron At-
kinton, who provided funding
from his own office.
At the time, \¥mtmtmi was
UCLA1 "literary jouraai*
Now it ^'strives to provide a
viable forum for the expeaeMOO
of all of the fine aru. It is tiK
Moere hope of the editors that
such a forum will tifff^flt^
and mainuin a itaodard of
excellence for the creative
aru,** fUtes the frontiipiecc of
tiK laeeei issue.
The difference is that now
Wettwind features not only
poetry and fiction but excerpts
from screenplays and plays,
photographs, and other art-
work The latest issue also
includes an interview with no-
^ijWt Brum Moore.
This, unfortunately, is one of
the least impressive and inter-
esting selections, particularly
for the reader who is unfami-
liar with Moore and his work
The interview is dry .aed loo
eaoCehc in some places, but it
conuin a few ''writer-
Ulks-about-writing- insights
The vaat of the new Wmh
wljid u relatively gooi. Let
Mbmo. who contnbuied The
Cat The TV The Beer.** dia-
pi^ya an mtnguing and amus-
ing atyle in his story abput an
attempt to write a poem Ther
is some neat word play in
Mike Rose's poem, "Kites.**
and Linda Matthess has deftly
assembled a piece of fiction in
the form of a series of letters
between friends. There are a
couple of stunning pictures,
such as Gary Ayala*s cover
photo and the 'Portrait in
Gray- by ILaren Robbins
Suflioe it to say Ttialniwdi
editors have done a commend-
able job at aasembiing a van-
ity of creative material It
would be nice if their fellow
studenu would uke the time
to read it.
A wry 'Mojave' and an unsophisticated Town
By Adaai Parfrey
Mefave CoidMaiitM at U
Mama Hollywood is a silly
little play that purporu to be
nothing more than a silly little
play Written and directed by
Spike Malloy, this production
is a pleasant diversion and well
worth your time and money.
A. one-act "mellerdramer.*
JVB^B^v t^'OHMeMiai contains
outrageous action and plotting.
It all ukes place at UCMD
(University of California at.
Mojave Deiert) where many
loeer-type studenu reside. A
duld^molestrng graduate stu-
dent, Gary Boone, kidnaps a
dizzy heiress. La Bruce Plantc,
with the aid of a friendly Latin
bombahcli, Minam Orf. Even-
tually, Gary and Minanr'a
hoKly plans for success are
foiled
*
Within this framework,
Malloy*s script fives an absurd
and sometimes very true look
at the flippant natures of the
Collegiau crowd. We get - a
generous sprinkling of hilari-
ous sop)iomonc chattering and
shibboleths. ..
Belle Zee*s vacuous La Bruce
Plante is a dyed-blonde cheer-
leader with a temfic taste for
lequila Her portrayal is win-
ding and perfectly on Urget.
Beth Porter's heavily-accented
Miriam is kept well-focueei
throughout, while George
Johnson's Gary teeters dan-
gerously on an. aoMteurish
edfe.
In secondary paru, Vincent
Sorrentino, Gerald Reynold^r
and Leigh O'Neill arc strong
despite their anti-semitic, poor-
ly-drawn, or grotesque rples'
Mojave Confidential runs
through May 2, Wednesday to
Saturday at 8 pm
■f ■
By Marc Palnicrl
Murray Schisgars comedy
All Over Town at the CalJ-
teard Theatre takes place in
the Manhatun apartment of
Dr. Morris, a peychsetnst who
Ihm decided, should he prove
usable to penetrate his most
perplexing case in 25 years of
practice, to move to a Bud-
jdhist monastery m Tibet.
^ The challenge is the case
study of Louie Luoaa, an idler
who has fathered nine children
by five different women When
Morns' daughter, Sybil, mis-
takes a delivery boy (Lewis
Franklin) for the prolific
Lucas, Frankhn decides to play,
the role of Lucas and run the
.awedL houeehold on hi.s terms.
and daughter are also fascinat-
ed by the itinerant Franklin
they take to be the virile
players genuinely believe in
their characters and
I .
Morris' wife, meanwhile, is
having an affair with Col.
Hopkins, the dcnnor's old army
buddy, while Sybil refuses to
marry her fiance because he
earns too paltry an income as
a social worker (ske will not
allow him to quit social work
for a buamess career) Mother
^ Obviously. Schisgars script
is a comphcated, well-crafted
piece of writing calling for
techmcal excellence from its
actors, the intricate blocking
and timing required to stage
the pUy IS deftly executed by
the Callboard cast. Unfortu-
nately, more than mere tech-
nical expertise is necessary to
present a complete theatrical
production.
The actors tend to carica-
turise tiieir respective roles
instead of characterising them.
In this sort of **sophiitiGaiad*'
comedy, it is essential that the
tions. The actors in tteb pro-
duction unwittingly tel us that
they are funny; they do not
allow us to perceive it our-
selves Eventually^ wm ^ art
manipulated to icapond only
to the most obvious of comic
lines (when Morns' guru in-
forms us that the aseence of
life IS to avoid acting like a
schmuck) and only the most
conspicuous of gestures.
The production ita*t dull,
but it isn't sophisttontad either
Much of the intrtneic subtlety
in Schispirs script » sacrifwtd,
resuhing in an amuaii^ pro-
duction that could have been
much funnier.
RecordingsRecordingsRecordingsRecordingsRecordinssRecordii
LiMMi:M
£ AT,
L
Wmki
MJ3927)
Sty
wski: Mms^ites mmd
for Piamo
and she
home with
music.
IMm t53l2
very much at
Impressionistic
—Marc Paliricri
The American release of these
12-year-old Russian recordings
reveals a bhlbant — and lit-
erally perfect — technique and
great musical intelligence.
Berman's felicity of filigree
and carefully wrought dynamic
gradations are repfetenutive of
highly proportioned playu^
His criap, dear phrasing aad
introspective underttanding af
Liszt make the -^rtiral '
dazzhng as the
Some of the
too worldly (almoet
lovenish) lasiBad of Hun-
garian and Rootaatic; and the
Sonata sounds disappoiaiii^y
static, with a ttudio likr qual-
ity about it.
The engineeiing is flnwud by
an overly-bright treble and
disunt baas, though between
these extremes tiK
mdjkow
Karol Szymanowski (iaa2-
1937) utts a Polish composer
of the Impressionist school
(ahhough well rooted m
Chopin) whose mueic is quite
simply too much ntglecied at
the present time. He it oae of
the foremost Impressionistic
innovators of this century,
ranking perhaps with Ravel
Debussy. Yet, as is the
with the best Imptieaaua
■what Szyimmafwirid has to
say onisically manages never to
he needlessly subjugated to
mnovatioo. His muatc is not
merely eloquent, but maeter-
Mk^ crafted as imB:
. Carol Bosenbaigw,, in addi-
tion to having truly excellent
technique, is aa intelligent
pianist, willing to take cal-
ctthood Mhs m at^er lo aBow
• piece to reach its fuU po-
tential She doesn*t seem satis-
fi^ •• Piay a pie^ withn„t
Ludwig Vmm BtHhoven
Sympkotte No. 3
Seiji Ozmwm rmtiktrtmg
the Smm Frwmckeo Symt-
pkomy Orckntrm
^Mipw 9Sm 992
Another unfortunate as-
pect of this disc IS that t^e
'Marcia Funebre** second
movement is annoyingly split
on the recording; that is, one
half on one side and one half
on the other The sonics are
•spacious and the surfaces
laultless.
— A.r.
ijor fantasie. But it can also
be put aside, as in the intro-
spective opening of the A
minor or the Dolce of the D
minor.
Repeats in the music are
usually ornamented, quite at-
tractively so. And, o{ course,
there is that beautiful tone he
gets from the flute. especuUly
evident on this well-recorded
The '^Eroica,'' weas Beetho-
ven*s first great departure
from previous form Its
his arand idea of heroisai
and nas had lliany recordings
just as noMe in conception a^
the piece. Add this one to the
list
Seiji Oaawa has fairly
etraightfonward, sweeping no-
tions on how to perform the
symphonic landmark Un-
fortunately, the San Fran-
cieeo is not a mature' enough
group to fulfill Ozawa's con-
ception of the work. Some
solo parts, are notably
timid, and the orchestra'*
attacfcfi mwp flnkh^ — and Lay-
Teiemmmm: Tweht tmmtmsiet
Odywmy 33M§
All in all. worthwhile uh
vestigating for anyone inter-
in Baroque music
— Jav BoaeaMatt
ving explored it thoroughly, g^j
The world of the solo in-
strumental in daaaical music
» ttBI OK dommmed by the
viohn and piano, yet i
•'cen-Piene fUvpal, and tlus
recording of the Telemann
■waive Fanlaiim fee Phite is
characteristic df his extraordi-
"^ry^phrasing, voicing, and
tone.
v^empal docs incredible
thinp with this musK. The
]^^>yty IS there when need-
'^^ QpcuiBB BBMmk.qf the A
AfoMwr 5
(A
0i§
Isniet Philharmonic orchestras.
All perform superbly.
In other Mahler discs, Bern-
stein orraeiniMiHy seems too
dnven and musciebound. Here,
his performaaoe is both ex-
pansive and uut and shows a
profound understanding of the
wofks despair. This disc edges
to the top of fOth Symphony
recordings, which include
George SzelTs gjowing account
an Columbia.
The kindertrnrnliedar is, in
a word, remarfcahle. Janet
*s voice haaamm the
on the Death of Chil-
dren so well one can only
expert
M13S32
For the aheer dei^ghi of
BiaidBntm lemyaihin, a bnl-
tiant new recording of the
Adagio from Mahler's 1 0th
Symphony and his
emerged
are
isftP! BatPT !hp
New. York
ia
tras perform sampeaoaaiy. Es>
pecially noteworthy are the
York
Columbia
lUTT"
m— aaKti
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lltP* Of mofo
I-
+
L_
CHAN'S GARDEN
^^ton^a a Itoodadn Cuislna
EacoMont Chinoaa Food, Boor A WIna.
Good Service, Pfoa Parfclng al
Conlof , Sana of Amohca
(fooa Or, Woatwood, LJk,
479-r7e5. 47e=77aa
i
I
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I
I
I
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I
I
~^— THIS IS A cotvoN. cirr rr a uaa "v— «-——.. J
UNEMPLOYED?
If you're in the market for a summer job with:
Future potential, practical ex-
perience, and great pay, $835
per month,
and are independent and willing to work hard.
THEN xnaybe you shouM call
479-4139
fora
appointment
FREE
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
LECTURE
ENTITLED
WHO DO YOU THINK YOU AREr
by GLEN C LIVEZEY of Chicago
> "^•etOar^ef the Chnattan aeleaoa Saard of I %\ iiaaelil
AT 28TN CNURCN OF CHRIST. tCJENTIST
••(
derfully quiet turfacei The
for a e^ifK ecao on aaaer lO
tlie aecond
HILOAHO a LWOSWOOX AVENUES
WEaTWOOO VILLAGE
e PM, FPUOAY. APRIL 29fd
OMid Cara Provldad
For Free Rsssrvsd Sssts Call
474^at
10 am and 4 p m Mon Owy
1
I
f
I
t
tm
w
■I III
aamm
^
1
: •
W^.
— J, J
1
f
3
prf af t
as aUAistrtaa
-^ C€/H/HUNI€N
»«4a«*4«« fMVft««fli
unc
rsMtt •«••
I
I
4
THE STUDENT
COMMITTEE
FOR THE ARTS
$1 STUDENT
TICKETS
at'Kerchoff Hall
Ticket Office
S2 STUDENT
TICKETS
at UCLA Central
Ticicet Office
650 \Wbstwood
Plaza
UCLA 1.0
Card and
liMmO
rniuirad tor
purchase of
all tickets
$1 TICKFTS ON SALf MOW
Sun . April 25. 8:00 pm - Schoenberg HmH
MUSIC FOM A WHILE. Mhy music
"skill, taste vitaisltty and natural
iton Globe)
Tuas . May 4 8 30 prT> - Royce HaH
QflANO UMION . ^ .-
"a nch mixture of fantasy, pisfody.
I*ty" (Washington Post)
gamas and
Sat . (May 8. 8 30 pm t Royca Hall
WILUAIfl WINDOie IN THURSER II
a raturn angagamant of Mr Windom in an
entirely r^ew production based on the Ufa and
tHTias of the quiet coloieui of American tetters
Fri . May 14. 8 30 pm - Royce Hall
SILL EVANS TRIO
an inteltectural. skilled and serious musician
(«»ho) has r>aver lost touch with an aaaantial need
to swing" (Leonard Faathar)
Sat May 15 8 30 pm - Royce Hall
QARRICK OHL8SON. pianist
' s powerful technician, a strong musical mind
an ifitefaating artist' (Harold C Schonberg)
$2 nCKETt ON SALE NOW
Sat June 12 8 30 pm - Royce Hall '
GUITAR SUSNMIT II
teaturing Launndo Almeida. Barrwy Keaael and
Hmrt Ellis. Sandy Bull an evening of guiter gri
^p
^i^
fc*.^
4^
^
Campus events
IMT. tf tilt tin
SMTCH Uirary. 2 pei Apm 22
Ffte. a
fsr ihTS
tetete. I-IO pai. svsry
ly hitsrr
NMiard Frss
voluntssrt for tur
information baatti. lost and foiMd.
and mttdy morf Opsn
te avaryaat. applicationi availabit m
Mardi Qras offica. Ackarman A-20e
— Eipa CsiNr TrsMi Fair door prizai.
I travef mformation availitols. 10 laM
tediy aad teiasrraw. Ackarman Grand
^^w« ^^HHI^
iia draw oadi wask for youf op-
mattH data, time and cour m-
d in Karcktiotf ISO. For
information call 6art Yaa at
F<Nate lar CMdliiii for SLC
ara now avaMaNa in Kerckhoff 340
haa IS April 22 s 4 MR.
-ecu Mvdl iraa imndi Crav ap-
plicatlaai art saw availabia m tf)e Mardi
Grai offlca. Ackarman A-200 now-Aprll 24
Opan to all. details an iis MMcalion.
— •stefatff Statai %uri. wfiicn shewa
each presidential candidate and tha
amount of dslaoatss plodfid from stetes
which have had primaries is now up in
Kerckhoff Hali nssf ttia slavator on ttte
first flooi
— €ailMi CBMMraSlHr. informal piaellis
for foreign studsnis and visitors 10 am
noon Mondays and WsdasidNW. Acker -
man 3517
•^-FaiMrsMpt information and deadline
on extramural funding for graduate stu-
deiil aad paeideeiorale ara avaiiaoie m iiie
FtHowshiot ted Asslttantship Secttea.
Surptiy 12a ^^
trained interns will help you find funding
for your lOeaa. Dean daily 9 am-4 pm.
Kerckhoff 401
and locar volunlssr poslttona are awi
ngw tfHough EXPO Ackerman'A213 or call
025^)031
PralaillBi. |oin OECA as a
iavastigator Visit Kerckhoff 311
or call 825-2820 Volunteers are also
iQr environmental and load pro:
-Alt Uttm LaiOy Ciilraalai F«itei. is
now available tor a two-year term with the
liC Student LotH)y in ^acramente winch
pays S787 50 a month Requirenienii in-
clude being a recent UC graduate and
interest in educational lOBass Pick up
in in Kerckhoff 306 Deadline is
7 or call 825-8545.
Architecture
lecture today
The UCLA School of Archi-
tecture and Urban Planning is
sponsoring two days of archi-
tectural project presentations
and discussions by locml and
visiting architects.
Open to the general public,
the first lecture senes will be
today, 2-6 pm in Dickson Aud-
itorium 2160, with Tim Vrcc-
land, Tony Lumsden and Craig
Ttodgetts discussing the Los
Angeles-based architectural
group called Silver. Charles
Moore will moderate.
¥
CI
OOA
AMoory CommHteee an nav
avaMMi. ■eodMe is April M. piek up
applications at Ackarman information
ad 04 desk.
— fsfesilnr. A «af el LMs. fsstunng
tunche 3ldB
FuNar and sterriao Mdiird lasaliart wdl
bs eliewn 5 pai. tomorrow. Melnltz 140
Free
a 2so Bsster 2-3 pai.
3617
-Fllllae tes Weld, revolutionary tad-
dMaM. a paaal diecaoeioa. naaa^ pai.
teawrrow Ackarman woman's lounge.
— Tka teerai lanaa Buddfiist art of
India. Nepal and Tttot. an iHustratsd
Isctura 2:30-4 pm. teday.
1966 Aoideiaif Award-wmmng
forsign film with dleeaoolan to follow will
be shown 7X10 pm tomorrow MelnMz
Free admission by ticket only avail
iiLz Film Archives
laaMral directed t>y Akiro
Kuraaaws and starring Toshiro Mtfune will
be shown 7-1t pm. tonignt. Melnitz 1400
Free admission by ticket only available at
Melnitz Film Archives
fSHS FlkB fteiael will feature
and Waaak Is Sri
April 22 Oickson 2160
~Aa Lang Aa Mm Mear !■■; film about
the American Indian movement, noon,
tomorrow Campbell 3232
— Tte Zee VerM architecture,
and painUng. an ilkistratsd lecture. 4-6 pai.
tedey Ackarman waaien's foanga
-4 NmrMa te MrlaH VMMi. 3^ pm.
irrow BuncHs MO. ■
rSlollao. 1-2 30 pm.
117
Cr
in ttie ThV-Mo
1:30-3 pm April 22
MasMd 3617
7 10 pm
2:30^ pm April 22.
HTkel
aalB. naan^ pm. April 22 Ackenaan wo-
niMti lounge.
H aiartaB and Tkair
works wiir be presented by graduate
students, npoo. today Schoenberg audi-
torium
^•ray Cat tlrlnf lead will perform
traditional Ameftcan mountain music. S-7
pm, tomorrow, Caap Free
^Tte Eaksaa a rock trio, will perform
noon April 22 Grand Ballroom Free
-Tte Caali af PsMaaekkv, wHt be die-
cusaed by Fattier Daniel Barripan. today,
neon. Janes Steps
-MMPtete ki Fall Haalc. tfie folk roots
of eteeeicel mueic lecture-musicsie will be
presented by Howard Feldman. record
oolector aad eweie leeiurer 7 10 pm.
Ittt. part of Ffiolograpliy Viewpoints 71. 1
^m. tonight. Moore 100 $2.50 for stedeate.
senior citizene. meateers of UCLA Arts
Council and Ffteadi of photography 13
gsnsrai admiaeien.
in Argentina. 1010-199). 2 pm
today Buncha 9Z76 ~
' to
4 pm today, luncha 3211
I. will dis-\
cuss tt>e status of ttte Agricultural
Relations Bill. 2 pm tomorrow CI
Studieft Library Campbell 1116
from onee apon a time to kapBily
ever after 3 30 pm. April 22. Franz 190
April 22. Oodd 121
af leateedte la tei Itedy aed
el Law noon-1 pm April 22 G8M
laN
CaMaOl Sennar 630 pm 6mrm 7 30 pm'
talc Aprtt 22. International Studam Center.
1023 Hilgard ^fm
—Words Md ■sale and Ipsra la tee
Veraeaalar will be discussed by Virgil
Thomson noon April S, Schoenberg
auditorium. Free
vs. tea
itelB. an open "^ forum /panel die-
cuaaion will be held noon, tomorrow,
luncha A-teS
lawlpteii. Later dterana aite tm-
teMtete, will be diecuteed by thrw law-
yers. 7-0 pm. temewew. Oadd 175
— Valttntaer fsmmer Jele ler Prslsslte
6-7 pm. teday. Iktesr Has Maom
Oel will msst 7-1 pm.
Taeedoys. Dykstra Recreation raom and 2-
^ pm. Friday s. Mfomen's Gym 20) for Ml
intertetad 10 Isarmng and praditino bal-
TP, 4 pm.
Kerckhoff 401
ISC survey . . . ^
(Continued from Page 6^
per cent. Mismanagement ~ 54.5 per cent; Lack of
activities - 20.4 par cent; Lack of publicity — 4.56 per
cent; Lack of facilitiet — 50 per cent
8 What would you thmk of an International Center on
campus'' In favor — 86.8 per cent; Against — L6 per cent.
No comment — 11.6 per cent.
9. If you like the idea, do you think that suck a center
should be run by students? Yes — 71.3 per cent; No — 6.2
pcT cent; No confment — 15.5 per cent. Should the students
be paid'' Yet - 75.2 per cent; No — lO.I per cent; No
comment - 14.7 per cent.
10. Do you think you would make more use of a center
Oil campus? Yes - %T.l per cent. No — 7 per cent; No
comment — 9.3 per cent.
MCENTENNIAL
EVENT
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
THROUGH BRITISH EYES
THIRD in the UCLA BICENTENNIAL LECTURE SERIES
J.R.POLE
y\cm Matter. Churchill College. Dembhdge University; Bntish scholar
who has made an intensive stucfy of American history and politics;
author of Abraham Lincoln and the British Workliig Claaa; The
Advance of Democracy (editor) and numerous other books and
articles.
series continuM WEDNESDAYS. 6 P.M Dodd Hall 147
Aornas
ROBERT KELLEY Profataor of Htstory uC Santa
TWO HUNDRED YEARS OF THE TWO PARTY SYSTEM - MOW
HAS IT &¥OLV£0 AIHQ MIHWi Alii W£7
Mays
May 12
WINTHROP JORDAN
RACE. AGE AND SEX REV
REVOLUTION
MARY BETH NORTON
Univaraity
TH§ REVOLUTION AS A WAR Of LIBERATION
lata
of Hfatonr. UC Bantalay
TIONS Of THE AMERICAN
Of Hialofy. C Of naS
niMion unarge
Wednesday, April 14 8 PM
by UCLA
ii Commitlaa and Commiwaa on Publtc Lacturaa
Public Cordially Invltod
Oodd Hall 147
COME
\.;
see us at the
m
EXPO Center
Travel Fair iJTe^^o^l',
Grand Ballr
Ac ke rma n
20,
Wed., April 21
We're the ASUGLA Travel Service
^ f"^ ^•^■» '•^t ''•••s ua diffarant. and why you should
come to tsUt to ua about your plans
• Ware right h#fa on campui
• Wara the ONLY official UCLA service
• Wera part of ASUGLA. which mesrta our profits co difeeHv
bsck to you /-
• ^^ <^,yiy |M)-student Tra^i Servica
• Evary rnember of our staff is an experienced student tra¥««er.
sr>d knows what you're looking for
We have over 1500
flights to Europe!
We also have flights to New York
sr>d Hawaii, and flights to Eastern
Europe. Africa and Asia
We have SAT A flights - with the
lowest prices availihle anywhere
and many mfm exclusively ours
Our selection of student tours is
immanes. You can p»ck from Un-
regimented Tours. Campir>g ar>d
Hotel Tour arrangements Es-
corted Tours. Budget to Lavish
Tours.
We have travel counselors — the
expertise of our staff and EXPO'S
steff is at your biddirig And boy —
are we handy'
I
PRIZES!
see N ae giving away travel t>ooks' If you wish to look over
s greater selection, go to the Students' Store Book
Department Travel Section, and browse It's on the B
ieael. Ackermen Union
tefs Qo lypspi!
soplee
on $10 a Day
sea
a/
wyon (wMH EXPOl
Well give you plain talk about
Charter Flights* worlclngs
I
It
g
If our pricas laam highar fhan •omaxommonly advartiaad
*** ^Tff"*^ "^ ^'^ y°^ pr»cai lagally avaiiabla at tha tima
waadvartisa tham w« couldn t avan bagin to Mat all our
fNghla. e««n »f wa took tha antira Daily Brum to show tham
toyoy
All pricat ara ragmatad by tha Civil Aaronautict Board
and nmithmr wa nor any othar Travel Agancy can discount
prtcat aat on chartart
What wa CAN do is aat upjha moat advantagaoua
•''•'•'^^•"••ntt for you by carafully chacking what is
availabki
Wa offar you tha aarvicat of tha EXPO travai library wa can
arranga your itinarary through Alliad Holtdaya
Toun. Chanar Spaca Managamant Continantai
CIEE. ElT Kuoni Travel and Univaraai Tour* Thara ara
moea Wall do our baat to gat yoc whara you want to go
but It may not always ba by a ch%r\mr flight Tharafora avary
daaiination may not ba aconomicaily faasibia by ct\mrx9r
The eo-day pign-up limit 19 immiilBMa. flMo m leeMW
fiU up 5 te S wiemhs m advanca ^-^-- - ""'^-
Wa foally dont try to mialaad you or imply wa ra tha hot
thota thatji get you a supar daal tha v^ak befoie ydu want
to laeva Sorry — can i oa done — but what
I;
I
!
ly impiaaaiva aodi
about chartan
raally don't h^^ our haada
CAN do IS
in
S
Some examples of our
terrific travel buys:
Lot Angeles to New York
21
$99.00
LAX-Honolulu-LAX
Aug. 7-21
$189.00
LAX-London-LAX
July 27-Aug. 23
$379.00
If yey esfi*! milie N le tfie Treael Fak.
us Ml ouf eiaoe ^
1221
n mon-fri 1(M
Nwa
L ^^ .. ^ ^ ......... ^.^ ^^
k«uiMtt*aaMaaai
1
!•.•«. •!•.•«•«•«'
■i' ■■^: ' i;
\
I
f
3
Barry Commoner
•
I
Author n»e CkMinf Circle; fwted EnviroNMcnulist
John Gof man
ProfvMor Emarttus. U.C. I<rkel€y
David Pesonen
Chairman, Californians for Nudear Safeguards
Ian Forbes
Chairman, Dept. of Nudear Engineering, Lowell Tech. Inst.
Ai Discussion of Energy
Policy — Nuclear Safe-
guards Initiative
'T'
Friday, April 23
12 noon-4 p^nu
Ackerman Grand Batlroom
d by: Speakers Profrwn, O.f.C.A.. UCLA Geogr
Chapter American Nudear Society, jZamput C
the Cap, S.L.C.
Salisbury Stealcs top A cfivision softbalf
For the iecc)tid ftnught year.
the Salisbury Steaks are the *A*
divLfion champions of coed
Softball. Led by Nancy Salia-
bury, Mark Davii, and Mary
Jo McNally. the Salisbury
Steaks will go on to represent
Intramurals
Mcn*s — Tomorrow b the
last day to sign up for the May
7 golf tourney The fee is S4. 60
payable at Kerckhoff 140. then
bring your receipt to the IM
office and sign up. Ooubles
handball play will begin today
so make sure you know when
you play. Doubles volleyball
sign ups are being taken now
through April 29. The deadline
for table tennis entries is this
Friday. April 23.
Women's ' — Women's soft-
ball play begins today so make
sure you know when your
team plays. The entries for
women> table tennis are due
Friday. April 23
Coed — Coed team bowling
begins tonight. Coed uble
tennis entries arc due this Fri-
day, April 23. This tournament
will be held in conjunction
with the men*s and women^s
table tennis tournaments.
UCLA at the AU-Cal Coed
Festival. May 14-15 at Jcrke-
ley
The AU-Cal Festival is in-
tended to bring about inter-
action between studenu of the
nine UC campuses This an-
nual festival, now m its ele^
venth year of operation, moves
from one campus to another
;h year. The sponsor of the
week-end is the imercamptis
exchange fund.
It IS called a festival rather
than a tournament because no
records are kept. In fac^, in the
course of the five games
*^layed. only two are played
with your respective school. In
the other three games, the
schools are split up again to
bring about more interaction.
In this year's coed festival.
the events will be softball.
innertube water poln, tenhk
and volleyball.
The festival is for students
only; no men or women who
competed on varsity squads m
the past are allowed to com-
pele. This weekend gives the
common student a ^^WT Ui
travel and represent his school
In coed raqnctball kat
quarter, Brian Koabal and
Laurie Gaudin wen the 'A*
division competition, and the
*B' division winners were Tim
Bradley and Melodie Huber
Soccer competition saw the
Chestnuts, with Scott Ros-
maier and Lisa DiPol. tie for
the championship with Alba-
core, led by Geoff Quinn and
Sue Lacey.
. Coetf peni (S-ball) was ssip^
by Nancy Busbee and Raja
Paladugu.
^Ken Krofft
Dankworth anxious
(Continued from Page 29)
last season, Dankworth feels
Ihnt the winning ways of the
football team will not compare
with that of the basketball
team. "^The pressures are dif-'
ferent. Football here at UCLA
doesn't have the winning tra-
dition hkc basketball, we arc
still in the stage of proving
ourselves."
■+■■
But Dankworth added to the
Rose Bowl idea. "Most people
don't expect us to go to the
Roiie Bowl again this year but
I think we will We won't stop
short of a national champion-
ship this yenr."
f I
1076 GAYLEY • WESTWOOD
«*- -r* .- ■ ». ",, _ ,
£ ;n.yM-%L -v^ » ^
478-5117
Take out or eat in
SPRING FESTIVAL
DEDICATED TO
AMERICA'S BIRTHDAY
Tuesday. April 20, 1976
J., . . . ,^,
Dh D<T
with Wavy Gr q & tm-nds
MFY> )FF PARK
K Whole wheat or white pizzas
Salads Submarine sandwiches
Beer and wine now available to
c
vnfh I
JCLA Dtpt
■ ROOM-
«'ntal ! .mot Mote's
inner
^ffi*fffT:
'.vi^.>i c) I or '"^ Ac^v
-■"jt-^
Get one pizza free of equal
or lessor value
Off#r good for small, madium and large pizzas only
Present this coupon
■e**i
^\^)?'\Lr\ .^
Wj Mke
Da Sports Wfto
AlrtiOMgfc It saaflM like
ineB^ bsaketbttM aasaSB just
ea^ed, ptum are abieady being
THe Brvins are recruiting
wflfl, tbc league has
mtmaummi^ aad tiK
ikould emmmm to
Many ttengs are aaaied to lift
women's bnaketball out of ob-
scurity. One is a aoiid laague
stnictiiffe so the sport c^ eas-
ily be followed by women's
bnaketball buffs. This has not
uken place, since the league
has changed for the third
straight year. Another factor
that will need to clHyifr is
scheduling This is something
that is being improved each
Next season there will be
approximately five contests
that will directly precede the
men's gkmes' According to
head coach Ellen Moaber,
these games could feature some
of the best teams in the nation.
The doubleheaders will take
place early in the season in an
effort to generate interest for
tbc year as a whole.
A third aspect that u chai^
Mftg ii player and ofTiciating
ability. The refereeing might
include some male officials
next year, the players are get-
Wright . . .
(C
Tbc
oedrrom Page If )
jMao had an on-
bbae-percenuge of .464, a slug-
ging percentage of .561 and
pitched an average of six.
innings a contest.
This year, Wright's role on
the team has changed. Now
she pitches every other game
under head coach Sharon
Backus.
She nooepu the role change
gracefully, apparently just
happy to compete for UCLA
in an age where th^ moln-sport
collegian is dying out m favor
of specialized coaching and a
gpcatei' emphasis on winning.
Wright feels this year's soft-
ball team has a very good
chance to qualify for the na-
tiniial championships m Ne-
braakn. But if they do. They
will have to have better luck
than the basketball team."
Wnght thought, as many did,
that the basketball team would
surely be going back east for
the Nationals.
Charlene's most memorable
moment in athletic history at
UCLA is the one-point loss to
Long Beach Sute, which pre-
vented the basketball team
frcyn advancing to the national
tournament of 16 teams. A
close second is her knee injury,
which sidebned her the good
part of one hoop season
However, all is not gloomy
lor Wnght.
Her four-year participation
with the UCLA marching bnlid
as a dnhnd player has kept .
ber gaing. The thnll that sha
got when the UCLA band gave
ber a iMltfa^g ovation at a
basketball game in the Sportt
Arena will remain as a fond
memory of UCLA
Wright was asked if she
would do all that she did
at UCLA (plus commuting
from Torrance and attending
El Camino College in the
summer) if ibe bad tt» choice
changes siatadfdrnsxt year
ting taller each year and ^
ability it slowly increasing.
Next year the Bruins will be
in a five-team conference, wuk
eight league games durii^ tbe
seaaon. The teams in tbe con-
ference, whtch IS coHiderably
suonger than last year's wUI be
UCLA, use. Long Um±
Sute, Fullerton and San Diego
Sute The Bruins, Long Beach
and Fullerton and San Diego
Sute The Bruins. Long Beach
and Fullerton were all strong
bwt year, the other schooU will
have many retummg players
next year.
The Uclans have strength-
ened their squad for next year
Last year, the 19-4 Bruins
stormed to a conference cham-
pionship over nine foes (in-
cluding all of the teams m the
present league) but then fell to
Long Beach Sute in tbe seou^
finals of the Western Region-
ato.
In the area of recruiting, the
Brums have bmded Bev Groot,
a 6-2 1/2 center Trom San
Jose'. From the local area.
UCLA has also received letters
of intent from two players
from the top two CIF 4A
teaoM. They are Tammy Breck-
enhdge of Crescenu Valky. a
cemer-ferssard. and Lynn
Wright, a guard from Ventura
Another top athlete in the area
who has signed a letter of
intent is Denise Corlett of
Marlboro High School
From Tennessee, UCLA has
reached to obtain the sute's
beet prep guard, Diane Frier-
son. Frierson has signed a
letter of intent At this point,
two of the five have been
accepted at UCLA,
The search has not been
concluded with the five new-
comers! A juard from Mon-
t-aaa and a 6-3 center (arm-
span 6-7) from San. Jose are
also possibilities. Soon re-
cruiting will be over and it w^ll
be easier to see just who will
be coming to UCLA One
thing u ceruin. The players
from last. year's varsity will not
have it easy when the dogfight
begins for 12-person teant
This i% fhm placm for ftib lov#rs /
|ay for fhm Bmsf Rib% w'vmfrimd in LA.
Herald Examirwr
COMPliTi DINNfRS
Cmsual Dining ««» *2« 7 S|
NAmiY'S OMiS MT BBO
1434 N CICSCCNT HilCHTS at SIMBiT STMP
10 Mtnut#ft L>own Sun»«t 61 vd to
Louf I Conyon Turn itght And Vqu r# Th»r«
juniors, seniors, graduates:
During Ring Week, Aprii19-23
there's a
14-karat
GOLD SALE!
ORDER YOUR UCLA CLASS RING NOW
Save 15.00 on men's rings
Save 10.00 on women's rings
When you purchase your 14-karat gold rkig
once npnn
The reply "Probibly
would do more next time
I
Ring* oviarad thig ««Mk wHI
arrlva bafora graduatlont
b— rw— f. b level, ackerman urxon. aag-TTll
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, Los An^olos. ColMornIo §0024.
notion problofNS. coN: UCLA Howsln^
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Women swimmers finish second, Moe stars
-«>•
My J«Ml Hak
UCLA^ women twimmen took Mcond pimot
MianiJ at tbc AMOCiation of Intercol-
Athktici for Women*! (AIAW) iwim-
Miuooai championthipt to conclude their
most fMontful leason ever.
Senior Kjtfen Moe. a foM juiilwt in the
1972 Munich Olympics, icored 95 1/2 of
UCLA*t 3|1 total pointi, placing in five
individual «|i two relay events.
Moe won first place in the 200-yard butterfly
with a tune of 2:02-8 and collected second,
third aad fourth pinee finiiiwd in the 100-
butterfly; and 200 and 100-yard breasutroke
evenu, iMpactively
Brum eoneh Colleen Onkum singled out
ILaren Mehck, Margie Moffit, Jenny ■nrtz,
Ltianne Cramer and Ann Simmons as ad-
ditional ''main point getters."
Mebck*s moat impressive race was the 200-
kireaststroke, in which she clocked 2:24.01 for
second place. Moffit captured third place in the
100-breastsroke with a time of 1:00.19
Sutk K.incade pjaced fourth in one-meter
diving, an event which was won by Carrie Irish
of Ohio Sute.
This finish came as somewhat of a surpriK,
since the three-meter di%ring event is usually
ILincade*s best event.
Later, it was discovered that Kincade had a
strep infection, which may explain the Bpun
diving specialist missing the second oM In "flfe '
one meter event after having the most poinu at
the conclusion of the first.
The meet Was the finest in AlAW*s
hietory, according to Giaiuua, in her first year
of .oeaching at UCLA. —
\r..:.:
"It was a very„ high calibor meet," said
Qnkmm. "Many Amencan records were set at
thk ye^s nationals.**
One psfticular rule in tlw meet helped the
Bruins. '
Athletes swimming faster in the comolation
finals tlma in the. regular finals could add
points for their teams, which helped the Bruins,
according to Graham
UCLA was undefeated in swimming wmtHM
prior to the nationals and won the league
championships. In addition, everyone on the
tmm achieved one or two lifetime bests dunng
the maon.
**rve learned a lot as conch,** said Graham. **I
am planning to run the program slightly
differently next ymt.
Optimism toward future seaaoas Can't be
avoided as most of the Bruin swimmers arc
eligible to return next aonson except for
graduating seniors ILaren Moe, Susie ICincadc
and Ann Simmons.
Hathy Heddy, winner of four gold medals at
the 1975 Pan Amencan games in Mexico City,
and Shirley Babashoff of Mission Viejo,
recognized as one of the finest swimmers in the
world, are ksted m recruits for next ytmt.
Since many team members are freshmen this
year, the Bruins look strong for several seasons
in the future.
Other top finishers at the Nationals include:
lUren Melick, 100 briaHstioke, 6Ch; Margie
Moffit, 200-butterfly. 8th; Jenny Bartz. 200-1 M,
4th and 100-IM, 5th; Luanne Cramer, 50-hnck,
4th and lOO-back, 8th, and Ann Simmons. 500-
free, 6th and 200-free, 8th.
Team Scores: Miami 445 1/2, UCLA 381,
Stanford 377. Alabama 319, Anzona 30S,
I
CLASSIFIED >ID
travel
travel
"SIR-
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tuforififl
Wright not the standani supersta
• MTV.
typing
I aHMi. AJ.a.T. i4as sa. u SrSSJSf ,25^^
.1^':(SSA'SS| . . *'
MptB ffunitohxi
By Mike FinegoM
DB Sports UrMff
Twcnty-three-ycar-old C harlene-Wnghi ts no!
the sundard supersur She does not have Ail-
Amencma or Oiympic Uurcls.
Rather Wright \s oae of a rare bfind ol
aililMa who keep striving for higher and higher
thinip until they have reached the pinn^ck
Suooeia has not come easy. A foapaphy major,
the 5-7 Wright remained in athletics after a
somewhat disappointing start. When Wright
first started sci»ot at UCL ATIT a BMhmmu sfce
competed on the women\ basketball team for
head coach Bob Omffey. ChaMey recalls:
''When she first came to UCLA she was ver>
quiet, hard to know, almost a loner**
Chaffiey and Wrighi mainUined good rappor
and. since Chaffey wa& also the women's
softbail coach, he was able to convince her to
try out for the soft ball team in the spring
In high school. Wright had played basket-
ball, tennis, track and field, and sofiball
Wright had not been planning to play anything
other than soft ball, but her strong interest in
athletics, combined with the fact that man\ ot
the peopk on the basketball team were goiHg
to be on the soft ball team, -added up to the
beginning o( a most interesting soft ball career.
As a freshman, Wright had expected to play
outfield (Chaffey observed she had one of the
best arms on the team) However, the Brums
were short a pitcher Wright volunteered
At first, she was wild Rather than pitcher, a
better description of the plaver who stood atop
the mound for UCLA winild have been
"thrower " As each game of each ensuing
season pneend. Wright started developing inttJ
the star hurler she is today
When we started out, Charlenc got the
pitching )ob by default." Chaffev notes "'She's
grown to like piXthmg more She has made
tremendous stridej " -,
The senior obsc^cs that, **ln piu^hing you're
in charge of the game 1 have more confidence
than jfrhen 1 was first starting. It's a big thing
Mr keep the hatter off hahmce**
In the outfield. \^ right vkould have felt less in
control of things, so it folio \\s thai her tour
years of basketball plaving nhich entailed a
knee injury, missed opptm unities and little
playing time, would have been ver\ disap-
pointing
•*lt was a frustrating experience Ellen
(Mosher. ICLA hcnd basketball coach) told
me that I was a part of the team ihis year And
I was supposed to he able to contribute to the
m other ways besides plaving m the
■'*>
Although Wright did plav some during the
year, including the finals of the National
Women's Invitational lournaflient. her ^b on
the team ended up being a good practice
pcfton and a team leader of sorts Wright was
one who was a real responsible leader on road
trips, and her attitude v^as a go<K< example for
the younger players
In Softball. W right's junior vear was her first
rcalK successful one as a lop-notch pitcher
Pitching about MO per cent of the time. V^ right
was a true workhorse on the mound A finesse
pitcher, the plaver whom thev Call "Bird" for
her meUxlic chirpings, took charge t»f the team.
' Ijist year's coach (Chaffey) recalls that
"Charlcne led by example ** The mound star
notched a 2 37 | RA and hit 333 in helping the
Brtfifis to a very successful 14-6 mark Wright
was first in at-bats. second in hits second in
runs sc€Mi«d,. second in walkti ( cd srtond
in runs hatred in second in stiijcj. ! asrs
second in singles third in doublev. Med for Ihm
in triples and sici.nd in homers on a s«^uad
which cunM dote to gtnng to Omaha for the
World Series
Wright pla>ed in all 20 games. commfTt'ni?
no e.rri)'rs fhe pitcher also had an on : :„,^
percentagr of 4M. a slugging percentage uf
561 and pitched an average of siV innings a
contest Wright played in all 20 * ^
games, committing no errors
K <Milinued cm Page 15)
PAPina
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Scatesmen vie with Waves for NCAA berth
I
i
imer
' DB S^orti Writer
NCAA thief and UCLA vol-
Icyball have become lynon-
yMMM, but not lince 1971 have
the Bruins won a league title.
Tonight at 7:30 pm at Santa
Moada City College. UCLA
will meet Pepperdine in a one
■aich playoff for the league
crown and an autooMlic berth
to the NCAA finalt at Muncie.
Indiana.
The UCLA - Pepperdine
match IS rated a toe§-up since
it will be played on a neutral
court and the statistics tell
why. Both teams finished with
10-2 regular season marks in
the Southern Calif ornm Inter-
collegiate Vollevbali Associa^-
tion (SCIVA).
Both the Waves and Bruins
had 6-0 records at home and 4-
2 on the road. The two teams
spht their league matches, with
Pepperdine winning in four
gMBes at Malibu and UCLA
victorious in five games at
Pauley Pavihon With Pepper-
dine winning five of the nine
,jMBes, UCLA has outscored
the Wavoi^ 122 to 119 points
Momentum wouio appear to
be on UCLA*s side. The Bruins
defeated USC, Pcpperdmc, UC
Santa Barbara and San Diego
State during the past two
weeks and have a five match
winning streak going into to-
night. Pepperdine lost to
UCLA in Its last match ap-
pearance and only played in a
tournament last Saturday dur-
ing the pMl ten days.
*^e aaa^id the layoff to git
menully ready for UCLA.**
said Harlan Cohen, Pepperdine
head coach. ''We had one of
our worst matches against the
Brums in Pauley Pavilion, yet
we ftill went five gaam. From
the way the guys are ulking,
we are ready and will not be
tired like the laat time.**
The Pepperdine players and
coaches indicated the team
tired badly a^imt UCLA be-
caoic it had played a tougii
four game match in iSanta
Barbara two nights earlier.
**To beat UCLA our best
players, (Ted) Dodd and
(Mark) Rigg have to be on,**
said Cohen. ''Dodd did not
have a good nyitch the last
time and now Rigg is healthy
after a shoulder injury.**
**Pepperdine has a fine ifam,
but we are very capable of
winning if we continue the
progress we made the previous
Pepperdine and Santa Barbara
matches,** said Al Scates,
UCLA head coach. "We will
certainly have to play Uveher
than the San C>iego State
match to win.**
BviMi experience
Experieiice would also ap-
pear to be on the side of the
Bruins. Joe Mica, Denny Qine
and Fred Sturm played every
minute of last year's cham-
pionship match, with Mike
FrankUn also seeing action as.
the bacicourt and serving spe-
cialist. Dodd has international
experience for Pepperdine, but
the rest of the team is mainly
new to playoff pressure.
The match could come down
to setting The Waves have
freshman Rod Wilde, the ommI
recruited prep setter in the
country and JC transfer Steve
Graser For Pepperdine to be
effective, the setters must be
successfully getting the ball
outside to Martin Nora, Todd
Silke and Jay Anderson and in
the middle to Rigg and Dodd.
David Ol bright and Peter
Ashley will do the setting for
the Bruins. They must be able
to execute the UCLA quick
nuddle attack for the Bruins to
slay in the match Olbnght was
in the National- JC finals last
year, while Ashley backed up
NCAA MVP John Bekins last
Bench strength
UCLA*s definite advantage
lies in bench strength. Pepper-
dine uiea at the most eight
players and seldom substitutes.
Scates has used Mike Gott-
schall in the front row for
Ashley, alternated middle
blockers Doug Rabe and Doug
Brooks, plus substituted Smgin
Smith in the front roii jar
Olbnght without hurting
UCLA's effectiveness.
'^Our advantage is that our
kids are so close both on and
off the court,** said Cohen.
"We went together to a house
last week to watch the Cable
replay of the match ip Pauley
Pavilion and .we left as a. team
confident that we woiild win
after watching how bad we had
played. We have 'been away
from home during the- patt
couple of weeks, but UCLA
will have to leave Pauley Pa-
vilion for the playoff, which
should help us.**
Scates had tonight*s game
plan for Pepperdine written
before the San Diego State
niatch Utft Friday night. He
knows the Waves better thna
any other team in thexountry,
If UCLA can execute what
Scates has put on paper, then
the Bruins should be able to
win in four or five
• 0 0
The doors will open tonight
at Santa Monica City College
at 6:30 pm, with all seating
being on an unreserved baak.
Tickets priced at S2 for UCLA
and Pepperdine students and
S3 for all others^ will be on
sale until 4:00 pm today at the
UCLA Athletic Ticket Office
and beginning at 6:00 at Santa
Moncia
Dankworth looking forward to winning a s
sit
t
By Patti Sullivan
DB Sports WHter
As spring football moves
into Its second week at UCLA.
the question of who will play
quarterback is still unresolved
Three years ago it was the
Mark Harmon- >ohn Sciarra
era. This fall memories of the
pair may be rekindled by the
duo of Jeff Dankworth and
Steve Bukich.
Dankworth. a senior and
UCLA's backup quarterback
for the past two seasons, seems
lined up for the starting asstgn-
menL
pa&t the B&uins have passed to
their backs very sparingly,
leaving the receiving to the
flcctfootcd ends. The running
game will basically stay the
The senior quarterback hat
been looking forward to spring
practice but feels it will' be
tougher on the offense ^ for a
change.
"Our offense has always
been more mature and power-
ful than the defense, but this
spring they are so mature that
we're going to have quite a
battle.''
— But aside from the improved
defense. Dankworth is curious
to see how the new. revised
passing game will be meshed
with the powerful running at-
tack. For many of the players,
this spring seems to have come
sooner than usual.
**lt's different this time be-
cause our season didn't end
until January. Not that Pm
complaining, but this spnng
will also give the players a
chance to get to know the
assistant coaches. We have to
learn their philosophies and get
acquainted with their person-
alities."
Dankworth has no fears
aboiit the upcoming season, or
about replacing John Sciarra.
"I feel that 1 can play com-
paratively as well and on par
with John Sciarra. 1 am confi-
dent in my passing arm and 1
do have experience
*"! haven't had all the work
that I need on passing, but 1
feel that I can adapt and have
the ability to throw the ball
wdl." he continued.
Dankworth feels that a quar-
terback must, in a way, be
arrogant. **A quarterback must
learn to remove himself from
the criticism. Its like a basket-
ball player- — 4ie is so dete to—
the crowd, and after every play
the fans say something. lt*s the
same with the quarterback —
he's the center of attention.*
What may hurt the Bruins
most this teaaon is the loss of
the senior leadership. With the
graduation of 17 seniors, the
lottes will be felt both on and
off the field.
"The major lots it that of
the leadership, but I think that
this group can fill any vacant
spot The mark of a good
program is that they can re-
the ganduates.**
After winning the Rose Bow!
(C
naPage 14)
"With the new coaches I
have to win my spot. With
(former coach fJiick) Vermeil,
people would have said that I
had just inherited the job be-
cause I had put my time in
Now I have to prove mvscll
**l think thai il Vermeil were
still here, it might be a
Harmon Sciarra situation
again.** he continued
With a nc\fc coaching stall
taking over, there are bound to
be changes. Dankworth looks
for new astittant Dwain
Painter (formerly ol BYU) to
have a definite effect on the
passing game.
"Coach Pami< deals in
strict pHt tptdlitSMion We
will still be running the Veer
type offense, but Coach Dona-
bne tays that we will pnsss
more ''
pank worth feels the major
change in the passing game
will be to cmphasi/e hittmg'
vinflU5 pweiiw — ■BrrrpTTr-
ends and tight ends In the
Hollinger resigns Wrestling
tit
By Rich Perelman
DB Sports Reporter
Citing an opportunity for financial
security in private business, UCLA wrest-
ling coach Dave Hollinger submitted his
resignation to Brum athletic dtraoar |.0.
^Morgdn Yesterday.
Hollinger. speaking freely about his
leaving the school he's been associated
with as an athlete »nd coach for the past
13 years, said. "I was not forced to resign
by any m^ins. but I want to.pursue sonne
personal busir>ess interests that are tough
to work in with my coaching duties here.
"I re^rei leaving the University, m the
that It has been my life up until
but at the same time, it is a great
bufden that has been lihed from my
shoulders. The coaching iob here is not
:ially rewarding, but very rewarding
ways — bi»t ft rs very time
9nd that n what really moved
my decision towards going into private
business "
Hollinger. a fine 123-pound wrestler in
hts undergraduate days herp. won ho-
rK>rs on the coatt for his wrestling talents
and helped toafh the Brums ahang with
After Holli s ur>dergradua?
Morgan asked him to take over for Hunt,
who was ailing with heart trouble. Hol-
hnger accepted the assignment in 1965-
§6 and has bean at the grapplers' helm
ever since.
HoMioger claims nr>ost of the credit for
the developrr>ent of the Bruin wrestlers
into a respectable conference and na-
tional contender. Putting it bluntly,
Hollinger commented. "I took this pro-
gram when It was r>othlng »nd made a
respectable program out of it." In his 11-
year stint as coach, Hollinger compiled a^
91-70-5 record for a .563 winnif>g per- '
centage. by this year's 15-7 record, one
ol the best in Bruin history.
As for his aisocilfion with the univer-
sity» Hoilingar had only kind words to
speaad afOMd. "I've eofoyed and ap-
preciated the invohrenrtent that I have
Had with J.D. ^4ofgan and the whole
atMatic department."
As for recruiting. Hollinger admitted
that his leaving will have a btg effect on
the athletes he wis attempting to secure
for the Bruins' 1976-77 squad. "I have
told all of the athletes that I will have
resigned »9%d that I will recowimend
them to the new coach and I ¥vill work
with the new coach, helping him to
recruit the guys that we have worked
on, " he said. "I ieel confident that Mr
Morgan will hire someone who will be
good for the program in general."
Hailinger has already talked with mor-
gan on possible successors for his iob.
but would not mention any names.
Assistant coach Dave Aubia, who might
possibly seek the head job or resign
along with Hollinger, could not be
reached for comment
Morgan, reacbud for comment later
yesiaeday afternoon after the resignation
was on his dmk^ said. "We definitely
appreciate the fact that Dave has given
us so much of his last 11 yean to UCLA.
We wish Dave alt the good kick in the
world for the future as he goes imm bis
business venture. His dedication wmd
hard work and all the time he ipanc with
us is greatly apprectned/'
On the matter ol a tuooanor, Morgan
explained the situation at ttiH poifit. "As
vou know, there is Affirmative Action to
go through. Mnd we anticipale that it will
take from three to sii intuitu to hire a
r>ew coach."
^icially until |une 30. when his resig-"
naltefl takes effect.-
Ucla Daily
VokMM XCVIll. Humbm 13
UnitiSTBlty of
WgflnMdgy, A^ 21. it76
Protest is useful
peaceful means,
Dan Berrigan says
-^•^
By Jim Peiti
Dl Staff Writer
Calling basic symbols of protest the most effective. Reverend
Daniel Berngao said Tuesday ''the price of pohtical dissent is
quite high and growing higher all the time.**
Addressing a sun-basked audience oL-approximately 150 at
Jaats Steps, the Jesuit priest said every^MC must get out wm4
protest for the causes of peace by themselvei. *^liat is crucuil.**
he said, "is the community experience and sooK effort to getting
an honesty working in our system,"
Berrigan claims most people arc unsure about protest and
believes symbols of resiitiaer should he haaic and direct "The
better an action it is,'* he said, "the more mysterious it is at the
lime."
Prolesit .
Berngan himself has been involved in many protests including
the burning of draft records m 1968 and more recently, the
digging of a grave on the White House lawn to protest the
stockpiling of nuclear arms. Friends of his also poured blood on
the pillars of the Pentagon
Explaining that these actions **stfip away the appearance of
things to aee them as they realty are." lerrigan said the digging
of graves and spilling of blood are *'sane^ actions which
counteract the "insane** actiona taken by the government ^
"One of the marki* of American genuis is to export death and
keep it at a disunce.** he said. "We thought it would he better to
bring death close."
Meeal patll
Berrigan also spoke Monday night at the University Religiout
Center and emphasized "a clear moral path from Vietnam to
today*s problems." He said from Vietnam "the government has
knraed nothing and Afnencans have learned very little.**
Blaming much of this on the government. Berrigan com-
piained. "when we consult authority for a higher wisdom, we
only get a *niaybe,* " adding this included the Catholic Church in
the IMTs.
When asked what the Roman Catholic hierarchy's reaction has
been to his activities, Berrigan said "they have been mostly silent,
which I take to be a criticism." He admitted his grievances wotiy
deauuid dMM^es in Roman Catholic structure — changtt hf faalt
would come about very slowly.
"Part of the smog we*re in is that 3foti can say anything and be
sure it will mean very littk," he
Tigna reminded the antesce that he (ek all the protest was
during the 1960's, bm he found out years later it had a
large impact. "One thing we mutt learn to Hve with." he tnid, "it
tiK cnflMHml fttHMlIt to integrate a contoenoe into a style "
Part of Brrrigan*! style mtkmim refusal to pay laacs for
miltury spending, brr airing the law when naaiad aad aincatiag
mikttn to the costs of procctting for peace
The tmm ^picttimi to he answered, he said, "is how do wc live
m a way tlwt m t^gniftcanily different in lU
ihari wtiai wg a^v tifiiig itiiiiiiciei) imn—
Comedian mixet joket with Jouttt
Gregory here for food run
B9 Maria Uvine
DB Stair Reporter
Interspersing humor with social commentary,
^omcdian/socml activist Dick Gregory spoke to
three diflerent groups ol students Tuesday, in
an effon to publicize his Bicentennial Food
Run
Gregory plans to run from Los Angeles City
Hall to New York City City Hall, averaging
about 25 miles per day for the first three days
and 50 miles per day after that, concluding on
July 4th He begins this morning at 9 am.
He wants to fmish on Independence Day "so
somebody will have something to say other
than what a wonderful celebration this is."
Gregory explained.
The primary purpose of the cross-country
run IS "to try to raise the consciousness level of
the masses, to say that food, is a basic right."
Gregory stressed "My basic right to cat should
be as basic as my right to breathe air." he
added
Large audiences
Gregory entertained laigc audiences, in f-ran/
Hall, the Law School and Rolle Hall with his
satirical comments on several political figures,
including President Ford. Ronald Reagan and
Richard Nixon.
Speaking on President hord Gregory said
he*S glad he is President "because he looks the
Way. America is. I don't know why people keep
trying to kill him Hilling Gerald >ord is like
wanting to kill Pinnochio "
Gxcgaoiy said tha>i he would like to sec
Ronald Reagan become President haaauii if his
name is said backwards, it says 'nigger.* and he
would love to boast that there is a backwards
aiggrr w the White House
Aiimilt to Mars
Gregory alto commcniad on New York Chv's
economic problems, and in light ol them,
obfccted to the government's spending a hilli(»n
dollars to send a nussile to Mars to find out if
the planet can support hfe.
"New York City can support life." Gregory
said "Why don't they blast a billion dollars to
^^New York**" "BasicalK that's ^hai the Food
Run IS all about.' Gregory added
Emphasi/mg the imporuncc ol the pubtic r
knowledge ol what they xat. Gregory said, "A
normal meal would wipe most ol you out " H'-
urged everyone to think about lood ac*tivitirs
and imitation foods and where thcv come Irom
a5,igg animaK
Quoting an article about animals in the
Atlanta C (»n\tituti<m, Gregory said that 65 (HM>
animals are destroyed yearly in Atlanta because
owners don't care Fifteen tons ol dead animals
are picked up from the streets each month hv
sanitation workers.
"What do you think they do with all thai
meat'" Gregory asked He answered with the
television catch phmae ol a last t.i^od restaurant
chain "Have it your way
Gregory managed to say a lew words about a
wide variety of topics throughout his speeches.
including ,CJ A surveillance, the Haren Quinlan
case. . venereal disease and the BiLentcnnial
"Everybody talks about the Bicentennial hui ^
nobody talks about the Indians." Gregory said/
He added that it there was ever a celebration .
that they should noi be left out ol. it is this
one
Fora Is Mm wenniig lo
UNM dormitories return
to non-coed arrangement
fall.
When asked what his immediate plans were,
"Pd hke to survive a httle longer"
A key ^aoition to return
the Uni¥ersity of New Mean
cd*s only coaducal
dormitory to **i
gation" hat HKt with op-
position DrtMn dorm resi-
dents. aaoai#Hig to recent
ripaffti in the UN M Dof/t
Tht iiBiiiia to dMr
Hokoaa Hall from inte-
grated floors to separate
W the |UWM
for the upcoming
itm% maSt due to
mcrenaad tacunty prohletnt
tmm tlK dorm was mte-
mted, amnrding to Randy
■Hilin. INM aaMdate
fl( undents
iin ajMd that the
change wtU aten mmt stu-
4aM prefercasai for more
conventional living areas
with the hvikiin^s pl^Mcal
f
Tlie
Mitt month
. wl
'^Hiatorically. over the tmi
five ynva, that building Im0
shown significant security
not Mnngiiig tknn bemg
there." he said Tlia iln-
dents lyt Wtt-
Memben of the H
Hall
called the
the
they're the
group.
"It « oantrary to
wMhai oC flMat tMrim
hving in Hokona," tiKy
in a wnt letter fifca
We
fC
anPntt*!
f
\
^^^
J
I
K YM'rt
TOO SKINNY
6ain Poundt
Th«f« t • product NMII't
m«rli9t twf
•ftinny.
helping
t« 0«tn
ol &-H twin It
Mil MSM And It • no «K
thi« product ^-c«ll«d Wai«.On« •• ultra
ncti tn caler»«». vtiamma. minerals
•Mi iron plua otmoat avory nuiriani
lino«n tor replacing amhauaiad
ttranott) and pracioua artargy So. if
irou ro akinny. mm and wndanwoight;
to poor ooiing hobita and
't want to ba akmrvy Bnymor^ tatta
>n Aak your driiggisi for Liquid
(K ToMott in popular flavors axtra
•iranQth Supor Waio-On if you ro m
a tmrry, or fry now Supar Wata-On 2
Enorguara Satiataciion guarantood o>
'•(urn to nma^ on tobol tor mon«y
Oacii' for fr9m booii on waigiit buKd-
ing wri la Wata-On Oopt WO-Mt. 427
W ll«ndofp^ Chicogo. III. tfltt.
BEST STEED READING
PROGRAM ^
LA rSpoc) - TIK READS Rapti
the feMI
tbc AMOooiad itoiiMa ol UCLA
AocoMlMii to Gory Mooii.
tlie R E A D S ^ofraoi will he olTararf 4
CAclutivcly by tbc ASUC LA Studaoi
Store
Focior* wbicb iaflucncad tbf daci-
•»•• woM ilM low COM. foody-^oct
raiat of opottb g/mttmum 1 be evaliiaiMM
ol R E A D.S ctaaaaa htU (or UCLA
ttudcnu A Mfltfoe faaiurt of
R ^ A D S COM— • It II* MA
ailowiaf aa^aact to ba doat prior to
UnaU
For furinrr lalofwotion on Spring
Quarter cifc»»ct. obdfct READS.
615 Nevada. SooaolHo. CA MMS. orttop
at the tabic in tbe fiudcnt utnt
Poet chants, tingt, and reads
4
4
t
A SPRING FESTIVAL
DEDICATED TO
AMERICA'S BIRTHDAY
Wednesday, April 21, 1976
12 00 200
Filling the ' iry \
a panel discussion with Howard Fast.
M ri K. " Th ' "■■ , An.
L): " ^: ,
j>j v\,rh a Zen Mast
"Hining Buddhi^i
An F
UI lU v> •
' .A.)
A( h
•VMT
'O^f. A
Award Be * ^
^arii S-
me
r.-i.
Ginsberg leads Buddhist fest
By Carol Starr
Frank Wftd4tr
DB Staff WrHen
Poet Allen Ginsberg sat
crofs-legscd Monday night in
the Grand Ballroonn chanting
Zen, singmg. songs and reading
poetry to an enthusiastic crowd
of 400 chanting students. It
was his contribution to the
Buddha-Dharma festival called
i?nir>i\^
\ fr* \^rTrr tj a
Earlier in the day, after par-
ticipating in the opening cere-
monies of Tse-Ong, Ginsberg
explained his philosophies on
Zen, writing and drugs.
Not quite recognizable with-
out his bushy black beard,
Ginsberg wore a jean outfit,
blue bonzo bouncers, short
black socks, flowered tic and
beads with little skeleton heads
peering out
**Ronnie Blakcly shaved my
beard when she was drunk one
night While we were on the
Rolling Thunder Revue,** he
said, *•! shave my beard every
couple of years, i like to re-
main unattached "
Buddist beliefs
Ginsberg said he is not at-
tached to much of anything
due to his Buddhist beliefs
Tve practiced a long time," he
said, as he balanced ImHtOh
style on the arm of a couch. ^1
first heard chanting in Sanskrit
in 1953 from Jack Kerouac,
who first introduced Buddhism
to contemporary literature in
his book Mtxwo City Bines.*"
Suffering is the key to Bud-
dhism, according to the beard-
lets poet. Ginsberg offered an
explanation of the intricacies
of the far-Eastern religion
*• Existence includes suffering,
suffering is caused by ignor-
ance."
Yet ignoranoe, as he per-
ceives it, can be overcome in a
series of steps called the Eight-
fold High Path:
— right views — understand-
ing suffering is included,
right ambition to ehminate
suffering,
— right speech — **straight
talk" without confusing, things
more,
— right activity — ecologically
oriented,
— right work — clean and
non-aggressive work,
— right energy from clean
work,
— right mindfulness and
awareness.
- right
"Everybody's suffering and
everyone's igMmnt. Working
with tbe sitiuttkm is the goal
yov don't have to pet to the
other side of the ^sorld,** he
said.
Survival
Offeriag a piece of wisdom
for those who want lo survive
in a hectic world, Ginsberg
said, ''Sit down and shut up
and observe and breath at the
end of your nose. Observe
«bBt*8 foiag around in space
This is classic Zen mediution/*
Ginsberg's Buddhist phil».
sophy is reflected in his song
"Gospel Noble Truths" which
he performed Monday R:gh;.
"Born in this world/
You got to suffer/
Everything chtmfml
You got no soul/
Try to be piy/ - -
Ignorant happy/
You fet the bh»s/
You eat jellyroll/
There is one Way/
You Uke the high road/
In you big Wheel/
8 steps yon fly ."
Songwnting became another
means of expression for Gins-
berg -in 1971 when "Dylan
canic by and said *Come on
man, lef s write something,* "
Ginsberg said
Profri
His songs have been part of
a natural progression for the
poet He started chanting in
1963. then put William Blake's
"Songs of Innocence and Ex-
perience" to music in 1970
Finally he began composing
his own works.
Ginsberg has just published
his newest book. First Blues ---
f^ags. Boilads and Harmonium
Songs 1971-1974.
(Continued on page S)
UCLA Daily
Volume XCVfll. Number 13
Wednaaday. April 21. 1976
durmg Wm
•Moeat during
'ing hoHdey. and •«•
. b^ th0 ASUCLA
30$ Wmi'
SOOB^. CSpf»%^f ISTi Sy ttm
ASUCLA Communtcmttont Board.
Second ciMf poiliee pmtd at tha Loa
^oai Ofttoa-
Meeting tries to clarify campaign rules
By Patty CrosI
Linda Rapattuni
DB Staff Writers
Rules concerning the use by
candidates of signs and poalers
were clarified in a meeting
Monday night of the Under;
fPiAMle Students Association
Elections Board Executive
Committee.
However, sonic candidates
bave not heard of the ruling or
even an April 12 addendum to
the elections code due to com-
nnunications problems The
addendum was disseminated
last Fnday in Kerckhoff Hall
student government boxes siu
dents who do not work in
Kerckhoff Hall and do not
have boxes there had to find
out through a Dai/v Brum.
advertisement on MondaVv
April 19
The addendum stated tbat
campaigning began on tbe
19th It also said candidates
are responsible for reading
nottees posted by the Elections
Board (EB) on the Associated
Students Information Service
(ASIS) bulletin board on the
third floor of Kerckhoff
I he EB ruled that ''all signs,
banners, posters, and the like,
except for one Bruin-Walk
sign, are hereby declared il-
legal." according to a notice
addressed April 19. the first
official day of campaigning
The notice went on to say that
displays cannot be held erect
or remain stationary.
vArthur Eliegelman, a mem-
ber* of the Elections Board
executive committee. said,
"some members of the board
isaw violations ot our ad-
dendum We felt that dur ad-
dendum was dear on the dis-
play and distribution ot cam-
paign materials, but maybe it
wasn't clear enough We arc
tberelore going to further clar-
ify our previous ruling **
"There'll be no sanction
brought against anybody and
no names will be aii«>nt"^'^d "
he said.
He was relerring to a sign
which had been erected on the
corner ot Ciayley and Strath-
more Mondav morning by one
candidate leading to the clar-
ification
One candidate surveyed hv
the l)ati\ i^rti/n yesterday said
he found out about the ad-
dendum because he was in
Kerckhotf Hall at the time it
was first made available Fri-
day night 1^. <icbers tound
out Monday morning when
thev read the notices in their
student government boxes or
Details of banner burglary still
elude investigators and staff.
By Mike Dasihjian —
DB Staff Writer
The method used to gain entry to Paule>
Pavilion by the people who stole nine ol
UCLA's national basketball championship
banners is still in doubt.
"Given all the possibilities, probably the
easiest explanation is that it was done bv
someone with a key and access to the build-
ing," said Bill C ormier. a supervisor ot Pauley
Pavilion
According to Raymond Zak. manager of
Pauley Pavilion, some of the brackets used to
mount the banners on the wall were found
inside the building. "It looks^likc they had been
placed there." he said Therefore, according to
Zak, whoever stole the banners probably had
access to the building
, Jim Pembroke, a detective who is investi-
^iag the theft for UCPD, said one of the
major puzzles in the case is that the burglars
took the time to unscrew^ the brackets in the
Itrst place.
Pembroke said the brackets would slide off
Uic watt and did not need to be unscrewed in
otder to remove the banners
Caato4ial staff
Corm^r raised the possibility that one of the
ianitors may have let the burglars in. However,
a spokesman for the custodial staff said no
custodians were working in Pauley at any time
Saturday -»-
He added it is almost impossible lo keep track
of alt the keys since custodians, the police, and
Physical Plant employees must have access to
all the buildings AoDOf^ng to Cormier, the
Physical Plant t< not always »% careful as it
nught be about reclaiming keys from people no
longer employed with them
Another possibility is that the burglars
climbed to the roof and entered a kurked door
The latch to the soujLheast door on the roof was
exposed because the piaster around it Jrad been
chipped away
.it.
Another way
^oriTieir said this was another wav the
burglars might have entered Since the damage
did not appear to be recent. C ormier thought
the plaster might have been chipped a tew
weeks ago in preparation for the burglarv He
said "the damage may not have been reported
because routine inspections are not maide.on
the roof.
Zak said that he and a maintenance man
tried to open the door with the exp«)sed latch
Although the first latch opened easiK
lafth behind it could not be opened It the
had been opened in this way, aamage migm
have resuHed. according to Zak
Gordon Cummings. Assistant Physical Plant
Administrator, said because ot the second
latch, the chances were **rather remote" that the
door could t)e opened in this way C ummings
added he had also tried to open the door (rom
the latch, without success
another
FREE
Computer classes
Everyone is welcome to attend the free, non-credit courses in
computing presented by the UCLA Computer Club Enroll by attending
the first class Bsssion. ClateeB start the ¥Mek of April 1 9. and will be held
from 7:00-9:00 p.m.. except as noted Computer time for class
assignment will be provided to UCLA students, staff, and faculty who
join the Computer Club. For more information, feel free to contact the
Computer Club (3514 Boelter Haih phone: 825-5879)
on the reception desk
Aaotber candidate fvtt
learned about the iddipadilm
last Wednesday night He then
learned trom Jav Cole, the FB
chairman, that it wa!« untair to
other candidates who had not
bcch told ot the new rules.
Cole was not available for
comment
I
I
9
i
X
i
I
r Right Here, Right 'Now
A mini film
Today noon Ackerman 2408
A film dealing with human isolation and the
breaking down the walls of isolation
Bring your lunch, join the conversation
Canipus Ministries, URC
Dr. Afifliofiy Baas ft Dr. Jon Vogel
OPTOMETRISTS
EARS PIERCED FREE
with purchase of
7.95 Earrings
Birk't }e«vel^s of Westwood "
960 Westwood Blvd
Los Angeles, LA WU24
Phone 477-
•79-5J13
^rr ^ ^f^
4fa
i^*^
>.>- ,
w -^ „ r
Pwloniwr expand* f pertoiro
One man band adds to act
•9 AIM MidMMl KarWIiuf
OS sun Hhicr
Don Davis, tke oac man
band who has performed here
&mce 1933. expanded the tech-
nique to a total media ea-
penence which according to
hiffi IS a umversal panacea.
Total media will save the
world! If ail men were toul
media artists they'd be too
busy to fight,** Davis ex-
claimed He added, ironically .
*'lf you don't believe that, IH
knock your block otfV
His music, in its mott recent
form, combines painting, sci-
ence, sculpture, technology,
athletics, and audience par-
liCipatuMi to provide a "total
Bring us your copying needs
«nd well ghre you a
G U AR ANTEB
S.
I ni» ■PPliH to up to 200 cop«s prmtKi by ofdMt prMs (200 of on» onomal
pticatM offMt pfM h« a twd d^r «WH fcjfcrttui, lop quahty Xerox cop«
r^JlTJ!!!?* *! *^ <*i«'"»« - yoo won t De cnargad anym.ng< Yoor
IN M 10. OUT AT 4
media" scenario. According to
Davis, the imdia compoarnu
are combined spontaneoiMly
and without limit to expfNS
the artist's cxcauve ideas.
The dcwlopwcpt of Davu*
"Toulmedu** befin tadr in
1932 when Dayu decided he
wanted to be more than a
musician, he wanted to be an
orchestra He was fifteen and
spending the summer in the
Kern River Valley when he
aKt up with Dick Weed, a
tamn who taught Davis to play
the guiur and harmonica at
the same time
At age seventeen Davis en-
tered UCLA to major in For-
estry. It was during this year
tliat Davis invented the world's
fint *i^our-pronged pendulous
pcr^oidiailar piano pounder,**
a fidflet tlMt attaches to the
end of a banyo and bangs out
chords on a piano.
In 1938 Davis enrolled m the
Cbovinard Art School which
he attended for a year and a
half, laying the groundwork
for later viauai additions to hu
flMiiieal performance.
EvoMioa
The evolution of the am
man band continued along
these Unes until at afc 36, in
1952, the idea for "toulmcdia**
was bom here in Los Angeles
To conclude his shows, he set
off an explosion on stage at
the end of Stars and Stripes
Forever.
In 1973 the one nsan band
added a wife to his show and a
few more visual effjecu to
make it what ix it today.
The 1975 Guinness Book of
World Records citei the;
UCLA alumnus' musical
IV.
achievement a^ "the world's
sophisticated
band - Davis afrsct, claiming
he plays more different musical
iattruments directly at one
time than anyone in the world
When aaked about the aud-
leaee rcacttoa to his perfor-
nances Davis replied, '*Oh
foUy, they all love it, it's the
only thing bke it in the world **
Davis played Saturday at
part oi the folk festival here
Hif fint performanoe on Ja«i
itept featured only his musicil
talent. A later performance in
Royce Hall expmeed the toul-
media expenenoe for an aud-
ience of children.
l^erfonBMKaa
Although Davie refers to Ijy
•how as a one man band, his
wife Rae alK) plays a pan in his
performances, making it a one
couple band. Davie dcichbed
his wife's pwt m tlie ehofr.
**Ho«r many pirli ase runniiig
around playing gut-buckets
these dayir SIm m ate fca-
tured on the stereo kazoo in
may <A hie shows.
Among the achievements of
the toulmedia show are an
eppfMaace on a Bob Hope spe^
oal, and five gnaet afpavmnces
on the Tonifbl ekaar with
Johnny Canon. Since his grad-
uation from UCLA in the early
Thirties, he has played on
campus many times and played
at two Mardi Gras^ in the ear-
ly I970's.
Davit haa also written a
UCLA fight song entitled "Go,
Go, Bnun Babyf?r It was first
composed in 1938 but has been
revised by Davis many times to
keep it up to date. The current
edition features each lyncs as
"Rock it. Sock it. Wreck it.
Rock itr
Correction to
^■A- •
t2'.
I M '
11
lA
open mc
<t5-6 3C %m\ 10-3
I pHnting A dupNcating
story
On Monday March 1, 1976, the Brum said Bill Grcenberg
and his attorney agreed that there was probably CMK lor
the issuing of a warrant for his arrest. The lUtcment is
attributed to Byron Atkinson, Dean of Students.
Greenberg and his attorney did stipulate there was
probable caiiae for the arrest once the warrant was ivwd,
but they did not stipulate probable cause existed for
issuance of the warrant in the first place.
The warrant and arrest came after the admimstration
cha^pid Greenberg with violating his parole by partieipalii^
in a rally last May protesting the University's policy m
Ethnic Studies. The case was dismissed because of
insufficient evidence.
* There IS a
difference!!!
m
J PAf %iaf fom
MCAT
: OAT
: LSAT
: 6RE
: ATGSB
: OCAT
: CPAT
: FUX
: ECFMG
: NATL MEO BOS
SAT- VAT
L A CA «00?S
I2t3» 4 a
MPQhi
fcr
«
3rd World Film Committee
presents
As Long As The Rivers Run''
A t.lm documenting the struggle over the fishing rights as guaranteed in past treaties between
Indians ot the \orthvvp«.t and the U.S. govt.
ii
The Longest War''
u.
(American
Focuses on the event, surrounding Wounded Knee and the struggles of A I M
Indian Movement) against national oppression and for self-determination
i
Time: 12:00 noon today 4/21/76
Place: 3232 Campbell Hall
L nderstandmg the -mpact that the nr»edia has in shaping idea, the 3rd World Film Series was
\'T^ !^ *^"'^*'^' '^^ L; X.I.A. rommunitv about the net values arui attitudes of the
}rd World < ommunitv as rell. > their social mfuerr.rntN
■' ■ ui ^ i
UCLA prof joins national center
The fint item of Regulation
■i|Mi this year by President
Gerald Ford led to tile ap-
pointment of a UCLA ementui
profeiM)r of folklore to the
new American Folklifc Center
•t the Library of Congresft.
to a ttx-year term on
tiK board of trustees by House
Sfiftker Carl Alben. WaylMd
Haad explained that the center
Credit not given
on Baron story
On Wednesday. Apnl 14.
wc published an article
about Anna Baron, an 82-
year-old student here The
article was a condensation
oi a piece written by Baron s
granddaughter Julie Heifetz
Wc apologize for failing to
give Heifet7 credit when wc
published the condensation
Environment's
future revealed
A lecture on the future of
the urban environment will tje
given by George Sternlieb.
director of the Center for Ucr
ban Policy Research at Rut-
fers University, at 5 30 pm
today in GSM 2232
The lecture will compare the
problems U Neidf York City to
the problems to b^ faced by
other cities.
will focus OB ''all tradUjonal
forms of folklore, includiag
folk tales and legends, folk
belief and customs. folk
speech, folk am aad folk mu-
sic.
Crested by the American
Folklifc Preservation Aa. the
Folkbfc Center is designed to
support and revitali/r Amer-
ican folk arts and traditiiOBs.
**For about five or six yeam,**
said Hand, ''people have tried
to form an American Folklifc
Center*
' Instructor of UCLA's first
ftneral folklore class in 1939,
Hand founded the teaching
and research units of the
UCLA Center for Folklore and
Mythology and helped to de-
velop UCLA library's folklore
collection.
Hand received the 1965 Pitre
Folklore Pri/c from the Italian
government for his set of
books entitled ''Popular Beliefs
and Superstitions from North
Carolina " The government of
Finland knighted him in 1972
for his contributions to inter-
nationai scholarship
"i have worked m folklore
all of my professional life."
Hand said "I retired in 1974.
so I am free "to take on this
iignment with what energy
time that 1 have."
member bosrd* Trustees in-
clude four appointees each of
the President of the United
Sutes. the President pro tem-
pore of the Senate and the
Speaker of the House Also
included on the board are the
Librarian of Congress, the
Secreury of the Smithsonuin
Institution, the chairmen of
y/both the National Endowment
for the Arts and the National
Endown^nt for the Human-
ities and the director of the
new American Folklifc Center.
Although Hand rmntlm in
Veitice. tK^^will be called to
Washington, DC. upon oc-
Hon" to meet with the 17-
Ginsberg celebrates
Dr. Pole discusses
Revolution as seen
with British eyes
The UCLA Bicentennial
Lecture Series continues to-
night when Dr J R Pole
discusses "The An^erican
Revolution Through British
Eyes- at 8 pm in Dodd 147
Pole, vice-master at Chur-
chill College, Cambridge
University, has made an
intensive study of American
history and politics He has
aso uught at UC Berkely,
Sunford and Chicago Uni-
versities, the University of
Ghana, and London and
Cambndfr UniversitKs.
The continuing Bicenten-
nial Lxcture Series is spon-
sored by the UCLA Bicen-
tennial Committee and the
Committee on Public Lec-
tures I here will be no ad-
mission charge
(Continurd from page 2)
I he p4)c! paused ttn a brief mcdiiaunn to
gaihcr his thtjughis Then, with a tlurr\ »»(
disjointed ^ofds he began describing hjs
venting ^ '
**V^hen I \iriic I don't nvjse anything I |usi
put down whatever goes through m\ head I
follow mv rninJ'^ vity and the pK*ture that
It's painting' lor mt
More aware
Cfinsberg feels that it is ntiw easier for a p<K't
in stKictN i< recognition •Pcopk arc
more ayirarc oi piKirv look. pi>litics is ptHTirN
a made-up langiia§r. Everyone is on stage The
question today is who is more honest v^ho has
got the cleanest act ' Poets do. not politicians
Poets speak tor themselves"
Writing, aeeording to the poet, should not
develop into a habit Cnnsberg. (or example.
takes (Kcasional respites from his oun p<ietr>
"The longest time I have ever *«peni nag
writing was three weeks m a cabin AtUrwards.
It was like coming out of a grave It was like
dvifig an interesting death Fveryonc looked
like a pink ghost at first "
In addition to Zen and p<ietr\ drugs are a
part of (finsbergs life "I smoked some pot last
ntght and Txc taken some acid this yi > he
N.iitl
Meditation. tTTj^ever. is more important to
the poet "I sit at least an hour a*d:«v Sutmg is
the tnam instrument for mindfulness II enough
pctiple were aware of their t)wn consciousness,
there w(iuld Ke a possihiht\ for change"
Cjinshtfii ther hi/arre intrigues include his
effort in the Pen Cluh an organization n|
writers such as Ken Kesey afid Kurt Vonnegut.
Jr. to free l)r Timothy Lear> I earv who just
received bail vesicf#»y. was imprisoned in
1972 for possession of less than a halt ounce of
•mari|uana
As part of the Rolling T hunder Rev ue.
(iinsberg has aKo been involved in the pro-
duction of a Boh Dylan film. "Boh Dylan a kid
trying to see Dylan, and Joan Bae/ plays Dylan
in drag "
f-uturc plans
In the summer, the poet will return to the
Buddhist-oriented school he helped found
-^ called Naropa Institute He said he will conduct
apprenticeship seminars on poetry there
Musing 4>n future plans. Ginsberg said. 'TU
be making^ a record for Columbia, sitting,
leaching, taking a Buddhist retreat and getting
laid -
As he glided MM tlic d#or. the aging poet left
his lavt thoughts behind. "There is no Allen
t»insberg |4» cling to"
This i% fhm place for Rib Lo^mrsl
iBy forihmBmiMU^ iim# V« fri^dln LaI
Herald Examii
COMnETE DINNEIS
Casual Dining »ramS2.7
NAmiY'S O^IM PIT BBO
1434 N CRfSCENT HilCHTi «« SUNgfT STMP
10 Minutes uoM^n bun»#t Blvd to
Lour#l Conyon I urn Right And Vqu ra TK#fa
'\
*
The Bus*
Advisory Cour>cil
of the
. INTERNATIONAL STUDENT CENTER
1023 Hilgard — Westwood
presents
Its WEEKLY SEMINAR
Thursday. ApHi 22
Management Consulting
Michael Rothbsn
Charles Roberts
Barry Brennan
New Products Developfwient - Ei
Herman Pass - Engir^eer - Terminal Data
Dinner h 30 S«mm«f 7 30-9:30
AH mterf»ied ^credited students wf4come
\meTK:dn -^ Foret^
phone ah«ad tor rrs^vjiions
477-45*7
I
LEARN SPANISH WHILE YOU
SEE SPAIN OR MEXICO
Two student tours conducted by Spanish
toachofs (for t>aglnnars or tMuahing up):
* All around Spain, 21 days daparting August 1 Santa
Monica Collaga oUart thraa aamaalar unte with tour
pra-dapartura 9¥%nkng maatmgs $1068 double
Mexico City-Taxco-Acapuico, S ddyt
15 $330 double
ACE WORLD TRAVEL
11554 Santa Monica Blvd., WLA
477-7571
K>g June
California Law Institute
at Santo Barbara
Now accapfing applications for
^ummar Session
Starting June 29, 1976
Foil Term-commencing September 7, 1976
Degree proprems leadmg to UB or iO Degitk GraiMtes Que^ity tur
Caltfomia Bar E Kammattons
TSANSFil STUDiNTS ACCVTEO
Low School Campus
2014
m* 'tost 9*3 1 5*7
J
Barry Commoner
author of Ttia Closing Circle noted Environmentalist
John Goffman
Professor Emeritus. U C Berkeley
David Pesonen
Chairman Californians for Nuclear Safeguards
A Discussion of Energy Policy-Nuclear
Safeguards Initiative
Friday April 23
12 Noon-4 pm
Ackerman Grand Ballroom
Sponsored Dy speahejrs Program (jtiice ot Environmental and Consumer Affatrs. UCLA G«O0r«phy OapT"
Campus Chap>ai American Nuclear Society Campus Committee to Bridge the Geo StiMtont LaaMMlve G—wcit
VI t »•-.
V«fl
-> ■ ■ 'l
■^■^i^"^ t ■
jl I
^l^^»
B
I
V
Call us for:
Information, someone tojalk with, or someone
to listen.
825-7646 UCL-POGO
sponsored by the btuoent Welfare Commission of the
Student Legislative Council, the Program Taak Force
and URC
t
<
Phi Eta Sigma
National Honorary Socioty
Meeting for members
Interested in helping with
Mardi Gras Booth
Ack#rm«n Union 2408
Thursday, April 22, 4 pm
or contact Al Fiedler 473-1463
II-
BSA
General Meeting
Today; Wednesday April 2tst
1r2 pm 2408 Ackerman
All SLC candidates invited
Friday April 23rd deadline
for BSA candidate regrstration
BSA elections April 28th and 29th
Sponsored by Studffnt Legi^latiyeCouncil
II \iri\(, I K()(. V \| ()()\
1^' ANM \I, 1-H(>(,.ll \ij
^* * JOCK£Y YOUB OWN FROG AND ^^
^^W^iCElVf A r-SHIRT ^^H
OR CNTfR DRAWING fOR fROGS ^^^^
»•» « Inrrv Bloofc, At R«*fp„,onf ^O^
// r i,^,1^yJ^Y\'^
A A MS
AMER-I-CAL
11434 Wcttwcwd aeiilsv^rd • Suite S • Lot Alleles Cjaiornu «tM
Call Pay ar in#tit - (t1 8) 478-87^-
Campus events
from
Mttiet WIN It tMtyrt<l m thit wmIi t ISC
Friday Night Program Omntr. 5 304 30 pm
(2 SO) •ntertainmtm 7 30-11 pm. April 23
inlflfnational Student Ctnler KB8 Hil^d
'•^mnmmm Umm. wittiiprvfiisionai
titeHart Irom UClAs dance depanmtni.
8 30-1030 pm every Friday InU
Student Center Free
-VMeyfeill mtmn MflmtL „
an NCAA berth to Munae. Indiana 6 and
I pm. April 23. championship game 7:30
pm April 24 Pauley Pavilion $1 for aM
students S3 concourse level U
level
tor your mu Opaa
Kerckhotf 401
«My f
^^W
and local volunaar pooiMM are »\
now through EXTO Acfcarmpn A213 if aH
82S-0831
PraMlM. |om OECA aa a
MMoatigator Visit Karddioff 311
or call B25-2920 VoliHitaon aft atao
tof enviro
lOCtfl
p^
T«r. of tfie University Re-
search Library f pm tomorrow meet in
Schoenberg lobby
Hi-
graduate ahd
Pick up
Deadline is
Trwel Fair, door prizes,
films travel information available 10 am-4
pm. today Ackerman Grand Ballrom
— P^MlMs Iw CMiMHv. for SIC offioaa
are now available in Kerckhott 340
IS 4 pm tomorrow
now available for a tw
UC Student Lobby m
pays S787S0 a month
being a recent UC
It in educational
application m Kerc4hoff
May 7 or call CS«45
— ttatewldi CeeiMlitee Appllcalleae tor
Presidential Aiviaory Committees are now
available OatiNfia is Apni X pick up
applicatioaa at Ackerman information
daak. Kerckhoff 304 and housing
tion.
Craar ap-
plications are now available in the Mardi
Gras office. Ackerman A-M row April 24
Open to all details on Itia application
—lelegals tiatas leari. which shows
each preaidential candidate and the
amount of dalagatM piaipid from states
which have had pftfliaries is now up in
Kerckhoff Hall near the elevator on the
first floor
—la^Ml GaavsrssHsa. informal practice
for iBffifR ftudanta and wisrtan 10 am
noon mm$mf9 and Wsiiiaaiiys Acker
man 3517
— FeNswsMps. information and daatfNiia
on extramural funding tor graduate stu-
dent and postdoctorals are available m ttie
Fellowships and Assistantship Section
Murphy 1228
staflad by
UCLA architecture
school yonairs
more discussions
The second * day oi
architectural project pre-
sentations and diS(:ussions.
sponsored by the UCLA
School of Architecture and
Urban Planning, will feature
projct presentations and dis-
cussion by Paul Kennon.
Fugene K upper and Cesar
Pelli from ^^Silver/' a Los
Angeles-based^ group of
architects John Hcjduk of
New York- wiH moderate
this discussion '2-6 pm lo-
dav in Dodd 147 He»duk.
and (harks Moore will
speak at 8 pm tonight
in Kmsey 51. California his-
torian David Gebhard will
be the mcxjerator.
^Eckiekar. A Way tf Life, featuring
Oarwin Gross, the living Eck master, 7 poi.
tonight Bundle 31Ab
— Flasi tmanslB. dtractad by Samuel
Fuller and starring Richard IMiart will
be shown 5 pm today Meimtz 1401 Free
— iaaaral 1966 Acadamy Award-winning
taiaiin film with rtHriiinn to follow will
ba aliown 7.30-10 pm. tonight Melnitz
li4QB Free adwiasion by ticket only avail-
adla at jUatmtz Film Archives
— MradBMlM li Wm Eaoay. Mn by Tom
Haydan and Jane Fonda will be sbown
neon, today Architecture 1102
CMCEITI
— Oriy Cat ttrlag lead, will perform
traditional American mountain music. 5>7
pm today Coop Free
— Tbs EakaM. a 'ock trio, will perform
hoon tomorrow Grand Ballroom Free
tH AaHrlsaa Masli tm$B up of
and faculty m the Oepartmanf of
Music will salute eminent lyricist Johnny
Marcar. |.30 pm April 23 and 24 Schoen-
berg auditorium $1 for UCLA students,
faculty staff and senior citizens S2 tor
other students. $3 for others
7 JO pai
Intomational Student C«w
m NNiprd Froi
-Vards iPd Moals and Ipars la Iba
will be discussed by Vlrgii
noon tomorrow feboanberg
auditorium Free
vireaaMolal Elbia, an open forum/panal
discussion will be held fioon todav
luNBba A-ljP ^
^^.7-% pm. tmlfbt. Oadd 175
— ArMftib »0mmm. wMt loature now
Zealand, with Kannath RioMar. IJO pm
April 23. Royce Auditorium t2 SO far
atuttants. otbars 13 and 350
••■* iiiMfc. of die SortNMma wdl
discuss J( ecriture aa iau. TImatlnatioii
mimMiiimI cNk CiMdal. 1 pm. April 23.
Haaylil.
••"I tmmmm. John Gofman and
Oavid Pappwp wdl diacm
^_, ^ iii«ia»d.
pm, Apra 23,
wiH be given by a maaibar of Nia
•■r m liiMla Csmmittee. noL... -^.
Botany 325. I pm tomorrow Hednck
Fireaidaouofa. baon, April a. Man s Gym
ne and noon. Apfd a. Kbmay 203
CMb. wilt meet 7-9 pm
Tuaadays. Dykstra Racraolian tmm and 2~
3 pm Friday s Mfoman's i^ 91 fdr all
interested m learning and practicing
loom dance
man 2401
4 pm tomorrow Acker-
2J0-
an educational model
combining Buddhist and Western ^p
proaches 3:|M:90 pm. today Ackerman
woman's lounga
— Ibllai wNh I isa MHMr. 2-3 pm today.
•Ackerman 3S17
— Flllial tbe Veld, revolutionary Bud--
dhism. a pahei discussion noon-2 pm.
today Ackerman womens lounge
— -AMsaAlyaaai llabard AIMvrs. will dis
cuss the status of the Agricultural Labor
Halations Bill 2 pm, today Chicano Stud-
ies Library Campbell 1118
2aa M
and Wmtfk M Brl
tomorrow Dickson 210
-As Lm As IM mm Baoi. film ^
the American Indian movement. noM.
MMrCampball 3232
-«M nm IpBfclMB. m the T».V4(te-
Cr system 1 30-3 pm tomorrow.
3517
TaMmb^sif TbM
2 30^ pm tomorrow Ackerman
3 30^. tomorrow. Murphy 1312
— Wsaaa's Karats S-6 pm. every Thurs-
day. Womens Gym 200
— iMMbMB PNIpbM. noon-1 pm. Thurs-
days. CampbaM 3232
— (ICU tism Cblb. film and skde show
will be featured 7 30 pm tommorrow
Oodd 175.
Iprbig BIstod Brhm. meeting for aN
4 Pfh tomorrow. Oodd 221
Bpsa CaaasMtag. 1030-11 X am
tomorrow Murphy 1312
-fr^N^big Bpsa rii iiiBaB. )J|^:30
pm. tomorrow Murphy 1312
free coffee hour for engineering grad
students and faculty: 3-4 pm. today.
waaRai 44b.
fontgbt tpalter 4442
— KoBiMBi VoBti 4-530 pm today Ack-
arniBn SBBi and 2-330 pm. tomorrow
Aobarman 2dBB «TiigBaatad danabon Si
-Friday Blgbi Bible Bbtdg. Goapai of
John. 7a pm Apm 23. AdNrman 3H4
— Mipii CbibL now dub (or anyone intw-
ested in mafic - brmg a trick M pm.
every Thursday GSM 33^:
BbidMts Iv Jbaaiy tahm. newcomers
welcome TJH pm. tonight. Ackerman 2413
~UCU FieMag Oab. preparation tor Baia
trip 3-4 pm. taiay Ackerman 24QB
Bate, noon 2 pm tomorrow. Ackerman
womens lounge
Fishmg 3-4 pm AU 2406 Hatha Voga. 5-
6 15 pm Women s &ym 200
University of New Mexico . . .
(C ontinued from Past* 1 1
Hokona is just as sale as mwy
other dormitory and that
changing its coed status will
not improve living conditions
or make the dorm appreciably
safer -
A meeting with William
t>avis, UNM president, and
five Hokona Hall repre^senta-
tivcs brought no change in the
decision The representatives
mainuined the change to sex
icgregation is "regressive in
nature" and the change was
made without the studei^ts*
consent They also stated their
belief that security problems
can be alleviated in other ways
Survey
Michael Rudd, Hokona Hall
president, Bftid that thfwigli a
survey of the residents he
found that 90 per cent of the
students who had planned to
come, back next year will not
because of the c^mm§t.
Davis, however, was not
convinced
**l think BMBV BdiooiB arc
-^^va«eu}i levels of conservatism
from parents (across New
Mexico) who want what we
propose "
Flaws
A Daily Loho Editoruil ac-
cused Davis of "moving to
correct these *flaws* in our
higher-educationaJ system" in
order to "upgrade the quality
of •ifndcnis enrolled" at UNM.
Davif If afraid that thr
parents* Visions of UNM inte-
grated dorms will hurt his
chances of attracting out-
standing high school seniors,
the Lobo said.
"Granted the adnjinistration
may have another option, but
that docan^t oieau oiiis fSCB
out the window,** David Flynn,
a Hokona resident.
SLC camiiaipng bepns
Spring means singtng birds, hay fever, picnics and
9 am Monday for students
on the Student Legislative
reexamining their positions
and are going back to sei
. - ~ -. , ..^ Student
•*' ■ a)ns
I he campaigning began at
seeking one of 14 poailMis „. _.„ ^^^.,^.._
^ Council (SLC) The primary elections will be held May 5-6
tor the andergraduate elections
Unanaounced candidates nuiy campaign now but they
must turn in applications by Thursday. April 22
Leafleting on campus is limited to May 3 and 4 and
candidates may not erect Brum Walk signs until after the
mandatory wndKlates- orientation meeting to be held at 5
pm next Mondax m the Ackerman Union Women's
I oungc
A mand«itor> candidates*
April 2< lor
the Cf
lililii M
1«nu are going nacR to se
.MWi«pu*:,Kt.Mid. Me.lMBi
^ppTiTiUioris
OSA c >ns
^'udcni^ A
meeting will be held Friday,
students ^.shing to run CW afiiflBB al
^c<
an (GSA)
\\h:
XX
lor tandidac> arc due Wednesday April 21
^•11 be held at the same time and p^Bce as
lltAK.Xl^fAnc
I.
Chapter Four of
THE BIG TAKEOVER
hi Wim Cooper Fsmny
Not mat nnany of you r^namtm Chaplara 1. 2 stkI 3 - but last Ouarlar. ua atudonta woHiino in what waa than
tNrCoop (ugh) Changed tha nama d tha plaoa. ^ did it all by ouraalMaa ~ umiatoraliy No approvala - no
!!J!^'"?^r-^ ^ •'T^ "^"^ °^ ^^'"^ """^ "^ '••^ ^ ^^ «-^*^ ^^ Coopar Family That s up. and
mafa Chaptar Ona Sinoo thwn. tha pi«:o haa bagun to ahapa up a imia mora to our liking - and yours
«apBar Two was whan wa inMatad Onfwlat Broakfasta. trom a:00 to lOOO am Big auccaas mostly cauas wa
usa raal aggs So tar waW laft 347 chicMne in a atata of total but piaaumabiy satiafied axhauation
Chaptar Thf#o Italian sandwichM aaing Grandma Coopor's own raolpaa. At this writing. waVa paddlad onouah
o^ tham. that If thay wars laid and to and. thay c6uld go thiriMn umm around Oraka Stadium (That s mora than
mraa mi«aa Or 5196 matara. amartf aca ) Thaaa aandwichM aro also likaly tha raaaon tha guy naict to you in P M
rWifGh smalia lika a Mg •— •-
NOW . . .
Concarta
i
L
Mii.iiii
• r M
Student performera performing for tlUtfiPrti-iJnpredictably cool!
Sponggiwd by the Cultural Affain Comfhrssion of SLC
Call Jay Bundy lor auditiona or auggestiona — 825-6564
Today: Tha tafey Cat String Band
AmeHcenMouffiMn music ere: Roy Cole, hmmm9f%6 diddmer; fMcherd Twomey,
end vocele; Nancy Dole,
i>\
'1
Fi
Tha naMan aandwichas havan't tihiiif oii^ Otiir lism^ aaiw. Taay'ra
Wg as m>mr. maklr>g tha Family's claim that our burgara ara tha baat m
•own atand up pratty good You can t>uy a whoia^r half aandwich (whola
la tO" lanal. hot or cold And now wa va got an Italian ^m^mmr^mn It a not
— you gotta aak for a.
i
'to-order
Omeleta m 10:00 a^a. ;
Six diffarant kinda of om«lata (muahroom chaaaa. pijipara onions
combinations) sarvad with cottags fnm, toaal and laNy tSc and 9b€
complata Maw you can fMtan up whHa you faa up. Bruina
m^^
A
.<■■ •
Funny Mng
m
It ir>cludaa
a ntm and fi
Coop coup Niia thia ahouid ba
tHit It haan t baan lisawsn torfand sludants
cmm studant want and ,INia ChapBsr Fl^ la
IS our Coopar Family, mayaa
Mm boa that works all tha timal
I « ■ ■ ■ ai^i—i*!
(- '^ i'f'
^'
m
-. x
¥7
Uattm
f---»
i
<
(if
s
daily bnjin
Letters to the Editor
poinr
Bkxxi Drive
Women
k:
Editor:
The report on Women
tiffs in the Daily Brum of Tue»-
<Uy, 13 April, qMOCet the Chair-
person of the Chancellor's Ad-
t
%
(
4
lis thai hmt- dnam, the UCLA
Spring Blood Drive is drawing
flri^*»r and closer. The Blood
^ ^ t Comm4ftee desperately k^.-^., v,. i..«r ^r.«rK^f-,ior s na-
jj needs the help of concerned visory Committee on the Status
-• in6 intrro^fed individuals 4r^ of Women as saying, fhey (the
- organizaj like you m the Administration) would like to
s preparation o\ this upcoming
5. event The UCLA Blood Drive
^ being one of- the largest m the
S* natiofi. is very important to the
I (ommunity. and the importance
i ol fh«» participation of motivated
^ students ih planning this event
* i#>.»#MMi ^ stressed erKHMii. If
have qualified women if they
could hnd them They
haven't been successful, espe-
cially in the physical science " If
this is a cOPl«Et quote, it is not a
correct appraisal There Af%t only
a limited n,umber of FTE's (ten-
tired positions) available for the
,<^ ■^
f ou af^ interested and would campus and there is competition
7~
1^^
like to lend a helping hand
come to our meeting this Thurs-
day April 22. at 4 in Dcjdd Hall
221.
I.
Robin Thayer
Chairman
Kids
As most ol you know, this past
week has been a week of vaca-
tion for many elementary, junior
high, .^nd other non-U niversity
Mudents Accordingly. Associ-
ated Students service facilities
hmt^ kmmf^ overrun bv tl^pse off^
campus patrons TiSe j^igns on
Ackerman stale that the facilities
ate for the use of Univ(>rsity
^studerifs. statT. ar«t Taccrtty and
their guests. Wiiose gueSts w^re
Jhe lunior high kids whci c^useci
-' many UCL-A people tc5 wait 4
halt hour to bowl' ~
't We reali/e that the ASUCIA
Board of Control appreciates )he
profits generated bv non-Uni-
'v«*rsit\ pc»rsons using Associated
Studc'nts 'tac limes' but we
thouKht wr were paving $210 .j
qu.irifw not only tor the priv
ileg^' ill using those facilities, bul
alsci scr that we mjv have some
firiorits ir„BOC will not enforce
the polic V ot use* bv I'niversitv
students siatt .ii>cl t^ciiltv
v\ h\ riot removr th«« sijjns
Diana Loper
Paul Sonnenield
among departments to obtain
them for their special needs.
When the administration de-
cides that the addition of wo-
men to the faculty is of suf-
ficiently high priority to allocate
extra FTE s for this specific pur-
pose, the Department wilt
quickly find highly .qualified
women to compete for them,
without compromising the "pur-
suit of exdettent
TNcOTM ntffn
Sr. Lecturer A Retearcli Engineer
Dept. of Anatomy A
Kesearch Institute
'fMlo. You probably don't rBcognlm nM, but bBltew It or not, I imm a
candNlate for tha prasidar>cy in 1972. Actually, I was also a candldals In
1960, and 1968. Coma to think of tt, I was on tha tickat in 1964, loo. Many
paopla tfiink I'm a candidala in 1976. Say, mayba you do racogniza m^
H9mmnb»fn Old HHH, Dump tha Hump, yaah, HiaTs ma . . ."
Kojeis
Idilor:
One of the unfortunate as-
pects of the free press js that the
publi( (s off en subfected to the
grossest of inaccuracies perpetu-
ated by irresponsible individual
who pander their phobias to
rudders with similar low tastes
I he peripheral treatment given
bv the Da//y 8rui/i in its 4-19
( drfoon by Kojelis. depicting tt>e
so-(d)led slave auction" infuri-
ates me not because it aacured,
but because the Bruin is still
pursuing Its fly-swatting diatribe
aKainst the Cay community
If you were so concerned
,«hniii (fince why didn't you
1 ' figate this obfectivelv
which IS the Kenerjl procedure
' before making leckless state-
ments? You could have reported
that (1) The "auction' was a
fundraiser held at a private club
wherein the proceeds from the
sales were to be directed to
various organi/ations designated
by the slaves' r- one of whom
was ordered" by his "master*
to 6\ne with hirn in Beverly
Hills; (2) The invitations were"
sent via d pf\y^a\f mailirig list (if
The police inew dbout the
auction' at least 3 weeks in
advance, but did not notify the
organizers that they were violat-
ing any laws, (4) The chains
and things the police so proud-
ly displayed were loaned by a
firm which handles those pro-
ducts (which people are entitled
to purchase if they so desire),
the haridcuffs" were of t^e
dime-store viriety.
A few rnore oversights while
the 65 officers were busting the
»0 patrons, an ekierly woman
was being murdered Oh, you
<>^y you didn t krKMv abogt that?
Did vou knciw that this little
frolic cost taxpayers $100,000'
No matter, most you live off
your parents and k\a>^e never
had to worry about paying taxes,
much less actually work for a '
livir%. Your apathy prevents you
from being outraged that the
the men and one of "jaunts " for
the women. A crew race is no
Sunday-picnic type of affair,
tifhich is what the world "launt"
implies. RcMving happens to be
one of the most strenuous sports
(Editor's note Berm^n is a student
here.)
• *
— — . — . _ ...-t — I 1 1 . II 'lit ' ■
Our society thrives on gossip ancj
mystique and legislators who are often in
9ke spotlrght are subject to such public
—scrutiny Through con^itant comact with
these "celebrities" (e.g. Kennedy. Mus-
kie. Humphrey, and Goldwater) I was
able to siphon out much of this mystique
Behind the scenes: Washing
By Mitchell Berman
were handcuffed and' around, and the various teams
here ^ UCLA participate in it
under varying degrees of hard-
ship I might alM add that a
racing "eight" is made up eight
rowers and a coswain, and that
each person must contribute
mightily H the raci? is to be won.
To single out one person's per-
formance as was done in this
particular article serves to deni-
grate the performance of the
other participants. The UCLA
program consists of the -men's
varsity. |V, Freshmen and Light-
weights, and the wonr>en's team.
The men respect our efforts, as
we do theirs. We are not all of
equal physicai strength or abil-
ity, but we do try to aa as a
fairly cohesive unit. It might be
a nice gesture if Mr- Finegold
'^^•pt^'t^at point in mind
h^ AharkNmel
UCLA WaaMa'i
le^ standing on a . polica bill
for as long as 2 and one ha(f
houi-s, not even being allowed
ta use a^throom.
Would the staff of the Brum
care to print its policy re: vic-
timless crimed Police harrass^
nr>ent? Official (rhis) use of
fund§^ Or is' oppression on this
campus limited to Zionists and
occasiorvaHy Blacks^ I fail to see
^he dtlference
Monique Voegele
Crew
Editor:
It was certainly interesting to
find out that the UCLA-Cal row-
ing series was one of "races" for
ing Thi$ building attracts almost as many
tourists as the Washington Monument,
and brings one back to reality fast. I
worked with Senator Edward fW^T
Kennedy (D -Mass.) as an intern for thr
OPINION
ar\d break through a lot of rhetoric.
During my visit in Washington. I was in
awe of th^ city, a city that is very
beautiful and full of history to me. DC
is the city of fefferson. Adams, ^nd
Franklin. There are numerous remirnlers
of oor forefather s struggle for freedom
and the building of a new nation Monu-
m -nts are ubtquitcxis and loom high
ab »ve the observer However, through
t|H^glanx)ur of things past shine the
iepPtHJiig realities of the present For
example, Washington DC has or>e of
the highest crinne rates In the world and
one of the largest police departments to
match. Additionally, lurking in the back
ground, near the historic city of Gcocge-
town, is the Ifdamous Watergate ^ild-
months Those three months were the
most meaningful, informative, and ex-
hilarating months of my life. At first. I
was somewhat apprehensive, but I had
the privilege and opportunity to view the
interactions and everyday procedures of
the Congress, sub-committee hearings
and staff meetings. Initially. I was as-
signed to the Sub-Commitlee on Ad-
ministrative Practice and Procedure, a
Committee which Senator Kemwdy
chairs I was also able to read the many
letters that flow into the Senator's office
While the preponderance is positive, he
receives a considerable amount of hate
mail", in fact, more than any other
elected official in this country All hate
•mmI is sent to the FBI for invcftipation
and action Because the Senat6r ii a
Kennedy, he receives an enorrTK>us
amount of mail, a great portion of which
seeks assistance in one of many forms
Whether it be from a mother in South
Arr>erica who has lost her son to revolu-
tionaries, or to a poor family in Ohio
unable to pay their medKal bills, he is
corvftifttfy being ^sked for help, like his
brothers before tiim Murh r>f fKf» rnys-
tique surrounding the workings of our
government was swept away by a ride of
never ending reality. Reality, such as the
hate mail, the need to amend our lobby-
ing laws, anti-trust legislation, the Mari-
ana Islands The most interesting subject
matter of all was the Administration of
Practice and Procedure vs. the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) hearings on
birth control pills Long hours were spent
listening to unnecessary rhetoric in
attempts, by the FDA to forestall the
comm.tfee's work of "getting to the
facts The point of a hearing is to bring
• n valid testimony, expert witnesses
pertinant evidence and answer un-
cjanfied questions. Occasionally, to
s^ted up the process, a witness would
be asked to give a conciic synopsis of
the facts surrounding Wi/»i©f testimony.
While this technique was seldom used, I
feel, It should become a common prac-
tice At this FDA hearing, one scientist
presented evidence that certain drugs
used in the manufacturing of the piHs
were four^d to be carcenagenic (i e
cancer-producmg) Senator Kennedy
Mned one prominent doctor how he
"peftonally" felt about birth control pills
The doctor replied. Senator. I could
not. with a clear cons e. prescribe
any kind of birth control pill to any of
my patients, ever New evidence showed
that a pill, which has been on the market
since 1951. has caused cancer in 3 out of
every 32 users. Kenr>edy wants these pills
off the market immediately. Additionally,—
he has asked the FDA to do more studief"
of this sort, to obtain facts pertaining to
health so that products such as this may
be prohibited in the future. Throughout
these hearings I noted some SefMiiors
sleeping while the Senate was In .session
and others paying no attention while
flebaies were taking place
These people who are elected by us
are no better than anyone elM on this
planet. They are as human as you or I,
but some of ui don't believe that and
some of them don't want to believe it
either. Some Senators have nK>re power
than others, mottly because of seniority,
><»»fwiwg the ropes, and "connections." I
am «ifare of the privilege that I had In
going to DC and sitting in on mfm Ol
these hearings and Senate sesaiom. I will
try to pass on my en^gfimoe to others. I
hope that the pre-coiKelved ideas of
what really does go on in D.C., will
become somewhat dem^ tUiimd to those,
like myself, who are frustrated by aN the
rhetoric and red tape, ^loae who are
seeking the truth, and these who are
against the apathy and slow action oi
goverrlment and ijkMpide hope that w«f
can mak«.A- '^■^'^^^^
AUTO
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RIEBER HAU PRESENTS
JEWISH CULTURAL WEEK
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TONIGHT
8:00 pm A FILM
GARDEN OF FINZI CONTINr
ollowod by a dioouoeion lod by Br —
FOREIGN STUDENTS
everything you always wanted to know about
IMMIGRATION LAWS /
FSAand OISS present ati
0
IMMIGRATION
, SEMINAR
3 Lawyers have been invited to talk about;
student status
permanent residency
labor certification an<;i clearance
April 21
7-9 pm
Dbdd Hall 175
Kunser. Dept. of Germanic Languages
■ TiKJenf . •rsi.'' . «
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5
r
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''Acres of Datsuns"
Student Discounts — Ask for Fleet Sales
Pasadena Datsun
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
* 684-1133*
tir^d of yMterday'8 hair?
H A ■ I? T ©D AT
For what's happening now
styling for men and women
Jerry Redding's Jhirmack products
For appointment call 478-6151
tues. thru sat.
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with this ad^
1 1PS Glendon Ave Westwood Village
t ^
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300 more $2.00 student tickets available
at Central Ticket Office for Sunday Night
Performarrce!
laivKiiis
Daace Campany
& Cawpiisr Virgj
Two Reyc* Hall programs;
S«t , April 24 ■ 8 30 pm
witfi Mehli Mehto conducting tf>e
Americon Youth Symphony
featuring "Hurrah' — to Thomson $
Symphony No 2 plus choreography
to works by Rt^g^tr^ Diamond
and Hovhanett
Svn.. April 25 ' B 00 ^m.
William Kirschlce, conductor
Lucia DK^gosrewski, solorst
(eaturir>g choreography to
works by DIugoszewski
S7 00. 6 00. 5 00 4 00 2 50 stud*»nt%
ICLA's
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VffitfTs Noy xjtiA fjMBAi T.'^c orricf •so w««««ood
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4*6 35W). «t boa oHKf ' *• ' rtctt/'r pr>« .•jn..««c« t4 ...
THE
Janss Steps
Rock
Tomorrow 12:00
Free Noon
Concert
.Spoosored by Cultural Affairs
Commission/Student Legislative
Council
r
0nb0rbair^m0nb I ndex
'Romantic Englishwoman' : a trio grows in London
ay Adiun Parfrey
"Life mutates art" — Chcar Wilde
Lewis Fielding, a siMOHiful novelist and
•creenwntcr. works on a tclcplay about a
woman who leaves home briefly to find herself
Fielding's wife, Elizabeth, packs her bags and
fOQ»-< on an impulsive trip (As we find out
later, 'i^rcedom" is sexy for her.) Hubby Lewis ^
writes tlwt Ilia' fictitious woman meets and
makes love with a good-looking giggolo on a
hotel lift. Unwitting Eh/abeth meets a hand-
some giaielo, on a hotel lift.
Eventually, life overtakes art when the
pggolo moves in Mr. and Mrs Fielding's
English Country manor. Their individual
deterministic paths are explored in Joseph
Loaeys The RoMantk EngKiliWiiMi . playing
until April 27 at the Music Hmll.
In this Tom Stoppard and Thomas Wiseman
screenplay, based on Wiseman's novel of the
tame name, Glenda Jackson is the romantic
Englishwoman, Michael Caine is her husband
and Helmut Berger. the German giggolo
Losey, (Tlie Aedjient, The Go-aetween) has
collaborated to advantage in the past with the
great English playwright, Harold Pinter; now
he's working with another stage writer. Tom
StOfpard (Roiencrantz and Guildciisterii are
Dead).
The result is a sensitive and beautifully
wrought picture; touching as well as funny
Richard Hartley's evocative score, with piato-
lacksom Serg^: love "m die girrho
tive oboe criea, fcirther heightens the tension
between the impulsive chaiacters.
L.o»cy IS an underrated artist with the
camera. Certain fantasy sequences, like a
shadowy, soft-focused ride up an iron elevator
continue lo haunt long after the film's coin
elusion His eye is objective, but m that
objectivity, we do not lose our interest or
ompassioa Tha«a^ always Tcmains a certain
personal driving force with any ol Losey's
pictures, here it's an unusual variation on the
love triangle
Not exactly your most fetching English-
woman JachMtt emerges with her moat vul-
nerable role in quite a few outings, and she it
brilliant, if her relationship with Berger seems
ambiguous, it's just another added dimension
to the Firie motif incurred in the script
Came, given a character of many dimensions.
r»cs to the occaation His puffy novebst is a
man who can resitt anything but tempution
Berger remains cool and calculated, a false
poet, a roaming wastrel whom we do not know
much about
While The Romantk EagMNrooMMi enter-
tains and absorbs until the chmax, the de-
nt>ument is frustratingly undefined, and the
stanlingly abrupt conclusion is enough to keep
you puzzled throughout the next feature
Overall, however, the picture remains a delight
to watch and well worth your uroe.
'How to Survive' :
OSS
•y C athy Seipp
Mclba Colgrove is a psychologist who wrote her doctoral
disM-riation on Creative Problem Solving Harold Bloomficid is a
psychiatnst who also teaches Transcendenul Meditation Peter
McWilliams has no Ph.d. or M D after his name, but one might
well tack on "^Boy Wonder" - at the age of 26 he is the third
best-fclling poet in the country and the co-author of the best-
selling The TM Book Together, these three have written a book
^Ikd How To Survive the Loik of a Love: 5« Things To E>o
When There is Nothing to be Done (Lion Press $5 95 132
pages).
As the authors' credentials would indicate, this book (what
there is of it the average number ol sentences per page is six)
IS very trendy, very easy to read and requires no thought
whatsoever There is hardly a line in it that I could disagree with
TRatt IS the Guardian of Health," **lt's OK to fed anger"
-pon't Isolate Yourself from 1 ife"). and hardK anvthing about ii
that drtcsnt annoy me intensely
To begin with, there is its prcsumptuousncss ( t»lgrovc\ rather
magnificent dedication of the b<x)k, *-To All Good," should be a
"""■"■■ of this, as should the dust jacket's description: "Never
hdore has a book offered as much comfort and suppon
(Gideons, here's something new lo place in jnotel rooms)
The book is really aimed at surviving the loss oi a loved one,"
eapecially a romantic love, but th authors are not satisfied with
this. They have drawn up a lisi ol **Noi So Obvious Lotacs"
("loss of hair," "loss of teeth ' "rape." "success - loss of
striving," etc) which their book "l^ designed to help you survive "
Read in this context. McWirii4ais sillv little poems (Sample "I
found in you a home Your depanure lelt me a Shelterless Victim
of a Major Dtsatlcr, ! called the Red Cr«at but they refused to
send over a nurse") are not or l\ mane, but ridiculous
To put it mildly, the authoo have a rather simplistic way of
expressing themscJYes "fn natuit. Ums is an essential clement of
creation," they write profoundK "^o i\ is in human life Our
baby teeth are lost and our permanent teeth take root. Omt
permanent teeth arc lost and an inderstanding of the Poli-Grip"
ads IS. gained." The trendiK illitt ate vocabulary mm^ like
"life-space," "specialness," and relationshippmg" abound
comes as no surprise but grates o. the nerves, nevertheless Since
two ol the authors arc, as they ^ould put it. "into" Transcen-
denul Meditation. I suppose it's ^ be expcaed that they have
put plugs for TM in their book But there is something
irntatingjy cralte about the blatant hint: "To find out more about
thiv I M program, look up ' I ranscendental Meditation' in the
while pages t>t your ph«»nc b<»t)k " ^
Normally, it might be insulting to sav that McWilhams'
metht>d of writing poetry is merely arrai^ng words into verte
lines But in chapter 53 he informs the raader that this is
precisely the way poetry shovld be writtpi " did you know
that you are a pocf Prove it to yourself Put words that you
warn to stond/out on serrate lines Forget everything, 'they
taught vou about poetry in school Do this three of few
umcs You'll get 9^po€m. l4oiitil." The thought <d hordes of
mini-McWilliamses that advice is going to encourage is enough
to nuke anyone* hhinchc
I Writing rotten thmfi about this well-meaning littjc book
("kindly." as the press releate caih it) may be l»ke sf^rinkling
arsenic on jeWo. But when the authors' fashionable philosophv of
"Evervthing is OK" extends to ''Stupidity is O IC.." they deserve
no mercy Trendineis is not O.K. Pseudointellectualism is not
OK Vague, faddish language is not OK And this book is not
ok: .
Russell Hoban's
By Joan M or ley
Alienation is a universal
phenomenon which strikes to
the very heart of culture, civil-
ization and proffcat; it is an
inlpgral component of this
or anxiety In his novel Ti_
Diary (Random House. 17 95.
21 1 pages), Russell Hoban
tackles afresh the problem of
alienation from an English per-
spective, but his characters'
troubhng humanity makes
identififlMMn possible for all
modern readers.
Turtle Diary consists of the
alternating diary entric
Willmm G.. a middle-agad
bookstore clc ^ and Neaera
H . a worldly writer of child-
ren's books, who plot to turtle-
nap two n specioKat
from the Loadon 2oo and set
them free The ab<l -n,
which haPOW» the focal point
of Neaera and William's 1
is a. vague, svmhoiic affair. 4)nc
can interpret its meaning only
m the cpntcxt of the loneK
introspections revealed by the
two diarists
Neaera and William, alien-
ated from society and from
themselves, try to reesublish
their humanity through the
animal world Neaera kecpt a
pet water beetle and writes
books about animal characters.
William ruminates often about
human-animal connections,
noting that both whales and
humans make love face to face.
Later. both William and
WiB^era feel a despemie need to
iet the 200 turtles free
Despair hanfi over the book
like a leaden pall The mood of
Turtle Diary echoes that of
Sartre's Aiausea as welj as
Dortoycvskv's Notes from lii.
dtr ground and Crime and
Punishment (a book Willuim
not coincidcntally f«frrs to),
yet lacks their driving power
waxes poetic
and
and. ultimatr'*
their horror TK....jh u.,n
iwMi
and Ncwn'« thoughts seem at
times stilted and unreal, thev
often plow uith an eerie off
as
when
reality just bordering
pte sufTering ^om aUtpafion
Hobaa's style is both pol-
ithed and witty, subtly analt-
ing hidden dangers just as the
irk ling suriaee of the
deadty
SnftiiMn Uohna
beneath the tttfjboe'
William remarks -|i
The evening had r
giant drvil-mirror witn its pic-
ture of a world and I was
tilvered at the back of things,
kiat atomt lyacdii^ to infinity
terror «at alt there was. no
thing eiae.
While Turlle Diary intense i\
explores the psyrhology of
estrangement and
taNfMt (such as
tabiishing links
men. animals
charm is thai
IMt
\ Mi itj .i^in,! ^ I..
«lJi^
Hohan:
rmrr
in
tnan's reet-
with other
HinwclO. Its
ntains n*
Hoban s mcMiinc
CIKIUIK IM^Ied oi£
^icafii reader The
well worth the
SISSLESI laPROVE YOUR COMMUNICATION
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irom is lo NMpo Iho gap
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essentiol to know how
^•ry^fei^in^g ol your
information coll (213)
Mtaaing it would i)a tha moat ridlculout mlatilia you aver moddf
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WAE
Wilson puts mintf^over matter
• V •. »
4.w2^
By Jot Y Of erst
DB Sporti Writer
Wilson got hil
<shott — he MMM to be immune
to the senior class blahs. With
three months to go, he hasn't
yet shown the grots apathy
and general dislike of work
llHt yiigMes most prospective
graduates.
Wilson is a sprinter on the
UCLA track and field team.
Third ranked as a Bruin at the
start of the season, he has
worked his way to the number
one slot through seven meets
Afainst Long Beach Sute he
100 meters and 20 8 200. both
wind-aided He also runs the
third leg on the Bruin's 400
meter relay team.
Self Made man
**He's a self-made man," ex-
plained UCLA head coach Jim
Bush. **Hc*s done it complete-
ly on attitude and desire Wc
never expected Dotson to run
10 2 or 20,8.-
At 5-10 and 160 pounds.
Wilson isn*t the image of a
classic sprinter. He's not a tall
and lanky Steve Williams or a
short and stocky Houston Mc-
Ttar.
**l don't believe in the cliche
^sprinters are born,' " Wilson
said "'Sprinters are made. You
have to have the raw speed but
there's also the technical part
of being good — knee lift,
body lean, staying on your toes
and carrying your arms **
Mental asptct inportant
Wilson ^id he considers the
mental aspect of rvinnmg the
most .important "You have to
be completely aware of the
entire race." he said. "And
make sure your body performs
to the best of its ability.**
Wtth Mike Bush injured and
Orlando Johnson academically
with a IxJd new introduction
Twenty-eight years after its original
publication, Walden Two remains
a prophetic, stunning work that
offers real alternatives to modern
society. This classic novetnow
Includes Walden Two Revisited, a
bold new Introduction written by ^
B. F. Skinner that examines the
novel's continuing relevance and
points the way to a world free of
pollution . . . overpopulation .
rMOurce shortages . nuclear war,
. . .economic distress.
^■WBiVtHI
MBn*""^HBf»iP««M[^
S2 SO paptr
IV4ACMILLAN
mciigible, Wilson carried the
Bruins* sprint corps single-
handedly most ot the season
He ran alone in three of the
first five meets.
**Someone had to fill their
shoes,** explained Wilson of his
more vaunted teammates "I
welcome the pressure tetcauif
it makes me perform better It
was natural pressure I put it
on myself I have a strong
desir not to lose.
Will not relax
Now that Bush and Johnson
have returned to compctitiefiu^
Wilson doesn't plan tcT^Yetax
**l don't w^n* them to beat me
either," h^ said So far they
haven't. Wih»on hars bested his
Brum rivals the past two
meets
Wilson has also faced tough
competition from UCI A's op-
ponents He races Reggie
Jones and Jon Young of Ten-
nessee and Charlie Wells of
Arizona Stue. ijiret ot the top
sprinters in tt>c nation
"He's gotten, his tail beat
off.** said Jim Bu.sh 'But I
think It's helped him He didn't
loose his poise or form in an\
of those races"
The determination and lead-
ership of Wilson has earned
him the respect ol his team-
mates. Two weeks ago, Docson
and fellow senior Rich
Gunther were jMUUumously
elected UCLA's team captatas.
Not talLfaig H HfMly
Not taking the chore lightly,
Wilson said, "It has inore
UptMung than just a superficial
term The captain plays a loffe
role in the concept of teaiti
unity. We lead the team hud-
dles before every meet.
''UCLA has had the huddles
eveV since 1 came here. It adds
to a type of family atmosphere.
I see It as my duty to keep the
cohesion going."
Wilson explained that
UCLA ii a forerunner in
emphasizing the team concept
in track and field **We set a
precedent," he said "Other
teams, like Tennessee and San
Jose State, have huddles before
their meets now."
The Olympics seem ju far
away to Wilson as graduatton
did when he was a freshman.
The only way Dotson wijl view
the 100 meters at Montreal is
from the chair in front of his
television It's a fact of life that
he doesn't have the speed to
make the American ieam
Dreaming abcHit the Olympics
"I don't sif home dreaming
about the Olympics.' he said.
"If ] was in the position where
I thoughi I could do it. I'd
think hard about going But
track is-<mly a small aspect ot
my life cycle. Academics is the
primary thing"
Wilson hopes to get into law
school and cventuall> earn a
masters degree, probablv m
crimmal law "There area
large number of Blacks and
other f hird World people in
penal institutions Thc.\ didn't
receive proper legal representa-
tion hecatfse of their financial
situation rj tike to change
thai".
With his future . pointed out-
side atlilctics.' the USC meet
and the Pac-K championNhips
in Ma\ will probabU be Wil-
sons last competition He
plans Id keep on running to
sta\ in good ph\Mcal shape but
his mental efforts wrti be gear-
ed towards hi.s la^ career
"M\ athletic Career has
taught me hi>u to work under
pressure." he concluded **h
was a real asset in molding m\
complete, perst»n *'
Not through
But Wilson isn't thiougti
(ContiwuHl oa f age 1 5|
Mother's Day Special
nicer than a phone call *
more thoughtful than a card
send an
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sealed in a box with a
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474-9053 474-9094
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1
♦ »
Softballers play doubleheader
By Mfkt Teverhoaiili
of a tight budget
and a little innovative scedul-
in^ the women's Softball team
wil be playuig a double-header
With a twiat today as they trav-
el to Cal Baptist for a game
this afternoon and then move
on to UC Rivenide for the
half of the ''double-
beginning at 7:50.
**! ichedukd it this way to
conserve money and I figured
that Cal Baptist is a rather
weak team, so that game will
be kind of a warmup for Ri-
verside, which is supposed to
be a lot better," said coach
Sharon Backus.
The team will be busy all
week long with games against
San £>iego State and GoMen
West JC on Friday and Sat-
urday, both on the road The
big game of the week, and
probably the btgatst one so far
this aeaaon, is the one against
Golden West, even though it is
not one of the Brum's South-
ern California Women's In-
tercollegiate Athletic Confer-
ence (SWIAC) punet.
Golden West features Mel-
anie Kyler, one of the quickest
pitchers around, whozjUrtady
has pitched about half a dozen
no-hjtters this year, according
to Coach Backus.
"We don't really expect to
hit Melame a lot," said Coach
us "1*11 have a few kids
throw hard at us m practice so
we can improve our timing a
imk, but we'll be up for the
pMne just because of the na-
ture of It "
The team goes into its
toughest week with some rath-
er impressive statistics. The
Bruins are batting .372, scoring
over nine runs a game and
giving up under two for a
winning margin of about eight.
Ccntcrfiekler Sue Enquist is
having almost as good a sun
as Pete Rote, leading the team
with II hits and eight KBI's.
for a more than rripactablc
.524
Jams Wright, pitcher Char-
lene's sister, has flmde the most
of her 15 at bats, getting a hit
tn 10 of them for a .667 bat-
ting average And Charlcne.
who was virtually the Bruin's
entire pitching suff last year,
has a 0 77 ERA and has struck
oitt 14 m 19 innings Deakins'
stats, on the other hand, in-
clttde a 0.67 ERA with 27
strikeouts in just 21 innings
Wilson runs
(CmUmm^ fro« Page 14)
with track yet He has several
goals he- would hke to reach
before departing Westwood.
He would particularly enjoy
beating USC's 400 meter relay
squad
Gels more fro* Ms bo4y
"Dotson gets mo^ out of his
body then 90 per cent of track
athletes," Bush said "If every-
body on te team ran to their
full potential like Dotson, no
one would come close to us
Wc can beat SC if a few more
athletes put out their full ef-
fort Dotson IS proof that it
can be done"
Dotson Wikon may not fit
the cliche about sprinters t>eing
oorn. but he fits another
vou can put mind over matter
Petitians for SLC
Candidacy due
Wednesday
Five weeks of study, travel
and fun
in Mexico
For toachara. high school, and college students Accredited
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For detaila and catalogue contact group leader Dr Richard
Martin between 6 and 9 30 any evening at 47t-38t7.
MEN AND WOMEN
WANTED FULL TIME
SUMMER JOBS
It you are temporarily discontinuing
your education and seeking sum-
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opportunity Large international
firm has several full time positions
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You can work locally, travel your
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The men and woman wt art leahaig
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Monday through Friday
lifrlA caa 023-4200
In Van Nuyt em 707-3001
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In Antlt«lm call 714-030-0700
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$208
THE COUNCIL ON EDUCA-
TIONAL DEVELOPMENT
(CcD) will be considering course pro-
posals ror the Winter Quarter 1 977 , and is
prepared to sponsor innovative courses
of genuine acadernic quality which
would be of interest to the campus
community. Such course proposals will
be due in the CED Office no later than
Monday, May 17, 1976. If you are in-
terested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educational Development. 3121 Murphy
HalL
BICEPfTENmAL
EVENT
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
THROUGH BRITISH EYES
THIRD in the UCUV BICENTENNIAL LECTURE SERIES
J.R. POLE
Vice rilaitef. Churchili Collega. Dambrklge Univeraity; Bntiah acholar
who haa ma* an irHiMiva ^tudy of Amar ican hMny antf piMtlca;
author of Abrahaai Lkiaato 9m4 Ito •Hllali WaMftf Claaa; Tha
ol Paipocrary (aditor) and nufnaroua ofhar booko and
oahao cootlmiat WEDNESDAYS 6 P M
April 20
Hall 147
^ ;RT KELLEY ProftttOf t* litlory. UC Stntt BtrtMra
T¥lO HUN0«E0 YEARS Of THE TWO PARTY SYSTEM - HOW
MM IT fiVOLVEO AND taHMi ARi WE?
MoyS
f ^^
wmrimOP X>RDAN Protoioor of HlolOfy UC Mfk^kmy
RACE. AOE AND SEX REVCRaERATKMaOFTHC AMERICAN
REVOLUTION
MARY eETH NORTON. Ajoocioto Prpioooor ol lliOlor> CorwoO
Univ^mty
THE REVOLUTION AS A WAR OF LiatRATION FOR WOMSN
Charge
WMloMday, AprH
Pi tonffl t>y UbLA BiOsnlBiini^ Commiimm and
on PublK Locturvt
Dodd
' w ^"
.u— Ji
•■^ .' ..to
i
; I
/,
CLASSIFIED >ID
Hm UiM«*r»lly •< Can-
Oil flOA'^MCfVINIf
AtfMftlsinf apse* will iie« ^
tflscrlmln
V r.
who #lscrliN<M«t#« ofi th« basis «f
•nc**try, color, nolloool origin, u
raHfion, or ooa.
nor, IHo ASUCLA Communlcotlooo
Vow MM MOTOTpBiMi 0**y ^f W BOr*
vieoo otfooHloo^ or o#«Of1looro ropro-
ooflilotf Ml this Issuo. |4fiy porson ho-
llooHif mot on odvortloomont to this
IMHO flololM Mm %mirtt% poMey on non-
tftaeHmloollon sloto^ horoMt oHmiM
001 nirou Loii^llnli In «■!■■§ lo
tho Buslnoss Mooofor, UCLA Dolly
•rum. 1 12 KorcMiolt Hot. Mt Woohoootf
PIOM. Los Aopolos. Colltornio f0t24.
notion prohloms. eoM: UCLA Hooolnf
Offlco. (212) •2f-44t1: WostalOo Foir
(212) 41
complete
copying
service xerox
kerckhoff \2\
82 50611
lor
lAanAtt)
PERM A PLAQUE
your diploma
^ cqmpus studio
I :>0 krukhott hall 823 06' ' n2/l
oprn mon h< 8 30 4 30
WHAT DO€8 A BRUIN
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ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
m
(1 All)
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TRA/ELSEFMCE
OPO)
XEROX ? C
KINKO S
T'he Inside Lane
distance runners — not so ionely
...MT
Perhapt no event at tHift^ium-
m^'% Montrea^ Olympics wil) be
aft taibsd about at the 1500
meters, matching the world rec-
ord holdar at one mile against
Ilia tSii aiaier recordman. And
there witt be no event as hotly
contested as the 800 meters,
parhaps. as this race matches an
American world record hoklar
afaioit a Yufoslav superstar who
just can't seem to win the big
one and an African who has
►n around for an eternity, it
»ms, but gets bener as time
goes on.
The main feature of both of
thate events is that both have
great individual match-ups re-
placing a wide-open scramble
for medals. In these events
tipariiH] there are |ust a hand-
ful of competitors in serious
contention for the gold, silver
afKl bronze nr>edals
in the 800, America's Rick
Wolhuter. the . world- record
holder at 880 yards, faces his old
adversaries — Kenyan Mike Boit.
who missed the 800 meter rec-
ord by nine-or^-hundredths of
a second »nd Luciano Susanj,
the Yugoslav star who has
beaten Wolhuter four out of five
times.
These three ranked head and
shoulders ait)ove the rest of the
world in the 800 the past two
years There!s no question that
the medais should go to these
three, but the element of sur-
prise is possible.
is the favorite for the
aold, undoubtedly, based on hts
all-conquering season last year
that saw him lose just twice m 19
mafor races. His 1:43.79 autb-
matic clocking at Zurich last year
ii inherently superior to Mmt-
cello Fiasconaro's 1:43.7 manual
time. Sort beat Wolhuter sm of
eight and Susanj 3 ol S.
tittle recognized Susanj had
the fourth fastest time in the
world last sOsson. 1:4^.2, and
won 12 races. Me lost just four
— all but one to Boit!
But I think Wolhuter will win
It ail He posted the number two
time in iihe world last year,
1 : 44.1 ar>d loft to )ust two
athletes besides Boit itnd Susanj
Couple that with his urnlefeated
year in 1974; well, it's the
makings of a champion, I feel. If
Wolhuter trains for the Bit
alor^e, there is no one who will
bast him.
Most of the rest of the world
a eyeing a place in the Olympic
final before they start talking
about maMft Late conters Ivo
Van Damme of BelgiMm and
Amaricsn Mark Enyeart <Utah
Scsle) both made a big iplaih
and ranked in the fifth and
fourth global positions, respec-
tively They also posted out-
standing marks: Enyeart's 1:44.9
bemg 1975's third best mark and
Van Damme's 1 45.3 good for
fifth
1974 sensation lames Robin-
son, now at Cal. also merits
mention ilong with Americans
Tom McLean of BuckneH, Keith
Francis of Bostdn Coll4!fe and
Viilanova soph Mark Belger
use star Rayfield Beaton from
Guyana also has dim hopes of
an Olympic nn^l, but the road
for him is rqcky with the above-
mentior>ed competition in the
way Having only three Ameri-
cans in Montreal will greatly
help him as it will the rest of the
world
As for the 1500, the whole
world concedes — it's a two-
man race between mile r^ord-
man John Walker (New Zealand)
and Tanzanian 1500-maleY vac-
ord holder Filbert Bayi The
consensus here is strong that
many of the world's best 1500
men (other than Bayi »n6
Walker) aft going to other
events to avoid competition with
these two praats of the metric
mile Examples trt American
Marty Liquori and Rod Dixon of
New Zealand, who have both
chosen the 5000 meters, where
Dixon ranked first in the world
in 75 and Liquori third!
Walker's shimn>erinf record in
75, blasting the Bayi raobrd in
the mile plus scaring the 1500
and 2600 meter records, make
him the pr^mmr middle distance
nwn in tfie world today Bayi. on
the other hand, had to cancel
his European season last year
when felled by mdUna and has
still to meet Walker for the first
time in more than a year.
SiMMlliig for the bronze will
be a VKMifepa^lpa of interna-
tiaiial talaat. Germans Paul
Heinz-Weilmann and Thomas
WiEiinghage fought it out for
the European Indoor title in
Nbruary with Wellmann win-
ning by a iersey. South African
Danie Malan has proved his
talent tinr>e »nd afsin, but may
be barred from the Games due
to his country's apartheid policy.
Irishman Eamonn Coughlan of
Viilanova ran very well and won
at the NCAA last year. And
Saturday at ttie Races
there are the Amaflcans
Top American hopes are
Liquori and Wolhuter, who pro-
bably won't ri#ri That leaves
indoor mile recordman Tony
Waldrop, who might skip the
Games to pursue his caiaar in
medkiine, even though he won
the Pan- Am Ganr>es Besides
thaav H appears that AAU
champ ten Hilton. Ken Popejoy
and Paul Cummings will fight for
the tickets to Montreal. San lose
State redshirt Mark ShUflng is
also envisioning "a trip to Ca-
nada. But, even if ihey do go.
none can chillenge Walker or
Bayi.
.RichPerelmanI
Ivan so, thaati 9mo anawu wiN W
certainly provoke controversy
galore as the Games begin aa^
wiN be aofionf the best match-
ups of all in AAontreal
U.S.A. Team PrsdkiHaa: 888
Malers — Rick Wolhuter, Mark
Enyeart. Tom McLean. 1S88
Maaars -r Len Hilton, Tony
Waldrop, Ken Popeioy.
Olympic Meda) Preoictiom: 800 ^
Matart — Gold, Rick Wolhuter
<USA); Silver, Mike Boit (Kenya);
Bronze, Luciano Susanj (Yugo.)
1500 Meters — Gold. )ohn <i
Walker (N.Z.); Silver, Filbert Bayi ^
(Tanzania): Bronxe. Thomas l[
Wessinghage (W.G.). *
9
I
Row, row, row your lioat
MikeFinegold
Why?
Why would anyone, quite voluntarily, subdue
their body to hour after hour of lifting weights,
running miles and rowing? Athletics are some-
times used as a means of identity Not crew
Crew IS not a sport sonrieone enters for glory or
individual honors. There is no Heisman Trophy.
Ail-American, or honorable mention for an oar
man or oar woman as an individual Crew is a
team sport.
A crew must work together to get the fob
done, in much the sarr>e manner that a met'-
ronome oxu^ click in a regular pattern if the
piano player is to play properly If there is NO
metronorr>e and the piano keys are hit according
to a computer readout of a random- number
listing, toul chaos wMI result. -
Picture etghj people trying to play the piano at
one time.. The same piano. The, same piano
bench. If you can picture^ that, you can picture
.how It is for eight ireshman on the first day of
crew practice.
After each day of practice, the unison becomes
more apparent Thote who stick it out learn the
disciplir>e of either four or eight paaple working
together as a unit — eventually ii>ey"become or>e.
No. their bodies do not copverge into one single
mass which sloppily fills the racing shell Rather,
after many many hours of practice and what
sf^mt like an eternity, this is what happens
Eight paopif enter the shell at the same time,
^irsi one foot, than the other Then they squat
down info their seats, which art a slightly
enlarged version of the bike seat on racmg^cydes.
I have ridden a bikf» manv times and I have ttied
crew
The seats art equally uncomtor table At least
on a b*ke»,you don't have to slide back ar\d forth
every 1W-2 seconds. For a length of tinf>e that is
almost ahvays in excess of six nnnutes And it
seems like forever When the boat is heme
bunched, when tf>e boat is being uken out m
the water and put away and when the boat h
being raced, any time you are within eyesight of
the UCLA boathouse at Marina Del Rey. every-
thing ii;dor>e with precision What better lesson
of togetherrtess and cooperation in our world
today — not to< mention teamwork.
As a freshman, I entered the water at the
Marina (1 was m a shell) full of desKe and will. At
6-4, 190, t felt prepared for the task at hand.
Coming out of high school wrestling, I was ready
for another "tough " sport
Not ready enough i will not sacrifice five
mornings and five afternoons a week to put my
body through 50 miles of rowing, 10 miles erf
running, and several extensive weight workouts
— each week Every mornirig wofkoMt camisis of
either running or weight lifting at 6:30 in the
morning Each afternoon is spent in rowing eight
lo 12 miles around the channeK of the Marma.
The Marina if a nice place for sightseeing —
. rowing inhibits your view. Instead, the rower
remains with his eyes glued to the back in front
of him. his brain fixed to total concentration of
the rowing motion
As I have noted earlier, I will riot i
Id such a time-cor»uming. grueling spOEtl Instead
i will sneak back to the toy dapartmerH in the
dapartnnent store of life" — the Daily Bruin
office.
CLASSIFIED AD
room to
pytea for
POMTIAC aT.0. 1S?S.alr.
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-J — L
UCLA heads forMuncie afteTbeatlng Waves
^ PB Sportt Wriltr
Al Scatei iiCLA volleybalJ
team will fet iu ihot for a
sixth NCXA title in thj^ seven
year history of the event. The
Brums beat Pepperdine last
night, three games to one to
win their first Southern Calif-
ornia Intercollegiate Volleyball
Asi»ociation (SCIVA) confer-
r^ ence title since 1971 and ad-
S.yvance to the NCAA finals at
5'Muncie, Indiana on April 30
a and May I
^ Playing at neutral Santa
. Monica College before a stand-
m ing room only crowd of 2.500
I (over 500 people were turned
J away). UCLA rallied to win,
j^ 13-15, 15-13, 15-7. and 16-14.
In the final game the Bruins
trailed, 14-IU but the serving
of Joe Mica and David Ol-
bright and the rpiking of Fred
Sturm produced five straight
points and the trip to Bal(
Stale I'niversity.
'*Thc difference in the fourth
game .was the way our subs
came in and played.'* said
Bruin coach . Al Seates. who
continued to earn his tag oj
the "new Wi/ard of West-
wot)d " "We got fine play off
ot the bench from Steve Sut-
tich and Singin Smith in the
§Mne as our bench Came
through likeiriiBS^ irtt year."
Game four was the bc!it
comeback of the year for the
.:^. Bruins and ii was -ac-
complished with team captain
'- I>enny Cline on the bench for
the first time this year. Wkh
; l?epperdine leading K-5. Chne
collided with teammate Ol-
bright going for a spike and
knocked to the ground
Trainer Bill Cowdrey tried to
revive teoi and Cline roaliniifd
in the match, but he was not
effective on the next four Pep-
perdine points and left with
UCLA traiUng 12-5
The comeback then began
with Mica making a good
serve to cut the score to 12-6.
I wo Olbright serves on blocks
by Brooks, Sturm and Mike
Gottschali cut the score to 12-
8. A great save by Mica that
he turned into a successful
spike cut the score to 12-9.
Then two Brooks serves got
UCLA close at 12-11, when a
controversial call was made
Mica*s spike had made the
score 12-11 and he went on the
Pepperdine side of the net to
retrieve the ball. A Wave play-
er fot mad and almost hit
Mica Referee Daryl .lames
called Mica for delaying the
game and gave the serve over
to Pepperdine.
"I went to get the ball be-
cause they kept keeping the
ball to delay the game." said
Mica '*lhere is no rule against
It. but 1 was given a technical
for the first time in my hfc and
we lost the serve "
With UCLA losing momen- *
tum on the Mica incident.
Pepperdine expanded the lead
~» l^iccmingly unbeatable 14-
11 count when Mica and
Gottschali hit balls out.
The Bruins stayed alive on a
PeppcrdwHf doublehit arid Mi-
ca-got the serve His first serve
ended in a spike by Sturm and
Im second serve was hit out of
bounds by Steve Graser Mi-
ca's third serve was excellent
and OiNrigiH tied the match
with a ftnir spike on an over-
paas. After four consecutive
fide-outs, the serve weal lo
Olbnghi.
The fint serve wnt an ace as
two Pepperdine players
watched the ball drop On the
second serve the ball came to
Sturm and he hit the ball off
of the top of the hands of the
Pepperdine blockers for match
point and the conference title
**! was serving for the seam
each time," said Olbright ''The
two serves broke different
ways, with the first one break-
ing in and the second breaking
out "
"1 wanted the ball on the
final ^t" said Sturm. ""I aimed
purposely tor the hands of the
-blockers and it deflected rt§hi
off for the winning point."
UCLA did not play well in
the match until mid-way
through the second game.
With Pepperdine leading 10-
8 in game two and seeminglv
in control of the playoff
tnatch. UCLA finally awoke
Three straight serves by Denny
Cline ended in Sturm spikes.
Two more Sturm serves, one
an ace and the other ending in
a spike bv Doug Brooks gave
UCLA a 14-11 lead Pepper-
dine closed to 14-13, but a
Mica spike gave Clie serve to
Brooks . Brooks made a good
serve causing M-ark Rigg to hit
a spike long and UCLA had
the game, 15-13.
Scates now plans to haVe the
Brums pla> in a tournament
on Saturday TO get them ready
for the Nationals and he will
watch with interest the West-
ern Rcgionals Friday and Sat-
urday night in Pauley Pavilion.
The probable UCLA opponent
in the NCAA finals should be
the Westerrt Regional cham-
pion It is likely that it will be
a Pepperdine-UC Santa Bar-
bara final
**l am happy to win the
conference title, but as I have
said all along, it will not be a
good season for me unless
UCLA wins the NCAA title/'
Come April 30 and May 1,
Scates will go for title nui
six.
■f?
The EXPO Center and
The National Tourist Offices of Los Angeles
present
THE WORLD!
r
«"• . «
^ \
M<^...r.^..i.-4at^..-
AUSTRALIA
AUSTRIA
BAHAMAS
BRITAIN
CANADA
CEYLON (SRI LANKA)
CHILE
CHINA
FRANCE
GREB
INDIA
IRAN
IRELAND
ISRAEL
JAPAN
KENYA
KOREA
NEW ZEALAND
PHILIPPINES
PORTUGAL
SCANDINAVIA
SOUTH AFRICA
TAHITI
THAILAND
l*n'
See you at the EXPO Center Travel Fair
TODAY, APRIL 21 10 am - 4 pm.
Ackerman Union. Grand Ballroom. FREE!
or fill out the coupon!
! artd thaM not ba aMi Id aMHid «ia
IWtum to FGTO. c/o
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'W—fc-,
^.>, *.
1 It ATTEMTiow PWE-HEALTH CARE STUDEWTS | Encourage» Wilting careers
f
MEDICUS
Bradbury 'never worked'
2:00 TuMrtay April 27. 1976
1228 Campbell Hall
■ ■*■
COPIES 2
i
Nd Minimurr
KINKO'S
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CHECK OUR TYPING SFRVICE
1ftQf> Wesfwnnl Rivd ! A Qf
lei 4 474
also Downt^jwn L A Van Nuys ^'
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Hon. Thru tat tiSOMii Iot.*d0pm and FH. IN 9il0pfii 47t-e222 477 -921
\7
Dt Stair Writer
King Kong*s fali from the
Empire State Building encour-
a§Ml 12-year old movie buff
Ray Bradbury to become a
science fiction writer and
"never work a 4ay** in hif» life.
Old movies ''changed my
life. I wanted to be a film
writer from seeing 4II those
lovely films,** said Bradbury
Striding into Richer HalKs
Fireside Lounge Tuesday
night, Bradbury seated himself
in a swivel chair and groaned,
"Oh, God/' He gnnncd "Ever
have the feeling you're being
watchedT he asked the crowd
of 200
Lea CiMney ffUmi
At afe three, Bradbury re-
lated, lie was taken by his
mother to see Lon Chancy
films. At age 10, he decided to
be the world*s greatest magi-
cian. "Out of a background of
comic strips, Tarzan books,
film people and magicians, I
was created,** said Bradbury.
Bradbury referred to himself
at "the only begotten son of
Emily Dickinson and Edgar
Allan Poc.** After reading bit
poem on his imaginary
parents, Bradbury taid, **Oiie
by one, every singk one of my
dreams has happened because I
got out and made it happen."
Romance
Believing that people "must
romance themselves into be-
coming their idealized selves."
Bradbury regards the moments
just before sleep as the "most
precious, when we dream our
tomorrows " He feels that peo-
ple should be foolish, because
"that's all you're ever going to
have. -
"What if I had listened to
those people at age 12 who
told me not to be a science
fiction writer?" Bradbury
asked, adding, "I'm telling you
about playing through life. I've
never worked a day in my life.
Look on me; envy me."
Ocnctics
Telling his audience to be
"true to their genetics," Brad-
bury said, "If you don't do
what you were born to do in
this world, then you're a
criminal, because you neglect
the talent that vou have." And
iit"^
ir
■,?.
«
«
m
TUNE-UP, LUBE I OIL $04«
JOB JBKU
ovnNAUi $1 0^
A-1 AUTO SERVICED.
I 1 ' '•'
Ray Bradbury
Oa Photo by ^u«a ONMon
t i"
^S^
x\
9
BARRY COMMONER
Author The Closing Circle, noted environmentalist
JOHNGOFMAN
-"^ ' Professor Emeritus, UC Berkeley
DAVID PESGNEN i
' Chairman, Californians for Nuclear Safeguards
A DISCUSSION OF ENERGY POLICY
NUCLEAR SAFEGUARDS INITIATIVE
\ FRIDAY APRIL 23
12 noon - 4 pm
Ackerman Grand Ballroom
Jflrrv
Chapter American Nuclear
unire of tnvironmentdl & Consumef AHairs. UCLA Geography Depf Campus
. Campus Committef^ to Bridge the 6ap. Student legislative Coun< il
hat liateners, the writer added,
should take thii free advice to
avoid "paying $90 a night for
tome piychiatrist who hates
you.-
Bradbury writct tcieace fic-
tion becauic it is the "field of^
the obviout truth. We're
dealing with the immediate
future, today and perhaps
tomorrow morning." If he had
(C ontimMd on Page IS)
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Vp4um« XCVIM. Hun^^m 14
Thursday. April 22. 1976
mihool ymr tfucmpt during ^ottdmyt
and dmyu toUcmtn§ IttHlltaya. and an-
amination pftoda, ^ Wm ASUCLA
Communtcationt Board,
mood Ptaza. Loa An§olm.
90084 Copyright 1979
ASUCLA Comumuntcation9 Board.
'Bacond ciom Bomtga paid at tho loa
it Offica
Caktofnm
tiy tha
Jim
Patrtch HMly
Ainna Young
Suwn Mmrta
Eric
Akksa Short
Paul Signoraiti
i#f Outnn assistant
Frank Staltworai
Kdarc Oa^na
Stuart Siiv«ralB*n
Qiann Saki
Jaff Lapm.
I lowaro
Laura Klamar,
Adam Parfray.
DaMd Whitnay
If
V
MumH
Oawa QouM
Holly Kum
Patty Croat
MMia Claahi«n
Oaniaa Oofoahsff
fiachmann
Mar Qarm
Joa NMhan Jonaa
Todd Smlf^
Carol Smun
Wrflart
Now able to pay full grants
Funds added to BEOG
By ToM SaMi
OS Stair WiHar
At a retuh of an intensive ttudem lobbying
effort, Cottgrctt bat allocated an additional
S3 15 millioa for Batic Educational Opportunity
Grants (BEOG), according to Dave Patterson,
band of the Fiaaaoal Aids, Tatk Force
Tbe lobbying effort, which involved some
200 studenu from lltth the National and UC
Student iobbici was a crucial one. Had the bill
failed in Congrett, BEOG wouid jiavc baaii
$791 million short of the SI. 3 billion budget
needed to fuUy fund the eligible studenu.
Neiia Garber. director of the National
Student Lobby on campus, explained that the
lobbyists "went on to the hill to try and get the
key votes I think it had a big impact on the
vote"
Patterson said that there are more than 2500
undergraduates currently participating in the
BEOG prtffiin on this campus He added that
this docs not include all of the seniors who
were eligible.
**Thit year all four years of students (fresh-
Carol Mock ends term
MS through seniors) may take part in the
grants as well as part-time students." Patterson
said. Prior to this year, tliaiaalt who had
entered collefc before 1972 were ineligible
Patterson exptamed that a student's difi-
bility and allocations are based on the lap—ii:
of tbe student's parents in addition to the
tludent's own personal mtttB. Patterson
stressed that the BEOG grant program is
totally independent of the campus Financial
Ai4t Office and ts completely funded and
operated federally
Pattcnoa taad that at a retuh of the addi-
tional allocation to BEOG by Congress, grants
will range from S50-SI600 He also added that
the amount of money now available to BEOG
participants should match last year's allot-
ments It will not drop,..-.M was previously
expected
Patterson stressed that students who have
applied for financial aid but have not turned m
their BECXi Student Eligibility Rcpon to the
Financial Aids Office should do so at once to
avoid ineligibility lor a BEOG grant
Student Regent heard
DB Stair Writer
Student Regent Carol Mock
taid membett of tbe Board of
Reentt ialeaad to her It much
aa "!• any of tbe other Regentt
— maybe more — during ber
term of office ending in July
Mock taid ber position aa
tbe lone Student Regent hat
terved to baigbtoi tbe intereit
Md respect of other Regentt.
Sbe bebe^RBt riw bat made the
Regentt more aware of ttudent
opinion during ber one-year
term. *i think you need tome
kind of communication be-
tween Regent and ttudent
feeliogt,** ilie taid.
Mock*t role at tbe firtt Stu-
dant Regent it part of an ex-
penmental, two-year prognai.
If tbe poat ia tboogbt to be
tttcctw ful by tbe Reyentt, it
will be made permanent.
of UCLA filling the potitian.
A ttudent member waa alao
thought to be beneficial by the
UC Student Body Presidents
Council. Tbey began to ad-
vertise for candidates to be
screened immediately after tbe
referendum
Two years ago tbe
for selactiag the Student Re-
gent war used for the first
time. Tbe Student Body Pres-
idents Council narrowed the
applicants to three,
people from all UC
The final three were reviewed
by the Regents Nominating
Committee which chose Carol
Modk to tervr m Ibe board
for one year.
(Continued on page 14)
Student escorts
to thwart nap ists
According to former Stu-
dent-Regent candidate Mike
Galizio. tbe bill for ttudent
aad faculty refMftt arat intro-
duced in the legitlature by
Attemblyman John Vascon-
oellot. Vatconoellos' bill pro-
pMBd a *peer-teleciad faculty
and student representative.*
Tbe decision was part of a
referendum passed by Cali-
fornia voters in November of
1974. Faculty members alto
have a representative on tiK
with Dr. David Wilton
By Uaida R^attoni
DB Staff Writer
A student atoait tyatcm de-
signed to protect students from
rape and muggings may be
operating here fall quarter,
according to Melissa Moss,
internal affairs coordinator for
Student Bcxly President Lind-
say Conner
The escort sytimi will be
one of a number of services to
be performed by the Com- f
munity Service Officers, in-
cluding assisting the campus
police foot-patrol, checking
buildings and doors at night,
registering bicycles, and issuing
bicycle citations, aocordmg to
Moat.
In addition to these tervioes,
the patrol will be equipped
with engraving machines to
nnark tbe personal property of
students with identification
numbers, said Moss She hopes
this will cut down the number
of thefts on campus The ser
vice will be offered free ot
cba^rge.
UCLA Police Chief, Boyd
Lynn, has agreed to fund the
student patrol service* aaaaad-
ing to Lt Jim Pembroke, who
will be in charge of the patrol
for the campus police.
(Continued on Page 14)
lonesco's
ACT OF DUn
Cttektiov's _
NtSHT BEFORE THE TUfAL
Two Comedy Mastarpiaoaa
1.00 Off^
fn aao pm aai looo pm j
Bmin Monica PInyhouao
1211
For
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
Lat ua ship your paraonai atfacts hofha W« ar« apactaiiaU in
»niirNinanBi packao^H) ^^ tf^inpNig Wa alao tali appaaaaas for.aflD
PACtFIC-KING lait Waat tai at. tea Aaaalas 17
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If
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This IS the place for Rib LovmrtI
By fcr the B^sfitibs w« Vw fried in LA.
Herald Examiner
COMPLETE DINHEtS
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Fine Men's Wear
Imported Fashions
European Tailoring Expert Alterations
T-
t>iscount for Students & Stiff
Chavez speaks on voting
Cesar Chavez, pteaidcnt of the Farm Workers Union, will
be yiring at noon today, in the Grand Ballraa« of
Ackeman Union According to MEChA, Chavez will
discuss Proposition 12 which if pnsaed will guarantee farm
> — i.^ fr^ ^Urt.on^ in the f^M SO thcv can vote for the
union of their choice Chavez will be asking for donations
and people to campaign for tbe initiative
SPORTSUITS
Men's! women s! styles' colors* sizes!
The Athletic Department has the best selection of $portsuits m
West Los Angeles Come on by and check out The Athletic Dept
before you buy
Hie qlhldic departmem
1317 WMt«P00d Blvd.
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T
I."
Analysis of the latest
Middle East situation
Dr. Hatim al-Husaini
Representative of the Arab LeeQM. Weehington. DC
Thurs<iay: International Student Pentei. 6 PM
Friday: Hminm Hall. Rm 39 at 12 Noon
by: Organization of Arab Sludanu - UClA
Fof«9n Studanta Aaaociation
Council on Propramming
t
<
GAy
I
Talent Night Tonight!
Be a Star! Join us for an
evening of music, dance.
poetry and comedy.
Kerckhoff U^tairs Lounge
7:30 pm.
GSA office 825-8063
24 Hr Hotlme 477-7660
nion
Sponaorad by' Studant Lagialativa Council
ROCK OUT
With people from 16 campusM
at the City-Wide Hillel
Live BAND ROCK DANCE
featuring "TRIAD"
Saturday Night April 24th 8:30 pm
900 Hilgard in Westwood
$2 00 membara $2 50 otttafa
at
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UCLA
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BY HILLEL
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•7*
,
Socialist suppoits DemocratJr^Party
Harrington says corporations favored
By A4tm Pfcffer
DB, Staff Writer
The federal ptasUst of cater-
ing to **pnvatc corporate pri-
orities'* was attacked by
Michaeh Harrington, national
chairman of the Democratic
Socialist Organizing Commit-
tee, before a noon gathering st
Meyerhoff Park
In addition. Harrington
called for supporting the
Democratic Party this Novem-
ber as a starting point in which
to ''transform it [the Demo-
cratic PanyJ, to make it really
adequate.**
Harrington contended that
"the government did loo much
in the 1960s and now the gov-
ernment IS required to do less "
He added. "The government
has failed.**
As a part of the problem.
Hsrhngton said, **lf you look
at federal government employ-
ment, the federal percentafc
has declined slightly even
though the population has in-
'Poverty wimung
In addition, he said, al-
though mihury spending has
dcclmed slightly in the last 10
years, the bulk of federal
money intended for domestic
programs has been funneled
into medicare and social
security. Whik these two pro-
jgrams are ''enormously popu-
lar," Harrjngton added, the
fact- 19 •*hffct Tiow in the
Umted Stiitet, poverty is win-
ning the war.** '
Harrington complained that
the government talks about
creating innovative programs
which, in reality, never get off
the ground. He cited as an
example a government project
which was being developed
which would provide 26 mil-
lion new homes The govern-
ment, however, never got
around to implementing it.
Harrington quoted Daniel
Moynihan, who said the social
programs of the sixties were
"oversold and underfinanced
so that their seeming failure
was almost a matter of de-
sign.**
•^Washington always follows
Michael Harrington
corporate priorities,** Harring-
ton declared Instead of fol-
\oming the common good, the
government follows the cor-
porate good in regards to the
allocation of federal subsidies.
he added.
According to Harrington.
New York City is an example
of common federal policy
"The city it goiiig through an
agony that is basically not [its]
fault.** Although (he past New
on Page I)
Using board in Ackerman
Program to trade skills
Students who wish to Icsm, teach and
esehtt^pe skiHs such as bowling or chess can
now do so thanks to a new knowledit
exchange prognoa
••Skill Swap,- at It IS called, is designed to
allow students to exchange knowledge sad
skills with other students who wish to learn
them "We provide people with the needs of
other people," tsid Russell Shimonura one
of the organizers of Skill Swap. •^We provide
a tervioe to people can come and see what
knowledge and skills people have to offer
lt*s a tra#a-off bet ween >^ |Mople"
To take advantage of Skill Swap, students
•p to the looation across from the Expo
Center on level A of Ackerman Union where
a gianU-board will post all th^ vk.ik t.. k^
swapped
Thoae students who have a skill or know-
Icdge to exchange then sign a card with what
.they have to offer, what they want to kam,
their name and phone number, and Jiipiiy it
on the board.
Shimonura said that skills need not be the
^ tiuag excba^pDd. "if a person needs a
tennis parter or wanu a partner to go girl
watching, they can use our service."
The idea behind Skill Swap turted in
October, but according to Shimonura.
^•ca«ae of red upe and delays, they couldn't
get rolling until about a month ago.
Shimonura expects Skill Swap to be in
operation by Friday, Apitil 23, at the eaHicst
The toul cost of the nij^gram is about $130
for the board and suppHcs
If yuu with tu vuiuntwr arm ngip m iiig
program, contact Shimonura or Andrea
Marks in the Expo Center at 825-0831
By J. Ml
Freshmen here moderate except in sex
ly Km Carte
Dl Sma Writer
In the course of condudiag
a survey of entering fieshmen
at 366 colkgBt acratt the coun-
try. UCLA Prof AleJUMiiBr W
Attin found that UCLA freth-
tmtn are not at hberal as they
thought they were
la the tenth such survey
annually taken, 38 per cem of
UCLA's freshmen considered
fhnatcivrf to be "liberal." at
compared to 33 per cent na-
tinaally.
Forty-seven per cent of the
freshmen entenng UCLA la-
baikd thcsMivat "middle-of-
the-road,** at cotnpared to 51
per cent of the rest of Amer-
ica's entenng class.
not looked upon tavor*
ably by freshmen here, at only
46.9 per cent laipaaied m the
affirmauve The national figure
for freshmen in favor wat 60.2
per oem.
£%«* p«y
The qnetlion of equal pay
for all ttmHItam af profestion
on the turvey. UC-
LA freshmen answered 14.4
per cent in favor of tlK
Contrahly on a nauonal
21.2 per cent of fiailMBaa con-
curred, aooavdiag to Asihl
The survey alto probed
imen at to whaaKr or not
they wmild break a law with
which they disagreed. Here,
25.8 per cent of the ftethmen
taid they woald violaie mdi a
law. while nationwide the
figure was 30.8 per cent.^-^
On the c€tmmm of tea adl
here were found to be more
liberal than their counterpartt
short relationship wat
able. 53 per cent of UCLA
i^eshmen approved, at oppoead
.to 51 pe^ cent m the national
f
When atkad if two people
having sex after only a very
But on some economic issues'
relating to college students,
fpcrtiiiicn here have shown a
lets hberal sunce than fellow
freshmen across the nation.
756 of UCLAs freilHMn
believed srudents should re-
ceive outnght financial grants.
Nationwide, 77.9 per cent of
the freshmen surveyed ap-
proved of this practice. ^^
More federal aid to private
colleges was apparently on
Book shows that
student protest
not thing of
By Jim PelCi
DB ^tafr Writer
Violent student protest is not a thing of the past, according to
Alexander W Astin and Helen S Astin. professors of htglfter
education here, who recently completed a seven-year study of
campus unrest
Results of the study appear in a new book. The Power of
Protest, which reveals that while disturbances may be relatively
dormant, recent unrest on both coasts indicate a new set of issues
could bnng them back in full force
"Campuaes today and m the immediate future have a potential
for a high level of unrest." according to the study.
"There is no evidenae at all in our data that students are not
conccrnad^ with today*s ittues.** Alexander Astin says. "The
decline in camput activism is due to the lack of viaMe issues,
issues that affect the students directly "
National survey,^
The study, carried out through thr l^merican Council on
Education, was conducted by the Astins along with Alan B.
Bayer of Florida State University and Ann S. Bisconti of the
Higher Education 4letearch Institute. It included nauonal surveys
of students, faculty and administrators and anai\sis of campus
newspaper reports. One hundred and three demonstrations were
studied, indicating which were most effective in creating changt
and the specific factors that led to violence.
"The best change from campus unrest." says Helen Astin, "is
the administration and campus became aware that students had
to be- involved in the government of the university " She claims
the whole idea of cumcuhtm changtv^^ncludtng ethic and
women*s studies, are a result of student demonstrations.
The Power of Protest concludes some protests were more
cfftctive in praiHCMg rhaagr than otlMl Disturbanoes involving
racial issues and campus policies, for iaiiHHa. cnaied several
changes, while protealt against the Vietnam War produced
virtually no resuhs. War-rriated research, ROTC pragnms and
recnitung on campus i|ll fUll contimae.
Cohabitation before mar-
riage was akK) considered ac-
ceptable by 53 per cent oi
1975's entenng ciats heee. Only
47 per cent of the nation't
frethmea concurred on the
tubfect. Astin's survey
Frethmen here were found
to be lett religious compared
to their peers in the Umted
States and alto lett religious
than last year. Twenty-two per
cent had no religious prefer-
ence*, compared to 13 per ceil
of the rest of the country and
20 per cent here m 1974.
If yeaft
Dr. Astin has conducted this
survey for the last ten years in
Htodation wi|th the American
Coaneil on Education All
freshmen here were given an
opportunity to participate in it.
Attin is currently teaching in
the Graduate School of Educa-
tion here. The full resulu of
|the latest survey, along with
past resuhs, may be ohtiinad
in Math Science 2340.
fil^ rr\oyJi^^fi/i^^u^ S$ZuKd^iO-iO^'^f
One outgrowth of studtt proiertt wat the
according to the Attint. *^e have a lot of tmmm to bcbeve it
wat an otgiowih of iIk *Ncw LafT and eaMiyid m a natKMial
of piintl." AiHuaider Attin claimt. There ate a lot of
bttanjaa wmtmm aad Blacks, inrhidi^g ditcnmination
Howcwer, the tftwdy
from the New Left
'sexist * "The w
h«t oaily the
many
the wooKfl't
the New Left
in the SDS were new the viaihie Icadttt
^ Maipi Ailin taid. Thit, in turn, deflated
cootribuied to the dscline in
\
^^^^^^P aB^# ^^m ^^^^^^0 , ( .
m
The ttndaatt who participated in protaau "i
poMcally Itonl, mtelligBitt, iB#iiirliiil«tir and iaieprniirm than
iMin aLin'Bti * according to the ttiidy. la addition, activitu were
fBOie bkely to nnajor in the social tcicMBa. artt or humaaitiet aai
len likely to uke the pre-profi
in the social
VT
homanitict lead to tx vnmt
iCi i< iiaaPairlS)
/^^|gg 4 ' 10 n-f^
f WESTW(
^
VVESTIMOOp VILLAGE.
a A dl -^ -^
■».r
V
-•^-v**.
• • ^ «- d^»« «
1
hi
Two will intern in Library of Congress
Catherine Morales
o
MIlHmiT
Monss
PimAT
SATOUAT
APinn 'U
EXCLUSIVaY AT THESE MiUili THEATHES
HLBLQmom
LOflQ
SOVTN OMfT KJIft
f,^r
6:30
THE IMAGE OF THE JEW
IN MED I A
DR. WILLIAM CUTTER
n. School of Education, Hebrew Union
on Friday April 23
Shabbat at Hrirel
dinfisr '
rations HiM 474-1S31
900 Hilgard
630
THIRD
ANNUAL STUDENT
PHOTOGRAPHY DISPIAY
April 1 0-2S in ALL STORES
Prize Winning Photographs
end Entries Submitted
by Students, ogei 11-22
T«BROAD\A/AY
The word from Washi;^
If bert The Library ci Coo-
grcff hat Uppcd Catherine
Morales aad Mfccy Griffith
for rtft h^hh prestigious
library aad laformation sct-
This maies the t CLA Grad-
uate SciMM»l of Ltbrar> and
information Sciences unique m
the op«iatr>. the onh tcbooi
this year to ^ct^oy a double
distinction
Robcn Hayes, dna- of the
UCLA fraduaie tcbooL said
"For our field it has the
character of _ _
iaf for the SopreaK Coaft
would for law"
He pointed mm^
that there arc oaK "^ _
openings at the Library of
Congress while there are ♦
clerkships at the SapreaK
Court
Morales, a bkaid 2b-^cax-oid
graduate of Texas Tecfc aad
the Lniversitv of Missouri,
works a pnntinf prets ai the
PowetJ Librao bateoKat.
teaches the new under giadaatc
I ibrary ScKaoe It^cmi^ aad
aa paat ot ber
wife:
JeHery Griffith
06
J
**I was far^nsed and
plaaaad.** liie said. "Worbiiig at
the LJbraiy of Caiigress will be
fantastic: rt*s like stamng at
the top "
At the end of tbr JM^eek
paafram. Morales tMpeeu to
be pteed m a permanent post-
wikicb tt oilen the case.
intcmft.
The interns start at civil
service level GS-^. paying
about 513.500 pff vear. and
will acquire experience sn each
of the hbrarv*s aMa> activities,
including the copynght office,
the congmsionii research ser-
vice and the National tnion
Catalogue, the largest card
catah>gue m the L S with
from over 700 libraries
came to UCLA after
from Harvard in
Itbb. spending time in Japan
wTth the navy,
elementary school
la Vermont
Mancrs earriculuai
As pan of the masters cttr-
nculum. he teaches the under-
frt#*Tf*' 110 course, works at
a res^rch aMaiant to Hayes
and concentrates his study in
~the mtormation '»idr of librai^
sarnce
Griffith <tf interested in cow-
puten/ed data retrieval system,
uhich. he says, could poten-
tially up most of the nation^s
libraries into a central pool of
He se^s this as
resource of the
information,
the reference
future
••It's a new
to get ia aa-
field and I*d like
the research and
development." he said '*lt's
really a tremendous a^ortu-
nity for me I he Library of
Congress IS one of the three or
four greatest libraries in the
world some people think
the greatest."
The selection process for the
Sepiember-io-January intern-
ships started m February.
\khen 46 accredited libary
schools throughout the country
submitted two nominations
In March, 26 of these were
brought to Washington for
interviews. On April 9. Hayes
got the "word that his two
students had both received the
award.
Conpetftion itifr
"I didn't expect to get it."
said Morales, ''The competi-
tion was very stiff, and >ou
just figure the odds wcf<
against me " - —
UCLA sent inierns in 1967
1968 and 1971, when the intern
program had a fatter budget
and more openings.
Hayes . noted the restricted
size of the UCLA Graduate
School of Library and Infor-
mation .Sciences. "We're cer-
tainly one of the smallest in
the country," he said. **$o it's a
remarkable thing rhat of the
seven interns this year two wil!
be from UCLA "
Founded in J 959 by Lavk-
rence Cl?rk Powell (for v^hom
Powell Library is named), the
masters program currently has
163 students and is the onl\
ont in the country with a
second year of study
Hesitating to call the Lihrarv
of Congress hrs ultimate career
goal. Griffith said, "It'*^ kind of
a wait and see position **
Free screening offered here
Test to seek Tay Sachs
Free screening for Tay-Sachs disease will be
offered here from ^pril 26 through April 29
"It's stupid not to take five minutes of your
time," Mark Feitebon. student coordinator of
the dnve. said He explained that although
Tay-Sachs, a geaetic disorder of the nervous
system, is always faul for children born with it.
the carriers of the disease can be discovered by
a simpk Maad test
Testing on April 26. 28 and 29 will be from
10 am-3 pm and 5 pm-7 pm in the mens
lounge ia Ackerman On April 27 the testing
will be at the same times but moved to the
Medical School Student Lounge
A Tay-Sachs child it born 25 per cent of the
time when two earners reproduce One in 30
Jews art carriers, while .)ne in }Q0 non-Jews
arecarriers A carrier is perfectly normal. ^%i
of passing on the
The Tay-Sachs child, however, appears
normal for about five months and then sIowIn
degenerates until it dies within two years,
Feitelson said.
If two carriers of the disease wish to have
children, a test can be made to determi
whether the womb contains a Tay-Sachs child
"A medical abortion can be performed if the
test IS positive," Feitelson said
A person "has everything to gain and
nothing to lose,** he said Feitelson added that
the drive against Ta\*-Sachs is a-proioivpc
program
'If this IS sticcessful. It could be applied to
other [geriettc] diseases." he said
The program is sponsored by the Schcwl <if
Medicine here in conjunction with Harbor
General Hospital in Torrance.
—Laais Watanab*
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f
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People get involved ■ \
Murals— a social art form
ly Sara
t Di Stair Reporter ;
Murais are a very social art torm. generating
pride and interest in a diverse community,
according to Barbara StoU, a graduate student
in film animation here
While painting a mural in Ocean Park with
two other artists. Stoll discovered murals arc a
people's art form People became involved in
the creating process of the Ocean Park mural,
whether painting or watching its development
They then feel they arc part of the art,
according to Stoll This is the significant lactof.
she said
Community members offered both artistic
help and advice Some suggestions were helpful
in improving the design
Old nuMi . «^
$toll smiled as she related how an old man
kamled lliem one drawing with the original
design of the mural and another ot how he felt
it should be The advice was followed
Conflict of artistic interests arose when
community members asked that their faces be
used in the mural The artists agreed
On the other hand, a gallery owner advised
that faces would give a caricature appearance
to the design and be distracting. The artists
agreed, believing blank faces would let the
viewer use his imagination. They were alsa
afraid people whose faces were not depicted
would be offended
Once the picture was completed, howew,
the community approved.
Research
The project began, when local anist Jane
Golden saw the need for decorating a plain
building wall on Ocean Park Boulevard The
muraPs theme is the old Ocean Park Pier,
better known as POP
Golden decided on this theme alter doing
research on Santa Monica. She talked to
people and obtained information from the
bbrary. The possibility ot the city building a
Heritage Square nearby also inCluenced her
decision " V^ ./
Golden submitted the design to a cit>-widc
?T*ural committee I hey approved her proposal,
supplying materials and minimum wages for
the artists
The project began m the middle of Januarv
and ended March 20. lo celebrate the onasion
aad present the gift to the communitv. the
artists planned a block party.
BU^k party
I wo steel bands played (or the crowd of* 500
people I ocal merchants provided free re-
freshments. I ocal officials and .lane frmda-.aHo
spoke- at the event
Stoll became involved in the project through
a, ^ign ri;if|i«stinj^ );hc services oi artists v^hich
was^ posted at tlie^X'arcei Placemcm Center
Peggy Fdwards. ^n amateur artist and neigh-
bpr. wav the third artist.
A psychological ettect is also attributed to
the mural, according to StoU When work
began on it. there was a fear of more accidents
at the busv intersection of Ocean Park and
Mam Street Surprisingly. Stoll said, no
accidents have occurred since the mural was
painted
Large rrputatNMl
The mural has a largt reputation, said Stoll
People have come ifacifie«Wy lo see the mural
IPMn as far as Long Beach
The artists will continue the mural along the
other walls of the building I he theme for the
remaining portion will be the buildings alon^
the pier
tiue to the success and the mcreatc in the
number of murals, the artists started a business
painting murals They hope cities, businesses
and private individuals will commission more
work Murals are profitable to businesses. Stoll
said, because thev attract customers
it
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Meeting for members
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The Fifth AnnuftJ Expo Center Travel Fair
and Summer Opportunities Exposition con-
cluded yesterday in Ackerman Union's Grand
Ballroom after a two-day run, with an citi-
mated 3,000 people having attended. The
exposition's purpose was to bring as many
resources as possible under one roof for
students planning to travel this summer.
The expoftHipn included over 70 exhibiu
representing the tourist afeocies of foreign
countnes, as well aa iMitional and intematioafti
airlines. Greyhound, Amtrak and various
campus programs. According to Alexander
White, the dean of the ExpenroentAJ Programs
Opportunity Office, an estimated 5,000 students
and faculty members will go overseas this
summer
Harrington
(Continued from Page 4)
York administrations arc re-
sponsible for **hiding the crisis
from the citizens.*' they arc not
rcsppnsibJe for the crisis itself
be 4»aid~
"Our (New York] tax base
has left town.** Harrington
said, rcfcrrmg to the- situation
where "blue collar workers and
^%hitc collar middle class work-
ers have moved out [of New
York)/- - ,
Technology
Since World War 11, there
has been more of an increase
in technology "m the fields
than in the factories," Har-
rington said "Technology paid
for by federal subsidies," are
controaed by such politicians
as James O EastUnd. who
works on the Senate Agricul-
tural Committee and subsidizes
"about $100,000 a year, to his
own farms"
Harrington reiterated. "Gov-
ernment has failed in America.
It creates more problems than
they solve " As a solution to
government failures Harring-
ton advocated government
gaining "control over the cor-
porate sector " One way to
begin achieving this would be
electing a Democratic prcsH_
dcni. he said
Full employmenl*
There must be a' "demand
for full employment," Harring-
ton said. He added that it is no
longer enough for politicians
to say they are for full em-
ployment but they must men-
tion specific bills, intending to
create more jobs. An example
of a politician who just
promises is President Ford, he
said According to Harrington.
*Ford claims, *No level of
unemployment is acceptable to
me"
Harrington advocaied sup-
port of the Humphrey-Hawkins
bill, introduced in Congress
m 1975. which states "if the
pnvate economy does not give
a worker a job, the public
economy must." he said This
bill can be fiiianced by a "full
employment economy" which
means, "more and more 900^
and services." he added.
Harrington said unemploy-
ment in the United States "is
twice as high as unemployment
found in European capitalism "
He said in Sweden unemploy-
HKnt IS "under two per cent"
while m West Germany it ii
^about five per cent " Har-
rington said a high employ-
ment rate is only "necessary in
i^profoundh stupid capitalist
•ocietv."
Law advice for
econ students
Advice for economics ittj-
dents interested in pursuing
» law career will be given by
UCLA kw professor Gerald
Wright and economics pro-
fcw§m Harold-^ Demsetz at
aoon t«iiiy in GSM 12M.
The event is sponsored by
Omicron Delu Epsilon, the
campus economics honor
society, and admission is
free to the public.
Derby Day
story flawed
In Monday*! Daily Bruin
t incorrectly Unted that
the Alpha Phi sorority W9m
tiK SifOMi CM Din%y Dny
The overmll contest was won
by the Alpha Deha Pi so-
rority.
Noon concert
The Eskees*
A noon concert featuring
the rock group The Es-
kecs,** a trio leaving on a
nfttiofutl tour April 24, will
perform today at noon at
Janss Steps. Admission is
free and the concert is spon-
sored by CAC-SLC
TYPEWRITER
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Guns: the shadow of death
By Parke K. Skehon
(idkor\ noto; SMlon is a p/itfosep^y ma/or and is the coordinator
jf UCLA tor the Coalition tor Handgun Control).
On April 19, ^le Dsiiy Bruin prir^ted an article to the literary
Ulents of Mr. lacque Wood This wearisome iteration of the
nnindleu dnvel foster^ by the NRA i^nd other such irresponsible
froups sariamly misn pfiatiited the initiative drive sponsored by the
Coalition for Handgurv Control. I thail use th«s opportunity to sec
the record straight.
1% appears evident that Mr Wood has not taken the time to
familiarize himself with the contents of our initiative. Me attempts to
prove that our efforts are futile because "gun registration la%vs 9re a
farce and unconstitutional." I am quite willing to concede the
farcical nature of handgun registration laws, which, incidently, is
why our Coalition advocates the immediate and total ban of
handguns in California — with specified exceptions Furthermore,
his constitutional argument is based upon pure fallacy and
convenient distortion of fact. The Second Amendment states A
well regulated militia. Mug nacessary to the security of a free state,
the right of the people to keep »nd be^r arms, shall not be
infringed." The Supreme Court has ruled several times (notably U.S.
vs. Cruikshank. 92 U.S. 542 and re Ramiriz 193 Cal 633) that this
""i^'" »* limited specifically to the arming of a well-regulated
militia" and has ne^et upheld the NRA contention that a personal
right IS involved. Even the NRA faa Book concludes that the
constitutional argument is of "limited practical utility
The arguments presented by Mr Wood that managed to
transcend acrimony and invective were of a self-contradictory
nature. In the first case he questioned the ability of the public to
deal intelligently with lacitiaiion presented to it via initiative "We
are a democracy If our elecfed officials do not pass the laws needed
then throw the rascals out." he contended Later on he bemoarted
the fact that those selfsan^ legislators had passad "KMne 40
laws .restricting the carrying, use, purchase, firing, etc of guns."
His whole line of reasoning seems yotally devoid of logic If the
citizenry is so stupid ("Square as the idiot box they watch," to use
his terminology), what guarantee is there that they will be capable
of electing sagacious officials? Perhaps Mr Wood would like to
relieve us of this right as well
Unfortunately, the NRA (which Mr Wood informs us is not a
"bunch of stupid killers") has sub|ected the Will of the maiority by
shafting rwscent handgun control legislation, thus precipitating this
initiative drive. The initiative:^ one of the few opportunities voters
have of experiencing true participatory democracy; and attempting
to use It for the public good rnmst be seen by the informed voter as
damocratic in the best laiiia of the term.
The tin>e has come to abandon romantic r>otions of America as a
frontier society where all owned har>dguns and rK>r>e were sa^e
Atfi^ic^ns own far and away nrK>re handgunv per capita than any
other nx>dern industrial sacitCy and has far and away the highest
homicide rate. For example, Engiarni, which virtually outlawed all
handguns in the 1920's — we own 27 times more handguns pm
capita than Great Britain — has a homicide rate from firearms that is
1 per cent of ours Tokyo, a city of 11 million, reported one
n
r
I
I
lUffidgun tie9th in 1971. During the same year. Loi Anaalas County.
population 7 million, tallied 306. Private possession of handguns ire
iHegal in \9f>Mn (statistics from ISM National Commmee on the
Causes of ViolcfKie).
The facts show that while handgur>s account for only one-third of
the firearms in this country, they account for Si par Cant of total
llawiicides, and 86 per cent of all deaths by fiiaainw. ftirthernrHKe.
handgurts are not good protection against burglaries of the home.
Only 1-2 par cent of all Hoase burglaries result in the cnmir^al being
Hogpad bf a gun. Indeed, for every burglary prawanted by the use
of a gun. 4 family iiitiiifcari »re killad in arguments or
SMMcaily speaking, the house with a han^pan is more
than the home without an^ Aiwioit 3 out of every 4 homici
Bamniitted by "law abiding" citizens during arpimants with family
ar other acquaintances (197S Fil crime statiitict). Mr Wood's
ppapasal for dealing with this trani^ (requiring completion al a
oaursa on gun safety before allowing an ir>div»dual to purchase
Hreirrm) completely ignores this fact.
It would be very ^asy to continue arauing in lavor of our
propotition indefinitely but for the limitad space allotted me. In
eandyiiofi, I wmiM Wke to invite all UCLA students to :iig^ our
initiative arni coaaliir fupponinf our efforts. It is time f^ put a
canduihia atid to the violence that proliferates in our ladety. We
must control the haridgun
can ba a lot iQUQhar than H might look.
The good the bad and Santa Barbara
By Peyton Mason
(Editor's note: Mason is a fophorrwre hi^tury
ma/or here).
On most any college campus one is likely to
?rve i Wide variety of. ideologies »n6 life-
styles in visible ar\d vocal opposition Take a stroll
up Bruin Walk Openly 'competing for otjr
collective sympathy, spare change signatures. ar\d
souls Mre a heterogeneous gallimaufry of You^J^
Socialists, gay student representatives. Gallo wine
boycotters. vulgar gurus, bold girls for Hayden.
and those ubiquitous non-sequiturs. lews for
Jesus. Dialectics don't seem out of place here But
on a volleyball court?
Those in attendance at last Wednesday night's
voMarball contest between UCSB and UCLA at
Pauley Pavilion waraa't just watching a clash
halween two powerful inter-conference rivah.
According to UCSB's Gary Sato, quoted in the
Daily Brum, and several other Santa Barbara
players along with coach Cus Mee. quoted in the
ipring issue of Volleyball Magazine, it was a
symbolic struggle pitting ies pfinntives ^. the
benign Gauchos of the mellow countenance,
representing clean air, mother's milk, plain
yogurt, and cool — against the Park Lord of the.
South — the paiion air-breathing, manufactured-
plastic. baby-grabbif>g Brums of UCLA. According
to Sato and the others, a victory would be
vindication for the "laid-back" and presumably
"haisle'-free lifestyle of pastoral Santa Barbara. In
the past all this had a slightly appealing Tolkien-
esque niavete about it but more recently the trite
putdowns of UCLA and what it "represents"
more dosely ressemble the priggish provincialism
of a small town Babbitt
UCLA doesn't rcpraiaiit LA. and even if it did
— so what? Are we to be viltified or even
atMdmed tor inhabiting los Angeles? I thihk not
LA, stewing m smog and self-consciousness,
shuddering upward under the weight of Dinah
Shore kisses,, game-show spontaniety, overnight
successes, and Akron kitsch, is ftiM a dynamK,
immensely variegated, always interesting place to
be We bury our dead in tacky r>ecropolii. to be
sure, and often in leisur^^jjits and freeway
commuters lend to worrv morf about brown
spots on the dichondra than »he smog in the air
-^ but that's LA — shocking mad and madder
than evrr Evelyn Waugh and Nathaniel West
couldn't write about Santa Barbara Lew Archer
and Phillip Marlowe couldn'r live there I think
Santa Barbara is a charming, even idyNic spot, J*
once spent a delightful weekend at the Miramar
Mplel with a typewriter, pretending I was Somer-
set Maugham at the Cote d'Azur Lovely time
The town certainly doaos't earn any flip, hack-
neyed putdowns, but it seems our coiintry
COUSbM to the north are in danger of "kicking
back" into the infaNactuai tofpar of the 1950 s
Laid back " may well represent ^a feckless. IfTO's
decadence, buttraisad by vacuous cliches and the
illusion of no "hassles."
The pfawappaiatf. icltoibftcal ciash,-syi«ibolir or
otherwise, neyer threatened to transcend the
dimawsians of the volleyball court Wa^oesday
night Curiously, the Brum style of play seemed
dangerously laid-back " at times, while the
Gauchos scrambled with a frenzied agiltty that
would shanne the most nimble LA pa^astrian It
was an exciting exhibition of volleyball by both
teams with the Brums the victors in four tightly-
contested games
The Brum vict<>fy. I hope, hasn t paused any of
the Santa Barbarans, or Barbarians a^one court-
side wag put It. to abandon their rustic lifestyle; I
rather suspect it has heightened their disdain for
UCLA and all ♦♦ "represerHs" Damn shame.
really
Letters to the Editor
UCPD
It is my opinion, and probably
that of many other students as
well, that the University Police
are doing an incredibly inef-
ticitm iabi I'm or>ly speaking
from my own experiences so my
opinion may be slightly biased,
but from the information I've
gotten from other students it
can't be too far out of Ime
I transferred to UCLA about a
year ago. after two years at
anmikm unnrersity? During those
two years i r>evar had anything
sMian, nor had I had any trou-
ble dealing with thefr polka. In
year I've been here, I've had
70 tapes, a front bicycle wheel, a
gas cap and (after I goi a new
front wheel) a ten speed bicycle
stolen. Now maybe I iwt ran
mto some bad luck, but from
hearing other studems' expar-
lerKes I feel there has to ba a
more substantial reason. That
reason is the ^mHmakmnam of
the UPD.
When I reported my various
losses to the police I was treated
rudely and disrespectfully All I
enpected was a little courtesy.
instead I got screamed at f^an't
mk me why), had to wait' while
the cops in back, were evrhang
inf( siCKies and was treated in a
"r>oncaring atmosphere I rea-
lize thai the UPD drah with
n%any reports vimilai n> mir>e
everydav bui aftf*r v ou hnd
some prized pov»«»ssion ripped
off. v<HJ don f ru'fd to he in-
timalalad or insybad h» wime
^M>lHe offM er
Gary h
Psychology /ffliOc al
Abortion
In spite of Oav^ La fiance an
acorn if net a tree, and a fetus is
not a "pOiMiii Unfortunately our
n^md far languagt tUnd cqm-
munKation forces us lO Mak in
terms of arbitrary categories
which are very miilaa^iaf.
There is an infinite spactnan of
(CuiiasiiaoPtMtttl
*
^1
M
•r
i4etters, letters, letters, letters, letters, letters^
I
n
■ir;^>''
■T^T
J (CofitiniMd fron Page 9)
Spdrticui^n, there are no uni-
versal. Abortion is often mur-
^ d^r. But usually it is done in self
^fense. Male heterosexuals
have a long way to go. I hope
^hey wake up soon. Or at least
stop having their nightm^r«»s.
me and my arrow
Bectians
. Tinie ^nd lime again, we as
*4 students and BOtamial voters in
the United Stales, hear the cries
of others. "Volt, ft really does
count. Well, that time has
conne again for the UCLA cam-
pus But in ail sincerity, for
someone to tell you to vote and
thefi mume you know why to
vole is wrong.
For just a few moments, let
me answer the skeptics at UCLA
^ho say, I'm not gni^ to vote
in student government electiom,
btmie it makes no diffeiwice/'
Well, the fact is. it does. Maybe
you have heard, all UCLA stu-
dents pay five dollars a quarter
for student governmom. Mul-
tiply that by three quarters and
then by almost 30,000 students
and you realize that student
government spends almost a half
a million dollars each year.
Since It's your money, why
not have a say, in one way or
another, in the way its speru.
Your vote is the simplest way to
give your input. The other ex-
treme is to run for an office
yourself. Realistically, no one
would want everyone to run for
in oHicc, but it certainly tt a
way to becomg extrmwiy in-
volved.
Just in case you have re^ this
far, let me tell you some of the
placfli that this half a million
dollars have been spent
r- Dozens of plane tickets
were p^id for so that students
could travel to Sacramento ind
Washington to lobby state and
federal legislators on student
issues.
—Thousands of dollars were
paid to nationally and inter-
nationally known speakers so
that they could i4>pe9r on cam-
pus. Remember hearing Con-
gresswoman Chisholm. Ralph
Nader, Alan King?
— Hundreds of doHan were
spent on putting together the
Experimental College — free
and innovative classes available
to anyofie on campus. ' * "^
— Thousands o4 dollars were
spent for community service
projects — tutoring projects,
protKU 10 aid juvenile delin-
quents in the community, and
many oiOfO;
— Hundrodi of dollars have
been spent so that those dining
in the coop can enjoy enter-
taining performances as part c4
the Coop-Series — just to mon-
tion a few. thiiifi. ,
I hope that I haven't given
you the impression tfyt Student
Government is a money hungry
bunch of political science ma-
jors, because it is really much
more Believe it or not, people
really do gain a sense of ac-
complishment from working in
student government — helping
students, the community and
themselves.
"^ The moral of this long scen-
*no» that your vote in the
upOMMng Student Government
eloctiom does count. For the
sake of thtoe who work in stu-
dent government the y^M
rotMd, please don't be put o*f
by over-zealous colleagues o4
yours pushing their friends lit-
erature at you on Bruin walk or
a, candidate coming to shake
your hand while you ar^ eetine
lunch in Royce Quad. So. let me
make that fame cry that others
make, "Vote, it really doei
count"
AM Director
Write.
/ . .
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NO 4.2ldf
A new Dim by
••tywfff Miy
PIITANT THUNOM
plyk
TKe
0nt/0rt/ai nm0nb
Fickolt
Goyen*t novel, TW
of BtmHi (fvoeiitly re-
in both hardcover and
fNiperback editions by Random
Home and Book works) and
his Tke CiMiHii Slotkt of
Willlaai Goyen (Doubleday)
five voice (o the past, and in
so doing restore the souJ and
meaning !<► Jiomscj, families,
places and people.
Goycn (talking from his new
home m HollywMi) grew up
in East Texas, a land of pine
woods and rolling hi lis. As a
Rice University undergraduate,
Goycn began to write stories
tad fcnd in large quantities
He found his new-found artis-
tic consciousness to be both a
boon and a hindrance. The
aoBBBBory disunce of the anist«
the cold eye with which he
flMHt oteerve those he cares to
write about, alienated him for
a time from his family and
neighbors. Thus Goyen*s ttory
repeau the paradigm of the
artist who must leave home in
order to find his way bock.
The Home of Brcatli can be
rn as Goyen*s attempt to find
way back fn this novel the
reader learns of the places,
voices and stories which com^
prisod Goyen's childhood The
reader learns of a town called
Charity, imagines the river
which flows like time through
the town, apd hears the voices
of the house of breath — epic
voices of those who endure.
But through it all there* is one
Novelist Goyen lcx>ks for meaning In memon^
novel Tki» r^ ^^^^^-^ii^. ^ — ^
II I
author who recalls in order to
restore
Goyen's novel is a fmished,
polished imagr a symbol
which unites matter and mean-
ing. There are two final
messages — the book serves as
a mirror in which the author
his own face, his identity.
feeb the artist is the prtett of
contemporary cuhure ^'because
he bnnp OKaning to people's
lives. Through remembering,
recalhng. riBttonng. he bnnp
salvation in Um Mate of freeing
himself and others from the
dark forces. The artist is a man
who remembers for his own
and it shows how the moments^^ race, for humanity," he said
when humans reach beyond
themselves to participate in the
divine arc those moments when
we demonstrate ou** capacity to
love.
Talking with Goyen about
his books, one can sense that
he is a profoundly emotional
man, a m^n deeply committed
to his vocation as a artist. He
Memory as a means of
ng comprehension and
meaning to life thematically
unifies the entire body of
Goyen's work *Wc must rea-
lize," he said^i^^t memory is
a great life force and that any
fKat powerful life force has
hoth elements to it of feajr and
terror and beauty and freedom
So to write of our
mory is a terrifying experience,
and exhausting. Sometimes
you'd rather do almost ail^
thing is the world than go
through it, but in foing
through It, it's the most free-
ing thing in the world, just the
most tremendous freedom —
absolute release.-
When asked if writing, out of
a memory was a freeing ex-
perience in the sense of alle-
viating a psychological burden,
he answered, **Ye$, of course,
but also in terms of finding, a
mining. What we're tryrng to
do m hf e IS to find a meaning:
otherwise lifers an insanity.
Man^ people say there is no
Phoiofept^ T«m
ng And what the artist
is doing IS searching out that
meaning That's a hard, hard
thing to do, but when it comes
clear, God, there's just nothing
like It. And it's everything,
every sensation and feehng," he
said.
, Goyen feels thit working
with memory, working with
one's memories, can leod to
effective action to control orie*s'
own hfe in the future. '^But,
there arc people who don't
agree with that People today
advocate forgetting the past I
used to go into rages over
people telling me that. They
just hadn't the slightest idiea of
what I was involved in. Every-
body ikt down and telli yoa
what happened to them in the
pa»t; particuUrty a writer.
What they're saying, of course,
" -^y ^ ^^^ ^^^^^^ record thu
experience, if you could under-
stand It, you could change
people. J would hope each
person would be dHM^ed in
remembenng.-
Many of the short stories in
The CoBtctad Short Storto of
)5f**"" Goyen ukc the form
Of remembrances, while oIlMB.
are autobiographical All arc
written in a lyrical style which
involves the reader's cmotiont;
Goycn makes us care about his
characters hooaaie he caniu
deeply
Realizing the short story
wnter is an endangered species
Goyen suted Tm honored to
he a writer of short stones It's
a beautiful and wonderful and
classic form To write a short
itory now is like writing
•oa«as for the violin Tve
studied that violm for years,
•hout 30 actually, and now I
can play some pieces on it that
I'm really proud to play "
Concerning his style, he added,
"Whatever is truly ours l^t
value, is worth something We
are worthy and our work is
worthy if it is good work.*
Goyen's work is indeed
worthy. It deserves to be read
and reread. 4t does what only
great hterature cna do ._ |t
teaches humankind what it .
iMans to be human. It restores
the soul.
By Howard Posncr
Virgil Thomson shifted his weight in the chair as his somber
face cracked in a wry smile
Tm called a neo-Romantic, but terms like that arc uist
trademarks for music appreciation daatcs."
Virgil Thomson does not like to be categorized At least, after
a 60-year career as composer, critic and author, he refuses to
categorize or he categorized in interviews with collegiate
journalists.
Thomson will lecture today at noon in Schoenberg Hall on
-Opera in the VemacuUr-- and the art of combining words and
music He has had ample experience in both, colUboraiing with
Gertrude Stem on a number of operas in the I930's He was also
music critic for the Sew York Herald Tribune from 1940 to 1945
and as such was an influential audience But Thomson finds that
there are far too many words about music used and those words
MTt far too important.
"The humanities, especially m universities, suffer from too
much verbalization Verbalization is just fine for literature but in
the auditory and visual arts it can be quite a nuisance"
He finds that words and explanations are what gives academia
a bad name.
•-Universities tend to be more interested in method than in
result. Consequently the word 'academic' is often applied
4iirfavorahly to their music, meanmg that the means em pTovaffife
complex all out of proportion to the end achieved "
Thomson at the age of 80 is a droll, round, diminutive man
acgumentative and hard of hearing (even with a hearing aid) a
fowhwiation that caa be very disconcerting He is aho given to
sweeping generalizations about anything and everything - the
same feaeralizations he made in pnnt 40 years ago He hat
chaagod a very few of his opinions And he doesn't hke to
explain himself. ^
"Don't atk me any question beginning with the word ^whv '
There arc very few things m the world that can be answered bv
questions beginning with Vhy.*"
The elimination of 'why' from his professional vocabuhu> hat
saved Thomson a great deal of trouble dealing with some of his
more amusing dichotomies. For example, though he hat attarted
that criticism is an aihaolutely integral part of the moaHOl
experience, he himself geu nbihing out of criticism of his own
work.
-It ukes three people to make music properly — one man to
write It, another to piny it, aad a third to criticize it," wrote
Thomson in The Stmie ^ Vuiir (1939) He still hpldt that belief
in principle.
.t «'^^"^' *''''*'' ^""^ •^ '"'"^ ^^ ^^ peaches, you
^^^^J^^r^toTK to eat them." he said Tatiday night in his
„ --V^ ^^^ . "^ • • -^ — "- — — •'••-* I wtt» invofvca in. every- ine soul.
critic Thompson : anything but why
-MMmkc h hi 4 very dHd period.
iy^ayto'C^MT
But W reacts to printed criticism.
critic, much as any other composer v^ould
"if I get a had review, I'm coavi need that the reviewer is an
Ignorant pipsqueak and probably in the pay of my enemies
"You don't learn about your oun music from reviews You
learn things ahoiit your own music from experiences with it in
front of the public, or sometimes from doae personal conver-
sations with someone who understands it. Reading reviews*
particularly of your own music vou're not giving yourself
instruction You read them to tee whether they're favorable or
unfavorable aad how long they are
•W yiou're depaMaat on newspapermen for inttniction m your
art, you're no damn good anyway r
Thomson himteif thrived as a acwspapana
he enjoyed writing for dcadhnei - lust at he emayw comi
under deadhaet Impoted hy cowmissioas and gran^
-Deadhnat aie piac pectiiire Fhev rc ,„ opportunity "it's like a
prcfhaacy — a^aiDiata ffete [Htgaant and she know^ she's goiM
to have a bahy in nine months. She can stracture her life around
bvcn oow« Thomfion doesn't aiind dispeatiat'frac advior hy
•j=t — ;rr
'ind mis tnteresting an^
<<n interesting piaee out of
itir luhirif "4' <♦»"''
his own experience as think you'll find it vcr\ hard i<> r^ ^
It,;* he warned after an abortive discussion of musical styles
\ ' 4^ *^^^ ""^ """"^ ■• ■ "^^^ ^**^ <**y» 4o€»A\ appeal much
to Thomson. i_.
-There's nothing going on now that wasn^t going on 40 years
ago If It was original then, it's original now," he pontificated
Music is in a very dull period In fact, so is poetry and painting
International organizations, politics and the arts of war that's
^ what occupies people's minds these days. We're m the trough of a
curve as far as music is concerned."
Part of the problem, asserts Thomson in another oi hit
Paradoxes, is that there is too much music.
-There is snnply too much of it in the world for anyoiv lo^
keep his mind on. The constant presenoc of organized musical
aound m buses and bathrooms and elevators and hou«t — it
such that even people with an elaborate musical education and a
propensity for it can't follow it with any freshness of mind
Tve traveled around the worW on musical errands and noticed
that Furope and North Amenca arc pretty much brutalized
about this whole thmg."
He did note that of all the cities m the world. Tokyo and
Bueno* Aires seemed to have the musical freshness of mind
lacking elsewhere. But he didn't explain why or what brought to
the conclusion.
-Music has become ^nuch more an addiaion than a nourish-
ment.-
The problem is not so much with recording "Recording i.s
rather good becaate you don^t have to pby the record You can
stack records oa the shelf and consuN them like books. The
constant pressure of radio is the trouble We're surrounded by a
cotisunt low hum that we jatc caa't concentrate on
Thomson feels that the surfeit is harmful regardlot of the type
of music or the quality
-ff you overeat, the remedy it to undereat. not >ust to utc
better stuff
He toes evidence ot the musical malaise m the pr^. **Noat of
the music reviewers like any of the new music,** he pronoumped in
a typically Thomsonian generalization. ''They're picky and
troubktaaK. But all the ballet reviewers jutt tove the ballets they
toe. There's aa appetite still for daach^**
One of the reatons ThooMaa has come to Los Kt^ritn (he livct
in New York) is the perforaanoe by the Erick Hawkins Oance
Company of ''Hurrahr a piece chaMopaphtd hy Hawkins to
Thomson's Second Symphony (perfonHd SaiWdhy night in
Roycc Hall with the Americaa '"Yoach Symphony.) Another
ThaaaK>n piece about George WashiafMe and the cherry tree,
composed m period style wat onginally on the program but has
since been rephMad.
Thomson has devdapad some strong opiaioat ia 30 yaart of
listening Mi,,wrftini and wntina ahaai jaatie.
everything except ''whyT perhaps becatise he
the world on its own tfrms. with no questions
to
Manns Westwood I
UrSTICK
l:3a. 3:3a. S:30, 7 30. f 30
Manns Westwood II
UfSTICK
3:30. 4:30, 4:30. 3:30, 10:30
Manns Westwood III
TAKING OPF (I)
% 4, «. 3. 10
-^i
An Anha ThmaUm
Meralta
9632 Cu«v«f tKd
CtfW«r City
UfS MY PATHtl
TOLD MI (PC)
CaN
uoo THf STOtY OF AOfLE H
for tKow liMM
Yadibi
Monica I
1332 2nd StTMt
S«nlo
45IM
SKYRIOitS
WW. AND THE DIXTE
DANCi KINGS
Ttmatrm
AAonica II
Sonto
4J1-M
HBTEt STRKT
THE STOtY OP AOELE H
tbPOXTaOT
TPfafrm
Music Hdll
9036 WIMWr* tlvd
S9v«r^ H«Ms
274>6t«9
THEtOMAMTK
engushwoMan
__ AMARCOtD
SNifH4/3tiiipiioii't PACI TO FAC8
Morm'i
Natforval
1092S LmdbfMli Oh^
tAO NEWS tEAES
^ 4, t. 3. 10
Midwifht Sh*wt Pn 4 Sat
4/ S3 lH»«fiwm«tiMf
flM
Theatre
l/K
11272 to«
27t^37f
479sata
4/SS
Pontages
N»S|(ihbJ atVmm
4«971t1
■•••••• Owvtin HsiiliVMNi
AU. THE PtESIDENT'S
mtM — PC
13:30. 9:«0. t:3e, •;«. 10:3*
M « IM I3:4S
h
Picwood
JIN
Un
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772t239
GABLE AND lOMBAED
SUNSHMEEOYS
Ploza
477-4)097
479-9077
TAXI MIVM
Reaent
1049
ONiRfWOVBITNi
CUCKOaSNBT
Royal
H:
477 S3tl
AWAY . .
Oidy 1 loMn A Ipm 3
fhMaf 10
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\"
«M«
m
^
Toho
La Brea
l0 Imo Ot Minth
Wf 4 2342
SEVEN SAMUtAI
plus
ASSASSINATION
UA Cinema
Center I
10ta9 W«Nwor«*i ▲«•
474-4154
SKY RIDERS
3:20. 4:S0. 10;20
TAKE A HARD RIDS
1:m 5:00, %:90
UA Cinema
Center II
Wif
474-41*5
•mi 9mmfum Dscmi
THE 4AAN WHO SKIED
"EVEREST
2, 3:40, S:20, 7:00. 0:40. 1020
UA Cinemd
Center III
W«Nw<Kth A««
KING Of HEARTS
2, 4, 4. %, 10
474-3643
UA CINEMA
CENTER IV
ton* Waltwortt) Ay*
Wntarood 474-4IM
lOaCYHOfttOt
PICTURE SHOW
a. 4, «, t, 10
UA
WESTWOOD
10tt7 lindbrodk
WMtwood
477-0575
THE ADVENTURE OF
SHERLOCK HOLMES'
SMARTER BROTHER
M-M ^ily 6:30, 4:10, 9:S5
S«t A Swffi 2:00, 3;40, 5:25, 7:10
4:30, 10:90
r>
VA(iJABOND
2509 WtUhir*
3472171
¥99^00 DfVWfl ^VtfflFSl
Hrntun Oahngon * londatpli ScaM
SHi (1935)
THE OLD DARK HOUSE (i933)
THEATRE
VANGUARD
9014 M*iroM A^
A
M.cho*i ONEPROSE SERIES
(VImmi t« D*nf«it V*uf«f )
to. ^n9«tM 276 9987 TuM April 27 7:30 pm ^nly
$2.00 G*ff«*rol AdmiMi*ffi $1.50 Stud*fif« wiHi School ID
Monm
Village
961 ftroitton
W««twood 478 0576
THE DUTCHESS AND THE
DIRTWATER FOX
a. 4. *, •. 10
T
.._i_
VAN HAUH
MANOALA
TK« Troy
SUNDAY
S300 cosh
KENTUCKY FRIED
THEATRE
1 0303 W ^o llvd
356^2663
th« bo«t el KfJ%
lo«t 5 yoor«
BEATING A DEAD HORSE
»T. A Wf i 00 4 10 00
TIMOUON SUNDAY AMNl 25
ART BLAKEY 4
THE JAZZ MESSENGERS
W«d Apr 24 - Sufi M«y 2
I Tho Ori«mot SovonHi Son"
WaUE DIXON A THE
CHICAGO ALLSTARS BLUES BAND
%
30 ^ER AVE
5lo%»d Men Trig
rrr?Il
-TtL .IT^ fi<H1
Student Regent.
(Continutd from poge J)
Thi4 year*! finalifts were chooeA in the lame
way Gmlizio laid this year's nomineet are Steve
Wade (UCLA), Dann Pcoplci (Berkeiely), and
Anfela Black well (Berkelely). The deauon as
to which will become next year's Student
Rcfent will be made m May.
Oat volt
Galizio explained that the Student Reftot
has one vote just as regular Regent memben.
He stressed that the Regent's vote was a
representative opinion vote and not a represent-
ative vote. Galizio distingutihed between the
two by saying that the Student Regent answers
to no one in the UC student system
The Student Regent does not have a con-
stituency. Galizio said the student acl4 with
respect to his own feelings, not as a sounding-
board for UC studenu.
''A strettful, articulaie person is needed for
the position,** accordifig to GoUzio. He said the
Student Regent must work with many in-
fluential persons including the Governor of
Cahfoniia.
Regent VIFs
Mock said she feels ihe has been a meful
Escorts. . .
(Continued fron page 3)
Moss and Pembroke, who designed the program, said that the
details have not yet been worked out. But, they said, they plan to
staff the patrol with approximately 30 UCLA studenu, both
men and women, who will work 4-« hour shifts for about
$3.25/ hr
Ten to 12 students will work in pairs from about 7:30 pm-12
pm Mots and Pembroke hope to equip tke ttudcnts with
specially designed parkas, flashlights and walkie-talkies.
The students will go through a month-long training penod,
according to Pembroke. '*We1l inform the students as to their
role to provide service to the community, and that they are not
law enforcers," said Pembroke. "We'll show them self-defense
technkjues," he added. ' .^ j,
Pembroke said he will diicourage students from taking any
action in situations where a crime is uking place. Instead, the
students will report any suspicidus actions to the police through
the walkie-talkies. , — - '.,:.. ,Z, * -
Mo44 and Pembroke view ihe student patrol as a ''buffer"
between police and students, and hope it will improve the
fdationship -ta^cc^') the two groups.
Pembroke said he believes the student patrol will relieve the
campus police force of 3(M0 per cent of their work. "It should
deter a lot of crime," he said.
part of Regent meetings. She ako i^id she does
not feel intimidated by Regent VIPs and noted
that the governor rarely appean at Regenu
meetings.
"1 have aU the powers of any other Regent**
Mock taid, explntning that she feels her
status does not hinder her work on the
of Regents.
There are approximately 23 voung members
on the Board of Regents. Mock said she
thought her vote served to enhghteti other
Regent menahan at to student feelings. She
does not try to vote for the entire UC student
system she said, but attempu to if%h all sides
of an issue and then make a logical and
rational choice from the evidence put before
her.
Mock first became interested in the Board by
attending their meetings as a reporter for the
UC Saau Barhnra Daify Nexus She said the
had kept up with Regent business and applied
for the seat feeling she would make a respoaa-
ible Student Regent. Currently enrolled at
Berkeley, as a graduate student. Mock will torn
over her position to the mtw Student Reornt in
July.
Carnap Essay
prize offered
The Rudolph Camap
Prize Essay Competition for
1975-1976 it being offered
by the department of philos-
ophy here. The winner of
the contest will be awarded
$100. ■"- P'-
The competition it open
to all students who are cur-
rently candidates for degrees
at UCLA, ^'^^s/? %■ J
The prize wiB be »m0M
to an ettay of 5.000 ll^rds
or Iet4 OB any philosophical
topic. Entries, typed and
double-spaced, may be
turned in to the graduate
secreury of the philosophy
department, Dodd 329, on
or before May 14, 1976.
n
Nonverbal communication
I ■
Sexual cues in walking
Students who noticeably shift their buttocks
froflA side to Side yifhcn they walk could
p044ibly be communicating their sexual avail-
ability, according to psychology professor
Albert Mehrabian
Mchrahinn, an authority on nonverbal com-
munication; said that "by moving the sexual
parts of the hody they are attracting attention
to those parts, and this connotes their sexual
availnbility and interest.**
Using his three independent dimensions of
emotional inlercourse pleasure-displeasure,
level of arousal, and dominance-subnutfiveness!
MehraMn explained that much can be in^
ferred by the way people walk
In general, **a8ymmeiric posture, such as
crossed legs and reclining body suggests that
the individual feels dominant and relaxed."
while jymmetrical posture, 'Mike that of a
soldier at attention** relays tension and sub-
missiveness, explained Mehrabian.
Specifically, people who walk with their Ucet
Ray Bfadbury.
downward tend to feel dejected Conversely
Mehrabian added, striding with large and
bouncy steps usually conveys a plaa4aat out-
look on hfe #
Meek people can be seen scuffing iheir feet
when thev walk, while those who pnnde atonc
the campus with an overly-straight back and
upturned nose may be indicating their self-
pride
Prior to examinations, much tension can he
seen by the way people walk IndividuaK who
walk with short, quick steps or with their arms
stuck to their sides can be found to be
extremely nervous many times, the person with
a casual hand in the pocket has everything
under control A more dominant gesture, hands
on the hips, is negative. Mehrahui|i added. **as
It turns people off**
Mehrabian said individuals who walk with
hooks pressed against their chests convey a
"hint of fear," as this is a protective measure.
—Jeffrey Brown
wntten a story 32 years
taring that most of the Blacks
would be out of the south,
Bradbury explained, people
would haveietid "impossible."
and the story could not have
been piibtished due to pohtupal
pressure.
Dieney worid
V In two weeks he will travel
south to Florida The Di&ney
people, who should, in Brad-
bury's opinion, "uke ov^r the
world," want to build a proto-
type town of the future, Brad-
bury said. "We'll look at the
town, see if tt works. Some^ of
the biggest names will be there
to design the town.**
The writer looked around
the room. "You get the hell
out of here and one or two of
vou change the
hf NV
As Students crowded around
Bradbury, holding out books
to be autographed, one girl
taid to the writer. "You really
opened my eyes this evening."
"Pm glad," Bradbury said,
putting his arms around the
Ijirl, "Let me hug you "
Student protest. . .
(Continued from Page 5) .
politically left,'* Alexander said "But now. political beliefs are
not obvious because there are no viable issues they can pin them
on."
One issue lopming overhead is the environment "Earth day
was the most-attended demonstration." Alexander A stm pointed
out, "but they did mot point iher linger at the proper institutions "
The Astins ai»o discounted the idea that students today arc
more concerned with gradei^ and degrees than with protesting
"^hilc we uke them (protest) for granted." Helen Astin said.
**tleie 14 wSM anxiety in students " The grade-degree anxiety
might itself become an issue "
FUN PARTY AT
tsnei
^/"y
'ff
u.
Sunday, May 9
4:00 - Midnight
$5.25
c A.»r u-v^^v r
■ U'V** r »ji)< • ■iiis
Admissjon to Disneyland, unlimited use of ail
adventures & attractions. FREE PARKING.
'tmmm M nil S*rvtc« C«nt«r. Kvrckhoff 140, whN* th«y last
Classic pure oott<m
knit shirts. . .warm
weather favorites
The warm weather perennial returns.
1. coiafortabk and ahaarbcnt all
shirts in shoit sleeve
collar and placket front
A truly tasteful silaEtioB of all
duren and lisle in ragimeatai type
as well at solid
la ' '
VAVCmH
•14^ •IS" and ^16^^
•»
in cottcHistfeich. .solid
t PDA TED rilADITIQNAl
VAUGHN
AT SATSn 04TB
OANK CaKDfT CABOS
WPtrOMFD
'tti,. Mi^' t-
itt
r,
n
CLUB GUIDE CONTINUED
TOM *^SH ond
USAMACGtfOOB
P«i A^l 33 a imt A^il 34
S 00 10 44
f S SO
leUBI
aUhalM
iMllllIU
niwr
fMSt
MIAIMC* AaMSraONG
«AUA TIM
u
C.tll AHS HAf^.l(m MANIMH INS B<M>kS AM» HM OKHS
April 23-24
EiCHICANO
April 34-37
JAMES
PIUS
STEPHEN A THE
WILOBOYS
April 3g-3f
QUICK
CRACK THE
SKY
4S4-2200
(i/D H
^^^^^^ ifc^ HeHyw<
THE STONER
2113 %kfr,m< Av«
W«tt L A 90075
477.7339
%mf 4 Win*
^ood, Gomm% 4 el
Indoor Spom
1/2 gM Nffh W
TROUBADOUR
9041 S^iif MofMco Slvd
L A 77a.41«4
„ April 22 • AprU 25
DORSEY ftURNETTE
AND
KENNY SERRATT
^^9 ^wp^WBJw jgipv
Lunch dtnnmt ott«r tho<^f« •ncor»«
f votic cocWtQil ¥with Con«on««« Cutvmi
FOB TMOSt WHO APPUtCIAIE QUAltTY
ioO WfSTWOOO ilVD 4 glQCHi SOuIM O
CHANS GARDEN <-«..««. .--».«^-.c«««.
104SS bw4>fii Or W«twd 90034 iM«M*f«i Chinm— fmmd. %mm mmd Wtn*
[m%t%0 479-77t5 479.77S4 N^ Pwriitnt •♦ Wtwd C^w»f 4onii #1 Amfw
GYPSYS INDIAN RESTAURANT
'»•««►•• Op«n *-lO .
v^
[JUNIORS
TMt aOLL4 HOVCf Of DCLICATE444MS
•••••rood H9mr Pko
tSTt WMlMoa aivd
4rS-S7T1
14444
unch $3 00 $2 25v |2 50
Minn»i S2JrXS4.2S. 15 25
474 094S W W Vflloqr
jUFettt Swiss
»^ 9i^ - T«l 47S-«22a
C&munmnimi ll««l»u««nl
RLSTAl'RANT MIR Nl
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IM13 WWitiiin BU4 LA SaA-VlfO '•V ^"^ V
ia9t3 m Mm 3I«4 U 474 934 S I-h^. 4h
OTPoumi
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It
int
477^M7 82S-33S4
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$700 netted from goods
J
4
r
A SPRING FESTIVAL
DEDICATED TO
AMERICA'S BIRTHDAY
Thursday, April 22, 1976
Z.U'
AlTcltN
ALUMl
m with rjTibi iuii
i VUMLL iii>n4ii iisaeae
JNGE KtiKCKHOF
liiC«I(
Mllldlul
ROOM 35 17-— ' ■' "
• XX
esTTva.
inQr>
rnpr
Budi
KWWl
ROOM :M6n DICKSON ii/\il
1 hire' .
L^ciuiui I li^
romTDuf
til'ia Qu,
UC equipment audtioned
iy
DB Staff Writer
Last Saturday*! auction of
uncial med lott and found items
and surplus University equip-
nnent at the Horticulture Cen-
ter on Veteran Avenue netted
approximately S700, accordii^
to Ray Galiego of the Invest-
ment and Recovery
(IRF), organizers of the
tion.
The auction, which sold such
diverse items as IBM electric
typewriters, Monroe calcula-
tors, a Martin futtar, a cig-
arette rollmc w cfcinc and 10
How to Stop Smoking kits is
^rt of the IRP program to
'Rcover some value of goods
otherwise discarded, explained
Galiego
**We also have a paper re-
cycling program in which we
collect waste paper from many
UCLA departments, shred it
wmi sdl it to papier compan-
ies,** he aMed.
**Thc equipment we sold was
either too outdated to be use-
ful or too expensive to reno-
vate.** Galiego said.
The lost and found articles,
unclaimed for more than three
months, consisted of tiiflitches,
tooks, bnefcases^ athletic
equipment, umbrellas, ther-
moses, a three-foot Marlboro
clfwette pillow and just about
everything else you can lose
and have somebody else find
Bidding on textbooks was
high competitive, as many of
the 80 participants were stu-
dents and thus well acquainted
with the high resale value of
many of the
Successful bicl4ers purchased
golf clubs for 10 cents, bas-
ketballs for S3 and S5, a
squash racket for 40 cents aad
a bowhng ball for S5 All sales
were for cash only.
Bidding was especially spir-
ited on such Items as an RCA
TV ($85). the IBM typewriters
($90) and a Schwinn 10-speed
bicycle ($47).
Following the sale of the
bike, the auctioneer advised
the crowd that **the next item
is for those of you who missed
the bike sale.** He then held up
the next item - a pair of
heavy-duty chain shears.
Claims urban planner
Bus beats rail tranisit
By Joanne Eglash
DB Staff Writer
Martin Wachs believes that bus rapid transit
is a more effective solution for Los An|^eles*s
transportation problems than a rail transit sys-
tem
Head of the Urban Planning Procram in the
School of Architecture and U^bahl [Planning,
Wachs presented his paper to the Central City
Development Corporation Committee. He feels,
however, that his plan is ''not going to have
any immediate impact.** since "people have
been planning for 35 years.** ./
On April 23, 24 and 25, he will be chairman
for a conference at Lake Arrowhekd for local
decision-makers. **By cxpj[icit reiC^cst.** the press
will be excluded from thi^ conference, which
Will deal with transportation and decision-
making in Los Angeles in general, said Wachs
' ' Transit /sales tax
~Los Angeles voters will have tlie opportunity
to vote on the rapid transit, sales tax issue this
June The plan, developed by Baxter Ward, is a
pay-asryou-go proposal serviced by revenues
from a one cent sales tax increase
Referred to as the Sunset Coast line, it
would be a modern version of the old Big Red
Cars running on rails built on freeway medians,
along flood control channels and on existing
railroad rights-of-way. according to Supervisor
James Hayes' office. ^
Classy system
-|t would appear.** wrote Wachs in his paper,
•'that to citi/ens of the world a rail transit
system goes along with the image of a
classy and leading city Freeways and smog
connote used car salesmen in white shoes
and shoppers with their hair in curlers Perhaps
this is why so many people who should know
are. avid supporters of rail transit for
Angeles **
Wachs commented. "We must recognize that
financial and fiscal responsibihty can be an
important part of an image too, and that the
Big Apple IS now mentioned much less fre-
quently than the Big MAC** (MAC stands for
Municipal Assistance Corporation, which is
trying to bail New York City out of its current
financial crisis.)
Tinted glass
Ultimately, predicted Wachs. Los Angeles
will fail to receive funding for a rail transit
system and "twrn to the bus** as a means of
transportation.
Basing his \7iews on research done m Wash-
ington. DC. Wachs feels that carpeted floors,
piped-in music, tinted- glass, an abscncr of
advertisements, fewer seats and more leg room
are not important
"The only things passengers said I'hey con-
sidered important were on-time service and seat
assurance,** explained Wachs
In ridership appeal, travel time and fre-
quency of service, bus service ''can match rail
service.** according to Wachs' study of technical
analysis. Flexibility and cost arc also niore
advantageous in bus transit.
incentive
Wachs also noted that buses would provide a
greater incentive for faayle to leave thetr cars
and use public transportation than trains
would.
Considering all elements. Wachs feels that
"we should abandon our blind adherence to an
image of transit which is not relevam to our
city and our era and proceed with the con-
sideration of more practical and comprehensive
transportation programs for Los Angete."
- What's left for the Left in 1976?
Are there concrete programs that progressives can work for in this election year which could
begin to democratize our social and economic institutions? The Democratic Socialist Organizing
Committee (D.S.O.C.) thinks that there are. and is sponsoring a conference at U.C.L.A. entitled "A
New Democracy".
Time: Saturday, April 24, 1976, 10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Place: Franz Hall
No Registration Fee
\T5he keynote speaker will be Michael Harrington. National Chair of D.S.O.C. and author of Th#
^ther America, Toward a Damocratic Laft, and Socialitm. Panelists representing unions,
consumer groups, academicians. Democratic party activists et al will discuss concrete proposals
for programs with workshop participants Workshop topics are: full employment, economic
restructuring, social democratization, public energy and utilities, r>eo-conservatism and the
starvation of the public sector, public access to media, peacetime industrial conversion.
Wallace Albertson. president.
Agenda
10:00AM
10:30
12 30
1 30.
Greetings
Workshops
Lunch. Student Union
Workshops
3:30
3:45
4:45
5:00-700
Calif Democratic Council
MICHAEL HARRINGTON
Adjournment
Reception. International
siudtfni center
Analysis & Computer Systems.
Inc
Bulloclcs
Montgomery Ward & Coifttpany
Western Gear Corporation
Dataproducts Corporation
Macy s Calif orrua
(US) Marine Corps
Westinghouse Electric Company
Bm Inc
Chubb /Pacific
Duracell Products Company
Otis Elevator Company
Travtitrt Immmtm Cwnpai
(US) CompMMr of Wm Currf
(U S ) Air Forct -
Missile
PL Forter Campany
VaNey Umvorstty School of Law
(^mpany
Campus events
:;%^.
>>^4'^^
_ April 25.
cast of ram mm at mtt in RaMi tM
round an* MM IMC omn, brm% kmcti and
mtm f 9m. AirN ». Miit m front of
Acktrmai)
— tiaa hmithm. mmK and danca trow
MtKico mm aa taaiurtd m ttiis weak t ISC
Friday MfM Prograai fiMnar S»4M
pin (2 50) tntoftainiant 7 30 n pm
tomorrow Infornaltonal Student Contei
1023 Hiloard
— -daHailill wttttn lailaaili winner gaci
an NCAA Nfth to Muncie Indiana 6 and
0 pm tomorrow champtonship game 7 30
pm. April 24 Pauley Pavilion $l tor ail
stMiMm. S3 concourse Itvel 14 arena
Tear, of tne University Ha-
taarch Library 2 pm toddy meet in
SctioentMrg lobby
-PiM»i M CaadMMv tor SIC ofttcat
are now availaMe m Kerch hoff j40.
xne If 4 pm today
. in ttie Mardi
Grai oMee ielMwaaii A«i nowApiH M
Open to all diMii an tka aapiitalluii
— lalafale ttalai laari which shows
each pfiBMMllal candidate and Ma
amount of iMMMs pMipBd Iroai aMMi
which tiw k&fpmmhm la now up in
Kerckhoft Hall near the elevator on tfie
first taor
— EflgMI CaaMrsMea intomial practice
(or »»ey itiiMnti and viaiMfs iO em
noon MaiMiya end Wadoaadays Aciier
man 3617
information and
il funding for gn
dent and paotdutiorals are available in ibe
Feltowshipf and Assistantshtp Section
Murpny 1228
•MaiHl Iraatanneblp Caator suited by
trained mierna will bala you find fundlof
tor your ideas Open deity 9 am-4 poi.
Kercifhoft 401
and local volualaar positions are
now fhreatb EXPO Aciternion A213 or caH
82S4M31
|oin OECA ae a
mveetiQator Visit Kercichoff 31.1
or call 825-2820 Volunteers are also
needed for environmental and food pro-
^^K Madaa Laaav Ce4NreBlv PeeMsa is
riow availaMa Mr a Mro-year term wm Me
UC Student Lobby m SirrinMwiii which
pays 8717 50 a onaM. IMaMBBaienis in
cMde being a laoaM IC paduale and
inloreat m educational laabos Pick up
ippbcaian in Kerckhoff 306 Deadline is
May 7 er call 82S«4S
-Statewide Ceanoltlae Appiicatleas for
Residential AdeMory Committees are now
availaMe. BoiMMe m April 3D pick up
epplicatlont at Ackorman information
daek. Kerckhoff 304 and housing aaaocia*
tion
-IM MMB « BMb
by
with Its direclof. Jon Kadar
7» pm. April 26 yoynj 090 Free
oMMEars
— fM Sabees. a rock trio wMi perMrm
Grand iaMroom Free
faculty in iie Oapartniani of
will sakae endneni lyNelM JaMwy
Meroar. tji pa, Manwiw and AprN 24.
Scboanbeff aoMlaNMi. It Mr uaA stu-
dents faculty staff and ionlor cituens. 82
^w elhor MiMenM. S3 for others
-4taBB SaaaM Maturing David Oor. an
leraet bond and the Nirkedo fionce T
April 28 Janes SMpe ^tm.
PRONTO MARKETS
HAVE OUR OWN
CUSTOM-BLENOEO
GRANOLA
Since the hottest bfeek-
fast food around has be-
come Granola. Pronto
MafMet looked for the MMti-
a«t. most nutritious ingre-
dients to blend our own
apecial 'Trader Joe" label
for you We found that the
best blend is old fashioned
rolled OMis, honey, soy oil.
wheat Qerm. coconut ar>d
pure vanilla. \MMal80 aploe
it up with apecial blends of
almonds rolled In coconut
for variety, and a nutritious
blend of seven different
grains which we call 7-
Grain Granolal
1
IM ki 8rt
Slokoon 2M0
O
8o
3617
7 10 pm
^flbaMMil rial
2 38-4 pm today Ackerman
eBl^noon-2 pm todoy Ackerman women's
m Colombian FobUore tbealer noon ApfM
26 Soaeae 8Di.
-aw M S« MM MU e SMew
iHL edewori Ironi credential and grt
programs 2 pm April 26 Ackorman
en ineoMcMry
XING OF
HEARTS
f
r
.-«, .iu.
Open 78m-midnlght
lOtSO National Blvd.
H Mvlai aae Tiair
-^_ a time to haiilM
ever alMr MB pm today Frani MM
-Mrty lyaaaai TbBBa8iana& 7 38 pm
121
H Eesasaaes ki 8w Madv Hd
,_ ^ ^«". noon-1 pm, today GSM
'264
MeeMpme*. tt»i$ week s Busmeas AdvMory
Council Seminaf 6 » pm dinner 7J8 pm
mm tonight international Student Center
1023 Hilgard Free ^^
^ —aerds sad Matic and 8pera In tke
'•'gaiMr. OMll be discussed by Virgii
Thomeon. ooon today Schoenberg audi
torium Free
""Anasbelr AdeaabMl. ertM feature New
Zeoland with Kenneth. Ricbler 8 30 pm
tomofrow Royce Auditorium 82 SO for
students others S3 and 350
— Mrerd tenaeii et die Sorbonne will
discuss iecriture en leu I imagination
mimoiogique chez Ctaudel. 1 pm. tomor-
row Raines 329
—%Brrii CeeNOOoer. John Gofman and
Oevid Feaonen will discuss energy policy
" ^yl'a safeguards initiative noon-4
pm. tomorrow Ackerman firand Sadroom
-^^ lesdhe. by San hipe of tie
HaMmo IMnmrelty Jeruealem 430 pm
ApcU a. Acbermon »17
-Tbe Mevv al.iBBM bi Les AapHea. 2 pm
April 26 Ackerman 3617
EXCLUSIVE ENQAQEMENT
UA CINBHIA CBNTtM • 474.3MMa
WmIwmo Sivo 1 Slock Soyth of Wii»hir«
JAijt J ec • 400 ••00 •••ee lo.to pu
Y
mm Oab. win meal 7-8 pm.
Tuosdt Oykabv IMaieation room and }-3
pm Fridays. Wamen't Gym 200 for all
mtereiMd m learning and practicmg
room ""
4 pm
Acker man
230^
wtll tie given by a member of Me Hayden
lor US Senate Committee, noon today
BoMnr 325 ^ pm tonight H«trick FiriaMl
Lounge noon tomorrow. Mans Gym W
and noon April 26 Kkeoy MB
—Tke iesMM sad Fel el ae
pbysics colioquium tee 330 pm
2-222 taNi 4 pm. teday Knudeen 12206
~iMb Maael ItaMa Leeame a U
will be given by John Groes Editor
TkMS Ulmry SoppMaeal 4 30 pm April 26
Solfe 1200 and 8 pm April 27 Dickson
?M0 Free
docuJnent
instru
'm-
wili
riign of die kmg of
ica 0 pm April 26
3 30 pm today Murphy t312
— WeaMii RerelB. M pm. every Thurs
day Women s Gym 200
— Seeabeag PNIpbn. noon i pm Thurs-
day*. Campbell 32r
-UCU Slerre Oeb film and sbda
will be featured 7 30 pm tonigbt
175
-U€U Sprkii aiese Srive. meaMif Mr aN
mierested. 4 pm today Oodd 221
-Prelaw IpBB Caaaeedai. 1030 ii » am.
today Murphy '1312
-hetMBlei 8pea CeaaBMhe. 130-230
pm today. Murphy 1312
-Keedaflel Vege 2 3 30 pm today.
Ackerman 2406 SugoeeMitf daaaban 81
^^^» ^F^^^w ^^^^w ^^^^^^t ^^M^^^M? ^1^ %^^Vfii
7»j)m tomorrow Ackerman 3684
—MhIb Gba. new club for anyone inter'
eoled in mage - bring a trick 84 pm
every Thursdey GSM IMC
-^beMe MNeaa. anyone iniereaMd m
Italian language and culture invMad. 7-8
pm every Thursday International Student
Center
— MbMM Is aa SeaMai' SaMebr. e human-
istic discussion group/class on social
charwe. 7 pm Mondays Hamas 208
-Mmbp's •saeerse CaMer Mssrkig Cam-
noon April 26 kinsey 190
Ida 8IBB Laagaaoi Qab. 9 30 ii am
Mondays Ackerman 2408
Gil .iniini: pill.ir i»l i««i
^i.iiwv in .1 ch.iDuMHi:
^v •rkl. rhc Jc?iii:n «»f
I lie V h»miu*r i> Utst
h.ick in till" Jim p.1%1 iif Si.. in
J in. IX I, in ifl.i^Hir.iftsni.inship
I luil l:<^^. If rim.iinfd n.inu-
lt"*h. whl'n Ausfr.ili.m N.iiL.rN
' . »pii"J.lf ;i> t:
htvrguiiniirv ti»r <i»unt* vmmu ti
I A V4 pmi mu>: \&*ivt^) i
.i 1/2 pint ul.K* riH» littU- » S» ihi
u .1 sp '^\\i St . hi leetwe-Kett % y tax -
g|«IM» WilN i hri>tCfli'J With ' * ;.
liamt- »>f ;i si iJw.iv KiHti n
.1 iuttcf .inii .1 iri^ '-
Thi* JH hmtncr h.i>ii I
♦ '-^ AikI tutthtr h.i>C>l\
. -.r It s Mill in.ivU u irh pu ii.M.Mi
m^rijii nts .iikI .» luTiLiyi i»f
hri'\vinut.\pirK'tui- th.it iu*\vr
ch.ini;i> A i»rf.it K'it JtH'sn i~
«.h.int'»^- t'>lvinpi.i iH\ir will
Q^fRfllP
Hix*r Jiii*sii't tfii .im htf u*r
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feei ere woriin -iallfun at)out \M)en iheuf're
into ie/iL..U)Ai Hx f^\ Get ink) some new
ineas^f learners. Getipur feet ioQether, qps^.
TBke 'em io a shoe place. .^pmon!
Or a jeans pbce.Someplaoe! O^
»■. ■*'
v^
g.Tirrt
AVOISfPAY APMLZf
NOON
2-3 p.n.
ACK. 33517
OPIN J^in CONCERT
DAVID POR AND ISRAILI BAND
THE NIRItODA DAWCC feAOUP
A HSrOKTOf -mC JEWS Of LQSANOCLO
WITH DA. MAX VOASAAN
|l^
•*:30P4A.
F0UNDCAS
AOOM
T30
YDUNC
WALL
MODCAN ISAACLI POCT DAN RACIS
ACADINCmWOAK
Tnc JEW m nLfA v/rm oan hadaa,
DIAECTOA. OF "LIES MY fATWEATDI-DM
THE SHOP ON MAIN STREET
DCSCUIMON Wim TTC DIRECTDA .«XAN
J ^
IS
r
pum€Pmtu M^ma^ifi av jlc.ax./u j,u
«y(M
Brain vdeyMn dn# in fimb
>
ly MiclMel Sondhcimer
DB Sporti Writer
For UCLA CMch A» Scales, the Wcslcrn Regionals tomorrow
and Saturday mght at Pauley Pavilion will be an tMf csperience.
The Brum volleyball nustcr can just sit k>ack and relax while four
teams battle for the additional NCAA berth.
For the past two years, UCLA iMt iMd to quahfy for the
NCAA finals by winning the Western RcgionaU, but after
Tneiday night's ffUmfdii victory over Pcppcrdmc. the Brums have
qualified for the NfAA finaU on April 30 and May I at Ball
State University
Scates' probable final opponent should come out of the
Western Regionals. Tomorrow mght at 6 pm, San Diego Suie
(5-7) will meet AUC Santa Barbara (9-3) and at I pm»
Pcpperdine (1^3) will face Long Beach Slate (5-7). The finals are
scheduled for 7:30 pm Saturday night in Pauley Pavihon. with
Santa Barbara and Pepperdme expected to meet
•*! don't have a prcferwKe in the Rxgionals, but I expect Santa
Barbara and Pepperdme to meet for the championship." said
Scates "If Pepperdme wins, I thii*M they could go into the
NCAA finals not very fresh, if they have a tough semi-fmal as I
expect Santa Barbara would be fresher m the finals because
they don't rely on just two or three hitters"
The four teams that will make the NCAA finals are "up in the
air" Iherc will be a conference call at noon today linking all
parts of the country The NCAA reprcsenutives from each
region will discuss which teams should be selected ^
It IS definite that UCLA aqd the Midwest champion, either
Ball State or Ohio Sute, will go to the finals The other two
spots arc "wide open." It is likely that the Western Regional
would be given a bid, since it has never failed to haf>pen before.
The other berth has gone lately to the East, but -the teams arc
very weak this year
This means that the second-place tean m the Midwest, or even
the runner-up in the Western Regionals, could get the last berth
With UCLA as top seed, the semi-fmals could be UCLA-Ohio
State and Ball Sute against either Santa Barbara or Pepperdinc
-•In m> mind, UCLA, Pepperdme and UC Santa Barbara are
the lop three teams in the country, so I don*l know what the
NCAA representatives will decide," said Scates
The UCLA volleyball team will work very hard in the next
^eck in preparation for the NCAA finals There will be l^ng
workouts today and t,omorrow The Bruins will be in the Long
Beach City College **AA" tournament on Saturday. The
tournament will include some o( the finest open teams and wUI
be. a good tunc^up
•*W.e are going to utiii/c our players in game-type situations tor
the most part on Saturday,"* said Scates **l want to give some of
the substitutes a chance to play full-time, but in the tough
matches we will use the same lineup combinations I plan to use
in the nationals.**
The Bruins will practice on Monday and Tuesday in Pauley
Pavilion and leave Wednesday for Muncie "1 want to make sure
our players have a day to adjust to the time change," said Scates.
Back in 1970 and 1971, Scates won the conference title and
went on to be victorious in the nationals. UCLA is 18-1 in
NCAA play and Scates has never lost a final match Now he will
find out if he can lead a team to victory that has not won the
regionals -
Buy2SA-90
at
^
I rub week we're of1enr>g our usual pnce
(which IS already well under the nationally
advertised price), and if you buy any 2 at the
> sale price we'll %n%
you a FREE
storage ton for them.
EVEItYTNIMG!
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HOURS: wi-^iK
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Mt AHEAD.
Set. Il-*^ %im. 124
AHEAD STEREOr
HOU^
1Q:
Pac-8 champion natters go for Oj
ter KaplMi laae Stanford rarHtft.!* «s.L. -^ .." .... _. r . 1
My Hunter K
DB Sports Writer
UCLA's undefeated tennis
squad is currently in Ventura
County for the 77th annual
Ojai Tournament which began
early this morning on 73 tennis
courts throughout the Ojai
Valley and Ventura.
UCLA clinched th^ Pacific 8
dual match championj^Mp with
a dramatic come-fF9m>Kehind
5-4 victory over the nation's
second-ranked Stanford Car-
dinals in Palo Alto la^t Sat-
urday.
The Bruins, now 17-6 on the
season in dual-match play and
winners of 36 consecutive
matches during the last wo
seasons, will be facing the
Skateboardng . . .
(C ontinued from Page 23)
run near Sunset Boukvard. At
the hill between Pauley Pa-
vilion and Drake Stadium,
junior high kids appear to be
going at least tiuit fMt
For one thmg, riders are no
longer content with **stan-
dard** tricks like skating
around rounded pool walls or
jumping from a board over a
bar and landing back on the
hoard.
"Tricks are out," Gerster
said '^peed is the big thing
now Everybody wants to go
fast •-
Skateboard parks are a not-
too-distant possibility Plans
and act ttiT cons t nic t ion a re^
already under way for private-
and public riding parks in
Carlsbad ind in the SaA
Gabriel and $«n Fernando
Valleys
While some nders continue
on their ever increasing quest
for greater and greater speeds,
there are plenty who will
content themselves with the
simple enjoyment of riding
One. in (ict, reporty^ Gerster
may be going a bit too far
he plaps to skateboard across
the country this summer
Beat
'SC!
R6i?ai5ssnce
Sg^aife^
IIMMU&
mf%mTt vt
1*^'*
MRXIBOUII
i*ur
I VRN THfrCOUPPfl f
1 5(XPlSC0tJXT J
I
soKoiifica
iamn9ai
T
I
Stanford Cardinals tlits
i^eckend along with USC and
Cahfornia in the annual Pacific
8 bracket of the Ojai event
Each of the four Cahlornia
schools enters its top six siri-
gks players and top three
doubles teams and plavs tour-
nament style from I hursday
through Sunday
UMey Park
The 24 singles players from
the California Schools are
seeded in matches at the Ojai
Civie Center Park courts,
known as Libbey Park. One
point IS awarded a school for
each individual singles or
double<»r match won by any of
Us players
The school with the roost
points wins the Thatcher Cup.
dedicated after Shernuin That-
cher, who founded Thatcher
School in Ojai Th^jitcher also
founded the tourney in 1899
"Ojai IS one of the most
enjoyabie tournaments in the
United States, held in a gor-
geous setting with clean, fresh
air and v^ondedul people.** laid
use's tennis coach George
Tole>
"Nfriy tlK entift commun-
ity of Ojai and nearby towns
devote much time to running
the tournament, which includes
tournament divisions fdr junior
players from ages 14 on up, in
addition to divisions lor the
Pacific 8 Caltfornu schools,
other four-year universities,
community colleges, high
school and open divisions
Over U5t players
According to tournament
nead Jack Morrison, over
1.250 players are entered fOr
this weekend*! action
••If you don't believe tennis
IS big in Southern California,
be in Ojai at 8 am this
morning,** said Morrison
'*There v^ill be over 700 mat-
ches being played around here
today**
Both Toley and UtLA's 10-
year coach Glenn BaiMllt are
still talking about last week-
end*! dual match play in the
Bay area, where third-ranked
use Mi Stanford battled all
the way down to the final
doubles match (first doubles)
late Friday niglit in Sunford's
Mapies pavilion before the
CardiiMls prevailed. 5-4
On Satiwisy night, the Bru-
ms defeated Stanford by the
same 5-4 score by winning the
final doubles match (UCLA's
Peter Fleming and Brian
Teacher outlasted Sunford'i
Pat Puprc and Bill Maze 5-7,
6-3, 7-5 )
"I don't think anyone who
saw our match with Sunford
last Saturday will forget what
they witnessed," said Basiett
"So many ili'^
''The momentum of the
match changed hands so many/-
imcs. There were so many 'tfs*
in the match. The players un
both sides tightened up a lot
bec«yi»e__QL4he pressure with
the duaL match title at suke.**
he will use tht
same singles and doubtes play-
ers in Omi who mm4t the trip
to Stmrfnid FkmiQgp Brian
Teacher. Ferdi Tiygiii. iruoe
Nichok, Jonn Austin and To-
ny Graham, ji'ho has been
bothered recently by a sore
right shoulder, will play sin-
gMS« with Teacher and Flem-
ii^ Nichols and Taygan and
Ausnn and Luis Enck teaming
together in doubles.
**! will use Steve Mott and
freshman Tom Loucks m the
Mens Open Divisian." said
Bassett. coach of the defending
astional champion Bruins.
**! look forward to this tour-
mwnt every season
"Nearly every top player
who has ever played in Cal-
tfornu has played at Ojai from
the junior level on up.
**! played for many years
myielf in Ojai, on the high
school, junior college (Saata
Monica College) and major
college level (UCLA).-
i
I
Pick up your portfolio and
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ISO Jtrro" •' '■ i-0«! I «27
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WHAT DOES A BRUfN
BEAR GIVE FOR GIFTS?
UCLA clothing for children
and adults, bears, mugs,
glassware, watches, desk
acc^saori^a. i#w«lry. per-
sonalised shirts, trophies,
football helmet radio.
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
wedding
rinrx)unCenieiit s
kerckhoff ]2. '
82 506|l —
ours * Da«s Maat at Sip— Cfii ft
Kappa Alpha Thala • Stark Ciuto at
(• A tt|
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Day. Ca«
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fpm.
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(TA»)
$1.
aflarnoont Wild Whiat
CtMh. IStS Waatwood Slvd.
for rant
14.
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ISMSI
aeMT-A-Tv ii«.st
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CSOU
fOTMrtO
for
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(It A 23)
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mornMi^s aarty ttP^PtPB,
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274-1273.
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(ISOlr)
ansa
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Paei OwHar Uimwi • CMM
aiHaf.aao (aap»a). Frtdayt 2-
3S1-14tt. 2-4 pm.
dpaiLCdi
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opportunitidd
OUa SIXTH VtAM HELPING
STUDEMTS FIND SUaMtSA S
PAMT TiaiE joaa
Mtomifia«
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Diraclar t11ft^13t
2
3. Maaa fwmltura $4Jt hr
4 Taach •wimminfi $2 ftt-tt.tt hr
5 AaaUtani camp counMilar t12t-
lltt «vli
t. SMraay at homa t2-it hr.
It-lit hr
t. NaaMaa tor Faaiays raalaurant. 13 hr
t OfPaa hatpar |3,2S-U.it hr
It. YoiHh activllla* diractor. 13 hr
11. Undafcovar I3.2t hr.
12. Aaal. alhlatlc diractar 12. It hr.
13. 2St paapli - Mutf an nlopii l2.Jt hr
U. Sorvay laiiar* - 13 hr.
IS. aiiHiiipim (Waalwaod) f3.it hr
It UMdaMa drtsar. 13 hr
17 Mddlaaaaa (wpMurant) 13 hr.
It. ONMa Malpar 14 hr
CALL 47$-S821
j|2£^
ildUMUaMBB.
(It A SS)
Sportswear
Clearance!
or less!
Large. selection of clothes for
men and promerv^topa, panta,
tennis wear, jackets, etc ^Vs
a big bundle nowl
ASUCLA Studenta' Sibra
SPORTWEAR
t leeMl, Actorman Union
S2S-7711
open iwi-Si 7:45-7:30;
m 7:4S-S:aO: eat 10-4
NATIONAL BEAUTY PAQACNT
AccapCIng Contddtpnto
MISa OflANOE COUNTY
AN Anpdd- C«M
(714) S3S-0170. S3S-ai71
lhSM2
wk, 3-4 hra/ddy. |3.t0/hr K4
(IS A 2S)
2010.
(IS A2S)
WAMTM
MM
CdN 474-0743.
(It A 22)
(ISA
NATIONAL CaNTia Mr STNATeOIC
STUDIES, a nofi-pr«m. Ida asdaipt
salt
(SIS) 1S1-1S4S. CdS Mr
YOUMQ, aaaNMp
an attfacMva.
hiM days - «Moa<3) apt
Mra. PMahy 477-2f7f t
(IS A 20)
rvoip nowi 0y ^wipm^ ^/wiora
SS-SSO/month for BiPod PI
HYLANO DONOR CENTER
1001 Gaylay Ava.. Waatwood
47S-00S1
Ml
347
(ISAgN
MARMUAMA. Pdnl Mt
•df nmw booli I2.SS
Laa tV. P.O
• (CX.
ploa 104 Ma la
*PERSONAE*
.'1,
Csnisr of Dramatic Arts
AnnouncM
IMMEDIATE lunch, waaliand. mn4
aiaaaapa. Tha Suh Station
477-1040. j^^ ^ jj^
1 pni. Manany-Prtday. CiS 4
(If A 20)
.LJL)
(lOiTSO)
A tppcMI thrpd wppk
(ApfM 12th thru SOti)
EARNSSMt
Par
277
(If A 20)
47f-01T1.
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ARCHIT. OtwPant far hauta ramod.
(If A SS)
aurmcaaca all ncw
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THC aurmcaa aTont
477^tt1
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(If A 27)
*WlMt IMP COttlflie atrpctOf to painting Noimo aaaraaa nwml^T%
lor. mm awrha. f4.2f hr. 20 hrt wk ta
no A SO)
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hatcheovora, nottlnf S rapo, tunky
cralaa 0 haaaa, die
one FNapy at S FJa. CaB *^
dt 473-0700 m
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paraona lo
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Cetact Oaooo and apm fSMSO tram
Pw aoaMat taM yavH aapr awpp Bt
dt 11S20 San VIOdnM BNg.. BidM 880.
LA on 4^011 34 M 111M PM
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CLASSIFIED >ID
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NeaO HELP RE
RPilO FACTS?
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TIST ALSO AVAIL POP PRfVATi CON-
SULTATIONS CALL 2ft-43t1
(It A 27)
CASH ar
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STATISTICAL MhuMtlons
(tS OH) aPM 470-0331
traval
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SABYSnTER lar S and 1 yaar alS.
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PSYCNUTRIC
M-f . 10-4.
(1ft A 23)
IW% BCRNUNBNT WAVNia
Cutting and Hptrttyling
For
Com
1013 arFrad 490-1440.
(10 OPT)
*SMViio MiaiwcOon an a 1
a«nn Alaa court ranMI S
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OVERSEAS X>BS
Europa. S. AmarMd. AnatralM, AaM,
(It 0«r)
CC.
Call BaPa Ram Singh Davit at ffO-
(10AS7)
-1111.
(ItOir)
wfiAHTcHS (partioi
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MOVERS
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MaTORCYCLE INSURANCE
TaaVi
1101
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capacity, MP.. aNMa worli ale. 300-
1073. .
(14 A 22)
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NEW CHARTER DESTU^A TlQNSf'f
AFRICA (Qh&rm A Nigmrm)
YUGOSLAVIA ISTS
ROLAND
GREECE $407
SOUTH PACIFIC
TAHITI SUPER DEAL SSTS
HAWAII 1 4 a MMM from 41
NYC 1.2. Sa«4M from 41
ORIENT
Contact ASThA tor o«ar 2a0 othor fliphia
w»th OopAMuro* from L A . tan ^tmncfco
Vani. VWaafMnaion. O C
OnOBflNOW
TfUMN a FINNY TICICBTB.
CAiiPaB NCNTALB.
NAILFABBaa, INT1IA-
BUNOBfAN BTUfMMT
ISC
TOURS A TRAVEL
Spring Summer A full Chartvri
lo
London
^^■1f'on
Madnd
r rank turf
B'uaavta
Zurich
Roundtrtp from $244 00
Hawaii and N«w Yorli
Roundlrlp from 1149 00
ISC alao runs toe a* mf tourt
r)y car and but ai minimum co«'
Calt U« tor Intormaiicjr
471 7
9 6 C'
• «1 P • • •
YOUTH FARC An,
BICENTENNIAL FARE fa«
CcUt
SS
ATCX FAME SUPEN OCAL
Laava/ralurn any day any Eur
n City
Slay 29<44
TOURS
LONDON. 4
JAMAICA 4
ITALY 18
LON PAM AMt. 14
MtXiCO • day*
4
4
Nfw toPM crrv • aayt
Many othara tong 4 shori l>udaai A
STUDENT TOURS
• coiffitnaa IB day*
l-«4i cruiaaSI]
1S(
2-«li 3
3-«4i tnciuaiwa
AtTrA
1144
Go with us to ttie
Soviet Union!
UCLA studpnM. fpcutty pnd ttoff
Cpn travpl witfi tha ASUCLA Trpwpl
Sprvica to
Laningrpd. Mopcow. Kipv. VplM.
Tbilisi. Kl2hi. Vipdimir
July 14 - Aiiguat 5
$749.00
all - incluaivB from London
A Ipvpl {with EXPO) Ackprm^n
•Ffl. 10-4, a2S-1221
4t4.3141.
ASBI
1 CHAaTtaaD
113 ASS)
LOB ANOCLBB
BNOPBBBIONAL CLUB
i40t Waatwood BNO.. LA Ca i0024
(213) t70-t121/ (SIS) 477-1103
TOC CHARTER FLIGHTS
TO EUNOFB
fiBiS ol OBMfS)
.-^ i.,.. .. ->■•». "~
)w.
-w *-
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CLASSIFIED vID
tr«v«l
•Hi N.V.C. $1M
(211)
(MOtr)
.' J
A8UCLA Travel S«rvtM
th« ONLY official
UCLA Ctiartor FHght 8«rvlc«
Aiampllfig
of Europe fllghtt
• ol
JurwT 7
Jun«21 11
June 21 12
June 2£ 5
Jun«29 9
June 29 10
July 5 8
Julys 9
July 12 4
July 19 4
1C754
iiers
12C75
15G75
17C75
1iC76
22C76
23C76
27C76
aOC76
$439
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
Prvpart for:
QRAOUATE HECORD EXAM
7b nt d(«M b«9ifw May a
A»to OLSAT
• OMAT
• MCAT
#OAT ^^^
^iBIMIifllf
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
3017 tenia Mwilca mit4.
CHINC9C Maniartn Pmk%n% nmVkw
%mmchmt, «NHI'«Hp«rl«fie*i wIMi C«ll
HAWAII..
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FLUS c» Wimiii UMint...ani-
rall/Curail pais«« ...Accoffio«la-
tAo<M...SATA flu... International
li>.
PNCC TflAYCL COUNSCLIHOf
AtlC US FOM ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO ICNOW ABOUT
TRAVCU
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>1S0CL4^
TRAa-SERVCE
«mi». Mtl.1949.
(MOID
FMMCM Tuiaiin
a.'MN*it««
^ft« ^
l» UCLA ^aaip
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(JMOti)
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niM. Ma-tin a«lw« • pjn.
(24 AM)
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EnfMMi graaa w/12 yMc* •Rp«fl«noa.
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(MAIT)
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CaN an«y Waa A FfMay
XEROX 2'2C
KINKO S
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Tour 4 J3 25 IftOW
• .'MKtd « 24 It 00
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PWOFtttlOMAL WHiar (SA.
UCLA)oMHypB>iMla>typaaal
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May lot lar
FLASH FInfars aacralarlal aanriea
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474-7J7a.
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474-aaM. 474-3142
(MAM)
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F««tur«a--Fora4an Lawguafai, tclonc**,
Math, Tabl«t Oiagrami Music Editing.
Caaaaaiing Xaronnf . anMlIng, t**<<*wf.
gmaawt WaMa MF-Hf 1
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tXCEFTlONALLy larf« raaai witli
F.F., full bath Poaullful vt««i« qutal
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(MAM)
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(»A2P)
(MA 23)
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for ouMoooo
WAHTED
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YOUR
RESU13S
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(MO«r)
(MA 27)
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(MAM)
houoofor
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1149 J9— Vary
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(22 A 29)
(M A23|
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f^o a 9^t
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(19 DP)
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(MA27)
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(41 A 22)
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(41 A M)
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(SM) 'aM-231«
473-2991
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(41 A M)
1994 FAtSLANS 999. 299 CI.
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(24 AM)
D
...
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Skateboarding becomes a most popular fad
■yPsMl Fartii
_ . ^ Oi SpcNis Hriter
Quite untestondably. the student was upaet She had been walking down one
u^^l?^^!: ^^«^°.»™«" ^^^^ »^ Jaom Slept when a crotjchmg iksieboardcr
buiieicd by almoat low-bndging her in the proceai She wsan't hurt, but her
notebook snd aeveral textbooks lay ipresd^glcd acroat the pavement m front of
her "^
-I knew this WAS gomg to happen sooner or Utcr." she moaned, while the rider
offered a fleeting and half-hearted apology
-They're out here every day and you qould sec something like this, or worse
coming These little assholei» shouldn't be ndmg around here "
Unfortunately, it appcan* that *he and just about everyone elac walking on anv
oi the campus paths had better beware of the ^httlc assholei - Thev figure to be
. aroiind campus for awhile - ^ .
The local juaior and high school kkds who invade the hiUs everv day' around 3
pm are just a small part of the growing number who have taken up
Hkstcboarding the latest and most popular fad in years
To be sure, the current nuuiia for the boards is nothing new Anyone old
enough to remember the populantv ot suberballs and slot cars m the mid-1960'i
can recall a similar passion tor skateboards From l%4 to l%6. the imd kept
junior high shop students across the country buay ihapmg pieect sf wood into the
miniature wheeled surfboards
^♦^Pien, shortly after every kid
on4he block had to have otie.
the boards joined Beatle Boots
and monster sweatshirts in the
same back-of-the-department
store limbo reserved for all
dead fads.
Ten years later, however, the
boards are back with a ven-
geance, in incredible and
steadily incrcasi renumbers.
As many as 30 million Amer-
icans and 2 million Southern
Cahfomians are said to have
jumped aboard a board To-
day, unlike to years ago. it is
not only the little leaguer who
i¥4^mg. College students, who
once bla/ed through the
schoolyard on the original
boards have taken up uhere
they left oft m prc^dolcsccnce
"It's more fun now than it
was when I was little," said
larry Hance, a I'CLA semor
who has rediscovered a 'child-
hood toy. **We -used to ride ^skateboards) when the waves were no good 4lTir
surfing) Now we lust ride skateboards *'
Chuck Clifford, a Ireshman took up the sport fsd when it started becoming
popular last summer Now he is a pan-time student and a full-time skateboard
freak
"I've got a lot of free time on my hands," he said "4 go to school mayfcc tlMe
or four hours a day and I was driving my mom cra/y; she just about threw me
out I had to find something to do *'
So he rides a skateboard Ificessantly On weekdays he foots the ttaik and a half
from his home t<» school tucking the board under his arm along with his books at
the end of his lournev '
On weekends, he has traveled up to 10 miles oh one of the six boards he owns,
skating around for six or seven hours Usually he ends up with the riders
shooting the paths near Brum Walk or uking the hill bet%yeen Pauley Pavilion
and Drake Stadium Both spots are hallowed ground for local boarders.
Bult like all fads, this one figures to come to an end. although no one is quite
sure when
Richard dcf^iwi. a nianagcr at Steve's South Bav Spurting (mods in lorranre.
one of the citv's largest skateboard retailers said. "I dont ihink its going to dro|
off. not for a long time For some t>eople it's a fad. but for some people it never
died OMI. Jbeyve been nduig ever suice '66 Those are the people wholl keep it
going loot sfter the novelty wssfs off There's a lot of them, too r
Says Steve Pezman. editonal director of Skatehomhkf SMfSStae: **Right now
the general level of enthusiasm is as high as ever In CaUlornia. the retail market
IS sAturated but pslM hsven't decreassd. The Easl^ sad Midwest have yet to hit
their pcsks in terms of popularity I don't think it's ever going to go away like it
did in the '60*s It's a more valid sport nou And it's a lot mofe fun "
Pezman explains that skateboarding ''has never before had the depth that it hss
now. There's a certain charisma and mystique to ndmg It'i a dance form Tliere's
a potential to express yoursell It's an expressive motion sport."
Anyone who hasn't been nesr a skateboard in the psat decsde might suffer
from a bit (rf future shock 1 he new boards sfe up to three feet long sad are
msde of lighter, more flexible i^lastks I hex come equipped with clear amber
polyurethanc whsslik sn mi. u that is credited with skateboarding s rebirth
^On the old bossit. the wheels which were often scavenged from outgrown
POlSfskstes were made of rubber, clay or metal Over rough surfaces, the
vibrations from tach wheels coald chatter the nder right off the board
Explains Pc/man, "The new wheels make it possible to ride on almost any kind
of tertain They've got such adhesion and gnp that the rider can m^hw^ nde on
vertically sloped surfaces without getting killed".
The new wheels also give the rider more versatility and subtlity by evenly
spreading the weight of saisll
obitscles m a rider's path
5^uch advancements don't
Qomt cheaply While the dino-
saur boards usually cost about
five dollars, prospective nders
in the '70's pay an inflatioiuiry
$1095 to. up to $70 for any
ooe of do/ens of laadali. The
pnix hasn't stopped anyone, at
least not Ivically
"Right now they're not sel-
ling real well because of the
weather, but by the time sum-
mer comes around we won't be
able to keep them in stock,"
said Bob Sawhi. a manager at
Smith's Sporting Goo^ ia
Westwood Village Smith's
sells only one model, the
$32 95 Bahne board, a product
of one of the country's largest
skateboard manufactureri.
Not only do Bahne and
competitors make boards, but
the multi-million dollar market
' ^ has given rise to do/ens of
other skateboard relalsd products. AsMMig. the itenH without which any nder
cannot be complete are 1 -shirts, special axks, ridmg shoes and l>ikims for the
large number of femaks who hsve uken up riding SkatcBcNirder maga/ine, the
bible of the' sport, is selling out on newstands, according to Pe/man and at last
count he said circulataaa bad reached 120,000 In addition, four movies on
skateboarding have already been made.
The new wave of interest and tncrsassd participaSion has also resulted in i hoft
number of skateboard-related injuries Faulities have occured and accident
victims bsve nude their way into the UCLA Medical Center by the dozens.
Hanoe and Clifford, the two UCLA nders report no serioos nding socidents.
although each has bad his share of scrapes and bruises
The new wheels are |Mnily rsFpsnsible for the injury increases. Thev have made
higher speeds fSMibic sad ooaasc^uently. injuries more likely
•^We're trying to downplsy the speed aspect of skateboarding and emphasi/e the
sport and safety side oi it," said Peznuin **Most of the peopk who are getting
hurt are kids who are really mexpenenced and don't wear any of the safety
equipment " Riders can protect themselves with helmets, elbow and knee pads
and gloves
The current skateboai# spsed record, says Pe/man. is 60 mph. "give or take
P^^ "U^ sn hour." Ridcfi hsve reportedly been clocked st ty to 42 mph pn s
(Continued oa fsft If)
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Townsend earns anolfier starting berth - on the basebal diamond
J
By Marc DcMm
DB Sports Wrtter
He trou otf the field and his fail
looks somewhat familiar As he reachc>
the dugout; it*s aoty to see why. The
player is Raymoai Townsend
He has hrcBOM racoggifihlr hmon
he was a tUrtiot t^ard on the UCLA
haskctball siqiiad which fioiifetd thud
in the nation this pitf tiiaoa. Now ha
IS the starting tboftilop tor the UCLA
hascball team, one which currently
leads the Calitornia Intercollegiate
Baseball Association by one-haliF gaoie.
Raymond Towaaead is an athlete.
The same abilities which earned him a
surting benh on the basketball floor
have earned him a starting berth on the
baa»eball diamond, despite the fact he
played only three games before getting
the chance to start
"I was impressed with his quickness
on the ba$kett>all floor.* says head
baseball coach Gary Adams ''This
same quickness helps him in baseball
*^- IS able to get a good jump, and he
He
reads the ball well He doesn't have f
real strong arm. but it*s accurate**
In basketball, he was the Bniihs* best
defensive guard, according to coach
Gene Bartow in baseball, he is the
team's bes^ defensive shortstop, ac-
cording to Adams But he isn't a one-
way player
"He's a switch hitter, but he seems
better from the left side He gets out
on his tronttpit'tpo much, but offense
is the last thw| to come after a layoff
If he makes contact. he*ll get on hose a
lot because he gets out of the box
well." f'" -Kj^--'ijy^.iu
- After fivt^p^. he has struck out
only once whil^^^Ilecdng four hits in
10 at-bats fiio bf those have been
infield grounders Townserfd wa& ahk
to beat out Another was a run-scon ng
triple in his first league at-bat
In high school, the 6-2Vi sophomore
played both spOris but earned more
recognition for his exploits on the
diamonds .
**! was all-Northern California as a
lunior. aad I figured I had a chance to
make All- America as a semor,** he said
while relaxing in his aporlifinl Tues-
day night "I actually had more pub-
licity for hiuhill. At the end of my
•OMor )«nr. the Angels invited me to
work out. but 1 told them I was going
to go to school **
It has happened before In the past,
^me UCLA football and basketboll
players have said they would play
baseball after their seasons, but few
have done it. Townsend has twice.
Last year, he played 14 games for
the junior varsity. "We won the champ-
ionship, and^ I hit over .400. I think
Fortunately. I got off to a good st^rt
The reason I started was (catcher)
Denms [>elany was called up to the
varsity and Mol^il (Cox. the team's
shortstop) was moved behind the plate
**Thas year, 1 kept warning coach
Adams rd be out there 1 wasn*t sure
he really believed Fd come out, es-
pecially when 1 surted for basketball-
he coniinued.
**! told him before the basketball
started that I would take one
off (after basketball) to go home.
work out on my own and rest men-
Ully. 1 told him I thought I*d be ready
for the Santa Barbara games. That
gave me 12 to 14 days to be ready."
He was reMdy two days ahead of
schedule After working out with the
junior varsity and playing a bit, he
made his varsity debut against South-
ern Calif omui College He entered in
the seventh inning andrhad two infield
hits before the game was finished
Against Santa --Barbara, he was a
defensive replacement in the first two
games of the series before starting the
second game of the doublehcader
Townsend is playing wjth Jhe ap-
proval of Bartow, just as he had.
arranged it with John Wooden when
the former conch wis recruiting him
••When we met, I asked him
(Wooden) if he'd mind, and he said
that after the basketball season he
didn*t mind Coach Bartow said the
same thtng. Coach Adams said it
would be tough to come out as late as
I did and make it. Plus tie had Andy
Lopez (last year) He told me I*d have
to go through the whole system.**
After only a week with the baseball
squad, Townsend has noticed a big
difference in the two programs
interest.
"I think the baseball team should get
more suppon People underrate this
program because of its tradition of lack
of success With coach Adamj^. the
program has turned around, and it
should get more recognitioh.
"I wish some of the people who
come to Pauley Pavihon would show
up at our league games.' I know the
Pauley cfowd makes tne ^y betllr,
and I know it would make me play
baseball better and that the team
would appreciate it.** he continued
*•! honestly feel we have a shot at
going to the NCAA*s, and this would -
give more confidence in the pmpnm to
the student body. I also thuik if we
have niCBiM this year, we teerve a
better facility to play on. I don't really
undersund why the bnacbntl field ivoi
turned down.**
On playing both sports, Townsend
said there is ''more prestige in basket-
ball, but it*i a httle easier to play
baseball here thnn it is to play basket-
bal. Vm just thankful the Lofd gave me
enough ability to play both sports.
'^I enjoyed basketball, but the pres-
sures c<Minected with it made it hard. I
feel real comfortable out there with
baseball. We have a lot of great guys
and 1 am really enjoying myself. **
One player. Curt Peterson, has been
caUing the shortstop "Flagpole** be-
cause of his thin physique.
"They do "rag** me a bit. but it
makes me feel a part of the team. A lot
of them call me "Rook ** Thai used to
be my nickname, and it bnngs back a
lot of memories "
In the future Townsend may have to
make a choice between the sports, but
for now he is thinking in terms of
both.
"With me it's always been when
basketball season is here, it*s basket
ball and when it*s baseball season. it*s
baseball. 1 think coach Adams under-
stands the situation Fm in. I know he*s
recruiting a shortstop, but at a scImoI
like UCLA, no matter what the sport,
they always go out and recruit a better
player."
"We can't count on Raymond join-
ing us until halfway through our
season.** says Adams. "We could have
lost half our games by then, and they
count as much as the others If he gmi
heljji i^i^ fiiie Mean#hile, we'll be
looking for someone to play aC the
time.**
But Townsend isn't looking thai' Itf
ahead 'My goal is to go to the
NCAA^s in baseball /^ We won it in
basketball last year and finished third
this year, and now I want xq go in
baseball "^
. — =— 1
, — ,
Return to Forever:
The Masters.
Chick Corca, Stanley Clarke, Lciiiiy White
and Al DiMeola ha\ e created a music that
presents stay}:erinj» technical demands,
cmph.isizes interj^lay lx*t\\een tiiusiciaris,
and insists im Cfmstant iHri^inality.
T!iev\e de\ eloped a style ^
KKIt K\ lOI^OKIAKK
Htm Jmmtm tutfnml^mm
which is increasinj;ly
imitated. But thereV no
doiiht who the masters
arc. Return ti> Forever.
'"Romantic Warrior.''
A radically original
album onColumhia
Records.
"H^^
Hurry! Saia
Wad. Apm a. igrt
itrv
■ I • <
.. >, .
It Mk^i
ACADEMY AWARD
WINNER
BEST FEATURE
DOCUMENTARY
EXHILARATING AND UNIQUE 0
da2!ziing visual treat that is also a mystic
celebration ot man's communion with
nature ' -Kevin ihomos. la. tiiies
FACT -NOT FICTION! A story of people
climbing Mt Everest, Mother Goddess of
Eorth It IS zen ond a sporting achieve-
ment of awesome beauty, of colors roin-
bowing before your eyes And here, at the
top of the lonoest downhill run, one man
alone Seconcls later he is stuing in the jet
stream down solid blue ice - a lotus blos-
som floating from the roof of the world
THE MAN WHO SKIED DOWN EVEREST is
surely the most inspired and beautiful
adventure on film Definitely for all ■ at all
QOfiS
> '
A SPfOMlTY HiMS MIESEMIATION
THE/Wfsl
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NOW SHOWING
UA CINEMA CEHT8llM«it«MQd TOMMSA
822 2960
uA ciNEiiA mmmmtm nm ua cineiia
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542 5100
Ucla
XCVm, Nufffitor IS
UfiffV#fBMy of
Pf«day, April 23, 1«7t
Vdte
says U FW will go to the people
Long-range parking
details still fuzzy
Dl Siirfr WfHtr
The deuib behind UCLA*i lont-range parking plan are "uiU
fuzzy.** according to hugh Stocks, Communications and
Transporuuura Administrator The addiuoin of 2,000 more
parking t^fmom m in the talking stages
*^c ftfe ^(Nit to enter into an afpeeraent with an architectural
city-phmaer-type consulum who will look at things for us,**
Stocks laid. The consultant is expected to spend four to five
months oa ^campus considering all the options the school has as
far as parking is concerned.
General long-range parking gaali inchide an **attempt to meet
the demand we see out there, at least in part, through the
building of additional structures.** Stocks said, commenting that
the University would be "building to meet the demand in spring
quarter, and we think about 2.000 will do it, 4^^
"^royectioni aasume UCLA will reach a itandy sta^ about ftvt
years from now, and as we clearly can*! cover the entire campus
with parking apaoes, we*re looking to try and draw the hne between
infinite expnagion and where tiK point u> »top it,** Stocks aMad.
The parking Sarvioe. remembering the long fall fnarter waiting
ttst. hopea to 4aii«iop a computenzad saonrd syitem so that it can
keep tmolt of how many of the same pcopk mn re-applying
quarter alter quaHar. For tktt laat tlMne yMfft, approximately 47
per cent of the UCLA Undent body has applW for spaoea with
Stocks ahaarvii that though the waiting
5,600 people Inst CaU, there are fewer than 1,1
parking in rtK VA lo% and Ti
to kg portly mpooaMg for tkt
Whik there a z ^x per cent enrollment drop from lall to
spring aawog tim general wmiam body, the porkhig isls have
ham kMNPO to drop 15-fi par oaol in the last three years prior to
the two oMItiaaal U
Mn't nssd iiifi tyjirti
ly Jam Peltz
Ot Staff Writer
Umted Farm Workers president Cesar Cha-
vez said Thursday "We want to take our
chances with the people** in obtaining voter
approval for Projposttion 12. the initiative
which would guarantee union representation
elections for California farmers
Speaking to approximately one thousand
people m the gaily ^decorated Grand Ballroom
in Ackerman Union. Chavez said ** The. guts or
the issue is the question of the nght to vote**
and obtaining legislation for the union is a
''Now you see it. now you don't game.**
Should th^ initiative pass in November, it
would hamper legislators from cutting set
appropriations for the Agricultursl Labor
Relations Board (ALRB) who administer the
farm labor laws. Earlier this year, the Senate
reduced the present appropriation plan from
$3.8 million to $2.5 nnillion
In addition, the initiatjve would allow union
representatives to talk with workers before and
after work without the fear ot having that right
overturned Currently 6nly a ruling of the
ALRB has allowed this to take place.
Claiming to have the vast majority of farm
workers behind him, Chavez accused the state
government of being **weak.** .
**A state that does not guaranist hs citi/ens
the^^right to vote is not worth the ink the
constitution is written on,** he said
Chavez announced (he UFW and its allies
have obtained over 493.000 signatures for their
initiative Only 312.404 are needed to place it
on the ballot ..
However, even if the initiative passes, it
would require funding from the Legtshititfe to
put 'it into action The UFW « concerned '*ff
the bill were approved today, we still would not
be able to hold the elections.** Chavez com-
plained
In reference to earlier elctions for union
representation Chave/ said, "maybe the pro-
blem IS we did so damn good in the electioas.
they don*t want to hold any more elections.**
Chavez measyred the UFW*s work tomrds
Proposition 1 2 against its past successes,
espectally Proposition 22 in 1972 and the Gallo
hoycoa m May. 1975 In both cases, he said.
i6ie goal was to take some of the authority out
of tht politicuin's hands and put n into Ihc
public's hands.
Greeted by a standing ovation, Chave7
thanked students everywhere tor supporting
htm 10 the union's beginning And he added. **it
always seems the ones who have the least to
five, give the most **
u"'-
La Jolla Ten hearings result
in 13 volumes of testimony
D» Stair
Hearings for 10 UC Saa
Diego studenu chsffsd with
assiiihing UC Prrsidsat David
Saxon last November ended
April 9 with ehough tesumony
to fill 13 vohimes and over
25,000 pogss.
The stadents, known as tkt
*La JoUa Ten,*" were charged
with four counts of condoct
code violatioas includiag **phy-
sical abuse*" or **oootfuct
threatening the heahh or safe-
ty^ of Saxoa.
The chargss were made iJI
coniiectioa with student prossst
that broke oot when Saxoa
to ooswer qvestaoas
the CIA to a UCSD
4Rtldent crowd in November.
14
faMally 14
charged, but three were noo-
studenu and ooe settled his
case without a hearing Hear-
iags for the La Jolla Ten took
four wssks.
DedaiaM r^garrtii^ any dis-
cipliaary action agaiast the
May, mmmmm t» UCSD V«s
Murphy said he chose Lu-
lai to he an impartial
iring officer after the de-
fendants opted for a public
hearing with legal counsel
Other options would have
been a stnctly administrative
heanng halweeo Murphy aiKl
the aoeagid. or a student and
faculty committee heanng.
According to Murphy, uader
UCSD regulations, a hsaring
officer arragsfneat is the only
heariag option that allows the
defendants Iqgal counsel.
defense and pay and costs of
lodging for extra UC police
called m from some of the
other campuses by Murphy for
three days
Murphy also cited these ex-
penses, although he did not
consider the salary of the pro-
secutor Milton Gordon, an
employee of the University of
California.
A defendant speaking on
behalf of herself and lefusH^
to be identified said **We were
railroaded into this option
They sslsrted the hearing of-
ficer brf ore we even selected
our option ** Speaking of La-
rnaai she atMid, **Hc can*t
impartial, he^ aaiployed by
the University he was to-
tally uasd by the adaMiaira-
tion.-
Murphy said he chose La-
gaMua kicaiair he had **no
prior involvement** and be-
Murphy said that the sta-
denti '^must be adding up not
the actual costs but the values**
associated with the partici-
pants* time to arrive at an
**astronimical figare like
$75,000. 1 think that*s an in-
flated way of looinig at it."
The money to pay for the
hearing **is not oomnig from
student fees, hut I do not
know where it is cooung
from,** according to Murphy.
One highhght af the
was wimn Saxon wm
testify for the defease. He
mlaaad to testify on
sceording to Mark Stad'
of tiK U<
Mnrphy. loth
and defense
the La Jola Ten
He cited the waste of
»•
re
prepare a
ta-
joh it is to
fact sheet deter-
For Saxon's tastMMwy tl v
hsnhog had to he metau to
tiK State of Catiforaia hoik:
ing. Afterwards Saxoa sur-
reptiiioaiil WH tiwoggli a back
ffsjm
guilty, Marpiiy trill decide
health and safety were owt
&o hinrpiiy,
ssjii.*'
ount the
*t>n the day
to testify, nhottt 130
hnd a rntty, albr which tiiey
forcibly entered the hearing
U Mb Ten wonhl he ex-
UC counsel fees aad
vianal rental. They.
»;
-^
i^
t
J
I
f . '
ATTENTIOM PRE-HEALTH CARE STUDENTS |
MEDICUS
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Woman in M^dicina
a Panal Diacmaion
•iW WMb. Apffl 2t, If 78
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CorM9» Of Rocn«;iw ana
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.<r»^ bRI€FCAS€S
UATHIM fcH>is .,f,A CRAFT INSTRUCTIONS
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PIZZA
GR 8-0123
*tam v^
ItU WVIIsliira Bhfd
GM^I'^
THE IMAGE OF THE JEW
IN THE MEDIA
diKuswdtyy
Dr. Williain Cutter
* ■ '
on Friday April 23
Shabtat at Hillel
6J0
•JO
"■* '
THE ACADEMY AWARD
WINNW8 DIRECTOR
'0 bm -mm
-^*s-
HIS WLT CmCF ENGLISH UMGUAGE FILV
AND ONf OF HIS KKJST ICCLWMED
n WiSM TNEflE WAS A FUNNIER
WORD FOR FUNNY! YOU'LL
HAVE A GREAT TMICr
TAKING OFF
.i>..
VW 4mMB kmt to wand frnd
Reg Fee group to take retreat
Wf AIM
Ml 9iBir Wriiv
Tlic Riprtiation Fac
mittae is retraauag tlat
eai. to I ajana Bmek ta'order
io coacentrate oa their racoai-
■Mttialaoas for spend ing the
StO fluHion fund next year.
The task force marathon
meeting it the fint af its kicd
for the committee. *^e have a
lot of work to do^ commented
committee chairmaa Pauhne
Brackeen, member of GSA.
The ub for the aieetiog was
budgeted- by kst year's Reg
Fee
According to Brackeen, the
committee*} function m to
come up with recomaMaiar
tiont for Chancellor Voung
how much money
to whoea "He has the
^naJ power," Brackeen
that generally he
by their recommenda-
tkiai, although he doesn*t have
to.
One hundred dollars out of
each undent's quarterly tuition
is conglomerated into the SIO
milbon fund, which is allocated
by the Chaaoellor to various
non-academic activities and
orgaaanttioBt oa campus.
SlviMli nake up the major-
ity of the 14-member com-
mittee. Tilt other five people
are repretentative of the
faculty and Administration.
TopilHr Ihry review the pcr-
formaaoe of the organizations
that require Reg Fee funding
and decide whether each
particular facet will receive
nK>re or leas
The
that raanvcs its fuadii^
out of Reg Fae is the Student
Health Service, which aocounu
for over S2 lailhoa As the
SHS has been a sabyia of
controversy ktely, the Reg Fee
Conunittae's dackioa concent
u^ the hiiddi Mrvioi will be of
C4
Five weeks of study, travel
and fun
in Mexico
For taachara. htgh school, and coHaga sludants Accraditad
claaaaa in rrpawiih. Maaican cultuia. muak:. art. ate at t^aautitut
Moniarray Tac Coiapa. |t60 inchidaa tuition, board, room,
laundry and Iripa Earn 2 wmmaii high school or 6 collaoa
credits
For details and catalogue contact gr<>up leader Or Richard
Martin t^ahween 8 and 9 30 any evehing at
Anothif controversial pro>
gram drpradi on the Reg Fee
for itt luaport is Child Gate.
Other dapartmeots relyuig oa
Reg Fee fiMidiM iMftade the
Di paiiiiMi ^ nae Am aa^
Productions, woinen*s Intra-
mural Program, Women's R^~
source Center, Study Skills
Center aad the International
Student Center
The Registration Fee eail'
for students will not go up
next year; however some sort
of increaae is ^OLpadad during
the 1 977-71 ^^Miool yaar. The
fee has not been increased
since I96t.
AA^ER-ICAL
1434 W<
m mkwm - (t1» 4yB-B7t1
Biiy2SA-90
This wmk we're oflarmg our uaual prK3t
(which « alraady wall xM^am ttw naiioaaiy
prioa). and if you buy any 2 at the
Ha price we'll give
you a FREE canma
stofaas tx>x for them.
EVEBYTNIM!
NOW PLATniG!
WESTWOOD ^3
B
Baiart
•at AHEAD.
HOUK:
n-e
11-
laa
AHEAD STEREO
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
XCVMl. NuNihar 1g
Friday. April 23. tgUa
Sr #V ASUCLA
90094 CoprngM ttm bf
ASUCLA Communtcmfton»
eimm
Tony
Opinions within Empire varied
'. ^1 -■ -I ■ ■ ■ !!■ .1 II.. .. I .1. I ■ ^ I I ■ ■_ .■ — . ■ ■■ - ■ — ,: r.r-
British view of American
B7 Marsha Nttn
DB Staff Reporter
The mutual resentment be-
:a the colonies and Bntain;
tk€ paternal attitude of the
MMl toward the colomcs and
the colonies* unfounded fears
of a. British desire to reduce
them to a state of slavery were
contributing factors to the out-
break of the American Revolu-
uon. accordml fd X>r. J R
Pole. Vice- Master at
Churchill College at Cam-
bridge University, spoke to aa
audience of 300 on **The
American Revolution Through
Bnush Eyes.** The lecture a«s
part of a contmumg Wednes-
day night Bicentennial Lecture
Series sponsored by the UCLA
Bicentennial Committee and
the Committee on Public Lec-
tures.
lining different British
lives of the American
Revolution^ Pole said, **r>ie
opinions were varied even
within the Bntish admintstra-
lecture
tion. but external opinions
were more divene.**
The Bntish, however, gen-
erally agreed that only the
Parliament could effectively
legislate for the whole Empire,
and because it represented the
entire Empire, none of the
parts, such as the colonies,
couki be harmed by lU legis-
lation.
"Thercfoie, when Parliament
ligislated the Sump Act. the
British felt that it was perfect-
ly fair that the colonials should
pay for 4heir defense, which
had previously been paid for
by taxation of the English, said
Pok added, "This enormous
burden of taxation throughout
England, coupled with the
myth that the Bntish planned
to enslave the colonies, caused
a mutual resentment between
the Bntish and the colonies.**
Pale explained that thu mu-
tual resentment made negotia-
tions to avoid the American
Revolution virtually impos-
J.R. Peie
DATSUN
M
"" Acres of Datsuns
Student Discbunts — Ask for Fleet Seles
Pmedena Datsun
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
• 684-1133 •
MOnHnT
MOflES
nUBAT
SATOBBAT
APIILa*t4
EXCLUSIVELY AT THESE MAMN THEATRES
aaiscMf
The Guidance Center
301 7 aasii Monioa Blvd
SANTA MONICA
GRADUATE RECORD EXAM
preparatflon
20 hra Vert>sl. Malti. Practica Teating
Ooufss kMQina May 8 lor Jtane 12 teat
Aaolhcr problem the col-
onists faced was the superior
atutuda ol the f^^*tish toward
them
'The British regarded the
colonial protests of British
as a challenge to the
aooepceo powers of
Parliament,- Pole explained
From this viewpoint, the
British develaped aa attitude
of supenority, using a language
of paternalism "The colohies
wer considered chikiren, and
England was their mother,**
Pole said
Pole added. * The British
Ignored the fact that one char-
acteristic o( children is that
they grow tip.**
One probl<mi of the language
of paternalism was that it was
not confined to an attitude,
rather it invaded British pol-
icies.
''Writs of Assistance were
illegal in England, yet they
were allowed in the colonies.
There was a loophole m Par^
liament legislation which pro-
vided for such exceptions in
the colonies," Pole said.
SHELLEY'S
STEREO HI H iiHTih
EXPERT REPAIR SERVICE
UKiTY Tcnn
Ppet) Mon A fr\ Til 8 PM
DISCOUNT
PRICES
1^ e Ma is die wodd*s tiniest
restaurant catering to the
woftd^Miggeel appetites. Natu-
rally wc have to be epen 24
hours everyday to do this, or wc
might miss samcorvc who Is
starvif^g and needs one of our
nke h-esh pMa breads stuffed
witti hat falafd or eMHMK ""li
Both of these happen to be
under ^1.00 wtikh is very good
to hear wtren you're starving.
nfes^nfs
Qayley S MgSum In the
Eat haPS / tihc out / epen 24 hrs.
• •••HIGHEST
u
IWriNG.'^
KATHtEEN CAMKMX. Ntm rmt Itmm
As dramatic as the
most suspenseful
whodunit . . ."
MVtO SHEEHAN. cas- r»
KBFQRD/HOFFIUN
mnEnEsvNTsnr
s
S
r
I
I
1
I
t \
NOW AT A aCLaCT TNCATM NEAII TOM
HtUYWOOO
Pantaoes T^atre 469-71 6 1
DAILY 12:10 • 3:00 ■ 1:10-0:00
A 10 30 MM
LATI SHOW SAT 12:49 AM
Wfsrwooo
OAILT 1? JO ]:00.- S 30 • 0:00
A 10:10 PM
LATCSPiaWSAT
ANAHEia
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OAltV 200 4 t
A •;4ft P»M
12:45 AM
V'601
7 is
CITY Of COMMEUCi
■|ig|Orive ln92' 1135
wmm% sTAirr a as
CITV gF laOttSTRY
Vfooland Drive In 33S-7518
•MOWt STAirr %:49
cavtiM
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SHOWS STAirr A:4S
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STAirr A:4S
JOS
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SUM. TMMas^ las • Stss • Sie
0:M A ll^OPM
wm OAT : i2:S0 • sas ' iiSS
0:IBA liaOPM
u
LtftNfidi 714/194 9400
SUN THUpS.: IrOO I M -4:00
a 30 A ixtm PM .
fpi SAT 12 10 • iao«ajs
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LA VESNf
M: Baidy Drivf In 714/S93-0343
OMo«vt STAirr at anas"
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SNOWS STAirr A:4S
at DOMOO If ACN
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MMLT 2 10- 4i4S • 7:20
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Studio 769 4441
MON mt 7:00. ttSOPM
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SUN 12:10 3:00 • S:SO • StSO
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VillMIIYt
ttpuiveda Drive In 786-6520
iwows STAirr ot4S
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ST AH? m^9
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MON rai 0:10 at
SAT OUN 12:10 •
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4y$34.iai2
IT BCACN
Mowport Cinema 714/644-0760
MON-rai 7: IS A ft4S PM
SAT OUN 200 • 4:SS • 7:16
at:40PM
fftiAagfift
HMtlna 7M-71 1 t/waM
MONTei 7:00 AftfOPM
SAT.SUN 2ao • 4:M. 7aS
A« »PM
coffaa houaa concart
WARRIORS of the RAINBOW
''music that defines and expresses
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taiko drums, kcyt>oard, bOM, traps, flute/rAAds,
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Tickala: 504 at door from 7-8 pm. Fraa rafi
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Herald Examiner
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.-k^--
'J
Assembly fails to repeal
T
* fc ■
II i * \
ban
on campus
ors
.--J!-.--
amento C orrcipondenf
(Sacramento): Lcgi&lauon that would make it
more difficult for DC officials to ban **dis-
ruptor*" from university property failed in the
Assembly Criminal Justice Committee We4-
nei»day. 6-0
The bill by Assemblyman Ken Meade (D-
Berkeley) would change a 1969 statute which
provides Univenrity administrators a w3y to
swiftly quell campus riots The law. known as
the Mulford Act, empowers a chancellor to
remove from University grounds persons whom
he believes have ^'willfully disrupted the orderly
operation of the campus.**
Meade's measure, backed by student repre-
sentatives here, says anyone student or non-
student may be ordered to leave campus
when **there is reasonable cause" to believe he
or she is committing or has committed an
illegal act "which substahtiallv and materially
disrupted normal campus affairs.
'* Administrators will think twice before
throwing someone off campus/* said Judy
Samuelson of the UC Student Lobby. **Ad-
ministrative procedures for handling campus
services are going far heyond criminal pro-
cedures,** she said.
The purpose of the proposed changes, Meade
Mild. IS to cianiy a 1973 II. S. Supreme Court
decision on the Mulford Act.
In Braxton v Munmpai Court, the Supreme
Court found the act violated free speech and
due pteem rights In a later case, Oosi v
Loper, the court tound the act uneeattitutional
because it proirt^gj for the suspension of a
ttudent **without first affording him a heannf
as required by due proccti of law."
Meade's bill shonens the time a chancellor
may ban a "disruptor" from campus from 14 to
leven dayi. provides the right to a hearing
within 72 hours instead of three working days,
and reduces penalties for remaining on or re-
entering the campus after having been ordered
to leave.
l-ast year, the Berkeley Democrat authored
similar legislation, which was vetoed by Gov-
ernor Brown on the grounds that it did not
extend the same due process rights to ele-
mentary and high school students. His bill now
applies these provisions to all students.
A consultant of the Assembly Criminal
Justice Committee said that he expects the bill
to reach the governor's desk again this year
During the late 1960's and early 70*5. Uni-
versity officials invoked the Mulford Act
hundreds of timet> to \^n from campus demon-
strators whom they believed disrupted orderly
operations.
Until next fall at earliest
V
Valley/UCLA busline delayed
By Chris
Dl Stair Wrilv
Those people who are wait-
ing for a University-assisted
bus service from the San ¥e§^
■nndo Valley to UCLA may be
waiting a lojig time.
Mike Galizio, external af-
fairs coordinator, said the Mr-
vice has been postponed until
next fall at the earliest, and the
bushne operation idea ^nay be
completely cancelled.
Ongmally planned as a Uni-
versity-operated bus service,
the program underwent num-
erous changes, as Hugh Stocks
and Lindsay Conner, two of
the persons involved with the
project, attemped to keep costs
down, said Galizio.
Gaiizio added that the ori-
ginal Park and Ride Program
was not thought to be feasible
due to excessive costs, so a
subscription service piM wm
drawn up.
SuiMcriptkNi service
-- Under 4he subscription ser-
vice, UCLA would contract the
RTD busline to run one bus
from the San Fernando Valley
every day. Stopping at various
plMo on the way to pick up
students and facuhy, the bus
was planned to deliver them at
UCLA in time for 8 am
clMtai. A similar program was
scheduled for an afternoon,
outgoing bus
The expense for this pro-
gram had been set at $40 a
month per person. Galizio said
he considered this to be high,
but felt It was still more eco-
nomical than driving to school
every day.
The University had aHotted
over $3,500 to guarantee the
RTD that the buses would be
filled Galizio said. Enough
studen*., and facuhy members
had signed up to fill the buses
and all preparations were pro-
gNKing smoothly
Lart nmute
**Thon at the hist minute the
RTD calls. up and tells us we're
going to have to pay $20 noore
a person,"* he added.
The problem was in a sub-
sidy that had been discon-
tinued. Galizio said the sub-
scription service had previously
been financed by money allo-
cated to sute highway and gai
tax departments. This funding,
as described by Sute Senate
Bill 395, had been allotting $20
for each person riding the bus.
Galizio said no one at the
(CaiiamdoaPagei)
E Z Wider, theor/g/na/doublewidth rollin,
roiling easy The double width eliminate <, fHPihttsle of
sticking Xy>jo singlevvidth papers together 4n{/E J Vlflig^
r^. is the standard of quality finest glue, slow even burn ^
- and the witerm^rk signifies a perfect thinhess of pa
e-z wider... easily the lie
W Air Com.ro i Mi-Fi will mmmf or bMt ar«y
corr«nHy ad«*rti«Mi prk* on any A^rontz itom from
•«• hug* rnvvMBry of th« finest audio p««4iicn.
A*oronti II o nam. lynonymoo. with qutility. S*.
whothor yoo'r* intorwtod in th« aconomy model
Morontz 22 1 5B AM/ FM r.c«y.r of In th. ..dtinfl new
Moronti ^420 dolbiziMi cou«n« dock, y*u will fi«ri
*• bott dool ot Sol Air Comero & Hi-Fi. Murry,
OMouM it a limited time offer.
«•/ Air Comero 4 Hi-fi Will M—t or
^^t Any Advmrtiamd HHaranti Price
»2;
beic^cQmoQfthHI
^fyfl jQi inoaiai fWMi
Mondov - So«urdov « 6
lose4)eneffits
V
Dt Stair
Approximately ow hundred
veterans will lose educational
benefits starting July I if
pending federal legislation pro-
posing to extend heneCit eh-
pkdmy is not passed
*For thoae planning on re-
Depends on federal bill
GBPfiaf stale subsidies for the
upcoming school year, the sub-
■idan BMy aai be there.** said
Manuel Val, aMMMftr of the
DivisiMi of Veteran Servtasi in
Sacramento
Full paw^r of Hoow of
Rcpresenutives Nl 9576 will
increase the number of months
Cheer and good
fortune offered
by Arts Festival
By Carol Starr
DB Stair Wfiiar
Time to kveO (feel pride and pleasure), bubbeUu. The 3rd
Jewish Aru Festival will be upon us April 26-29, offering a
plethora of mazel (good fortune) and cheer.
Sponsored by Program Task Force, the celebration was
orgamzed by the UCLA Jewish Union. **an umbrella group
for all Jewish groups on campus," according to committee
director Rita Heller. "UCLA has never seen Jewish
progiamming like thisP sIk said.
Monday's events include a aoon concen on Janss Steps
by David Dor and ha Israeli haad. *Their music has a
Sephardic-lsraeli-Onenul flavor to it,** Heller nid.
Following the band the Nirtote dance group wtll
perform.
Later in the evening, Jan Kadar. who directed Ues My
FatfMr TaM Me. plans to discuss **The Jew m Film** at 7:30
in Young HaU, 2250 His movie "TIm SaMip on Mahi Sfrasr*
will be shown afterwards.
Tuesday has been entitled "A Diay at Remembrance,** to
commemorate the holocaust of World War II Janet
Hadda, professor of Yiddish here, will give an 1 1 am lecture
on Yiddish poetry in Ackermaa 3517:
As part of the **Night of Remembrance,** photographer
and author Roman Vishniac is presenting an 8:30 slide
show on **The Vanished WorU of the ShtetP Vigiutai win
be at the University Rehgious Center, 900 Hilgard Avenue.
Another slide presentation will be offered at 2 pm
Wednesday by Debbie Pnnz in Ackennan 3517. Pnnze will
mystify her audience with ** Jewish Magic and tiie Demoness
Ulith.**
In the evening, a musical program on modem cteHcal
Jewish comfMMfi iadudrng Gershwin and Copelaad wiD be
heard in Ackerman Grand Ballroom. The program,
oiaanized by Jay Hayman, begins at i pmL
Thiinday*s art fair on Janss Steps culminates the four-
day festival. Beginning at 1 1 am, 30 aitiau plan to display
their crafu which raafe from staMKd-gkss aiuJ pottery to
jewelry and Sephaidk fltory-telhng. As an added attsaelion,
Jaacph Pelzig will demonstrate ii ' revolutionary printing
process widcfa runs aathout flKtncity or aaf.
fcrt
He!ler*s involvemeht With the festival. Fern
Levitt, Moises Paz, Richard Silverstem and RaM Feller.
four gantsa mayven (ahopether experts), also contnbuted
their talents
a veteran is eligible for
fits for graduate study The bill
raisas eligibility frooi 36
months to 45 months and
would cquaiie federal bcncfiU
for graduate and undergradu-
ate mitt^y
The State of California ad-
ministration hflu eliminated
.veteran educataaaal assistance
funding from \ti 1976-77 fiscal
budget. Starting July I, no
state funding for veterans will
be availaMe.
This means that under-
graduates receiving subsidies
for over 45 months of
schooling and graduates res
ceiving subsidies for over 36
months of schooling will ^ be
caught la a void between
pending state and fodsnd legis
lation, with no subsidy to pay
for Bchaal this fall
revsral besMflts
Federal funds are S270 a
month for a 45-month maxi-
mum for underfraduate educa-
tion and S270 a month for' a
36-month maximum for grad-
uate education.
State funds now provide an
additional maximum of $100 a
month for 12 aMoths. Cur-
rently, a veteran may receive
state funds only after he
exhausted his federal funds.
About 75 per cent of
sponsored veterans are
graduate level, according to
Val. If the federal bill passes,
nine additional monthr if
benefits would be available to
these students, he said.
Wrong assismyllaa
According to Val. state of-
{Caauamd on Page •)
WE WANT YOU!
W «■ i«' ♦•.Jim winiM-n •»! lh«" /,*»» \ $tif« 1$ s I itttfifi t
' n<i>hi . ^itf,, thr utriiHh"^ /.ii)ni>l <>riifani/at ion
«>f .\rTMrir;L ln« V\v .m ilu lafvr>i ZnmLsl
•iLMiji/iilnm in Xnurira. WrVr ji ifnuip i»f
• irilu.i'iMl Miuni* in«»ih<T>. *fr.in<lnH»lhrr>». MnicU'
\M»iiH*n ;in(l )»r«»ff*»^u.n[ul \\«»ni«'ri v\h<» v\Mrk t«»
! • <Mir (It'iatn^ MfafM'cun anti h«ahh\ Uriwl -
it\ liuiftiituf hoNptiaK an«l M'h^Htl^ ami lV\ n^MMi-
irii! aii'i rfhaliililahni: iiiiiniv^rani and dinadvan
taii«M| \f»uth What a i/t«at fri'linir it i> !t» kn«»N^
\M*\i' mail* |H'o|fh>, wlmlt aifaiii »»r >i'nd ii rhilil
«m t4i .1 U'tln lifr l>wallv .our |»ni|;rani iiM-ludo
iuii^. partiri|iati«»n fHi ihr ArntT^ran iind
joiiiniunal •*rrn<*» *.>iir arti\itir> an* \ari«tl !••
mrhnl« ^I'tninar'*. rht'^'**-^. ltmrh«MHi«». ra<^hi«Mi
'«li«»*-. Uip*' ilanrt ' ! m*l ^jimmI «»til
l.i^iit'iK**} i*f\ ht^riliri - \\i\ii vMiinci) «»r -imilar
mhi«'*.|«. *' , .
Imagine how much more wei*ould accompliiih
if you were with us. (vive us a call todav at
(21.1) N7«»-<^27 and let us tell you about tNU*
new member»hip pruaram.
YOU ARE NB
3 » D •
/>».s An<ft lis ('hnjittr o^ Hadatsah,
14W .S>ulh RcaHTtsnn Blvd
ROCK OUT
with people from 18 campuses at the City-Wide Hillel
LIVE BAND ROCK DANCE
featuring "TRIAD"
Saturday Night April 24th 8:30 pm
900 Hilgard in Westwood
$2.00 members $2.50
UCLA Extansion
474-1S37 475-0427
LACC
UJWF
by H<HM
LAUC use CSUN
M4-7443 7474at •■•-6101
Renaisssncf
motxaoun
,^
I
I
mrrnce
I
i
I
!«samiKivi^iiis4Vfiia |
I aORO^HCi I
««^p«ft«9«i.«i|
Here's YOUR chance to ask any question you want of:
UDALL, REAGAN, FORD, CHURCH,
CARTER, BROWN
and ail of the other candidates ...
Make your VOICE HEARD by returning the form below
By April 30 — Friday
Project Awar«n«ss '7S, a non-partisan political information neiworK aervmg the UCLA
community, in conjunction with Common Caus#will compile the resuitt and call on ail the
candidates to answer the questions you raise.
HOW WOULD YOU
Your
Pfiofia w
on
j
>
\
9
I
I
. ^..
ItMaii
i
J
f
'/ • J. ■ '
■j==^
Letters to the Editor job hunting: boring, dtegusUng and frustrating
Anti-social
• %
\
<
I
I am fiOfT> Mesa, Arizona, and
I started anending UCLA in the
fall. Since then I have met ab-
ftokitely no one. This place
makes Sun City look like Sin
City.
I \w9 alone in an apartment
and I go to school by foot be-
cause I have no transportation.
Once at school I go to clasMS,
the library, the Coop, more
classes and then I go home. The
people here are anti-social. They
all think someone is out to get
them. They seem to be doing
the sanr>e thing P am, but they
still won't reach oul to other
level much lonpar. I have too
much tinr>e to study Mrk6 barely
study at all. If 1 can't get in
touch with other poQpAe and
itop being a purely academic
person, then I am going to leave
UCLA.
King
Abortion
By Joan
(Editor's note. Morley is a Jtudant here ma/or^ng
in tnghih).
It's spring again — tlie tonon wk&n a stu-
dent's fancy turns to thoughts of money »n6
iumryycf c^mployment. Unfortunately, |ob hunting
can be not only time-consuming but bormg,
disgusting »nd frustrating as well.
I had one such experier>ce when I answered wn
OPINION
UCLA has almost every type of
MTvice mvaginable, but is still
unbelievably lacking in social
services. I don't want to bie set
up with other peopled I just
want to go to a place where I
can meet other people who like
what I like.
I can't keep operating at this
Editor:
Mr. Ralph Aivy, m his re-
sponse to Mr LaiFrance's anti-
abortion stand, is stumped on
the ma^or Issue: when does the
fetus become a Ttuman child?
Yet, he h convinced that to say
humanity begins at the moment
of conception is absurd WImm
he compares the human gesta-
tion period with the Pope's
growing hair, he hopes to reveal
this absurdity. To me the only
absurdity revealed is Mr. Alvy's
own analogy. I doubt that the
Pope's hair grows a single strand
at a time at the rate of 8 inches
(Continued on Page 7)
ad prominently displayed in the Daily Brum
which tantalized with the suggestion of summer
earnings which would enable orte to "Vacation in
style all fall, winter & spring." There is no
mention of what the job ertt ails or M ^h€~
company name — just a phone nurrtber to caH.
Curiosity got the better of me, ar>d I called. The
answering service directed me to the lobby of
Dykstra Hall for an interview the next ahernoon,
but they had no information as to what type of
work was being offered.
I kept my appointment the next day, along with
about ten other pao^le who wef^e equally in the
dark regarding these jobs. We were met by a
young man who arh^^ed IS minutes late and
shepherded us into a small room. Inquiries as to
what kind of iob we were applying for went
Morter
unanswered, but we were Informed that we were
expodad to remain in the room lor an infor-
mation meeting which was to laft an hour and a
haH. If we could not stay that long, w^ were
asked to leave and return at another time
The "gentleman" conducting the meeting
informed us that he and hts two atsistants worked
for the Times-Mirror Corporation, and then
launched into a ludicrous sales pitch, whose
prime import seemed to be to convince us to
attend their salesmanship school in order to
become talesmen for their company We were
also informed that the fob required us to work
outside <^ Californa. Ah hat So no«v we knew
that we were going to sell — but what? (In-
surance? Vacumn cleaners? Pornography? Th«y
were certainly being tocrottve enough) When
pPMaed 4or infformation on the specific proAiU
to be sold, tlW fJlMmarf replied that he would
get to that in a moment, but of course didn't.
At this point, I and the girl next to me were
evicted for evincing "Jack of interest" (I guess we
interjected or>e of our names into every sen-
tence);
Out in the hallway, bursting with curiosity, I
pleaded to just be enlightened as to what the
damn things were that we were suppoaad to sell,
and tfien I would go quietly. The arwwer was
"Wataar' handbooks door to door."
Sound tike a job for you?
J
t
SPORTSUITS
Men's! women's! styles! colors! sizes!
The Athletic Department has the best selection of sportsuits in
West Los Angeles. Come on by and check out The Athletic Dept.
before you buy.
the olhletic deportmenl
__ _; 1317 WMtwood Blvd.
" '~~ Westwood, C«. 473-6467
M-F10-6 Sat 9-5
The rtifht wjty tnpciur
Ht'tT never chanijes
Sinr*- the dawaof tir^nrs-
A vi lit wini; hack ii
A D . breu'mnTSTcrs have Qrjii
criminatmn drinkers to pitur striNjihr
into the head, and not intt> a tilted
I IV U
Altht»uuh hlatantly defi;inr of
fe tradition, the orin-
inaJ metntHJ havrh« rncrilL>riDus
ad\ai«aee of producinjj 1 seal between
the head and the Jrink Jtself trapping
the carK>nation below The beer
docuntnoflat The merhtid
remain srriu-
V\ • rf nnes to pouring beer, the
brewii. c rijjht fnmi the begin-
ning. When It came to making beer, no
was 0\\ Skill and ingenuity )ust can t be
" i upon Some things never
change Olvmpia never wH!
I
BeiT ikH.*<in\ gL't anv hefUT.
CONTEMPORARY ART SURVEY
presents
LAWRENCE WEINER
lecture/film — "A SECOND QUARTER"
Friday evening 8:00 pm
Dickson Auditorium 2160E
sponaoredby Ca>ArtS. UCLA Art D«(it, SCA. SLC. PTF
■
Mother's Day Special
nicer than a phone call
more thoughtful than a card
send an ^
Orchid
anywhere in the USA
sealed in a box with a
card and your message
Only $4.25
Call Gamma Phi Beta to order
474-9053 474-9094
474-5767 475-9070
fcji^res April 27
Letters Continued
>-
per hour. Mr Alvy's imafination
k% indeed fertile. Having ex-
liausted the possibilities of the
plant seed analofy, he has
grabbed for one mmrn^ ^nd it
a^ipears his latest desperate con-
coction will have to suffice until
he can dream up sonnething less
"ifieKact and fuzry " Tell me,
Mr. A Ivy (when you conr>e down
lo earth) when the fdus be-
covnes human.
I happen to believe it is not
9knard to suppose that the fer-
tilized Ofg is human. It has a
human chromosone structure,
and so, is n\ad^ up of living
human cells. If it is not hurr^n,
please tell me what it it. Re-
turning to the seed plant an-
alogy, is it implausible to sup-
pote that the seed is simply a
^ plant at its earliest stage of
relopment? Clearly, seed.
II mg and sprout ate ^M^
of different stages of the
developnient of the plant, just as
fertilized e§g* child and aduH
foier to varying stages of the
development of the human be-
ing. Elderly refers to those per-
som who have reached the firtil
ttlgr of human development. If
we cut off the life of the human
being at its earlicfl stages of
development, why can we not
justify, as Mr LaF ranee suggests,
cutting off those who ate at the
final stage >of human develop-
ment? ^-
Before you devise fviore anal-
ogies. Mr Aivy, think about the
TITLE MSURANCDE
AMOTMUST
unpleasarM retyks of your
lion.. >
Sick & tired
1 am fgtmkmg tM and tired of
the controversy raging over the
ISC mitmanagement issue. Why
4mMi'\ anybody do something
kbout It? Why doesn't the
University appoint an indepen-
dent irwestigation committee to
\ook into the matter ^nd try to
Mttle the problem of>ce ar>d for
all? The ISC inue may have served
to overshadow the OISS evils
(such as, preferential treatnnent of
foreign students, corruption,
biMod hiring procedures etc.)
which have only re<:eived scant
attention so far. Our furture
investigative efforts, should be
directed towards the OlSiOIHcc.
That's where the ctujl of the
problem lioa.
4 am totally oppotftd to the idea
of moving the International Stu-
dent Center to campus. I think
ftudents no0^ an informal, off-
campus ptooe where they can go
for recreation and relaxation.
What are your argun>ents for
having the Center on campus?
Your questionnaire should have
emphasized not the location but
the restoration of tf»e various
services that ISCiiSOd to offer four
to five years
I certatnfy nope that
will take the resutn of this poll to
be rappwentatwe of the opinion'
of die mafority of foreign stu-
dents. The content of the ques-
ttonr^ire reflects the bias of the
makers, a closely knit radical
clique that's running fSA this
year Furthermore, I would urfe
all foreign students ntA to take
any more shit from the FSA
Office amd not to swallow any of
tf^etr idiosyncratic statenients un-
critically because they do not pre-
sent a croii section of the foreign
students. If ypM do not Mieve mev
just take a look al the composition
of this year's FSA Executive Com-
mmee. I believe tfiat part of tlio
reason why FSA has failed so'
conspicuously in its noble mission
to serve tf>e foreign student com-
munity is because of its built-in
inability to appeal to the majority
of foreign students. I feel it is
about time the FSA Executive
Committee Members started dis-
engaging from t'his age-long
bettle with ISC and engaging m a
seH-appraisal warfare.
If this is any consolation to
McCarthy, let me dose by saying
that the ioMign Modems' welfare
IS in ieopardy not only because of
his mtsmanagml tkiMi but al»o of
tf^ nKAtnefomi malpracticsi ol
OISS and FSA. So the issue is a
combirsMiofi of ISC's miaiiigiiige*
ment. OfSS's corruption, and
FSA's irrespomibility
N.g The above rerrtarks must not
be construed as a tacit endofie-
ment of the ISC's har>dtlr>g of
foreign students' needs nor a
refection of the FSA concept
X
Rhetoric
Mark Iwgph's editorial en-
titled "Their watch word is Hy-
pocrisy" (4/14/7g) iiemtd to be
a well prepared presentation of
an opinion on socialist and com-
munist rh€?torir Throughout the
argMMem, he tried to establish
tfie fact that the socialists seem
to be hypocrites because "they
care about people, but only
insofar as their ideas agree with
min^ (the Socuilifii|/' In his final
para%rapk\, however, he diapfays
a smiilar brand of hypocrfiy. Mr.
Imph teHi us that wMIe tfie
"chenoe tocMy to chengt poo-
pie," he believes that we must
"change poipit to change so"
ciety " He Myt tHe "mfy ef-
fectual change is that nrgiight
when a person reconcte Nnv-
seM to God by faith in Christ."
arui that we may feel free to
respond to this debate, but only
wmi arguments based "on wfiat
Chrift taught '
My attack, then, is aimi|d not
at Mr Igiopit'f ratgliMi pff-
g*tf>ces. but rather at his stipu-
lation that reipoTHes be beted
only upon Christian princlpiM.
iThis to me seems fust as hypo-
critical as the alleged "socialist
hypocrity." Won't he consider
arguments based on other idaet?
What about lews, goddhists, or
Moslems? Must tliey iIm) res-
pond in terms of what ChrMi
taught! If Mr loaeph believes
so. he is as hypggMcai aa. he
purports the sociiltal to be.
g
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I
I
I
I
Laffy Folacii
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available m district offices tf)rougn-
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out ttie U S H acceptil yeu will be
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You can work locally travel your
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The moM aiMl womw we m% logkiiig
for are tfttbitKMii, iipooiibli md
liord working For district office
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m-Aiielwiiii ceW 7ie §00 0700
' •
r* 1
1
Analysis of the latest
Middle East situation
Dr. Hatim al-Husaini
Representative of the Arab League, Washington, D.C.
Thursday: International Student Center. 6 PM
Friday: Haines Hall. Rm. 39 at 12 Noon
Sponsored by: Organization of Arab Students - UGLA
Foreign Students Association
Council on Programming
BARRY COMMONER
Author The CloihiK Circle, noted environmentalist
JOHNGOFMAN
Professor Emeritus, UC Berkeley
DAVID PESONEN
Chairman, Californians for Nuclear Safeguards
A DISCUSSION OF ENERGY POLICY
NUCLEAR SAFEGUARDS INITIATIVE
(
FRIDAY APRIL 23
12 noon - 4 pm
Acker man Grand Ballroom
Hf: S^mdmn Program, Oflat ol Environmental & C^wnninr AHain, UCIA Ceograpiiy Oipc, Ci
Cliipigr Americafi Nudaar Siocmfy, Cawpiit Comrruttee le indte the Gap. Slwitnt lejiila^e Counctl
r*'
V *
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1
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•
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ "^^^^^^^^^^1
•
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1 ,■ •
"■vyy-'-''"' '~r': ' ■ -■^- ■^xJT^v^^^^S&^^^v^T^^^^^^^P^^^^^WI^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^H
-^—^ — rrmr-
University of
San Fernando Valley
COLLEGE OF UW
Announcing:
FALL SEMESTER 197S
• FuiMBU l-y««f day P'ogi^
> Pan-iuM day and •vaning prupMM
I he •>( hool i>
FUUY ACCItfDITID
^>V rbe Committer of B.ir f K.imim*fs
Stale Bar (H ( .iliUxnt*!
TH: (2H) 8H4-5711
8353 SepuUeda Blvd.. Seputweda. Ca 91343
. (■
o
ELSAPERETTI _,
OPENS HER HEART
Eisa's sculptured heart is on a chain, but
It flirts up. down and arOund Sterling
sffver heart with fifteen-mch cha»n. * 34
TlFFANY&CO.
BEVERLY HILLS
ttaNLSHIRE SOULEVARD • ZIP: 90212 • TEL: (213) 273«
Md tm> doHmn tor shipping mnd fimndhng plus %ml9% tmx wtmre 9pptfc9N^
Anwricmn £x0fns • BmnkAmericmrd Omnign Cqg>yrightmd ig^ f 4 Co^-
-1 •<X'
r=^
■-. ; . • -t'
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psakns 2 and AcU 4:25
I
1
I
God ralMd up Moms ID iMhwr Hit pttopi* out Of aw tiavcry and o^
ol aw iaypilaML Wtwn Mom« had imislwd his worfc and lad
to aw bora»r» of aw Puiwliid Land ho tumod hto K>to and
ovor to Joahuo. Ood mIracukMialy oponod up aw watort of
aw RNof JaPdMi and ato paopto cfvaaod
M^artoy ato waHod dty of Jaftoaa slaad In aw way of awlr
Ona day aa Jaaaua stood aunwying aw situation, tuddanly ha I
of a man atoadtoe naaiby wtai hts sword drawn In Ma hand,
want to Mm and aalwd N ha waa a frtond, or a toa. Tha rapty
*l«ay. btfl aa captain of aw hoat of Tha Lord am I now conw."
Jeahua S:14.
(Wa ara caNad upon to wwdWats upon God's Word: TMs man adaM
hava baan aw Arch Anpal Mtohaal: 'And thaia was war m
Mkrhaal and Ma Awpali toMfN aaalnst aw dragon ~ aw graat
— that oW sarpanl caHad aw 0^>^, and
whato waild. . ." Mow. 12:7. ale. Or. dda awn adw appsaPid to
might hava baan notw oawr awn Chrtat NanaaN: lal CadnMana 10:4.
ato. toas us Christ waa aw "tpMlMSl Maoir «Nh laraal. and Ha N
It was Chrlot adiam awy tomptod by
at aw Fmddiwii of God. and for
God ctostroyad and MBad many mouaandi of awm *
aangi ara wrttton tor our
iaHiua faa an Ms f aca to aw
-WHAT SAJTH HT LOHO LUfTG HtS SERVAMTr Tha Srat adng aw
Captoto of Tha Lord's Hoat tofd Joahua waa to
CrtSng on ona
Jartohor Tha hoy
TUfMng io aw
InlMactoaarTha
aol
tod. iw aakad. 'llfho brolw down aw walU of
"aa. I dant know, but a waan't
aakad. 'la aUa aw uaual
, ^san. awi ooy m »ary non^M.
tdoN."
Ifw Inapactor axptomad Ina IncMant to
rapMad, **! hava had awt
Htoaas got wfwn God
of God's Hoat gava
Whan
lawcityf(yau
God
to oovfy aal Odd's pton.
awwaUsal
^
God's Throna? WHy don't you ad honaat anouah to ao< o^^ of a
ChurchtoMndadanddasaiopsdonatogiiaaaiatotatoanaraatotola
aw bitoatoto Word of Odd?) Whan aw waai
awy wara to ao ap ond aaiiHy daaaey aw oNy
award and ara. wNh two aooipaona: 'VV FAITH THE HAMLOT MAHAS
aOHMK) NOT WITH THCai THAT WUCVf NOT. WHEN SHC HAD
RCCEIVCO THE SMES WITH aEACE." Ilabrawi 11:31. Tlw«awra«-
toba
to
awT
to aw
to aw
af Apras, 1
WHO TAUQNT WHOar? A Mg of
Of adi
nwytw a
of aw
CI
what God's Word
ofaaa
aw a tola and Tha Lord's arayor to oar
■nly ads gfaoEy piaaHSBS igaavaaoa of Ood and His
-*ANO THIS IS LIFE ETEMNAL. THAT THET MnOHT ICNOW THEE.
THE ONLY TaUE GOO. AND JEaUt CHRIST. WHOMI THOU HAST
aCNTT " John 17:2.
THUS SAITH THE LORD. LET NOT THE WISE MAH GLORY m
HIS WISDOM, NEITHER LET THE MIGHTY MAN GLORY IN HIS
aaOHT. LET NOT THE RICH MAN GLORY IN HIS RICHES: BUT LET
HIM THAT GLORIETH GLORY IN THIS. THAT HE
UMOCRSTANOETH AND KNOWETH ME. THAT I AM THE LORD
WHICH EXERCISE LOVINQ KINDNESS, JUDGMENT. AND
RiOHTEOUSMiSS, IN THE EARTH: FOR IN THESE TIISJOS I
DELIGHT. SAITH THE LORD ' Jf^mkt^ 0:22. 24.
THE WISE MEN — LO. THEY HAVE REJECTED THE WORD OF
THE LORD: AND WHAT WISDOM IS IN THnS.* Jaramtoh S:S. Tha
Of Tha Word of Ood by Sw wlaa
latopllhaywMbaaBhamad.dtontoyadandtoliiwlHBppiantoua
•" ^ww ^^^Ba ^H^wi n^^w ^waawy aaan laKan m ay attr
In wwny c Bwlsrsnaaa or aiadaa, tod wa haaa not yat gal aar
*«Y REO^UE ARE DESTROYED FOR LACK OF KMOWLCOQC. I
WNX ALSO REJECT TNH — SHHiQ THOU HAST FORGOTTM
THE LAW OF ODD. I WNJ. ALSO FONQIT THY
4A Ffwn wRM aw foad to
and an aawr haadoya, awat to gMMP^ far to
aiir aSadPoar " AND JnUS ANSWMMO SAID UNTO TMm. DO YE
MOT TiaNSFONE ENR. SECAUW YE KNOW NOT THE SCRIR-
TUNIS. MWTlim THE ROWM OF OOOr Stofii 12:24.
La( «a ery to Oad wNh ato Raobatol: laiLT NOT THOU RtVWE US
AOAaH: THAT THY REORLE NIAY RCJOICE M THEEI
ciiTya, GAi
Parking — .
-F
Tsrking in the foreiccabk
future It a dichotomy of lost
sod fsia. Tito MMNi-to-bc-be-
gun Jerry Ltwk Center fog
Masoalsr Dyslrophy will ra>
present s SMsiilN IsM of S5
tpscei. Stocks believat tkst
difficulty will be offset by the
Health Sciences Parking struc-
UtfC, %^hich, when opened, will
sccomoiair 1.000 cart.
/
In the Westwood PUza mat-
ter plan. Lot Six it designated
to serve as visitor parking
Such an srraairrAent is nat-
ural, as the parking lot is
aocesibk to the places visitors
tend to come to. such as Ack-
ennsn Union, Pauky Paviboa
and Um Ahtmni Center But;
according to Stocks. **we won*t
touch the lot until we have an
alternative place to move the
students now parking there.**
Vets . . .
(CoiNiMMtlraa Page 5)
ficials wrongly assumed the
federal bill would pass. On
that basis, they figured there
would be no need for
assistsnce. Val said
Even if HR 9576
the Senate, continued Val. the
President could veto it. The
sentiment of the Ford admini-
stration is not in favor of the
kfislaiion.** he said. **But this
it SB election year and crazy
this happen during election
years.**
New slirtc aM .
Aitembly Bill 2360 in the
slate legislature would permit
continuation of the state edu-
cational aid to veterain
through 1976-77. Again, Vml
fsid he it *^ancertatti at to the
outcome of this legislation.
Between now and December,
before they adjourn, they could
pats it. It could be too late
then. after students hsYC
slicsdy naadc plant.**
Val taid a UC Stu^it
Lobby could •*try to generate
tupport** for this sUte bill by
contacting senators sad con-
gfsssmen.
Randal Winter, the UCLA
United Veterans Association
(UVA) president, it trying to
activate veteran participation
on this issue. Said Winter, '''rm
planning tq send a letter to all
attemblv people urging them
to pass this kfitlation ** But
since Student Legislative
Council funding for the UVA
has "not been restored, I
coukln*t get the letter copied,
couldn*t fet tUmpt.**
VMifBM' Istoy
Winter believet that s
UCLA veteraat group lobby
coold aide pawap of the Mate
bill "I think we're s well
known school,** he tsid. ""A lot
of wliat b taid here theukl set
a precedent nationwide."
Busline a a a
(CsMri— tdfcniPa«e4)
Univeftity had known aboot
the fundiag. and the twMrn
oaowiliag af these funds had
been unexpected.
During a sMMe audit of the
funds aHotted hy tile bill the
a«Mse of funds was disoswsfsd
and the money skss 4is60»-
tinued. To CQfyer the loss, md%
paassn would have been sr*
quired to pay aa additional
%m a month, brinpRg the tou!
coat to $60
Galizio taid Cooner and
Stocks are ssoilat oot tattars
of explanation to sM d* those
had ngosd Up for the
No one had
so
. Frankai, M.D. Madical Group
Hair Transplantation
Acns-Complexion
Plastic Surgery
Dermatology
Allergy
Pt\on% tQf Parsonai Appointment • Madicai Litaratura on Raquaat
Alt Madtcai and Health Plans • Cradit CardrQradit Tarma Avaiiabia
Lot Angelas
Lskewood
Huntington
6423 Wlls^lre Blvd #105 655-6533
5203 Lakawood Blvd 531-7420
8101 Newman St . Ste C ' (714)
to
Campus events
KarcWiaa HaM
hrtt
priman
If tM
Afni Z7 ISsdica Caalar
of MSBII SSatMnraH 1^
tract Bniipi ttac
paa**^ B** aamm
t^ao pai mwmnm
Out l«B Wirtnie
Afdliat^m Hettt aaan Aprti 2S
SchaanSart eiai Wall uttmtrn tar lie
turai 2 pai. Maat WM in cast of raai
m SoMi t2QU
Tas CMaa Sar Mte •
aiSi Si
pai. Afni B. V|
an fMiriaiMfii tuadae far traSaan iia-
SaS aai patliiiliraa art ivadaSii m int
FaNawiaipi tad Aiiittintthip Stctjon
Murphy ia
_^^_ lafjjiir
aiM. a MdH aar'^BROTV
staSidty
traaiid aHiiia ailt halp you taid
wdi ii
April 27 NFt lydHiriaai ^rat
Jalli tadriei m
fV pri
I kai Aprt «.
I as dtaiMiiairyiSsai a
dactar aa bi iliaapa S pai. Aaril
Ffl
trip MOO toot mm, tha
aator 9 am April 2S. iiiil la fron( of
fdiaif. mui^ tad
Mtaica wMI to laaturad a Sda
Fridsy aigM
SSI. mm
tnttrtatnmant 7
sac
sjo^ao
1-11 pm
nisi
il
Hilgard
^Vi(l»ylall attttri Rtflltatlt ainntr
fHi aa aCAA birSi to Muncit ladiana. 6
and 8 pm tomgm cttamaiaaalHp ftaii 7 JO
ff*!. tomorrow Paulay FaaJia f1 lar iN
13 concaurao laval 14 amia
art availaiii
A213 or CSS
|orn OC£A as •
conauaiar mvattigatot Vitii Karddiaff 91 1
ar call 825-2020 Voiunttori art alto
lar anvKonmantal and
in Iht Mardi
Graa oftici AcMraian A-flO aawtomor-
to ill dalMa an da aspSisNin
8t8tat Saard wtiict) thoart
Liiiv SaSaHlv NdSai a
now availaMt tor i twoyoar tarm witti ttM
UC Studad LafeSy m Sacraaitnto wtacn
pay« S7S780 i diaaifi Nqmrtnitntt m-
duda bamg a racanf UC oraduate add
intaraat in aducationai aaaas Ftck up
application in Ktrcktiaa M SHSSat M
Miy ^ Of call 82M646 , ,
—tiaiaaidi Caatahtia Appllcaiiaai tor
FraaidifHiil Advisory Committaes art norn
ivaHaSli OitdlMia a April 30 pHrli up
ippiicitioni it Aclierman information
disk Kirdclialf 304 and housMQ aaaacia-
SJO pai. iMiQnt and tamartaa
11 tar UOA i^
SI lar tsars
iSTiili band iad Sa Saliiii Sosm Traupa
aaan. ^J[2i Jtnii Sliii ^m
^^^vaMiH ^ww ^^^HH^s guv 4^VBV nHMBiBiB
will ptrtorm noon AprH 27 ScSsaiSiro
auditorium ^raa
will
bi Sivin by parlormara from UC PiMt aai
use. Ml pm April 27 SilmiSas Md-
itorium 11 tor UCLA tladnai. tMaSy
cNinai 12 lar otnar
m
• Dtentr • cocfctallt
lanqiaef Facilities
^if t Pltiltam sburg
wit!
Zaaland with Keawtf. Airnttr 8 90 pm
tiai|M. Aapai Audrtorium |2S0 tor ttu
dain aaiirs ss ind ssm
Sawd Sanaa ot ttta SwiSiaa wdi
ditcusa I acriturt an lau I imasination
miaislssi|ba cfw Ctaadil. 1 pm today
Hamii m
—Siffy StatNaar JoHn Gptman and
David fNanan will ditcuu anarsv policy
^^" ^^^^^f . ^CW^w^WHW VVeMv
?
tm
475-2525
11 7*5 NationnJ Blvii. Los Angeles
Prime Rib $4.95 from 5 to 7
Appearing in the Cockuil Lounge
Dgvc Alien Fri St Sat. Nights
^«ii
will bi siMn ay i maaibar.of tlii Niydia
tor US Sanstf Commttttt naan aday
Min t Gym 10? and noon ApfM X Kintay
203
■~ISa MHMil £wlaf Laabw a
will ba pivan by Jonn Grots Edtlor
Taaa LSavy tappaam 4 30 pm AprM 20
SoNi t^K and 8 pm Apm 27 Siabian
21SI Frdi
Monday April 26th thru
Thursday Ai^il 29th ^
Dinner Specials!
LaMagna $4.00
Layers of paMia, fioaHs chaes, maat and
with mozzarela chaaas and baked to perfection
Zucchini Ala Gina $3.95.
Zucchini slices sauteed tn wine. ssBMlliaasd in fresh mush
rooms and faaan peppers, topped with mozzareya cl
and ballad with love
Both dinners comprfete with honnaMi^ aoisp, or
bread, dessert and coliee.
ciA/axdiizLi, ^wo ^uij^ ^\om {JtaCu
IM4GI
Val. PariiiBt Witwd. Ctr. IMg.
477.2f4l
^documnt 200 yasrs raipn of tha kmd of
instruawas m Amarici ^pm April 20
SlbsaiSifB AuNJitoriumFfti
'**fflai Saadai idaSMtaidv. aipaimant
in Colaaibiin foNilort rt>taitr naaa. Aprd
20 Bunche 6275
-Soa Ta Sa bSi UGUl'a SabMl ^ iSar
Sat advaart tram cradantiai aap praduata
pai. AprM 21 Acliarman Ml
by Dan Npii af Sa
NiSraar Umvirsity Jarutalpm 4 30 pm
Aprd II. Acbdrma^ 3617
-na salay a iaai a l« Aapan 2 pm
April 21. Ackarman 3617
-4lHHdi. da ircttiaoiooy iad tiwiary
m ibdii 3 pny-April ?7 Ackarava 2412
pm April 27 USC auditorium SX) Hiigard
Froa
. — Vldaai PHlry 11 im April 27 Acbar
8617
Stan Dtorio trorr Common Cauii. 4 pm
April 27 GSM 2250
llaary by floward Mdman 7 10 pm April
27 Kaiiaif Wt
74 pm.
iad 2
cas. wm
TuMdaa Dykslri
3 pm Fridsyi. Wddlin t Gym 200 lar pN
•ntiriitid in liprnlap and practicing bill
Tksszettiiic
You're Mie
prtfidsntiAl
270
ITHE PRE8I1MMCY
..For
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aSaa. naon AprM 28 Nmaay ISO
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The Making of Mardi Gras
"4*5' "'.-.-
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K?i.r
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Photo by Rick Becker, Neal Nat
La Jotta Ten • . .
Pagtl) '^WeVe oontinmi^
•ctivky."
Tn inticipilion of pHriMv^ 4«i CIA chMI
fuitker '^disnipuon,'* tlK Chan- TW U i<ii Tca« aBmben
cellor ^'Mked for asasuaoe* ^ of tlv UC$D AoChCIA Coa-
'^borrowii^ l^oboe'* fron oChcr litio» are pUnning and co-
VC camputcs in order to **con- ipaioring (witir die Fropa-
tain the diirupuon ai a campyt faoda CdlDCtive) a ilalcwide
■Mtter,** Murphy said. He did anti-CIA conference this wmk-
to involve non> end in San Diego. The purpoat
University polioe fnMB local of the confercace iM to '^huild a
ts
erring to the necessity of
fee extra police. Murphy said
they were available if we
them. On a couple of
they were able to
further disnip-
unified action against CIA
f oniwrtiniM with the Untvernty
of Califonua," and '^■OMMlt
student hghu and aoMahty,*
aooording to a pamphlet on tho
conference.
Extra
But the extra police, al-
though paid, were not oeeded^
according to Stadler and the
ddendants. There were
clumps of pohoe strolling
arouad i, ainpoi looking
hored,** nid Stadkr. but
**nothing else happened.**
A possible penalty otjier
than the maximum of expit
sion from the La Jolla Ten
could be adnuniatrative pro-
bation. The students would be
restricted from participating in
the student cooperative (UCSD
ilodent government) or other
school groups, according to
Murphy.
Meanwhile, pending Lugan-
nani's decision, *^we have to
joit wait,** said one defendant
Sunday service
for Hamilton
A public
for former UCLA official
Andrew J. Hamilton will be
held at 2 pm Sunday, April
25, in the garden of the
Chancellor's campus resi-
dence at 10570 Sunset Boul-
evard.
Hamilton, who died April
8, was public affairs officer
emeritus at UCLA and had
been head of the Univer-
sity's public relations for 37
years. Chancellor Charles E.
Young, among others, win
offer eulofiea. The UCLA
Men's Glee Club will furnish
music for the memorial.
■i
SIN6LE8I IMPROVE YOUR CMmiUIIICATimi
WITH THE OPPOSITE S£X
...Ewofy Wodnesday Nite. 8:00 PM
Paul Lindoman - Expenencod Group Laador ^
PHMHE:|6t-7tS1 .4 mi» mmi •« miim, hmt awMt wva. MMTIMfc tUoH
SHERIOCK HOLMES*
SMAICTEa^ BHpTHEIl
fib')* 'M.^IM.A.fMtM
«A TI«AT« imaMti 477-0S75
LMC«rr«nlMK4-77?6
iai-5171
UA Ifl MM rorrMM Stt-SSai
/^ONOAV APAIL 26
NOON
OPtN KVK CONCERT
M^VIP POa ANP iSAAtLI aAf
-me NIRKOPK PANCC <*AOUP
2'3PJ^ ArasTDRror'mcJEw^orLosANceLes
Hi30 fJ\. MOOeiNN »RMtL\ POCT DAN MkClS
^SS"^ l\£APil>>C HIS WORK
tSo^ trie JEW IN F■J>^ wrm oikjrf nADRR,
!*
VDUNC
HALL
DIR£CTOA OF "UCSfNY RKmERTDLC
THE SHOP ON MAIN STREET
D0CUSSION WITH TTC MRECTDR . JAN
RAPAR.RH.LOWINCtHE rUA
i^dm
p
NOW AT THEATRES
AND DRIVE INS THROUGHOUT SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
447-1179
1
Trackst
Hi^
■ ■*
travelto A/It SA&Relays
% Wrfter
for the
vCM f1#yfl9S
Spring m fimdly in the air oai il*t time for
rile Southland*! aanoal country carnival of
track and Mi — tiK Mt. San Antonio Ralayi
The relayi are hoiog run this weekend. April
23. 24 and 25. at memonalllMlium in Walnut.
Califoraia, a quaint little town dear the San
Gahriel Valley The high school aad colkfe
events are featured today and the women\
events on Sunday. The premier action — the
men** inviutional — is reserved for Saturday
afternoon at 1:15 pm
Only (he Pcnn and Drake relays, abo run
thtf week, equal the Mt SAC Reliyt at a
prestigious track event The tno of meets are
aapocuilly significant in this Olympic year They
afford all (hose hardv souls who haver.** vet
qualified a chance to make the VS. loam trials
set for Eugene, Oregon in June
Mt. SAC is alio a showcase for those already
qualified to tune thetr uknu and show off a
bit in front of a track-lovuig crowd. Among the
^oig names** scheduled to compete are world
record holders Don Ouarfic^-(200 natlift) and
Dave Rohcrts (pole vault), Olympic gold
■Mtfahst Randy Williams (long jump), silver
medalist Jay Silvester (iteoiaK high jumpers
Tom Wooii and Rory Kottnek
A numher of UCLA athletes will also make
the one-hour hus tnp to Walnut The Bruins
have no colkgiate dual meet this, weekend, so
they ire OMking last minute tune-ups for next
week*s saoion finale against USC or are trying
to pick up qualifying marks for the Pac-8
championships Some will skip competition
completely this week
"The Ml. San Antomo Relays figures to he a
UCLA
orticfT Jim Buah. *it*t a mmai with no
team sconng aad therefore, no imm pretaure **
BriMRS entered kn the invitational division are
Doti^on Wiiaoo (ttil* ftennic Myles and Irian
Thenot (4ti|, Jeff Haynes and Conrad Suhr
(100), JaoHl Owcm (IIOHH), J» Niedhoft
(shot put). Mike Tully (pole vault). Jerry
Hemdon (long jump) and Willie Banks (tripk
and long jumpa).
Among those entered in the coilepe-university
4tviaioo are Tin Curran (pole vauh). Phillip
Milli (huriln), Joe Toati Oavehn) and Dave
Kurrasch (shot put).
And for all you red. white and blue groupies,
the Mt SAC Relays is an oflWaJ Bicentennuil
event
UmiW TRACK NOTIS: A numher of Bruins
have already qualified for the I nited States
Olympk Trials in June. They arc sh6t putter
Mm Neidhan (64-61. pok vaulter Mike Tull
(17-9'/^), triple jumper WiHie ilank» (53 .
mternmiiate hurdler C.ranf Niedrrhaaa CSB.2).
high hurdler James Owcbm (13.6) and 40()-metrr
specialist BasMic Mylcs (45 8)
Banks also has a fair chance at qualifying in
the long jump He has a hest of 2 _ 4. a mst
quarter short of the Olympic Trials*
Others with a good shot at making
the trip to Eugbnc are high jumper Jaaoa
Mehilar (7-OC^ hett. 7-2 needed) and discusman
Rldl Gunlhcr (l9l>-6 hest. I^^IO needed)
Banks lost his first long jump competition of
the season last weekend to SUnford*s James
LoiPton But the sophomore out of Oceanside
continued his seven-meet unheaten stnng in the
triple jump Other Bruins yet to lose in *76 are
Owens (110 HH). Niedcrhaus (400 HH). I ullv
(PV) and Ml Haynes (800)
Batmen knidng for big weekend against Canlinab
By Marc Delhrn
- DB Sports Writer
STANFORD — When the
UCLA haseball team' takes the
field here this afternoon to face
the ' Cardinals (2:30 pm.
KCRW-FM). they wiU he try-
ing to stay even with the USC
Troians and push the Cards
further from contention in the
California Intercollegiate Baae-
ball Association raoe.
The Bruins are currently 10-
5 in league play, while the
Cardinals are 7-5. A Brum
sweep would practically elimin-
ate Stanford and keep UCLA
close to the Trojans.
UCLA had a one-half game
lead over th|e TcQjans going
into this weekend*s octkm. Last
night, they hosted the UCSB
Gauchos at Dcdcaux Field.
Tomorrow, the two teams will
play a doublcheader in Santa
Barbara, followed by a single
game on Sunday.
The Trojaiu, 8-4 in I kaguc
pUy. waali aviaiiily he ffkt
favorite over a Gaucho club
which has won just two league
games ia 13 tries.
Following today*s game, the
Bruins and Cards will play a
double haiii I tomorrow, begin-
ning at noon.
The hut time the two teams
met. at Sawtelle Field, the
Brums won two of the three
games. If they can duplicate
that effort this weekend, it
would be the first time UCLA
has won a season series from
Sunford since 1970
Brum head coach Gary
Adams will probably go with
his usual three, weekend
pitchers That means sopho-
more Tim 0*Nali this after-
noon and seniors Steve Bianchi
and Ed Cowan tomorrow.
O'Neilfs 6-1 record is the
best on the staff, as is his 1 %
earned run average He is 4^
in league play one of those
wins coming against the
Cardinals Bianchi has won
four of SIX decisions wliile
Cowan has lost only twice
SIX wins
Btanchi*s earned run aver--
IS 3Jli. and he leads the
team with 49 strikeouts.
Cowan has a 3.22 ERA and
defeated UCSB. 5-2.- hurt
Saturday in his first league
appearance of the year He had
hcen sidehned with a sore arm.
This weekend should be one
full of stolen baaet for both
sijuads UCLA has 95 thus far,
15 more than the former
school record. Staaford. on the
other hand, has over 130 thefts
to Its credit.
Dave Penniall leads the
troofa with 22. just seven off
Veooy Garrison*! sch<^l record
act last year He is followed by
Earl Batter> with 13 and Boh-
by Dallas with 12
''Ohviously. these gaSMi are
very important to both
anford head coach
Ray Young observed. /*Wc
have to wia.**
Tne Carda attack has^ been
less than potent m CIBA phiy
Only two starters. Pep
Hinojosa (325) attd Larry
Reynolds (.308) are over .300
in conference play. Rich Bu7-
zone (.160) and catcher Bruce
Walters (.143), are under 200,
while the others fall somewhere
in between.
UCLA* on the other hand, is
batting 272 as a team in
hragur play, led by Brian Viael-
IPs .410 average. Robbie
Henderson is at .327, followed
by Daliaa (J13) and Paaaiall
(30«|. -
Today's probable starting
lineup:
r4 (league hatting
average) - I B: Tom Gtiardino
(.233). 2B: Kevin Thggs (.200).
SS: Steve [>avts (250). 3B:
Gary Pitchford (289). LF:
HiiMJaaa (.325), CF Reynolds
(308). RF Randy Wong
(225). DH Bu//onc (.160), C
Bruce WaHers (.143), P: John
Yandlc (0-2).
UCLA (overiflf' 'average,
'home runs, .runs hanad in)
IB: Ken Gaylord (250, 6. 24)
or Viselli (.330. 2. 15). IB-
Dallas (.278. 5. 22), S& Ray-
mond Townsend (.400. 0, 1).
3B: Battey (.260 5, 25) or
Jerry Waters (559. 0. 9). t F
Dave Baker (.277, 3. 24), CF:
Penman (294. 4, 23). RF: Jim
Auten (244, I 6) or Larry
Silver (232, 4, 19), DH Rob-
bie Henderson (306 6, 26) or
one of the first or third ba<ie-
man, C: Deaaii Delanv (.275,
5. 23) P O'Neiri (6-!)
Softballers dunk Cal Baptist again
By Mike Teverhaiigh
DB Smarts Rsparlsr
Going from almost one extreme to the other,
the UCLA women's soft ball team won both
games of their disconnected doubleheader
Wednesday, beating Cal Baptist IIM) in the first
game aad VC Riverside 9-t in the second
Tlie fwm game was played in tbe afternoon
heat of Cal Baptist, with cows grazing behind
the heiKh and chicken roaming in right Geld
Cal Baptist didn't offer the Bruins much
C^opeutioa.
According to coach Sharon Backus, the
game offered a chance to work on some of the
ftmdamentak that the team will need in order
to play well agatnit Golden West JC in the
regioaal toaraament next week
'^Playiag a weaker team, you're almost at will
to do things offensively," aaad BadOM, **hacaiiie
the other team aiay aoC he ahle to make the
play. So, wt wtft trying to create^ a situation
bruin
• B .^^.^ / •
i>
■•I
I
i
3
we were offensively minded, taking no
I, being more aggresive People think
we're trying to run up the score, but we are just
working on fundamentals.**
The team was offensively-minded from the
very beginning as they scored six runs in the
first iaatfig. Catcher Leslie Trapnell was the -
gaflie*s batting star as she tripled twice,
homered oqce and drove in five runs De- *
fensively, it was all pitcher Charlene Wright,
who held Baptist to just two hiu aad struck
out six in five inmngs.
In Riverside, however, the night was cold,
the surroundings civilized and the competition
Cairly stiff Riverside's pitcher was much faster
a more effective than Baptist's, and through the
first three innings the Bruins could only
manage one run on but one hit, a tri^ hy Sae
Liaquist.
Btit the Bnitns opened ap the game in the
mm Page 14)
I
■■ ^1 ■
' \
ytrr^mwr fjtrr
fiH
•
i
I
WlMi CiMiek DebiM
pendetf ^ the DWIA and bar-
red from coaching UCLA*t
women*! track team, several
athletes whom he recruited
«Uo left. Now the team if
OMched by Fat Connolly aiid
consists oi a **small group of
quality athletes.** according to
Connolly, some of whom are
Olympic hopefuls
One such athlete is ICarin
Smith, a freshman transfer
from San Diego. Now the
team*s top javelin thrower,
UCLA women's track team will
be divided this weekend, as
seven athletes will compete irt
Saturday's SWIAC letfue meet
at San Dicfo Sute and five in
the two day AAU meet at Mt.
SAC.
-•ruin coach Pat Connolly
^Min't expect to win the
SCWtAC meet but rather views
tNs weekend ^ a charure for
some of the women to "achieve
the natiorial standard" and qual*
jfy for the AIAW championships
next month.
Karin has improved immensely
since coming to UCLA.
She recently threw a distance
of 181-2 in the UCLA track
invitational and topped that
the bame weekend with a
throw of 188-7 to qualify for
the Olympic trials to be held
June YQ at Eugene, Oregon.
Although the throw was her
lifetime best and was good
enough to give her a ticket to
tbe iruila, K^rtn etttniatet the
.wjti btyg^jg ibtgw the javehn
*^d probably compeu mad hiquc
91 (MympB^Hlh
*at }nt^ 185 feet" to make the
U.S. Olympic team.
Tbe way Vm going now, I
think 1 can improve by tbc
Olympic trials,** predicted
Smith.
Perhaps one of the reasons
she has been able to improve
this season is the fact that she
has received coaching from
Tom Tellez, UCLA's men's
field events coach.
**Telkz helped me a lot on
my technique,** commented
Smith. "^Now I feel confident
with my throw, so when 1 go
into meets I feel more re-
laxed**
This year has been one oi
chMifes for Karin — a new
school, new coach and new
technique. Most athletes do
not like to make any changes
dunng an Olympic year, es-
pecially in the area oi coaches,
but Smith feels **lt was worth
It to make the change.
**lt has worked out well,**
said Smith '*Teliez changed
my technique to uke the stress
off my back (she suffers from a
strained muscle) and now I
hardly have any back pam "
Like many of the women
athletes at UCLA, the kin-
esiology major is a serious
athlete Her life revolves
around track — it even enters
imo her futttre plans. She
plans to continue with, the
javelin **as long as I can** and
also coach **
-
BREATHTAKINC
...Exueat ANTiy funny!
^waoJiiig AiScrgwadup istobe wttras
toaglafit
"AlCILLIANT MOVIE
"UPROARIOUSLY FUNNY
Astrong wUBt UiiinMLdahng min from yim tinuji r
WMUmVMlIf ' cm
l«CRH)ny RJNNY!
San PrwKiKO Ov unkli
UNA WBrmUilER'S
ALLSCREWB>UP
AOM m.m iMf ONIMA
NOW SHOWING
Maa. mm M. S:M. S:as. IMS PM.
iM \m, %m 5A 7 A s ss nm pm
me
1 month and a bidr ia a <t^mM
Some say it ukes a bani tO
3^ears to make a food javehn
throw«, ao according to tbasc
statist*ics Karin has another
faod four yean kit.
Right now she is training
hard and working on her tech-
out quite independently bc-
cMiae she *'doesn't hke to be
pushed**
Her problem now is to get
the new technique nailed down
aa that it is a second nature
when she throws The next
tnak. This
competing at
llK Mt SAC Relays, where
she will be able to face Kathy
Scbaidt aad other top javelin
throwers from around tbc
country.'
Crews have extensive sdiecMe
The UCLA men*s and women's crews have
their moat extensive round of racing this
weekend as they travel away for two contesu.
This afternoon at San Pedro, the Briiin men
fo against USC and Stanford whia Mk womea
race against tbe Trojans. Saturday mormng, tbe
UCLAns travel again, this time to Long Bc«ch.
Friday's race is for tbe Harback Cup. The
Bruins have had good saeaaM in this race in the
paat, and they figure to repeat today. But the
UCLA crew will have to cootead «M tug-
boats, oilslicks and floating obstacles —
hazards for #hich San Pedro is famous..
The only maB*! sIkU that was victonous kit
weekend against perennial power California,
the Novice Eight, also provided the most
exciting finish. In a photo-finish, the UCLA
of Joe Wbelehon, Dennis Barr, lob Sire,
Kevin Gartland. Je£f Ue Boer, ScoSt Goodwin.
Dave Griffin, aai Tony Wood dipped tbe
Bears.
The victonous wamaa's momot eight of laal
weekend consisted of Suae McCarty, Patii
Arguelas, Gficn Baker, Suae Aateaoa, Robin
Katberman, Brookes Croaa^aiaC Dibbie Oaaat
and Barbara Vis. However, tbe Novice Eight
will not eoaqpala i^aia aatil May I.
Tbe crews get httle rest afler Friday's raoaa.
Early Saturday, tbe Bruins will take tbe San
Diego Freeway south to a city better known for
tbe Queen Mary and tbe Pike than for racing.
However, the Bruins will nevertheless put
several shells oa tbe water in Long Beach's
Marin Stadium against tbe crews of
Beach Sute and UC Santa Barbara.
u
PACIFIC'S
Itrtf SM fMmn
^ VEVERUTMfUj \ aeaMMFi
WVIi»MMII aOUllVAaO** CAMOMl S It 7 P.M
Playoff pairings
UCLA was given th« top seed for the NCAA volleyftMlt ftnah
next Friday and Saturday nighu at Ball State University in
Muncie, Indiana The Bruim (13-2) will meet Eastern repre-
sentative Springfield of Massachusetu (22-7) next Friday at 6:30
pm (3:30 pm Pacific Sundard Time).
The other semi-final will have the winner of the Western
Regtonak against the Midwestern champion, either Ball State
(10-1 in league) or Ohio State (10-1) The two Midwest teams
will play tomorrow night at Ohio Sute for the title and NCAA
barth.
"Almost all of the 7 JIM soats for the finab have been sold
and only general admission tickets are left/' said Al Lesar of
Bali State University.
UCLA got the best possible draw, because the Bruins do not
figure to have trouble with Springfield unless the E«tem
entrant has improved remarkably over its NCAA final
appearance two years ago at Santa Barbara. Ilia YTiisliiii
Regional winner should have a tough tinr>e with the Midwest
squad. Ohio State was strong in the Nationab last year. Ball
State would be playirig at home in front of a partiBan cwwd.
funny:
F^ULMAZURSKY^s
reenwich
yillage"
NOWSHOWmO
Avn carTB cm0m WMtMoo 475071 1
m.
Intramurals
The schedule for men*s soft-
hall and water polo will be
ready today after noon. Sign-
ups arc being taken for volley-
ball doubles now through
April 29. Men*s Ubk tennis
play wiU begin next Thursday
at 6 pm. Sign-ups start today
for men's hndminton in MG
118 and will be taken throi^
May % _^ — - •
Women*s ^Sabie taasis will
begin next Thursday at 6 pm
The schedules for volleyball
triples and softhall will be
ready today after 12 noon.
Coed
Coed table tennis will begin
next Thursday at 6 pm.
Softballers
unbeaten. . .
fourth inmng with five mas on
four hits. Tbe big bks of the
inning were a two-oat double
by shortstop Cathy Collins
that kept the rally ahve and a
mishandled fly ball hit by Jaac
Beyler that scored two.
Pitcher Kathy Deakins
turned in a strong performance
OB sba aMvad. Sbe worked bv
way out of a lot of tight situa-
tions all night long — sbe had
runaefB oa base in every ia-
ning. In tbe saooad she had
woaien on noood and third
with ao one oat, bat still al-
lowed Riverside just one run.
**Well, they can omIu
plays," said Backus, **I
questioaiag wbetber tbey could
wmkt tbe plays wbea aaater
laaai bit Charlene aad Kasby,
and the teaas slM>wed that tbey
caa. f ana vary piaaaai aiib
our infield.
Tbey were a httk sbaky at
first and tbey oaaJa a few
aienul errors because tbey
is a few bay
Tbe tMHB wtQ pbiy
JC Saturday, o«c of Iki
Tbe
tbe tune-up tbe
sbouAd be jart
-for-
to
jyawe ~ Gaudio regional
fnatgcehr
DB SpaHs Writer
Tbe probable NCAA volleyball final match oppaaent tor
^h^. ^^^ ^'^^^^^ knight and tomorrow mght at Pauley
Paaibon wbaa tbe ' Western Regionab are bald
^^J^ ?^^* ^^"^^ *''" "^ ^~ "^i^ Sute (5-7) at 6
pmtaaigbt and^ Peppcrdinc (10-3) will face Long Beacfi Stlte at
8 pa m tae smi finalr The championship match is scheduled for
tomorrow night at 7:30 pm with Pepperdine and Sanu Barbara
the Western R
"I expect that we'win have ia .,^.^.„ .vc»ii^
champion for the NCAA title," said Al Scates, UCLA^hS
coach. •*! think that UCLA, Pepperdine and UC Santa Barbara
are the top three volleyball teams in the country, so 1 hclieve that
we will face the wmner of the Pcppcrdine-Sanu Barbara match
at Mundc."
Santa Barbara has been tbe surprise team under second year
caaab Gus Mec The Gauchos lost all six suncrs from last year's
NCAA runncrup, but Mce has only lost twice to Pepperdine and
once to UCLA this skjason. The Gauchos are led by senior team
aaplam Enc Pavels, scmor hitter Gary Hopper, middle blockers
Rnas Jonas aad Joe CoUigan, plus setters Gary Sato ^*»*
McShane and Scott Carlson. ^ "^ ' ^'^
Sato could he the key to the Gaucho cbaaow as he seeaM to
excite tbe other pkyers to make ''unbelievable- plays He has not
been effec^ve against Pepperdine, which should be a pivo(«|
factor if tbe Gauchos BMet the Waves.
The Waves lost their past two nuucbes to UCLA, but caacb
HarUin Cohen expecu his team to be ready for the Regionals
His phiyers are determined to get another shot at UCLA.
Ted EkKJd and Mark Rigg are the middle blockers, with
Martin Nora and Jay Anderson as outside hitters Rod Wilde
and Steve Onaaar do the setting.
If there is a surprise team m the tournament, it would be Eddie
Machado's Saa Diego Sute Aztecs. The yoia^sat team in the
loumameht with three freshman sUrters. the Aztecs are very
talented and just surting to jell. The Mason for the surgr is 6-5
Mira CoaU CIF fjhiycr of the Year. Mike Dodd i
^ The Aztecs played very well the last month of the season with
Dodd in the lineup, after joining the 4eam late from the
hasketball
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World Hunger
Forum
Noon Friday April 23rd
Acicerman 3517
Find out what is being done
and what you can do.
Gueat Spealcera
Rev. Steve Commina
Pat Reif
SATURDAY NI7C
Imcounter groups
hyUieTi
\ c ;t>n i:m w^ si k w
>
I
r
THE sun SESSIONS
RtwM In I954-SS: These Are The Recordings
Thjt Shook The Rock n Roll Norid. And
Made ELVIS Famous!
ALONG WITH ALL OF
EL VIS'S GREATEST HITS
LPs, AND THE ENTIRE
ELVIS PRESLEY CATALOG
• Ll-
'-'ir:
fcinr^-
1 —CLASS JFJ EJyAO
*•
:^'-v
\
A4K»*Ht»ln9 tpac* will n«t IM
•MNiM* t«i ItM OaNy 0ruln
«ti« ill»crlfnin«l«« on th« ba«i« ol
••ictftlry. color, national origin, raca.
or mm NaHhf IHa OaMy tiHln
Ma AtUCLA C«MMinlcati«M
I iRwaaiprtait any al Mia tar-
vlcoa a^arttaa^ or advorf laars ro^r»-
aonlod In ttolt laaua Any pmfon ba-
IkMflng that mn advanisamant In thia
tflacrlmlnation tlalad horaln should
aaaimunlcal* conplalNla in wflllng to
Mia Bu•^n^^t mmn^gmr. UCLA OaNy
112 Karchholf HaM. 3<M Woatwood
I. Lot Angalat. CalHornla tM24.
for aaawianca with houalng dtoaftail>
Nation probloma. call UCLA Housing
Offlca. (213) •2S-44f 1 Woslsida Fair
(213J 473-3
WHAT DOES A SRUIN
BEAA WEAR FOR ACTIVE
SPORTS?
announcements
UCLA sWHtshirts,MM«t-
pants, joggers outfit, t-
shirts, shorts, racing trunks.
sweat socks, and carries a
UCLA gym bag and beach
towel.
Bearweer7
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
VWQHX N
/ ' . k.< O D C
- MIL Lb tCi J J^'ili ■*!" -"fJn/
-^.H PF area 938 1037 Ifd Saf
.40-0441 every Friday
■SAN PtL/» —ry Sunday
' MAN INST (^.-nfvwood 475-24S3
GROUP COUNSELING
•CURE st^ynesi enjuy 'itp
• BECOME more aware
• BE In charge of your Ufa!
prr - - --
PflE-MAflOl OflAS FEAST
EGGS AND ALL THe PANCAKES
YOU CAN EAT
BENEFIT aMEAICFAST
V^Rvf MB^H 49VI« • • a I 9^1
SiSPmiiHii
At Mia SIOIIA MU Hmm*
••1 Oaylay
Cornaf of SlraMMiwa and Qaylay
KA^^A Oalta And Kraw invltat you
»bomrd She
of your Ufa.
<• A23>
PASSIONS PENSONS
PERSPECTIVES
ZINA GRAND
Tha aiTCH !• Sack and so ara AOm
and KKY! Waahaood aawdatand" MardI
H Aa»
CHINOOK Goajd lueii on your MCAT
Saturday I know ysw'll do wad. Lo«a.
JILL
In your 23rd ya
Ma a
r. Veur
<« A»)
"t^.
^ To Mia TRUf FL E Catia aaling Champ law
^ af.Mia Waal. Happy 20th MIrthday.
Mia Mtiatty.
m A ^^\
complete
priming
service "
iv|N-<<niiiiK
ImihIiiik
iniinr«»-dili«>
IIM k«nkh4ill ImII
linrttlliiai
MItlCIT: 22 alraady? Ha Cha Cha.
Wishing you muchas of happinaas
Ma^Mdid. WMaa you. Matuatma
(fA23)
OCAR Mark. Happy Mrthday CwMa -
in Mpp. Imp you to a StfMdMfV|r Sundaal
(« A 73)
passport
identification
resun^e photos
aCAOULL - Thay Mnafty prmlad your
lollBc* Are you flying oww tha cuolion ■
It yat? Jung.
HAFTV WrMitfay. LoH. HMa a gaadt day.
Lais oflpat - your Weenda.
<tA2S)
osuc/o
mpussfvcfi
/
F50 korckhoH holl 825 0611 k271
open man hi 8 304 30
P There mr^ openings
Ef or next year's P^er
Health Counselors.
E Applications avail-
Rable at the follow-
ing orlenlation
meeting only:
H Tuesday April 27
e 12HM AU 2412
^ 5:00 AU 2400
A For further infor-
I mation, call M-F,
GO - Moaa la Mleawdiit. t«rry I
up. " You atNt wamw ptoy? Loaa (rsaWyl).
Wlng-N«H. .^ <f.A -»>
MBL-Baan wlahin' upon a stpf?! Sohdaa
waf? Your trio (ant, addl, omwl) ^^^^^^
CHCEIISloMda
ayfian ina Cwl
alqr's Wara looking lonwafd to havlfig a
Mma. - Tha Thpli OaN Sroa
(tA23)
HO. Ho. afid KapHt Now I know
You Boon." Congrota. Sir Cocky
<MA23)
CAQ iarMilaasooandydu'vaMia
of Nsy Mia.
ISA23)
|iA23)
Oeu (Thol'a f9m
ly Qdi
••H.H-
^^V 9^N* ^%<
m^m
T
H
1Q-3, 825-7506
harMy
Day
474-
. 474-
Ap««27Mi.
(•AM)
church
«ri|l|i
mAri\
•ntertainment
for
(TAli)
a
't.
(TA»)
Tex OS Iwsfrvmeiif
tIJM QUM.ICATI
ly aftarnoons
Club ItSf
47t-
WIM WMal
aiad.
17
nmJncuB
for rent
11349
CAU. 49a- 77*1
EOUIfHiCNT
BewiM PI WLA
im Westaf
14.
t1f.tt Allpa-
(tut)
ftMAai
-A-TV. $1M JM
atii^nl diacounta Dallvory to ttaS.
47S-«7t. 2ai3 Woalwood.
QQSl
aaUIN TV. aENTALS
COLO« TV S
Waakly/fwowMdy
T.V.a - VM a
CdM:27f-tatt
peMlpMWAl. Soloet CdMfprfHa WInoa
llip •aipa MMiSfia W. tlM Sl^ W«a»
lit
Fpl Rock
SultaMo *f framing
My tha
it.iM
ARROWHCAO caMin In g««at aroo.
SiMpa t. tiM/2 daya. 91M/7 daya.
Si7-I447. .
acMn
r
2
D«y/
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I ^^SiWP-
(•AMI
for sale
PLANT Sola: Hundreds of In^dpr S
planki grown by hofMoiNlMfdl
■unday 10-ft, 21 IS Unninglon
(1 Mlpek Waat Mavarty Olan A Olympic)
(10A»)
(If A :
AND
aN.VCa JCWCLMY
AT LOm, LOW FfMCaS
Ml Mm
I TMia COUFOM - 1% OFF WITH
AMVFUUCMAaa
OFOOLO
QERMAN AnM9ua
Now Schwinn 10
A car rack. >M 2SA-1MM
HOUaa Tuda - Thura. 12 - 7
Fh . Sdt 12 • midnight
Sun . Mon - cloadd
dock. I19i.00 l^^ frl. — -. — -rZ:„.^«J
TI-FAMILY ywd
««<» » ^M» •
CALCULATORS
Tl Sn SO A. 811 SI A
HF - Craig
afll2, Sa it. ate
llMi SanlB Manloa aiad.. WJLJl
REES ELECTRONICa
CaM 47S-18Mf Hf boaf i
ApiM 94-2S
tJH4.
(10 A 21)
WILL
lar apB King. Ouaon. CaM
no A 21)
70 OLVMIPIC Tickets HIany avowta/
aoaartwg ad 2 wooka. Flaaaa laoaa name
STOVC-wMta-al
apt. alaa.
$7Mi.
(tf A27)
electric. Ilka new. aM loaluras
$1«M.OO. •22-at7i
(It A 23)
flO A 771
MIARUUANA Don't let the new law
mlalaad yaiil Knew your rtghlal Sand
Ipr hdw Mdok I2.tf phM ltd laa Ip
Lea IV. F.O. aoa Sittl. LJL
(itAtai
FOR
2010
Silt.
f^AXT)
Mtey 7-atMie
STtREO componenta: Mliidentdla-
CaM27i»-1f7S.
(10 A 27)
Mfpwda. Vaapy. ttl-ttdS. ttl-202a.
iti^iOTa. sit itti.
Sportswear
Clearance!
MOVIMO Sale aiHNwa sola, ehalra.
ra«H«efalor. beds, blcydoa,
••c ate. I«a. 470-S4lt. 47S.
FACKARO baM
caH 7:tt
(10 A It)
T.V..
rtn A 9^
$4
99
(It A at
free
or less!
Large selection of clothea for
nfian and women—lopa, pants,
tennis wear, jtcliali. ale
a big bundle nowf
AOUCLA Studenta^
spohtwcau
(aanlp).
It1-140t. 2-4 pM.
ni Aat)
S2S.7711
opaffi RMh 7:45-7:30;
fff
opportunitiee
•PERSONAE*
Center of Dramatic Arts
crplaa A Moa
Matting t raea. hMMy
aa, aid Mamaippd. ast'
Asppciel thied
(Apfiii2ai airu aasM
iia ■,
n
aiid awHdh- owiy 7he following tubidcta will bd
lie A
MATTREaaEa AU. MEW
fww
F«a
THE MAI
aaa FfMay al a FJl CM
HUSH
eppcftunltiee
h subjects
cja tat-asH. am t-f
<14A2f|
(14 AM)
aali t2f-rMSi tar
fMAIT)
wanted
t7t.7it1.
(ISA 2a)
CAaM ar
llfit
). 477
(12
•raa halrslyHiif.
hrfo caa
(12 car)
help wanted
FART -Mma v FrMay for C.FJL aiaaa
Ml Cawhiry CRy. Bt2-1t11.
./1SA2ai
CAMIF/arta A cratta caunaatara (et-
78/wk.). June 14 • Awg. 27. inclno
ris A2ei
In gm 2 dava/
««i. t-4 hra/day. t9:0O/hr Keenan.
(If A
(It A at)
MHee<S) apMI
477-2870 f
(IS A'att
Hdip SdM by Halpir>g Oeiars
ss-sao/i
HYLAND OOMOR CENTER
1001 Cayley(Ava.
47t-lD051
41
(IS A28|
fiARH tt la tlft/hoMr In
(IS A 2t)
ARCHIT SlMdent Ipc
(ISA
(It A 27)
(It A
(ItAi
tARMVOUaaiAV
SMOOO
at iitao
LA an
yoyH
94 m 11 to am
^LASSIFIECM
icaaofffarad traval
ata^27t.
ntaas)
llMUDIATj iMWCh.
weekend, and
Mia. Can manager
ReatauranI 477-1S4S
Tha Sub Station
(IS A 23)
aAavarnij|nar S aw< 1 yaar^aia. Maar
pppipsiat wwBwa ^w^^^^w. ^^Bw^^^ag vHsaa*
^^te^ aSM-AIAA
S2S? i2S!l^*» 'o- ""•
tSTJ J??*^""*0 "tot NTMtO-
(It A 27)
STATISTICAL laMulaflans aai
Z?^ ^^ ««*Hdated awy ar
(It A 27)
RAINTINO Hduae addraaa numhara
9n curba. S4.2S hr. 2t hra week to
CARP^ilTRY Dona .^ „ „,_
nm **^*-^*^ •"*••* 0««l« at SM
(It A 27)
(lOOlr)
CHARTERS.
Ovaf JOO iiignu A aaiaa ••!» a«partur«t
front Aarti tttru Qetaaw SMy f la tl
Te
L
L
JX
CM
OA
A'
4/11
4 t».«/a«
A'
(It A 2t) CaM Jimmy Mfty
OUR aiXTH YEAR HELRMQ
ETUDENTS FIND SUMMER A
FART TIME JOet
Murwiita* Aftamoon. EvafMitg or
Director tUS 2130
2 SaiiMiiar an. Maw paik cars S2 SO hr
3 Maaa IwndlMfa. 04.00 hr
4 Teach awtmming $2 SOSS 00 hr
5 Aaalalant camp counaelor Sl20-
81S0 wk.
t. tdfaey al hama. t2-tt hr.
7 Teach ppH Mma. Art Oanca-ianguagi
tS'SIt hr
0 Hnataba tor Famaiia laalaMianl. S3 hr
0 OiMca helper t3.2S-$3 SO hr.
10 Youth activities director S3 hr
11 Undercover. S3.2S hr
12. Aaat. athletic director S2 SO hr
13 2tt paaFMr- aiuff enaelopea. S2 30 hr
14 Syraay MiMiri - 23 hr
15 aaaMkiiplwg (Wealwood) $3.50 hr
It Umoalna driver S3 hr
17 Haaiaeaea (restaurant). S3 hr.
It ONIee Helper S4 hr
10 fumltuie mover S4 00 hr
20 Teach rtdlng. Stt-SIIO wk.
21 Delivery. 4_hrs dialy S3t0 mo
22: Keep raoaa^: tS hr
23. DalacMva trainee . t% hr.
24 TypletS3.2t-t3.S0hr.
25 RiBipaawlil t2.7S hr
CAU trs-asM
THE JOB
fyCTCPY
Auatralla, Aala.
S12tt
CC.
aarkeley, CA. 04704.
FORTRAN IV
tdt-ltll
(It a at)
11 amttpmat
(It A 2a)
tiat
(ISA
WORK Shidy
(It A 27)
S2.S0
offered
t) Chli
25.00^ hr CaM
MOt/inc?
Tha original-
TALL,
dfUCLA
271-07MA
I at the
(It A 20)
Aaart. Alaa aaarl rental Srantwood
fit Girt
4t1-17at.
(It A 27)
1^.^^ . ^ ' •"^ tapMah. Phi-
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^^^^ capsfvoa. enfisneso Moftattf Mm
Ming s Engilah 3042070
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10
(It A
A FRNMAL ALTf RNATtVl 114 LOt AN-
OBLf t FEELING TRAINING CI NTfR
COMKY AVE 0MM04 023-0701
iilo«
FRfClSION
Ciff atyMng
(10 A 22)
•9ff. by Gregg Hell for two weeks
•Mt{f m haN pHaa Tel 47S-4477
" (10A2t)
•••••• mm^mm aeei
^RiCMHG LESSONS
^^^^^^^^•^^^^wwsy "^ pm^aa- aSMR
•A,N.O.A. Aaara««a rtatng ••(•ait«aaMnt
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Day 404-ilia
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hwa wmil A
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Slay 29-49 day* |«ofn 0440
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LON ^AA AMO 16 days tiOO
MEXICO 4 diys ft«
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WMahIra 477-0020. 070-2207 «NNi
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telephone Yellow Fapa* ad.
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AUTO II
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(213) 401
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, FOUNO SOMTrHINQ? |
e e
ISC
TOURS a TRAVEL
' 0 Fatt CharMf
^rt«
Madrid
^ rartaf urt
MruswMa
Rounotrrp irom S2V4 00
Hswali and Naw Yorli
>SC sKm» runs local OVda lours
by car and btia mi ntir*lmum coa:
Ca<< u» Tu> information
473 2a«1
4 4 Daily
• a #
•J
Go with us to tho
'Soviet Union!
lUCLA otudants. faculty and otalf
icon trowpl with Itia ASUCLA Travel
ISarvica to
JLaningrad. Mooccw. Kiov, YpHg.
Tbihoi. Ki2fii. Vtedlmir
July 14 - August 6
$749.00
all - incHiaiva from London
A tavai (with EXPO) Ackormmn
Mon 'fri, 10 - 4. a2S-l22l
-2tdi.
1 CNARTtRflO
Moy 1. Omaioidi
>m,tpNi. aaat
F' '"r.Pf
(SiAiil
(22 A 2a)
THE WORLD!
^*ul;/«
• >»,»* M' m.
AST CHANCE TO BOuf
TOTNe
TAHITI
8-ai lor aahr Maya
A RUR
474-
I
fl fum iMMwa M pet er
fit A
O^r
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HI. AoMpeaacI
TNI JOS FACTORY |
vn
tttJt ^■•••--•-iiaFei* ,
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fMta>) NawYatt (ttat)
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no
••F«TI-
aavARo a
(17 A 2t) aaCKFACRI
Inaurpnce Village Office Werner
— iiat ~ " ~
LOaT SaaaM
ApHI 14
Reword mot
M Wed
therrie t24 2aM/
(17 A 22)
(23 A2t)
UMT:
Ml
•4 aaaNaaai. lai
raw ralMs iTt ■
ovaaaaAa ioaa
Jaat-t2ji
' (415^000-1404 i
oa. CA pttfO Z
(10 Off'
Wa 00124
08 A 8m
U !_*_J4 I
«i«^E-
^ — L.
CLASSIFI E D>1D
tr«if«l
ASUCLA Travel
•if ONLY offlclaf
UCLA Chartar Ftlght SviVlcs
flights to Europe
Irofii hundred wH
fllghu.
LAX -Amsterdam- LAX
.^^ 1
f
1C754 Juff 7 7
11C75 Jun«21 11
12C75 Jun«21 12
15C75 Jun«28 S
17C75 Jun«29 •
18C76 Jurm 29 10
22C76 July 5 8
23C76 July 5 9
;?7C76 July 12 4
30C76 July 19 4
LAX-London-LAX
61991 June 19 11
L56226 June 22 6
L56222 June 22 2
$49
I42i
$42i
$429
$429
$429
$429
$425
$415
$379
%f IM QMf toao NifMi to
iunmm of 79 •
BMt 0MIWQM * OfiWf
• tfWMl tmumnom • ham
• Mutly
HAWAII . . .
(panial Hstlng)
weekly departures
tA-HOtHOLULU t«ti (MM «MM
LA HONOLULU ttm two IMMW
•(«ui and MMi> aMo Mat)
LAX-New York
June 21
^^$99.
PLUS Car Rentala Leasino...artt-
rall/Eurall passes ...Accpmoda-
^ ...8ATA fits ..Intarnallonai
FREE TRAVEL COUMSCLINai
ASK US FOR ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW ABOUT
TRAVEL!
L..^,
;■.'■
>1S0CI>1^
TRA/ELSEFMX
-li.^
Unten A-213 (wMti CX^O)
FrMay 10:00-4:00
1221 i
— * ■ I
worn $12.00 you can ioln fducalefs
Tre«e« ■uteau ana tHy tei caNsfs hout
•uniaiar Open to tacutty. ttatf and
For •«•• MaMMllaa. aaMs la
Tiaval. 1900 railiildn Or^
C%.Utali 04121.
(23 A 21)
CUROFE
and N.Y.C $190
(213)
m
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charter Flight Service
Over 1000 ffightf lo Europe tms
Summer • Discounted Student
flightt to Europe • Charters to
Hawaii and Me«fco • Student A
Faculty discounts on car purchas
es rentals and teases • Study
lours • Camping Tours • Unregi
mented Student Tours • Rai
Passes • Fly dnve European ar
rangements • Mim Tours • Hotel
Accomodation • Hostel Informa
tion • International Student iG
cards • fr99 travel counselirtg •
EXPO Travel Librar
ASK US ANYTminLi YUU
— WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING!
asooa/^
• 99.
ISC
tMTf RNA^IONA) 4«TimfMT
SCRVIMQ THfc UCLA fcQIMUWITT
a <T t wnowos
•4 DMy
Touast Touast rouasf
t*' us I'OH
• Tour 4.23-2t SM
0*»n»f*mn^ 4/lS 1
Swiuoi* a Ktfts* C««*y«»« 4/M-4'3 Mi 00
Siutfvn* rai« non ■tutf«f«l '•!•• ••••labi
AH loura tnclud* rr»n«pe«lBaw«. sight
— 'ng •ntranca •••• •nacka and totfgtng
on owafntgM trip*
Our goal la to craala mn Inlercuitural
aichanga ir> a raiaaad fr)«ndly
atmoap^ara and to do mia at a
minimum coat fo you
473-2991
EUnO^. laraal. NY 0 OHont TOC
Low cool mfMa A.t.t.T 1430 9o. La
Cler^yga Blvd LA •82-2727.
(23 A 20)
CHARTERt and vacation packao**
en Pan Am 747 to HawaM/r
9. America/ Europe Call Kerry
475-5321 825 Y 222
CARO IN EUROPE
RENT OR 9UY
CIAL RE0UCTION9 TO
TEACHERO 9 f TUDEMT9
FREE CATALOG
EUROCARS
OUIISIT 9LV0 . LA
271-4
LOS ANGELES
PROFESSIONAL CLUS
06 Weetwood Blvd L A Ca 90024
••? 13) 879-9121/ (213)4^7-1102 .
TGC CHARTER FLIGHTS
TO EUROPE
(Lots of OttMTO)
Mi'n Prica TQC
1379
37S
6/15-7 12
:•/ 1,5 -a/24
0/1^.9/07
0/t9-»/06
0/22-7/05
0/22 -•21
0/20-0^23
6/20-0^14
•/ai-7/13
7/00^30
r^os-T't*
7/00^10
7 10-4/10
7/13-7'20
7/13-*/ 24
7/17-0/13
0/03^/07
0/31-0/20
ii^-10''10
•/io-iO/n
k12S. Oepoalt reealred per person.
iLlmMed apace 9oeii new. PIwbm try|
d book 00 days pHar to departura.
►11
L7701?
B700-5
ELF07106
L87132 '
7132
07170
37t
tutoring
OTATItTiCO tutoHno/conaulling by
PhD candidan m stallalics. CaM 9rian
470-3742 oc 302-3037 ^^ ^ ^^
RCCOROCR etoaa ler
Tinea.. Apdl 12. 7
Chadoa Flachor,
(24 AM)
JAZZ PIAMO/ALL 9TYL19.
croeNno your
to mdlawetory/i
eel
47S.a979.
r24Qtr)
Prepora tor
QRAOiMTE RECORD EXAM
20 ht ctaaa begins Mey 0
Aleo #LSAT
#OMAT
• MCAt
#DAT
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
2917
CHINE9e Mandarin Peai««
toee^r. well-ea^rtoneed MNi Cell
fernle
>r. weii-eaaor
999-19M. '
mom
CONVEROATIONAL French Eipe
rtenced tooeher No««a Portoton
rales •59-9172 before • p.m
(34 A
L9AT. e«tor toat
Individual, amall oroup Inalructlea.
087
«MOlr)
typing
TYPING Al bbida Faal-noat-accurato.
754/p9 mm Oelectrtc Mid-WllsMre.
PartUng Joanne 304-0000
(25 M 0)
TYRIWO - Wormmr lofat secretory doalvea
work at home Westwood raaident.
474-8390 ,„ . „,
124JLW»
TYPINOat
I
I9M EaecuMve- 1
Call 500-
190 Oil
TYPING Let Ceoey do N. Tom
Iheaea. diaoertetloea. etc Cell 394-
7007 for free aedmeto. ^^ ^^
PROFE99IONAL wHtor with 9. A. In
EnfOah (UCLA) wM type and •&!% tone
pepera. dieaaa. etc. Over 20 yeers ea-
One dey aervtoa 91M
(25 0tr)
PROFE99IONAL WrfWr (9 A EnfOah
UCLA) will type/edit all typos of napars
Faat 480-4717 ^^
. /25 A 271
FLA9H Fingers socretarlai service
Eicellent work, prompt Reasonable
'****• P»c*»-««a and dsiiaesy. fandL
822-3090/474-7370. ^~
(25 M 4)
PAPtRO Typed— Reaaonabte DeN's
irial. 393-3722 1S43 12th 9t.,
(25 A 23)
^^LTcJmlfll^TVPINGC^^^^
Thaaia SkMrcialtsi
Free Ealimalea
PROFESSIONAL COLLEGE TyPING
SPECIALIST
Term paper* Thes»«. Dissertaltona
Faatures Foreign Languages Sciantes.
Math Tabiea Diagrams Muaic Edttmg
Counseling. Xeroimg Printing Binding
Student Rates 300-3191
iOITH - imo Toffin pe|
diaoertotlona. reoumea.
totiors. fdft
opeNtoif/freaaNer. Meal i
teat. ecciMPto. 098-1T47.
roOeM
RUTH: Oalactrtc. dtooaa.
920-2702.
(2ft o«n
EDfTlNQ. Typtaf asfidoa.
•neea. 293-0100.
(29A29)
Leeel Oeeretery. Meer caaipva. 470-
'^ (290lr)
XEROX 2' 2C
N^j T^immufTi
njinn kinkos iiirr//
1
1
■"
OPCtDT. accMrete I9M typlat - roa-
vng f 919919 i jf^HHg* w4^P S^^WW^B ^Wb*
••*^ (20 Olr)
TVPMO. Tofwi popeia, eOe.
retoe. Tep OiiaOlv. Jady m-A.
(20Olr)
THC9C9- tone p spoil, lepe
and accurato typino ^7 •*
eaocudve aocretory Roeaeno
i i
900<4087
(as AMI
TYFROO/EOrriNG I9M The
270-9390 or 279-9471
ooa» tofei
RUTH C 0WMIITATION9.
9TATI9TICAL FAST. DIPS
9CVEN OAYO A 9IOTR. 9M
9TYLE9 920 0428.
TNi9i9.
■IDA9LE
NT TYPE
(29 0tr)
edu^ellonel. sclonllflc. ether. Donl
walL ^Ml' halMo i^^^K. ^i^v ^^MB ^^A.
99099
' scripto Accuracy guarantoed
per pate. (213) 304-5014
(28 A 27)
PtPFECT PAGE9 by professionals
Safttoh fteds w/l2 yeers oi
W8I Correct.
ff8Ai7^
apts furnished
1 SCOROOil iveNi
4 aiea en toeaa - 1
479-1724.
'mo SIS". (2len-
(24 A 23)
8127-M<
IMI8C01ATELY. 470-
3 Medw
{20 A 279
1- SIDROOM, vaeMi to UCLA 8200/mo
729 Oaytoy Ave. Apt.s 207 Phone 473-
^^ rn^m
814 ""
UfM eeeliing
*-^^^^9» .^^^.
PURNIONEO/Unfurnlehed 9echeler
0140 OInoles 8198. Peel. Heert el
Weoheood 10024 Uadfeoaeli. 478 8804
MINUTE9 freai UCLAf 9lnoles fur-
nlpNia o«»e bedroom, luaury -conee-
nlence - reasonable pripe 2901 So
Oepulveda 479-2120
CadOr)
808 OAYLEY. acreaa from Oykatra.
473-
ran owt
unfurnished
ROOMitATE lo share 3
in dmnheood 1</> mNea from c(
887 SiO mo 820-8210.
_^ (27 A 23)
~IP f9u are
440 veteran 1 and 2
room. $320 and up Ftrei
lishwasher balcony poet. aeeurRy
(27 A 20)
VENICE noer beech 1500 sq ft, live-in
studio available May 1st for utmmm
7 X 7 iacujcxi photo booth, greenhouaa.
Egypto Art Deco decor, large mrmm sky-
lights suit, photography SOOO/aie.
-7903/300.1910 ,,^ ^ ^^
4 9INGLES redecorated aep
eetortut Ule baths, great old bldo-
Robenaen/Hergls. free«»ays close 1125
ulH. pd Need mgr eachenfo reduced
rent 569-5713/300-1010.
P7 A 30)
EXCEPTIONALLY large room with
f.l^ full bath Beautiful view quiet
toetale preferred CaN after • pm 275-
3422
I7J A 28)
apts, to share
WOiOAN to
OUsailaks. own room S175
/9tl A20I
FEMALE sliere 2 bedroom 2 both
peel. 8140/aie. 303-0821
(28 A 20]
MALE «red
Monica apt. I8ee%-furnlalied. ntaf
I ITTiiiii 100 1118 ^^
C20A29)
•eaito29er.apl. lOada.
UCLA. 81 18 JO aiaiMRty. 471-399
(29 A 27)
for sublease
l»9epi 8229/
(20 A 27)
8475 SRENTWOOO beeaa. 3L
2 baths, larfo kllchen. new cerpet
snd drapes, bright pette. private. 8.
277-8077
(20 A 30)
0UMI8IR:
apt
91. 98|t
FUII9II9NEO 2
be9idMplMito
leAapMlOlei
(a9A30{)
1st
0.
120 A 23)
r29A27}
^^M9^^BI9^Sf 9^PB999l9^Pd*
s. jOba. paeiyeid.
(30 A 101
house for
sale
i
MOtlj beato. 9 a
09J99 eaMi pr/ply. 1
9297.
OO*. l/fiea paRa>
house to share
2 BiOROOOf
Utilltlea peld - Prefer aiele - 8138
IS9A99I
2 9COROOM heuaa. noer beach. Oenta
8200/ month Fireplace, prlveto
ee call Days 974-9723
(33 A 20)
r.
furnished. Own bedrooai. Air con-
8100.00 meam
8 JO pm 270-1000.
2 StOROOM
270-091S
19 ada. tar
8120
CaMOiif
192 A 291
Adulf lo share sunny 2 story
Ti house on private courtyard:
from iMech. view. suiMleck
fireplace. e|c 300-0313.
02 4 n\
bed! housing needed
■aor UCLA. 0/18 - 0/18. CaB 9L
Oapt. e< Econ.. UCR. (714) 787
(714) 781-0724.
iieiiiee/
VA
2 badrseai (er
nt for new profeaaer.
T. H Kennedi Flaher. MJ>.
Tveaen. Artaope 09722.
(23 A 29)
ANY900Y
to share t»
07(U after •
(20 A 29)
4^AA^a^aA^^A.^L^M
FH VWdMN
(299) 020-2310. cedact
FEMALE was
«t9i 23-30 yr.
021-7294,
IllASn
JKHise OKchange
FRANCE-L^. Writer s 4-bedroom la
Vi
itabaiiBiHiiiosm
(94 A 29)
room
Aboard
men's C4
474-9930
»-ep. 8130*1
. 474-3142.
neadi. 7V HNfaid.
(28A29)
ROOdi 1
927 MBai
Md
Neai
Md.!
a ssal
far 8199 mmmm.
mom
room and board
exchanoa ler help
^ T?f![*?S 9*i'.!*9*»< tieaeedeoipldv.
Ses 20029. Mp 9998. (»7 A 29)
DIRECTLY eeroea
off 0:29.
474-
4»
doRsfae. T.V.. eto. I asla aloai
CaB Pied. 891-1199 aitor 9 p«.
nra
room tor rent
(20 A 30)
1
.1.
^<>tomenjwgers vwitufft] -T4Vlen^s Ojai results
north to Ojai Todmey
»y Cf9tt L.
OB Sparto Eo^dr
u/ilZ-^^"*'*''[L ^''' °"^ "^^^'^ Southcni CaliforniA
Womb 8 IntercolksuUc Athktic Conference tennis pk/mtft
the UCLA women teniM lemm sent represcnuiivcs to tli^
preotifious Ojai touriMiiient which bcgnn yesterday and
CORURRCS through the weekend. ^^
f%7w^^''V^?T^ " the top amateur lournament in
the We9t. said UCLA coach Bill Zainu **SchooU such ao
use, Stanford aRd AnzoRa Sute wiU be compeiing-
The No. I doublet teaRi of PouU Smith and Cindy
Thoma8 will compete in the Open Divmon, where some of
the fineot amateur talent in the country will be on display
Suzan Zaro, whose singles play has been extremely stroRg
all year, will compete in the Collegiate Division as UCLaT
singles competitor Shannon Gordon and Cindy Cazm will
compete in the collegiate doubles.
Although they played number-one doubles on the JV
team all year, coach Zaima rates Gordon and Cazins
present pUy strong enough to place them as the number
two doubles team lor UCLA, RiMd of the number two and
three varsity double teams.
Zaima feels playing time, not resuita^aic iraporunt in the
tournament. The CQmpetttion is seen strictly as a tune-up
tor next week*s league championships
The UCLA coach has not been happy with the play of
his squad lately and hopes the team will pull together for
the playoffs
''Kim Nilsson and Laurie James are having trouble at
number two doubles right now They got to gtt themselves
straightened out if we arc to place well m the playoffs.**
Also bearing heavily on Zaima's mind is Paula Smith*s
recent loss to Karen Kennington of Brigham Young
University.
**Paula is in a down period for the first time this season 1
tteiRk the pressure of being number one and having to play
top competition every match is wearing her down She had
9 JPMt wiR over Lele Forood of Sunford and a good oRe
over Robin ICahn of CSU Long Beach and 1 just ihmk she
hatf a letdown **
Smith will try to get back on the winning track in the
doubles, teammg with TIirrmis ohii has been playHig very
well of late Thomas, a 6-3. 6-0 winner m the BYU match,
peaked Ia8t-)80R9 at this same time a J^^* it would be a real
boost to the team to have her repcRt last year*s victory at
the sew I AC pUyoffs
**The main thing I emphasize to the team is that everyone
gives their maximum effort all the time.** said Zaima "The
team has a tendency to let down in the doubles if the match
has already been won When it doesn't mean anything we
have trouble winning/'
The team can*t afford to do that in the playoffs as ttie
scoring depends heavily on each individual victory Abo.
the seeding of thc^ Nationals is highly dependent on the
Flm
UCLA*8 Peter Fleming. Bnan Teacher aad
Ferdi TaygRR r9C9iv9d by99.
Bru6e Nichok (UCLA) dcf Bnan McCarthy
(Cal> 6-1. 6-2
John Ausun (UCLA) dcf. Jhr Harper (Cal) 6-
0. 4-6. 6-3
Andy Lucchefi (USC) def Tony Graham
(UCLA) 7-5, 6-3
Mike Newberry (USC) def Dm TienMy (Gal)
7-5. 6-1
Perry Wriiht (Sunford) def Sieve Halm (Cml)
6-2, 7-5
GcRe Meyer (Stan.) def John Hubbdl (C9I) 6-
l« 6-2
Charles Stro^ (USC) def Steve Ponpaa (Cal)
7^, 6-2 — f— .
Haao Gtldemetater (USC) def. Mark Mitchell
(Sun.) 6-3. 7-6
I
Ferdi Taygan (UCLA) def Perry Wright
(Staa.) 6-4. 6-2
Bmee Nidwlo (UCLA) Jef. iffl Maae (Staa.) 7- .
6. « f
Bruce Maaooa (USQ d9l. Jolm Amur f
(UCLA) 6-3. 7-6
Brian Teacher (UCLA) 4tL Haw Qili9«989ter
(USC) 44. 6-4. M
Chrio Lewi9 (USQ 4ti. Gmut Mayer (Sun ) 4-
6, 6-4, 6-3
Pat DiiPie (Sua.) 4d. Aady UMMriMi (USC)
6-4. 4-6. 7-6
Mike NewiMTy (USC) def. Matt Mitchell
(Staa.) 6-1. 6m4
Peter Fleming (UCLA) def Charles Strode
(USC) 7-5. 6-7, 6-1
Taygaa-Nichols (UCLA) def Tiemey-Larooa al 2
Cal 64). 6-2 f
GaR9 Mayer-Mark Mitchell (Sun.) def Jim V
Harper-Bnan McCarthy (Cal) 6-1. 6-4 1
Graham-Austin (UCLA) def Hubbell-Hahn "
(Cal) 7-5. 6-3 P
players' performance in the playoffs
CLASSIFIED AD
aoOBI. adeela bedi. sntrenea m
ter young employed person.
(20 A SO)
OUIfT ^leete room bath, kltcben
2f*vliaaea Leeadry WaaleaaS WOaa»e
~l9oi», 9ec«dl|r. 9«Mdaat After 8:30 pm
474-7122 "
(20A27)
autoa for sale
me^BfllB * 9ee'"jPveB*
PS al die
141 A 23)
'M VW CaaMer. aaeaOent eeadMtaa.
eutoe for sale
autoe for sale
bicycles for aala
(41 A 27)
««9 M 9%
19>e ¥.« 9ilioiiu Pt
tm/pm 0
92000 020-4172
Inf handlebarff Call evenlnea. 304-
0730
T1 VW
(41 A 27)
(41 A 291
(99 A 22)
1940 CADILLAC MINT OniOHlAL
CONDI riOM 41.000 ACTUAL tmLMM.
BWCHANICALLY ataflCT ROOY.
AND INTIRKHI PtRP9CT
CVC9. COU.ICTOR9 ONLY
fOI A27)
HI A 291
74 BHi9TANR
AM/FM aleree tape. 9MMrl . pewei
V-8. ■lOiaioBt S91-09i8.
room lo share
ax-4:iewNdtaepa,4i
ABI— rsf'atereo ceaaetle 83299 ced
. loio ^BMi^^
-wre 141 A 22)
429A27)
bteydee for sale
WilsbireWest c
Bicycles '-• •^—
le-.
l»UCLA
477.2128
11941 WMthire Blvd LA
(41 A 22)
t097 VINTAOi VW Ref
Iwtt tOt^ttw ^eeaee^
inlerler. ea
81
^44^A20f
cycles, scooters
for sale
9UZUKI 1999%. 290
^•4-1741,
M9A2n
vera yaobana ND 2p tuaol mm Law
lallea. oaeeNeni sido or aeef ^r
^- ' 7a8>1701
H9a2yi
(41 A 23)
M8/nB.4
1997 VeNe 144.
|d1 A29)
1994 FAIRLANf 890. 290 CI Ooed
477-0040 eve
(41 A 201
19.9R«0.
477
1424*71
^••112!
141 A 39)
(42 A 399
74
(41 A 23)
AUTOTdANO. 82400
fai a 9«i^
TOYOTA
«4i a9f|
IHAMS OHRT
74 V9RA 94j099 aidea f i
ia»i uilei iiiLt iiMOilO
(41 A
RtCVCLlt, R8C.
(2
RALEKaH. PCUOEOT
MIBNIKI. CENTUHION
•lUTESOi
art py^ A^-
f02A
T1R79
1072
(42 A 30)
1972
(42A
i-*»
«4i a 9a
Saai 929-7977
MS A3B1
^^
.^■^'^
% ■-.
I
f
tnd0x
Campus
t>y
f
TonigHt and tomorrow
nifht in Schocnber^ Hall
Auditorium, the Cavakade of
American Popular Music, «i
annual variety tbow di-
rected by the music depart-
ment's David Morton, will
highlight the music of Johnny
Mercer
Faculty and student per-
formers will sing "Moon
River." -Days of Wme and
Roses** and many other songs
who has had 18
nominated for Academy
AtMifdt. Tickets are S3 yrneral.
SI for liCLA students and %2
for other student*
Sunday night briafl Music
For A While, five ■pacialiits in
Medieval and Renaiaaaacc mu-
sic and musical inslmments, to
Schoenberg Hail at 8 pm They
call their program O in iuha,
and it consisu ai sacred and
secular song and dance music
of 14th and 16th-century Italy
The tlieater arts depart-
mentis production ol Our Lan*
is sold out.
Movies
No new Tilms this weekend,
but the Fox Venice and Nuart
theaters offer their usual varied
assortment. At the Fox Venice
tonight. Francois Truffaut*s
disappointing The Story of
Adeic H and Fellini*i epic
reminiscence, Aauurcord, will
show Tomorrow it's Maiing
Saddles and Hearts of tiM
Wot.
At the Nuart tonight. Curt
McDoweirs Filmcx screened
movie, TiNNidcrcraeli! will
play. Tomorrow it's Humphrey
Bofart night with TIm African
Queen and Beat tke Dtvii.
Sunday. Roman Polanski*s
Vampire Killers and Mel
Brooks' Yuuiif "-ininnrriin
wiM screen.
Sunday afternoon at t pm at
'^the Royal Theater, in the
-Therapy Past and Present,"
series, David Munro's Kaots
and Peter Robinson*s Psy-
Violence will show.
Musi
ic
'I I i™'mw»w>niW»»|ip»iW'>
iridi HawkiiH Dance C
«dhovc) is in
Sunday nights. The program Salupday ni|^ at •: jt inciudes music by
iucie Oluiassewsia, Alan Ho^lianess, M^d Vitfi Jhmmmm, pfilniinad
by the American Youth Symphony. Sunday nl^ at • the nuisic ol
Dhigoszewskj will be peHormed, wMh die composer at die keyboard.
There ought to be nmk tickets for $2 9n hour hehMe
Robin Tower and Gary
Wright perform this Saturday
evening in San Bernardino's
Swing Auditorium. Emmylou
Harris, Leo Kottke, Jimmy
Buffett, Guy Clark and John
Penn play Sunday all day at
the 4th annual Cal State Long
Beach 49er Banjo, Fiddle and
Guitar Festival >
Sunday at the Claire Copley
Gallery. (918 La Cieneg^) from
II am to 10 pm. there will be
'*New visually oriented works
by young conupMcrs. The pub-
lic is invited to briug iattni-
mtaH and participate.
Veteran performer Tom
Rush will appear at McCabe^s
Guitar Shop today and to-
morrow at 8 and 10:30 pm
Phone 828-4497 for informa-
tion.
At the Dorothy Chuadler
Pavilion, tonight at 1:10 pm
and Sunday at 2:30 pm, the
Los Angelei PhtBMutnonic and
soloist Isaac Stem will play
Dvorak, Brahms and Roch-
berg. Alto at the Pavilion,
under the baton of Mehli Meh-
ta, will be the American youth
Symphony, perfornung Sunday
at 7 pm
— . , ,_
Theater
The major opening this
weekend is the World Premiere
of Neil Simon's latest comedy
atMcCahc's
California Suite tonight at the
AhflMflMo Theater. The play
is a l(rverly Hills Hotel versiou
of his earlier work fhtta SaHa
and Tammy Gnanet; Georfr
Gnzzard, Iwhura Barrie aad
Jack Weston.
Abo opening tonight is
CyaihnliBa* a romance story
"set against the background of
a war between Britain and the
Rome of Augustus Caesar.** m
the Globe PUyhouM.
The theater arts department
here is offering Our Laa* m the
MacGowan hall Lktk Theater
Through May 1 . The play con-
cerns the Reconstruction era
and the impact of Lincoln's
aaaasination on Southern
Blacks.
Continuing shows are
Shaws 11— thiiak Homc at
the Westwood Playhouse, a
look at the geflMation of the
60'i m Ki— sdi*s CMdMi at
the.Hunfin^on Hartford and
Shcrloeh HohMs at the Shu-
bert Theater.
f ■> *
The unpunished genocide
Armenian people condemn
camps twenty five years later
Beginning in April 1915 the
Turkish Government imple-
perpetrated against the
ed millions to Nazi death
mented the premeditated de-
portation and massacre of the
Armenians in the Ottoman
Empire.
Half the total Armenian popu-
lation (1.500,000) perished
during this first genocide of
the twentieth century.
The survivors were expeiied
from the lands their ancestors
had inhabited for 3,000 years.
The failure to redress this
brutal crime against humanity
encouraged the perpetration
of similar racist crimes in later
decades in other countries.
The Armenian people, for the sake of all victims of geno-
_ cide — Armenians, Jews, ^nd others — demand recogni-
tion of their tragedy asa^lesson to all mankind.
Further, the Armenian people asks the world to recognize
their ancestral right to the>lands from which they, were forcibly removed
The documentary " The Forgotten Genocida'Vwill be
shown at 10 p.m. Friday, April 23, 1976, on Channel 13 (KCOP)
UCLA Armentan Sttidtes Club \
. ,^.v., '*.,
Ik
*■' • ..
XCVIII.
It
Monday, April 2t, ItTf
Crowds down asain at Mardi Gras 76
•y Sally
Dl
Sudr WrUcr
a natter of the
nties bke Mayor Tom Bradley and ptaeidential
CMiiidate Jimmy Carter*i Km Jack, and the
addition of an extra day, Mardi Gras *76 failed
to draw the crowds oi past years.
The carnival, 'sprawled across the intramural
athletic field with leveoty booths and eight
rides the pait three dayi^ tMM wyani/ed entirely
by stadents All prooHdi froas thii waekcnd*s
activitiei 00 to (Jni-Camp, a summer camp for
underprivileged and diabetic children. The
projected amount for Uiu-Camp thi^ year
$58,000
Last year*s attendMMe for two dayik only
40,008, which was a drop from the previous
year This year there was a total attendMwe of
33,935 from Friday to Saturday mght and it
was estinuted that there were between 8«000 to
tO,QOO patrons on Sunday, making this year*&
attcndaace ai best only 3000 higher than iMt
year.
Aocordwf to Alex Roie, Mardi Grak chair-
man, one pMsiblc explanation for the low
attendance was the weather which war overcast
and chiUy both Friday and Saturday aad only
ibghtly wanner on Sunday.
— t ae hMH ireqiient . compiairti nearo at tms
year's hiaidi Gtas was "Why aic the pnoet
higher at rngMCT
Rose explained. ^It*s not
prices going up at mght. We
dunng the day to encourage the kids to spend
more money**
Again this year the three bigfeU hooths were
the most popular, at least in terms of cIk length
of the lines The wait was as long as 45 mmyte»
for the House ol Horrors, sponsored by Phi
ICappa Psi and Kappa Kappa Gamma The
lifMM were also lengthy at the Fun House,
sponsored by Lambda Chi Alpha and Pi Beta
Phi. and Minsky*s. sponsored by Theta Delta
Chi and Chi Omega. Minsky*s traditional
nighttime burjesque shows were augmented
during the afternoons by magic shows, in an
effort to appeal to more children and families
on the two special family days (reaunisceiu of
the network's family hour).
The booths, hustling lood and dhiA and
games, appeared to ^getting an e^ual skaie ol
the business
Dancing girls, out of the reach of the crowds.
were another popular attraction Besides
Minsky*s. girb could be ogled at The Broad-
way, sponsored by Sigma Pi and Ciamma Pht
Beu. and the Westwood bandsund sponsored
by Ka^pa Kappa Psi and Alpha Delu Pi. The
baadstand also changed its format for the
oay cmpnasis irom oanciiig to-^urtie trot
EST, Arica, Scientology
Pop' therapies viewed
•y
urn StidI WffUcr
Six **pop** thefapim, ranging m their
promises from enhanced self-awareness to
world peace, were presented to an audtence of
100 ttudents by Gerald M Goodman, associate
professor of psychology here, in a recent
lecture.
Good ananas presentation, entitled ** *And after
Lunch You Get * The Promises and
Prooediiref of Pop Therapies." was fourth in
the UCLA Extension lecture series **Pop Psych
Growth Supermarket.**
which waa daacnbed by iMBe
ibers of the audience as a skeptical view,
was the result of a recent study of pop
therapies.
Although they tned to be unbiased in thar
irch. Goodman admitted that the element
of skepticism did **creep iiL**'
The therapies selected for review were Anca,
Erhard Seminar Training (EST). Primal
Therapy. Re-evaluation Counseling. Scient-
9kam an^ S>^^ Mind Control.
According to Goodman. llMgt were idaeiad
^acaaae they represent a mixed and representa-
tive group, all are promoted JMid practiced in
California and ^^'3Ut similar intentions All
aHke one or mlofe of tiK faftawing promises:
no map aooHClM^ had. sake the good beuer,
or .tm had into good.*^
The -War of pmmmT has alraidy begun, ha
everything with the other
**The only real promve it makes is to give
you the *space* to learn for yourself.** he said.
Because SKmbers of EST prefer to keep thetr
procedures secret, fearing a daaaafing eflect to
new clients where beforehand knowledge exists.
Goodman was faaoad to gather the majority of
form a 1975 ^ychoUttv To4lm\
by Mark Brewer
The S25B traintag it spent on folding chairs
in a hotel conference room for two weekends
there are as many as 250 trainees m each
tratniag. No drinking. eatiag« smoking or
leaving is allowed during the tamiofi. and only
two breaks per etght-hour period are given
The primary communication is by the trainer
to the trainees. According to Goodman's
source, the primary group diagnaeit jpven is
that **they're all there because thetr lives are
shit, aad thcy*re all aetholes **
trainees aft given instrviiMM on prob-
lem solving, undergo prolonged stares from
a«imaals and other trainees, ptactioe relaxa-
tion techniques aad are told^ they are
"^aachincs.**
Arthur Janov. a UCLA social welfare fndu-
ate. calls his Primal {m SaaMHa) Therapy, the
**ooly cure for neoroiis,** aeeording to Good-
man It mmmn that neuraeii is jcavnd by
primal pains, or early hurts. To be relieved of
llMK, aad Mmiahy cured, oae mast l>reak down
tlie peydwIailGal dirfMHe and ariaaae the pains.
Ifew York by a loliviaa
the gfBMJM tlHM
it
**all human
with the
view of the
called 3iuucuu liitnci ihiin
of 20-40 over a thrra —ath period. Each
partiapaat is aaatyaed, ifcw i|g>i a phaugfaph
of bJBurlf. for a piiHaaMii type
I Tlie therapy iuelf coaiifts of total Kif-
diictoiare, repetmoa dC certain phrases as
ay ine wmiwa^^ ai^v^^MBi^pn ^ cam
hy the other aMrihcn af the
by various
including compiete iaolation from pll
Wmgm food) for 24 hours U
the first MMioa. The
with no interptalatioa nade hy the gaide. until
he-fmi date to a caan of priaml pain. This
wtU he idMad hy fte htaathing. a
AMibMSSdof SlmctMi Dinllz
Israeli ambassador
to speak today
10 the Uaited States,
in the Achiiiaaa Ui
Graad
aacki of
»miiig tat
a pobtical adviMir to
r«f»
, ^^ *^ Ooo^iwan. is the
^ moiivj' ns^itar off the g^'P
Whaa lae
Re-evaluation CooawlM^ aryiitcd m
by Harvey liHriaa, a labor organizer, was
dneriBad hy X^aadama as an ''et.ion
Bay ■owggKas.
'It is dMhana ta thai it
to aiva^M^apy while reccMag tlierapy
7
ir
m 1973.
Minister Galia Mair for
of the
Minister of li
DC
Masier of ScMiir ia Ft
interaaiaiHl law Fiaai 1951 la 1951,
t
I
*•
I
r
4
'4
■»imiK— r
*!■
^jir^mmm^ir-r
Crime £r Punishment
ORGANIZATION OF
ARAB STUDENTS
Invites You To A lecture
ISRAEL: AN ANTI-ZIONIST
JEWISH PERSPECTIVE
by Dr. Edmund R. Hanaver
EntMtive Pireaof , Seych tef Jurticc li Pqi lility in Pifttline
Monday April 26th
_ 12:00 Noon
Bunche 2150.
if':^'^ :.
o
aulo-insiianoe
flMsdaliates
college students
AMER-KAL
1434 Wcitwood ioulevard • Mte ••U»
Call Day wr lll«lil - (SIS) 47S-S721
Parking still the"^
Chief problem here
Dl Sliiir Writer
Following his speech at the Law School last week Lot
Police Chief Ed Davis discovered the University Parking Service
iHid iMiiiCl him a S5 traffic ticket. Aeom^ng to Peter Patemo,
director of the Ufal Speakers Pr^frmm, D«vii ^^^i'"'*"
authorization to park in a red zone outside of the Law Scbooi
but the parking service ticketed him anyway, causing Davis to
remark to the crowd which had fathered, ^^this aener happens to
me at USC.**
The Law School was also the scene of a $540 guitar theft. The
student left the Martin guiur in itt case between two dcaltt ©v«;
a tm^o-day period and later returned to discover it loae.
A UCLA football player and five of his buddies were observed
bending a "^o Parking at Anytime" sign near Sproul HaU Circle
and De Neve Drive. After bending the pole they advanced to the
car in which tfK spadtator was sitting, surrounded it and broke
the radio antenna completely off Toui daaaifr to the car was
listed as $50.
Approximately 30 young men in a large pickup truck threw a
glass full of beer at a pedestrian on the sidewalk one evemng last
week. Police ruled the apparent motive as malicious mischief.
Three women caught an elderly man usiflf a woman*! restroom
in the Center for Health Sciences. After being informed that he
was in a woman*s resuoom^the maa made ao comment and the
women walked away.
A 13-year-old visitor had his skateboard iMiMi twa Saturdays
ago as he played pinball in the ''A** leval bowiag attey. Aa
unknown suspect told him via the kndline timt he had taken the
board and would pay him back far it huer. The bey walMl a
reasonable aaKxunt of time without hearing anything and tkea
reported the $47 loss.
A meul box containing $505 in checks and cash was
from the Dyksua Hall Siudc&t Covernment during Easter week
Cahfomia Uoense plates were stolen from two cars on two
separate occasions last week. One was worth $25 and taken from
a car parked in structure 3, the other, worth $2E, was taken from
aa aulo in lei 9.
J -Board to meet
on stipends issue
The Student Judicial Board
will meet tonight to decide
whether or not the Student
Legislative Council (SLC) has
the constitutional right to with-
hold stipends from members of
student government.
The Judicial Board acts as
part of a checks and balances
syalero in student government.
The Board may rule on the
constitutionality of actions
nuide by SLC
The case was brought to the
Judicial Board by Willie Banks
who is one of the three Gener-
al Representatives on SLC.
The case was initiated by
Banks after a number of SLC
members had their stipends
withheld for not turning in
their bi-quarterly reports. The
reports ase designed to sum-
omrize the work done by each
member in their facet of stu-
dent government.
Opposing Banks is Admini-
strative Vice President John
Schroeder who will be de-
feriding the position of SLC.
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
§0(04 Co^rt§tM i§79 Sy
ASUCLA Communtc9tion§
OiKk Kitui
Larry
K«r Qartn
^^uhhwh0d •yfry
\f durtng tfw
Sr 9m ABUCLA
CMltftymm
WmOl^WmASUCLA
LtM AngBtm^^
Qfficm
CI
CKIA
•■CENTENNIAL
EVENT
TWO HUNDRED YEARS OF
THE TWO-PARTY SYSTEM
HOW DID IT EVOLVE AND WHERE ARE WE?
FOURTH in the UCLA BICENTENNIAL LECTURE SERIES
ROBERT KELLEY
of History. Univ«ftity 0^ California. Safita
auMRanoan fvwfy wnri
arttctaa
5 - WfNTHROP X)nOAN. Profmof of History. UC
AND SEX - 9IEVEMKRATIONS Of THE
•paciaiizirtg in Amarican intailactuai and political
In Uia Aiaartean PaM. (i
Kaaayiai
WEDNESDAYS 8 P M.
RACE. AGE May 12
REVOLUTION
Unlwarslty THE
147
MARY tETo fiiclRTON. AaaaalBto Riataaaar af
UTIOW AS A WAR Of Ut^UTION TOR
WEDNESDAY, APRIL » 8 PM
Mo Admlwlofi CtMWtt#
DODDHil[LL147
toyilOLA
OA Puaac Lacturw
J. Zlea, aafik of Amorica aaalttani managor.
Equal rights to Jews, Arabs
Arab League spokesman
urges secular Palestine
9f Mile Dasl^iiil
DB Stair Writer
Creation of a seciilar Palrsrinian state which
would grant equal rishts to Jews and Arabs
was ur^ed by Dr. Hatim al-Husaini in a speech
Friday.
liusami, a representative of the Arab League
to tke Uiuitad States, said the founding of Israel
proved the confiscation of laad to which the
Arabs had righu. **lt is historical fact that the
state of Israel has been created by denyiag
another people their nation,** he said.
Husaini attacked attempts to justify what he
called ^'Israeii inilitary rule** of Israeli Arabs.
""SoflK iHaai leaden have tried to say, 'We
have benevolent occupation.* Occupation is
inegal and it is immoral,** ht said
According to Husaini, the Israeh governor of
tktt Palestinian Arabs has the authority to
destroy hooMS, make arrests without trials and
exile. He also said many Palestinians have been
tortured.
T¥e Arab movement to liberate Palestine is
the normal reaction to these conditions,
Husaini said. ''It's a resistance movement
irgn*'** the Israeli colonization of our land
a denial of o«r national rights. It's a
for freedooL* Ik said.
Husaini attacked Zionism on the grounds
that it is ''haaed on an ideology that caUs for a
thaooracy " He called instead for the
of a secular state where the three major
tehgions could live in equality
Husaini also rejected Zionism on the basis
that, "it has institutioiuhzed laws anid regula-
tions in Palestine that have discriminated
against the Palestinian Arabs aijKl giiven more
rights to the Israeli Jews." He added, "As long
as Zionism remains, you will never have peace
in Palestine."
Equality between Jews and Arabs must be
the ultimate goal in the Middle East, according
to Husaini. "The Palestinian people must
return, the Israeli people must remain, and the
two people must live legether in brotherhood,**
Husaini was indignant abo«t what he con-
sidered to be American apathy toward the
Palestinian situation, saying, "Why is it in this
country people speak and scream about the
conditions of Jews in the Soviet Union, while
about the Pakstinians they say nothing^
Husaini said the Palestintaa struggle in the
Middle East is for civil rights and human rights
and could be likened to the Amanaan struggle
for equahty and civil nghu He appealed to the
American people to support the Palestinians
in their struggle.
Solving the Palestinian crisis could help
alleviate other taasiafls elsewhere, acpprding to
Hasaini "if you have peace m Paleitine, you
caa have paaoe all over the Middle Eaal and
BMjfbe have peace all over the woftd," he said.
ATTEMTtOW PRE-HEALTM CARE STUDENTS
MEDICUS
ssaieirttiMi If)
2:00 TuMday AprN 27. 197S
1228 Campbell Hail
I
I
BEIT MIDRASH
CVERY MONDAY AT ACKERMAN 3564
12 Noon (repeated at 1:00 P.M.)
TRACTATE KIDOUSHIM
with Rabbi Chaim Seidler-Feller
12 Noon
PA RSH AT HASH AW AH
with Rabbi Odvid Berner
•J
Z
I
i
KAPPA SIGMA
RUSH PARTY
April 30th - Friday 6 P.M.
Sunset Canyon Rec. Center
Short Films — Refreshments
For more tnfbrmation call
784-7145 or 824-1424.
,-J«
DATSUN
t<
Acres of Datsuns"
Student Oiscourits — Ask for Fleet Sales
Pasadena Datsun _
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
* 684-1133 •
ii?
BBQ
This i% the placm for Rib iovmrsi
By fcr fhm Best Rib% W9V9 frimd in LA.
Herald EM«min«f
COMPLETE DINNERS
from 92a 7
Casual Dining
NAMIY'S O^m MT BBO
1414 N CRESCENT HEIGHTS •« SMNSfT STUf
10 M4hut«% Uown Sunset Mvd to
lei#rel Canyon Turn Right And ^ou re TKf
r
MTIm* \
TUNE-UP, LUBE & on $04«
A-1 AUTO SERVICED.
7957 VAN MUYS SIVD. onj yt^jc
■ *
♦,
«
3
S
<«»••
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IL BAMBINO
$1.95
c^^axdiz^zii^
»— • » — *» ■ •>*\*
'»V
.vie*.
'f/. ; j^t
<-t^
~t-
USA pandidate meeting
There will bt a onaAdi^tory Undergraduate Sttt^st
Aaaoctation (USA) candidate orienution today at 5 pm in
the Women's Lounge in Ackerman Union. All '^^'^"^
must either attend or have their official representative'
attend or they will he uken off the hallot General
campaign instructions will he given.
If you are interested in heing a paid poltworker in the
Spting USA-GSA election^, pleaae attend a pollworker
orienution meeting on Tiaeaiiay, April 27. 1976 at 5 pm in
Meyerhoff Park Prospective poUworkees will be given
further information at the meeting.
Berman, Sieroty urge defeat
Legislators oppose SB-1
By CWk Bowman
Sacramento CorrespoaAMl
SACRAMENTO Two ranking iUle legia-
lators last week urged Congress to defeat
Senate Bill One, the Federal Criminal Justice
Reform act of 1975.
Democratic Astern blyman Howard Berman,
majority floor leader, and Alan Sieroty.
chairman of the criminal justic committee,
introduced a resolution last Thursday oppoaing
the federal bill The resolution was co-authored
by 16 of their Deiaocmic collegues, including
Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy. x
sieroty called SB-1 ^'an attempt to create a
police sute** and he added that many constitu-
tioaal protections "'could be senously impaired
by pMnge of this pro^Mal."
Berman said proviaoaa of the federal bill
THE coavim Discoum drug stores
moffo rmmmm^ new— loto appuamrm
T9^ QaAarrnmms AT imm low mscomtt mm
SToa m mmmwm Evmfur
wMrf^, ngdict the praia to reporting
tht government released for public ^
tion and wouid punish joumalisu for exposing
illegal government acts.
Bennan laid SB-1 also contains kmnh prison
sentences which have no relation to deterence
of crime, narrows the nae of insanity at a
defense plea and broadens the government's
wiretapping authority.
AddiUonaUy. the Lot Angeles Democrat said
the bill would make illegal public demoMUm-
uons **which interfere with any govem^oH
function, no matter how minor.**
Bennan and Sieroty were joined by student
repratentatives from the Cahfomia Coalition to
stop SB-1. Two UC Davis studenu announced
pint for a state-wide raUy on May I at the
Capitol in oppotition to the pending federal
legisJafibn. — X
Elections Board
rules for Banks
By Linda Rapattoni
PB Suff Writer
The Elections Board last week found no evidence supporting
charges filed against Wiihe Banks for statements MmkB HMMie in
an April 13 Los Angeles Times story.
The chargefi were filed by Russell Cummings who was running
against Banks for the position of Student Educational Policies
Commissioner Since that time, Cummings has withdrawn from
the race for '* personal reasons.**
The Times quotes Banks as saying, **There*s an election coming
up on campus in early May and Tve been tpanking in the
dorms*
Cummings believes this statement is in violation of the
Undergraduate .Students Association Election Code.
Article V, section A of the code ftatct: •'Campaigning will
begin at a time designated by the Election Board Chairman. For
the purposes of this Code, the term 'campaigning* shall be
defined as any public action imtiated by either a candidate or a
menFib^ ^^ their campaign staff to 4)crsuade members of the
student body to vote for or against a candidate(s).**
Banks' statement in the Times was made prior to Apnl 19th,
the official time designated as the start of campaigns.
Banks claims Uiat the author of the Times story, Jerry Soifer.
quoted him out of context.
••They asked mc what 1 was doing this year, and I told them
that the General Representatives (Banks is a General Representa-
tive) had just finished talking to the' dorms about two projects we
started. Outreach and the Interest Matching System.**
In another question, according to Banks, they asked him,
"What are your plans for the future?** Banks said that he told
them. "This year Tm going to run for Student Educational
Policies Commissioner.**
"Whoever wrote the story, or the editors, combined the twp
answers." said Banks
THE STUDENT
COMMITTEE
FOR THE ARTS
51 STUDENT
TICKETS
at KerchoH Hall
Ticket OHice
52 STUOE
TICKETS
at UCLA Central
Ticket Office
650 Mtestwood
Plaza
UCLA 1.0.
Carl
1.0
PHrdwMil
III
Ommu
*■••<««■ Uunnte
' .". ' *' 'I ■ «l|llir
r
Psych prof loo|^ at pop therapie
For A tee usually under
SIOO. the client takes part in
eight weekly training ications
A count rhug partner is select-
td from the group, with whom
the cheat wiU spend an ad-
ditional two hours per week
co-counseling on a «K>to-onc
haaii. Each partner spends ImUT
the time as client aad half as
counselor
ImertHad MMMr
No interpreting b done by
the counselor; rather, he serves
as an interested listener, al-
lowing the client to ulk and
work toward discharge,
through cryiag, anger, laugh-
im^ trembling, or yawning, in
tlM way. painful distress from
^l^t huru are released, and the
cfient will be **restored to a
high, intellectual, zestful level
of function.**
GoodoMn added, in it right
direction.** Scientology, ac-
cording to Goodman, opaentes
as an extremely popular, ux-
free. religious movement. Its
promises include getting rid of
neurotia» acquiring personal
serenity, an expanded know-
ledge of the universe, control
over othen
into the fetal position, as if in
the womb He usuall>
experiences paralysis, upon
which he is lifted from the
water and. with a laying on ol
hands, is "reborn."
Threatening ralihit
Goodman referred to the
dilemmas pop thear^pies pre-
sent to the profcMMCial psych-
ology world as **a threatening
rabbit to us academic turtles.
The Jack of research con-
ducted and data available on
the effects and the relation-
ships between the intentions
and the outcomes of the
therapies is also seen as a
problem by clinical psycholog-
ists. Goodman said.
Other ways in which the pop
therapies differ from tradition-
al psychology methods arc that
their practitioners are trained
in a nontraditional way. they
advertise and promote their
services and they charge a flat
fee for a paduige. program.
The results of Goodman's
profect have been published in
his book. O
Thrrapv Stuthrs m Strut turtJ
Intimocx .
t
i.
I
t
I
_^Therapy consists oi jetting^
|n touch with painful
expei'ienccs embedded iir the
unconscious. Procedures Vary
from instructor to instructor;
however, clients are guided
through various levels accord-
ing to, a chart of human
evaluation from "pre-ciear"
levels to»'*clear'^
Silva-Mind Control, some-
times called Positive Mind
Controf. was described by
in as a -Western
phenomenon ** It makes
promises of better everyday
coping, curing emotional
dysfunction (including
alcoholism, nervous tension,
smoking and over-eating), and
enhancement of extra-sensory
perception abilities No fee
information was available.
Therapy takes place in four
sessions. Clients are taught to
*'use the mind as a computer.**
going over "old tapes** from
the mind, reevaluating them,
discarding harmful decisions
and or making new ones:
**Rebirthing sessions* involve
kowering the client and coun-
selor with snorkel into a tank
of water, where the cbent curb
. Rck up your portfolio and
take a merciless look If you re hit-
ting the mark creatively but not m
execution, take a look at Canon
^ The good things youve
heard about Canon SLR s are true
One pf the best things about them
is our line of nearly forty lenses
from fisheye to super-telephoto.
including asphencs and our ex-
clusive fluontes They represent
the optical state-of-the-art This
means they have sharpness and
contrast ax\6 theyckyn t have flare.
distortion or annoying aberra-
tions Mechanically, they can t be
topped
Our camef'a bodies are a
beautlfuf Wend of form and func-
tion They II help you work surer
and faster because once youve
run through ttie controls, opera-
ShorpBC
Surer.
tion IS second nature Ttie meter-
ing system common to the F- 1 and
FTb measures only the center
12% ol the finder area Consis-
tently No matter what lens is in
place Whether you re into the
Zone System or shoot from the
hip. you II come to rely on it.
Best thing is. a Canon is
priced wijhin easy reach Theres
no time like a Bicentennial year to
declare your photographic inde-
pendence and picture America
with a Canon Your dealer will be
happy to show you the profes-
sional F-1 . the remarkable FTb or
one of our other frne SLR s. the
electronic EF or solid TX Visit him
soon
PROfiRAMMER
TMi laauranct mi
TruftCo tht
tWt
^anyiattiiUS wM
It caaditcttng m-
intenHnvt
April 21
It
h_ .
' wT
\ ■ ».^li I |. Hi^» IJ
aecnoN rhetoric
Stan DK>no from Common Camtwtii ipeak on ''Promises,
FlVHiiiSM, Fromises: Pinning the Candidates Down'^^^nr
April!?, 1976 at 4:CX) pm in GSM 22Sa SpoHMHVd by
the Co-op^
•
!
1
making and
agreements
6
Tucs., April 27 5-7 pm
how many times have you agreed to do some-
thing you don't want to do, or not done some-
thing you said you would.
Taking a look at how you make and break
agreements and the effect they have on your
ljfe«-
women s resource
Kinsey 190
center
825 3945
Blood drive prepared
Effort begins May 3rd
Stair Writer
%i
ftudent contn bullous.
our pro-
Sharing of idina, practicgt and programs for
the iMWtment of dMors for the May 3-7 Red
Gmm Hood Drive was the focus af liK CoUegt
aad University Bloodhank Conference held in
the UCLA Recreation Center last Tuesday.
It's corny but true, that \Vs "better to give
IhHi to reoetve** in this program, said Dr. John
Martin, executive manager of the West Diilhrt
of the Red Craat, Martin gave the opening pep
talk to the junior college studcnU, univenfty
•laments and gaaits in attendance.
UCLA is, to date, the moat successful coUagt
program for blood donations out of the student
programs in the Orange and Los Angeles
Counties, said Dan Bent, AmefiBBa Red Crois
supervisor of donor resources for the combined
counties area. The top production for UCLA
was 3,193 pints of blood for the combined
touls of fall and spring 1975 donations.
**lf only half of the student population in
Orange and Los Angeles Counties would
donate once during the ytar, blood for the year
could be supplied for all** laid Bent.
gram appeals to students and staff,*" said
representatives of the UCLA blood drive
committee. **The staff contributes approx-
imately 1 5 per cem oi the total, yet they are the
ones who really may have to use the blood,** a
comnuttee member ckmrmA.
*'lt is very important to start giving blood
yourself,** said Martin, ^%ecause you never
know when you nught aaad it.** He said that
individuals of a donor't iiaMidiiH family may
also draw blood out of the bank from the
donor*s account.
Student
#
The long-range objective for student do-
nations is 20 percent of the student population,
said Bent. However, the toul 3.8 per cent
donation as of last year is far from the long-
range hopes. The donation resulted in 20,827
pints of blood, said Bent.
UCLA participation specifically is '"prinuinly
The fact that donating blood it a *^i
safe medical procedure,** was alM
by the UCLA committee. In a brochure, the
committee pointed out that, **lf you eat a good
meal before giving blood and come in relaxed,
in less than an hour you should be able to go
about your reguhir activities. Lets than a pint
of blood IS taken and within a few hours your
body replaces this volume.**
The committee presented a rund<ywn on their
arrangements and publicity for their program,
and this year, donors will have a chaaoe to win
a trip to San Francisco on PSA« vaiious free
dinners at restaurants in the area and tickets to
theaiers
A diKiitsion of the pcnoaal approach ymmm
the commercial pri» winning gMMMcks to gM
people to donate resulted in the decision that
**You have to do what appeals to your particu-
kr school,** said a f ihrr of the ai
URL presents book awards
By Sara Goodman
DB SufT Reporter
The University Research
Library (URL) kept up its
oldest tradition for the 28th
time Wednesday afternoon
when it presented awards for
the annual Campbell Student
Book Collection Contest.
There were 31 finalists in
two catagones, undergraduate
and graduate students.
Undergraduate winners were
Mayer A. Brenner, with his
collection entitled The Best of
All Possible Worlds, Jeffrey
Lee V opal, with British Auto-
mobiles and Mark J. Phillips,
with the Shape of American
Humor. Robert Benchley.
. Graduate winners were
David Drake. South Africa
and the Satellite of Lesotho.
Kenneth Ki/er. Sport Diving,
and Stephen R. Tabor, Crow
and Ariel
Each participant received a
SI 00 award and a gift certifi-
cate.
Two graduate students re-
ceived S50 each from the
Graduate Student Association
(GSA). They were Donna Rid-
ley, Beatleography, and Tracy
L. Johnson. Robots and
Science Fiction.
Awards of merit were pre-
sented to graduate Robert
Bothamley. Railroads. ? id to
undergraduates Richard J
Self. Military Uniforms and
Robert Koppany. Disney-
anima.
Beattle material is rapidly
disappearing according to
Ridley People carelessly throw
away memorabilia, while others
steal the reniamder from
libraries, she said.
R^idley^s entire collection
consists of records, posters,
shirts, buttons and anything
else relating to the Beatles.
Ridley, a student at the library
school, is writing her special-
ization paipar on the Beatles.
Realizing that South African
history is weighted to whites
and anthropology towards
Blacks. Drake started a col-
lection of both types of books.
He tried to create a synthesis
of the two areas, showing the
interaction of Blacks and
whites.
**Falling in love with a
neighbors Jaguar** was Jeffrey
Vopafs reason for beginmng
his collection.
The criteria for judging the
collections was explained by
judge David R Smith,
archivist at Walt Disney Pro-
ductions.
Smith said the collection had
to be well-defined within its
field, with a succinct intro-
ductory statement and an an-
notation for the collection.
A narrow field was best, said
Smith because it would be
more complete and thorough.
The books should be valuable
to the student, and he should
be knowledgable on it.
The other judges were Fawn
Brodie, author and profestar
here, and Jerrold StanofT,
librarian and antiquarian book
dealer.
Professor Brodie gave a brief
talk about her mott cherished
book. The Booh of Mannaa
This book was **rap«Mible for
my being bom,** said Brodie,
bocause all her graadparenu
were converted Mormons.
Brodie said her interest in
Joseph Smith started her
career as an historian and bio-
grapher.
An explanation of funding
for the contest weat given by
Page Ackerman, University
libraruin.
Bob and Qlanche CampbaM,
book sellers to UCLA and
originators and supporters of
the contest, were present.
Campbell thought the contest
sounded like a good idea and
*^hat was the simple reason for
beginning it.**
Altman Award
of $900 offer
UCLA TAY SACHS DISEASE SCREENING
Mon., Wed., and Thurs.; April 26, 28 and 29;
Ackerman Union lien's Lounge
Tues., April 27, Medical Center Student Lounge
Testing hours each day are from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
A simple ^minute blood test can detect carriers and help save lives. Testing is
free. The Tay Sachs Program is a prototype for the prevention of genetic
disease. Help yourself and help others — get tested!
The Museum of Cultural
History has annowapad the
opening of competition for
the 1976 Ralph C Altman
Award.
The $900 award wiU be
presented to a gradaale
dent who is
of ath^'am. The
I • *m * ^\»mi m ^^ .
in 1967. He was f<
aad first director of
lipaHi af QiHal
tmy.
Applications for
award are availaMr at
55A.
for
2J
the
Hit-
the
the
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»ACAKfAST CONVCASATION WITH
AO/AAN VISHMAC AT im.UCL
MOAION SUBOTNICn. COMPOStA
WICL TAUl ASOUr fll5 ACCCNT/AUSIC
AND ret PLACE «>tM<CNTUAr AAT.
PAiUCMIATfOM WILL M ILUlSTAATCD
tY JCUCTIONS FAOM HIS OWN WORK
II A.M.-N P.M. IN rue WO^MNS COUNOC
HiaiT or CONTEfyiPA AMYOCWlSn AATI5T5
IN ART IN PCnPM^C . AJL»C
PAC5CNTATION Of WCV^HSM ART
CKCAJtP OUAINC THE nOLOCAUftTAN»
— MKUSSION OF mC I^M.rrANT 4CWI5N
AAT»T wmi KACTl PAUSAN A.U ISH
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ll'tt
TtiC YVOttHPOCrAY OF ARON
C«.ANT5'l.eYEt.E5 WITH DR. JANCT
NAPPA AOiEA^VAN Hn
UES VIOUNg PU aAC NPIAfc».
.IAA5AAA iX-nm nS AROftOI.06Y
AND mSIORY M S\,iPC5 WTTH CSTK
PUCNW^ ACKERMAN itO
A MOHT OF RCmaRANCE
HOt^OCAJJtT * MEf^ORIAL
NEW AATEF PtAYERS PROPUCnONON
THE HOUXAUST _
THE VRNKIMED WIORUD OF THE^HTETL
PRESENIATfONS Wrm ROI*^A•
WSHNMC. PMOTOCAAPHCR AUTHOR
URC AUPmiRIUPI 4DOHHXARD
JCWWf MA6IC AND THE DCMONES5
CHJTH SLIDE PRE5EN1ATI0N WITH
DcaaiE FAiNE A.a Mn
ART FILF^5 M TNE W0MEN5 LOUNCf
PORTRAIT OF THE ARTWT ASA W<W
TW0 SHOAT FI,MS OM THE UPK OF f^A AC
CHA6ALV AND THE RMWDEJlKSOFAtAM
O'llRM. CLASSICAL VARIATIONS ON A THEME
KATURDM: 5HIRAT HAtAM CHORUf
5TRING QUARTET
IMNA BM-XAACOV, ^f-AfffCAi
PIAIWSr
ORANDRACt ROOM
THUR5AA1C AFMIt a<l
OEWISH ARfF liNR
'Tin'A ./MXaN
CRAFTS E»M»ITS AT JMl0D f lEFS
CONCERT Wmi AMI AMDMOfHE
THE CALLKiRAPHY AND
RETUnOTOF
PRESCNTATIOli AND
It
ft A.M.-
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tUifoeo BY
5FOV5O/fC0 ay i/.CJiC ftfM/
l-flP.M.
7IOO ILOMEWIUROaA
THE APPRENWCCSWIPOF PMDDY RRAWIZ
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Don't Leave
pornf
By Debbie Alb<TC
Don't iMvef You're not the only one who wants a more active
il life at UCLA That* why the Student Legislative Council is
t|Wfiiorifif an exciting new program -^ the Intereft Matching
System
This pf€i§r»m n designed for pMple like you who don't want to
be "set up with other people/' but |ust want to g^ involved with
others who share similar interests. In just a short time, we've already
gathered a response of over 1,000 filled-in questionatrcs which
OPINION
^ indicate interests in various social actfvrtiesr So, whether it'i
< photography, square dancing, mountain climbing, or ceramics you
•; name it. and we can help you get in touch with other people who
^ share your enthusiasm for a particular activity.
J 1 don't want you to misunderstand. The Interest Matching System
M is not to be confused with compuiefiMd dating services, organized
clubs, or activities involving academic sub|ects.
i Computerized printouts will list all students (with their phone
. numbers) who have mtpmmtid an interest in a particular activity.
Don't get me wrong; even though the names are put on a com-
puterized priritout, this is done merely for convenience and
efficiency. The personal element will always be strtpiyf >n this
piQ§r»m. The printout publications will be made available to you, at
no charge, by distribution at key campus locations. (For example, if
you mark five interests oh the information sheet, your name ir\6
phone number will appear under five different categories).
We have scheduled computer time, so all you have to do is to
pick up a green Interest Matching System brochure (Brochures are
available at Lecture Notes, Ackerman Information Desk, Student
Legislative Council Desk, and Dorm Information Desks). Convenient
#pap off locations have also been provided.
The Associated Students is your organization, interested in making
UCLA a social as well as an academic experience for you. I
.encourage you to participate m this exciting new service.
If you would like further information, plcaie call: 825-2339 or
825-4505
RfvlsiM
I
An anti-Zionist Jewish perspective
By Hassan •! Nouty
(Editor's ncAe: eJ Nouty is a Professor
here in the French Department.)
Racial discrimination, expropriation of,
Arab lands, destruction of Arab villages,
-massive expulsion and savage repression
of any resistance encountered (as ex-
emplified by the current events in oc-
cupied Palestine) are the methods used
OPINION
by the Zionists to de-Arabize Piliitinc
\ The Nazis once used similar methodi
against the lews. It is not the Arabs only
who say it. At a press conference in
Brussels last June, Dr. Israel Shahak, who
IS Jewish, declared: "I do not hesitate to
make a comparison between the situa-
tion in Israel and the one which pre-
vailed in Germany between World War I
and World War II. I do ruM hesitate to
say that the Jews in Israel — and indeed
most of the Jews around the world — are
presently going through a process of
nazification. I do not mean only those
anrK>ng us who are real nazis — and they
are many — but also those who do rK>t
protest nazism because they think thai
the Jews' overall interests ma.y be hurt."
- Dr. Shahak, who teaches at |he
Hebrew University of Jerusalem and
chairs the League on Human Rights in
Israel, is a just and courageous man
whom neither harassment nor threats
have deterred from publishing his book
on "The racism of the Israeli State." Be
assured however that the mass media will
not publicize his fight. To expose Israel
would gravely reduce its usefulness for
the imperialist strategy in the Middle
East. But the mass media constitutes one
sector of public life in this country, in
which a high percentage of Jews can be
found Therefore if there is a "con-
spiracy of silence." they share part of the
guilt, sonr>e of them because they are
rabid Zionists (the "real nazis" reierre^
to by Shahak), most of them because
they fall in the second category of those
who "do not protest Jewish nazism
because they think that Jews' overall
Interests may be hun." By doing so. they
prove that they have been had by the
most tragic hoax in history: Zionism
which poses as the champion of the
Jewish cause is its actual enemy. It is
another form of anti-semitism
Both Zionism and anfi-semitism con^
sider the jeWs as a foreign body in any
non-Jewish society and agree on the
necessity to "ghettoize" the.n (Israel is a
super-ghetto) Zionism fears above all
not anti-semitism but the integration of
the Jews in the nations among which
they live, because it has always given
priority to the establishment ol a Zionist
^tate. over the welfare of the Jews. In
1938, a British plan to salvage the Jews
persecuted in Germany, by graTitmg
them asylum in Great Britain and Amcr-
ica. was killed by the Zionist leader Ben
Gurion and his influential friends in
those two countries; "If we dissociate
the problem of the refugees from the
problem of Palestir>e. the very existence
of Zionism will be jeopardized" ^n
Gurion s letter of 12/7/38 to the Zionist
Executive).
Herzl's gOod relations with von Pleve,
the Czarist minister who masterminded
f^ie pogroms, opened the first chapter of
the long history of the Zionist leaders'
close ties with notorious anti-.emiies^
whose desire to see their count nes nd of
Jews nr»et the Zionists' need to recruit the
latter for their colonization plans in
Palestine. In fact, they encouraged anti-
semitism. They urged the Jewish Ger-
mans to wear the yellow star many years
before the Hitlerian regime made it
compulsory for them to wear that dis-
tinctive sign. A whole separate article
would be required to tell how the Jewish
Arabs from Irak, Morocco and Yemen
were tricked by the Zionists into leaving
their native countries for the so-callf^i
"Promised Land" where they are now
contemptibly looked at as second-clfss
citizens.
Not all Jews fortunately^ are blind to
the vicious nature of Zionism. Shahak is
not alone in the arena. On Monday.
April 2^, at noon (Bunche Hall 21S0) Dr
Edmund R Hanauer. the Executive Di-
rector of "Search for Justice and Equal-
ity in Palestine" will be speaking on "An
anti-zionisi Jewish perspective" Please
and listen.
CX ASS- COULD XHAVE
HOUR ATTENmOfS) ?
Letters to the Editor
I look's LECTURE
wiui. ee QivEKj 0y
MYFATWER
DURIMeTHlS HOUR
£V£RyONE WlU. 6£T
FREE SOFT ORHsItCS
3 TH\NK wcte Gawe
TOHAVEAPOPQUtr
The saving right -about -face of
Bernard Nathanson, M.D (cf
Good HousflkMping/March 1976)
"We are saving babies. " Na-
thanson says with evident pride,
"who would not otherwise be
saved." Bernard Natharison, MD,
oversees critical ammmmtm at St
Luke's Hospital in h4ew York City.
He was once head of New York's
firtt arid busiest abortion dinics.
100 or more pregnancies vwere
terminated each day. The famous
obmiiiciaii rnntimm. '^ said to
AN that prM^iiiiii
youVe been spewing Mit abom
abortion not invofviiig the taking
of human life is nnmim. If that
thing in the uterus is rKifhing, why
are we spending all this time and
••Wfity on itM become convinced
that as director of the dinic I had
In fact presided over 60,000
deaths. But no more. At last I
saw the light. So do babies."
He elaborates: "As early as six
weeks we can detect heart func-
tion in embryos . . brain acti-
vity at eight weeks ... To vehe-
mently deny that life begins
when concision begins is ab-
surd! The pi yjycttow of con-
ception is a huffiah being in a
Ipecial time of its devalapMfit,
part oi a continuum that begins
in the uterus, paMCf through
childhood, adoteioafice aiid
adulthood, jand endi in death.
The fact that a fetus depends on
the placenta for Kfe and can't
nullify its CKisterKe ma human
being. A dnbetic is wholly de-
pendent on insulin, but that
doesn't make him less human. I
had to face tfie fact that in an
abortion, human life of a fpcciai
order is being taken." As a
fornter fetus. I really
this article.
OF.
Olv.
f^-
Happiness is a warm gun
By Adam Ffeffer
(Edkof'i note MmHer is a suh
writer for the Daily Bruin).
Republican presidential car>di-
date Ronald Reagan tmomtl^ at-
tacked tlie Ford administration
in Seattle. Washir>gton charging
that the Soviet Union has be-
OPINION
come militarily superior to the
United States due to the admin-
istration's lack of irwestment in
"strategic and conventional
weapons. ' ket^n said, "Their
fSoiriet Union) strategic missiles
are larger, more numerous and
more powerful than ours And
the size of their army is more
than double ours.'/
Moanwhile, in Amarillo, Texas.
President Ford countered Rea-
gan's attacks by declaring "In
ilkme categories where our mili-
tary planners call for clear-cut
superiority, the fact is we are
first." Ford went on to say, "The
LMited States has the most ac-
curate ballistic missiles. The
United States of America has
mar»y. many nr>ore missile war-
hoads than the Soviet Union."
So, who's telling the truth?
Committee 4or American Pa-
triots (CAP) President Homer
Baumenbacher upon hearing
the news was rg^Oftadly furious
I called Baumenliacher at his
home in Bombsheher, Texas lor
comn>ent.
"There should not even be a
doubt that America is militarily
superior to the Commies How
couid those pinkos be more
powerful than us red-blooded,
apple pie-eating Americans?"
Baunr>enbacher said. "The ifhirig
that bothers me," Baumertbach-
Cf continued, "is that Reagan
and Ford don't^ have the guts to
do anything but talk I'm going
to do something.'
"What did you have in mtr\dV'
I mked
*'Vm going to open a last -gun
service and caM it. Bullet King,
in order to put a gun in every
pocket," Baumenbacher de-
clared.
"Could you please repeat that.
I think we have a bad con-
neaion/' I reiorlod
"In the iume of America the
beautiful, I'm going to sell a
wide selection of arms to the
public m order to protcKt our-
selves against a Communist in-
vasion," Baunr^nbacf>er said in a
bitter tone.
"We're going to offer hand-
guns for those who want to pick
off one pinko at a tinrw. rapid-
iiring automatics which can be
purchased with a side order of
dum dum bullets, the five and
three-quarter pournier rifle arni
rifle with eyesight, arni for tf>e
really patriotic American, the
Whip^r, a nuclear warhead
sefv#d complete with 100 per
cent pure nuclear power, 4,000
n>egatons aryd placed within a
big B-S2 for a perfectly exciting
experier>ce."
"Sounds delicious, I mean
great," I exclaimed
There's going to be a Bullet
king' in every American town/'
Baumenbacher anrKHjnced "It's
been too long since Anr^erica
had. a food war '
"I remember It was only yes-
terday the American flag npoda
its way up a flag pole amid
duKuses of 'lar>d of the free mtd
home of the brave; ' invpired
masses stood silemly ar\d sung
imtioctively the words symbol-
izing the world's only true
democracy: ' only yesterday
young men were proud to die
I
9
*
I
«
*
for the Anr>erican ideals Of Cod,
pie and dear old
"Then what dori^ou attribute
to America's disiniercft in m^V*
"A food OGonomy. If it wasn't
for a good econoaav in the Six-
lies, Vietnam wouw have been
popular People would have
been proud to fight for their
nation. Of course, the Commie-
liberal tfnmdta such as telcyiiiofi
helped
desire to kill the Viet Cong
What a shame . .
"You mean you think if Amer-
ica revives the Cold War with
Russia, inflation artd unemploy-
nrteiit will disappear?" 1 askid.
"That's right," Baurr>enbacfier
fOipoo^od. '-H we stan building
our military then that's mmre
work for factories which Is more
iobs for people which leads to a
prosperous America."
'*Hoy, I never though of h like
that," I said.
"In addition, my Bullet Kuw'
will get the arms to the poofle
so that America win onoa again
be 'king of the worki,' iaun>en-
bacher proudly said
"That's a nice thought/' I
'Sure ii. Too bad there's not a
politician who tees the situation
at clearly as I do. Ah, Cod
you, loa McCarthy."
,/
I-
INVOLVED
Be a part of health delivery ip the UCLA community
Applications available for next year's
PEER HEALTH^
COUNSELORS
at the following ortentatioa meetings only:
Tuesday, April 27
12:00 Ackerman 2412
5:00 Ackerman 2408
For further information call 825-7586 M-F 10-3
i_-
-¥— 1-
^
r
f
Non-traditional siimnier vacation ideas
— — ^^ I
»
Ride a bike, bus or train
r ^"'^ !«► "Co. >^
Vc
\
i
\
^oi^
(CPS) ~ h'f funny, but few
people ftt excited about a tnp
through America. It*i just too
— well, American. Ma and Pa
and the kidi all pile in the car
roll off to a ho-hum turn-
of highway pit stops at
McI>onalds and Holiday Inas.
Cheap, but few thrills^
Coflege studenu used to
avoid this summer sameneM by
catching a plane to Europe and
leaving America to their
Hvcnts. But economics have
interceded aad now Pittsburgh
seems a lot more practical thiein
Paris.
Fortunately, it's possible to
ditch family tradition and
enjoy an off-beat summer
travelling through the U.S.
Here's how to do it with a
minimum of cash:
Explonng Amcnca from the
hick aMt of a car IS a good bet
if you*re travelling with six
other people who are splitting
the gas upkeep on a fine-tuned
VW Otherwise^ gas price-
fixing what it is, it*s cha^r to
park your car for the summer
and travel via bus, train or
bike
f
coffee house concert series
I
WARRIORS of the RAINBOW
"music that defines and expresses
the Asian Culture*'
taiko drums, keyboard, bass, traps, flute/reeds,
percussion and vocals
MONDAY, 8 PM, APRIL 26
Sunset Canyon Rec Center
Buenos Ay res Room
%
I
Tickets: 50C at door from 7-8 pm. Free refreshments
SCA-CAC
AT LAST
- A COMPLETE
D ENTAL PLAN
FOR ALL STUDENTS & EMPLOYEES
OF
U.C.L.A.
Single Members - $30 per year FamTTy Members '$80
For Full Information Without Obligation Please Return
This Coupon Today!
Address
City
Phone _
H Time To Call
OR CALL 655-7761
Train lovers can take ad-
vantage of Amtrack's USA-
RAIL Pass, which entitles the
hokSer to one flK>nth of iid-
limited eoach travel for $250.
You can also buy a 21-day
pass for S200 or a 14-day pass
lor $150.
The USARAIL Pass can
save you a lot of money. For
instance, Amtrack*s coach fare
for a trip from New York to
L.A. and back asun via Chi-
caf o is $304; a two-week pass
thus saves $154.
Those who are willing to
rough it can pnichase a simi-
lar past from the bus com-
panies and cut Amtrack's price
in half. A two-month Ameri-
pass from Greyhound costs
$250; a one-month pass goes
for $175. Continental Trail-
ways offers the same deal at
the same price and calls it
Eagtepaas. The competing bus-
lines have very reasonably
agreed to honor each other's
paas on all their routes.
(A tip for busers: you can
save yourself a few bucks and
wear and tear on your stomach
lining if you pack your lunch
and avoid the rip-off prices of
bus station lunch counters.)
Unfortunately, America's an-
awer to the European railroads*
Eurailpass may soon be com-
ing to an end. Amtrack may
pbase out its pttss by May 15
"^ up to a few months ago
the USARAIL Pass was avaal-
abk only to foreigners — and
the bus companies iMll be
making a final decision about
ikft fate of their passes on
April 30. Hold your breath.
Another transportation op-
tion for speed freaks is joining
up with the Bikecentennial.
Bikecentennial, a non-profit
orfanization set up to develop
bike trails, is s^oatohqg num-
erous burvclc tours this sum-
mer.
For inalMW. a 12-day, 375-
mile bike trip through the
Colorado Rockies coUt $165
with lodging every night and
$145 for reserved camp sites.
Each tour is led by an ex-
perienced tour guide and the
price mcludes the cost of three
meals a day. For more infor-
mation write to Bikecentennial,
PO Box 1034, Missoula,
Monuna 59801.
Independent cyclists who
want to see the U.S.A. on their
own should latch onto a copy
of the
and Towteg GaMt, Workama
Publishing Company, New
York. NY. Co9t $5.95 This
book maps out 150 bike traik,
rates them as to their dif-
ficulty and gives lots of iafo
about camping and lodging
facihties along tlie way.
Now you know how to get
to where you're going, but
whert do you stay? One poa-
sibility is youth hostels —
dormitories for student hitch-
hikers and bikers that cost
between $.50 and $2.00 a
night. You need a youth hostel
card rngfiag $11 and a ilatp-
ing bag or slwet
Write to American Youth
Hostels, Delaplane Virginia,
22025 for info. Members re-
ceive a free listing of hostels in
the U.S.
Those who dont §md like
haaaiing with hostel curfews
and have more money to spend
— an average of five to eig|K
bocks a nifM for a misfit ranai
— can crash at a budget motel.
Here are the national nd-
dreiees of three motel chains
(directories arc avaihible from
each): Motel 6, 18$8 Century
Park, E. Suite 1900. Los
Angeles, California, 90067;
Econo-Travel Motor Hotel,
Koger Executive Center, Buikl-
ing 3. Norfolk Virgima, 23502;
Scottish Inns of America, Inc.,
104 Bridgewater M., ILnox-
villc Tennessee, 37919.
In addition. Budget Motels
and Hotels of America, Inc.,
568 Snelhng Ave: N., St Paul,
Minnesou 55104, offers a $1
directory of independent cheap
motels outside of the chain
circim. Another guide to in-
expensive rooms is WkMt In
Stay USA. Send $3 45 to tht
Council on International Edu-
cational Exchange, 777 United
Nations Plaza, New York, NY
10017
If you're not schooled-out
come May, you can often find
inexpensive rooni at univer-
sities. Mort's Guide to Low
Cost Vacations and Lodgings
on College Campuses, CMC
Publications, 1974, hits dozens
of teiiools eager to open up
empty dorm room to vacation-
ing students. A 7-day stay at
the University of San Fran-
cisco, for instance, coats only
$24.40 per person for a double
room.
(Ci iliiii li M paff 11)
ATTENTION
STUDENTS!
Information about 1976 SUMMER
INTERNSHIP POSITIONS with
CALIFORNIA STATE AGENCIES
is available at the PLACEMENT
& CAREER PLANNING CENTER
RECEPTION DESK. DROP BY
NOW.
Application Deadline:
April 30, 1976 .
Zeta Tau Alpha — UCLA's 18th sorority
By Km Gatte
DB Staff WrUar v
The number of sdrav'itiek
here Ima now grown to 18 with
the addition of one that Ims
naan neve beioce.
Zeta Tau Alpha, a •Oit>nty
that moved off this campus
nine and onr kmU years ago,
will reacquire their old dMp-
ter hmmt on 720 Hilgard Ave-
Tative housing project
m trying to purchase the
ty. along with several
sororities and fratermties, MMf
laat fall. However, escrow did
come through.
transaction,
it described as **99 per
cent sure*" by RlMda Simin, an
aluHMM of ZTA.
After tlK sorority left cam-
^ the Acaba fraternity
and then to the
owners, Wiktem In^
CoqwratAon, when the frater-
nity feidad keie in 1971.
The proxinuty of tiK hmmt
to campus toadmd off a hkA-
diHi war bttwem several fac-
tions.
According to a raident of
the house, the Twin Pines
But ZTA, with funds fi
Its national Offgaizauon.
abk to make a firm offer of
between $160,000 and
$175ji8t.
ZTA hnd bean at UCLA
since 1926, aten the campus
was Inanlai on Vermont
Avenue in Lot Aageks. The
aoronty had a chapter honte
tlK old faculties In 1929,
UCLA made its ap-
in WaMwod, ZTA
bulk iu hoMf at the present
location.
There are only two legal
parking tpnoes in fzont of the
house, and ummjf cars ut
parked on the lawn. According
to a resident of the house,
when the property «nt sold to
Summer trips . . .
(CiilhiniiiiirageiB)
Stndcntt on a super-tight bodftt should plan on a summer a#
pup tents and campfiret. For a liattng of the national parks, write
to the Superintendent ci Documents, U.S. Govenanant Printing
Office, Washington DC, 20402 Ask for Canifing in the
riatinnal Park Sy9tem-*76, document number 024-005-00627-3
and taad 85c, or for the NatftoMl Parks hi the VS. Map and
G«idt,#024-005-00546-3, tend 75e.
A copy of the ^National Forest Vacationt brochure can be
obtained from the saote address Send 90c and atk for Program
Aid 1037.
When you*re not on the road or in bad« you can get back to
the batios of pktywg tourist. Every time you hit s major city,
check otit the Visitor's Bureau — an office which is sooietinMt
dMpHted atvthe Department of Commerce or Tourita. The good
folks there will give you city maps, city bus information,
sightseeing guides and entertainment tips
Student vacationers who want to get in on .the Bicentennial
hrotthahji can send for a ralmdtr oif all Biecntannial events.
Write to the Superintendent of Documentt &t4 nak for tht
CnltBdnr al BitaatHHdnl Evaalt. the East Conat
for $3.40; the West Coast vertion coau $3.00.
UCPD will seize bikes
if not parked in racks
With the advent of warm spring weather and con-
sequently more bieycit riders, the University of California
Pohoe Department it wnming that illegaliy packad bicydtt
wiD be confitcatcd.
The only phwet hieydes can be legally parkni are in the
bicycle racks placed around campus, according to Sargent
Hanaon of the UCPD. Bicycles cannot be locked to
poles or trees.
a person parking their bicycle anywhere but m
racks return to find their bikes missing, the first plnoe
^hey shoukl go is to the police depnitnent.
Hanson also reminded the UCLA community that no
bicycles are allowed in buildiop at all as they aie m
violation of fire regulations.
Delegates of caucus sought
Any UCLA student, fac-
ulty or tmff atember selec-
lad as a racomnMiia
gate at any of the
iential cnniidate
hrid ApriMX 1976.
Otlly
Alper M the
110. «r can S25-23I2.
C.n. Prmnkml, 11.0. Medical Group
Hnir Tranapinntatlon
Acne-Compie]^ion
PInstic Surgery
Dormntoiogy
Allergy
pt^ona tor
AM
I Lit^ratur* on
Los An^elaa
Lakewood
6423 WHahire Blvd . #105
^203 Lakofvood B»vd 531-74^0
B101 New?r.an St Ste C (714)
Wilstern Invattnsa Cofporation
an afMaoMnt stipulated that
no radical improvemcnfs
would be aMde to the eatenor
of the premises vnitts an ea-
pandcd parking facility was
added.
Since the addition of any
parking spnaat to comply with
city buiklAog laws waiild cott
of the
itself, ho miprovenients
to the buildlhg weie^made.
Univer»ii> officiah.
Ht a Greek oraaoi/jition
cupy the mmtmnot. were
wiling to waive nay building'
and pnrkii^ codet to the toro-
rity or fraternity, which had a
sincere and finandally-l
offer
ZTA has apparently
aStr for te
to rush new women for
fall quarter
ZTA m *t
to regroup on thjt
aendemic year
returned to UCLA ial quarter*
and though it does not hai« a
house at present, it will have
this autumn.
f
r
Presented by Norman MNIer
Vet basketball awards
ptatcnt-day
Aa awards presentation for the First Annual
UCLA Mihury Basketball Tournament took
plioe Friday in tht Office of Veteran Affairs
(OVA).
The awards were presented by Norman
Miller, vice-chancellor of student and campus
affairs.
Partiapntivg tanuM represent the Airforce
ROTC. firtt piaaa, the Navy ROTC, tacMid
place and the United Veterans Association
(UVA), third phne.^ Tht Amy ROTC alto
topk
ahhoiigh ''noc much
The ROTC groups participate in iniennural
sports between ROTC chapters of other
schoota, to they used the same teams. "But u
was good*** said Lieutenant Jon McCooMt,
coach for the Navy ROTC team. **becattse even
though all ROTC divisions play other
we never get a chance to play each
Lacoete got his UVA leaAi together by word
of mouth, although the UVA also had inter-
mural competition. **! got about 25 guys to
up by just asking them,** he said.
I
t
It
Jorge Lacosle, a UCLA student and a
veteran, originated the idea for the UVA-
ROTC tniimantfiiit **! think it*s very wtNtb-
while bacBMte it gave us all an outlet for
participating in sporting activiteik we don*t
nonnally get a chance to do!** said Lacoste
Lacoste described the games, held on March
6 and 13, as ^unifying,** since veterans of
miUtary tarvlnr were able to get together with
**We*re going to do it again next
I amttr said.
**1 thought it waa gitnt,** said McComas,
*^hough my team should have won There
waan*t a big audience turnout this time, but 1
expect it to get bigger and better 1 enjoyed it.**
Captain Lawrence Pace, who orgamaed tht
Airforce ROTC team, agreed that the activity
was ^ery worthwhile.** He said he would
**certainly** be part of the event if it is
contmued.
r»4»y NV
FUN PARTY AT
.•-i
tsttci
l^
J.
C A.i<' U'%«»^v r- i#M<»«<;
• Sunday, May 9 ^^ #%£-
4:00 - Midnight 4^9 .ILO
Admission to Disneyland, unlimited use of ail
adventures & attractions. FREE PARKING.
riifeN m Mil »T>»c« Ccntor, K«rekhoff 140, whN* ttivy Imi
SMART
Prevent
Tragedy
Disease
Tested
Xcker man—Union
ente
"^'-'vrnf..-^'-^- ':— -«.;r-"I^— ■ -
Stud
Rf>t
our
d.m. to
p.m.
3 p. in and 5 p.m tc
\ Simple blood test will en-
able you and your relative^ to
have healthy unaffertf>rj rhil-
dr^^n.
<^ -»#•*« ■
^•^v
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1 i
Official f/n^Bpi/y Notices
'•■■■f , ApHI 38, Y9P( il IIm
•A
I
i
Something New - Exciting in
Auto Insurance
If you don't have liability insurance, ' the nt«v financial
responsibility law could affect you in 1975
Modified rates tor Qualifying Students
"^ Call Today For Your fr99 Quotafion
245-7275 Hov« RotM — Will Trov^l 984-0844
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Y-
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ot Sonta Barbara
Now occepting opplkafions for
Summer Session
Sfarting June 29, 1976
Foil TemY-cemmencing Sepfomber 7, 1976
E)egree proerams leading to LL6 or JD Degrees Graduates Qualify tor
Canfofnia Bar Examinations
TRANSFEI STUDENTS ACCEPTED
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liwH— you to try ITS 8FfllHQ OUAHTER MENU
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11
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FnaaySaKiai
82.50)
Uineli S Dlnnar inciiitfi. Soup or aalad. hot ontrae. dnnii
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WE ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
WrrERNATIONAL MEANS AMERICAN. TOOl
low School Compos
THE COUNCIL ON EDUCA-
TIONAL DEVELOPMENT
(CED) will be considering course pro-
posals for the Winter Quarter 1 977, and is
prepared to sponsor innovative courses
of genuine academic quality which
would be of interest to the campus
community. Such course proposals will
be due in the CED Office no later than
Mondty, May 17, 1976. If you are in-
terested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educational Development, 3121 Murphy
■ 'H'
■•■i^*"
0nb0rba i nmGnt/
^ i.
Wallechlnsk/s 'Almanac ' stalks wild trMa
•y Frank WiMcf
**I utcd to rcid ^^^nmnmr^ all the tiflK, and I became ditsatisfied
with them."
Unlike many people who share hit view, David Wallechinsky
at 27 did something about it. He wrote hit own: the aational
be«-»ellcr Tlie Pcoplc^i Almaaac ($7 95, Doublcday, 1478 pafct).
The son of noted author Irving Wallace, who co-cdited the
mammoth work, Wallace said he has what li called **job
security." In fact, with the royalties coming in from Po^fk't
(PA) and another novel lOon to be rclcaicd called The
k Wallechinsky appears to be well on his way in following
his father's literary footsteps.
PA covers basic almanac information such as country
descriptions, predictions and sports and offers, them on a
personal, human level. In addition, other controversial and
absorbing topics -are presented, ranging from a seaion on "The
History of Sex" to a section pn famous spies and one on
vytterious happenings.
Interesting notes of history and research embellish every page,
such as Adolph Hitler owning 8,%0 acres of land in Colorado
and Richard Nixon bemg accused by a judge of unethicfU
behavior in his first court case
^n'o be precise as possible regarding the writing, we feh our
personal biases should show," Wallechinsky expiaiaed. **To one,
objectivity is something that doesn't exist."
Working out of two offices, one at their home tn Brentwood
aad the other m Berkeley, the Wallaces collected an original
manuscript of over 7000 pages from nearly 200 contributers.
Because of production problems, the manuscript was first cut
to 5000 and then to a "slim 4,500 pages because Doubleday
couldn't find a book binder capable of binding that large a
book "
When PA was first released, the piiblic response to the book
caught Doubleday by surprise. They underprinted tliie copies and
the public hCNlfht up the books at such a furious rate that the
bookstores were out of stock for months.
On tour to promote their book last September, Wallechinsky
racalled the frantic phone call to Doubleday warning of tho huge
demand. "We were m Chicago . . . our third major city, and
after talking with numerous people, we determined that the
market was so large that the planned printing would be too
small. So we made otir call, but it was too hM^**
Currently, two separate printing houses are printing PA
around the clock to keep up with the demand. On the latest Time
nuigazinc non-fiction list, the \mtk has moved from eighth to
sixth and continues to sell out in Westwocd.
Not content with only one top-seller, Wallechinsky told of
another supplement to PA for September 1978. ''A million new
•t
WaBichinsiiy; 'X^hfgctivHy
words and all new material. Pve been screening applicants for the
book now, matching their interests with our topics."
As to his owh efforts in the project, .Wallechinsky said, **I warn
to write a history of journeys around the word, and if there's
something I don*t know about and am interested in, I will do it."
Jht hlMmt problem Wallechinsky now faces it the over-
whelmmg reipiiMe he has receivcrd to the advertisements for
writers.
**We have had a tremendous amount of applications fr<
•oMttnics akme. But we tend to go to peopk who are wnters
haooMc they have. to research the articles themselves and can
explain it better to a novioe.**
Hundreds of su^estion aad complaint cards were
in retpMMe.to^ a page m the almmmc asking for
"Doubleday will not stop printing to correct the typographical
erron in the book," WaUechaasky explained, "it's frustrating to
see Lewis CarroU*s mhk spelled wrong and to receive letters
about ft.**
The supplementary edition, however, will not be published by
Doubleday. Banum Books now has the rights for the planned
hook due to contradmU problems between the Wallaces and
Doubleday.
For the next book, part of the research will mclude a book-
buying tnp by the young Wallace in London. Currently, the
tmniYy owns more than 10,000 hoilts and, "I hope to have a
workable reference library," WaBiclunsky said
Wattechinsky is no newcomer to the literary field Previous to
his most recent success, he wrote Chico*s Offaaftc FarmiaB* *
non-fiaion book written with an ilbterate fanh^ named Chico
about farming techmques "He had the knowledge and I had the
writing," Wallechinsky said. * - *^
More akin to the style of the PA was another work entitled
LaoglriBf Gas — a factual but human study on the history and
effect of laughing gas. However the almanac involved much more
extensive research than his previous books.
*Xhir nuijor problem with the first almanac was organizing the
writers and just gettmg going on it," he explained. "I*ve leaned a
lot working with my father about organization aad raafarch "
For hu next liovel, Tlit Oaia, Wallechinsky *took a cross
section of the class [his high school graduating dais of 1965] and
included the basic stereotypes. Linda, the hod girl who slept
around, and the quartertmck of the football team, who is now a
masseuse."
David is not the only Wallace publishing books this year. His
father has jutt poblished TIk E DooHMal about the FU taking
over the country. In June. David*s mother Sylvia Waiaeg will
publish her first novel caUe4 TIm FoobIbIb. Finally, J|ii nalar
Jane omd his father are working on a book titled Tho Two, a
biography of the original Siamese Twins Chang Mli Yag.
*^It*s just coincidence that they are all coming out at the same
time," Wallechinsky said.
Though Wallechinsky expects that popular interesf in the PA
should die out in three yeaia, he said the book will again be
pushed by DooMaday in iu nwoaihrr sates campaign.
David Wallechinsk/s test dissausfaction ted him to write a
top-iellii^ ateHoac. With his heightened literary curiosity, not
can only wosder where his next diaaachantment will tead him.
Tonight at 8 in Schoenberg Hall Auditorium
University organist, Thomas Harmon will give
the music department's final Bicentennial
lecture on, joddly enough, the organ in Amer-
ica. Admission is free.
The Contemporary Music Festival gets off to
a* rousing continuation tomorrow night with
violinist Robert Bloch and pianist Marvin
Taruk of UC Davis and the USC (of all
things) woodwind quintet and stnng quartet.
Both will perform music by American com-
poaers including Charles Ives, Jerome Rosen,
Richard Swift, Andrew Frank and Raoul
Pleskow. The concert begins at 8:30. Student
tickeu cost SI.
Tomorrow at noon the UCLA Brass Quintet
and the Tuba Ensemble perform in Schoen*
berg Hall.
Wednesday from 5 to 7 pm, the Coop hosts
Tom Smah, Debra Dante and their cabaret-
style musical act.
Ptemst Johana Hams will ptey ^n all-Roy
Harris concert Thursday at noon. Like all noon
Schoenberg Hall concerts, admission is free.
Attorney John Mason will lecture on ^'^Con-
tracts as They Relate to Music, Dance Theater.
Visual Arts and Motion Pictures" Friday at
noon m the Schoenberg Liltk Theater. It's free.
so bring your agent.
So he stands on the
Shouts to tke shore.
But tke louder he screams, the
Longer he's ignored.
For the wine of obiivion is
Drunk to the dregs.
And the mer chant. s of the
rs almost have la be
• \
\
Till the giant is aware thai
Momeone's pulling at his leg.
And someone is tapping at
The dbor.
— Tke Crucifixion
Phil Ochs was completely,
integrally and irredeemably a
child of the IMTt. It was his
greatest asset aad his fatal
Ochs thrived in a world
where the song was not only
an art, but a weapon for so-
cial chaoge.
levelled guitars at
ition and the war, and
^Mtic eaeoMa of tiK
old order They cal^d it rev-
olution, becaoae "revolution" is
such a amrvaloaaly impressive
to sing.
Phil Ochs wrote and
u everything thai
in arwipapers. aad a few
things that d«dn*t. He acoffM
at miilinl ^isiiiinliai ("is there
aajliady here whose pride is
on th^ hoc/ with the hooar of
the %fme and the courage of
the blind^). chided kncc^-ierk
liberals ("1 love Puerto Ricans
and Kegroes. as lotif as thcv
don't live next door"),
the palist ("Lam tl
American maa: I ktH thete-
fore I am"), and cancatured
intellectual confrontations (**To
Che k»er go the hai^V^ ^
the victor go the haagers-oa").
Ochs was very, very good,
alature. When protest faft aad
proleat rock were in, they were
dominated by Yoa-K.now-
Who. aad by the time he va-
cated the field, it had '
unfashionable for aoogf to
Phil Ochs hung himself two
weeks ago - an execution as
wen AS a faisi^.- Earlier, he
had told a friend that the
words weren*t coming, but the
proMem was hig|«r. The
jiM^rnalist streetfighting
taliiy had bo place in an era
that coithi accept GaEald ¥m^
with a ittaii^ f^e In f^76.
the Establishment was once
m^m Aa c^alooar not the
Sy oeaaad to etave- Ochs. at
\ rcma¥pi himKlf forcibly
\\from a aofid with retetiuily
telle diaseasioa reUtively
-htrtr
ATTENTION PRE-HtftLTH CARE STUDENTS
MEDICUS
Wonnan m Modictno
*
c-oa w
43-105 Cmi«v
April 28, 197t
for HMlth
AUTO
INSURANCE
^ES - you need duto msurance
All the more reason to contact us for discounts up
to 35 to most students — another good reason
for being in college
See or call ud m Westwood
477-2548
Agents for College Student Insurance Service
1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build
mg) LA 90024
i
Brady Hodee
telliUCIA
where to go»
Brady Hodg*
47t-1t1t
And how to
10%
diacount witfi coupon
on dry cloaning only
Expiroa April 30th. 1975
10%
digooufit with ooupon
on dry doonlng only
Expiroa April dOth. 1976
Number 1 Dry Cleaners
1126 Westwood Blvd.
478-631 Q "
next to McDonalds
Complete Dry Cleaning and Laundry
Parking in Rear
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T
■f-
.-X. "■^'
1
r
/Distant Thunder' lacks a Ray of Hope
I
IndiaH premier fiimiiiAker. Salyiiit
lUy. bM made a new film that is
nothing more Chaa ^, long dirge of
sorrow and despair ~ a dark ule with
absolutely no light at the end of the
tunnel. It has the overt>eaniigly poetic
tuie of Dimm TlHMMlv (overbearing
you are reminded of it end-
> and in companson lo Ray*t
previoyi achievements, it is undis-
tinguiilMd.
After the brilliant poetry of Days
Id Niglirs In tlic Forest and the
anmsing triviality of Tbc Golden
FnvtPMS, Ray wanders across the plains
oflnAa in a pitiful death shroud in
DiiiMit ThMidar at the Los Fehz. The
problem is the weak and dimeniionless
story. For a director so story oriented
as Ray, this is death indeed
The setting is the Indian rural coun-
tryside at the outbreak of World War
II The vtMnge, Mtiafiad and fulfilled,
looks upon its doctor (Soumitra
Chatterjee) as a kind of sage and
leader. In reality he*s a silly bourgeois
fop who acu smug toward the "simple"
pntnnu. His wife (Rabiu) is full of a
SOMB of duty and tranquility, and like
Bergman. Ray shonrs women to be
infinitely better people than men.
The village, suddenly and almost
invisibly at first, is caught in the grip
of a ^'nuin-made** famine canaad by the
stockpiling of rice for the war effort
The doctor's safe existence becomes
shaken at iu very base. In tbe nidst of
flurries of violence arising from the
village's desperate plight, his wife is
nearly raped
From then on. Dtotant Tbnnder
dOMHids into greater despair miil |Ik
preoocnpntion with danih verfH on tkt
obtawva. As a consequence, it alM
baooflMS —endurable
The dramatic situauon Ray presents
us has potential for a great deal mote
depth and contemplation than what he
delivers This is a cieeed-cnded tak
told with a gallon of tears and a pinch
of art.
Ray is mnilly uncinematic in Ihs
treatment of distinctly nch stories, but
oddly enough in Diitnnt TlHMdar, this
is not completely the case. There is a
visual irony set up between the for-
geousness of the country (not to men-
tion Babita, who is breathuking) and
the abject poverty of the people. The
stunning imagery of cnflMinnMMi Sou-
Roy IS not just pretty, but
ingful
As for Hm nctofi, Itey arc lyiHidid.
Chatterjee, India's beat actor, is a
piMMflManlly versatile artiat of jpower-
liil ioo^ and subtlety And Babiu
naad only stare into open spnee (nMdl
she ends up doiiig for abovt half the
film) and sIk will nanae jpml
IMstnal Ttandv is Rny*s entry into
a growing contest aaoiiy nyu^f inter-
■minanl filounakers in which each is
trying to ontelow ttoe otter guy. Ray
TlHMdar to be sook sort of ballad to
the victiaMied millions of past and
present, but all he has iMdc is a onn-
note tune drawn out to two
hours.
Speakers Program Presents
AMBASSADOR
>-»■
SIMGH A DINITZ
Israel's Ambassador to the United States
Highest Israeli official in the United States
\
)
i
>^»ai0 >i ■ ■■'■■^■i
W# •» I ■! ^r ■ i :^m^m^•^m
Monday, April
1:00 P.M.
Grand Ballroom
Come early for assured seating
Reg fee funds Interest Matching System
•y JodI U€km^'
DB Stair Wff«i^
Student registration fees in the
amount of $1600 are paying for the
new ''Interest Matchi^ System," ac-
cording to Jerry Herndon, designer of
the ptngiani.
The funds are from the Student
Legislative Council (SLQ conti^p«cy
fund, for which each student pays
S5.50 in reg fees.
The service is designed to help
students reach others with similar
interesu. The 62 activities available
range from horseback riding to disco
dancing to poker playing.
_ have
ttuned m siaoe tlie initial distnbution
at the end of hut quarter, said Hem-
don. Hemdon cxpineiad iiirpriie at
•••^ • i**^ nspoMe for a new pro-
gram.
Hemdon is not sure what the moat
popular activity it ''Ri^ offhand, 1
wovid say there have been a lot of
^others/ ** he lai^f^d.
loan informal DaUy Mtum poll 10
studems setocsad at random either did
not know or didn't care about the
program.
A senior marjoring in economics
'1, 'Tm too busy. I have other things
to do - A junior als^^«iajoring m
^om , mad, **lt*s good if you hgut
time- He added, -| have my o«n
'*rd do It if I was vounger.** laid a
jraduate business studcm
The first computer run of the ap-
plications, programmed by members of
the Computer Chib, took pinoe le-
ccntly Last Wednesday, separate listt
for each interest category, conuining
the names and phone numbers of
who apphed, became avail-
The hsts are on disphiy at the in-
formation desks in the dorms. Acker-
man Union and ICerckhoff Hall. They
are also at some eating areas.
There will be at least two dtrectofs
of the program with the responsibility
of calling people in vanous gmups and
arranging interactions, Herii^on said
This is in anticipation of possible
shyness of the studenu lo telephone
'"strangers **
Studenu. both undergraduates and
gmdua{es, may still continue to turn in
applications after the first computer
run.
The Student Interest System is spon-
sored by the general representatives of
the ASUCLA.
I
r
Campus events campus events campus event
will
Msy 3-7 Sion up IS Ssmli MeeS S am-2
pm. Asrtf MM, tsMss on Brum afaik.
CtWB SMSd swd luncht waHiway
•iiipiaiimiiM. t4 fm, ttwy INimsday
and folh dancts. S-tO pm. also- tvtry
iMadnMday during mnas Quarttr 1023
HilQArd
-fsMM d
pamtMifs and imsffaphs. ft
AprM a.
Cit
by tht Chmtat Amtrican
raiMdaSofi, limited to
of CMaHt asfisslry wHo art
prestntly sophomores at a rtcogntzad
coliege or umvtrsity in ttw Los Angalss
area For an appdcation write Chinaat
American Alliance Lodge 415 Bamboo
Lane Los Anaslss 90012 or csfitact ma
Scholarship omca. Murphy A-121.
-Tay Jana Masn ^iiiiiiSiii JawMn.
testing is trad sad opan to the pubMc.
today April 28. 29 Ackerman Mens
Lounge and tomorrow Medical Center
LOunge
^ — ieleiatt Statat Saari. which shows
each pnartantiai
amount of
which have
Kerckhoff Hall
first Soo^
bam itatas
it now up M
atevator on in
for farauB
noon
man 3617
mformai pr
10
on eMtramiiial
Oent and
mformation
for graduate stu-
aia availal>fe m the
Feik)wshipt aatf Atsltlantship Section
Murphy 122S
tramad MlviiB will iMlp you find hmding
tor your iiiis Opss iitty 9 aohi pm.
Kerckhoff 4P1
mm tNroufli EXPO
A2l3arGaN
fom OECA ii a
Visit KaiMM* 311
Vala^ttoaff 9r9 also
Slid food prO'
now avaiiiiia for a
uc Stupaai loMy m
psys SIViO a mmm. RaauiiiMSli i»-
duda feoMi a lacom UC frsdosia and
tniaiwl m adycaMoail Ihms Pkk i^
appMcalion m fkmttmM M Pasdiiwi ia
May 7 or csN flMMB _
^residamial Advloiry CoMoiMaaa art mm
available tagMia is April 30 pick up
apphcatiofis St Adiarmaa lafarowlioii
daak Mrckhoff 3M and hooslii|
tions
wHD lis
-lia
dtacuasii
7» pn. iMlga. VoMi 2250 Free
-im mm m M. WIN be slwom 1^30
P*n ttNOorroip. HPI Auditorium Ffaa
-isMt Aairsvs sad Caral Baraatt al
M. 1W TV praSocllsn «M Pa
5 pm, taasy Molnitz 1409 ffoa
— «■! Bii isewasRivy sbsat s SiMk
woman doctsr «NI fea shswi f pm. isday.
Malnp Hm. Ras:
..... -_^-™Spm.
l>nwarslfy YWCA, 574
am TV
B pm. Apm naais sow satf
5 pm. tsmorrow
M MedWaa. a ,
will*ba haid 6 pm. April 28 CHS 43 105
-m SmmM EaliV LaaMnila „
•IB bajiven by Jolin Gfoas Editor
TiMB Blaai lopptaaaal. 430 pm today
Nolle 1200 and S pm tomorrow Oickson
21iO Free
200 yoprs miBn of iia kind of
Niatruments in America 8 pm tofNpht
Schoonbarg Auditorium fr^e
T^siPs Spaalt id— JBaider ex per imam
in Colomilmi Folklore theater noon, today
S275
Te Bel Ma BCU i SaBaal tf
iM. advisors from cradantial and
proffama. 2 pm, today Adtarman MBB
'■Bi Baadlai. by Dan Pagis ol the
Htbrma Unnrarslly. Jamaalam. 4 30 pm
today Ackarman 3B17
-Tbe mmn HJaaa M Ui BniMm 2 pm.
today^ Ackerman 3617
—itaamii. lU ardiaaolaBy ami htstory
in sBias. 3 pm tomorrow Ackrman 2412
-Us ItaaMHS ifarM a Ba BBM. 730
pm. lamprrow URC auditorium. BBO NO-
BSrd ffia .^^
— TMMMi PaMry. 11 am, tomorrow
Aokarman 3617
517
-TIM Art a Ba
sontation-woi
3617
Stan Dhkio from Common Cause 4 pm
tomorrow GSM 2250
IdewBarm M Faft MbbIk Jam aM aari
BIstory by Howard Feldman. 7 10 pm.
tomorrow Kmaoy 3B2
2 pm April 28 Acker
a iPda pro-
Ap'll 28. Ackar-
tma as gsBisBstic tttamss. 10 iiir AprH
am. AprlllB. UCLA HtHel
w^^ k^^^^H vs^nwo. nooii, Apni aa. amiORa
A 163 ..«,,.«^
— IbMsI Ibm Cia. will amsi 74 pm.
TuaaSsyi. Oykstra Aacraaiion room ami 2
I pm, Fridays. MIoman s Gym 280 for all
Is Mandao and practicing BsB-
li ai Baardae BaMaly. a human-
istic discussiof group/class an social
I. 7 p
\'9
190
1030^
are avaHaPle aidy al Bm awat
Ackarman 2412 and
Bs 2m
H pai. ismm-
i. organization
4 pm lamarria
MH, mOk Tom
fiparlaMa
7JD pm. 10-
WaaBly
Kerckhoffll/
noon-tJB pm today 4
538 pm. AoHl 38 sad ^8 pm April 29
Ackerman 2488 SimaaslSd donation $1
ball 6 154 pm llVomens Gym 200 indoor
Soccer 8 10 pm Womaas Gym 200
SHiiimoyPiaial. 1-2 pm RMIe flange Jiido
24 pm BMC • 146 Bfalar Ski 4-5 pm AU
3517 Wiaaaiiio. 3-5 pm MAC Pi tie
I
i
I
Tedari
Kung Fu 3304 pm MAC 146. Kendo S-7
pm Mfomans Gym 200 Shooting /Pistol
noon^i pm. fliBa Asnoe Galaxy 4 10 pm
AU 3408 Flymg. 7<9 pm KH 4BB. «aiisn.
every afternoon Horticulture Gardans
WreatMng 3-5 pm MAC 6 116
Taaadey
Lacraaaa. 3 304 pm Fiald 7.lUrala. 5-7
pm Womons Gym 200. Bimal/Trap. noon-i
pm Moos Gym tiG Nanpo 53B430 pm
IMC B 146 Hunting, noon- r pin Mens Gym
IBB; Judo. 24 pm MAC 8 146 Aikido 7-9
pm MAC B 116 Choat. 6-10 pm Mens Gym
122. Social Dance. 74 pm Oykstra H Rec
Rm SaiHng 74 pm AU 3517 Itoun
ismaori noon Moore Lawn. RasMSlBall 4
pm. AU 2412
Taatadey
\ om Fm
Ljicroaae X3B4 pm FmM 7
Pistol 3 5 pm Rifle H9nxit
Air Rifle
Women s
Karate 54 pm. Wamana Gym 288 AdMia
74 pm MAC B ltd Kanpo 530438 pm
MAC B 146 Kuna Fu 2-5 pm MAC B 148
Chaas 6^10 pm Mont Gym 122;
3-5 pm. MAC B 116 Maontapis
Mooft Lawn Social Oassa 8 pm-i em
Sunset Rec Center
A. Mandell Educational Center
(••laMah^d 1946)
Wt Prepare You to Takt Hit FellMftiig Tests:
(for Coll^Qa Admiaalofia)
•.AT., L.8.A.T.. G.R.E., M.C.A.T., A G.MJ^.T.
Wa Alaa Oflar TiHaHnp In AN
Fisliing 34 pm. AU 2412 Hattm VMS 5-
615 pm. Womaiia Gvm 388: Taam Hand-
D.y
Mo«^* Com tor
4764 1S3 8374474
1738
isais
Vj
A
"Mora human and alh« than M
"Thair finast act is in fiving
Ployai
back to tha psoptB^
COL Um§US DIS^A TCH.
I
t
Sponsored by Associated Students Speakers Program/
Student Legislative Council
1 -
itraMi Band sii Bo
M BSBM.
i4pai,Apm2B
uk: BJB pm. OMariiB. %mmkw% mm-
..^.. mt%i
raprsssaiatioi tram tip isiwa TadBM
aad oaai^i pm. ApiB 28. BMfi
B Can
nmm maman hmIcimim »*MMi AnrM 21
i^m IMte teste C^hMI «ao
7 pm. avsnf
IT
Tuesday - May 4
Noontime - FREE
UCLA SciiTpture Garden
Bring Your Lunch & Join in the Fun
SCA
'•H^ <
ip
v--
I'
I
I
>•«• your r#e«fpfs!
CLEAN-UP
SALE!
20%
OOFF
Elastic coated shower caddy
Nylon mesh washing bag
Spic-n-Span household cleaner (1 lb.)
Wood clothespins — SO-pack
Reg
34C
1.27
I
f
1
pH» oOmt thingsl
confections, b lewsl
.'.'^.•.•.•.
sportswear clearance
33%OFF
';•,'•■?
, i-f ■
i^J
i
t
♦;-
r ■_.-...
veqr special buys here!
^
men's f-ihirts were 6.50-10.00
Good selection of ^ m^ m #^a
designs, colors. 0«49*4.99
men's Spring shirts were 15.-17.
styl
snd fabrics
9.90-12.
women s Spring shirts wera 6.-16
►rn.(.bf*ct 3.95-10.55
women's Spring sweaters were 13.-2S.
Coat stylM. pullowrt.
• ofcolorB.dacignt
I .yi
8.50-16.50
Owens loses first
(CuoUniacd frow f age 24|
wards. *M could have gone
faster but 1 wassH ^pmhed"
Myki explained that hit
recent slump m the 400 was do
to mitmUd depression snd not
physical condition. *There
were too many meets/* he
said. **I had to go out sikI run
46.0 every week in order to
win. If I ran 4i.O 1 woiiid lose.
Freshman Brian Theriot
took third m his 44)0 heat
despite running a strong race.
The loss came one week after
Theriot captured his first vic-
tory as a Brum — -^♦^ win
against Sunford last Saturday.
**It*t wicrd running on dirt,"
said Theriot of Mt SACs
dusty lanes. **1 haven*t run on
dirt since high school. I had a
Calse start and I was even with
Art Bell (the eventual winner)
coming off the last turn But
he had a better sprint than
me."
Bruin high hurdler James
Owens kMt etudeori for the
fint time in 1976 as he wound-
up third to Dedy Cooper of
San Jose Sute and Fred Shew
of use. Cooper*s time was a
wind aided 13.6 to Owen's
13.8.
*nwfe*s no way Tm disap-
pointed by the loss,** said
Owens later. "^It had to come
sometime and Tm just glad it
came today and not m a dual
meet. My losing tells I still
have a lot of work to do be-
fore I fBt to the (O)ympic)
Games.**
Owens got off to his wmmH
fast surt at Mt. SAC, but he
slowed down after the first
three hurdles. Cooper,
whik, was running- at
apeed through the entire race
Shaw squeaked into second
outdoor race ... ,
with a good spnnt off the mal
hurdle
**! wasn*t mentally into the
race/* explained the UCLA
sophomore. '*1 think it was
because the track was dirt
UCLA*i tartan track really
spoiled me.**
An aasignment in as cmtstde
lane also bothered Owcas —
he couldn't lee Copper leading
until it was too hOe. **1 feh I
was out of the competition,**
said Owens. **! oouldn*t see
anybody outside to push
But that won*t happen
use next week, ru have Shew
on one side and (Mike) John-
son on the other to really push
In the inviutKHMl 100 meter
Bruins Ootson Wilson
and Orlando Johnson finished
sixth and seventh — but only
by inches. A buffalo herd of
eight runners was bunched at
the finish aiul a photo finally
ftaamtiH Charles McCuUom of
the Bay Area Striders as the
winner His clocking was 10.3,
the same as the next two nin-
who played behind him.
It was a good day for former
tracks suru in both the
running and field events.
Maxie Parks and Bennie
Brown, running for the Mac-
cabi Track Chib, sprinted two
legs of the winning iti yard
refaiy team. Parks also ran the
leadoir leg on Maocabi*s win-
ning 400 meter relay squad.
NEW!
Custom imprint photos
or wl«atsvsr on a t-sMrt
7.50
OfHy)
Fu« color or block. and- whUe; your fw^orUe
photo, drawing, peolonrd. lebol - even your
title pege lor your theeiaf We'll acale it to
7m10" and Sprint it on the shirt Adull end
child aizoa; nloe gift for Mom and Dad's Oev«
^egulerty 7 jg. ' "^^
Exdusivgly in BearwMf
b level acksrman ur>ion. 825-77
11
opan mon-thuri 7 4ft- 7 m tn 7 dl i ae iioi <»^
^*«Aa«?Aa..
■*• ■! I • * fa
L-.
Rec sign ups tliis
Wednesday and Thursday
Sign-ups for the MHNmag rccrcauon classes will he held
Wednesday. Apnl 2$ and Thusaiey, A^ 79 from f a»-
^ pni at Gate 1^ of Pauley Pavthon
Seaion I. MWF II am- 12 noon, WoLn*i Gym |g0C
Section 2, MWF 12 nooe^l pm. Womcns Gym IQbC
Section I. TuTh 12 noon- 1 pm, Mac "B** 146
Section 2, MW II em-I2 noon. Mac -g** 146
Section I. MW 12 noon-l pm, Mac "B** 116
^«£i»^ 2, TuTh 41 aai-12 noon, Mac -B** 116
These chnses are recreational in nature and do not carry
unagiiiijc credit CInssas are free of charge and wiU last four
I u^\\.?^*^''''^ *^"* ^^*^ counn may be answered at
|825^54« or come to rooip 164, Pauley Pavilion
UCLAs Peler RenUng (left) kepi UCLAs team
lypy, •'hNi |n leat weehend's 771h enmiel 0|ei Toumwient by
waphlng yaalaidei s ilneis igalnat UtC's Bruce ateneon hi ttie
ci^ ■mpianelilp singisi nwich. UCLA end USC wete hed for gie
•oed with 14 poloto gemg hMs ^ ^^ nw mm
he hi Tueedey s Dg ^aporla
. NEW-
WHILE-
U- ,
WAIT
Xvoifc Color
Copies from
Original Copy
or Enlarged
from
35 mm
SlldM
Multi-Cof>y
In Michaels
Artist Store
OtS Weshivood Blvd
Los Angeles
477-4229
s
NOW
Complete Sdendfic
from.
Hewlett-Packard for $30 & than everbefoie.
25t JiMt tl6S.*
. pfecdy. The ttwott k
sixves rcpc^ttprc procNems
quickly.
HoealioaK Switch lo PRGM.
Er«er the kryscrokcs you rwed to solve
mbiem once nd then flip the PRGM
to RUN. That's it. Thc^only thing you
hnve to do far cnch iteiwon frocn then on is
enter your vahnfaleii »d pnns the R/S (Rim/
Slop) key: k*s th« atailgir.
The resuk: Riepgriiiwe problems »e no
ksnger a repetitive problenv
But thats only pert of the W'25 story.
Mae's tnore Yr^.r 1^1^ Y^ rk^rlrnr^Ar
And becguK the keycodesof al prefixed
functiom «e Riefged. the 4i^tep proi^ram
memory can actually store up to 147 key-
strokes. (Hoars that for a memory QifMlt$$
What's more, you can stoR numbers in eight
data gegisMffs and pwform 72 preprogiatiiiticd
Unctions and operations Oogi, trig, mean
nl Not to mention
RPN kigic; fined dcdmaL sdcfliife and
engineeHngnatBion; arKl mtich. nmch more
In faa. if yoQ warded 10 kagMT all the
HP'25 con do far you g wouU tsike a book
But don t svorry. weve aheady laijutinmu,
125 puget-wnh-fuK chock fuB of apptkar
lioom]
And don't faiget the be« news. The
pnce. The HP'2S was an exceptional value at
$195. Right now it i an out-and-out boMiki
at $165!"
The HP'25. There's newerbem a cakii-
laaor with diis kind of c^pafaiky at thia hi^
of a bw price before, with HFs name on It
And you know what that ingMib Dnlpi,
perfanaance and a back up support gyitnii
yoti iuit can't get anywhere dae.
TheHP-25»
atyouri
•KM JM922. (la CallC tOO^UUMbl)
ID fiadatailK agBK of
your programs at will You can aho wriif
tnterrupciona iiao your program ii
as Algebra and Number Thoory,.Numencal
Methods. Statiitici -even Gaiae^.b detail
■^
HEWLETT X PACMAMD
SJSZ^sxS'iizaLii^
r Wnw
us
CAnm*
jma
Tom Andrews (left) oi u»C and JamM
Owens (above) of UCLA square off in
the 110 meter high hurdles at the
annual Tro^ — Bruin dual NM«f this
Saturday in Drake Stadium. Their race
is a key event in the b«Me of the top
rated dual meet squads in the nation.
The Trofans are curreiitly nmtmd num-
ber one but defem^ig- dual meet
champion UCLA ^siiotiid offer a stiff
reasons why you should
get your resumes from us
Howers^iave goocHwreekehd. win cup
OS S^mu WHtm ~: ' hf^ZmcilSi^^iJi^^tlL'f'tl'*^^ '^" "*"' ?'**^ to li«e UC Smu S.,tef. p„,
. ■_ P"«^»«^» UWCfl JCrry JOSasoai II vc-irs ai a witn:n iii«r U AM^^i^^. >• .w^ .^ M^ T
3
?
Traveii^ I0 Sm Ftotfro and Um Bmek Im
weekend, the UCLA men*i and wonen'i crew
ihjvered m the mM harbor, but wen in very little
hot water m they captured their 12th straicht
Harb^k Cap MMry Friday in San Pedro and came
b^Saturdav with a pretty deetnt showing tn Lo^
• crew or UCLA. USC, and Sunlord
I.J!.? i*^»*^ »^*» J«^ John^n-i II yc^rs ai a
UCLA crew conch, the inuM never tait the cup
With 1 new coach, the Weitwood clan
pommmon of the cup. which it awwiiid on the
m results of the varnly, jumor vamty. and
«« the Bruim got tM firstt and a second to
casiJv win the trophy
Then, late Saturday afternoon at the Marina, the
Westwood light weight! had their firit tatu of
controversy. Winning the first race hnadily the
Brums were edged in the main event UCLA
protested the race, as did Loyolas lOHd, on the
grounds that the UC Sanu Clara crew had uken a
Mm start.
HowKer. it was to no avail; the Brum lightweight
eight IS already looking ah«id to a renuitch with
Sanu Clara this Sunday at the big Newport Regatu
Rowing before the USC hud at San Pedro
UCLA'i women'! varsity eight opened the weekend'!
yM>i ^>th an easy win over the Trojans. UCLA's
sn^md eight boat was ako entered in the race, but
ftiiished less than a second behind Souihern Califor-
nia.
The Bruins' winning boat consisted of coxswain
Sue Coon, stroke Sue Mctarty, D Pickcn. Gwen
Baker, Snsie Anderson, Debbie Guest, Debbie
WoUman, Toni Brown, aai Fatti Arguelles.
Baker and AnderK>n mmmd up to the varsity boat
from the second as the Bruins npped through the
1,000 meters of Los Angeles Harbor water to down
USC by lOV^ iiriMii ^
The women'! !econd eight of coxswain Kim
Palchikoff. stroke Shelley Wandzura, Barbara Vis,
Robin Katherman, Jan Rickard, Terri Price, Dana
Kceton, Renee Lux, aad Rencc Smith were close
CMUgh to the Troj«»* vanity boat at the fmish to
think that they had won. Actually, the JV eight came
Inches shy.
■jy^ ••■*■*• ^^^^ followed just after the varsity
net. The boat of coxswain Pakhikoff, stroke Tracy
Kroycr. Louise Moore. Sally Hunc, Broolt^ Croon-
quist WM held off by USCs varsity women's four by
five saoonds. After the women's four race, s couple
of hours of waiting ensued, pnor to the beginning of
the competition for the Harback Cup between the
Johnson used to caU USCs course a bathtub, a! it
has many turns and obstacles. The Tro|aas anHt
have forgotten their rubber ducky as their varsity
^_jy N^Mit fell to the Uchias by 14.2 and 12
MM^ raspicttvely, before Stanford's frosh spoiled
• dean sweep by the Brums
-The UCLA varsity eight coamis of coxswain
Monica Smith, Hroke John DiPol, Mark Dohm
Tim Powers, Mark Johnson, Kcrr> Turner, Mitch
Henderson, Jim Pentlarge, and Mark Minich The
winning JV boat from Cal's southern campus
lnc^uded coxswain Shiela Parker, stroke Scott
Sayler. Bob Frassetlo, Doim Engh, Larry Offner,
Craig Leeds, Bob lezman. Glen Wetzel, itnd John
DeFedc
The novice shell that caaK on top for UCLA had
coxswain Steve Gates, stroke Joe W he Irhon,. Dennis
■•fT, Bob Sire, Kevin Gartland. Jeff DeBoer, Seatt
Goodwin. Dave GnfTin, and Tony Wood. In a race
that was not in competition for the Harback Cup,
the Bruins nevertheless wanted to win just as much!
BtnAv Saturday
Friday's extensive schedule was followed by a
busier Saturday After returning to Westwood for
the night, the Brum crews returned south early
Saturday morning Long Beach's Marine Stadium,
buih for the water events of the summer Olympics 44
years ago. had a huge scoiehoard that was not
operating and numerous graa^stauds, mostly empty
The women's vanity eight, the only women's race
.that UCLA was entered in, set the tenor for the
racing action. Trailing by nearly a half of a boat
length midway through the race, the Brum women
sprinted past Long Beach Suic to win going away
In a space of pcrhapt» 200 meters, UCLA turned the
race completely around, then had enough left to
slowly widen its wmnirig^ margin as the laec aas
fimshing.
The men's varsity eight buih up about a four
sccoad race at the 1.300 meter nurk of Us 2.000
•Nidt
erm
Mad
nc55 or :
■I
60i\JA'tDjii'tiq woiyler
Cunouser anc/ Cuhouset"
(t waa ao surpriaad that for a mofnant I quite forgot how to apaate good EngHah.)
Surprised hacauae it eeeme half the quarter has whisked by before my eyas . . plus
l*¥e gone and aelan this stupid cake which has wm^ me quite outragaoMly huge and my
poor little feat are so far away
i atould think I'M be quite emtmmtm^ ducking through hallwia and doors: that ia if I
can gat through at all! (What a fir>e mmm IVe gotten into this time.) And I've got to get to
#^ LKC I'llM. MOTES counter — mmjfkB n f txiy a Cham Qutde it witt tell me how to gat
smallar agiin or what to do with my poor little tar eway feet (f auppoae 1 muat be kind to
tham or they mightn't walk where I want them to; perhaps if t sent them a lattai . .
(Dear feat ) but thorn poelman do take mm so long and my feat are so ¥ary far
. (eight!)
Anyway, dear feat, it's off to 0 LCVCL ACKEIWUii for
ASUCLA LCCTUIHE NOm alwwys haipe during Midlarm Madnaes
pull I
r
r
i
meter race, only to have UC
with:n just I u wcoiids at the wiiv. iruin
Duvall Hechi explawcd the dote outcome
-Sanu aarhara hat a ttcai^ crew sad we wcmi't
up hke we should have hesa. You can never take
anything for frsnlsd at the vanity level la a aaaill
program hke Sanu Barhara*!. they doot have great
4spCh but their vanity a sometimes pretty atfong "
The Gauchot lack of depth was borne out when
the Bruins OMide up a ''second JV eight" boat at the
last minute The boat included AUan Miller, whe
had rowed htm than one hour earlier, in the freshman
four The iseead JV Brum shell finished well ahsad
of both Santa Barbara and hapkn Saa Diego Sutc.
a team toully outclassed by atl of the competition «
The hot first JV boat was never in danger of "
loiing the race, completing a 2-0 weekend series *^
The frosh eight fell again on Saturday, this time to 1
a smooth rowing SanU Barbara shell It was a 5
dillerent story for the frosh four. ^
Bad start
Stroke Tom hley iccalled that ''we had a
■tart, but in the next three or four strokes we caught
up and took the lead " The four never relinquished
the advantage, victorious by a full 10 seconds
Amidsi all of the races that the heavyweight men
and women Uclans row flounders a struggling
lightweight program, trying to stay afloat The
women's lightweight rowen are interspersed with the
present heavyweight program, to be split up juat in
time for the Western Sprints in the middle of May
This Saturday the men*s hghtweights had races
which experienced a broken scat, a tire oh the
course, and a protest At 4:20, things got underway
!Wimmingly as the lightweight four from UCLA -
coxswain Tania Horton. stroke John Gumbel, Guy
Weaseer. Hcvin Iven, aad Pete Wagner swampsd
the frosh four of SanU Clara and the )unior varsity
four of Loyola, the latter coming in 13 seconds off
the pace. '"^x
As darkneu wis descending on Ballona Creek, the
lightweight eight finallv got underway M) minutes
late. It ended a few minutes later. amid controversy.
Santa Ctara won the 2.000 meter cealBSt by three
leceadt while UCLA and Loyola protested that the
Broncos had takea ^ false start
The appeal by the Lions and the Bruins was to no
avail the official *tarter ruled that the race had a
fair surt.
So don't be lyiprisad — toiiy yoMr LCCTUM NOTES no«v before thinga (or YOU)
out of propamanft
CXitragaBMBty yours.
Cmiiy
I
.
imiji*^ '
-< — er
CLASiSI Fl ED
/fv
P for rMxt Y%mr'9 Pmmr
In 9m BMy B^win to
#Ucrl(iilfi«t«« Afi lh« M»U •!
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C 5.^ AU 2406
^ A^^ further Ififor-
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HOW DOES A MIUIN
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With UCLA blankets, pen-
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and radio, gfmmmtm, mugs,
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Pepperdine wins regionals
By MMidI Som^Mmmt plsyed our best mstch of mt would wm iRc Issi two
m SooftE WHisr year Agsmst the Gauchos.'* said matches smi^ UCLA ^
an
«;
It
Ih^ UCLA win
St Munets, hiiisRa for
NCAA voUeyball titk as
IIm Waves qualified for tiM
NCAA semi-finab by winning
tiK Western Regionals in
Rsuky Pavilion over UC Sianta
Rartera, three games to none,
Saturday night.
Should the Bruint defeat
Springfield of Massachusctu
on Friday and Pepperdine beat
the winner of the Ohio Suie-
Ball Sute match last Saturday
rught^ the two Southern Calif-
ornia Intercollegiate Volleyball
Association (SCIVA) would
battle for the fourth time this
yssr for the title
Is whsl fifured to be at least
a four game and probably a
five game match, Pepperdiae
completely outplayed the Gau^
15-11, 15-7 a^ 15-10. it
the third time without a
Jhst tlM Waves have
-hasten the Gauchos aad
played our best match ci
year against the Gauchos,'* said
Ted OoM, Pepperdine All-
^^M^xs oraaiaate. T win say
it for the third time that I
thmk we will beat UCLA at
Muacac for the NCAA title
(Dodd said that Pepperdine
would
matches sgaiMt UCLA,
was wrong).
^odd iiadi '^nwr nf^tltti
match agamst the Gauchos as
did Mark Rigg, Jay Anderson
and Martin Nora Rod Wilde
and Steve Grasaer outset their
li from SsMU Bar- mm m Gary
baia. The only rough aoMMMt ^went loi^ aad il
for Pepperdine came in tiie perdine after UhN.
first game. Mec said, **p9ppirdinc
After opening a big fl-3 best UCLA for tiM tu le if tlMy
taw the s#- Hsy eslm. Thsy
cut 10 12-10 imd n- won Iflr playorr 6m
naSy 14-13. Alter two side- night if tlvy
oats. Nora pot a spike down to heads together. Pepperdine
give the serve back to the could have a issgh match
Waves Wilde served the wiM- aaaisMt the
A Single Voice
Adams and loose baseballers turn program around
ossch Gus Mee had no exicusM
for tlK
*We simply stunk out thess,**
Mee after the nuitch. **I
that Pepperdine was
for a loM tSMiflK (Sat-
urday), but we never pueiMd
tlMM ia tiK three games
It was our best mstch of
the 3i;esr and the key was that
we played together ss a team,"
flsid Harlan Cohen, Pepperdine
bnd coach. **AU we want is
another shot at UCLA and
now we shSMid ftt it in the
**We hit a low potat afcer the
tesfse low to UCLA sad after
the loss in the playoffs to
UCLA, we bad to pull our-
selves together end I think we
Two years Ago this coming |uly. Gary
Adams faced a huge task — he had to
rebuild the UCLA baseball program, maybe
the one program which did rwjt receive #ie
respect accorded other UCLA sports
After all, the Sruim didn't play on cam-
pus. They played «t SawteSc Field, on the
grounds of the Veterans Hospital, where
they could frolic unnoticed. More tinrws
than rKJt m recent yeers, their play ha4
looked more like that of the veterans than
of collegiate players.
In 1974. the Bruins ahnoM finished two
games over 500 at 2S-24. Sut almoM is a big
word. They would have reached tiMt mark
if th^ could have thrown out their fiKt 11
games. You see, they last all of them.
When they finally wofi a fsaie — in the
12th mning due to an Arizona State throw-
ing error -> one would have tbaaiKt UCLA
had just won the World Series. Geez,
everyone knoairs you can't lose them aN.
UCIA hadn't won a saesan series from
California sifKe IfTI, from Stanford sifKe
1970 arxi from USC since 1999 It's kind of
hard 10 win a league title when those are
the other . teams m the league. They
couldn't even beat a school like IX! Irvine,
which only started playirtg bMoball in 1970.
In Irvirte's first five years, it defeeled UCLA
nir>e timet In 11 tries. Of course, it had one
advantage.
It) head coach wm Gary Adams.
In his first year at UCLA, the Bruins wertt
from 26-35 to 31-22. That, as they say, ain't
too shabby. Irvir>e, as if to drive the point
home igMtrk. dropped from 4S-S under
Adams to 15-27.
Marc Dellins
The Sruim didn't win the league title last
year — they didn't come dote. Sut they
started to chaRfe some things around. They
won the seaion lerlcf from Cal. 4-2. In fact,
they won the first four before losing the
fifth in extra innings. ^
This yar. more thirtgs have changed. UC
Santa Sarbara entered #ie league and the
Bruins won five of six. UCLA took two of
three thts past weekend at Stanford to take
that leries, 4-2. What's more, not even
assistant coach Glenn Mickens, who's been
at LCLA for more than a decade, could
rerr>ember the last time the Bruirn won
mase than they loM aa Ibe Farm.
With a 12-6 league record, the Sruim are
assured of their first .SSS-or- better finish In
league play since they were 11-4 m 1971.
Sut this team may iust be destined for s bit
than that.
The 32-4 record is good eaaugh to be at
tfie top of tfie California InternsJieaiMi
ale of the
Canfereiice tnd the nKKsle
team Is good enough to be at the tqp of lbs
world.
The 1979 Sruim are a loose team, laasar
tfian any team I have traveled with In four
years of covering sports at this school. Aher
losing on frkUy, the team could have been
down. It gets nir^ runs and the ace stUI
loses. Time to fold.
Sut they scored seven times in the flnf
Inning of the gams Saturday and led 9-2 in
tfie seventh ar\d 9-4 goif>g to the bottom of
the ninth Suddenly, it's S-7 and time to
fold. It doesn't happen and the Bi'uinI puN
it out.
In the second asRie it's 3-1 Stanford after
Well, the Sruim could be content
They pH their one on the road ^rni that s
sli that csn be expected. Six outs ar>d go
home, time to fold.
Others know about tH9 track record at
UCLA. After Stanford's win on Friday, a
Cartiinal assistant asked the Bruin trair>er H
UCLA was going to bother to show up the
r>ext day. Fast performance.
By the tirv>e Stanford sot three of tbase
outs. UCLA was ahead 4-3 and added one
more in the ninth to take the dstlbla-
header. The bus ridt to tht airport wm one
of the m^f9 Riemorable trips in four years
at this school. This team roots far each
other by insubing everyone in lAabt about
everything ^ from hair color ta body sae
to girl friendi.
And rH> one Is examat — not even
Adams. In, the wake of the California
players signing a petittaa against coach
lackie iem^n, the LKXA signed one on thm
airplane Thursday nifbt It r^wi that th9
Brums wanted a talar coach than the 5*9
Aikam
" - Anyone seeing ttws team for ffie first time
would think it was crazy, but those aroufKf
it knows better. And its loose attitude
comes from the top. A^fiMm creates it with
his easy going, yet authoritative sppreech to
his pbyari. When he sets a rule, he expects
his team to respect R but he doesn't diadt
on it. Because of that, the players respect
him.
And like him — enough to go out ar>d
get the iob doaa. And u> far, R h» been
dor>e, " . *
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Baker turns it around and Bruins sweep doubletieader
By Marc
DB
1
f
STANFORD - Uft fielder
Dave Baker ilasaatf what
may be the key hit of the
laason asd third baaowM
Robbie HenderMM drove in
wImI proved to be the winning
run as the UCLA baftcball
fimm droppai Sunford, 5-3. in
the leeaiid §mmt of Saturday*!
double header here.
The win gave the Bruini a
iweep of tht twinbiU. They
won the o^ner. 1-7. after
ieadinjf^^f«4 before Stanford
had a dMMe to hat The Car-
diaali tmak Friday*! taaaon
opener. 13-9
' By takiag two of three over
the weekeai, the Bruios. now
12-6 in CIBA plaf, mHiined
at the top of the kapae tUnd-
inp. use, wAuch won two of
ici fifst three gainet against UC
Sanla Blartera, was 10-5 —
one-half mmt behind UCLA
• i
^
I
a
— before yencrday't
woh the Gauchot.
"^f 'UCSB won jrcitcrday i^
teraodtt, tl^c Brums* lead over
use is now a full gaoK. If the
Trc^^ans won again on the
road, they technically lead by
22 percentage points.
But the Bruins (29-19) are
where they are only because of
a three run rally in the eighth
inning which wiped out a 3-1
Cardmal lead
Until that franie. UCLA iMld
managed just one run and
three singles off freshnuin Bri-
an Harrison. Center fielder
Dave Pennuill led off the
eighth with s double down the
left field hne. but when secoad
baseman Bobby Dallas flew
out. it looked like it might be
tiM vventh ume in nine de^
as Stanford left 10 mea
Cardinals mas-
ooiy sui hiu but received
eighl waBu froai the big right-
who ate struck out
But up stepped Baker, who
had six hits in the series, three
for extra iiases. He lined a
Harrison pitch over the right
field fence and suddenly, the
Bruins had new life, both on
the scoreboard and in the dug-
out.
First baseman Ken Gayiord.
who hit his third grand slam of
the season on Friday, belted
one to the fence in right center,
ending up on third base with a
triple.
Head coach Gary Adams
sent Earl Battey in to run and
he promptly scored what
proved to be the winning run
when third hMaauui Hender-
son smacked reliever Mike
Williamson^s first pitch up the
middle for his second hit of the
game.
The Bruins added an in-
surance run in the ninth on
Raymond Townsend*s walk,
stolen baae, a single by Dallas
and WBfauMHI*! wild pitch
Ed Cowan, who struggled
throughout the game, won for
11
Walks were something that
plagued Steve Bianchi. who
started the first game of the
doubleheader Although he
had a seven run lead before he
took the mound, he left in the
seventh inmng. having walked
seven Cardinals and hitting
one. He. like Cowan, allowed
just six hits, but the free passes
hurt him.
As if trying to BMike up for
Friday's loss, the Bruins drove
starter Rob Irwin from the
mound in the first inning as
tliey sent 12 men to the plate.
They combined four walks
with five singles to do the
dimagr, the biggest blow being
Penniairs two run single.
But the Bruins got what
proved to be the winner in the
seventh when designated hitter
Jerry Waters doubted and
moved to third on Henderson's
grounder to the right side.
Because of it. he was able to
score on Brian ViseUi*s sac-
rifice fly to left.
Trailing i-2, the Cards
scored twice in the seventh,
driving Biaaahi from the
mound, and three times in the
ninth against Floyd Chiffer
before Bob Lizarraga came out
of the bullpen to get the final
out.
Winning the doubleheader
was a must because the Bruins
lost the first game of f league
iaaas for the first time this
year^
UCLA 99fiittd six times in
the first two innings, but Tim
CTNeill, who entered the §mm
with an enraad run average of
l.f6, couldnt hoM it aad be-
dune a loaar for juat the sa»-
The Brains §■! on the bonsd
first when DbIm tnpM and
i mmft by Bnkar,
up on a siagfe by
Gaylord and a fielder's choice
and scored on an infield num-
ber by Waters. But Staaloid
then ioniad the bates and tied
the game on a angle by Randy
Wong
UCLA wdnt ahead again in
the second when Townsend
singled. Penniall singled and
Baker walked to load the
bates. Gaylord then unloaded
his seventh honte run of the
season and third grand slam to
put UCLA alMid, 6-2, but it
wasn*t enough.
^unford got one back in the
second and drove O^eill from
the mound with a five run
third inning. Tliey added two
more in the fourth off Curt
Peterson to take a 10^
The Bruins got within
on a two-run homer by He»>
derson (seven) and a se4o shot
by right fielder Larry Sthrer
(five), but Stanford scored
three la the seventh to put the
gust away.
Offensively, Baker was a big
man this weekend, going six
for 13. including a double,
triple and home run. He scored
four tioMS and drove in three
runs. Gaylord was four for
eight with a triple and tbe
grandslam while Henderson
went five for 13 and did a
tend job at third base.
He and Tnainttnil. who
made one outstanding and
several good plays at short-
slof, gave the Brnint a tnlid
left side of the infield to go
along with Dallas and either
Gaylord or Viselli on the
side.
Wllkens sets discus world record at MX. SAC
By loe Yogtrst
DB Sports Writer
WALNUT - It was 8 dog day after-
noon in tbis small Southern California
community — the mood was lazy and
the sky hazy Mac Wilkens was hot
and bored so he deaded to steal. There
was nothing better to do
Wilkens, a 6-4 and 260 pound
weightman from San Jose, stole the
world discus record from John Powell
with a heave of 226-11, three mches
longer than the old mark. Wilkens*
kwdmark throw was the only highlight^
at an unusually lackluster Ml. San
Antonio Relays.
''I hurt my back weightlifting a week
ago today," explained Wilkins, a
bearded and long haired giant who
looks like a holdover from the Stone
Age. **] could n*t even put my shoes on
this morning and I was only hoping to
throw 215 today I never expected to
throw as far as I did.**
Wilkens, a native of Oregon, moved
to San Jose last year to take advantage
of the extra months of sunshine and to
work out with Al Feuerhnch. the world
record holder in the shot put The
move seems to have paid off — Wil-
kens has improved his shot put best by
five feet (from 63 to 68) and his
best seven feet (from 219 to the present
record). . ^ ^
^'My techinqtie is finally starting to
catch up with 'my physical ability.**
Wilkins went on **lt was just a matter
of tune. But Td still bke to get the
discus a little mote under control. I
have a tendency to lean to the left *"
Wilkins said watching former world
record holder Jay Silvester, also a
contestant at Mt SAQ inspired him to
the record toss. **I saw Jay get off a
good throw,* he said, *^and I get so
scared and turned on tJMB I itid tilt
same thing.
^ stOI consider John Powell tlic
Olympic favorite. He*s
he*s the national chnaip. I
sistency and 1 need a little experience.
Most of the 22 UCLA track
field athletes entered at Mt. SAC
decided to toratch leaving a spnne
group of six Bruins m the invitational
events.
Bennie Mylea, nMkiog his fiitt dig
meters surt in three weeks, won that
event easily as he breemd to a
46.1. several yards ahead of his
oponent.
TThe Myles is bnck," he said after-
<Caidinoed on Page 16)
The Rapper
Let's face It — the basketball dynasty is over
Stuart Silverstein
While writing up the NCAA basketbsit post-mortem
in that crannpod hotel room in PhHadilphia, I decided
the best way to evaluate the now fhdslind basketball
snason would be to wait awhile, to use a bit of
retrospect Thirty days, I figured, would be about
And tomorrow , it wm be one month since tfie Bruhis
were humiliated by Indiana. Only one month Now we
ar9 in a new quarter, with a new set of midterms. The
campus athletic adorables are now the volley bailers,
who once again scam destined to win a rtational title
And now. I can predict with a fair deiree of certainty
the unmentionable — the UCLA Lnhmball dynasty is
over.
For the past dozen years, UCLA has had it so
But it could not last forever — the third place
amif^ more often now, and we might as wag get
to It. For when you compete, yoy can't always
in firtL. Snch is life.
The best exanfiple is Coorge Washington. He was our
tint ofoMnnt. He was also first in war, first In
The loss of Andre McCarter and Ralph Drollinger
will not affect the chances of the 19?k-77 Bruim very
much, but losing Richard Washington and possibly
Marques lohfMon will. Bodi have filed for hardship
status, and If they do not withdraw by the NBA draft
MCttf flionvn, f Fvey w^hi oe pros aiwnnpar'vnoif^ wMsn to oe
or rK>t. And with the imminent coMapse of the ABA,
this is probably the last y^ar of the bidding wars which
brought all those phenomenal bonuses.
It boih down to this — would you ghre up a year of
college cRglbitity for a mUNon doflan. or a signiftcant
fraction tftereof? I would. »nd I think both Richard and
Marques would also. They don't owe anything to
UCLA, or to the basketball program. I hope they sign
for nobs of money, and then file suit agamst the
mserve clause or something Good for diem,
gut then again, wouldn't Marques be imwi^ihig with
the ban on dunking overturr>ed?
The rest of the refurr>ees form a good, mpmaontacive
dub. but not one of championship caliber. And
are too nMHP oAar gpnst teams around, and
great, as wore the c
sonaltties involved But
W%
all the per-
• •
Speaking of beshoiball. look for. coach
CTacking the whip nextyov. In the
concluded, he tried to be ovefytedy's
of the players look advantage of it TMs
though, with a year of 'The Myfllon
he won't make the same mblihe. He's
coach to repeat the error.
to
his belt,
good a
And thon. there's the gr
ycMi probably know, l«t
ssele nino ot the ten
sifipenoeo flom the rafters of INadey
claimed they were going to auc^Hon
D^ Bruif^ personah. widi the
barmer controversy. As
on In ilie
MBm DHijjin
Toda/s primary
may make Carter
almost unbeatable;
Ford is unopposed
DB
Today's PennsyKania Presidential Primary
ntty finally esubhsh Jimmy Carter as a
virtually vnbeatablc froat-runner. \rliilc
efleriag Senator Henry Jacksdo aa impor-
unt oinnoe to overuke Carter aiad cM-
lenging Representative Morris Udali to
survive another pnmary
In the Rcpubhcao raee. Conner Caliiomia
Governor RonoM Reagan declined to oppose
President Gerald Ford, givn^ Foid all 103
Pennsylvania delegates.
The* key to a Jaduon victory in Pennsyl-
vania, a heavily indnjIrisliTrd state, is the
support of organized labor More than 40
Pennsylvania labor leaders, representing such
onions a^s United Auto Workers and United
Steeheorhers, have pledged their support to
Jackson. AFL-CIO Vice-President James
Mahoney also pledged to "get out the vou**
for Jackson.
The sute AFL-CIO*s Comntmee on Poli-
tical Education mailed out 175.000 letters in
sisppon of Jackson to its members, accord-
ing to a press coordinalor for the Jackson
catnpaign.
Carter, the former governor of Georgia,
predicted he would capture the votes of the
union membership m spite of umon leaders*
support for Jackson, saying union members
will not be "led by their neecs.**
Rep Morris Udall is seeking ttxpport
to
Philadelphui*s suburban bberals
the endorsement of tbt
Party, a Black organixatioa o
Philadelphia Mayor Frank L. Roao.
Finnnc«4 dtfTicuRaea, stemming from a
30 Supreme Conrt decision stri^
tRe Federal Elections Commissapn of iss
election subsidy dsebntaemeni powers, have
beset the campnigns of all <:An6
President Ford.
crats J
Rnnnid Reagan end
Carter. Udall. Fred Harris,
Wninee and Frank Church have
joined together in fihng suK to reinstate the
Commission's power, saying the current
ruhng **irrcparably Kar mad**, their own First
AaMndnKnt righu and those of the elec-
torate by forcing tlH esndidates to curtail
campaign activities.
Rep Udall, in a speech to the Washington
Press Chib. charged that Republican Con-
gressmen favoring the Pindidncy of President
Ford and DeOMemtic Congressmen disposed
to Senator Hubert Humphrey are stalling ra
■nking the commiision reforms mandated
by the Supreme Court.
'Udalfs campaign has been extremely hard
hit by the lack ol funds. Udall said that in
preparation for the ^emisytvania primary, he
had been dnving between Philadelphia and
Waahington, DC. bicanee he could not
afford plane or train fare
nrww -
Ucla Daily Bruin
VomnM XCVIfl, Numbsr 17
Uiilvoi'Rily of
T!Mii<«r. April 27, ItTI
Israeli ambassador says Son campaijns at Hanli Gras
w i; .
t
Mideast tension due to Carter's smjle appeal m Westwdod
Arab wish to expel Jews
By S^
he will be
able
Hmm
to defeat Brown "
DB Sinir
The Itradi ambassador to tiK United Statet, SinviM Dinit/.
attributes the continued tension in the Mideaat to the determina-
tion of Arab nations to **puth the Jews into the ten.**
to a crowd of S80 in Ackerman Grand Ballroom
Monday. Diintz laid there will not he peace m the htMenet nntil
the Arab nations admit that there is an independent Jewieh Hme.
Dimtz laid a tme penee will not happen in tins feneration.
He cited two reatont for the unwillingness of the Arab
countnei to negnlinle with Israel. Dimtz wmi 9kmt countries
have been receiving Rneeaan military aid and were confident each
time they attacked Israel that they would win The other reason
it Weetern European nations are not bkely to interfere with the
actiont nf countries supplying them with oil. he tnid.
Dinttz IS confident the Arab nations are ready to negotmte
penee with Israel hecnnee iBey heve Inet all fonr of the nmrt
waged on the small country and they have failed to expel Itrael
from the United Natioaa. **We have won all the wan, bm we
Regarding the Palcftiinians. Dinitz taid. **Tliere it room
between the Meditermnann nnd the Iraqi border for two
Jewieil nnd Arab.** To give in to the Palettinian demand for all
nC llMit territory would be '^mttAmmk wmmitr for Itrael he tnid.
Predicting that hit father would get *iit lenat
one half of the labor vote** in the pretidential
primary in ^tnntytvania today (Tuetday). Jack
Carter, ton of ^mocmne cendidnte Jimmy
Carter, campnmned here in Win wood Satnr-
day night.
Carter alto mid thnt if hit lather won in
^nntylvania today ***( Hubert) Humphf<^ lwon*t
have a chnnee ef getting the nominniMn at the
convention.**
Cater and hit wife Jndy
with Democratic Con*
rn in Lot Angekt
then enflK to Weit-
tO pOM
pnign literature
waiting la line to tee the
10 o'clock thowing iri AB
the riiridfl't Mmi at
the Brum theater were
with a hnndthnhe
Jimmy Carter
Carter neknd that
they read the material
which ttretted open gov-
ernment and contact Car-
ter haninnnflert in Lot
Anpilet if tWy wanted to
volunteer.
Meet ef the
why he
•o familiar at he
down the line.
ing at the Bruin theater
trip to the UCLA Mardi Grat. Carter
tpoke by phone with KFl mdio*t Hilly Roee.
In retponte to Rote*s quettiona. Carter cate-
gorized hit father at **a new breed of pnheicMn
called renennnlie.** When preeeed to put ihrnny
cntegory, (farter
to
that hi& father m
only Democratic candidate to have
by PmMdent Ford. **Ford het chiimed
that dad it *futay on the
iMoet* and he
cized dnd far hit *ethi
punty* ttatefnent,"* Carter
claimed.
After the radio inter-
view. Carter admitted
that the 'ethnic pnnty*
ment nMde by hit
twojmi
down the
paign by teveral dayt.
••The truth it,** Carter
said, -the other
i*t
■*■■ *
\
i
i
a
\
\
\
1
different
father doet
in my
Carter wat refernng to
-*He*t anetnken for hii
mid Carter*t wife J«Br "tt^ Mt n
if he didhX
at hui nnd tny *Yenh, nnd Tni
n ike Fred. If 1
rd
on the fid
Ai
Find Hamt. Carter
hnd to vou for
for him/' '
Carter expieeeed eonHdenee thni hit father
would win the California primary June I
jigaintt Governor Jeity Brown. **We*ve fee a
lot of thinft going for nt ihnt Brown doeM*t.**
V-'Jaw^^W^ SiB*W
^
^
I, lo mi.imn.li oi
hot I think the
WaBaet. The
i*t heenoM he^ mciet, it*t
Wathing^on* Curtpr
Jack
fttneonRC"
t
=!S
:^_hl
1
f
The PrlmalToumiafimr^
Proudly Presents
A Special Premiere Showing Of
Ingmar Bergman's
'"Face to Face''
Starring Liv Ullman
At The MiMk Nai Tkealer
9t3( WMrfrc loulcvard
Wednesday, April 28, at 8:00 P.M.
'^n my opinion, Bergman has cremmd J power/u/
and deeply sensitive film that dramatizes the
discoveries of 'The Primal Scream' '\
— Orl Arthur fanov
• • «
A Dfimiition Led By A Panel Of
Primal Therapists
Will FoHcm The Screening
ADMISSION:
16.00 Doruition To
The Primal Foundation
Tax Deductible
fO« RESERVATIONS
27S-202S
For Your
Bicentennial Engs^^ement
andForever
A perfect Keepsake diamond says it all, reflecting
your love in its brilliance and beauty And you can
choose with confidence because the Keepsake guar-
antee assures perfect clarity, fine white color and
precise modem cut There is no finer diamond ring
Hnw to Plan Your Engagement and Wedding |
am uxNii pynnmy your cngnfiMiai an^wtdding m a biMMlM 20 p^pt |
tvcrvin;
booklet
far
44 Pit Sndrt ttwpiili i Booh tmd 0am hM
I m a MmmMM UO paft i
y md mSnt^ OA ^Mtm I
flolorpoMr Aifar2« I
f, ^^»K"< I
Zip
I
I
Rings Box 90 Svracui
Yorti i:^?ni !
or4mhm
1Q0 m OBim
For doctoral candidates
-A-
,.v *
Research grants available
Mouse of Horrors triumphs
«v»
Chanceilor'i Patent Funds
are avmilabk lar ssscarch to
students wh9 are registered as
doctoral candidates.
The source of funds for
these grants is the interest on
income from patents held by
the University.
The funds are uied for items
(normally supplies, equipment,
services and field expense) for
which money it not available
either from the student*! SMMOr
department or from wome
other source, according to the
conditions set by the Commit-
tees on RsssMch. ^
Students whose fMStrch is
financed through University
Hoop stars on
UCTVLA. 11:30
UCTVLA preients an in-
formal visit with Bruin
basketball sure Richard
Washington and Marques
Johnson at home, a tape of
modern-jazz dancer LiUa
Washington and a look at
bicycle theft at UCLA at
11:30 am today.
Also scheduled are bur-
lesque scenes from Mardi-
Gras and a • program of
Latin-American folk-singing.
UCTVLA airs over spe-
cial monitors located
throughout the campus.
contract research budgets are
not eligible for a grant.
Those students, however,
whose research is financed
through University research
gfMMs as opfNMed to Univer-
sity contract nssarch budgeu
are ehgible for Patent Funds.
Although there is generally a
S750 limit per student/ an ap-
phcant is invited to apply for
as much support as can be
properly justified.
The funds are distributed in
January and July Applications
may be subnutted at any time
Common Cause
views elections
Elections - presidential,
sute and student - will be the
subject of a speech to be given
this afternoon by a member of
the lobby group. Common
Cause.
Stan Diorio, an attorney
from Legal Aid Foundation of
Los Attgrks, will deliver the
speech ^titled **Promises,
Promises, Promises: Pinning
the Candidates I>own.**
The lecture is the first in a
series of talks sponsored by the
Cooperative Relations Cofls-
mittee of the Univereity Co-
operative Housing Project, 500
Landfair Avenue.
This program begins at 4 pm
in GSM 2230. Admission is
free.
CONTACT LENSES
FITTED
REFITTED
West¥vood Vtlt
DR. ALFRED R. BECKER
Optometrist
10959 Weyburn Ave
ADJUSTED
POLISHED
GR9-2111
ATTENTION PRE-HEALTH CARE STUDENTS
MEDICUS
Woman in Medicine
a Panel Discussion
6.-00 W«ds. April 28, 1976
43-105 Center for Health Scimcee
SUMMER JOB OPENINGS
LIVE-IN counselors are needed fo lead trips, tours and
other activities for JajMnese students staying at UCLA
July 30-August 13.
SALAKY: S500 •► room, board and €npenm%
INTERVIEWS: See job #1300-22A at the PlacetDent Center.
hr th* CpmikII m
IJ.C
during the year.
Ferow can kt obuincd froa
the Research Coaunmee in the
Academic Senate Executive
Offioe in Murphy 3125
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Tussday, 0^ 27. ifPl
ftd dart
ir tfm AeucLA
A8UCLA Communtcmttona Bomrd.
elMf poetijt mm mih9Lo9
Dtc«i KrMjz
Patty Cfost
Ourmg m§
amtrmtlon pmnoda. by m& ASUCLA
itionM Borneo, J0f mmt'ii
L#9 Am§tlm. CmMoff**^.
90094 Cipi'NsRf liWS Sr t^ ASUCLA ->
rttofw Botnt Second
paid mt tfw Lob
\
An MATTRESS
— — ^n^
1976
STATE OF THE ART
4 m.. I
Mn LIFT
I?
T«l. (4ia)
Booth wins hy a scream
aECnON RHETORIC
Man Uioriu
Promises. Promnes: Pinning the Candidates Oomm" on
April 27, 1976 at 4 00 pm in GSM 2250 Sponsored by
the Co-op. ^
After all the fluffed hippoe.
aod fokdfiih had been
won at Mardi Grat ^6, the
operators of the booths finally
§ac a chance to win pnzet for
themselves.
The Heaae of Horroft,
sponsored by Phi iLappa Psi
and K.appa Kappa Gamma,
swept the enteruinment booth
division as both the best booth
aad the best facade The
House of Horrors competed
against the Fui^ House and
Mmskys
ccKnpctition
split into two divisions,
with Omega Hot Dogs, spon-
•oced by Omega Sigma Tau,
asd Sproul Hall Seoaad
Fl«er*s booth. Last Chartce
Saloon, winning first prizes.
Rally Comflsittce's Hot Dogs
on a Stick had Jfer Irril faai
booth facade.
Participation boothi were
split into three divisions. The
v^inners were tiK Water Ral^
loon Bust Game, sponsored by
Rieber HalJs Floors 2S, 6N
and 7S; The Buffalo Pitch,
sponsored by Seventh Floor
Sproui Hall and Phi Eu
Sigma and Alpha Lambda
Delta*s Spin Art. The best
participation booth facade was
woo by Sigma Nii and Oelta
GanuBa*s skooting gallery. The
Saloon.
The best new booth award
was giveii to the West wood""
Bandstand, spooaored by
ILappa K.appa Psi and Alpha
Deha Pi-
The sweepstakes award.
which o " given to the overall
winner, mil be anoooocad. yi
about three weeks; aoooailog
to the Mardi Gras committee
The swoepMokes pnze is baaad
on facade, originality and the
fioancial success ol the booth
and will be awarded at the
Mardi Gras banquet. The rea-
son for the delay is the amount
of time It takes to assess the
financiai supoaas of each booth
^ ' Sall^ Garwer
I
ATTENTION PRE-HEALTH CARE STUDENTS
MEDICUS
Mtnortticft i"
ThaHMttti Fiatdi
2:00 TuMday April 27, 1976
1228 Campbell Hall
\
UCLA STUDENT
W:
Special UCLA
Student Rate
8.50
R% a|>fHiiiitiiiriil
Alec or Arnold
4TS-8566
WILSHIRE WEST PLAZA
10880 WILSHIRE BLVD
WESTWOOD. CALF 90024
lloal aid provided to cu^RFnt^ ^
d u c l a stljoents in a
■ L .u>Mi. >rrl T, t »^^«^(,, niurv
>■ "* tr ' lt i ! '^^ ' I :3
tracts
1 ot ^
*Hours
MON TUE«=^ '^'^D
THURS & f Hi
> p fi »
(no cippo«ntrT»trnt needcu.'^
408 KERCKHOFF
\ i
ph'.^ne 8;^
^t> or O^L» ^^b4j
prMaaMtft ••■ip«» aitatcirias
pr«sk«t«r*««ai«tli«4i«tl«lli«r«aSttpi»ai«lirial»«B
-^CC/H/HUNICN
\m%A%m TSa Y
UI»C
.-(. _ -r > ■«■,
Orientation
Meetings
For Next Year's
PEER HEALTH
COUNSELORS
b
I
-Wr-
■-=l'",i.ri
r'^=^.
^.SAPtHblll
OPENS HER HEART
Elaa'a scylplurea ummn la on a diam, but
It flir^a u|». UoWn 9r>d around Sterling
•Ifviar hMrt with ftft«en-inch chain. ^ 34.
TIFFANY & Co.
aCVtHLY NILLt
(213)
p^f.acto.
Applications Available Only
At The Following Meetings:
Tuesday, April 27
12:00 Ackerman 2412
5:00 Ackerman 2408
For Further Information Call
M-F 10-3 825-7586
Sponaorad t>y Student LagMalive Ckxihcil. Student
InTSfi
'^
s
re Commi
--<•» -. •- «
.w#
1
f
MOST
TUNE.UP, LUBE A OIL $04^
LlOi .XBL^35
I
W/MMS
195
A-1 AUTO SERVICf ;;.
894-7075
ru7 VAN Nim uvo
MNMWUCin>.wii
•
f
tolQlr
PRAKTICA
Gmrman Cmffmd QuaUfy
Nova IB
fvwvi 1 fo t/SOCMi
*On»y Sin
*Ul Pric* $144 99
$79.95
Super TL
*D»p«fi4sbl« focal pkme%tH0mr
'Onif 3 m nodi
1204 95
$114.95
LTL
irom 1 Id Y/ 1000th %9cond
' Electronic Hoth lync ot 1 / ) 25th
BuiltHn ftoth hot
$124.95
AH 0»me Mod*(s With M*w HVarionfiM
taelQircomeiQ&hHi
92 7 WMNrood Mvd Lot An^tmt 90024 (213) 47 7-9669 or 6 79-9616
616^^
r^
Studenu aw fet free testuM
this week (April 27-29) (qx
Tay-Sachi, a fBoeuc ducate
that kills children. An etti-
Mftted 350 carriers of Tay-
Sadis arc n^dtiiii on cao^Nis,
according to Ted NatlHui, state
coordinator foi ffbtt drive.
Testing today win be in the
from 10 aiB-3 pn and 5 poi-?
pm. The tMli^g will be co|i-
ducted in the Ackerwui Men*s
LouQge the other two days at
hours.
of the disease ap-
pear perfectly normal, but
when two cvhers of the dis-
ease reproduce, the child has a
25 per cent chnaoe of gettii^
Tay-Sachs, an always fatal
disease resulting in a slow
deterioration of the child's
pbyMi Mid flWital abUitiet.
'Sexism' in langiiage analyzed
By Jeffrey Brown
DB Staff Reporter
'Traditional language has
ie woMsn invisible,** said
Suzanne Hendrich, assistant
programmer of the Women's
Resource Center here
The generic use of "man" to
denote the entire human popu-
lotioit has com^ under scrutiny
as a result of the feminist
movement
Robert Slock well, pr
of hnguistics here, explained
the universal use of ''num** as
an ^historical accident/* in
which "somebody aurted doing
it-
"I don*t buy that line," com-
mented Together cditor-in-
chief ICerryann Ldbel. "People
shouldn't rest on tradition just
becoMe it*s easy.**
Hendrich added that the
GSM helps MBA's
seeking summer jobs
The Graduate School of Management Placement Center
is now making availabje to employers a register with data
on more than 200 first-year Master, of Business Admmis-
tration (MBA) students looking for summer jobs.
"Many students want summer jobs, both for the
experience and the income,** said placement center director
Bill Cawley, "^but the benefits are equally real to employiiy^
organizations.
Last summer, nearly 75 per cent of the schooKs first-year
students worked in jobs ranging from financial analyst with
a Riafor corporation to management intern with a phil-
harmonic orchestra. Other employers included CPA firms,
government aBfocki and nearby universities.
Most students are available for mid-June through mid-
September employment, and monthly salaries will raafe
from $800 to $1200.
Organizations that wish to interview Graduate School of
Management MBA students for possible summer employ-
ment should conuct Bill Cawley at the Planning Center,
ext. 53325. The summer studem register is available to
employers without charge on request.
generic use of ^man** evolved
of the assumption of
dominance **
Peter Thoriky, chairman of
the English department here,
said that ** *Ms* ia sooKthing of
a convenience,** but added that
words such as ** 'chairperson"^
are awkward and utterly un-
necessary bacnnsg etymologi-
cally ^man* in such words did
not in its origins refer to sex."
Robert Maniquis, director of
freshman English, said that he
•would permit the use of sex-
ually nonspecific words such as
"chairperson** in class essays.
**l suspect that it will die
out,** commented ThorSley
when questioned jsbout the
trend of- nonsexual word use.
Lobel, on the other hand,
said that *it*s just the be^
ginning ** She added that
people are trying to use appro-
priate wofiia. ** People ought to
say exactly as they mean,** said
Lohel
Hendrich commented that
"the transition indicates that*
wc*re trying to re-examine lan-
gnage — hmguage janes on
sexism.** Non-sexisi cases
should be used in a ouxed
gender group, she said.
Maniquis said that whether
words like '^chairperson* will
become accepted as part of the
langirajT depends on the nua*
her of people who continue to
them.
^iPiH
UCIA
BICENTENNIAL
EVENT
TWO HUNDRED YEARS OF
THE TWO-PARTY SYSTEM
HOW DID IT EVOLVE AND WHERE ARE WE?
FOURTH in the UCLA BICENTENNIAL LECTURE SERIES
ROBERT KELLEY
of Hialory. Uniwwty of CaMornia
in
ualanOrnmrnnmsteii.
M^^^^f w
of Ainaftcaii NMavy with
, among many books and artidas
continuaa ¥I^DNESOAYS. 6 P M OoOd Hall 147
of HMory. UC BsHWiBi RACE. AGE lity 12 - maAY BTTH NORTON. AsKsclMa -rnfcaiiii of
AND SEX - REVERBERATIONS Of THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION UnivofM^: THE REVOLUTION AS A WAR Of "'
May 5 - WINTHROP JORDAN.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28 8 PM
No Admission Chsrgt
DODD HALL 147
onPuDMC
i I
r^'
doly bruin
Have gun; will use it
Letters to the Editor
By William Pcirct
(tdkor's note: ^rce fs a.sfii-
hore in the Masfen FrO'
0/ Pii6/#c AdminiurBtkin.)
Aher reading Farke K. Skd-
ton's artide "Guns: The Shadow
of Death" in die April U, View-
point section of the Daily Bruin,
I came away with several un-
pposaions, most of them nega*
th«, I agree wHh Skehon's
contention that many of the
argunwnts advanced by the pp»>
gUfl
often lack internal
OPINION
oonsistency and just plain logical
form; but I find these arguments
and haH truths no worse than
Mr. Skelton's own more ad-
-vanced arni sophisticated use of
half-truths and appeals to emo-
tionalism to iustify his own paai-
tion in the camp of the anti-gun
lobbyists
I find It particulafty interesttng.
that Mr. Skehon feels that the
wHI of the "majority" has been
subjected (could he have meant
subjugalad?) by the NRA in the
btest defeat of an ami-handgun
legislation proposal that he
doesn't refer- to by n^tne. Could
it, be that it is the will of the
''Aqfiajority that prevailed and only
the mmority (irKrIuding Mr. Ske^-
ton) that did not succeed? Of
course not, Mr. Skelton is too
pious for that I wofidnr what
hell do when (and if) his ini-
tiative gets on the ballot i^nd
gets roundly defeated What
nriaiority will he preterni to be-
lorig to then?
But more important Ihon
cheap emotionallsiw is his bla-
tant misuse of sutistics which
witfKMit further dau are almost
meaningless. For instance, of the
JBB hondcUn deaths mpoited in
Los Angelas Hit year, for every
one committed by a private
person, five ¥vere committed by
poftot officers acting in the lir^
o^ duty. (I have worked m the
security industry for three years
now and for the same leegii of
time have listened to the people
I work with talk fornily of how
many people they shoot not
making it to the hospital.) And
taking this into consideration
pretty much takes the wind out
o^ the sads of the reu el his
swistlcal argument as well. Mf
only 53 per cent of all homicides
are committed by handguns,
and five of six of these are
committed by polioe, ihen the
majority of homlddes are rnx
only committed by handguns
but, indeed, are ru>t commined
tiy ftraarmi of any kind. Or to
put it afH>fhef way, banning all
firearms will still not mitigate the
fact that uaeiiis kill pioek and.
indeed, find more ways to do it
than with guns, »nd at a higher
percentage than gun related
PHC
ning some new proiecss, for
v
I come to Mr. Skel-
ton's finaf statistic that guns are
''not good protection against
hureleries of the home" ar>d, by
implication, all related crimes
against persons arni property.
He uses the sutistic that only
or>e or two per cent, oi such
burgieries are paeeensed hy "the
use of a gun. And, for once, I
find no 4auh with that statistK
except that in his usual fashion
he omits the fact that it is almost
iiepeislhle to gauge the pfe»en
tion of hurglarm, arni related
crimes, by "the non-use" of
gyns:^ penonalty own several
handguns ar>d have neiver once
had to even draw one on any-
body outside of the line of duty.
However, everybody linows I
have them; and ksapes that if
caught breaking into my house,
the odds are pretty fOod that
they are going to ect their
brains blown out I feel that this
plays no linle part in the pre-
vention of burglaries in my
hon^e.
Lastly, I find it interesting that
we are currently celebrating the
200th anniversary of a revolution
that began at a little spot called
(CMoHeiiiieoPeta^)
UCLA, as we all know, h a
huge place ar>d it is very easy to
remain known by only your
registration number. WeM. these
Mre alternatives. Ofie of which 1
to become a ^eer Itaahh Coufi-
selor What is a Peer Health
Counselor? PHC's are dedicated
Seauelly Workshops, mnd
There will he
me^wNi^p as woicn
wW be a iJehli, Tuesday, ApH)
27th. at noon hi AU 3412 and 5
Ml Acr ^SDe. jueewer training win
"ii
about health care at UCLA.
PHC's staff a counaeling office
in KerdJiolf 31S, where they
help people fhid their way
around the heahh system by
referring them to the proper
OfSinization. They aho ooumel
students who |ust want to come
in and ulk and they sett non-
prescription contraceptives.
PHC's staff the Cold Clinic, a
walk-in. self-help dinic at the
Morthwest corner of Pauley Pavi-
liort on MWF from 8:30 to 11:30;
and they counsel vegetarians
ami overweight people in the
Nutrition Clinic of SSudent
Health
They also work in CRC in
Student Health counseling
wooMO about their choica of
contraceptive as well as assist-
ing the examir>ers and living the
wvonesoey evening eoucanonat
clau.
PHC's are aho actively plan-
for sIr ^w«eks Wi
hme and July
We welcome all wAm heve an
mterest to become invoked in
such a program. For furtfier
information, call or conne by iCH •«
3121. g2S-7Sgg, N4-f 10*3. *
I
i
Amused
1 wsis amused by a Oalhr gruin
irtide in which Steve Seim said
that returning desm lealdBi
the kMSery waitinc list had
offered spaces by last winter
quarter. I am one of those who
h still waiting for that offer to
put in an appearance. Be tfiat as
it may, there is quite a bit of
injustice in the lottery syssam as
it was run last year. Exaoiples el
this are incooaidefelisfi for
tlKMe wfK> live too far away to
conveniently search for good
of
Datty Bruin
km
ON CAMPUS
MARINE CORPS
OFFICER PROGRAMS
Freshmen, sophomores, Seniors & graduates
juniors
PLATOON LEADERS CLASS
Free civilian flight instruction
$100.00 a month during school year
Leadership training at Quantico, Va.
during summer
Commissioned as a Second Lieuten-
ant upon college graduation
OFFICERS CANDIDATE CLASS
12 weeks of Officers Candidate
Training at Quantico, Va.
Commissioned as a Second Lieuten-
ant on completion of Officers Can-
didate Class
Earn $10,075 to $12,742 during first
year as a Second Lieutenant
We're looking for a few good men.
For additional information see the Marine Officer
Representative Captain E. Johnson on April 27,
1976 in Placement Career Center at 10 am to
y
3:00 pm.
-''-..^-■^-'.
i*:;i>=^
I
i
I
I
!!•
Ssd
1
5
i
]^l^t»i £quipm«^nt Corporation im prou4 of a
th raU> that hmi made ua the Imrnd^r in
mini-<romputer manufacturing and techaoi-
ocy im only 19 yoara. Our dynamic aaeoaaa
means continuing ■aioa oMortunitka in
our North American fteid aaiei organi-
aation.
The poople who qualify for our
computer sales training program
will apand ninm Months at our Cor-
porals Hoadymrlors in Maynard,
Maaa. The comprehensive program
will fcMTus on salaa/marketrng and
hardware / software ■vitams IfaM
must have a tochnical 6€grm9
(Math. Phvsieal Science, Engi-
neering, or Computer ScMNice) with
two BOflMsters of computer science
After completi^ our aalea
program, vou will be jsflsd mi ona
of our Md aales offices throughout
, the country. Your fteld responsibil-
ities in technical sales will include
procuring, developing, aervicijm,
and managin|^ ficw accounts for
our complete Line of hardware and
software.
For additional information
about the challenge and rewairda
of a Digital. s^les -career , pleaae
write, indicating: ar«a of geograph-
ical preference, to:
Bruct E. MatFadden, Digital
Equifmktnt CTporation, Wegtem
Regional Om^w, $505 Walak A ven-
ue, Santa Clara ^ Cmh/etwim M
Kr are an e^ual opportunity
player, m/f.
digital equipmant corporation
********«W«OT
More on guns
(Continued frcMn Page S)
Concord Bridge, a battle that
committed a handful of farmers
to fight for their right to the
personal posi«»»ion of firearms
— 1-^, goverwwent trooJE* benf
on the confiscation of those
same weapons. Today, 200 years
later, the war is stiU not won.
f
UCLA Hillel Welcomes
ROMAN VISHNIAC
More letters
Author: Polish Jews; PHd Zoology. M.D., PHD Oriental Art
who wUI present a photographic lecture
'THE VANISHED WORLD OF
i THE SHTETL"
7:30 p.m.
As part of "Night of Remembrance"
URC Auditorium 900 Hiigard
by Jewish Cultural Arts Comnn. and P.T.F.
(Continued fro« Page 5)
fre$hnr>en send a Left^ of Intent
to a school that hands out hous-
ing in an urpredictaMe fashion.
But, I'd like to address myself
to the problem of fhose excep-
tions to the lottery. Hundreds of
students don't have to go
through the lottery to get a
room. Thefe include arhletes,
those aHiliated with foreign ex-
change programs, personal
friends of the Regents, %n6 off-
spring qi major contributors to
tiw University I suggest that the
fHimber of tlW>se who avoided
the lottery for various reasons
be discovered for each exempt
group. Then allow each group
to enter that number of applica-
tions in the lottery this year
That way they take their chances
with the rest. Better yet, if no
one applied to the dorms, the
dorms would have to start im-
proving in quality to attract
residents instead of deteriorating
because of the surplus of
demand.
SUBMIT!
SUMMER JOBS
$210/wk
la
Must Be:
Dependable:
WESTWIND
Hardworking
Willing to le«« LA. area
Today, 2:1
UCLA's Quarterly of the Fine Arts
Submissions to the spring issue of Westwind are
now being accepted. Send your:
Poetry Screenplays
Prose Photography
— Plays ' or
Art Music
To: Westwind, 112 Kerckhoff Hall. Please include
a self-addressed, stamped envelope with a
submissions. Hurry!
Deadline
Wednesday, May 5. 1976
University Lutheran Chapel
■e On Time
pm
Strathn^ore 4 Cayley
ATTENTION
STUDENTS!
information about 1976 SUMMER
INTERNSHIP POSITIONS with
CALIFORNIA STATE AGENCIES
is available af the PtACEMENT
& CAREER PLANNING CENTER
RECEPTION DESK. DROP BY
NOW.
Application Deadline:
Wbea the
fide twmy. the
of
pictiHe
of the local record ttor^ n-
rmmm. Evetybody m fhandly
asd belpfttl, but the imall
■liipaBiaat vaoeai stores have
the best pricea aad Uk addad
of
iaoB of perosanent prices is
flnde dilficnh by the ntuDerous
aMumfacuirers* hat prioat, the
periodic sales aad oocakional
price wan, the foBowing^ chart
ii tm tadication of the oepiper-
Oi the seven rec-
!ly avail-
able to the UCLA cooHMiiiity
(Note: A fkm Release is
the latest album by a given
artist. It suys at the low New
Releaae price as long as it selk
jMril whkii is anjchaii fnm 2
laaeks to 3 months.)
At uuf giwm tiflK about 75
aie aold as New Re>
- iadaiiBg the groups
M AM and FM
of a par-
licttlar Okmrn akukam. the aK
a vetenui of the
S2.9i atbum days, when she
a store in Hollywood, was
in her conuaaalB about
relations with the large chains.
*We*re not taking htead out of
anybody's mouth. SeoK paopie
just want It afl.
They're unhappy about the
usad album sales," sIk ooo-
timmd, " but it*s perfectly legal.
JHowcvcr, thay*ie bftginning to
come down on the sale of
proasos. (Promotional albums
are sent free to music reviewers
by record companies and
though thsp are amrked "Not
for Sek^ they frequently find
their wiy into the usad album
» ^Grammy is a custoraer-
orientad store which wiH fill
special ordcit for hard-to-get
records at no extra charge.**
said Nifoussi. ^'And we offer,
free paprllis trie care if you
want to come in to just talk,**
added Terry, a Grammy salesr
to win studio raomdrng time
phis guaranteed atrphiy and
real bype, all paid for by
Rhino.
"Rhino also buys and seOs
leaidB^ but has discon-
ilB sale of promotional
albums under pressure from
the harfe chain norm," said
Rhiiio*s low pricing did lead
to legal trouble in one in-
Stock or Catalog. All
aie for one-record >
eqjuivalaat laagth tapes. Dou-
ble aJbooM wwe not compared.
Of course, than are mm^
between the stores
What has a
draped from the ceiling, a
Xerox copy of Lyaette
"Squeaky" FrQ«me*s Jr. Hi^
School Yeaitouk pscture on
the wall, and the Japanese
"In May, 1975 Rhino was
sued by Wherehouse Records,
rapneuHliid by California's
largest law firm, for telling
Elton John albums at 12.99,**
said Bronson. "We settled out
of court for a modest sum," he
concluded.
Besides the wide iclactian of
new and aaad albums,
amgazines, humorous wall
orations (a amp of all illegal
activities in the stoic for the
benefit of Tower and Where-
house spies). Rhino usually has
giveaway for the cus^
such as Soul C
and fiJMl TasB
which are featured this
and tapes, tape cases, silk-
screen t-shirtf and a wide vari-
ety of smokiag accessories in a
fascinating display case with
endlessly rotating trpys.
Music Odyssey is just down
the block from Licorice Pizza,
but the "price wars, leaflettmg
and chargai of Fair Trade
violations have bacome a thing
of the poat as the two storm
have sactM down to paacehil
pnaiMtaace." mid Green.
VefBS Msimih
"We're haaically a daasianl
and catalog store," said Vopm
manager WaUy Bndar. "«5% of
Odyasay
"They're a pain in the am"
Odyssey salasama Tom
our
"Of course." he contini
**we have all the new rock
lulaaaes, the big hot ones, but
our strength is in stocking the
complete caulog. Forexaipple,
we have the complete Warner
catalog — Reprise^ Electra,
Atco and Atlantic.
"Vogue does a lot of bus-
iness with UCLA faculty," said
Bader. "and the ethnn muaJml
ogy department occasionally
buys from us. Many times a
customer will buy a record
ham and my they've haen all
over k>oking for it and nobody
had it but us.**
that Vogue
iTKi
I TMCK n cMtrm nm
of the
dnl emphaais of one t3rpe of
aaanrd and the hmmmJ of the
alofe itaelf . Here then is a hriai
of such of the
i the Westwood
■tSS.59
... -i.
3"
4«»
4» —
rack and then put racks in y
other stores. Soon he opaaad a 1»
record store of his own and 3
gradually expmiiad it to the
13 ataw Towar Record chain."
The Westwood Tower siofc,
which opeaad in July, 1975,
has thiaa mann — rock and
pop on the first, jazz on the
bccoimI And cIasuc^ m the
top floor The wnBs are graead
with 5*x5* paintings, of current
albuam done by LA artist Ray
Smith, who "used to paint
pictures on swimming pool
bottooM until that fad pasaad
and he got into doing reaofd
covers," explained Brown.
Although Tower prieas aie
basically as listed in the chart.
Tower sniaaamn Steve Sawai
noted some exceptions.
"All our Elton John albunm
are S3.99 and Jpm Mitchell
albuim are $3.M whether
they're new releases or stock.
in addition, from 9 am Friday
to midnight Monday we have a
^kend sale in which we re-
some of the new aalanam
to $3.66."
Sawai atoo explained that
"Tower ha
department with omny
labeb such as Angel, RCA,
and London, more than half of
which are $3. St. and a variaQr
of the cheaper *badiet labels.'
Tower has a 5-day return with
aasaipt for
faction."
mad stock albums at $3.99,
Raoosds b^rartf the
priom in town.
with the
LizNif<
The
pay for all the chain
Wt^y/t haasi haae for two
am slitt jnst
3*
3"
4"
m
5«»
4" 944
4«»
3"
:»T
194
4«»
3"
J"
4-
4««
3*
S"
4'* 9S4
Pizza is an II
owned by Jim Graen-
the "You get k nicer at
tim Licohoe Pizza" voice fa-
miiar lo mdao hasanara. Pizza
encfies current pop, rock and
jazz albums, witl a ^air*"
dnaaical section, aeoaaiing to
Johtt^Jkid. ai^^t^^t
"Laoonce Pizza sti
4"
3"
5~
S^ 99€
has a
auction of movie and allow
proud of^lBII
"Mmaj d these al-
e out of print
Oiusn, refernng to the
coirer over the front desk? clanging pinball marhinm up- **
stain at Maaic Odyasay.
**Tliey've just been sold be-
for caaae they were too noisy
the jazz or rock aftaiaaado. Prepk co^da't a^foy the mu-
"We have the
of jazz ia this area," Rhiao tat the rest af the apatatrs
Odyasay*s
hihals hke Siaeple
aad CJR. We*re oae of
Jap^
does a thriving business in
Igia music," like Bing
Crashy aad the Andrews Sis-
ters. "Many of thcae artisu arc
available only on European
albums, but in hae with tha
Vogae poicy of rwiaasiia in-
ventory, we try to keep all iha
hi
TieV
vice/* said Held **We help
casiaamn fiad albums, dacide
what new albwas inigiM ha la
Hiair liking aad we amke ip^
orders at no extra charge.*
aovanve poacy caBad
antaad Sale Album" ia which a
'^worthwhile" or interesting
aaw attaaa ia said with a
aMaaj^^ack gaasaaiaa. If yoa
Hlan*t'like it, you can hrii^ k
back for a imU refund, no
Held
Although prices generally
m the
with Dyhai, Cat Ste-
hle Pie, Vaa Morrisoa
Tower records started in
prfaai hsiaw S2.
Mamc CMyvey,
to haas a mmt at UCLA *m
$3.77,
Cartney, Led ZappaUn
Miles Dae«
Held.
According to ian Brown,
hat New York
tests iaclude a Vacation ia
T4
LPs
pharamcy, aad as thJ
-j:'
.»V'
I
f
The Guidance Center
3017 Santa Monica Blvd.
SANTA MONICA
GRADUATE R^OpRD EXAM
praparatlon
ao hn. Verbal. Matt). PraoHc* Taating
Couraa begins May 8 tor Juna 12 taal
•29-4429
li.,.
I
t
First Annual
UCLA Slumber Party and
All-Night Movie Marathon
--— 7:00 p.m. - 9:00 a.m.
Friday — April 30
FREE — Grand Ballroom — FREE
Cuitural Affairs Commitston/Student Legislative Council
k
WMNThie
N ctiecfc ie
$10" or
I
I
f
1
t
1 5% Off
CHAN'S GARDEN
ft Mandertn CuMne
Eicellefit CMneee Food. Beer A Wliie,
Qood Senrtoe, Free PeHUng at
Weelwood Cenier, Bank of America
Undbrook Dr. Weetwood, LJL
Ptione: 479-7785, 479-77M
,,-^^:ti, M A CO.PO.. cvT n a .st^^^^^^J
tired of yesterday's hair?
lr1AII$ TOD AT
For what's happening now
. . styling for n%ef\ and women
Jerry Redding's Jhirmadc products
For appointment cail 478^151
thru sat
•1 1
3.00 - OFF first haircut
wittithisad
1105 Giendon Ave Westwood Village
"^^
If
BREATHTAIONC
„EXUBERANTiy FUNNY!
wneWnu AiScrewedilD KtDbewttnsK
Ids gisnt talinCr vmccmcanev/ncwvoaK
ji
'A BRILUANT MOVIE
niPROARIOUSiy FUNNY
RJPeiY!
UNA WERTMUUBTS
ALL SCIIE¥fED UP
PaOM MW UNf CMf MA
■=f-
NOW SHOWING
Mm. Mm Fri. 1:31. ••.miMi FJH
Sal Sea. 1 A Ma »«. 7r«. %m, 11M Mi.
PACIFIC'S
TOIKrMI/5\ a~
WHtMMII tOWUVAaO**
-llil
A(v \ Man. IInv
caNOf* \ I tt 7 P
fri
SlI IteSPi
1 ta 2 P M
Can't argue with Stouman's 'Sunrise*
Jv.^
In « oricf introductory letter
tm cIk reader, Lou Stouroen
baclMaa: '"Come wall( with me
awhik/ We can be friends of
the road. We could even be
lovers, so intimate that for a
brief hour you'll see the world
through my eyes.** And, in-
deed, Caa*t Affse WMi S«k
Hm-A Pa^er Movk (Ceiestuil
Aru, $9.95. 185 pafes) does
achieve such a, comforting in-
timacy. Stoumen*s art not only
is an acute refinement of ex-
perience, but also, in that pro-
caM of introspection, instilb a
new energy into an evolving
form of art, the paper movie
This six-pan odyiaey com-
bines a series of footage from
photography and film work
with documentary-like poetry.
The sound track is the reader's
voice Inside is an autobio^
graphical document, a relent-
less passage through dreams
and images, horrors and fi
loneliness aad Jrvaii—
In tht fml lection, ''Dream
of IsfcMlis,*' Stoumen taps
down refladiOM of his parents,
of the violence and hypocriay
of the Great Depression and of
his waaierlust: **! was a#i«Bae
guard then of the idiot Tour-
rum and onaiuae aiid nooky.*
But this is more than a glossy
remembraace of things past,
for hii wark has a burniag
sensitivity to both tbe unsightly
obvious aad the subhme His
first movie was a dofUBMlaiy
on Puerto Rico*s children. The
photapspbs surkly depict tbe
maimed and desolate, a dis-
c^uieting contrast to the soft
and lulling beaezes above: "'Pu-
crto Rico is Paradise My
camera eye found in it also a
Hell."
"Men at War** is al onae a^
tierce recount of war, of tbe
idea^m of its agents, o( watt-
ing
to die of boredoBB, of
ive,- of whore-
hoiMai. As a photographer on
bombina aiissions. Stoumen
baoMK sceply disturbed by the
gross pragmatic morals of war
"Killing is rniicr in air You
never have to fuck a bayonet
into a maa*s belly./ You're only
wMlar fire yourself a few
minutes" He correctly per-
ceived the pervertmg effects of
war op Its partiapants: **lt*s
bitter truth that the closest a
lot of my generation ever gat/
to loving was in the eon-
caicship of battle.**
With the gusto of a pil-
grimage, Stouroen next recalls
••Asia.- The poetry^iiere falters,
as it is too self-consaous and
aKlodramatic. The photogra-
phy takes over. Interwoven
between photos of bustling
crowds, the Taj MalHd and
other street scenes lies **the
people*s river of sweat.** In
those fleeting moments, Stou-
men succinctly captures the
vast baammty wi Asia: *H>ne
immortal family/ under the sin-
gle roaf of sky **
In ''U.S.A.'* the photographs
range from Times S<|uare in
the ram, Stoumen htamatf wkb
an Academy Award for one of
bis documentaries, laaeliness,
frieads, students and demon-
strations. His writing oovers
the initial faan of teaching (he
still instructs at UCLA). Youth
in the' end paaes no problems
for he bas'great empathv for
their eaaiiy and ideals
His final chapter. *^[>ream of
Love,** is intense, cumtortmg
and yet embarassing in its
romanticism and youthful spir-
it The photography arc sen-
suous, with dark tones and
bright eyes dominating. Can't
Argue With Saariie-A fi^ar
Movie has as iu core maa*B
solitariness: a delicate blend of
humanity and hunulity.
Sick characters in search of an Alther
By Cadiy Seipp
"My family has ahaayt bi|Ri into death," begins Lisa Alther's
KinfUcks (Knopf 503 pages. S8.95), and unfortunately. the irir
but popular misuse of the word "into" sets the tone for the whole
book. However, Ahher's main problem is not her stupidly vague
sentences, abundant thought they are. Her basic fault is that
Iflalllrbi is twice as long as it has any right to be.
What probably explains the fact is that KinfKcks is Ahher's
fiest novel. In her enthusiafla for writing the book, she has
crammed all the people she kas ever known, all the situations she
has ever experienced or inuigined, all the clever renmrks she has
ever thought of, into one big autobiographical mesa.
It is as if all her ideas seemed so good to her that she was
laallK to leave any of them out. She couldn^t decide to write in
the first person or the third, tell her siory chronologically or use
flashbacks, be funny or serious. She does it all, and the resuk is
disconnected and self-indulgent.
Alther's heroine is Ginny Babcock, whom we see at her earliest
as a fbig-swinging cheerleader in her native Hullsport, Tennessee,
where bet father owns a munitions factory and her mother
compaaes epitaphs in her spare time. Ginn/s steady boyfriend is
Joe Bob Sparks, a star football player whose moronic all-purpose
Comment on anything is, "Do whutT* Ginny's unvarying greeting
is "Say heyr This is probably the best part of the book; the
slapstick portrayal of high school sex is mercilessly funny:
"Eventually we got up and lartad out our clothes. When he
haatfad ale my skirt I discovered a damp stain down one side."
" 'Sperm,' " he said, with his idiotic snule."
" 'Aarghf I dropped my skirt onto the seat and begHi bealias
the spot with my fisu. 'KiU themf *
At college Ginny becomes involved with a lesbian named Eddie
llolzer, with whom she drops out of school and goes to live on a
b's commune in Vermom. In a typically grotesque scene,
■w ^msMpRssBv wiuiL nomg s aiiowiTioDiie. in snocK
Eddie's death, Ginny marries an insurance salesman named Ira
Bias, bat she is thrown out of the house when he discovers her
committing adultery with a freaked-out war deserter.
Ahher is as caaalaBs with her chacadars as she is with her
For instance, she aMkes a point of mentioning that a
named Laveme has bhie eyes, but later on in the book,
her e3«s miraculously chaase to green A small thing, perhaps,
but one which indicates how little Alther cares about her
charaaMsraad how little attention she pays to making them
belli
The one donsiaaat trait of Gitmyi character is her utter
waakaesa. which may be believable, but is also irksome. Her
unvarying faapaase to the aauiy crisis in her bfc is to coUnspe,
aad s^ lets herself be dominated by ahaoat evcryoae she meets
The 6ict^that she is aware of it is no saving gcaoe. This type of
charader may appeal to some people, the aaas-who do not retch
at the asiserable phrase, "BaooiBiag a person in our time," which
is how the novel is daaehbed on the bookjacket. However, Ginny
has no redaaaung charm which would make her endless -exploits
tolerable.
>
Ahher is a fine satirist in a nibber-tnnicheon sort of way. if
she had limited Klaflkha to being a satir^ of the 196(rs, it
probably would have been tolerable. But Alther's endless
pondenngi of hfe and death are lanrticulate and bonng, aad
wh(fin she is not being funny, she is practically incoherent The
\MMi sentence of the boak is parrteaifly grating: "She left the
cabin, to go where she had no idea." Alther is trymg la say that
her heroine docs not have any idea where she is goias, but one
can't get the picture out of mind of Ginny's heading Upwards a
land where it is impossible for her to have an idea.
By the end of o^ftr 580 messy pages, the reader doesn't give a
damn what happens to Ginny anyway, aad is more than happy
to be Mi Mi
On Campus On Campus On Campus On Campus On Campus
Review:
Our Lan'
By C^y Seipp
The theater arts depart-
ment's production of
Ward's Oar Lm* is so
barrasiiagly ba4 h hurts to
watch it. Maidie Normajs'i
direction aManfa to be haih
painfully slow-moving and
confusingly haphazard. These
may be somethiag to be said
for a director who can com-
bine both of these major faults
in one play, especially when
each IS developed to such an
caacmottS degree. But the
result is that it is almost in»-
possihte to tell what is going
on, and. the fact that the acton
mostly speak n» if their analhs
not help
TBTT
The plot concerns a group of
freed slaves who try to make a
life for themselves on an island
off the coast of Georgia. Moat
of the cast mugs and hams it
up so ferociously that the few
wooden acton are a welcome
relief. All of the adass aae
awkwasd and unsure «l them-
icfvcs ^
John H. Joties* make-up is
nouble because it is so fright-
fully awful. A prim school
is rou§Bd so aMKh that
laaks hke a French harlot
srlet fever CI
meant ta be aid are
with gtaaay Mack
are evidently meant to be
wrinkles.
God only knows why the
thMter arts department chose
to produce Oar Laa\ but there
is ao conceivable excuse for
ne saoodme t iu
Preview:
Lin Dunn
tions on
Lin
i motion picture
wifl
expert
In 192i, Dunn joiaed KKO
Pictures and remained at that
studio for 2t
tagraphy" tonight at 7M m
ld09 MelniU for free Dunn
will show dips from fihns he
worked oa, iachtding
H's
s Special
a Director of
af the
and
He
I effects for
A naaay aaaay
WarM, West SMe
Trek
Mad Mad
ipm prognun has been pre-
by Dunn flMre than 100
times at tcchairal societies,
cottages, aaiversiti'- ^nd cine-
ma aspmizatior "^ the
wafM. After aacn mm c^ '^
shown, the haaae lights win i^
turned on aad Daaa will ex-
over too
"Hmn foaadad Film cffrocts
of HaMpwoad, lac, ia 1946 and
is currently psaaidaat of the
The
'of
'ips'^ial effects aaiu in Holly-
wood aad Ihap have worked
on amny likas, iaihMiint The
C-real Bace, The WMt. Akpmi
and poat^pradBdlaa on Taxi
OAKLEY'S*
's HBlrcultlng
BtitsbMt
Long & Short StylM
liil Qagiag
DATSUN
'Acres of Datsuns**.
Student. fBcutty. and alumni
fleet discountB
lot S. Arroyo Perk way
•Ji4-1133 •
Mj-
i
.3
I
Thi% i% fhm p/oca for Rib lovers/
|fly fcr fha Btf Ribs wvm frimd in L.a\
<T^9r OTO - v»sl9v*vfTf
COMPLETf DIHNERS •
Casual Dining •'w^B^.T
NAMiY'g eem pit see
14)4 M. CtiKIifHT HilOMTS •« MINaffT ST«P
10 Mimitas Uovi^rt Sonsot Blvd to
LoufofConyon Turn tioht . . . And VouVo TKari
THE POLISH JOKE
is a sandwich
Delicious take out food
262 26lh Street;Santa Monica
394-5337
Owned and Operated by
a Very Proud POLE
Five weeks of study, travel
Andfun
In Mexico
For teachers, high scho6l. and college stcidaali. Accredited
claeaaa in Spantetv. Mexican culture, music, art. etc. at k>aautiful
hlontgriay Tac Coiiega. MM ir>cliidaa tuition, board, roeai.
laundry ar>d.||:lpa. Earn 2 aamaatars high school or 6 collage
cfadits
For dataila and oattlague oaniact group laadar Or Richard
l^rtin between 8 and 9:30 any avaning at 47S JSiT.
\
' w:.
Gowns
' \ ■
Planning for summer or fallf
Be origindi
BaVy CafFol^
(213) 7SS-492t Van NHyi
\
l:
I
^-1 f^' 1
t
s
Amateur and Profes-
sional talent wanted
for coast-to-coast te-
levision show. For
audition appointment
call 466-9153.
\
i
i
I
'A
imtjucju.m^m
TUC5D«^Y« APRIL27
A DAY Of l\e^^c^^aaA^lce, ycvahashoa
rsNiurrv di*
II'I2 A/ACAICAANDI ACfLCCTKWS ON
AJ-V. TMC Y»DSf1POerAV Of ARON
CLANT5-LeYCUCS WfTH DA-o/AMCT
HAPDA . ACKCA^UW 3Sn
NOON Lis VIOCIN5 PU BAL
MnAl».
3^AM.^\A5AOA rVIXtt fV AA<HtOI.06Y
ANO niSIOAY IN SLIPC5 WrTN tSTK
PUCN^OkS ACHCAMAN 2<II2
A NIOnT or Alin»AANCC
HOLOCAUST ^ f^Cf^OAlAU
NCW AATCf PLAY(A$ PAOPUCTIONON
TrUS
r
me HOLOCAUST
6*30 TMg %ANI>mP WOAWP Of THC5MTCTL
SCIDC Paf 5(N1ATfONS WITH AOf^AN
VISnNIAC. PHCTOCfAAPMCA AUTHOA
,T>.^«^ URC AUPITOAIUW 4DOHIL(AAP
L
I
Jack Carter campaigning .
(O
to the tmdenti baflHMfc ^'he*! the
freth face with a backfround of mi political
deals " ^
One Carter campaign worker thought that on
Carter's rtext tnp to Callfomia May 20-22
Carter might speak at UCLA*s Pauley Pavihon
although no definite piMM iMve baea auiJc yet.
**Wc hope to draw a lot of volunteer support
from UCLA** laid Rick Ra«m of Carter's Lot
Angeles headquarters. He added that the
purpoie of Jack Carter's visit here this weekend
was to increase the number of volunteer
workers for Carter.
Potent force
**lf the students had a better voting record
they could be a very potent force in this
elect ion»** Carter said. **They*re good campaign
workers but they just don't turn out to vote.**
Carter alao said that his father's support
cames from the unorganized part of fhe'
lie "Humphrey
organixni, he's an old ti
everything
Carter
Irforc arriving at UCLA to tee Mardi Grai,
Carter and some inipnign workers niikitf up
and down m the elevator in the W«lwoo4
Center trying to reach Carter iHMli^uarten on
tftt 1 1th floor. The elevator refused to stop
Hwc and Carter finally got it to stop o« Hw
eighth floor and ran up three figlMi in tine to
4o the phone interview. Afterwards he referred
to the escapade as **an example of our
zation.**
At Mardi Gras, Carter managnd to
frisbee at the **AU *e PrmtfentV
haeth after three tries and the proclamation
that both he and his father were grant fnsbee
throwers. ^^
After that it was on to 'the Playboy Club and
then back to Pennsylvania before today*t
prinuiry.
Am _,
pM, ApfN 8, Jims aiiips Ffw
— iiHhv Tsw. of Vie Lif9 Scitnot sfts. 2
pm. AprN 21. Hiett in Sdmmi^m^ leitoy
—BmUmm inrS lp«lnr fHftm. tsr nil
SLC csndidatas, 8 pm. tomorrow. Dytistra
lounoi.
"■kiOmmmimm.wtH t^MiMiosMay
3-7 Slffi up Is iMna MMd 9 im-? pm.
tomtfTSiw^^ 9. IMss on Brum Walk.
Clism qyatf ani Mchi wiMway
Campus events
Studont Loaay m ?MriinHj wdich peys
$787 SO a month RoquiraawnsMieliin
a focsnt UC pmtmm mi imiil iii
HMflf iaaHaa Pkk hd mStattm In
Hsff 306 Ooadlmt is May 7 or call 821
sidaanal Aiwiesry Committett are now
avaiills. liiiMa » AprM X. p«ck up appit
cations at Ackarman Information Otsk.
Kerelitioff 304 and
::±
Um Oiono from Common Cams. 4 pai.
taiiy 68M22S0
to Ml BMk Jn aii iips
fey Mowvtf FsMmm. 7-10 pm. to-
nigtit. Kinaoy 382 ^
LMt
s piaaanmieii. 2 pm.
I »17
-IfeaArtiian
folk dancas. J- 10 pm also ovary
durinQiprino quartar. 1023 Hiigard
paintings and littiograpln. 11 am-4pm April
28. Ackerman Women's Lounge
testing is free and open to the public:
tomorrow-April 29, Ackerman Man's Lounge
and today. Madtcal Center Loynfs.
-Magm 8Mw 8aan whfcMaaws SKn
presidential candidate and Ow amoMit of
delagates pladyad from states which 1\9^
had primaries is now up in KeroMiiff Hall
near the elevator on the first floor
lagliili CiMwaaiaB. informal practloe
for foreign studeMS and visitors lOam-noon
Mondays and Wednesdays -Ackerman 3517
being offered by the Chinese American
Citizens Alliance Foundation, limited to
students of phinese anoastry wtw are pro-
santty sophofRsras ats racepMgBiciMaisor
university in tho Los AnfMS area For an
application'write ChinassAn
Lodge, 415 Bamboo iMm. Los Angelas 80012
or contact the icHslmllip office Murpliy A-
129.^^
— IMaaaMps information and
extramural funding for graduate
postdoctorals are available in ttie
Ihipa and Aisistantship Section Murphy
1228
trained interns will help you find funding for
your Ideas QpoM iiNy 8 aiM pia, NsMMMlf
401
local volunteer poaMana are available now
through EXPO Ackerman A213 or call 82S-
0831
Ceasaawr Pretactiaa. join OECA as a
consumer investigator Visit Kerckhoff 31 lor
call 825-289 Voluntaars are alsa noadad tor
environmental and food prefects
fWf tWV^lBr WtM WWW Vw
idsan. WIN be Shown 12:30 pm.
NPf Atfdnprium free
if. a film aM «M aeUggls
wM be preaenlad 8 am. tsnigN. University
YWCA. 574 HUgvd Fras.
■naan. a 1863 TV pradiMllni atyilno
Jamaa Oean andporothy Gish will besbawn 5
pm. tomorrow. Maliittz 1408 ftm
— Aaatgaanat Hn. a aMrs doctimantary
will be shown 6 pm. MHMnaw. Malnitz 1408
Free
— CbagMi aM T|B NaMMMis af IIM8. Mvo
art films wW be" shown 4 pm. tomorrow.
Ackerman Woman's Lounge
-Tbe AggvwiaaMp d Mftf ftraMfe. and I
Uaa VmiiH. wtibs sliOwnTpM. April 29.
Oickaon 2180. Fraa-
-4JCU 8raBa 8MRM aM TalLlaaMniB. will
perform, noon, today Schbenberg audi-
torium Free'
rnaaapMin Haalc NMbnl CMaarl wUl
ba given by pertormars trgoi UC OaMS and
U8G. 8:30 piR tMilglK. lollOiiilPi aMli-
torium $1 for UCLA saiiBals. fasulty. staff
8iii saaiar citizans. 82 tar
Bat-Yaacor piamst. a strtag
and ttie Shirat Hayam chorua. 8 pm
Grand
irt of her own works.
auditorium Free
Cwnw ffaa
8:30-
WIN be held 8l pm. tomorrow CN6 <l-t06
-I8n Anaal BnMB LMtwea M UnmBm
will be Mvan by Jgim Sieaa. Editor Lsadaa
TbMa lljwin lugplagmt tonight 8 pm
iialnon2188. Fno.
^^4nMiiL Its afcfinnlsgy and bMwy la
SNaaa. 3 pm today AMMfaHii Mtf.
-Ha VHMbad «Mi M Ms 8M1 7:» pm.
tomght UIK: audttorium 900 HHgard frm
— rM8Mi Naiy. 11 am. today.
»17
SPECIAt^^
GENERAL MEETING
come meet, and ask questions of
the candidates for BSA 1976-77.
Today Tuesday April 27th
3rd Floor Lounge
Ackerman Union
Records. . .
number ot kids lOrT
oU^** noind saletman Dan Ro-
mut. They're buying Bentle .
albums like crazy; they just eat
It up," he anid. ^
**We aioo fet a lot of tnn
vekrs from places like New
Zealand or Auatralia who are
buying records in the States
hecnnae they coat $S or $9 at
hoaae;** continuad Engnnn.
'^One gny from Japan came
in and tokl me to >ick out the
records that kids like today.* 1>
was grant. 9y the time I got off
work he hnd more than $800
worth of albitms and they were
■till nickiaa CMt aanac** Roaaaa
recalled. ' ■- .
In addition to the full sdeo-
tion of new rdananB nsd g8nrir
albums at the prices listed
above, Wherehouse has several
racks of *'cut-outs"' —
facturer's ovemina, surpli
okler albums and other special
bargains as well as several
tnhles of t-track and cassette
at ank prioaa. usually
13.
PROGRAMMER
Titis tnsuranag and
Trustee talMgaat
title insuiafies earn-
paoy mttieUS will
be conducting on-
campus uUanNaws
Wiiwniijj»rt»
for pragraawnsr pa-
sitiom m tiig Ma-
nagSMsnl Intonaa-
tion Systani INvi-
siaa Ml paaitions
wiNbslaaiBiiattie
ialB8 «lia antia
paiagmiMllvgiMB
JunawHtiaaiaierin
rrm£ MSURANGE
^ AND TRUST
Reming wdns angles tide .. .
h
e
r
^ (
141
6-4. Satur-
Four Bnuns were anHBMl to the 1976 Southern California
Intercolleguite VoUeyhnI Association (SCIVA) AU-
ConfcreiKx team in a vote of players and coaches m the
circuit. v^.
Joe Mica, Fred Sturm and David Olbright were first
teaga aiigations, while I>enny Clincf was named to the
second ieam. The SCIVA champion Bruins dominated the
All-Conferenoe choices as no other team had more than one
first team selection
Slurm and Mica were named to the first team as outude
hitters, while Olbright was named as a setter They are
joined on the first team by middle blocker Ted Dodd ot
Pepperdme, outside hitter Ebb Yoder of USC and setter
Gaury Sato fraos UC Sanu Jirhara
Chne wns named to the second team as a middk blocker.
He is joined by middle blocker Tim Hill of Long Beach
Sute, middle blocker Mark Rigg of Pepperdiiie, outside
hitter Eric Pavels from UC Santa Barbara, outside hitter
Rich Davis of CaJ Sute Lx>ng Beach and f icshmna ieticr
Rod Wilde from Pepperdine
Siane ^kt SCIVA is the dominant volleyball conference in
the country, an All-Conference selection is virtually
eqoivmleBt to Ail-American recognition.
down Teacher 6-3,
Ferdi Taygan. s two-timc
All-American who has used his
fine top-spin groundstrokes
and superb anticipn8ina lo win
nine of 10- singles mMehes for
the Bruinii. overwhelmed Stan-
ford's Perry Wri|ht. 6-4, 6-2,
in the second round *b^fore
falling in three sets to Stanford
ace Pat DuP^e, 6-7. 7-5, 6-0
**l should have run around a
few back-hands and tried to
pass him (DuPre) when he
came to the net on womt of his
aaansKi serves.** said Taygan. **l
cotald have broken service a
lew more times.'*
Fleming turned out to be
UCLA's savioF. thrilling the
capacity crowds of about 2000
fans in Ojai with blistering
hard serves and pinpoint ser-
vice returns The 6-5 transfer
player from the I'mversity of
Michigan was taken to three
sets by Stanford*s DuPre for
thr Siat time this season on
Saturday Fleming held service
in the third set to secure the
viciary. which kept the Bruins
ahve in the team race
The Brum star, who is now
15-0 on the season in singles,
could become the first UCLA
player ever to go through an
entire seafon undefeated
Fleming has already captured
the most prestigious singles
(Ojai) and doubles (Pacific
Coast at La Jolla) tournaments
in Southern Cahfornia
*^y goal when I came to
UCLA from Michigan was to
complete a^n entire season with-
out losing a match in singles,"
said the tall, powerful junior
**Pat (DuPre) gaVr me a
tongh match today. 1 really
hnd ta play It was very hot.
and the wind came and went
throughout tbe match.**
Fleming had won the Men*s
Open championship at Ojai
last year over former. USC and
Peruvian star Alex Oil
Fleming's success in Ojai
ended in singles ccNBpetition as
Stanford's Malt Mi8eMI and
Perry Wright cruahnd the
Brum aa8aiiian8iaa of FlaaMag
and Teacher. 6-!, 6-4.
"We were flat," said
Fleming **Matt MitcheH was
really on ha gnaK He was
halting slio8s for winners all
over the place **
Fleming and Teacher ' hadn't
lost in doubles (4-0) prior to
Ojai
In other UCLA doubles
matches on Frida\. Maaiaa
and lewis of USC defeated
UCLA's duo of Tavgan and
Nichols, 4-6. 6-3. 6-4, while
Stanford's Maze and DuPre
easily handled Graham ahd
i
I
Austin, 6-2. 6^
-We weren't even 'in* the
douhlas atttchcs.** aaid Bassett
"It was the worst days mi
doahks I t(^ink I can remem-
ber. Briaa (teacher) and Peter
(Fleming) should hardiv ever
loie their serves ijn^il^^ublaiy"
They were broken several
times.**
Bassett concluded his re-
marks by saying. "I'm sure
we'U he hack Wi) have a great
bunch ot guys-^ho are capaMa
of winning another champion-
ship *
The championship tie in the
Thatcher C up is stiU a cham-
pionship bringing UCLAs ^
toul to 15 at Ojai to lead all ft
schools, USC has won N 10 »]
times
I
I
HAYDEN FOR SENATE COMMITTEE PRESENTS
U. S. Senate Candidate
SO OB
433 5o^rth
S(
Los
Raglster DEMOCRATIC /Primary June 8
mm
mmm
-■n-
^.^
CLASSIFIEDS D
wli* #l»crliiilfiat«a •«« lh« ^aslt of
i^
trtt—4 Of m4v9rit9mf mpn-
In tilt* !••«•• Any ^r««M bo-
MovlMf thai an •#««ftl»«fiMfil In Nils
•tatotf h«r«ln sliMili
in wMkM te
»r. UCLA Dally
1121
. Cm AmilM, CaMornla 9M24
Htlan ^f bloiw. call: UCLA Housing
Offlco. (219) Mf -44i1 ; WooloMo Wmlf
«12J
WOH»* N Ml AV SHOPb f 0« biNOLES
' PFFM.. , •,
Qolo
0t 7-U0 Ctioapl m§ H
OV OOMfOOy. ^RINO ^MOy -MSI HI IRO ABUCLA
StudonU' Stor* Conloctlont, • lovo
MMmnmrnummn M-TH 724§-7:20; F 7941
uhoup counseling
CUR€ >ihyn(*ss en)
JO ME mot* a««ar«
LAST WEEK TO TAKE
ADVANTAGE OF THE
Its BONUS IN THE
TUDENTS' STOREI
10, itn
•cl««c*« Slor* In Mm Dental Cellaa*
campus
P Th^rt art opanings
P for naxt year's Paar
E Applications avall-
p abia at tlia follow-
^ Ing orlantatton
maating only:
H Tuaaday April 27
c 12.-00 AU 2412
C 5:00 AU 2408
A For furthar Infor-
Lmatlon, call M-F,
10-3, 825-7506
WHAT DOES A BRUm
8EAR WEAR TO CLASS?
UCLA t-8hirt8 (hundreds of
ttyiss in the ASUCLA Stu-
dents' Store), custom-im-
printed t-shirts. football
iareayt. sweatshirts, hooded
sweatshirts, jackets, hats,
socks, and carries a UCLA
gym t)ag or bike bag.
ASUCLA Studaats' Store
Ackenaan Union
4 OAYS LEFT
4/Sa/7f . For
OfficfrtaittiMatiH
Hoalth Offlco or eoH: S2S-1SSS.
StMdont liMMTonco. UCLA
HooNh Sorvteo, LJL, CA.
cOOSE SHEETS - 4v
BOUND. REDUCTION
LEGAL SHEE^'^
aA2a)
(TA»)
IIJeOMMJCATl
woofiooooy owon
anofo cio*. isst W4
c'mon bo^ lol Nm
(lASSI Jjja
Graduates
PERMA PLAQUE
te=; your diploma
^^compvs studio
t^^n)
ALLIOATOa Prloiia. I
Mili OlW tttti «NM of «
aAtf)
liAfn
ft A 27)
2701.
a A Si)
r. 7
aASF)
Chofty mng
it A 271
Tool
Vou.
M A 9?i
Soyo - On lo
fiAsn>
m ASUCLA~4/7/l
(tA27)
WV R^V
Olnoftor^ ovonl Toostey lh« 20th
1 Aft)
iy( YoifH
<lM
MA 27)
forrwit
isfiuiN TV. a steheo hentals
COLOR TVS,
jf/inonOMy
• •day
$7.M/i
supply a
T V.'a - $7 JO/iiionOi
CaM: 27S-1t32
114.
AMIOWNtAO OoMn In ^mIoI
Sloopa t. SiS/S apyo. $1iS/7
IS7-I447.
drylfif focm HI tno
Cowfocttow Oopt. of flio ASUCLA
W.Y
SliO
rftA27)
(•MS)
IL4.
(It MSI
M A IF) Art/Englnoohng
• • . ^
....*.-....
itaaa
fltMH
K 11
Hi A 27)
MA
ftlo.
IMA 27)
for sate
Texas Iftstnimaiif
Tl«l(
flWtf
ntpa-
H)0
NOVUC
tisni
CAu.4va.??oi
— jr^T*^
Sy aio
fWASM
STOVC-wfiito-^04
4
STSAt.
(It A 27)
fit A 97)
Ti sa It A. sa 11 A. sn M. sa M.
worn
ilia. CMi
iiaAsn
iltJi. AN fo- OT
ItMt)
May 7-of Mo Foni
m. Cat 274-1272.
(laAiT)
^^^^^fcp^M^^^^B^ ^^^^M M
■■■III, saw T.v^
a oMi 7:ai oM. Sit
J
--HftOAOn
Sportswear
Clearancel
or IomI
Laig* talaction of clottiM ««r
man and woman— top«. panta.
vrifMO iveBr, jBOHMSt w. 9siw
a Mg bundle now!
-?ni
IH 7:4S-S:aa: asl 10-4
Hotoficovora, ooftliif ■
oroloo A bosoo. oM
NAaPSICHOaOISTS: i Zoliof
(It A Si)
fMAit)
aTmaa
foraalo
*
7t OLTMMC Tloteto.
uo>orlni at 2 voolw. PU
A iiMWiir tit till
Mony ooooM/
(M ASM
IIJUAMA. Oool
IV. P^.
t42-2t1t
^PERSONAE^
Canlar of Dramatic Arta
A tpocMl mroo wtai
iAoftI 12th tf^ru 30th)
aailMa AuomoN T14
Tho following tub)octt will bp
research subjects
(14A2i|
ciaTMico scuaA ofvia
ri2 A2i)
(tSASM
r).477.
AT tow.
WANTIO:
(it MM
12.-7
CLASSIFIED
novrc7
6priM9aop-7aBpto«oali
A NIefe toffoofplocli PoH) ChlnoM
K««if P« InoliMolpr Hpio jam laoPtM
l4AiM
r FOUMD aoaNrrHniQt ^
I JfMu-vp iM«a t pel or frapip pf{
« ^^^^^** ^^^ ^w^^a IP HpiB POM
la. — ▼F^
477
I jj* Mwajp pipopoo pg Pi jS
THS joa PACTOav
iiaaicuTs f fcy
AVOW a
^j"* ** «* "^ •"« w yvw
nsoir)
LSAT ^
aM •uPiocU aoaaonaPIo ratot I72t ^ «^. - ^...w^^-« ~
-*- — i»itvonteo.M7- ADVANTAGE OF THE
ILA«T WEBC TO TAItf
t474.
THE GUIDANCE CENTEa
sauspiMp
In
(It A it)
f ia Ato% aptp ypor
11% BONUS IN THE
STUDENTS* STOREI
(17 A 27)
tre¥el
«'*^ iMMa
(It M 2)
LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION
TEST PMEPAMATION
fit OM
(It A 27)
ft: To a
ie-n;
(IS AMD
It tor JMly it
Toal
i>4MAT coMraa aoeitia Jooo t Ipr
ioly MlaaL
-SMtD aEAOIMO coufM Ooftna
IS, ISTl
Stofo In tno
(ItOtr)
-1111.
nsam
(ttMn
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•ipait. oppty. CIMaant AcHoi^
(212) 4i3-ttSt.
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IWAMTSD: Ftwonf ^rofioH
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^rlof. atloctt»o trooPnont CpS
CM Mi)
to
(It A it)
NOuaasiTTta
27. lov
t/1/n.
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MOVERS
atpii
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SIS
tij
ISC
Co.W
In
'^•«
(It A 2i)
SMM
> on iptf M
oontfilion
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Mntyl
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a. S?S'
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nn A lot
LIT US OlVf VOU A FACIAL
^ Ipr an kpMr or ao to lot «a
AUTO K
f* .M
■1 roloo
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-7872.
(It
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iSi-727i
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(•MM 7)
AUTO INSURANCE
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Too V
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M«f1rnl
Huun(}l>«p from S299 00
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i
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trav«l
travel
travel
r
• tuMOPt nf% I
■ As low M taat 00 rewi«« trip L.A. or O.f^
*t»LDwp<m.i>iio*»Mw<iHp»ioPiMiwwiinrJ
■ C^mmr lUglHi tfo«n faat Co— t * CNoa«ol
to iurop* atM •vsHsbl* L.A !• NAWAMf
|lilMrMt1iOaO(ll«MgTfM. •
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I CAL JCT CHAATWIt (4tt) Hf-MBt |
a 2190 OfMn 8l ton ^f«nci«co CA Mt23 Z
tiitoHfH
ftmriMMd
N.V.C. lift.
cai jBcfc (219) m-Tia.
canotr)
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ASUCLA Tmvvl S«rvic«
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CM 0/10^31
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AB 0/21-0/13
CM' 0/30-0/23
AS 7/00-0/30
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from.
8 Day
Sun Fling
IT-6PA)AS00
$299~
doubia occupancy
full pnca met tan
Round-trip Pan Am Jet Rainbow
Service including Hot Food witti
Complimantary Champagna
• 7 Ntghts-a Days HawaU'a Raaf
Hotel on Waikiki Baach
• Hertz Car rental 1 full day uor
limited milaaga (gaa extra) Valid
licenae required, minimum driver
a9a 21 yearo
' Catamaran Sail off Waiktki Baach
• Hertz Bonuo Diocount Coupona
• Full Color Hawaiian Memory
Album (1 par room)
• Plaaaant SunaatMai Tai CoolctNl
Party
• Hawaiian Welcome breakfaat in
Waikiki Baach Club
• Exotic South Saao Shall Let
• Excluoive Waikiki Baach Club
Featureo
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INCLUDING TAX A SERVICE
TUESDAY DEPARTURit
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By Marc
DB Sports WrNv
NonBBlty, 9 non-confei
don BOC inspire
UCLA tSBRi to gramt per-
Its record assintt
IS 1^-13.
tiK contC9t 19 imiBlJy uwd
to 9k9rpen the pitching for the
{ken<t cofifercnoe 9eries.
However, this afternoon*!
sgBMWt Cal State North*
k more than ju9t another
weekday fame. The Bruins will
probably be lookiac ^or a little
bit oi revenge when they take
the fieid at 2:30 pm
The laat time the two teams
Intramurals
Men — Thursday is the last
day to iign up for volleyball
doubles. The tournament will
run May 3-6 in Pauley Pavi-
hoB. If you are entered in the
uMe tennis IKTs, be at MG
200 at 6 pm Thursday.
Wail — ValleybGll doubles
si#n-ups will be taken now
through May 7. if you are
sifDod up to play lable tennis
intramurals. then come to MG
3iS at 6 pm Thursday, April
29, for the surt of play.
Coad * Those who are signed
up for the table tennis com-
petition should go to MG 200
tlH9 Thiniday ar 6 pm for the
start of play.
Rrst place batmen seek revenge versus Northridge
out
llle Matadoia 9queestf
a 12-11 victory ob iheir
Mtf. And miiini m
the proper way to describe it.
Northndge blew an 11-3 laad
BBd wm ahead by ju9t oae, 12-
11, when it came to bat ia the
bottom of the eighth iaaiag. It
•99med to BMat of the Bruins
that the MaMdBfs were takiag
ju9t a bit loBger than usurI to
step into the batter*s box.
The mason is that it was
getting dark and the North-
ridge facibty does tuA have
lights Thus, if the gaaae wm
called due to darkness, the
Matadors would have a vic-
tory.
When the Bruins came to
bat m the ninth, the North-
ridge pitcher did not go to the
mound until told to by the
umpire When he did, the
Bruins scored a rua to tie the
game
However, while Northridge
was batting, the umpire de-
it was too dark to con-
tuMK, aad Northndge had lU
UCSB once before ameting the
would aever coom the
a loas, and the first phuw
Bruins will probably try haid
to avenge the **lp98.'*
UCLA is now a full game in
front of use m the Cahfomia
Intercollegiate Baseball Ai-
aocuition and m good position
to win iu first league title since
The Bruins are 12-6 in
league play, while USC is now
10-6 after losing at UC Sanu
Barbara on Sunday. Sunford
(1-7) is in third place.
UCLA has six gaaaca re-
maining — five at home —
while USC has seven left -^
two at home The Brums win
host California in a three-game
series before facmg USC^ three
times, twice at SawteUe Field
use must travel to Stanford
for a three-game set and host
The Trojans alao have a tie
■99, Bflainst Cai. It has been
the conferenee race will end in
a tie
Following the game with
Northridge. the Bruins will
horn Cat Poly Pomona iM^t
time i9 7
I
I
NCAA voleybal pairings
It will be UCLA meeting Spr:ngfie!d and Pepperdine battling Ohk)
Slate in the NCAA volleyball semi-finaU oh Frni^ night at Sail Slate
University in Muncie. Indiana
UCLA qualified by winning the Southern California Inter-
collegiate Volleyball Association conference. Springfield advanced
by being victorious in the Eastern championships. Pepperdir>e won
the Western Regionals in Pauley Pavilion last weekend »r\d Ohio
State beat Ball State in four games last weeker>d to win the Midwest
volleyball title
Hot tip?
Gall 825-2638
^ It ^
>his win pot he com-
pleted; meamng it is unhkely
SU CMif one of schooTs htgostg
providBS fun, iBcreation and tripi
By Don Trlngali
DB Sports RafOfler
For several years, the UCLA Wpter flki Club has heen one of
the largest clubs on campus and has provided tun and
inexpensive outdoor recreation for many people
Currently, it ranks as the second largest U^RA cluh. and. with
interest m high as ever, its members have made plans for several
trips in the coming months.
The Ski Club gives people who Bfe interested in water skiing a
chance to get together and take off on trips which otherwise
might not be possible It relies heavily on participation and the
collective efforts of its members, as the boats, transportation an<f
other skiing facilities are all furnished by the individuah in the
club.
The ski trips, which are on weekends, holidays and during
quarter breaks, vary in length as well as locations Most of the
one-day trips are to CaaUic and Pyramid 1 akcs. while the longer
ones are held along various parts of the Colorado River.
Buena Vista, a lake area ncnr Bakersfield, is another favorite
site of the Bruin skiers and was the site of their ftnit weekend trip
of the yeas, held April 10-11
The Ski Club tries to hold a one or twa-day trip every other
weekend They also have plans to go to the Colorado River for
three days over the Memoruil Day weekend and for five days
after finals If interest is ilill high into the summer, more trips
may be plan^ied
Although the main purpose of the Ski Club. is to provide fun.
leisure skiing for its memheirs, there is hope that some
(Competition with other schools may materialize Some skiers
inve worked out on a slalom course at Castaic Lake, but i|s yet
no formal competition has been organized.
Ski Club meetings are held every other Wednesday, and
anyone who is mteretted is invited to attend.
— i^...y
■4
I
i
I
CLASSIFIED AD
housinflL
ffOOffll TOT rMit
blcyci— for —to
N1 A
MS Asai
NBASai
{-
^.^a'
'J^t^mm-Z
1
I
Bruin netters managrtie with USCat Oja
< By t
^ Dl SporH WrlM
D OJAl >- J4oft tennis ipec-
Utors a| the 77tli mmuuU Oiai
Tournament last weekend en-
pnemd UCLA*t undefeated and
number one ranked collegiate
i^Hld to clinch the Pacific 8
team championship (Thatcher
Cup) at the conclusion ai last
Saturday*! •eau-fiaal round.
Last 3^ear*t Brum team,
which went on to win the
j^ NCAA Championi^hip W by
•■ freshman tiar Billy Martin.
t; did just that. But this year^ not
■ only couldn*t the Bruins rr-
^ peat, but they only tied USC
(or the cup after all play was
CMnpicte.
If it weren't for several
superb clutch perlormaaots by
UCLA star Wmk Fleming, the
Bruins would not have tied
Coach George Toley*s youag,
eager and vastly-improved Tro>
jaas.
The 6-5 Fleming won the
Men*s Pacilic S aiagles crown
with s coww irom behind
triumph over USC sophomore
ace Bruce Manson, 3-6, 6-2, -
6-2. Fleming's victory gave the
Bruins a one-point lead in the
team race oyer USC (15-14).
Fleming advanced to the
championship match by de-
feating USCs Charles Strode
(7-5, 6-7. 6-1), Chris Lewis (6-
0. 6-4) and Stanford's Pat
DuPre in Saturda|^*s semi-
finals (6-1, 5-7. 6-4)
UCLA's lead was short-lived
as Hmmmn joined with team-
mate Chhs Lewis to convinc-
iagly win the doubles title over
Stanford's Gene Mayer and
Mark Mitchell, 6-1, 6-4
Although the Bruins cur-
rently hold the same unblem-
ished dual match record (17-Q)
at this stage as they did a year
ago, the 1976 Bruins are strug-
t
I
Wilces expected to sign letter
By Midiacl
DB Sports WrMtf
The Soulville Foundation will hold a press
conference at 1 pm today in West Los Angeles
where a is expected that ianr>es Wilkes, co-Los
Angsiu City Player of the Year, will sign a
national letter-of-ifitent to attend UCLA,
acoarding to Daily Bruin sources.
At least nine high school senior basketball
players are expected to attend the press oofi-
ferern^ in the Friendship Room of the Beverly
Hills Federal Savings building, %nd it is possible
that Wilkes, ^rom Dorsey High School, will not
be the only athlete to announce his intention
to play basketball in Westwood.
UCLA pniiBiMti
Darrell ANums, the 6-« All-CIF 3A center
from Lynwood High School, is also scheduled
to be at the conference, and UCLA is re-
portedly very high on his csNege preference
list. Another player expected to name his
college is co-CIF 4A Player of the Year, Johnny
Nash (Long Beach Poly).
Nash is expected to announce that he will
' either iong Baach State with teannnaie
Michael Wiley or say that he is going to
Arizona State. Several other local players will
be in attendance, but none of the others are
apparently on the UCLA recruiting list.
'1 cannot say what school James will an-
nounce he is going to, but I will say that UCLA
is very strongly in the running," said John
Haydel, Wilkes' high school ctoii|k._.—
Last week. Haydel and Wilkes were seen in
the UCLA athletic dapasmmM fining a letter-
of-intent form. If the Bruins can land the 6-7
Wilkes, who h considased one of the irnost
gifted players in the country, he will help fill
tf>e void that could be created should Richard
Washington and Marques Johnson go hard-
ship.
Lost WMmus
One player UCLA has already lost is 6-6
La Von Williams from [>enver, who last week
signed a national letter-of-intent to Kentucky.
Williams vj^ent to Bruin coach Larry Farmers
high school, and UCLA thought it had an
excellent chance to sign him, but he decided
to go East.
''We are sorry" we (•« UI%r, but I still
believe recruiting is going very well and we
should be able to sign four top pratpacts/'
said farmer.
The Bruin coaching staff hopes to have
recruiting completed by the end of next week,
and it would be a great plus for head coach
Gene Bartow if he could land Wilkes as his
first recruit of the year.
gling in toumamem competi-
tion
As a resott. Bniin tenth-yaar
coach Gleoa Bassctt. winner of
NCAA championships in 1970,
1971 and 1973. a concerned
with the NCAA*s a month
away in Corpus Chrisli, Texas.
**! have feh aU along that the
team this y<pir has the potential
to equal the wmoQtm oi ay
undefeated \,mam mi 1971
(Jimmy Connors, Jeff Boro-
wiak, Haroon Rahim, etc.) and
last year*s team." said Battett.
**ln a tourn^iment as big as
Qiai, with four days o( tough
competition, a player has to be
mentally ready taplay coMi»-
tently while concentrating as
much as paitiBia.
**ln dual matches, a player
competes in one match and the
week*s preparation is over But
in a tournament, a player must
be ready for Jttck-to-back .
matches for several days in
succession.
''We had numerous lafMS
and breakdowns this week-
end,** addad Bassrtt, ''aapecially
in the doubles.**
All three UCLA doubles
teams were eliminated on Fri-
"We can't afford to lose our
doubles teams early in the
NCAA's," BMMtt said.
The Brums were breezing
along on the and, windy O^ai
Civic Center (Libbey Park)
courts going into Friday*!
quarter-final rounds.
Four of UCLA's six sin#»
players advanced into the
quarters, as Fleming, Brian
Teacher and Ferdi Taygan re-
ceived byes in the first round
Tony Graham ws the only
Brum to lose in Thursday^
fini round, falhng to USC*s
Andy Lucchesi 7-5, 6-3.
UCLA sophomore Brum
Nichols had the b«t day oi afl
amo^g Uk Bruins, icfKafti^
Cilifafia's Bnan McCarthy,
6-1. 6-2 in liie first round
before pulluig the upsci a# tiK
day aad perhaps the tourna-
ment by upending Stanford's
sophomore Bill Maac, 7-^, 6-B.
Maze had upset UCLA's three-
time All-American Brian
Teacher in the UCLA dual
match win over Stanford, 5-4,
in Palo Alto a week earlier.
"When I get my game tetally
together, I can beat nearly
anyone playing in college.*'
said Nichols. **! have beaten
waML of the top college players
at one time or another in my
career, which gives me con-
fidence.'*
Nichols, who was a nation-
ally-ranked junior player since
his days in 12-and-under age
category, is greatly underrated,
according iQ^mmdk BmmfUL
**Lasi y«w« Brma mm on the
same team with more fMiMi-
cized players Billy Martin,
Brian Teacher, Ferdi Taygan,*
said Baneit. *'Bruoe has aMaays
been a top player. It doesn't
surprise me when he pulls off
big wins.**
Nichols' 1976 record it mmm
a fine 16-3.
Bat MaBSMi eliminated the
Bruin sof^homore in Friday's
quarter-finalr, 6-2. 6-4.
UCLA freshman John
Austin handled California's
Jtm Harper in the first round
(6-0, 4Hb. 6-5) before falling to
the Bruin giant killer, Maaaott
(6-3, 7-6). Mason went on to
lasPagell)
CAREER INFORMATION DAY
UCLA STUDENTS, FACULTY, AND STAFF
Come to meet informally with representatives of over 125 occupations. They
_ will be on campus to provide students with current, accurate career information.
-The occupational groupings are listed t>elow.
Actuary and Statistician
Advertising and Public Relations
Architecture and Urban Planning
Art Related
Banking and Merchandisir^g
Biology — Life Sciences — Research
Biostatistics — Health Planning
Computer Science and Math
Education and Library Careen
Engineering and The Physical Sciences
Film
Health Education. Allied Health. Nursing
Hoapital Administration — Envirorunent
Mariagement
Investments — Econnnic Forecasting
PANEL PRESENTATIONS
rOraign MBBNiffMM
WoNMfi — Your M|Ms hi Sis Job Market
Planning Concerns of
* Journalism — Publishing
^"law^^^Criminat Justice —
'TsTon GuTld~Ass6cTafr6ns
■[ Military
""•"Motion PfCRjfmr—
and Unions
• Nutrition — Dental Hygiene
• Occupational and Physical Therapy
Personnel — Training and Development —
Industrial Relations
• Pharmacy — Epidemiology
• Public Health — Medicine — Veterinary Medicine
^ Sales — Marketing
• Social Services and Mental Health
• Television — Radio
" Theater — JylMSic
• Travel — Hotel Management
1(kOOA.M.
12:MMna
GraiTd Ballroom, Ackerman Union April 30, 76; 10am-3pm
f
K
•
Carter
,c.
Pennsylvania to list of^vins.
Carter ^'Wo'ro going to
win, win on the first
ballot"
My Mike
DS Stidf Wriiir
Georgia Go^
Carter Imm firmly
tke front-runaer iMMSg Dnnocrmtic
pitnimtiAl candiilBlH by iconng a
convinciiif iteary in the Pennflytvaina
DHMcratic prioiftry yeftcrdav
Witli 72 per cent of the 9.638 pre-
cincu counted. Carter M wilh 35 per
cent of the popular vote Senator
Henry (SoaM) Jackson was running
Mcood wkk 26 per cent, followed hy
RepresenUtive Morris Udall with 20
per cent and Governor Georpe Wallaoe
with 11 per cent.
There was no Republican prunary.
as former CaHforma Governor Ronald
Reagan declined to challmjc Preaidettt
Gerald Foid.
Tkt Pennsylvania
race
II drvi
prdei
a delegate selection The
vole has «o hMfiaa <^ ^
of deiafaiM to the 0«aa-
niion Howcw, it gfvM dli
a great deal of publicity and
sway
With 33 per cent of
counted in the delennic selection.
Carter M with 53 wligitu, Penn-
sylvania Governor Milton Shapp had
23. fbllowoi by 19 for Jackson, l€ Jar
Udall and I for WaUace. 42
were uncommitted.
Prior to the ckction, campaaan
of both Jackiaa and Udall were
pared to concadi victory to Carter in
Peaasylvania Each hoped to finish 1^
fell
could
enough vam to give Jackson a
In winning his seventh prwmry
of the first nine, Canv ande a
sylvaaia. He traiM aaly in Phila-
delphia,
ihwnrr was ttrt
Carter said hs had wiped out
poaaibk ohMack" to his nominatioa bjf
winning the preference vole He loM
supporters in Philadelphia, **We*re
fMP| to win. win on the firM ballot:**
County Supervisor Ed Edelman.
Cahf omia co-chaingnaa of Itos Carter
eaflipaign, said, ''We^re mtom eintod
that Carter has shown he can win in a
large industrial state.** He added,.
Ucla
XCVNI.
It
Bruin
miiwiHiy Of
Aprtiat. ItTt
Hayden plank: "daredevil creative realism
ff
Sy Cadiy O
DS Staff Wriiv
Tom Hayden, candidate for
California Dewocratic Senate
Representative, laid at no9n,
yesterday, before a crowd of
over \Sm, '•We ilt fighting
apathy and hoplessness more
than Tunney "
.John Tunney. is Hayden's
Senatorial opponent
Hayden expressed his view
that new cntena for leadership
should he Kt up to establish a
*'daipdevil and creative realism
in the Senaie and all levels of
government" st Janss steps,
accompanied by his wife. Jane
Fonda
Fighting for right causes,
when It is not politically fash-
ioiinMr to do so. and nsking
life and reputation for them.
Hayden believes should be a
stipulation fo^ our nation*s
**Hayden is a man. a broth-
er, who was with us not only
in the Inat weeks, months or
when it was the politically
jught ihing to do, but also
during difTicuh tiaKs of strug-
gle when it was not considertHi
pohtically right.** said JessMca
Govera. speaking for the tlnit-
ec^ Farm .Workers
Govera read a statement by,
Cesar Chavez. President oi
the . United Farm worker's
umoff
The statement said the
IJmon gave Hayden full sup-
port-^The disillusionment with
public officials is rampant
People want and need chanpe.**
the itatentrni said
Wonan^s afwdify
Hayden affirmed ^ts fight
for women's equality, adequate
employment and guaranteed
hcnith cate for the poor and
senior citizens of the nation
Timney puts the **health cure
of oil companies rrcfcrr the
heahh core of the American
people.** Havden said
Hayden cited some oi Tun-
ney's corporate contributors
including Gallo. the late How-
ard Hughes, Gulf. Standard
Oil and Atlamic Richfiald. He
cited the fict that these coo-
per
§
n
Focus on undecldetl vote
Hayderi^eeks recognition
a% ^iiahillr Dwval and Mitie
OB Staff ^rittf%
V. iiing issues on v^hich he diders y/^nu
oppi>ncnt .lohn I unnc\ Dcmocraiic Senate
candidate Tom Haxdcn aimed his campaign
at I he undecided mmct in a talk v^ith a small
group (i1 campnipn v^itrkcrn. iiicuh> members
and news rept^rters vesie* ^
C^iginalK planned to be a laculi^ meeting
with the candid 'ollowing his speech at
Janss steps the hour s4Mm turned mio a
"discussion prcvN conterencr" as Havden
termed it vkhcn it Was discovered that onl\
fhret;^ 4ae«ilH menther^ wete m aiiendancr
( oming joM two da\» of camfWMfning in
\orih a where he said he
ttd^sesH^ It Humhiihit and
ChK ri *mtdi ~tl|r reason I did
this (L~ume t«» I ( I A) is to pel vtMunieers
An\ thing vihich maximizes our siren|Uh tn
I \ IS pood"
With ^3 to 40 days icmauiing until the
ir«>n.da\ 11. IN den sirevied "t^ur enetyii 9%
locued. EifiN n $om$ lor hr<ike
V^ irxing to < the umlecMM
\« on • >siies uhich scparat t|
lunnc\*s supp cuide pttll^ ts
58 jaer dm necoidina to
CoMomia
of thone arc verv S4»lt. and will v<ote lor him
because he is the incumbent and because
lhc\'%e heard his name.** Ruf said.
Jane 1 onda Hayden's wde chj
hrr role in the campaign as that of **fttnd*
r and organt/er.*" saving she does
ever> thing a lund-ratser dooa "travels
s puhlicK and foes l« anietings **
i4>th 1 onda and Rut agreed that loi
Ha\den **lhc haste problem is not s radical
image bu* that pcojjllr 4lon*t knovv %vho he
IS
Rifl e\plaiiieU^ 4«4f 4i^N*v now on Mavdt-n s
tele\ist«in ciNMBfrcmls will increase and all
the campaign's mone\ will be directed
towards the media.
When a%ked ah<Hit radicalism on cumpus
Ha>dcr -nmcnted " I he radicals all
hneiMn: lacultv memh adding that he
thought ** I he sophist »a ul the knowledft
(H issues ts higher U hen f urnf to college in
the 1 vports vias the onK thiag
im; ti mmi sex "
Wiuk- i' s9m$ her athliatuNi with the
cantpotgn 1 (twdtt soid **thr hie oC a nunie
star Kb emptx Ntrmf. a vacuum and is out of
touch wiihi fonbt Rut commented that
fonda had a lot ot mM nod tint slie ha^
()i^.tni/.it lon.il
Of
H9 Is
tnbutions constituted 15
cent of Tunney's c
funds.
*"! need motiey that won't tie
my hands.** said Hayden. "This
is money from you, and not
from spaeini interests **
A contribution was received
by Hayden from Groucho
Marjt. asid he snd he is watt-
11^ for the accusatioas that tte^
received contributions from
this makes me a Grouch
Marxitft.**
Hayden believes that if we
keep travehng in the route we
are *the majority of the people
will suffer.** He snid this will
include the working and nad-
die class and shot the **es-
tahiahment program tells lis to
settle km less.*
The count rv has a misdirec-
tion of priorities. Hayden snid.
He quertMHd what §o¥em-
also why the military budfet is
iiljIJlOT iMf ^ a ihaii
during a war.
"^e don't need the abihty to
blow iifi Rniiia 36 times over.
This kind of — rtgar overkill js
unnecesaary.** said Hayden
areas should not he for **mind-
less development for profit
only.** snid Hayden.
Hayden*i attitude toward
education is that we need to
"expand education and nnke it
more relevant for the future.**
Hayden sees the issue of
nuclear energy as needing fur-
ther examinnticm with regaid
^to dangers and alternatives.^
**What if we cottM create a
capital of lainr mtMfl^ Hoy-
den said "We t|ien wmM have
io»ething happy to talk
about.**
Edge af dacny
Society today is on the odps
of decay, he said, adding, the
United States is an empire
whcMe ambitions hove run to
their limits Hayden dooga^t
feel we sMvM nscept what he
calls the hiatonc. faul end of
empires like ours. He doesn't
feel the coumry should
another Rome.
Hayden feels
do this only to a
said.
he
iiirn
In ridding ns of this ^
The IJMtod Stgtes shonid
not Midtdgr in nttnaocs and
MM^nn svtth djittofihipi the
wofM over, said Hnyoen.
oi QK nation
of the wMcs Hoy-
den died n( where the t|«e
>ij
•r
1
f
K
tf
1
1
i
•I
ti
A vital ethnic group
The first Jews of L.A.
V
By
Dl Smm Hritcr
Jews W9rt the **most impur
tant ethnic group** in Lok
AofrtH between 1840 and
I MO, the taiac time that LA
was the **rouflMft ctty in the
U.S.," Dr. Max Vorspan, or
the Univer»iiy of Judaism. sMid
receolly to a group of 25 stu-
dents. I
Outhning a 40 year history
of Jews in LA, Vorspan cited
documents nami>ig a tailor.
Frankfurter, as the first Jew in
Southern Ci^hfornia. Frank-
furter came to LA in 1842 with
a settling party He nuy not
have heen first, however A
friend of Vorspan-s said his
great uncle spend the night in
ja*!! here in 1835
When California was a4«
mitted to the Union 15 years
later. LA had a population of
1600. eight of which were
Jews, according to Vorspan.
These six German and two
Polish Jews were young, single
merchants, who lived in the
same neighborhood in the back
of their stores. Although they
didn't expect to remain iw LA
becauic of its wildness, y/or-
t^n laid, economic opportuni-
ties attracted the German-Jew-
ish imoMMMits
As tht Jewish community
grew it prepared to settle.
Jewish women were imported
from San Francisco or Ger-
many for marriage. As children
were born,« '*there was extreme
inicr-marriafc between fattiiiic*.
Everyone was a second or
third cousin," said Vonptn.
Families inter-mamed to main^
IM the bm MOftl level and
their faith.
During the community's
development between 1850 and
1800, Jrwf prospered and be-
came "respected, civic-mindcd''
I (tint i M P^se 4)
SLC Candidates
meet opponents
We are a group of men Interested in forming a
Men's Consciousness Raising Group. We
would like to get together with other men who
¥
are interested in beginning a group engaged in
exploring our male role. ^
We will meet May 6 at 1:30 pm at 190 Kfhsey.
',..., /v ., ■ ■ .....
We are working with the cooperation of the
U.C LA. Women's Resource eenter. Call Ihe
Women's Center if you have questions at
825-3945:
The 33 OMiikUtef for the 14 Student Legislative Council
positions had their first look at their opponents Monday at
the mandatory candidates* orientation meeting.
During the one-hour meeting, vanous election procedures
including platforms were discussed by Election Board
Chairman Jay Cole.
Students planning to caapi||B ■■■§ itmtm asch m
University- As UCLA integration were urged to study thoae
imai hy AS UCLA Executive Director Don Fiadley
Following this, ^he lotteries determining position on the
ballot and or^ of aelection of Bruin Walk ipoCi for m^m
were held. 'i
The oiadidate turnout this year is low compared to the
61 caaiUmtes last year. Last year there were no unopposed
but this year there are Uiree.
" — r«tty
Thief calls KLA
An Anonymous caller to KLA Radio has provided a ^^
developi^Jfcnt in the theft ot nine of UCLA*s 10 NCAA bttsket-
hall championship banners over Easier laeekeiid.
The caller has made three telephone caDs leaving clues as to
the whereabouts of the banners.
The only previous communiGMibn from groups cUimihg to
hav^ Hoka the banners was a letter received by the Daiiy Bruin
over la week ago The caller has not acknowledged that he sem
the letter.
The caller has said he would return one of the championship
banners, provided that KLA and the Daily Bruin specify which
one After the return of this banner, further clues aie to be
provided as to the whemtouu of the other eight.
Investigators have n6 furtherleads on either the identity of the
caller or the location of the banners.
.*-;-t
UCLA TAY SACHS DISEASE SCREENING
Men., Wed., and Thurs.; April 26, 29 and 29;
Ackerman Union Men's Lounge
Tues., April 27, Medical Center Student Lounge
Testing hours each day are from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
A simple 5 minute blood test can detect carriers and help save livesrTestingls
free. The Tay Sachs Prog ram_js_a, prototype f^ the prevention of genetic
, t disease. Help yourself and help others — get tested!
1.
2.
3.
4.
BSA
GENERAL ELECTIONS
Today & Tomorrow
Polling Places Tnclbde
BSA Office 320 Kerckhoff Hall 9-5
Each dorm outside cafeteria 5:30-7:30
Bruin Walk 10-2
Afro-American Study Center 3rd floor Campbe
Sponsored by the Student Legislative Council
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Volunw XcVmi. H\ifx>^m ia
AprtI as. 1976
dar*if Wm
mninmtton pmno^ bf Wm A8UCLA
ComttamicMttofm
mmm^^ ^^^a^^^^« <■■■ ^^
ASUCLA Commun»eatton§
Supervises campaigning "^
EB conducts
4tr^
Wy Patty Croat
DM Staff Writer
A campaign worker for in
undergraduate presidcntuil caa-
didate bare aifead aaotlttr mm-
dent if he will support her
candidate. He replied. ^Vm a
Jimmy Carter supporter .•
By May 6, tllc fu^t day of
UiMlcfgraduate and graduate
dactioRft. students will see a lot
of soiilmg. iMMid-shaking and
promiie-making in action, six
months prior to the natioofl
dKtions
But unlike national elcctioas'
where there is minimal supcr-
nrnm over campaign practices,
five students aae iH^oosibk
for supervising campus elec-
tions.
Five Mflicrs
The function of the Election
•aard (EB) is to be responsible
fir •'everything m terms of elec-
tions,** according to Jay CoUe,
this year's EB cteimMn '*lt*s
an incredible amount of work
for five workers," he said^
«Ming that too many students
Working on elections may be a
hindmnce.
The EB sets up and super-
viaes venfication of candidacy
petitions, advertising, actual
ballotiilg proccdufaa,
counts and hearings coaoermng
complaints, aocordii^ to tlK
Elections Code of the Undar^
gnduate Students Assocution
(USA)
lines are availaMr ui the Can»-
pus Programs and Acuvities
Office
Strict interpretation of the
code depends on the EB chair-
man, according to Randy Oka-
m^ira, the 1975 EB chairman
**We tried to take a casual,
flexible approach. We foond
we were forced to become
more stnct and ngid. As we
did that. It (the 1975 election)
(Continiiad o« Pagt 4)
The EB Execute Committee
their interpreution of the
code to decide whether vio-
lations of the code and the
activities guidelines have oc-
curred. Copies of the Guide-
Revisions continue
in Elections Code
ly Patty Croat
DB Stoir Writer
In antidpoiioa of the problems that annually plague student
body elections, the Elections Code for the Undergraduate
Students Assocuition (USA) continually has to be reviewed and
reviled in preparaUon for the yearly May elections.
Members of poet election boards say questionable tactics have
been tried by candidates haping to gain an edge in their cam-
paigns for Student Legislative Council (SLC) These, they say.
■MVOMiislLd changes in the Elections Code.
One )«nr a candidate petitioned to run for five offices He was
disqualified from only the First Vice-presidency, an office then
reserved for women. H« won two offices anyway, leading to a
(Continued on Page 4)
Turnout of 400-500 expected
BSA elections to begin
By MIcheMe Duval
OB Staff Writer
The Black Student Alliance (BSA) will he
holding their annual elections today and
tomorrow at various locations about the
campus. . .
Voting will be conducted at the African
American Studies Center and the BSA office
(Kerckhoff 325) from 8 umit 5. Bruin Walk
from 10 until 2 and at the dorms in -the
evenings. 5 to 7.
Two candidates are competing for the top
office of chairpersons.
The BSA is antiapating a good election
turnout of 400 to 600 people according to
McKmney. which is about 50 per cent of the
Block student population on campus The BSA
also feels the same numbers will turn out to the
SLC elections.
The two candidates for chairperson are
Roderick (Rocky) Mitchell aad Rochelle
Leaper. both junior Political Science majors.
Mitchell has been active in the Black state-
wide coordinating committee and the Constitu-
tional review committee of the BSA He
advocates **ao open admission policy ai UCLA.
a re-incerporation ol the BSA with the Afro
Sljidies Center, an estahlishmem of concrete
legal services for Black students and a RSA
pamcipahon in the international Black revolu-
tion, independent ol the UC system **
Lcaaper. who has been involved in "Bridging:
the Gap" and the Black HiMorx Week Com-
mittee, a^ well as being responsible lor the HSA's
pyblicitv This year. tecK the BSA i9^ hasicalh ii
pohikal organization and should he concerned
with the iradrwie survival ol Black students t>n
campus. She leeK that a key problem is
declining Black enrollment and thai the HSA
should be geared toward combating that h\
confront mg the lintversitx
In addition. Leaper wants the BSA to deal
with the actions o( racist professors on the
campus, to relate to communitv serMccs and
deal with other progrcssi\e organizations She
also advocates a constitutional voting change
and the implementation of dues lor activities
Candidates Um otiier ollice% include Bernard
Johnson and Reginald Jackscm lor Vice-l hair-
person. Michclc Rodgcrs tor Sccretarv. I v turtle
Cameroon tor Programs Ca-ordinalor and
Ohthia Moldorow running against Severn
lor Ptthhciiv co-urdinaior
Anthropologist to speak
loan M: Lcms, profesMir of anthiiBel^gt at the London
School of Ecae amies and Pohtical Sckmot. spanks on **The
Myth of Socuir Anthropology*^ at 3:30 Thnrsday. Apnl 2f .
1976 m Rotfe 1200 The talk is the Hitchcock FoBBdation
Lectttie for 1976 There is no admiiiion charge and the
public is invited.
I
I
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VfMCI. TACK A»OUT im AfCCMT AM1»K
AMD Its PLACC 20*M <CNrUAVAAT.
PAtSCMIATfOM WILL M M.LU5TAATCP
PY JCLCCriOMS FAOM HIS OWN WCMVK
f I A.M.-«I AM. M THC ViM>MCNS COUM6ff
tKtvmnOf COMTCfVOA AAYWKWtf n AATI5T5
NOON ART IN DCflAMCC . A 4LIPC
PACSCMTATIDW or WKWiSn ART
CRCATCO PUAIMC mC nOLOCAUSTAMD
MKUS5ION or mc fs«.rrANT Jtuifh
ARTVr Wmi KRm FRUSAM a'.u isn
a-»AM. aCWl»H /AAMC ANO tn£ 0CmOMe55
LILITH 5LIDC PRC5CN1ATIOM WrfH
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frS KtK ART FltmS M TMC y0>fOfMNS LOUNftf
W>RTRAITOf TWC ARTKT ASA ^<W
rvi«o SHORT nlms om thc cm or /saac
CMA6ALL AND THE
6^1 MM. CLASSICAL y«^RIATION5 ON A TNCMC
nArURINi>:5HtRAT HAIAM CM0RU»
JTRINCr QUARTCT
•MA •AT-VAACOV. CLA>5CAL
PIAMtfr
IVMV V
<iRRM»aAti Roai*<
CI
OOA
TWO HUNDRED YEARS OF
THE TWO-PARTY SYSTEM
HOW DID IT EVOLVE AND WHERE ARE WE?
FOURTH in the UCLA BICENTENNIAL LECTURE SERIES
ROBERT KELLEY
o< I imory UfM^eraHy of CslMerma Sauls OeiOaw. Specialmng m American ini#tioctua< ano poiittci r»iof y Prgissgor KaHey is
of Tlia thiiplng el Oia Aineiloaii Past Tilt SeMiiOs ef Coaarevafef-CHMlal Aig^
> olilnwitaan Hleiary wiit» co-aut»iof Letantf tsiOw»w •odQeieveLttfaai.TNeHvOieyeeMMntCeniRafefeflaCiMeMOe'ai
and srtictM
«V£ON€SDAYS 8PM OoOc -idn t«7
5-
WINTH«K)P J9IIOAM Pi'B»iMili Of H«lory UC gerHKey RACf AGE
AND 9EX - MEVERBEAATIONS Of THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28 tPM
\ \
Mav 12 IdAf^y OETH NOflTON AaSOCIl PiOlseSP* Ot
Jni^ersifv THE RCVOi )N AS A WAR Of HBCRATtON FOR WOMEN
I
1
i
I
\
-1 ■
DOOD HALL 147
•^mm»
mmmmmmr^m
m^^
^■"■■^i^
-U
;
DATSUN
"Acres of Datsuns**
Student, faculty, and; alumni
flMt discounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
• 684-11^ *
Elections
•If
revisions
dHMife in the election co^
didntci t»^ running fof one
tivate
Another ycnr, • wnte-in candidnic reoeivid
vol« thsB as atbml cnndiinte in te
nHMir. The Jodicinl Wmtd (i9) teided thnt
write-in candidates mutt conform to the
election caia.
One ymr, kitcri to the editor wear aaad to
aasaoimce the candidnfy of two piaiidciituil
i
f
475-2525
11705 National Blvd. Loa Angeles
Prime Rib $4.95 from 5 to 7
Appearing in the Cocktail Lounfe
Dave Arlen Fri A Sat. Nights
A busy year for Election Board (EB) and JB
was I96i. Charges of violations includiag
failure to submit budfet reportt, iHegal caai-
pa^ fiactices and failure to be regieiered aa
a student were brought against 16 candidates.
Last year, a major controversy centered
to
tile Engia..
aviflg Graduau Studcnb Aaaodatioa (EGSA)
to imfOe off a calmiator to
who voted, while endonaii
at the same tinne. The GSA EB diridtj t^
matter could uniiairly inliaanee the electMnt
Kag er ha«
The Interfrateniity Council had to drop tl^
idea of giving a ]keg of hear to the fraternity
bnagu^ ia the owiat votes for tkt aame reason.
Anpefdiag to ftandy Okaaum, 1973 Election
Bbard Chairman, the isaue of ginuBscks was a
touchy, volatile suhfoct. ''Should .a groiM teve
the right to get their ipeaibeii to vote? Should
you be able to buy votei? Theie were no
(CemhnadoaPagtf)
Elections board . . .
(Continued from Page 3)
became eaaier to run . . I
don*t personally like the strict
approach/ Okamura said.
Strict hut fair
When asked how strict the
Election Board will be in inter-
preting the code this year. Cole
said, "We almost have to be.
We will try to be stnct and
fair. Anyone who claiins we*re
not fair will be wrong.**
While Cole leels the respon-
sibility of knowing the rules
lies with the candidates only,
Okamura believes '*it's also
the EB chairman*s resoasibility
to make sure that information
is readily available (to the
candidates). Lots of times con-
fusion arises because of lack
of communication, misinfor-
mation and. rumors that go
around "
According to the Elections
Code, complaints of violations
are first heard by the EB ex-
ecutive committee. Its decisions
The following ^ople have
turned in petitions and are can-
didates for GSA office
V ■ ' * , . . ■ ■ ■
President: Pauleen Brackeen
1st Vice President: Bill Cormier
2nd Vice President: Ken Paslaqua
Vote
May 5th & 6th
Vv '■—
Former Congressman
ALLARD K. LOWENSTEIN
(#7 on Nixon's Enemies List)
Will Speak
TODAY, NOON, 12 O'CLOCK
GRAND BALLROOM
"Abuses of Power"
(FBI, CIA, RFK, JFK. IRS)
Spofisared by ASSP/ASIS/LSSP/SLC
■My he appMlHl to Judicial
Board (JB), who may in turn
have their dccisiom overturned
by the Student Legislative
Council (SLC).
When the JB receives a wnt
for an appeal of an EB de-
ciaion (due within two days of
that decision), it decides to
hear the cnae *^ we have juris-
diction,** according to Judicial
Board (JB) chairman, Paul
Hannabnch.
When a vioktion of both the
Election Code and the Uni-
verstty Rules and Regulations
is alleged, the caae is heard by
the Student Conduct Com-
mittee. ^
In the past, penalties for
Election Code violations have
included wmmings, a ban o^
campaigning and outright di»^
qualification.
"You always hope that elec-
tions would be free of im^
proprieties. If questions ariae,
then EB and JB would have to
rule on the merits of each
caae,** Hannabach
-LafiB i|6lnfS • ■
cititzens, according to Vorspan.
They participated in local
government, ettablished a
library, the first Chamber of
Commerce, the Los Angeles
Athletic Club and other social
clubs In addition, the first
Jewish cemetery wa$ built in
1,8$^. To sponsor its OifMza-
tion, the first non-profit group
in LA was surted, the Hebrew
Benevolent Society.
Foirii raMi
This was followed by the
establishment by Poliih Jews^
of the first congrtgatton, Ton-
gregation Bctn £1. in 1862. It
"disappeared six months later
when Germans engaged a
Polish rabbi and began Con-
gregation B*nai Brith. now
Wilshire Boulevard Temple.
With representatives of both
countries present, the two
groups were both **madr to feel
at home** and only ooe congre-
gation was needed, said vor-
span.
As a result of an effort by
the women in the community,
the first Jewish building, a
sjrangofue. was built in 1873.
The women raised a large
portion of the ftraos using •nc
traditional methods of any
sisterhood." Vorspan said.
Society shifted in the IWTs
as more mid-Wcueraers came
\o Southern CatifgfWB. Life
chaiiiad from i tomfh
Mxriety cM the West to a
vincial mid-Wcstern society,
said Vorspan t
ScKial dtacnmUatfon. which
was the •'symbol of a wave m
the I'niied States.** became
critical Ai this point Jew* lost
their nett%e folr m tlK
miiniu Votfif&m
Varied erranda aplenty
Galizio: man on the run
By Mark Hohoda
DB Stair Kipaftir
It was hMe in the afternoon, but external
affairs coordinator Michael Galuio examined
the problem for only a moaient haiaM ipoitii^
iu crucial difficulty It had bcefi a day for
solving absorbing problems, and this was just
one more. A quick adjustment and a metallic
click, and the UC Student Lobby had a
functioning stapler again. ** Wrong size suplea,**
remarked Galizio as he rambled back down the
hall to his office.
Although the 20-year-oid junior prahahly
not notice, amat of hts work is pretty
tedious stuff. Officially he is the studem body
president's executive assistant on external
affairs, reporting to President Lindsay Conner
In theory, this meaas he works to represent
student interests at governmental levels In
practfce, it means he spends a lot of tinm
runmng minor errands and being interrupted
by people.
c> Samll hear
Galizio takes trivial matters in stride —
short, quick strides, as he charges up and down
corridors hke a* small t>ear "Actually. I like
running around outside the office. I welcome
it,** Galizio says. *'Just sitting around writing
gets to be kind of a drag. So iamaad I do all
these fun thinp.**
The next fun thing on the agenda ^h a visit
to student government accounting, where he
dropped off a requisition. After that, a trip
down to the loading dodu where he picked up
a coil of stamps. This kind of amusement goes
ofi ail day for Galizio
iaterryptioaa
Between errands, wording days progress by
means of interruptions. A worker in oae of the
student lobbies blew into the office with a
problem. **No more requisitions." he said.
It mm dBt^Mod that fundg ghoiM
bB trBiiBiBfTBd Bcr9BS tlio lino llOfllg
to raplBfllBll lllB glippllOg BC*
cotmt . . .'^••aon lor rtquoat?^ Qb-
lizio fBBd thB tfBnglBr lorm with
ptizzlBiiiBnt. **Wb havB rtm out ol
" hm wrolB.
*'You*ll have to sign us one.** Galizio looked up
from his desk. **A requisition, for requisitions.**
**Right.** said the visitor 'Right.*' echoed
What begins as an imerruptiian can turn into
lan errand. The phone raag Mid Galizio «^-
swered. ""Internal-cxtemal afiairi oh. hi
Ruth, am I overdrawn'' ThaVs what I thought.**
Downstairs to accounting agaia.
JeNy beaas
This time extra diplomacy was called for **l
come bearing jelly beans.** said Gali/io He held
forth an apothecary jar of candy wjhich he had
brought down from his office Ruth accepted
and began munching jelly beans. ''You have 14
cents "left.** she told him.
It was decided that funds should be traaa^
ferred across line items to replenish the supplies
accoum. so Galizio scritHiled in the blaaka pa a
transfer form ^'Reason for requeatT* he read m
puzzlement **Wc have run out of money.** he
wrote, after a pause.
If Galizio*s work day seems a bit disjointed.
it*s parity because, aside from a few formal
obligations, his role is poorly defined "No.
there's no clear delineation of responsibilities
on the (president's) staff.** he says. "There never
has beca. It chaugn from year to year.
year. I think the stall was more limited
ia wlmt they could do. Alan Katz (last year's
external affairs coordinator) and Ron Sufnn
(internal affairs) arc very talented people, but
Katz was on UPC (Untventty Policies Commiv
uoni and Sufrin was fchatr of BOC ( Board of
Control) so they obviously had a lot less time
for external and internal affairs Bui then (laal
•ao«it ao hours
lo
a. H« shrugs off th« tlmo
It aat
year's president Larry) Miles had 4 different
idea of their roles. **
Among Gali/io\ responsibilities this year are
the three student lobbies, which try to influence
the progress of pending legislation affecting
students
The National Student Lobby monitors Con-
gressional activity in Washington, fhe UC
Student Lobby watches Sacramento and the
newly-formed UCLA Metro Lobby works at
the city and county level.
GalizK) supervises the operation of all three
on this campus He reviews their budgets, signs
their requisitions to make sure they get supplies
and exchanges information on current bills
with them. And. of course, he fixes iheir
staplers
In addition. Galizio ts unofftaal **chtel oi
staff* in the president's office. He says he came
into this position when Dee Dee Musial
resigned as imernal affairs coordinator last UK
Melissa Moss was named to fill the vacafic>
but Galizio. having been around longer
anumed a position oi leadership m the office
Now he informally oversees Moss* activities, as
well as those o( Ivan Kallick. co-director ot the
Associated Students Information Service
(AStS)
Special advisor
Gali/io pcrlorass oae more, unofficial tunc
tion in the office acting as the presidcntv
special advisor on certain sensitive matters I hc
president sometimes consults Gali/io lir\i on
forthcoming moves
^"l-veoMn
lor Mm LA
If (nifinfnB^
BoBfd ol EdtiCBilBn) lor
ol
Lindsay Conner walked tMo the office late iit
the afternoon T here was a banquet that night
for some ol the SI C volunteerx and dcctsionv
to be made.
Tm wondering d I should wear a coat and
tie.** he announced "I mean I don't want to
look too formal. What arc you wearing
**Oh. rm >Uftt going like this.** Galizio unrc
jeans wmd a sw^iier Conner frowned.
Options began to emerge. "Yon coHid wear
the shirt with the jacliet oser that.** counsckrd
Galvio. **Yoy caa take the jaehet off later ii
you want**
"And just wear ^>^ 'fe****
UNIVERSITY BMSCdP AL
COMMUNfTY
Suwaayi 4
u a p.m.
mMM
The Chapal. Sb HUgard (at W
Chaplain Terry lynbcrg. 47S-'tg|g
I
I
I
I
LiM being involved with people?
Need a |ob7 20 hours a week?
Eligible for work/study? ..
Bo a progrann aide for tho axciting Alumm Scholarahip
Offioo. Job opan now and may bo oatendod throuigh
tho aunrmior.
Mininnal typing akilla roquirad Soma phono, tomg Ma.
gOMa fMOftrch. much aatisfaction.
Call Barbara Kahn 625-3901
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Experimental College Class Changes
11-
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for infomMition on th— ^ mny ot our p*t»#r
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Spooaor^ by SLC SEPC R I P R A G
T--
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T-t
1
t
3
dciy bruin
poinf
1
Gathering Dust
4»-
0
By Milyn VHIarMl
(Editor's note: VilUrtal is a studem here and an /nfer^ /or fhe'uC
Student Lobby.)
^Lmmmmbm the 1960's? Remember how the word ''^plfhy" wai
non-extstient in the. college students' vocabulary? Remember ho«^
our counterparts then were not oniy protesting the w^r but aho
questioning the relevarKe of our education?
Well, the administration has not made much headway in adapting
the college curriculum to our iwgA as students, but there have
r
I
OPINION
been some attempts at giving us a chance to let them l(now*wh«t we
waru. So what have we done on our part? Apparently, nothing
much lately, since I noticed a stack of applications for the
Systemwide Committees Advisory to the President (Saxon, not
LMhi|f) gathering dust in Kerckhoff Hall, i mean, here we crying
wolf about not having a voice in issues concerning our education,
yet we all seem to busy to do anything about it.
Don't we hear a lot of talk among ourselves complaining about
how the departments always cater to graduate students, and the
Ufi^r graduates get the shaft? Then why don't some of us stop
talking and apply to be on the Advisory Committee on lnstructiof>al
Improvement The student representatives can help coordinate and
give advice concernmg the University's general efforts toward the
improvement of instruction.
Don't we often grumble about how screwed the Financial Aids
system is around here? Well, stop the aimless grumblings! Grumble
on the Task Force on Financial Aids Administration because it is this
group that reviews existing organization, policy systems, and
_prc>fedures governing all aspects of financial aid.
And if there ire those in the UCLA community who know nriore
than others about academia, why not let your ideas be explored on
the Academic Planning and Program Review Board. Concern
yoMfself with reviewing programs such as campus academic plarts,
plans of medical and law schools, ind libraries.
These are only three of the system-wide committees that newd
input from both graduate and undergraduate students. The others
are: 1) The Administrative Advisory Committee on Inclusion Areas,
2) Advisory Committee for Learning Resources, 3) Affirmative Action
Advisory Committee, system- wide', and 4) Intercampus Athletic
Advisory Board. Serving on these committees is a chance to do
temething worthwhile Don't let it slip away because of apathy.
These are onre-in-a-lifetime opportunities for us to move rhountains
in the University of Cafifornia. Perhaps in admission that thie student
input is irr>portant. University Hall m Berkeley is clamoring for our
participation It is an exciting and radical process. Ours is probably
one of the few universities in the country that gives students a
formal voice in Presidential-related issues
in the end. the readers might ask who I am to say anything about
the system-wide committees. I arn merely a concerr>ed Bruin who
applied to be on one of these committees last year I did not receive
any appointment and it pains me now that this year the rest of the
UCLA population is fust letting tho^ applications gather dust. Pick
them up at Kerrkhoff >06 and apply* The deadline is April 30th
If s My
to aitjcs of
C«i
Letters to the Editor
Dr.Epps
Editor:
Last quarter we knew we
would like Dr Tpps the first day
of our Astronomy 3 class. But,
alas, all professors want lo gtve a
good impression at first. But tfie
UCLA astror^omy department's
Dr. HdrUnd W. Epps is different
— there was not a lecture we
mtssed because of this brilliant
and dedicated teacher. We did
not want to miss his lectures.
Right up to the end of the final
exam he kept us smiling. All we
could say was "1 cannot believe
him. What a nice guy Not only
is Dr Epps an inteiiect. but his
cheerful personality brightened
up our day.
Many praicMorf s^^'Come to
my office hours," anid When you
finally get th«rc, the door is
locked and no one is in sight!
Not Dr. Epps! The first day he
distribute four different tele-
phone numbers for where he
could be reached. He sincerely
urged us to call, but he warr>ed
us that if ¥1^ call be^een mid-
night and 6 arp to phtAe give
him a few minutes to get to the
phone! He urged us to come to
his office even if we had no
questions. "Drop by to say hello
or to tell me where to go!" Dr.
Epps would say with a smile.
Anyone was welcomed to Dr.
Epps' many office hours. On the
white card outside his office
he lifts a few hours, plus by
appointment, and "anytime you
could find him!" When entering
his ofice that bunerfly feeling
that we all get in our stomachs
when seeirfg processors r>ever
comes. Dr Epps drops what he
IS doing ind receives you warm-
ly. We are never rushed out of
his office either!
Dr. Epps truly cares about his
students. By observing him one
wishes that ali teachers could be
Dr. Epps. Dr. Epps was more
than lust our teacher — he wat
our "pisces pal."
If any professor should be
recognized for his fantastic per-
formance and attitude it ii def-
initely Dr. Harland W Eppi! We
leanwd a lot in his class because
his ways made «i search to firui
the answers and to learn more.
He inspired us greatly. We truly
respect Dr. Eppt liighly, wish
him the best of everything, and
want to tell everyone who ts
now enrolled in his class to
enioy him, and moreover, re-
alize how lucky yo^ really are to
have such a unique instructor
Our regards Dr. Epps, and
thank you.
• IT'' ■ »
Voter Initiative drive: not the last resort for farm workers
^^
*y-Rf»bmo RfMJii^tte/ and Darlt'nr FInrrr
(Editor's nnfe Ifodriquez h a
"hprv dnd Iditnr n1 XH Genre f-tore^ rs
a/so a student here and UfW or%dnij'er )
"If the people say we cannot have
legislation, we go back to the law of the
jungle, strikes, and boycotts, and all
those things you have to do" Cesar
Chavez said on ^pr il 22. 1976 en route to
the California State University Loivg
OPINION
ieach after a speech at UCLA Cesar
Chavez, the leader of the United Farm
Workers, is organizing support in Call
kiirnia to put on the ballot in November
Ifgiibtion that will give farm workers the
right ta^¥Olf for a union
' On April 1. 1976. the UFW organizers
started their drive to put on the Novem-
ber ballot legislation that would give
them the right to vote for a union The
Initiative Drive will end on the 30lh of
April They ate confident that the people
M«t« Help tlic'in oig^ilizt* vvt wot M lu
Talie our chances with the people any
day. If our lives are at stake, we want to
put it in the hands of the people, and
not in the hands of the politician."
Chavez said in his speech at UCLA.
The UfW leader spoke about the
human side of tf>e struggle to orgamie
farm workers. Chavez mentiolled a
woman with shriveled hands who ap-
proached one of the UFW organizers on
the city street She re*d the petition amd
after deciding to sign it. the wotofi hold
the pen between her teeth wrvd signed.
give the most." Chavez said
The UFW needs 312.404 signatures to
qualify in the November ballot. They are
trying for 65 ^ cent or about S40,000
sipiatures in a period of JO days. This
means they need an average of 184XX)
sigr\atures a day. accofdtag to Mr. Ganz.
a UWV organizer In Los Angeles County
alor>e. they have to get 200,000. &nd in
the Bay area about half thai, he said. As
of the 22nd of April, they have 495.000
II u res. I hey have been averaging
from 21.000 to 25.000 signatures a day. In
Los Angeles County, they are signing up
to about 10.000 people everyday.
"We are saying that the people of
California are going to decide this time
We want the voters in California to
decide, once and for all. If the people
say we cannot have legislation, we go
back to ihe law of the jungle, strikes, and
boy cons, and all those things you have
to do," Chavez said With this in mind,
the UFW is recruitmg organizers.
Cesar Chavez said they need people to
organize on the Initiative Drive, and
people to fill the spots that are vacant m
otf>er areas because of those who came
to thie tovon largest counties in tf^ state
to be on the petition drive. The UFW is
building the foundation for the Novem-
ber odctioim. They r>eed poople to work
in the clmics. the day care centers, and
field offices. The union will provide the
room and board. ar>d exponits to get
around.
The UFW has been successful. They
esent about 30,000 people. ar\d
negotiations are still going on for con-
tracts, according to Chavez. "We need a
lot of people." he said. They are signing
contraas evefy week.
Traditionally, university students have
supported the UFW Cesar Chavez is
aware of this and is appoalwif to tftem
again. "We come to you because you
have been our best supporters, and
everybody knows that," Chavez told
UCLA students. "But. also, when we
come to you, and we aik. tfiat somodqrr
we have to pay bock. When we afi for
your help, we apo soriof^ Mi^ m ^^
ourselves, so we can help 9/kmn.'*
Even if the nrK>ney is appaopriiMd. It
won't be enough to hold elect ions»
according to Chavex. This means a
massive moblliigibofi throughout the
country to start fighting on tfie hafm0^
and strike front. "We af stM foHif
ahead with the petition drive bocnnt
whatever mofioy lliey give thcffi^ it wii
not be eoouf h to hold elertlans.'' the
UfW leader %atd
>■<!
tiofly Wxw^^
1
I
r
Ttie Flapper
Let's face it - World War I is over
-Peter Berson
While writing about World War I. post-mortetn.
1 have often tfiought of sonne of tf>e mistakes that
were rnadie in those years. The war is kmg over
but I waited this long to write because I want the
full perspective that 56 years would give me.
Before World War i the United States had a
very good track record in wars, but this war has
left a scar on tfie KwneriQan pyche Only a few
otfier counries have tlbe^ocofd the United Slates
has in mar. but this streak is over. Such it life.
President s Wilson's loss of Colonel House and
his former CoMoafoes at Pnncetus will not hurt
the United States much, but if some of the
members of the Senate ar\d foreign dignatartes
screaming "hardship " jump the ship the United
States' char>ces in another war ate in ieopardy
Unlike basketball, these political leaders have the
optioff to join another league. tf>e Commu rusts.
The Russian revolution has oper>ed up many
options to these world leaders.
What H boih down to is, would you give up all
your freedoms lor a multi-million dollar contract
to sign ¥vith Lenin This new government is
untested ar\d could run into some financial
problems If tf^ Russian government fails, the
bidding war for experienced politicians will be
over Maybe these officals could file libel or
freedom of information suits.
The rest of tf>e An>erican establishment is in
good hands. The Rockefellers, the Carnegies.
Schlesingers ar>d tfie new upstart Franklin Roose-
velt There are otfier good countries aroiufyid. The
United States recruiting has not been going loo
well arnf tfiere is a posibility of a depietlion at
the end of tf>e next decade. Let's iust face that-all
the streaks have come to an end
Wilson has lost tf^ confidence of tfie people
af\d has to play mister tryttafs guy He chaofed this
image after he was elected to office ar)d is now
one of tf>e most urK:ompromising potWdarn m
the country
The sign on his daik reads "No more Mister
Nice Guy." This uncompromising stand COft the
United States the posibility of a League of NatiovH
ar>d other foreign relation ties. There is rK> telling
what will happen with the AHies' greed over the
defeated Germany
Speaking of war. look for the United Stales to
join again with tfie allies in 20 years in anotfier
war against Germany. Rumors out of Germany
indicate that tftere are a lew new upstarts on the
political scene. Tfie controversy all hinges on
what pyscho-histbrians will call the German
mystique m the 1950 s and 1960 s
These aspiring political tea<iers in Germany are
doing tfus just to line tfieir pockets with money.
Look for SLC piatforms — next wieek ~ in the Biuln
'.'*"*ii-*_i ■■"'i'
J
CAREER INFORMATION DAY
*^
. ..UCLA STUDENTS, FACULTY, AND STAFF
Come to m^t informally with representatives of over 125 occupations. They
will t>e on campus to provide students with current, accurate career information.
The occupational groupings are listed t>elow.
_i_^ ^^ !_Joumalism -^^.PubHsWflo ^— —
Actuary ind Statistician ~^*~ ^
Advertising and Public Relations
Architecture and Urban Planning
Art Related
Banking and Merchandisir>g
Biology — Life Sciences — Research
Biostatistics — Health Planning
Computer Science and Math
Education and Library Careers
Engir>eertng and The Physical Sciences
Film
Health Education. Allied Health. Nursing
Hospital Administration — EnvironmerUal Health
Management v
Investments — Econmic Forecasting
PANEL PRESENTATIOf48
iM#MlNaaw Coyfilry Careers
Wo«en — VourMfMs in the Job Market
* \Mm — Criminal Justice — PoWtfcs
^^^Htary
* Motion Pictures — Television Guild Aseociations
and Unions
* Nutrition — Dental Hygiene
* Occupational and Physical Therapy
* Personnel — Training and Developffient —
Industrial Relations
* Pharmacy — Epidemiology
* Public Health — Medicine — Veterinary Medicine
* Sales -- Marketing
* Social Services and Mental Health
* Television — Radio
* Theater - Music
* Travel — Hotel Manageiiient
10:00 A.I(L
2:00 PJL
Grand Ballrodm, Ackerman Union April 30, 76; lOam-^pm
/
• «
rrrrrr
7 —
\
Gatizio
external affairs
■v^.
(Continiicd frofli page 5) „
**Fortet the tie and wear just
the jacket, and Uke that off
Uier-
'^No, that doeMi*t look that
great.-
**That look! fine ThatMl
look good.** aiftured Gahzio,
concluding the matter
Mo4d b«f
The office itself, which Gal-
izio share* with the rest of the
president*! staff, is littered with
the paraphernalia of recent
projects. A cardboard model of
a bus. thoughtfully donated by
the Santa Monica Bus Lines,
lies on its side on Galizio*s
desk On the walls above it is
an assortment oi buttons and
stickers for various Democratic
candidates, dating backi several
years. Ahd presiding over the
whole room from atop a filing
cabinet is a dtgnified-looking
slab of clear plastic cut in the
shape of LA City Hall, spirited
away months ago from the
centerpiece at loia civic
luncheon. ^
The kind of junk Galizio iMf
accumulated reveals the sub-
stance of his haphazard work-
tag days a pamkfn for
politics When not caught up
is administrative chores. he*t a
risourceful hustler r- Ulking
on the phone, writing letters,
arranging meetings with peo-
ple.
Sometimes
lag has worked very well. Gal-
izio cites the extension of the
Southern California Rapid
Transit District's (RTD) num-
ber 88 bus line — service wigs
expanded in February for this
line to UCLA. This change
was accomplished mainly
through County Supervisor
Edmund Edelman*s office.
Galizio also claims good
working contacts with Fifth
■V
r- .-
W here ^Tciit beaches are just the bediming.
You'll find just about every
kind of beach along our two
hundred miles of Pacific coast-
tea. Beaches of white, gray
and black volcanic sand.
Beaches for snorkeling, fishing,
sunbathing and even surfing ( at
SunzaL you might 'find the per-
fect wave). Ahd all within a
thirty-minute drive of the cap^
Ul city of San Salvador.
In fact, because El Salvador
is a small country, you*lI dis-
cover dozens of exciting activi-
ties within easy reach. Water
skiing on shimmering crater
lakes. Colonial churches and
teeming native markets. Tower-
ing volcanoes and cloud-cov-
ered forests.. Or d^^rn dancing
after dark.
And El Salvador is oae of
the most affordable vacation
spots in the world, with every
Send to El Salvador, P O. Box 801. Farmingdalc, N.Y 1 1735
104A Q Please send me more informatiofi tkfom student tours to
El Salvador. I04B Q] I'd like to learn more ahout representing
El Salvador on my campus. CODE 1 04 B
Name
Addrt
type of accommodation, from
-J^u class hotels to scenic-
camping sites. The rate of ex-
change for the dollar is the
same as in 1934 — so your
money still goes a loag way.
Best of all, you*ll find our loGil
residents as friendly a^s the
year-round springlike clinute.
Send us the coupon below,
aad we*II send you more in-
formation on El Salvador.
(Special Bolc: if yoa*d like ta
U Si^i
City
T :
Zip
El Salvador^
[>istrict City Councumao Zev
Yafatiavsky Recently he lob-
bied~ throagli YaroalMfey for
more street parking in the
campat miiiiiorteod, aa ef-
fort blocked by opposition
from local retidenu.
Galizio speaks eaiily and
surpritiat Bai agreeable habit
in someone buih like a ba%y
bull. His face shifts quick!>
across moods and he slips
readily into- silly baater.
Since be enjoys his work,
aifd people seem to enjoy
having him around, Galizio
puts in a lot of time on the job
-^ abaiit BO hours a week. He
off the time commit-
n get a little carried
away with these kinde of
thinp.**
**Galizio for Board of Edu-
cation — *75r reads a small
blue pin on a corner of the
bulletin baafd. It is the only
visible reminder of his bid for
one of three Baatd of Educa-
tion HJMi Mid ia February
1975, the pott eventually won
by Diaae Watson. Galizio
pteeai fifth «n a field of 14,
spending about $13,000 in an
effort he feels was well worth
the time aa^ expense.^
**1 wouidn*t have traded it
(running for the Board) for
anything,** says Galizio. **1t was
worth two years of college. I
learned so much about people,
about campaign financing
laws, radio "commercials . .
things I never would hav^
iearned otherwise**
Gahzio reliad oa radio and
spot mailings (direct mail to
selected precinct lists). But his
relative lack of resources pre-
vented him ..from going door-
to-door. By comparison, he
says. Watson received the en-
dorsement of the United
Teachers of Lot Angeles (DT-
LA), and teachers canvassed
neighborhoods for her. Gal-
izio*s effort, staffed mostly by
peopJe fronsr^his alma mater.
(University H^gh School in
West Los Angeles), lacked suf-
ficient volunteers to do that
*Ym wanna fuckT
Instead, Galizio says, he
devoted a lot of time to per-
sonal contact with voters "Wc
would get together, around six
of us, and hit movie lines. A
few people would leaflet and
then I would come down the
line aad shake hands aad
introduce myself, f gof lalo
some great conversations with
people.
The nonconversations were
just as interesting. "One guy
had a pahn buzzer — scared
the shit out of ine. And this
one woiaaa jatt looked at me
while I was shakiag her haad
and said ftaally, 'You waaaa
fuckT lt*s just the aura of
running for office. It's very
flattering.
"What I §01 out of this is.
fm pretty much convinced that
anybody caa via. You saw the
movie The €ii Mi ii? lt*t the
saoK nary It doeHi*t matter
who you are or whrt yo«
for. You mmd the
the
Yoa eaa rva the
the
to
lyn im interest
As manager
III presi-
iie is faaulUr^with the ler
(Cr— ' - ^— ♦^
student Elections
(Canfinnad frooi Paff 4)
provisions in the EB code This
would have been a precedent' if
the «iiie crysubzed.** Okamura
•*After each election, the
is changed to uke care of
problems. It (1974) was a
soaad code. It needed minor
amendments rather than an
overhaul But they (SLQ
worked it over aad confuted
thmgs,** Okamura said. .
Okamura referred to a pro-
cedural change giving EB the
rr to hear charges against
brought to them.
Okamura addad, ^1 feel this
hearing process hinders the
election in that EB does part
of Judicial Board's job. EB is
an administrative body and not
a judicial body.*
*Over-hrood'
About the Code, Okamura
said. **It*s over-broad and
vague The code can be
OMde or interpreted for an
authontartan chairman
This year's changes moved
the priroMry election dates to
the fifth week of datses in-
Held of the fourth week, made
candidates rr speasibli for ob-
taimng the election packeU,
and required complaints
apinst the EB chairman to be
given to Judicial Board, ac-
cording to Jay Cole, the
sent chairman of* Election
Board.
. Referring to SLCs approval
of changes in the elections
code. Cole said, -|fs kind of a
■haoK that SLC raas the elec-
tion Members of SLC plan-
nmg to run for election have
too much say We're responsi-
ble to SLC-
Too BMKh power
Mhad if he agwes that SLC
has too much power over the
elction code, Okamura replied.
••It depends on the Chairman
If he ieu SLC run the election,
it's his fauh. For SLC to ap>
prove the Election Board
Code, it's to prevent a stijoog
EB chairman from beooitiing
euthorilanan.*' But he noted
that a weak chairman coul^ he
a puppet of SLC
The present set-up piauints
an independent chairman (a(
EB) That's why the check is
there," Okamura said He
added that he feels the duties
and rripaasibilitics of the EB
chairman should be m^^t
much clearer in the election
code.
According to Cole. EB is
given $2000 from SLC at the
beginning of the fiscal year and
S2500 later He said the money
is not etuNifb for everything
On the run . . .
(Cootinued from Page S)
ritory. Though he has decided against it. running lor studem
office wai a tempting possibility
•*! really would have hked to be president but the mmt 1
though about it the more I wanted to get into other thingj^ .
heavy Democratic work, things like that."
Coro Foundation
Galizio intends to graduate m 1977 After that he will
probably try for a Coro Foundation internship a 12-roonth
master's degree program in public administmtion Then be hopes
to work for a legislator —
tn the meantime he is running for Democratic Party tTouim
Central Committee — seven members from his assembly district
will be elected in the June primary ''ItS the best possible way to
run." he says, smiling. ^You don't need any aione\ you fust put
your name in.'*
But suddenly xhd phone rang, and GaHzio was scribbling a
series of letters onto a pad. "E . . . 1 . . G " U was the
alphabetical order drawn by the Registrar of Voters to deicrmmc
where candidates* names will appear on the ballot
- Then, political aspirations deferred again, he is down the hall
looking for business si/e envelopes. For the moment Michael
Galizio cannot «.eem to avoid having fun
tolQir
VivilaF
Enduro Case
riH-
.', ".
Th« VlvM*r
fpv can e'^ord. Its U
It
$24.
EB wanted to do. **We cut
comers We waaied to build
new ballot boxes but won't due
*o lack of fttudr"
The board it paid a loldl of
$1310 for stipends
Okamura said, ''It ukes
S6000 to run joint GSA-USA
eleciioai.7 ^^ >^^ EB bad an
imtia! budget of $3000 from
SLC aad wm given $2000 by
the Board of Control
**Tbis election IS an onfomg
procan. In my mmd it's es>
sentuil The EB needs a decent
budpl to run a decent elec-
tionr he said, citing the need
for better baloliaB* hener ad-
vertising, more university ser-
vices such as "building aad
grounds," more cars and morj^
peMaaad, aH of which neces-
siute a larger allocation
Okamura 9m§Mtmd that if
EB was. given iTbigitr budget,
more students could be
and thus, more stu-
S4i
THE BUSNFSS ADVISOtY COUfiCtt Of THE
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT CEf^TEK
1023 Hilgard - Westwood
Presents Its Weekly Seminar
Thursilay, April 29
'Marketing - Domestic - AbroacT
Jack Nadel Pres,
''Measured Marketing Services''
IntematiOfial Careers in Engineering^
V.P. - Crefco Corp.
Dinner 6:30 Seminar 7:30-9:30
Ail accredit^ gtudenU Invited
477-45S7 for rctervatiom
dents might vote
^1 thmk the bu^et is
characterialic of the EB hemg
an administrative body like
any bureaucracy I would like
to see less money spem. but
you huive to spend money ^ last
year*s chairman added
AMER-I-CAL
INSURANCE
1434 WcMwood Soulevard • Suite •• Lm An«rf«. C^Mfaraia
f.,--
VAGANCIES
lUDICIAL REVIEW COMMITTEE, an advisory body charged with
providing a continuing review of campus regulations.ar>d fudicial syst€*m*.
is seeking undergraduate and graduate students to fill three vacant
student representative positions beginrwng Fall quarter. Thts is a sttpended
position, which involves active participation in weekly committee
meetings and research task teams.
We're lookling for people with exceptional verbal, analytic ^ndwritin|i
skills. E>j|>erience is not necessary; the initiative and desire to offer student
input at a high administrative level is essential.
For further inforrruiitic^n contact the University Policies Commission
Office (825-7906), Royce 126, for details. Deadline ifor receipt cxf rclsume is
friday, May 7. - j
SUBMIT!
~ WESTWIM)
UCLA's Quarterly of the Fine Arts
Submissions to the spring issue of Westwind are
now being accepted. Send your:
Poetry Screenplays
Prose * Photography
Plays ,x>r
Art Music|
Tov Westwind, 112 Kerckhoff Hall. Please include
a self-addressed, stamped envelope with ail
submissions. Hurry!
Deadline
1
.*
J
I
p
iSn
in
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
J^jMitrup youi p«rton«l •f%cls ttom* ¥W« art ipacMllittt in
mrmttoimi p^ek^Qmg •nd shipping ^M» al»o wit •ppManoM for 220 voitt
PACIFIC-KING 121$ Wtil Ml •! . Lot AngtlM 17
4a2.Mt2
ATTENTION PRE-HEALTH CARE STUDENTS
MEDICUS
Woman in Medicine
a Panel Discussion
6:00 W«ds. April 28, 1976
43-105 Center for Health SciencM
Ci
Solo
ff
A mini film
Today noon Ackarman Union 2408
An award winning film of suapanae and aa^anture
. . in nnountain clinnbing
. ' 111 ^
• •
Bring your lunch Conversation follows.
• • •
URC CaiiifMM MinittrtM
cn
SEPI'S GIANT
SUBMARINE
15
C
discount on any
Giant Sepi
with tj^is coupon
good through 1976
# (# ti
T€W)
♦ •-*/.
What
to UCLA
DIAMONDS. . . in Aapat, Sim, and pricas
thor will surprise and delight.
I
»<OWhitw<oodBoMte^>fd
CA 90024
.f713) 474 4?7t
0nb0rbainrn0nb indGx
■~^,,»„ ,i..i^- .
\
Bergman confronts mental breakdown 'Face
ay PriMrllla Lofue
The ^urlii he^ms and ends mMuk \t»ur%elf The thm^ is lo
^ork out a remon fur hxinf^ Then to remember the reason. " -
trland Jo§epkBon as Dr Tomas Jacohi in Face to Fac«.
In his latest film, Ingmar Bcfpaan brings his characters Face
ta Face with their laaaans. CX phmary concern arc the reasons of
Dr. Jenny liakMon (Liv UllmanK a disciplined aad capablt
professional woman, comfortably married and surrounded by the
good things of life The film chronicles her mental breakdown, as
her reason slowly slips away from experten4c
Face to Face, opening today at the Music Hall, is impeccabk.
Careful attention to dcuil insures the clarity of the emotional
experience. This emotional experience ii Bergman's mam
concern, he want it to be felt before being und*cr5tood
The acting i$ superb. Liv Ullman. who made her first film for
Bergman (Persona) when she was 24. can create a character lor
him line no other actress. As Jenny she portra>s ihe embodiment
of one of Bergman's favorite ideas the tutilitv of a rigidly
ordered existence.
While her husband is away in America and her estranged
daughter at summer camp, she takes on a lover Vismng her
grandparents, who furnish her room with all the lurniture she
had as a little girl. Jenny begins to feel the tug of unresolved
X feelings, questions, chaos
One step at a lime. Firs< breakfast May^ a good book. So
Jenny desperately tries to cling to order as experiences break
around her For Jenny, life has been mostly ''practical
considerations." For yeairs the anguish, hate, and lear she teh
t h r o u^hout xiuldhoc jd aL I he s ud de^l dea t h at he r pa re n t s .
towards her grandparents who raised her. and rowardy her own
sexuality, have been quite carefully separated from the daiK
routine of her existence
Bergman, UBmann: potiibililies, not
Bergman warns us to tuUy realize why Jenny is envious of Dr.
Wankel (U|f Johanssen). the medical superintendent of the
psychiatric clinic where Jenny works. He tells Jenny that ;*there is
neg^ between myself and what I experience.** This particular
icftiag alldws Bergman ample room to develop Ins Mkas on tlic
''bankruptcy of psychoanalysis.**
A critical scene ukes place at Jenny'a recently vacated summer
home where she has been summoned by a distressed telephone
call from an escaped patient. Maria (Kari Sylwan). Jenny is
surprised by two men who rob and attempt to rape her It is a
subtle portrayal of the complex psychological issues with which
Bergman is deaUng.
When Jcngy relates the iiicidem to her new acquaintance,
Tomas (Josephson). she tells him of her feelings at the time
Initially frightened, she tells him she turned from feelings of
resignation to actually wantiaf tiie rape to take place. The rapist,
however, was anaMc to penetrate Whether the attitude towards
rape was a manilettation of Jenoy*s own psychosis or an example
of Bergman's attitude on the controversial issue is unclear
The sense of being out of control, of being raped, bcgias to
overwhelm Jenny's sense of order: the old questions tag at her
reasons
For Bergman, movies are closer to dreams than any other art
lorm. The dream sequences, thoae surrealistic images of troubled
emotions that Bergman has mastered and knows so well, are
unlorgetubk Only alter i^ttempting suicide and going through
these personal hells can Jenny say to Tomas that "Maybe reality
isn't what I imagined "
But it IS m watching he^ grandparents, ''their humility, their
dignity.*' and how they prefiare for death that Jenny reali/es thai
"love embraces everything.p
The movie ends m the true Bergman style ne qaachisions,
onlv possibilities.
'Baby Blue Marine' : soft corps
or
Mtd Vincent: monilrotiily mawkUi
a% Aaam Parfres
There ure manv types ol trim gcariA
suspense, horror, exploitation, sex. scirw-
baU c^^omedy. Now there is the Jan^
Michael Vincent B picfure, Witness Whitr
Line Fever, aiisttr aad aOBe and n>s
1.1 test hick -epic Baliv aine V1artn|. Ap-
prtrtpriatcK. thi i gtuni anKHin-i •(
H .illiteration m the ink «ind in its a^M^^s-
Rient bad. babbling, barren and blaml
This IS a Second World War nosialjita
picture that tells about a "Baby Blue
Marine** one who was evicted from
b«»*M cunip Oui babv blue-eved p'*-
t.i^'omsi iVmcenu |ict*» mu^'d bv a ^ii
weary Manne who steals his blue outfit
and leaves htm his umform The Babv
Blue Marine dons the offering and hitih-
hik«s into a town Eventually, he falls m
love wiin the local good girl (Glyhnis
0*Conner) and does a brave deed to
prove himself a '*man **
Director John Hancock (Bang tlie
Drnm Slowly) Hashes a tew obvious
messages m Babv Blue Marine like tfeie
degradation irt rciccted Marines and the
iduHTN ol the .lapanese internmeni camps
But. unfortunately, this didacticism falls
apart at the teams when Hancock makes
Ihis stjiemcnts mawkish by iting a
;gang ol weepy epiM>des Instead
\0i choking on the scntimentahiv vou gag.
Hancock seems to be imitating tlie
Norman Rockwell oil paintings he shows
at the beginning and end. Rockwell
people pose and are cute Hancock*s
dmracters pose and are cloying These
innocuous people don*t exactly impinge
on your cunosity or sympathy
The movie first reveals its rampant
stupidity when an omniscient narrator
intones a nostalgic message over the titkM.
The Wah Disneyish icnpt by Sunford
Whitmore is comprised of a very pre-
dictable plot, ichmalt/y encounters and
undistinguished dialogne.
Ihe acting despite the welcome pre-
sence ol Bert Remson. lacks dimcnsM>rt or
interest to naasssary to sustain ,tlM
*'human interest** picture Manneish Vin-
cent loefcs all wrong as tbe bumbhng
rciacted recruit Young 0*Conner is as
uninspired as Vincent in the ingenue role
Even though Baby Blue Marine is
inoffensive. ft*t inoffentive swill StiU, the
picture it oddly entertaining as unin-
tentioned humor in uniform
On Campus On Gimpus On Campus On Campus Oh Campus
Cavalcade of Popular Music
Rot those wtK> enjoy an evening of pure entertainment, not to
SKntion American popular music of the last 50 years, the Fourth
Cavalcade of American Popular Music, siags^ \m§l Friday and
^t0mt4&f niglits in Schoenberg Hall, was a particularly delightful
event
The production's 82 sonp were performed in three sets. The
first two sets repreimed five decades of theatre-film mu^ic bv
the likes of Ira Ge^wmr .Jerry Bock. Harry Warren and Cole
Pnrter
Farter's -Love for 5iale" (from Tbt New \orkers). and The
Phvsician" (lr(»m Nvrnph Frrant) sUumH .is ih*. highlijihu of ihe
first half of the evening Porter's way with songs remains one of
the tmm original and polished Uyk% in all of theatre music.
The second half of the evening honored lyricist Johnnv Meveer
with 5"' of his toaigi, including "Days of Wine and Rotes.**
"Moon River" (with Henry Mancini) and "DearK Beloved** (with
JCfome Kern).
All sonfr i^cTt ^ung to onlv four insiruxn^jaiLl. Scwft Mac-
Gt>ugan nn guitar. Chns Bern ,;r bass. Greg Ctoodall on d'-ums
and producer-director-arranger David M%«lnn whose piano
accompaniment alone would have made l«>r an rsciting
rvmtng nhiwf si t tipht, »■» whtawiii pwhiimMi
Ihr Molini^s were, in general. '^ " especialK '
Diipiech44 and '-^^n Hall Ruh Kuiiv
well The most enjoyable petoraainccs of the evening were given
by Judv K.i\ Mu ha.s ihc abiluv crcaK* a ver\ behcvable mini-
dtama with each ditUreat Km j her readaam ol Porter^
"Love for Sale** was genuineK u>ving.
irr Palmieri
unusually well by Steven SifvcfUein)
recorders.
with
* Howard P
Music For A While
music bave, in a
the problem ol how to hold a
the noveby bat isorh off Music
evervthing vrry well
The quintet's ..Sundav night Sc^
of luhan smigi mid danca[ i»
ceniyries. At tiaws the gra^ «
vielles, rebecs, late, harp ntal
I "^sM^^ x^^ performnnoes of ancient
to pfii^mt 0i rcsearcb and tecbmque.
.) s
^crnaodienoe*s attei
^^ ^T^ hile^ loJtitihrr if fo do
nberg HaM
the fourteeiab I
a string ebsamMe
^y and' at
and off I
L.A. Philharmanic
Stem it brave With nearly 60 yean on him. be
lo neglpttate two of tbe most dWbnil nmts in viohn Uterature
the arahms and Rncbbtrg concertos in one evening
Predictably, he piayed laMiiy
in this fenultimaie conoett of ibe saaaaa. labHi ftMte aad tbe
l^ot Aggelet Philharmonic pr«mdad thoughtful, full-bo^iad
's Caniit^
Miret
\ W4>rkeil
prMBanly a wind group, ^a d« rnft' mabbat. recorders and
tbawm< ^-iprano Sheila Sb^a^^run was accurate ami TTT*f
expressive m all tbe socgt *e tnat and bfwthuking ma few of
them.
Tbe gronp. ;..:.T*J *i^«h *^ p^^r membr York
Pro Mnsiaa, bitndsd piapiinn ai.u r*«ergy nao a larrlv lei^itby
litifuiiiiaiiig nm satuiultd ■■nR' lll?lwlf|[^^
' the instntmrnts used, d rrmir hiilanac mmmtmid the
kbui did ni)t . Ncrpoa«r the ^ ,,^^j ^^ ^^^^
eatibcsant readicion of.
ay pragpaiiMMtg the
Braban. Mehu was atsnicd tbat bis sold-oai
stay until the end Undeniably imertsting and moving at
tbe Rochbcrg recalit Wtlham Wabon't CMOerto for violli
its mantpitt*'*^ and fadlely nbtsinsd penlct and ebbs^
af wanmh m liia ilti pi nation.
appeabag.
i».
allowect H/i J
tbe com
for a relaxed
all tbe needed diinfaisni were tbe
,imt itii nafiLiw.1 fv*
rjndiag 4* '1
Stem
Bmbms
OHO^-m CNCOUNTlil
iRAaraEaTTO
graaTA
Si-nil ^ 4
DONATION
HAIR DESIGNS
ASA DE ROBE
SUMMER JOB OPENINGS
UVE-IN counselors are naa^ad to lead trifis. lours aad
other activities for |apar>ese students staying at UCLA
July 30-August 13.
SALARY: $500 ♦ room, board and
INTERVIEWS: See job t1300-2iA at the Placement Center
W thm. CuywcH on
I.SC
ki.'^
AN
g ¥
xX
i
AUTO INSURANCE
We can aava most atudents up to 35% on student
discountad policias Call us in tha Village for a
quotation:
477-2548
agents for College Student Insurance Service
1100 Glendon. «1447 ("Monty's" BIdg.)
I
THESJnriNG
MUVT
4 M M
50c
Stout or Schlitt.r^g 79C
r
$1.15
V
II II
Hot hart d'ocuviM. ltk« Swedish
, ioad suoduni, rocktgii ixanba
^
4la7
tBar 1109
(213) ^77
11
Vifiaaa
aar
^i!
MH*
Donate
Blood
MAY
3-7
-..♦
' r ■ • *\
J
n
Union
Medical
Center
Schoenberg
Quad
< •
Campas events
w
tne draw m Ktrckli^ M fir youf
4ssignmMli. lint. iHt Md couil N iitfi
ClN lift It
2 pM. ttnerrow. ntt< in Schotnberg
twin
«f MMW. tpMMftd iy
irael Indgt Lmqim ComptUtitii
« Ital pfli. Miy 1.
Club 1«6 «
-in Aa
Wgi Miiili Mviiaa mvm wmm wiN bt
I i^WM 7 p»-| am AprH 30 AflMMMR
wM BMlf oom Fraa
way. irivNig 170 imlat round trip. Iimttid
te t5. May 1 and 2 C«N E|i ai M-IM or
Dave KS^13 tor dolaMi.
tpiw iHMi l-IIJO pn. AprH 30.
URC 900 Hiioard. ipaaaorod by tho Urn-
vanity Catttoiic Canter ticfcali ara SI m
advancr at ttio omm or tlil at «» iaar
— '^fiaaa aa Bapa hmil 9 pai'1 aai. ApcM
30 Sproul Emartairanant Cantar fraa wWi
a maal card or SSO wittiout
Jawiai/Ani Falra. featuring muac
ry calligrapt>y potlory aad telili. 11
pm. tomorrow Janaa Slapa Fiaa
Tear, of the Life Science area.
^Xd Craaa Haaa anaai wia mm
May 3-7 S«on up ta iuMli Maai • fl»|
pm. now April S.
3017
and Wi
ara ppa-
■Hi pm, avavy
•-10 pm. aloo mmi
ihitmmtmi during
11
Fridoy 1023 HNgard
-HMOM «
paintings aai
(aoMng is free and open ta Ma puMlc.
today and tomorrow AckaraMir Maa't
lounpa
— ielegate tiatas Oaard. which shi
aacti praaidantial
anaMM a« iHafai
whicb have had primariaa is now up in
Kerckhotf Hall naar Oia olovator on Oia
first llaor
'— fiBMi CaaaMBka. mfofmal pra^Btd
for foreign studaaH and visitors 10 aai>
Citizena AMMoa FaaaJoiow. Nmiiad to
if Cninaaa aaaailnf
ilMMPaa M a MMapNM c
la Ma Laa Aaoilgi
an application wfHa CMaaaa
Allien Lodge. 415 OamOao Laaa. laa
90^ or caoMelMi
(MirpHy A-t2i
information aai
on extramural hindrng far pntfiMl
and paoMoanli are ivaMaMa in Oh
FitiiMiiilMi and Aasisiantsbip Saetioa.
MaipRy 1230.
trained interns will Mp you find funding
\m yaar^ liaaa Opaa ioily 9 am-4 pm.,.
HOPBfeMIn 40T
^HNarskips. laterastiaaal OppartMBltlaa.
lir
jMiwit LiOOy »
PmSA a M«Mi.
Mao ■ rooMit UC
ia M^f 7 ar CM
tar
IIP Mrough EXW AcliarMaa A213 or call
KNn OECA as a
»r invoall|Olar Visit Kerckhoff 311
•r call 825 ?8?0 Volunteers are alaa
tor anvironmantal and taad pro-
ill moOli ' aatdlMa lo April m
^MMeaMMM at t^^kmm
Kardthoff 304 aad
TV
9 ^^^V« H^^MP^t
W _ ^^^^^^^^Fwe ^p 0^^^^*
aad TM
two art filma wHI be
Ackermaa tMama's LaMpa
-Tbe MQiiiiiBMWt
and I LiM iMOmib wNI ba
fHm aad
(
OB Pa(e 13)
First Annual
UCLA Slumber Party and
Ail-Night Movie Marathon
7:00 p m - 9:00 am
Friday Apni 30
FREE - Grand Ballroom FREE
Exams Workshops
LSAT, GRE, GMAS, MULTIPLE CHOICE
ONi TrM Taal A
LAAT
LSAT TrM Taal
LSATTOTt
CMiAT Trim Teal
OatAT Test Pl«vl«w
Enroll
May 3 1 1S-3:30
Tuaaday May 4 1:t&-4:30
Wdnaeday, May 5 12:30-6 00
Tuaaday. May 11 119-430
May 12 12:30-5 30
y 17 2:00
Mpntfay. May M 1 00-5:00
Tuaaday. May 10 0r00-11 00
Ladfhing Skills CantSar. Study and Raading Division'
271 Oodd Hall, or MMphona i2S-7744
A Iran Sfvica of Student and Campus Affair* for all ragutarly anrollad students
ray for blue denim
and comfort
br SdioU sandals.
1
;,p,'.n
;^v
Sf. ri*"»l I
mtaeiOn
Ju.
Look who's going together now
Scholl sandals and blue denim How
comfortable can you gef^
The )eans-look strap has contrasting
white stitching, studs (actually studded
screws) on tl^ side and foam-padded,
soft leather underneath
The sandal itself is cool, carved
bpechwood With exclusive toe grip
And; nonskid sole I
Only Scholl, the onymai exercise
sandals, feel so good and look so good
Tt7 on a pau»«ad see what mmfort
IS all about
Scholl
Bettor •^
oarefcxM
Abo m bother ~ Bone Whue ^. ,
LOGIC ror mem on the bchoU Sendal
C^tor
**%%«»
Jbk Anthony
Hayden at Janss Steps
OPTOMETRISTS
mat for luprrme world power
**!£ Riiooie coa Mow no up 17
tuaei and we coa blow tbem
up 36 tioMO, fvt woo*t
be around to pat ounelvet on
the back," Hayden said
Hayden ftrened be would
like to aee a debate between
himoelf aad hit opponent to
clear up the otando of both
Tunney and biiUelf on the
There are actually nine other
candidates beoiiao Tuaaey and
Hayden, but he oaid, he
doeoa*t want to aee a 30 min-
ute televioion debate turn into
**a arcus ao a oubotitute for a
deb^e*
Hayden focuoed on tupport
of the people layiag thu power
will help determine the out-
come of the election and help
defeat Tunney at well as tet up
a long rai^ grooo rooio pohli-
Haydcn copHlOBd hit phil-
oaophy in a Quaker tcnoet **lt
u much better to light a
to curie the darki
Chameleon herd kelley speaks today
Chameleon (Debra Dante
and Tom Smith) bring their
cabaret-style musical act to
the Coop from 5 to 7 pm
today. The duo performs a
program featuring Broad-
way, rock and original
music. Thetr previouo per-
fonaoaoet include the Holi-
day Inn in West wood aad
Two Dollar Biirs Bistro m
Hollywood.
The terioo of UCLA Bi-
centennial leeturet continues
this evening with Robert
Kelley. Proionor of History
from UC Santa Barbara.
The lecture will be held
tonight at 8 pm in Dodd
147 There will be no ad-
mission charge. The tched^
uled lecture is entitled **Two
Hundred Years of th^ Two
Party Systent
0
KAPPA SIGMA
RUSH PARTY
April 30th - iFriday 6 P.M.
Sunset Canyon Rec. Center
Short Films — Refresh me rrts
For more information call
784-7145 or 824-1424.
Carter wins . . •
<Ci ii Hi *o« Page 1)
Thoae people who waat to
stop Carter will find it irery
difTicuh-
The gain of mnaotiafiim by
the Carter rampaigo could deal
a Mow to forces supporting
Senator Hubert Humphrey.
Humphrey has stated that he is
not an active candidate for the
Democratic nomination, but
may enter the laoe if the pn-
RMriet produce no clear-cut
Carter*s resounding victory
in Pennsylvania may catrte
Humphrey to seriouoly con-
sider ttasring out of the race.
**! want tu tee the Demo-
cratt win. If Jimmy Carter can
win, Pm not going to stop him
at alU** Humphrey oaid.
President Ford expressed
doubt that Carter could be
stopped. *Mf Carter wins in
Pennsylvania, 1 don*t lee how
the Democratic taoke-filled
roomt in New York can take
the nomination away from
him,** he laid.
la,doiit
Me %0 Me where we make
pasi laHMi M ma wono. wi
tome garbanto baans,
Oiam good and flna. add
af apices and some
and ahi^ them Into amal
wMeh wc fry dght toi
|front of you. W% laaa
nkc fraah pHa, add
Itomato, and a coupio
BMt that% al wa do. m dent aat
it for you. %*
m.
Campus events
• •
(Coadaaad from Page 12)
Hy two KStrudat m4 atumm with
tonmOiii aOael ^ttmrMmftlu^
citmOMO. ctfWtMO Sfio ooar
pm April 30 UniMity YWCA 574
COMCOTI
VarMliM M • Tiomi
iHryainr. faaat t sa
Oiona. 0
■trfts. PlsoOt will prwMM a
concart. noon. loMOfftw.
itoTNifn Ffw
—Oslo fttoti^ 6««li pwiaiiioaai. 0:30-
0:30 pm tonight Inttrnational Studint
tion on NiOaaiatc thtms 10 wm
.Aclarman 3517
o^nfi
In the
/
/
nra*
/
Special
»«4..
Miuiinain
AIKMIIS
SUN. MAY
IIMG mCl UHUi
AU SIATS llSftVIl: fS.TS, S.7t. 4.?t
ktu A««.i«t)lt 4l «il nCMFTINNl OUTLCTS Walhrh^ Mu&u City
->»•» lilMKljr t»r«tt Af em .»». Paiilic St«rto 437 St.. Mill It
M« all SMiMi Af »nr i#s L«if tvarh Ar«n^ •»« Offict
wm wt m»\ i0t49t For infomifftiflm r«ii illJk437 2395
*xt uKjif t miitntLUu concurT]
<
dr. %mnm
GOODAU
LIMITSP SIATINO AVi^llASU THtOUOH Tl
UCIA IKUf O»flCi'KHCKH0M HMlf
^ W¥ 7dt-d*n
STUOiNT
$4
ttfOiftAll
■^~^;d^^t^^
.t.-.—zn-:'^^
— Tx:;.-
rMO
o». rut umu" 9i
^^^^^t^^-i
^ t
-,ff» -.-^T»««
■»'ddL.
■TT ~T.
"m ■'■■ y
s
W
g
THE COUNCIL ON EDUCA-
TIONAL DEVELOPMENT
(CED) will be considering course pro-
posals for the Winter Quarter 1 977, and is
prepared to sponsor innovative courses
of genuine academic quality which
would be of interest to the campCis
community. Such course proposals will
be due in the CEO Office no later than
Monday, May 17, t976. If you are in-
terested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educational Development, 3121 Murphy
Hall.
I ■ --«•
.,.-
I
%
DiKital Equipment Corporation is proud of t^
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mini-computer manufarturinfr and technol-
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The people who qualify for oor
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Spring football
Defense sparkles in drills
By Patti
DB Sp«^
Th€ w90omi 9cnmmm§t of tbc
1976 tpring football program,
held last Saturday, omM sever
be claftificd as thrilling,
fantastic or an exhibition of
brilliance Terry Donahue*!
new oiinite wm IwHii ^ aa
akrt deieaae that iateraqpiid
patact like Raquel Welch walk-
tag down Brum Walk.
The highlight of the morning
workout was the performance
of the defense, most noticeably
the backs . At this point, they
teem to be the strong point of
the UCLA team
Little dilTercMt
At the quarterback poattion
there was* little discrepancy in
the performance oi the two
candidates. Jeff Dankworth
and Steve Bukich. According^
to Donahue, **Neither sparkkd
but they played equally wcU.**
Ai this point, the offente it a
bit of a disappointment to
Donohue, due mostly to the
large number of fumMea.
Donahue labeled the scrim-
mage as ** mediocre overall, no
better than that.** He expected
a better throwing gMW
becante the week's workovis
had included general pnanng
and passing-under-pressure
drilU.
Offensively Wendell Tyler
and Jewerl Thomas stood out
among the offensive backfiekJ
performers. Thomas exhibited
iPaiM speed and agility while
Tyler continued where he left
off in the Rose Bowl. Aside
from fumbling, Tyler looked
impressive.
Tora.>1urphy. at inside line-
backer and Tin Tennigkeit al
tackle Um4^ nMJgtflili at
their positions and showed
streaks ci taccBencc. Anothnr
noted performance,' though
brief, was that of Dave
Morton, a redshirt iMt^ianaMiu
who showed quickness at the
of the ball.
As 01 this week, the junior
collegr ' tmnsfers all show
potential and as Donahue says,
**have a good chance to find
playing time.** Moat do not
have exceptional spring
practices bccanit they bave to
familiarize themselves with new
coaches and a new system.
May 15th is the date of the
Spring Game and with three
weeks to go it is evident that
perfnr—n f I ■ need to be
Women softballers lose
ly MBie
DB Siports Reporter
For ten straight games the women*s Softball
team rolled over every team they faced, scoring
almost at will, until last Saturday when they
ran up jgainst a pitcher who ailepced their
powerful hniing attack and sent the Bruins
home, beati^ for the first time this season, 2-1.
It was Kylar
Melpnie Kyler, who pitched her Golden West
JC teammates to the National JC Cham-
pionship last year, put an end to any hope the
Bruins might have had for an undefeated
season as she held them to just three hiu (they
bad been averaging over eight a game) and
stnick out six (they had struck out only five
times all seaaon).
"She throws hard," said coach Sharon
Booktts. ''About a half doiea of the girls on the
team hit her pretty well, but it was uways right
at somebody. 1 gness that*s the breaks of the
game,** she added.
Kathy Deakins, the fastest of the two Bruin
pitchers, also pitched a fme game Saturday,
allowing only three hiU in six and two-thirds
innings However, with twa out in the bottom
of the seventh. I>eakms gave up a bit that
sailed over right fiekler Salty McCalTs bead for
the home run that decided the
HtBs and for three inmnp they played as if
their minds were still on the road back fn
Golden West
For a while it saaaMid as if the only outr
standing characteristic of the game was
Domiqgycc Hiils* first biiaamn, who spent the
entire afternoon screaming at the top of her
lungs and driving away more than a few
i||OClBtors. But in the third inning, the heat aad
tbe scranatnt got under the Bruins* skiiM and
they scored seven times to put the game away.
The Bruins received four straight walks
before catcher Leake Trapnell hit a bne drive
down the left field line for the graiid shun
which accounted for the bulk of the scoring ia
the third.
A double in the fifth inning by Sue Enquist
and singles by Cathy Collins, Trapnell and
Romain Campoa helped the Bruins score six
runs in the inning and pull abaad 14-1. More
imporuntly, the %ix runs gave the Bruins the
ten run lead they needed to end the game in the
fifth inning instead of having it drag any
*The teams were equal as far as talent goes,
but Golden West was more experienced.
They've played twice as many games as we
have Sally misjudgsd the baU, I don't know,
maybe with more playing time she could have
caught it,** said coach Bnataa.
Monday the Bruins went against Dominguer
"The game was satisfying overall, but we
have to be ready to pbiy all the time, not just
against Goklen West. If we coaK into a pmie
with this fraose of mind, a good team wiO beat
■s. We can*t wait for the other team to push us
or for the score to be close before we start
pUying.** said Backus.
The Bruiaa, who are now ll-l overall aai
remain unririaatsd in SCWIAC play, leave
today for Sacramento and the regional tmvan-
which begim Thursday. Hopefully, they'll
a better frame of miad with them.
Heres YOUR chance to ask any question you want of:
UDALL, REAGAN, JACKSON, FORD,
— 9HURCH, CARTER, BROWN
j and all of the other candidates ...
Make your VOICE HEARD by returning the form below
I By April 30 — Friday
Project AwarMiMt '76. a non-partisan political information network %%rying tha UCLA
community, m jconjunction with Common Caiaae wilt compile the roeults and call on all the
cendidales to answer the questions you raise.
mKS## •••••••• ei#JJNm|
I went Id
(Chech one)
PRESIDENTIAL CAMDIOATE, HOW WOULD YOU:
a
D
tj MMiPe imaan^ le eevcfiiiiMnr?
a (hef t my own nimMow):
ef IMee?
MTLMOI
rvturn mi# iorm by April 30 ^nday ~ to on* of mt tocaliOfIt
SpOf»«of*d r>v Shi^lPnl I •gt«i«tiv« CouncH StC Infc " . and Proiact
Sondheimer Says
building Wdoden-type reputation
John WiO^n t» undoul ,
(he motl fiirmjrliable maA I mlM
evef nMCt m my lMetim« No«^
>unninf a dote Bccond is vd-
ieybalt's wizard, At Scatn. Net
surprisingly there ir^ many
similarities between the two
most Mtn^zmg Bruin coaches.
Both n>en were A II- American
players in their spot belore be-
coming outstanding coaches
Both have followed their same
coaching imtiocts over the years
artd neither would compromise
principles. Maybe the reason
both are so successful is that
their players iOOfli to put more
into the sport than would ap-
pear IS humanly poiiiMoi
While WooAn woO len
NCAA basketbaH titlef be«or# lie
retired last year. Scales wilhte
attempting to gain title number
six this weekend at Ball State
University in Muncte. Indiana.
Scates. who is now in bis 14th
year as UCIA head voJieyball
coach, might have ten titles atao
if the NCAA had adopted vol-
leyball as a sport More 1970.
This year^Scates will bid lor his
sixth title iin the seven year
ii
Jumper Meisrer . . .
(C
Pafel^)
cetttive to jump higher and
tliBt*t ■oa^Tthing I hgven't had
this y«tf."
"Ileigirr thoukin*t hove a
pioNun with mottvation Sat-
urday. He facet USC freshmao
Tim Walker, a leven foot high
jumper from Rhode Island
who is currently ranked third
m the conference right be-
hind M Ciller -7~
Walker beat his Brum* op-
ponent at the Los Angeles
Tiiaei Indoor Games m Feb-
niary. He had a ban jump of
7^ to Meifkr*s M. But Walk-
er is a flopper and his ap-
proach from the right gave him
a nil runway. Meisler. on the
other haad,- had a curtailed
nmway thai originated near
the first rok of seats
and croiiod the'onral track, he
to endure mim^ous inter-
ntptions frool relay squada and
spnnters.
"1 can beat him if I go out
and do what I'm supposed to.**
said Jason **! respect him a
lot. He's done a mueh better
job of adjusting from high
school to college than 1 did."
"Meisler said he doesn't feel
a ttfong urge to beaf USC as a
team. '*! feel more for my
events he explaiaad. *^rd like
to have leas dual meets and
■Mfc nlBfB Hke the Prnn and
Drake •
But he does predict an awe-
some meet for Saturday
•*We're the definite underdogt,**
he concluded "But there are
several eventa-ilMt coukJ go
either way. If the feather is
food and the crowd conies our
it will be a hM like lait year
many incredible narks.**
Batmen drop first game
Managing tlK grand ttoul of six hitt, the UCLA baieball team
lost the firtt gasK of its doubleheader to Cal Sute Northndge. 6-
I, 3^eiterday at SawteUe Fiekl. The Bruins iKHert scheduled to play
Cal Poly Pomona last night.
Tonight, the Bruins wtB boat Cal Stau Dommguez Hills at
Sawtelk, beginning at 7 pm.
UCLA scored first when, with one out in the second inning.
Ken Gaylord doubled, moved to third on a grounder and scored
on Larry Silver*s infiekl single.
That was the extent of the Bruins* sconng and the Maudors
finally got to pitcher Tim 0*Neill in the sixth ^nning. Until that
point, the sophomore had a four hit shutout, but it all came
apart in the sixth when CSUN scored four times.
Three singles, a fly ball and a stolen base tied the game and
when O'Neill, now 6-3 on the season, issued a walk to load the
bases, coach Gary Adams wem to pKcher Brad Rosa.
Northridge fmt baseman Tim Timm hit a two run single and
after a strikeout, Robbie Hendenon*s error allowed the final run
to coaae acr<
The Matadors added a run in the seventh and one more in the
ninth off Royd Chiffcr, who deserved better With a nuin on
^¥^ QMffcr got tlK next batter to iMt a bail bciwaen third and
shortstop. Henderson reached it just enough to deflect it behind
shorutop Raymond Towpaend and the Maudors bad runners on
first and third A singk then cott Chiffcr the run
-Marc
SUMMER
JOBS JOBS JOBS
Col^oga trainod man and wd-
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SATYAJIT HAYS
THE ADVERSARY
THE HERO
WCO. AMHLag
ITHUPS aPPIt 2B
TM
ft
KAMCHANJUHGHA
THE LONELY WIFE
MAY 3
TUnLBMYa
mm ef 1979
fpl AMHL ao
BAT. NMY 1
BUM. MAY 2
MERALTA THEATK'
history of NCAA .volleybalf .
When yoo wm is ohan as the
baabaibalt and » aiaylMll teams
have dor>e. paopjg paf ptaai urg
out ol Matching the 'pefennial
champion lall It happened rare-
ly in Waoden's last 12 years dnd
It has taldom happMOd to
Scates in the past seven soasons.
Both Weadan ^nd Scates have
rheir teams playing at "pe^"
potential in the pUfoHt. While
Waadan won 44 of his last 45
games in the "sudden death"
.| pressure of the playoffs, Scates
has followed a similar pattern in
volleybill
Scates IS ia-1 in NCAA play in
SIX years (originally a round
robin forn^at was used) ^nd has
never lost after reaching the
NCAA finals. Wooden never
lost a championship game at
Westwood, ¥vhen teams have
played urnler silMatiom With the
most pressure
Wooden retired in hts mid-
Michael Sondheimer
BP's. but Scales is still going
strong m his mid-JCTs His desire
to win IS |he same as his playing
at k)CiA dnd he dp-
,each NCAA champion-
ship with' the same enthusiasm
Whrle he may be the "miard
of coRage volleyball, the new
pro league is cofHtantly hMnd-
ing htm the way 'a college would
PMrsue. a top high school pro-
«i
'Pro volleyball is a possibility
if the offer is right, but the
league must become more
established first. " siid Scates.
The league is rm&^ lo pay
Scates* price, so there is the
chance he would go and loach
pro volleyball this summer lor a
team like Ei Paso It would not
affect his UCLA |ob. because he
would return in the tall
Both Scates and Wooden have
won NCAA crowns as the
uni^do^ ind as the favorite In
1976- Scales is the favorite which
is a change over the past two
years when he has ^^^^ ia "up-
set Santa Barter n
If history can remain m Scates'
corner over the weekeisd then
Saturday night he should be
celebrating His sixth NCAA
crown
One thing missing in the
comparison of Scales m%d
Wooidan is recognition, because
volteybalt is just rising as
a popular national spot, but
recognition could be- changed at
UCLA
Wooden <' accoaiplishmenis
can be seen everytime one
walks into Pauley Pavilion tod
sees the basketball banr^ers
(when they dfe not stolen)
UCLA has won throe of its five
previous NCAA voNeyball titles
in Pauley Pavilion and the cam-
pus fafihty has become
synonymous with the volleyball
squad as well as the basketball
ream
e
i
i
I
«
i
It
BRAVDO
WINNING WAYS
ADD-fN
JELENK *
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(16 6141
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Meisler doesn't flop in high jump
Stnuftdlins (approsch from
the /left aod t^cc down) was ihc
Sy i«c Yosar^t
!>• Sports Writer
UlEe the bUck^mith and the
chiiESry 6««rp Jrmmi Meisler
IS the vendor of a dying an
Meisler is a straildle style h^
jumper
• SI
hell
torm conceived bv the lurn-ol
the-century creatori of the
sport. Valeri Brumel and Pat
M^t/dort UM:d it lo achieve
their world recneis in int
l%0\
But at the Mexico City
piympia, Dick Fosbur> intro-
duced his Hop Upproach from
the right and face up) The
new !)»tyle caught on like wild
fire and its popularity survives
todsy. Most of the top rated
internauonal jumpers use it.
pwight Stones and Tom
Woods included
-plopping Ik a lot easier."
Siid UCLA field events coach
Tom tellez. **AI1 vou have to
do IS turn you back, it takes
longer to be a fSR< stfddler
because you have to rotate you
whole body while voy*re in the
air-
Meisler. however, elcclii to
•stay with the old stand h\ ^1
tookd around with the tlup."
he said *^iii« f did only 6-2
"I'm ncH very jfood at it I he
straddle comes natuDil to mc
No one had to show mc h4>u
to do It. I saw siimconc do
It on IV. I tned u and it
worked"
A sophomt^ir ooi ol* North
Massapequa. New York. Meis-
ler has a best of 7-2 after two
the Westwood
This year' his highest flight
16 7^>V^, the ssesNd best mark
ttt the Pac-S.
But Msiekr feels he has the
potential to soar much hisher.
"If I $iH perleci e\ecy|io».** he
explained "I could go 7-5 But
I have one major fitalt in mv
technique I %k>w down on
the final two steps o1 my ap-
proach."
Meisler explained that slow-
ing on the approRch is the
RM6t ^critical mistake a high
jumper can make "You're sup^
posed to lake ott^jit the-^icak
of your speed." he said **!
know what the problem is but
the st>luiion has lo come Irom
inside of me *
"It ukes awhile to get the
improved fom into your
head." explained telle/ "He
(Meisler) does very well up lo
6-8 but over that height he
reverts bseit to his mistake *
The rest of Meisler's tech-
nique IS solid, however He has
a strong life off the ground, he
uses his arms well and he has a
decent swing leg All are es-
sential to a well executed high
jump
A lot of the Brums' success
stems from another, less con-
trollabie factor his physical
stature At 6-3 4nd 175 pounds
Meisler has the perfect high
jumper physique Stones and
Woods, the world's top rated
leapers. are also tall ^nd shm
"You need iofig and power-
ful legs to act aN a lever against
the ground when yoti jump."*
said Meisler
I wstddn't hRve
all the publicity if Pd fo«e to
hifh school out hsve. In CaK
ifornia there were a lot of
jumpers.**
Bi!t Meisler decided to
t!Z
his small Loog It
6 piRoe Ml the sun He trai
yoOO miles to perfect his iskat
it UCLA iMider the
of Telle/
lelle/ recently spespiRd |he
head track and field position at
the university of Houston and
Meisler feels his departure will
be a major loss to the UCLA.
program | ^
"1 think he knows morel
about track and field than sny^
man tn the country," Jason F
explained "He coached held;:
but he kn|6w everythuis
running too. Rui
Meisler got his first intro-
duction into hifh jumping
completely by accident He was
a long jumper in Mth grade but
before (|nc meet he pulled his
hamstnitg muscle and couldn't
make it down the lengthy run-
wav.
**l needed an event last." he
rcfnembei^. "So' I U>4»ked
around I he high jump ruRWay
was. shiirt so I tried it I lelt it
was an exciting event, and I
like bnding tn the foam rub-
ber "
"Back kt^cw Sork I realfy
stood out in high school.** he
continued * I here was oaty
one other guy in the stale who
could do 741. I be rest were far
events
about
would come to him and ask his
advice UCI A vhoutdrr't have
let him go-^<^ Houston 60' eas-
ily "
Kiit Meisler will remaia in
Westwood despite his coach*B
departure He teels he haows
enough about hii event that he
can flsake improvement! by
himsell "It'i the guys in the
future who won'it have the
benefit of Telle?.** he said
Another person who had
strong effect on Meisler was
former Brum high jumper
Rory Kotinek. who won the
Pac4l championship last year.
Kotinek is now the third rated
leaper in the world.
"Being in the same meet
with Rory helped me a lot.**
hlcttiei said "It gave me in-
tC ootinued oo Past 15^
CLASSIFIED >ID
afOM furmatmd
tioying
f36A
LAW
16 - 6del. 16.
Cemury CNy. 6ep.
MM.. a-SR. 1 SA^
lUUIII IQr rwn
WALK UCLA treei
a Seat Idr 2. RMdidn
471-1
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Bartow lands Wilkes, Allums, Sims
Joe Y(
DB Spwte Wi
know aad km iMtkct-
Ml coadmag tuff etubbshatf
thar rKTuiUng ability lut ytmr
by buiiiai David GfMMMfitf,
Hamihon and Br»d Hoi-
That expertise wm TO-
Monday with tlie
of High Sdwol All-
hmm Wilkes, Dar-
cell Allums aod Gig Sims
~^**Nobody can take up ihc
§kMk for Richard and Marquas
should they decide to go hard-
ship," said Bartow, **biit I do
think that James, Darrell and
Gig have outftanding talent
and there is not at college in
the country that would not like
to have them for a four year
education. I think that all three
are capable of contributing to
our program as freshmen, but
not many first year players are
able to pky regulariy, espe-
oai^ with our returning
pisyers.
Wilkes is a 6-7, 190 pound
forward from Dorsey High,
where he was picked as Co-
City Player of the Year after
leading the Dons to their first
City title. He has tremendous
talent and is the most likely of
the three to be playing a lot
next year.
*" James is an extremely
smooth and fluid forward, who
is a good outside shooter and
driver," said Lee Hunt, UCLA
recruiting coordinator. **He is
probably farther along at this
point than the other recruiu."
, iAUums is a 6-1, 220 pound
forward -center, who is pro-
•.^
•mint James WMiei (left) and OerryN
bably the Sleeper" prospect in
the country this year. The
Lynwood High School lenior
did not start playing basket-
ball until his freshman year of
high school and in the short
time of four years he has
grown from 6^, 1 70 pounds to
his ptesent dimensions.
m
"Darrell just started playing
basketball a few years ago and
has his best play ahead of
him," said Hunt. "He hm §md
mt and jumping ability and I
thmk he could become a domi-
nating rcbounder."
Gig Sinas if a 6-9, 205 pound
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GIf k tyck
**Gif has food quickness and
an excellent shoot ing touch.**
said H|int, ""Plus he*s very
good at changing ends ef tlK
court for a big man "
Wilkes and AMusm signed
National letters of Intent over
the weekend while Sims signed
Monday afternoon The of-
ficial announcement on WUkcs
and Allumi came yesterday
sftefBMMi at a press conference
given by The Soulville Foun-
dation.
*^i|gning with UCLA was
the fulfillment of my son*s
boyhood dieaai,*' jmI a happy
Mr.. W&es at the press con-
fene^c *'lt wa& his decision
and we didn*t try to influence
himi o«e way or another We
WMiad him to go where he'd
be Bappy
"parties decided that UCLA
was the best for hini I don*t
have to lell you about iJCLA*s
basketball repuution We have
peat respect for the coacHtng
ablities of Coaches Bartow.
Hunt and Farmer.** said John
Haydel. Wilke*s high school
coach.
Very relaxed
Wilkes was very relaxed at
the press confltrcnce. where 18
other athletes indicated their
college preferences and re-
ceived awards for their past
basketball performances **lt is
A nice feeling to sign with
UCLA.-* said Wilkes. *-! aei
glad to be gnieg to a college
ffifh a winning tradition **
telirtid UCLA
*^If Rkrhard and Marques go
hardebip, thee aiy plaps^aie to
play this srear.** explained
Wilkas, wto selected UCLA
over Ariseaa aad Nceatfa Las
Vegas **UCLA Ims a siratlv
attmmt to the one I ran at
Doney aad I bke Coach 9ar-
tow's style of play.**
Allums is a large adtvidiial
who could grow to 6-16 by tilt
end of next year. He
UCLA €f^m use. Long
Sute aad Texas A A M "I
had baeicaily the saoK afiaas
from all four telMeU. but I
decided to stay local.** said
Allums ''USC hae a few pro-
blems aad I know I will learn
a lot more at UCLA (Allums
has a 3.2 grade point average
in coMspr peep classes)
Startle center
*"! think ni sun out as a
center at UCLA.** Allums con-
tinued. **but I wdtlkl like to
play forward. The Brum win-
ning tradition inflneaeed my
signing If Richard and Mar-
ques go hardship. I have a
better chance to play next
year, but if Marques Mays, I
jcnow I can learn a lot from
him**
Johnny Nash from Long
ieacfc Poly signed with Ari-
zona State The other players
werci scattered, but USC did
not land ane of the 18 pros-
pects
"^We're still talking to two or
three players.** concluded Bar-
tow. "*%o there's the chancF
we'll sign another player **
i.. ■
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^-^-
-■-,-1-
Voliini* XCVIII, Numbv If
Daily
IMimnttf of CaNfomli, Lo« Anqlm
Thuraday, Apri 2t, \wr9
Church's wife describes iife,
husbantl's campaign strategy
By Mar> Betii Murrill
Da SlafT Writer
**rve aiwiiys been a polilH
cian I started out at five ask-
ing someone to vote for m>
daddy.** said Bethine Church
wife of Democratic Presiden-
tial candidau' and Idaho Sena-
tor Frank Church in an inter-
view witll tlie Dai/i Bruin
Tuesday.
Mrs. Church accompanied
her husband lo Los Angrks
Tuesda\ where they attended
the grand opening of Church's
Wilshire Blvd campaign head-
quarters Church faces his first
primary test m Nei>raska on
May li
**Frank has felt very good
about the aiiio|{nt of support
he*s.had here in Califomm. He*s
hoping to Stan some backfires
in the later primaries to comr
in strong in California ** Mrs
Church said
C oascrvativf
She described her husband
as being "as conservative as
Sam Frvin when it comes to
upholding the constitution and
the Urw. as progressive as Ted-
dy Rooseveh when it comes to
breaking targe monopolies and
trusts, as progressive a» Frank-
lin Roosevelt when it comes to
putting people to work and as
'common sense* as the Amer-
ican pcopkt when it comes to
not wanting to enter mto every
foolish foreign war
-He's taken manv hard
stands on the export of )obs
and the export of cartel, for
eaample.'* she said **As head
of the Multi-national commit-
tee, he has seen how the 'gov-
ernment km» tilted tax btcmks
to send jobs abroad **
Mrs Church suggested that
such tax breaks were partiaHy
responsible for urban decay
''Cities should not be the kuid
of decaying centers they are.
Wc should take the tili otH^of
putting our industries and tax
breaks abroad and put them
back in the cores of oqr cities.**
she said
So daeekri
Mrs Church said it was
nnportam that Avneric^Kis be
assured that the government is
not keeping dossiers on private
citi/ens thar the FBI is en-
forcing llic law and the CI A is
takmf inteHigence on foreign-
ers, not on Americans
She said^shc saw no danger
in the relaaie of the Senate
Intelligence C ommittee*s for-
eign and mihtary intetttgence
repon Sen Church headed the
oommtttee
"If you have a pt)licc force
thai has been breaking and
entering private homes, you
don*t sweef it awdcr the rug
and say **We have a fine police
force/ ** she said **The dMiafc
the CIA has done, they've
done to themselves **
Asked if her l;ittsband was
taking part in the *stop Carter'
movement, she answered. **l
don*t think Frank has anything
to do with any stop-any body-
of-t he- Democrat ic-candidaiei;
I think he's just had a 'start
htmseir movement.**'
Mrs. Church expressed en-
thuctastic suppon of the Equal
R if kts Amendment, adding
Tve always been, both with
my father and with Frank,
totally liberated**
She -said her husband would
not favor a constitutional
amendment either Sot or
against abortion "If yoi^ try to
bring a constitutional amend-
meiil on either side, you^re
splitting the country.** she said
Sen. Church authored t.he
"^conscience movement,** which
allows hospital staff to refuse
to assist or perform theraputic
abortions.
Asked about her opinion of
non-candidate Senator Hubert
Humphrey. Mrs. Church re-
sponded. **| think the Amer-
ican - people are looking for
new leadership, for someone
who hasn't been around* the
track several times.**
Qp rating her husband*s
chanGas of winning the Demo-
cratic
Church said the
always taken long
'When he first ran for the
Senate, he was hardly known
He ran afainst three others
who'd all run beiore and he
was the youngest to be elected
to the Senate at the time. ^ He
feds it*i never too late to try
and that the odds are sever
too great to run
*'But.* she added ''f
wouldn't estimate the odd&.
because Vm terrible on math-
ematics. Tm not so bad on the
but- r
It hematics
Three discrepancies cited
RFK death
hit
•II
StS
•y Jim reUx
Staff Wffltar
Former New York Coiigressman Allard K
Lowenstein said Taeadey lie is still convinced
tbe esidence in the assassination of Roben F
Kennedy eight years ago **» not supportive of
tlie onr-gun theory given by the Los Angeks
Police [>epart ment "
Lowenstein cited three discrepancies in the
evidence: eyewitness testimony versus the
autopsy and official testimony the exact
number of bullets fired
and whether practice
bullets fired from Sir-
Kan Sirhan's gun match
those used in the shoot-
«
twg.
Speaking to a small
feathering in Reiber
Hall's Fireside Lounge
Lowenstein said. **!
don't know what the
answers are but I don't
want to #ave the quest
Horn l*iti "iprepared to
say if we 46n*\ tr^ to
frnd out the trui^
cooperate
lining that the
LAFO lias refused to
with bii iu-
' )wcMietn.
wlio enlcied tkt case
two years afow
the aaaic peuMem
of the evidruce it tbai
iIk eyewituenai aad of-
ficials could flUI ^0iee
a« llK uuiilMi uC Sir
fired.
X-
otody could put
Ts gun in tiK
autopsy showed the buUeu entered from the
rear, close eyewitnesses saw tiK gun in front of
Kennedy.
In addition. Lowenstein questioned whether
more than i^fln bullets, the number Sirhan's
gun can fire, were found in the Ambasaador
Hotel Since five were taken from injured
bystanders and two from Heaoedy. that left
one bullet to make many holes in the ceiling
and dcior frame. The LAPO claims aM|>uli^t
ricocheted off ilie ceiling
and flour.
** L^^^^^M^^^M^^^^^M a.u^^a
rw^^^gwwf* INK
tiles witll tue uuHet
holes were destroyed by
the LAPD.** he said
Then, on December
17. 1975. UK LAPD
sUfcd a search on the
pantry of the Ambasia
dor Hotel to louk lur
more bullets. !,# wen -
stein called die search
**tlK ultimate annouaaiK
ment of the contempt al
the authorities to pursue
Three elected
in GSA being sought
by only three people
•y Clwis Painter
Dl Staff Writer
The Oniuate Students Association (GSA) election fcaulls wiM
be easy to predict this yuar. No need for polls No need for
experts. No need for tabulating computers. The prediction
reluibibty is ateoet a sure tlung: Eytry caadidaie. ag niamaf
unopposed.
Each of the three elected posts in GSA is being sou|ht by only
aue punou. Pluiiine Brackeen is runmng for prciideut, >iil
Cormier forrftnr vice-preskSeiiniMrXeii reila^ua Jm'mmlmi
vice-president. The dead kne for submission of candidacy Wat laet
week. Of 12,000 GSA studems. only tlHue liave permaufftly
expetteed thetr desire to rua for the three olffioes.
*'Four ads were put in the DqUv Bruin announcing the ilacuaa
pmtB and noltfyuif everyone of }he deadlines.** said Gwen Huyl,
IIk GSA sacMary. Sliie said this situation ha*
pui iKvei an iiim. noyi
but do not violate any
"A sMifle
mfli^Hu* a W9
ctrcumnances are
ling that iihile t
Los Angeles is wuere
IlK trafedy occurred,
■ad yui Lus Aupilai i&t-
Hcials have ic^iaad^ to
cooperate.** he daialad.
In lengthy detail. La-
wenstein explaiaad tkt
inadequate in^
tried to
ihot from auHMB's
with the oaas actuaSy
tiou. He said the experts
NtttcaHy CMild cither
mil ipa III II m eui
(C !< iti PaftS)
'Riddle Thief reveals banner
One of the nine UCLA
NCAA beaatri staHen over
Easter weekend was dis-
ouueead kM mglK ia a Kin-
sey hall locker
According lo Jeft 5
sky. program dtreetor lor
KLA radio, the 1975 hUMter
**tt was wrapped in
ptaatk, almoel like a
sack/* he
thief several times
to hruadMH
them' revealing tl
ti^.
The uauon was
at ahout fM
the
chiH he
tuthg
. <
IS-
^^^^^^^f^^^
mmgmmtm
«Mi
UP
1
I
DB SHrfT Writer
Winsion Heiidenoii, chair-
of the Communicatioiif
■ocHMd student govern-
mcnt of unconstitutionally
II I 111 ' ' ,1 1 , , I . ■■ I . ' ' I — PI ' ''.
Ilenderson raps student government
pping its bounds in ex-
erting pietsure on the Com-
municatJOfliB Bonrd
Henderson wni tpaciricaUy
referring to student pressure
jiimed at forcing the Com-
Spmd an MWforg^ttobia •v^nliif w«||i ToiiiOMM-Lautfvc
Pmd Gauguin, Max iha Actor, THm Van Gogh, and . .
t
1
THE SHOW THArS
SHOCKING THE CRITICSt
at
TlMZtpHyr Tl
(on thaatr* row)
7461 Mairon Ava
WtaMt HoMywood
Partormancas
M^ad through Sat
8:00 PM
Student Mm: S3.00
For information A
llHtfvations Call
41M409 '
SENIORS AND
^GRADUATES
Learn the principles of effective
interviewing at a
Group Interviewing
WorJcshop
March 1 , 1 976 - 1 0am - 1 2 Noon
, ' ■" ■■''■V and
March 15, 1976 - 2pm - 4pm
S ig n up at the Placement and Career
' Planning Center Building 1G or
^ . call 825-2981.
\ )
BRING THIS AD
AND BUY ANY.LP
PRICED 3
ONL
ANY TAPE PRICED
FOR
I
MAY 8
GRAMIVIY RECORDS
10*- ' GriV\OV Avi
pQT. c
-la Blv
CLOSED SUNDAYS
munications Board to fund
departmental publications
However, he said he intended
to include all campus groiqpt.
The Graduate Student Ab-
sociation (GSA) ubied a reto-
lution befpre the GSA Senate
earlier thu week The resolu-
tion seeks to modify the Com-
munications Board *s operatmg
procedures so that the Board
will be forced to fund depart-
mental publicationt.
Student government has no
authorized control or link with'
the Communications Board.
The board exists as an agency
independent of ASUCLA, ex-
cept that ASUCLA acu as a
banker for the Board.
**What*s at stake here is that
student government thinks they
can introduce — wiUy nilly -
any ictolucion,*' said Hender-
son. He added, They have
voided theu constitution by
inierfering irilh our constitu-
tion."
Although. Henderson would
not name tile individuals who
he claiflu have been pressuring
the Iboard, he said, "Preaaure
was (Coming from unauthorized
student leaders; both under-
gnduate and graduate student
government . **
Henderson believes the
boaffd is being pressurad to,
fund departmental publications
so that tt can be used as a
political iatae in the upcoming
student elections.
The resolution before the
Senate «^as submitted by Bill
Cormier, who is runmng un-
opposed for Graduate Student
as deri
are
in
or
publications,
the resolution^
are student poMleBlMa which
»red by an academic
or sdioaL pro-
by full-tiflM alMiaaii aad
whoae content would be com-
munication of academic
professional nature.
In other matters, the Board
approved a 1969.00 mcreaae in
funding for IVestwmd. the
UCLA bterary quarterly. This
mamty will be uaed to incieaac
the number of copies from
2,000 to 4J)00 per ianie.
Another fimiaat by West-
wind editor chaiiet Cataai
for Board approval of prizes to
be offiered to the best sub-
missions, was denied.
Nine UGLA faculty
get Guggenhelms
Nine UCLA schotors fuhre received Guggenheim Fellow-
ships for 1976 as UCLA tied Yak Umversity for fifth pltux
in the nation in number of appointments, according to the
John Simon Guggenhetm Memorial Foundation.
UC Berkeley led* the nation lo the number of awards with
21. Otfaer universities topping UCLA were Sunford, 18;
Harvard, II and Priaceton, 10
--'V
The fellowship ^wards this year totalled $4,192,000 and
are awarded on the baaia of drmnaaiiated accomplishmenu
in the past and strong promise for the future
The winners arc Dr. Calvin Bedient, aaaociate profesaor
of Engbsh (Woodland Hills); Or Paul Chihan, aafociate
profesaor of muaic (Weat Loa Aafeka); Dr Harold B.
Gerard, professor of piycholofy (SanU Monica); Dr. Leon
ICnopoff, professor of geophysics and physics (Westwood);
Dr Stanislav Segert, professor of Biblical studies aad
northwest Semitics (Pacific Pahaades); Dr. J. P. Thomber,
professor of molecular biology (Brentwood); Dr. Kenneth
N. Trueblood, profesaor of chemiatry (Bel Air) aad Dr.
Robert S Wcttaaa, aaaociate professor oT history (West-
wood). In addition, a fellowship was awarded to visiting
Research Fellow Peter fc. Cjol^inaii of UCLA's department
of history His home is (}ueen*s College, New York.
The nine faculty ipfmbari were among 300 scholara,
scientists and artists chosen by the Committee of Selection
from among 2,953 applicants in the Foundation's 52nd
annual competition.
-J. NaliMn
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
VoHima XCVIII. Numbw' If
Thursday. April 29. 1976
if aurtng thu
SP/ioo/ ymr. aao^pr ^um§ firtMrt^jn
•ntf da^f fo^omHtg aaSMiys. and •«-
mfiHmtton pwiotft. by Vm ASUCLA
Lo9 AngBi—, CsMomit
Copyrtght 19>9 ty tfm
ASUCLA Communtctition§ Bo%nS
quid •t thm Lm
Jifn
l^trtcfc Hn»y
Enc Mand»i
Alios Wkom
Pmuk Signorvlli
Oulnn.
Otymoia %Tm>tisnq Como#ny Olymp.i, IVMftington 'QLya
Some thin^N never ch;int:c
I Fir>t hin-tcd .it in NN with a
' piitcfu li»i[ "a uh>|
with which ti> i>pcix.aiilk
anJ truit c;ln^!' thi* slcvk
Mcel line of the chissic *
beer h«*oli Kml to ,\\xmx
the invention i»l the hcer
can hy American dn in
, When emr' f CXwyy
SamfNt>n w:>' lu rci invent
thiN penuliiii..,,v,, JuiKhon.il ttH>|.
f^cceeJecl in uninnt; V yi - <t rhirsry
thrr^ifv v.,th the a.meni>»M nuiiionH ^4 cam!
It tiM>k !ikill and in|^:nur : the r
|u.st c an r be improved upi»n . , ,^ ^.nne m h. n u»r Olv
Stmie rhtnu'> never chantfe A u'reai bc*fr aiHrnni chai^v
Ol
VI
fU'\ ff wt
II
{^'ysag)!]^
Kvf ilm-Hnl mi am heCUt
MEXICAN
MEDICAL
SCHOOL
accepting
20 american
stubent;
*AMA Recognized
•WHO Listed
•No Spanish Required
*N6 Spanish Required
M Year School
•Starts August
•Immediate
Acceptance
•5 Hours from the U.S.
•Re-enter the U.S. as
a Dortnr
Can 512-943-2016
and back for $600
••l);c
Bicycle trip — LA to DC
ay Ktr Garia
DB Stair Wrilar
A bicyclist caa save over SliO and fet more
for his money by nding cross-country with
Shen Goldberg.
Goldberg, a semor at Granada Hilb High
School, found that it will cost her only S600 to
bike from Los Angeles to Oregon and then on
to Washington DC, followed by a plane fUght
back home.
"Bike-Centcnnial," a similar program,
charges $780 for a^ trip with fewer features
**1 sec no sense in what they*re charging. I
thought they were a non-profit graa|^** tasd
Goldberg of Bike-Centennial She added, rit
was too expensive. I knew I could do the same'
thing for less than their coat**
She estimates that fl>od, bought in super-
markets across the country, would cost about
$270 per person Renting campgrounds tolah
$90 for the trek by Goldberg's cakulations
Miscellaneous expcaaes are estimated to be
$75 The plane trip from Washington DC. to
Loa Angeles is $147 Bike-
CentenniaPs $780 fee does not
include spending monev or the
' ine fare home
Goldberg found that one
airline daci aal charge far ttoraee or bicyclei^
and even supplied boaes for the bikes.
Free bike toaas
*'United Airlines charges $10 for bike boxes
Delta 'Airlines considers bikes as sporting
equipment and therefore charges nothing **
Eleven people have shown interest in Gold-
Nrg^s excursion since she put a notice in the
Dmiy Bmim campus events section three weeks
afo. She said. "We had our first organizational
BKeting two weeks ago. and we*ll be nding
around on ahernate weekends**
The purpose of the weekend rides is to
eandition the bicyclists tor the journey and to
give them an opportunity to know each other
better
Mare flexibility '
Goldberg now feels that ber expedition is
better than **Bike-Cemennial.** -1 here's a lot
more flexibility in what to to and a lot ol
fracdom, too ** she said.
Her group plans to average around 51 miles
a day, though that distance will var> Goldberg
•aid, -We'll slow down in interesting places and
cruise through places of no interest
Well average 42 miles a day going
through the Rockies and about
b8 miles a day in Kansas"
Knatlaaid on Page 7)
Kirliaii photography
dianiflaeii on UCTVLA
Human beings emanate
wwrgy or '^vibes" which dan be
recorded using, a technique
called Kirlian photography,
aacording ,to Dr. Thehna
Mots, who will discuss the
technique on UCTV-LA at
11:30 today
Mom, a parapsychologist at
NPI, wiU show film |clipt of
^bcf** fenerating from both
alaafti *<^ hunaaaa sk^ aaid
*^vibes** change peroeppMy „iia^
pending on the mood ., of,, tiK
life source.
Shanng the UCTV-LA pro-
gram with Moss wil) be a
videotaped Kgroent on aeat
week's Cinco De Mayo oala-
bration, a look at the Farm
Workers Initiative. Mexican
aad rhirann folk songi from
Hector Aquiniga and a short
at hfe in Weat L.A
International Student Center
CourK:il on Programmifif .
invites you to an
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
FILM FESTIVAL
6:15-T«)
7:15-7:30
8:00-8:30
9:00-9 30
7«).715
8:30-9:00
7;
Among thoae screening are ...
'Environmenf - Zawd Darwish
'Social Service' - Jeanne Shanin
'Eaat-Side Story' - Morteza Rezvani
*David' - Ellis Ron
The Name is Woman — Patricta Sidea
A I Chhatmas Gift' — Nabll Wanis
'Spectator' - Jeanr>e Collachla
'One' - Pamela Jonea
Refreahmento wlU be served!
iUfeniaaion Free - Everybody Welcome—
Saturday, let May, 6:00 - 10HK) PM
At the International Student Center^
1023 HHgard Avenue, Westwood.
Phone 825-3384
bylSCa
nion
M«et8Tonlgli«
7:30 p.m. Karckhoff
Upataira Loung*
Tontgnts'%,a|lS«< *• Bill Carey,
p Mayor Bradlaf^ newly appointed
liaiaon to Itie pay community
Join ua lor an informal evening of
diacuaaion
OSU offica 825-8063
Hotlina 477-1
I
r
tired of yesterday's half?
IrlAlK' TOCAT
-- For wtiat's happening now
styling for men and women
Jerry Bedding's Jhirmack products
For appointment call 478-6151
tues. thru saL
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with this ad
1105 Glendon Ave Westwood Village
PARTY! PARTY!
For Good Times of
the Oelt House '^
J ■ ■ .
-7- Live Band
Frozen Kei resin nn its
Delt Daig's 4 Bullfrogs
Friday April 30 8 pm - 1 am
649 Goyley Ave
Get Wet —
Succumb with the Delts
T
t
I .. - ^ I II JH
.1 I wmm ■ mi
r
TJui „ th» ptocmfor Kib LovmrtI
\By for th» iMf Kibtwmvm tr^mLA
^ coMPiETE ommK
Casual Dmmg «^S2.75{
■JUHIT'S
l«M M CKSCiMT »<«HrS M SUMKT STHT
10 MinwtM UowJi StoiMt Wvd lo
to»r«< Canyo« Turn t^jt., Aod Vo« r. 7K«r«
Awareness Gyoup
assists Diabetics
By CMi Svttda
DB Sulf Bcpoiier
Mjir> Tyler Moore, Gary Owen>. baieb^B
player Ron Santo and hockey player Bobby
Ckurke are all diabetics Bioufh they freely
•cluM«iiiipe k, many with the diicaie find
tuch an admiision too hard to make.
According to the UCLA Diabetcf Aware-
ness Group, public mitcMiceptions sur-
rounding diabetes cause many with the
condition to fear public reaction and feel
ashamed of themselves *^iatiftics say that
about 2 in 30 people are diabetic.'* said Ron
Kxndit, one oi the club s founders, "On this
campus there are a lot of closet diabetics.**
The Diabetes Awareness Group was or-
ganized last fall by diabetics and non-
diabetics. It became officially recognized as a
campus organization during the winter
quarter The group wants to eliminate the
Atfconoeptions by spreading the facts about
have
reach
explained that mrl wfk ining friends
tried to keep the neeBed sugar out of
m he went into insulin shock.
**lnsulin ihock is frightening. ' ,^;^*
member Cathy MooOai, Urctting it can t)^
teal unlm the praper action is taken
The Diabetes Anvienm Group's four-p<,int
miiMon IS tp^coumcJ new itudents who hai*
diabetes, pro^i^e information referral
conduct rap sessiW and spoMor lectures
and campus progti^ Beetgned to cdotatc
the public about diabetes
GToup members will partiopnie in coun
teling diabetic younstcn as part of the
iinicamp program They wUI also man a
tooth at the May 25 hcahh fair.
Amid laughter at Thursday nights rar
session in the Treehouse, the members
One example they cite is the belief that
Bittheief iBeans an individual must never
have.Mgnr or sweets. In truth, they say.
when soneone with diabetes goes into
insulin shock they must have sugar im-
swapped stories, news and gMMp. -•My name
IS Mmdy. I'm a dance major, and I'm going
to be famous someday." said one. The next
be this Thursday at 7 pb at the
••It's not that everybody should already
know this.** said Kendis through his brown
osoiastache. "It's just ignopince -
**¥on can menuon that we look nornuil
and It's not contagious," added member
Steve Edelman
Diahetes resulu when the body's abthty^to
••e blood sugar is impaired Insulin in-
jeaions are required daily to supplement the
body's sugar-burmng process.
Insulin shock occurs when the sugar level
in the- blood is depleted, cutting off nourish-
ment to the body's cells '
**Then your brain cells begin to starve and
you become flakey." said ILendis "Vou then
have cold sweat, tremors, "nausea, disorncn-
tation and sometimes undirected rage * He
SHELLEY'S
STEfleO HI Fl CENTER
;■ J>*.{,
4i
ion will
Treehouse.
Eileen Levine and Elaine Tennen of
student health are the professional members
of the group -Moat of the programs for
diabetics are either for the very young or
very old." Levine said -The college age
population 1% normally left out. We re
hoping our program will be the first of
many.
"One of our goals is to educate the staff at
Student Hcahhr; said Mmdy Brofftnan, a
mf mbfi.' She said diabetics cannot obtain
insulin through that service at present
According ta Kendis the group is no\*
lobbying for just that
_"We are working within the system
There s no need to pohticize the situation'
Kendis said, admitting that if the 2.000
estimated diabetics on campus were or
gani/ed they would be the largest minonts
group on campus ^^It's not the kind of ihiay
that works ^hat wa>." he said '
DfPERT REPAIR SERVICE
UMTYTCinAnKY
^Qpoh Mon I ^ Til 8 PM
DISCOUNT
PRICES
Extension course note
I'CLA ^udems enrolled in
regijiar session, including those
leave.
<♦'
on^ leave, must secure written
approval from the appropriate
dean or studv-hst officer prior
lo enrollment in UCLA Exten-
sion. , ,
Provided such approval is
secured for each course taken
m Extension, credit toward the
bachelors degree mav be
earned via many UCLA txten-
The Stixl0nt Committee for the Arts
in OD-operation with
D.E.A.F. MEDIA
t presents "^ .
k special sign language adaptation o1
"^ Stephen Schwartz's
His
Sign
in the
music
Friday, Map 7, 8:30 p.m,
McGowan HaN
ADMISSION IS FREE!
sion courses Students pian-
ning to transfer— Extension
credit to UCLASfcgular session
arc urged to confer with the
Extension Information and
Program Advisory Service (m
Ilia Extension Registrars Ot
fice, 10995 Le Conte Avenue at
the south weii comer of the
campus) for information on
the many opportunities open
to them
?^w^^^nt"*» Corporat.ofi i. proud of a
minicomputer manufacturina and t
-^■GTH* mtfy It y^„ Our dynamic
our North Amoriean IMTmIos ornni-
xation. "^
The
*.«^ *. - -. -• * for our
wm'Llii'L"***!!:^'"' program
^iii spend nine wmmA^ at our Cor-
'S'^^ Heaiiqiiaitm ia Maynard,
will focua Ml aaka/mmrketina and
h^rdwart/aoftwrniv ayalana. Itm
TiS'^.w^'V.* » toehafcal dnrr««
(■•th. Physical 8ei««e«, Engi-
v^nnc, or Conpatar Mtkmtf) vith
two ssiMai — -p— — ^ #
teminina.
A?Ur
fr^'^.T^ iA W lanM tai
OI our Md aalaa oA*
tha asMilr
L^ **>'^' 'i"i «to wflif indudt
proeunac, iiirtiplag; aarricins,
*nd maaAging new mmmmU far
» Am aT iMundwrnrc aad
aWut tiM
«f a Diaital
^■T^tt, in
icaliiniMii 1^.
hmii
. I.
lAMta
year s Student elect!
hit by apathy of students
J
Saffy Gamer
U4k ZcdMmy
Dl Staff Wrttert
A major concern of thi& year'i ttudcnt
^(Bidy presidential candidatet it the kck of
•tiident interest and mvolvement in student
government
Each of the seven caaMAics is interested
in the perennial fipgliiaM ol housing and
parking, and interest was cxprenad in new
mmi like campus safety. AS UCLA use of
stiatlen' funds and education.
According to David G Brown, 'The
higfm problem is parking " Brown wants to
ge straight to Mayor Bradh .ffice and use
student pressure to have the side streets
around ICLA retoaed for all-day parking
An opposition to the proposed John
Wooden Sports and Rect-eation Center was
voiced by Brown because it will raise
registration fees
Although all the candidates want more
student participation in student government.
Gerald Ixon Hale is rurij^ingas a member of
the **apathetic students partv **
"We're not apathetic about student con-
cerns, we're apathetic about student govern-
ment/' Hale commented
Hale said the SIC should exercise some
kind ot '*hscal responsibility." calling the
purchase ol a $5,000 mobile football helmet
for use at UCLA football games iudmtus.**
Restoration of student government vitality
and a ** redirection of presidential elioris to
things tliat ciMicern more students*' are the
goals of Don Leaser Lesser was previously
the director of UCLA Cal-PIRd and is
presently the SLC financial supports com-
missioner, a position he has held for two
months.
"ASIC'IA revenues should be redirected
to serve more students' lesser iuiid An
ASUCLA-sponsored bus line running to
Palms and the valley is one way the mnnrv
could be used according to Lesser
An emphashs on '^practical things" was
stressed by Meg McConnack. **rm an idea
person,** §km mid. **rm the one who*! wiihng
to fo out and find out w^t iIk students
wnM." McCormack wa« the 4kf9et ! the
recent impc syMosium here, a member of
the Campus SaMy Task Force and origi-
nator of the Dykstra Hall escort service.
If elected McCormack said her top
prionties will be to revive the night tram.
Mcaaase campus lighting and increase stu-
dent control ol AS UCLA funds
"If individuals in student government
don't work, they slMiiidn*t fBl paad." Victor
Nunez said They should go out and "solicit
input** from campus groups, he aMed.
Nunc/ has *becn active m student govern-
ment for three yfcars. Ait a former Com-
munay Services Commissioner. Nunez
handled a budget ol S 100.000 and a staff ot,
2.000 volunteers.
"I'm going to work, not sit back,** Nunez
said citing his ability to get students
involved and working with the administra-
tion. Student employment, housing, safety
and issuance of {MU-king permits are prob-
lems he would like to solve
Howard Schreiman a member of the UC
Student Lobby, has also worked in state
politics. Schreiman wa^ts to make the
students aware of where their dollars are
going, and to more effectively maaait and
run ASICI A
Other issues in Schrci man's campaign are
improvenfurm ol Student Health Services,
better publtci/ed SIC meetings to create
more student input and findmg ahernative
solutions to the parking problem
Another candidate concerned with the
**closed door" atmosphere of Kerckhoff HafI
is Scott Taylor Taylor is presently an SLC
General Representative, a member of the
Board of Control ( BOC) and a former
president of Sprout Halt dormitory
He advocates a filing of class descriptions
by proksMirs before each quarter and an
eXtensi<»n of add drop deadlines Taylor ahio
said student government needs a master
phwi
Lowenstein • • •
<C ontimicd from Pafr I )
suic of their findings ' "The
effort to match the bullets with
Sirhan's gun ^as a washout."
he said.
I owenstem. who led the na-
tionwide "dump Johnson"
I movement in 1968. also failed
to discount the idea of a con^
spiracy based on the pattern of
rcooM assassinations "To say
that only loose nuts commit
the murders is absurd." he
charged "Th^fefore. one can-
not say there was or was not a
conspiracy; you can only in-
vestigate.
claiming, ^'^tl is clear the CIA
was engaged with organized
crime, and wc don't kno%^ hou
far the alliance goes"
Saving he wa> seventh
the White House's "tnemies
List." Lowenstein said. "De-
mocracy depends on not
having forces you don't know
about doing things they
shouldn't do We invrtc being
putty in other force** » hands.**
SUMMER
JOBS JOBS JOBS
Lecture given
on archeology
Professor Andre Ray-
mond lurmcr director of
the Institut Francais D'-
Ftudcs Arabes de Damas.
will give an illustrated lec-
ture entitled **ArclieolOKical
Lxcavations in Balis Mes-
keneh in Northern Syria"
at K pm tonight in Dodd
121 1 he puMic is invited
and tbcre is no admission
Cofi^ga framed men and wo-
men will ^ considered to
supplement our parmanawf
atalf in district offices
throughout the US These
positions are full time summer
ioba We f aaarchtng for
applicants who mm ambitious.
dapamlaMa and hard work-
ing Excellent opportunity for
advanoaawfit. You may con-
tinue fo work on a part time or
full time teaia naat fall if you
daaire For district office ad-
dreaa. or for appointment with
out local manager, call Robbie
after April 10fh • a.m to 3
)pm . MofKlay through Friday
ifiLACa«a»4aH
In Van Nurt Caff TiT-attl
m Manaanan tea Caa S72-tl97
In Analielni^ Caff na-gaa-i Its
-I
/OOMCO't
T OF DiriT
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BEFORE THE TIML
Two
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)
10074 W. Pito Bl¥d.
\Mst Lot Ang^laa
Phona 474-1Si0
Lunch g
Spanish Speaking Mental Health
Research Center
Colloquium Serim
Presents
IGNACIO AGUILAR
Direcier. Xipe-Totec CItnica de Vafuda M«nul
liUn Slate Hotpiul
44
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J-Board rules for Banks
Tkc Sittteit Judicial
nikd Tuesday that the Stu>
dent Legislative Council (SLC)
lias tiK coaatjtutional power to
withhold the stipends of stu-
dent government members who
do not submit bi-quarterly
reports.
The BnMi, however, found
the SLC resolution on with-
holding stipends void until
SLC established guidehnes to
regulate the form and content
of the reports.
The 5 am decision came
after seven and one-half hours
of testimony and deliberation
on the case, which was brought
before the lovd by SLC
member Willie Banks.
Opposing ianiLs on behalf
of SLC was John Schroeder,
administrative vice-president
The bi-quarterly repnru are
designed to summarize the.
work done by each staient
pooernment member in his
facet of student government.
Until now, it has been up to
the discretion of the Adminis-
trative vice-president whether
or not to MMpt any bi-quarterly
reporu. With this mhag, the
SLC will have this discreuon
in the future.
Lost fPifter, two-thirds of
the SLC members hod their
stipends withheld for not turn-
ing in their bi-quarterly re-
ports, according to Banks. All
members received their sti-
pends once they turned in their
reports^ Banks iacluded.
Banks said the reason for his
late report was that he
waiting for the other two Gen-
eral repreamplivas to finish
their reports so they C9uld turn
theirs in together.
**We wanted to put all the
bi-quarterly reports .tn^pMHr as
a team concept haeoose that's
what we*d been doing all year,**
In .the dehvery of its unani-
mous decision, the Judicial
Board cited a sectioo of the
Undergraduate Student Asso-
ciation Constitution that Hales
as one of the raqpaMlbilities of
SLC: *The promotion of close
cooperation between the
Undergraduate Association,
Faculty, Administration and
Alumni of the University
— Lhiia ftapattcNv
Events post described by candidates
By Mike Disi^iia
DB Stair Writer
Activities such as the Speaker's Program,
the Film Program and Mardi Gras are some
of the major concerns of the two candidates
for Campus Events Commissioner.
Jim Bechtel. a freshman, has served as an
intern on the Campus Events Commission
for theppast year« and he teels this experience
would be helpful. Tve been trymg to get
into every program in campus events to see
what each one is doing." he said
Openness is an important asset to the
commissioner, according to Bechtel. ''I am
open to any new and innovative program in
the office." he said. 'Tm willing to^ consider
input from any source and see whether or
not It win benefit the students.*' he added.
Bechtel proposed to increase programming
ii:.^
AN
in dances and conceru, events which he said
were given a great deal of support this year.
He stressed contmuity between last year's
and this 3fear*s programs as being important.
Bechtel said one a( his major assets was
thatTm a completely honest person" He
said he would be enthusiastic in his work
and fulfill all the demands of the office.
Ittch lievfer, ir^sophomorc, has been the"
dormitory film commissioner and the Sproul
Hall facilities commissioner. **1 think my
experience with working with paaple is my
hcsl asset.** Levier said.
Hei said his experience as film com-
missioner will help him to work well within
a budget. He said. ** We've put together a
film program that rivals campus quantity
and quality." on a budget that he terrned
**much lower" than ithe campus*. i
GSA . ..
(Contiaasd from Pagt 1)
constitutional codes because
the petition deadhne was pub-
tically advertised, she said. **!
think student apathy is a part
of this thing.**
' "Apatii''^
John Hill, the graduate elec-
tions commissioner, echoed
this belief, sasripg **I view it as
apathy.** He abo said he had
received complaints ahotit the
low number of opponents for
the candidates. ^
Hill said the complaints cen-
tered around the lack of stu-
dent interest and not a lack of
proper publicity to gaaame
that hmuit
^f
^4" h e f o M o w I n g pec pi e have
turned In petitions and are can
didates for GSA office
President: Pau leen Brackeen
1st Vice President: Bill Cormier
2nd Vice President: Ken Paslaqui
Vote
IMay 5th & 6th
FILMS
IHOtA *
All wiff^ CfMilisli SuMrtlM
SATYAjrr lurf
THE ADVERSARY
THE HERO
WCO. APPtL M
THIIRS. APRIL 29
MERALTA THEATRE
CHr
THE
COMEDY
STORE
A
CONTINUOUS^HOW:
OF COMEDIANS :
EVERY NIGKT :
Quake victims hQtneless
Drive wiil collect money
•431 -ww^— VL
ig2i wcrrwooo
I7B-7M1
477-47S1
By Kar Garhi
DB Stair Writer
Over one million earthquake
victims in GuateaMli arc still
homeless with the rainy aaaaen
imminent there, according to
Clyde M Woods, assisunt
professor of anthropology
here.
Although groups here have
raised funds and oaBaded food
and clothing, their work con-
tinues
Woods IS currently leadii^ a
dnvt to provide more money
to the quake-torn land.
Woods' interest in Guate-
mala steauned from his travels
there since 1967. Jim Louckey.
an anthropology graduate stu-
dent here who has been
helping Woods in his graduate
„ ifork mvolving Guatemala said
tof the efforts. "We want to
rekindle interest in the Gaute-
mala crisis. People have almost
forgotten Gautemala after all
the big news died down. There
are still people homeless with
the rainy anaot» coming.**
Woods appealed to the VC-
LA cofamunity saying. -We
need money. That's the only
thing we need at this time
Housing IS the big problem
and they need money to buy
material down there." said
Woods.
He added. ** People are living
in bamboo litrts -covered with
rags there, and the rainy
season begins in June and runs
to September. They're going to
need help for the next couple
of years. The United Sutes has
interests in Guatemala that are
political, but I'm not con-
cerned about that I'm con-
cerned about the people there
and I hope that the students
here will help us " ■
Woods coordHuited the ini-
tial fund-raising campaign im-
mediately after the big tremor
in Central American with the
help of the International Stu-
dent Center (ISC) and the
School of Public Heahh here
ISC donated about S500
from special sales and dinners.
The anthropology department
gave about S2306 from pubhc
donations. The efforts ol the
School of Public Health
brought UCLA's total contri-
butions to Guatemala to
S4000
The money was taken to
Gaatoaala through the Amer-
ican Friends Service, a chari-
table orgaaiartion Dr Susan
Scrimshaw of Public Health
Bike trip
(CoAtianarf from Pagr 3|
She said she has always en-
tertained the idea of a very
long bike ride '*i've been plan-
ning on this trip since I was
13 I didn't plan on going
cross-country until I heard of
Brke-Centennial Since they
were too expensive. I knew it
woirld make the trip more
enjoyable if i did moat gf the
work myself**
The hikers plan to be some-
where ia Oregoa hy July 4 to
celcbraic the Bicentennial.
Any oat ^teressad m joining
Goliherg*s group is ariMd to
caH 3<t JBlih. afternoons or
evenings.
returned recently from the
tremor-riddled country after
gning the money to the proper
authorities.
Medicine and Mankets ho-
to Woods* dnve were
Uken to one of the hardest hit
towns. San Juan Sacheteta-
quez. by IN XT reporter
Sandy Hill and her film crew
Woods, during the quarter
break, traveled lo Goaicflmla
Uke photos &[ the disaster
He will show shdes and
lecture ahout the stricken na-
tion to any groups interested in
raising funds tor the homelew
there.
Aayone interested in the
slide show or in giving tax-
deductible contributions shoall
conuct Woods at the depart-
ment of anthropology at 825-
1759
Like being involved with people?
Need a job? 20 hours a week?
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Minimal typing skills required Some phono, tonne file,
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I
f
daiy bruin
1 ^
point
!
Who is Tom Hayden
(Idtt^r'i note: Thk h § speech
that Mdrcuie gavt to introduce
Hsyden^in San Dwfo. Marcuse
ii the co-founder of the Institute
of Social Research and ii now a
9^9^9MOr oi poiiticai philosophy
jj at UCSD)
^ Who is Tom Hay6enl For «o
. many years we have known him
R as sonr>eone who has fought the
^ •itablrshment We know he was
< one ot those who went to the
»h
OPINION
I
I
«
I
i
, South to organize for civil rights
and to register voters in the
early sixties when it was not
fashionable to do so He was
one of the leaders in a student
movenr»ent that dramatically
swept across the campuses de-
manding greater participation in
decisions about the direction
and the quality of one's
life. And he opposed the
policies of the government
and the Pentagon in order
to end the war in lodo-
Ims record as a radical — up
until now!
When we see him today and
hear he is taeking the Demo-
crafk nomination to the U.S.
Senate, we wonder what this
means. Why is this man wearing
v''a suit and tie today, with rela-
" lively short hair? What is he
: doing running for political office
by Herbert Marcuse
in the Democratic Party^ Is he
toning down his demands to
make them more palatable to
the establishment? Is he dis-
associating hinnself from social-
ism? Doesn't he know that
"bourgeois democracy" ivould-
n't work anyindre? I have asked
these questions myself And
here arr my answers.
There are two reasons for
supporting Tom. He is easily the
"lesser evil." And this fact
shoufd be ridiculed in view of
what we have today in the way
of politiciarH and their masters.
If we are talking about even a
little improvement in the situ-
ation, it would help.
But there are more compel*
ling reasons for supporting Tom.
Today is not TSii. In 1966 we
could still engage in militant ac-
tion, we still represented a mass
mowcincnt and there was unity
around the issues of that period.
Out of the tumult of the 60's the
social system has reorganised
Itself. The system of control and
repression »s perfected. Ar\d the
rnovement is divided in itteH
Mnd diffused. People are very
disillusioned and defeatist. There
are apparently no sirtgle issues
which can unite us. In sh^; this
is a period of preventive coun-
ter, revolution which requires a
decisK^e shift m strategy.
Under counter-revolutionary
conditions, features of liberalism
and bourgeois iaiocracy,
which were previously held to
rights and libgftii, the struggle
for equality and justice, for pop-
ular control of the government
— they have again become a
level, a decisive level on whkrh
the fight for radical change must
be waged today.
The situation is so serious that
even the vote must be used.
One more decent human being
in the legislature committed to
telling the truth, to raising basic
issues and to fighting would
make a difference. And even ii
Tom is not elected, a significant
vote would be a show of
strength and would serve as a
warning to those in power that
their bankrupt policies will not
continue unrestrained.
The choice in this country
today is not bourgeois demo-
cracy or socialism, but rather,
radicalization of democracy or
neo-fascism. The fight for social-
ism requires an extended denru>-
cratic framework in the com-
nnirrtties, in the schools, on the
iob, in the economy.' with the
goal of ielf-determination by
using the available means of
be only reformist, anti-revolu-
tionary, and regressive, assume a
new significance They can be-
come, must become, weapons in
the struggle against the rising
authoritarianism, militarism, to-
talitarianism. The defertse of civil
popular potential for action in a
step- by -step manr\er, instead of
operating in a fantasy world and
assuming pne day we will dranrv
atically shift from one mode of
social organization to another.
Once fascism is in power, it is
too late. It is too late for you to
^ight even for the "bourgeois
rights" and "liberties" which
you may disdain today. I think
Tom knows it and this is for me
« a socialift, as a Marxist, the
reason for supporting him.
MuUM IMd
letters, letters, letters, letters, letters.
»r-1-
It is my wish to inform the
Dai7y Brum and UCLA students
in general that our national
senior women's honor society,
Mortar Board, is. opening up its
membership to quaUfied men
stuxienis. ^- -
Faced with the requiremems
of.. Title U compliance, our or-
ganization has chosen to in-
terpret this mqve as a truly
unique opportunity It remains
our central goal to promote the
advarKemeoi of women m soci-
ety, but now that goal is more
nealistically possible through the
combined efforts of men as well
as women.
We invite all men and women
who are currently juniors, have
at least a 3.0 g.p.a. and a record
of university or community ser-
vice and leadership, to pick up
applications at 2224 Murphy
Half It IS our hope that the
UCLA chapter of Mortar Board
can set an example for the rest
of the country through the ef-
forts of an active, unified mem-
bership
The deadline for return of
applications has been extended
to Friday, April 30 at 5 pm. They
should be turr>ed in to the Dean
of Students Office, 2224 Murphy
Hall.
Mortar Board
Munoz
The March 23 coup d'etat
carried out by the armed forces
in Argentina has presented to
the world an image of moder-
ation and respect for human
rights. But the reality is brutally'
different Silently, the Argentine
junta has unleashed a bloody
repression against all leftists,
trade unions and people's off
finizations. 'Meanwhile, rightist
OfganizatiorYs continue to oper^
ate with impunity, including the
criminal Argentirte Anti-Com-
munist Alliance (AAA) w^ich has
redoubled its attacks and assav
si nations.
This is the tragic truth that the
entire world must know: raids,
tortures, abuses, mass arrests.
The lives of thousands of Argen-
tines are in serious danger. Mili-
tants of other nationalities who
happen to be there, in particular
Chilean political refugees, are
likewise victims of this persecu-
tion, being turr>ed over to the
contem^iWe Chilean junta or
shot on the spot without legal
proceedings of any sort.
Among thoie cor>demned to
death is Mario Munoz Salas, 3S
years old. a mine worker arid a
Chilean revolutionary working-
class leader. Pursued and con-
demned to death by the Chilean
junta, he is today threalMwd
with the same fate at the hands
of the new Argentine govern-
fnent, which claims to respea
international conventions re-
garding Mylum and human
rights.
Only 46 hours after the dema-
gogic declarations of the 'rgin
<*gg frnu, a military patrol ol
•••••••lel police ooffipoKd of 30
nr>en in battle gear raided hit
•wute at 3 am (March 25). B^
nwstake. they first ifwaded the
house next door, violently
breaking down the doors and
brutally beating those they
^ound intlde. Upoh ilhiwmiiii
their error, they proceeded km-
inediately to the house of Mario
f^^tr^oi. They entered, fmiitiiJ
up the interior and itiMiiil out
of the houte hit companera,
Olga Menetes Ibwiu, their five
children and a couple of rela-
th^es who witf^ present, beating
them all the while.
AH of them wUre taken into
the street where the troops im-
nnediately began interrogating
the women and children as to
the whereabouts of their fatf>er.
while the other relative was
mercilessly beaten. During the
interrogation of the children
they were mistreated and sav-
agely beaten, which produced a
reaction from all the neighbors
who witr>essed the terrible scene
of weeping ar>d screaming. The
troops then tried the snatch the
smallest child, a two-month-
old baby from the arms of its
mother, to use it as a hostage.
She replied that even if all her_
children were taken froc^i her, '
she would not utter a single
word that might endanger hier
companero's life. Faced with the
nx>ther's courage, firm deter-
mination and the outrage of all
th<Me present, #ie patrol was
forced to retreat, but not before
informing Munoz' coMpBnero
that their orders were to shoot
^irr\ on sigfit.
The province of San fu^n has
kmmn tealed off as the hounding
of Mario Munoz continues. In-
terprovinaal trantport is beinc
stopped and searched to look
for him
The brutal persecution of
which Mario Munoz it the
victim mutt be imvMitf^nally
publicized. His life must be
^avedt 'ixinim mti km^m of
the ArencBgua Union of Wmk-
ers and Miners, Munoz It
known and respected by all
Chilean workers as a tireless
fighter Recognition from his
ry
Death
■».' I »
ff^ior's npce; Mefo#r h t
*Ofi^H>mofe hmt and ii ma/orrnc
in hiitory)
Scientistt. poHHclans, the l.A
rimes and every two-bit dair
^ant agree on this one Calif-
OPINION
and earthquakesi_^omething is being done.
By Peyton Mason
omia is due for a big earthquake
^ »oo^ Many hw« felt that
"cy agenciet and prey-
would be woefully i^
te in event of a Mgli.
quake. As a conte-
1^"^' frthquakf research has
•■••^■iitod and dtjjr councils are
KastHy dgiiiing earthquake con-
tingency plans. At UCLA next
•«ek. the Earthquake Oeferne
League in conjunction with ilit
Moody Opcimint Club it ipon-
soring Earthquake Awareness
Week in an eHort to incream
consciousness of the peril all
Californiant face and prescribe
realistic, effecthre mecfKxis of
dealing with this peril. Events
tentatively fikanr\^ are:
• Monday: Earthquake Con-
•dousness-raising seminars led
by eminent ptycho-geologitt Or.
Stansbury Mountebank. Seminar
nr>embers will be encouraged to
cuhivate seitmic sensibilities
■KSeeeeeei
p There iS a '•^,
• difference!!! i
MT
LSU
H 'i
em
FLEX
■itataiw
Itfl
fUTLIIEOBOS
MT-VAT
21M
I21J) 477. 9lf
COUCATlONAi CCNTf M
Te^ ^^ ^^ ^^JT^^Jl
AflVSfltflip^I BlOfftiyUNIIS
Take advan-
tope of your
phyiicol. emo
tionol and ir«ol-
lectuai pat-
Ivne by plot-
ting your own Biochart
Mathematically t>oogd Bio-
Rhythma ore ooiity chortod
wgh the LMo Bio^hythm Kit,
which includot drawir>g
tmm^MB, dhmx poper. calcula-
tion tabloa and instructions
Ooni tie nppod oft by high
priced computer aarwiooa oflar*
tng to plot BnRtiythoia tof a
pfoacrffeod pariQd only. Uao tfia
Ula BtoRnygvn Kit to your ac^
for gie foat of
Send your
a check or money
$4 96 lor each Wt to:
S273 indBpaniance fM
Bouklar Cdo 80Xi
for
'•"■pl'ig each other and
inding terrain, in tfie pro-
encountering and dealing
ly with underlying faults in
an atmotpfiere of convivial para-
niola. Noon. Janss Steps
^ Ttwday: Controaatiial pan-
galit and <fuH figure Clark da
Ff»ek win paatent his bizarre
viewfs on earthquake prevention
•tnoon on ianat Slept. De Frock
«^ho has devoted a lifetime to
discrediting PrnwititaMi and de-
J^ewptng a smog-po«vered auto-
't^obile, is convinced earth-
quakes could be eliminated if
Human sacrifices were made to
Poseidon and other ancient
Creek deities De frock was
arrested by campus police at San
Oieeo State University last week
while he was allegedly anempt-
ir»g to burh an unidentified so-
rority member on a crude aHer
De ffock later cUimed the
whole thing tuas a sham ritual.
insisting that the girl was neither
Creek by birth nor a vir%in.
Noon. iafMt Stept.
Wednesday: CaofoglM fat
Theries wilt present a slide lec-
ture "Earthquake as Orgasm: A
cate of subsurface strau getting
its rocks offs." Included are
explicit slides and Mr Theries
unique interpretation of the
i
quake accessories, coliapiMev
water bottles and gaMy docoiai- 1
ed gas main wrenches. Noon. ^
newly.discovered "Palmdale
bulge." The lecture begins at 3
,pm in the Ackerman Ballroom
and it is advisable to arrive early
to ensure a good seat.
Thursday: Famed entrepre-
neur arni chief marketing execu-
tive for Disaster Enterprises,
Loui^ Avaricia, will discuss mar-
keting opportunities for a wide
range of earthquake accessories
in a talk entitled "^ear h the
Key." Mr. Avaricia, a firm be-
liever tn diversification, has
made his company the loader in
Its field by successfuMyjnvestmg
in everything from disaster films
to prayer beads Recently. Mr
Avartcia turned a large parcel of
useless desert land into a profit
making operation by cornering
the sandbag market and in turn
•elling to flood-beleagured
towns in North Dakota Mr
Avaricia plan» on displaying two
of his firm's fastest -selimg earth-
J
Friday
part-time Ships waitress and
autfmr of Schapenhauer and ike
Restaurant Came ar\d MoMo db
Sanu C/aus will discust ippliLi
t^on of her eiistential philo-
sopfiy to earthquakes and life in
general m a talk entitled "The
Inevitability of Acts of God end
Menopause." Ms Climacteric,
who dainit to have the ploti
every movie ever
Westwood stored in her heed, 4
has been a fixture at Sfitpt for>
more than fifteen years Noon.f
Meyerhoff Park *
The ipontofs of Earthquake *
Awareness Week are careful to S
point out that the purpote of if
the week it not to frighten peo-
ple but merely to enlighten the
University community Reactiiig
to criticism that the project
could cause widespread para-
'>oia. EDL ipokeipefion Harvey
Madison replied. "It may be
reelmt to say that Earthquake
Awarertess Week coold cause
•ome paranoia, but paranoia is
iust a fcKm of awareness and
awareneu is enlightenment te-
sides. we live here too."
v^ ••»■
• •-•.
V
.t\
» • •
• •
• :
• » •
• ^
-> -
/
i_
*
• «
• • •
' • •
•tore Dm ^^'^ammnlmt nf "^--S-Im n ? iy^lzi^^^'" *M»^ jwu mc m th«
■*!kp«»iui^owiSS'3toSp2^^5^ ft>n.rouiui Com. m ar«i biw«.'
Bacikpackers'
• iz^
20% OFF
k»« •
BAYS
ANY ITEM IN OUR NEW WEST
LCB ANGELES Al 6 STORE
( Except boots and Kelty products )
• . •
11161 W. PlooBhrd., at
; Sepulvoda. Ea^
* from both San ^
Phono: (213) 47ZA574
Thte
BMS.,SUM,,MON.*KAr 1,3,1
H«r« an Jvst a f«w of tha Itana on which
wa^ ocrarla^ S0% OIT dnria^ ovr Oraad
Opening 8-day aala: • A16 ( naturally! )
backpacks, parkae, tonts, sleeping ba^
• SNOW UON alaeping ba^. down garments •'.
Jackets, tants ■ TRAILWISE rain gear
sleeping bags • CHOUINARD climbing equip-
ment • WIGWAM and WICK^DRY aoeks
■ WOOLRICH shiita. shorts, parkas, chamois
shirts • WILDERNESS EXPERIENCE day
packs • MOUNTAIN HOUSE. TEA KETTLE
and RICH-MOOR foocte • BOOKS, BOOKS.
BOOKS • Complete line of topographic liiapa
(see our giant rallaf map of California on
tha waUl ) • And much, much more!
SPECIAL SALS HOUBS
r. noon to 0 .
I . • '
I ••
Aiesumoniyt
hi
• <
' - •- •
• •
•^*
, ••-
• •
^•>
•_• •..
^/^/'••/^
• (T
}
diKiM>f
^
Moreletters . . .
V
• • •
(rut(>*U/ a/«^4L
l}4^"hMJUlMJ III
Ituit^u
>ikyU/
ff-ll
m
d«H bfoiim nr^ade hifn a n^-
tlofial Icaiar o^ the Rcgiocuil
N4iners Coiiwdli during A«
govcffMMMM Of Salvaflc
Without faltering, he
Im^ in forming the
industnaics (locak councils) o^
workers, miners ind peasants oi
Aconcagua and Valparaiso
against the right-wing mobiliza-
tion. Until shortly Mofe Pino-
chcf'f Woady coup he was km&d
of the North Aconcagua K#-
gtonai Comminee of the Social-
ist Fjkrty of Chile.
In his Argentine exile, he has
been the only one to organiac
the hundreds of thousands of
Chilean work^ and peasants
who crossed the ArKies by foot.
For this crime the Argentine
military junta has condemned
him to death.
Only international workirM-
dass solidarity can save the \ne
of Mario Munoz. Jt j^ an urgent
task for the parti«f and organi-
zations of the working class to
mount a powerful international
campaign of pressure on the
junta to ensure safe
foi^ l^tunoz out of the
country Not a minute must be
lost! Stop the manhunt!
by Don
rut Yi
m
i
»■
>
.
(21.99
WESTWOOO VILLAGE,
1067 Broxton Averuig
-*v
■' - r.J — ^H-*
Relationships
This is in reply to Donald King
who wrote the letter entitled
Anti-social. I iw from L.A. ^nd I
have anended UCLA since Fall
1^3 Since then I have lived in a
dorm, but I »m presently living
at home and commuting by bus
everyday Wheh I lived in the
dorm I failed to find any mean-
ingful relationships^ and as a
commuter, I have still failed to
find any My life is centered
around three daites and noth-
ing more. There are no datfs,
no friendly no parties, no social
activities at all. But in the three
years thai I have been going to
UCLA I h^y^e been seeking that
stereotypical model of the col-
lege iile 1 have been led fo
believe that my college years
were a fun-filled and enjoyable
part of my youth, years to be
treasured.
Instead of these fun-filled
days, all I have is loneliness 9n6
guilt over not having rnade it
^socially that is). Yet in spite of
all my guilt feelings. I can hon-
estly say that I have tried des-
parately to make friends, but in
the end I have m^de none. I
truely feel that no one at UCLA
4
>
UCLA
DRIVE
MAY
PSUftES
iMM-lf mn fM MM7I litM
•ponsorad by StiMtonl L^gtototlw Council
knows how to relate lo ar^yont
•be. We Mfc all too busy with
our own hang-ups and worried
■bom cramming for tesH thgl
we evert little effort to be po^
^diumanired all of us. taken
away our individuality and
turned us mto robslk All of us
have fek that ttnnft feeling at
one time or another while sit-
ting on a rrnwiiii^ bMt where
not a iioul if speaking. We're all
UCLA students with loti in com-
mon, yet no one is relating to
anyone else. You feel like smil-
ing to the person next to you
but you're afraid he/the won't
Mrilt btdi or you're worried
you mfgfn appMf immature or
have a foul odor on your breath
or something is hanging you
up . . MY COD? What mid-
nets! Ar>d this is supposed to be
a learning expenence? The only
thing I want to learn is how to
communicate to other people
9nd carry on dialogues about
what's h^pQentng m our liv«
these days.
Yet I haven't \earn9d how u>
reich out to other poople at this
campus. But let me add this
Donald, I im not about to stop
trying to make friends here. I
am not about to drop out of
school. No way! Keep trying! I
admire you for your honesty
and courage to admit that you
are lonely I wish you much luck
in your remaining four years.
Thanks
On l>ehalf of the organizing
committee for the annual Camp-
bell Student Book Collection
Competition I would tike to
thank the Daily Bruin for sendr
ing a reporter to cover the event
(Goodman, OB 4/26/75). but
9ko to point out that there are
several misleading statements in
her article We wish she had
paid attention and chocked her
facts better, fitu of all. the
contest is not a UKL tradition. It
is sponsored by the University
Library system, of which URL is
only a part. The reporlir ako
noilocted to mention that in
addition to the Campbells, the
original book seller to the UCLA
community and rK>w retircKi. this
years' prizes were donated by
the Friends of the UCLA Library,
Rand Corporation and the At-
lantic Richfield Corporation
Each of the six winrters received
a $100 prize and a certificate.
The tMO special priiei were $50
ON A DIET?
WE NOW CAHRY NAJA
(LswFit) Y0U6HURT
AT PRONTO MARKET
This is a new product from
Alta Dena Dairy - in an 8 oz
aarving of the Plain Youg-
hurt there are only 180
calofiea. An 8 oz carton
aefis for only 39C
Available in Raech. Pine-
apple. Strawbery. Boysen-
berry. Red Raapberry and
Black Cherry, the calones
will vary in theae but is
listed on every container.
NAJA Youghurt is free of
chenr>icals, preeervatives
and aygar In both tie fruit
and the finiehed product
Pronto Marfcct
CAREER INFORMATION DAY
April 30, 1976
Grand Ballroom
•mtAtn
AlybrMid
L.A. C«M*
10:00 A.M. — 3:00 P.M.
UCLA STUDENTS
Here'i your chance lo meet iniormaiy wMi over 159
■y and WKimen from iivartetyolocaiprtoaiTHey are on campus
•We^ to provide you wMi current, accurate career hifoiii _t _., to
amM you in your career decMipn making. Thii is a once a year
event, don't mitt it. Listed below are the individuals, their
organajfcnal aMMens. and occupaHew
1m
r>rrK«»nut t i«r fmuraftrr of CjMo$mtt
AMDlMBAav
CortUnd P«ul Anhur
A A*
KMK
Amwi II
Lok Ar
Tllfwt
MMlfM
^«ie*m. - . UCIA
LOCt
UCIA Cam* km th»
Burv«ii CKmH
Chmlal
City o< la
C«y at QutitWt Qit^
Urban Ovwgficf
Cntmm and Ai
MKnt
uaA
Oir«
, CaMorma
CylW. lATIt
Humwi
TV Hmm% KncHtM
fmgt
VK-e
■MiMcVar
CiMrtM M^oHli m4 aMfi
PNTHCAi AAO OCCIiTAWMAi
ti Isiipi • HmptiS m*d H«Mi C««
«as* ynRfl % I
umtitetm.
4 ltn«ncM<
lAMT. CMMfNAi lUmCI. POUTICS
liaWOipMiy
•UncrMfrMir
Oif«nor at f nf[«n«4mnf 4 r«ciiNw«
Cammunity C4
ma tXriA Cr<
•OClAi IMVICI
C«M
atCtta^rma
CoMfwil of |i»wh W9nmt\
rM NfAirN
M Wmmm OMc«
Lo*
Chy
f*ra|Ki 0*tmt»m
An Otrvcion
MTM.-.CM
C«|
MTV
oiri^bltcK«
•TV
_!•••> An*ly*i* tnt^n^tuns*
*a«pr«>ient«tiv« lATSI
FfCMCtion
Lm
O^
Cmntm
FHfnCf
.IndrprndVfM
PrmtdMM.^uMir
Ific
Lot
KCfT
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temnrr li
unrMuft
Pmk% 4 ll«cf
Culv«f City
'.«»*•>•••/'
A4lfntfi
d*Mf 4 TV
Clwmb^ OrrlMNtra
:i0i
L«i
imAt
PmUA
Ctty
OtHtm
■•I-Am ttmtmt. In<
WWHf ,
Im Ammtm Caumf
1mm fmym C*
KCIT .
MaHwimf
L«clu#«f UCLA li
MTTV bound. lATSf
C«
Cmmettn. MaMon 4 TV
WnyCM
N^n tipiwHf' '•
KFWI AN Hmmt -
1m»— u CIm«4
Tidw Mt§umm
nii^jHii ml kducatJarndt
ncrr
MpMNMHWiNV
lATM
COUNTW
Ll«»4
tao
ClM^
vCitfnc tf$
Bteficfi
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IduLMttm
UCiACIbMcali
UCLA
(tfll9 •! Cjllt0r«ii4.
VqHin
v%0mL9iam.
KCTT
..»« tr-
im A«
NCfT
UCLA
UC I A
SPOMKMSDSY
THE UCLA PLACEMENT AND CAREER PLANNING CBMTER
AU2
THE UCLA ALUMNI ASSOOATION
'^ »•■•*-
■9-
^'i
.V.
-' — p^
^vco Center
Cinema I
■%■
-4 r
•OMN A MAIUN
11:00, >:aO, S:4S, 040, 10: IS
Simon soys In 'Ccallfomia Suite'
4y»«n)
Avco Center
Cinema U
475-0711
Avco Center
Cinema III
NEXT STOP, GtKNWICH
VUlAOi
IkMf S;SS. SriO. 10:35
SslASwfi 1:3S. I;4S. S:SS
•:00. fO:3S
SiVEN BEAUTIES
1:10, 3:40, 4:00. t:^, 10:30
475-071 1
Beverly
HESTEt STREET
m^m 9f\ 4 4 10
It A SMfi 3:00, 4:00, 10:00
SUNSHINE BOYS
MUf»-fri 3:00
Sflf A Syti 4:00 A 3:00
Pocifk't
Beverly Hills
Wikhtrm Mvd at Catmon
1 bNi Eoo> «f ■•^•Hy Dr
271 T 121
AU SCREWED UP
AND NOW MY LOVE - PC
M-f ap^fi 4
S«f ii UntOpmn 12:30
Brentwood I
2324 WUih«f«
(ot 2dil) St.)
329-33M •29-3367
?-•
RVE SUMMER STORIES
PLUS FOUR
Brentwood II
Sonfo MovMco
SCARMOUCHE
Storring Kirli Dvufkw
THE MAN WHO WOULD
BE KING
AU THE PRESIDBIT'S MEN
477-
ia;30. 3:^0, 3:30, 8:00, 10-.J0
If thmmt M A Sot. H
Century
Plaza I . '
JQ4D Amm aI S^w^
FAMILY PLOT
1:30, 3;4f. HM, t.-IS, 10: IS
Mw»-PH 4:00. i:10. 10;30
Century
Plaza II
2040 A^ •« V0V1
553-429T
THE RIV« NIGER
3:03, 4:3S. 10:03
CLALIDINE
1:33.3:30
Cinerama
Dome
JHANTOM OF THE _
PARADISE — PG
Daily 12:30. 2:30. 4:30. 4:30
0:30, 10:30
M 7 Sat 12:00
Crest
Cinema
w.c
13ia
272 5376
A ME — PG
OaNy 4, 3, 10
2. 4. 4. 3, 10
Fox Venice J^j
630Linca«d Mvd
»«^«l
Kmviti/
Hollywood
Pacific
466-5211
BABY BLUE MARINE
ALOHA BOBBY AND ROSE
4aily hmm 12:30
Los f eliz
1t22N.
A aanf waiii ay
DISTANT THUNOM
<>
i40<tt4»
**This entire city tnelli like
an overripe aiateiope,** lays
Ne%^ Yorker Hanmih Warren
(Tammy Grimes) in her Bever-
ly Hifls Hotel suite in the first
of four playlets collectively
titled CaHfonia S«il«, at the
AhmoMon Theatre.
Neil Simon*s latest comedy
is a California version of his
earlier play Pbua SuBe, and it
deals with the weaknesses,
warmth and wisdom of mar-
ried couples. CaMfoniia Suite is
typical Neil Simon, but this
doesn*t mean you're in for the
same old stuff; u means you*re
in for an evening of maay,
ttutnx laughs.
' In '•Visitor from New Y«rk,"
Tammy Grimes confronts her
ex-hwafcand (George Grizzard)
in a bitter ditniaaion about the
custody of their daughter, their
past and hts conversion to
Calitornian. Grizzard has given
up his anaJyit ("I went sane**)
aiid smoking (**don't you miss
the coughing and the hack-
ing^T), but she*s still the same
cynical rich-bitch. Grimes cap-
tures these characteristics very
well, and this first scf ne is fun,
but It IS also the weakest of the
four. As it turns out each
playlet is funnier than the one
before it.
A pudgy Jack Weston wakes
up (o find a deep sleeping
female visitor in his bed and
his wife knocking at the door
in **Visitor from Phiimirlphia "
The storyline is an old one —
trying to hide the rnktr womaa
from the wife — but thai
doesn't matter, because Si-
mon's hnes are fresh and so is
Weston*s acting.
Weston is truly comical in
his desperate attempts to keep
his wile out of the bedroom,
claiming, among other things,
that he has a terrible stomach
problem ("1 ate spaghetti with
white clam sauce and tacot. It
was a Mexican Italian restau-
rant.*0 Barbara Barne, as his
wife, is a good balance for his
boisterous, and is especially
funny toward the end of the
scene
The second two playlets
were the. best, first *• Visitors
from London** with Gnmes W
an Academy Award nominee
and Grizzard as her super
sophisticated, gay husband.
This scene is best described as
''cute;** Diana and Sidney arc
ly to laugh at she*s a
Mess ant and he*s a perfect
ight-man ("who was that
in you threw up on?** he
» calmly). Due larfely to
> ^ript, Ghmes and Gru-
are better here than they
in the first playlet.
It <ieents there were the most
laughs and chuckles in ''Visi-
IMS Irom Chicago.** the last
enm Weston and Barrie and
G«7/ard and Grimes are two
coiipleii vacatiomng together,
aad by the time we sae
titom, are growing quite tired
al each other's company
This last scene is really
on as his b£St with slap-
and mass hysteria very
wel) handled, as is the entire
phiv by director Gene Saks
California Snite, running
llirough June 5, is a great
vacaiion.
Zephyr's 'Mad Vincent': fragmented but intense
Presenting the Itfc of Vincent Van Gogh within the limitations
of a theatrical production is at best, a difficult undertaking. Jim
Kennedy*s Mad Vincent (at the Zephyr Theater) tackles this
challenge in an interesting piece of theater Whether or not it
works is a decision that must be made by each individual in the
Hudience. Mad Vlncwl, however, is certainly worth seeing
The play is set in jwo a<;ts. the first 4n eight scenes, the second
in six. Each scene is a vignette, a flashing glimpse into the life of
Van Gogh. While 'lie scenes progress in a somewhat' accurate
chronological order. Jhe play does not build to one central
climax followed by a denoument. Ratlier. each scene has its own
inherent intensity and its own clihiax Each vignette seems. to
acclaim itself the most important moment in the play. Mad
Vincent thereby seems wonderfully fragmented In this respect.
the play is a remarkably clever «■> of presenting the lilc of Van
Go|^, a seemingly random cbllBCt:on of intense moments and
feelings that produced a consider.^ hie number of mcomparahic
paintings.
The stage itself is snuill Coiwtant shifting back and torth
between the two playing areas seeni!» U) reinforce the fragmented
quality of the play ^
Similarly, each character within the script is somewhat
fragmented and distraught. A( times, the characters, fading in
and out of Toulouse-Lautrec's cocaine- induced fantasies, seem
little more than hallucinations; cf<i.t(urcs one might encoumer m
a sei/ure of the DT's
Especially convincing was Wilkam Rothlein's character i/at km
of a somewhat parasmc Paul GfBfzuin. Vincents "idoP and best
triend who could onl\ iell Vincent to **paint from memory** so
that he might be more prolific In GauguinX scenes with Vincent
(Jim Kennedy) one leels how destructive their friendship was to
Van Gogh Vincent once attempted to murder the cynical
Gauguin with a ra/or In Mad Vincent, the kiUmg is attempted
with a butter kntfe. seemingly reiniorctng Vincent's helplessness
in everything except his work
Writer-director Jim Kennedy's portrayal of Van Gogh
successfully presents the artist's **madness.** his angelic naivete.
One believes that, possibly. Vincent was ikh at all in control of
himseH One also feels how petty a consideration Vincent's self-
control would have been, had it been presem to impede his
artistic expression. "~^
Marc
'All Screwed Up'
WertmuUer swept away by cliche
•y »
Kochlcr
DrcMrNlg b* Mllt«> 10*
cu
The idiocy of American distribution
companies has reached a neu extreme
with New Line Cinema's release of Lina
Wertmuller's 1974 Mm. All Screwed I p
(at the Pacific Beverly Hills). Since it has
been released after her newest work.
Seven Beauties, one is mistakenly led to
believe that AH Screwed Vp is iven more
recent. Assuming this, one wi^d Wonder
what all the noise over this Italian
^higfernaur WHT^bout Ail Sepsoed l^
some sort of printer on how not to make
good comedy. To say the IcML the title is
prophetic — ~-
If one judges this film in tesms of what
ame before (Mimi) and what came after
fSwept Away), you get a clearer per-
spective oil Wertmuller's ups and downs
As an artist, she is as frenetic and wildly
out of control as her characters and her
dubbed sound tracks. Where this can be
formed into a passionate response to a
dramatic situation (as in L«pr and An-
mmkj) It can also remain an harnessed.
and In Al Serewiad U^ it jual g«»es crazy
Significantly, this ts the onl\ film of
Wertnuiller's that is virtually plotless.
Originallv (much more originallv) titled
Everything Ready, NoClung Works, it tells
oi the escapades of two young men. Liugi
Dtberti and Nino Bignanuni. as they ooiae
seeking high fortune, or something close
to it. in the big city of Milan fhey land
dreary jobs in places like a butcher or
pizza factory evoked by the camera of
Gisaeppe Rotunno as hell-holes of mad-
ness. After settling down in a commune in
the middle of M iton's shmw, TheyTttnisr
for some stability to their haphazard lives.
Bignamini falls in love with a girl who
TfUty prizes her virginity fSafa ItapisardiT
and fears marriage until Bignamini some-
how stnkes it rich
And so it foes. It*s the kind of non-
sequitur story that really never ends, and
that IS pan of Wertmuller*s point. But the
film has no direction or point of view
from which to oversee all the cra/iness In
a film where nearly everyone reminds you
ai a chicken running around with its head
off, the director appears as heailBV as the
It IS a curious and bi/arre thing, but
Wertmuller's view of her own countrymen
often resembles an ignorant Americanos
idea of whit ''all thoae apntac luham**
are about Her people are afwa)9 talking
a mile a minute, screaming, crying,
spitting up pizza, fat or over-L.atinized ~
in AM Screwed lip you are drenched in
pasta and the cliches are remforoad.
^^AN Screwed t'p doesn*t tell us anything
about Wertmuller or Italy that we didn*t
-^new from her- earlier films the same old
rantings flbwrt wker solidarity, the same
old Catholic guilt feehaps. the same old
Milanesrs laiuei craciimg bad ^okca^ aa.
they walk across the screen, the silly
mugging close-ups (this time of Big-
namini. who is a poor substitute for
Giancarlo Giannini).
When you think about it. though, none
of this matters, because Wertmuller has
grown and improved tremendously with
Swept Away and Seven Bea«ffcs. AN
Sefewad Up is a black and forgettable
blot in a stunning and skyrocketing
cafcer Enough said
•••>
"»iV.,
FUN PARTY AT
VACANCIES
u.
, r -<«uc'ft.
tsnc
Sunday, May ^ ^|- d^|-
4:00 - Midnight ^Dm^O
Admission to Disneyland, unlimited use of all
adventures & attractions, FREE PARKING.
Tiessii IS ssis 99rhcm Center, K^rcKnon 140« wimp «i«y lasT
JUDICIAL REVIEW COMMITTEE, an advisory body charged with
providing a continuing review of campus regulations and judicial systems,
is seeking undergraduate and graduate students to fill three vacant
student representative positions beginning Fall quarter. This is a stipended
position /which involves active participation in weekly committee
meetings and research task teams.
We're looking for people with exceptional verbal, analytic and writing
skills. Experience Is not necessary; the initiative and desire to offer student
input at a high administrative level fseiMMial.
For further informaiton contact the University Policies Commission
Office t825-7906). Royce 126, for details. Deadline for receipt of resunr>e is
triday. May 7.
Manns Westwood I
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Sonl«
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THE tOMANTIC
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WOMCN in LOVi
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THE MAGIC HUTi
IIMftt IWUl
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Mu|ic Hal
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Notional
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Theatre
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7)41
MM — ra
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4rl 4 30t 13;44
icwood
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ONI purw ova TNi
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Cinema I
/"
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12:00, J: JO. S:4S, 8:00, 10: fS
Avco Center
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^*^
11
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SfV»l BEAUTIES
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AU SCREWED UP
filwt
AND NOW MY tOVE - PC
«4-f efMi 4
Silt 4 SwfiOiP^fi 12:30
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{m Win St.)
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RVE SUMMER STORIES
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SCARMOUCHE
Storrinf Kirk Peufl^E
THE MAN WHO WOUID
BE KING -^
Bruin
477-
AU THE PRESIDENT'S MEN
11;30, 3:00. S:30. 4:00. 10:30
M 4 S«t.
Century
Plaza I
3040 A««. el Star
993-4291
F AMaY PIOT
TK«ir».Sufi 1:30. 3;4S. 4:00. 4; IS. 10: IS
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Century
Plaza II
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THRRIVIRNIG9
3:04. 4:35. 10:0S
OAUDINS
1:35.4:30
_ ■
Cinerama
Dome
PHANTOM OF THE
PABAMSE — TO
0Bify i4:^W( 3:^W( 4:^w» 9*^W
4:30, 10:30
M7S«t 12:00
Crest
Cinema
W.C PKUK A MR — PO
Daily 4. 4. 10
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WBiiiiiiA a. 4, 4, 4. 10
474-7466
4/M
Fox Venke %Z
AAihll.SO
CMUSLOO
ii# •! D«*44v Kr«v«»i,
Hollywood
Pacific
466-9211
RABY BLUE MARINE
ALOHA BOBBY AND ROSE
4^ ffwfi 13:30
Los Feliz
lt22 H
DISTANT THUNOR
"1 iTi •I'-'-i'if kMwtNwl "
we»n4»
H^lkWed LimJll
-frr-r-
0nb(^rba i hmGn t/ , i ncl(&x
Simon says in 'California Suite'
By Laura Klemcr
**Tbit entire city tmcils Ukc
an 6verrtpe cmnleiope,** lojrt
New Yorker Hannah Warren
(Tammy Grimes) in her Bever-
ly Hiils Holcl suite in the first
of four playlets collectively
titled CaMfoniia Sahc, at the
AhuMHHon Theatre.
Neil Simen*s latest comedy
is a California version of his
earlier play Piaia SaRc, and it
deals with the weaknesses,
warmth and wisdom of mar-
ried couples Califoniia SuHc is
typnaii Neil Simon, but this
doesn't mean you*re in for the
same old stuff; it means you're
in for an evening of Buuiy^
many laughs.
In "Visitor from New York,-
Tammy Grimes confronts her
ex-husk>and (George Gnzzard)
in a bitter ditnmimi about the
custody of their dauflMcr, their
past and his convertion %o
Calif omian. Gnzzard' has given
up his analyst (**l went sane")
and smoking ("^don't you miss
the coughing and the hack-
ingT*), but she's still the same
cynical, rich-bitch. 'G rinses cap-
tures these characteristics very
well, and this first scene is fun,
but It IS also the weakest of the
four As it turns out each
playlet is fiinnier than the one
before it.
A pudgy Jack Weston wakes
up to find a ^tzy sleeptitg
female visitor m his bed and
his wife knocking at the door
in "Visitor from Philadelphia r
The storyline is an old one —
trying to hide the other WMMtt
from the wife - but that
doesn't matter, because Si-
mon*s hnes are fresh and so it
Weston's acting.
Weiton if truly comical in
hts desperate attempts to keep
his wife out of the bedroom,
claiming, among other things,
that he has a terriWe stomach
problem ("1 au ifpoghetti with
white clam sauce and ucos. It
W4S a Mexican Italian restau-
rant.**) Barbara Barrie, as his
wife, is a good balance for his
boisterous, and is especially
funny toward the end of the
scene.
The second two playlets
were the bfesi, first "Visitors
from London*' with Gnmes 44
an Academy Award nominee
and Grizzard as her super
sophisticated, gay husband.
This scene is best descnbed as
"cute:" DiioM and Sidney are
(y to laugh at she's 4
»icss nut and he*s a perfect
•l^ught-nuin ("who W4s that
wwnan you threw up oil?* he
aiks cokiily). Dua lupdy to
dK scripl, GrinKi oad Ghz-
zafd are better here than they
were in the first playlat.
It seems there were the most
lavfhs aad chuckles in "Viai-
tors from Cbicafer tlw laat
enir\ Weston and Boffie and
G«7/ard and Grimes are two
couples vacationing logetlifr,
aai. by the tone we tac
thtm, are growing quite tired
nl each other's conipany.
This last scene is really
Simon as his best with slap-
nirk and mnii hysteria very
well handled, as is the entire
play by director Gene Saks.
Cnlifornia Suite, running
tlvough June 5, is a great
vacation.
Zephyr's 'Mad Vincent': fragmented but intense
Presenting the life of Vincent Van Gogh within the hmitations
of a theatrical production is at best, a difficult undertaking. Jim
Kennedy's Mad Vincent (at IBc Zephyr Theater) tackip this
challenge in an interesting piece of theater Whether or not it
works is a decision that must be made bv each individual m the
audience. Mad Vincent, however, is certainly worth seeing.
The play is set in two acts, the first in eight scenes, the second
in -SIX. Each «cene is a vignette, a flashing glimpse mto the life of
Van Gogh. While the scenes progress in a somewhat accurate
chronological order, the play does not build to one central
climax followed by a denoument Rather, each scene has its own
inherent intensity and its own climax Each vignette seems to
acclaim itself the most important moment in the play Mad
Vincent thereby seems wondertullv fraginentcd In this respect
the play is a remarkably clever wav of presenting the life of Van
Gogh, a seemingly random collcci a>n of intense moments and
feelings that produced a consideniNlc number of incomparable
paintings.
The stage ilieN is small Constant shifting back and torth
between the two playing areas scens 10 reinforce the fragmented
quality of the play.
Similarly, each character witnm the script is somewhat
fragmented and .distraught At tinics the characters, fading in'
and out of Toulouse-Lautrec's coc^iine-induced fantasies, seem
little more than hallucinations, oKatures one might encounter in
a seizure of the DT's
Especially convincing was WiBi<«rn Rqfthlein's characteri/at>on
of a somewhat parasitic Paul Gnn^uin. Vincent's "idoP and best
friend who could only tell Vincent to "paint from memory" so
that he might be more prolific In Gauguin's scenes with Viqcent
(Jim Kennedy) one feels how destructive their friendship was to
Van Gogh Vincent once attempted to murder^t-he cynical
Gauguin with a razor: In Mad Vincent, the killing is altempicd
with a butter knife, seemingly reinlorcing Vincent's helplessness
in everything except his work
Writer^director Jim Kennedy s portrayal of Van Gogh
successfully presents the artist's ** madness." his angelic naivete.
One believes that, possibly. Vmcent was not aVall in control of
himself One also feels how. petty a consideration Vincent's self-
conuol would have been, had it been present \o impede his
artistic expression.
Marc Palnkri
'All Screw^l Up'
Wertmuller sw
wa
KiiHikr
The idiocy of American d inbution
companies has reached a new cxtrenK
with New Line Cinema's relnnsc of Lina
Wertmuller's 1974 film. AM Screwed I p
(at the Pacific Beverly Hills). Since it has
been released after her newest work.
Seven Beaulicv one is misukenly led to
believe that AN Screwed I'p is even more
recent Assuming this, one sMvid wonder
what all the noise over this Italian
Juggernaai was alwut Alt Swewetttpir
•ofwrtorToT primer cm how not to make
good comedy. To say the leaiL the title is
Significantly, this is the only film of
Wertmuller's that is virtually plotless
Originallv (much more onginallv) titled
Everytliiilg Ready. fiioOiing Works, it tells
of the escapades of two young men. Luigi
Diberti and Nino Bignamini. as they come
seeking high fortune, or something close
to it. in the big city of Milan They land
dreary jobs in places like a butcher or
pizza factory evoked by the camera of
Giuseppe Rotunno at hell-holes of mad-
ness. After settling down w a cummune in
^T*^ prophetic
OawMif ^
w<
If one judges tfm film in towns of what
came before (Mimi) and what came after
(Swept Away), you get a dearer per-
spective on Wertmuller's ups and downs.
As an artist, she is as frenetic and wildly
but of control as her character v and her
dubbed sound tracks. Where th s can be
fornied into a pnsainnate rop^'Hse to a
dramatic situation fas in Lnvt and Kwt-
iPilqr) It can also remain pnHarnessed.
and in Al Scrtwai ili^ *t jiMl.g<»cs crazy
the middle of Milan's shmifl. they hmiftr
for some stability to their haphazard lives
Bignamini falb in love with a girl who
truly prizes her virginity (Sara Rapisarda)
and fears marriage until Bignamini some-
how strikes it nch.
And so it goes. It's the kind of non-
sequitur story that really never ends, and
that IS part of Wertmuller's point But the
film iMf no direction or point of view
from which to oversee all the crazincis. In
a film where nearly everyone reminds you
of a chicken running around with tu head
off. the director appears as hea^kss as the
It is a curious and bizarre thing, but
Wertmuller\ view of her own countrymen
often resembles an ignorant American's
idea of what "all those maniac Italians**^
are about Her people afe nhvnys talking
a mile a minute, screaming, crying,
spitting up piz/a. fat or over- Latinized
in AM Screwed Dp you are drenched in
pasta and the cliches are reinforced
AH Screwed t p doesn't tell us anything
atout Wertmuller or Italy that wc didn't
know from her earlier filmsi ^tne^aame old
rantings about worker solidarity, the same
old Catholic guilt feelings, the same old
Mitnneses faitiet ctncking bad jokes as
they ^alk acroas tlie screeit the silly
mugging close-ups (this time of Big-
namini. who IS a poor substitute for
Giancarlo Giannini)
When you think about it. though, none
of tins maturs. because Wertmuller -has
grown and improved tremendously with
Swept Away and Seven Saauties. All
hmwmw^ lip IS a black and forgettable
blot in a stunning and skyrocketing
career Enough said
r»^ sy NV
FUN PARTY AT
VACANCIES
n/^i
i
>,***• y
tsnci
Sunday, May 9 |hc OC
4:00 -Midnight ^O.^W
Admission to Disneyland, unlimited use of all
adventures & attractions, FREE PARKING.
ISnirvlcn
JUDICIAL REVIEW COMMITTEE, an advisory body charged with
providing a continuing review of campus regulations aod judicial systems,
is seeking undergraduate and graduate students to fill three vacant
student representative positions beginning Fall quarter. This is a stipended
position, which involves active participation in weekly committee
meetings and rese^ch task teams.
We're looking for people with exceptional verbal, analytic and writing
skills. Experience is not necessary; the initiative and desire to offer student
input at a high administrative level is essential.
For further informaiton contact the University Policies Commission
Office (825-7906). Royce 126, for details. Deadline for receipt of resume is
triday, MayT '
Manns Westwood I
UfSTICX
Manns Westwood II
UPSTICK
2:30. 4:10. «:S0, • SO. 10 M
Manns Westwood III
TAKING OFF (I)
1 4, h, %, 10
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u.oo
|«ty«fil lay • TK«
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r/TlM
C«ll
AAonica I
1)32 2nd Str«^
Sonio
45)
3 i>«MtiK»i tamtittc Nlmt
SlwfifM Qkmm^ Jadnsfi
THE ROMANTIC
ENGUSHWOMAN
WOMEN IN LOVE
rh«
A^onica II
1322 2nd
Sonio
THE MAGIC FLUTE
'YUMU. MMli
fOtk NOW
»*
Music Mali
903* WitehMw Mvd.
FACE TO FACE
I'-f
i»k4
h4ational
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Dnw«
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27t^379
479-5349
4/34 TKwn. -i«l#»*fid Jtm/th
4/34 M • lk9 %mmm9k SmI/1
4/ 30 10» - flw OmUm iM V«llM» I
wwe weoy ev ai
!• •
r^-^-
►/t
Pantaaes
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13:00,
MBIOENT'S
— FO
S:30. 0:00. 10:00
M * Set 13:40
Picwood
OAMi AND LOMtARD
SUHSkWHLWOYS
PJQZO
479^4077
TAXIORfVa
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ent
Royal
y\m%mm
jo-Ami.
ONi FliW OVH THi
CUCKOaSNBT
AWAY
11 O 1 PM
fO YOUO
Ondflf • 10«
m
??
%^
<»♦
Toho
La Brea
Wf 4-2343
ZATOICHI FLASHING
SWORD
THtiE OUTUW SAMURAI
UA Cinema
Center I
474^154
HOUYWOOD BOULEVARD
2, 4:40. 7:10, 10:00
UTTLE SHOP Of HORRORS
3 30, 4:10, 4:50
UA Cinema
Center II
lOOff Wul^mf^ A««.
474-4 1 A9
BABY BLUE MARINE
3:35. 4:50. 10:00
ALOHA BOBBY A ROSE
2 00, 5:15, 4:30
UA Cinema
Center
W«IKvon*t Aw«
KING Of HEARTS
2, 4, 4. 4. 10
474.3443
UA CINEAU
CENTER IV
10459 Wdlwonh Aw«
474-4195
THE MAN WHO SKIED
EVEREST
1 3:40, 5:30, 7:00. 4:40, 10:30
UA
WESTWOOD
10447
477-0573
THE ADVENTURE Of
SHERLOCK HOLMES'
SMARTER BROTHER
M^^jly 6:30, 4:10, 9:55
It A Sim 2:00. 3,40. 5:25, 7:10
4:30, 10:30
VAGABOND
7309WMmm
347-2171
Hmw 35mm Print*!
$Hf (1935)
THE OLD DAKK HOUSE (i933)
THEATRE
VANGUARD
90)4
$2.00
A««
776-9997
THE VANGUARD
Mi»y 4, 7, • 4:90 p.n
$1.50 Students wit««
Villoge
441 iMKlT
4740374
THE DUTCHESS AND THE
DiRTWATER fOX
2, 4, 4, 4, 10
9fir. S^, Sufi
DANCE Contest
SUNDAY
SIOO cosh
Winners compete
♦n fhe finaK
S300 co%h
KENTUCKY FRIED
THEATRE
tt»« bMf el KFT
(••t 5 Y—r%
'MMIiNO A DEAD HOtSE
^AWtt004ieOO
May)
WIUIE mXON 4 THE
OMCAOO AU STARS BlUES BAND
T«M^ «toy 4 . IImm4^ May *
HAROLD UNO
BlUE MITCHEU QUINTET
Li^thous^
30 PIER AVE
TfN
HERMOSA BEACH INPO-TFL 1T9 2;<Hi
On Campus On Campus
Reviews:
Contemporary
Festival
And RaouI riwlriiirii **Per Ve>
fc Vicne" cune off overto^mif
And uninicrcfting at the pAme
time, while RichArd Swift'i
AlbumbAtter for Violin And
PImio was merely uninterest-
ing
The use String QuArtet
An enthutiAftic mob of 25
f Acuity members lAt throifli
the first m a lenes off con-
temporAry music concerts
sponsored by the music de- , «^ y, ^^ -
pttitment Tu44dsy night in 500- ' tAmpling of Ives' descnptions
ill. an ex- ^^ ^^^ second movement **Ar-
but there was no
progTAm note , And nothing
The pcrformAnce might hAve
been greAtly enhAnced by
iCAt Schoenberg HaU, An ex-
perience thAt mnde both the f^*^^"!^
performers And Audic^e feel a
little silly.
Of coarse, modern music
concerts on TuesdAy nights
aren*t going ^ to break atten-
dAnce records. And even some
perfqi:piers, the HAnsl Wood-
wind Ouintet of use, CAn-
celled on short notice becAuse
of^Unesr^Tfojans will be Tro-
jAns) Still, for the oae dollar
nricc pf admisiiion, a few music
students might hAve come and
learned something from the
violin-piano of Robert Bloch
And MArvm TMtmk And the
use String QuArtet
WhAt they would hAve
IcArned is thnt regardless of a
composer's style And intent,
music must hAve direction and
purpose, if it doesn't start
somewhere and go somewhere
it isn't going to Accomplish
Anything along the way.
Andrew Frank's Serenade
for Viohn and Piano was the
only one of the newer works to
displAy Any kind of direction
or Any sort of logic The piece
hAS mood, unity. And speciAl
effects thAt ACtuAlly contribute
to the work instcAd of in-
truding for their own sAke.
Bloch WAS incisive And bold
with All the violin pAru, which
aided the FrAnk piece grcAtly.
But Jerome Rosen's Five
Pieces for Violin And PiAno
WAS SAld. ThAt*s All right
there weren't too mAny people
rcAding or listening
— HowArd Potner
I
Erick
Hawkins
#
.^^
dynamics which Are chAracter-
istic of Hawkins' work became
repelflfve and unexiting
This problem also occurred
in "Lords of Persia." The ritual
and formality of the dance was
(airly uninspinng after the first
, ^ 10 minutes, although the idea
gave a spintcd reading of the ^ of a dance bailed on the or-
second quartet of eharles Ives igination of polo in Persia was
novel and interesting. It had a
distinctive Oriental influence,
reminiscent of some of the
dances performed in ehinese
opera theater An Oriental
flavor was also present m
"Meditation on Orpheus." not
only in the movement but aA44
in the scenery: brush-stroke
drawings on scrolls held up by
one ol the dancers.
'*Greck Dreams." particu-
larly succetsfut. was a tribute
to the mythical creatures found
in Greek literature Hawkins'
easy, fluid style lent itself. very
well to the interpretation of a
pastoral subject without des-
cending: into frivolous senti-
mentality.
'Hurrah!" done to Virgil
Thomson's eoplandesque Sec-
ond Symphony, recreated the
sarnc of an early American
hoedown in an earthy style
that contrasted greatly with
Hawkins' usual abstract ele-
fftnoc. The dancers played
back and forth Across the '
st4ge, constantly regrouping
until the end when they broke
off into courting couples.
"Classic Kite Tails" was an
elegani presentation ol abstjact
mo>emeni with the choreo-
graphy- ranging in style and
lorm from langorous suspen-
sions to lively position chan-
Saturday night's perform-
ance was accompanied onsiUge
by Mehli Mchta and the
American Youth Symphony
who provided an appr»priAte
scentc background to the dan-
ces.
Cail Hampton
The Erick Hawkins Dance
Company performed at Royce
Hall this past weekend in an
effortless, tranquil and flowing
style enlivened by quick shifts
in dynamics I hey presented a
varied program that ranged
from a dance based on a turn-
of-the-century Fourth of July
ceiebration to the re-enactment
of a Greek myth
Both nights opened with
Lucia Dlugoszewski's "Early
Floating,' a , playful dance
composed of entrances and
exits with emphasis on hori-
zontal shapes and movement in
line. Accompaniment was pro-
vided by Dlugos/ewski on the
"timbrr piano." which both
complimented and contrasted
with the movement
In "Cantilever." another abr
stract movement presentation,
the dancers demonstrated bal-
ance ind shifts of weights by
the use of suspension and pro^
jection of the body into space
Unfortunately, the evenness
and similarity of the steps and
-.^ . ^..^ a,,u siniiiariiv oi ine steps and
^^^^^V\\UllUIIMnHMII|||||||H||||H||imiiH|iniiiiuilHllMllllllMin^
"^ S-S VB ^^ ik^a ■■ ^/j
THE ONE
THE ONLY...
THE GREATEST...
%
"Lmu,
livily M»i jMt
a littlt Itchtrtn.
echnlque attempts to lessen
IdsMear-of trIp-to dentist
By Ikm fcto
perience and tubstitutmg a
iavorable expericaea^*
Deatisu who suffer through
[the kicking^ screaming and
•bag of mgbieaai children
may nam find relief in a new
technique developed by Dr
M.e. Mceann, aseooate pro-
fessor of pediatric dentistry
here
«
The teclinique attempts 19
alleviate the fears and falK
ideas of children through
breathing exercises and make-
believe dentistry which can be
practiced at hooK. *The child
becomes involved in hit own
dentistry,** McCann says, **Ky
learning to know a httie of the
procedure.**
Pnnciples of the technique
stem from the Lamaze system
for painless childbirth, in
wliich women are de-sensitized
to pain through special
breathing aad bf observing a
specific focal point. **Likewise,**
says MoCana, ''probiem chil-
dren viM> come pre-condi-
tionei for a negative exper-
ience are re-conditioned by
wiping out the negative ex-
TlK fm vak, wiMdi is fne
of charge, is a praclioe senioo
dunng which tlie child is aa»
sured no actual work will be
done Reducing his anxiety
and helping him to rdu^ lie
dentist beipss by teaching the
ehiki to bffiiht alowiy with his
mouth open at about 10
breaths per minute.
Once calmed and breathing
ly, the pikit is asked
to eaiK one of his legs for 45
to 20 seconds and then lower
it **His mmitA and motor skills
are now being used,** claims
McCann, *'and this transfers
his concentratiron from the
mouth to his ieg.*^
Favorite tuat
In addition, the chikl is told
to think of his favorite tune
Mid repeat it in his mind. This
exercise also transfers the
patient's concentration and
alters the focus of attention
from his mouth
Finally, during this first
seuion, the chikl pretends a
HBatI straw, given to him by
the dentist, is aih injectix>n
needle. According lo MoCann,
the greatest^ anxiety amoAg
problem children is **>findli
phobia,* MMumtmt fear of tbc
naaik, ratber than tbe actual
work Itself
Tben while repeating tbe
three steps of slow brealhing.
Iqg raising and song hearing,
the patient opens hts mouth
and the dentist inserts the
straw as though it were a
Following this make-believe
session, the dentist gives the
child an exerase booklet to
practice with his parents at
home The booklet also conies
in Spanish and McCann re-
marked, **This is novel to in-
volve Spanish speaking fam-
ilies in the experience. But
speaking to parents on a
mature and helpful level makes
them cooperators,** instead of
just having tbetr children re-
ceive the aid.
When tbe child does return,
uaually a week later, the chikl
eggia goes through the exer-
ciies, Mill using the straw. If
the patient responds well, the
dentist substitutes an anesthetic
oeedk for the straw and the
novacaine is given.
McCann, along with UCLA
dental students Dan Heffelr
finger, Nicole Doone and Gary
Benedetti. have tested their
technique on problem children
at UCLAs Venice Dental
Clinic McCann defines prob-
letn patients as **nol able to
accept routine care without
extreme problems usually due
to "past mcdKal cxpeciehces,
having very anxious mothers
who will not leave their chil-
dren or ones who know sojne-
thmg IS wrong (swelling, pain,
etc.)" — ^
If the pgtient has two out of
three of these factors, claims
McCann. there is a 90 par cent
chance the ^hild will be a
problem patient Hence the
free first visit because, **we>e
trying to wm back the patient,**
be said
This technique aLstriienefits
the child tii esublishing rap-
-poft with other health ofTicials.
McCann said, adding the
principles of the pffOjoadiirr mrt
applaosble to many areas of
health where anxiety may
^wcurr
SOP IKTO
with an ISC f oy r
Sk Kingg Canyon $55.
l|a«Hiissonc# FoiredL Picnic $12.
M#ffico by ^i¥9H Tmm S70.
loeVbgOi.CrqndConyon.A IbJmSpriagf $90
iaalaiWpboN/SoMing $7.
Umvarso/ Sfudiot A iushGordafu (l4.
fmtom* $f.
Cahiornta tMotmnmacm S90.
Giva ut o cofi
473 29^} or 825 3M4
ynfTrnoT7onaT~5ru&wwrTwmwr
Mk
I
r
CLUB GUIDE CONTINUED
SIlhalM
SttHlauu
014417
C.rlTANS BAN.HI8 MANIM)! INS B4M>KS A.Nl> MM(>MtM«
APMl 30 - MAY 2
MICHAEL
QUATRO
MAY 3.4-5
UFO
i
5
asa-noo
N0llyw««d
THE STONER
A Win9
9 ^^w^p»
2113 Uonmf A««
WMt LA 90023
477 7339
1/s aak . w§9ffn cT o^fMipM
f gM W—t 9i
TROUBADOUR
90S I SontQ
LA 276^6h
ISIS pkM* IVY aOTTINI
M«y n-ia
NiCKfY aatcuY
biay 10-33
CHARUf MUSSii WHiTf
lw« MiCHAf L aiOOMflfU)
JUIPdNO'l
lt«^teii#0fi Am
>w 9m> a«iiwc»< Cmmt Buiii n
rtrnPrnhOmmMT^-mn
LwncH d»f«r»«r olt«r th#«tr« •i^cor«t
Eaotic coctitoil vvfth Conton*«« Cim«h
49^
FO* THOSE WHO APPRECIATE OUAirTY
suu weslwOOO MVD 4 HOCKS iOulK O* WUSHMK
lAN'S GARDEN
CBiUmm mn4mmmAatk
HOaSSiiw^iiiii Or WMwd,
47f.77SS, 47«-77ta
GYPSY'S INDIAN RESTAURANT
iiuMtt* Optii a'10
JUNIORS
TMi aoixs aoYci or otLiCATt t
47S-S771
M royBf uB rfOhc% i^mth 12 oo. 12 23, $2 so
^09S9 U»^mwk Or D»n»i#f S3 75 $4 25, $5 25
474 094S W IT >fiHmw
jUJVIttStmss
> T«l47S-Sa2S
RESTAURANT MIFLINE
1M2S WIMit** ai«4 iA91*-^lO . ^**?*^'^r*l tS-SS^
tasat m nm m^ u 474.9S4t ••■•• ■■■»• s««^ «»» vniin
OTPO
Th« I ■
nisvMaoiisi
477-4SS7
EAT OUT TONIGHTI
SUPPORT THE BL(
DRIVE!
I
•U-V
J
.•^.,.«
.J
1
f
3
I
ft
I
ASUCLA Students' Store
will be open for
UCLA OPEN HOUSE
Sunday, May 2, 10-4
V J
109^
discount
in these departments:
• Sportswear • Gifts & Electronics
^rt & Engineering • Confections • Bearwear
• School Supplies
and for the first time, you can get a 10*^ discount
on the purctiase of your UCLA class ring — Sunday only!
(Book departments will be closed)
t
.1
.■>>:i
laiMMMMMMMIMMIMM
THESE FOOD SERVICES
WILL BE OPEN:
North Campus: Gypsy Wagon
South Csmpus: Bombshelter Pelt A Burger Bar
Central Campus: Kerckhoff Coffee House. 2nd 1\ Kerckhoff Hall
* The Coop, A level. Ackerman Union
Sunday, may 2. 10:X am -4:X p.m
a and b levels, ackerman union
Here's YOUR chance to ask any question you want of:
Campus events
EMttTt
tor
Sfiiia ilalii ta aeseacaft tiniaiiii to
lacaait iwwaivtd m Wmfrittk ClHircii tar
PratiSant campaHin 11 am-i pm tvtfy
taMt on 2 pm
Ml Mfcitfiati lOD tar year aiatdi
art any priiHiai. caA lart at 47S-iai
HMm Ihiii ImmmmL mti\ awanis
9i SMm. taaimfti iy imiimn
tH playins six satMont. Itic Hint of whicti
is 12:30 pm May 1 mm Wfusi Brtift
ClaS. Hfft Waaaaaai SaalMari
-M Amu «U MHSV Nrty lai MI^
M|M Bwlf Mvtftaa. Mvaa atavtas^wtii bt
shown 7 pai4l am. tomorrow Achtrman
Grand Ballroom Frtt
.. " SnNIi Ciarii hmSphIl. 6 milas orw
way. dnvmg 170 milts round trip, limitad
to 15. May 1 and 2 Call Ed at Oi-iidl or
Oava^HMIta far iiiads
— SlHra Imm. i-IIJO pm lomoHOMr
URC ISO HA«ard spanforad by the umvor
sity CattH)li€ Centtr ttcktts are SI m
adteact at ttvt Centtr or $1 SO at tttc door
>-Claet da Maya latct 9 pm i am
tomorrow Sproul Entertainment Center
Frat wftt) a mtal card of S50 wrttH)ut
->Je«itli Arts fttrt. ftatunng music
ftwtlry calligraphy pottery pad MMi. 11
am-3pm today Janss Stops Frat
Elections .
(Continued from Psfc 6)
Ten petitions for candidacy
were taken, of these, only four
were returned. M. Minis
Moon, a candidate fof the
second vice |>resident office,
withdrew his petition without
comment. That left three* can-
didates running despite the
advertising.
The advertising for the GSA
Letters/. .
(ContiaMad fcepi Page l»)
from the Library Staff Associa-
tion and $25 from the Graduate
Student Association.
Perhaps the most serious mis-
statement was about Donna Rid-
ley's collect.on of Seatleofra-
phy. Her coHectton is based on
books, as are all the collections
entered in the competition ami
is supported by such extra ma-
terial as posters, programs and
buttons Each collection sub-
mitted for judging must be at
least 70 per cent books — the
basis for the «i«bolc competition
We thank everyone who en-
tered a collection this year and
everyone who helped to make
the day possible Those who dM
not get ft together to enter this
Y^Bf ^r^ encouraged to watch
for sigru pf_ the contest nent
spring.
UDALL, REAGAN, JACKSON, FORD,
CHURCH, CARTER, BROWN
and all of the other candidates ...
Make your VOICE HEARD by returning the form below
By April 30 — Friday
Project Awarenett '76. a non-partisan political information network serving the UCLA
community, in conjunction with Common Cauaf will compile the results and call on all the
candidates to anawar the questions you raise.
I want to ask ^aaiUantiai CaiMldatog:
(check one)
PflEaiOEimAL CANDIOATE, HOW WOULD YOU:
Addrwa
a curb
a
a (hart*t my own quoetlon)
D balanco enofgy nooda wNh onvlronmontat
on
fvturn this form toy April 30 - Friday - to one of Tha kxationa lialwd below
Stofa (nWlawaor) - AdMwiiaw tnfo Peak - KaiWglPft tnio Dmk ^'^tt^
Spon^ofd by Studont Ligiaiatm Cowncn SLC Info Offfeo and P»o>act %>ai^liaaa 7g
MteSL
Im. ot itit Lilt
May 3-7 Sifa up to
pai laaay m4 Iwiiarfaw
mk c
m4 folk daacas. g-lt $m.
%m4
dn •mai
walkway
i livf
aiaa avary
FrWW. 1023 HjIM
la tat
iMa s Laaags
wtiicti thows
at
wiWrii naw
Ktrckhoff tiall
floor
prkaariaf Is aaw aa la
anttt firct
mtormal practica
10
tor
noon
man 3517
— ^aHHM ■rWHaMip MHw. liaiWB By
trainod intorns will tiolp you frnd tundlao
tor your liaas Opan daily 9 am-4 pm
Ktrckhoir 401
pad kxai voluntoor potltiont art avaiiaila
tttrougt) EXPO Ackerman A213 or call
1,.". •
fovemment potu did not in*
chide a statement that office
holders receive a stipend for
their duties. Hill said that
though the stipend varies from
year to year as decided by the
GSA BudfBt Commiwinfi. it
never varies drastically
A GSA represtcntative said
this years president (Martin
Mishi) receives approximately
$3,900 lor his position The
vice-presidents each receive
$2.U00 The five commissioners
appointed h\ the GSA presi-
dent have received S500 to
S600 in the past.
Bill C or-micr. running for the
firsi vice-president .spot, is
current Iv one oi these com-
missioners He IS in charge of
reicaich arul ptanninte .Pauline'
Bracken currentiv holds the
second vice-president- post
W rile- in volei^
The onK^av one ^t ihe^
candidates could he challenged
at this time would be through
a massive write-in effort where
enough writc-m votes were cant
to defeat the listed candidate.
Hill said he was drawing up a
ballot with a blank on it to
include the possibility He
stressed that this was common
procedure itm^ was not a spe-
cial instance
HiH said the possibiliiv ol a
write-m campaign is more fea-
sible when all the candidates
arc running unopposed, a* mi
the current elections
ACCOUNTING AND
FINANCE MAJORS
LET US HELP YOU TO
BECOME A CPA
CM
REVIEW
tps
fan Huf%
lANCNiOO
213 072 1073
7i4ft4i'aaii
?nssi isii
couaac* acoiii aav as a mov. h
m^^mr'
ivw
m*
vou an
Wio-etMUS
of ovorythlng you buy
In tho Students' Storto April 29 and 30
SAVE YOUR RECEIPTS!
You'va kept tha raceipta of avarythlng you bought in aithar tha
Studants' Stora in Ackarman or tha Health Hciaiioaa Store in tha
Mad Canter, right? Good! Now — gat your special radamption
aniialopa either place (one per custonnaf — : thafa all you'll need).
Put in all your racaipts. including purchases mada April 29 and 30
TabuMa Via aaoaipls acconlir>g to tha aaay instructions on tha
Br\^mk>p9 Son>atima t>atwaan April 29 and May 8. turn them into tha
Students' Stora ~ again, either one. YOU'LL GET A CHECK IN THE
MAIL FOR 11 % OF ALL YOUR PURCHASES - INCLUDING TAX —
in tha middle of MayC
by your oontinuioa
Tftls 0onus program
support of 1t^ ASUCLA
<«4piMi«4n
Cultural Affairs Commission & Campus Event Film Commission Present
FIRST ANNUAL
UCLA SLUMBER PARTY AND
ALL NIGHT MOVIE MARATHON
FRIDAY — APRIL 30
7:00 P.M. - 9:00 A.
GRAND BALLROOM
<
7iX) p.m.
e'JO p.m
11:30 p.m
1:tOa.ai.-
3:30 a.m.
5 JO a.m
7:30 a.nn.
- -Eaat of Edan' -
^ -Tha PfoauaacT - By Mai
- *iaaal John Ooa" — By Frank
- Tha Long Voyaga HaMa'* —
> Tha Night of tha Lhring
- *V Saaat" - By AHrad
by 9tudem Lifiai
Wayna
'JglW
9^F^
i
Simih producing "name" victories
By Grctt I- *
DB Sporu R
Something New - Exciting in
Auto Insurance
it you don't h«ve liability insurance, ttte new 'inancial
responsibility law could affect you in I97S
Modified rates tor Qualifying Students '
Call'Today For Your Free Quotation
245-7275 Hov* Rat«« — Will Trovsl 9t44)t44
Mercury Insurance Agency
'^'■
Five weeks of study, travel
and fun
in Mexico
For teachers, high tchooi, and college students. AccredHed
claeses in Spanish. Mexican cutturv, music, art. etc. at beautiful
l^onterrey Tec College. $660 includes tuition, boefd. n>onn.
laundry and trips Earn 2 luinselsri high school or 6 college
credits. , , w
For details and catalogue contact group leader Dr. Richard
Martin between 8 and 9:30 any evening at
Official Un^mity Notices
AprI 3S, t974iif
't item to b<
If It Ind not been lor a long-
distance phone^calt and a per-
suasive talk from Brum netter
Kim Nilsson. Paula Smith, No.
I ^ player for Uk UCLA wo-
playing for the USC T
Her decision to play for the
blue and geld probably was
Ihr difference between UCLA,
which captured the Southern
California Women's Intercol-
legiate Athletic Conference
tennis title and USC, which
ished a ctesc second
**I was all ready to go to
use," commented Smith.
-Then I came up here to LA to
play in a tournament and I
stayed over at ICim*s (Nilsson)
house. I mentioned that 1 real-
ly liked UCLA and would
rather play here., Next thing I
know Bill (Zaima, UCLA wo-
men's tennis coach) called tip
from San Jose; we talked and
finally I decided to ge here
instead.** '
The freshman from La Jotla,
California, bas proved to be
more than anyone could have
hoped for as she has produced
victories iOvcr "name*] players
such as Stanford's Lele Forood
and Arizona State's Chris
Penn.
Tm really surprised about
how well I'm doing," remarked
Smith. "I thought it would be
a lot harder since all the girls I
play are all ranked above me.
Now, I'm actually starting to
beat them.**
Smith, who always seems to
be smiling about somethrng.
plays a power game, depending
on a strong serve and volley to
overwhelm her opponents. Al-
though she IS dissatisfied with
her groundsfroke play, her
overall performance has been
atroag enough to defeat the
majortly of lier opponents
Smith comes from a strong
•perts tradition. Her father is a
fonpcr All- American football
player and her older brottier
presently plays football at Ber-
-Jieky^ ^Surprisingly, she didn*t
surt playiag tennis seriously
until she was 16
**! used to play only two
times m week when I was a kid
I just played too many other
sports like softba|l. basketball
and football so 1 really didn't
concentrate that much on ten-
ais."
However, she did maintain
enough interest to win the
Hawaiin High School State
championship in the ninth
grade, competing against play-
ers two and three years older
The victory was "probably the
biggest win I've ever had.*'^
Smith moved to California
that year, yet she did not play
tennis for her Irigh school.
*•! beat the No 1 guy there
bitt they wouldn't let me play
for the team because 1 got
there late and they said they
already had enough people."
said Smith "After that I just
decided to play on my own."
Since competing in tenni$
seriousfy for the last three
years. Smith has made excep-
tional improvement and she
feels that her '"casual" attitude
toward the game niay have
bscn the best thing for her.
**! see a lot of girls reaching
their peak when they're young
and then they just sort of fade
away," observed Smith.
They've worked all their live*
and now they just give up
"However when I was young
I played just for enjoyment
and now that Vm starting to
work at my game hard. I'm
* .«^fr»
UContB
Hair Stylists
MEN*. WOMEN . "^
We Style Long Hair &
Also the Latest Full Cut.
Shampoo & Blow Dry or Dry Cut
Manicuring & Pedicuring.
We also color and give Body perm waves
lOttev. u Come Ave. >^^y P«y ^orel
Westwood VINege acroea from U.C.LJL 47a-777S
PmMn% Lot pi 47a-7770
4
I'm just trying
1 can maintain
right now. I
pretty good
more ready to deveic all my
time to it.*
Smith makes no bones about
It. she's here strictly for tennis
'*Right now tennis IS the
main thing in my life 'and
school IS just a sidelight,"
stated Snuth. "la fact, 1 wasn't
going to ge to coMegc but mx.
parents really wanted me to
Whether I come back here and
next year depends on how I do
this summer in the tourna-
ments.
Smith's main goal is to be
accepted on the Junior Federa-
tion Cup team - a group of
girls that travel from tourna-
ment to tournament during the
summer with expenses paid in
order to refine their games. Jo
ht accepted, each girl must be
proven against top competition
and overall individual recoid
This creates a lot of pressure
tor the women and Smith, lor
one. feels it.
-Right now
not to lose. If
the level Pm at
should have a
chance
*'The bad thing about it is
that when 1 play opponents
ranked below me they have
nothing to lose and everything
to gain while 1 have everything
to lose," remarked Smith.
"They can play to win and
enjoy themselves While I play
not to lose."
Smith {^refers douk>les to
siafles and the team of Smith
and Cindy Thomas bas givea
the Brums 4)robably the best
duo in l^ouihcrn Calitornia. In
last ~ week's Ojai tournament.
they won the women's open
division in possibly their best
triumph of the year This week
they will travel to UC Irvine
for the league championships.
Td really like to do weH in
this tournament." offered the
freshmen "It'll prohabK mean
a lot towards getting on the
Federation Cup team."
For Smith, the idea of a
sweep of the singles and
doubles IS not beyond the
realm of possibility Since her
doubles ~Vifln IS favored and
she is leaded No. 2 in the
singles competition Her
strongest challeiige will come
from Barbara HalM^i^t. No; X
player at USC.
*" Barbara is the No. I seed in
the touiiuimcnt i;c actually I'm
not favored to wiil" said
Smith " *
Vn light of -her Tdrev lous vic-
tories, to bet against Smith
may be just throwing your
money away.
SUMMER JOB OPENINGS
UVi-IN counselors are neederf lo laad trips, tours and
other activities for japafiete ftn^ams staying at UCLA
luly 30-Aiifust 13. ^^ |
SALARY: $300 * room, board and expenses
INTERVIEWS: See job #1300-22A at the Placement Center
by fW ''«*w*«Hl •*!
I^C
BRAVDO
WINNING WAYS
ADD-IN
JELENK
A teiTiflc Selections of Styles & Colors At:
Ihe olhletk: deportmenl
1317 WMtwood Bhrd.
M-F10-«
Cot Those
SUMMER JOB BLUES?
So^iiel Students working with our nationally
known company earr>ed approximately $640 a
month in 1975.
INTERVIEWS TODAY
3:00 pm Thurs. April 29
Hedrick Hall - Chautaqua Room
Gymnastsi in «Pauley
OS Sport* >^rilcr
nighi tit
at I pm, niaay of the
finest gyoMMMli from through-
out the Southland will meet in
the annual Brum Gymnastics
Brum gymnastics coedi An
Shuriock has gotten many of
the competitors in last year*s
classic to return onoc again
Shuriock stated. ^1 think itU
be one of Hie better invi
al competitions We have
of the beat guys from I
schools, as weH at some others
who are out of school. It*t
going to be a quality competi-
tion."
Two of the top competitors
on the rings will be Elliot
Schnee of UCLA, who finished
third in the NCAA champion-
ship this year, along with for-
mer Brum Dave Rasnick The
two are co-holders of the
UCLA record on the rings. 9.6
Others who should be
watched on the rings are How-
ard Beiaen, a Stanford grad-
uate now attending UCLA
medical school, and UCLA^s
Eric Yeakey
The vaulting competition
should be equally competitive
Matt Holsingcr ot Cal State
Distances ...
(Continued from Page 23)
American lOiXX) scene for years
and seems at least a very good
bet to go Herold is tesi certain,
but also has been outstanding in
tlie last year
In the marathon, where this
reporter claims rn) special
kneieladfe, I turned thinfi ewer
to someone who does, toy
Farhi. a distance iN«ak of the first
order, came up til^ith suggestions
and analysis that follow.
Despite the multiple variables
that go into a race eif better than
26 miles, a few things ar^ sure.
.Olymjpic champ Frank Shorter is
-M aa^ enndition to defend his
title. Along with Bostonian Bill
Rodgers, who ranked number
one m the world last year,
shorter appears headed for gold
again. Rodgers battles him and
Americsns Gary Tuttle (Farhi's
pick for third spot on the US
team), )on Anderson, Kenny
Moore and Rick Roias try to
impto^it on Moore's ninth place
finirii at Munich.
Concisely, the word is titat the
USA could do even better tf^an
-4l^\w 1-4-9 placing in 1972, truly
an outstanding feat for a US
squad.
Competition for the f96,
white and blue will be stiff,
Jerome
en nn
FuUenon. the deiendmg cham-
pion, will tK there. His stiffest
competition will conK from his
own teammate. Sam Shaw,
who was this year's NCAA
champion in the event.
Greg Casian. a fifth-year
UCLA student, will also com-
pete in tbe vaultmg. Another
lop vaulier will be Bill Searles
of^Men West College
On the pommel horse, Joel
Ullos of Cal State FUllenon
will be one of the favorites,
along with the UCLA senior
Shawn Miyake. the winner of
this year's UCLA Invitational
Dal Seymour of USC will
also be tough in the event, as
will Harold Maghe of Cal
State Fullerton
In floor exercise. Richard
"^^Pascale of Pasadena, the de-
fending champion, will return
to defend his crown. Top com-
petitors from UCLA in this
rvent should be Bill Vought
and Mario Mora
The high bar should ^ one
of the most interesting events
of the evening. Competing
among others will be the two
Bruin aces, Steve Sergeant and
John Hart. Sargeant is the
defending champion, but he
will be pressed by Chad Noun-
nan, who has won two recent
invitationals. However. Sar-
geant is undefeated in three
years at Pauley Pavilion.
The parallel bars will feature
several top competitors, in-
cluding Pascale. Joe Snee of
Long Beach City College.
Steve Noriega and Alan fo-
plit/ky of UCLA
Another feature of the-meet
will l>e a special exhibition of
several women gymnasts on
the floor cxerc^e.
Admission for all UCLA
students is free For the public,
generally admission is $2 for
adillu and $1 for children and
students
1>rayten.
hepnc soil, will be tough to beat.
He's run work! ylssi times at
5000, 104M0 mA marathon.
Drayton stomped Rodgers at
Fukuoiia last year, one ol the
raoas el the
Abo in contention for a
ape Aenralian iiawnjnnwr David
Chetlie, veterans Ron Hill (Great
MHbi^ m6 Eckhard Lene of
EattCermany. Abo to be dealt
with is Brilon Ian T
who minned the
WSMD WiM Mi
the C
1174, running 2:09:12.
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UCLA TAY SACHS DISEASE SCREENING
Mon., Wed., and Thurso AprtI 26, 26 and 29;
Ackerman Union Man's Lounge
Tnaa., April 27, Medical Center Student Lounge
Testing hours each day are from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. to 7 p.iri
A simple 5 minute blood test can delect carhers and help save lives. Testing i
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foligion or mh fiolflior Mw Ooiiy Bruin
mmr th^ ASUCLA Communication*
vicaa advorllaod or advor1i»or« rapra-
•antad in ttiit Issua Any parson ba-
llaving that mn advartiaamant in tills
iaaua wleiain Iha Board's policy on non
diacrlmlnatlon aliMad iiarain should
Cdiiimuoicia ootNplMiits In writing to
tfia Buainaas Managar UCLA Daily
Brum. 1 12 Karclihofi HmU. 30t Waatawod
Piaia. Los Angalas. California M024
For aasistanca arittt tiouaiwg dtacnmi-
nation problams. call: UCLA Housing
Oftica. (213) •2S-44t1;W— Idlda Fair
(213) 473-
announcements
^0«K N PLAY SHOPS ^0« SINGLES
• BEV MILLS 273-3»40 4th f nOay
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awest aocks, and carries a
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(•A 20)
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Meend ^^iartar of UCLA standing at tha
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( A 20)
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Large selection of clothes for
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<27N6|
RUTM C DISSERTATIONS.
STATISTICAL. PAST.
SEVEN DAYS A VVSBK
STYLES. 6S6-942S
to SllBrO
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SINGLE/Pool. Savarty-FaiHai
Juno 23 Saplombor 20—9120 incL
C96 W3 iSSS aaaidaga.
(S6M4r
XEROX 2";rC
KiNKo s :»rf^'
PnOf t66lOMAL arHlar
TndiariFflkfc Ha iRii Laa
:y
Distance races not borinii tothose wiio undefstand them
And ncm, wt cork to the world of the
runner, a world that 19 praksWy the moot foretsn to all
«l uft. These are the men who put in thsMBSndi ot miles
III running to be able to run sii last. Their dedication is
often beyond what many comidef the li«itts of sanity.
Unfortunately, many of the loRfar racei tiave loi^i
bsSR unfairly taffRd M being ''bormg." Simply, this is
not thf case Tli06e who undersund the inaportance of
pactnf, tactio and »he fight against latigue get a real
appreciation for the long distance runner those
who ^oR't, well, deserve to be bored.
ShortgM of the "di8lafice events" at Montreal will be
the 36SS-meter steeplechase, a race iliflnly shorter
than two miles, over barriers and a water jump.
Another Olympic showdown seems imminent as the
games approach.
The battle for the gold seems to be 9 two- man affair
between world record holder Anders Carderud of
Sweden 9nd Poland's Bromslaw Malinowski Each has
been raniied first in the world recently Carderud for
75 and Malinowski in 1974. Carderud set the world
record twice last year, running 8:10.4 on )une 25 and
then lowering his own mark fust six days later with his
current world mark of 6:09.6. *' r
Malinowski lost 3 of 5 races to Carderud last yearr~
but has sosmed more consistent over the recent past.
Hsiscver, he raced far behind Carderud in the latter's
world record sUsit jM Malinowski is clearly in the
t|K>iler's role at Montreal.
Others with a shot at a medal include Michael Karst
of West Germany (ran 6:16.2 for third faMest in the
world). 1972 Olympic bronze medalist Tapio Kantanen
of finUnd, iSRiitional youngster Frank SaumgartI of
Eait Germany (6:17.6 last year), vets Gheorghe Cef an
(Rumania), Yohannes Mohanr>ed (Ethiopia) and Franco
Fava of Italy.
Where are the Americam in all this? Right now,
nowhere Possibly the best hope la s>-Tennessee
iSSSj^lsr Doug Brown, who ran as a pjiiii in the UCLA-
TenfiRSfess affair earlier this season, irown set the
Amerfcsn record of 6:23.2 in 1974 and stilt ranks as one
of the top 20 performers to ever run the event. Sut,
even fourth place doesn't bring a nr>edal. If Brx>wn can
get in shape, he will have probably the best chance for
a medal of any American.
Other American candidates for the Montreal steeple
include. Randy Smith, currerw American champ, )im
Johnson, Randy Lussenden, Mike Manley/ who'U be
running on his "home track" M Eugene for the trials,
and Kent McDonald.
The expdus from the 1500 meters, due to the dual
brilliance of John Walker and Filbert Sayi, has left the
5000-meter situation up m the air Who'N fun tKe 1500?
Who will opt for the 5000? \ppar^n&f, nKMt of the
world's top milers are taking to the k>r>ger race and
liking It just firte Converted milers ranked in two of
the top three places in the world last year — taking
first and third
New Zeaiand'% Rod Dixon made a fine showing in
the three^msiof race* thai he Nad, winning them all
He'll share the co- favorite role with Belgian Emiel
Puttemans. the world record holder at 13:13.0 Put
MfRians, seeminely oblivious to aging, keeps right on
fOtng. though he's been racing internationally since
way before the last Olympics He posted the fastest
time in the world last year at 13:16.6.
Others that will be in the Montreal picture are
^mertcan Marty Liquori, who moved up from the mile
to rank third here last year; Great Britain's Brendan
Foster, who anigjle opt for the 10.000 rT>eters to stay
away from the vicious kick of the speedy milers; British
-fleammate Ian Stewart, third in the '72 Games; Holland's
los Her mens, who pushed Puttemans to that 13:16.6
with his own 13:22.4 last summer, and Africans Miruts
Yffter and Iphn Ngms. the former finishing third ai
10.000 meters at Munich. The obvious loas here is
American Steve Prefontaine. who would have been
among the favorites for the fold, but who had his life
cut short by a car accident last year.
While liquor i has risen as the best American hope,
there are several others, al^ proven distance aces,
waiting to get a plane ticket for the American team.
Top hopefuls are Dick Buerkle. who with his Kofak
styled baM top ranked fourth m the world at this
diatarKe in '74; Ted Ca9teriada. who might also try the
1O.t)0O; t^reg fredricks. tdhn Gregorio and ^ottegien
Craig Virgin.
Question marks at this point are defending Olympic
champ Lasse Viren of Finland, so brilliant m winning
both the 10.000 and the 5000, and New Zea\an6er Dick
Quax. Viren has gone on record saying that he wiH win
the 10.000 title agajn, but is as yet undecided as to
wfiether to run the 50S0 again. Quax ran very fast times
in New Zealand over the last three months, but is also
in quandary as to what events he'll go in: the 5000, the
^0JO0O or both! If he enters the 9SSS. he'll be a big
factor if healthy ~ in|ur les have curtailed his career ior
years ; ^
While 5SB0 meters rum a bit over three tnik^ the
104XX) msisr run stratdtei seme six miles aryd chaMBs.
It was here that Viren bliMered one of the fastest ficldi
in history with his then-world record 27:JS.4. And lour
of the top %ka finishsrs in that race reium ior mtatkm
chance at Montreal, although some of them probably
won't be in the race.
Puttemans. second at Munich in "72, will probably
coRcewiraie on 5000. But that still leaves Yiher. the
bronze medalist American marathon gold medlliat
Frank Shorter, and Viren to fight it out with anelllisr
whole ca9t of talented runners.
In the favorite's chair right now. dgBpite Viren's big
mouth. IS Briton Foster. He swept to victory in the race
of the year last summer, the Coca-Cola Invitational in
London. Running his first ever race at 10.000 meters
foster moved to seventh place all-time with his 27:45.4
ckx^ing What a way to start out! "Big Bren," as he's
called in his homeland, Foster would seem to have all
the tools for an Olympic gold
But maybe that'^ premature there are others le^
be dealt with, and it is conceivable that Foster would
rather run the SOSB, even with his notable first
performance at London.
Besides Viren. Amerlcsn Shorter, ^e second place
finisfier at Coca-Cola at 27:46.0. feels he has as good a
shot as anyone, even though he'll be doubling with the
10,000 and the mar atf>on, a double that saw him win
the latter and finish fifth in the former behind Viren at
Munich
Hermem. who seems to be able to run any distance
well, is also in tfie picture, as are Puttemans. Yiher and
Quax if they decide to run. Other dramatic pe»8on6t
include Foster's countrymen Dave Black, Bernie Ford
and Tony SlRHRens. who al8e ran well at Coca-Cola;
Finn Pekka Paivarinta. wfio was incomistent. as wa9
Kenyan^Washmgton Stater Ngeno Big at the distance
m 74 was New Zealander Dick Tayler, who's been
sidelined constantly for nr>ost of the last two years by
arthritis
Arherican hopes for Montreal are Shorter and
possibly Buerkle. Castenads. Gregorio and probable
team members Glenn Harold arid Carry Biorkland
B|orklahd-has beeQ^^ right near or at the top ^f the
(CoMlineed on rate 1^)
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Key voleybalers could (Me those without tournament experience
D» Spirti Wriiw
MUNCIE, fNbiANA - As
the timt ■pffichci for UCLA
to make itt bid for a i^th
NCAA voMeyteM tick in the
Mven-ycar histof7 of the event,
several platj^rs without pre-
vious NCAA playing exper-
kmm will haromr key figures.
Setters David Olbnght aad
Steve Suttich, outside hitters
Mike Goitschall and Singin
Smith, plus middle blocker
K..C. Keikr have played an
important roie in bringing the
Eruins to Bali State University,
Mid aach could be a pivotal
factor in either the semi-finals
tomorrow sight or the finals
on Saturday.
X: AH-Amirftin^
Olbnght is a 6-1, 180-pound
JC AU-American transfer from
San Bernardino Valley College.
Suttich is a 5-11, 170 pound
All American transfer from
Diablo Valley JC in Concord,
California. Those two, along
with Peter Ashley, have given
UCLA steady setting this year
in replacing last year's NCAA
ftteit Valuable Player, John
Bekins.
GottschaO is a 6^14, 20D-
pound sophomore from Even-
dale, Ohio (the Gottschall
families will form the UCLA
rooting section in Muncie),
who has become noted for hit
sn§kiitkg spikof. Smith is a 6-2,
170 freshman from Loyola
High School, and he is prob-
ably the flKMt improved player
on the squad The 6-7,. 186-
pound ICeUer is the tallest
on the UCLA squad,
the freshman from Ot-
Caantfa* via Torrance,
I tremendous future.
Denny Chae, Fred Sturm,
Joe Mica sadH^tkr f^ffsakltn^
are the only players on the
UCLA squad with previous
NCiAA experience, but people
like Olbright aad GollidHdl
have come on during the last
two weeks to give the Bruins
their first league title since
1971
Olbright has played his best
volleyball the past three weeki
after a slow start due to the
flu. An All- American last year
when he lead San Bernardino
into the JC finals, Olbnght
was just named as a first team
All-Conference selection in a
vote of laofoe coaches and
players.
The All-Conference reoSfBi-
tion gives Olbnght an excel-
lent shot at AU-American
honors this weekend in Mun-
cie,. Olbnght IS not only a fine
setter, but one of the better
Bruin hitters on the team A
football, baakeChall and tennis
star at Riverside Poly High
School, he says, that it will be
the biggest thrill of his life if
UCLA can win the NCAA
title.
Ci(Nii>i liiii iMMBacoming
Ball State University will
almost be a homecoming for
Gottschall since he lived only
150 miles away. Gottschall is
the only married playier on the
squad, and his wile is the
daughter of the former mayor
of his home town.
Gottschall had miide pro-
this year similar to that
of 1975 OCLA All-American
John Herrcn. In 1974, Hcrrcn
just played the front row and
alternated with a setter but was
a full-time player last Sanson.
Gottschall has alternated with
Peter Ashiry this season, but
he cotrtd beoonr ar full-time
starter neat ycor if he con-
tinues to iinprove.
The iMBcr Air Force vet-
eran was ansad for baskethait
and fi ilfcsB in hi|^ khooL
but he has now become^ the
**stroi« ■MW'* on the UCLA
team. Ooe big plus for the
Bruins is that GotisaimM lus
had his best matches of the
year agaiasl Pcpperdiae.
VsnolBe player
Suttich is one of the most
versatile players on the UCLA
team. Besides being able to set,
he IS one of the better hitters
and blockers. He has
jumping ability for being
5-11. and probably only Joe
Mica is a better Icapcr on the
UCLA squad.
Tor OK there is only one
piMce, and that is UCLA,** said
Suttich. **1 don*t mind coming
off of the bench because 1 have
accepted it as my role and I
know when I go into the game
that I have the chance to turn
things around.**
Suttich has been conducting
volleyball chnics around the
country the past couple of
years and will do so again this
summer. His mother has been
the higfSM influence on his
volleybaN career because as a
^fcpiter piayer abe wasr able to
teach Suttich the fundamen-
Uls.
South is the . surprise player
on the UCLA team. He played
on a poor high school team
and was not recruited, but Al
Scates invited him to come to
UCLA and try out for the
Brum team. It was a smart
move, as the freshman has
done everything he has been
-!.-^
aikkcd to do.
The math major, who
tered UCLA with a 3.8 gr^Mle
point average o^ut of high
school, said, *'Just being a
of the UCLA team is a
moment for me. The NM**^
difference about coUege voley-
hall IS the fans, Iwause I have
never pUiyed in front of big
crowds like at Pauley Pavil-
ion
Saiqpi or Steghi
Singin (pronounced Sin-gin)
has the real name of Chris^
topher St. John Smith, but
Singin IS how St. John is pro-
nounced in English. (His nick-
name IS naturally Sing-in.) He
is probably the most versatile
player on the team in that he
can set, middle block or hit with
equal effectiveness and it has
not been determined yet where
he will play next year.
Keller was a two-year All-
City basketball player in Can-
ada, but he IS really from a
volleyball family His dad is
the National Technical Direct-
or for the Canadian Volleyball
Association, and iC.C.*s family
moved to Canada after his
ninth grade ytmr at North Tor-
rance High School.
I He laas a menAti of the
f team flMI won the Canadian
Junior Championahip. Iron-
I ically his dad coached the
team, one of his younger
brothers was on the team,
agathrr brother was the team*
mascot and hia morhar was the
biggest fan.
The frcBlMMn's Nggest thrill
at UCLA was starting the
opening home leagne match
agatast Long Beach State at
Pauley Pavilion *Mt was a
grant thrill to hear my name
announced over the PA as
being a starter on the NCAA
championship UCLA volley-
ball team," said Keller
Against Springlicld in the
semi-finali and against either
Pcpperdine or Ohio State in
the finals, Olbnght, Gotts-
chall, Snitich, Smith and tel-
ler have regular playing assign-
nKnts, the other three will be
ready if
*"! have said all year that this
IS the deepest squad I have
ever had, and I will not hesi-
tate to use anyone on my
bench should the right situa-
tion occur,"
.
Recraation sign-ups
There ve still op«hings in sccdfid session racfearion disics
as sign-ups continue today from 9 a.m. uocil 4 p.m. at Gate 1
of Paulery Pavilion. Classes open for sign-up are:
BODY CONOmONINC FOB WOMM
MWF 11 am-12 noon Women's Gym 100C
12 noon-1 pm Women's Gym, IggC
gECINNtNC lUDO
12 noon-1 pm Mac "B" 146
11 am-12 noon Mac "B'' 146
Saf DiffNSE-MiN AND WOMEN
Section 1 MW 12 noon-1 pm Mac "B" 116
Section 2 TuTh 11 am-12 noon Mac "B" 116
Section 1
Section 2
Section 1
S(l*Hion 2
MWF
TuTh
MW
YES!
It is the
' rv • ^
INTERNATIONAL WEEK
again
Info. 825-4940 or 825-3384
,|.
-s?*^
Dinner tickets
on sale at ISC (1023 Hilgard)
and FSA (325 Kerckhoff)
starting Friday, April 30
$3.00 ($2.50 students)
Faire booths
A limited number is still available for group*/
individuals interested in displaying/selling
artifacts/food. Just come to our meeting today'
at ISC at 6:00 p.m.
International Movements (May 10)
International Arts (May 11)
International Healtth & Environment (May 12)
International Affairs (May 13)
Asia Night (May 10)
Europe Night (May 11)
Africa Night (May 12)
Latin America Night (May 13)
International faire (IMay 14)
International Dinner (May 15)
8pofiaof#d by: Forv^pn SiMdaiit
P.T^^
H r
r « •• •<-
By Marti Lavtat
DB Staff Rcpartar
thaaiio
Guests to discuss
their work today
to inform students
reprcftcntrns 23 different occupationi ^lU
highlight Career Informatioa Day. today from
10 am to 3 pm lA Ackenaaa Uoioa Grand
Ballrooai.
The event will enable students iia meat
iafonnally wuh the representatives aa^SiapaiHa
current career infonnatioa, according to Bob
ia cbana af career
vcttmenii and Economic
Crunmai Juitioa, Politici, Marketing
Ma^aal Labaratary Technology. Mctficiaa-
Publu: Health, MUitary. Nutriiioa aad Daalai
HygKac, Penonnel Training and Devdepnent.
Phatnacy and Epidemiology. Physical aad
Occupational Therapy. Social Service
Mejntai HaaMu Travel aad ttoiai
and Vcteriaary Medicifie
The groupings were lat
have a cbanee lo
t*
**h win not be a )ob interview
Ehrmann emphatized The
will simply **sit down and
explain what they do,** he
The moat widely represented field will t>e
Arts and Commumcations Guests will indu^
Edward Aaaer. Art Seidenbaum/ Warren OIney
and, Burt Prehiuky.
The other occupational aravpaigl are: Ac-
tuary and Statistician. Ardotecture and tlrtian
PIsnning, Banking and Merchandising.
Biology-Life Science Research. Biostatistic&
Health Planning. Education and Library,
Engineering and Physical Sciences. Health
Education - Nursing. Hospital Administration
and Environmental Health Management. In-
ipational
»rding to
Ehrmann He hopes that this arrHipMMM will
help students realize that for hmmI occupational
areas outside of engmeenng and tkt
large variety of things can be d^
such specific traimng.
Three pand discussions will also be
sented. covering the topias of Foreign Stntfaai
Home Country Careen at 10 am, WaaMta's
Rights in tbe Job Market at n€x>n and Career
Planning Caacifas af Miaoruy ^udenu at 2
pm.
Career Informaliaa Day is spaaisied by tbe
Placement and Career Planning Center and by
the Alumni Assocuition. whose partial fundtqg
enabled the event to be so large. Ehrmann
said.
I
r
I
*
«
. *
- /
Ucla Daily Bruin
*
VelMiM XCVIII, Numtor 20
UnlvtrsNy of Calltomla. Lo* Ang^tm*
Priddy. Aprfl 30. 1070
But funding sponsors advised to 'pray a tof
Extended University gains some backing
Jiy Cbfis BowaMS
DB Sa^raoMiito ( orre^pondcnt
SACRAMENTO The Uni-
versity won some support in
the California I egislaturc
Wednesday for getting state
money lo continue itii finan-
cuilly strapped Extended Un^;:.
versity program for part-time
!»tudents.
The Senate Education' Com-
mittee approved S2 6 million to
provide for the current enroll-
ment of roughly 1.500 Ex-
tended University students next
year
Aa M) vote sent the ap-
propriation bill, authored by
Scruitor Lou Cui^anovich (R-
Loi Angeles), from tbe -Educa-
tion to the Ftaaaae Committee
for more screening.
Senator Albert Rodda (D-
Sacramento). chairman of the
Edibcation Committee, told
Cusanovich and tbe Uj^ Stu-
dem Lobby, a maior sponsor
of the appropriation.. **You
pray a kit before Fi-
The biggest hurdle, however*
is Governor Jerry Brown Tbe
governor has omitted funds for
the Extended University ia bfs
prQpc^d state budget for the
next fiscal year.
\f ■
Last year, the Legislatuire
approved a $1.3 million ap-
prdpnation to continue the
program, but Brown vetoed
the increase oa the grounds
that VC cottid operate the
program within existing re-
sources.
Last January When Brown
unveiled his propaiad W^T7
bvdpet showing no money for
the Extended University. UC
President David S. Saxon an-
nounced the University woidd
no loff^er admit any new stu-
dents to the program
''We fougbl for it and we
fought hard.** Saxon said, "but
we were unsuccessful in ^-
suading the state to cominue
supporting It. As a igiiil^ we
will phase it out **
The Extended University,
launched as a pilot program in
1972. has received state as-
sistance until this fiscal
Saxon says UC can no
lonper continue the program
without state rponey
I he program, which is ad-
ministered by afl UC campuses
except San Francisco, geo
eraBy serves a clientele older
than the traditional student
body, who MTt unable to attend
UC full-time because of work
commitments, finances and
family obligations.
Many of these part-time stu-
dauls attend evening and week-
eud classes both on and off
campus ~^5^^
Spokesmen said the Extend-
ed University has demonstrated
high student demands. A study
completed alter tbe program's
first pnr diMud ibat M par
cent of the HudMMs attending
would have found it impossible
to go to school fulMime.
Saxon showed that some of
tbe Extended University pro-
gram will continue without
state funding. He also said tbe
University is committed to
are **still in tbe pipeline** until
tbey complete their degree.
■r ♦
■•»■
I,
♦
f
I
• -
'Hughes' will/ if
authentic, wili malce
UC $93 miilfon richer
« »
Tbe UiMvcrsily af CabfMUa will receive ai/ct 93
from tbe aiMe aT tilt tele Howard HmfM if a aawly
will dMad biarch 19. I9it. m proved to be ai
Tba biBiUiiMia will snas taraad ovm la tbe dark Cmmmy
(l^iaaada) Clerk yaMgdiy by an ailiaal oi tbe CkHcb af tba
Latter-Day Saints (Marmon). m^f of tbe baMfioiafMa.
Tbe win reads, in part: 1. Howard Ha^Mi« baiag of
not
tbis to be aqr
to
University of Texas. Riec laHilaie of Tt
Urn versity of Nevada (and) tbe Ufvatraity of
Sara Motia« tlie Syitemwide Press Officer, said **ff if s mafljr
his will. Its ceruioitr food news.*" but addad ibe dooblad tHr adi
was aatbearic. However, a Clark County ClaciL efliployae
eoaticlad by tbe Daih Brum said tbe wdl Ig
laat witf and mBmmm 71
f
1
f
3
1
^
It
I
\. ^-
'Smashing, spellbinding,
•minently snf rtaining. It's
a stunning actiiavemsnt so
well crafted and acted that
it could be the best film of
the year."
•TANLEY BCHCLBAUM,
'MIHEPREaDFtfTSIIDr
..I *«; 1
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Clears path for Carter
Humphrey staying out of race
Y 1- rmd FsrW
O0 StUI Writer
Tht ftiuU hurdk in Jimmy
Carter*! drive for the Demo-
cratic Presidential nomination
nay have heen cleared yes-
terday with Hubert Humph-
rey*! announcement that he
will not enter the presidential
race.
The former vice presidem
fNM considered the one man
who could flop Carter*!
mounting Democratic support
His amiouncement cones two
4my* before the Texas primary;
the nation's only Saturday
prinury, which figures to be a
victory for Carter and a close
race between RepublicsM
Ronald Reagan and President
Gerald Ford
Humphrey, tean in his eyes,
told a press conference in
Washington, **! shall not enter
the New Jersey primifx nor
ihall I authorize any commit-
tee or committees to solicit
funds or work on my behalf. I
intend to run for re-election to
the United States Senate from
the state of MinMsms **
Humphrey, who was the
Democratic presidential nom-
inee in 1968, said he would
accept the nomination if the
convention this July turns to
him. He described that pos-
sibility, however, as fcfpote.
Irter, in his home state of
Georgia, said he had **mixed
emotions** about the announoe-
ment but said the decision will
give him a chance **to pull the'
factions of the party back
together **
Clampaigning in Tex;at, Pras«
iinit Ford said he thinks the
only way Carter can be
stopped now is in **the smoke-
filled rooms of a divideicl con-
vention and 1 think the pubbc
would object to that. So unless
they find some other formula,
it seems to me that Carter has
the edge at the present time by
a substantial margin.**
Of Humphrey*! announce-
ment, the President said, **I
wouldn't pass judgment on
whether it was a wise iacision.
1 ihiniL it was a pnictiGal om
b«anse Jimmy Carter gained
some tremendous momentum
(with his primary victory) m
Pennsylvania.**
Ford has spent four days
campnigBUig through Texas in
hopes of a victory which could
!upply the knockout punch to
Reagan and his withering CMB-
paign
CridcaJ dnrgts
While campaigning in Fort
Worth, the preiident laid of
Reagan*! iacicasingly critical
charges that the li.S has fallen
behind the USSR miliurily,
**Wc should exercise great cau-
tion before heeding the words
of a man who obviously has
no experience and little under-
standing of the complexity of
national defense matters.
When it ceoKS to Hir^e
and death decisions of our
national security, the decisions
must be the right
arc no retakes m the
Oval Office."
Mennwliik, on tkt nrnie
cratic side, the race in Texas
shapes up as another victory
for Carter. The Uirmtr r-t^^rgia
governor*s challenge shotild
come from favorite son can-
didate Senator Lloyd Bentsen,
as well as closes rivals Senator
Heiu7 Jackson and Repieaettt-
ative Morris UdaU.
Jackson and UdaU who have
mounted very weak campaigns
in Texas, greeted Humphrey's
decision rnthnsinstirall}
Udall said the arniuncement
was *'a very big breakthrough
for mft. Fm hoping that a lot
of the kind of people who
would support Humphrey will
come to me," he said. '
Jackson told a news con-
ference he expects to pick up a
lot of support from people
who were hoping Humphrey
would enter the
Board acts against
Banks and Taylor
■^"tii
cl.
By SaRy Garner
ORl^air Writer
Willie Banks, a candidate for student educational polices
commissioner, and Scott Taylor, a candidate for student body
president, have been prohibitied from distributing campe^n-
literature from noon- 1 pm next Monday in an action by the
Elections Board Wednesday night.
Banks and Taylor, presently Student Legislative Council (SLC)
general representatives, were found guilty of using their
ASUCLA office stationery for a political endorsement. The use
of ASUCLA or University supplies or equipment for any
campaign is prohibited by the elections code.
, The Elections Board decision stresaedl that this wa! **a
somewhat minor infraction*" but that it will be considered '^a
serious . violation** if it oecurs again.
The literature in question was a list of candidates for SLC
offices endorsed by the office of the general represenutives. ^U
wasn*t the endorsement of candidates that was illegal,** said Jay
Cole, elections bonad^ chairman, **it was the printing of the
eiKiorsemcnts on ASUCLA/^sutionery and the copyiiig of it on
the (student body)' preisdent*s xerox machine.**
Jerry Herndon. SLC general represenUtive and Bank*s and
Taylor*! campaign manager, said **! have to assume responsibility
<CiBtii I o« Pegs 19)
Pr«»«nt«« in 4 TflACH STCACO SOUMO
PHAJsrroAt
of the
>G PARADISE
CINERAMA DOME»».».«rv^
HOLLYWOOD • Sgg IS01 MMirtaji. !«§.«»
Donate your biood next week
It can save a life.
at the 3ame time you become eligible for
drawings for these prizes on these days.
Moaday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
D\nrrdt for two at Charthouse
Lunch for two at Alice's Restaurant
Lunch for two at La Barbara's
Lunch for two at Old Venice
Noodle Co.
Two Passes to the Troubadour
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Voium* XCVIII. Number 20
frtOmf, April 3D. 197t
Every donor is eligible for the sweepstakes prize
A trip for two to San Franciaco!
StJuniuiiU ijy SI
CtJUIltll 311
Wooden
rts Center funds f
. : _^ ^ , , - I _
Young says it is separate
from Plaza master plan
Cherkt E
Young told itudent govern-
ment mem ben Tuesday tluit a
student commitment to fund
the pfopoacd John Wooden
would not he a oommitmem to
fund the rest of the Wettwood
Plaza master pAaa.
The Chancellor was invited
to the Constitutional Revicu
Committee (CRC) to clarify
his position on a number of
Sports and Recreation Center umversity related matters.
The Chairman of the com-
mittee. Brian Eisherg. told the
Chancellor of a intemcnt a
student made, saying. **You
can have a Wcstwood Pteia
without a sports and recreation
center, but you can't have a
sporu apd rac center without a
Westwood Plaza.**
Eisberg later said, ^1 needed
a clarification from the Chan-
cellor on whether or not
hailding a sports and rec cen-
ter with student money would
commit students to eventually
fund the entire Wcsti
CONTrii^O«A»V FILMS
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Educational Policies candidates
Two candidates. Craig J. Mitchell and William Augustus
Banks 111, are running for Student EducationaP Policies
Commissioner (SEPC) this spring The commission is
designed to represent the undergraduate student voice on
UCLA educational policies.
Mitchell said he is concerned with student empio>ment
after graduation He said he would "go out, hend ^ task
force, working wtthr representatives of business and ask
them what they want and how can we incorporate that m to
the curriculum of UCLA."
Interested in initiating a review process for TA*s and
professors. Mitchell said t^t ''would prevent a TA from
Shaftiiig a student because of individual differences.**
Mitchell said he would also like to see more student input
through student voting on the curriculum.
Believing his qualifications are **not being taimcd by SLC
(StvioM Legislative Council).** Mitchell said he has been
involved with the farm workers and Proiject Awareness (an
SLC profnoi ifTfifw^^ to stimulate student interest in
national elections).
Willie Banks believes TA*s should take a special teacher
training course in which they would be graded to determine
their qualifications for the position
**! think we should have students sitting on the professor
Jenure and promotions committee. We'd get more profes-
sors res|K>nsive to students,** smd Banks.
Banks said he believes in giving academic units for field
projects and internships.
Banks bsted his qualifications for. the. position as having
worked on SLC as a General Representative, having «at on
committeas working on educationni policies and havin||
been in close contact with* the administration and students.
— Unia Rapationi
Doing one thing does not
comnut doing the other.**
replied the Chancellor He
added, **t would not try to
airingi a canifNugn to go out
and get student reg fees ... to
fund this element (plan).**
The Chancellor was also
asked if the constitution of the
Board of Control (BOC) could
be changed by a two-thirds
vote of the student body,
regardless of the board*s own
vote. (The BOC is a body
composed of six students, two
administrators, one faculty
member, and one alumnus. It
makes all policy decisions con-
cerning ASUCLA projects.)
In reply, the Chancellor said.
**lf you take the control over
the constitution of BCXT from
the hoard, then you are taking
o\cT the comrol of the' non-
student members. • Why should
one portion of the constituenc>
of the University (students) be
able to change its constttu-
tionT*
When asked how he would
feel about adding one or two
students to the membership of
BOC. the Chancellor replied.
**T1iat's within reason Eight
(students) to four (administra-
tion, faculty, alumni) sounds
all right *•
Only two of the six members
of CRC were present for the
meeting Eittatf explained that
the reit of the committee mem-
bers were out canipnasning.
J
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Intellectual freedom panel
A colloquium on intellectual
freedom hononng Everett T.
Ml flit will be held from 9:3S^
'am- 12: 50 pm Saturday. May t
in Rotfe 1200
Principal speakers include
Jiiiith F Kr«i of the Office of
Intellectual Freedom, ALA.
Melville B Nimmer, Pn
of Law here; attd Everett T
Moore, former associate uni-
l^rsity librarian here.
The event m ipswifsd
jointly by the library schooh of
use and UCLA and the Com-
nuttee on Public Lectures.
There is no admiMM dMrft.
Che public is invited.
Short to edit Bruin
Alice Shon was selected last night by the ASUCLA
Communications Bonad as the eiilof ia iinrf et the DaiJv
Brum im If76-T7.
Short, a news eduor inis year, had worked for the Daih
Bmm for two and one half years as a stafT reporter and a
staff writer, before her satedion
Short, a junior, is a history iiiiMor who plans to atimd
law icBsol. Short will aatthMi and implement Haih Brum
policy and maintains overall control over xb
miiminni She assumes her duties June 4.
3laj|['j a— I— ii mii nirti V *' ^' k-^^j^^ t,.^L
Waunahe.
PARTY! PARTY! PARTY!
rFor Good Times
at the
Dell House
Live Band
Frozen Refreshments
Del Daiq's & Dancin' & Bullfrogs
Tonight 8pm - 1am
649 Gayley Ave
Get Wet —
Succumb with the Delts
Mernbi^oTc
/
}
TAPER CHASC" wtf
• -12 CHAIRS
Physical and social >cienca« only
Of^ House happens Sunday
larttisUCtAi
•tUCLA.
" -■ ■, '^'-^
•. I
■ .■ r'H. '
J^- jr<«s
tlir C
mm watmk
Burke. Dmmmi
of Letters siid
ciMK tlK CampiB
msiMEi
»'*■ ^
Da«iJitniiiMf&,
»fW<
-js^k^kfi.
UA CINEMA CENTER HOLLY CINEMA
West wood 474-4166 Ho*ty«ood 4«6-2iS4
AND AT TNES€ SKCtAUY
T1KATIES
r
BiKZ
■itti
^fWm
f%M
^9m
tits
i/n
Jin
*^li it was too imwieldy to
latplvc tlic whole campus.**
Dcaa Bitrkc explained the
Opra House is set up on a
rotational Mtit« each time
^iflncot Cottefes uking part
Tlie physical sciences, will
offer "The Excitii^ World of
Chenustryr a 45-miiiutc "cir-
ciis'' of demonstrations in
Young Hall 2250 at 12:30, 2
aad 1.30 pm. \n addition, ani*
OMled films involving chkem-
i9Cr> will be shown throughout
the day
Recentiv cpmplcted. a pic-
ture 0|Mcff> of famous mathe-
maticiias wilt he on display
aiong the uxth floor hallway
Math Sciences Building.
A begnining lecture on the
Grand Canyon 4>y ProfnMr
SoMS Heiffer at 3:30 pm will
be among the highlights pro-
vided b> the fBology depart-
ment Dating techniques,
eanhquake prediction, ocean-
op;iph>. Venus and Jupiter
mmi environmental problems
will be covered by members of
the fnitfgr. frophysicB, plane-
ury physics, and space physici
departments Surplus fossils
wiU be given away while they
•A World of Never-Ending
Diac0wrki** will be provided
by the physics department
"Tour the World of Physics"
wiM be featured every half hour
" ^the first floor
elevators in Knudsen Hall.
In the MciaJ sciences, the
economies department has
scheduied in Bunche 2168 af 1
and 2 pm the film PsopJc of
Market Street, designed to
convey the basic concepts of
ecoDOOMCS. OtBHTtment Chair-
man Jmms C. LaForce will
answer questions following the
movie.
The Bocioiogy department
will present Dr. Linda B. Nil-
son, in Hmtnes 220, at 1 pm,
who will lectvfc on "^llape is
How You See It.** Sbe will
discuss people*s concept of
Tape an<d ham it is affected by
the characteristics of the vic-
tim, the offender ahd the cir-
cumstances.
Proienar Fawn Brodie,
author of TkaoMM JcffcrMa:
An iBihniii History, will dis-
ctist Jefferson's personal life in
a talk that will begin at I pm
Unoppottu mtuh
lDtal|f readif' for
cohmlrfhRJob
Lou WiwfmHt Mb totally
ready to iMndk the poi^ition of
Cultural Affairs CoaMBitsioner
fCAQ* to wiuc^ Ik is
A jiMor ami CAC director
of profraoumag, Karasik it
running becaaat of his expen-
ence tlM yaar as dmctor aad
his diBit to vale on student
*! hope to be very
council,*' he taid ai
tliat he fsaii **a
oo
and
to expand tiK
aaaoivt pro
graa. Next liA, he mid be
bke to see a
At for the
two a
away
But no appointment needed to donate
— Bteod drive sign-ups end
Today it the last day to
aa appointment to do-
nate Mood on campus next
An appointmeiit* though not
necessary, OMI save students,
faculty « and italf time waiting
in line according to the Stu-
dent Health Service.
Perions who donate may
choose whether to give their
blood to the UCLA blood
bank account, the Red Ci
or another organization which
can use the blood to help save
lives.
Vivian Black man, a worker
for the Blood Drive, said the
project IS doing well so far and
Monday's appointment log it
almost filled "
There is a table on Bruin
Walk where one cUn sign up to
donate blood. The workers at
the ublt ask piiiiffi b» to
their participation
A IftN-gayge acedk is em-
ployod in tlie uking of blood
to keep red blood ceUs intact
In the procedure of blood do-
aatioM, a paiaaa't bod>
temperature is taken to check
for any last-minute infcc
Hood pressure aad hemo
globm count is then measured
Before the actual doaatioa.
The process itself takes seven
to ten minutes After this' is
done, the donor, under ttate
law, must stay lying down for
at least 5 minutes, after which
he is taken to a recovery tahie
to he down for about 20
minutes.
The proceedings take about
an hour and in only in a few
cases doe* severe light-
headedness OQcur Coffee and
cookiei are serv^ed afterwards
along with an invitation to
retara next year
-People ineligible to ^Mate
include those weighing
than 1 10 pounds, persons
recovenng from a recent cold
or others using any antibiotics
such as tetracycbne.
All the donated blood is
then taken downtown whete -it
is checked for traces of hepa-
titis and processed for dis-
tribution and fterage.
Sign-up tables for blood
doniition will be found in the
Chem Quad and in Bunche
Hall as well as Bruin Walk
-i^sr GariB
OHO^-m CMCOUNTm QUOUM
AM tAgV WAV TO
AMD gTAMT A
SOOPM
■ mmo mjmmi a mmmmmQmJL IHLATiOMaMP
V91-7T3T 4 SMu Ml o( Fairltti. NMf Smmmi aHiS tdSA
$2M
»
r
DATSUN
""Acres of Datsuns
Student, faculty, and alumni
fleet discounts
101 S Arroyo Parkway
* 684-1133*
99
I
<rsAn6ailmAkeft
/
*-»
1 H4 We%twood Blvd
\*^rM wood. Calf 90024
Phonr (213)47)9549
M« ■«« I
IKfTrau TlOKIf
/a oarii
NSA representative running
for and /against' his own office
fra)
HMb 't.' yc
ffj \^ X K^La^K^fifm^^fl op4^;- / Joys
%J!j^ \^MtmKmmmm ham $02 am
B«fwaan Bar rington ond Bimii^ ~~'
11t13 Witshire Blvd GRf 01^
•9 SaHy Gai
DB Stair Writer
The very existence of the
alfice of National Student At-
•ociation (NSA) repi tUBIativcs
is at Slake in next week*s Stu-
dent Legislative Council elec-
tions.
Brian Eisberg. this year's
NSA representative, is running
iar. reelection aad advocates
the elimination of the office
**rin running against the office
of NSA repreienutives,^ Eis-
berg said, **bacaase the work of
the NSA representative dupli-
cates the work done by the
exteriul affairs coordinator.**
" The external affairs coordi-
nator IS appointed by the
undergraduate president and is
in charge of a41 the student
lobbies and any off-campus
matter that directly affects the
students.
Etaherg also feels that the
National Student Lobby
(NSL). which UCLA alroidy
belongs to, is a more effective
organization than the NSA.
If elected. Eisbcfg taid he
will attempt to place a refer-
endum before the students
that the office ot the
NSA representative be abol-
ishai.* Eisberg will i;iot accept
his stipend as long as he is in
office and if the referendum
faib. he will resign immediate-
ly
Ivan Kallick is opposing
Eisberg in the race for NSA
representative K a Hick, pre-
sently the director ol the SLC
information service on the stu-
dent body president's staff,
feels **it would be diaaitrcHM**
to eliminate the NSA repre-
sentative from SLC.
According to Kallick the
NSA rcpre^niativc's duties arv
"to represent UCLA on a
national level" and to bring t(i
council **things o\ national
importance to siudcnts." NSA
membership would benefit
UCLA b> providing "'>iudcni
travel and insurance benefits, a
m
source of informatton on na-
tional issues and a lobbying
lorce in Washington." Kallick
said
Kallick considers the VSA
**a potent lobbying lorc^** and
said that the NSL (% gutgn
bankrupt
"TUNE-UP, LUBE t OIL iOA'^
COMKIIf W/farts m~
ilMliMi IMM
OVIftMAM %\QK
A-1 AUTO SERVICED
79S7 VAN NUYS BLVD
894.7075
r 4
'ir
Commigiity Sorvices post
The Community Services Commissioner oversees such
programs as the AS UCLA Tutorial Project. Project Amigo*^
and Bridging the Gap. Thu year, two students are running
for this seat on the Student Legislative Council
John Kobara. a junior wants to encourage students to
imtiate community-oriented programs and to perpetuate
them so students will hav«^ the affartunity to gam practical
experience.
Kobara spent two c|ttaf1ers working on a volunteer basis
with incarcerated youths, ^'getting them through their
terms."
He is assistant director of the Bridging the Gap program
The other candidate. Delores Turner, was unavailable tor
comment
aiilo-insiiianoe
lates 4
AMER-I-CAL
U94 Wcftwood Banlevai^ • Swito •• I
Call Day or m^^M - (^1B) 47B-S721
VACANCIES
JUDICIAL REVIEW COMMITTEE, an advisory body charged with
providing a continuing review of campus regulations and judicial systems.
IS Mcktng undergraduate ar>d graduate students to fill three vacant
student representative positions beginning Fall quarter This is a stipendcd
position, which involves active participation in weekly committee
iiicetitigs and iCMarch task teams.
We're looking for people with exc^n'i^nal verb^» ^n^hur ^nd writinfi^
skills. ExperierKe is not necessary; themiiiative andoewc loul I er student
input at a high administrative level 1 >ential
For further informaMton -intact the University Poli*^'*^ rrirr.missK>n
Office (825-7906), Royce 126, lor details. Deadline for re< eip< ot resun>e is
frtda>f M^y 7
I
t
4
f
u
3
..*. — ;.
dolybajin
DB Editorial
Those awful signs
Elitiloil ttiM Is hf9 and with it mn
. abomlnabis campaign practica that
would bast b% aliminatad. Tha practice
la visual pollution in tha form of blH-
IS boards postad up, on and around Bruin
*: Walk. Rartiaps tha boards could althar
' ba bumad as firawood, tharaby making
5 a contribution to anargy or thay could
^ ba crushad and ma6€ into pm^f to
J^ aaaa ttiat shorlaffa.
1 Tha grass 9nd trmet north of Bruin
Walk provlda a studant somawhat of a
rallaf from urban boradocn. Thasa signs
ruin it
Ab Im m • vola attraction, tha bill-
boards mr9 ludgad by thair artwork
rathar than tha candidata's platform, so
idaally thasa advartlsamants should not
contrlbuta to a candidata's popularity
anyway. ^,,
It Is Important for candldatas to
advartlaa. If signs f naaaasary, than
on this axtansiva campus thara Bf
altamativa locations for tham. P^rhmpt
thay could t>a abandonad altogathar.
Howavar, digging up the ground and
hamiiirlng fluorascant aya-grabbars
into ona of tha few open, natural areas
on jCmnput should be discontinued.
This Is a problem that could be
changed by the Elections Board. Per-
haps a candidate could add it to his
platform Hi order to attract more votes.
IM 9t»M4»> IH rmitm
t.,
Bicentennial fever
(Editor's not^ Kennedy « a member of the Progresuve L^bor
Party here)
Everywhere we turn this year are Bicentennial inwiges and synr>bols
— flafi. eagles, pictures oi the "founding fathers." the Liberty Bell
— which are designed to remind us of the bosses' mythology of 200
years of "representative government." This all-out effort to bolster
American nationalism in a country of massive unemployment, rising
prices, lowered real wa^es and cutbacks coincides with a ri^e in
organized racist violence; Fn Boston three weaiti 9907^ 29-year-old
Letters to the Editor
Ei^ash
aiacit attorney was savagely beaten with an American flag poie by
ami- busing dcnruDnstraters. Systematic attacks on Bladt^ peap^e by
white teeruias 8*^8^ ^'^^ increased^ while in some white neighbor^
hoods, vigilante squads patrol the streets, harassing and assaulting
minority pafions. This is "Bicentennial City" — after 200 years of
exploitation, slavery and racism, Black working people cannot walk
safely down the streets.
OPINION
Patriotism and racism are being used in this country to build
fascism, the natural governmental form that correspon^lft- to
capitalism in dedine. U.S. bosses are in serious trouble; they are
facing worldwide imperialist competition and rising ar>ger among
workers of all races in this country. As long as capitalism was
expandifif , its leaders could aHord a multi-party system of checks
and balances with limited freedom for working class parties. They ,
can do th«t no longer.
Tlwy have taken a page from the history of the Nazis in Germany.
The Nazis, in order to instill loyalty to the "Fatherland," glorified the
Gemnwi put. And while making plans to eliminate the Jews, they
talked of a revolution ^ a "national socialist" resolution — which
diay claimed unearned income, big trusts, land rent and speculation
wouid be abolished and the lands of the aristocracy would be
expropriated without compensation. But once Hitler achieved
power, the "second revolution" never came off and its letdirt «vcre
murdered by the SS. The big industrialists remair>ed in control
In the U.S., fascist groups ire mllitantly organizing, tl^ American
Nazi Party is growing from San Francisco to Minneapolis. The Klu
Klux Klan has been resurreaed in California. Restore Our Alienated
Rights (ROAR) has spread from Boston to New York and is far wesr
as Chkaao. At ROAI^ meetings and derTK)nstrations, members salute
the AmsHcan flag ind^sing "God biess America." They assault anti-
rariits arid shout, ''love it or leave it" or "go bark to Africa." The
headquarters of a multi-racial union was vandalized in South Boston
and its members threataned by ROAR thyfi.
Rather than fight thefe fascists, we are urged to celebrate the
BiGentennial. What is there to celebrate about that? The la%i^ers,
merchants and planters who wrote the Constitution were interefis^
mainly in insuring "domestic tranquility" by keeping down the
Urmen and workers who were protesting their expoitation. They
alio legalized the slave trade for another 20 years and provided for
the return of escaped slaves to their masters. The author of the
Declaration of Independence, Thomas Rffiinaa, who wrote that "all
men are created equal" and that they have a right to "life, liberty
the pursuit of happiness, had his^own "final solution" for the
of color." He wanted them all diparted and the laaaer the
"A million and a half slaves are within control; but six
millions (which a maia>il|f of thoae now living will see them attain)
and one million of these fighting men will say/'we will not, go (we
will not be dipaflad|."/ro pratse these leadart ii to cofidone the
radit system they pe^paluated
Workers and students should celebrate resistance to capitalism
rather tk&n iu 2UD-year rise in this country The struffie for the 6-
hour 4t^ produced an international workers' holiday. May Day. On
May 1, the Proarestive Labor Party is marching in Los Angeles,
Philadelphia and Gary. Indiana. In Los Angeles, workers and
(Ciili i aa Pate 7)
EdNor:
Because I was in San Diego on
Thursday and Friday, April 8 arrd
9, 1 did not see Joanne Eglash s
article on the University Library
when, it first came out. I've now
had a chance to read it thor-
oughly and I would tike to thank
both the Daiiy Brum and Miss
Eglash for the lime, attention
and space devoted to this ar-
ticle It 15 by far the most- ambi-
tious description of the Library
system in the Daily Bruin that I
can remember. It was both com-
prehensive ♦and specific and suc-
ceeded in communicating not
only the iaCXs about the UCLA
Library, hut something else
much more important that is,
the pride thai staff members feel
in Its resources and their eager
ness to make them available.
faa* Acker man
University
umtra
I speak primarily to worr>en in
this -article Since women have
been given the decision- making
power over abortions, it is main-
ly a female issue. We have ac-
cepted the fudgment of ihe
Supreme Court and are sending
yearly over one million of our
own innocent unborn children
to slaughter. Feminists have spo-
ken truly, women should have
the right to control their own
badiei. Unfortunately, when this
argument is used to defend
abortion it is misguided. The
unborn child is not part of. nor
an extension of the mother's
body; it is housed and nurtured
by the mother's body, but func-
tions on Its own systen. .. i ru
unborn child is a life, a life from
conception on, this cannot be
rationaMy denied
We in the United Slates have
attempted to protect those who
cannot priect themselves.
Many of use have fought for the
protection of minorities, fought
against the slaughter of South
East Asians, fought lo outlaw
capitals punishment and even
fought for the protection q(
helpless animals There are many
amaaa us who will not eat the
flesh of animals because of the
belief that it is wrong to take the
Hves of these animals Yet. d^ikf
theusatKk of women give the
Jives of their unborn children to
suaion hoses or equally cruel
fates For what reason are these
unborn children condemned?
We call it convenience. Most of
these >inborn are conceived at
an ir^-convenieni time in the
mother's life The mother has
accepted the exciting aspects of
sex, but has ignored or refused
the responsibility which must go
along with sex There may be
other factors such as economic
hardship which make a pMg^
nancy inconvenient Yet rw
woman is forced to keep her
child. We think it cruel to give
up a child, but more cruel than
to take Its lift away^ There are
good loving homes for these
unwanted children, homes
where there is a "need for a
child. Can any women be so
heartless to say she will not give
nine months of her life to give
another human being a chance
at a meaningful life? It would be
difficult to carry an& give up a
child: certainly ii would be dif
ficult to face orte's relatives and
friends Abortions ran be done
sorr>ewhat secretly and therefore
without criticism from family
and friends But can we con-
sciously put our pride before
human life; c^n we cheapen life
to such an extent?
There are many who use a
misguided sense of altruism to
lustify abohon They condone
abortions in cases where there is
a possibility or certainty of phy-
sical or nr>ental damage lo the
unborn. Yet I sincerely question
whether the physically handi-
capped or mentally retarded
wish their parents had aboffed
them. Are we "normal" people
to judge what d fulfilling Ii4e is
or IS not?
.Ihe qut'^i luii .ui dUuiiiuii It an
emotional one It touches each
of us and our deftpesf feelings
and convictions concerning life
It IS not an issue which should
he diiposed of easily Laws can
easily be wrong or against the
grain of our morality The rights
of the unborn child have been
taken away vntil sin months
from conception. These unborn
children cannot defend tf>em-
selves. We must defend them
Nature has entrusted women
with the precious gift of life. It is
,our duty to protea that gift
Ka^Meefi ^aas CitiefTefo
(Om a< 74)
tipiM
It must be easy to downgrade
a movie in a review. AH it takes
is a catchy sentence . or two. a
few statements i^mplying the
nK>vie is so bad that one cannot
possibly help but "see through
it." followed at least by a gen-
eral synopsis of what the re-
viewer thought the rrK>vie was
about and the review is com-
plete.
A prime example of such a
review is Tony Peysefi criticism
of UpHM in the April 12 Oaify
Brum Out of fairr>ess I have
chosen to follow the above
stated fcirmat in my review as
well.
Peyser's review begins: 'Bci>y
meets girl. Soy rapes girl Boy
acquitted at trial ..." Not only
is the opening paragraph
catchy, but it places the re-
viewer in an elite class — those
who "see through " movies, a
class which excludes those who
<eel iipilMi is not as Mr. Peyser^
asserts, "ill-conceived, poorly
crahed and imbecilic."
Next we come to the plot of
the movie. Contrary to Mr Pey-
ser's views. 1 sincerely believe
that Lipaacfc is an anti-rape
statement, but nr>ore than that it
IS a portrayal of the ar^er. frus-
tration and deieat of a woman
caught in the brutal, dehu-
mantgiwf *'aylem of fu^ti^*
facing rapj victims. That the
victim flna% takes justice into
her emn hands is not an ad-
vocacy of violenc/. but rather a
statement by the movie's author
that the legal course of action
simply does not work for a rap^
victim.
Of the aae hour, forty min-
utes used in the movie's power-
ful exposition of r^pe* the last
five cover the departure from
justice arni subaaaaent acquittal
of the rape victim. This is not a
fMftcation o^ violence H is an
examination of justice afuA the
difficulty ol achieving justice.
Upiidi is an emotional film
with a dear mesMfC It « *^^"
conceh^ed, well acied and very
pUusible. And don't worry — if
you like the film you may fOin
the elite who |udge films for
themselvp^
More letters to the DB ^^ ,
Fmni
On April 24. t went to the
Mardi Gras at UCLA and I really
got annoyed because I came last
year and th^e w<*rf> iitrl^ prizes
like decoders
And this year on the Pirate
Climb, the man held the ladder
the whole time just for one linle
pr\ And I don't think it's fair
a«Mi M. Chmtm
7
tucing
iut perhaps I have misin-
lerpfeicd Mr Gregory's re-
.9#rks. Perhaps what he mtani tt
^t everyone h» a right to eat
the food he hitmeH has prc^-
duced If so. I agree whole-
heartedly Everyone should have
the right to keep and use that
which he has produced* i^. the
basic right to his own property.
Marcy TiHaiiy
— a
ditterent wofdf is
lul or dignified
"quile ~iure Vrn r>ot
hoaa the
apparent current trer>d
favoring the use aH arch ar>d
artificialh< elegant nomenclature
can be reversed at UCLA.
ClMt ol *B
Owis
Food run
Nomendature
In the t^aify ^uin irticle
about Dick Gregory's "food
run/' Mr. Gregory is quoted as
saying that "food is a basic
right" and that he has a ''basic
right to eat What I uke Mr.
Gregory to be saying is that
whaihar or not an individual tt
willing Of able to supply his own
faad, he can justifiably demand
that he be provided with food
anyway. Of course food is not
just "provided." Someone must
labor to produce it. Tfuis what
Mr Gregory ii feaNy saying is
that tfH>se who pmdiKe should
be forced to turn over the fruits
of tlieir labor to those who are
not producth^e. What this
amounts to is. m a word, slavery.
It IS forcing one individual to
work to support anotfter If this
IS not clear, think for a moment
of what would happen to the
"rifht to iood" if everyone
For a gobd many years, I've
had no particular reason to be
in communication with UCLA
but nevertheless have a pro-
prietary feeling about UCLA
(lots of us do, I suppose) be-
cause it's my alma mater arni I
worked there for a long time
ar>d tf^ san^ is true of many in
my family
When I was at UCLA, thinfs
were called by their right nanr>es
(n>ore Of less) — at least one
could tell the fururtion of an
oMice by its title, ftccently. in
connection with helping a friend
about possibly employing a
UCLA student in her home, f
wai ihe dismayed recipient of a
form letter from the "Office of
Residafitial Life "I've pondered
about this a Imle bit. but really
don't know what it means
All kidding aside, I honestly
don't think rf>e use of such silly
euphuisms (not "euphemisms"
More from PCP . . .
(Continued from Page ^\ -^
students of all races will demonstrate to smash the Dixon- Arnett bill
and to counter the rise of fascism Jby organising for socialist
revolution Come with us to celebrate a workers' holiday rather than
tV* bosses' Bicentenr\ial
Chief Davis, you have a^*^
too far. I keep hearing
say that your days are num-
bered You almost arreHad me
at a charity "slave" auction for
the gay community last week. I
paid 10 dollars for tickets but
failed to go when I heard ru-
mors Oi uninvited guests. If you
honestly think a "real slave" was
lold for 16 dollars then you must
be thinking of pre-1860 prices
That IS what century your mmd
is in.
I saw you on TV Saturday
night ranting about gay slavery
and sadomasochism The only
sadists that I know of are you
arKf your police department. If
you are seriously looking for
sadists, I would be happy to give
ybu tfw names of two po^e-
nr>en wfk> threw me on a side-
walk and beat me with Jheir
nightsticks I have tf>e evidence
to prov^ e.
Chief Davis, people are ^wor-
ried about your mental state I
used to say that you were ba»r
^aliy a good person who If
living in the past But I think it is
time for you to submit to a
psychiatric examination. You are
getting on in years and some-
times the oxygen dbes not reach
the brain' in adequate quantities.
I know ci teveral psychiatrist
who would be willing to exa-
I
I
i
t
t
ycMi without charge.
Would you like their names? For
the sake of Los Angeles, the gay
community and yourself please
resign before you cause any
to people's lives.
Ray
l> i
re Larry Pollack's retpaate to
my column in the 4/28 Brum
Part of what I said . in my edi-
torial on Socialism was mis-
uiideriiund> not becauie of
malice on Mr. Pollack's part, but
because 1 didn't express myself
very clearly When 1 said, "base
replies on what Christ really
taught." I was not meaning
base your discussion on Chris-
tian teachings, as opposed to
those of other systems. If I had
me^nt that, then Mr. Polladc's
accusation of hypocrisy would
be valid What I meant, however
poorly I stated it, was wmply If
yotr ertticize Christianli^, criti-
cize what Christ really taught,
not popular mlicanceptions
thereof Of course, the criti-
dmm can come from any logKal
or rational viewpoint
This is all I meant The only
reason t put that in my article at
all is that it becomes wearisonr^
defending Christianity from
various straw-man versinni 9l it
ranipant m the world Two of
the chief of these are that it is a
mere ritual, prgiided over by a
mumbling minister an# that It il
merely a ^very, strict) moral sys-
tem Neither Is valid; Christianity
IS a set of beliefs describing a
relationship to a penan* lesus
Christ
■/-•!■/
I
4.
t
I
i
I
y^w '^ci^
^ V
^
HISTORY BOOK
^.
The filfn The History Book is a Scandinavian film originally
produced for junior and high school students. It tells the
history of the world from the perspective of the working
people. This film is entertaining and educational. The narrator
is a rat (animal-cartoon style) who tells you how it was.
Beautifully done animation.
Friday, April 30
Haines Hall 39
7:30 pm-11:00 pm
Sponaorad by
American Qraduata Studant Aaaociation. Asian Studant Union. Asian An>arican Stydlas
Studant-Community Profacts. 1st V P Stlidant UlalBtiaa Council
"" '■■
■■^WP
B^E^iSMai^£Ha^aS5
a&
TT*^^?— "^
i*^
S=3
w*^
^/•mmmm
J
Dachshund racing never had it so good
•*,-
r_^penhouse during UQ^ayJslj^icnicjday
j ly Geoir Quinn their ga/es glued lo teveral iion, the gates were letattirf Then a^aui, i»fely was an But, from tlie begiiiiiiiig
:^ na &*air vtrii^r ' -'-"-* Martin, m^tm^ .t r,.w^ »m^ tk« nrr,^^ r^f A unfi ta/^nt nn^fi houce Ml succeisful as UC mic was Dot cicar.
By Gaolf Quinn their ga/es glued to several
DB Staff Writer ' dmmi flftrting gates at one
It was the fourth race of the end Inside they could make
afternoon Tension showed on out five high-strung purehvatlt^
most of the faces of the quiet straining at the b^rs FinaBy a
spfctamn hning the track hugie*s call shattered the ten-
sion, the gates were lei
and the crowd of 4,000 went
wild with whoops, cheers and
racing arver
had
>
*i.^r
'1
No end to platform variety
for Administrative Veep
By Loui^ Watanabc and frank \%id4er
DB Staff Writers
There appears to he no end to the variety
of platforms given by the three admmistra-
t'ivc vice-president candidates: Chrittopher
Meyers, Bob Borden and Gary Collister.
Running on an ''apathy** ticket with
Gerald Hale, student body presidential
candidate, Chnstophcr Meyers said, **Neither
of us care much about student government.**
Meyers feels 90 per cent of the students
did not vote last year because '"They don*t
care about student government and student
government doesn*t care jtbout them.**
His election to office, Meyers laid, would
be a good choice because he is like the
apathetic student majority.
Meyers said he and Hale have not received
any endorsements from present members of
SLC. ''We don*t want their endorsements
because we don*t warn to represent them.**
Among Meyers* issues are the S5000 spiht
squad helmet which he termed **ttupid,**
women sports which '^need more support**
and SLCs annual retreat Or *Wacations.**
Robert Borden, a former SLC member,
&aid *^LC has so much potential to get
things done but it is almost never used.**
Urging more visibility for the council,
Borden said that present SLC members are
^too concerned with their own affairs and
not concerned enough with the students;^
Among his platform goals are an ex-
panded route and operating hours for the
night tram and establishing a working
Student Intern Program by fall
Borden ako tifciied the naatf for better
relations between SLC and the Administra-
tton, '^You've got to Work with the Admini-
stration and not against them If they don*t
think you want to play ball with them, then
Its 'We*re the big shots, foodbyef* ** '
A student bank on campus and a con-
sumer comparison pricing service for stu-
dents are two of the goals being urged by the
third candidate, Gary Collister.
According to Collister, the on-campus
bank would be open to bidding from com-
mercial banks and would cater only to
students
Colhster said he would like to set up a
Weitwood consumer education program
through the Office of EnvironmenUl and
Consumer Affairs The program would
include student interns going through West-
wood to compare prices; the retuhs would
be published in a newsletter.
"Westwood was built around UCLA
initially, and I believe it should be student-
oriented economically,** he said.
Collister. Akk) favors student control on
campor. *^ «aat to finally settle the
question. Wt*ve^ exhausted negotiations on
ounpiis. Tm a tough negotiator and have a
good working relationship with the Ad-
jmiustration.**
**I feel 1 %m the most qualified,** Collister
added. **! have the endorsement of the
previous administrative vice-president and
Pm ready to go in.**
Then again, mely was an
open house ss successful as UC
thivis' annua! picnic day. For
the pact oi flat feet and usual-
ly a sunburn. the sprawling
CMB^Vi admitted somewhere
around 80.000 carious peopk.
They arrived last Saturday to
get w sone entertaining and
picnicking while teding out
wliat was going on out there in
the University.
Misaai a ycv
They come from all over
Northern California and the
from the beginniM |lMir
was not clear.
Sporting hsind hau, a large
doiihle-^ihMhMl Axe and a
ftFOQg resemblaiKx to Jona-
than Swift's yahnoa, Hunitoldt
Colleges band kept h«iy be-
fore the parade coaottaced
They job. was to welcome the
slodgy junior and senior high
school bands. Favorite tactics
included catcalls and Groucho
Marx-like inspections of their
giHs.
?
hardest corel blush to iMimit
they missed a year way back
when.
Most of the student body at
UCLA was blissfully asleep
long after Davisonians were
jiubjected to Masls from a loud
air i^histle mounted on an
ancient steam tractor.
Few remained slumbering
after the relic completed its
snail-like journey through cam-
pus. Like most tractors, bi-
cycles and marching hiais in
the area, it was on its way to
the opening parade
Starring role
Like most parades, the
bands had the stamng role.
Meanwhile, CaKs band in
yellow shorts was warding off
squirt gun attacks from a
crowd of piiiBaHHclad dormies
All this to tke asoaaqpamment
of Davis* Cal Aggie hand with
iu version of Berkeley's fight
song: the theme from **Under-
dog.**
Large crowd
The parade was hard to tee
because of the large crowds.
But see it or not, very few
people missed it. After all, it
set the mood for the vest of the
day.
Activities included baseball
and soccer games, a rodeg and
touring the displays set up by
(ConHnnad on Page IS)
GET BACK
IN 01/ nt
;.,)
of everything you buy
In the Students* Stores April 29 and 30
SAVE YOUR RECEIPTS!
You've kept the recetpta of everything you bought in either the
Studertts' Store in Ackerman or tNe Health Sciences Store in (he
Idntf Oenter , right? Qoodi Now — fet your apeciei redemption
wwoiuiie either pinoe (one per customer — thafs ait you'll need).
Put in all your receipts, including purcheeee WBda April 29 and 20.
Tabulate the receipts according to the eBay Inatructions on the
y^^yy ^^'"^^'"^ between April 29 and May 8. turn them krito the
Studems' Store — ngain. either one YOU'LL GET A CHECK IN THE
MAIL FOR 11% OF ALL YOUR PURCHASES - INCLUDING TAX -
in the middle of May!
This
^ your continuing
9W-
Tracksters looking to spike Trojans
'c
bruin
QQQ^araa
WJll
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f
I
i
<
BEA?SC
Going for third straiglit title
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DB SporiM Writer
-MINCIE, INDIANA - Of-
fending aa NCAA champion-
ship if probably ibr loughm
aMgament in collegiate iparU.
For the UCLA volleyball team,
this weeliend will be an op-
portunity to win a third
straight NCAA crown and a
sixth title in the seven-year
history of the event.
The Bruins (13-2) meet
Springfield of Massachusetts
(22-7) tonight at 4 pm (PDT),
while Pcpperdinc (12-3) battles
Ohio State (23-3) at 6 pm
(PDT) in the NCAA semi-
fiaala. The finals are scheduled
for tomorrow night at 6 pm
(PDT) and will be uped by
ABCs Wide World of Sports
for future sliowing. If form
follows, UCLA and Pep-
pcrdinc should meet for the
fourth time this year.
Scalii confidence
** Being seeded first gives me
confidence going iMo the
finals,- said Al Scatci;^CLA
head coach. **Physically every-
one is healthy except for the
coach (Scates has a cold) and
we are in good shape."
**We are not going to loolc
past Ohi:6 Siate, but should we
get UCLA in the ftnak, I think
we can win, with the key being
how well we cah play defense,**
said Harlan Cohen. Pepperdinc
head coach.
Springfield, under veteran
coach Tom Hay. is a typical
Eastern representative, mean-
ing It shouid lose in three
games to UCLA "I do not
expect us to have any .prob-
lems with Springfield," said
Scates. ^Knowing that we
would play the Eastern repre-
sentative in the semi-finals if
we won the league made me
have to go for the title!
Now a look at the ttarti^
hneups tor UCLA and Pepper-
dine should the two teams
meet for the NCAA champion-
ship M expected.
SETTER; For Peppcrdine,
Rod Wilde, 6-1. 160 pounds, a
freshman. For UCLA, David
Olbright. 6-1. 110 pounii, a
sophomore. „Wilde is probably
the bait freshman in the
United Steles this year and has
played extremely well under
pressure. He vmdt second
team SCIVA, Oibright was a
JC A 11- American last year and
in kus first SCIVA season he
was a first team AU-Confer-
ence- selaqticNt Olbnght must
have a fine hitting and setting
match for UCLA to win the
title.
SETTER: For Pcpperdine,
Steve eraser, 5-11, 175
Munds, a junior For UCLA^
Peter Ashley, 5-9'/^. 150
pounds, a sophomore Grascr
has hurt UCLA this year with
his serving and overally quick^
ness and is an adequate from
row hitler Ashley is probabl>
the best pure setter in the
conference, but could be a
UCLA liability when he has to
play in the front row If Ashley
can do a good job of blocking
and hitting when he goes
a<;ross the front jcpi^rjj then the
Bruins are 4n excelteni shapeT^
MIDDLE BLOCKER: For
Pepperdinc, Ted Dodd. 6-4.
180 pounds, a senior For
UCLA, Denny Cline, 6-3. 17»
pounds, a senior Dodd is
Peppcrdme's best player and
must have a big inatch for the
Waves to beat the Bruins.-
Chne has played the best two
matches of his career m the
NCAi^ finals and this year
could be tbe sane, m his final
UCLA match.
MIDDLE BLOCKER: For
Pcpperdine. Mark Rigg, 6-4,
185 pounds, a freshman. For
UCLA, either Doug Rube. 6-3.
175 pounds, a sophomore or
Doug Brooks. 6-3'/^, 175
pounds, a junK>r Rigg and
Dodd are the two k^s for the
Waves because each carries the
majority of the hitting and
blocking load Either lUbe or
Brooks must have a "^ good
blocking match to slow down
Pepperdme's power attack.
OtTSIDE HITTER: For Pep-
perdine. Jay Anderson. 6-2,
165 pounds, a freshman For
tiCLA. Joe Mica. 6-2 'z^. 175
pounds, a sophomore. Ander-
son has played his matches
against UCLA and played out-
standing in the Regionals
against Santa Barbara M.c* ii
a returning Ali-Amencan. who
should have his best match of
the year in the NCAA finals
Mica could dominate the ac-
if he
tion
ts on his game.
Konlinued on Page 15)
We invite the
Campus Jewish Community
to join UCLA students participating in the
1976 Solidarity Wallc
for Israel
I
Sunday, May 2 w
free breakfast at Hillel UCLA 7 am
^alk begins Rancho Park 8:30 am
Hillel — 900 Hllgard — 474-1531
University of
Judaism
JOINT SUMMER INSTITUTE
IN
JEWISH STUDIES
JUNE 23 to AUGUST 6, 1976
and
UCLA
Courses In: Hebrew Language
Contemporary je^h Life. History.
Education. Bible. Wbbinic Literature.
For Further Information & Application
UNIVERSITY OF JUDAISM
6525 Sumet Blvd. Los Angles, Ca. 9ft2t
Admt^sinn opf»n ro §11 wifhouH r^fisrd Ut r^r rrr^^Hl. Of rrtkn
Netters go for umtefeated year
iy Hunicr Kmpkm
Di Snoru Wriltf
4JCLA*a &m4 4^uA
aBttldi of the 1976
againii USC today on tbe
Trofan caosptit (1 pn) ii all
tkat standi in tiK way <of the
Bniin*i second eoneecutivcL per-
fect dual inatch season.
UCLA coach Glenn Bassett*s
squad currently holds an un-
Menushed 17-0 record and has
won itt last 36 aMtdHa aver
two seasons.
**Vm really looking forward
to our niiltch with USC.** said
the OcLA coach. 'Tm ex-
pecting USC (14-3) to play iu
best tennis of tbe saaaoa
against |is on iu home courts, i
know the Trojans woukl Uke
nothing better than to beat us
and end our winning streak
and chance for
ttiaight undefeated
Tlir Trofan^ tlune losses
••on haven't baan to push-
Troy bai rtrappid iwa
narrow matohas to SUnford.
the nation*! second ranked
tcnm (5^) in addition to
to UCLA
The Trcpas have d<
witbout their number one pky-
er Butch Wahs (daatefad acn-
demicaUy ineligibk) and with a
young sqund daa^hscd of
titfce soaiMaMsai» two junion
a freshnian.
*"! think coach George Toley
' ne a fine ^ob with USCi
young squad this season^ said
Bassett. ''Many of USCs play-
ers have pulled off some im-
pressive wins. I hope they
don't pull off any against us."
- Wahs would have
Iy played for USC tbii
ranked among dw top 30
United Sutei men playan, but
could not latisiKtonly aMke
up an incomplete reoaved in a
course, aacording to Toley
Wahs may be gose but
USCs 5-8 sophomore Manson.
a three-time All-Los Ai _
city high school singles cham-
pion from Grant High School,
has bansen just about everyone
of note in the collegiate ranks
Top ranked collegiate sun
Brian Teacher (UCLA) and
Pat Dul»re and Bill Maze of
Stanford are on the list of
players Manson has defeated
in 1976.
I
THE SHOW THArt
SHOCKINQ THE CHITICtl
^ludsnt
Jk $3 25
For mfoffnstion A
llsiirvstions Cat
Batmen host Irvine
Woman's track
UCLA's women tracksters
will oomptit in the SCWIAC
JenaUe ^^i*^f»iwi*^«»^^ia tnAmv mt
UC Sanu Barbara /
The Bniias are the defending
national champions and coach
Pat Connolly ^will try to win**
today's nwet. There's a good
chance, however, that the Bru-
ins will £all short of this unless
each athlete wins in her res-
pective sport.
This is because several ath-
letes from last year's team have
decided not to compete for
UCLA this year and as a resuh
the team does not have the
same depth imperative in win-
ning the national champion-
•hipji.
**We have the paipiiriil. but
not the depth," commented^
UCLA's Varsity basfbaB laam will be in action just once this
weekend when it hoMi UC Irvine this afternoon at 2:30 pm at
Sawtelle Field The game will be broadcast on KCRW-PM v^iih
Lou Riggs and Al Epstein
The Brums. 29-21 on the season, have won just once m three
4nea ihia week. That wna T iii idB» - night when Curt PetesMK^
defeated Cal Poly Pomona. 9-2 UCLA lost to Cal State
Northridge. 6-L on Tuesday afternoon and lost to Cal Sutc
Dominguez, 6^. on Wednesday evening
Meanwhile. USC travels to Sianlord for a three game CIBA
series. UCLA is 12-6 in league play. USC is 10-6 and Stanford is
8-7.
TNE
CHAPEL
CHILI
SUPER
SUPPER
Sunday. May 2, 6 p.m., $1.00
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
corner of Strathmore arxj Gayley
Sunday Workshop - 1030 am
Crew
The coach views track as an
"Individual rather than a teaa**.
ipofft. And in an Olympic year,
athletes oonoentrair ananly on
individual ioBproveaHat.
The athletes Caviaay wil
rely on to give the Bruins good
standing in today's wmm are
Karin Smith, Diane Kufaanr,
Janice LeMer and Lisa Vogel-
tang.
Smith will probably take the
javelin whi^ Kununer stands a
BMpd dMHKe to win the long
jump, Qift^rt the high jump
' Vaarisang (who was also a
iber of UCLA's champion-
volleyball team) will do
well in the discus.
Tomorrow, the UCLA wo-
men's crew will host three
other tchaali in . Marina del
B^. Th^ men's ccew wiH- travel
to Newport Harbor to compete
in the Newport Begatta as
racing action for 1976 winds
down.
The women's vanity eight
will vie against Long Beach
Sute. If they win, they will
compete against the winner of
nnathcr two boat race. The
varsity womeh'i four will be in
a three team contest All of the
schools have been ones the
Brains hnd b^ten earher.
Sunday at 8:30 am, the Bru-
in's men's team will gn soitth
to Newport Beach, whaas
about 10 schools will compete
c6uld be a preview to the
Western Sprinu on May 15-16.
The races to be run at ^ilt
Newport Regatta include the
varsity eight and four, the
freshman eight and four, the
junior varsity eight and the
lightweight eight.
-MBic
MEXICAN
MEDICAL
SCHOOL
ACCEPTING
20 AMERICAN
STUDENTS
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•WHO Listed
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Acceptpince
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CaN 512-943-2016
THESSVnfG
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Hot hort d o«uvrM. hkc Swedish
m«atb«lii^rMd succhmi. cockUvTIranks
patato chips-fr«* gapnam. too'
MoinMnr THaooGH nuMT
4lo7
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(213) 477.3006. Opm iron 1 1 •vary 4a.j
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Tumorr-
INCREASE
Have your previous
summer jobs left you
with insufficient funds
for school?
Can Help
Call 479-4139
(P.S. We offer LOTS of
money)
X^ontemporary Art-5urvey
presents
david askevold
slides/readings
Friday, April 30, 8 P.M.
Dickson Auditorium 2160E
UCLA • FREE
aCA PTF SLC OSA
1
a
T
i
1 «
f
-\
1
<
Spanish Speaking Mental Health
Research Center
Colloquium Series
Presents
i I IGNACIO ACUILAR
Director, Xipe-Tot«cC Imica dc Saluda Menu!
MilPOp0litan State Hospital
'n^herapy Through a Death RituaP
J ■%'
i: MoffKlay — May 3, 197(
Time: 2:00 pm
Mace: 313 Kimey HaH
Phone: 025-8886
•^ J-.
ng Company. Otyinpta WMhington 'QLY*.*
>^|r rva WDrld buffeted by change. ^imMjcr
H' the unchan^ng church key
I On .1 tntcful day in
** October 1919. Mac C
Rosenfeld received Patent
#1.260.^21 for it A j»l<^aminn
symphony of spring steel, the
church key was used by three
j{eneratitms of thirsty collegiate
Oiy drinkers -Not until the rwist-iitp
was its utility questiotled. althouj^h the
discrrmtruitsni: Oly drinker will always
keep one on hand for tdv-S(ubbies and
Oldtime bunies
The des^ of ^hc church key hasnt
char%|^d because it was made-M'ith ski!)
iiigenuity and simplicity A great beer
dorsn t chanije for many of the same
reas<.)ns If it s done ri|^t gotni; in. you'll
have an unchant^inK standard of qualify
Some thmfs ne\'er chanjje ^>lvmpia
never will.
OM0lfT,aMlfO¥ MUaiCAL...afi W-ff< proiy
-•>...■ ~m
Ttit
^"^ ^'t
/HtJSIC4L
t«>JHLJ( Ml
^•tCOIOi 01k
NOW PLAYING
UCLA- ISC track
'1./ ;
-« *r
•-■■•.^,~
K- . ,
. „ • - 1 ■ '•■,
Can Trojan Horses buck ilie Bfumstfej^?
:':^ '
Ijr i^ Yofer^t
DO S^OTto Writer
Nothing epitonuiOk the USC ICt A track and fitU rivalry
more than a picture of Willie Hanks being spirited away on bis
Uammates* shoulders after the 1975 meet
Banks, a fmhman triple jumper, kaped a life-time best of 55-1
on his final try of the afternoon to heat the Trojan's Tom Coche
and Don Bryson. His win clinched a 75*70 upset victory for the
BruiBs.
Tomorrow ~iM 1 15 in Drake Stadimn, Banks and hts fellow
Bruins face a similar task -- they must somehow upend a SUC
team that is favored by as n^any as twenty points. UCLA head
coach Jim Bush calls the 1976 Trojans **the best in the schooPs
history"
That's saying a lot when you consider that Troy has won 21
NCAA titles since 1921. -
*^Ofi pt^^cr they have the better team,** continued Bush, who is
looking for his eighth win in twelve tries against the Trojans.
**They*ve got more depth and outstanding talent than we do "
But Bush feels his team nuiy have the psychological edge in
tomorrow's showdown, ''ithifiik we have better spirit." he said.
**And we've faced a tougher schedule We know what it's like to
meet tough Jcana.**
UCLA has downed powerhoiMes Arizona State. Tennessee and
San ioae Sale this spring, air ranked in the top ten nationally.
The Brains average marfMi of victory was 21 points
use. on the other hand, has faced a weaker schedule that
included a 137-116 win over Cal State Northridge and a 116-29
stomping of Arizona Their average victory margin was 75.1. but
the only ranked team that Troy met was Arizona State
The Trojans and Bruins have faced three common opponents
in ASU, Stanford and Cal. Troy has respective winning margins
^of 45. 70 and 55 against those squads to the Bruins' 15. 33 and
14 point spreads.
Bur UCLA was without the use of many stars in several of
those encounters. Jerry Hcrndon and Grant Niederhaus were
sidelined with hamstring pulls and Bob Thomas had foot
problems. Conrad Suhy had a bad hip bruise while Bcwnic Ntyler
was suffering from mental depression Most of those ills,
however, seem to be cured for tomorrow.
^'The Myles is back." said the UCLA quarter miler after his
400 meter victory at Mt. SAC last weekend - it*s a statemeiit
that couljd fit the whole team But only Saturday's performances
will tell how far the Bruins have recovered from a mid-season
slump and how close they cah cotne to the top ranked Trojans
The following is a summary of tomorrow's events with
highlights on the primary competitors and a Daily fi:utn
handicap of the possible results.
SPRINTS: James GUkes is from Guyana, a land on the southern
fringe of the CariMoin where spirit worship mmI voodoo are
practiced. Grikes learned to run like the devil in his jungle
homeland and that's why he's favored to capture -both the 100
and 200 meter dashes tomorrow.
A 23 yemr oM senior. Gilkes has season bests of 10.2 and 20.3.
niM-ks which rank him far ahead of hw nearest teammate or
Bruin opponent.
But USCs short distaace expertite doetn^ end with Gilkes
Mike 5/mmom (10 4 and 2IJ 7), Ji^i Andrews (10 3) and Ken
Handle (20.5) are also cap^hic of winning, making USC one of
the nation^ most talented sprint corpik.
Raodle, whone specialty m the 400, has that race before his 200
try and is hk^K to be timJ But Simmons and Andrews arc
oiclusiy sprinters and could lead Troy sweeps in both evenu.
**He does it un attitude ami desire.** said Jim Bush of Dot son
Wilson's fine spnni performances this year. But those mental
qualities probably won't overcome the rawSalent of the Trojans
Wson has wind-aided ban of 10 2 and 21.8.
James Owens aod Memm ^vles are better bets to break the
USC ranks Owens, the Brain s world class high hurdler, isn't a
bad 100 meters man^ either. He's only flown that distance once
this season bdt it was a wiad aided 10.2. Myles (21.0) is entered
in the 200 but he may be fabgued after his 400 meter try. several
events earlier.
400 METER& Mennie ^f^k^ a junior transfer from LA Harbor
College, will face the toughest race of his career tomorrow as he
squares off against Ken Raadle and two other top rated Trojans
But Myles has responded w^ell to pressure in the past He
recorded a personal best ot 45 8 afaimt Herman Frazier of
Arizona State and a 46.0 la beating Ronnie Harris of Tennessee.
Both mcn^>are rated, in the top ten mitionally.
MylctlUKl^ ^ If^ ^^c Mt S^AC Relays last week and said. **1
could have gone faster but I wasn't pushed.** He seems to have
overcome a mental depression which plagued him through several
minor meets.
Ksntflr, hawcver. is the defcndmg Pac-8 champion and a good
bet to make the U.S. OlympK team His season best is 46 4. abo
achieved against Frazier. but he has a life-time mark of 45.1.
MaTS
Bush calls him the best cdegiate quarter-miler in the country
Freshman Brian Theriot (47 2) backs up Myles. while Randle
carries a supporting cast nt Claude Brown (47 0) and Rod
Conntrs (47.3)
^^rm not afraid of Randic " said Myles ^1*11 give him a good
run.** He may give the Tf^mn the run of his life
•00 METEKS: Thi5 raee could be the most interesting of the
iftern^oo and possibly the only event where strategy plays a role.
. \JSCr% Ra\ fieM Beaton, kke Gilkes a native of Guyana, has a
•eaaan hest of I 47 I. the second lawan mark m vHe Pae-f. The
lhlMi*s top half-miler. Jfff llavmes, has run 1:50.0 but he haaa*t
laat at 800 meters this year
lealon. however, must rur the 1500 an hour before his 800 try
and lush is hoping the Troian won't he able to recover from his
grtiehng first race. ^It happened laal yiear — Beaton drop|Md one
of the shorter event after finishing teQand in the 1500. Bnt Trofan
coach Vera Wolfe feels ilLit an extra year of maturity aad
experience has cured the problem
The Bruins' Cottmd Sakr (1:50 7) should make a good run at
lecoad but he*H be piwatf by Troys " ^ Jotmrnm (1 50.6).
Suhr seems to have retu'veieci from a bruisco hip he suffered over
Christmas break while >>ggMig near his Bay Area home he
nanad in a gopher hole.
DISTANCES: If there is ne s(»lid weakness m the Troyan
armor, it lies in the long dis^ nee null UCLA bnt traditionallv
iB i mii^
'he dMlaBan^** flMd BbMi, were m
__ weTT
If we dont acoce wefl in
Steye Beck, a red-haired demon from Malibu. leads Brum
entrants in the 1500. Back it a gntsy runner who has filled in
aptly for his injured brother Curtis. His enthusmsm has carried
him to an impressive season best of 3:48.9 and nearly into a fight
— he had a tusak wpth Tennessee*s Bob JBentz after the Vol
bumped him on a. turn.
Ra\ field Bemom (3:50.5) and /)bn Aldrtdge (3:49 0) chaltanie
from Troy while Gan Nitti (3:5 L6) and Mark Lttevano (3 57 )
bac up the Westwood cause:
At press time. USC had no entries in the gruding 5000 meter
run the Trojans apparently cOnceeding a nine point sweep to
UCLA The Bruins have three good 5000 runners in JC Iranaler
Boh Thomas (14:14 4). DiPug A>5hW/ (14.52.4) and Afim Baksh
(15 29 0)
HIGH HtROLES: Jamrs Ow^ns has come a long way sinee*
breaking an ankle the first time he flew over a hurdle. The Brum
sophomore wound up second in the NCAA*s laif year and ii a
solid bet ta make it to Moaitreal
He IS also a sofid \nck to defeat the fine USC duo of Mike
Johnson and Fred Shaw tomorrow Owens has jetted to a wind-
aided 13 6 this year while Johnson, the brother of the former
Bruin grid star Kermit. has a legal 1 ^6 best. Shaw has gone 13 7
Shaw beat Owens at the Mt. SAC Relays last weekend but the
Bruin had one of the worst races of bis career Owens was in an
outside lane and said. **! couldn't see anybody to push me** He
shouldn't have that problon Saturday - he*ll be wedged between
the two Trojans
INTERMEDIATE Hi RDLES The late comedian Chartie
Weaver always joked about Fresno on tekrvision. But that Raisin
town has prodticed a hufdler who*s nothing to laugh at — U&Cs
Tom Andrews.
Andrews is the defending Pac-8 champion id this event and
one of the top intermediate men in the nation. But this teaaon
he's been outshone by UCLA's Grant Niederhaus (50.2) Andrews
has a better mark« (49.8) but the Bruin has raced more
Pant 14)
DB Predictions
100 - 1) OBmb dUqk tliii 11 (UKK Owans (UCLA)
200-1) OBms MQ* Ban«a (UKV Mylas (UOA)
400-1) Mytas fUCLAK ^mSf MCU Bfwwn MQ
aeo - 1) Harnas (UCLA), Baalan (UK), Strfw (UCLA)
T5Q0 - 1) Badi (UCLA), WBB (UCLA). Baalan (USC)
SOiO - 1) TlMMS (UCLA). BoamoB (UCLA). BaWi (UCLA)
- 1) Oiw (UCLA), fill ma MQ, 9km> (USC)
— 1) NieaefhaMs (UCLA), (^adiinii
UfO. CiaitiM (UKD
P«l -. q Mridhaii (UCLA), ■ndfcicich (USC).
fUBC)
- 1) Mcr (UK), r gi^TiBi (UK). Cmatkm (UCLA)
- 1) HcMy (USC). TatB (UCLA)* OcaM^^ (U^LA)
Hi^ Imp - 1) Mdsicr (UCLA). ¥fdkm (USQ. f avar (UCLA)
rale Vaai - 1) TaBr (UCLA). mUsnMin (USC). BagM (USC)
-. 1) Banks (UCLA). Htrndaa fUCLA),
(USC)
Triple Iwnp - 1) Banks (IKIA).
4Si Mater Belay - 1) UK, 31 UCLA
MBe b2^ -ij liic Fum —
mNML SCOBS: UCLA 74 UKTI
(UK).
(UK)
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8AHTA MONICA
GRiAHUATE RECORD EXAM
pr»fMiration
20 hii. Verbal. Matt>. Practic* Taating
Couraa baQina May 8 for Juna 12 taat
8»-442«
Women netters pby in SCWIACs
E
i
I
<
I
• 4
f
The UCLA wofiieii*t temuB team will defend
iti Southern Calif ornu Women Iptercoliegiatc
Athletic Conference title thu weekend mi UC
Irvine. Matches will be played continuously,
and conclude with the finals on Sunday.
Last year the Bruins defeated UC Irvine. 24-
It, sweeping both the singles and doubles
competition. v
This year doctn*t figuffc to be that easy. The
overall caliber of the league is much stronger.
UCLA, whi<;h was undefeated in league play, is'
the favorite but its chances were weakened
considerably when S^usan Zaro went in for tests
for mononucleosis. Results turned out negative
but a subpar performance from Zaro could
throw the competition into a dogfight.
"If Susan is ipt able to play we will lose a^
sure three points, pmaMv up to six.** lamented
coach Bill Zainia **She*s going to travel down
with us but the doctor said that if she feels the
bit weak out there, she shouldn't pUy**
This would deal a severe blow to the Bruins*
hopes as they would have to compete
essentially with five varsity performers iifMMt
the other team's six.
Fortunately for tJCLA. the women got a
super draw as their top players should be able
to breeze 4o the quarterfinals and the lesser
wenefi will have a chaicr to knock olf
^op coaipatition.
**rm very pleased the way the draw went.^
commented Zaima "We got the second (Paula
Smith) and sixth iCmdy Thomas) seeds and
our other players are in good position to pick
up some points.**
The sconsf of the match is ^luch that every
win counts one point and matches, aflei n bye,
count two For the team this means thai every
win is important and the women cannot depend
on their top players to carry the match
Ito Zaima's view there are three key
considerations.
First IS the performance of Zaro. Her
inability to win at least three early round
matches could cost the Brums victory.
t Second is the match between UCLA*s Gaylee
Poiakoff and UC Sanu Barb4f»*s Meg Ziegler
(No.' 2 for the Gauchos). **The nuiin thing is to
score and I think Gaylee has the talent to beat
Ziegler.** commented Zaima. **lf she does, it
would mean two points to the team. Gaylee is
really mto the team and Pnv^ sure she*ll do
weir.
Last IS Shannon Gordon s play The No. I
JV player is being touted tu defeat Mary Ann
Colville of use It that should happen it
would shut out one oi USCs varsity players
and would severely cripple their chances at the
title.
Bruins in role of underdogs
'•• .rr
CoUjmbja Pictures presents
A Spelling-Goldberg Production of a John Hancock Film
S^ing JAN-MJCHAa VINCENT tn MIY MJK MMMI
Co Siaring GLYNNIS O'CONNOR ivr.nen t)y Stanford Whitmoft
Omcior of-PhdogNphy iJKZio Kovacs Muse by Fred Karlin
pfoduced by Aaron Spelling & Leonard Goldberg
FOiiHmaMiflHMi-e» Direcied by John Hvcock
FLAVIM6
AT THEATRES ft DRIVE-IMS EVERVfiHERE
CHECK YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER
(Continued from Page 13)
consistently.
Niederhaus. however.
hasn*t run his specialty since he
_ an tMPPer hawtring at-
tachment in practice over a
month ago Only Saturday will
tell if he can regain his formrof
early season.
Sephomore Rich Crayhehl
(50.5), ah unknown last season.
shoiiW score a third but the
Bruins Phii/ip MtJIs {5\\2) will
challenge.
HORIZONTAL JUMPS: They
call Tom Coche^ **The Brum**
becii^te he has trained
at UCLA throughout his col-
Icfe career Bui Cochee is a
loyal Trojan triple jiimper
who*ll be trying hard to beat
the real Bruins tomorrow.
Cochee faces one major o^
stacle ^^Wilhe Banks the
1
NILSLCMOIEN
WULS CX^ HIS NEW
^XKY TOUGH"!
C17 Ibogh Ilie loKce beh^
sdb album
with emotion coming from all ends!
1976
Sounds best on
top rated collegiate tnpler The
Trojan leaped a lite-time best
of 54-4>/^ against UCLA Ust
year to lead ail competitors.
But Banks came back on his
final jump to soar 55-1. his
best ever
Thi« year Banks is a sobd
favorite after posting three 53-
plus wins. Cochee has yet to
fly that far. Fred A\\ef (5\-\0).
a 25 year old Trojan from
Iran, should take third.
The versatile Banks is also
entered in the long jump but
he's the underdog to USCs
Gerald Harfeman who has
reached 25-10 twice this sea-
son. The Bruin's best 197 leap
IS IS'IVa. Banks, however, is a
more consistant jumper and
should be able to out-sky Har-
deman who has jumped mis-
erably in his last three meets
UCLA*s Jerry Herndon. the
1974 NCAA long jump cham-
pion, will lace use -^fter a
four week layoff due to a
hamstring pull In his last
outing Harden cleared 25 ^ feet
three times before injuripg
himsell 00 a final tr\.
JAVELIN: 1 his ' spear-
chuckmg event could be the
most predictable of the meet
USCs %4iki Helsh\ has a best
of 239- M and he hasnt thrown
under 212 thii season.
Ihc two top Brum lavelin
men. Jite Tasii and Ru h
Oiompa. have icaaectiwe bests
o\ 210-9 and 204-0 and no one
picks them to upset Helshv
HIGH Jl MP: Trojan lim
Ha/A>r tRhode Island) and
Bruin Jasttn Metsler (Long
Island) are from the same neck
of the woods, but the\ have
diflerent styles of high tump-
ing
Walker has \ flopped 7^
while Meisler has straddled 7-/
0V^ this spring 1 he duel will
obvioush be close but junior
Meisler has experience and
consistencv oyer his^freshman
opponent. UCLA's ^m; Paver
(6-9«'i) and USCs Rnd Con-
nors (6-K) will dog tight^ tor
third
POLE VAILT: Russ Riggers
of use has flown 1K-|>/. this
season, the best nuirk in the
Pac-8 But that was on the.
Trqians Easter junltcl to Ha-
waii, a trip where Rogers fro-
licked freely and surfed daily.
Since then his best effort has
been 16-6.
With Rogers suffering from
island fever. Tom DiStahtsJao
could be the Iroian <^ main
airborn weapon The junior
has cleard 16-6 a remarkable
live of SIX tims in *76 and has
the potential to soar much
higher
UCLA's Mike Tidh is
another vauher surfer but he
hasn't hit the waves in several
months "I couldn't aHord to
(( ontimied cm Paar I5>
SUMMER
JOBS JOBS JOBS
Cottaga trainad men and
woman will be coosidapad to
•uppiament our parmaoent
staff in district officaa
throughout tha US Thaaa
paailiona are full or part-tima
aummar (oba. Wa mr% saarch-
ing for applicants ¥^0 ara
amtMtioua. dapaniaMa and
f>ard working ExoaAanI op-
portunity for advanoaniaf^!
You may contioua to mwk
on a part tima or full tima
baaia naxt fall rr you daairt
For district offica addraaa. or
for appointmont with our
looai managar. call RoiMa
afla^ April IBth. 9 am to 3
p nri Monday through ft^Om
at 213— 47S-a422
PUBLIC WORKS
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Fridays at 9 p m
The Church in OciMn Park
235 Hill St (Santa Monica)
£1^
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final McelyT
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OUTSIDE HI11UI: For Peppcrdine
Nata, ^y 205 pMAds, a senior For UCLA,
Fiad Stum, ^3V^ 165 pounds, a senior Nora
Sturoi arc both fine left-handed spikers
a USVBA AU-Americaa last yaar
and ahvays hhs welf against the Bruins Sturm
iisai for the oacaaion and should have his hest
aaadi of lus career in the NCCA finais
BENCH STRENGTH: Pepperdine usually only
■MS 6^ Mike Bekins and 6-2 Todd SUke as
hadrrourt substitutes to rest Kigg aad Dodd
UCLA uses 6^>^ Mike GMsOhafl n tlK front
row for Aairfey, Mike Franklin as the back-
court aad serving apaaiaist for either Rabe or
Brooks,. 6-2 Singin Smith as a front court hitter
for Olbnght, Steve Suttich as a third setter and
6-7 E.C. Keller as a front court blocker The
definite bench advantage lies with UCLA,
hacaMK Coben seldom can afford to remove his
starters.
OWo Slala
Ohio Sute, under coach-Taras Laskevych,
was an impressive third last year in tl^ NCAA
Midwest team ever to reach the NCAa finals.
Last ynr tkt Buckeyes were **awed** by playir\g
the Bruins, but they will not be by Peppcrdine.
**I feel we are a better volleyball team than
""with
li aBpaars the rhainf it*"*^^p mAith
the two sqaads andd he rtassifird as a
but UCLA*s nHttn advanuges lie m NCAA
experience with Cline, Sturm Mica
Franklin, plus the fact that Peppcrifine has
tendency to tire.
SATUADAY NITE
ENCOUNTER GROUPS
m (no
as a way af
aapMNna ••• craawva ways at failing to tnam.
la 9tM «Mt) any Satur<i«y nUs. a:00 PM at aitnar
In Pepperdine has a tough match with Ohio
Sute, while UCLA brceics by Spnngfield as
expected, then tha Brums should be in excel-
leiit shape
''Pepperdine has had the tendency to surt
very ton^ against as, with Dodd and Rigg
aWe to hit over our Mack^ but aft^ the second
game they are not jumping as high and our
block becomes very effective.** said Scates
The Bruin head coach is not worried that
Pepperdine might have an advantage going into
the final match, because it has lost to the
Brums the past two times Apparently UCLA
utilized the ''psycholiipaar advantage of Sanu
Barbara the hM two years in the chimpiaaahip
-<
more experience,** said
Liskevych **Perbaps we gained something by
what happened to us last "year by playing
UCLA and 1 know we will be better mentally
going into the NCAA*s this year.**
Midwsal crowd
Even with a Midwest crowd of close to 7,000
behind them, it is doubtful that Ohio State has
the power to stay with Pepperdine All-
American Marc Waklie and All-Conference
selections Shelton Collier (he sets a 5-1
offense), Peter Dumpis, Dick Duwehus, Aldie
Berzias and Mike Buckingham give tiskevych
hope.
Pepperdine won the first thegular season
match from UCLA in four games, with the
Brums blowing a 14-11 lead in game three to
turn the mptnentum to the Waves. The Bruins
won the other rqgula'r season match at Pauley
Pavihon in five games to force the one match
playoff for the' conference title In the playoff,
UCLA won in four games, rallying from 12-5
14-11 deficits in the
time
*Aecording to my stau, we flkff^i batter
Pepperdine the second time than the first
and the third time than the second. I expect to
play even better the fourth lime than the third
and it should be good enough to win,**
I
{
•
3
One advamapr Cohen thinks is going for
Pepperdine is team unity and enthu.sia.sm. "My
kids will be excued by playing on television. I
have hot dap on this team, not like the shy
squads i have had in the past.** said Cohen.
**They like to be in the spotlight and have the
glory, so it should keep the adrenalin flowmg.**
When everything is analyzed, one simple
statistic may tell the story Al Scates is 18-1
(.947 pet.) in NCAA final round-of-four play
and has tiever lost once his team has reached
the NCAA finals. If that stat holds, then
NCAA title number six should come into the
possession ojf the Westwood crew sometime
around 8 pm (PDT)
PREDICTIONS: UCLA tlvee games, Sprinf-
Psppsfdlnr three games, Ohio State
dine two.
UCLA tlwce games, P
Mile relay could be decider . . .
<t.<
(ContBrnad tmm Page 14)
get hurt,** he said. Tully was
the fourth-rated jumper in the
United Sutes last year after
clearing 17-10 against USC in
his def^t of Rofars. He hasn*t
slacked off much this saaaan
^ his beat is 17.9V^ — and he
could dear 18 feet for the first
time, Saturday
WEIGHT EVENTS: JapoMse
filmmakers am in Westwood
this week to shoot a new flk.
**The Battle of the Gargan-
tlMWS.* It surs Darreii Elder
(6-7 and 245 pawds) and Jim
Niedhart (6-0 and 270) with a
Itipporting cast of hiike Bud-
incich (6-1 and 250), Ralph
f^mmtglietti (6-1 and 245) and
Rick Gunther (6^ and 225).
Elder, a gentle giant from
use, IS the, favorite in the
discus after winging the wood-
en disc 195-0 this season. Fel-
low Trojan Fruguglietti. born
in Italy, has a best fling of
192.2. Gumher, UCLAs senior
co-captain, leads Westwood
entries in the discns. His best is
190-9
RELAYS: The Tro|an*s mile
rellay s<)uad has jetted .i'07.0,
the world*s fastest time in *76.
But Rayfield Beaton and Ken
Randle, the men who run the
fil legs, have two earlier races
and nuiy be fatigued.
The Bruin's best effort of
398 was achieved with 400
meter man Brian f heriot at
anchor. But Saturday he*ll be
replaced by sprinter Orlando
Johnson.
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"East of Eden" — James Dean
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"Meet John Doe" — by Frank Capra
"The Long Voyage Home" ^ John Wayne
"Night of the Living Dead" — Horror Classic
"39 Steps"— by Alfred Hitchcock
Sponsored by Student Legislative Council
>. Women successful
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7
By Joanne Lflai^h
IM Staff Hriier
N^incv Pctcrshgc. a fini-year UCLA Mcilica] Scll#ol studeni.
exprcsMTd the conscnkus of the -Women in Medicine** panel when
!^ taid. "lUc lor a woman in, nMdicine is fantastic*'
PmkI mc^mberk discussed their CMKern^ Wcdnesdav evening in
the Center io^ Health Seieacc* keiore a prcdorainamly fcmak
audience Dr Suzanne Young from the County Heahh Depart-
nicm &aid sihe confronts a "wide-rafige of clieau and ^lal and
inciicil iwuefi** in her v^ork as a pediatrician
Bv working part-time while raising her three voung children.
Young iniegraics "1amil> and a career m medicine " Her advice
was "^o put owelf in the situation with the least number of
conflicts T here is no poini in slaying home all day with children
when your heart and soul is elsewhere **
Career
Within two to three years, Young t>1ans to return to full-time
work ''I think I'll he glad when I do return to a lull-time career."
said Young, adding. *'lt is necessary to have a husband who is
willing to help you and support you "
A third-year medical student at UCLA, Karen Kleeman
commented. *'As a woman. yoUj go m with trepidation You
always hear stories that it's all vei% difficuh " Kleeman. however,
does not fecfl that women are treated diflcrcntjy EssentialK. she
said, the Rfurdical student is judged on •'what you do and how you
conduct yourself **
As an intern, the only pnbimm ^f women is wuh patients,
said Dr Brodwin Balcman. Resident m Opiomologv "II you
don't have the patient's confidence." she added, "you're not* going
to be effective " Once the patients know the doctor, however.
Bateman Iccls that ihe> sometimes **irust vou more than anyone
el.NC "
Top tea
T he record of women in medicine is •terrific.'* said Batetaan.
Ifi her class, there were 14 women Eight of those women were in
^he top ten per cent of her class "And r^eople noticed that," the
added
Prtcrshge and the other women m her class developed support
groups "lo recogni/c the feeling or community " Each group is
^^trly" a^ito^om<»u^ HWMf <aa meet on mr^niitm\ basts, dtscuss
issues or invite outside tpcakcn. Once a quarter, all groups meet
together.
IK LA. said Petershge. "blocks your time throughout the entire
w#.*ek You learn to jealously guard your free hours. If you don't
iMMie a meeting, you might spend all vour time in the hbrary -
_ There is no room in your first year/ she added; "i^or living as
wcH as. studying."
Dr E ranees (rrover. lecturer in anaH>m\ and aitiatant dean of
spccml education of the DCLA School of Medicine, said that
more women arc m mtidical school and clinical work than in
academic medicine "The academic side is more hard-line and
have not flexed as much "
^<K*iall\i and acadcmicalK. she said, "women do ver\ well here
I scldi>ni fK-ed to help women hcLausc ihc\ dj^LJjj* *^c'll on their
Demonsfrafions
of elecfric cars
A toctare and presentation
oa etoctric automobikt will
ke prcKnted at 10 am
Saturday, May I in Boellcr
Tht event will feature free
rides in real electric can,
includiag a Wankel ElaBHk
Hvhnd Pp^I a Katterv.
iR€ lecture topic will be
••Energy Stocaff far Ekc-
tnc Can: BatttHet vf. Fly-
wcred Karroann Cfhia and Societ
wlwels,** aad will
two 20-minute Ulks.
The event it fi
iptiaiiiii ^r Ok
engineering ta
with the Electric Vehicle
ol Southern ^
v^ii^UW
UmVPRSfTY OF
PARIS SORBONNE
StWY/Mtw Pilt7 Pt
Onderoraduates m gMltltiliy and
■iialH aanBTs Mf^ 3Q^ cniiii
hi rtfutir Sorbonnt (^ans fV)
caarm SUKY ^ Par « iv 9^m
tmH iwafvi studtfKs avoid eom-
feartome pre inscription ano at
land Pans IV not piovincial um-
versitiat:
Director assists witti housing
^QQfMms studies
Orientation, lawgyagi review.
Sept 15 JufM IS Estimated
Hving airfare tuition fats S3200
NY residents S3700 others
Prol. O. MaalMMM^
>apt« S.U.G.
N.V. 12M1
(t14) 2S7-;
^t
n
I
I
475-2515
117t5 NatkNMl BKd. Loa Angetai
Prime Rib $4.95 from 5 to 7
Appearing in the CockUil Lounge
Dave Arlen Fri SlSmI. Nighu
^1
I
10% OFF COUPON
UCLA "NIGHT SPECIAL"
This coupon good for 10% off on any purchase over $10 00 from our
CHINESE DINNER MENU
on M^on.. Tues., Trturs . Fri., Sat. e!30-lJ!:30 PM
MANOAftlN Cm
11829 Wilshire Blvd.. near Westgate
474^-6514 Open 7 days
' *■ ■ ■
I Coupon expiiae and of Juna
; t
Scotch & Sirloin
restauranf
LOBSTER-CRAB
RIBSCHICKEN-SHRIMP
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STARTING MAY4th
miNNIN&BAM
9-2 tues.- sat.
pico and sepulveda...wla
1^' -ioX-Tr-:::- JnJi^SS;
(iU. A%4
um
-» T -m
71
Panelists discuss nuclear risks
. Must examine alfernofives
1
<
I
i^-k
^0m^
WESTWOOD VILLAGE
ARTS & CRAFTS SHOW!
This Saturc^y and Sunday, a perfect vA/ay to spend a
spring day; stroll the village, enjoy the a^^ and
afterward — for lunch or dinner — relax on our
patio and VA^tch the work! wander by . . . big or
little meals — pii^za, sandwiches, pastas, milk fed
veals . . . on the quiet side of the village.
<:^axdL22i% \JuJO ^uut ^xom UtaCk
I«t4 tCLENDON AT LINDftKOOIL)
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DB Stair Writer
Risks involved with nuckar
energy power plants mutt be
looked at in perspective to
other energy sources, panel
members laid Thursday in this
month's edition of lICLA*s
Medicine aiM Sodety Fonim.
Entitled -The Nuclear Power
Plant Threat or Promiic,** the
fomin coMMlai of moderator
Bernard Towers, professor of
paiittrics and mmomy and
panebiu Dr. Jonn Goldsmith,
epidcmioiifitt at the State
Department in Berkeley, J.
Morgan Jones, aaaodnte .pro-
fessor. Graduate School of
Maangement and William E.
ACCOUNTING AND
FINANCE MAJORS
LET US HELP YOO PLAN
AHEAP TO BECOME A CPA
I, OS ANGELES-
Downtown 213 872- 1873
Sant»Ao« 7M 541-9311
Van Nuy» 213 9m^2i7^
SAW DiEao 714 298-7752
1/3 o^ USA
The Drtize*
A Shabbat on Israel with
^-
Ziedan Atashi, Consul of Israel
A Druze himself. Ziedan Atashi. Consul of Israel in New York, wms bom ifrl940
in Osifiya. one of the two Drure villages on Ml. Carmel in Israel He has served
in the Israel Defense Army (1961-63). was Deputy Director Generar of the Arab
and Druze Workers Youth lyiovement. has worked in the Arabic Department of
Israel Television in Jerusalem, and headed Arabic television for the northern
area of the Haifa District He holds a B.A from Haifa University, an MA. from
Hebrew University, and has taught Political Science at Haifa University
FrI. A>ril 30
6:30 services 7:30 dinner 8:30 program
reservations 474-1531
A Christian- Arab sect iivirrg jn the Middle East Israeli Druze have long been loyal
to the Israel govei^nment ,
Hillel — 900 Hiigard
ICattcnbcrg. profetsor M en-
gineering Kere.
After Towers stated the
panel *'was not debating •
poiiticaJ iiMicr Dr. GnldMiitti
bifMi hy Mying **We haw a
complex problem of future
riiki which we are being askfd
to measure against present
benefits. **
ElfMli
SpeafcM on the efftjcts of a
nuclear pliMi aocident. Gold-
smith said, There is no
question tlHil tKraaaed mtfin-
tion exposure would cause
increased mutations and in
feneral, it it agreed ii
exposure to radiation in<
the risk of cMHer.**
Jones added that **a maior
nuckar pinat accident, ac-
cording to ettinHrtei Fve teen,
could caute anywhere from
teven billion to SI 00 billion in
property, dannget.**
While all agreed tiMl iw
riaks of nuclear power plants
should be looked at in per-
spective to other forms of
energy, Kastenberg led the
way. ** Basically, weVe looking
at high contequence events but
eventt with a very low pro-
bability,** he empl
**Expotttre tlMt is now known
to occur is exftremely taall
when compared to other types
oi exposure.**
When Towerv asked what
the obligationt might be to te
future, GokUmtth dtai Umbs
aiMs oi concern: the iom ivai
presence of radioactive Bia-
tenak, the posaWity of
human geaetic daaapr and tke
capability of man today to
predict the capability of future
tech meal maMfement.
Admitting that *'nuckar
energy it not going to tolve all
our problems,** Kastenberg
said nuclear power must con-
tinue to be weighed in per-
ive to other
Challengi«f tlk problem
from a moral Maiidpoint,
Jones atked, **What Iright have
we, for a full decade of power,
thtt legacy upon aQ
life on this planetT* Doubting
whether nuclear power pinals
save htfge amounts of money,
Jones said, ''We don*t know
how much money it being
wmttd and a lot of misiirfni nis
tion regarding nuclear power
circulating.**
^^.
Looking at the problem
from a ••ritk-bcnefit** point of
view, Kattenberg compared the
potaibk risks of ppwer plants
to die i»itil>i1ity of liani
faihng ano airline crashes in
residential areas. ''We have no
accepHtable risJk criteria,** he
ckiflied.
Goldsmith agfeed. '^These
matters have not been clearly
defined,** he said and added, "a
nuckar power plant is just as
hazardous as a natural gas
plant.** Referring to radiation
from power plants he taid.
Open House
Town converts
to sun power
(CPS) — Texat Power
4uid Ug^ Co fmaUy fwkai
the rural town of Biidfeport
too far. The 3,600 residentt
decided not to go along with
the ktett rate increate and
opted to have their elec-
tricity cut off within three
yean iaatead.
At an alternative, the city
fathers have decide to have
a tolar electricity fenerator
built for the city.
- r*l
GEORGE BERNARD SHAWS
Comedy/Drama
BACK TO
METHUSELAH
A rare production of a
world classic!!
Falcon Playhouse
5526 Hollywood Blvd
April 30th thru May 29th
Fri. & Sat. 8:30
Special Student & Group Rates
278-6444
(Coniiit<>wPage4)
in Bunchc 2209A.
The geography de^rtment
will host several films, in*
eluding The Turtle People, in
Bunche A 1 45 at 12:30 pm, a
film photographed by UCLA
PrSfessor Brian Wetss. dealing
with the Miskito Indians of
Nicariigua Films and lectures
of several foreign countries
liave also been scheduled.
Dr Paul Halpern of the
department of political science
Will moderate a panel discus-
sion of -The Election of 1976."
in Bunche 4269 at 2 pm with
Professors Thad Brown. John
Petrocik and Stephen Wither-
ford participating.
"Innovation and Relevance**
provide the framework for the
department of anthropology*s
portion of Open House. Tlie
Yanomamo in Haines .129 at 2
and 4 pm. a film depicting a
primitive tribe in South Vene-
zuela, and Mrind tkt VeA,
also in Haines 329 at 11 am
and 1 pai, a ttttdy of the roles
of Arab women will be among
the attractions
Films will be shown at the
Army (Men's Gym 129), Navy
(Men's Gym 122) and Air
Force (Dodd 221) ROTC
headquarters here. Questions
will be answered following tjM^
movies. .
As well as free p^rifif>g cir^:^
culating minibutet will be
available to trampcm visitors
from the science quadrangle to
the soaai sciences departments
in the central and northern
campus.
. Programs can be obtained
from the UCLA OfTice of
Public Information. 1104
Murphy Hall
Davis festival . .
(CofitifNMd iro«i Page 8)
all the dapartmenu.
Among other things, the eopMefi had a wind tunnel, the
physicitft had a kaer a«i the hUm! of africulture had a cow.
The cow wat probably the bi^Ml attnction due to the peephole
in one of iu itoflMdM. H caaoally ale itt eiid whtk CMWli
studied the iwnlto cif all the munching.
While they watched it was evident everyone wat having a good
tinK hahig granai out
Envy
Eventually, the olf-campus spasttMn wmt hone
with the kiiKJ of fand will tMnaii the caapot ^
administrators on other campuses might envy With their
the students got off to iome bubbling of their mm with a
party on fraternity row
Davis ttutaMa are known for their ttudyii^ bttt
-When we antei — na>^ - ^
day and a celehration that even the MCATS held that
CQold not dampen.
\
US events
Candidates . .
. wbo art
omortt If a rtcotni2t<j
tr MivtKtity |R tHa Las
May 3 MMi MM
«aiii
--ariaMit Ubm* la Llirafi ttiMta
mtormation on prt^ration. admiaaion
mm fm, 2 pm May 4. Acfctf
AaplMWQtr
on txtramural liMilw tor ,
. , ' im Wm
a«e AsststifitaHtp Stction
i^pypi^ w» one ^attoncry.wcfi
though I didn*t do it ** According to tanks. Hemdon aad Taylor,
the eaooteanaots were written up by haod ■aakt aii4 Taylof
then left the oflm aod Herndon gave the list to Skarry Walker, a
tecreury. to type up sod have copiat aMir A copy of the
eodors^mentii was then poalad on the geaeral reprcaiaiatives*
office
i
i
•^
Ml Kfrckhotf 308 Dtadlint » May
t2
Bruin Walk to tncouragc studtiits ta
iiwolwad m Hit Frank Churdi IW
11 am-1 pm, tvary
jwajd mm wMT Mp you fmd tundlao
♦or your idm opofi dOly f tm^U
(Ifrdtfioff 401
voiumotr
•Hough EXPO Acktrman A 123 or
auOiofium Ffoo
iiy
m K
ptayort. cHack
tor your maMh
daM aat court If Mioro
call Bart at
|om OECA as a
consumor mvoitiaalor Vttit Karckhoff 311
or^all. 825 2820 Voiuntaort a«« alaa
for anvirofMNMai and food pro-
•d t>y Amofieia Caa-
Compttition oMlMalB
tlM noHt of wtiidi
of i6(^«00
of ptaytng six
IS 12:30 i«. tomorrow Wild tMM
Ckib « Woslwooo aoultvard
-181 A«Mi ■» imbOo Hntmm
MfM BMMi psnOaa stvtn moviat will ba
shown 7 pm-8 am. tonight Ackarman
Grar>g jallraam^ ^rat
-iMMIi finil IsalOMk. 6 miiat aat
way. OMblf 170 milts round trip Maapg
to 15. May 1 and 2 Call Ed at OM-ltlO or
gpra. 82ft^13 for daiMis
— IfMn Mtm. t-iiJO pm. taaifHt, iiac.
too Miigard, sponsorad t)y MM univar-
sity CaMic Coasr TIMmM art $1 m
advanca at tha CMr tr tIJI m Wm iaar
— data, it Mtft iMMt. • po-l am.
with a faaal cant or t.ao wttHaat.
nowavailatHa tar two-yaar tarm with UC
SJjMjt Laaty « Sacramanto which pays
•TWJO a month flaquirtawins tndode
09m » rtctni UC grtduaM and intarast m
aducationaJittMtt Pick up appiicanta m
Ktrckhott 308 OtadlNit • May 7 or call
^ pan
of a ttNts tn iM Mfal and practical
atptcts of Hit arts noon itiM
M^UtJlB Tlitaltr
otataaatn 10 am tomo'rtai,
3400
laaa UpMpnMMa at Laad aid StA 4
pm today Laboratory of nudtar MadicNia
and Radiation Biology aianeii Hall 900
Vataran Ave
— EtnMatkt: A ittltr I Eipariaact la
iasMiaM^ noon t pm today- CMS 13-106
""CaslBas tar WtiHa a t^kmgium^mm mai^
for faculty staff .and MaiMit wtmtn wMfi
multtpia rtlts noon evary Friday Murphy
—Malawiia Camaiittaa AppMtaiMot. for
Pratidantiat Advisory Commitlsts art now
avaiiabla Dtadfina is today pick up
apaltcatiaaa at Ackarman information
wmk Kardihoff 304 and houtMo attoci
ations
—IBi isidi^ a film from Morocco will
if-i'l!'"'"^ •♦ ^ ""•^^ «C ^ittly
aigm nogram dinnar 530-8 30 pm fC SOI
film 7 30-11 pm tonight Intarnational
MNa, ^_
Mialary U. by Howard ftldman rtcord
caiaelar and music MdMrtr 7 10 pm May
4. Kjatty 3P
— AMMay a at Ugta. workshop V7 pm.
May 4 Woman s ntsourca Ctnltr. Kintty
190
Stiidtnt Cantar
CiliMM
iy lit
u^^^^^ tek
1023 Hitaard
Maai RMi Nsetsi 8-10
Intarnational Studam
today
•jp iaipiBS CMfc
aMMlit H7d an
3 pm.
3"5 pm
and 930-11 am
tomorrow
and Mas MnM af
it shown 7 30 pm.
auditorium fi $o
^Kirt^^SSS^
**Ever\b<iiiy*s been bygfing us about our cndorie«ie«t»,-
Hemrfon said, "that's why I asked to have ii p«t on our doar***
Bank^. Herndon and Taylor all Ice! thM the puhij^hmcnt is
more sc%cre than the crime becaiite they were not awaie the
cndorienicms had been printed on ASUCLA itationer\ I liev
reaiued a vioiaiMib of the cieciiaMO cade was committed v^hcn
they were Muestione<l.by the FIcctfom iavd Wedneidit> mghi
' Taylor and Banks were attending a cahdiitooas* forum in
Dykstra Hall when Cole and severaF meanhan aT the-i:lectM>nN
Board questioned them about their invotvement
Taylor felt that the elections himrd should "^hold an actual
hearing** rather than gathering tcstim4>n> during a candidates
meeting Herndon called the Elections Board handling of the
matter ^shabby." hut a4ided that he thought *-they were right m
making us aware of the infraction immcdiaieK '
Ahhough Banks and lavku both claimed no prior knov^ ledge
of the use of their offiti siaiioncrv ( olc said **lt's obvious that
^^»9 h*d prior knowledge*' He explained that ii was on their
office d^ar and that all three generar representatives were *een int
the oflicc Wed r^esday Cole added "It's obvious that sbmeonc got
to them before we did (Wcdhesdav niglit) and told them what lo
8iy.""
iaaks. Herndon and Taylor expressed concern that the whole
issue w#Mld be taken out of context and that the actions of the
Elections Board at Dykstra were questionable
Banks is running against C raig Mitchell for the office of SEPC
commissioner laylor is running against David G Brown. C^rald
Le^n Hale. Don letter. Meg McC ormack. Victor Vune/ and
Howard Schreinun for undergraduate student bcKl> president
V
}
I
>
nnxmura
^fORSOOTh/
IgQuaibKi/^xHC'nriKa !
I aoK o^icft I
itCUM€n «aai «. laMbml
I -tan.ipw 94^.%§ I
I aihL«waniMv«ata^4t.aa I
' li.K
3» f
NAVE A DEGREE,'
BUT LACK A JOB?
CONSIDER RETRAINING
FOR SOCIAL MTORK
IN ISRAEL
ISRAEU WHY?
i '
I
/ I
.^^
CLASSIFIED
OKAOLMC: t«:30 A^M.
tuMy
l» th« Ui»4««rslty of Call-
!'• ptmcf mm mmm-^tmcntmnmumm.
A#««rtl»lfif ftpac* win mmt ta «M^
who discrlminalat on th« batU ol
ancattry . color, national origin. rac«,
roMflon, Of sas. MaMKof llw OoMy Bmin
nor Itea ASUCLA Cofiifnwnicallont
•wwtf iMa Inaaalltiiatf aiiif ol ftm tar-
vica* advaniaad or atfvarlltart rapfa-
•anlad in this Isaua. Any parson ba-
llavlnf that an advarllsamani In this
tssMa ■lulalai tha BooMTs poNcy on hon-
tfacrtminatlon 9tmtm4 horain shOMM
coMWHinlcats coiPplplRts In wfiMiig la
tlia •ualpops MaAOfar. UCLA Dally
•niM, 112 tCarckhoff Ha«. 3at Waatwood
Ptaxa. Los Angalos, Calif ornia #0024
nallon problams. call: UCLA Housing
Off lea. (213) •2S-44f 1 : Waatalda Fair
(2HJ 473-
J
w»nounciwttt»
^r)«>« N ^'l A^ smOPS fop
• WILSHIWE i»r«.« -^ }« 1.T
•VALLEt
•SAN PEP
FREEMAN INST
' Jru Sal
.... y Su-^rtity
CM ol piBii of 7-Up Clwapl Sig IOhm.
taMH. Mt Mt plua 79t iipoiW («hMoIi
you fat back whan you ratum Wm IwMaa,
•f couraa). WhMa Oioy last in Via ASUCLA
Studonta' ttora Conf actions, • laval,
ABlnnwiw; apofi M-Th 7:4ft-7.3Q; f 7:4ft-
t:ao. tio^
i,-r \
GROUP COUNSELING
1^ frijcy i|f»»
LAST WEEK TO TAKE
ADVANTAGE OF THE
11% BONUS IN THE
STUDENTS' STORE!
lohacH
flpf aaa^fthing you buy
youH gal book a
tor
1C 1f7« ttirough ApHI SO, ItTf
In AflMNVMHi, or ttia
Sciancas ttora in ttw Dantal Collaga
campus
i
^
complete
printing
service
l\)M->«'MltiK
birMlinil
\2\ krr<kb«ilf hall
oncAT oirr. PAoiiom pwm^otm
PCntPECTlVCt by awHibr. locturar.
counaalor ZINA ON AMD STUOffMT
tTOME WCtTWOOO OOOKSTOUtt
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or Ed at S0ft-t740 Or
(1 AMI
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1100 •«
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With UCLA btankets. pen-
nants, clocfc. helmet lamp
arK) radio. gllmmmmif9, mugs.
In a UCLA
CMIipUS
aniKHinctniiU
passport
identification
resume photos
la
cqitipussfucff
/60 hefckhoH hall B25 061 i m27 \
opan monffi 8 30-4 30
•ducatioffi
can MMNyn OlMkuff . 27*
lorrMffigi
7f-S200.
now
(5> ao)
church serv i
SUMOAV Maaa: 1:90, 10:00. 11:30
(4 (Mr PH)
WfSTWOOO
kara). SOant
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472
It
lOQlrfHIl
Oft - things ara lo»kli»g up- 10 mora.
•MB
^^ (OAOO)
I I
M Phr«. Craacants. and all who^
holpad malia Fun Houaa 7ft a suo-^
eoap— Thona a mllllonl Tho Sro- *
Niort of Lambda Chi Alpha.
lOASSI
MY '^tudty" Law Sludant Worth
waiting for. I lova lt:l lovayou. Your
^""•'"^ <0A10)
ANOMVMOUS AJ mirar— I on ly go tor
t^H. boardad goys. Ara you that
typoT Soautllul Lady.
<• A 30)
FAMCWELLFarty forTomMM#toton
tonight at 0:30. Malnlti Hall Staga2.
All walcomo— bring your own das-
aarts, dips, mteaa, atcl
(0 A 30)
for
SILL darling. aa«a Oia loat
ma - ft pm at U.C.C. Suaia.
A 30)
KAREN ft.: Happy SIrthday Lova.
Oannls. ^^ ^ ^^
la Sacli! Kappa ftlgms tralar-
nNy ruah party Friday. ApHI 30th. ft pm.
Canyon Koc. Cantor.
It A 30)
apricot brandy. I
rum ft cohaa. Thiy
spMa A maSaa.
Voa'm sa abyiii. Happy ifth blrOidpy.
twomuas Lamha.
(•A 30)
•hr
(ft A 3ft)
(0 A30)
10 A3t|
iAMrr. Tan
mm mm. 4/m at 7?
lOMftl
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m A
THCTA CMto CM. Opan Bar ft
Friday night 0#M Froa
ItA
of
Kriahna
ASUCLA .Students' Store
Ackerman Union
nl. CaUft3ft-ft404.
lOMft)
fftASO)
"> J
Bood daala
Ibraala
LAST WEEK TO TAKE]
ADVANTAGE OF THE I
11% BONUS IN the'
STUDENTS' STORE (
OBW^^ft^^ OftP^^^^^^^O^^ • m^^9^^ ^^W% ^^^^9 ^^^^^Oo ^^^^^a
Ko«p your raaaMli tor auary'^<"g yxi
buy in tfia Slvdanii' Siama' tuu u n^t
bach a chaak loc avarythmg you bought
batwaan March 10. 197ft through April
30 197ft-tncldd*ng tan Oat ydur rm-
damptioo an«olopa snytrma this waak
ailhar tn tt>a Sludonts Stora m Ackarman
or tha Haaith Sciancas Stora tn tha
Opntpi Collaga butlding
rrUDCNT INtUHAIiCI
1 DAY LEFT
Enrollmont wM cloaa 4/30/7t. For
Information A appMcaion, cofiltet
tha Inauranca Offk:arat tha Studaivt
Haaith Offlcaar call t2S-1SSS.
tiudont InauraVlba. UCLA StMiiwI
Haaim Sonrtoa. LJL. CA. tOS24
Ml Vi r I III
Sporttwear
Clearance!
or lessl
Large talectton of ciothet for
men and women—topt. panttr
tennit v^rear, lackett, etCrSave
a big buridle now!
ASUCLA tiMiints' Stoia
SPORTWEAR
R level, Actormen Unkm
•25-7711
open iiHtti 7:4S-7:30;
fri 7:4S-t:30; eat 10-4
■Or rwn .
anuiN T.v. a rrenco pientals
COLOR TVS
L
11/
ft7.ao/
T V s -
27ft-1
NOTl: Our pHasa mm
W UCLA
a«ai and lanad. AM
to H14.
mm t^fm. At ra^
(0M31
aHfT-A-TV. ftlOJO
awMoni aiooaanta>
47t-10?a 91B« -^ -
Dalhwf totiao.
(toai
AaeowNCAO aeaia m eM**t a«aa.
aiaapa ft. ||ie/S taya. 1100/7 aaya.
fOOhr)
foraala
•
Mack only - ng. mt
ASUCLA stueanti' Stem
Art/Enginaanng SMpptaa A laval
Acharman. M-Th ft 30-7 00 F ft 304 00
14 ataol ri
$130. Faiir a-at-14
noMfti
boali 02.00 phia 104 lai ta
Laa tV. rO Baa 20001. LJL
^^a*W> 9^^^^^0 W^^^^^^^tt W*^^«^
(10 A 30)
rft3
faiir or usa
1771
(It a ft)
TisattA,safti A.saft9,aatft.ai
RP • Ovale ' Canma • Maaaa
aCES tLlCTaONICS
M Sanaa • Kae». ft
hatchcovofa. notting ft ropa. funliy
eralas ft bosaa. old barnwood 031-
/in
fit a SI
spring $75 ft
(10 a 3)
'TcMos lm%*w%0mmmr
Til
CaBtf«S300 ""•"
NOVR*
• 12
Buaiacst EomeMCWT
1 ma ftwns Mawics a< aoA
CALL47S77«1 3 SI W— I »♦ ftaw DWaO Fwy
afiaatar. Ca.
t CillMrha.Wtnaa
tt12W.MeSi.l|^aat-
HAaeSICHOWOIftTft: S Ziik0tmtmmn
harpaahard w/kila slop. CscaNani con-
dition ft13tt/taal olfar • ftft3-4tt1.
(10A3t|
STINIO campanants: Studont da-
branda. Vallay. tt1-0i4ft, ft01-20SS.
(liOlr)
y
BAaia Phow WMmor Now -29
TV Consola M7S bast offar Diana
020-0270 or 401-7000
" (10 a '4)
Fiaa. aawport aa. 200. Marth/Jotx
^^^^^^^m% a^^^^^^a^^^v^^^^^^a ^ ^a^^^^^^e^ *^^P^^^^^^^ ^p^^e^^B*
OSftt/oflar.. John ft2ft-3tttt tSft-70t4.
(10 a 3)
OAAMAao Zaro Itt
(16 A 30)
MATTacaecs all nsw
ata
Mi • stiaji
THE iftATTPICSa STOaC
11714
at
477^101
au. (470.
sn H. PrhNS
) (47»-0014)
(10 A 30)
nmUng
padastal haadhoard
aaam mattraaa ft
702-2140.
If lap
Iton.
(10 a 4)
tea Typawrltar Saactrlc" In good
condition, bast offar Ask for aili«
(10 a ft)
000-7402
fa a a
OCY
w/
070.00 UOOJO
ft. 4.
OMt)
(10 a 3)
DeL WATEASED frmmf. maftrasa.
Ilnor. $70 with small tmmk. ftftO if I
17 a«aa ^^ ^ ^^
ftlO. aMi nyto« • t7
Cat J.S. 302-4374
U
(10 M ft)
SLACK NNion F3t 1.3 ftftOO
3.S • ft2S0 Sronica 2ft • S3S0 Call
-neo ft-7 p.m.
(10 A 301
•Aihi
(10 A
rtn •• M\
Turn two K»K20IZE
I. 1
474^700.
(It at)
FLANT Salo: Handradt ol
10S 211S
Ian (1 Maak waal Bovavly oan ft
^^ ' (10A
ftlOO aach Doug •20-7300/
ntAtsi
FOA %mkt Faaa bat taMa Fut saa and
CaM 300-071 1. Aali lar San.
CIA M •)
aOA tufwtabis
co«ar sint condition. 0200
(10 a ft)
ppportunitia>
tacond City loachar^ Class m—H:
7:00 pm. Waanasdays Call tiava
(13 a 0)
aSKlCAN
Amaricans. I
WHO
dial* accaplancs
ftuguat. ipium ta
Catlmmsdlatsly ftl3-
043-201«
(13 A 3t) «
*PER80NAE*
Cantor of DrRinatic Arte
Aiwounct
A opecwl thraa waak
(April 12th thru Wm
Auomoot Tig aaouca
Tha following tubjacto will bo
covarad:
'Whet ttia ceatlng tfl^octor to
tee PaBB|f at V W«a|L
as7-seii
- -
nttded
laubjacto
aueJKCTS wMh vaian m ady ana aya
Fays 02. Susan 040-0130. pa gut)
AlOHT
in
parlmanis Cama at ona a tha I
llmas: 4/20 1 Pa 2027 Frana; 2
22ftft Franr. 4/30 • 1
2 ta -2200 Franc S/3 11 A«4-34t4
FSMC 3 Fa 2200 Fran<: 5/4 2 «t
ISO Hahms; 3 Fa-320 Hamas. S/S 10
Aa - A27t Frana: 2 Fa - 0441 Frana.
(14 a ft)
Irolny hacks tor hlH.
alda planting. Hard, satlafylng.
autdoar warh. Saturday A Suntay-
aayft a ft. CallftTl-eieft af tar 4:30 pm
fit a ei
034-2210.
(12 A 30)
WANTED; Sruing bactis for IMNalda
pwmun^. nsrw. smim^^n^ aiflaaar wam.
i^lwen and Sunday^aay 0 ft 0 CaM
473-1014 aNar 4J0 pm, ftaJS^hr
ccATaieo scuaA oivee wAirrta--
to ba pfa«idad tor JUL Y a AUGUST
ai aexiCO. CaO Lana at OTS^lO.
(12A3SI
(isoei
holratyHng. Pmtr
T(
(13 001
..*- I.
fljg^
!• w^ eat
tor 11
Salt oaifl. a NMtYeaiae* cowtec
no A 30)
Vl
\
CLASSIF1ED4D
' . }
j
Halp wanted
WAfTSaS/Waltraaaaa-^Fart^tlma.
avanlnea. unlgua. top rastaurani.
aacallant tips Eaparlancad. sinca
[^i^-J^**'****** •FF»y. avanlngt
(10 a 4)
LIva-ln w/adol Oln-
gla. f1 ff^Jo^4^^ SA and/or aa
parlanca to social sciancas. Call
batwaan S- a n« - noon. fH ftioi.
(10 a 0)
I
ADMlNISTaATIVE CLERICAL
Jwarch proiaci studying causa of
ftuOdaa miant D««th hat |ob opaning
•or a hm Of pan untm p«r«on for m4
mmtstrstiw* sod clartcal tasks Typmn
F'ohciancy mgaiii. niiUm •«»•
f^ncm in iwsdical rasaaiah daahaMs
it inisrastad contact Sua oL^M a m
a.ft 234 3205 ^^ "
(18 a s)
OAfVCa naadad until Juna 11th.
FIck pp 10 yr old girl. Unlvarslty
ElaoMntary School. 3:00. aonday
through Friday. Ona hour par day.
03.30 par hr. Call avanings. 470-
^^^ (It a 3)
WANTED Susinass Adm«nitiralar
trainas - succasslul
to wiansga Driving
(15 M 3)
Hfta*
WITH joaa
)
1
1 T(
2
3 T
4
• T.
S T
7
ta hr
U-Mhv
ft AMisWnl M hr
tiaa-aias as
I m migtaf ta hr
lawasUpalor traina* $3 hr
halWStB t2.M hr pteM
-ftlltlarial « %*tn
CALL'
(
WAaTSO: Ftoant Franc>( apoahor ta
(1» A
lUSICIANS string bass. 4ritm9nmf
aa9L21>23 smaN
(irai)
|oh Forappt. cat
•20-3271
lift A 301
CMttft OFPOnTUSNTY
t^Myai
Otmim' and mvQisai,,
OnKMjMqtMO'VHmt
spri«ultu«Si«aiM0
'itlorai
osny Must St c
•ny iw# cow
eoos*«***«* <M*'*
<m»H >nvot<m swiyio »«yuu«
(Ca»a»r
€• fisa4 (iai)ta«
• 4
^•r««n(tO VM«*y
wiN S» tmki St M— wwn« 4
Canwf on 4/2a 7% at aonrta
Mwmiy
WM09 an 3rd ni
Mifl MflU* #r p0^*WW9
r^W^^^»w wvViaR ^tpt ^MVlv
hirWy Mat-toad mt
amrant.Caft 270-0040
mt apply In paraa
a. 0f22 Waat 3sd SC.
LJ^.
lift A Mi
COjaiSgLOes taycMp. tap pay. Mry
maaan amean or windaw van profarrad.
LET US OIVE YOU A FACIAL
Foe oaLY II
Na dMp by tor an haar ar aa to at us
thaw. 43t M
>1t.
. Moai
(10 a
m/
4)
HllaM.
473-1101
012/
(10 a 4)
(10 a 7)
AECEFTIONftT for Art Gallary 1-3
f aaan
13) 4t3-
(1ft a 3)
4:tt p m Call Contraraa (213) 4t3
13tft 7.ftp.m
WANTED Driving Instructor Fart
landing to full amptoym#nt in %Mm%0mmr
Must ba 25 or aWar by June IS $4 00
par hour to slart CaN OOO-ftOftO
(1ft a 9)
^'^to ^mm ay maiplfie wSiaca
SS-ftSO/nvonth for Btoee Plasma
HYLAND DONOR CENTEII
1001 Gay toy Ava.. Waatwood
470-0SS1
LIVE In dorm counsalor (2i or aldar)
naadad for girls boarding school in
APiambrs. 1000.00 month 202-4151
(Iftat)
SASYorr yiri- iidi. ft
pm: Tims. Thwra. Frt.
ftftftf
r «T«^
(i» a 4)
aOVING iL^dantlal. apartmanls.
officas Lacgii^^small |o6t I ocal A Ipng
dislanca CaO Sarnay 30ft-ft7ftft •nfikmm
or larafy fiaaa
briat. mtimaUw traalmaht Call
i*m M •)
HOUStSlTTSa < aaallahia ft/l/Tft.
(1ft a IS)
FtANKLiN ft KUe EdTiors Ovarall
474-
(1ft a 4)
I
AAROW IMSUaAMCt
HOUSE ftlTTER AvaltoeM - aatura.
274-0027
(10 a 11)
HOUSCPAiaTiaO - arata Fratoa-
^••••R ag
ic^sofffmn^d
In or our? Wa mova fur-
nllura. apellancas. apts.. housaa.
towast ralas. fraa aatlmatas 470-
•107
(10 a 0)
TY^taO dictatiaa via phona or
cassatta Also loftai 9M.i^»r^9t%em
ain. chargs tlft. 300-1000 batora
0 pm.
(10 a 0)
■•r
tnwrajt
SOUTH AMERICA
Inaurancs V
11
Oftica ^mrnmt
1U1
(^aai
10 DAYS
SUMMER DEPARTUREf
S ALLEY Fan way to Soauty 13SS
Waahaaad. and Unhr YWCA. 074 Ht-
bMh aanaaaaunsatng
hy aadiritoiang
LI
CanMal Cantor al Holly
ft13
0301
(lOQlr)
Ifitormaetoioa. atfvancad 0 loaaons!
021 tpoaai ralaa. 2 ar
liana taraia.
r.
Chriato OoeaoM
ii^ ciartR. t2s-tS3i
^••m ^PMantoNen May I. 12
1S17
mom
MOi/inc ? Lg
Tha originai-Caparanai
FaSy Beaapat - Raaaa
1 '*««#-i
Oar Oa yaar- 7 days a waak
CA«iP^ eaavtcEs
Aat tor - JaMi
^^■^^^B ^^^^ • • • • ^^^p^eea
SSS-SHS
iltWCHTS 03by tMnaa
MMa^aara4hatoaa. Pai
i haroMtpia
(10 OW)
aHna. CaM 4tt-1004 anyt
(10 aa)
LAST WEEK TO TAKE
ADVANTAGE OF THE
lis BONUS IN THE
STUDENTS' STORE!
(Mom
til.
!i^TON EXPKESS
MOVERS
'vveuniie
aovaM a aaatne Lave* a
•1013 ar Ffad.4tt-144t
»■ 'i • .-(It oai
Rich tS4-2t#t
MawoM 051-3027
TOURS & TfmvCL
tha Sarrlnglan mmn. W.L.A 11744
atlahlra 477-002ft. ft70-3907 WNh
maia than 30 yra. aaparianca Hato
ta study-ratoln-raMs-alaop. Saa mmr
la Yallow Pagas ad. Spaclal
"TTy:; tet A found
■«e
I FOUND SOMETHINO?
I Jt etw aa veiiiie a pal or a^toto ef
^^^^^w* ^^u ^^^^w ^0 w^^^ yaw raw»»n,
I 4uat cema into aia Dally arylh
I
(It A 30)
'i2ir-
an oe to wai
7tS7
leJL, OLAr) 470-
(loaai
I oofteot. TNt Mm FAcroav
{ Aocacv. Wioaioae aaa^ mmtm
jlha ae at NO oeai to yeel
fl
|, %utnny>
a Fsii
ChOrl
'in(lr)n
<n
P
• ftt
ti^
.r1
it
r'.;«a«it
>»rtp from 121
Ufe
H«
«»••"
mnd Um^ V
Of* ^
^p
^.
tmvoc
Siso runs local sros *our»
y car srHi but si minimum co)
Call Us tor Informtftlon
473 2M1
9 15 Dsily
tHOir) at
(It a It)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLI RMRMm
. . Tee HMT
STUOCMT DieCOUNTS
(1ft a 3)
1-
/«« M M\
I
•ff
eukssiFiE tyA
travel
^ Cat J>t Chmfmt Pimmnn ■
1 IMIOPt If 7t I
■ ^* *•»_•• mi W ««Mntf trip L.A. or t.^^
K'*la«iK WigHiB troin iax Com* A Chtoago*
liifop* attto awaiiabi* L.«. tm MAWAIll
|<« kwr M IIMOO inMma Tflp) ■
2 Writ* Of Call '
I CAL Jf ' CHAATEPI8 (415^ •0-1494 |
• 2180 G. '^ tl . Ban frmncfco CA VOZa T
IF^^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^P S^B ^^P ^V
•— I
ASUCLA Travel S«rvic«
UCLA Ofrtaf PttfM
# flights to Europ*
LAX-Amst«rdam-LAX
• nipiniiii •«!
fe:^
' i-':
... . Vi .
\- :
1C754
Jun«7 7
$429
11C75
Jufw21 11
$429
12C75
JiJM21 12
$42^
15C75
Jun«2t 5
$429
17C75
Jurw29 9
$429
liCTt
June 29 10
$429
22C76
Julys •
$429
23C76
July 5 9
$429
' 27C76
July 12 4
$429
30C76
July 19 4
$429
LAX-Lofidofi-LAX
61891
June 19 11
$425
L56226
June 22 6
$415
LfiA?2?
June 22 2
$379
^v %m
Omt IOH
• Ortantandl
ISC
INTERNATIONAL STUD* '
MnVINC TM» IMMUNITY
'H4CMO«
10. •-• >u«rft A«»nu»
rouMs- rouns< tours-
N Ut FOR
'MQufMa ft King* Canyon 4 30 *> ; t6& Ol
Sltidcitt rmtm non •lutfani »•!•• •«aMab««
•• iMCltMt* 'rm
•Mmncm (•••
'>n uvamighi trip*
Our goat la to crmm^ an Intarculturai
pichanga in a ralaiad friandly
atmoapttara and to do thia at a
rnfnim.jnn coaf lo you
2 Islandt
10 Days
OAMU AND CHOICE OF
ONE NEIGHBOR ISLAND
$443
ttitoring
MATH Ttrtwtna ky mjL
4 73 2991
^ •
CANS IN lUMOPt
WMTOflMIV
9PCCIAL IIIOUCTKMS TO
TIACNtRS S STUOMfTl
mn cATALoa
EUflOCAIIt
BLVD.. LJt SSSI
Tr^•
S0fvti
^0ff90fHjftm
and
HAWAII
Mng tftm Ul
wrlAfl I CR5 (pantai iiatirtga)
Owar 300 fhghta A dataa with daparturaa
tnm AprH tfiru Odabar nay 2 to 2i uti
LAM- wn 9/^2'9rt» ti fait
LOtI JX e/IA^IO • 4«
JX $/-l5-%/24 M 4M
CMA/19-A/06 1^ 4a
OA •/22-t/02 A 4ti
AH 7/OA-%/2» 4SI
-" SR T/04-^Q/m *• 44»
JX 7/13-A/24 ^S «M
■« 7/1»-«/25 ^ 4ii
jH 7,-27 %^1 • 4M^
I «/2t-A/29 ^« 4at
full pnoamd laa
Tour ^sckAoe IncHidssr
• Round-trip Pan Am Jet Hainbow
Service including Hot Food with
Complimentary Champagns
• 5 Nighta. Hawaii t Reef Hotal'on
Waikiki Beach
• Hertz Car rental 1 full dsy un-
limited mileage (gsa extra)
Valid licenae required, minimum
driver age 21 veert
• Catamaran Sail off WaikikiBesch
• Hertz Bonus Coupons
• 'Full Color Hawaiian Memory
Album (1 per room)
• Piaasant Sunset Mai Tai Cocktail
Party & Welcome Breakfast
• Exofic South Seas Shelf Lei
• 4 Nights on Neighbor Island you
Select;
Accommodations
Kahana Beach Reeort
Condominium
Kauai Islander. Plantation
Hale
Kona Islander
Neighbor Island Flight via Aloha
Airlines
4 day Harti Car rerHal unlimited
milaigs iMi^our Neighbor Island
(gas extra)
TOUR PRICE PER PERSON
INCLUDING TAX & SERVICE
FRIDAY DEPARTURES
VidfiNy SSA-STSS
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
3017 SanU Monica Blvd
in'
Santa Monica
LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION
TEST PREPARATION
bagina JiMva If tor July 24
Taat
-GMAT. couraa baglna Juf»« S for
July 10 loal.
-SPtCEO RCAOING couraa boglna
^%tn* 2S
•CAMEER QUIOANCE
Island
_ .li
Kauai
Kona
typing
(2f A3S)
and mHminmy» type*.
Psuloy • Tactvnical Typlnf Sonrtoa. WLA.
Pirn
*LA'«IONOLULU nm on*
*tA4«)NO(.ULU tiat hvo I
•(am and M^ alao
PlilS Car Rentals LsaslnB...M».
rall/luralJ passes ...Accomoda-
lions... SATA fits.. .International
\J0
LINQt
ASK US FOR ANYT>llNO Ytiu
wiurr TO KNOW asout
TRAVEU
>isocm/
TRA/EL SERVICE
A-21S («Mi CKPO)
Uti
N.Y.c. lias.
CaS iack (2'lS) 273-7iii. ' '*^
CBCM
S^2S-9/l2
7/OS^l2
7/24-S/2S
7/S4-S/04
7/S4^12
I UU- AS
^ AMIS CM t/osrS^ao
3 CM s/is-a/31
CM S^1S^1S<94
■■ AS S^I-^13
S» CM s/ao-s/23
J Aa 7/QS.S/SO
CM 7/14.S/1S
CM •A>4.«/1S
E LAX- EJ S/OS-SAB
^ PRA EJ Jrt^^no
^ JX 7/17^13
32 ■" 7/17.S/2S
m ^ LAX- EJ S/17.S/11
^i# ZNR JX s/i7.a^
EJ %f2A-%fWi • 4?f
EJ 7/01-SAI1 * 47*
EJ 7/0S-10AM IS 47S
NSW CHARTER l>e8T. »
AFRICA (Ghana ft Ntgana)
VUOOSLAVIA
POLAND
GREECE g4«7
SOUTH RAciFic tasa
TAHITI SUPER DEAL |37f
HAWAII ift2
NYCi 2 3«-..
ORIENT Many dalaa trofr 4SS
Contact ASTrA fof ovar 200 othar fltghfs
with dapartufaa trow L A San Franc laco
Chicaoo Boalon Na«r Vorii Waahingion D C
Chartar rag rtaquwa S» day tKiMmnM Sooking
price sub|«KTf fo fO% «ncra«M
- 42f 4SS
479
KAV: Typist. aSltifig Efifllah froS.
Oiaaartationa apaclaNy Toran papMS.
aiBifti. leauwaa. lotlors ISM •2S-7472
(2SQTRI
PRO^SSIOSIAL WRITIMG. EOITMSO.
1NOEXING RESEARCH BOOKS.
JOURNAL ARTICLES. DISSERTA-
-?K>MS. RPOP'OSAtS. JASMK WIMTEII-
nSLO WEST HOU.VWOOO 321-SaiS.
(2SM4)
1 ASQCLAT
TRA/EL SERVICE
Ackerman Union A 21 3 with EXPO
Monday-Friday 10-4 825-1221
Logel Secretary. Moer
(ISOirl
aEROx I z
•ftNKOS 'vrw-^f
Rin^ c. DisatwTATiows;
STATISTICAL. FAST.
SCVtM OATS A WtOL MANY
CANADIAN
CAMPING TOiIRS
CMOSI
twmtiet
from ties
Si.Ti. 4S7-1S». 2132 W.
om
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL. Eaatcoaa4
ITX. us faatrnaai
VOUTH. Europa.l^.
APEX. 22-45 so day adv
COaKWITHUSOMA ,-^.,w«^
DAY. Travel tho Alaska H*ghway tt^
•nsiOi Raasaate. 22 days |49S Hika
•n the Rockies el Banff National Rem.
12 day* |?19 Oapoe t»«o Church«ll River
in Northern Saakatchowan 12 days
I $362 Moala mr\6 aquipmont irKludod
"'axibia ittnaranat Shared
•andiy atmoaphora It • a
\ brochure Wrtia to
»noaief» Caeiplfif Toura
250 d One Palliaer Square
Caigery Alta T2G OPS
(405) 3S5-a9S0
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charter Flight Service
'^^-^T 1000 flights lo Europe this
• imer • P >. < o.infi.H Qii.rjppj
to E • .to
Hawaii anrt M»*mc( • -'' \
)unts on car purc^ •
lift and leases • Study
J • . '^ • • Un" ;
^-an ar
$ • Hole!
>n • Hostel Informa
national Student ID
•I counseling •
I - - , ,- i^ i. ■ ii f y
AS^ uS ANYTHING YOu
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING'
Eur frpm
JSiPERNOW
TRAIN S FtRRY TICKETS.
CARS. CAMPER RENTALS,
RAILPASSCS, INTRA-
EUROPEAN STUDENT
CNARTDIS
H .1. "' ^* ••V Caie*aan/S Amarica crutaa
on ttaitainci MrAarmLA imiaNliami
p«u« no-cttarea 2-«* air cMivnaion ftomi
TOURS
JAMAICA i daya
ITALY IS daya
LON PAA AMI 18 daya
MEXICO. S daya
HAWAII, i gMa
BICENTENNIAL. S daya
NSW rORK CITY g ^ay*
■aa*»v aihara tor*g ft ahor] ouau«i A
STUDENT TOURS
Rusata tRpataaa) 3 wks mrt from ton
.. »rf>m S7M
'^^^^"' «*iiw J taia^d rfif" i . ,», , yi. S4SS
•retartd 3'«Mi MKhMft«a
ASTrA
ttitoriiHl
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"^^ ttt, 47S.S1S3; 1SS1S ¥efilea. SS7-
LIOMTNING TYRING CO
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PROFESSIONAL COLLEGE TYPING
SPECIALIST
Terifi papera Theala Dlaaeriationa
Paaturea Forvif n Lawfuafaa. Sciencea.
Mtolh Tatolea
04 US)
MEED Help M
OaneeiLa
S-7:JSpm
MATH Tutoring Sy M.A. fn
Cjleylua. AlfoSfa. ProbeSIHly. afiS
mm 91
(9S OS^
OPINM^ ie4
/IS0CL4^
/»»Tlft
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Inaiviauel. amell sreep Iwatnictlon
IMAS9I
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PROPtSSIONAL wrltar
(UCLA) «4S {P> 4^4
FLApH Ftnpora aecratarlel aervica
Eacellont work, preeipl. WoaaoeaSle
rates Pick-up and PaSvery. SSRilh-
S22-3SSS/474-7S7S. ,---.*.
lis ■ 4)
■jite ftimighsd
fVmH lorpe ampla wNP 9uWm
waNi to UCLA S200 Incl
aS7S or •31S4aS
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27t
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SUMSIER Rales. Spacious sinplea.
1 S 2 bedrooma from S17S Large
courlyard Sft2 Veteran Awe No Wllalilaa
(2SJ4t
rURMISNEO/UffrfiKfiMiea
$14S. Sinflea SiSS. Peel.
SSf OAYLEY. acroaa froei Oyfcaira
MINUTES Ireei UCLAI
eeaeeePia priee 2991 9e.
47S-113S.
apto unfmnished
2 SEOROOM. 1
(27 A as)
SiTVjn • t BEDROOM tV.
PeMMffia SSI 4 VIeitoft Ave •
Apt. 2 - S9S-77S4 SI S p.m
(27 1
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ROOMMATE
2
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HUGE 12 reow
room. Hraplace. kHcHeii. ow«i m
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(2SMS)
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June 23 - Sepleoiber 2S— I12S »«cl.
(29 M 4)
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More Entertainment Index Calendar
, Music
Genesis, the rapidly rising
progpasitve rock ffowp. will
pcrforiti in the Starlight Bov^l
in Burbank. tomorrow at 8
pm Musical albino "iohnnv
Winter will be seen tomorrou
at 8 pm in Swing auditorium
and Sundsy si 8 fna at the
Hollywood Palladium
At the Roxy. Tommy Bolin
and Roy Harper will play to-
night and tomorro%^
The people who supplied the
traditional Irish music in Barry
Lyndofi. The Chieltains. will
fife and strum their w»y Into
every Irish 'art Sunday at 7:30
pm in the Ahmanson Theatre
downtown.
A^ St the 14usic Center
will be the last concert ol the
seatpn by the I os Angeles
Pliiiharmoni^ and /uhin Meh-
ta. that o( Mahler's Symphonv
no 8. or his "Symphony of a
Thoussnd.** named so because
of the. immense number of
perforiners Playtime* are to-
night and tomorrow at 8:50
pm.
Philip Springer, electronic
composer, will perform his on-
us U4ii works toiaoivow eveniRg
at 8:45 pm at tlie Ebell Fine
Art& Auditorium located at 741
Spulh Lucerne BoulevAf4.
Theater
The ne)ii two campus plays.
Ovr LaR* (finishing up to-
morrow) and Wc»i Si^ Slory
(opening May 6) are soM out
SifRRlb. a well received plav
stout "iKuif male in Amenca"
has relocslcd at the C ornpany
Theater Edward Albec's Zoo
Slor% opens tomorrov^ night at
the Inner City Cuhural Ccmer
and the Los Angeles AcU>r*s
TheatcT offers a free produc-
tion ol a new pla> called Msh
Neil Simon's highK enter-
taining CaMromia SmHc. about
the comic episodes ol vacation-
ers m suites 20.) and 204 of the
BcvcrK Hills Hotel, continues
at (he Ahman»on Theater Al-
so still tunning are Shaw's
Heartbreak Hou«c at the West-
wood Playhouse. KeRRedy's
C MMrar. a drama about the
60\ generation, at the Hunt-
ington Hartford and Sliertocii
at the Shubert I heater
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Campus
Tonight and tomorrow nifht
in Women'k Gym 208. mx mat-
ter's candidates m dance will
perform a thesis concert. Tick-
ets (SI. 50 for students) are
available at the Central Ticto,
Office m advance there witt
be none at the door Both
shGMM Mr at 8:30
Uiifvertity •rfanin Thomas
Harmon offers a concert of
American music topight at
S: show
8:30 He will play the funl
of the concert on the Schoen-
berg Hall organ, then move to
Royce Hall at intermission.
The contemporary Music
Festival continues. God will-
ing, 8:30 pm, tomorrow in
Schoenberg Hall when Cal
Arts Contemporary Enaembic
and the Occidenial Collcfi^
Glee Chib performing viarks
by Subotnick, Elkott Carter,
$am«el Barber. Copland and
others. Student tickets coat one
dollar
Saturday night in Mclnitz at
7:30 wiN be Preston Sturgn*
Unfaltkfully Yo«n and Mike
Nichols' powerful Wkos
AfraM of Vi
Movies
Tonight, m Ackerman Graad
Ballroom, there will be the
"First Annual UCLA Slumber
Party and All-Night Movie
Marathon" starting at 7 pm
and ending tomorrow at 9 am.
Showing are Tlw Ckaitf. Ea»l
of £4cn. TIk Proiliiccrs. Meet
4 .■
ft
nriic Producers' fai
'Who's Ahraid otf Virgmia Woolf in MeinUi
Jolni Doe. Tlic Long Voyage
^ome. Night of the Liviag
l>cad and 39 Steps. Admission
IS free.
This weekend at the Nuart is
a diversified one. with Ydl^w
Submarine. Let it He. and
Help tonifht, Tlie Story of
A4alt H. and Day For Night
tomorrow and HaroM and
Matt^e and Play it Kpm, Sam
on Sunday The Fox Venice
has King of HcarU and Start
tlie Revolution WMmvl Me
toniofrow.
.1 ■'
CAREER INFORMATION DAY
April 30, 1976
Grand Ballr
• It
i
M
10:00 A.M. - 3:00 P.
^P^ UCLA Students
i
: Here's your chance to fneet informally with over 150 working men and women
from a variety of occupations. They are on campus solely to provide you with
current, accurate career information to assist you in your career decision
making. This is a once a year event, don't miss it.
—The occupational groupings are listed below. Check yesterday's Bruin for d
complete listing of all participants.
•*T-
*
*
«'
Actuarial and Statistical Careers
Advertising and Public Relations
Architecture and Urban Planning
Art Related
Banking and Merchandising
Biology — Life Sciences ~ Research
Biostatisitics — Health Ranning
Computer Science and Math
Education and Library Careers
Engineering and the Physical Sciences
Film
Health Education. Allied Health, Nursing
Hospital Administration — Environmental Health
Management
f
Investments — Economic Forecasting
Journalism — Publishing
Law — Criminal Justice — Politics
Military
/
Motion Pictures — Television Guild Associations and
Unions
Nutrition — Dental Hygiene
Occupational and Physical Therapy
Personnel — Trainir>g and Devek>pment — industrial
Relations
Pharmacy — Epidemiology
Public HMlth — Medicine — Veterinary Medicine
Sales — Marketing
Social Services and Mental Heatth
Television — Radio
Theater — Music
Travel — Hotel Management
PANEL PRESENTATIONS:
• Foreign Student Home Country
• Women - Your Rights in the Job Market
• CarfwPlannirig Concerns of Minority Stu
Sponsored by the UCLA P
\'- •■
1 Hi
XCVIII,
21
Daily
UrrtvefsNy of CeNlomle, Los Angeles
Mey 3, 1971
14 years in State Senate
Beilenson Justifies bid for national office
By Jin CumMi
DB Stair atporttr
Citing his 14 ycmn at an **effeciive tepiaiatof
in the areas of government retoai, the environ-
ment and women*t nghtsrUS Congresiionai
candidate Anthony Eeilenton outlined hit
qualifications and viewi in an interview Friday
Serving the 22nd state senatorial district for
14 years, the Democrat said he hat been named
^Best Ail-Around Senator" by tlie Capitol
Press Corps and **Most Effective Senator** by a
poll of his colleagues of both parties
** After 14 years of tkt same issues and the
same people, oae feete tiie need to ilMve on and
make a contribution to the larger, more
imporunt national issues that affect im all
profoundly.** Beilenson has received the e»-
dorsement of Thomas Rees, the incumbent who
is retiring the seat after II years in the House
^ Beilenson was the author of Proposition 20.
the 1972 Coastal Initiative tbat created the.
CoaaUl Commission. Tbis body, which has
plafftned development along the California
coast, has now expired, and Beilenson is
currently spoasonoi SB 1579, which would
cr^Oe a tocrrsanr agency. Tht bill is' opposed
by unions and business iMilers *Hifho want
unlinruted access to the coaitbne.** Betlenson
n heavily involved in women*s righAs
long before the Wome;n;s Lib
AuMiony
Ri(garding hit rel^ord on women s rights,
Beilenson noted his spoiaofship in 1967 of the
country*! first reform of a state abortion law in
over a century and his current backing of a
family planning program Observing the can-
didacy of Wally Robenson, a speech teacher at
UCLA who is also seeking the Dcfmocratic
congressional nomination. Beilenson saul,
**There should definaely be more women in
public life But mv record shows that h
Beilenson said that President Ford h«s
provided the necessary leadership in the araa eif
cner^ ''The tnajor issue is the toul lack of
commitment to energy conservation. Wr wasu
between one third and one half of all the
energy that is prodiaoad ** --
He said he suppovts efforts for the IMletf
States to attain etiergy independence, "but not
the way Ford wants ** refernng to Administ ra-
tion efforts to secure aflshore drilling rights.
Beilenson criticized Governor Brown for his
lack of leadership in many state matters He
believes that Brown, whom he said he knows
very well, is serious in his drive for the
presidential .6r vice-preside^nai" nomination
*'The Governor is a very bright, warm young
man on a personal level, but he should stay
around and be a good governor for a while **
Beilenson said he supports Morris lidall for
President, attng the Arizona representative's
similar stand on the issues of the environment,
the economy and integnty in government
Wiien asked whAl he thought were the
accomphshments of Brown's predcoesBor
Ronald Reagan, Beilenson said he could only
point to ''one valuable thing *^ He cited the
former governor's attempt to keep a lid on She
spiraling growth of the government payroll,
which could have caused "much greater in-
flation than dMl occur **
Beilenson said if elected he wilt support Title
Nine, the biit pending in Congress that will
provide for an equal distribution of funds tS
women'i alhletio programs, and the Buckley
Amendment, which will provide student
to their transcripts and files.
NPI will end drus treatment work in fall
Program to be turned
over to the community
By Barry MIdMal Grey
AlaB MftdMel Karbehiig
DB Stair Writers
(Editor's note: this is the
first m series of qrticies about
the UCLA Drt4t Treatment
Program. Subsequent articles
series wHi deaf more
nfically »^iih the findings of
a Dally Br«in investigation
into the program.}
$1.5 miHion in annual feder>
al funds will be iMI to the
University on September 30 —
liw cad olf a frve- month phaee-
«it ai its three-year-old Neuro-
psychiatric Institute (lIPl)
Dnif Treatment Program.
The phase out' began on
May I. On October 1, half the
HiAi vidua 1 centers which made
up the NPl-administered pro-
gttfls will seek continued gov-
ernment funding The other
half wfU be inctparated into a
noB-proTit corporation and are
assured of governinent stsp-
con-
Approainyiuly 700
with histories of drug
utiluc tbe
sifts of
clinics, counseling anil resi-
dential centers, and admin-
ialrauve ^M» to iupefvtic op-
NPI will deliver grant money
but not supervise or hire em-
ployees as It has in the past
However. Ralph Glonoso.
adult psychiatry administrator
at NPI said that durmg the
phaseout "The University is
legally responsitile for the prcK
jcct. We have absolute pro-
grammatic and financial re-
sponsibility " Almost S806.000
in federal funds are allotted to
the program for the pteMOiit
period
In 1973. the government and
the University agreed on a
three-yoar contract, the Uni-
soffsity stating it pkMmed to
relinquish control of the pro-
gram to the community after
that time. "We went in to be
largely a ffoiit for^soaie faal-
ler community drut tpcatmcni
programs jthat couldn't get
f«a£flf on their own." Glor-
ioso said.
"It IS now viewed to bt
•oBdly based aad can make it
on its own,** said Eh^in Sven
son. -c chaacellor for in
stitut tonal
1
The . _
drug treatment ceaters and
four administrativt maii. Ol
the treatmem oeaiert. 9&m arc
JuMcs and the re-
live offer residefitial
wd Of iiMipu I
treatment.
Infornuition gathered from
NPI indicitrs the program had
considerable administrative
troubles.
The employee turnover rate
of the program was described
as "the iMftiest of any NPI
pro|ect." accofding to Glor-
fcct director who will take over
half €A the program when it
leaves the University, said the
high employee turnover rate
was because "Thev (the em-
ployees) couldn't do their
In Its first year of operation
the employee turnover was 80
per cent. During that period.
5i^ persons resigned out of a
possible 68 positions The pro-
ject has reduced employee
turnover to 40-45 per cent.
Glorioso said. The regular em-
ployee turnover rate at NPI is
approximatelv 10-12 per cent,
he added
Gerald DeAngehs. the pro-
Organization
DeAngelis has formed a
non-profit organization. Health
Care Delivery Services. Inc..
that will absorb six ol the 12
NFT Drug Treiiment Program
units A proportionate amount
of the federal grant goes to his
firm The remaining six units
Villi become indepemieM. Their
federal funding will continue
through the universiiv until
September V). after which the>
will be left to fend lor them-
selves
However. C»lorios<> said
"Wc anticipate all componcni*
will receive direct funding
(from the federal government
after September M))"
Program Director IK-Angclis
admitted he has had trouble
dealing with the Universit> "I
have no patience with the cra/^
les at NPI.** he said, adding. *l
ftist can't <l^l_^ith bureau-
criM:ies.*
<fflorioso achnowlcdgcd De-
Anftlis* complaints. "They're a
little upset with our bureau-
cracy." he said On the pro-
gram's future without OC'I A
Glorioso said. "I will be in-
teremed lo sec how n 6€^c%
fCiili ion Page 1J»
.Afe-
I
•^1
k
I
\
!
%\
4
f
■fr
T
I To work on bohalf of spociol inforost groups
^■•■Hp
■ir-
i SLC First VP candidates stress communication
^ By LmMm G^km flrouDs and the office ikev are interest stoum on ciimDut their hAcksround. Drocrmm for tion (a ftorority coAlition]
vc
DB Stall Wrter
Student Ix]
Cowal (SLC)
Marcia Bitque and Cynthia
McQmb, itrcMcd commumoi
kttwecn tpcdal interest
roups and the office they are
running for. fint vice preii-
doat.
The two women said rela-
tioas' between current SLC
First Vice President Sue
Melton and the nine special
•'>*.^'
1
2^
:
POSITION AVAILABLE
— student Coordinator —
Foreign Student Orientation Program
Academic Year — June 1976-June 1977
Responsible for implementation of Orientation Program
for newly arrived UCLA foreign students
20-40 hrs/week during summer <i
Average of 10 hrs/«veek Fall. Winter. Spring Qtrs.
Stipend
Job Description A Applications Available:
International Student Center
1023HHgard
or
Pttipe of international Students A Scholars
297 Dodd Hall
Deadline for return of Applications
May 14
Cassette Dictator
incfonm tH« •ffici«ncy of your oHic* wilf) a Crotg 2706 Com«W OlclBlor-Tran«crib*r
from iol Air Comoro A Hi-^i THo CroiQ CoMOfto DKtotor hot iuN rmcrophooo con-
trol and a microphono tpookor Comot comptoto wifh foot •wfldi.
$^99.95
Electronic Notebook
$149.95
Tlw Ovig CloctrooK
AC
fh« Craig Electronic Nala^aeli ond vhe Cfoig
Dktafof To9«fh«f Worth $409 90
Botli
$299.95
*Ma
-\B belQircQmeiQaihHI mr
X^ »27 Wi<WMd a»0 iOf i^neiill »C024 (?t3)477.9S«9oct79 9616_/
interest groupi on campus
wer^ weak this year.
TIk fluun responsibility of
the First Vice-President is to
work on behalf of the
interest groups on campus
funded by SLC. The office
helps negotiate buifst requests
from these groups, and, once
budget requests are approved
by SLC, aget tlK checks
Bisque, a third year soao-
logy major, said she plans to
** bridge the gap** that has re-
sulted m a lack of communica-
tion between the office and the
groups. She also intends to
concentrate on milting special
interest groups with program-
ming by ''actively working with
the groups," a job she said the
present first vice president
(Melton) Int not done well.
McClain, a second year poli-
tical science major, focused on
the autonomy of special in-
terest groups. She plans to
encourage them to 4o .their
own programming.
''Programming is not a perl
of the office of firtt vice presi-
dent How can I, not bemg of
their background, program fer
themT* McClain said, citing
the "misoeeception'* her o^
ponent hat CiMt the Hrst vice
president is a prqgnauner.
Bisque said she wants to
"create a stronger alliance be-
tween the groups" by involving
them in joint piojli Td like
to have special interest groups
and IFC (Interfraternity Coun-
cil) work in community af-
fairs." Bisque received the IFC
eniefiement kst Thursday.
Referring to groups pro-
gramming together, McClain
said, "If they'd Uke to, fine.
Buf^ I think that all the first vp
can guarantee is that her of-
fice will be efficknt. The rest is
up to the groupt
F4
McClain has been endofsed
by four oi the nine fpacia]
intefSH groups — > the Black
Student Alliaaee, Native Am-
erican Students Associsiioii^
Allan Studenu Union and
MEChA
Candidate Bisque said she
would also Uke to obtain SLC
funding for the 1,000-plus
member Panhelienic organiza-
You can get guaranteed top quality
Xerox copies fast— RIGHT HERE ON CAMPUS!
Loose copies, 4C each; legal
size and bound copies, 6^ each
*
x
Dont monkey around — come to us.
121 kerdcholf
1 X
Saturday 104
a^ fnond^r fnday 7 45^ 3o j printing A dupHcaUng
Uon (a sorority coalition),
which currently has no SLC
funding
McTlaia pians to esubhsh a
oeeeflii within sadi group of
three or four members, and
■eet with each council once a
month." '
Bisque said she has "the
expertise** to assist special in-
terest groups haoMfs '*! know
adminiftrative seii.** She cited
her work in a similar capacity
at a Florida junior college
before sIk transferred to
UCLA this y&r
McClain, a former member
of the Judicial Review Board,
aMsd that she was active in
the Black Student Alliance
before Mehon appointed her
as tiK First Vice President's
aisiitaat earlier this year. **rve
been looking at the office of
first vp since winter quarter.
fm Sue Mehon's candidate,*^
dK said.
BSA officers
for fall elected
The Black Studem ADi-
anoe has elected next year's
officers. They are Rocky
Mitchell, dMuraan; Reggie
Jacluon, vice-chairman,
Lynetle Ciuaaron, program
coordinator MichdAe Rog-
erl, secreUry; Ceila Rodri-
gez, finance' commissioner,
and Cynthia Muldrow, pub-
licity commissioner.
UCLA Daily.
BRUIN
VolMW XCVIM. Number 21
Mondar. May 3. 1S7S
mtrtng tfm
•nd amy9
^mtnmtion
ty tfM ASUCLA
Copfftght 1979 br tfm
ASUCLA CommumcBttont Bo^rd.
tmmatmdLot
• *«**«i»*«*«»**«
^^mmmmitmmm»»*»»mmmmmmmti^m»
\-
4
Study in Powell — bees assured
Hives are safe from removal
»y Haay
DB Stall Wriler
Had to the hilb of West-
not only are they pic-
turesque but they mie also a
prune source of the bees that
pofHilate Royce Quad and
other tree-bned campus court-
y^ds. They contribute to both
cimipus boehives and transient
colonics, meaning those in
search of a home.
A hive is safe from reaww^al
en campus, at least until soose-
one complains about it and a
who IS slightly allergic to beesv
The stinging insects, whellMr
residents or just pai
through campus, have cat
their share of unusual inci-
dents. About seven months
ago, Dodsofi recalled, a hive
overlooking [>ickson Hall got
too heavy for its branch
Along with gobs of wax. pan
of it fell on top of an unlucky
Pest control officers arnved,
washed down the car. killed
the fallen bees and left the rest
to them (For
example, it is safer for every-
one if the bees aie hidden in a '
stump or waB)
If the hiv^ must be removed,
the University's first choice is
to call one of three beekeepers
whose phone numbers are
handily bsted on the wall of
the tiny pest control bungalow
in the middle of Lot One
Killing the bees is a last resort,
Beneke said.
"We prefer all of them to co-
exist peacefully, unmolested
and "ttsppy," he added If a
hive IS bothersome. **we get
something done before we get
a blast from the hill (Murphy
Hall),7 he said laughing
Another factor that deter>
mine» the hive*s removal is
whether its pollination is bene-
ficial to the campus landscape.'
The decuion to call the bee-
keeper sometimes is not dear-
cut, as m the case of bees that
invade the Powell main read-
ing room Building coordinator
Carol Stancil said she has
discussed thtt spring invasion
with pest control officers. Ac-
cording to Stancil, the tiees
nearby have not been removed
pest control officer agrees that
it is* endangering people. If a
hive is close to a window or
hangs on a low boMKlt, it is a
likely candidate for removal,^
according to campus pest con-
trol supervisor William Dod-
son.
Moat baas on campus live
away from an open window
when they are not f warming to
a new location. Dodson said
ateost every column across the
front of Powell Library con-
tains a hidden beehive, and
that the insects have cousins
close by under the olive tree
by Haines Halfs east entrance
DicMon Hall has n foiirii iir
hive in a tree, and another bee
family calls tiie Botanical Gar>
asas home. Pest control of-
ficers recently removed a hive
frofli the Rehabihtation Center
near Veteran Avenue. There
probably are other hives no
one knows about, said pest
control officer Gerry Beneke,
of this hive in the tree alone.
Last summer, a group of
bees in flight to another lo-
cation took a rest stop in
Parkin§ Lot One on some-
iKKty's car fender and.'tiaM.
That insect family was irritated
with a tpray until it left.
bcjes, referred to as
"swarming,** caq shock anyone
who is walking by. '^It can be
very disconcerting,** Beneke
said. "They look like hori-.
lontal hailstones " Fortunately,
thay are not usually vioous or
jealous of territory when they
are swarming, added Beneke^
who IS one of five pest control
officers.
His officers policy is to leave
the bees alone if they are not a
threat to people and people are
— they benefit the flowers;
— other bees would move in if
the first ones were shooed out
unless all outside wall holes
were plaistered,
— they are asainly a problem
in one season only;
— some of the bees are tran-
sient, not residents.
What does this moan to the
student who comes across
some territorially jealoni bees''
''If you donU bother them.
they probably won*t bother
~you - unless.. it*s your day to
get nailed,** Beneke pointed
out
People I may havt a hard
time outsmarting a bee colony,
he added Researchers believe
the insects communicate by
changing the pitch of their
wing beat If a person swats
one bee. that one will spread a
warning by shifting its pitch
And if bees sense their own
vertom in the air (after a
person has been stung), this
too will trigger a aKSiagr for
the colony to be on the defen-
sive
Taper Movies'
lecture tomorrow
pMt
The UCLA
tttmm aad tte de-
t of thcAtcr art*.
'••"•-- *--•■>•••••••••••,
sion division will present
Lo« StovasB, ssiociatf pro-
if tJaaiBr arts, m g
lactitfe/slida pi'^i''^
tattaa entitled "Photo-
graphy, Pipv Movisi
Other Mystehes," at I
S May 4 in Dick
too Aaiilneiwn. TlHre is oo
of 'XIant Argnewith
Sunrise/ A Paper Movie,**
Ray Bradbury says
he otv fifit look at tlK
mtbtUwmmm of
Art, NY, UCLA
Aft Gallery and the G Ray
Hawkins Gattety. Los An-
geles. He
Awards for
JOB
UVE-IN counselors are needed to lead trips,
tourand other activities for a ^roup of 120 Jap-
anese students staying at the UCLA dorms
July 30-August 13.
SALARY: $500 plus room, board and expenses
INTERVIEWS: See job #1300-22A at the Place-
ment Center.
Spomored by the council on OvrrteM Study Programs afid die ISC
dnoad
HAMBURGERS TOO?
tt isn t enough that we make the best pizza and
pasta in town, if you really only want a delici
hamburger we do that toa
Ground boaf suMy
Haakreoai Burfor -
Sautcod m wine & mushrooms
$1.95
$2 15
Layerad in bacon
AS our liapihiMpii an bar b-iiMsd.
and ficiHTn tncs
on
c:AlcLxdxzzi\ \Jtvo ^uLfi \Jxom Lflatif
'
at Li
Val. Parkk^ Wnwd. CW.
f
I
I
f
s
I
Vote
Student government electiofts ikfedneodey end
anatomy
of an
upset
/
H-
■^fi"
A workshop designed to gtve you an
opportunity to look at the patterns of
recurring upsets in your life Please
register and plan to attend both sessions
Tues., May 4 Kinsey 190
May 18 825-3945
5-7 pm
women s resource
center
!■•
,1
1.
'^^
■1
J
s
3
U
5
Office deals with students' concerns
Four compete for Student Welfare i^ost
(SWC). The SWC
with personaJ
that could ttlumatcly
their mcmitmue
to The SWCi functioM
head the Student Welfare the Alpha Ptii OoHifa car pool
o
I .■'. »'i. — [-«-»-
the mmimm Helpline,
the UCLA Mhod dnve, the
r-ohcnted PubUc la-
Croup (PIRC)
the peer haaldi WviMfi
provide buth ooatrol ia-
tion attd devices among
What are the limits of psychiatrist's duty to warn
about threats comfnunicated by his patient?
Kurt Melchior
»
attorney in the Tarasoff case will discuss this topic at the following
locationsjK) May 3, 1976:
11:00-12 00 NPI Auditonum. "C" floor
12:15-1:15 faculty Conference Room (2417) Law School
1:30-2:30 2220 Franz Hall
3:15-5:15 Seminar. Health Science* 13-105
by t«oai
Forum D*pt of Climcal Psycti i DapC of Psychiatry
V
'O'i
• . 1
Scotch & Sirloin
reshiurant
LOBSTER-CRAB
BIBS-CHICKEN'SHRIMP
STEAK-PRIME RIB
xbap
STARTING MAY 4th
CDinN6IU»l
mm
9-2 tues.-8at.
pico and sepulveda...wla
478-4458
CaftilMlatf Raaas
SWC to . mtDnmat iu pubUcity
cQbu, Mi^ the Dmify Brum
HfiilntkMi paduBU. He
tkt' car pool profcct iMt
''failed miaerably,** aad kc
would txmmkt iu funding to
tiK peer health adviMffi
the PIRG
.. . ,(
Kotca points to
icBce ^ith the UC Studeot
LoMy as ASUCLA Adminit-
trative VP and on an academic
prices aad/or provide
He
studeat
to
safety. Roaai it ako critacai af
the jirsMin plua/
diuoat to UCLA's
as qualifying him far
the poit. He says his exper-
ience, along with his personal-
ity; enthusiasm and new ideas,
OMke htm the best qualified of
the '^^jHHi^n
The PIRG. says Rosen
should coordmate ptfusure oa
Westwood butiMnes to lower
(at*s inability to thus far
I baar lieaafc for cam-
pat mating facilitict.
**! will use Che tmdeot
government's iaflueaoe to get
to the roott oi the proMtan,"
said andi^tM Erie Seher in
explaining his ''constitueacy
pina.** "^hen a student hat a
problem with soawoofe in sta-
dent government, I plan on
representing his so he won*t
have to run around,'' he con-
aiarafel^
Jeff Conner seeks
commixioner job
luate Student Body President Lindsay
Marted his political career here as facilities
Following in his brother*s foottlept is Jeffrey
it running unoppaaad.
Conner is a junior, but he said he will suy f or tfw
3can. He phms to apply the tools af economic aaalyii
what he calls the "^optimal attignment problem" ia _
office space, a primary concern of Ike oommittion^
Conner said, "I have a knowledge of the job and of wliat
it enuik."
Conner brought up the upconung projects his office will
bt concerned with next year.
With the opening of the James E. Wcar-Alunmi Center,
"A good amount of office space on the K.erckho£f second
floor will become available for ate."
Two other facilities he will be concerned with are the
proposed Wooden Recreation Center and the North
Campus Facihty, which is currently under construction. The
poiot is that ''when these facihties go up, that's not the end
of it." The continuing operation of t^te facilities is
Conner's concern. • -^
Another concern will be the ptohhm of the accumulation
of information. Conner said he plans to ttiake an "infornal
or formal inqwry into the way the flow of information
iacreates in quantity and accuracy."
He added that the facilities conunisaioner sits on a
number of *^fchitively aMijor committees with regard to
buildings and faoUtao," at well as the 'gtudrnt Legialative
^Patty Cfott
Next time you need help.
mformaaoa
or |ust someone 10 talk ta
give tifi a call
825-7M6
(iK:FpOgo)
6pm tD 2 am
AN EVENING OF CHEKOV
with the Tyburns . . .
Thursday, May 6 2 Performances
beginning at 7:30
KERCKHOFF'S COFFEE
Admission Free
HOUSE
MiHer unopposed
for finance
The SLC position of Financial Suuporu CommisMoncr is
one of three SLC election pasts wrth only one pcTsaa
running for the office.
Hugh Miller, currently an undergraduate representative
on the Parking Review Board, said he will attempt to
''stabilize the Financial Supports Commission." if elected
A OKmber oi the BeU Theu Pi fraternity. Miller is a
junior nujoriag m economics Miller feels that spending
three yean involved with the parking program has prepared
him for the work he will do as FinanciLl Supports
Commtssioner. if elected "I learned how to relate to the
Administration and haw to communicaic with them.
"There has never been a commissioner that's suyed in
office the whole time." said Miller He went on to say that
every financial commissioner in past years has either been
iaspeached or resigned Miller said he thought one reason
for the tremendous turnover rate was the great seape of the
position —
According to SLC regulations, the Financial Supports
Commission must advise sLC regarding the SI specif
Education Fee that each undergraduate student pays every
quarter. This fee goes to minority recruitment and
education. Other duties of the commissioner include audits
of all ASUCLA activities which employ students and the
examination of housing problems the camp us^jagylacCL
Millar taid S60,000 a year ^aas to the Special Fdumtion
Fee alone.
MiUer hopes to set up a comprehensive prograai to
handle each t>f the many duties the Financial Commissioner
IS supposed to fulfill He said he will attempt to make
everything run more smoothly than it has in the past.
When asked if he had any idea why no one chose to run
afaiatt him. Miller replied, "1 gHtts everyone thought 1 was
the best nuui for the job"
—Chris Paimer
Six candidates seek
general rep seats
Mf PaMi Caaal asd
Dl Stair Writers
With ej^ienence varying
from preiidfcy of a fraternity
houte to shuttle bus driving,
six candidates are contending
for the three avaikble posir
tions at ftfieral representatives
to the Student Legislative
Council (SLC).
Eric Sherman, a sophomore
and member of Zeta Beu Tau.
said he is "no stranger to
KerckhofT Hall" because of his
work in the UC student lobby.
ShermAn feels SLC fails to
involve enough students la
thair own government.
Running for the office
it is the ''most creative
mvolvcmeni,"
aaid he will not use
M a "tlepping stone"
A shuttle bus dnver who
people "complain about
different things on campus
everyday,** Harry Michael
Snoek regards the office of
gaaefal representative as "all
input." His main concern is
studeat representation
Snoek wants more ofT-cam-
pus parking. "This is a com-
muter iQhoot** the senior said,
adding, "There is a general
acceptance by students that
there is nowhere to park on
campus."
Ron Hacker, a juhior with
semor standing, was president
of his fraternity latt year and
involved for two 3«ars in Intra-
fratermty Council.
Concerned with the parking
problem. Hacker sees a partial
solmion in the alteration of the
street by Sunset and Drake
A Public Lecture on
MAYA
ARCHAEOLOGY
By
Prof. Gordon Willey,
Harvard Univ.
Factors in the Rise and
Fall of Maya Civilization
Wednesday May 5 S:OOPM.
RoMe12SS UCLA
<■/■
//
Aho
'dent
sot Hw An hj^um^pr
tXlAl«tin A
V
AUTO
INSURANCE
tES you need auio insurance
All the more reason to contact us for d up
to 35 to most students — another good reason
for betng m college
See or call us m Acstwood
477-254B
Agents for College Student Insurance Service >
1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build-
ing) LA 90024
I
.r
CI
I
I
^ ■ ■ 1 1 ■ ti
I COMPLETE DISCOUNT DRUG STORES
PMSCIIPTIONS • VITAMINS • COSMITICS • CAMIIA
PHOTO FINISHING • HOUSIHOLO APniAtKiS
HIALTH A MAUTY AIDS
TOF QUALITY FkODUCTS AT iUFUt LOW mCOUMT MtlClS
STOCK UP NOW OH TMlSi iVlRYOAY MUD5I
• ) tiTI OtUOk
•*•*•*• mmmmm
»•«•*
• ' IITI OtUCl
siiniMiJ' _^
KHinuta^
»••*■
■ i fiTf DtU
tlT( OtU&\
•I tin Of uct
1
n
J~3.
t-1 *•
, ' -iu.
1.^
t
Now comes Miller time.
M*it«f
Co m
Formed by ethnic prejudices
Party system 'tribal' to prof
9 CWii Fii^Hltr ftvftt«m ,.__-
9y CMi Fi
DB Stair WHMr
^^We are itill engaged in
triM poiiliGi,** ttid Dr. Robert
HeUey as Ik bctured on Two
Hundred Yean in the Two
Party Syttem" in Dodd Hall
Wednesday evening.
KeUey, a professor of history
at UC Sanu Barhara. said he
sees everyone as a part of
many different groups. These
groups are differentiated by
ape, sex, income and many
other riiarartrriitici. Each
K according to ICelley, is a
iraie tribe He believes that
we form tribal treaties to get
the things we warn. Kelley said
he felt this was the essence of
our present political patty
sysum.
iCeUry categoriaad tlie
lory of American politics into
five staiss. Each sta«e held
social and economic presssires
which helped one party defeat
tile mUna and win the govern-
wwntal role.
Saying political parties are
**the tip of the social iceberg**
Kelley explained his theory,
which hypaHnuzed that poll-
ticai^parties are entirely formed
by ethnic and anociated pre-
judices.
Kelley said political parties
Started as tkt rctuh of certain
ethnic groups regarding each
other as mutual enemies. To a
lesser extent, thia situation still
exists today, he said. A com-
student meetings
on the legal rights
of tenants offered
mon cause agiiast an enemy
the m^or ronton for having
polical parties, according to
the proleasor
Kelley said he fh«nes no
breaking down of political
parties in the near future. He
said he feds that we are all
ethnically biased underneath
our hke ckKhii^ and psucdo-
smilas.
The lecture was bne of a
series of six lectures presented
by the UCLA iicentenniai
Committee and the Comnutt^
on Public Lectures as a Ii-
centenniai saiule to America.
Entitled **Thr«ifii Six-Uniii
— Rediscovering America
After Two Hundred Years,**
the series meets every Wednes-
day at 8 pm in Dodd 147
There is no admission
charge, and the program will
continue until May 12.
TUNE-UP, LUBE t OIL Pi An
A-1 AUTO SERVICE...
>
»y
MidMBa Dnvnl
Dl
1 Stair Wrilw
A
laani
of paralegal advisors
>m
the
hovMH •ervioe
wtH
far ttndonts,
to teach them their righto as
venters. Held dunng the week
oT M ay 3 through 10, the
meetings will touch on all
types of legal matters snr-
rounding leasing an apartment
The meetings are important be*
cause **The more in(ormalian^
itudem hnt about his hghu.
the better.** said Bill Homaday.
an aiiialant dean of studenu in
the housing department, who it
iftvolved with the program. He
and fellow iJMiHint deaa Judy
lowman are paralegal adviaofs
well versed in studenu* righli.
^'Wi important that people
become aware of the rights a
Imtee has. panted by tfie
state.** Hornn^y'iaid The
will cover such nghts
as how to get repairs
bow to clean the apart-
and what to do in cases
of invasion of pnvacy.
Kerry Yumada. director of
the Student Counseling Ser-
vice, will be addressing the
meetings on how to handle
roommate disputes.
. Hornaday warned that many
leases are **biaaed toward the
Inntftofd and thM 90 per cent
of the people who simi
have no idea ~wfart oie
says.
He also added that many
arc *iKM always under
'
NEW-
WHILE-
■
WAlt
Xerox Color
Copies from
Original Copy
or Enlarged-
from
r:-
MuM-Copy
t>
Artist Store
k'
A
vi9 woaiwooa wo.
Loa AnQOlaa
* a/i-nun j
Hk •tate*s statutei*
that
Camiliarity with their righls as
they can.
There's not too nnHh m-
lerest until after the fact,** he
Each saanon wttl take phwae
in a different dorm at 6:45 pm,
except for a special on-campm
Wednesday, May 29 at
iC
an Pafs 13)
Tragi writer
to give lecture
The Gtttuve E. von
Gmnebaum Center for Near
Eaaiem Studim will present
Dr. Jabra Ihrahmi Jabra,
critic, poet, nowehit from
Iraq and viaitii^ laccwer in
Arabic Literature at Ber-
keley, in **Art, Dream and
— Arab poeli as
Motivators of Chaimi** to-
morrow. May 4 at f pm in
^mche 3211. There is no
admimion charge, and the
public is invited.
THE COUNCIL ON EDUCA-
TIONAL DEVELOPMENT
(CED) wilt t>e considering course pro-
posals for the Winter Quarter 1977. and is
prepared to sponsor innovative courses
of genuine academic quality whicfi
would be of interest to the campus
community. Such course proposals will
be due in the CEO Office no later than
Monday, IMay 17, 1STS. If you are in-
terested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms In the Office of the Council on
Educational Development, 3121 Murphy
Hall.
wMI
Lad by mmk Aah.
ft:4i.7:1» p.in.
AMan-Ti
N was tha taMh of our
vwt sussaKieo vieM ^^ ant vwwt
can wa find in JodBlam to add
walua and maanini Id our Nvaa
lodB^ A ciaaltaa not a md^^
in aaarcti of Jewish
m
0f Nly^9y and
coursa will M
pnHoaophy Tna
•ciactic yot dl-
not ao muoh tar
of inauiry
God ba daaaad?
For haoinnani as waN aa
arhe have praviously
maia. Teats wlN ba bod) In
andEngliah
Tractate KIddyMn An axamlaa^
dan of TiiiaMilc tsms daaaof
wdh fnarrlapa. Taats wilt ba pi^
vMad cf^lisn, Habraw and Ara-
maic. Lad by
of ifw
In tn
wawManalyaa
aa wall aa study in depth
of fnan and woman).,
and oounOnga
ymn tn dealing with
i ilSH
900 Hi Igard Ava,
3rd fiaor.
U. CA M0?4
p.m
wtQ aoni
ID
iivea wWiintnai
by MbM Chaim
Co dhaenii. OCLA HMai.
Tua^aya. 7 JO-t p m
laaef aw
In^a* and
efdia
mew
or«9inof
Qary
rabbinic
do a.
lAV
At
70
is«Mioaiam foanif ai
I? Lad by Ptaabi
Levy. Cxacutiva Diraetor.
Anoalaa Hillal Council
TuaadBipa. 7 JD-# p.ai.
I
I
5
iaiha
WIN
Of the
The
I)
i.'n tna widely
Of
ef UCLA HMal
Intern at UCLA Hitlal Meafta
Tuaadaya^ 9o^7 p.m.
TMa
fori
of you
intM^omQ taiea ano
in
Imps 0* vie 2nd and SPd
wM ba to
la laoblsidL tad by
Bmrttmr. Diraetor. UCLA Hlllet
7:afr^ p.m.
Viddien. Ladioo.
( by a vartaty ef i
toy Jay
7J0-10P
iiaweaaaf
1291
leTi
You
Ffod.
"T"
law
")
J
I
JkJt^tgUti
PLP urges yes vote on graduate referendum
-../■»
^
by Floyd Banks
iMtor'i naim: Bsnks is a mem-
oir of the Profresfive Labor
Vote for the referendum
ifaifiil racist cutbacks in the
Graduate student elections, May
S and 6t
i$ The outrageous cutback of
£ wkicnion in California arui
•«r around the country, such as the
^ closing oi three campuses of the
Z tuifiorvfree C'ity UniversitY of
I
OPINION
Nm$t York, affect minority, fe-
male and working-dass students,
faculty and campus workers first
and hardest: the non-"elite"
members of the academic cofV>-
munity. The administrators
would like to luff white male
and relatively weU-off students
ar\d faculty into complacency in
the belief that since they're
mernbers of the "elite" group,
and "more qualified," they will
rK>t be affected by the cutbacks.
This was the implication of Gov-
mmm Brown's, statement that he
wai cutting UC enrollment by
3,000 students in 76-77 because
i*^ith specfaf- admissions UC "has
thrown its doors open to stu-
de#its who, at another time,
would rK)t have been academic-
ally qualified/' {LA Tifnes, 1/22/
76).
This piMlicil ppoctffil of
racism, icxiain and eUcism ac-
tively distorts the fifht afaintt
cutbacks in iIm UC system.
There are 600 fewer black stu-
denu in the UC system today
than in 1971 {Daily Califorr^ian,
12/12/75). At UCLA the pro-
portion of black students has
dropped from 6.6 pm cent in
1973 to 4.9 per cent in 1971
(UCLA Planning Office). Chi-
canoi made up ohiy 3 per cam
of the studtm in th^ UC sys-
tem, while representing 16 par
ceru of the California popula-
tion (ChicarK) Task Force Re-
port), and Native Americans lets
than 1 per cent. In winter quar-
ter the UC Police engaged in
extreme racist harassment of
Black students in the investiga-
tion of an alleged rapa White
students are supposed to believe
that they are not and will rK>t be
affected.
But this isn't sot The Regents
are talking about closing Irvine
and Davis Medical schools and
the UCLA Nursing Irhaiit Tf i i
are no new faculty posts, and
thousands of Ph.O.'s are grad-
uating to the unemployment
lines. Diagnostic and clinical
care in Student Health have
been cut, as have financial aid
and work study. Banks are rK>w
refusing loans to students (DB,
2ylt/7i) There's a 47/1
taaching anlttant ratio, meaning
long hours for TA's and fewer
jobs for graduate students. The
Regents are planning to increase
out of state tuition, which will
eliminate many foreign students
and working dais students from
other states. Wonrten Ph.D/s as
well as minorities, are systemat-
ically defiM tenure-track faculty
poits and are placad in tem-
porary lecturer and Acting Asst.
Prof, posts {D§, 4/76). But there
are many white males in these
"revolving door" pom ai well.
The plan is to restore the
University to its previous Hly-
white character. We students
must unite to fight
backs nam, m the ^
dents have been doing. Black,
white, Asian, Native American
and Latin students must get
together nam, and v<ite for tfie
anti-racist referendum in the
Graduate fludont rladJom May
5 and 6 to force the Unlvorilly
to reverse thoM cutbacks.
OK boys, lof • pock up oni pMi
wiftm D»ily Bruin
Daily Bntin
Mc
li
MECHA PRESENTS
V
"Cinco de Mayo Celebration"
May 5th thru May 7th
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS FOR 1976
Cinco de Mayo Activities is as follows:
r"
Wodnotdoy Cioco do Moyo
9-4:00 Displays .
•■»•■. — ■
10-11:00 Botano
^..^-■-^.i^v
•toys
Women's Lounge &
Grand Ballroom
Chicano Studioo Corn
2:00-3:00
Soul Solocho. first Chicor>o
muralist and Roberto Chovoz.
director of the Chicono Stu-
0#^^^^ ^m^S9% «M«^^«
Qrond Batlroom
44-14 :30 Mar iacN Uclotan
11:30-12:00 Carlos Vasquez —
-Onnd
12-1:00
1:20-2:00
2-2 30
2:30-3:00
Editor of Sin Fronteras
Antonio Rodnguoz ^-
National Coordinator of CASA.
Hermjindad Qer>eral do
Trot>oiadoroo
Flofoncio Yoocat —
Indigenous Dancers
La Pona Movil —
Indtgonous Musical Group
Grupo Folklorico
Ballroom-
Grand Ballroom
y
Ofand Ballroom
Grand Ballroom
Grand
Grand
Ballroom
Ballroom
Thurodoy
11:00-11:45 Flor dot Puoblo.muoiGol group
11:45-12:15 Ricordo Sanchez. Playwright,
journalist, and poet
1215-1:00 Rodolfo Corky" Gonzolot.
chairperson ar>d founder of
the Cruoade for Justice; or-
garittiir of the National Chi-
cane Youth Coi
Tootro Pni
Moyt
Grand Ballroom
Grand Ballroom
Thtindoy Die do lo Chlcofio
5:3d-6t)0 pm Javier Pocheco - Poet
6-6:45 pm Olgo Talamania —
Chicar^i Activist
6:45-7:45 pm Panel Discussion:
laabai ChOMi - Community
OrgmnUBT, Member of Prenea
Sambrodora
, Ll2 Caatro — Activist in
Women's Movomafit
Ano HMo Gomez — former
Pfx>feooor tn Chicane Studiao
Dapt of CSUN
Maya
Women's Lounge
Rolfe 1200
Rolfe 1200
1:00-2:X
Grand Ballroom
Qcand Ballroom
Frklay
9-4 00
8:00-9:00
9-10:00
10-1 30
Dance a
Displays
Tootro do lo
• -IP-
Sabor
Sivo
inra
Rolfe 1200
MoyT
Woman's Lourtge
Grond Bollroom
Grond Bollroom
GforKl Bollroom
ALL EVENTSWILL BE FREE
May Day
Letters tcr the Editor
■ J >■ r "^
» « ■
-4
May 1st, Imernational Workers
Day, is oaUbraned by workers
tKroughoCit tHe world Working
peQ0lc_. Iwive been lightmf lor
ireodoiii lor a long time and
May Day is the lime when
lirofkers sum up the struggles of
the past and lay the plans lor
luture battles. These hottlet are
waged against expkMtation, ^n-
efeployment, ihe threat ol an-
other war and rhe general con-
ditions imdef which we must
work and live May Day was
started in this country, as men
arni women struggled lor and
won the g hour day in the mid-
18t9's. Everything workers have
gained such as social security
and unemployment boooaii
have been won by people unit-
ing as one to light and struggle
against the rule of the capitalists
who try to keep them down
Today, millions ol_Americans
are faced with massive unem-'
ployment while those 4eft in the
plants are forced to work faster
and harder and leo§er. Because
of forced overtiifie workers are
fltill struggling for the 8 hour
day Capitalism has become
more exposed as the mam ob-
stacle between the people and
our aspirations for a better
world Everyday the rulers of this
country fry to shih the burden
of their economit crises -omo
the rest of us. Ecoruxnic experts
have redefined the acceptable'
level oi unemployment from 3-4
per cent to S-b per cent and
now some are suggesting that in
the 1960% 10 per cent may be
the acceptable' level But be-
hind ev'ery percentage point
stands a million workers who.are
in rHfed of fobs. But is any level
ot ; iinemploymc^t arceptableV
for the working cWsi the answer^
IS very clear. FIGHT. DON'T
STARVE' - this is one -of the
slogans of rhts year's May Ooy
This slogan puts forward the
fightmg sund of the working
class in the face of massive
unemployment and agatrHt all
attack*.
We are told by the ruling
cUm about "the common in-
terest" but the m^ofiiy of peo-
ple have no comewMi interest
with thn haridM of explbiteps.
And we won't carry their crisis
on our backs. Profit is the only
motive o^ the capiulrst ciass
With all the tccboological and
produaive forces — enough to
provide for all of humanity —
we are still forced to live in the
middle of chaos, war and pov-
erty But with this growing op-
pression, the year 1^6 will aKo
brings a growing workers move
^n^nt against that oppression
Municipal workers from NY to
San Francisco have demonstrat-
ed and struck against massive
firings &md waft beeves Last
August BO.tXK) coal miners ariick
tor 4 weeks fighting the courts,
the bones and soU out union
leadership to defend the right to
strike
The slogan WORKERS UNITE
TO LEAD THE FIGHT AGAINST
ALL OPPRESSION, another slo-
gan of this year's May Day. is
both a staterr>ent and a call to
workers to take up the task of
mobilizing the broadest sections
of the people against all • the
attacks we face. The working
class has the power to unite alt
the struggles of the people into
one fist, one movement directed
against the source of all attacks
— the capitalists.
The "freedom" our rulers talk
about cornes down to the "free-
dom' to sla^ for some boss or
starve., Therefore, workers have
taken up the slogan DOWN
WITH tm SYSTEM OF WAGE
SLAVERY because exploitation »
the heart, the foyodliati on
which all the other abuses of
capitalism are built And it ts at
this Hiloiii of exploitation that
workers are aiming their Eilows.
On May Day the working doit
gathers alt of its aMies together
to help build the fighl ^ptioit
espAoimiofi and ogpieiiieii. In-
creasingly, as siudem* lace xin-
employn>eni after graduation,
education being cut back, mil-
itary recruiters pimomc off our
need for a decent life, and in
general, society decaying around
us. It is becoming clear that the
capitalist system offers us no
future, or life with a purpose
We have every iioewil in link-
ing our fight for what we need
with the fight of the working
class and participating in May
Day The RS6 is putting out a
call for students to come to our
May Day celebration Tues. May
4 Noon in G.S.M, 1337
Indira Sundbcr
Harriet Harmon
Jimmy Jr.
10%
dtecount with coupon
on dry cleoning only
Expires May 7. 1976
10%
dticount with coupon
on dry cleoning only
Expires May 7. 1976
Number 1 Dry Cleaners
1126 Westwood Blvd.
478-6310
next to McDonalds
Complete Dry Cleaning and Laundry
Parking in Rear
On the night of Saturday.
April 24, I ar«d poMibly thou
sandi o^ o#ior who wer%pieMM
at the UCLA Mardi Grat were
subfected tp^ the rude pushing,
shoving, hawking and hand-
grabbing of the " I immy Carter
ior President" troop. Typical of
hardcore politicking, the :§mip
consisting of lack Carter (|immy
Carter's son). Jimmy Carter's
daughter-in-law {\ didn't catch
her name), a staff photographer
and assorted other cronies (poft-
9iMy secret service agents and
press agents )> lor ced their way to
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^/^^
W>o**ti««tt^ •» NV
the front of several
the purpose -of taking
pictures Those waittf^ in line. I
among them, were rudely
shoved out of the wa^ so thot
lack Carter ct al. could be m
freot for the press pictures.
Booths such as "Democratic
Dans" and "All the President's
Frisboos" provided the perfect
letting for some propagandizing.
The piioiopipiher would often
cftmb irvto the boolf» to get a
picture of rf>e ffroup. and thus
would disrupt the on-ooiog
games, lack was alte photo-
graphed shaking harKh with
dooms, students ar%d everything
eke rfiat he could get a hand
on
Although these events are r>ot
in themselves terribly dtsturbiog,
I feel that the implications are.
The m^re fact that Mardi Gras, a
cfiaritable e^f^nt run for the sol^
purpose of raising funds to serni
ur>derpFivileged and diabetic
children to camp, was the victim
of tuch hiaiani political oppor-
tunism ts, to me. indftaiiive of
what one can eKpect from tradi-
tional pNt>littcians like |immy
Carter I was sadder>ed by the
fact that Carter's organization
saw Mardi Cras as the perfea
vehicle for publicity, while at
the same time ^Ihey showed a
total disregard for tf>ose of us
who will be voting in the
primary.
Untir^aturd|[y night t was
undecided ' as to»' which candi-
date would receive my vote in
the Democratic Primary. Now
the choice has been made less
difficult jimmy Carter, as a re-
sult of his campaign's total dis-
regard for the rights of the
individual, has been eliminated
from my list of
I
r
Discrepancy
r
1 was delighted to remd that
two UCLA students had been
chosen as imerns to the library
of Congress.
However. I was c^smayed at
the discrepancy between your
reporter's coverage of
Morales and Mr GHfNth
If Heporter Sutton must tell us I
that Ms. Morales is blonde, age ^
26. he can do rK> less than pro- $
yide us with this most basic *^
mformation about Mr Griffith. "^
We wait with bated breath for 3
Mr Griffith's hair color, age ar^
perhap% his measurements. O^
vKMisly Sunon felt these qual-
ities to be requisites for the
bestowal of this great hor>or
Tak tsk. I thought tfiat the
Daily Bruin had cleaned up Its
cov^ageoi^ women. or>ce and
for aH
Kerry Ann Lofcel
I
FUN PARTY AT
\
^^
C A. II' Uv*^v r i«uc'''">s
tsnei
Sunday, May ^ ^c OC
4:00 - Midnight ^O.ZO
Admission to Disneyland, unlimited use of all
adventures & attractions. FREE PARKING.
TMMi « MM 8«rvtc« C«nl«r, K*rcfcheff 140, whito th«y last
*
CT
— (KLK
BICENTENNIAL
EVENT
Race, Age and Sex:
Revert>erations of the
American Revolution
«
Fifth in the UCLA Bicentennial Lecture SeriM
Winthrop Jordan
Professor of History, Univeristy of California. Barkalay. Profassor Jordan is author of WhNa Ovar
macfc iUmrican AMkitfaa Toward tha Naflro, 1SSS-1t12 and a former Aaaociate Dean of MineHty
Affairs in t^i Graduate Division
May 12 — Final lecture Series: MARY BETH JOROAt^, Aaaociate Profaaaor of llialory,
Cornell UnivwaHy: "THE REVOLUTION AS A WAR OF UBERATION FOR WOMEN-
WEDNESDAY, May S, • PM
No AdmiMlon Charg*
OODD HALL 147
itorer
f
I
%.
i»rl
-f^»--«.
MMMMMi
t — 1*^
»,. _«^
J
f
3
3
The International Student Center
Is Offering
Complimentary Tickets for an all
Jazz Concert
Ella Fitzgerald - Count Basie
Oscar Peterson * |oe Pa»
Tuesday, May 4 - 8:30 FM
Schubert Theatre
Century City
Concert i$ for benefit of Neighbors of Watts
{A FfWfid Im Jiven ihf«c lidien to ISC to dtttribule — Supply Limiicd )
Come for Tickets at
Internjtionai Student Center
1023 Hilgard
477-4587
wm^
0nb0rbainnn0nb i ndex
*-r-
Screenwriter Paul Schroder : of death ond taxis
I
AA^ER-ICAL
1434 Wal«MMd toutevard • Suite •• Lm AngrfH. OMomiafMCM
CallDay orNiyht — (213) 47S-5721
— Council on Programming —
— Presents —
A Turkish Cultural Evening
■I .
.-*- A oelictous Turkish oirmer
— A documentary on Turkey
b^ C. Le Louche
— A seminar:
Turkish Language
Reform and
Person Perception'
by Pr. D. Cucekiglu
UC
.w
— May a/7S
6:30 PM
International Student Center
■ V
iy UMy Slatt
"I've been trying lo teach at UCLA for years — tHty never iei me
in I have this fantasy about going in there ami trying to
make students work. ! never thought I was made I6 work much
—Paul Schradcr in Fitai CombmI
March-April, 1976
Six years ago screenwnter Paul Schrader received hii MA in
film from UCLA. Now riding high on the success of his film
Taxi Driver, he returned this quarter to the Theater Arts
department to teach two courses in film and television v^rtting.
At 29. Schrader is considered one of the new breed of
screenwriters which includes The Sting's David Ward (another
UCLA alumnus) and Anerkan GrafTiti^s Gloria Kat7 and
Willard Huyck. Taxi Driver is his second script to be produced;
his first, Tht Yakuia. was a box office flop for which he received
S300,000 — almost unheard of for a fledgTing writer
Schrader is relucUnt to discuss Taxi Driver - "Lm all ulked
out," he remarks preferring to concentrate on his reason for
being at UCLA. He was asked by Theater Arts department
chairman John Young to temporarily fill the position left vacant
by professor Larry Thor, who died suddenly in March and so
" added "instructor" to the string of credits which includes film
critic, author (TramccnaenUl Style in Film: Oiu, Br^haon,
Dreyer), Amencan Film Institute Fellow and maga/inc editor
(Cinema).
For each class, Schrader had to choose ten students out ol the
many who applied and his method for doing so, he readily
adisits. '^made me a lot of enemies. I had everyone write down
their three most pressing personal problems and I selected thoic
whose problems were the most interesting to mc '*
Most of each three-hour class session is spent discussing an
exercise assigned the previous week The first exercise was to
write film meuphors for the personal problems the students had
listed.
One student, for example, had killed some6ne in a car accident
and was surprised by his reaction: he feh "sad but not grieved.
guilty but not damned." His metaphor was that of a woman who
had had an abortion but developed an obsesiiive concern with the
4leyelopment of the destroyad. child.
Schrader and his students tossed about ideas concerning the
metaphor to see if it worked commercially or nor, to sec "how
far we can go before it falls over deaa," as Schrader said Plots
were suggested, individual scenes added, characters developed. At
one point Schrader'drew a laugh when he warned. "The human
mind IS amazing in is ability to leap for the -cliche. It*s a reflex
acfion You have to woi;k through that in your scripts."
^ _l^^»^t 'ni trying to do in this course is lo forcc^the students lo
^ think like screenwriters/' he explained ^I keep throwing
problems at them that they must solve right away, so that in the
solwim they'll surt to se;e how to write, to think, to orgamze to
sell.-
Schrader continued. "From the metaphor exercise, we've
moved on to the idea of creative theft how to steal from your
environment, how to get the most of the things around you
Much of screenwriting is creative theft it's all on TV every
week It's just fNit together in a new way"
The class will then cover exposition, which he fcdi is "the
bane of all writers Everybody's problem is overwriting You have
to learn how to get right to the point, to be succinct, which
comes from experience and reading other people's work So often
one little line will say more than two paragraphs."
Schrader emphasized the idea of meuphor because for him it
is an integral part of the creative proana. "First you have to have
a theme, something you %dnx to say ... Ln the case of Taxi
Driver, the theme was lotttimess Then you find a a^taphor for
that theme, one that exp^sses it In Taxi Driver, that was the
cabbie, the perfect cxprcssi -n of urban loneiincas. Tbcn you have
no ftnd a plot, which is ilic easiest part of the process You
work through all the permutations until the plot amirairij
reflects the theme and the meuphor You push the theme
through the metaphor and vou should come out with the plot
"Where the writer hurto himselt though," he added, "is when
he never., goes back to the theme, just moves forward from
H to plot. If yop don't go back to the theme, you can't
Schrader: '^The human mind is amazing in its
^ttlky to leap for iie dkfae. Ifs a reflex actiotv
You have to work through it in your scripts.'^
make it richer, add more layers. You have to keep coina back
and forth." r © *
While it is difficult to break into screenwriting (Schrader
estimated that perhaps one tn 500 or 1,000 scripts will become a
movie, but "it realU depends on how good you are if a scnpt
is good It ha& about a one m three chance of being made") he
On Campus On Campus On CampusOn
JMrf!!!5%Wi^ii«^
Tomorrow at noon m
Schoenberg Hall Auditorium
flutist Lenora Warkentin will
pUy the J.S. Bach E minor
Sonata and Cesar Franck's
Sonata in A. Admission is free.
Wednesday night at 8:30 jn
Schoenberg Hall, the Men's
Glee Chib directed by Donn
Wens will give ihc first com-
plete performance in the
United States of Antonm
Dvorak's Drci Slovakische
VoWader There will also be
•omi by early native Ameri-
OMi rnnp mis,'- 20th century
American compaaais, a salute
to American musical theater
arranged by Weiss, and a sees
tion of George Gershwin
songs General admission at
this and all music ^ipartment
evening events is $3, with
UCLA Hwtents fettini in for
SI and other students for i2
TMaAd
in
Wednesday from 5 to 7 pm
the- C«op, Ackerman A
level, the vocal tno Guaranteed
'Chicken will perform Admis-
^ton (ndaally, you just wander
in aad out as you please) is
frae.
The music department's
second free noon concert of
the week is T bursty in
Schoenberg Hall Pianist Joyce
Lind^rff will play chamber
works by Haydn, and Pro-
kaiteff with Susanna Watling
(flute). Barl>ara Goorevitch
(oboe), Robert Zelickman
(cbriner), Chris van Steenber-
fcn (French Horn). Ken Meyer
(hiscpn) aad Mary Ann Ta-
mre (oeM.
The theater avis- depart-
ment's prodttctton of West
Side Stori opens Thursday
ffAght in MacGowan Hall All
shows are nominally sold out.
thoygh It might be possibkp to
ifeels it IS the easiest way to get into the film industry because
2^7 ? ?u *PP''^'V'*'^*^:P involved if you have it and ihcy
want II, they II take it
To novice writers, he adv»ed. "Reach deep into yoiirselt, pull
out something unique and meaningful to you, then try to uke
n ^Z ^^^^ of,«»« •nd see it in the context of cpmmerctal
mm how can I transform this raw meat uuo somcthma a
million people waul to ice?
Once the script is written, there is the matter of getting it sold
which involves the proce« of moving up Ipom the industry's
lower echelons to the people in power Schrader calls the film
business a social industry About 200 people make all the
decisions about movies Then there are 1.000 people who act as
intermediaries and then another 1,000-2.000 further down the
line.
^iu}^ y®**''^ J"** itartinf out there's no way vou'll get to tboM
200 right away, so over the years as you stay in the industry or
hang around which is a lot of what UCLA is about ^ you
^art io meet jnore and more people \ was here foitr or fiw years
before I met anyone," he added * """
In Schrader's case, he was able to pet a job on the LA Free
Press through a UCLA professor, which in turn enabled him to
meei a "collecter of ulent" who introduced him to a hterarv
sgcm ^
He commented. "Maybe it's good for a newcomer not to meet
the important people right away, because you won't know how to
talk to them if you meet them too early Thev won't respect you
because you're not aware of how the film industry functions,"
Schrader felt that it was more difficult to break into television
because "it's more of a closed community The film industry is
very open, daring, willing to tate a chance and therelore 4^'*
always free to bring in someone new. but TV isn't" . .--{
»J^ "^^^ control rhc writer has over the finished movie
'^depends on who you're involved with, how muchthey respect-
you and your ideas and how talented they are." Schrader
explained. 'Sometimes a movie may be very different from what
you planned simply because the people involved are more Ul-
ented than you are and they have better ideas The movie will be
better than you hoped, in which case." he smiles, "you will chiim
that li was all yours Sometimes it goes just the opposite way
"The ideaj situation is one Hke Taxi Dri%ar. where all the needs
meet and everyone warns to oMike the same movie." he fimshed.
In the future. Schrader would like to teach one class every
other quarter. He is currently work mg cm four projects, including
a film about Hank Williarns which he hopes to direct Looking
ahead to next year's Academy Awards. Schrader said he'd be
surprised if Taxi DrhraiL receives any — except lor music securing
because '•the film's too damn eontroversial, too hot You
don't make a picture like this expecting to get nominated this
IS not your 'How to Wm Friends and Influence People' kind of
script."
How docs It feel, knowing that m/Hk Taxi Bri\tf he has
become a successful screenwriter^
Schrader considers a. few seconds, then replies. "It leels very
good. I feel like a runner in a long race who's hit his stride I feel
absolutely in condition, creatively and artistically — I'm
moving. Tm working hard and getting soma^tace It's the greater
feehng in the world because the juices are working and you know
your work is coming to something.
Feeling this way means more than money w praise can ever
mean That's the greatest reward of success, knowing that you
have a place and that your work means something"
•t=».
Review LA. Philharmonic
Zubin Mehu. the Los Aofdes Philharmonic. L.A. Matter and
Collegiate Chorales, Irvine Master Chorale. LA. Chamber
Singers. Metropolitan Festival Singiiii. California Boy Choir and
eight vocal soloisu gave an impressive perioammBt of Guilav
Mahler's Eighth Symphony Thursday niffat - wtikfi isn't taying
very much Just getting 450 ptofk m the Chandler Pavihon
itafe ig an impressive sight.
The symphony is the uhimate in Rofnamic bigness and the last
great eruption of symphomc scope. Mahler sat the elevcath-
century hymn "Veni Cfestor Spiritui** in hu fnif ipovcmciit and
the final scene of. Goethe's Fault, in which the sinner is redeemed
by love^ into a massive orclMttral and choral celebration of
universal optittism After this *^ymphony of a Thouaai^**
symphonies ceased to be the predomnant mutical form.
Romamiriim died as the prtoakut muiical expiWMon.
A peffomianoe of the fifaatic E^glhth is a fim§m event, and
ssaBOB"COBGiBBH^g coBccn wBs nocoHHnmafl ay bmicb ansylioo*
And perlMiM At moat can be mad 'm tet it nas tawHi Hk effort.
The perfnrwnrf was far from perfact . . Tkt bemaiamm of
both ■iniifirli wmt maned by lack of purpose and
I tiikfi wiin 1 mw luri
More showtime Don't plan
an evening aiiund a.
the instrument to a hock-row vinliniil who dida*t ka(pm kam to
haadk a plactrum The dioHUKt soffefod frmm a
lack ei mfceuim m the inunrl at the etectreaic oifan.
But the overall effect snm glorious, with fciitita puli
everything together with amaziMk^ g
soloists (esptrmBy leaor Seth McCoy
eontrmuting lit
BBQ
Thi% 1% the place for Rib Lover%f
fly for the B#sf Ribs weve tried m LA
He*"«ld E««rnin»r
COMPLETE DINNERS
I Casual Dining ♦^<»'«*2.TS
NARKY'S OPWM PIT BBQ
1434 N CKfSCENT HflOHTS 01 SUNSfT STaiT
10 Minutes Uown Sunset Blvd to
^ louf el Conyon Turn Wight . And >^ou lO Thara
h
¥
Spanish Speaking Mental Health
Research Center
Colloquium Series
hresents
IGNACIO AGUILAR
DlTKior, Xip«-Toiac Clinics da
M^ropol^n State
Saluda Manul
Therapy Through a Death Rituar
Dale: Monday — May 3, 1976
Time: 2:00 pm
Place: 313 Kintey HaS
. POTPOUnRI
THE International reetauiumt -
'029 Hpippra, Wootwood, Ph.. RJI^-33S4
you to try ira tPfllNO OMIAIITIil MENU
mm
i
u
mn
CIHcMSfl
Kotett
(Iran)
4
)
(IfSfl)
i«stia
(CUtss)
|1A).
$M,
LunctiA Olnnarlnahi^ toup or
Dnnk |l.2i. tintmj Mwh. $lilO Chefs
roncMM eNTWTAwmtwT,
on nun rm-1%
-WE ARE OPEN TO THE PUSUC
INTERNATIONAL MEANS AMERICAN. TOOl
snsafln
\
I
5 <
BRUINS GIVE
BLOOD!
Tenants ...
FiLMt
Ail with Itiglith Subtitles
WCO APHIL 2t-«IAY 4
KANCHANJUHGHA .
T>lg LONELY WIPE
^f^ MON. MAY S
^K/^^ TUES MAY 4
MERALTA THEATRE
M32 Cul««r •!««.
C%
(
^<
HU^»;i ^4^, Di^«4i^
1M0r« human and alive than tha Royaf ShalcMpMra Company"
XT f tnaft act it in fiyinttMiaipaara hack to tha paopia"
^*r"- 4 -COLLmBUS DiS^ATCH,
Tuesday - May 4
Noontime - FREE
UCLA Sculpture Garden
Bring Your Lunch & Join in the Fun
tCA
Camiiiis events
and diftcuttiofi.
1337
•m. tUdt %hom imik
tomorrow GSM
m can Ml^ you tMd
«Mit
^ on mo Miiil ViiM
HH out a card mi iio
Id »0M ^
boHoMiOa^fJIpa.
today-May 7 2fid lovoi Acfcormaii. 11 am
3J0 am. today-May 6. 9 aaMwon May 7
ichotnborg quad and 11 am -3 30 pm
M4ay-May ? Modicat Cantar Studant
LiiHiia Call a2S-t4l4 tor an upaMaMMM
or MfR m m liMo on trum WiNi. diam
ayad or laaPii iMikway
>^raiaali lalHil »o Liariry taioact.
information an froparation admittion
oyrrlculum and iolia. 2 pm. tomorrow.
tomorrow Kmaoy M2
^faPOT M Ma Mm Ml Ml M
(MMIn. • pm. May 5 RoNi 12M
^•Mi ana iMMn. a wofUMp. S-7 pai.
May 5 Womon's aoaource CoMar Kinaoy
110
-4MI fviMaaa la Ma UMi V5 pai. May
& iMMaa 2m.
7 pat May ft.
330
Mpi LJi«M|B CMH maoM 34 p«.
ICndia 2f7l arul 939-11 am.
Ttiursdayt.
.■■^■. m araaiiinaton applicationt ara now
avatlaMa in KanAhoff 306 Deadline is May
12 ^
iia draw m Karddioff tOO tor your maM^
apPipMiaaM. law. daM and court If taapa
«• any problomi caU Bart at 479491
KaroMiafr dN
-Taaaaa Mil groups wM moot ^2 p^
today 10-11 am May 5. 2-3 pm. Ilif^t and
9-10 am May 7 Matti JeiiiBi 4223 CdM
KM031
KMoay 190
boing offorod toy Bia Clunaai Amorican
Citizons Alliapvi FaaaiMMa. IMMd to
aaidaaM o» .CHinaaa ancaatry who are
proaontly sophomores at a recognizod
college or yaMMraity m the Los An^olos
area For anapptication wnte Chinaaa
Amtrican Alhan Lodge, 415 Bamboo
Lana. Lot Annalie 90012 or contact the
Scholorship office Murphy A-129
— HBaaoMpa. information and
on extramural funding tor graduate sti
and paaMoctorals are availabia in Iha
Fellowthips and Aasittantship Section
Murphy .1229 _ ^ ^_
trained interns will help you find funding
for your idoas Open daily 9 am-4 pm
Kertichoff 401
and local volunteer aoaNions are availat>le
now iirayoh EXPO Ackerman A123 or caU
92S4931
— CiHaBHr fraMMMa. lom 0€CA at a
eoaaumer investigator Visit Kerckhotf 311
or call 925-2920 Voluntop/t are. 4lto
niaidd tar anvironmontai Md taad pro;
pcti
now available for^ Iwa yaar larm with UC
Studant Lobby m Sacrasianto which pays
S79050 a month RaaMiaaiants include
bamg a recant UC graiaaM and imeresi m
aaiicational Jaauaa Pick up appiicatron in
Kerckhoff 399 Doadkne is May 7 or call
rtMB
will be shown 5 pm
MMmlz 1499 Free
H aow CMaa. 1 30 pm tomor
row. Mens Gym 201
OMaaaii Endi. directed by
and starrif>g Dana Andrawa
5 pm. May 5 Melnitj
1499
G9KlfT9
tail MartMaia FMMi will piwaai a
cancan with harpsichord and piano, naon
taaMfiaw Schoanbarg auditorium Free
— MU 9Mi'a OMi mik will presom ru
annual hama caneart. 930 pm May 5.
auditorium Free tor UCLA
for othor taiaMM. tKuity.
a 3 ay dan group
wilt smg from folk -rock to bbp. S-7 pm
May 5. Coop Frao
■"■aBaaiaBva h raH
NIstery 11. by Howard Feldman record
music lactyrar. 7-10 pm.
ani Daana of Students Office of
LMe and tha dlraclor of the Studaal Caun-
aahng Cantor 9:49 pai. lontaM. Oyhalra
Firaaida Lounaa tomorrow SprOul mam
taanfa May S Hanhay kving^oom May
9. Nadrick Rraaide taaafa. May 10 «oaor
Finaida tounga and noon May 19 Kerck-
hoff 490 _
pm today Haines 304
—ftaadaBnl VaaL noon- 1 3D pm today 4-
530 pm May 5 and 2-330 pm May 9
Ackerman 2409 Suffaalad daoation $1
BoHa CbTChrlttian sorority
'tar Bible Study 6X pm. tonight
call 47SJ9B9 or 477 •6K7 for more informa-
tion
— Fiaaaa Caavertattoo araap. 7 99 pm
evory Wadnaaday international Student
Canter
conducM a cdMoa hour 3-4 pm. evory
Wadndaday Baollar 4405
-Ilt9 RyMg Qui, is going to Moab Utah
for a Colorado raft trip May 21-23 limitad
to 14 people Find out more 7-9 pm
tonight Kerckhoff 400
OaiBwa CaneaMMlHi Braap. 7^ ^n^
every Tuesday International Student
Center ■■■^■
ing 4X pm May 5 Acfcarman 2412
UB9
Taaiyi
Kung Fu 3304 pm Mac B 146 Kendo
5-7 pm Womons Gym 200 Shooting /Pistol
naon-1 pm Rtflo Mange Galaxy 4-10 pm
AU24b9 Flying 7 9 pm KH 400 Garden
every afternoon Horticulture Gordons.
Wrestling 3-5 pm Mac B 116
TaaadB|f
. Lacrosse 3 30-6 pm FiaM 7. Karate 5-7
pm ihtmm Gym 200 Shaat/Trap noon 1
pm Mant Gym 11 G. Kanao. 530-6 30 pm
Mac 6 146. Hunting noon-1 pm Mans Gym
182: Jyao. 2-4 pm Mac B 146 Aikido 7-9
pm Mac B 119; Chaoa, 9-10: Mina Gym
122: Social Danet 74 pm. Oykflira Mac
Rm Saamg. 7-9 pm AU 3S94 Mounuin
noon Moore Lawn
fiahino »4 pm. AU 2412 Hatha Yap. 5-
915 pm Wamana Gym 200 Team Hand-
ball 8 1S-8 Dm Romans Gvm 390 mdaar
ball 6154 pm \aomons Gym
Soccer. 9-10 pm Womens Gym
2-4 pm. Mk B 149: Waiar Stti 44pm AU
3664 Wraatling 3-5 pm Mac B 116 Con-
servation — Lecture Sanaa, noon Bunaha
A 1C3 Go 3-7 pm. Math SoaaoM 915 A
Lacroaaa. 3J94 pm Field 7 Air Mfia
Pistol 3-5 pm R.fle Range Womens
KaraM 54 pm Womons Gym 200 Aidia.
74 aai. Mac B 116 Kerpb &3B4mpai
Medium Pizza
with any Large
call
475-6464
thru Ml
i
■J
P«i9 7)
HI UtrckhoM 400. The
ly, I4ay 3 mtmibag will
be in Dylutra HalTa Ftrcaide
LMMift. Tueaday'9 — atin ^i^l
be HI SproMi fUTs Main
Louofc, Wedaeaday*! in iIk
Herahey Hall
'9 at the Ftrcsude
Louoft ia Hadhck Hall. In
aiditkm, Umbc will be a hmsI-
ii^ m MaHiay May 10 m
Rieber HalTi Fii
Reps a a
ladftwPataS)
iaio a one-way atreet
96 tlMt CHfi could park on the
A gentor on tlie **fTve-year
plan,** Jay Buody would kkc 10
coctiaMf and expand prognuBa
preaently run by the feneral
fepretenutive, auch ai the Out-
icach program and the fresh-
man intern program.
The director of the Coop
Schea to the Cuhural Affairs
Commiaaioa, Bundy wants %o
help 9ladents with ideas but
not Toiifricdfr of Kerckhoff
llaM to got involved in student
Planning to implement open
fonuBS for iaaoaa anch aa park-
ing, hbuaiMi nad food, [>iaBa
Sheph^ 19 a sophomore with
inyobMBeat in a **numher of
cluba and organizations on
campus.**
With this **wide variety of
experience with which I can
relate lo stndent pfoblema,*^
Shepherd feels qualified to act
aa a **link between SLC and
the ftnerfl community."
Aaaialant to SLCs First
Vice-president for special wo-
men*s prognaa, mrnd oQoe a
UCLA cheerleader, Anita R
LeVeau2 feels her qualifica-
tioas are juatified by having
■Mt *^ H»ny people on cam-
Welfare . . .
A freshman, Selter haa'apent
tiK
sisiant 'Commissioner ci Stu-
dent Welfare. He feeb that this
experience will be beneficial if
he gets elected because, **I
won*t have to run around."
His ^constituency plan is
what Sekcr feels studenu are
looking for. Seher would alao
UK to aae iigiltiiiH of 91k
want aia in the Daiiy Bndn.
saying that students should not
be subjected to **fraudiiieAt
such as the In-
terest Matching Program iSd
Project Outreach should be
ohaw^ad into the Student Wel-
fare Commi99ioo^ accordii^ to
**My hoaoo bsiwaiH
and
ition will be the
(of the cnndi-
\)r Scteer w^.
The other two candidatea,
Paul Oraen and Jonathan
Lepp, were not available for
Drugs . . .
It the lJniversity*s
process and constraint. Who
knows, maybe it will do bet-
lerT*
Psychologist Michael Peck
of the local Suicide Prevention
Center took a dimmer view of
the portion of the profimm to
be under DeAngehs* control **l
don*t see how it t> possible.** he
Israel Independence Day
May 5 - Wednesday
•:15 A.M. — MINYAN
at Homo of Rabbi David Berner
428 Veteran Averuje TefHUt Void Ha-Atzmaut
10 A.M. — At Royce Quad
H^^ will be displays arKi tables with information o^ interest on
Ivael tourism and education
Noon — Cotne Join Us
At Schoenberg for Israeli Music, Dancing, i^f\6 FoMei
5:30 P.M. — Israel Independence Day Dinner
At URC, 900 Hilgard $1 50 Donation Please call 474-1531 for
reservations
B:M P.M. Israel iBidependence Celebration
At the UCLAH^ckerman Union
Yoel Dan
Tel Aviv Band
»
Belly Dancer
Israeli Dancing
Shirat Hayam Chorus
And more . . .
by unJ m cooperation with Student Zionist Aiiiahce ^nd Hillel
iii
m
\
x
4
TAA/O ROUND TRIP
SIGN-UP WHEN YOU
ACKERMAN UNION .%•* nr. imh«, ■-' »tm
MEDICAL CENTER . ft«««.t i«Mg« . «-r im:m
SCHOENBERG QUAD ..«..»..>>. >..,
APPtlMTHEIilS CM.I tlS 14M
tPfiSMU IV STVMIT LECiiUTIVC Mtldl
HMIIT WElfilC CMMISSMN
DONATE
A A ^Itzo ^slooo
mmm
1
TFT
Travel to Pomona today
Ba^eballers shaky
By Marc
DB SporU Wrilw
DATSUN
''Acres of Datsuns
Student, faculty, and alumni
fleet discounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
• 684-1133 •
ft
I
i
z
Newlow PSA nigyit Ceue
ttLSO Id the San RBiidsco
BayAiea*-**-*"-*-^
$l7iliiaji727iBl«.
When the moon oomet u^ PSA fares go down. And
GniuungtiiRii bcoonie Baia^ BiRttiiighdy
^
Fhxn L.A. to Sm Arandaoo. OaidaMl.
Or HoUywood-Burbank to
Cai your campus rep. Say you
the nnm^ Siady Xodga 47»-l8i«
S.F oSSSHi
Lmki^iu'
■£SS&
Mo».dM
SiStpw
TlMo.«S*t.
fJSpn
Ssiftpn
Mm.Sm
tiM».as«.
Thiaa,
•
V
ta.
Pilk^MS jwiaWL ^
With just fMae fMBM reiMiinifif oa tlwir
regular sowoo wckeink, it woiiid aeefii to be a
bmA time for the Bruin pitchers to go into a
slump.
However, as UCLA travels to.Cal Poly
Pomona today for a 2:30 pm contest, it will be
trying to steady itself on the mound after the
events of last week, one which saw the Brums
split four garnet whtk fiviag up 21 runs.
Senior Curt Petenoa wm the only pitcher to
turn on an outstaaiiitg performance as he
totally controlled Pomoaa, 9-2, on Tuesday
night. Only a two run homer with two out in
the nithnning marred a performance in which
he allowed eight hits and three walks while
striking out II.
However, none of the three regular Bnttn
starting pitchers helped their statistics during
the week, including Ed Cowan. The tall right
hander increased his record to 8-2 by defeating
"UC Irvine, 11-7 on Friday afternoon in
Sawtelle field, but allowed all seven runs in just
six innings.
Floyd' Chiffer pitched three scoreless innings
for the save Respite yielding four hits and
walking two Anteaters.
The win brought the Bruins* season record to
X>-21 and their two Mason old versus Irvine to
5-1. When head coach Gary Adams was al
Irvine, the Bruins heat UCI just twice in 1 1
tries but things have turned around since
Adaa» CHK to Westwood.
Irvine sonad fkit wktn Alan Belasco, the
first hatter of the game« hamered to left. It was
the third time over two yaars that !rvine*s first
batter at Sawtelle homered and it turned out to
''WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?
Psahns 2 and Acta 4:25
ie the third time the Anteaters lost the
The Bruins tied it up in the first when Dave
Baker countered with his fifth homer of the
^pear, the first of three hiu he would collect.
UCLA went ahead for good in the fifth,
bieaking a 3-3 tic oa Brum Visellis RBI stagle
with the bases l^pded The BruinS appeared to
ice the game in the following inning.
Pinch hitter Tom Spillane walked, stole
second and scored on a double by center fielder
Dave Pcnniall. He moved to third oo a MQSle
by Bobby Dallas and scored on Baiter's stafk.
Dallas, meanwhile, was thrown out trying to
move to third.
First baseman K.en Gaylord followed wuh his
eighth home run of the season and the Bruins
were cruising. 8-4.
However, Irvine scored four times in the
seventh, on a solo homer by Steve Carpenter
an a three run blast by John Espy, before the
Bruins could get an out Chiffer replaced
Cowan and held the slim lead despite giving up.
a walk and a double.
The Bruins scored their fiaal nms in the
seventh as shortstop Raymond Townsend
singled for the third time and reserved catcher
Mobil Cox followed with his third home run of
the season.
The Bruins added one more when PenrnaR
singled, stole second (his 27th) and scored on a
single by Dallas. PennialPs stolen base toul is
jut two off tlK school record set by Venoy
Garrison last year while his 50 runs scored are
just three less than the school standard taa^
scored by Bob Adams in 1972.
Baker and Townsend each had three of the
Brums* 16 hits while Penniali, Dallas. Gaylord
and designated hitter Jerry Waters each had
two. •
Scatesmen win
another title . .
:
't< >-*■-<--.—;«>■..-■
-W
>
. .*'.
i.
-
Of Mmc "AND THE LOUD
s^AKi usrro isoaca aAYMQ, wawBAi tni aon of BLiAzm.
THE aON OF AAMON THE PflliaT HATN TUNMB AafAY IfV
waATN Faoai tnc CHajMM of mrasl aaata ni wAa
ZSALOUa FOa MY SAKI aaKMO TNm THATI COfiaUMIC TNtM
HOT mm JEALOUiY , VMaMFOK SAY aaHOLO . I Ol VC MMTO
HMi MY COVfMANT OF FfACt: AND HI aHALL HAVE rr, AND Hia
EEEO AFTEM NEE, BVm TNE COVEMAMT OF AM EV0ILAaT»iQ
FfHEaTHOOO. BKAUaS HE WAB ZEALOUE FOa HIS OOO. AND
F. O. BOX 40i. DECATUa, OA
Id **wlial It wfEMnr Have you
about *^AOINQ FHEaEAg" since Eils
lo yotfl Has tt cauaea yeu te 0m any
as wel as aiet of year
aieClHircliofQod.
8c27.g0.
■^ff
UCLA
DRIVE
MAV 3-7_
• «
MiEIMAI HIM.SECMt IIWEL Bf Ifl'M
tCIMMEM tIM.TEMT Hnil S:M F t-12
HEMUl CERTEI STttEiT IMMC HF n-3:M
by Student L*gtslattv« CouncM
a»fls. m US<-
linued from Page 20)
nyitch. but had no alibis. "The
difference was that we did not
^ss and execute well, but
UCLA did.*' said Dodd "We
had our chances to wia the
first gaine, but gave it away**
Bekins was hoping that the
tradition of his family would
help give Pepperdine the title.
His brother John sparked
4JCLA to MTAA mks m 1973
and 1974 and his other brother
Milo ^yed on the San Diega
State championship team of
1973 "The first game was the
difference in the nrutch I think
that if we would hav<^ won the
first game, then we could have
won the match in three straight
gaaMs.** said Bekins
Surprtic^ MVP
Mica was ^urpriyed when he
was announced as MVP, but
his peformance told the stary.'
He Mocked 13 balls for either
points or side-outs. put spikes
away when Pepperdine was
beginning to gain momentum
and most of all. took charge at
the end of the first gaaie.
"We are not going to be
beaten when we play inleiMe.
The only two times I have seta
us play with real imesity
throughout a match have been
the NCAA finals last year
afiast Santa Barbara and to>
night EfMnst Pepperdine." said
Mica "Wmning this year is
not as satisfying as last year.
as the underdog "
Olbright had ain outsunding
setting and httttng Eiatch m hnr
first NCAA fmals. -*! tl
we laid tkt better players
It showed," said Olbright "The
down to the one
sttuatioas aad we
proved that we were stronger."
VoBrybaM haaMiv
The volleyball team has won
the first NCAA championship
of the 1975-76 scataa far
UCLA and now maybe tiK
tinK has finally ooaie for Brum
Athletic Diraolar J D Morgan
to put voBtyhaB haaacrs up in
Pauley PavHiaa to syaihaiwe
tae SIX >!. AA iitJes
Netters have theiTstreak^shattered byLUSCl
By Hunter Ka|ilan
DB S^orU Wfiiar
llaay coUegiate tennis fol-
lowers who didn't get the
chance to see the I'CLA-USC
tennis match last Friday after-
noon probably thought there
was a misprint to their. Satur-
day mornjog newspapers nhcn
they read the headftr^ "» SC
Ends UCLA's Tennis :>uc;uk"
The newspapers printed cor-
L :)c stunned the nation's
number one ranked UCLA
Bruins, 5-4 Friday at USCs
David X Marks Stadium be-
fore over 2,000 fans to end
UCLA's longest winning streak
ever at 36 consecutive dual
nuitches spanning the last two
seasons
The enure afternoon's agea-
da lasted over six hours.
The Bruins, who captured 19
consecutive matches last year
enroute to the national
championship, brought an un-
blemished 17-0 mark to the
DSC camptM Fridary
But. . USO number one
doubles team of sophomores
Bruce Manson and Chris
Lewis upset UCLA's duo of
Peter Fleming and Briaa
Icacher. 7-5. 7-5 to pave the
the way for the upset bv the
Irojans. who rank third in the
aation.
The Bruins swept ihc top
three singles matches, high-
lighted by a superb straight -set
Kleming trouncing o( the high-
ly rated Manson. who has
defeated every top rated col-
legian on the west coast with
the exception of the Bruin ace
But use outlasted the Bruins
in the third through six singles
matches and took two ot the
three doubles contests
Fleming ran his 1976 match
record to a phenomenal 16-0.
(124) 4Jd dual-match competi-
tion), with a 6-0. 6-3. triumph
over Manson. a 1975 Pan
American Games doubles goki
Intramurals
Men
Signups and weigh-ins for
men's wresilmg will . be held
tram 1-5 p m in MG 100
today. The tournament will
run from May 4-6 evenings in
MAC B and Pauley NCAA
weight classificauons apply
The men*s swim meet for
fraternity, dormitory and inde-
pendents will be held on Mon-
day. May 10 Sign up at 2 pm
at the Rec Center on the day
of the meef Mcn\ badminton
sign ups are being taken in
MG-II8 now through May 6
There will be singles and
douMrs.' A reminder that thtr
men*s golf tourney wiM he held
this Friday. F'or volleyball
doubles, all "A" teams report
to Paulev Pavilion Tuesdav.
May 4 at 3 pm All ^B" Sl ^C"
teams report to play m Pauley
Pvilioa Moaday. today at ^
pm
Women
The hpt, da> to sign up for
volleyhaft doubles is this Fri-
day, May 7. Plav will Bcgia
Taniiy. May II. The entries
for the fsaasen's swim meet are
due Tacsday. May 1 1 This
will be a one day meet on May
12 from 3-5 in the Rec Center
Pool.
Coid
There will be coed swim
rck^s held in conjunction with
the men's aad women's swim-
ming fmals. It is ^ oar da\
event held Wedniiday. M
from 3-5 pm m the Rec Center
PaaL Tik: entries are due Ma>
lu fdf mt fWB BKii mo uiiiniii
tea
medahst and defending NCAA
doubles titlist with fonaer
teamaawc Butch Walu
"Peter (l^leming) is playing
UCLA*s highly su. tul
caadt Glenn Bassctt. said he
believed the Bruins shoaied a
lot of couraat in the doubles
1)
2)
Peter Mcmmg (LCLA) def Bruce Measnii (ISC), 6-0. 6-3
Bruin Icacher (UCLA) dcfC'hris Lewis (USC). 3-6, 7^, 6-3
^1 herdi laygan (UCLA) def Mike Newberrv. (VSC) 2-6 6!
6-3
4) Andy Lucchesi (USC) def Bi . Nichols ( 1(1 AK 6-2, 5-7, 6-
5)Bu// Strode (ISC) defv John Austin (UCLA) 1-6, 7-6, 6-2
6) Hans GiWemcisier ( USC) def. Toay Graham (UCLA). 7-6. 6-2
1) Maasoa-Lewis tUSC) del Fleming- leather (UCLA) 7-5, 7-5
2) Newberry-Lucchesi (USC) def Tay«n-N,chol» (UCI A) 6-3, 2-
6. 7^ '^
3) Austin-Graham (UCLA) def Sirode-Oildemcister (USC), 6-4,
>*. 7-5
Score: USC W. UCLA 4
tremendous tennis wrth uhi-
matc concentration on every
poim," said the 5-8 lefty Man-
son, who plays with a quick,
wrist a^ion style similar to
Rod Laver.
Although FknFHnmg played
extremely v^ell in singles, he
didn't leave Mar)ts Stadium in
a happy manner Alter losing
for the first time this season in
doubles with teammate
Teacher in dual match action.
Fleming smashed his ri»cket
against the head umpire*s stand
in frustration.
"We dumped m doubles and
that cos! us the match." he
Sjlld
**lf f lai SIX rsM^iets with
me. f mav have broken all
SIX." Fleming added B> losing
in first doubles. UCLA had to
win both of the remaining
douKlc^ matches still in pro-
gress for a victory.
which went against as,** said
the Bruin eqach "*! tiMiifht we
had It won lor a while near the
end
**l am VI rited la
have our winning streak ended
in the last dual match ot ihc
seaeaa apdnst USC.>ut I have
to gLve the Trojaas credit
They tied us for the team
championship at Ofai hist week
and beat us today.
*X>iai is a tournament played
ia a similar manner to the
NCAA championships The
slight difference is that a team
can enter only four singles
players and two doubles teams
in the NCAA's where at Ojai,
a team is allowed six singles
entries and three doubles
**USCs success agaiast us at
Ojai and today in the dual
match defmiteK makes it a
strong challenger for the
NCAA team championship."
said Bassett, whose lifetime
coaching record asinst USC is
VACANGIES
lUDICIAL REVIEW COMMITTEE, an advisory body charged with
providing a continuing review of campus regulations and judicial systems,
is seeking undergraduate and graduate students to fill three vacant
student representative positions beginning Fall ijuarter . This is a stipended
position, which involves active participation in weekly commiliee
meetings and research task teams.
We're looking for people with exceptional verbal, anafytic and writing
skills. Experience is not necessary; the initiative and desire to offer student
input at a high administrative tawd is essential.
For further informaiton contact the University Policies Commission
Office tftZS-TSOS), Royce 126, for details. Deadline for receipt of resume is
friday. May 7. „ ^
matches, playing with a great
deal oi pressure away from
home before a highly partisan
crowd.
"We came back in the third
final sets in the second
third doubles matches
now 16^12 The 1 ro>ans hold a
slim 52-4V lead m the
dating back to If2l
!tt praifead Ttaii
George Toky lor preparing hn
laaai for Friday's laaici. **l
think eaach Toley has daae a
fine job with tha year's USC
iMai after laeing his number
player. Butch Wahs. for
;mic reaeais. I hey wouid
have waBy iaai tough with
Walts this year."
Toley has accomplished
nearly everything possible dur-
ing his 22 year coaching career
at USC. winning nine NCAA
iMMpi daiaipiaaships while
finishing runner-up on seven
aecasions
^'The win today was oae of
my most satisfying achieve-
menu," said the affable Troian
coach. "I felt we could pull it
off if we could get a split in
the singles asMches becaBK of
our strong doubles teaav and
because the crowd would he
pulhng for us with the match
on Hk line *
i
r
We are a group of fnen interosted In forming a
Men's Consciousness Raising Group. We
would like to get together with other men who
are interested In beginning a group engaged in
exploring our male role.
We will meet May 6 at 7:30 pm at 190 klnsey.
We are working with the cooperation of the
U.C.L.A. Women's Resource Center. Call the
Women's Center if you have questions at
825-3945.
e Center For 'Atro-Americ dn Sluciies
"resents ^^-
ax Pau
Dependency Theory anc/
The Cciriijhedn Crt^c
Onon cincl Free* to the Public
CLASSIFIED
itmm
m^cm-
A#»>rf«t*tif •#•«• will fiol k«
MafliM* In ttw Oatty ■mm lo
«!!• tflscrlnilfiaUt on th« basit of
•Aooolry. color, iwllonol orlf In, raco,
oor tfio ASUCLA Cofnniuntcotlont
viooo o^ortlooi Of o^voritMri ropro-
lo this lotuo Any ^n^n hm-
Miol on oJvortlooMMnt in IMo
irlmliiotloo ototo^ »ior«tnjho«iM
in fvnlNif to
»r. UCLA Dolly
112
i.Callfornlol
^oblom*. coll: UCLA Nouslnfl
Offlco. (21S) •2S-4491: Woololtfo Foir
JS2SL
^ JHH N PLAT SMOPb f-UH
AN PtD«C ')«''
rrMAN 'N*^.' Wr- -v.
y Sunday
ASUCLA Tmiwl
i^fvtet Is going to
RumIo!
UCLA •tudoflti. faculty and
staff are oligibla to travel
to Laningrad. Moscow. Kiav.
YalU, Tbilisi k Viadimar.
July 14 - Aug 5 for $749 00
alMncluaivo from London
Call 625-1221 or come to
A la«al, Ackarman Mondays-
Fridays 6:00^:00
»
II M
a t-posl
laa.|MBt
k of 74lp Oh
•ttplMTlt
tfspoaM faiMali
lottiaAauCLA
lt-7:M( F TM-
PMPaoi- V
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dUiiirwiii. 9fmm-rkTm
t:»;Sl»4
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'IVIt ay a«M»oc. loctwror.
ZIMA on AMD
foken now J
^or Groduof ton
Cailf fm ■■■sliimisiif f
for
iorsalo
WHAT DOES A BflUfN
BEAR WEAR TO CLASS?
UCLA t-thirtt (hundreds of
stylos in the ASUCLA Stu-
dents' Store). custom-inr»-
printed t-shirts. football
joi^soyif siveotshlfts, hooded
sweatshirts, jackets, hats,
socks, and cariies a UCLA
gym t>ag or bike bag.
t». ColOoi«.
477 -onj.
OSL WATIASIO From* fnotfroo*
Moot, ^y wHIl •mall laak $•• tf i
*••• f «a M a»
Cacollont condition |27f .00
4a7-7S7t ^,^ ^ ,.
STOVt.
lao
»S 'cSiTlti-on* atlar i.
(10 m r}
TENfMS
iia. Bool
Ca« J.S
•7
oaars)
SIZE Maltroaa. lap of
MMte
CUSTOM mtu far
(MlioMr).
(IS •• 7)
tHO. 474-47ii.
(ISM 4)
lali ol Hni. CaN •74-a2f 3.
CoNna to ttia Confoctlont
Dapartmont of tha ASUCLA
Stutfanis' Slora for your
MMIiar's Day cards and giftal
tela of nkcm proaonts. In-
cluding cawdtas. Opon M-Th
7:4S-7:30; F 7:4S-«:30;S 10-4.
««n m A\
FOfff talo Foot ban
^ioon Com 304-071 1
Fui
(10 M 5)
MM/wm
■IfM.
(It M •)
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
FIVE Hush tool laddor-bocli dininf
choirs. Vornloliod nolurol finish. Ea-
collonl condition 120.00 ooch. 4fS-
2070 aftor 4:00 p.m.
oppoftiiiiHIoo
noun
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
FEARLESS LEADER
VOUTHCMSr*
ON VOUH Mas
14 alaol rodlolo. $120. Four O-SO-14
OfS
Socond City' loachor. Cloos moots:
7:00 pm. Wodnosdoys. Call Stovo
(12«S|
(It H SI
MAMANTZ Afnp (noar now>
Ml^ aaaSly walnut spoohors. Turn two
channol iBia four or uso slono for
Oroat ■uMW#wt slomo. tlOOiW Doug
ottor 9:00. 02i-1771
(It Mi)
^PER^ONAE*
Csffilsr of Dramatic Arts
Announcas
MO
iyea In
Studam WoHoro Cooimisslonor. 2nd
It Mil
^^w^m n sa It Ajpa ti
^%t VM B^f ^^M ^^^ '
A apaciai thraa
(ApHI 12ti thru 30lh)
111
2r»
aaiaSi
rSiwoaa.
ItMt)
nccs CLicTaotiics
472-attt lor hoal
AUDITION TECHNIOUI8
Tha following subiacto will ba
LBOAL
7Ff«o
(UCLA Slu-
NNT)
WOODEN
hatchcovorsj oottinf A
eratoa S baaaa. old
Kags, *
JS Tharo a
wamsili
Films, thoolor, daneo, art, eolohrato
Ulo a omotlonai footings, not Inlol-
(t»4)
, funhy
Id. t
*Wliat Iho eaating diractor la
for.
MO M SI
PfMpy at S PM.
SS7-aS11
you roaNy IMng I
would lorgot^ 207 Thanks for Iho
«« m bl
Tan
I. 4/20 at 7:00 pan.
S24-244S.
It Mil
(it M 2)
Tex OS IfistrvMieiit'
aubjocts
UCLA
of your paat
Krtohna Movomont Call t2t-i4t4.
JUL
MAYCa. Our
ea«!f as 500
• 4-la«ol Slaeli 'Ol
HCVIK
til
SUSJECTS wNh
^aya as.
• ItlMgNs
ISMf)
Mo- TO all
r. I
Ma of a six yaar aM
liicua
aiOMT . handad paopla : Bam 19 to
1 MS - 3127 Ffonc: 2
: 4/3t • 1 PM-3
I Fianc: 1/9 11 Aai-a4S4
i • IMt Franc; 0/4 2 PSI-
2 FN tm Wslwii. t/f 10
Ljsa-stsi
MM 41
SUtlNESS EOUIPNCNT
nasi swNs m ai wla
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NILLO
**You awy
wt ^d^^v^sw*
ItMtl
CMN7)
COMOaATS la Wm Baoy-K WInlar 1%
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n9om
aaa .sraaso
ila: Sti
for roiit
atom
n4NT|
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$7.
dN T.V.'t - $7 JS/i
CaSc27t-1t)2
ID UCLA
TV Csaaais. $47S host oftor Diono
or 4t1-7igt.
(It M 4)
Ina
FIMN.
$1tSt«
C^N7)
ttsjt. Aa lo-
(iMt)
trulny hacks for hlll-
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outdoor work. Soturday S Sundaf—
Itot S t. Call47S.S1S4 allor 4:St pok
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AaaowNSAO o
S. $SS/1
aohi
ird-hookshoN. lap
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(laOh)
WAMTtO: Srulng hacks tor hllloldo
; 1-4
r, 474-
(tt N 4f
la da 2
$2JS/hr
•701
Its IS 71
WANTED gMs IS lo 22 lor
Sam ahlfl. If Intaraotad. centacl
^a^p^^^^Mf ^a«aa«f igs*ia>*9
(IS a s)
In
oloctfonlcs
commisoion. osponoos CaN Sharon
nil. Its N 71
Looia . . .
N yau awfh. rt got iobo|
Was. r«a gpl a way thai you
up an EXT1U t17S - fSHh
hlaphsHi solootf! And ifs
N pours inlsmatsd In
WANTED: Good drivor not
ono piiiiwgsi lako VW ttom Los
golos to owff^jrin Woshlngtor. D.C.
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Corp.. 1041 Mo. F
(1SN7)
arhchw. EafhtltO lotijtoach. Ootalla
data. Ca. 01200 (»U East Sraadway)
(It N 7)
MSLIAl
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0. i • t 1
Waal 1
Ifitoi
1. nJB an
hour and
CaatS2-
#10 W 71
PSVONIAThIC aflor
adults 1t-Sf. Hours and dutios aro
SaaMa Contact Juno. 037-0140 MWF
12-4. *TTh 0-1 pr Torry. 030-40S0 M-F
^•^- (tS N 7|
(14 M 11) or
war UCLA iratamNy. pub
m. Salary sppros. t4i0 par
470^131 ^„^,j
POLITICAL Actlvlata: Slalawlda oMI-
aana otganNahon aaaking onorgahc .
(212)
CItlaons AoMon
(It N 7)
|dk. Ny appi aai
(tSN
_ laltroaooa— #art-tlaio.
ovonlnea. unlgoo. lap raaOaurani,
aaoollont lips. SapatlaaaaC alnoo-
r^.Ji'J*'^****^ tpP^. avonlnga
C1SN4)
LIvo-ln w/adoL Sin-
glo. 21 yrs^oldor. SJL ond/or oa-
porlonco In aoclol scloneoa. Call
holaroon 0 am - waan. SES-tEBC
. nsNsi
Maodod until Juno 11th.
Hak up 10 yr. old glH. Unlvoralty
llo»ontory SohooL tSt. Monday
through Friday. Ono hour por day.
SMS por hr. Coll ovonlnga. €7S-
"^' (IS M 9)
ntN4)
$12/
(It M 4)
t SIS.
(ttM7)
nsHa
^LASSI Fl ED .
hwol
SS hr
M4PB
EOQRY
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTOaCYCLC INSUNANCC
TMsMght
STUOeNT
nSMT)
AUTO II
>7sys.
(It
WAMTSO:
Irator
lit MSI
in or out? Wo movo fur-
Nituro. opplloneoo. opta.. houaos.
lowool ratos. Iroo ostlmolos. 470-
tlOT.
(ISMS)
TV^INQ. dictation vio phono or
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MIn. ehargo $1S IM-1000 holoro
• paiu
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aanhal aaunaaSng
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
SOUTH AMERICA
It DAYS
SUMMEfl DEPARTUaE!
IXK> CCNTIM. EM gaii
I ^taaamshuii: May i. It N
SSI 7 AckaniMi
4?4.
tail fdayo). 47S-1S11 losaa). WP aha
SALLBT: Fun way lo Moouty ItSf
and Unh. VWCA. §74 NS>
2 or
ADtMNiaTMATIVC/CLEMfCAL
irch
•or a hdl'or'
E/CLEMfCAL J
udylng eauaa aM
haaiah apaahig
•13.
aaCtrriOMIST tor An eallary. 1-2
4:St p.m.
iait7-t
(t12) ass-
fit N 2)
MUSICIANS airing hooa. drumoior
May 21-22 soMt
(It MS)
ni N 2)
LIVS hi dorm lir (21 or aldar)
naadad for girts hoording aohool m
an-4isi.
(1tN4)
og a 4 Jt Dai
aark. Tuoaday. May 11,
MOVIMO: Hoaidontlal.opartmonts.
■Hi laha. Local S long
fiaosr%
troalmont. CaN ttS-
fMMOl
(IS NIP)
FMANtCLIM S KUM. Editors. OooroN
adWng of
474
(1tN4)
Nouaaarma
(IS Oh)
nsNig)
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•A.N.O.
CIS Oh)
fit Oh)
MOi/rtc?
Tha ortflinal-
nxi
EliTS; Am you sloiflad and
shahf hatara asaaiaT Com ioo
(1tN4)
$2 hy
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(It Oh)
%-TON EXPRESS
MOVERS • '
Mich
lot A found
C FOUND SOMETHtHOt
j.Nyeii>w isMMd s gal ar asOilo af i
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Loa
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(Leii ef Oaisfa)
IISNt)
travol
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ORIENT Many <MIM from4tt
Contact ASTfA for Q^fi 200 othar tlightt
with tfaparturas from LA, %mr\ Franctaco
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'Ctwrttr i«p. iiqutra 06 day ad«anca t>oo«itno.
pnca aub^act to 20% inc
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENfll AU -- from
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APEX, tt <M0 day adv book Eur from
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10 n Of 14 day Canbbaan/S Amanca cruiaa
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TOURS
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ITALY 15 ^^
Ilon paa ams. ts tfM " iS
MEXICO • doya tZ
HAMTAII • day* Zm
SICENTENNIAL • daya sS
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Many o«iaf«. long A aho^. budgai A ijaiiaa
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|llV*«*A- (R.pMaM). 3 waa inci from Lon
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12 days $219 Canoa ma Churchtii Rtvar |
in Mortharn SotfcStCHSwan. 12 days]
Includad
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Frlapdly Hiwiphara It'a all m ourj
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TO
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- ' anga in a r»laiad trt«nd>y
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CaiM1<Mnor
(34 113)
MATH TulMtng ^y M^. jrajuau.
Cjjcylua. Aif»ra.Pro»aMilty, and
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JAZZ PIAMO/AU. STYLBS. Uwii Jay
fa4 0lrt
IMOir)
(14 0ID
%^^vB^^BW HMIWWwvM*
tuomy
Cat A«
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IBtOir)
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
Bi -> ' -
LAW BCHOOL ADMISSION
TEST PREPARATION
•OBMT 04
-BMBD RIADIMa
Janall
-CAMEM OUIOAMCt
Int
typing
accuhati
lato/TfcaMaand OaAa araa. iM/4M-
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EXNM. BCKAACM BOOICt.
JOUAMAL AMTlCLIt. DlttffHTA-
TIOMt. PHO^OSALSr JAMIS WIMTEB-
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adycaMowal. aclafitHlc. athar. Oaiii 477
(2S M4)
12
room, firaalaca. kitchon. own
to Vol
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(29M 12)
B^BBOV. aecMraia IBM typlat
1^
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room and board
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471-7i91.
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1/2
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Jana 22 • Baplamiir 29^9120 Incl. OUIBT Frlaala ra#m/balli, liMaliaa
CM 1141
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BaBT«
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21- Jan. 1.
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(29 M 7) 72 TWI 9pm¥ mM
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to
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BBffO 72,
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141 Mfl
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Bi 1i
Trojans end streak at 42...
< ContinMcd from Page 2B)
sprint corps Troy li\A9d up to its repuution by
iw/eeping the top three places from the Bruins.
James Gilkes won in 21.1. Mike Simmons was
second in (21,2) and Ken Randle third (21 2)
''Now I can let my hair grow bBck," said
GiliM9 pointing to his bald and shiny scalp *"!
cut it three weeks afo and I was going* to let tt
suy this way until we wen this meet"
Gilkes.. B senior from the South American
land of Guyana, said he was just **jogging** m
the 200. ''I^was running ft about half lipecd,**
he explfttned. **(JCLA wasn*t really any compe-^
tirion.**
One bright spot for the Brums on this dismal
afternoon was the first plape finish of Conrad
Suhr in the 800 His timing was ^47.8. the fifth
fwiteat time by an American this year. Jeff
Haynes of UCLA was second and Lkiyd
Johnson of USC third.
Rayfield ieaton. the favorite in the race.
^ never ran. In scrathed after an exhausting
effort in the 1500 an hour earlier
**! had no idea tt was the fast.** said Suhr
atterwards. *^umtl they announced the time I
don't know where it came from "
Bruin Bill Heinzen ran a scorching first lap
which set the pace for Suhr and Haynes. "HeV
our dirty tricks man." explained Siihr "His job
is to fo out quick so Jeff and I don't run too
^km. the first quarter.**
Steve Beck, the Bruins aophomore distj
ace, also iMid a fiae day He woo the 1500 in
3:45.8. his life tinjf best, in beBttng the favored
Beaton
The race wa9 Marred by a push-shove
incident between Bech and Beaton **He spiked
me,**, said Beck pointing to his bloody keg. **\t
was a question of me slowing down or ^edging
htm out. So I forced him into the second lane.**
Beaton, stumbling at the finish, wound up
with a 3:46.2 clocking while fellow Trojan Dan
Aldndge was third
~UCL As Willie Bnnks wen tlv lM«f jump
with a gCKid 25-Bl^ jump but junior Jerry
Herndon was edged our for second by the
Trojan's Gerald Hardmcnan
Banks, however^ failed to Jiefend bis meet
title in the triple jump. Tom CbiIbm, b USC
senior, won that event in 54-2*/4 while Basks
could only mannfc a best leaf of 54- P/^. The
Bruin had won eleven straifht triple jump
competitions untif Saturday.
Other meet winners were Mike TuUy in the
pole vault (17-6). Doug Boswell tn the 5000
(15:09 2) and Jason Mnslrr in the high JpUflU)
(7-0)
The Trojans picked up additional victories in
the 400 (Ken Randle in 45 6). 100 (Gilkes in
10 1). discus (Darrell Elder in 193-11). the
javelin (Mike Hclsby m 230-7). the 400 meter
MBly f39.3) ai^ ihc miie reUy (3:07.1).
X
hi fBVB
=CLASSi FIED^^
1972 OLOBMOMLE. fany laatppid. _-,_^
91 JM adtaa. Canlaef Jaa al aEB^EEES. 72DATeUM
141 •• 7)
autoa for
bkardaafor
9419.
4rJ199B-
HI Bit*
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foraala
#41 MM
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HANSOHRT
H1M4I
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mici named Most Valutble Player
Scatesmen win sixth NCAA title in
years
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MUNICF INDIANA ->
mH^ km
for coftch Ai
UCLA volleytell mm. The
fN>fi their sixth NCAA
title in the seven yenr hotpry
«f lilt muA mnd their third in
a row by routing Pcpperdine,
18-16, 15-9 and 15-11, Satur-
4a^ Bifte M Ball State lini-
icnity helbre a crowd of over
4,000
UCLA ran its amazing
NCAA tournament record to
20-1 (952) and Scates kept haa
streak intact of never losing an
NCAA championship match.
Sophomore All- American Joe
Mica becaflK the youngest
player ever to win the NCAA
M«tl Valuable Player award.
Seniors Fred Sturm and
Deniiy Cline and sophomore
David Oi bright alio made the
All^ToumMMil team.
'*The more you win, the
more you want to win,** said
Scales after the nuitch. "Win-
ning the first game was the
crucial part of the match for
us, because we took the mo-
mentum away from Pepper-
dine.**
Alt-aroMd '^mmT
The Bruins of 1976 are
probably the gpeatest all-
around '^team** in collegiate,
volleyball hialory. The six
starters might not be the best,
but for a 12 nuin umt, Scates
has the most talent he has ever
had. It was evident Fri4ay
night in the routing of Spring-
field. 14-4, 15-2 and 15-5 and
Mver more af^Hiffent than the
first game against the Ptpper-
dine Waves.
Scates utilized hit bench in
th first game by using 1 1 of his
12 players to pull out rhe 18-16
win. It was felt before the
match that Pepperdine would
have lo bcm UCLA three
itraighi games to gmn the title,
bccaute the Waves had a tough
five game mitfii against third
place Ohio State in the semi-
fwals
The third game ««t dose
throughout, with UCLA finally
gaining a 13-10 lead on the
serving of senior backcourt
iptcialiit Mike Franklin Pep-
perdine rattitd back and
eventually tnnk a 15-14 ad-
vnnttgr on two Sniin mixups
Pepperdine^s Mike Bekins
had apparently served game
point when UCLA made an
errant pass that was heading
for the stMidt, but substitute
setter Steve Suttich made the
play of the right.
Suttich tame from the op^
posite side of the court to
make a lunging save of the ball
and Dong Rabe then blocked
the spike of Mark Rigg for a
Brum side-out A serve by
Sturm and a spike by Mica
tied the match at 15. A serve
by Rigg »nd spike by Jay
Anderson gave the Waves a
16-15 advantage, but Rigg*s
next serve was long, giving
Rabe the serve
The sophomore, who is not
noted for his serving skills,
made a near ace to tie the
^aoore at 16 and a Cbae apaka
c^ the Pepperdine block made
it 17-16. The game point came
on a long really when Mica
called for the ball and put a
crushing spike into the court
It finished the longest game of
the year for UCLA as it took
43 minutes (the usuaf ganie
takes around 15 to 30).
Pivotal factor
"The first game was the
pivotal factor in the match.
we had our chances to
win,* tnid Harlaa Cohen, Pep-
perdine hand coach. *Tht com-
bination of the way wc
first gHoe, pint the
nuitch we had aginst Ohio
State coat us the shot for^ the
we weren*t strong
to
Sturm served UCLA to a 5-0
lead in game two. The spiking
oC Mike Gottschall, who had
the batt hitting match of his
career, expanded the knd to 9-
I. Pepperdine clotad to 9-5.
but the Waves were never in
the gnme. A serve by Peter
Ashy and a block by Mica and
Cline ended the 15-9 Brum
win.
Game thsoe «ot dote from
the ootstt as the Waves tried
hard to ^void lotMig in three.
UCLA hod on cnrly 7-2 lead,
but Pepperdine cut the deficit
and eventually went abend, II-
10. A Franklin serve tied the
gae at 1 1 and tlien after four
side-outs. Mica went back to
serve.
**l knew we had tlem when
we caught up at II, because we
could tell from their faces thot
they were beat.** said Mica.
The NCAA MVP served the
Hani four points of the match.
A block by Cline and Olbright
broke the tie. a Chne spike
made it 13 points and a poor
Rigg spthe brought the score
lO 14-11 The NCAA
championship point came after
a fine save in the backcourt by
Franklin The bott^was set to
Sturm, who dinked (hit a soft
shot) over the Waves* block
and It could not be returned.
Ucla
XCVIIi.
at«»f Fr»d
For Sturm, Cline and
Frankkn. it was their third
NCAA titles and a nice way to
close their UCLA careers.
*^ was a very satisfying watj
because we played well with,
intensity throughout the
RuUch,** said Sturm. **We were
fired by playing in the finals
and I thought before the Ruitch
that we could win in three'
games if we played intense**
**This IS the way 1 wanted to
go out. because I hoped we
could win in three games," said
team captain Cline. '"As a
sophomore we won in five
and last year we won in
year wf beat
four, so this
Pepperdine it
we would beat them in two the
next time **
*^it it a real sweet victory for
me.** said Franklin. ''After wit
bemtr Pepperdine in the first
gaoK I knew we hod thtii^
because you could see thai
they didn*t have it anymore.**
Pepperdine All-Tournment
selection Ted Dodd was
naturally disappointed after the
(CooihnadooPMeU)
^^^rajans blast Bad News Bruin tracksters, 83-62
in
»
My Joe Y
Ov S^pofts 'wfHtf
Like the Bad News Bears of anematic fame,
the Bruins of Westwood finally discovered
Saturday that winning isn't everything. It only
took them five years to find out.
use ran, jumped and threw its way to an
imptflutBiW win over the UCLA track and
field team before an overflow crowd of 15.011
at Drake Stadium The Trofan victory ended
both of the Brum dual meet win streaks — 33
row at home and 42 straight overaB.
latt time a UCLA team went down in
defeat was May t, 1971 when the Bruins
dropped a 75-70 decision to the same school.
**i didn't thmk wa would lose thot hndtss**
said UCLA head coach Jnn Bush afterwards.
Bush then heaped the Umk on hinatelf: "I did
a lousy job of coaching. I thought I knew
something about aontlMig but it's oh>noot 1
don't**
The hones of Troy achioatd the arin on their
own outttaftding performances rather than a
UCLA coUnpae. USC athlMt niiidij| iiiiiit
hfe-timip and six ataaoo haito oo wmm to an
overwhcfhmng display of talent and depth.
No npaalt could mar the Trojan effort at
favorites James Gilkcs (IBB and 2BB aiMOili^
iCen Bandk (400), Tom Andrews (400 meter
to vict€»ry. But it wos an un-
expected win by Trojan shot putter Mike
incich that started the avai
a M nad 3iB pmmi senior fr
Gate flung the shot i3-5M — 19
further tlMB he hnd ever ^tmmm hcfoai
taat noaal Ike Brain*s Jim Naidhn^ the tenth
in the
af«S-IM
'I fM
"I mtm^i. wtf fdrai anat on t^day
I 9mM dBov 68 to 7i feat Bbl t
the ring too
use cooch Vem Wolfe said he wasn't the
Itatt surpritad by Budincich's nptet. "He's been
hitting 62 in pracfkx all week and he ahrays
better in the meets,** said Wolfe
Wolfe termed the Budincich victory the
:** that Ignited his Trofnn team. **lt had to
them a lift,** he explained "After that we
A short time Inter the unexpadad ttrnck
when favored James Owens of UCLA
wound-up third in the 1 10 meter high hurdles.
USCs Frad SImw um the event in 13 7 while
fellow Trojan Mike Johaaon was roMmr-up in
13.8 The one-two phicii^ ^ve^tJSC a 31-19
after six nitinli
flew off lo his «annl4aai ttar
after three hurdles But the Troian duo
up fast and pntted Owens with four barriers to
ga. The Bruin tnpped over several hurdles and
stumbled at the finith in a vain effort to catch
up.
**lt's been the same problem since the
beginning of the year,** explained Owens
"After five hurdles 1 looae my
the daiiMiim Fne4 hurdlea
champion, was favored la the event
UCLA's GfMK Ni
It di*in
to low aad I
np.
IP Pn fm
Seven here may be
delegates at 76
Demo convention
Bill regulates teochers' bargaining
Prof runs school labor board
DB Staff Wi
Depending on which way the
political wieds hloni
the seven UCLA sti
Ha has llMne dele-
iotnsnandees from
York.
The UCLA iliiislii. David
Bender, Tom Comstock
Wilhaa Oknick (for
Mark Gnaiaon (for Washing-
ton Saaator Henry Jackson>,
Wilham Barth and Steve
Pehanch (for former Georgia
Governor Jiminy Carter) and
Robin Gorelick (for Idaho
Senator Frank Church) were
elected at caucuses held by
candidate in
dittnct.
Whether a potsihk 4lclegaie^
or recoatasanoeei attenos tne
coni^ention will depend on the
vot^lifi or her candidatr re-
cei^Tm the dUtrirf and the
final concurrence df the candi-
date's sute steering committar.
The June 8 primory will
210 of Cahformas
inrag
^, pStT» alterttBW. imB br
to
vote at a
Sinff Wi
The Rodda Act. pattad ktt fall proi
for collective bargaiaiag among school
pananod and estahhthed the Educationai
Euyluytttut Relations Board (EERB), which
is chaued by a UCLA Law Proitstor.
The prnltttnr. Reginald ABeyne, heheuts
collective hnrgauung will not sutomatyally
benefit school prriOMrl
The attitude of the school board toward
the bargaining process, the hargiining tahk
position that the schdbl h^atvd takaa aad tlK
abthty of the union npntinihig the em-
ployees are some of the factors that will
deternune the resoha, explained Alkyne.
A release from the Cahforaia Teachers*
AsaociatKwi said that the Rodda Act per-
mits tencher nrganJrttinw to seek school
board recognition by showing proof of
siipport m appropriate bargaining units,
according to the release.
The local chapter could reoetve exdnsive
bargaining nght^ if over half of the teachers
suppodCIA. although 30 per cent of the
teachers can submit a chnBrhgr and force a
representatwn electiott. The represenution
supervitad by
kya
thnr
Ahhoogh ttrikcs
beheves ia collective
of reconciling
Apti 1. E£RB Witt ttt
be
The hoik of the boaiCs wofh far tkt
dividmg school personnel into
units. The creation of tl
units,** he explained* *is an
issue because not every<
with everyone etse.**
EERB will decide unfair
which are divided into three
— Discrimination against aa etaployee
of umoo organizing aotivdies;
Refusal of either party to
faith and,
—The settiiig np M
illy serve Urn kmmmtm of
i
ployers and do not rtptetem the workers.
T
William Barth
Inttve Council (SLQ m Inlo
Director/ was selected as a
BrowB delegate m the 23rd
(CD)
"^sarly enough to
ier*s nomination.*
Brown matt ttoefve at
30 par tent of the ymg^ia the
May II Maryland primary for
according
to " ' _.
^*We would be weHmmtd^^
Senator lennedy or Senator
for
slate m the 9Mi
i
i^
1
passiag ont 'caraations for
Former Bruin cartoonist wins Pulitzer
By i.
Former Dmiif Brmn Cartoonist Tony Anth snid he fdt
winning dK W^ Puhti^r Priat lar
Auth also said he hnd HMtd feelmgs tbovt the awntd. *X>n
it*s a graat hoaar to win, but on the other bond, you
penliae that you are nominated by a gpaap of ama who get
lupthtif in New York.**
Auth said that. to be an editorial cartoonist, one awal
saate of the nhtnad« and aat he afraid to rock the
**1 do a lat of iisiH^afwhnfs w^m •^^ ^ h^* '^•'^
rm gaiag to say.**
Auth ptdapiii firooi UCLA m IBiS with a BA in
IBnstmtioaa. ^rans h5 to 60, I went aronod and did
illustrations for hoapiuls aad doctors.^ he said. **It was
^m^m^^im
i
f
i
i
I
■mw-
ONt »« cur Of
A4 Oood TImi May It.
The UCLA Center for
Afro-American Studies
presents
Dr. Claudia
Mitchell-Kernan
It ProU
\ r > t h r r 1 f ^ r J f
< )I I-
..w
I ui'scWyTMav IT. 1976 12:00 Moon
3107 Cdiupbill Hcill
Professor Henr\ McCee
-Jjirrc tor. C (Miter for
..'O-AlTUt l( .11 . "^1 Ull
K"^^
7
udicial Review^tate
Courts, txcltjsiofhuv
Municipal Practices
cHiJ'tho Limits i)i i^rowth
Ihursdav.Mav \ I Vf7h I2:00\o«>ii
OPEN AND FREE TO
THE PI IKI ir ' ♦ »
Cfime A Punishment
■a:v.
Exposition in Diclcson
Extention ttudeiit #flCli the
intention to cooMUt r»pe on
April 17 at booo in parking
HnKnire ifj.
The woman was walking
hack to her ear following clan
and discovered the elevator
was not working. As she
chmhed the stain, a dark hair-
ei inan foUowai her, grabbed
ber from behind, spun her
around and attempted to sexu-
ally assault her.
The won;ian struggled with
him and then kicked the man
in the groin. He felt to the
ground, and she kicked him in
the hand area. On the second
kick she heard a snap and then
turned to retrieve her purse
aad the contents of it, which
had fallen on the ground, wben
left, the suspect was still on
na ground.
A non-afudent cbargpd with
grand theft last quarter in
cMHMcuon with the theft of a
briefcase and its contents,
werth $248, faikd to appear at
a baanng after p5sting hail
according to Gary Mould, stu-
denu* stoffe operations flsan-
afer. He was charged with
grand theft and has still not
been recaptured.
Mould alM> reported that in
the past 10 weeks, 41 shop-
lifters have been apprehended
Tbe average value of iteoM
t^ken was about S2.70. The
thefts raffed from two cents to
$26 70
About two-thirds of those
people cangbt were students
here, and 35 of the 41 were
The suapaat, dressed like a
' the ea-
An imiirnt of indecent ex-
posure in the Dickson Art
uaUery was reported April 29.
-■■" ^ — ' m •••*» %
hibit for about 45 minutes,
imbaiad by his foUowmg her,
she turned to aak bim what he
was doing and diaoovered he
was eapoaini banMir. He re-
pbed Ibnt hg bntf faae to the
hathrooB aBa rprgot to put
my zipper vp.** The woman
weilt md reported the incident
to a security guard, who fol-
lowed her b*ck into the ^
Icry.
The security agent looked at
the suspect and unknowingly
asked him where the flasher
was. The victim told the
security agent that he was
talking to the suapect.
The victim reported neither
the security guard nor the
receptionist at the gallery
' too much cMMvn, and
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
l-etj^sh*p your personal effects hom« We ere specMiiiBts in
MwaMenal packaging and ifttpptng Ws aiK) isH applienoss for 220 voHt
PACIFIC-KINQ i2ie«-teaigt.,ia.
17
10%
diacount with coupon
on dry cinaning onl^
Exptraa May 14.1 976 ~
10%
diacount with coupon
on dry clnnning only
ExpireMlay14.l976
Number 1 Dry Cleaners
1126 Westwood Blvd.
478-6310
next to McDonalds
Complete Dry Cleaning ana Laundry
.- Parking in Rear
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
XCVIll. Number 2
Monday. May 10, 1976
PubM9h9d mmn
mhooi fmrnr, mmtfi durmg hoitdmy$
amirmtion nmif^ iKf ttm ASUCLA
Communif How 9oin^. JOf Wmt-
wood Pimm. Lxm Angmtm, CmMomm
aMN Co^rt^hl 197B by th9
ASUCLA Coftfmunicattona Bomrd
ciMe paetipe es«tf t ttm Lo%
P0ef onto:
Young
««>
SALE!
Bonnie Doon
Tennis Sox
'■-■)
"Net" (right) r^. 1.50 pair
Cottpn and stretch nylon cuahion lined, low
cut with contrasting no-slip.coUaf White on
white or white with contrast color trirri.
3 pr. 3.60
save 30C a pairl
"^unmato" (laft) rtf. 1.65 pair
Cotton and stretch nylon cushion lined, low
cut with contrasting crocheted top at ahoe
Nne and pon^pom at heel \Mhtle with white.
wti^ with contrast trim.
3 pr. 3.90
save 35e a pairl
v^
O I^RrVIt
unioii, 105-7711
7:4§-7 Jt; M 7;4S-6 30; aal 1(M
r .♦
'Reefer Madness' era traced
Pot labled
*!t
in '37
(CPS) -
tiK owe popular oaaaipl af
that HiM a aoMr-
I'l MHfc akMt the drag,
wkh ao obscofc tax biil
mh9 40
Tnanliiij to a legal
Charles H ^hiichfead of
the Univeraky of VirfHua*s kw
school traced the hiilory of
manjuana laws from the pas*
saae of the first state prohihi-
tmi of the drug hy Utah in
1915
Whitebread, who he^n
searchu^ raoords in 1968 to
4iaaovef whgye the idea started
of tti^lftug marijuana usage
criminal, said 27 states had
made the drug iUegal when
CofigreM passed the Marijuana
Tax Aa IB 1937.
Congressional hrani^ oa
the hill lasted only two hours,
Whitehread said. *Their key
witness was Eaahi^Br^ the head
9i the Federal Bureau of
Nascolics. who testified that
marijuana created m as aeen
'insanity, crimiqality and
aad hemp production,
without de-
from the
M
Tas Act
The Marqvaaa Tax Act, an
extensive measure that in-
cluded prohibition of mar-
bUl could
without the ap-
proval of the AMA,** White-
hread said. **Why did it thenr
Birdseed manufacturers who
were using mari|iiaBa seeds in
thetf auaed seed products were
exempt fraa the act because,
Whitebread said, nhey tried
other seeds, but none aMde the
hiid's eaau so shiny or aMie
theoi iiilg so much.**
The 1973 act set the stage
for **Reeler MadMaa,** White-
bread said, but the>«Dal origin
was the scasafioflaittic aewe-
paper coverage t^ live m^ior
criminal trials in the early
194(rs in whtfh aMaiarers ware
acquitted oa crinuaal insaiiSy
resuhing from marijuana use.
A proetiinent physiciaR teali-
of the trials that^ he
had tried smokiag auriiuaBa
himself. WhitehMii nid. ""Af-
<^ ^"^^ Pifftaa a amniuaaa
dgaretu,** the doctor said. **l
turned into a hat mmA flew
around the room for five
minutes, laadina sit the bottom
of a ai04bot tnkweB.** A ter-
Whitehead said he hoMs no
high hopes lar natioaal kgiU-
ization of aymjuaaa becauac
the public confutes kaaintion
with proawaiMa. He beheves
that suppreMMa of amhjuaaa
usage poses graver dangers
thaa l^alization.
CORRECTION
In MBWt} to #ie C84ATT1
May 6th Bruvt The top apaad of tht
tncorractly prmiad aa 4o a^. h ahould haMt baan
of SO mph
I
r
Comm Board
appointments
In a naeting hut Thursday,
the Communicationi Board
appointed the following people
for positioa9 -aa editors or
advertising managers:
:^ pail> Bruin
Advertising ' Mi
Nadine Wildman ~ Ha*am
Editor
Mike Finkelstein — Ha*am
Ad vertisi ng Manager^^
Lywok Clark ~ Nommo
Editor
Bernard Johnson -^ Nommo
Advertising Manager
JOBS WITH
FOOD & DRUG
ADMJN. - F.D.A.
Seminar to be held:
Date: Monday. May 10
Time: 12 Noon
Place: School of Public,
Health — Room 16-059
PRESENTATION APPLICATIONS DISCUSSION
GENERAL INFORMATION RAP
\
•
f
3
<
8.P.H Alumni Assoc, g
Opportunity
SPECIAL OFFER
STUDENTS
Los Ansdes SWngs
Rosie CaaMa aab Lmu
Oannis Ralston Dignna Fromhottz
Vijay. Aroritraj
vs.
Lphoenix
Chfif Evsrt. Tooy
Knstisn S^^. Aady Petti»*>n
IIOUPOM
TNt coupon muni
be. •xchaf^gSd at
least ont hour
prior to the
p«rform«fics for
which intended.
$ 1,25 OFF $ 2.50 SEATS
-Uff-
Omul
VIM
M*iy 12
StartHif Tims:
t p.m.
Log Angeiag
va. Phoenix
AT THE FABULOUS
FORUM
MANOCSTER t PRMRE
International
Week t>egina
Both American aad foreign
students here will have a
chance to exchange tdeai diir>
ing International Week (May
10-15) here af speakers, films,
entertainment and an inter-
natiooal fair highliglit the
week*t aetivities.
Spaaaaaad by tbe Faw^gi
Studenir AaMciataa (FSA). tkc
prograaa emplaniBt **aware-
aaa ' 01 otiier cinluftt rcpic^
sented here by a^aat 3M0
students fnm mvcr tOO coun-
VETERANS
UNITED VETERANS ASSOCIATION O
ROOM 325»<ERr'^HOFF HAlj
CLA
-- . .i,i».>. .<i' — ^.
1
1
•
*
n
4Y 12, 1976 3 PM 3175 BUNCHE
NOMINATIONS ACCEPTED
opiOR TO VOTING FOR
ALSO
*^e*re trying lo near some
of forum,** said Allan
rgaaiser of the event
**We*re aot tryiag to put oat a
of vwmJt iy yid
Today^s activities feature
international OMiveaeaii, with
aad films, and eve-
ealertainment from Asian
PLUS dUEST SPEAKER
Other day^ will feature in-
teraatioaal art. hiti
REFRESHMENTS SERVED
^.
•7-1^
1
Presents —
•
I
i
i
i
EDUCATION FOR
ENLIGHTENMENT
The Transcendental Meditation Program
TUESDAY, MAY 11
I
noon: UCLA Ackerman Unik>n 3564
"Rediscovering the Lost Dimension in
Education" '
Video taped presentation by Dr. Sidney Reisber, At§oc.
Dean, center for Educational Communication, State Univ.
oi N.Y. of Albany
8 pm : Haines Hall 39
"EducsAion for Enlightenment —
Properties of superfluid
Prof talks c
v-v
The Future of the University
Ms. Robin Bebow, Dean of Academic Affairs, Maharishi
Imernational University, Fairfield, Iowa
The
Money Sem
' *^&i
Dl Staff Wrilar
Itadore Rudnick. profettor of phytict
here, illuitrated how tuperfluid helium
remainf a fluid at freezing temperaiitfat
Thunday in the 5 lit annual JFaculty Re-
March Lecture.
Rudnick ipoke before a full house in-
cluding UC President David Saxdn in
Schoenberg Auditorium. The Faculty Re-
search Lecture annually presents distin-
fMikatf aekoian who are chosen by the
faculty.
Superfluid helium, which Rudnick tcnnatf
'^he beat heat exchMier known to icienoe,**
is hquid helium which has dropped to a
temperature of -455 iipaai Fahrenheit er
lower.
While most hquids turn to solids at these
temperatures, liquid helium turns into a
**superfluid** which continuft^ to flow without
leas of energy. Rudnick has found this fluid
reacts very strangely under certain con-
ditions.
One of his ciprhmrnts showed the crea-
tion of a **snoii>Hoi«*' wli^ air wu intro-
duced into a test-tube of superfluid hehum.
It reverses the effect of a liquid falling in
freezing air.
He also displayed a ''superfluid founuin,**
a stream of liquid helium whkh rises and
liquid helium
falli according to its temperature. Passii^
through a plexiglass tube, the fluid is
relaaaad through microicopic pores called
''wperleaks,** which, Rudnick said. *lM the
energy ptat iiaaHy or not ac att.**
Many of Rudnick's expenmenu have dealt
with superfluids by acouatic wmttrndi. One
''can determine the velocity of the fluids by
measurmg the two [sound wave] panki,'* he
explained.
The use ei mmmd to OMMure liquid hehum
currents was flrst ektenmi «t UCLA, ac-
cording to Rudnick. RaatHUon are em-
ployed to lieft the reactions eieemmi pnasing
through a medium of hehum rather than air.
From this test, Rudnick has been able to
measure the viscosity, or thickness, of
superfluid helium. ^
In his ftani damoMtration, Rudnick
hooked up the ekctric aurent in the sound
waves to the movements of the superfluid
fountain. The resuh was a simultaneous
movemeat of the riae and fall of the foun-
tain and the "notes** of the sound waves.
Rudnick joined the faculty in the physics
department in 1948 after recciviag his
bachelors, masters and PhD deg^em from
UCLA. Throughout his career he has
worked with PhD candidates and t^r^l^fd
them for "allowmg him to help irinaiih their
projects.^
Now in 'period of scarcity'
History of urban aid told
!-»
»n
an6 aintpla lachniQuaa to i
your life and the prosperity conac
the cash flow
of your mind.
Tueeiay May 11 §-7 pm
Womens Resource Center
KinMy T90 82S<4aM tO am-S pm
ly JoaMe Egtash
OB Stair Writer
Examining urban problems
and solutions from the 1930*s
depression through Nixon's
decentralization, Marshall Kjip^
Ian diirwaied "Federal Urban
Aid and the Cities** Thursday
evening ia the Architecture
Building as part of the Thun-
day Evening Series.
The nationally known social
planner from Dallas, Texas
described the present penod as
Hie *^0olitica oC
Kaplan: The government did
ereate, however, the Tirst co-
ordinated federal housing
cause of Watergate and Viet-
nam, ICaplan feels that "it is
conventional to be anti-intel-
lectuaL aati-goverapaBt."
The federal government's
involvement in uHnm problem
solving began in the thirties*
harausr of economic problems,
Kaplan said Attempting to
"get cities back together
again," he added, the federal
government was the only level
that could handle the prob-
lems.
During the ivar, **not much
was happening,^ commented
act
Two significant pieces of
legislation were passed after
the war. he said Th^ 1946
employment act "suggested
that every American was en-
titkd to a job," while the 1949
Housing Act declared that
every American was entitled to >
a ''decent home in a suitable,
living environment,** anid Kap-
lan, ^ince little funding was
atuched to the acts, they
"mainly became useful for
rhetorical comments in
" he added
Although^ "bttle happened"
in the Eisenhower yea^ Kmf^
Ian termed the 1954 Housing
Act "significant** since it
started the era of categorical
piBgaimi.
In the I960*s, however, the
nation became aware of pover-
ty for the flrst time, said Kap-
lan. One out of five households
in the United Sutes were Uvii
I
'i
ENGiNEERiNcXBRAMiAfr Student Ass
NEEDS NEW LEADERS TO CONTINUE
-V
1
— GRAD LOUNGE —
— PIZZA PARTIES —
NO OFFICERS MEANS NO SERVICES
AND NO REPRESENTATION
EGSA noeds engineering graduate students to fill the posts of President, Admin-
istrative V.P., Academic V.P., Treasurer/Secretary, and Departmental Representa-
tives. Continuation of current services and the providing of new services is essential.
INTERESTED?
I
4405 Boelter Hall (open 8am-5pm) and sign up
(Name. Phone Number, and Department)
in poverty, he added. Martin .
Luther King and the Civil *
Rights Movement influenced -
the administration but the as-
mmtamkem oi John p. Ken-
nedy led to the rise of a ^
"populist president,** Kaplan
expahned.
'^^ I 111 III
The federal government
created over 400 aepaiate pro-
grams in the I960*s, aimed at
urban proMeraa. Kaphin sees
the accomplish menu of the
Sixties in the ^lapid jpohticizak—
tion of the miaprity commun-
ity,** and "the significant^ in-
come redistribution.** These
achievements, he feels, should
not have led '^o what I think
oocMrred in the 70*s.
"Where do we go* from
hereT* Kaplan asked. From the
turmoil of the 60*s, the cate-
gorical programs, and the
effort to rewrite federal com-
outaents of recent adminis-
trations, he feels that future
administrations will have to
attack the following types of
— housing production ^vtnvm
quality of life;
and
capacity issues, and
growth.
Inaccuracies In
PIRG article
There were a numoer of
iaaccuracaes in the CalPIRG
uticie of May 5 concerning
poaaiWi aataMilmMit of Cal-
PIRGs at four UC caiiipiii
CalPIRO haa not readied a
rnm| lin ijrti UC Pi iiiiiit
David Saxon, but with Ad
Bi
UC
The nfMinsiii nian for
aed at the May 5 Co«mM of
Chancellors' meeting, as
Charles Feinstein had inac-
curataljr
Two lectures tomorrow
\
.'^
TM and the university
Traaaoendental meditation
(TM) aa a maaas for uaifyiag
ami expanding the educational
proceai will be the topic of twia
lectures to be held on campvi
^ the
International Meditation So-
ciety of UCLA, the pfwenta-
will deal with the rela-
aen TM and edu-
cation and ham, both can be
instrumental in creating an
A videotape produetion of a
ktim entitled "Rediscovery of
the Loat Dimension in Educa-
tion,** as presented at the
National Teachen AMOcitlmi
Convention by Sidney Reia-
berg, associate dean of the
Center for Communications at
Che Sute Uiivaraity of New
York, will be slmnm in Acker-
man 3564 at noon.
Robin Babow, asaiilattt to
the president for Mahanshi
Intemauooal University, will
pnaant a iaeture, "Education
far Enlightenment: The Future
of the Umversity," at 8 pm m
Haines 39 She will discuss the
pmoeas of returning what is
now the "mOHiversity*' to a
"university*' by unifying all the
fragmentod interests which
make up a university This
would allow the university to
futfill its greatest purpose —
that of prodjiciag fulfilled
ipdividuais.
Both lectures are! free.
Stephen Bloom J a TM
instructor, stressM the fact
that these air no0ntroductory
lectures to recmiit TM stu-
denu Rather, they will intro-
duce students toyfhow tbcy.can,
through TM, open themselves,
their university and their whole
society to its fuU "^ponmtiaL
"We feel that people who are
conoanrnd aboin odnGation will
find it vahiabk," he
"Education is an attempt to
understand and express the
nature of the uni-
TM, the
af tiK student
the nnnd
foes to
sonroe of thought, so a
caa get more kno>w-
ledge and understand his own
TM
ledge," Bloom said.
As proof of the
caa haoa on Iha
whole, aa wtM as the educa-
tioiml coiMnunity* Itoom cited
the reauks of studies which
examine the correlation be-
tween nnmhers in the popnhih
tion who practice TM and
to Mnooi, even a
anuill percentage of a city's
population pfartirina TM can
of a
m TM,
a drop in the
and iaMt
by the entire population,*
He compared this pheno-
uve or napative vibrations will
he feh and wiU influence the
others in the group.
"We see tension and frustra-
tion all the time, and we can't
deal with theae poaMMM only
with laws. We need to expand
individual conacionanaaa lev-
olC' he added. "The Maharishi
that when thepercen-
of TM pcnelloe in the
pOfHilauon mn^jhaa five per-
oem. we will see symptoms of
an ideal society"
The Maharishi International
University in Fairfield^ Iowa,
rellecu the effocu a 100" per-
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dciy bruin
UFW and the First Amendment
By J. Peter Fiske
(idtiof^$ fKtfc: fiske is a student
h«r« in the School of Law).
I do not buy or drink Callo
wmm ^- rKX out of principle but
becMM* I think it it a wine of
very modest quality, at best.
I support the right of labor ^
ifidudinf farmworkers — to or-
ganize ^nd to b^r^^in coNoct-
^ ively. In pursuing these objoci-
2 Ives, labor must be afforded the
• hill protection of the First
Amendment's guarantees of
freedom of expression, by
2 speech and in print. ~
Evidently, however, the Uni-
'"' ted Farm Workers Mnd their
supporters believe that the first
f
OPINION
+■•
Amendment should protect only
certain daiaes, groups or causes
in our todefy.
The Daily Bruin of May 6
-reports that x>n the preceding
Tuesday, 15 members of the
campus La Raza Coalition at
IHayward State University
marched into the editorial
offices of the campus newspaper
and demanded suspension of
the Cjtto advert isenrtent which
ran tfiat day.
Furthermore, one of these
demonstrators told The Pi-
oneer^s managing editor that the
Coalition would "close the pa-
per donrnr* using "any means
we could."
This was only the most recent
in a series of incidents con-
nected with the GaMo adver-
tising controversy.
ThrMti of physical violence
preceded the wholesale r ihcfl
and thrashing of tOOO oapisi of
The Hornet at teasamenfo State
University after publication of a
Calk) »d.
Thirty-five hundred copies of
The Highlander at UC Riverside
we stolen and disposed of a
couple of weeks a§o — also
coincideritally an iffue contain-
ing a Callo ad.
At UC Irvine, supporters of
this cause saw fit to deface the
campus with Callo inserts ap-
propriately modified to convey
their boycott message.
In Februa/y, the UCLA
Communications Board voted to
continue its ban on Callo ad-
vertising '*m the midst of strong
vocal pressure from over 100"
United Farm Workers support-
ers.
To me, this » a very disturbing
and ominous trend. The First
Amendment exists for the bene-
fit of all, not for |ust a few.
Whether the cause of the farm
Workers is just (as it may well
be) is quite beside the point
The point is that the tactics
described above are completely
Incompatible with and hostile to
both the lener and the spirit of
the Bill of Rights. In fact, I find
such actions very difficult to
distinguish from those of the
Nazis and other fasdfls. ^rhaps
someone could explain the dis-
tinction to me. The Nazis
thought tHsf^ were right toa
after all.
I would imagine that there are
few who would defend the theft
and destruction of entire edi-
tions of a newspaper simply
because of an objectionable
advertisement.
.J*'
To be or not to be?
By Gordon C Cyr
(Editor's note Cyr is President Pro Tern, Shakespeare Oxford
Society, Baltimore, MD)
Thank you very much for your courage in publishing Carol Starr's
article on S. Colum Cilfillan and the Shakespeare authorship
("Author denies Shakespeare wrote plays," Wednesday. Apr^ 14).
One need not accept the Earl of Oxford as author of Shakespeare's
works to realize that Prof. David Rhodes' absurdly weak rebuttalis
riddled with faaual errors, unsupported statements, arKi slipshod
•♦■ ,
How it can be "known" that Shakespeare of Stratford (or
"Shakespeare/' ai he signed himself) had a "fine education" at die
Stratford Crammar School wf>en neither eviderure of his attendance
nor of Che school's curriculum exists? There is rK> reason to believe
that a provincial school would even be in the running with the best
of such schools in Lorulon during Elizabeth's time, rK>r to suppose,
in the absernre of all eviderKe, that such an institution could supply
its graduates with the equivalefM of a "masters in classics from
Harvard," as Prof. Rhodes claims. (Readers should note that tf>e
Stratford Shakespeare's "extraordinarily well-documented" life does
not include his putative education.)
And since it is only tradition that puts tf>e'^Stratford man in school
in Jhe first place, the san^e tradition has him leaving school at age
13, owing to his father's financial difficulties — long before the
young country genius could have got down the necessary Ovid,
Plautus, etc. which would provide the minimum qualifications for
writing the Shakespearean carK>n. Prof. Rhodes, like most Strat-
fordians, selects only those parts of the myth thaf bolster his
argument! Contrast all this with what the distinguished Oxford
historian Much Trevor-Roper says about the Stratford Shakespeare:
"As far as me records go, he was uneducated, had no literary
friends, posMMed at Mi death no books. ar>d could not write," Pmt
artd futi^re M^^mkm, January 1%4.
I challenge fiof. Rhedii and all who share hit belief in the
Stratford candidate to Vmd an affirmative artswer to both of these
^Meitens, which form two halves of the ShalMapearean authorship
problem: 1) )Can Prof. Rhodes (or anyonel nnd a single cor>-
lemporary reference to Sheheipeare as author which proves that he
cvne fpom Stratford? 2) Can Prof. Rhodes (or anyone) find m the
"extraordinarily weH-documemid" Kfe of the Stratford ShdM^ere a
ry dociMMM that proves that lie was an author?
<C M I ea Paft 7)
umtriiiniii Ml I II m uwi cipMi
Mill kaiT I weuld Ilka temedMf ii read
lut there are probably more
who would defend the policiei
of the UCLA Communications
Board in simply banning advertir
sing before the fact.
lut I question the wisdom of
such a decision, particularly one
made in apparent acquicncence
to massive intimidation. It en-
courages similar efforts by otfier
special interest groups. Are
campus newspapers henceforth
to have their policies deter-
mined in this way? Do they
coruinue to acquiesce even rK>w
"Out of fear that the Bruin wilt
suffer the vtme fate as The Hor-
oef and The Highlander^
I do not defend Callo or its
labor practices, past or pre<sent.
In fact, I am probably unsym-
pathetic to Caflo in this respect.
Nor am \ especially fond of the
Teamsters Union, currently al
odds with the UFW
lut the pattern of behavior
which the UFW has dearly
established in recent months is
insulting, ifnpjpKtical, immoral
and unconstitutional. And the
acquiescence under duress of
the... UCLAv Communications
Board only encourages such
behavior.
mm
Letters to the Editor
M.S.
An opportunity to get
irwolved, help others and have
fun now exist at UCLA. For the
students that want to do some-
thing worthwhile and meet
others with their saiVie interest,
we have new organization on
campus. UCLA Student Against
Muscular Dystrophy has been
organized to involve youth at
the University into a function-
ing group that will work towardt
fighting Muscular Dystrophy.
Through involvement in patient
services, summer camps and
fur>d-raising activities, nydeiMt
can nf>ake a worthwhile cormt-
bution, helping patients with
neuromuscular diseases. We
hope to offer the students a
chifKe to come together from
all different organizations on
campus into a cause, helpir^
others less fortunate than thenn-
seh^es.
Muscular Dystrophy is a dis-
eete which iiiBpaii ively inwedet
and destroys the voluntary
mutdet, rrippting Its vidimt and
eventually weakening them to
the point that may proife fiuL It
can strike artyone, refgadtar of
aft, tea or race. The Met
maioHty of Rt vtaUM are <Md-
rtm, and m ffiem the disease
progresses nrK>re rapfdiy then iri,
adults. Only a handful of them
can survive to maturity. Nothing
now known can arrest its down-
hill course. Yet students and
other volunteers can provide
comfort and hope.
Our first evem to raise mor>ey
for Muscular Dystrophy patients
is a FOOSIALL event in West-
wood on May 22. All the
fraternities and sororities, alor>g
with the rest of the student
body, are asked to panicipate.
FOOSIALL is an exciting table
top toccer game that has gained
man Union, Monday at 1:30
Room 3564 or Tuesday at 12
noon Room 3517. Watch the
Daily Brum for future meetings.
Whether you want to join the
FOOSIAll tournament or to
help in one of our many patient
service programs, stop by meet-
ings. We hope you will ioin us
in fighting this crippling
muscular disease. Help defeat
Muscular Dystrophy!
Mtdiael Uemkt
Womens Track
popularity with students
throughout the country. This
marathon tournamem will run
15 hours fltaitiiie at nine in the
morning till mMMgltt. Free food
and prUes will be donated by
the WefleMd eiertlianis for all
the participants.
If you an interested in help-
ing others and want to pet in-
volved, come to one of our
at Acker-
fn regard to the letter of Ian
Bakker in the Wednesday May 5
Daily Bruin suggesting that the
UCLA wonr>en's track team is not
a natilortal champion. I suggest
that Ms. lakker take a more
mature view of the ttaatlon. A
natiorwil championship is won by
a te^m for a school, and UCLA is
the defending women's track
national champion. As long at-
UCLA has the championship,
and its athletes wear Brum
colors and compete for our
Ufdnenily. they are the chanipt^
After all, who are you rooiirig
for, CKXA, or a ooech who used
to work here?
More on Shakespeare
*f
el ia^liii MtMture, such as Prof. RHOflat, afe not Ui
^ dHMdne historical ealdHioe. So, rather than trying to argue freei
a lack of such evidence, they iftieidd mkk to rmmmn withm their
ptmtkew (e.g. textual analysis) and leave biograpidcal determinations
to historians, ruNural anthr
More Letters
Food Run
the
the
says to try to
level of
to say that foo^is a
right." The Revolutionary
Student Irigade chants "we
have a right to a decent educa-
tion." Certain groups on campus
daim that any student with a
cf>ild has a right to child care
paid for out of "Reg" fees.
One hears tfie death kr>ell of a
free society as this list of
"rights" grows at an alarming
and^ apparently unchallenged
rate. A rieht to food, education,
and chdd care etc. mear>s thai
lomeoiHt ^ite has an obligation
to pro¥ide those things. When
thing for lemeena else for no-
thing in return, aren't we talking
jiavery?
1 don't wi^ to detee at this
t the morality or trrunorality
of sayirtg that any one per*on
has an obligation to provide
totnediiiif for lomoent elte for
■eching in return. All I atk is
that these people take responsi-
bility for ¥vhat they are saying.
The Revolutionary Student Iri-
fede fhould omm right out and
tay that they want the poor
morkinf' «t^ who goes out and
busts his gut at work every day
to pay for them to sit arour>d
and contemplate their navels for
four year^. The^ people who
want "free" child care shoidd
say that anyone who withed to
be a student at UCLA should
share in the coit of raising a
child that seewofie ehe chose to
bring into the world. Dick
Grefory thould admit that he
wants the U.S. to feed the
world. At what cost? And for
how long? Ar>d how long could
we do such a thing even if it was
dajCidid that it should be done?
f seriously advise all members
of this academic community to
thir>k long and hard about what
rights tnake m all freer women
anid men ar%d what "rights '
SUM
Abortion
3
i
{
Logically, most of the anti-
itory artictes ir> the Brum
have been essentially correct.
Even on an emotional level,
killing animals without good
reasoTH is wrong, fven if a fetus
ii not a complete human being,
abortion is stHt not detirablt.
Unfortunately, abortion is a
necessary evil, and only the
can decide when it is
A mother cares nKKe
deeply about the fetus than any
nnale eottibly could. I would
tfnil the tweiifarc ar%d future of
the fetus more to its mother than
■
-^^ •'^ ^mmw ^i^r^ir^^i
■■'■,
Tht Mm tami ZMt Miey
\
to sexist doctors, judges and
male laws.
As long as society falls to
provide child care, and until
women ate allowed to partici-
pate equally in law-making,
medicine ar\d in our judicial
system, tf>en no law restricting
abortion can ever be enforced
with any justice Abortioiri is not
good, but the alternatives are
much worse. If our society per-
mits police and busir>eiiitien to
kill "burgUrs" over a few dol-
lars, then a woman also deserves
the right of self-defense when
her career and life are threaten-
ed by an unwanted pregnancy.
A very sexist sooiety has
abortion necettary, and it is the
mass murderer. Presently there
IS only one good alternative to
abortion — lesbianism
■^
(iHlllli
1 1 1 1 1 (t 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
,1 1 1 1 f
M 1 1 1 1 n
-I
asaorted comic
greeting carda
tniistrat«d l>y
Gary Patterson
were 70f
400
7711
Vanguard I acrylic polymer
^rtlafs colora and medluma
were 70^-2.25
450-1.50
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5
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■I
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UCLA delegates.
(Continued from Page 1 )
jtcmi from what he luu seen of
Brown's performance at Gov>
ernor from hit vantafe point
on the Central Committee.
^Vm encouraged b^ what
Tve teen him do,** expllained
Olenick, relerring to Brown's
**retittance to pressure from
the old-timcrt'* at one qi
Brown's strong pointt.
Oiemck is tempoimnly limit-
ing hit active involveflmt in
Brown*! campaigB.
**With three aad Me half
hours of driving to UCLA four
times a week. 1 just don't have
that much time." said Oienick.
Senator Henry Jackson, who
very special purchases
in Bearwear!
Asstd short
sleeve sweatshirts
ioSJ»:kkM
UCLA
3.99
was considered the front run-
ner early in the caapaifn. has
tiace discontinuaC ictivc cam-
paifning. StilU his supportaat
prett mL
Mark Gamtbn, iclaclcd as a
Jackson delegate recommendee
in the 24th CD, has heen work-
ing on the Jackson campaign
lot 14 months.
**Vm going to stick with
him,** affirmed GaflMon ''His
name is still on the hallot. and
we will work to get to the
convention to have input on tlie
platform committee and Mip-^
port Senator Jackson if the
convention is brokered,** Gam-
son explained.
Working both in his district
and on campus, where he is co-
founder of the campus Jackson
organization, Gamsan has done
precinct work, organization of
volunteers jdnd fundraisers, and
Ofiedia research. He compiled a
list of radio ta!k shows, their
hosts^^-aiKl ience political ori-
entatioft and guest policies
which was usad extensively in
planning the Jackson media
campaign.
Yaroslavsky
Gamson, a junior political
iCwtinuai m Page 9)
Lucille Ball to
talk on comedy
» '^ , . -M
UCLA heather-tone
t-shirt, reg. 4.50
3.25
r/rayon/cotton in a rib
knit body thrrt; hathir blue, navy trim
OlImUCLA
— look for ttiMtf
b imtm.
7711
lM^:3Qi ^ 7 <0 jtgQ; aai 4(M
lienne Lucille Ball will
give a special lecture on tele-
vision comedy writing tonight
at 1:30 pm in Bunche \209B.
The lecture, which is free
and open to the public, is
being presented by the UCLA
Extension and was arranfed by
Ray Singer, who is currently
teaching an extension work-
shop in advanced comedy writ-
ing.
NEW-
WHILE-
U-
WAIT
Xerox Color
Copies tforn
Original Copy
or Enlarged
from
M nivvi
Mum-Copy
in
Artist Stora
State youth denied Democratrc ^6gates .
WinP-t^Qtinn flin : ~ «r Il*— PM«t) iMth fonM« Cner emc>..n. u.t.«
wine-tasting fun
SACRAMENTO (AP) ~- Sttid^nU can't sip along with Hw
others at baer aad wtne-tatttng daties, the stale Attemblv ruM
Monday.
Several legislators vehemently opposed the measure by
Assemblyman ICen Meade (D-Bcrkcley) It went down to a
cra*faing defeat. 15-35/ far short of the 41 votes ncaiad to sewJ it
to the Senate.
Had the bill passed, a companion constitytioafti aaM«dment
wottld have required voter approval before the 1 8-to-21 -year-old
tipping could have transpired.
Assemblyman Barry Heene, a Eureka Democoi who repre-
seats some of the rich North Coast wine country, hMktd out at
criticism against the bill He questioned **puriumcal attitudes" of
some of the opponents aad said the sute had the finest wine
country in the world.
Asfemblyman Alister McAlister, (D-San Jose), aagrily
denounced the measure as *nhe best practical joke of the year.-
Meade argued that in soma caaat students who were under the
legal 21-year dnnking agr were drinking in wine-tasting claim
already. He alto said any drinking would be supervised by the
^ -nructor The bill is AB 2116.
/sociology BMkior. fin-
thu-d behiad City Coun-
cilman Zev YaraalBViky aad a
professor from Lot Angeles
City Colkir in caacvt hallot-
ing^
**! ran at as individual" md
I am the only
runmng who wat ac-
tually doing something for
Jackso^.**
Fonacf Georgia Governor
Jimmy Carter, currently the
"BMa to beat" m the Demo-
cratic race, padBatf the Graad
Ballroom in hu March 12 ap-
pearance here. Two UCLA
students were elected as Caiter
delegate recooimendecs.
Wilham Barth, an SLC Gen-
eral Representative 1974-75,
won election as a Carter del-
egate in the demographically
diverse 24th CD, which extends
roughly from La Cieneia East
to Wcttem aad Pieo north to
Toluca Lake.
"Our delegatioiriiBipritira
Croat taction of people tradi-
tioaally left out of politics ~
Blacks, Ckicaaos, Gays aad
Youth," aeiad Barth
Unlike many caucuses, wktfi
tittes repreteatad traditional,
aMabbthed paaais, a slate at
Carter's 24th CD caucus repre-
sented the district's ethnic and
pohtical nunonties. Barth, who
was atkad to join the tiale,
decluiad on principle.
*V«it iBitpan^tirtly**
**! think a detegate matt^^^^Dlc
independently and respoatiMy.
I took that istue to the caaeut,*
taid Barth.
A tcaior ia pohtkal
Bluth foraaaet Carter emerging
ts the laaiar ia Hk CaMarnia
primary, especially in hfla of
support by Max Paieviky,
Robert Pauley aad Herb Hafif
— iaiptilaii Califomia
itical forces.
'Steve Pehaaifh. a
old jumor la political
was elected at delegate reoon^
mendee at Carter's 20lh CD
caucyt. At ia the 24th CD
Carter neaiiii. tkt 20ili CD
tiierted '^regalar citizens'* aad
refuted **big party typet" ac-
cording to Pehanich.
unteer wtirk for tlM Caiter
It currently work-
ing in Stau Senator Alan Rob-
bias* office as a community
caaeworker, a job which begaa
at as internship through
UCLA's EXPO office Pehan-
ich is doing precinct and vol-
Dickson
«:
— V-
waw 10 tne bmnb omoe ia
Dicktoa and asked what coald
be done. She said they, too,
did not prove helpful, and the
woman reported the crime the
aext day.
The police report notes that
the teearity guards scheduled
for that night are all memberf
of tiM Naval ROTC.
In another sexual, incident, a
aaked young man appei^^ in
the third floor south women's
fetliuuui of Hedrick fiall aad
attempted to touch a woman
who was Jiting the bathroom,
the fled the tenpejn safety and
the young man was not ap>
prehended.
Mhatliyour bankdobig
for you after sdiooi?
n
<lltniiyDUf|rarkiatf,yotarbnnkbgcoffint
finandai nlJpi motn nand for
credit You ymoL a bank that on
your banking ghnpk.
i%HNi oBoaa. \Mlh over twioa at many
CaMomla bank %Me're ueiiaily cioae Iv K you're
lo
hipiking When your ifiplcnion it apfamiad yw
aiting iirtrh nn minhnnm halanra, Iwiii jfimmnwtmA limlig, ma haiiil^,
dmdk fluaraniag Joad, BankAmarieaidf * oaaidi uh piolaclhJiC atrii
rnmn'itihjii fine BniihAmaiicaTffaiiihn Chni|MM-dlior juel
$2 a month.
^— ■■"""■ "^'V—fr-r -rtf taig%fnfr<iigrrhirliiiun
taanppinimatidcniiiM|;)yDufirdtheongditMt'tii^ioryoit,
GntfatothaHaniettJoblnthaWHlf ksl6p«etnf4iifilionfl^^
inlgN liK) iiwt to pick i«i oiar ''Vk^n In StMB 1^^
at yoiflr local
** i^w ■■■■■ vmv wtf
tnpfnrt if Carter was not
laalad, Pehanich said. **rd Ittve
to anil and see who*s availaMt
— Mjrway. I think Canards
goiag to make k.**
Idaho Seaator Frank Churdi,
chairman a( the reeeai Seaate
Committee on Intelligeaoe Ac-
uvities, u a bite entry into the
Democratic race. One UCLA
I at a de^
recommendee.
Robin Gorelick, It, wat
selected in the 2ltt CD Church
caucut.
'*! like Senator Church*!
stand on the ittaet, hit raeoat-
itions for controlbng the
anrantll)
I
f
^3
A WH Anit Eoyce parlced
ia Farldag Structure 5 had all
fbor of itt tnlid bine iner hub
capt tloien Arpil 2d. Tht hub
capt, latcribed with the letters
DANH, were worth
16
stolen 3 weeks ago from a
locked wooden storage box
located near the southwest
con^ of tlK tennis couru.
They were valaed at 1150. A
similar theft, occured laet
A ttudeat drivmg alm^
Wytoa Drive aear Circle Driat
I car shot at re-
tly by either aa air or IB
fun. The rig^ wiinar of his
car was shattered.
r^'
So u^ ndt efeop by eoon
•Ihnn af%^ adhor bnniL In edmri. Ani
477-4229
«
1
t
•
\
I
f
1
^i
/^
»^
If
ii»Tiiiiip«=Sai
^— ™"*^
•> -
J
f
i^M'^ty
TK STEICI MSCNmiS
N01M SOUND STEntO
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►1 »tlM«'
WITH PIONEER SPEAKERS
AH-FM •-Iracii.^r cmmm ;*«it^ .cMd«»J .«^»f^ features ^no
po*e' ^nj (*»i«r ih^tr P'qyi'i st»«»«i*iefs your u*f reaiu
cc^iciia'i/*^ '(^'U^¥ S^A cassette •«
^f-fs.o' ^^ vemion
79
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H*f» II It' Add 2S
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AMP
ONLY
GLENDALE MOl) 5 Centra' ;^40-406r
XANOGA PARK n V8 Toprinaa Canvon-Ri^
WEST COVINA N. w to L i 960
MOWTEBELLO ?525 W B^vef *y fiivd 721-0207
ANAHEIM 2711 \A^ I locoin 1^714)82^-8070
WEST L.A. 12437 Santa Mgnica tf20- 1446
2570
M-r 11-8 Sd* 1t-8 tiKi It-S
SPRING TOPPING
■■■■•■
SALE ENDS SATURDAY. MAY 15TH .
HURRY. QUANTrriES ARE UMITED!
■^?w
Save ^2 on our 2-pc. set.
Lovely camisole top with ^ ^^^x^^
matching tbarUAmm^ ov«r- f 119 9
blouse. Crochet borders. ■ M V
100* cotton. Natural or JL\^
black In sisM sm., iMd., Iga.
Campus events
irrow
-TIM Tipr. by Murray SchitQal will be
$mm»i$ ly ftM OapartMMt •! Tl
Am ntM. Mar M. MMisiMa Tl
13«. Ffw
2444
TiMrv d CrMf. ani tip-
wMli commonty utad
•riM. ^30 pm tomirrMr.
a FdlMHiK
. 7 10 pm. xommwu. KiiMty
bars Call Z74-2Z72 or 82S-2I20 or yitrt
ifCA
— fdl iMMi. 1-10 pm avtry Wodnaiiay
aili lao- 10:30 pm. tvory Friday Hda-
nsHMSlSlMiaN Canter 1023 Hitgard Fraa
-^••iMi kmtnmm 7t can halp you find
Ml Hm NatiMWl pfmipwual candidatat
mm^ m-mt amtt WM Karcfchott 30S
mt$ fill out a card and ttia mmmi will be
MWI lo^yau
— NlMMdipi. tnformation
M txtramural funding for
and paHiicliiaa art available in ttit
Fellowships and Assistantahlp Saction
MurfHy 1228
--•feMMl OraalMMdllp CdSar staffed by
tramad interns will help you find funding
(Of your Man Open dbtly noon-4 pm.
401
*Te Caia laa Umi dM Mmk. a b^
iMWb lactura. aaan May 12 Buncfw A-li3
3-5 pm May 12.
'21S0
May 12
Tiima
Kuno fu. 2<< idi. MAC I 141.
pm May 12 Acbardta MM
5-7
It pa.
Sfkrtaa^ap ciil.
fufidia 2178 aiN
3'5vpm.
-11 am.
TJHiriiayit Acfcarman 2401
^ — TdMM MMraMSaa MaaMa wmt As
Want Oaaa af Stu^aaM. Odica al Saai-
iadiil Liia and ma dinciaf af mt tmdam
CaMMlillO Camar. 1.46 pm. tonight Fire
aMa lauftoa m ^^9^r Haft and noon. May
1i. Karckhoff 400
pia. today Haines 304
-4ICU OMMm aife IMI r»1y 4 pm
racaa. 7 pm. bailMcue. tomorrow, call 02S-
37D4 or 02S-3171 tor informatKNi
""^WMBd ManiyaMBt, new expacNnantal
collage cImi. 730 pm. every Tuesday
Acfiarman
ami loca^ valaaiBar paaMona arc available
aaa Siraafh EXPO Ackerman A123 or call
«2S8e31 ^
consumer investigator Visit Kercktioft 311
'm «a(t 82S-2020 Votuntaart art alao naad
for environmental aad food pr(
-Tfta SPBpai d Wrdi. diractad by Jofw
Ford and atarrtng Htnry Faaai aM iana
Darwail wM ba screened 5 pm. taiw.
Malaftz 1400 Fraa.
-Tba Oap d Nal l»ad. will be sfiown 5
pm. May 12 Mafnitz 1400 Fraa
TaanaadO. organizational
styiants inttrtalad in particiaaling in May
22 tournamtnt. IX pm. today Ackerman
3604 or noon tomanaa. Acbaaai 3617
""■^J^aiaaai laga. noaii'f.90 Pm. w^ay. 4-
5:30 pm May 12 and 2-3J0 pm May 13.
Ackerman 3604 Saapaaiad donation SI
ilpbi Odd CM. Christiaa aorarity BIMt
Maiy. 6:30 pm, Monday evenmga. caN4IO-
SBO or 477-0367 for informataa.
"laaaaaa 4dM. orauaa wa laaat 1-2 pm.
MaMwaw. I>I0 aa. May 12. and 3-4 pai.
May 13. Matt) Scianca 4223 CaM 025-2031
for information. '
aaa aada bv
I aa adar JMb
cadupy American muaic. noon, tomorwa.
auditorium Fraor
Uaaa. 4 pdi. taday. Madi
maattng for aft old and new volunloart.
7 30 pm evtry Wtdntsday Acktrman
2412^
— Fraadi CaaparaaSdi iraap. 7:3o pm.
tvtry Wadaaaiay international Studaat
by fa Engm-
3-4
Ad MO Flying 7-0 p«. KM 400
tvary atttrnoon Horticulture Gardens
34 pm MAC 0 tlO
Taaaiav
3J04 pm. FiaW 7 KacaM. 5-7
pai. aoaaaa Sya aos. Skeat/Tria. aaaa-t
pm Maw 6ya 11 6. Kaapo 530430 pm
MAC 0 146 Numag noon-1 pm. Maa Gym
102. Judo 2-4 pm. MAC 6 146 AMude. 7-0
pfi). MAC 0 110 Socta Oaaoa. 7-0 pa.
Oykatra Sac Sm..' Sating. 4-8 pa: Dock
Party Marina Del Ray.
Moort Lawn
Ftahmg. 3-4 pa. Ali 2412. Nada Yoga. 5-
615 pm aoaaas Gym 200: Ttam Hand-
bail 6 154 pa. Wcaaoa Sya 200 Indaa
Saeaa 0-iO pa. WoaMW%aiDO.Sbaai-
ing/Pistol. 1-2 pm. Riftt Ranga. Jatfa. 2-4
pm. MAC 0 140. WaMr 8lu. 44 pm AiJ
3617 Wrtstling 3-5 pm MAC S 110
Cansefvation — Lecture Series noaa
Suncfa A 103 Go. 3-7 pm. Matb Scaneaa
3015 A.
Tbaraaw
Lacroaat. 3:304 am. FiaM 7. Air RHlt
Patat. "94 pm. SMlt Saaga Waoani kar-
aa. 54 an. Monana Gym 200 Aikido 74
pa. MAC 0 110. Kaaa. 6:304.» pm MAC
• 140. Kaao Fu 24 pm. MAC 0 140
34 pm MAC 0 110.
noon. Moort Lawn. Amataur
Saia Rffi BaaSar HaN
74 pa. KN 400; TabM Tama. 7-
rick Sac Sa: SrMoa. 746-11 pa. SNM
mmt Sfidit Clab -
HaSM Yoga noon-2
Kaaa. 5-7 pm. m
24 pa
Tl
taring SraaiaM
This is the place fot Rib Lovers/
By for the Best Ribs we ve tried irt I A
Her aid EnAmir^r
COMPLETE DINNERS
Casua/ Dining
irom
$2.75
Gym 200
6ya aO; Saaai
2-4 pa. SaiOi
ayM
Karat 10-noon JfVomans Gym 200: Cridt-
tt. 10 am-7 pm. Ccicktt Pitch Garden 2-7
pp. Horticulture Gardan. FmM >4acbay. 3^5
pm. Attilotic Field Snow Ski Club Picaic. 1
pm Sunsat Rtc Ctnier Lacraaaa «a Sai
Oieguito Club 1 pm MW Canar a Oft
Field
Taan Handball. 2JO-4 pa
200: Kando. noan-2 pa. aasawa Ova
Gardan. 2-7 as. Hortaullurt Gaafcn
NARR Y'S OFI08 PIT MM
1434 N CRESCENT HCIGHTS of SUNSET STRIP
10 AAtnutes Uown SAan^ct Bivd to
louret Coriyon 1uT»i1^ighr—T~^^^xf >^ou re Ther«
Write
^J^
A Study in Nostalgia
by Ronald ^. Carbajal
exhibition and tale of prints
4.50 each, 2 for 8,00 unframad
16.00 framad
May 10-14
11:00-4:00
Cams saa tfils rsinsflcsbld cdlaction of nosMUgtc
photoompHtc prints of sirplsnaa, XrmnM. csrs.
movias. nasslsrn tfiamas — sll prints v«ra^0xt4"
ifnd sapis
•'.-►■
a lovai, acaaf^MrY union.
7711
Opan morv-ttiurt 0:30-730 ffl fJMt'l^: SSt HM
^
XM, education.
Psfo 5)
TM prscticmg populsuoa
hsve. The msututi<Ni
which combinct trsditionsl
sducatioB with TM studies la
the ^^science of crestive in-
tclkfence,** recently recetvcd
lasagDition for - csndidscy for
soeraditstioiL After intcnstve
evslustioa, the sccreditstioa
romnwrtcK reportad that they
were ^oasrwheimad by the lev-
il et interaction ^od the level
of hsmfiony" between students,
fsculty and sdministrstioa.
Thsy sloe raportad s
or
^Although sll thst*B been
wrttten sad flk|awn about TM
tavofiabk, it*s fllMaPa
-.1 pidiirc. TM
aat only a
» rf' -s-L-ri.
^We wottld like to make
West Los Angeles the first
idesl society/* Bloom ssid.
"We have one-hslf percent TM
involvement in the population
right now4
sfe
the deeper, more
tsBt cfiecu of TM.
i
I
LA jobless rate drops
LOS ANGELES <AP) — Fewer people were out of work ia
April in Los Angeles County thsn the month before, but
the osasodsUy sdjusted unemployment rste remsinod st 92
per cent.
April employoKat rose by 3,200 from Msrch to 2.^
nullion, sad 3004ii persons were out of work, said the
state Employment Oevelopment Dspaitaient
In Orange County, April unemployment wss TJ) per cent
compared to 6.9 per oeiu in Msrch. In April, 54,600
persons were unemployed, sad in Msrch it wss 58,300.
Fayinyifni fibres were 753,100 for Apnl snd 741.600 for
Msrch
For Riverside-Ssn Bci^rdino Counties, The acasooslly
sdjuoisd late for April wss 9,9 per ccat^ up froai f J piBr
cent in Msrch. April
cent, up f ri
to 52,100 in March. Employment wss 444,400 in April snd
444,600 in Msrch. -
The Cslifomis unemployment figure wss 9.6 per cent ia
April, up from 9.5 per cent m Msrch.
Deiegafes .
(CiiatiaaidfcuBiPsgef)
intelligence community snd
multinstionsl corporstions,
sad his support of Isrsel snd
Soviet Jews,** Gorelick said.
The Church strstegy is to
win St the convention if no
csndidste csn schieve s ftnt
bsUot victory, Gorelick ex-
pMinccL
'^e*re relying on a stsnd-off
smong /the other csndidstes, in
which esse we expect the con-
vention will turn to Senstor
Church,** ssid Gorelick.
Gorelick, s sophomore in
pohticsj saence, helped set up
the csmpus Church, for Presi-
dent organization sad is cur-
rently sssisting in fundrsistiig
snd lesfletting aettvities She
wss one of two women elected
by the 21st CD Church csucus
rrt
y tfji^x*:
C«.
o
>^
«f
t— J".
\/
-»r-
•p«cial purchat«l
dalicste pendsnt
necUsceo
' •
Looking fsr mora axpanslva thsn thay
raalty mr; tfiasa chsrmaro mr^ yours in
gold or silver tones, snd exquisite
deeigna the triple otsr, ssshoam. pluss
butterfly, triple haafls. haart-snd-key.
dove, children kissing or holding hsnds
Dedghtlul gift!
blevai
1*
\
S^.
.1
I
i
summer ssndsis
ONLY 4.50
• ri^t.
,r^
The Criss Cross sandsl is multt oalSPSd. so you
sling is yours in blue daomi or bone
of
it with snything — tie
At ttiie prioe. you can
\-r
blevet
7711
7 46-7 30 fri 7 4S4Ja SSI tCM
r.
V
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4j
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■■«..«.■'»■■' «
"■It tin
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■■»••"■ ' i<
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" ■ ••" **
....w^
AWARENESS, 76
I
r
I
- 'i
z
t
I
Presenting three most powerful speakers . . .
Tuesday: INTERNATIONAL ARTS DAY
International noon concert
International Arts Exhibition
International Arts Filrns
11-12 a.m.
Vista Room
Sunset
Recreation
Center
12-1 p.m.
Moore 100
Violation of Human Rights World-wide —
Amnesty International Campaign to Make
Torture As Unthinkable As Slavery"
GINETTA SAGAN. Chairman Western Regional Board,
and JANET JOHNSTON, Amnesty Internationa!.
"Non-violence in a Violent World"
IRA SANDTERL, Institute for Non-violence
Wednesday:
INTERNATIONAL HEALTH &
ENVIRONMENT DAY
Perspectives in International Health
Food Industry & Intant Feeding
International Ecology Seminar
Thursday: INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS DAY
Angola
~ Korea
United Nations
Films . . .
<*|^^Ks:^<,^i^ 'ojt-
THE ARMENIAN CASE (11-i^ Kmsey 169)
%
MAU MAU (12-1. Architecture 1102)
Africans political and military response to repression and armed aggression
whir*^ resulted from 60 years of resistance to coioniai r
i, AN OPEN DOOR (II-2, Architecture 1102)
A three-part documentary of China by Joh- Rodti,^- uuih<i>>^. d;id Ctnna
waicner The Awakening Giant Days of Turmoil Today ar ' jmorrow
<^0 I
;Free tickets available at
^ckerman Info Desk FSA.
ISC. OISS.
m
EUROPE*
'Tuesday. Dickson Art Center)
AFRICA NIGHT*
(Wednesday, Rolfe Halll
LATIN America night*
(Thursday Dickson Art Center)
Rolfe Hall 1200. 7:00-10:00
nternatio
Dinner
International
Chi"<=se^^^ Songb ,UCLA
i Songj
lanese Fal
onesian Ja^PDanc__ .
Ch!iic'c>e Student
f-r^n
nK
W^^^^^-^'^B
.'t^mk^*M.m.i
(UC A '^
Jaoa
It D
TWU
Ui.\J I
Saturday at i.b.C
xuiic fooa irorT: . 10 countrie
Be1f^ _
De.L gates
i iCr ETS /
lANSS STEPS
nternai lal Food
& Ar'
oon-
AILABLF /
SC
Songs /KorA,-^
T Q C I r n I f
otTumsmmd^mt
M»>»-:Jgmt
■^o^a
^^I'iff' ti^'g
UCLA IIMTERNATIONAL WEEK
For info call 825-4940 or 825-3384.
m
1
I
liWi^
■atuBft
'iFr_ j;
srac
■•-;» •
f
I
Somefh/ng New - Excifing in
Alitb Insurance
ft you dsn't K«v« liability inturanc*. ttw n«w financial
r«iponsib4ltty law cpiil^ aflact you in I97S
Modified ratof for Qualifying StvdMits
Call Today For Yow^ Froo Quotation
245-7 27 S Hm^m tirtM — Will Travel f •4-0144
Mercuiy Insurance Agency
•
X
;._!:•
Brady Hodge
telttUCIA
>fourorfictalPSA
only doing tfiair
jobs. \MHh fnofo
Caitfomia flightB
iwrair-
lina. PSAItfMdy
to take oft any tima
you art. tat PSA
gp^ you a lift
Brady Hodg^
47t-1t1t.
I
I'
¥
i
I
ANNOUNCEMENT
ALAN & DOROTHY PELS
INTERNATTONAL STUDENT
ANNUAL PRIZE
$500 - 1500
for academic year September 1976-June 1977
for best thesis or papre on how, where and in
what manner the student intends to use the
skills, ability and knowledge learned in this
country in his/her' home country >
Preference given to graduate students, nearing
completion oT degree, with demonstrated
^ '~r~ financial need.
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE
International Student Center
1023 Hi Igard Avenue ._..
~ — Westwood r- - ??tp
DEADUNE FOR RETURNING APPLICATION
May 17. 197iB
THE COUNCIL ON EDUCA-
TIONAL DEVELOPMENT
(CED) will be considering course pro-
posals for the Winter Quarter 1 977. and Is
prepared to sponsor innovative courses
of genuine academic quality which
would be of Interest to the campus
community. Such course proposals will
be due in the CED Office no later than
Monday, May 17, 1976. if you are in-
terestKl in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms In tfie Office of the Ck>uncil on
Educational Development. 3121 Murphy
Hall.
Gnt^GPt/Oinm te-nb
•
I
Young, gifted and naked
By MldHMl Pi
Woody Allen and Mel Brooks oistrafeotisly
IPftrodied tke romaiitic epic and the horror fite
wkh Lovt and Death and YoMBg Fi ■■> laaidi
Now Bruce Kimme! doei the iame to the
Hollywood musical with Tha First Nndie
Hmdai (at the Manns Weatwood) Whik not
in the laafiie with the fint two filmi, it is ictll
very funny.
It is present day Hollywood and a porno
producer (Stephen Nathan) is strugglii^ to save
his hankrupt studio. His only hope if to shoot
the fint pomograpfak muncal, complete with
top hats and danciiig vibrators. If he fails, his
hagkari will forecloac.^
Obitacles await him at every set-up. As part
of the deal, he must employ a young Ivy
LanpK director (Kimmel), who studies Eisen-
stein, but doesn*t know, the definition of
pornography. Then his leading, hidy (Mary La
Rue) quits, forcing him to cast his dancing
•acMtaty (Cindy WiUiaois) in the big
ihowstopper, **Let *Em Eat Cake, (But Let Me
Eat You).-
Needless to say, the film scores a smash.
Khnme! becoaias the new boy-woadcr. Nathaa
saves his atMdao mad WUhams wias her
Tijjithar tkay wakz down Hollywood
vard, Mip^p itKo the night
From beginniflf to cMd, it is Kimmers show.
In addition to acting, he co-direets with Mark
Haggard and coMtrihMtcs the saMSMplay
soMfs. In both cases the roMte are so whi
sacally infectious that The flM Nvdh
is an inoffensive at a Wah Diney movie.
Above all, it it KJmmtl, combining
with naive curiotiiily, who mmkn the
he ''directs*' the action. Paeaasii^ the innocent
exuberance of a 10-year-old sneaking his firat
sip of beer, Kimmel inspiroi isMint rmpailhy.
His work pafMcularly shines in scenes wiMorehe
drives a erase into the ^^***Tig dildos and is
attacked by a housefuJ of whores He display!
more musical charm than anyone since Robert
Morse.
It IS doubtful that The Fint N«dle Mvsical
will be m contention for any of next year's big
awards. ttopefuUy, though, it wonH be the lait
picture show for Rimmal or any of his com-
pwiy .
Miller's
He has been called every-
thing from a fint-dait par*
.nographer to the '^modem-day
Rabekis," but Henry Miller
transcends all conventional
definitions. As a writer
embraang all that cmbcMM
life he becomes, in amtece, life
itself. Nowhese is this clearer
in his recent wntmg than his
latest work. Rook of Frianda
(Capra >r«as; $7 95, I3« pp.),
his most joyous in some time.
_ B^prc opening .JMI M
Fiteidi, one OMist put aside
the nKmones of such
works as Traak af Ci
This Week on Campus
Two music department free noon concerts are of special
iaiafvft this week because they feature compoaitons by students
Tomorrow the UCLA Contemporary Chamber Ensemble,
diraeted by (jeorge Packer, will perform compositions by Burt
Goldstein, James Homer. Tim Mukherijee, Ted Schrcffkr and
Mel Powell.
On Thursday, the Jazz Ensemble will perform works by Bruce
Brode, Rocky Davis and Jeff Mar. Both concerts are in
Schoenberg Hall.
The Cal State Northridge Symphony Orchestra is in Schoen-
berg Hall Thursday mght, playing Igor Stravinsky's arrai^HBent
of aw Star Spmiilad Banner (no kidding). CoptaHid*t Dance
Symphony and Charles Ives' rather spooky "Unanswered
Question." Tickets are $3 general, SI lor UCLA students and S2
for other students.
A free noon concert in Schoenberg Hall Friday features
in organist Peter Hempin.
The Booka hi My lifi or The
of Marnnsii, for they
Jones'
^
Review: Men's Glee Club
The Men's Glee Chib was all iwaetnais and light, and
less all-Amencan in ita Wadncwtay night ooaoeft in Schoenberg
Hall The program of show tunes, folk songs, chestnuu and
novelties was done with group's uawd pohihad, htoded sound
and infectious enthutiaam. StMl a PoByannish effect that director
Donn Weiti usually manafes to avoid was ttiitinctlj pfaatui this
time, and juat a bit grating.
A notable exception was Dvorak's Drei Siavokttche
VoUtabadcr, getting iu first complete performance in the Uailad
States. The sangs are Dvorak in a reflective mood, and have an
almoat reJigi— s quality in the rich harmonies and flawing hMiw
The Glee Club also performed three solid but decidedly
unmemorabic aoǤi by the 19tb-century American Isaac
Woodbury
ot Ocrshwin. Porter, Cohan and other
By Jnmi Morlay
Eva's Man by Gayl JoMi
(n—iiim Houae, S6.95, 177
pnpBS) is the story of a middle-
aged Black woman, Eva Me-
dina Canada, incarcerated in a
psychiatric prison for murder-
ing and sexuaUy muulatmg her
lover Eva's biogtmphy onfaiil
through a eeriea of flashhacti.
the scenes from a hnitnl child-
hood, idoliaeBBiii and aduh-
hood all jumbled tofether in
one crazy kaleidoecope Joarn
tnes to create the illusion of
insanity from an inside view,
but her conception seems
forced and invalid — an in-
experienead writer's imagina-
tion of wJM ioanatty might ha
like
Eva^s narration is phrased in
distrmwgly M^, child-like
terms; like a child, she is over-
ly enamored of hodi|y func-
tional J«Mi hna amiMiad the
Mlantml color of Eva's youth
In a Nei
New York
sequem itineram career in the
swnaon ■nOMniBS as Ma SosBn
in fivor «f an exclusive em-
pteais on pornography and
excrement
— Hwward P<
nc,
more identify
than with a
A. Mandell Iducationtl Cantir
Wl rfipifi TM m IIKB M fOTBWMi| 1MB:
0m CBisft A^nliginiig)
%JLT^ t.BJLT^ QMJL, m.CJLT^ B OJfULT.
•a an
ITSi
TUNE-UP, LUBE & OIL i^AK
T7T<
J»
♦35
OVIBNAIIi I
f*¥ouiu^cfin^mm,».m^ 894-7015^ I
I
I
(farri^M)
Triends': memories of maturity
were written hy a much
younger Miller in more paa-
sionnte tiama. Bmtk of Friands
is, like so much of his work,
autobiography but it is more
like a long love letter to his
very best childhood pais from
the streets of tum-of-the-cen-
tury Brooklyn
More importantly, Bn^ af
Friends is the collection of
mellow memories warmed and
charpad By the mind of an 85-
year-old master who is still a
-chikL^-JiearL
One is astonished by the
variety of characters: "Hen," as
his friends called him, who
raised hay on the sidewalks of
New York; Susiu, his first
friend, a rather savage kid who
loved Rider Haggard; Joey
and Tony, relatively peaceful
boys who introduced Miller to
the magic of nature; filler's
Cousin Henry, who was the
''king** of his street, 85th in
Manhattan, a place that
seethed with sexuabty and life.
Each chapter begins with a
quaint photoigraph of a part
of Miller's stalking grounds
and ends with a cryptic and
beautiful Miller w^tercolor,
Tlicy asa iidiflii'r of the
hook*s general style: calm and
serene, overflowing with love
(and hate for those who de-
serve it).
But there is a sadness hirt
also. Almost without aaaa^
tion, each chapter ends with
the fnend grown up, a nobody
lost, dying (and Miller often
hagflng^ to him for some
dough.) It in.fests Book of
Friinii with a liiar mHiMig:
that the purity of childhood is
sure ta he brow^beaten as you
'^grow" into maturity.
It saHM Ant the only one
who survived this process was
Miller himself he is sure
that hft hna hacn praiaiir 1 hy
;1 who
Jewfsh StudiM Colloquium
The Poetry of
NATAN ZACH
A Lecture In Hebrew by
MERI BARUCH,
Phd candidate in
Near Eastern Languages
u^t«. TueBday Noon
May 11 2412 Ackerman Union
T
saved him from the hell-hola af
conformity
For thb, we can all thank
our lucky stars.
^Man': illusions of insanity
Richard Speck or a Charles
Manson She exudes an odd
passivity from her early child-
hood sexual intercourse with a
boy's dirty popsicle stick
through her mnrriafe at 18 to
the 52-yaarHild JanMs '"Hawk"
Hunn, a tender murderer who
watches Eva Kke a hawk day
and night to ensure her faith-
fulness. Oaonaionally. Eva ex-
plodes into a surprisingly de-
structive violenoe aimed at the
mttn armnd- her and we are
left to pmak out har motiva-
tions, which are never really
Eva herself seems to blame
her murder of her lover on the
vagne estonr thnt^ **He thnngji
1 was that kind of a woman,**
a whose. While the
kys out hiiB ami
of Eva's bizarre psyche,
she doaa ant give m mmm^
clues to rMBy naiamlMid the
woman nnd the Book con-
depth,
ii no hunKyr in this
no warmth, no
manity, no^ insight The
that can bt mkA af Emft
is that it shows a naUdm-
^dfa
ire liiemrt
NEW TIME & PLACE
Theosophy Workshop
MondaylEver^tg»~^ 11aineiliaJ[21 8
730-9:30
Topics include:
ATLANTIS —
WHAT & WHEN?
Parapsychology
Ethics ^^
UCLA EXPERIMENT AiL COLLEGE
SPRING 1976
Condiicfed by tPm ffcajyijorfars Staff —
Thmou3phic€d Sociafy /rUamoriorio/.
10th ANNUAL U.C. BERKELEY
JAZZ FESTIVAL
ami
RBBMy LtBfiS
MlyCarlir
HhmIi \Mn
TJipa
sx.
-3r
31
I
t
Sweep of California sets stage for USC series
\%^mmmmmW9^rwa^M4) Dennis Barfield to flv out to ifcailmi n«ht r^\A mK^mmt ^^m^m^^^
2 Tbc iruim added twu mdrt in the iixth, one
coming as Penniali itok ^loinc on the front end
of a double stcaU but CaJ got ihem b^k in the
eighth. UCLA addod one in tiieir half of the
ctgfath for inMinMoe and eun Peterson retiied
the final three Bean in «ffder.
A picchen^* dual, a rarity at Sawtelk Field,
replaced the thigging matches for the series
finale. When the Bruins came to bat in the
bottom of the sixth inning, each side had just
two hits. The difference was that one of the
Bears* hits was a two run homer by Len
Patterson — the only real mistake Ed Cowaa
would make all day.
8 The Bruins loaded the bases with none out in
^' the sixth but Jeff deed fuuM^Bd to work out
^ of the jam. He didn't get out of the next
^ inning.
S Townsend led off with a double down the
• right field line and Delany singled him to third
5* After Penmall struck out. Dallas bounced one
J just over the third baseman's head, sconng
J Townsend and sending Delany to second.
One out later, with the Bears playing him
to pull, left bander Ken Gaylord dropped one
into the opposite field for a double, sconng
Delany with the game tying run. .
Neither team could score until the bottom of
the 10th ahhough the Bruins had a chance an
inning earlier with men on first and second and
one out. Cal also had a chance in the eighth
when Marshall Johnson beat out a grounder
and advanced to third on an error by Cowan.
There were no outs, but Cowan sUndcd him
there by striking out Tim Hibkerson, getting
Dennis Barfield to fly out to itwllrr-n- nght field
and fanning Altoq Caesar.
In fact. Cowan got stronger as the gaflK
went along, allowing jusi two iiiu after Peter-
son*s fourth inning homer. The big right
hander who improved his record to 9-2. struck
out five Bears in the final three innings.,
finishing with 11.
He was rewarded for his effort when the
Bruins puakad across the winner in the 10th
Robbie Haadrrson doubled to right center and
Earl Battey ran for him. Jerry Waiart^iai^M
Id nght and head coach Gary Adams held
BdOey at third The Bears walked Jim Auten to
lond the bases and the stl-ategy worked as
Townsend forced Battey at the plate.
Delany followed with a grounder to the hole
mt second Barfied smothered it but didn't have
a play and the Bruins moved to within one step^
of the title.
Offensively. Dallas wit the Bruins' big maa.
The senior second baseman collected eight hits
in 1 1 at-bats against California pitching, hiking
bk batting averafe from .299 to .323. 4ie hit
two home runs, scoring four runs and driving
in four.
Other offensive highlights included seven
UCLA homers (Dalbu — two. Penniall,
Waters, Baker, Gaylord — hisTOth. and
Delany) and nine doubles, including four M
the bil of Townsend
By scoring 22 runs on the weekend, the
Brums ran their toul to 370 for the year and
became the most offensive team in school
history. The 1972 squad had held that distinc-
tion, scoring 365 runs in 1972.
Record
If the UCLA baseball team
does win ^he.CIBA title. «. will
be the first league title for the
Bruin baseball squad since
1969 That year the Bruins
won the District Eight playoff
before being eliminated in the
College World Series.
The. Bruins couid win the
title by finishing just 2^
against USC. In the past, two
wins against the Trojans have
been next to impossible for
UCLA to accomplish.
UCLA would win the title
because of its record againsl.
the other CI BA teams. The
Bruins were 5-1 against Calif-
omia. 5-1 against UC Sanu~
Barbara and 4-2 versus Sun-
ford On the other hand, USC
was 3-2-1 against the Bears. 3-
2 (with one left) against UCSB
and 4-2 with Sunford
Cowan*s four hitter Saturday
afternoon increased his CIBA
record to 3-0. He previously
defeated UCSB and Sunford.
^^lowiag two runs in each of
those games His earned run
averafe in league action is now
!.29.\
Among the fans watching
Saturday's doubleheader were
jlthletic director J D. Morgan,
assistant athletic director Keith
Jtefley, trainer Ducky Drake
and a baseball fan from way
back — John Wooden. The
former basketball coach voiced
his displeasure at a couple of
calls by the umpires during the
first game.
The Bruins have hit 62 home
runs this season but are still
nine away from the school
record, set in 1973 Those 71
home runs are believed to be
an NCAA record.
Dave Baker has played in 55
of the 57 games this naam,
most on the squad. Dave Pen-
mall is next with 52, followed
by Robbie Henderson and
Bobby Dallap^
1^ Mark D<
of Savings!
Intramural Sports
Mea
This week is the beginning of softball playoffs. Make sure you
K)w wiien you play. The men^a mim wmtk m» IkU this
afternoon. May 10 at the Rec Center. Sign up at 2 pm at the Rec
Center today.
WoMcn
Doubles volleyball play begins tomorrow night. Check to Me
when you play. The women*s swim OMet will be heU tiMf
Wednesday, May 12. Sign up at 2 pm on the day of the mbet
Coatf
The coed swim relays for 2 mea, 2 wonen teams will be held
t^ Wcinwia) , May 12. Teams should sign up at 2 pn on
Wednaaiay afternoon. Sign upt will be uken now through May
20 for the open coed doubles yotteyball tournament. Play will be
held in Pauley Pavihon beginning May 24 for 3 consecutive
nights. Varsity players are welcome to participate in this
tournament.
HAWAII, VAHCOUVER-CANAOA, ALASKA,
NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA,
STUOCNTS. P»K)fESSORS. WANT TO REDUCE VACATION EX-
PENSES? WANT TO FIND ACCOMMODATIONS BVORE STARTING
OUT ON YOUR aiG TRIP? WANT TO EXPERIENCE AN EXCITING
VACATION^ EXPCMIOiCC NOaK CXCHANOIMa
CONTACT PEOPLE tNTERESTCD IN EXCHANGING OR RENTING
VACATION HOMES OR APARTMENTS
ADVERTISE NOW IN THE ALOHA OCHAMQK 01-
aaCTOMY OR PURCHASE DIRECTORY ONLY TO
FIND ACCOMMODATIONS
WRITE FOR IMMEDIATE INFORMATION
Any Coupla EiigiNa
DATING? MARRIED?
Particlpata in a Special Study of Romantic
WNO CAN ^AaTiarATB^
aMaTDOYOuaet
St>ow up at • tMvw and {
WNAT la n* aacuT?
ormarriMi.
Youri
ora»
Com« wHh your pwtnar |o Wtm
Room 1 iTf anow up any Mm«
MByf
For mora
7p.m antfiopm oiiti«(
M%ia
tj
caliaMt
maia
pwens does well
(
ficid
Pafr23>
mcli
Ike Trojan's top
high hurdler Mike Johoson.
Caaper won the heat in 13.7
as a strong finishing sprint
earriad the spartan past Ow-
eas. Jackna was third and
JolMaaa fourth.
Two UCLA aluma, Maxie
Parks aad Bcnnie Broara^ also
heaped reyeoge on the Trojans
The fooaer Bruin quarter mi-
krs raa fbft fiaal two lejp on
th^ Maccabi Track Club*s tmk
relay iqaad that eigad USC hy
leH llyui a foot.
Broam turned a close laee
into a raaaway on the third leg
as he splinted into a ten yard
lead But Tro/s Ken Raadle
ran a blistering 45.3 aachor leg
that cloaad tliue gap on Parks.
The Maccilhi nrnner had just
enough energy to hold on at
the end'.
**! was dissappdinted last
week,** enplained Par^s of the
USC — UCLA dual meet,
which the Trojans won 83-62
*"! wish I could have helped
out. But graduation ukes a
toll ^on everyoae."
Earlier Parks had downed
BrowB in the open 440 yard
daah. BrowB took an early lead
oa the hackstretch but Parks
pasa^ hiih on the final turn to
wind ""up with a five yard vic-
tory in 45.5.
The Bruin*s two mile relay
team came up with an ad-
ditional fine performance as it
took third behind Cahforaia
aad use
Alvin Gilmorc led off for the
Bruins but couldn't keep pace.
with upset minded UC Irviae
and Ffesno Sute He^haadad
off to Curtis Beck ten ywii
behind the leadaft.
UCI and Freiao faded as
Cal took ^ lead. Freshman
Conrad Suhr ran the third leg
for the Bruins in l:4g.8, his
second best h«lf mile ever His
kick was enough to give Bruin
anchor runner Jeff Hayntt a
slight lead.
But Haynes was no match
for Cal*s James Robinson and
the Trojan's Rayfield. Beaton,
the prenuer 8iO aien on the
West coast. The doo passed
Haynes on the first turn aad
dueled for the victory between
themselves. Cal finally won in
7:22.4, a second ahead of the
USC while UCLA wound up
third in 7:27.4.
; "We wanted to give Jeff
(Haynes) a good Ind goinf
into the final leg.** said Beck.
**We didn*t do a very good
job.-
As for ' htflMelf, the soph-
omore explained, **rm still
rhnppiag like a mikr out
there fm aol putting in the
proper speed work. But agaia
that*s not my nuun event. Con-
rad and Jeff just float out
there.-
Haynes said that he is gouig
throufh a temporary slump. 'I
haven*t been feehng good late-
ly.** he said ''But I ^ hope to
have It kjated out by the Pae-
T% aext week**
UCLA*s Mike TuUy faced a
gairgantuan field of 24 in the
pok vault and waaad ap aae
af Hie 20 vauhen uiIm 4lia*l
dear a height He pa«ad afl
heights until 17-0 aad then
aanad all thrcce attappla.
"This waa the first tiaae Pve
and my loiig approach,** ex-
plained TuHy Afterwards -It
was an experiment but 1 dida*t
get anything aocomphilMd he-
aaaae i iMd only three triea. At
the pao-Ts 1*11 go back to my
ma aad then t*n try tiK
run again at the
relays in two weeks
TuUy comp
Uf NIL RgJiUffl
was voiced by several vaulters.
**lt really screws up ypur ac-
celeration;** he said. "Some
vaulters, like Dan Ripley. don*t
mind. But !*m sensitive to run
ways.**
Ripley, a former San Jose
State standout and the indoor
world record holder, won the
West Coast Relays competition
with a best jump of lg^. Don
Beard from Australia via toag
Beach Sute %vas second m \%-
ley m^Wnt
than Rip-
;her Brum vertical jump-
er, Jason Meiaier, was seventh
in the high jump at 6-10. Brum
shot putters Jim Neidhart and
Dave K.urrasch placed mnth
and 1 3th respectively m their
event while Jerry Herndon
(long jump). Mike Bush (100)
and Dotson Wilaoa (100) failed
to place
AMERICAL
1494 «V«»tweod
Cirtl
• SMitel*
ht-(ais)4Ta-sTai
I
I
runway, a baef fhM
\
First
. t 7 •
time
ever!
£3-
special note
to UCLA
sophomores;
you can order your class ring now
SO that you can wear it in your funior year!
tt \m&A to be claaa rings could only b% ordered t>y
upperclassmen and graduates. BUT — since you'll
be a junior in the next quarter, you can order it now
for summer delivery All cleee rings are custom-
ffiede. so come in and let us know what you want.
blvval.
union. g2S477ii
Opan «iorvthurt 7 46-7 30: fri 7 46^aJ0. sat 10-4
la
r
i
I
AUTO
INSURANCE
^ES yOu need auto insurance
All the more reason to contact us for discounts up
?o 35 to rrost stud* — another good reason
for bemg in college.
See or call us in Westwood
477-2548
Agents for College Student Insurance Service
1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build
•ng) LA 90024
Coxswains most ignored part of crew program I ^•*"*'' *"••» »*•'• *" ■'?"
•y MilL« Fl
DB S|Mrto
The aotl tiMPii pMt of the
UCLA crew prognun ie tht
vital role of the coxiwaint.
Thetr job it to neer the boat,
watctuof for ohMadet. AJm>,
they mutt decide the pace
neonatfy to heat conpetmg
sheilt.
On November 9, 1975, the
UCLA men^s and womoi't
crew journeyed to Lot Aiifekt
Harbor for the annual LA:
Head of the Harbor. In thit
ra,ce, the coxswaint had to
cCAfcC"*
PBtSENT
siruxr
*ST'
^0t^^-
BICCNTENNIAL
EVENT
a nvcr tuin
which the boat tiirat without
•toppu^g.
However, tince early
November the role of the
coxf warn hat oicluded tunung
in raoet. While racmg 2,000
meten, the UCLA coxtwaint
mutt choote whether the pace
of rowing m the naott iilieieat
one or not.
Monica South, a tenior, it
the head of |he coxswaint at
UCLA. The "coaat,** wmpf
are tometimet called, are fo^
lowing a recent wett coatt
tradition they are mostly
iIk day before, yat Oaiet and
company ware able to pull aff
an uptet of toaK of the tap
crewf m the area.
ShieU Parker it the
coxtwain for the jnaiar vanity
eight boat. She hat quarter-
backed thaa to aaae of
UCLA't
thv
Dennk Murrin, Gail Jumer.
Erin Mourey, and Patti
Coniad round out the nien*i
la fact, the Bniins have only
one male coxswain — Sieve
Oatet Th^ highlight of freth-
man Oates* season came a
week ago Sunday at Newport
Beach, when he guided the
junior varsity four shell to a
surprise victory The bont had
only been arranged bv positioqi
Sue Cooa and Kim Palchik-
off are the two coxswains for
the women*! crew. The fact
that the wagmn't crew hat a
mere two coxswaift it directly
in line with the owiiu'swomen*!
lack of facihties.
However, next year the
Dniiii women will hai^ tbav
own boat — for the first time.
They are sdD endeavani^ lo
appropriate funds for their
mm
A
tiCLA - aruocNT HEALTH agnvicc
omciAL notk:c to aTuocNTa coMct nNiNo ana x-mav
acnvicc AND coNcemoM couNacLMo a aoucATioN ctJNic
(ccnc)
APML, lava
laaisUCLA
UCLA
'sX-«ny
for aw
UCLA oinpaasnt nMMmaen and aaiM ol
by ana AdmAiilstratlv* staff to oatalti
soon as N Is knowfi.
miwugii otfior
of Ti
by ana
•f aw
ofa
contraosptive information uai as
ForfyrUiar
r f^
THE REVOLUTION AS A WAR OF
LIBERATION FOR WOMEN
Final Lecture in UCLA Bicentennial Series
MARY BETH NORTON
Associate Professor of History, Cornell University;
Author: The Debate Over the American Revolution. 1765-1776; member, the
Coordinating Committee of Women in the Historical Profession; Chairwoman,
Columbia University Seminar on Early American History and Culture, 1975-76!
Current research: Women in Revolutionary and Republican America, 1760-1810.
WEDNESDAY, IMAY i2, 1976 8 P.M.
No Admittion Charge
DODD HALL 147
Put>Hc Cordially Invited
iMiiiw uri Puuiic
Bruins land Vandeweglie
lYaal NEVER Sat lUm
Hifii School All-
City performer Kiki Vande-
awglK sigiied a National Letter
of Intent to play basketball at
UCLA Thursday aiglM, ta a
move tiMt turpriaed moit baa-
ketball experts.
aaaawtflw lapailidty was
not bang beavily recruited by
UCLA until but weekend He
bad an ouuundiag taw jaaK
aniai for the California All-
Slan afainst the Russian Jun-
ior laa«i aad those perfornn
aaeai against the Russian Jun-
ior team impressed head coach
Gene Bartow and his coachina
staff into offermg him a tchol-
anhip.
a iiiiiBt tfM Vmt
Far Vandeweghe. it is a case
of the player recruting the
university and not the uni-
versity recruiting the player
He believed he could play
basketball at UCLA and he
waited until the Bruins offered
him a scholarship. He was
heavily recruited by Bngham
Young Umversity and former
UCLA aanatant coach Frank
Arnold, but >e has always
wanted to play for the Bruins.
With the signing of Van-
deweghe. Bartow has landed
the four front-liners he' was
seeking in case of ths-hi|xd-
ship Signing of Marques John-
son and Richard Washii^UMi.
In James Wilkes, Gig Sims aad
Darrell Allums, Bartow has
three tough iaside players and
now in Vaadeweghe he has
gotten the ''shooting forward**
he was Itnakiaa f6r.
**Krki reiaily impressed us
with his phiy in the all-sur
practice sessions and in the
two games," said Lae Hunt.
UCLA recrulM|| coordinatar.
''He is a Itae oMide riMoter.
who can also drive He is a
good studeat and competitior
and I think he will turn out to
be a fine player for us"
The 6-7, 2m pound Van-
deweghe sveraged over 24
points and 15 rebounds
a gauM, while leading his team
into the ncoad round of the
City playoffs He is regarded
as aa outstanding offensive
player, but his big fvestion
mark is his qukrkaaM aad de-
fense.
Scouts have claimed that
Coxswains . .
(Ciathiasd frwa Page It)
own boat hotiie — so they can
th0«er and chaafc cloches at
the Marina. Untu such time,
they have to share facilties
with the inen*s crew btit with
expansion should come nwre
coxswtaiai at a«ll.
The count mmm ffiamtr at two
rniiaiBii im tha women ^
hoth tamla — wmi seven for
the men ~ six female. So
whik women's crew is behind
titt aaa'k in firlMli , they aie
in
i
I
The
onkf
• TV
I
I
I
I
H
Vaiiilinighi is onit step slow
to play at UCLA, but assistaat
coach Hunt disagrees. ''Kiki is
a very snun defensively aad he
has learned how to successfully
overplay the offensive maa as
he demonstrated against the
Rmsians. 1 think he can bf a
goad defensive player anil I
don*t think that he will liave a
problem with -it at UCLA,"
said Hunt.
With the signing of the four
players, recruiting is now be-
ginning for 1977 '•Wc arc now
done with the cecruiting for
this year and we have already
begun working on next tea-
son,** said Hunt
^rtowr has landed an oua-
standing crop of freshnmn
prospects, with all given a
good shot at being aMe to
contribute to the varsity next
year The 6-7 Wilkes from
Dorsey High School, was the
City 4A Co-PUynr af the Year,
the 6-9 Sinu from Redondo
Beach, was the CIF 3A Player
of the Year, the 64 Allums
from Lynwood, was a first
Usm All-CIF 3A selection,
while Vandeweghe was a first
team All-City 4 A choice The
quahfications are impressive,
but basketball tans will have to
wait to October 1 5 to see what
OATSUN
ff
''Acres of Datsuns
Student, faculty, and alumni
fleet discounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
" 684>1 1 33 *
J--
Vou kftuMr them
Jkin condition who aiMl t
Aid's h^mtHirftr a _
iMbliw, a trip so ISatk Mountain tilt
uttlmaic »fi "famHy tn^tfuf nta ", M4i
Ricturd NiAon was Kr«wed by "th«m
aodtfim commie pinkati6«ral»"! We're
Mirv you know mum •rami TLAIN
f*OLW and we're pretty Mire you
wiH bU5( 4 gi*i^
Sy i»»e way. bm
TU^IN FOLKS" are not diiipttd for
aie kiddlM..... these arc «apay
Comic Book^V. FLAtN FOLKa
BOTH COMfC SOOKS. OVER 1SS PAGES OF SELLY LAUSHk
|iTJ«jMAT^AJ«ERIC/^REVE«
^^ THEfLFUatlCATlOSia "***
3aB a 9H)acmwN blvo room a. . .aevERLv hill, ca ao2ii
lENCLpSO I ICaii, I ICheck | |M.O (Sorry. Mo COD.',)
( )Ctpimmf'^H€ePDJP''m3 ( >C90mmf TLAtN f^LKS-^gS
Mu . ^— !SR^ •' ^^^ "^'^ BOOKS # moo
MX. unices INLCUfX SALXS TAX ANO PQSTAOf
liP
)/
^
CLASSIFIED
Cmk
riM«l
A4v«rtt«lMf ipgat will not to
wl^m €i%t.f\m\nm\m% en tli« feasU of
•••cestry. color, natlonol orif In. ro€«.
Mm ASUCLA C««Miiunlc«tlon*
B iRweMifBloo Mty of Mm sof
vicos •tfvoniftotf or 041 vortlMr* ro^«
•onlo4 In Hil* !••«<• . Any poroon too
ll««l«ii Miot an otfvoflleoinonl In
In mmm% to
•to* toyolnosa Mono^or. UCLA 0«ll|
•Mln,112KoPDirt»
Mssa, L«« Aii9«ioo. CaMlornlo I
notion pf obloMS. eoM: UCLA Housing
Office. (213) ttf -44f 1 ; Wostsid* Fair
Homtoifl (2H) 471-3
•ceoptotf at tho UfilvoroMy ^oront't
MiiroMry ftctoool for
^m iiitmiiii, Thia
UCLA ttoitfMit alBfi
I/Mi aaaalons. For Info call
a «««
^CRSOMAL frowtti •roup. Qpon. Thiap.
12 - 2. WMMR't MoMurca C^wtii. KInoay
Mil}
ASUCLA Tm^
%mrtkcm It going to
Russia!
UCLA students, faculty and
staff are eligible to travel
to Leningrad. Moscow, Kiev.
Yalta. Tbilisi A Vladimer.
July 14 - Aug 5 for $749 00
alt-inclusiye from London
Calt. 825-1221 or come to
A lto¥pl. Ackerman Mondays*
Fridays 8 00-4.00
eampus
announcements
OOMQ TO LAW iCMOOLT Leam lo
STUDY IFFECTIVELY. Wrfta: Laffel
Preparation. Inc.. 471 South Ogdan
nut*)
ef 1971 .Up.
IS. tSTt-epssa-jisi.
(IMMI
fofcen now j
for Graduation
ci'.iji Ui
^^compus studio
. cfchoN ho// 8:5 06f F «27
op«>n mon hi B 10 4 ,30
•flUIN TV 4 STEHCO HENTALS
COLOR TVS
laeay
f7.80/monf»i
•laeli/trtiHa T.V.'s • $7 JO/i
wn CLicmoMics
47S.Sitoior
toackpacklftf . Iannis, waokands. All
Vt
•AMO-iaiC foM
11 7S talll soil $120
S'^ap-
CaM 47S.
IS Si 10
MfcSfS-ISSI
««rr-A-Tv $10.00
NOTED Vanleo ^llosopliar Leonoy
BSpl lies an anawor lor compiai ptollo>
jDeiivai f to
<S«in
IS m 101
IIUTM— Jaaan
youH week up
Oopay? your el
foreale
Doom fPe IBS) aleveo leaelaer.Tape
ens ptoototo SiSMls. PH. $1SS. 1 Hli
•••^ • '^ Its M tm
SteCASTMCY OeSoli. LSa Atofales rnt^
■■■■Siwt Sen Fienclaco Sdiata CaS
Jim •24-2401 ^^ ^ ,^
SMEtoWOOO S-721S i
ef acoustic aMapenato
MS ssss. sae-tsao. 1
'eaalsai $18S. pek
m ipiikin $17S.
10 St 10
Uaa.
(SS1 10)
^a 7
toSAUTIFUL. asqulalla
Uaa 10. StoMt aaa. $17S.SS.
17
no M i«l
Se SraL Tilale.
(S Si IS)
(IS Si 12)
(10 Si 74
laSia
LADY DCLLE. Nappy AiSSnaiMwy (Yoe.
MMIT aSIa hSSB). I
wSt (timels). ■oat
$721 (Sua). a«aa SSS-
YASIAMA TS-7SS
KA>14
S4/4
(IS Si 11)
CIS Si 11)
baenly
iMys, Moll
(IS Si 14)
oppoftunlM—
.477-
W YOU MHD tOMCOliE
TO TALK TO.
CALLUC
MELPUNE
(IS Si 14)
SSS. ii
(1SSI1SI
r oerortty avoet
OaS 477-SK7
(SSiltl
AMSY
PnCPAIIiFOfl
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
ttrssi
MMs to
TNI ssArmtM rroM
1S7S.
•AMTA
Heart enS tS Sieto geM
ser^fillno eliein for aele. Secrlfica
fee SSS. SS.
ef 2
Wm ^fL
(SSilS)
(IS Si 12)
UC
S12JS per tor. If a
IS H ^S|.
NB0 21S.
, /.U
WHAT DOES A MUIN
KAH QfVE FOU GMFTl?
F.O. BeeSm. StaMne Bal Mar .
**: f7«ltl
kefs. EicoNont aeela tor June 22iiS,
el we ponMi. SS2>7SS4.
(1S|I11»
Texas Inffniiiienr
••«tftoi*50(r~*-£
nmnnu
nssissi
^PERSONAE^
Center of DraiMlic Arts
A spsdsJ thsss WBSI
(AprtI 12ti «iru SDVi)
Ttoe followifig aub|#cts wM to
UCLA doihing fof oMIdfWi
and adults, baars, mugs,
glasawara. svatchaa, daak
accaasoriat. jawalry. pmr-
aonalizad shiris. trophias.
football halmat radio
CTMtl)
•ijss auPucAfi
r«o
nSBIII)
ir,
ASUCLA Studants' Stora
Ackarman Unlwi
(IS siiti
ISSI14I
112 M lei
Hfp Saff toy Helping Oaisrs
SS-Sao/iMonlto for aiood Plpsftoe
ape I HYLANO DONOR CENTER
1001 Gayley Ave.
478-0051
11S1S
)
(12 0toP)
•ree weioawftowe. per
271^$2» TMeo^SoL
SH o cell
a2Qto)
'^^ — e-»- A -m-
ilUlU wiwu
TO
lie JOB
eKiory
eri tor.
F.427-
(tSSiUI
47S41S1.
nSiS)
■aatt. eppty. Clllcons
: ^^ 4SS-SB8S. ^^
Its
COUHatLOas. soy e«pp. lep
lerpa ateHeii
fisiitli
■ew.ef
m^S^JTiS^m
MMT ■■» WAT aos OAT
VSS er 7 . SIS per tooor.
477.
ftSMITl
^ctftmuM' >
^tASSIFIEir^D
^icMoffforod
Top $ poMler
(SiS/llr. ptow) 2SS-S77S.
(If Si 12)
»«elto 0 to $ f
PROFBSSiOMAL
-2146
04 Si 12)
(19 Si 12)
nssiis)
t'*4
Cidver CHy 871 -0004 Bnclee
(1$ Si 12)
iOISJS/SKHlTH Positions svailetolaler
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTOMCYCLI ISISUflAMCi
TooHHiRT
STuotNT macounrrs
(1$
ittSI«t
f**m»m%»'»* »••• *i ■ — ««»»<
Cenfer ef Hollywood tSSI
Ma $12,
(lOOlrt
SSJS p/tor CeS
277-2212.
toi aevorly
IpM • 11pm
*aWei tor
11$ SI>1SI
MOUIMC ?
2732
In
Aak tor Lert.
(IS Si 14)
(lOOin
CORIES.
I PvlMOfig S Copy
^^V^a*« ka^^< t ^*^^«
Woat-
(10 Si 14)
rnOkr)
LEARN
flONI 0
(IS Si 14)
SALLSr Pen wey le aaeety 12SS
WMSiioS. enS UmIv. YWCA. $74 N»-
eSveneeS. 8
|tt. apeolal «leo. 2 or ..en
weekly, irmnt Serata. DtstlnpulatoeS
nsoir)
VTON EXPRESS
MOVERS
Rich 854-2SSS
SSI -3827
SK>VINOS
•rf
(iSOirl
MVONOSIS
a er eien mr^mt"
rSA.. UM.) 478-
(ISOto)
'^ARTY** eo 0 yoetol Sey
Del Rey S22-11S1
(IS Si IS)
ig a 4Si Dog tietoilfig
Fark. TuaaSay. Stoy 11.
Wif Of motion: 477^172.
(IS Si 10)
in. Alee ei
1,472-7888.
ronlel. 8 rant
THE aOOYNISM
QualNy Aole
Mopak 4 PalnOiig
47S-0040
(Oava or Gary)
CaaMBR? Ws ar
laosn rsQslr •<
L.AS
BLECTIIOLYSIS: UwaremaS fpflel S
Pi
BnoSaL477^
(ISQto)
477-
878-8181.
(18QS1
VOM
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(IS SI 1^1
LSAT.
418-8188. 18818
fisav^
ESITTSa
ic— offorod tr«v#l
880VING CORIRANY
MousEsiTTaa
ucu
$871.
8/1/78.
SIOVINQ SoalSoetlel.apartmants.
.avga/aeieS |etoa. Local 4 long
CaN llarrtoy 204-47$$ mnfU$m
/«e nw\
(14 81181
AUTO imePBaoi: Li
*71I8. 878-8782 er 487-7872.
ASUCLA Trasal
OiaONL^
UCLA Ctoensf
• liflits to Euro^
OlSlSMoSli
LAX-ARMtardam-LAX
8 n$psmm osi
1C754 Juno 7 7
11C75 Jur>o21 11
12C79 Juno 21 12
1SC75 Jufio28 5
17C79 Jufw28 8
18C78 Jufio29 10
22C78 July 5 8
23C78 July 8 8
27C7i July 12 4
30078 July 18 4
LAJt-Lofidoo-LAX
81981 June 19 11 I
L5aa8 Juns22 8
LS6222 Juno 22 2
%ruoi o«sf. iswtofM
(18 Okr) ee Ran Ami
RIDING LESSOMS
»A.M^.A. Appri
I rieiftp — <aOUs»ii>siH
M.V.C. $188.
(212) 272-7122.
188 Oil
HAWAII
lort A found
^ FOUND SOMETHING? |
IRAN
Ar« you going to Iran thtt •ufnm«r'
"■' a I rs»»i i»«»'vif m
sal SHrd Hu 4 19
Holtywood CA WOJH
— S2SS
LA-tiONUUJtU tIM on*
LA-MCkODcuiu nm tm
Kawi SfiS Msut SI
RLUa Car Rentals
roN/iuroll posoos
llaRO...aATA ffto...lfitornollonsl
lA
FRtI tRAVIL COUSiaCiaSM
ARK Ua I'OR ANYTHINO YOU
WAMT TO K»IOW AROUT
TRAVtU
MM MMMI IM ImIA MMAi MiMMM
It '
Juot come Into tlio Dolly Rruln'
Dipojfiiwl on4 loS i»l
Is plaso so si |to aiol
Last a Rowia ooRmmi. As s piiaasl
SOfsioo. THE JOa FACTORY {
AQ8$ICY. WootoPMa MoS.. «ai fMtol
iJRoaaortooooot^to^yMil j
LOST: Lailoe Sigh aotoeel i
tofO Mgto aptooei 74. ReO eiee
472<00i8.
vng. Men-
(17 Si 18)
OREEM tilatory noletoeek
POolSv POoSleo laal Timr.
LSI. eaiea.
feonO-ln
■1^ Is SI
(17 Si 181
rfOMM UfiMfVO
OR'nrssa le Wmi vtrgNUe Leeaa Mtm
1 2 Wools Ilka somaona la atoara
JjlulJi«. 474 $184 (28 81121
1 id— wanted
,
1918 le.
s
f
tueniB 4 eatas wiiti
alsytlBtt
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AH 7^to«a$ M
s
J* 7/1».0^ IS
S- ^^ sn 7/«s4^t$ s
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Of 7/os.^as •
SB ifu%m •
m 7/i*^it 7
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■OA u 7^00'4/SO $
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Spp 7'17-S/M
UUI- %^ 7/01<»01 s
SNS sj rm-f^m^ m
HAWAI1 142
NYCi 7-^^
ORIENT Msr.
Contaci ASTfA (or ovar 200 attwf (itgMs
with 4«psrturst fronn L A $an PssnctSCO.
CiMcaso Soatof^ Naw vomWMOkigton OC
*ChsH»r Mig xguwa JS ear aOwawas aoasiwg.
MIPmAIRfAMU
BICENTENNIAL. Slaisaasi
YOUTH. $ur«e* ♦-y
APEX.22-4S iSMysa« eaaii ^
TAHITI SURER DEAL $WS
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TRAIN 8 RIRHY TICRCTa. CARS.
CARIRIR RCNTALS. RAILRARaaa
IMTRA-CilRORCAN STUDENT
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,
1 •• Vvgat C^rsrMl Car
Ssnta Bart>M'a Sr»*vang
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inivara/4 «,
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11 nn
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274
(IS Bl 11)
111
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AUTO INSURANCE
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.TeoYi
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12 la OeiiSer 11 41
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CLASSIFIED
trmvl
tutoring
typing
•pis to
8 Day
Sun Fling
rr.«pAtAiO0
$299
Miel lu
• Round-trtp P«n Am J«t Rainoow
9»rvic« includina Hot Food wMh
Complimentary uhampflpno
• 7 Night»-8 Days Hawaii's Roof
Hoiol on Waikiki Beach .
• Hoftz Car rental 1 full day un-
limited mUeege (gas extra) Valid
Moonae required, minimum driver
age 21 years
' Catamaran Sail off Warkiki Beach
• Hertz Bonus Discount Coupooe
• Full Color Hawaiian Memory
Album (1 per room)
• PliMant Sunaot Mai Tai CoclctaM
Party
• Hawaiian Welcome breakfast m
^Waikiki Beach Club
• Exotic South Seas Shell Lei
• Exclusive «MiM(M(i Boach Club
Feeturea
TOUR RRICf PER PWtOW
IMCUJOING TAX ft •IRVtCC
TUttOAY DEPARTURES
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
M17 Santa
lUOly after tpM
^CMALf
tania
tiiiiiiii.a
S M.. t to..
LAW tCHOOL ADMISSION
TEST PUCPARATION
(MM 12)
I Hr clOM a^e^fM iMTW It for July 24
TmI
-OMAT coufM b*9ln« Junm 5 for
July 10 tost
•tPCED RCAOING court* bogint
J«MMl2S
-CAMCta OUIOANCf
ft2S-442f
TVPSSQ - AM kifiOi PtM-
7fe/p« ISM ftcloctrlc MM-tVNolMfe.
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■"'■■ Sy f-r •*" ^^^-
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(MM ft)
(MM 19)
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(MM 21)
(MM IS)
iAZI WAMO/AU tTYLIS. LaarM Jay
•a Wi#lwiiiHiu/<
tor bat prolagtliiMil teeaihn
472-M7B.
#94 /%wi
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In
472-:
2
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$tM/aia.
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(MM 11)
flM/MM.
fjRE. tSAT. ^^ ^
•OOhriauflt, •feall fraep InatrMCttefi.
XEROX 2 .c
t BEDROOM. 2
tIM P9f
y^t^^J^miSHWD ■pocioui 2
plus eon. firoetaco. careats. Sr
(MM 11) J^«*elaaato.yo^.aiHiftl#fa
___^____ to schools. slioppingxfiNarofi
P«t oh t taHolr. LJ^
.477-7744.
- ■ (MOID
CHIMESI ManOarta. Paltliiff natlvo
laachor. woll-o«por»oncoe with Call
fornio Cfoeantlal. Indiviauoi. small
(24 Ob')
-^i-OFJ
Mo mintmjfn
KINKOS :;.:
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111
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^•MALk ihaia ana tootfr. spi pamjs
MATM Tulof«nf |Mf M JL Oratf. SM
>4^eL4^
TRA/EL SERVICE
Ackerman Union A 213 with EXPO
Monday-Friday 10-4 825-1221
sorvtco. VIclnMy 2S4<078t.
(24 0ai
fnP^nifctmtcal typifif-oMih. scian-
nc-th«sos aiss«rt«llons. tipliii Ji,,
825-3452- ovorMnga 299-20i4 Clia«loMo
M J 4
P^mrrrr oa^«. ^. ^ rniiMi t
9l»sh Groat w/l2 yoors t^parionco. ISM
Mw!^20S7 *****"' Chooss typo stylo
MMie
^ZJH^
Vataran tlHjm la IITf .ftt
(MM 12)
2 MALE Jowlsh undaftroas nood 2
raamiiiatos tor apt. noat fa« - waauna
aistoncs UCLA. 473- 17«.
(M M 12)
PACMIC
ana 0m»i 2 aoarooMi. 2%
riwach S/20 - S/IS. fufniidiod'
-i3as
(MM 11)
SAJfTA _, ^
li MtS/meeii. MS-JMS^
(MM17>
house for sal*
(MOtI
ii
(MVaMi
apt aSM 2 fay maa. $1M. ASsr t.
f9aMf2t
r I 4r.
(MMiei
tV^MO/odianf/multl-oiporloncod/
faot. accuralo/picli-up. dollvor/rtghloout
■■■owwpF^oi Mas. ^^ ,,, y^^
TYaHMG-CdlSoe/lhosos. IsMfi papars.
^^ Low ralos. Noar campus M.A. Jour-
CaN47S-l^37.
(M M 14)
FEMALf
2-alar« Srontwood
J«idy 472-4771
at M 141
474-
(MM11)
to
w.v.»
apto fumishod
Ma. Cat Hat 274-St12.
ftttft^
(M ai 11)
F^MALf
- '••
JjSMICl apar«n»ant. 4 fttocks baach
(22 M 14)
ESCAPE - SEE THE WORLD!
■ Chapters - lowos* ' .'ms
— ■ • ;,rit» *(ifh,n
jei Asia Africa Ships F^jd-
t-asaos Youtr Hostel Cards Camping
^"-'^ /v r^ A„, . . r> .uiicatior-
- CATALC .
M at trt* only nation- wK]f>
'"'" *^«v»l ofgam/siior
JOS Applicants: Automatk: lottors aro
ahoapar. quiclior, arul afimlnala typos.
I*ayla|r - T»chn»cal Typmg Sorwtca. WLA.
477-M4S
(M J 4)
KAY:.Typlng adltlng English grad
Olsaanatlorts spocially. Tanwi papars.
tftasos. rosumos. laMaVB. ISM. S26 7472
(25 OTA)
tMft^ ATTSACTIVE lar«a hao bod
raama, ono soparta garaga and aatra
cac spSBi. (»aad afoa. Santa Monica
S55 33M.
^ (2S M IS)
OWE Sodroom apfs. (iCltchanotta)
S205 00 and up. Inckidos; gas. walof
pool May-Juna aub4aaaas to Sapt
Ou«at aduMs. 477-37S7
(2S M 7)
subloooo
WOMAN Jaxx musician shara
Mfltop gardon lotaura h
ale $40-ia0 tsooti 34S
(32 m 12)
r^il!^
NT TRAVEL
90024 C.
(■bow* iMri<w«*>o<i««> (^
CAMS IN El
scirr Oft suY
;iAL SCDUCTKMS TO
TEACMCSS ft miOSMTS
FS8E CATALOG
tUflOCAfIS
SLVD.
271.
EdM . .
Lagal ftocrolaryTNbar eampua. 47S-
LIGHTNING TYPING CO.
Tltoats SpwctaMsl
Froa Eslimalaa
^SO^KSftlOMAL COLLEGE TY^ffiC
SOCIALIST
Tvrm papart. Thasls. Olssortolions
FaaturaS'-Foraign Languagas Sciancas.
Math Taatas. Diagrams Music Editing
Counaaling Xaroaing. arinting. amding
Studant Aafos 3SS 3191
LUGE. 1-bdrm fum.. aulalMSi. paal2
(MM 12)
NEED foapanalbia poraon la aaftlat 1
tmdwem^ 1 bath aponmonl. cornor
LandMlr/Gaytoy/Woahooad tar aia. of
Juna A pasaMlM July. t2S0aia
PaHsadaa
llSO^mo 4S4~S»11.
km^mmt
af a«M«.
(32 M 11)
772SS-S
SUMMEA Aatoa. Spacious sln^los
1 A 2 badroams. Larga courtyard.
ff2 V^loran Avo. Mo. WHaliIra 47«-
•^ (MOir)
473-77S1a«lM^fp.m
(MM 14)
UCLA PSOTESSOS saMat la««a Houaa
In Mar Vlata Juna M - Sapt. 14 3
' — ' 2 battle 2 la««a siMdtoa. laf«a
S47S/aw.
Monad S1M.M
lar S:SO pm. 27t-
22M It
2SE0flOOM
S2BQ/fl^ fSA««^^^Mi
Oaya-f74-f723.
a
ATT ID
aaiin
^<) 7
Wiru OoCm 1
WALK la UCLA
SI|«tOy. accurataJSM typlat - raa- MteHan.
11)
ISC
TOURS A TRAVEL
Sprtng Summor S PmV. CrMMars' •
Shannon
-Pans
-Madrta
-Frankfurt
Brussels
Zurich
RoundtMp from i2'n 00
Hawaii and Naw Vorti
Roundtrtp Irom $1SS 00
'•Quirwo L«ncJ
SUTH C OISSSSTATIOMS. TNBSBS.
STATISTICAL FAST. OEPENOASLE.
SEVEN DAYS A WWBL. MAMV TVPI
STYLES S3S-S428 ^ _^
Pm>PESStOMAL Typing ISM Salaclric
aducatlonal. aclantlflc. alhar. Doa'l
MINUTES front UCLAI Sln^los. fur.
tmt badraom, luxury ^anaa-
raaaonaftlo prica. 2tt1 Sa«
47t.21M
' (MM 14)
SUSLET 2 bdr - 2 bath furn apt
Sronlwood. S3M maafll. S-lf -f-l«.
472.77M. Pilar t.
S/1:
27l-iM4 a«a
(MM14I
SUSLET 2 bsdrapaia. l-bloeii la UCLA^
Wastwood }/9ry liffM. qu»at
PmrtUn^. FMritHbH. S300 not a
AvaNsSia Jana 1. San :473-o&3S
SUSLET Juno 1S-A«iQual IS m
mmnt Laff^a fuSy furniiiiid 1
1200/ mo WLA 471^143
(St M 13) ; gTUOENTS «« Ma aaw af yoar
**•"•* *•**• aawaiof in aachango far
* *o alaf. Solaranooa I
Writa Sara. 23t Nichols. S
M310 Thank yaa.
(MM 12)
(Mai 12)
721S.
IMOS)
27S-03M m zn-mn
PUSNfSNSD/Unfurnishod bacholor
£140 Smtlae I1SS. Poof Hoart af
WasAaaad. 10SM I bidinMA. 47S.SSA4.
(MOir)
ONE badroom availablo in spacious
2S M 10 Ihroo badroom dur^ai Juna - Sapt.
SIM monthly Call avonln^ 277-1 ISO
(M M 12)
t9nnm
TYPING. Lat Caaay da It Tt.„,
thaaaa. dlaaarlaSana. olc. Catt 2S4-
IMQS)
WOAYLEY. aaaaaa Hmm Oybatra
■«J-.?^-a.M^aaaaa*aoma.473.
RUTH:
«MOin.
1178 ATTA Wum _ ^
aaparaia garaga Laaadry faaMNIaa.
1M1 Sa. earning. LJL Sil 11M far
OS M 14)
ISC also rytn* local araa tours
by car mnt bus at minimum coal
Torm ^_^ ,
dtoaonaMaaa. raoitaMa. latlara. SSN
1747
apta. unfumiahad
Call Ua tpr inforfnatlan.
S-t Daily
TYPSiOat
n
1
omrr.
(27 M 10)
(M M 11) aitlarT^Coll BmrMa ¥fnm, SM.B070
(22 M 14)
■■HI. .1, I I'
tasaaa lar
(MM 12)
SUSLSASSaf
471
(2M1S1
47V1177
ss #
ja.
PSOPESStOMAL wYllor with S.A. M
(UCLA) adi Mpa an
•M. 6a»r 21
IP yaa a^a
(MM IS?
IHH— tprrin
474-0172
THSSCS.
rs. raports. Paat
*7
■PtSstoslmrm
(MMSSI
•ppNaKaaa. wtiNtiaa. paal.
n I^SS/ttM.
(MM IS)
> m III
SOOM aad
tarm papara. aaaays
tatlons CaM:
or 3tt-2f 14
rrm m 13)
S8ACH VACATIOM
Ct(KfS COMPONTASLE FAMILY
HOME AVAILASLC MtO y%IHt TO
MIO-AUGUST S2J80
TIASLE Cai4 370- 1240
far tISS
^OTlVi
IM Softball playoffs
BYES: Rittenbcrg*8 Roveri. Dykstrs 4
UCLAW. SAEI. ATO A, Theu DslU chi'
FisM liioc, HsiriM^psi, Thsis Xi,
Houss ♦ 4. Thsis Ckk. SiiBs Nu A,
fsrs, Extrsctors, Lsst Qmiss, Hsrry Doyg
»»» This SMMi to cJMcfcjc^sdulc with Grs«.
Fridsy, fimy 7. Ckssk Mondsy
y Msy !•
(4) Jskes's All-Lesguers vs Stfliiu Lis
Army
(5) Big Slicks vt Csotieaul Xk^mn YL.
Owens regains
•y Jms Ymmsi
DB Bpsrts Wita
FRESNO - Oi s.WMni
SI Hm Wsm tossi Rs-
(2) D«p«sbk DsMsfaM vt Tociioio Gisms
(3) Homerun MsSfMl ¥i Ds«bmI BsUsrs
(4) Osolocy ^ Last Tisse Around
(I) AWT vst DTs
vers Cksvers vs NROfc
Chi B vs CVAC
vs Delu Tsu JDehs B
(3)
(4)
(5)
(1) Blscony Boys vs CornhokfS
(2) Longhsllers vs DelU Tsu Dclu A
(3) Sous of Lsst Stsnd vs winner (Two All
Beef/Biliy*8 rs)
(4) Vets fi JoiKr fTwo Aii BeefvBUly B**)^
(5) Who*s on 1st vs Normsl Devistes
(1) Pyrsmid vs winner (Meyers/ God Squsd)
(2) SifiM ri vt Grsieful Meds
(3) •^Issoi vs (Msiensk or Prnlni^d
Fsrt)
(4) 7istwi ^s iusci (Meyers/ God Squsd)
1 Msy IJ
(1) ZBT VI Propyl Lsctstsi
(2) BsrtsriMi VI AAA
(3) Cincinnsti Spresdkis vs
3M #2
(4) Fuhik Ucsith 10 vs Soof
ef Toes
(1) Isd Newt Bssffs vt Phi lUpps SipM A
(2) Sec Utere 4 TrsipMsn vt Aspiring All
Stsrt
(3) Bsttered Bslk vt TfiiisMiisliln
(4) AGO lifters vt loser (Durs Mster/
(5) ATO B vs winner <Ditn Msier/
TBiliij Msy 11
3pMi
(1) LusMs Chi Alphs vs You Msnisc You
(2) Dungson Softhslls vt Lsst Gssp
(3) Gozinys Bros, vs AxiJisry Aces
(4) Trisngle vs Bsrry*s BstsmslHwinncr plsys
Fri 3:00 FieW 2
(5) Moondoggers vs . UCLA Band 8
(2) Artful Dodgers vt I Phclu Thi
(3) •••Chimbo vt (PS I Love You or Phi
Dehs Theu) _^
(4) Crude Technique vt Lssi Oschi FhH
Chib
(1> Douchcbsgs^ White Punks On Oope
(2) ^^^Ptitrons vt (Phi lUpps Pti B or
Bsrhsrism II) /
fasssoeens^ ^fi^ Tjoioen
plsyt Fn 5:00 Field 1
(4) Urbsn Guenllss vs Rieber 4|h So.
(1) ^<*Whsmmer limipii vt (Hippo*t or
Dehs Signs Phi>
(2) Pnspism Riset Agsin vt Bsnd C
(3) Betst vt Herthey
14) HsnIMI Strokcn vt wamm sf Tms 3.110
#3
FrMsy Msy 14
3pMi
(1) Signs Chi vt Team HsndhsU
(2) Hedrick 11 vs wmaer of 3:00 Tues #4
(3) Hot Chik Pepper WT^iiUitip^ Psi B or
Psitron
(4) Turing Machine I vs Materials or Bozos
(5) Airborne Formites vs winner of Wsd 3:00
#1
iiilt or tiK priis
to use
the Bruins'
hufdkr. w<
evsai is 13.7, sas of hat
psrfornsMM si iIk yssr
field of polsMsl OlympisM
sad Ihs two Tro|sn runnert
who best him seven dsyt ssr-
lier
Ssn Jose Stste freshmsn
Dedy Csspci finnhsd tscond
while former Bruin standout
Clim Jackson wound up third
Frsd Shsw of USC
do«nsd Owens in
previous showdowns
liinsi Ui\\ ta r4^
**! did H, 1 dad It,
ectUtic OwsM sfter the
**It sure fssb good just to win
again.
tsnag from the
*Esfly m tl»
f
rsn s nssrly perfect
fron lUrt to finish He
got off to his HSiial quick start
sad didn't brske the entire
distiim M hs posisd one of
tlM Im ftvs hurdln b«t tMsy
I WIS sbte to ooncentrste all
ths way through. It andt s hm
dlffBMBH."
That's what you call
aunauon," said UCLA
coach Jim iwh from the
suadt. ''Hs haat ooe of ttw
rsaiest ftsMt ia the U
Sutn. The only mt^
isrt ano ware aMning
Larry Shipp (Louisiana Sute) f
their tw«^^ ^ad Charles Foster (North s
u, wms a Carohaa Central). "v
^Masses always gMs oat tar 9
aad Ihsa ribwt ap sfter he gstt *
s big Isad,** Bash west aa.
"Bat today hs didB*t 1st ap
oaoe through the whole nos.^
To resch the fiaals« Owan
hsd to finith in the top three
of s qualifying
that aftannaa
(1) Stroht vs Tridem Msstwalors
(2) Reuined Rooli vt Hoaest Plessure
(3) Penugon Pspert vt Road Runners
(4) Schroedingers Equations vs Sigma Nv
Hackm
Mi^«
(1) Vegeublei vt wmner of Wed 5:00 #f
(2) Fourplsy vs Phi Delu TheU or Chimbo
(3) The Other Tesm vs Barbarism II or
Psitrons
(4) ••• Alpha Epsilon Pi vs winner of
Turing Machine 11/ Dill Doughs
(5) ♦•♦Prolonged Fart/ Bozos vt loter of
Turing Machine/ Dill [>oughs
fl) GfoetCoiarvr
oT^iOO
m
(1) Dickwood Dicks vs lUppa Signs
(2) Phi iCapps Pti A vs Mismsnagod
(3) Blue Oyster Cuhists-vs Bet( A Brightest
(2) Sigma Pi ^ vt Storm
(3) Art Thai Sticks vs Csrbohc SmokebsOt
(4) Conoeptiial Blockbusters vt Hubbard*s
Hackers
CLASSIFIED >ID
•Kcfcan— for h»lp
bicycl— for Mto
m'
» ft. S*H.
'■'- -,
71 CAMH. 4 ipMS
sun.077.tisi
mmm
(41 M 12)
Tt VW
1S7S
.T a-is
gami^
ts4 m «•»
;t7t SUICK S«f«l. Vlfiyf %mp, firtly
m.
fSlMtSY
jRf aavara ir^b^k sap*** ^a^mm
-^ ^V^.^ 477.313S
wHti kitch«n for
tVP M «9I
7t aoiiTi caaLO.
isnsMssr.
HI a t4)
141 a IS)
FCaALC rtuSom.
-73 VW souaataacK
Hi ai4)
SI cap.
tfSSS. aary. SSS»1
bicycl— for mmlm
room for rant
rsDsaai. s S.SL
•stvttft. ttSM.n or »••< 99Hf. 47t-
141 *ii^
t14 -1.7
|41 a 11)
74 VW van.
141 a 14)
OUIST Frt««|«
474-1
Miosn
mail)
a/w. a#flM
(vn tn^ 4S1-1141
•41 a in
tTUOaUT DIBCOUNT
r m&Nm mmi vou sr Atr
YMOTrON LIMITS AND
HANSOHRT
fin OAniY AVI.
cnam
mass)
143 a IS)
^s^^^Sji^
(41 a ii)
•eiatt)
74
fssaii)
rnrBxnMMBrfiR3PBrMi?S / ^
(41 a 11)
SpNI
■SS VWFi
it.ne aa
4S9-nt3 uc as.
(41 aisi
Ml a 111
r
t'-...
I
Macric number Is reduced to one
fBaseballers in great position after Caiifornia sweep
m-
mii
DB Spofti Wrilir
And then there wm itm (with mpolopM !• Ajitha Chhftic).
By iweepiiig a three ganie Mfiit with tfceCsiifamM Ban over
the weekend, the UCLA Bnaw have practicaUy wrapped up the
California Intercollegiate Baseball AtsocMBaM title. Only a
«>mplete hfCftkdown can keep the Bruins from hecomtng li^K
champs
UCLA is now 1 5-6 in laipit aalioa, as full two fames 9kmd «C
use,, which plays UC Santa Btftora tomorrow night The
Bniins and Trojans then play three games, beginning Thursday
night, and if UCLA wins just once the race will be over.
use is 12-7. in league piny and the resuh of the game with
UCSB wtU have no bearing on the outcome of the raee. Onl^ a
use sweep can keep the Bruins from winning their first langne
title since l%9 when the team a^nMlced to the College World
Series.
(USC will finish with 23 decisions due to a tie with the Bean
and this has turned out to be to the advantage of the Bruins)
After winning Friday *s scries opener with little trouble, 10-3,
UCLA had to come from* behind to take 9-7 and 3-2 decisions "on
Saturday afternoon. The finale went 10 inmngs and aet the stage
for this weekend's series.
Tim 0*Neill allowed six hits and three unearned runs while the
Bruins (^flense produced ftve doubles and three liome runs in
Friday's opener Catcher Denms Dehiny belted a homer and two
doubles while shortstop Raymond Townsend had two doubles
In the second inning, the Bruins scored four times, two conung
on Dave Bnker*s bases loaded single. That hit scored Dave
Pcnniali for the 54th iimc this ye%r, giving the UCLA center
fielder his second school record of the week.
Tuesday, Pcnniall stole his 30th base o{ the seaj»on breaking
Venoy Garrison's school record of 29 set just but year. Before the
weekend was over, Penniall had increased his totals to 57 and 36,
respectively. .
Saturday started off as if the Bruins were going to heh the
irs all the way back to Berkeley Penniall and„ Bobby Dallas.
UCLA's first two hitters, deposited Ron Wj^lton pitclKfl owr the
Sawtcllc fences for home runs Two outs later, Robbie
Henderson walked and Jerry Waters hit UCLA's third homer of
the mning to make it^,4-0.
But Steve Bianchi, who has been ineffective m his last three
CIBA surts, was out of the game before the end of the fourth
inning, trailing 5-4.
in the fifth inning. Dave Baker, who turned a game around at
Sunford two weeks ago, did it again. With Dallas on first. Baker
^mmered a Walton serve far over tlie right field fence to give
^ Bruins the tend for good. (CaaSlBaadbnFafel^)
IK -
■•ir
' ^'.j'li' '''
• J . ^^ !■ I *_»!
get ready for Hummer
with health and t>eauty aids
at special prices!
t
d
Leci-i-Thin-6 from
liealtlrRite
rmg. 5.83
2.99
sunglasses 25%
rsgulorty 4.50-«.M
3.37-6.73
OFF
It's a B-6 aupplamaiit in a natural
thin. IMp. Cidar Vinagar T
your dM program oaNa for B-6. try tBia --
to
Thaaa ara aoM aiaawhaia for 5.00 to QiX)
Qmr pair; ttiay'ia axict copiaa of much-
Mghar-pfiead famoua nama glaaaaa Good
of atylaa for man» woman
b laval.
union, a8ft-7711
73«-?«; 4a 7:4i-«:a0; eat 10-4
i
•s
I'll I I ^l^^ip^^^FV^I^^^^
^^■:: -■ '<i
-i_.^
C. :j
„ — J-
Ucla
XCVIII,
Friday. Mtay 7, 1f7t
QSA pasaaa anti-police initiative
*
McCormacIc, Taylor to vie for Presidency
Bj Sally Ca«ir
DB 9tair WrlSv
Meg McConnack aad Scott
Taylor will face each other in
the runoff election for under-
gNi^aale Msdent hody presi-
dent next week, after gathering
wail 4han SO per oat of the
vole cast ia t|e SLC election
yesterday and Wednesday.
The vote hreakdown showed
McCormack with 1070 votes
(30.3 per cent) while Taylor,
presently a Student Legislative
Council (SLXT) general repre-
sentauve, garnered 7M votes
(21 7 per cent).
The other five candidates
split the reoMmder of the 3521
votes cast for president: pon
Lesser 695 (20 per cent) Victor
Nunc? 694 (20 per cent), How-
ard Schreiman 119 (3 per
cent), £>avid Brown 111 (3 per
cent) and Gerald Leon Hak 73
(2 per cent).
Pride House draws
fire; leaving UCLA
ly Alaa MialHal KarMaig aad larry Grey
tm ssair Wf«i«t
(Editor's mote: this is thtJoeosid ortick in
o serin €m the. N Pi-administered UCLA
House is the popular aaaK of the
UCLA Adolescent Druf Treatment Pro-
gram, looated in Hollywood. It ti a MBaH
part of the federally-funded UCLA Drug
Treatment Program and provides ^Hia lar
16 residem and 140 non-resident clients.
Pride House and the entire Drug Treatment
Program are aepaiatiBg h^m ikt Untvenity
on Oosato' I . The Drug Tuatawiir Program
IS leaving hecause the arrangement with the
Umvertity has ended.
The Pnde House treatment prognMB law
heen the tatpl af complaints from several
ianaer empiayaas. Administrators of Pnde
Haaae have heen accused of having misled
state officials in order to mamuin licensed
stataa, aaeordiog to several aaurces lomier^
associated with the program. \ ^
'SlMMiig charged
Wiiiiam Fox, associate director of Pnde
and licensing iaapector. rie said that every
umst State Department of Health MaaMii^
representative Selma Gleasoi) ^^'i*^^ ^o
inspect Pnde House, *thsap were slraJfiflBd
around.*^ Administrators
Glcason to know the numher af
hving there — that the actual ceoaus vio-
lated fire aad huildmg regulations, he said.
**There were more people than it was
licensed for actually living there at the time,**
Fox iMd.
Pride Houae up until
Hooae from Oaohcr, 1974 until January,
1975. has dHMfad that Pnde House ad-
miiustrators daMeratrlv misled a state heahh
the
^ Na a
When reached at har aAioe ia daamtown
'^Laa Aafriri, Gleason herself would jmh
aaament. **! am not at liherty to say
anythmg,** she told the Daiiy Bruin.
According to files kept hy the Hcraiiag
afliee, Pnde House was cited hy tkt Sute
ftadth Department on Fehruary 21, 1975 for
having too many people living there. At the
time, it was icaasod for six residents; tUgpa
were nine residents living there
Louis Mangual, former Pride House
(ContiiMsad aa Fags 22)
Leading the write in votes
for presidem were Rocky A.
Grahonowitz aad X Swami X.
who grahhed 3 volas apiaoe.
Taylor wanted to ^first
thank aH the students who
voted for me** and then chal-
lei^id MeCanaaah se^a^aeriaa^
of on campus MMMes in the
next week.
' •'Fm very pleased,** McCor-
mack said after hearing the
results *'! plan to work my tail
off in the coming- week,** she
added and thanked her sa^
porters sayiag tkft was %ery
grateful and very pleased **
McCormack was also suprisad
at the **high voter ,tum out.** A
toul of 3645 studaato voted in
the two day pnmary elaesian.
A run off will also he held
hetween Christopher Myers
and Gary Collister for the
position oif Administrative Vice
President. CoHister got 1178
votes (49 6 per cent) while
Myers received 727 votes (30
per cent). The third candidate
for the office, Robert %orden
got 469 votes.
The raoe for fvst V'ice presi-
dent was the closest wttlNCya-
thia McClain heating Marcui
J. liiqae hy a aMrgin of 43
vosas. McChun got 1243 (50 J
per cam) and liaque laceivad
1200 (49.1 par aaai).
Another dose race was he-
Bcchttl aad Rich
Levier for the office of Cam-
a current SLC general repre-
saatative.
The only other race that will
go to a vote again next week is
for the attae of Student Wel-
who gathetad 1051 '(4^.2 per
aaaa> I'olaa, will face ion Lepp,
who had 555 votes (24.3 per
aaat). Also in the race were
Jay Seller with 424 (18.5
ccfd) aad Paul Green 248
(10.8 per c^t)
Incumhent Brian Eisherg re-
taiaad his poaitioa as National
Student Aanaiation repiBH»>
tative hy soundly defeating
Ivan HaUick Eaherg received
1366 voica (63.6 per cent) la
*s 779 vaias (J^
)
Jay Bundy, Ron Hacker
and Diana Shepherd were
elected next year*s general
taptaaaacatives, with Anita.,, Le-
Veaux fimshmg a very claaa
fourth. Bundy raoeivad 1209
vasaa. Shepherd I0t9, and
Hacker 1059. LeVeaux got
1048 vosaa, only eleven hehind
Hacker. The other two candi-
datas ia tli^ laoe were Efic
Sherman and Harry Snock,
who gathered 852 and 575
r aspect ively. -
In the three ^ aacontested
Lou KLarasik was alaaiad
Cultural Affairs Commissioner
with 1876 voles; Jeffrey Coa-
Iter -became fmcrtrtri
missioner with 1778 volas aad
pua Events Coaimissh
with 1407 (53 per
cent),
1247 (46.9 par
In the race tor Communu>
Kobara swej^ to viawry with
136^ iia8i8<i2.3 per cent) ower
DaiasaaTaraec, aalli iM (37.6
per cent).
Wilia iaafea laaiwiid 1573
aasas (55.8 fm ami) u Meat
Craig J. MmMI ih the race
for Ssaiaas Mannsiaaal Pol-
1245
Ft
Zipaar aad Milyn
la the Graduate ^„,,»,
Asaociatioa racipa Pauleea
1
I *
i
t
4l
n 1
1^1
M
_i-
ms
JfifaU
i
1
i
i
i
JOBS wrFH
FOOD & DRUG
ADMIN. - F.D.A.
Seminar to be held:
Date: Monday, May 1Q
Time: 12 Noon
Place: School of Public
- Room 16-059
Health
PRESENTATION APPLICATIONS DISCUSSION
GENERAL INFORMATION RAP
8.P.H AiufTi4| Amoc a .
Opportuntty fltgiattr
Insanely funny ovtrtgeoat and imvtreiit.
' PLAVBOV MAGAZiNf
JOIN THE LAUGHTER EVERYWHERE
TmLUFmtAriiltt 1330 MHfNi
mm
FMbrooti 113 4212
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A great American ambiguity
' ' I'
,a. '•■>
Race, age^ sex and the
Declaration of Independence
New test aids kidney and
blood pressure problems
By Carol SUrr
DB Stmir Writer
The iifMHS of the Oedsni-
tion of Indcpendcacc f oininri
the ambiguous phrase, ^ail
men are created equal** to
mean three different thmgs at
once, according to VC
Berkeley professor Winthrop
Jordan.
Speaking on^ithe topic of
**IUoe, AfB and Sex^ Rever-
berations of the American Re-
volution/* Jordan gave the
penultimate leeture ' of the
UCLA Bicentennial Series
Wiinnsflsy mght m Dpdd 147.
Jordan told the audience in
the crowded hall **l*m fully
persuaded that the ligMn lMl4
no difficulty with the term *u\V
It is happily the least ambigu-
ous. But the term 'men* could
ht understood three different
ways. Fir^t, *mcn* is unmis-
takably the term for hupian-
kind. In the second sense, boys
are men, but girls will never be
men," Ik said.
Efeiborating, Jordan offered
the example that boys can^uoe
public restrooms labeled Men,
were right to suppose that they
didn*t hold office, but they
never paused to thinJi that
women could,** Joidan said.
Sexnai #if|aBetfM
This laxuai jdisj unction in
the Decteration involved the
assumption, according to
Jordan, that women were
poliucally inactive in univenal
r^Mo.
Reading a letter by AbtfaO
Adams, who has been cob-
fidercd one of the first
feminists, Jordan explained htr
unusual departure from wo-
men*s passivity.
"Remember the ladies,* she
wrote her hushaad .John in
1776, then involved in writing
the I>eclaration. ^'If there is
unlimited power in the hands
of men, we are determined to
foment a rebellion.**
-I think these are remark-
able thoughts,** Jordan ex-
dmrnad." Matoricaliy, no other
woman gave utterance to them.
Possibly some women
thought along those bnes with-
out mustering the nerve to put
them on paper to help their
i«I*lii
^
UC
Winthrop
yift ^hrli do not have this
privilege.
Age oeparatkm
The third possible interpre-
.on of **men** concerns age
cparation where boys are not
considered men
Thomas Jefferson*s original
wording of the Declaration.
Jordan said, was eventually
''mangled by committed. Jef-
ferson first wrote. *A1I
men are created free and
independent * **
More naturahitv ami radical
thna his colkagnes, Jefff
eiipfmmd a philosophy, aoucd
Jordan, which fully recognized
the rigltti of all men, not Just
Aflsericans or Englishmen The
CooiBtttutionnl Convention re-
jected his original phrasing.
howiver, because of the exist-
ing controversy on whether
**& equal rights weae derived
ffMB creation or the OmMor,**
he explained.
> iWmmm were hot mchiiad in
the Dectaration*s egalitarian
women weren't men^ They whites."
in bondage But there
was virtual silence, since moat
women shared the assumptions
of men in the political arena,**
he said
Reflecting further on the
Declaration's ironic phrase
which promulgates equality.
Jordan discussed the plight of
Indian^ and Blacks during the
Revolution.
Indians
"Indians were regarded as
foreigners, not citizens,**
Jordan said -Jefferson wanted
them to settle down at farmers,
to physically and gBMSicmlly
settle with the white society
The difficulty was that the
Indimio were either killed by
dMaaae or forcibly rpmoved to
the West They ^ftrt con-^
sidered 'men' but thty did not
participate in the new. Amer-
ican experiment."
In addition, Jordan said that
Jefferson thought Blacks were
inherently infenor. "He sms
convinced that Blacks would
someday if they were free.
pnysicaily amalgamate with
Along with his collegues
Jefferson wanted to see Blacks
colonized outm^ the Uniiad
States, Jordan said, adding
wryly. -Many American^
wouldn*t mind if that were
hrwil^t about today, if a
would not be so expensive.**
By
DB
A new tan teipmd to diag-
Mt cmmbk high
mut rehited to kidney
levelopad ^
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Vohmia XCVIll. Nufnbar n
Fflday. Stay 7, 1976
durmg ffiy
er th9 AsucLA
Communtomitom eof0. 300 W«tf.
mood Plom, Lot Ao§otm. CmUfomtt
Ma4 Co^rt§hi f§re t^ t$m
ASUCLA Communiemtton§ Board
Bocond clMt pottigi patd at tha Lot
^Mf Ofttom
*nie great majority of poo-
life ^^^k ^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^^^^
will never \b cmed becaum
Leonard S. Marks of tlie
fiinoi ei Mediciw onsl **Biit
those with kidney problems
f^ig tan he cured will be
ocraened out by
Marka, in
Dn. Jooaph J. Kaufman aad
Morton H Maxwell, (also
from the medical center here)
have tested their screening
proccas on^, Ofver t5 patients.
Tbey hope t^ market the pew
test for Bk pubUc witlun ti»
moLt year. ^
The test coaoiflOo nf isyec-
tioao of a new drug, oaraksin,
which will cause the blood
pressure to drop if kidney
is present The test
doctors to ianndiately
prescribe surgery for those
with had kidneys. In addition.
It will mve tune and money for
thoae with faorntial hypcrtea^
Olon but normal kidneys.
A MisOine drug prufeam is
the best treatment medicine
hat available for essentially
hypertension people to date,
according to Marks. But in
five per cent of hypertension
caom, the cause is related to a
bad kidney and the new test
can spot M immediately.
**Tlie drug is given intra-
venously," hiarks said, Tirst
with a siigts sIms, foUowad by
a sustained injection of 90
minutes." If the blood pn^
suie sniienhf drapa> the kid-
nns are to
raor kidneys cnunog high
blood pasaanre are caused by a
aarrowmg of an artery, which
passes km Mnod than naaBad.
The kidney then ralsnam an
enzyme called renin, which
starts a reaction producing the
chemical angiotensin. Angio-
tensin constricts the blood
vamilB and raises the blood
pressure.
^■f^^^w
Ann* Youne
Kan«
Qmofi Ouinn
iitir^
int
drug blocks the
angiotensm, lowering' the pres-
sure and signifying a kidney
problem,** Marks said, adding,
''If the pressure does not drop,
the patient suffers from es-
sential hypertension and can-
not be cured.**
Marks estimates that close
to 30 million people in the
United States have elevated
blood pressure His associate.
Dr. Kaufman, said about 35
pnr cent of the Black popula-
tion and 20 per cent of the
white population suffer from
**ln some extents it may be
related to diet and occupa-
tion,** Kaufman sajd, "all of
which may be nimad to
stress** Marks added. **lt*s a
middle-age disease.**
In midnight cemetery search
Basketball banners recovered
KMton
Ca«)y Saiep
Tern
Nmi Natsum«da
Many November
Marti Rubin
ChrMleQNIS
Randy OMe
By MBbs
DB Stair WfBir
The remaining eight of UCLA*s 10 NCAA
'basket ball championship banners wem found
early yesterday morning after a bizarre ^ search
which aniad in the Veterans* cemetery.
C: Jjfine of the 10 banners were originally stokn
from Pauky Pavilion over Easter weekend,
with the 1969 banner being left behind. One of
the stokn banners, from 1975, wns^ found in a
Kinsey Hall locker last Tlmrsday night.
tqr another clue. When the trio arrived at the
cemetery, they found the banners on the other
side of the fence. Shuitt jumped over the fence
and retrieved the banners.
Shanofsky said all the directions were very
specific and the whok search took kss than an
hour.
A call to KLA Radio
wm&hky at uuM^^ymtm^My was the
first in a series of clues ksiding to the finding of
the banners. Shanofsky, along with Bob Shuitt,
a station employee and Karen Foxall, the
bnainew nsanafor of Togetkgr, went to a phone
booth behind the Sixxler Steak House on
Ave. in ^' ' * ^^
Shuitt snid the car they weee ridai^ in wns
being folnmad by another car on the dnve
from the Ssulsi to the undercrossing. When
the three reached the sign the pursuing car
Onrnad onto the freeway and spied away.
Shanofsky said he had received a phone call
at KLA at about 6 30 Wednesday evening from
the person presumed to he the banner thief.
The caller told Shanofsky he would call hun at
exactly midnight to revnl the location af the
MNia Kurtz
Joyca OaMi
rsky# said he received a call in the
a. i2:3i am Thursday, telhng him
to look in tbe phone book there for the next
chse, which diaecsad the theaaamne to a sign at
tbe Sepulveda BM iiiiIfi ■ nniiig of tbe San
..-V..-
clue
to
found behind the
to the Veterans*
Shanofsky said the baimer thief acknowl-
edged having originally hidden the banners in
Powell Library. Shanofsky added that sution
empinyee Chris Nevil solved the first three
clues to the locatioa of the bnnnan kft by Bm
thisf, and would have found the tenners in
Powell if they had not been mmmi to the
cemetery.
IL BAMBINO
(The PcrfiKt Lunch)
$1.95
A Clip of
A gkaa of wine or
H sandwich on a hmah
%^^BBai
soup or a
1
<^axJiizz
ti
1 ^xom Dia,Lk
J wo ^UUS ^\Om LfLCLLU
teas fCLiMDOM AT uNiMnooai
VAL PAnKINC WSTWD CTU BLDC.
477.JSSI
stuciciits
AMER-ICAL
1434
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MIgKt ^ (SI B) 47B-B7S1
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Sifuc flu* il.iw n *»t iny.iM-
i:i*J hrcxMtiuh.Vk in .SiV
hrexMn.iMcrs h.i\i; ur^i'^l ill-*
nn)»JrinkffH,t<» fnuir Mr.ni:Bc '
'ini»» the- hcrtJ. .inJ r>or inii» i filti'il
ri*v*c| tiiclc
Although hLit.inriy Jcti.int i»t
sttKfv'J ctillcui.itc tniJitUtn rhi- (h*!!:
ri^.il nu'tUiJ h.isfhc nK'riit»riou>
.iJx .lntal^' i»t priiJucmi:>«^<«iMl hiMUivn ,
the hi';id AnJ thi- J rink i(!*i'lt rrappinjj
cKi* CirKHuiiuHi hiltm Thi- Ixvr
vi4H.*Hn t j»i> fl.i! TIk* nH*rhiiil
ri*m,iin> rriK*
U'hon It ctuiK'H to pi Hiring K-'r if^^
hrtumiiKiur* were rit;ht ln»ni ihi . ^ ^.w
huh: Whi*q If 4';inte* tt* iiiiikint: Ixvr. ^ •
u iif» Oly Skill A\\i\ intrc-nuity |U!<a (.';in t K
iniprowvl upon Sihik* ihini:> lu \ ». i
chanttL' Olyinpiii ncvif wilt
|)lKyiM]ii){]^
ft
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I
UC Student Lobby
positions still open
Wins awards for work
ASUCLA l»iietting rMNly to
RETURN YOUR MONEY!
If you h«v«n't gotten a redemption envelope. GET IT NOW! Folloer.
directiofie on how to calculate for your boruja — put in the receipts from all your
purchaaea from the Students Store from March 10 through April 30. and turn
It into the Bomia box in either Store You'll get a check for 1 1% of all your pur-
chaaea — including tax — irvmid Mayf
LAST DAY TO TURN
IN YOUR ENVELOPE:
SATURDAY, MAY 8
Today ia the last £r3f teepply for the oxiircctor'i potiden at
the UC Stodcn: Lobby The job involves a two-year, $787 50 per
i^MMith conuUBSiit to prcaaiaf the concerni ol UC ttudenu before
sUiC afeiicy end iegisltton.
According to Mmry Jo Miller, director of UCLA*i annex to the
Lobby, the job providci ietis£actioo above the salary. '•Ifi a very
socially rewarding job,** the said. **lt*s a great culmiiiation to a
colkfc career working for studenu in a professional Ttanncr **
[>unng the past year the XJC Student Lobby has preasuied for
campus alcoholic beverage licensing, laws eading housing
discrinunation against studenu, funding for child care centers
and insuring the privacy of studenu* records.
Siwck lew
A lobby-spoaaofed hiw took effect thai ynr requtrmg warrants
for authorities to search dorm roots. Frel^ioys to the Lobby's
efforu, studenu did not have this protection.
The Student Lobby is currently investigating possible change!^
in laws and reguktions governing unemployment iiuurance which
would forbid the agencies involved frooi denying studenu
■employment benefiu.
Qualifications for the co-director's slot inchtde: an ability to
Wfnk aad write well, a willingness to travel throughout the stifte,
operating out of SaoKHnemo and sutus as a present UC student
or raoent graduate.
i>
..» . j."^''
The apphcant must nko have a *^vilJingness to work long
hours under pressure,** according to the official job requiremenu.
Next Friday the applications will be scranad by the UC
Student Lobby*s personnel committee. Thirty will then be
intcniawai on May 21 m northern QUifon^ iiikd on May 27 in
the south. * ^
The UC Student Body President Council, acting with the two
UC Student Lobby co-direetors, will fill the position from 10
finalists. The new coHlirector will ainfft work on July 1.
**lt*s one of ihe ifbre constructive options you can have as a
student,** said MiDer. ''You know the work you do is going to
have a lasting effect.**
Other poaMaa
Miller also mentioned that the poailion of office wmmm^x in
the Lobby's Sacramento office will soon be opening for
applications.
Application fortns for job* with the UC student Lobby are
available at the Lobby's Campus office, Kerckhoff 306. A
compete Ttmmm wmk sample of writing abihty muat nocompany
the applictton, which must be poat— itid today.
UCLA'S Dental School
presents its
Annual Minority Recruitment Day
and Open House
Dance for Recruitment Day Participantt
Where: School of Dentistry, University of California. Los Angeles
When: Saturday, May 8, 1976
Time: CONFERENCE — 2 to 3 p.m.
T
CONFERENCE
OPEN HOUSE
DANCE
2 to 3 p.m.
3 to 6 p.m.
7:30 p.m. to 1:00 a.m
f
»»
FEATURING
T"
CONFERENCE
Orientation
Introduction to the Profession of Oerttistry
Minorities in Dentistry
Question and Ansvwer Session
OPEN HOUSE
Tours of the Dental School
Meeting with Admissions Officers and
Counselors
Application Assistance
Meetings with School Faculty, enrolled
minoritjr dental students, and practicing
minority dentists
DANCE
The Student National Dental Association
and the Associated Chicano students will
sponsor the dance
v^
supports inmate
Dl Stiff Wrttar
Helpng men nude jpfiioi to *^tAke it out
•lep ftt a time" to freemn, tiK UCLA dMiyicr
of the Seventh Step Foundation won two
awmrdt froni tlie Federal Correctional i^pti-
lution at Lompoc, Caltfoniia.
Skip Johnson, director of Prpfect Growtli
and Diane Stella, president of the student
chapter, received the Clinton J. Duffy Award
•ad the Community Service Award AHhough
the ewards were given in their naoKt, Johnaon
emphasized that they were earned by **the
program and all of the ttudents"
Growth volunteer Brenda Woodi deacribed
t|» UCLA chapter as ^'in the critical stage.*
Many people, ^iIk feels, do not undenHMd
a goes on in pffison.** Since pnsoners may
**very high ideals^ the students need to
help them achieve their gaali without **teariQg
down their ideak," expUined Waadft.
Aft schaol
One prisoner wantt to start an art ichool.
she said. Although he is *^wy enativer he
cannot ''just walk on the street** and start his
school, 'added Woods.
Viewing Seveiith Step as a **poeitive oiiani-
zation/* Woods explained that the steps
developed by the foundation spell ''freedom.'*
The UCLA chapter has averaged 25 persons
ffr etch visit to Lompoc, said Johnson. Each
involves a nine-hour time commitment.
they leave fron Los
and return at 12:30
Aagaks at 3:30 pn
After arriving at the priao^ the studenu
lidpate with the prisnaan in a prognuA.
in the progran ii a *hgl tent portion *
which Johnson dncrihod as a ^^good-natured.
figoeoM golhhg** of iiwnatrs. Since pn»oners
who are being quertioaid will be released in a
**thort tine,** priieoan and studenu "preaa
questions involving education, vocational and
interaction plans,** said Johni
Fi
The seoead part of the evening eooaiau ot
and a half hours of **talk between inmates
and studeala,** he explained. Through this
PPOPMB, an idea of furUM||fM was developed
Three innuites were releaaad for su days iii
the latest action of the student-arranged
furloughs program. Participating in an "infor-
mational aad educational furlough,** Johnson
related, the inmates conducted lectures at
UCLA and Santa Monica City Collegs aad^oet
with campus departments Tor information thMt
they couid ukc back to the prison
Funded by Action, the UCLA chapter of
Seventh Step is one of many Project Growth
programs Johnson described this pilot pro-
lan as "helping students who want to be
involved in services to the country, such aa
VISTA"
OffnanifUffn
screens today
**Oow< Peoples Strag-
gle,*' a film sponsored by the
Iranian Student Association,
will be shown at 6:30 pm
today in
5208.
French prof lectures
The UCLA Cotnmtttee on Pubhc Lectures and the
department di French will present John Lapp, former
chairman of the department of French here, in a pubhc
lecture on "Le Bastion Assiegr Unc Thematique De La
Violence Cher Zola. Malraux Et Sartre," at one pm today
in Haines 1 10 The lecture, in French, is free and the pubhc
is invited Professor Lapp is the author of hooks on Racine.
Zola, Pontus de Tyard and La Fontaine, as well as
numerooa studies m all penoda of French hterature.
OHO^-M MCOUNTlil QUOUM
EASY WAV TO MHT TNf O^KMfTI
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DRIFTWOOD COUPON
2 for 1 Burger Combination
Buy 1 Burger Combo at the Drift-
wood, the jazz inn on the beach at
Venice and get a second one plus
a half -litre of one of our fine
house wines absolutely free with
this coupon.
This i^ value also entitles you
to the fine jazz of Ray Draper and
friends direct from Europe and
New York in their only L.A.
appearance, an atmosphere of
freedom and relaxation, and un-
limited access to the sun, beach,
and the paddle tennis courts all
right outside our front window.
Good Thru May 25
JsLzz at the Driftwood
on the Beach
Fine Dining
Live Entertainment
Jazz Concert Every Sunday
Afternoon between 4 & 8 P.M.
1921 Oceanfront Walk
Venice 90291
399-95^8
1 1
1
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*
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I
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—SUMMER
OPENINGS
for $2,491
Did your previous summer job take the
I.Q. of a CANARY?
GET OFF YOUR
TAILFEATHERS AND
come to an interview today 1:00, 4:00
at 900 Hilgard or call 479-4139
..■■,^
■ '^'-^V^ •■ ■'"
Wbexetohuy
LOS ANGEUS
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TlwtroocKvciv
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The Barrel WarehcxjM
AffTESU
MofVi
lAKEKFIELO
Broodway
J[Oft3 s Trading Potf
•iVEMYHHiS
Rudnioli'i
BurcoTs
id's Towne Shop
CiMNTOS
TheBorref
COSUMiSA
The Hofef
WNd ¥IMi Sto9«
as^euNDO
OLENDALi
OftANADAHHlS
RunOfltwMM
HOIIYWOOO
AMNne't
LONG BEACH
DvnimOepo^
Robert's Oepoftmeni
Shore Sporting
Goodi, Inc.
MAMMOTH LAKES
£. G Rummel ltd
AxMne's Stioes
NEWPOST BEACH
WestclWShow
Als
NOffTH
HOUYWOOO
NOfiTHMOOE
EiCammo
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HOtWALK
Richard't
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OXNAAO
Adomls Den For Men
SAN
Sam's ShM
SANUANA
SAMABAmAAA
SooltYwick s
Koib's TfodlnQ (^otf
WfSnMMTfff
Black actor's perspective
"WeWbeen puttTng you on
ft
DB Stair WrBflr
''WlilM 4oo*t kaow bow to enteruin Bkcks.
But wc csn cntcftsiti wtalM ^^ wc ve eeea
putting you on for yemn," ador Rofer Moteky
taid yesterday in a quettioa aad asfwtr aaBMOtt
OS *HiM<giril Penpectives on Blaciu in Ameri-
Speaking tmder flie auspioei of the Afro-
Amehcan Studies Center. Mamkff, who has
a)>peared in numerow tekvMton prograflM as
we as such films as TIm New CeatmriaM,
Lsaihrfly and RIvsr Nlgw, said, ''it was never
ieaigned for Blacks to be involved in the
entertainment industry."
He said that in the past such traditionally
Black enteruiners as Amos and Andy and
minstrel show actors were played by white
people. Moseley added, "There is no spot in the
theater for Blacks unless it represenU money in
the business. Black films are a place for
jBODeymaking^ powciv iM for oiff own creati-
vity.-
Moseley has been involved in producing
works at Walls* Mafuadi Institute as well as
working with such stars as Stacy Keach aad
John Wayne.
Concemti^ the paer stereotyped roles of
Blacks in television Moseley exphMB^ **! don*t
believe Blacks are always playing thugs. Every
sImbw has one hero aai SB crooks I deaiiad my
chaaoes for getting a job were 30 to one in
favor of the crooks. In every alMiV, the good
guys are going to overcome the crooks. It just
so happens the guest stars are always crooks.**
The film stereotype of Blacks portrayiy
pimps and gaagsters are a refkction of t%
^'attitudes of the people writiag the scripla,**
Maaaley said, artriiag, **I turn dowa a food 80
per cent ai the roles ofiefod to me.
**! turned down MaaAafa,** Maacly said,
explaining he had never read the book aad
while under a picture contract with Paramount
was offered all kinds of money without haviag
to aak for it. (MaailBfo. deah with slavery in
the South and certain critics termed it a Black
exploiution film.) The script was so bad, I
bought the book to see if they had lied to me.
Believe me. the script was a blcaaing compared
to the book.** ^
**Beiai *^ ^ thmk clear is very important
lb Bie,** he added wryly.
As- to violence and the negative iaapM of
Blacks portrayed on television, Moseley said,
*The aduhs are copping out on this and so it
affects the kids. The priamry iwpaaaibility of
what aqr kids do rests on me The parenu can
turn the tthtiaiuu off; you don*t have to feed
that to yoar children. I*m not there until you
turn the televison on.**
Moseley said he *'wanu la enterum the
world as a Bhick entertaiaer. We can entertain
the workl on more leveb than makmg tl^em
laugh all tlie tsaie.
**I hate the phrase Black film or Black
theater. There isn*t a yellow theater for Amhh
or a brown theater for Chicaaes or even a
whiu theater for whites. Bhick has coiae ^to
mean a low budget film; it becomes cheap^ 1
don*l acant to be labeled ^ hmited,** Moseley
Someone in the audience nigfrilMl the film
Saaadv was good, to which Moseley replied **!
thought Soaadtr sucked. In Soaaiar every-
thing was caatialed. That family aad system
didn't get ui aowhere.** .
Moseley said he would bke to see "^the trend
go toward reahty** in Black portrayals on the
screen. In the future **We have to
balaaoe in our portrayals. If there is a
then Blacks can. without regret do
acu like Uurel and Hardy.** he commented'
i .-•■•'•.
The ftinniest Wm of I9as»
r^
A WORLD WIDE FILMS RElEASE
SURVIVAL OF THE
JEWISH FAMILY
the question of survival and quality of survival will be iHxiiiBOorl by
JERRY BUBIS
Diractor. School of Jawish Communal Sarvioa Habrww Union CoHaga
Mr Bubis has written articles and taught claaaea on the jewteh Family.
intermarriage, and synagogue life
FRIDAY, MAY 7
at the Hiflel Shabbat
*c«s 6 30 dinnf 7:30 program 9:30
neaeiiailuii ^/^-idji
, JF^i^ r A»r/v*>»»»/^ ^(r/>Mi^>iMr Jf^-^^M^U
CHEVy CHASE • PHIL PROCTOR. • RiCK HORST* LARRAINE NEWMAN • HOWARD HESSEMAN • ROGER BOWEN
H«ic by LAMBERT A POTTER • Written by MICHAEL MISLOVE and NEIL ISRAEL • Executive Producer WOODPECKER MUSIC INC
Produced by JOE ROTH • Directed by BRAD SWIRNOFf A NEIL ISRAEL ^ Dtsinbuted by WORLD WIDE FILMS ^-=^
Mr . >ii II
NOW SHOWING
Added Subject CHEECH & CHONG BASKETBALL JONES
UNITED ARTiarS, WESTWOOD
m
Hon tkrH Fri. SM. 751. S:2I. 11:^ P.M. Sat.. Sw.. Hols 131. 2:55. 4:25, 5:55. 7:25. 1:55. 1025 P.i
SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SHOWS Fri and Sat at UNITED ARTISTS. Westwattf - 12:15 1 121 A.M.
CISTA NCSA. I A Cmema • S4I ISM
ORANCE U A City Cinema • 634 3411
MO PASSeS THIS ENOACEMENT
tESTMINSTER. Ui CiMM • IS3 I54t
4
*»
daly bruin
Letters to the Editor
North Campus
I'm flii recovertng from the
shock of learning that at [eau a
few students are uncier the im-^
pression that the new building
foing up behind the Cypty
^ Wagon is to provide food ser-
S: vice for faculty and staff only —
"t sort of second faculty dub, so to
speak We leimd of this mis-
' inripression while handing out
apples at the recent Food Fair
and believe that it should be
corrected.
The building, for tack of «
_ more r^tevant name, is the
North Canripus STUDENT Facility.
It was planned, financed and
constructed under the auspices
of the ASUCLA Board of Con-
trol. It is being built by the
student association, with co-
operation from the University,
to serve a variety of student
needs. As with all of our facil-
ities, it will be open to faculty,
staff arui visitors, but it is pri-
marily a student facility.
I do rKM believe that there has
ever been a facility built on the
UCLA campus that had more
student input and participation^
than this one. Since 19/1, ftii^
-^-^-dients have participated m the
_*:Jfirst research studies, prcp^r^
tion of the planning guide, se»
lection of the architect, review
of the architect's design, (and
:ibicause the students insisted)
revie%y of the irchitect's re-
design, menu planning, furni-
.tufe selection .an/i countless
other phases of this project This
type of comprehensive student
involvement will make this new
facility the very finest from a
student viewpoint.
When it opern in mid-July, I
sincerely believe that the labors
of all involved will be richly
rewarded by a facility built to
MTve you and to welcome you
on your own ternrn. By the time
you return in the fall, it will be
in full operation.
To dear up one other matter,
the Gypsy Wagon was moved to
its temporary location in order
to make way for construction of
the new facility We wanted to
keep it in operation to serve
you, in its inimitable style
(somethmg beats the heck out
of nothing) until the new facility
was ready. Then, sadly, it must
■o. Perhaps lack Smith will be
kind enough to preside over its
laM rites, and thwi |oin us in our
enjoyment of the North Campus
Student Facility.
DMaM E.
ASUCLA
Banks
Floyd Banks, you're full of hot
air. I refer, of course, to your Oi
opinion (5-3), in which you pro-
test j^e closing of three tuition-
free New York City University
Campuses.
You also complain about taBc
of closing Irvine and Davts med
schools, and the UCLA nursing
school. You complain that there
are no more faculty posts, that
Student Health Service has been
cut and that financial aid has
been reduced. Why are these
things happening? Because they
cost money. And what do you
do? Do you suggest that more
money be raised to finance
these things? No — you protest
that out-of-state tuftion is going
to be raised!
In fact, you say that raising
^-•ut-of-state tuition will eliminate
"working class students." Well,
as it is, out-of-state students
already pay three artd a
third times as much tuition and
fees as California students. One
way to increase enrollment of
"working clas* " students is to
get rid of some of those rich
out-of -staters to make room for
some poor California residents.
And you complain about the
47 to 1 student-TA ratip, but in
the same breath you condemn
Governor Brown's dec^slon to
cut down UC enrollment! What
do you want him to do — throw
open UCLA's doors to every stu- .
dent who thinks he's capable of
college-level studies, and then
try to dig up — and pay —
enough TA's to harnile the in-
flux of new students? Grow up,
Floyd!
Banks are refusing loans to
students, Floyd, because they're
such poor risks. The Federal
Government has lost hundreds
of millions of dollars to college
students vvho've defaulted on
their repayments of interest-free
or low-interest student loans. Do
you think-that banks can hcipe
to stay sohrent if they lend
money they can never hope to
see again? They're living in the
real world, Floyd, if you're not.
And then you say that "UC
police engaged in extreme racist
harassment of Black students in
the investigation of an alleged
rape." Well, the rape did hap-
pen, but no one has yet proven
that the police actions
constituted "racist harassnr>ent."
Maybe you should have said
-'a . . alleged racist harassment
. . . ^m the investigation of a
rape.""
Go ahead and try to defend
yourself, Fbyd, ar>d seer If the
Daily Bruin will stoop so tow as
to print your unsubstantiated,
seK-contradictory, rabble ,rous-
Ing rhetoric.
Sick and tired
It is unfortunate that Ms.
Wolfson is so "sick and tired" of
reading the "anti-" side of the
ongoing dialogue in the DB on
abortion. Apparently, however,
she has missed the point of the
dabate. She feel that since
abortion is a "question of ide-
ology," individuah should have
the freedom to act as they wish
concerning it Did it occur to
Ms. Wolfson that murder, racial
"Niil. pteaM."
discrimination and bribery are
aiso ideological issues? Shall we
excuse Nazi, Communist, or
American murderers on the
grounds that they have a right to
their own personal ideological
preferences? In fact, shall we
remove all laws which might
limit one's practice of his ideol-
ogy^
The poinr is that any law has
implicit ideological basis, and
indeed the absence or removal
of a set of laws (for example, the
absence of laws restricting reli-
gious practice) likewise implies
certain values. So it is not a
simple question of whether or
not to eliminate ideology from
the law, as Ms. WoHson seems
to think, but rather which ideo-
logical assumptions to utf . —
those of the "Majority? Thoie of
the ruling group? Those of a
certain data? Of course this is a
difficult problem, but we canr>ot
wish it away by denying that it
exists, by calling for taws which
will infringe on rK> one's ideol-
ogy
The debate in the Daily Bruin
centering around abortion has
proven that a few people on
each side are capable of con-
sidering basic issues, values and
assumptions somewhat objec-
tively: When does personhood
begin? Is killing a person always
wrong? Should the State legis-
late in this area of our lives?
What are the obligations, and
what are the rights, of the
woman? This, not mud-slinging
and name calling, is the kir>d of
dialogue we need.
MIk BIytli
did (WedMnday night) and told
them what to say." This was
again in i|pference to Taylor an6
Banks and iaferred that some-
one tipped them off to the fact
that we would ask for their
testimony. Presumably this
would allow them to distort fads
so as to avoid penalties. This is
not in fact what happened, and
no such statement was nxade
The Elections Board feels that
the article unfairly and inac-
curately. dttcVibes the actions of
Mr. Cole, Mr. Banks and Mr.
Taylor.
Because we have been unable
to obtain a- retraction of the
quotes from the Daily Bruin, we
feel that it is our resportsibility
to Mr. Banks, Mr. Taylor and to
ourselves to darify'^ the situation.
Bisque
Marcta Bisque's literature con-
tains her name, her picture, the
office she's running for and then
the words ''Representative of"
followed by a Bit ol campus
organizatiofis. These include the
lewish Student Union, MEChA,
Asian Arvierican Coalition, For-
eign Scudenu Association, Inter-
Fraternity Council, Women's
Programming, Native Americans,
Gay Student's Union, Black Stu-
dent's Alliance and Veteran's
Association. An eleventh group,
which she calls "Inter Residence
Council" we assume means the
dorm students.
Clarification
It has come to our anention
that several statenrients in your
recent article on the activities of
Elections Board are inaccurate.
Specifically, Eleaions Board
Chairman jay Cole was quoted
» Mying, "It was the printing of
the endorsements on ASUCLA
stationary and the copying of it
on the (Student Body) Presi-
dent's Xerox machioo" (that was
Illegal). The reference to the
Xerox machine was absolutely
never made. This quo^ con-
cerned an infraction made by
WHfie Banks and Mr. Scott
Taylor.
Later, the article quotes Cole
as saying, "it's obvious that
»ne got to them before we
luit looking at the iMiil {^fnd
who really studies them all?) one
would assume that she it of-
ficially Cfidoriod or supported
by these many grcMipi. This is
mjiiiding arKi downright da*
ceptive. These groups exist
under the oMice o^ the First Vice
President, which is probably
what Marcia meant. Marcta is, in
faa, endonod by only one c4
the gpoypi, the IPC. She Noi
neyf^ even met with ifioft of the
o#ior groups (sonie have
heard ol her), and we
using our names, and In four
cases not even the correct
names (i.e. lewish Student
Union is officially the UCLA
jiwish Ur>ion, the Asian Ameri-
can C6alftioo is the Asian Stu-
dent's Union, etc), in fact, most
of the organixations have en-
dorsed Marcia's opponent.
More letters to us
" Wf
Cynthia McClain, amor^g them
the Third World Coalitidn ii&A,
MEChA, ASU, NASA) One
froup. Women's Programming,
♦s heeded by Cynthia herself.
We are strongly proCMlM^ this
nrtiftlcading use of oitr organi-
zations as part of Marcia's cam-
paign. In addftiofi to this loner,
we are carrying our pretest to
1^ Judicial Boerd, in the hope
that further ambiguity witf be
prevented This is beiiaBy an
attempt to cUrify the poMom
of the student groups on cam-
pus, to Hop tf>e name-dropping
ar\d to demaryd honesty, without
"small print."
Uvy. CnnifcHiimu
PSA
NASA
Grabonowitz
,r
Rocky GrabofK>witz has been
on this campus for the last three
years. He has seen many carr*-
paigns corr>e and go. He has
toon the same campaign tecf>-
Ai^ues and, frankly, he thinks
it's time to change.
When have the issues' heen
Bddnmod? He Nm never seen
them addressed — he has even
hwind la the phocne boolr. to
his opinion all of the candidates
hmm been as frank as Oscar
Meyer and as candid as Alan
Funt Me has had as much tripe
as he can stornach.
:. He is not a candidate, make
no mistake. He has no intention
of participating in this cam-
paign as a regular candidate.
However, be feels that as a real
Bruin, the facts should be re-
vealed.
Let's loo^ at some of the is-
SMCft. Everyone has been dis-
cussing the Wooden Center The
popular brouhaha has been over
the fundirtg of the structure. The
real issue, however, has not
boon disoisaed. The Woodoii
Center wiH fall flat on its face.
Everyor>e knows a structure of
this size must be buih of steel
After all. what would happen tl
it rained and got warped? All we
would have is aruKher spruce
It has been very popular this
year to discuss student comrdf.
Again the real issue of integra-
tion has not been dealt with
Mliifactorily. The answer to in-
togratlon is the to bus the chan-
cellor.
AH of the candidates have
made stands on violence on
campus. They offer rK> solutions
to the rea\ iMue at stake, the
oMoM solution is to ir^creas*
reg fees by S2S and issue Satur-
day night ipodah to each stu-
dwM. They won't attack you if
you have a rod m your pocket.
Something must be done to
ypfrade the quality of educa-
tion. What we need k dt^m kt
dassrooma. This would solve not
only the overcrowded parking
lot proWom, but alM> trie dttim
or me flooonti. utaMOMi wioi
students wIMMg to go to the
hoad of the dsM.
t^hy isn t there more atten-
tion paid lo the housing short-
^pi? Existing houMOg jphouM be
^aaoe taiver. LOMf—fnooese
ing could use some of its
surpkM by providirtg
boaes to all students wishing to
Nve there.
There hot hooo anudi dbGoa^
sion of campw cvof«k All of
this nostalgia talk about the
Fifties a/>d Sixties. That's not
good enough! Let's go back to
tne_erawmengBgotloi2|isj^re
had the Thirtif^s Let s get rid of
th< 'ehouse and bring back
breadlines and so4m> kitchom.
I soup
Brums, you iliotlld
thankful for the one
has stood out amidst the
veny surrounding this electloft
This dynamK individual has'pi^
vided a calm port m a sibhny
Ma. Through his eternal vigil-
ance wror^ has boon prevented.
Bless you Arthur Phleagatmann
Ken
td
At approximately this time
every year the students at UCLA
are subjected to numerous no-
tices that a student body elec-
tion is taking piace. We are
bombarded with leaflets and
presented with those large
that do so much to beauTify
Bruin Walk AboVe all else we
are urged to vote. For instance,
in the Wednesday, May 5, issue
of the Dar/y Brum, there were
no less than nine boxes con-
Uining the word "vote," one
small article on the election, a
full paoe sample ballot for the
GSA alactioii md a half p^t
GSA reiarendum.
Yet, every year only a small
percentage of the student body
votes. And every year a number
of reasons ranging from Hftdoot
apathy to bad weather are pro-
posed as the causes of a low
y^fte turnout. While I have taken
ertough political science courses
to realize thai ih«n the best
circumstances it is hard to moti-
vate people to votr, t aiii sure
that the tremendous disorgan*
zation demorwtrated by both the
USA and GSA Electiom Board in
conducting the election will nca
help increase the turn out.
Specifically, what I am talking
about is the fact that at 10:30 am
on the first day of the primary
«iecllDiit at^JoMt three polling
booths were stilJ not open. Poll-
ing booths are suppaood to be
open from 9 am to 5 pm on the
two days of primary docHom.
Yet, when I approached the
booth located neat po Bunche
Hall at 10:25 I was told byrthe
senior citizens working there
that they were not ready — they
had no ballots, irntructions* or a
ballot box.
Proceeding to GSM I found
that the situation of the polling
booth located there was the
About to give up the idea of
votifie ahogmer. I decided ttiat
I had an 11 am dass in Dodd. I
would try the polling booth
bcated at the Law School Patio.
Hpmevef, when I reached the
booth no one was preaent.
Minutes later, two senior citi-
zen pollworkers and a oietiibei
of the USA Elections Board ap-
peared. Sincf I was the first
voter, I was whed to sign an
affidavit statinc the ballot box
was empty and locked, the date
and the time, which was now
^:4IB am (this occurred after i
was ghren the alMafiffi that is
UMd lo doie tf>e polling boqth
— which I leiHted to sign for
Ttie two senior
both very
Mice aoe "^roufteous^
the ndm for voUeg. The
tiom Board nmiihei and I
rapidly explained the voting
procedure to them, ahtxiugh I
have my douto as to wheiier
they ever eet It right f IfMBy I
got my balot and wes aBowed
to vote.
But several querfl^m stM re-
Did the polling
iuncihe Hai and GSM
open?
Why did I have to go to
polling placet In order fc
an open ooav
. Why didn't that one
tBI
10:40 ami
Why is a lefilor citizens'
organization rather than the
students running the polling
University of
San Fernando Valley
COLLEGE OF LAW
1
I
Why weren't the senior dti-
wm given previous instructions
or training as to voting pro-
cedures? and finally.
Is this anyway for two student
hinded mmmlirtonii to run an
I look forward to a reply from
the n^o election boards and t
FALL
STm 197«
^-yoer dey progreni
The s4 h<jol f\
FULLY ^CREDIIIO
In the Comm«tlee cH Bur t*^iMw-
Simile Bar ot ( .ilitcimM.
Tel: (213) B^-S7ti
8353 Sepuivetla Bird Sepuivetfa. Ca 91343
I
CalPiRG
We are writir>g m regards to a
Oarfy Brum edttonal (DB,
May 4, 1976) supporting a candi-
date kn the office of Student
Body Presidervt. CalPIBG would
like to point out that the peti-
tion drive to establish CalPIRG
received majority student sup-
port and is thus considered suc-
cessful. However, CaMIC is not
yet establihsed at this campus,
itiationt are continumg.
A classic motion picture...'
i
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ILLDEUKSUNTSIIEir
•>
■\. •-'
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Bruin
to
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divine
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Batmen finally playing for more than mttfe n
z:*^
DB SpmH Writer
Usually by the time the
ImU leasoo tmdtm May, tiK
UCLA team it just playing out
the itrmg. However, at the
Bruins ready theniselves for a
three-fame aerim with Califor-
nia, there, is moie than just
pride at Mikg -— a lot more.
The Bruins arc currently on
top of the Califomia Intercol-
legiale BrngBsU Association by
one-half game. Their doaest
pursuer is USQ whkh has a
12-7 record tw|iaiiid to the
Bruins' 12-6 log. However, the
Bears are still in the hum wkh
a 9-1 CIBA log.
The two teams will meet on
Sawtelle Field at 2:30 this
afternoon and at noon tomor-
row for a doubkheader.
Every game the Bruins win
this weekend will mean they
have to win oae kis in next
weekend*} showdown with the
Trojans. If the Bruins manage
to sweep the Bears, they would
need to win just one of three
games, against USC to claim
their first league title since
Two of Htnt
If the Bruins take two of
three and the Trojans di^ldtt^
DC Santa Barbara Tuesday'
Bight (which they should), the
team that ukes two of thiee
next weekend will be the
champ.
MEN AND WOMEN
WANTED FULL TIME
SUMMERJOBS
ff you are temporarily (ftscftrninuing
your irtirition and saakmg sum-
mer werlt. consider this unique
opportunity Large mternationaJ
firm has several full time positions
available m district offices through-
out the US If accepted you will be
working with others your own aga.
You can work locally travel your
own slate or neiohboring stales.
The man and woman we are looking
for are ambitious, depaodible and
hard working For district offk»
aiiPtss m your area, or forippoint-
ment with our local flMiger. call
Sherry betwoM f am. to 5 p.m .
Monday through Friday
InLAeal
In VanNifM
•/'
(USC and Cal will have
pit|uJ one less game haeoMc
of a ramout which will not be
replayed.)
However, it won*t be easy to
sweep the Bears, even though
the Bruins took two jof the
three games played in Berkeley
in March.
Their strong suit is pitch-
ing,** Bruin coach Gary Adanu
said yesterday. *^I think they
arc in the top 10 in the entire
country. Their weak suit is
defense. Their first five hitters
are food hitters but there i* a
drofolf after that.**
Adams was in the Bay Area
kst weekend to scout the Bears
and the Trojans (the latter
were playing at Stanford). In
addition to their hitting, the
Bears run the bases well ac-»
cordmg 10 the Bruin coach.
lit ilaals
They stole their 100th base
last weekend,** said Adams.
they rottly hke to
Alton Caesar is their top man
with 36.**
Mark Barfieid, who was
hitting .364, is the top hitter on
a Bear team which waa aMe to
;score just six runs against
UCLA pitching in March.
•^e have to fct the pitchmg
they expect from their guys if
we expect to win,** Adams
said -I really expect our
pitching to come through.**
One advantage California
has is momentum. Last week-
ead, the Bears took three
straight games from UCSB to
move into third plaoa* alMMl of
Sunford. Meanwhile, the.
Bruins have not played a
league game in two weeks sLtid
have won just three of seven la^
that period. —
Oik of thoK wmr~Wcdnes-~
day night, when Uie Brums
defeated Westmont CoUege 9-6
(ContlntMd am Page 17)
TMf«
Topanga Center for Human Development
Drop-In Encounter Groups __
We invite you to try drop-in encounter groups as a way
of meeting new people and exploring new. creative ways
of relating to them.
Wd*y nllt, 8 PM: 2247 H. T
hy site, a PM: lisa N _
17X WMKirood gM^ nK,
For brochurn call
455-1342
Tracksters try to regroup In Fresno
Non-maiiiben.SS.OD
Colloquium on Asians in America
TODAY
3-6 PM 3232 Campbell Hall
YUJI ICHIOKA
ircti Associate
Asian American Studies
on
"The History of Japanese
,_ , In America**
sponsofsd by Asian American Studies CsfUsi
B
Di Spam mmm
Fresno ia s alicpy town
nestled between farm fields in
CaitfiinMai great central val-
ley. Cau^t in a time warp, tile
mMntti stiir find hot-rods sad
kaMridsi popular.
mm every aprnif Hk coan
munity awakens to kail ase of
the nation's top track and Said
9^mm — the West Coast Re-
wyt at Frcaao Sute CoUspe.
The 1976 Relays start at I i an
tomonom as competition m
the ppen^ university division
pets under way.
-More world records hsve
been let there thsn any place
eiae in tlK world,** said UCLA
hand coach Jim Barii. «ic*s a
pisce where a lot of athletaa
reach their peak The track is
records
faat and if the
you caa expo
this week.**
The relays, in its 49th ._
ning. continually drawi top
competition from around the
■stion But in this Olympic
y^ tlK fiald wiU be extra
"CVB^ as athletes struggle to
qualify for the U.S Team
Trials set for earty next rooaih.
Among the current and for-
laer world record holders sche-
duled to participate at FrsHKi
••c AT Feiierhach and George
Wooda (shoe put) sad Dave
Roberu sad Dsn Ripley (pole
vault). Other top iateraatiaiml
Mars, like Mike Soit mid Msrk
Eayart (tOO), are also entered
^y of the top college
•^■■ds in the sute sre sending
isrge contingems to the Wsat
_ ^_T ^SC aiow will run
2a sthletes. Other aolHiali with
«ttnes srt Ssa Joae State, VC
»€t;keley. Laag Beach State
Bush wilt lead a group of 1 5
^'^»P> to Fraaaa to compete in
five Midiaidust snd two rehiy
.^
V POTPOURRI
THi WTERNATIONAL WESTAUfUMT
LunekAOInmr
I. Njt
WC ARE OPEN TO THE PUBUC
The mUe relsy laam (Benmc
Myles, GsBOl Niederhaus and
Jeff Lsada) win try to imprtna
lU sessoa beat o( 3:07.3 while s
•pccislly sssembled 800 meter
relay sqaad (AKm Gilmore,
Steve Baek, Conimd Suhr and
Jeff Hsyaes) will run its first
test of the spring
Pole vsulter Mike TuUy
leads the bst of Brum indivi-
dusl performers ss he faces sn
excellent field of 34 competi-
tors TuUy, the world jumor
record holder (17-10), fsces
outdoor lacatd hoMsr Daiia
Rohwts (IS-6V4) sad indoor
record holder Dan Ripley (18-
Tully ii coming aff s fine
performsaer against USC He
leaped 17-6 last week to down
Trojaas Russ Rogers and Tom
DiSunishu. Roberu sad Rip-
ley rsoenUy jumped st the Ssn
Joae Inviutionsl, where they
both clesred 18-2.
In the high hurdles, Jsmes
Owens will be out to regsin the
form which earned him to an
NCAA ninaer-up finish last
yesr. Agsinst the Trojans,
Ow^ns placed a dismsl third as
he leveled three hurdles.
Owen's opposition at Fresno
includes Tommy Hill of the
U.S, Army, an Olympic favo-
rite aad Dedy Cooper of Ssn
Joae Sute. the top freshmsn
hurdkr in tiK nstion Philbp
MijOs of UCLA amy siso rUn.
**James will be out to re^ia
his winning wayt^** explained
•■•h. -He has sanething to
prove to himself after last week
snd he aeeds to get his confi-
dence back.**
Jsson Meisler is entered in
the high jump for UCLA while
Jerry Herndon will a^aare off
sgsinst fine opponents in the
long jump Sprinters Orlando
Johnson and Dotson Wilson
will test the fields in the 100-
meter dash. In the shot put,
Jim Ncidhart and Huve Kur-
raach will throw for UCLA
Bush said his Bruins will be
going all out at Fresno "They
^ to regain their confidence
4CpartaaaiaaPagel8)
I
f
i
The Black Student Alliance
presents
West Coast
Reg. Minister
Karim Hasan
will speak
1
today Friday, May 7th
1:00-2:00
at Rolfe 1200
by Sfudf-nt L^gisljfivp diunctt
Contemporary Art Survey
presents
Art & Language
Mel Ramsden
Friday. May 7, 8:00 pm
Dickson Auditorium 2160E
UCLA • Free
SCA. PTF. SLC. GSA
ii
mam
r
^ ♦
,..(
I
I
I
1
I I
nuuT
1 M y^
SOC
Guixin*u Stout or Sehitfi. r^g 75<
11.15
III
Hot hors d'o«uvr«s, lik« Swedish
itb*Ils. fri«d zucchini, cocktail fiiinks
to chxpB-{i99 pypuuta, tool
Momunr THBOOGH nuDunl^
4lo7
C«My'a B«i UQ9 GUndoc. Waatwood Villaff*.
|2l3) 477-3996 Op*n iioiB 11 cvary day
Softball star Enquist follows brothers
%
■ ■■' :
m
i^ ^ J
1 #1
tRHf ^
bail Mi to try Md fit «p a
ttmcfl you
to stop and wonder where this
country's women athktet
woyld be wohout oAdcr bro-
thers Some guy shows his
Uttk sitler how to dribble a
basketball or hold a bat and
the neju thing you know ihs'i
sUpping on a pair of
running out to the
Sue Enqmim, the
centerfielder for tiM UCLA
woaca*s icMftU team, m m^
ether « a Imig line of iemakt
whoae interest in iports was
spumed by her big brother. **I
started in the fourth grade,**
she said, "Splaying with my
brother's Little league team. 1
didn't play in the gamete 1 jiiit
/^
^^^p^P*^^Ml^.«««VM ^%*
-^LAYBOV^
THE
^^ ^''^
u^~. »
MAJSKAL
rUrnSfi wiSKhs Mei
i»STiMir w PN€i^«.^€itt s mown
^«.,^9MIC€ lllli III
4 MMNoum ie€M€*in coioi
JOW PLAYING
nAiiy.ia'aa«t:ji
atja*a:aa*in:
Foreign Student Association and ISC's Council
on Programming invite ail Foreign Students To:
FSA SPRING GENERAl: MEETING
6:30-8:30 PM
— Non-Resident Fee Increase
— 1976 International Week "^
— Upcoming FSA Election
— Council on Programming
^!30-TD:00 pm - international Dinner win be served at a special rate of 50 cents
($.50) to all registered Foreign Students attending the General Meeting
10:00 pm - 1:00 am Live band Today's pleasure; Music And Drinks
FREE FOR ALL
Date: Friday May 7th. Id76
them My
brocber taught me hoiv to htM
the hat aad sook other funda- ^
aenuis. He git ne ialo it aad
ht encouraged at."
Dftven to caaipflt
Ever since that day. Sue hai
b^en driven by aa urge to
compete. At Saa Clementc
High School, the played every-
thing the could, inciudmg bat- \'
ketball* tennis, badmintoa, vol-
layhaH, field hockey. loftbail
and baseball.
During her junior year, the
first year that women were
allowed to play on men*8
teams. Sue played on the JV
baseball team and started in
left field. SIk hatted slightly
over .300 thai year
**! ph^fiid OB the men*s hard-
ball (baiebatf) team because r~
could compete against better
athletes. In high school the _
wooica*! Softball and hardball
Hmm weren't very competitive
because they progranu weren't
very well developed
**But here at UCLA, the
women's program is just phen-
omenal" she went on. **l can
get the kind of competition I
want ** And according to coach
Sharon Backus, once Sue gets
into a competitive situation.
she gives it everything she's got
and more.
''She gives 250 per cent all
the lime." said Backus '•She
never quits Defensively, she
takes charge and more or lets
runs the defeatc vcrhaily and
actively When ahr « on the
hen^h, she keeps every oae up.
She has a natural talent — the
desire to do what's expected
and go beyond that.**
Sue's statistics easily back up
what Backus said --' she is
batting .485 while leading her
team with 16 hits . and
14 RBI's.
San schedule
According to Sue. the Bru-
in's saft schedule explains why
they played so p>oorly in the
Regional last week. **We
haven't had any real com-
petition all year." she ex-
pUined **That nade the dif-
ference It's going to be dif-
ferent next year as far as the
teams well be playing. Well
play more JC's becauit their
women's athletic programs are
better than those of the small
colleges we've been playing.**
Sue credits the fairly recent
progressive movement in wo-
men's athletics for giving her
and other women the oppor-
tunity to become seriously in-
volved in sports. "Before, wo-
men athletes were students
first, who played their sport
but didn*t really have the
chance to be able to get ser-
iously involved," she said.
**Now. I kiad of represent a
aew hiaad coaMig in because I
was reeniited as an athlete and
Vm really an athlete first and
then a student. Pm really in-
leresled ia graduating and be-
coming a coach, but mainb^
I'm an athlete," she said
WaaM aaadi
Sue, a kiaaslaiai0f ^ip- »
thinking about being a high
ictool vnliiyhaM aaii softhall
coach after graduation, but
she's alsa keeping her eye on
the iMsr «MBan*s professional
Softball league that just began
play in a number of Southern
California cities this year. **By
next year, if the
financially, IH
or not I warn to turn pro," she
''*15xpUined. "But, if the
a
which IS wfat Fm really driv-
Mig toward"
i~4-
m bringing back rah-ratrsptrit
By rmtk
■li:
Writw
Bring out your full-length
taccoan coat and tune up the
old *52 U Snii, hacause that
hack to OCM athletka. For-
UCLA anistant football
Jerry Long is now hnd-
iag the athletic promotions
pmgrani and is shining up the
megaphones of the past
Aa asHSlant coach for 25
years (II at UCLA), Long
moved to the promotions de-
pannwni so thai he could help
the overaU athletic program. **!
feh that 1 had gone as far as I
an assistant
,** he said, "and that it
a gand tmm to take over
position."
Innovative
J^ong enters the prooMNionk
~ with numy new aad in-
nouattve ideas. Right now his
anin concern is promoting the
Rose Bowl championship foot-
hall team. Long. who*s still
knowa as "coach." feels that m
order to maintain the excel-
lence in sports at UCLA there
must be an increase in revenue
through gale receipts
"I want to make going to the
Cohscum a sociid event" he
explained. *^and a social evem
it will be if Long has his way.
Proposed is a plan that woukl
involve meeting at a local res-
tauram. bussing to the game to
avoid the trafAc problem and
then settlmg down to a fall
picnic at Exposition Park. All
the while, alumni bands will
stroll through the park arous-
spirit among the fans
•■ «
Once inside the
Long has devised^ sections for
busines.«es (the gold section)
and' alumni (the blue section).
Within the cbnfines of the blue
section, former band members,
cheerleaders and song girls
from the past will a|t as the
alumni's own spirit s^iad. The
section will tout its own alum-
ni hand, and every game will
have a theme.
Long is also concerned with
promoting interest in UCLA
among the Southern California
community He has plans on
the dranaag hoard for a dis-
count alumni sectioa for recent
grads who can*t quite afford
the reguhir season rate of foot-
ball tickets.
"1 want to make UCLA the
Center of Southern California,"
he said. "We have some
183.000 alums and 80 per cent
are in this area. I want them^ to
have aa affection for UCLA." .
Sparts a catalyst
The enthusiailic Long also
feeb that athlilaGB is the cata-
lyst that hri^gs people hack to
the University. He has found
that it not only brings th«n
back to support the athletic
program, but also hack to their
departments in acadnnscs.
Lang phms to visit the fra-
ternities, sororities and dorms,
showing a foochall highlight
film to help create excitement
within the staiaat hody and
alaa get the parents involved
with UCLA.
Ptmm his years of experience
in raarhiag. Long has found
that piafwe hase la play to an
empty stadium. It*s his goal to
fill the Cohseun for every
home aame, not just the USC
ar Cmo State a
Oregon and Wa^
juil as much a SC ita the
column of the seasoa^s
Baaading to Long.
Included in the plan ^lo take
U<^'A to
nia." IS a "Terry
Night" in Redondc Beach
^here the UCLA Men's
Club has agraad to perform
form.
Those who aid UCLA by
joimog the SHnaa ticket cam-
paiga will be awarded Uriih aa
authentic Bruin football helmet
mounted on a wood hnte.
Looking around his olficc ia
the northeast comer of Pauley
Pavilion, one saes the mem-
ories of 25 years of football —
three Rose Bowls (one at Ore-
gOB State, two at UCLA),
photos of past and present
UCLA starts (two of his form-
er phiyers aie presently on the
football staff ^ head coach
Terry Donahue and graduate
assistaat Ed Kezirian). and
Joha Woodea's "Pyramid ^
motivation" says 1 m^ ''nad I
thmk this rtrpanmma will be
very successful."
With Jerry Long behind the
desk there will never be a hu:k
of motivation, enthusiasm or
creativity Possibly the only
problem will be finding enough
people to keep up with him
i l>on1
careerof
lorajoh.
The Advertising Center s ^
only purpose is to give you a comprehensive
and working understanding of odvertising
Every vital aspect of it
• Account Management • Creative Concept
• Photo Introduction • TV Production
• Graphic Design
• Public Relations.
• Creative Execution
Copy writing Workshop
t
ustration Workshop
Advanced Concept
Photo Workshop
Package Design
• Classes start week of iuuae 14
(2i3» ^^ f— «mi^
j
I
^I^ pltUtmnlnirg
475-2525
11705 National Blvd. Lot
Prime Rib $4.95 from 5 to 7
Ed Hollingsworth and Carolyn Cojr
Fri A Sat Nifhts
Holly Near
Langley
Uhllflower
of fKc sMomen
IK CONCERT
NAY 2«TH 4k 2i8T •:•# PM
WILSHIRE EBELL THEAIBE
4401 W. 8th (a
Um /Kngdam. CA
TICKETS. UJim
Fori i liii laJi 213-999 ltt8
CHILD CASE PROVIDED
I by \% on Wktdt, FO Bm SM
hlY DO THE HEATHEN RAGEr
^ Psalms 2 Mii Ads 4:25
r CWMtiMall M IB, M9 •Htl
M A MQTLI V aHJCTUHC or
Nli
If Ml
1t:7.
•m$am90Bm4 —
UMTOVOU.
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AMD TNI Uirr or TNi
TNi MTNBi. airr « or
AWAY. AMD TNI LUST
DIITNi
17.
P. 0. BOX 405. DECATUR, 6A. 30031
-7
1
I
s
BRUINS GIVE
BLOOD!
::> il L
I
Committee on Public Lectures
And
* '
Cultural and Recreational Affairs
Present
Betty Hahn
In a Photo Lecture
Saturday, May 8, LW p.m.
Sunset Canyon Recreation Center
Campus
Film Commission of the Student Legislative Council Preeents:
1... 1 .
Field hockey starts Sunday
1?
I
I
^
fWW
WD(M)Y
ALLEIV
DIANE
KEATON
LOVE
DEATH
A JACK ROLLINS -CHARLES H JOFFE
PRODUaiON
Produced by CHARLES H JOFFE
Written and Dtrccted by WOODY ALLEN
Field Hockey will sun Sun-
day at 3 pm. Teams hsve II
members each. Those who are
participants should meet in the
ecluipment room of %ht Men's
gym.
A VERY SPECIAL
KIND OF THRILLER.
A GRAND GAME FOR THOSE WITH
A TASTE FOR COMPLEXITY AND
WIT IN THEIR DETECTIVE STORIES.
JUOITM CRIST SATURDAY REVIEW
I could murder her in frwit of your ey«s
and you couldnt prove iC
said the master criminai
to the master detective.
rrp\
ACKERMAN GRAND
BALLR
FRIDAY
• !•
MAY 7
• Ti
^SMIS
JDN \OGHT jmHit BSSETMAfliy an
ni;«:::ilM77^
^OQFMGMIf;
i^OCll
NiXMIIIiKV
excu
^-HMlu*»
VILLAGE TMEATM WsilWiuU 47S«7i
utktL V 74B • A4B • 4kflO • ftflB A «A^A ^^
DATSUM
>■« -
"Acres of Datsuns"
^udent, faculty, and alumni
SmI discounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
•684-11
GOLD'S
GYM
Bears, pitching pose problems...
at Sawtelk Field. The win was
the 2^M) of Adami* head
coachinf career.
The big hit in the game was
a three-run home run in the
-.seventh uuting by third base-
man Robbie Henderson The
homer, his ninth of the season,
gave the Bruins an 8-6 lead
aad gave freshman pitcher
Dave Rucker his second wm of
the saHM ugainst no losses.
Ken Gaylord also hit his
nmth homer of the year Wed-
nesday night and he. Pave
PennialK Bobby DalUu, Jerry
Waters and Raymond Towa-
taad each had two hiu.
Penniall also scored one run
in the game, tying Bob Adams*
record of 53 runs scored in a
single season (1972). With ^hr
games rematnmg, Penniall
would seem a cinch to set his
\
tacond school record
Tuesday at Loyola, Uk
BrvMi center fielder stole two
kases, giving him 30 for the
year. That toul exceeds by one
the school record set by Venoy
Garrison just last year. He
stole Im 3Ut the following
day.-
However, pitching is still the
question marl^ for the Brums.
Sophomore Tim O'Neill
pitched thre^ innings Monday
at Cal Poly Pomona and
•cemed to be throwing the woy
he did earlier in the year wImo
he compilsd a 6-1 recoii.
Adams said the pitcher had
iHd a **daad am" because Ik
ttoppsd lifting weights far a
few weeks.
Tomorrow, Steve Bianchi
will throw the first game while
Ed Cowan will handle the
nightcap. The big right haaiar
ha^ the best record on the
LSAT Preparation Center
Shows Substantial Improvement
Latest ttattstics indicate that students who have taken the
LSAT ofKe balMt wiH show a fftcdian improvement o* 110 points after
they complete Levin's course and take the test a lecowd time "
HARVARD LAW RiCORD - fa// 197$
This could mean the difference between admittance to
UCLA v$. Southwestern or Southwestern vs. San Fernando
Law School.
For information call CJL Levin, Director, LSAT
Prep Center at 479-24% or write 1M7 Brovton
#20, U 90024.
Clashes for My exam given In WeitwiKKL
' Cal for a free leminar,
PERFECT FOR
MOTHER'S DAY
(order early )
852-0077
By phone . . . $10.00
By Foot . from $20.00
GRADUATIONS. GETTPJQ A JOB. BigJWlays. Aonivvsarya.
aData.(Fa»ysPay.
squad (i-2) while BiMMlM is >
3.
Curt Peterson, who threw
four shutout tnninp Wednes-
day night, struck out five while
attowing just two sii^lBS aod
one walk Floyd Chiffer- or
Bob I iMiWii win handle the
relief chotes from the right
siae. -
On the held, AanoM will
probably go with Gaylord at
first, Dallas at second, Town-
Mad at shortstop and Hender-
son at third Dave Baker will
be in left, Penniall in center
laad ailker Larry Silver. Jim
Autcn or Brian Viselli in nght
Denntf Delany will be behind
the
Moyt, 197*
7: 30 fM,
TtalMHSIO $7S0 SS
CONTIST
I— Mr. MSJi
cCAfcC"^
PRESENT
bom
> \
■iM^iiMaa *■ I I
I
J
i
u
3
Spjkers look for good efforts in Fresno .
IfSAndalmakeR
More the Pac4*t (May 14-
15)/ he laid.
MIUIN TRACK NOTES: Af-
ter UCLA*i diiinil loM to
use, Jim Butb could tttU tift
a few diauMMiii from tlie
faftett m the
f-^
world llBt yw, U off' te
1334 WeuwoodBlvd
Wrsiwood. Cj<if 90024
Phone (21 3) 473 9549
. «*-.ro»ttsANr)AI5 belTS I'lHU His DUKSCS MA' ,s
ufH^ ^RleFCAses:
'^'^'M^l^'i^ofi?'"^ "'"' CRAFT INSTRUCTIONS
I
Little crabs and little
lice are not exactly thrilling
A little A-200/pal/and
you'll have made a killin!
A-200.
rvftiiiiirg^
At drugstores
notable
r, a freshman from
Lot Allot who nm a blistering
1:47 J in the 800, a life-time
best. The clocking was the
third fiaHHI by aa American
this year, behind Ride Wohl-
huter*s 1.-46:6 and JoflKi Rob-
inson's 1:46.9. Suhr's previous
bait WM 1:50.7.
The surprise performance
thrust Suhr lAto the t)lympic
picture for the first time, but
the cute lanky blond said that
mnkiog the trip to Montreal
wasn*t on his list of priorities.
**rni thinking more about
making the U.S. Junior Team
so I can tour Europe this
summer,- he said. **rm not
thinking that hard about mak-
ing the Olympics this year, but
I Will in 1980-
Suhr lives near the western
edge of the UCLA campus in
an apartment he shares with
intermediate hurdler Pbillip
Mill and high jumper Jaaoo
McWcr. They must be living
right — Mills wound up sac-
ond and Meisler fu^t in their
respective events as the trio -
scored 13 or UCLA*s 62 points
against USC.
A sophomore from Auck-
land/ New Zealand, Mills jet-
ted to a persona^I best of 50. 1
in his runner-up to USCs
Tom AaJrcws. Andrew's 49.4
Milk ciockuig finally qual-
ified hun §m IIk national Ol-
MMB. Wm Phil won*t be
tke trip to Montranl —
tk€ deadline for achieving that
If over a month afo
Mills doubts that the New
Olympic Committee
will accept the late mark.
Other Rruins achieving life-
time baM OfBiait the Ti
were Jeff Haynes (1:48.9 800),
UmmWtdk (3:45.8 1500), Rich
Gunther (190-^ diacus) and
Rob O'Rriaa (15:38.0 5000)
Guather, the Bmia's
captain, still lies belmd
Freberg aad Dak Gordon om
the aRHtec^ UCLA dkcoa Kat.
Freberg's biirwiw.194-10 whik
Gordon had a loQgest toM of
193-7.
4'..-'':
r -
» :i.if>
*
» <
•ATUROAY ■VBHMMi MIUHTZ NALL, UCLA) 7iM
mayB
IHE
WONDERFUL COUNTRY
WESTERNS
Bias
0§mm prints)
t1.
I
,.4
!
^
Mp«M»^
miE m HIGH counhy
Parntft I1SSM Ttcftmcoior
Crews without competition
Next Friday, the mfen's and women*s crews from UCLA will
compete in San Pablo with the top crews on the Pacific Coast.
However, this weci^end offers a respite for the oarsmen and
women from WestwooA;
The Rruin women have the weekend off. whik the men rowers
will compete amongst themselves in the Grand Interclaas Oar at
Manna del Rey Saturday morning.
While this year's men's team appears to Jbe one of the strongest
UCXA bar had in sevcrat years, the squad has only three seniors.
In the vanity eight boat, there is only one senior Mitch
Henderson. Fourth year UcUin Henderson is joined by only two
other seniors from the JV boat - Larry Offner and Craig Leeds.
Therefore, some non-seniors will have to be added to the '^■enior'*
shell.
Laat ycar*s Grand Interdaai Oar saw the inplioinBii dntt win«
look for the juniors to take tlK 2,000 meter race tomorrow.
However, the freilHBan class could be a dark-horse since tkey
have been rowing in their freahauMi ci|^ akell all irmit tke
other AeRl htm a mixture of at leaii two differeat dMeee.
-MRlc FlMfaM
intramural sports
This Friday, May 7 k tke kft day to tipi up for voUeyboU
doublet. Ptay will begin Taeiiay. May II. The women^t twMi
meet will ke Imld We^Haiay. May 12. Entrke ace doe Tneeday
May 1 1 The tckediiles for IM*s will be o«t after 12 noos4odav*
The mens pwim meet will be Mnnjiy, May 10. Sig
pm at the Rec Center on the day of tke meet. All thoae ii
inplaying ubk tennis doubles ooaK to MG 200 today at 2 pm
•aady to play. The IM HkBiiaes for next w€ek*s gMHa will be
ready today after 12 noon.
tmL
^oeo
There will be coed swim rekys for 2 men, 2 women
?!^-!^"?^: ^^ -^ J* Coniunction with tW — »,
^?"^*- ^^ '*• leaaia may sign up at the mrct
schcJuki will be ready today after 12 noon
The
Sp
Milt Kahn
to stir controversy at noon
By Mike FlMfaM
DR Stair Write
Lurking in tke iluidowt at
such sports announcers as
Howard Coaell and Superfan,
Mih ILakn claime ito be *'the
most important and honest
sporu critic in America.**
Kakfi claims that Superfan
itok the titk from him, but he
rentty doesn't care.
At nooB today. Rahn will
attempt to stir up controversy
and revive soom: past oppoai-
tion when he ^aaks at tke
Grand Ballroom
^ J*^" I"y» >»^t F»d Heat- -J. D. Morpui a very
kr bropicMt UCLA events,** fetovt to a daancnke
^.■•** , lety." Kaka explaiat a4oraaa
1 can t diapute Morgans aa -^ maa with white s
marvelous winning reaOiC but
winning isa*t everythi^ Ako,
how intelligent doet a guy have
to be to get a faad winmng
record at UCLA? I mean,
where is an athlete going to
go? Pitttburgh? lower
UST 4 PERFCRKANCESIliiiT 8^15^22^29
SAT
• PM
$3 STU
Kahn
taid be will have **Sports
'*qutte a bit to say about tke
UCLA basketball team **
Rahn didn't want to reveal
who hat two martinit for
luach, eu
'"Morpm wouldn't even be
man enoagli to come hear me
talk," he taid
ily Rahn breaks the
on hk own ratings.
me aMHe than I
mt iiAfiuiaas
suMMrsiaa a^
lY MichoBl McClura
•They're inaane.Thcy ' re f un Suparbly don^
Company Theatrai65 3 S.LaCi«en##ai 274-S1S4
sports,** said the man who
spends over S3,000 a year on
ing events.
He said he is **representiiig
^rm Mih Rahn I don i care say about the Richard Wash- tke public with hu »o^ VIP
rf he waau to take my mck- inron-Marques Johnson hard- confidential ^iT, ^rror \
ship case, but he did offer a bi-monthly three-page news-
preview for what he thinks of letter Rahn claims a sub-
name. It akaars you what kind
of sute the media is m wkaa a
coavicMd criminal who weighs
over 300 pounds is announcing
sports for tekvision,** he said
in a reoeat interview.
Rahn doesn't praise CoseU.
**He*s a koaseman I'd rather
be an outright phony than
the two superstars
CLOSET CRACKER? What k H? It k an attempt to^
halp UCLAar'a who think thoy may be gay or bi-aexual to
moot in small groupa similar to a dinner for twelve atrangara.'
It m an o#f-campua email, informal, anonymous gathartna wtiara
you meet people wMh aMiHtar taelingfl K wIN be rmled by
three studanta from the Qay Student's Union The dale la thta
Friday avaning. May 7 Call the GSU 24-Hour HOTLINE
477-7000 tor datalk. time and place Your privacy raapected
Taha this small slap out of the cioeat
scnption of over 5,000 and k
I
f
Rahn wonders •*what kind Of proud to announce "no adver-
pcople Washington and John- using - All one has to do k
son must be to be so sac-
rilegious.** According to a jCoI-
umn by Lawrence Moddry in
the Virginia Pilot, ^^
pretead^to be honest ki le- **Laok, we have to aeeept tke
porting.
Rahn enjoys
pick up an issue of htilt'i
Mirror to see that Milt's ad-
vertising k lastncted to pro-
moting \kaig aeaalMer aad him-
fact,, that ballpkyers are often
fun at less talented than ordinary
ridiculing virtually anyone fglks Look at Roger
connected %rith sporu, mclud
ing sports announcers, spafti
writers, athletes, athktic dir-
rectors, etc.
Whik Rahn has no partic-
ukr group he hkes to mud-
akag^JUCLA k certainly not
left untouched by brash, harsh
sutements in reference to such
who lalakliihed the home run
record He's just a human
being. Why put him on a ped-
estal? Did he win the Nobd
Prize*'
''Mans IS now selling beer
aapaewhere Why shoukl kids
pittem their hves after some-
body hke that? He's not the
peopk as J. D. Morgan, Men's sort of fellow I want my son to
Athletic Oirector, Chancellor grow up. to be"
Five years ago. Rahn was aa
obscure figure in sporu. Now
he^s a iMdl-known, but not a
well-respected (at least not
publicly) sporu critic. Rahn
said he saas thk as merely a
refusai by aporuwi iters to see
eitker the human side of sporu
or Rahn's own achievements
Rahn went through several
broadcasting jobs in a two-year
period up to 1972; since then
he has not had a mi^or job
Rieht now.ua untilJun* 15th.youcan fly roundtnpfrmk
New York talMxemboury for (Mily $360.
piaf • nee Imii than th«- youth far« you'd pay on any
other lelMdukd airline. (From ChicaaD you pay $401 and
save $106.) All you have t4>do i. he uSnMSWM^24
There an no bookina raatrictiona. And an Mm^nr n
^^^^^a^ Becauaa wf r vf you the Mmeiaryke
you d (vt trotti other airlifiMi, without the same high
on
jwuthfarm.
m^ yvo aporv than the
We'll give you the
^n^nua. NY. hrnStlTr'
Saw W6 on jet fares
to Europe and book
anytime }€uiiant
athletes.
E. young, and
because he feds the need for
R^n does not imply quke **honest and interesting re-
that Washington and Johasaa porting.** Mih thinks that his
"-■ ^"
.r-:-
ing about UCLA three are profofypes Of Mark, btit he Mirror is such a newsktter.
years ago. Milt tabbed Youi^
as a "roller derby captain.** He
has' focused his attention of
late (with regard to UCLA) at
Morgan and members of the
perennial power basketball
team. •■ ,■ .
'*You hamr to wdadci if J
D. Morgan has all of his mar-
^^ , V '■■■ .
said he thinks they put them-
selves on perhaps too high a
pedesul. i
**lt's a dangerous' Country
when you have guys like Wal-
ter O'Malky, Jack Rent Cooke
and Carroll Rosenbloom" in
charge of professional sporu m
Los Angeks.
|MIWWrJCTfMMiTOang>EjgAa¥ftiBmi»
Colby says investigations
have not ttiwarted CIA
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Former Cia director Willi|im
Colby said Thursday recent congressional investigations
have not seriously hampered the CIA's ^worldwide in-
telligence operations.
"The product being produced is still the best in the
world,** Colby said of the material gathered around the
leorld by American espionage agenu.
Colby added, however, "There has been a cost** incurred
during the widely publiazed investigations in terms of
foreign contacts and of "good hard, intelligeaoe.**
Director of the CIA from t^3 to early If76, Colby said
he believes the intelligency agency should continue to gnft
auf to America's "fnends" in countries with internal strife
and he Said 1^ fdt it was a "great mistake for us to refaee
to assist black nationalist groups** in Aiigok.
Rat Colby told a news conference he draws the bne at
amaaakuting foreign leaders during peacetime, though he
said he would have "cheerfully carried the bomb into
Ukkr's bunker in IM4." .
Assassirution attetnpts by the CIA against Castro and
Coiigo leader Patrice Lumumba were **wrong — we should
not have done it we weat over the edge," Colby
said
He said he was "delighted** to see guidclaies eaiokkilwd
for the f |A, clearing up a **gray' area** where moral
judgmenu weren't ahvays dear.
But he warned ag^aait too yecific regulatioas that epaald
constrict the CIA. Like Gulliver in the land of the
I ilhputiaftfc, he said, the CIA aaflM find itself tied down
and unabk to operate with a masker regulatory msacture.
"1 think we fim aeed flexibility, wc do aeed geaeraf
gaiialiaea, wa da aeed sapervision,' Caiby Mid.
Aad he added ike CIA should be brought out of the
that heve t
**uiial aaancv
surroaadad it.
Colby said he
except hk peaaion aad
**! hope to keep them both
answer many specifk quest i
He did aappi
committee to ovenae i|k intell
IIIUIWkMall Luiigidii
ties" now with the CIA,
of seciacy.
he said, aad he didn t
tke OA
recomamadation for a
rrr
VTffw
>•
fobrics people live iiL
■ r rmtt M< w. g tMsasaMaa *ifw ^^ohh n * twvt
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n
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Something New • Exciiing in
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rttponttbility law could «tf«ct you m If 73
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CjMI TMloy For Your Free Quotation ^
245-727S pHov« RoIm — Will Trov#l 90^Ot44
fipercunf Insurance Agency
mo
This i$ the place for Rib Lovmr%1
By for the Best Ribs wve Ve trimd in LA
' Heratd EftamiPer
COMPLETE DINNERS
Casual Dining ♦'^^'^ *2 .75
NAMIY'S OPIN PIT BBQ
1434 N CRESCENT HEICMT3 ot SUNSET STRIP
10 Minutes Uown Sunset Blvd to
LoufefCohyon T.urn Right And Vqo f c Thoro
TUNE-UP, LUBE A OIL $04
aarja^'i^iL. 8»4.7075
The International Student Center
Officially Endorsed Contribution
To The Los Angeles City Bicentenmal
"THE INTERNATIONAL WORLD OF
AMERICAN COOKING"
A montrilypMantation of dinnw'. music and antartainrpont faaturing
djflswil countriaa whoaa dishaa tiava tecome part of
eia Amartcan mmtwi.
« To ba ttald at
"POTPOURRI"
Tha Inlamational RaaUurant of ttia r
Intarnational Studant Cantar
1023 Hilgard. Waatwood
"ALWAYS ON SUNDAY"
Sunday, May 9 Russian Dinner
and Entertainment
Dinner and entertainment $5.00
6:30 - 9 pm "Mother's Day"
Treat Mother and the famrly to
an unusual experience.
Class
Women
Women intercHai m careen in the enter-
tsinment iaiMtry can obtain realistic infor-
mation throuifi a series beiag offered by the
extension program of the Women's Building in
Lot Aafelet.
"Six Fmn Show Biz" mu nrpaiiiil by
filmmaker Judy Reidcl as an open forum for
questioae aad discMsion with lU women who
have wmt sasesHlul careen in all faoeu M
screenwritiag, agenting. televsion and film
production.
The fint two segmenu of the series included
Joan Tewkesbury (screenwriter of "Nashville'^
and Joan Scott, president of ha own writers
and artists ageacy. They were attended by
many women whten, actresses and filmmakcn,
according to Ginny Roe of the Women's
Building.
**There was a lot of energy generated by
discussion to get together and to things beyond
the series,** she said
The third segment of the series, planned for
May II, will present Deanne Barkley,
vice-president of program development for teesc
ceasi NIC-TV She js resf^onsible for deter-
mining what we will ate on NIC priow lime
television. She also served as IvBii writer for
Dick Cavett's morning show aad later pro-
duced Viiginis Graham*s and Helen Gurley
Bro>we*s syndiceiad Ulk shows.
As a previous vice-president m charge of
ABCs ^'Movie of the Week,** sks ms iMlrv-
mental in increasing the number of women
wnten on the program.
~T~Filture segments will include Lin Bolin,
president of her own television production com-
pany, on May 18; Shirley Clarke, a priix-
winning New York filmmaker currently teach-
ing video here on May 25; and Vema Fields,
vice-president of production for Universial
Pictures and Academy Award-winning editor of
-Jaws,** on June I
^Xn proframs bcjgin at 8 pm and are held at
the Women's Building, a public non-profit
center for women's culture located at 1727 N.
Spring Street, Los Angeles. Admission for each
program is $3 for members aiul S3.50 for non-
awmben. -*■■
Labor leaders may back Carter
rather than risk sitting it out
WASHINGTON (AP) - With psHi^ntial election
their favorites all but out of No rush of support is ex-
ihe race, labor leaders are pected beyond thAt already
looking toward an accommo- given by a few liberal unions,
dation with Democratic front- but most union chiefs are bc-
runner Jimmy Carter rather coming reconciled -la-a Carirr
than risk sitting out another victory at the Democratic con
r-'
Jfmmy Cartet
:Sr.d
LAST DAY TO
REGISTER TO VOTE
You need to register If:
1) You will be 18 by June 8
2) You liave moved
3) You wish to cfiange party affiliation
4) You failed to vote in November 1974
There will be Deputy Registrars available on Bruin
Walk, at the Gypsy Wagon, in the Court of Sciences,
and in the dorm lobbies.
For more information call
PROJECT AWARENESS 76
at 825-4847 Kerckhoff 306
6^0l^aoP8^ by OLGi^lNrO'^jJC 9ti
vention.
Contrary to his position in
the last election, AFL-CIO
President George Meany is
telhng his political lieutenants
. that ^ Carter wins the nomioi-
tion, the giant labor federation
will throw its full support
behind his presidential cam-
paign. BuL sources said, sup9»
port will be keyed to an accep-
table clarification of Carter*s
stand on latior issues.
The independent United Au-
to Workers, biggest of the
liberal unions, is expected to
work for Carter in the Michi-
gan primary rather than back
Representative Morris K
Udall of Arizona, the so-called
progressive candidate.
Labor leaders in general
have been suspiciosi of the
former Georgia governor. But
some — among them UAW
President Leonard Woodcock
and President Jerry Wurf of
the municipal employees union
— have indicated they can
forgive Carter for some posi-
tions that wiere less than per-
fect from labor*s standpoint.
For example, they cued Car-
ter's slowness in endoning the
pending full employment bill in
Congress and his hesitancy
toward full-Hedged national
health insurance and toward
repealing right-to-work laws.
In 1972, labor balked at the
Democratic party*s nomination
of George McGovem and, for
the fint time since the merger
of the old AFL and CIO in
1955, refused to work for the
[>emocratic presidential ticket.
This caused some painful
divisions within labor's ranks
and added to the landslide of
Richard Nixbiu whose name
was an wtmtkmunk to most of
the big union leaden. There is
a general consaasM, even
among the conservative^ build-
ing trades, that nobody wants
to go thrwifli tfM again
"We've got to get rid of
Ford,** said a union pohtical
strategic. "»Carter is still the
new gny on the block to khar,
Meany said last winter that the
AFL-CIO would remain iini-
tral in tiK frannies aai^^aciie
after the convention whether to
suppon the nominee. Indivi-
dual unions were left fuse to
get involved, and a number erf
them, particularly those that
supported McGovern, have
*^«« ^«sy gattina members
convention delegatei^
(ContinvadMPagf 22)
Rentes coercion by FCC in lawsuit
CBS cliiet clefends famiiy tiour
LOS ANGELES (AF) The
prcsidaal of the CfeS Jtmptre
said Thursday he was not co-
erced by the Federal CoM-
aiiiaicatioiis Commission into
estabhshing a *^amily vienong
hour^ on his television aal-
worfc.
Arthur Taylor, sometimes
called the father of the family
hour, told U.S. District Court
Judge Warren J. Ferguson that
charges by wnten, direaon
and actors in therr nonjury
lawsuit against the FCC were
untrue.
He said FCC chairman
Richard Wikv had disfcussed
the problem of sea intf^violen-
oe on televiftion on Npv 22.
1974 OMl Jan f, I97S. with
•network eaecutims.
''it didn'i saem to me that
the November 22 ateeting waa
ominuuik. venal or thiaat-
ening."* Taylor said He added,
though, that he thought the
Januafy 9 meeting was '*ili
advised,** although he smadad
it anyway
But Taylor defended ^
concept al sastricting pnme-
tiine viewing hours to the sort
of fare that would not offend
children
**! feh it was naosssary to say
to the American people as an
industry that this sex and
violence #as a prt>blem.
Heroin addicts
on the increase
Senate report shows
fBI promofion of gar^g
A^ars against Panthers
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
FBI directed more than 200
Cointelpro operations against
the Black Panther party and
promoted a gaag war between
lis FiaaliMn and a rival group
in which four persons were
killed, a Senate repast lays.
^Information from the FBI
intelligeaes program also led to
s 1969 raid in which Chifli«a
police killed Fred Hampton
and anothar Panther, the re-
port said.
The repon by the staif of
the Senate Intelhgener^icom-
imttee denounced the FBI tac-
•tics as ^'deplorat^k'* and added
that **equaUy disturbing is the
pride which bureau officials
took in claiming credit for the
htoodshad that occurred.**
It said, '^ome of the FBFs
tactics against the BPP were
citarly intended to foster vio-
lence, and many othen could
reasoiuibly have been expected
to cause vioknde.**
In addition to promoting
warfare between the Paathen
and rival groups stich as ttie
Biackstone Rjtngen m Chicago
and U.S. Inc. in Los Angeles,
**the FBI employed the full
range of Cointelpro tech-
.niques** in an effort to destroy
the party*! effectiveness, the
report said.
The gaag war thaf erupted
between the Black Panthers
U.S. Inc. resulted in the
deaths of four party
hiembert along with several
beatings in 1969. An FBI me-
mo nocad timt ^'although aa
specific counterintelligMMS ac-
tion can be credited with con-
tributing to this situation, it is
feh that a substantial amount
of the unrest is directly at-
tributable to the program.**
The report said FBI tactics
•ometimes were used during a
lull in the violence at the
groups tried to work out dif-
ferences peacefully.
The 3t-page document is
of 13 volumss baiag re-
by the intelliflM panel
in support of itt naal report
ment described ia detail a
number of
uasd against Hm
then between 1968
It said Urn FBI
Pan-
1971
~1ord to teU hk iteck Panther
tenants to move thair
fomad . i^Uiia af a
from a public housing
in San Francisco by informing
housing officials she was asiai
the apartment for a free brsak-
ymous letten and phone calls
in an effort to get Father
Frank Curran, a Cathohc
pnest, transfenad for kmag
Panthers nse his San Diego
church for the breakfast pro-
^
One of the most extensive
FBI letter-wntmg efforts was
intended to spUt onetime party
leaden Eldhdge Cleaver and
Huey Newton« it said.
(CPS) ~ Heroin
in America is lacreasing
steadily and the traditional
patterns ol haroin uae are
changing, according to the
government's top drug^buss
capert
The heroin epidemic,**
said Dr. Robert L. DuPont,
director of the National in-
stitute on Drug Abuse, is
spseading from the East
Coast metropolitan areas
into small cities and towns
acrom the country
** Heroin has becoosc a
national phenomenon,** said
DuPont, noting that Blacks
and whites now use it
equally. In addition, he said,
the number of female heroin
addicts IS rapidly spn
proaching the number of
male addicts.
. There are currently aa
estimated 300,000 to 400,000
daily heroin users in the
United Sutes. The peak of
heroin ass was in 1971,
when there were between
500,000 and 600.000 daily
/a aarii
ems
FIZZA
GR 80123
Opoo 70mf%
} \AMfo7 AM
a^fwaon Bar rmgton and Bundy
1 1t13 Wilsliira Blvd GRMr3
IF
!
I
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QA^ HOTLINE
4 PM TO 2 AM 7 DAYS-A-WEEK
Non-Judgmantal Paar Counsaling By And For Tha UCLA
Gay Community And Thoaa Oaahng With Thair Saauality
by Sluatnt 1 ■aiiimw Council
I
I
t
I
Dr. King subjected to FBI
plots, even after death
WASHINGTON (Ap) - One y»ntflerthe ■liiminBlliIii
of Dr Martin Luther King. Jr>, the FBI was still hatching
plou to defame the civil rightt leader and his widow, a
Senate probe shows. ~
The FBrs Atlanu bureau drafted a plan in April 1969
and forwarded it to headquarters m Washington '^in the
event the bureau is inchnad to enteruin counterinteUigence
action against Coretu Scott King and/ or the continuous
projection of the public image of Martin Luther King,"
according to FBI dacumenu cited h)r the Senate intelligence
committee. ^^
The hite FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover rejactlid the phin.
Saying in a jreply memo that **The bureau does not desire
counterintelligence action against Coretu King of the
luiture you suggest at this time.**
But Hoover apparently approved an FBI plan to try to
convtnos Co^gmm not to declare King*s birthday, January
15. a national hobday. An FBI memo of March 18, 1969,
recommended bnefing key congressmen to make sure **they
realize King was s scoundrel.** Hoover and a top aide
rcphad that the bnefing must be handled ''very cautiously **
The Senate panel, which issaad a lengthy report last week
on U.S. intelligence-gathering agsades, issued s 105-page
supplemenury report Wednesday on arhat it termed the
FBFs *Vicious vendetta** against King.
i
I
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of the ladder?
If you like to apply yourself to the fullest,
it could mean
tw— .
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I
SANTA MONICA
GRADUATE RECORD EXAM
preparation
20 hrs Verbal. Math. Practice Tatting
Couraa bagina May 6 for Juna 12 taal
829-4429
SHELLEY'S
:htU t^ M LiH
EXPERT lEPOl KaVICE
UKtHTCHn
dpan Mon t Fii T« 8PM
DISCOUNT
PRICES
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««»aifi
l740HiWliiii Wm HM»5
11715X1111 iitf»id aS2«U
IIITtSMMllW §574221
■UNSE fifa ami 411^739
9 1M07 NmMww airt LfMiM
3t22 tim lii aK 375^S4M
aHlUL 1 1171 liMNft aid 477 7I«
atin
121 W LiMlNi (714) 771-5111
Baa aM 1113 NMport aid (714»l
liiiMaMi 12122 iiilU«n4)l
iMiftM 1212 iMa a«ai (714)
37#.7277
:«ipNrti(559liiMpO|ii aid WAI4]
Mm iai65 iMwt aid n^m
•■aNMlMid 12012 Vtcaiy aid. a
lMillll42
An(714)27».51SI
SLC elections
got 507 votes to become the
fint vice piawdiiit and Hen
PatkM|tia wif elected lecond
vice presidcot with 419 votes.
There was a larae write-in vote
for all the olfioes but figures
were not released until an
exact break down could be
obtained.
Of the initiatives oa the
graduate student ballot four
and three failed. Those
were an initiative de-
Bttadtng an increase in minor-
ity recruitment by a vote of
507 for and 469 against; a
demand for a reversal of the
cutbacks in Student Health,
743 for and 256 against; a
demand to end police harass-
m of students mad to
the campus police, 518 for uni
425 agauMt; aad a dnaaad to
rescind the S4i5 iaciaaic in
tuition for out of ilale aad
foreign studenu. 486 for and
480 apiinit
A demand that the Uni-
versity implemem the recom-
mendations of the Chicane
Task Force Report failed by a
vou of 382 for and 459
against, while the initiative
including demaads to reinstate
three LjCLA enployees also
failed, 437 for and 440 against
Graduate students also voted
ao one the question **Do you
approve of the VC Iran
project?" by a vote of 517
against and 287 for.
Pride House .
(Continnai froai Page 1)
director and now a counselor
at the facility, said non-resi-
dents were occasionally al-
lowed tjO stay overmght **Wc
weren't really lying We never
did give the wrong, statistics to
Seloui,** he said
Hasty meetings
A former counselor said
hastily-arranged meetings were
called — in one instance afteV
Gleason had already arrived
there for an inspection tour "
in whiich administrators in-
structed counselors to tell
Gleason that only six clients
lived at the facility ait the time.
in reference to the alleged
meetings, Mangual said, '*1
don*t remember ao house
meetmgs.**
~ Pride flouse's present di-
rector, Gerald DeAngelis —
who will also direct half of the
UCLA Dryg Treatment Pro-
gram when it leaves the Uni-
versity, denied the accusations
"It's not true," he said
Eenchifig eontroversy
Another controversy sur-
rounding the treatment center
concerns OKthods of punish-
awnt. Until several weeks ago
adminuitrators would '^bench*'
clients. Benching may be in,
violation of state licensing
laws.
When a client cursed or
broke other house rules, he
was benched According to
Florence Wagner, licensin"!
supervisor of the State Depart-
ment of Health Facilities Li-
censing Field Services, the
"stjbject would be confined to a
bench facing k wall from 20
minutes to five hours depend-
ing on the senousness of the
char^. Ho waver, ^hi« punish*
ment has been described by
fqrmer counselors as being up
to 12 hot^ a day and some-
times longer. |
When asked whether clients
had been benched for 12-hour
periods, DieAngelis would only
say, "I'd say there may have
been a reason for that (the
benching) " ' ,
No 'humiliation'
Sutc law mandates that
clients of adolescent t refitment
programs arc "not to be sub-
jected to corporal or unusual
punishment, humiliation, men-
tal abuse
NCAA banners .
i Continued froa Page 3)
He added, howevef, that the recovery of the banners was a
team effort of the entire KLA staff.
Det. Jim Pembroke of UCPD was pleased with the return of
the banners.. "I'd like to compliment KLA and the Daily Bruin
for the time and effort that they put into recovering the banners,"
he said
According to Pe^nbroke, there is nothing to indicate that the
original letter to the Dailx Brum following the banner theft was a
hoax. Pembroke said the case is under further investigation.
Labor, Co rter
(Continued from Page 28)
Until now, it is known that
Meany haSxiaken a dim view
of the Carter campaign m
private, even though he said
last year thai aay of the Dem-
ocratic candidalM except Ala-
bama George Wallace was ac-
ceptable.
But in recent weeks, the
aging labor chieftain has in-
structed his chief political stra-
tegiH, Al Barkan, to return
Carter phone calls. There is
alM> wooing on the other side
Within the past aadu Meany 's
naiaa wm added to Carter's
mailing list for position papers.
The Carter ramaaign staff has
caaMked umon people on the
joht aad aalioail bmkk ia-
suranoe isanet.
Meany and Carter have nev-
er met, but the candidate said
Tueaday he was hopeful
a fft^^ifig c^iM he
Meany aide, the labor leader
replied, "You have it,*' and
said he wwitM be ghul to meet
with him
Most of organized labor had
heea counting on two candi-
<kdet: Senator Hubert H.
Humphrey of Minnetala Mid
Scaator Henry M. Jackson of
Washington. Laal aiaek, Hum-
phrey refused to become an
active «aadidate. and Jackson
called off campaigmng.
A few labor leaders are still
urging uncoautted deleaates
and thoae pMfed to drop-eat
candidMes to slay off the Car-
ter haada>agOB in hope that
Cahfomia Governor Edmund
G Brown caa stop the front-
ninacr^
Others are begimu^ la
speak far Carter, fai Htm jer-
sey thk week, for example,
state AFL-CIO President
Charles Marciante said of Car-
ter. **Beheve me, there is aa
other group more intent on
defeating President Ford in
Novemher thaa oraaaiaid la-
If Cwfitf
According to a that, then we're aU4ae i(L
However, the two nen
talked hy telephone March 22,
at which lioK the ^
Campus events
»a St iM 1 pat,
Ate Centk Society ol
a rsna MNsr
^ iiaaaMi. s p«
aa. fwsfy F
OMisr. do
or cat e5^79i7
•-10 poi owory
Frtiilf Ifrttrna'
a dNMior
9m. acturt on Iwikm IsnuisM
8Ja8r1i PM sad IMS isciMMsry
ao. lalsfwtiafial Student
sao-
&3Mao
I p« ti
Comsr
-fadaiMa. «iN issii
• JD ill aUI. «MSic sad
imdofii
-Tia awl a
May • a «is aa iny a
a aiy a naaar. to st
a sat of As ts
Court of
as. Mm 10.
-4ieu Sifeiiv CM Mk Pv% 4 pa.
7 m^SSa^tom, asy 11 csN £
3711 or 0-9171 for inariiaHsa.
H^caa sap you Unc
asaii oa as asasa Visit KoroMelf m
sad (til out • card sad ao saowtrt wiii bo
* i, «. ^ •^'^ Tuiodoy
Ackormon 3BS4-
aoctioas. 3 pm. toisy
on extrsaiyra lundiai for dradsaa audsat
aad pasliMlsraa art availatott m ao
Ftliowstiipt and Astistantship Section
MufBlW i2M
ttaNsdSy
mU »iolp yau find laaaaf
tor year liMS Opon daily noon-4 pm
Kerckttoff 401
Haaia Vofs,
Karaa. S-7 pai
2^ pm. a
Courts
Gym
6ym no Sodal
Gym 200 Toana
2^ pm. Saoa
and lacai voaiMoor pasaaas or t availafea
now throuo^ EXPO Acktrmon A123 or cat
loin OECA at a
coaoamor inwsstiaalor Visit Korckhoff 31 1 v
05-2ttr v/
III 2:30-4 pm.
m FioW Hockoy 3^ pm. Aaanc Hm.
Kondo noon-2 pm Woaiont Gym. Gardsn.
2-7 pm Horttculturt Gardtn. Lacrooas
Toumamont vs UCSB 1 pm aw Coraor
of ai mi
.
or caii 825-
Vpiuntttrs are also
pro-
is
for aio yaer ana mm\ UC
Stadaat LoPPyjn Sacraaioato wfiid) pays
SiMi8sr«BaN yc psaida aad InteresT m
odacaliaaai iosyos Pkk op application m
Kerckhott 306 Ooadlme is today or cali
agn
J film from Inao mth
English subtiHos will be shown 44 pm
tomorrow Inter national Studanf Cantor
in23 Hiigi^rd DonaMon at tHo daar -
-4aw sad liai. starring Woody Alion
aad Olant Kaaiaa wM bt shown 7 and 9
pm tonight Grand Ballroom |1 pi the
door
-Tbt araptt a Wraa dirocad by Jotm
Ford and sumng Henry Toads sal
Oarwoll will be screenod 5 pai aay 10
aamtz 1410 Frtt
mm
Karp.
faculty rocMal. 0;
berg Litta Tbasar UCU Studants faculty
and sag. ssaior cftizans Si othor st
will prosont a caaesrt a now works by
aaiMi compaosfs as wsll as ottir 20ih
osatury Amoncan aaaic aoaa. May 11.
Sdioonborg auditoriuai Frot
3 30 pm today
Naa aad Uaat 4 pm aay 10 Math
Scitnco 4000A
2-3 pm
2444
Tbavy a Croap and com-
pahtaat wiMi commonly utod crtop ttio-
oriot 3-4 30 pm May 11 Sooiar 8H0
May 11
cap maaa ^-^m
Mondays. tiaaaaT Ji78 aad 9J0-11 am
Thursdays Adtsrwiaa MO
-T«aa« Jtfei grpiip mm mm
MHh Scionct 4Z23 Call CS-SBI
aatOaan a ytadaaa. 98ao a* issi-
Coaasamp Conar. 645 pifi. May 10 MsPar
fimm aaags aad aapa. May 19 Korcfi-r^
taff 400 ^ i-
Hot tip?
Call
825-2638
-I. w i«»*iT' *• »J
CLASSIFIED i« D
■ *,
:• WIN net to
wlio #i«crlfiilfiat«t on lli« toasts •!
•ncsttry. color. «iotlo«Ml orif tn. roco.
Mm ASUCLA C«
1^ any ml
vIcM advorttoo^ or odvortloort ropro-
Mfilod In this IssMS Any porson bo-
llovint thol an advarHaoinont in this
fapoMey
horolM
In
Mm Buslnost Manofor. UCLA Dolly
»rmn. 112 K 11 BliiiWMrt.JOtWsatoiaad
Plojo. Los Awfolas. Colltornia Mea4
ooUon proMonns. call: UCLA Housing
•mca. (211) tat -44f 1 ; Waslslds Fall
(212) 47r-»m
t
I
I
I;'
r*
-*.!-
*.''
h4 Pi Av *;•
•VALLEY
•SAN PED^
r MEEMAN
^ Eftd<«
••fy bur»Ud»
^fSt^
Nursury
mm Unlvorslty ^aronf a
I lor summor ond/or
This
aosslons. For liilo eoN
(Ann M 111
MHISONAL «r
12 -2. Woman s
■f
ASUCLATraiwI
S«nric« is going to
Russia)
UCLA ttudentt. laculty and
ttaTf art oiigit^i* to travel
toUaningrad. Moacow. Kiev,
Yalta. Tbititi A Vtadimer
July ^^ - Aug 5 for $749 00
ail-incluaive Irom London
Call 825-1221 Of come to
A tovai. Ackarman Mondays-
Fhdayt 8:<X)-4:00
campus
passport
identification
resume photos
Oiucto
.tqmpys stvdl
ISO kerchhoH hall 825 061 1*7"^
open monhi 6 30-4 30
complete
printing
service
bindiiiK
mifiM><»Hlill<»
121 kr/tklmff hull
WHAT DOCS A BRUIN
•CAR WEAR TO CLAM?
UCLA t-shirts (hurxlfods of
styles in the ASUCLA Stu-
dents' Store), custom-im-
primed t-shirts. football
(ofteys. sweatshirts, hooded
sweatshirts, jackets, hats,
socks, and carries a UCLA
gym t>ag or bike bag.
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
ifor
* — — —
tor
■w
nutsi
Wo'fo roo^ tor OMia. Sal ana
tAT oirr
l*tas^ECTI¥IS ky a««ior. loctiMor.
counaolor ZIMA OMANO. STUOiNT
STOaf WCtTWOOO SOOKSTONtS.
litor)
Of ttn no-
July 10. ttTs— Call aas-sifi. /'
f1M7|
CAMP sue
CAMPftoO EQUIPMENT
Camping Equipmont
VAM NUYS SLVO.
risif ts»
(S«
mm?)
KA'14aOQ
UOXLC-«
14/'
WA
(IS ail 1)
MMTI
SiW« v^^S* vflV SHBv V ^^M-
chiifch
N. Today lain
SUNDAY
S:SS. ISrSS. 11:SS
'odayl
a. AZl
yotf Coiiffatotoltonal
tor a lyM
alao mmm Antlqua I17I.SS. Isonlnf •
4Tr'%44%. #tn ai i»»
PCTaANCH— Yoo'ro fOtUflif to looli
SLICTaiC mono - Unlsos CP lit.
tscallani conOitlon. t27f/^sloltor.
M)
^Sck.
Nap^ tZ, "If sura 4an*l yo«it" Lovo.
Mothor Doator (allaa: Loon a»^ llio
*^ M M n
(10 M 12)
Soloei CaMflamto Wi
^PERSONAE^
Csntsr ct Drsmsttc Arts
Aimounoss
M)
mom
•ducaftioffi
SAVI
STtai O ooai^awonto:
VaNoy. SOI
$2.00
toLO4M^.O.aMi0772.l
CA.
Stodont dto-
». Si aiator
SS1-SSSS.
ntotn
Dal May.
r7M12l
<4 91
liMtSI
(7 M it)
POTOfMI
Penlel Rolling Writers
black only - reg. SOC
59C
I
aus. 1SSS
WH^VMal I
ASUCLA St
Art/&«gineertr>o SlippMaa A lavol
Acliorman. M>Th 0^30-7 00 f 9
A opacial thraa
(April 12th thru SOttl)
auSjact AUOmON TtCI IIIIQMSi
Tha following OMbjacta will ba
coyprad:
*WlMl mm Mating diractor to
sau.
aaa Prtdey tid S FJa. OtM
ON OavMI Am r
V'l
■. I
four)
music
tST.
P.O. aaa
(101117)
$200. 2S7HiO.
M1SI
pram a t17f mm
e'/iaa>
aaO t120 Can 470-
rasearch subjects
^AMASOMC
tor rout
Doug, 477-47SS.
(10 M 7)
I I
ISMT)
KATIE
sautN TV. a STEiiao mentals
COLOR TVS
today
07
Hoor al^Mt a fama of aoi
a wiliaeli or toaf? «o
tanTHfoa'a
al aMr naai
you "an aatra
raSaia? Or
Mid as
YaM'»
whlls T.V.'s • 17 JS/moidk
CaM: 270-1012
IMOTI: Our pMsss SM aniMlii Is UCLA
slMa»n«iaisuwnt list, satoi amy
FCNOCa VWagar.i:
CRcaltont condition. $279.00
,407-7070. (10M7>o
STOVf.
0.
(10-M 7)
TisaiSA,aaiiA.sMis,SMis.
11
iSMn
AanOWNKAO oaSta to a«ito«
Stoapa 0. 000/2 daya. $1iS/7 doya.
2S7.14«7. ^ ^
110.
jPNIO)
THANKS
my
YouoioaO
;^' teraato
•BoMy. Raaiy, trte. Ltoyd. Otonnla.
i(n
Dtona. Tom. Stovortoo. Amy. irto,
C
ISM7)
MJI.— To Sia
'toad
0/0/7W
MATTflCSaca ALL NSW
TNE MArmcaa STona
iirta
aOSl 001 'a ^d otHor atoroo ei
'^^ fit Mist.
'74 LBS Paul Cuatom. JlarahaW 1SS
amp. toiofooiro adioplaa. ory
ALCONOL aapaili
iSJSmr. tor mm
Havapd 470-7070.
WAMTKO. tuajiB*
SpooNtoaSy to daw
to a roa^^orcn atody.
ito aao iisaa ami M-
amal tlOM
Nn St-120 CMS. Pay-
14 017
SUMCTS adto «l(
"***• (14 M 11)
<14il7)
SNCaWOOO S-7210
af
01O0.
t17S,
10 MIS
wantMl
cm 7)
AND OAOI NAPPY Si
AUNT KATI AND MA-Orl HAPPY MO-
THCPY OAY MOil AND SNMII LOVK.
ME.
(1429 2rd
Opm-laai.
IS Incti
chain lor adto. Sacrltlca
for OOO.OO. 020-0077 avonlngs snd
riVS MuaH aoot toddor-aoek dtotog
ahaka. VamlaPad natural ftnlali. Ba-
efaPawt candHtos. SSSao aoeh 400-
(
ISMTI
XV* »
Or moantolnoortog.
Sockpoaliing, Isnnls. wookonda. AN
Aofa, A ipoato. Mmmior I'm 20,
aolttwi A ropo. tonliy . ^SSt
THE
nva
May 0
10' PfUNDLE Catomaran «ISi
01000. ir MaMu OsldMir 010S. W
SSI
nt M tm%
HSIT)'
S100
X
yo»to SI. L
doy ot a
of
MCCAPTNCY
^- — ^- ^ - - — - AM — — A — A _ ^ — —
■Ota. caoofionT aaaii tot
(10 M 7)
Oc-
fSN7)
(IS M m
Texas liistrvfsieiir
Coma to tha Confactlona
DopoianiiH of aia ASUCLA
atedaiita' Stora for your
MtoDiar'a Day cardaandslltol
Lato of nica praponto, In-
otodlws candiaa. Opaw li-Th
7:SS-7:Sa; F 7:4a-aJS; S 10-4.
V
/ I Haip Saa Py NPIpIng
SS-$SO/ month for Blood
HYLANO DONOR CENTER
r
1001 Gaytoy Ava.
sTBaao
naaai
?00
SI
srjo.
(ItMT)
fSM7)
NOVW'
• 12
(10 Mil)
NJ Happy flaO Isnl M I
op lo Mollla Foof Craw
Sto oani wbN to
a
O.O.C
BOOKCASCS. raCii . ptoo waaCpaiw
s^wy sminoo. a^w oocn. aoaaar irumB^t
0179 4^'S.OSiO
(10 M 11)
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K«»T
(12
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aaa 1179 00 CaO
.Y
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sn^osiOT
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a tooa» tor
(4 M 7)
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tion iTi lin.
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(12 am}
CLASSIFIED
I
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Palninf . ha was
af
toto a
1 Oo
n«»orod« can Parry Whilo lor
oalaf
HouaaasBPBa'
(10M1SI
|tOM7)
vMA^i^ w^ww^^^m. ^^^^^Mp. aMamoan, ^~^
■■■alapi •f***»**^y*»day~Frtauy QBO
m par to.iai>ina!aijaad wa «M Poai HMi
Cai ChaalL 200-7012. (flai
41
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aK>VINQ COSIPANY
»od. 0
t ar
Soroto. DIsNnf utohod
(10 Okr)
ISC
3 ' UUt '>
•4MW
(10 to 7)
Tap f poM tor
rt19/hr plus) 200.0770.
(19 M 12)
doni Immodtoto oponlrif in Bksarli
(flaa). 02.00 p/to CaO Ma. TaOto tor
appX 277-2213 . „
(lOMIpl
do 2 to.
mnAL OfSea Hato- i to 9. i
wk. Comoet
9701
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HouoasiTTia . aaaaaoto s/i/ts
27. lawMai
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IIS M IS)
M. S22-2140.
/la M i%\
9010J0/MONTH -
wOSOjf W
470-4130.
(10 M 11)
477
(10 M 101
••eeeeeeeee^eee
RIDING LCSSOMS
JUST TMO OUBMBN or
aairroapuu.
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSUilAiiCI
. . Top
'PMTT aa a y
Stoltoa Dal Boy. 1
, I
SS-1101.
fISMISI
eOT yaardas a 4.0f Dat Patotof atoaa.
Woafwood Park. Tuoaday. May 11.
7:20 pja. tolaimaimi; 477-2172
(10 M 10)
t ..
t rontol. BronHvood
fMOin
toataiound
N U& rOM
$7 rv
^rO*.
SM OC
19 00
too 00
• i« non aiuawnt r*i«a ••• tant
'~ii la to crwal* an mii
go It- -: ' ^'
ntnimutn rosi to you
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(M«"f9)
HAWAI1 1«2
NYC 123
OfiiEfrrMiK.y
Contacl AATcA l«f
wtnt (l«p«rt4irM from LA, San Francisco
Cmoaoo. lotMn. NMry««i. WHH^iimiii. 0 C
'Ctwmr r«« niQulm ii «iy ■tfwwiM kMking
prioa aufeiKi lo 20% ifwroM*
8UPCR AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL. CMteoMt tn
YOUTH. iMrapa iy
APEX^-46.MaByadv book Cur
TAHITI SUPER DEAL $m
OflDEM NOW
TRAIN ft FCRRY TICKETS. CARS.
CAMPCR RENTALS. RAILPASSES
INTRA-EUROPEAN STUDENT
CHARTERS
SPECIAL CRUISE OFFER
10 11 or 14 day CaribHaaii/8 Amarica cruiaa
on Italia inci air form LA i niia Miami irar«alar«
p«us no-charga 2-«iiti air amanaion . from STW
TOURS
JAMArCA • day* uijf
fTALY IS days ftM
LON. PAR AMS 15 day* |nV
MBCICO • #iiya t1«
NMMAII. S daya IM7
mCMHTUm%M,. t days JMt
NCW roMK CITY • days IHi
Many otftafti. iono A sfwt. biidlpat A daluaa
TOURS & TRAVEL
Sprang Summar A fait Chartam
^rut»»ia
Kouftdtrip from S7QtJ 10
Mf««M^H '^"H »k«-^ Yofli
'om $1fi9 00
term MP*'*, ••••yd. IIm«^«. ^•••r-
tolloiid. Call: flate SiiMlf. 9tt-9S4a
•r ltS-at14 ^j^ jj ^^
TVPW0 •# #idaaB. #ar
la iMaa CaP
KaMiy aftac Cpin ' S3S49
M.
(2f M 12)
TYPWO aafvtoa Ta«M p
mafmaoartpto* aiowla aM
4i4-0liM.
i T'V aoHpli.
locuralt worli-
OftMIS)
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• Catompran Sail off Waiklki Baach
• 100 Pagp Full Color Mpmory
Album
• Hawaiian Wplcoma •vaakfaat
• Mai Tto Cocktail Party
• BiQgago Tips at Rppf Hotpf
• Mpmbprahip in Plpaaant Waikiki
SMchCkib
• Isrvioii of axppripncpd Ptoasant
Holiday Hoalaiaw
LAND ARRAWOeiKltTS OMLY
FROM ITS
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More Entertainment Index Gilendar
9
At tlie Loo ADfclei County
Art Mitteum, s WiUiain Wylcr
film rctroipective ^frii acreen
ToMifht at % pm. Romhm Hsil-
4mjn turnng Gregory Pack Mid
Audrey Hepburn and TIm
Cood Fainf fcatunng Frsok
Morgsn sad Rcginakl Owen
will run Sslnfdsy at S pm,
featurtt Jcsekil with BcLte
Psvit, Henry Fonda SRd Fay
BAinter. ind CoMRtelor-At-
Lsw with John Barrymore.
Behc Dsnjek and Melvyn
HoMieo RMd JmUeI with hit
famoui psftoer. Margot Fon-
teyn Simday, Philippe De
Brocat Kiftg vA HoRffM with
Alan Bates 9m6 Carl Reiner*!
WjMn*i Poppa Will screen
Feter Robinson*s AoylMHi
will show Sunday at 1 1 am
sad 1 pm ai a part of the
Therapy Paot sad Preacnt
•eries at the R^bysl theater
Music
The Nusrt theater has a gsP^
and grotesque double bill to-
night, Tlie Te&Ro Chaiaaaw
Msiiserc sod John Waters*
FoMsIr Tro«Mi with the hea-
yenly Pivine. Saturday. it*s
Rudolf Nurtyev in Ar EvoriMg
tiM Royal BmIsI and
There is much to oce in the
popular tssoc^ eipsciaUy jazz,
this weekead.
EUi Fitzgerald, Count Basie.
Oicar Peterson and Joe Pass
will all perform under one
roof, the Schubert theater this
weekend Playtimes are tonight
snd Saturday, 7:30 and 10 pm
CouHlry' in Melnlli
and Sunday at 7:JS pai oal^
L|iura Nyro will warble pro-
f^Me/ pvolMund ditties at the
Santa Monica Civic Auditor-
ium Sunday at I and 1 1 pm
The Doobie Brothen and
Pablo Crwisr are in concert
tMoiflM at tiK FabulMMi
Forum
At the AMihwM Convention
r, Johnny Cash, the red-
iBo4ssr, will perform at
7:30 on Sunday
The TrcMibadour features Ism
snd Ivy Bottini this weekend,
while the Palomino has Hoyt
Axton aiuf Steve Fronhohz.
Starwood features jazz musi>
cian Willie Bo Bo and the
Roxy has Jimmy Buffett.
With the Philharmonic sea-
•on over and the HollywMMd
Bowi series not yet started,
there m not much going for
classical music m the LA area,
albeit flautist Sheridon Stokes*
appearance at the Museum of
Natural History, Sunday at
2:30 pm Admission is free.
Theater
The theater arts department
production of Wast Side Story
(through May 15) ts competely
sold out Another campus of-
fering this weekend is God-
spiB» presented in stgR iOMg-
uage tonight and tomorrow at
%'M m the Mac«RWRM ftWI
Little Theater, free ^
The Mark Taper Forum has
added a fourth production.
Chekhov^ Tliree Sisters, to
run in repertory with
CroM Country and And Wtiere
Slw Stops Nobody Mnowa.
Other new show5i include the
rcHnahtic comedy Get to the
Heart at the Group Repertory
Theater, SomI ABey, a play
dealir^ with Vietnam, at the
Hollywood Center Theater and
Brecht s The Jewiah Wife at
the Beverly HilU iPlayhousS.
Continuii^ MV Neil Simon'%
hilarious Cafltooia SmHc at
the Ahmanson Theatre and
Shafw*s 4leartbreak Houne at
the Westwood Playhou!»c
1- -.
CLASSIFrED
houpplor rpnt
miitil
..^f.
5-
t
'Ut
) •
1 0nb0rt/a i nnnenb IriQGx
■^^
■K- -f
I
Campus
Tonight at 8:30 in Schoen-
berg Hall Little ThMier, harp-
tichordift Bcm Harp perfomt
a faculty recital of music from
four centuries, including Bach,
Haydn, Giles Famaby, Martin
Peerson and Henri Lazarof.
Q«Miml admiision for all
music department events is $3,
with UCLA students getting in
for $1 and other students for
Another music department
production is a program of
music by UCLA-affiliated
composers Saturday night at
8:30 in Schoenberg Hall Audi-
torium. Roy Travis* ''Switched-
on Ashanti** for flute and tape,
Pia Gilbert's **lnterrupted
Suite** for three pianos and
^kmnet and Paul Rjeak*s
•^altz King** for two violins,
four singers, narrator and
piam fei^re smaller ensem-
bles while Elaine Barkings In-
ward and Outward Bound aqd
Henri Lazarof s Third Cham-
ber, concerto use ensembles of
12 and 14 instruments. Also on
tlw progran^ is *The Cave of
the Winds*' by Lucas Foss,
who was on the music faculty
here about 20 years ago.
Pianist Stephen Bishop-
Kovacevich is in Royce Hall
tonight, playing music by
Schubert, Beethoven, Brahms
mmi Wmrt€k.
Thurbcr II, another one-man
Thurberiaaa by WilUam Win-
dom, ex of telcvisionV *'My
World and Welcome To It,**
^
i
will be in Royce tomorrow
night. Both Windom and
Bishop-kovacevich will begin
at 8:30
Saturday at 3 f^m in the
Schoenberg Little Theater Bar-
bara Goorevitch (oboe) and
Chris van Stcenbcrgcn (French
horn) will perform works by
Guilhaud, Bach, Beethovenv
Telemann, Dukas, and Mozart
in a semor recital. Admission
is free.
W<M>d)r AMcii vcfMM iMtmUt m Acfcerinafi I
In Royce "if t iprm Sunday,
Mehli Mehta will coquet the
American Youth Symphony,
the Roger l^agner Chorale and
soloiats Delcina Stevenson and
Marveke Cariaga in Gustav
Mahler's Second Symphony in
C ipinor ("Resurreaion-) as
well as the Prelude and
Liebestod from Wagner's
**Tnsun und Isolde.**
The concert is a sort of hail
and farewell aOair, for though
Mchu is not leaving the Ame-
rican Youth Symphony.' he is
retiring from UCLA. Like all
AYS concerts in Royce Hall,
this one is free, so bring your
mother. Zubin*s will be there.
Movies
t
I
In Ackerman ' Grand Ball-
room tonight at 7 mud 9 will be
Woody Allen*s uproarious
L#v€ and DaaHl with T>iane
Keaton and Harold Gould
Admission is $1.
The Meinitr Hall Movies
series continues with two West-
cms. Tomorrow at 7:30 pm
will be Sam Peckinpah s RMe
tlie Higb Country and Robert
Parrtshs The Wonderful
Coiitfy with Robert Mitchum
and Julie London The bill is
11.50
(C
M Page 27)
■
The Man J. D. Morgan Loves to Hate
Come hear:
\
MILT KAH N
y.
•renowned sports critic
* author of Milfs Mirror — a confidential Letter
to Sports' VI Ps.
* frequent crkjc of Chancellor Young, J.D.
Morgan.
* Plans to replace Johnny Carson on the
"Tonight Show."
J
Friday, May 7
12 Noon
Grand Ballroom
SpunvorM by A
"srownrr
Siudeni LegisUiive l ounnl
/n
J-k.
Chances improve for nursing
school spot in cancer center
E>i
to a nursmg school section m the
propoMO caacer research center here improved
yoai I liay after a S 1,363 Jit opprapMlion for
Ulc profert ptmmd threvfli an Assembly health
committee in Sacramento.
According to administrative officials here,
tlK future of tiK nureing selMol itsell may
hiage ok furtlttr dfvrloyMnn in the
Legisiature.
Attached to the bdl, Al 409, is
appropriation of Stt5,000 for coostruction oi a
UCLA-UCR SdMOl of Medione Bio-Medical
facility is the cancer center. The health
comnuttee also plMSd a ''do*' recommendation
oo the bilL urgiof as pmam^ on the Aambfy
floor.
Sponsored by Assemblyman Gordon Duffy
(R-Haaford), the bill was approved by the
bcolHi committee as an enserfency appropri-
ation bin. The emergency heading gives ^k
money to the School of Nursing this year and
tiK biidfet act of 1975, which did not
asy Hnis for nursing.!
Monies proviied by the State Legislature,
approximately S2.2 miUion, would cooic from
ifce Cayforaia Jiealth Sciences loud act possed
1972.
Executive Vioe-CtaaMtter Wilham P.
Gerberding. who participated in committee
on the aursiag idittol, sa]^, "We are
aytiniinic about tki prospects of getting
the building, i hope a dectsiop will be made by
early or mid-suouaer.''
Total funding for the nursing school section
requires a matching federal sum of approx-
imately S3. 8 milhon, which has been approved
by the Otvision for Nursing, Departmeat of
Heahh. Education aad Welfare
However, the matching award is also based
oa whether the Sute LegisUture approves AB
409, according to Doniu Vredevoe, itfffBft^
director of space planning here.
Construction of the S20 million cancer
research and School oi Nursing facility would
begin in fall 1977, if approval of the sUte
aursing funds is fmaltaBd in the June budget.
The planned 94,008 square foot. 15-l6-f1oor
proyect would be located on the grass lawn at
the present corner of Tiverton aad Circle Drive
South.
The heahh saence nursmg bill now goes to
the Assembly Ways and Means Committee for
a fiscal aaaiysis aad clearance before moving to
(Coaliaaed<iaPaie9)
t
*y «
«
JkJ^
*,j'
Ucla Daily Bruin
.jL-ii^^
XCVM. Numbar M
%#vii^aiaNy W9 \^awf^iiiws« uoa Mpipviwa
TlMind^. itat %, 197V
' . V
'» ;-Tlfei
»"i H ft.}
More campus protests against Gallo ads
SACRAMENTO — Advertise-
ments for Gallo wiaes in col-
lege newspapers have sparked
ooatroversy in recent weeks on
campuses across ^bt stale, with
several reports of laaas theft of
staoeat aewspapers aad threats
of pliysical vurience.
IIk most recent in a series
of disturbainces surrounding
the long-itaadtijg United
Farmworkers Union boycott
on Gallo occured last Taesday
at Hayward State Uaisanily.
AvOvt 13 nKjabers of tae
campys La Raza . Coahtion, a
Chicano student group.
laHUxhed into editorial offices
.of the student newspaper. The
Fkmtun, and demanded sus-
pension on the Gallo ad which
ran that 4m^.
Carmichael sayfe U.S. is ripe
for revolution; urges socialism
By lUr Caiia
America is ready for revolution because the
people are alienated from the government,
Stokely Carmichael said la a speech given here
yesterday afternoon.
Carmichael. who led many revoKs against the
established govemmem tn the l9Ms, argsd'the
large Ackerman Union Grand Ballrooni crowd
to overthrow capitalism and inaugurate so-
cialism in tlas society
He said that this revolution was aecmary
because **Amenca is tlile aiost politically
backward country on the face of the earth. If
we look a poll of all Americaas, 90 pet cent
would say ^Communism is bad* If we polled
that 90 per ceat aad askad them *What is
usmT" only two per cent would laaip
Dan Sheridan, Pioneer
aging editor, said one demon-
strator told him the coalition
would **close the paper down,**
usMig ^any means we could,
even if it came to doing some-
thing illegal.**
Earlier this month, editors of
the Sacramento State Uni'-
versity newspaper. The Horftet.
reported that they received
threats ofiphysical violence
after pMbMning the Gallo ad.
The aext time The Hornet
advertind Gallo, 8.000
of the student
takea from their
points aad were later found
stuffed in trash bias.
Dmh Bruin.
The Board -extended its ban
to indode all |>resent and^-fu-
ture advertisers who are in
violation of federal and state
labor relations laws or are
facing legal action, as is Qalia.
The Communicatioas Board
first banned Gallo advertising
in FLbsaai> of last year
Last week UFW sup-
porters petitioned the UC
Sanu tiaibaii asaspapii. The
Dmiy NexuM, demandiag eqaaJ
space, free o{ charge, for ever>
■aid Gallo ad
J
J I
1
Carmichael said the "growiag mi^n
ppssMT is caa^Mra^. '^Wherever the
people are coafrooted by mmihmmbm§ that
oppveas* the pcapk will iaevilaMy triaaipiiL**
ThraaghMit his spoKh, riraMrhael ftoiad the
various forms of oppression he feels are
■■Difesting tlMaMMhies ai the w6rld today
^'America is aa m^M coantry, bacaaK u
oaiibes jast tlMigs wpBt snd oaiusi thiffp
jail,*' CifflriElMrf said. Tapitahsm doesn*t fm
owmkm tiM Macks or the Mnriraas. bat the
Incidents on other campuses
include:
— Inclosion of a Gallo
poster was saea as having mo-
tivated the theft hut week of
3.500 copies of The Highland
er, the weekly student paper at
the Univertily of California,
Riverside.
— .. The saflse Callo poeicn
recently inserted in the UC
Irvine newspaper. Urn New
UniverMtty, were "plastered all
MBpai,*' scfaaliid with
GalkT
the New Vr
9mm Urik SuneU
- Tfce
al Saa Diepo Stale tJaivenity
ftaaaaid ami-Oaflo adi
aeaapa^er. The Aj$m
the editorial board rejected
faiMaaihai^ pleas aoi to tan
the Gallo oroaiQliMi. The
Tile Gallo ads dtapole
raised what many students aad
others on both sides legard as
basic, phacipiei lelaling to a
cam us ncwspaper*s purpose
aad sMpaasibiltty
Editors of i|ll pa^en inter-
Misafad agree that press free-
dom tnchides the right not to
print ather stories or ads
which they determine lo be
or otherwise in
f * , ■"
Michael Doraia, lobbyist aad
attorney for the California
Newspaper Publishers
tion. said geaeral
have the right to refuse or
adverliBiaa from any-
i /
dMrty defined A campta
aeantpaper, anhke the
piOM, is aat traly
of its readership, the
For exaaiple, student hews-
rs of the University of
de clear his definition of
revolutsaa as a
revohitiaa. Revohilioa,
there is
m a
there IS
BBse
mmm
-<w^V
'f4
-y ..
4
ACT Of DUTY
Chekhov s
NtGHT BEFORE THE TRIAL
Two CoHMdw^MntarpiMw
1.00 offL— ;*.-
fn 6 30pm Sal 8pm and 10pm
Sun 7 30pm
1211 Fourth Str«9t Sania Monica
For ratorvatioo oaN a»4-9779
V. — :
Avoided Angola war
VOTE
_J
w Any Couple Eligible
DATING? MARRIED?
Participate in a Special Study of Romantic Relationships
WHO CAN ^AMTICIPATET
Dating living-tog«th«r •ng«g«<j or marriad. couplai. in short any coupla who
has dat«d at \%m»\ oncm
WHAT DO YOU DOt
Show up at a tima and placa baiow with your omnnmr Each of you will ba gtvan a
ona-hour quaationnaira to taka saparataly .ii ... .
WHAT m rr Aaour?
Tha quaationnaira covars a broad rang* of topics This intiludaaquaillDnaof an
intirnata and confidantiai natura Your answars will ba kapt strictly anonymous
WHAT DO YOU orr?
Each paitofi wiU ba patd |1 90 and will alao racaivs a fUli summary of tha
WHCN DO VOU JIHOW UT, AND WHERE?
Come Itllh your partnor to tha larga lactura room in frmnz Hall. Psychology
Room 1 17.a Show up any tima batwaan 7pm and 10 p m on tha datas balow
Thuraday, May6 Monday. May 10 Thursday May 13
For mora information, call thia numbar in tha
Paychotogy Dapartmant 625.2039
Rafraahmanta Sarvad
By Mary Batli Murrill
DB Staff Hhtcr
Oee of the moat impor-
tant things he has done for
students has been to help
keep the U.S. out of a war
in Angola. Senator John
Tunnry said in a pren camr
fere nee Tuesday at the Lot
Angeles Press Club
Through an amendment
Tunney authored which pre-
vents $^8 million from being
funneled into an American
military venture in Angola.
Tunney said the U.S. saved
millions pf dollars, thou-
sands of Angolan lives and
the lives of American sol-
diers who could have betn
sent into the African con-
flict.
The place to stand up to
Turmay at
praaa confaranca claimad cradM
for kaapiwq U.S. out of
the Soviet Union ji in Mos-
cow, not in Angola,** Tun-
ney said ;
Told of aenatoriaJ can-
didate Tom Hayden*s ac-
cusation that Tunney had
become a ^big guy" m pod
tics since he had accepted
campaign contributions
from large corporations and
power broken,, Tunney said
there was about 10,000 con-
tributors to his campaign
thus far. adding, ^V\\ take
money froip anyone as lon^
at they know they are not
buying anything but good
government.
Tm very proud of the
fact that Tve had more Icgis-
iMion go through the Senate
(Continued on Papr i)
^""^
Reg Fee would end fellowship
Contribute
to
ether
^
By Alan Michael Karbelnig
DB Staff Writer
The Registration Fee .Com-
nuttee will recommend an end
to registration fee funding of
the Chancellors Teaching Fel-
UCLA's Women's Newspaper
short stories ^^" ^ i sports
art "/^V;.^ photography
reviews " ! r news
poetry '^ prose
also need essays on feminist theory.
women's status "^
COPY DEADLINE: MAY 10
112Kerck>ioffHall 825-2640
f
SUPER SNACKS -
PARTY SNACKS
WITH NO
PRESERVATIVES AT
PRONTO MARKET
Pronto Market carries the
famous El Molino line of
natural foods, and deli-
cious carob candy There
Are no preservatives in
these products
Pronto Market sells El
Molino products — every-
day :— at th# lowest prices
m town
! ■
1 Pronto Market
^0850 National Blvd.
n AJOAmN ( N N
11829 Wilshire Blvd W.L.A. near Westgate
Open 7 d4^ till midnight 477-6514 "^
CHINESE DINNERS FOR MOTHERS' DAY
lowship, according to K.en
Paslaqua, a committee mem-
ber
"Personatly 1 feel that it is
an excellent program but
siould be funded out of Edu-
cational Fees rather than Re-
gistration Fees, since it is an
academic program," Psalaqua
said Registration Fees are
supposed to fund only non-
academic liervtces
" The Chancellor's Teaching
Fellowship is a financial award
given to first-year graduate
students and is "based on
scholastic excellence." ac-
cording to Louise Noodelman,
administrative analyst of the
Fellowship and Assistantshi<p
section of the Graduate Divi-
sjon
Rock groups
on UCTVLA
An hour-long videotape
teeming with entertainment
which includes performances
by rock bands, as well as a
lighthearted look at poker, will
be shown today at 1 1:30 am on
UCrVLA Filmed by Steve
Whittak^er and Marlene Mcd-
win, the tape focuses on new
hands like Crack the Sky.
taped live at the Starwood
Club and the Berlin Brats. In
addition, the tape features
Stefan Thomas, a local folk-
si ngcr; interviews with John
Palumbo, lead vocalist for
Crack Sky; television director
Rodger Le Page and some
mysterious surprises
UCLA
BAT 3-7
■>
L..
rx
i
Spofiaonitf by Sliidant
^fc^--^ M. %Mi mt§m I ■ f^ II ^^Ib ■ I'll M
VHKIVffll WwllBrv wOffNIIinvfUfl
82S-14a4
ilfii-iip wti^ffi you donala Wood
ACIEIMM raiM SCCMi lEfEL H-F ia-2:Ji
SCMEMCaC WAt TDIT mik llJiU ft 12
MUiUL €HTEi HitCIT laMME «-F ll-Sat
Council
•"i
It It i four-year fellowship
consisting of a first year sti-
pend and a second and third
year of TA-ships and research
assistant positions. During the
final year the student is paid
on Page 5)
-I.*-
UCLA Daily
BRDIN
Voluma XCVIII. Numbar 24
Thursday May 6. 1976
Pubh»h9d 9¥0ry mm^kday during th9
ap/Kw/ .jfaar ajicapf during hoitdayt
arxJ &ay8 foflowifig hotHtmya artd •«
amirwtior) pmriodt. by th0 ASUCLA
Communtcationa Bo^rd 300 Wwt
wood Plim. Lo9 Ang^tm. C^utorrim
00094. Cofiyrtght 1976 by tha
ASUCLA Communicationa Board
3*cond ctmaa poatmg* pmtd §t tha Los
Angfa Poat Ottica
Jim Slat>ing«r
Patrtck
•y
Ann« Young
t
n Kana
Cnc
Aaaa 8hori
ii
Oaoff Outnn.
Mtchell« Duval
nt
SMiStant
Fiank Slillworm
Marc Oalitnt
Stuart S«lv«rsl»in
in sa«t
JUT Lapin. aMittant
^a wfflafa
ftAary Arwta Cartaino
Karan Q«aan
Cathy Satpp
Rtck Backer
Pmul^ immnrnga
Tarri
Mark Rubm
Chr»stt« GHIa
AAnav Quia
Marta Lavtna
Li
CaOiy F
Better to give thjin receive
gains strength
By Mm PeMz
DB BMT Writer
Wluk reasons for
their- blood and time ranfcd
from civic responsibility to
pkdn curiosity, studenu in this
year's Blood Dnve agreed they
were there to share something
with thoae who needed it more
"Tm donating because it's
0O«iething I can share. 0aid
Terry Albert, a studem here. **l
heard there wasn't a very food
response yesterday so I decided
**There is a blood shortaft in
naoi hospitals today.** Gary
Gilliland. a graduate student m
bactenology laid.. **People m
hospitals should not have to
worry where it's coming from.**
Red Crots affgiab reported
a healthy influx of donors
yesterday but expuHOd hope
that students wmM Mcreaae
their donations as the week
continued Ruth Jamagin, a
Bed Cmm 0iaff menibcr said.
*" We're really pleased with the
to do something else**
Moat ralaaatf
Inside the bloodcenters.
activity was smooth and most
donors just relaxed as the
blcxHl flowed from their arms
to the bags **You just day-
dream." said Steve Auer. a
communication studies major
**l used to give plasma for
money so it's easv I can't even
Iccl it**
Linda Manning^ a junior in
Fnghsh, said. **You feel that
to get on the tMll."
"I figured •omctNOidy coiild^
use my blood, which is AB
positive.** said Mary Burns, a
senior in biochemistry. '*lf
someone in my family or my
friends needs it. it will be
there**
Donors receive credit lor
themselves or their families
should they ever need blood
"The really neat thing is if
your family needs blood and
you've donated, they have ac-
cess,** Pat Un, a sophomore in
music said
Shortage of bl<xid
Many donations stemmed
from people ooocoroad with
the shortage of blood in to-
day's hospitals^ **rm aware of
the need,*' Marylin Slesh. a
worker in the Medical Center
-rcn^ked "One brisk bleeder
can use four to six pints a
day**
firstMm^r donors "
FkH timers
Most first-time donors
seemed pleased that they were
iin.^lly contributing Becky
Fisher, a pre-niirsing fresh-
man, said, **! ^Iways wanted to
see what it was like I h^ve an
uncle who's a hemophiliac, so
I'm aware of the problem **l
thought It would make me feel
good and that it might help
save SOMOipc't life.** Jennifer
King, a kinesiology junior said
•*So I finally got up the cour
you're not only helping people,
but there's a CMoaraderie when
you're lying on the tabic and
everyone is joking around
Students seemed oblivious to
the insertion of the needle
"I'm only nervous when they're
going to put tiK Moik in.**
said Manning, "but when I just
(C ontinucd on Page 4)
Even those who did not have
the coufOfe were on iuuid to
help Marcie Podgur. a soph-
omore in psychology, volun-
teered through her sorority.
Tri-Delts. to work in the
Schoenberg tent location. Tai
too afraid of the aoodka,** 0Ik
admitted, "so since f^ not
going to give blood. I watited
VOTE
^>SYCH
STUDENTS
don't Join the
Foreign Legion
Wo hovo work atudy and
voluntoor jobs in Franz Hall
Undorgrad Psych Aasn
1531 Franz Hall
I
I
COPIES 2
KINKO S
CHECK OUR TYPING SFRVICE
J
i
5
THE BUSINESS ADVISORY COUNCIL
of the
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT CENTER
I presents
ITS WEEKLY THURSDAY EVENING SEMINAR
tHURSDAY, MAY 6
"COMMODITY FUTURES AS A TOOL
FOR CORPORATE MANAGEMENT"
Arnoid Brisk - Sr Commodity Spf*iidlnt
B^che, Hahey. Stuart.
Dinner 6:30 Seminar 7:30-9 PM
All Accredited Students, American and Foreign
Invited as Guests
INTERNATIONAL STUD€NT CENTER
I 1023Kilgard
Phone 477-4587 for reservations
--i.
.ft
The Ihternatiorxal Student Center
Officially Endorsed Contribution
To The
. Los Angeles City Bicentennial
"The International World of
American Cpdicing
A monthly presentation of dinner, music and entor-
tainmont featunng different countries whose diahos have
tiocofrie part of the American nr>onu
To bo held at
••POTPOURRI"
The International Restaurant of tho
Intornationat Student Center
1023 Hilgard. Westwood
. "ALWAYS or* SUNDAY**
Sjjnday. May 9 Russian Omr>er and Entertainnr>onl
Dinr>or and Entertainment $5 00
6 30 - 9 pm Mother's Day"
r
Treat Mother and the family to an unusual oicpor<onco
ERIC ANDERSEN
BTRON BERUNE
and
SUNDANCE
Z
•r
cosToai
jv •*
» TAPE wnu
mmftnm§
W
a pn
WIW
7
w^m.
SPEAKERS AND
INSTALLATION
THESE TWO IN DASH UNITS-MOST CARS
SATURDAY, MAY 15-8:30 p.m
SCHOENBERG HALX • UCLA
$4.00, 2.50 STUDENTS*
.«:>
Ticket info.: 825-2953
*1 ticket per I.D
Ticii«ts at UCLACmitral Ticket Offica. 660
LA. 90024, all Mutual Aganciia; Walltch's Music City
Liaarty 4 Tickatron Aaanciaa; alM) at box offica ona tiour
hafora rwrformancg. rf avatlatila far info. a2^ ?9^3
=-»W"
rauf
W-
1
■•••i»*«"*«ip***»
^
u.
i
SUMMER JOBS
$210/wk
s
Must Be
i
Hardworking
Willing (o leave I. A 4rea
Today, 2:M pen
University Lutherdn Chaj** ' Strdthm6re & Udylev
Se On Time
MAKE AIM
at Ack«fm«n Urvkxi,
Center and Schoenberg Quad
SURVIVAL OF THE
JEWISH FAMILY
the question of survival and quality of survival
will be discussed by
JERAY BUBIS
Director School of Jewish Communal Servica Habrw Union CoMaga
Mr Bubts fias written articles and taught classes on the
Jewish Family, intermarriage, and synagoguge life
Ff^lDAY, MAY7
at the Hillel Shabbat
^rvrces6:30 dinner / .30 , program 8:30
900 Hilgard reservations 474-1531 .
t
{
Driftwood Coupon
2 for 1 Burger Combination
Buy 1 burger combo at the^ Driftwood,
the jazz inn on the beach at I'enice and
get a second one plus a half-liter of one
of our fine house wines. Absolutely free
with this coupon.
This 3.30 value also entitles you to the
f\ne jazz of Ray Draper and Friends
direct from Europe and Sew York in
fc . , i„i,
their only L.A. appearance, an atmo-
sphere of freedom and relaxation, and
unlrmited access to the sun. beach, and
the paddle tennis courts all right outside
OUT front window.
Good Thru Mav 15
Glc.uDinu ptil.ir ol vt»ti
Nt.iiuv m .1 ih.im:>n.:^
ut»rlvi rhv vlt^H,'!^ . 't
the svh«H»ni*r 1^ K»«»f •
iMvk III tlu- Jini p.iNi t»f Si .in
Jin.iM ■" ■•' '-- ^ •♦•-", in?»liip
I ntil . .; 1 n.imi'
lisN. when AiiNtr.ili.in >.iil*»r«.
»K]«»ptt\i It .i** rhf rc^ul.iMttn
Kvr quantirv tor youn)> M-.tmit^
I A V4 pint nuij: \vi*> u»»» n
.» 1/2 pint ):\,t» Uh» liffk- I S> rhc
wj>p-\v.iiHt. hi»ffom-hcii\\ i.n
HktoMJ \vii> chrisrcncJ uitfi thi-
nMm* *4 ii ship rniJw.iv K-ruvvn
.1 cutter .inJ .1 triti^iu
Trk" •HTn^HM^ T h.iMj t vh.inm'J
a kif ArK.1 luithi r h.i> C^lvntpi.i
Bivr It N ".nil m.Kk" with •"• •mum
lil|5ridjct>f> .inJ .1 hiTit.i^, , ;
hnr\\inucNpirun.^i rh.il ncM r
rh;inut*> A^ rJ^K•Nnl
^l^• Olvnipi.i rx'M'f %\iH
(0)[yyRai|)a^
Antl-lmperlallrt view ol holiday
)-
-f
--1.
Cinco de Mayo seen as victory
By Joe Yofertt
DB Staff Writer
The importance ot C inco de
Mayo ii an anti-imperialist
victory againft the French was
emphasized by Antooic^ Aodri-
guc/. the NationaJ poofdinator
o( CASA (Center for Auto-
nomous Social Authority).
**padly armed and with httle
food, they overcame a barrier
placed in thetr way,** he said
Rodriguez was tiK keynote
speaker of a Cinco de Mayo
prograRi presented by MEChA
(the Chicano Student Move-
ment) yesterday to celebrate
Mexican Independence Day.
He spoke before a large crowd
in Ackermaii*s Grand Ball-
room
Cinco de Mayo marks the
liberation of Mexico from
France on May 5, 1862. Na-
poleon III had attempted to
coloni/e Mexico, but the
French were met by fierce
opposition.
Cites Aitfola
Kodriguez gave an account
of other peoples*ucurrently en-
gaged in a struggle similar to
.the one the Mexicans faced
over a century ago He cited
Cinco
style
Mayo Waaii activities at Dyliatra KaM
VOTE
Vietnam, Angola and Palestine.
He also attacked the United
States Border Patrol which, he
feels, IS; a hindrance to the free
flow of the Mexican people
across the international border.
''Where are their papers?"
asked Rodriguez of the United
States government. **They had
none to ^o into Vietnam and
Puerto Rico. And what papers
authorized them to hire mer-
cenaries to set back the strug-'
gle in Angola?**
The round of sharp barbs
drew an enthusiastic reception
from the crowd of 500 that
filled the Ballroom seats.
I
Carlos Vasquez, the editor
of the national Chicano pub-
a a D
J^jf^fettjgjir'j
HAIR DESIGNS
FOR MEN A WOMLN
Qualicy-Pnd*
lOur Ciicao Nacdi arc miwmyt
cooMdcrcd Numero Uno!
CASA DE ROBERTi
I 1665 Senu Monica Blvd. WLK
Cufting by Mr Roberto 4'^''^22n- By Appc
a ir B 8
POTPOURRI
THE INT£IINATIONAL RESTAURANT
^1023 Hilgard, Woatwood, Ph.: •2S-3384
^mmm you lotry ITa SPRMiQ QUARTER MENU
Bix*r iiiii'<«n> )^t .iin ht-ftiT.
r
Lunc^ 4 CNnnar
Hfl if?!r^*^^* sanonNctm on pin bread with soup or salad and
Drink $1 25. healthy lynon. $voo Chpft mm $1 OoWeZTiaa
ruppaeoli o $ ao. deeaarta; 40 nvvmo a.46.
UVB DfTERTAINMOrr
FOLKOANaNQ
ORmjBTlM^I
WE ARE QPFN TO THE PUILIC
IMTERNATIOMAL MEANS AMERICAN, TOOl
lication Sin Fronteras. also
spoke to the Ackerman crowd
Vasqucz spoke in less harsh
terms as he outlined the strug-
gles of the Mexican people
**l speak for the sei^timents,
aspirations and expecutions of
the Mexican people in the
United Sutes,** he said "Not
only for the future, but what
has happened in the past that
dictates what we do today.**
Vntquez atucked universities
which he said, *Vattempt to .{|
transform Cinco de Mayo into-
an orgy folklorico,** while try-
ing to downplay the political
meaning of the day. He said
it UCLA wm not in that
Sin fronteras was described
(Continued on Page 15^
Blood a . .
I
(CBBiJMniil froa Mms 3)
look away ** Burns added that
she *• is always chicken when I
go in, but I feel fii^ once it
suru.-
With students becoming less
afraid of donating their blood,
the centers are expanding their
facilities for a large rush today
and tomorrow In the Acker-
man Union center, additjooal
beds have been added to ac-
comodate as many people as
should arrive. ^^-^ ~^ ■*-^-
Francene Lifson, Red Croas
coordinator for the drive, said
over 100 UCLA volunteers will
help the drive throughout the
week and added that **The
volunteers, both from the Red
Cross and UCLA, are fan-
tastic."
PUBLIC WORKS
■nmSffTMML IKAIK
Hilarioua and tOMching
"A parfact axamplt of the
creative praona in motion''
OMi mmm umM momu ounam
Fridiya and Saturdays at 9 pm
The Church in Ocaan Park
235 Hill St (Santa Monica)
wn
Dean Jauds womerfs meet
By J. NmlMn h
DB Slnir Wffiiar
Not all thoac who attended
the Intemationai Womens
Conference in Mexico City hMt
year were critical of its out-
come
Dorothy Nelson, dean of the
use Law Sch^sil^ praiiad a%
pcrformanot at a gatlMhng of
atout 25 men ai>d women in
IIk Women.*! Resource Center
at noon yesterday.
Speaking on the j^opic of
"^Reflections of International
Womens Year,** alK also cnt-
ieind the way the press cov-
ered the conference.
"Most ot I he journalists
there were just looking lor
headUnes," laart Nekon **The
press didn*t report the good
things ol the conference, such
as the dHjCiVMiMis on children,
the world taod problem Mid
women.**
Nelson said the conference
was succeiaful because it was
able to pull people of different
cultural and economic syMaiM
together so they could ex-
change ideas on a variety of
international iesuri
'*lt was a miracle to see
women from all over the world
debating in an orderly and
Official write-in
Bill Davis, a former member of the Board of Control and
the Chancellor*s Housing Task Force, baaame the only
legitimate write-in candidate in the Gradtiate Student
Association (GSA) elections by turning m an expense
account to the Elections Board. He is runmng for secaad
vice-president against Ken Paslaqun.
Though Davis will not be on the ballot, the expense
account entitles him to spend money on campaign
aMtenak.
As chairman of the Food Service Committee. Davis said
he played a large part in designingfthe decor and the menu
of the Kerckhoff Coffee.. House. As an undergraduate, he
helped, develop the Murphy Hall line monitor program to
simpbfy enrollment and registration prooaiaea.
I|>avis says he originally planned to run, but was shuffled
ofTia slate during the negotiations th^t led to each of the
three GSA candidates running uno|
Teaching Fellowship . .
(Continuad from Page 2)
while researching and writing a
dimenation.
For gmd studrnH^'
Selections for the fellowship
are made through the depart-
ment head, and only graduate
students who have completed
leas Ct^ one year of graduate
work are eligible There are
about 5B new fellowships avail-
able each year, Noodclman
The Registration Fee Com-
mittee recognized the need for
an alternate source of funding
for the program two yenit ago
It was recommended that the
fellowship receive its full bud-
get of S40,000 that year but
fliat it be gradually phased out
However last year, when the
Reg Fee committee recom-
meaded a cut of S20,000, the
'Omncellor overrode the
recommendation and trans-
iarrcd excess funds into the
pragiam. so the original bud-
get request a( S40,000 was met.
Concermng the recom-
mended cut for next y^ar.
"^Any cut that is made should
utilize stronger language to
urge the Chancellor to com-
ply." Paslaqua said^t the
Laguna Beach Reg Fee
meeting At first another^ gra-
dual cut was discussed If t the
meeting. Further discussion
resulted in passagr of a muuon
to completely cut the program
The requested budget (oij the
program was $4i0.927 ,
When asked about the
recommended cat in the fel-
lowships, the Chancellor said,
**Thai comes as a complete
surprise; we think that it is a
very important program.*^
The Registration Fee -Com-
mittee is working with what
they term a "steady 'state**
budget, which means trying to
make improvements with the
same amount of money each
year. This leaves httle room for
inflation and other floating
increases.
Committee on Public Lectures
And
Cultural and Recreational Affairs
Present
Betty Hahn
' In a Photo Lecture
Saturday, May 8, 2:00 p. m.
Sunset Canyon Recreation Center
iriendiy way.' khc Mid "I wa»
very optiaiMic: tto eoafercncc
wat (he fint Mcp ukcn (or
international
ACCOUNTING AND
FINANCE MAJORS
LET tJS HELP YOU PLAN
AHEAD TO BECOME A CPA
iMvw
SAN
''« M« tai 1
'MMt-rrsj
1/3 or USA
t
U Cimte
of aia uac
s Cawlatanca In
cair.
Nelson said there were still
many goals women have yet to
achieve Among them were an
increase m women's employ-
ment, an increaat iif the lit-
eracy of women and more
women participating in the
policy actions at the national
and the international levels
"Women are counseled into
believing that a women's place
rs either in the family or no
place, or, if they do gel 4i
career, that it must be some-
thing female, for instance, be a
nurse instead 6^ a doctor **
Nelson also said she hopes
that in upcoming regional con-
ferences and at the next world
eonterence planned for Iran,
the press would be more re-
s'^onsible in their reporting
"What we need at the next
conference is a core of Jour-
nalists trained to report on it."
said Nelson "The press must
bring out the true meaning, ol
^hese conferences.** ^ ~
• ••••• •• • ••••••••••■
THE •
COMEDY
STORE
A
CONTINUOUS SHOW
OF COMEDIANS
EVERY NIGHT
• 2 Locations •
8431 SUNSET
ia21 WESTWOOO
27S-7g41 •M-422S
477-4751
AMvrican t ayr**** avfUiAmaricsfa
21 Years %mm% Location
lluir Stylists
. MEN & WOMEN
We Style Long Hair &
Also the Latest Full Cut.
Shampoo & Blow Dry or Dry Cut
Manicuring & Pedituring
We also color and give Body perm waveb
'OMg% u Coma Ave. ^^V Pav niore?
Waatwood Vlllaga acroaa from U.C.L^ 478-777$
Partijf»g Lot ^1 478-7770
t
A
Meet A New Number" thurs.
7:30 pm 3rd floor lounge Kerckfipff
Oat involved m cord color, cirds, can- GSU Ottica
dies, cookies, correspondence, and 82S-60S3
clockwork For first timers and indad Kerckhoft4ii
o»d»es Hotlir>e 477-7660
^ Sponaorad by Student I agislattv Council
ANNOUNCEMENT
ALAN & DOROTHY PELS
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT
ANNUAL PRIZE
$500 - 1500
;for acacjiennic year Septennber 1976- June 1977
for best thesis or papre on how. where and tn
what manner the student intends to use the
skills, ability and knowledge learned in this
country in his/her home country
Preference given to graduate students, nearing
completion of dearet^ wi^h demonstrated
financJal need.
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE
International Student Center
1023 Hilgard Avenue
Westwood
DEADLINE FOR RETURNING APPLICATION
May 17, 1976
Students from the Middle East
and
1
Developing Countries
Pr^^x^ yoursefvesfor management positions in Banking & Finance
through a new master's degree program designed for you and
offered by the."
INTERNATIONAL iNSTITimi OF BANKING AND
FINANCE AT SAINT MARY'S COLLEGE
A representative will be on your campus TUESDAY. MAY 1 1 at 9:00 am
to provide information and answer questions.
GSM 1379
For further information, write or call the
THE PLACEMENT CTR. BLDO. 1^
INTERNATIONAL INSTrTUTE OF BANKING AND FINANCE
AT SAINT MARY'S COLLEGE
P.O. Box 101 '
Moraoa. Ca 94575
(415) 938-9674
I
■9-
-T-
s
a
*-«
ma
^m
■P"
'^ ^^W
1 i
I
i-
I
Aid to cities lecture
ManlMU Kaplan, anaooaily known tooal piiuiacf fi
. Trut, will Saam **FedefmJ Aid and tlK Qm"
•t 5:30 pa la tlM Architecture Buiklinf. Roooi 1224
^ires^lamed on fuel
^bsolutetq Oulroqeousl
IYmI MEVER Sat TiMaa COMICS At Yaw L
•EF Dir^noconK
It lilM it «. rt #iaw and wM it
youNft alwayl —wwd to «t it. ft»>
HdM, **MCS^ Oi^' M pfWWtf Oft IMflS.
toft papar. to if you can't fwid OMa uaa
for ft. vouH ffMd iwo^iartf OaiLV S3.
You know tttcm the onas with tfic
skin condiuon wlio thmk i MjcOon
aid's hambufiar it tfit atfanca o^ aatiw
ctMMM, ^ trip to itea^ aiaMiiliiN itm
uhtmjkU »n "family taatthernctt '. *n<i
Richard 'Hixon wji tcrcwed by them
fotfdjm commie pinko literals ' We re
iurt you know some pt iKcse '▼LAlll
FOLICS-...... tnd we re pretty sure you
will butt a a>*t tanahtng about them
By the way. both "SHCE^ Dl^ and
TLAIM FOLKS" arc noi dcMgnad f^
the kiddies thate tn m&lhf Aduh
Comic Books'! FLAIN FOLKS S3
!?
^Tm ttot advocating non-
lippiaaaina of fires. It's joat
that we've fit paopir ai iIk
wroaf place — aext to the
fuel.** said Larry Ljoeher. a
retired firefighur currently
doing research on leaidsniiai
patterns and fire hazards lor
htf
WSFTLIME
hOUtS
4pnn to 2am 7 days a
•*77-7€60
^E£R countdiing by and for thoaa
aaaiing witn inair taAoairty
IN COMIC lOOKS. OVER 1M PAGES OF iELLY LAUGH! r
T lirNAT AMERICA REVERir. ONLY S6JI POSTPAIOf!
TH€EL PUBLICATIONS
266 S ROBERTSON B I. VO ROOM 3 BEVERLY HILL. CA 90211
l£^»CLOHt I iCath i [OlccK | jM.O (Sorrv No COD s
/ ^Copim of-^H^B^ DtP" mS3 i fCaptm of^LAtM fOLKS' 0 93
( tCopm* of BOTH (XMIC BOOKS 0 SSOO
ACL PRICES INl_CUO€ SAlXS TAX fkUD POSTAGE
(I MM
IS vamofavi)
ADORESS
CITY
STATUE
ZIF
Campus Evants Fitm*
WOODY
ALLEIV
DIANE
KEATON
LOVE
*>.
/
DEATH
A JA^K ROl jN$-CHARlES H. jQFFE
1 PRODUCTION
svoducec Dy CHARLES H JOFFE
'iMBKr ana X>mM by WOODY ALLEN
ACKERMAN GRAND
B^LLR
aia
FRIDAY
7 & 9:00 PM
MAY 7
ADM $1.00
ftoki> h« asm opmu. . ..c
fpajr a tbde pfaaenutioa aaa
talk haaad apaa 10 yaan o(
experience fighting fires
throughout the state.
Loeher describing prohltfH
that firefighters run into in the
Mi, taii. **Los Angeles
Count> and the Sute Forestry
Department have the best fire>
figiiiing techniques in the
world The problem is that
we*re very cCficieBt at cxtin-
gutthing fmall fu'es. The fuel
builds up. and we wind up
with pig fires that nobody
how to put out.
JHPrilii ths
parai regions above Hk
yens a^ Sovchani Cahfartaa's
worst fire hazard He also
quoted figures supplied by C.
Coi/ntryman putting the
amount of grouad baimd per
hour at four to five square
milas. Thai fire caa rdaase as
much mA four to right hundred
billion BTU*i of heat That*t
about the fasK aa burning five
to eight million gallons of
gasoline, he^ .ex plained.
• Floyd W. Wi
Tunncy .
(CaatialBad fradi1Pii(|e I)'
than any other firstferm
senator.** he said **Most of
my leipslation is ckarly on
the side oi the 'average per-
son
Haydea haa aiso accused
Sen Junney of vacillating
on a position either for or
against jtbe controversial
Senate Bill One Tunney
responsded angrily, saying.
**l was opposed to S One
before some of my oppo-
nents even knew it existed I
have consistently been
a^inst S One.**
Asked whether he would
favor a face-to-face debate
with Hayden, Tunney said
he would prefer to meet
with all the candidates in a
round table discussion. **But
as to whether or not 1*11
meet with Hayden, I told
him personally and in a
letter that we are ail equal
m our candidacies,** Tunney
said.
The senator dis^Maed
Hayden*s allegation that
Tunney had become a **best
friend** to oil companies,
saying **! have worked on
anti-trust legislation that
deals with breaking up oil
companies, which ahhas me
a pariah.**
^ Tunney decUned to say
which Repubheafi he woiild
least like to run against in
NpVembcr. **I can see
sttiengths and weakaassss in
an of them,** he said -I
really don*t have a choice.**
He said he feh the key
iaaue in the campaign con-
for
openness m government
**and to make sure that the
nation*s business ir con-
ducted in public*
/
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
Lat US stHp your panoriat effects home We
irmrnaMonai pacaaging and shipping Weatsoael
PACIFIC-KING iai« »•« M> tt LM
laiitia m
for2aDvolls
±:
SQUARE DANCE
I Sat. May 8th 8:a0pni
tack again by popular demand our cailBr^
MR. HANSON
$1 25 members $1 75 non-membors
Hillel 900 HJIgard Ave. Westwood
Committee on Public Lectures
And
' Cultural and
Recreational Affairs
Present
Ruth Mintz
In a Poetry Reading
Thursday, May 6, S p.m.
Sunset Canyon Recreation Center
„ «!.
... ., ^,
Maintaining an election
r
r-
.- ■'»■
r
I
Photoa by Paula Gibson
ECTIC
TFOF
J
PRIMAF
J3 fINA
LATFORI
TO GIVI
Voting continues today in
the graduate and undergradu*
ate student body . elections
which began yesterday Ap-
proximately 1600 students cast
their ballots yesterday, ac-
cording to Jay Cole, Elections
Board chairman.
Last year 3334 . students
voted in the two day phnoary
elections. i
Although many ofj the
polUng booths opened an hour
late yekterday. several members
of the elections board felt the
turnout was- excellent
BRUINS GIVE
BLOOD!
ponsore,
Student Legislative CofinciJ
itudeni Welfare Commission
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A senior citizens group
manned the polling booths this
year in return^ for an undis-
closed contribution to their
organization Their late arnval
for an orientation mdbting here
this morning was the cause of
the late poll opemngs
The polling booth in Royce
quad had to briefly shut down
twice yesterday when they ran
out of ballots but ihe problem
was resolved quickly and heavy
voter turnout was reported
there.
—Salty Ci
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Music festival organized
n '
By Barry Gray
DB Stair Writer
Pclcf Yarrows musical ap-
prenticeship waf in the fmiall.
informal Greenwich Village
coffeehouses in New York City
in the early Sixties.
In the spirit of these late,
peat cuhural meetinghouses.
Yarrow (late of Peter, Paul
and Mary) has helped organize
the Santa Monica Music Fes*
Uval, designed to give un-
known songwriters 4n4 singers
a chance to perform what Yar-
row caHs "^honest music.**
Scheduled for this Saturday.
May 8, at Sanu Monica *s Lin-
coln Junior High School, the
Festival will, according to Yar-
row, **provide them (perform-
ers and songwriter's) with the
beginning that all talent needs
to find — a dialogue between
audience and performer in a
loving, dignified, performing
surrounding."
The festival sent out a public
appeal some time back for
taped song submissions by
high school and college-age
people and received over 380
upes Through three saMSfitng
'^\
Pmtmr Yarrow, formarly wllti Patar,
Iha Santa Monica Music FastlvaL
processes by Yarrow and
"knowledgabl< songwriters**
(according to a festival spokes-
man), the number was even-
tually scaled down to 12 win-
ners seven males and five
females.
Sue Lubin
Among the female winners is
UCLA sophomore Sue Lubin,
who will perform two of her
Pmu\, and Mary, halpad organlza
DATSUiy
ii
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tired of yesterday's hair? j
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styling for men and women
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For appointment call 478-61 51
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9i2 GmY\9y Avenue
{nmm Le (^(f^)
songs that have gained airplay
on Dr. Demento*s weekly
KMET radio program i| re-
cent months (One of these
tunes, "Hy A way Ise Tse Hy,**
was number one in Demenlo's
weekly top-ten favorites con-
test last Sunday.)
Festival organizers said their
show is decidedly anti-estab-
lishment "Music a the mmt
poignant form of communica-
tions we have,*' said Helen
King, whose Song Registriition
Service (SRS) firm is helping
.organize the show "^Meaning-
M 4yrics and music arc strang-
led b\ the industry Music is
not just an emotional depen-
dence on rhythm and catch-
phrases " she said
Yarrow echoed her senti-
ments, criticizing the **big
business music establishment **
He said record companies '*aee
the value of mLi.viC (onK) in
direct pf()pX)rtion to its ability
to make buc|Ls " He said the
festival will provide **lhe op-
portunity to gauge the truth-
fulness and value of their art**
C'oMmuntty effort
Yarrow and King see their
show as a communitv effort,
and the festival's list^ of organ-
izers the Santa Monica
VWCA, the Santa Monica Al-
tern^itive School. McCabes (a
guitar shop). SRS and the
UCLA music department —
would seem to bear that oitf!
Yarrow and his organiz.ation
see the Festival as an ongoing
event, and if the show works
ou! well, there are plans to
t»rgani/e more festivals in
oihcr Lc^mmuniiics. .
.fi^
n
Special UCLA
Student Rate >
8.50
B> <i|>poiiitiiiriil
Alec or Arnold
475-8566
Wilshire west plaza
108b0 wilshire blvd
westwood, gauf 90024
3
Protests over Gallo ada
^.H:/
iC iiiipii froa Patr I )
taboid-Kize poster inserts.
though they wouid hke to.
Sol vent
"It (the Gallo ad) keeps out
paper Solvent." %mtd Dsa Sheri-
dsii of Hay ward Sute's Fi^
mer. "We won't be intimidated
to pull out the ads ** Shendan
published another Gallo ad last
Thursday He said he wouli
have gkdly bsiuied the contro-
vmbiaI promotion to quell stu-
dent protest if an ahemAte ad
««re available.
The editor of the UCR
li(|iysiM<ii said he hat oon-
tintied to run the ads for finan-
cial reasons but has given
UFW supporters a full edi-
torial paae to present their
views
Other newspapers have re-
fused 16 publish Gallo ads,
which editors say offend their
Carmichael
ree#cri aad undermine the
editorial board*i announced
support of the UFW.
Setting pro^udi
"We are categorically op-
poeed to Gallo selhng its pro-
^mU at the eipaate af the
farmworkers,- aaid Irv Eachus.
adit or of the Cakfomm 4flrir
at UC Davis -We are dealing
here with a coopaay which
^Ui^ a long history of exploita
tion of farmworkers.*"
Editorial staff of the \}C
Santa Barhara Daily Nexus
and the UC Irvine Sen Uni-
^''sity htk^ also editorialized
in favor of theUFW boycott,
but run Gallo ads hacause they
refuse to cross editonal policy
ovfcr to advertising.
**We believe anyone should
have the freedom to advertise
aad we ean*t surt to discri-
minate on the basis of editorml
(ContfaMMd froai#afe 1)
Carmichael said. "When the university becomes a money-
■Miiuaf venture, then we have to struggle against it.** He drew a
loud ovation when he slated. "UCLA doesn't teach you to serve
the people, but how to make money"
Pan- Africanism was CarmichaePs solution for the colonuilism
in Africa He saw the liberation of Alnca as the focal point of
Black liberation He said "On!v when Africa is free will we be
free '
Zionism is considered racism by Carmichael. •'If a Jewish
student here collects money, and even goes to Israel to support
an oppressive cause, then an African student should be willing to
go to Africa to fight for the struggles of his brothers -
CarmichaePs speech was part of Cinco dc Miyb activities held
in Ackerman Union Abo on the same program as his speech
were speeches by Chicano activists Carlos Vasquez and Antonio
Rodriguez along with native Mexican dances
««
stance.** said Pat Grosss, New
Umi¥9rmt¥ advertising maiM-
ftr
**We figure any bod y\ money
IS eoual to anyone else's.** she
said;
But Manuel Picket, head of
Sacramento State's Chicano
group, says "freedom to ad-
vertise** IS deceptive He said
the UFW cannot afford to pay
tor ad space to eounier the
Gallo promotions.
Dave Miller, editor of Sac-
ramento Sute's Hornet, said
he believes prets freedom in-
cludes the right not to print
ads which are offensive to a
Urge number of readers.
I he campus media board
there resolved the dispute by
prohibiting the newspaper
from publishing both UFW
and Gallo ads
Nursing, .
a ontinmd froai Pagt U
the floor
**We hope we receive final
approval at the end of June,
but often bills just delay in
hearings." Gerberding said **I
am more hopeful now that we
wUl get an OK **
Closely linked to the Assem-
bly and Sute Senate deasion
is the nursing schooPi present
lack of an ofTicial dean '^Find-
ing a dean is pretty much in
suspension umil this basic issue
is resolved.** Gerberding said
Reasoning for |he nursiag
school section was also based
on a need for space.
Construction of the cancer
center section would provide
approximately 30.000 square
feet for nursing, including
learning labs, demonstration
rooms and conference rooms
V
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1
daHy bruin
Games T.V/s play
By Joanne Egiash
(Edifor's noie tgUih is a Staff Writer tor the Daily Bruin)
Madison Avenue, which directs t^ lives of America, is now
encouraging children to change info minature adults.
Via television (the only role model the kiddies see since Mummy
Mnd Papa are occupied "in aid to the lost souls on the cocktail
circuit), children view equipment that they can fasten onto their
^ bicycle's handlebars to make their little bikes sound like motor-
( cycles. Vrooom! Vfooom! Perhaps they can break their tiny legs, and
■^ end up in wheelchairs just like some real motorcycle riders
OPINION
.^ '
Obviously, this idea originates from the Olden Days. Suzy played
homemaker by sweeping her miniature broom across her doll
house's rug, and Billy built baby skyscrapers with his Lego blocks
Children who grew up with those type of toys, however, did not
develop into good consumers. Instead, they became dull house-
wives who tried to conserve money and busy businessmen who
channelled their cash into curing their ulcers.
Technology need» to advance and halt the growth of those
peculiar children who still resemble children. Dr. Spock needs to
write a new childcare book Kiddies should begin drinking their
beer at age thre« As they learn the English language, rhey should
hear numerous expletives, none of which should be deleted, and as
fmuch slang as possible Parents must explain to their offspring that
they exert no influence in the governrnent. and voting accofnplishes
nothing If possible, kiddies should recite nightly; Honesty gets you
nowhere. All politicians . are crooked. Money is all that matters.
Where's the nearest bar? God bless Mrs. Ford.
Children are no longer fashionable No one sighs. "Ah. mother-
hood!" when a woman appears with nine little copies toddling after
her. No one wipes away a sentmiental tear at the sight of dear little
Bobby learning to blow hts nose instead of drying his nose with his
sleeve More advertisements appear in the media for new, delicious,
nutritious food for dogs and cats than for boys arui girls. Boys and
girls ate encouraged to eat nice, sugary, vitaminless food so that
they will pot grow to the ripe old age of 60 (Old people are also no
longer fashionable.)
Shirley Temple would nev^r have achieved perpetual bliss in the
Wax Museum if she had danced childishly onto the Good Ship
Lollipop in 1976. not even U her curls grew out in alternate twists of
red. white, and blue What scKiety wants today is a T^atum O'Neal,
who resembled, at age ten, a hardened 20-year-old, If technology
can continue to progress and meet society's demands, perhaps the
r>ext generation wiH consist of adorable kiddies who become
alcoholics at age eight and smoke behir>d the school in the first
grade
Irresponsible Journalism
By Michelle Oliver and Vincent Harris
(Editor's nqte Ofiver and Harris are students here )
We ar^ ei<treh>ely dismayed by the comments of Joe Yogerst
concerning James Gitkes, the USC sprinter from Guyana. In the DB
sportswriter's column (f4-30). Yogerst makes slightly jingoist
references to the former British Colony in South America. Stating
that "spirit worship and voodoo" are practiced there, he provides
his more serious and intelligent readers with "Gilkes learned to run
like the devil in his jungle homeland and that s why he's favored
,rf . >^ as a reason for the successes of this world-class athlete.
OPINION
_ Is that so? Maybe we are reading something into these state-
ments that are not there Is Yogerst implying that Gilkes is a "Witch
^•ctor" who has been engaging in voodoo and spirit worship? Or a
Vernon working with black magic in the perilous |ungle? Analog-
ously, could Janr>es Owens have developed his expertise in flight
from the UCPD and the KKK while hurdling trash^can-lined ghetto
streets becaute he was suspected of raping a white female who. in
fact, tried to seduce him?
Ridiculous, isn't it? Or. is it?
We sincerely apologize for our sensitivity However, we feel that
this IS |ust or>e more example of the gratuitous, chauvinistic, white,
middle-class attitude that permeates our University and this society.
Time and again, this feeling manifests itself in the images created by
such stereotypic phraseology. In our opinion. Yogerst is implying
that Gilkes is a Jungle Bunny.
Yogerst. Guyalna's estimated population is 800,000. Agriculture,
mining and forestry are the three mam industries there. Guyana has
a high literacy rate in comparison to other South American
ccKjntries Over 80 per cent of the Guyartese can both read and
write.
Daily Bruin articles have continuously distorted facts about
athletes (especially Black athletes) all year The April 30th article
Illustrates a lack of respect for James Gilkes by Yogerst. This poor
quality of writing wtH not be tolerated in the future. The DB staff
can no longer condor>e articles that are written in poor taste
Readers can appreciate good quality rather than quantity in the
school paper It is oor sincere hope that in the future, Mr Yogerst.
you limit your feeble attempts at refining your style through the
creation of such picturesque r>or>sense Niggers don't run through
tangles being chased by ghosts anvmore!!
J'
Letters fotne Editor
BikeTow
Editor:
This Is in response to the
irtiiccurate and irresponsible ar-
ticle appearing in the Daily
Brutn on April 29 regardjing the
bicycle tour from LA to Wash-
ington DC While we wish Sheri
Goldberg the best of luck on
her tour, we'd like to give a
better description of the Bike-
centennial 76 organization. For
the past few years this highly
organized group has been work-
ing on a 4.100 mile Trans-Amer-
ican bicycle trail across the Uni-
ted States 4rom Oregon to Vir-
ginia. A vast amount of work
was done to map out the most
scenic route, secure facilities,
organize tour groups, assemble
elaborate maps and guide
books, and provide administra-
tion for all participants. Com-
paring this program with Gold-
berg's little tour, we fail to see
how she can claim to have a
better program This is especially
true since she sard when con-
frorued that she plans on using
most of the Bikecentennial trail
Since Bikecentennial is trying
to keep track of the 10.000-
20.800 cy( lists on the trail, they
recommend that everyone rid-
ing the trail be registered with
them in some way For those
who want to got with a group
and have a qualified, trained
leader. Bikecentennial is offering
several tour groups including a*
tour that goes across the coun-
try It's cost is set at a realistic
S68S and not $780 as GoWberg
had said Her projected cost of
1600 is not only )ust a ro^fh
estimate, but pverly optimistic.
This follows sir>ce she doem't
know of the , conditions along
the way and that there aren't
many supermarkets strung across
the country at 50 mile intervals.
On the other hand, for those
who wish the freedom and flex-
ibility of traveling independently
as we are. Bikecentennial pro-
vides for those also A %7S regis-
tration fee for an independent
on a cross-country tour with
Bikentennial includes guide-
books, maps, insurance, a list of
campgrounds, the usage of sp%<-
ciat Bike-inn facilities, and a list
of liaisons along the trail. We
feel thrs cost is well worth it.
especially when we think of a\t
the work Bikecentennial has put
into this incredible project So
far, they have about 10.000 cy-
clists registered and a very good
idea where each rider will be on
any given day to make sure that
there isn't any ^^larmful over-
crowding m any given area.
So Sheri Goldberg, if you plan
to ride this Bikecentennial
Trans-Arr>erica Trail, or parts of
it, please keep in mind the
following: 1) The incredible
amount of time spent to re-
search and develop this trail,
and that you aren't paying a
penny for it, 2) In the inaugural
year bf this trail, you are
screwing up Bikecentennial's
organization, 3) You are adding
an unplanned impact on the
areas along the trail. 4) You are
hurting the chances of having
future bicycle trail develop-
ments, and 5) Your trip won't
work out in the way you ha^e
planned it
Again we'd like to wish Sheri
Goldberg the best of luck on
her tour, especially when she
tries to find a supermarket in
the backcountry communities of
Appalachia. ,
Randall HIga
* ingineednf
Ben Mandac
';
Abortion
There have recently been a
••rlei c4 itatements in the Bruin
emphasizing that abortion is an
evil because a fertilized egg cell
is a human being Without at
this time taking up this issue (or
that of abortion as a whole). I
would like to make an urge for
consistency.
Unfortunately, there seems to
be. a strong tendency for thoie
opposed to abortion to also be
opposed to other methock of
birth control ~ contraception. If
the belief in saving the "human"
life of the fetus is what is
deemed impbrtant. this opposi-
tion to contraceptive methods
would seem quite inconsistent,
if not downright imnrK>ral.
Since many forms of contra-
ception (condoms, the pill, vag-
inal jelly etc.) do not in any way
kill an egc <^«ll a^er fertilization
(they act before this), the argu-
nr>ents provided against abortion
do not apply here. These meth-
ods of birth control would help
women to avoid the problems
and suffering of unwanted preg-
nancy, as well as providir^g an
alternative less dangerous to
their health than pregnancy is
(this is true for even the rela-
tively hazardous pill). And. since
many abortiom. even if illegal,
are performed anyway, more
widespread use of effective
contraceptives would almost
surely decrease the number of
fertilized-«fg-cell-humans killed.
It seems that those against abor-
tion should see this as most
important
Thus, as an interest in saving
human life itemed to be the
major argument u^ed by the
anti-abortionists, surely these
persom would overwhelmingly
support nruxe wideipread birth
control of the type deKTibed:
These methods would not only
lave the livei ol great numbers
of "human'' JtMHi, but perhaps
the lives of a levy of thoie larger
humans, wmmmn, from the haz-
9rdi of pfiggnency or abortion. I
certainly hopt, Mr. La France
and other aoH-abonlon ^oopte,
that you wHI rnA take^fMlessive
role in this struggle. I will be
eagerly looking forward to your
leQoii urging more erf^aiptv*^
Hfcicatfon on and use of contra-
cfpth^fii.
Wm •! *» Oa^ Brvtn
TWOt^ly aru^
^i
More Letters
PBerHiMhh
This letter is in regard to the
article that ippeered in the Daily
Bi'um on Monday May i, about
the office of Student Welfare
Commission 1 am a Peer Health
Counselor, not a pe^ health
advisor — no such organization
,*ven exists. My organization
feels that our group has a very
important function that of mak-
ir>g the students aware of some
of the major health concerns.
and bridging the gap between
the students and Student Health
Service. Since our organization
begin in 1972, we have tried to
make ourselves known to the
students. This year we have ex-
panded our prbi^rarr) and have
reached many more students.
Although our budget is very
limited, we have spent o¥^ 50
per cent of it in advertising,
much of It for ads in the Bruin
^•l^J'O"^ r^eporters. |odi Ze-
chowy arni Chris Sunon. did not
pay us the common courtesy of
reporting our title corrodly We
would therefore like a clarifi-
cation that we are Peer Health
Counselors (PHC)
It IS also necessary to clarify
exactly what "arhong their ser-
vices" includes: a) Nutrition Cli-
nic; weight control groups; ve-
getarian counseling, b) CCEC —
Contraceptive Counseling and
Educational Clinic, c) Won>ens
Sexuality Groups, d) KLA Talk
Show, e) Pregnancy Screening
and f) PiHiC office; counseling
and contraceptive ' sale^
These fururtiohs were rrtitn'
tioood in Karen Blick's article on
TiMday, April 27 The fact that
i
your writers did not get the
J information straight in this ar-
ticle leads me t6 believe that the
suff does not read their own
paper
-r iyime fracy
7^77 AMbtanl Directet. PMC
Food Run
In foipofite to Marcy Tiffany's
DB letter 4/4 concerning Dick
Gregory's food run, I have this
reply Ms Tiffany,, obviously
you have no cornrept of the
food problem which the world
IS faced with The earth's popu-
lation IS growing too rapidly for
food production to keep pace
According to WHO reports, po-
tentially arabie land is almost
exhausted and only margmallv
productive land remains This
marginally productive land is
quite fragile, easily eroded, and
difficult to manage, meaning not
much food can be pfodyced
here.
You. Ms Tiffany, happen to
be qne of those very fortunate
individuals to be born in a
country that has, or can take.
the resources needed to feed
tft^eH; bid you choose to be
born here? Did you do some
wonderful deed in another life
which gave you this privilege?
Millions of people on this world
die each year, r>ox because they
are lazy or unproductive, but
because they don t have 1/10Q
the chance that you have to
produce, much less earn such
luxuries as er>ough wood to heat
their or>e room shack, or go on
a ten mile trip to the €4ty tosee
a movie once a year
Ms. Tiffany, get yourself off
\. \\
|i-4 . ..,.;,^'
H't the RtpgbNcin padys Goldwater Syndromg'
vour iegal JpedestiF and come
down to earth for awhile Stop
by some geography courses
somHipit, particularly 107. and
see ^nat the real problems are
with food, agriculture and popu
lation And one last thing. Ms
Tiffany, how many hours did
you spend on your farm last
week raising the food you eat?
Vk Sohagj
ErcHystems
^it-
WE WANT YOUR BLOOD
MCnB
ri
GRADUATE STUDENTS
'-^
The following referendum items wili appear on
the GSA Ballot:
INITiATIVE AGAINST RACISM AND CUTBACKS AT UCLA:
F
Do you endorse thg following:
1. We demand annual minority recruitment, beginning Fall 76. of
1.411 undergraduates and 428 graduates, including freshmen
and transfer students, the same as the peek y^Mr of minority
admissions in 1973. until minorities are represented at least
according to their percentage of the population of Los Angeles
County
We demand special admissions for minority. bilir>gual and
working class white stiiidents at the previous rate of 1^
We demand that the University, in cooperation with private
foundations and government agencies, should plan and insti-
tute a five year program of undergraduate achoiarships and
graduate fellowships for minority and working class white
students admitted to the University.
2 i.We deimnd that the University of California implemsfH jNe
reGbnunendations of th^ Chicano Task force Report
3. In view of tne complete leck ef Affirmative Action tn iJO&»A
hiring to this date and the lack of employment for graduates of
UCLA. w# deaMnd an end to tfte facylty hiring freeze and
increaeea m faculty hiring to t>e impMMnied as follows A) In the
ilaiisilwieiiii which have experienced a ^mrp ir>creaee in urKler-
graduate enrollment, such as Political Scienee. chemistry, and
Bidlogy. mcmttm tenure-track leeching faculty positions to meet
the standard of 15/1 stbdent/faculty ratio; B) Decreaee by a
cempus-wide depeitmental average of 50% the student-TA ratio,
without restricting enrollment but by doubling the number of TA
ships, in accordance with the demand of the TA s union, C) All
hiring, whether into new positions created under (3A) and (38)
above, or into existing positions must be allocated according to
population proportions of Los Angeles County of ethnicity and
sex; D) To rectify existing instances of racist, sexist, and elitist
practices at UCLA. ¥ve demand that the following professors
students and staff be reinstated immediately 1) Dr Humberto
Bracho. 2) Ms. Rocio Camacho. and 3) Willie Morten
4 We demand » reversal of the cuttaoks in Student Health
5 We demand an end to all forms of police harrassment of
jStudents at UCLA, particularly of minority students and workers
and leftists Disarm the campus police
~:-X'~
^2rj:
6 We demand that the $405 increase in tuition for out-of-state
and foreign students be rescinded immediately
IRANIAN STUDENTS ASSdClATION INITIATlVi:
The U C -Iran Project attomm ttte tranian Regime, one of the most
repressive dictatorships, to set up a so-caNed "Persian Study
Center" on campus The Iranian Students Association at UCLA
taHeves that such ties with a regin>e that holds over 40.000
political prisoners, moefiy students, and which haaeaecutedover
aSO patnots in leas than three yeers. is. to say the least, an insult
to the studefUft of this University We further belive that the UCLA
facilities should not be put at the dlapoaai of the faaciat regime of
the Shah Do you approve of the U C -Iran Proiecf^
VOTE MAY 5 & 6
7^
i
< I ,1
I ^
Vco Center
Cinema I
. /
lOilN A MAMAN
12:00, 3:30, S:45, trOO, 10:19
Avce
Avco Center
II
'^'••■•ww nttof
475-0711
A»co Gof9»
Avco Center
Cinema IIJ
WiMur* n«or
475-071 1
Porit Indoor Avco Gorag*
MEXT STOr, OliENWICH
VULAOi
te^ly S;55. t.-OO, 10:39
SstASim 1:39, 3;49, 9:99
9:00, 10:29
SEVEN BEAUTWS
1:30, 3:40, 4:00, 3:30. 10:30
Beverly
■Sovooy D^tvo
(•t WlUhiro)
275-44t4
THE PASSENGER
mmn mmd 2. 4:10, 10:19
TH-Sun 4:10
WIND AND THE UON
Mtoo-VVsd 4:09, 3:30
TK-Sufi 3:20
PtKthc
Beverly Hills
Wiiiiiif« Ikd of Common
} kik%mmot lovoHy Or
271-1121
AU SCREWED UP
^ND NOW MY tOVE - PO
M-f efPMi 4
S0t A S«ifiOp*n 12:30
Brentwood I
2524 WUah*f«
•29 3367
RARRY LYNDON
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS
WANTH) TO KNOW ABOUT
Brentwood II
2924¥MWm9«
(«f 24#i St.)
Swrte Monico
a9-33M nj-SMT
GtOOVETUK
- pint
FLE^HGOItOON
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Bruin
WotNvood
477-09M
ALL THE ffRBIDENT S MEN
12;30, 3:00, 9:30, 3:00, 10:30
Century
Plaza I
3040 A»« of 9ivr»
553-4291
FAMILY PLOT
1:30, 3;49, 4:00, •;15, 10:19
MM»-fri 4:00. 3:10, 10,20
Century
Plaza II
2040 A»«. o« 9»mn
553-4291
DOG n4Y AFTERNOON
M^ 3:00 Set Sun 1:19, 9:90, 10:20
* SLEUTH
M^ 5:40, 10:15 Set A Sun 3 30, 8:05
at KofcliKolf toB Off ico
tni Tkkota
Cinerama
Dome
Sun— ♦ noor Vino
Hotkymo^d 466-340)
PHANTOM OF THE
PARADISE — PG
Omily 12:30, 2:30. 4:30, 4:1
3:30. 10:30
MURi«*if SK«w Fri 7 Sat 12:<
Crest
Cinema
) 262 Wotf^i^ood ttyd
272 5i76
474-7966
W.C. RELDS A ME — PG
DiNly 4, 3, 10
2. 4, 4, 3. 10
Fox Venice
620 LiocoM Mvd
)i4^4215
/UoHfl 50
CMM SI 00
•I 1^ Ptna*-
S/I4itai
•/ 1 1 Too*
H/l
Hollywood
Pacific
■S2M
EAT MY OUST
: X> 6 THi OUTIAW
HVf. w&thf fffwvt 12:30
Los Feliz
1322 N Vormont
NO 4-2169
TfWtfi«iMHit't LE SECRET
THE MIDDLE OF THE WORLD
UVIf Sot Mirfilijlll Mly
Ita^is Uffi •! 1*40"
2«l
rt/atnrnent?
A disturbing lool<at Nixon's final daze
Ry A4mm Parfrey ^
Famed Nixon mimic. David Frye, cut a record"! couple years
back called ""Richard Nixon. A Fantasy.** It was an unadulterated
fantasy which portrayed the former Chief Executive as an amoral
paranoid and manic depressive who leaves "Screaming and
kicking" from the White House. The frightening thing learned
from Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein^ Tbc Final Days
(Simon and Schuster. SI0.9i, 476 pages) is that the book reveali
Fryers fantasy as fact.
Those fascinating morsels from Mewswerk are not repre-
sentative of the book Tlie Final Days is not at all pregnant with
such sordid highlights. The real revelations are few and far
between.
The ebb continues too long between the peaks; the pros^ is
fairly truncated, sparse, and bloodless Still. The Final Days
stands as a significant historic and journaiistic achievement.
IVoodward
r^fsmtii^ h^ Hsmy l«lw*N«i«l
Mainly because so man> higher-ups volunteered marvelously
Uboo information on a taboo page of history nearly always
deemed unfit lor public consumption Bernstein and Woodward
seem to accurately recount the mood of the final days nervous,
with a lot of desperate men kicking the law around as if it were a
Whittier College pigskin
There if already an extraordinary amount of controversy
concerning The Fin«l Diw Accusations of tastelessncss and
faulty reportmg have been heaped on the authors, the tw«
brushed them ofT'as j)ureK "political face-saving.**/
Unquestionabry. if Wi>odward and Bernstein had chosen not to
protect their sources. th^> would have been unable to write their
book. But inevitable problems arise: it is likely that their
informants remembered whole speeches months later, verbatim'
Were' the interviewed some undoubtedly connected with the
present administration stili covering up for old skeletons
unfavorable to Jerry Ford'' /
There arc scenes fit for dramatization. A weeping, fetus-
positioned President The hermil-hke Nixon praying in the Oval
office with Kissinger A Nixon so preoccupied with thoughts of
resignation that he attempts to gnaw open a bottk of pills with a
child-proof cap. Ajixious meetings of the President's advisors
severely doubting the Executive capacities of their appointed Vice
President. Gerald Ford All the Presidem's men frantically
searching for a Dictabclt with a conversation with Johq Dean,
and Nixon« cliilling repiv: •*Whv can't we make a new
Dictabelf**'
You will probably jbe annoyed to creep along nearly SOO
opinionless pofcs without much of the oteve*f dramntic focus.
Fair enough This is a small price to pay for objectivity, a virtue
sorely lacking in such journalistic-historical pieces as Theodore
White's The Making of the President series Admirably.
Bernstein and Woodward hold out their facts at an aim's length
Mtf judiciously inclu^ all the right information, some that
would ordinarily go against the grain of the Washington Post
investigative reporters. *
There are no black-halted villains To themselves con-
scientious, concerned and repentant, the politicos and not
without sympathy They all have their human frailties Bernstein^
and Woodward show that ihev are far too frail and amoral t^
command such power.
A thunderoils coirifmercial success. The Final Days is
The Be0 of Tom Rush
Tom Rush
CohmMm
This album truly represents
Tom Rush's best.
The cuts represent a variety
of influences and styles
handled with a pleasant folk-
country flavor. Rush's voice
ranges from the barroom drawl
of "Kids These Dayi** to the
melodic quality of ""Child's
Song" with ease. This virtuo-
tky gives the aHnim a variety
that is not often found in the
works of a single artist.
Though the album lists four
different producers, including
Rush, quality is consistent The
arrani^cments are full but not
overbearing The songs are
well written and even the ones
that Rush did not wnte fit well
into his style Some songs are
thoughtful, some are just fun,
but none are boring
lem aiises with the fact that
their music, on the whole, is
rather uninspired Wil Sharpe
(guiUrist and main composer)
tries to recreate the Genesis-
type story-song m "Everyman"
and "The Dimension Man."
Both songs fail because of
extreme cominess.
The album isn't totally bad.
There are a few good ideas
tiuit are elaborated on and
ffi«e are indicators that Ethos
may turn out good songs m
the future, but for now Ethos
should just be filed in the back
of your minds as a potentially
good band and nothing more.
— Stuart San4a
^and evolves into a drifting
moody composition, typifies'
the excellence of Klemmer
both as a composer and per-
former Simarly, ""Free pall
Lover,** with its hypnotic and
soothing chant, and "Walk
With Me My Love and
Dream," with Klemmer playing
flute and offering a short po-
em, exhibit a mellowness
which by their verv nature take
OACto the state of total rclav^
ation
»
— Scott Rappapwff
Fint C
Let RUen<
Epic
Eikm
Ci
Ethos has just releiiti iU
debut album in hopes of cap-
turing part ai the enhirgmg
group of proflNMive rook fans
Unfortynntely, they never pre-
lent themaeh^i at serious con-
fer the public's atten-
Composed of two key-
hhnrdt, a guitar, a bnat,
drums, aai fifmmt musical
talent, Ethot wmmm to poMns
all iiK iii|ieuienu inii i pr^-
band needs. The prob-
Touch the latest offering by
tenor saxophonist John Klem-
mer. reveals the immense satis-
faction a mellow ja// album
can bring. Every aspect of the
instrumentation involved on
the album is finely done
Chuck Domanico on electric
bass, Dave Grusin on electric
piano, John Guerin on drums.
Joe Pfcarro and Enlil Ri-
chards on percussion, and
Mitch Holder and Larry Carl-
ton alter natiag on acoustic
riiUr. provide the backing for
lemmer They interact ex-
tremely weM together, with
some beautiful dialogue be-
tween electric puino and saxo-
phone
**Waterwheels."* an eXouisite
piece which begins with 12
string gMiar and soft pmno
Although he is in his carK
twenties, guitarist Lee Ritenour
IS currently oik of the busiest
musicians working Los Angelcv
studios. He has worked and
recorded with such diverse
artists as ^9§gy Lee. Seipo
Mcndes. Quincy Jones and
Alphonse Mouzon.
Laal year. Ritenour began
phiying once a week at the
Baked Fm&tm in North Holh
wood with a group including
veteran pianist compoaer
David Grusin m4 aaotht
busv young studio pltV^
drummer Harvey Ma.sc^n. Wllh
this core, Ritenour and
of LA*s fineit iCiaiga men
produced a somewhat borm^
though professional,
record.
No new p^ound is broker^
with the album. The rhythr
tunk druniflNng. is typical (
much rif thp nru ta/z-roc^
music. Grusin plays the obli-
gatory synthesizer and electric
piano.
None of the htgh-qualtty
musicians can he faulted for
poor performances, but most
of the tunes are bland and
uninvolving Grusin's ""Theme
From 'Three Days of the
Condor' ** and Ritenour's
** Memories of the Past*" arc the
most interesting pieces The^
latter, with its overdubbed
chbisical guitars, is relatively
innovative. The rest of the
record is easily forgettable
— John Highhhi
Biack Bhtod
Block Biomd
hioinxtreom
Another itffailge new group
has blossomefi -^n the Latino-
African scene, and vou just
jnight like it. The sound is very
much Osibissa. with a little
early Santana thrown in Like
Otihiiea, the group is , a
haipepe^ ' of different na-
tionalities and backgrounds
Brazilian. French-African.
Afro-American. The album
itself was recordad in BriMvIs,
and the voeals have an Afri-
can accent
lag
IS is
deluded into think-
this is one of the year*s
in jotz, rock,
or anything else But if yoa
SMBethmg with a funky
far your next soul pan\.
'ht check out Black
Blood
— Erk Edmi
benefitting from both its niftv. near tandem release with the
immensely popular movie All The PrcsMtirt's Men ind the
upcoming Presidential election Bookstores arc reporting sell-
outs, and Simon and Sc^jster proaMsc to raise the price a dollar
soon 7
Americans are very resourceful people, they can capital^e on
the death of a President or the death of an administration t>ne
shouldf revel at the chance to kick Diet NiHon around some
mor.c but «ihould;. also question Simon and Schuster's buck-
raking muckraliing ...
The Final Days remainj>» a historic scroll Important, but not
exciting We. like David Frve may have fantasi/ed about
Nixon's last hours Leave it lo Woodward and Bernstein to
iactuali/e our fantasies
Chekhov in Kerckhoff
You have had a marvelous aasoctmcnt of crepes, k^ J
ciaams and coffees m the Kerckhoff Coffee House, but have
ymt laalad their Chekhov?
The married thespian team. The Tyburns. will present
MM one-act piays by Anton Chekhov in the Kerckhoff
Hottie toffight at 7:30 and % Featured are Enc
s miMlili I r of **The Brute** and "The Harmfuincis
af Tnhagn."
*The Brute** is a knockabout Carce about a hooriah
creditor who larks repayment from the mourning Mrs
Fopov They are both chagrniad at each echer*s sMihhom-
aam, which climaxes in a propaaad duel. This scheme it
ddtelad when the brute falls ma^ in love with the feiily
Woman. r^'
An ancient and sjafc UMBfmm aivcs the twenty minute
soliloquy in "The HarmfalMs of T dhacco.** It's a dia-
boiically comic, one-nuin morality play. AdmiMiaa is free
Manns Westwood I
n
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THE REST NUDIE MUSICAl
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FACE TO FACE
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BAD NEWS EEAES
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474-4145
ADVENTURES Of SHERLOCK
HOLMES SMARTER
MOTHER
2:00,
6:00, too, 10:00
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UA Cinema
Center III i
V i^B^Rr ^Mrew^flfo^fi Ave
KING OF HEARTS
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Academy Aw«fd Winner fer
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THE MAN WHO SKIED
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THE ADVENTURE Of
SHERLOCK HOLMES'
SMARTER BROTHER
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END Of THE GAME
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A
Caryer^s *Be Quiet Please':
short stories tall on jeality
Raymond Carver captures
the blunt reality of American
life in a collection of his best
short stones. Will Yoy Ptcsac
Df Quiet, PlesM? (McGraw-
Hill, S8 95. 249 pAfCf). Carver
has skillfully created characliers
out of ordinary American life,
and placed them in the light of
opposing forces. He has cre-
ated characters who are victims
of circumstance, but who are
:t'^:
y
by no metm helpless victtms.
They do not stri^fk against
destiny, nor do they give up.
but rather they attempt to exist
alongside the reality of their
adverse situation
The prevailing mood of
theae 22 rtories is bleak, but
there it 4 subtle optimism
inherent in all of them; these
characters continue to emlure
For example, the waitress in
''Fat** IS amazed at the obesity
of a customer She tells her
friend Rita a conversation that
she had with the '^t i^n:**
*• Believe it or not, he Says,
we have not always eaten like
this.
Me, . I eat and I eat and I
can*l fstn, 1 say Vd like to
gain, I say
No. he says. |f we had our
choice, no. But there is no
choice."
Carver's stories are richly
simple and bi7iirre. This com-
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Expert Alteratioflj _ __
next door to Macdonalds
Discount for Students & Staff
offtattoQ allows m to
the horrors aiid the comf^xi
ties that are experienced in
everyday life There is the
horror we find ki **The Father"
upon the discovery that the
haby does not hook like hia
father because his father
"doesn^t look like aaytody **
Carver makes us , aware that
what on the surface appean
ordinary, is not ordinary at all
Dialogue is an important
component of Carver*8 overall
style, dialogue that is sharply
and strangely focused. it*s
common dialogtie, but maneu-
vered quite carefully so that it*s
simplicity is merely a guise for
deeper meaning
The question that continual-
ly comes up in theic stones, it
one that most of us askrour-
sejves The characters wonder
what IS happening to them;
why are they victims of cir-
cumstance'' There is no answer
in the story "Will You Please
Be Quiet, PleaseT* for Ralph
and Marion Wyman Marion
docs MM know why she al-
lowed herself to have a brief
affair with their friend Mitchell
Anderson Ralph doesr^'t know
either, but he 4fOts know he
must live with this cold, raw
tact.
Carver captures the times we
face, times of burdening cir-^
cumstance His characters
range from the unemployed to
the unfulfilled, so very typical of
American life His stones arc
stripped to their bare essen-
tmls, mtense and immensely
powerful The endings hit
hard, abruptly, to create sud-
den impact We expect release
and we get it delivered in one
blow
.And perhaps what makes.
Carver's stories hit as hard
they do is the simple ^act that
his glimpses of human life
speak . the truth.
Congratulations Steve RIvetti. .
Johnson Agency Man of The Month
Helping to meet your financial planning needs
Save today for a secure tomorrow
The Johnson Agency
New England Life
^ 10880 Wilthire Blvd.
LJL/Westwood CA.
yi--fi«ii:
T
Campiis events campus ev
•NM it iitM 1 pat
lary • am May I
Tyburns aprtormpf Hm
1:30 paKcSTmuM
BBQ
«* ipiaMiiiH.a »oiiy
10' laofw vifw fiuiiiof I visit
—H li Ihmi ft-iO pM twtry WaiRtiiay
aai IJi-liJQ am. svary Friiay kmrm-
tmmit StuiMi Camir ite H^r6 ftm
^Imlkf^ Nialai ttalunng a dumtr
tJD-l pm. lactuft on Turtiisli iaaaaaat
mlirfn 6:30^15 m md ntm documw
I ,
Cinco de Mayo
(Cootinycd horn Pafr 4)
by Vasquez as **a newspaper
that tries to bnng the Mexican
people a full understanding of
how we [Mexicans] see the
world today.** Published in Los
Anfekt, the bihngual (English
and Spanish) paper is sold
throughout the cpuotry>
Dykatra week
Dykstra Hall is sponsoring a
**CiDCO de Mayo Week** which
highlights the festivities on
other parts of campus
Tuesday evening, the dormi-
tory held a "Mexican** style
dinner on its back 1^ wn which
iacjy^d dancers (Ballet Folk-
Tor ico of UCL ATHStf a speech
by Enrique Valenzuela
Valenzuela, a resident as-
sisunt in Dykstra, read a
proclamation from the State
Legislature which ated May 3-
6 as '*Mexican-American
Week** in Calif orma
Last night, the dorm hosted
a Chicano Art Display with
contributions from various
Mexican artists 1n the campus
community.
Hedrick and Sproul Halls
ako hosted Cinco de Mayo
activities — each had special
Mexican dinners last night
Sproul also sponsored a dance.
DaocM
Dancers also frequented the
Grand Ballroom, whert groups
from Sacred Heart of Mary
and Pioneer high schools pre-
sented shows. Girls, wearing
traditional drets and dancing
to Mariachi music brought
strong applause from students
and children in attendance
icandsofiQ^ S3M30
**^ -'Uliil lllllFIIII 1% c«i W yoM M
f, SMt itoi fiatmnn giasiitalial caaiMlaiM
^^^ siMii an Ml laMaa ¥«ii mmmm
siHiiit
pai tamorrow Inttr
l» toej HHoird
-Mmm^Hm %^mm mm May iH^**^ ^^ ^^^ '^ ^
9 IS Iht laat aiy to ragiMc so tM surt (0 "^ * ^~
ii so ai ont of mt loiiowing lemiaao — Nimiipa >n(ormaii0«i ana
•nim Walk asar j»i eoiiy IMaiia. (:ourt M aalwaarallMaif lir araiiMl
^g**?- .•^ •<Mf iufielit and MsKiiliisli m avaHaMi ai. iis
i«Mli| if iHfeM teaturmf iii Ftiiowships and Aaalifantship Saetton
Murphy tS6
—wKKtm aivHBHHp y§Hm naviai ay
traaiid imarnt anil halp you find funding
* * ". Apr yaur lipai Opon daily
I
This IS the place for Rib lovers'
By far the Best Ribs we ve fri^d m L A
Her «*d E>i«iiTiiref
COMPLETE DINNERS
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saMMTSAaa iw
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TUNE-UP, LUBE & OIL $01^
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A-1AUT0SERViCE».
79S7 VAN NUYS BLVD. ^g.. --.-•
ASUCLA ia gatting raady
RETURN YOUR MONEY!
M you tmtmn'X 90M»n a i«d»mption iiinf^i. GET IT NOW! Follow th» mm/
AwlaM on rtow to catcuiaM tof your Mnw — put in th* ncmpi» from all your
purctwaaa from ttw Studanii' Slora trom Marcrt 10 n\fmif* April 30 ar>d turn
it into trw Bomia box in aMiar Stora You'll gat a chaek tori i% of all your pur-
— iftdudma tax — tn mid-May'
LAST DAY TO TURN
IN YOUR ENVELOPE:
1
I
DRIFTWOOD BAR
i«ii >^..i.«< wM JAZZ AT THE OttFTWOOO
^^^ tAY MAPEft AND FtliNDS
V0MPwv v^V^M Si#PB9v Sips ^Vv^Hr i9MI
•VtON
SUNOANGi
liw«9roaafl
McUB'S
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14- 1 6
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KING
454-3100
Ifm
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THE STONER
11 13 SlWWr Av«
WMt LA 90075
477 7339 .
•mt & Win*
fsMl, Oom«« 4 •!
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I
TROUBADOUR
908V SofHD Mcmco m^
I A 37tf-6l«t
Tl»ur« MUy 4 9
MAXINf PIUNMAN A
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mmf 11 14
MOOY lAaOAY
mmf 14-19
FONO'S
LwncH 4*9*9%0r efter tH««tr« •nceret
laetk cocktail wifh Contonoao Cwiami
FO« THOSe WHO APPHECIATE QUALITY
tsoo wfsrwooo iivD 4 aiocKS sou^H Of WII&
:i'
CHAN'S GARDB4
1084s 11 it II ill Jt WaKvd.
474.778S. 474-7784
\
WWW
QYPSYS INDIAN RESTAURANT
i9ii«ii«* Op*M 4-40—
JUNIORS
TM8 IIOLL4 ROYC8 OT D8UCATt88Cil8
2379 \W«alwoo4 Ol«4
<■ . . 47»-4771
,B roy%r u% tioncB Lumh $2 00 52 25 12 50
r045f itn^ktmmk Or O«««nor $3 75, 44 25, 45.25
4 74 0944 W W ¥Mmmm
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M»ty t—»» liii iia ai WLA
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IM7J iwiiiiti* m^ u ai*-99io '*y^^^^^ •
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^OTPOUttl
1023
477-
Na« ImMIm 41 SO
Sm^mnhm 41 2S
41 7S««ory mMi
EAT OUT TONIGHT!
SUPPORT THE Bli
• • I
DRIVE!
T'
"«■
f '
i
•H
CONCERT
i
I
I
t
A
TURKEY RUN
Janss Steps
Today at 12 noon
i--
I
sponsored by CAC/SLC
./ 1
\*
Ashe, Borowiak escape danger
(Continued from Pafc 23)
and there was much enthus-
iasm. I would like to play there
After the disruption at the
tennis stadium Saturday, the
streets of LapM were jammed
with scurrying people and
traffic congestion. Truckloads
of soldiers were in the streets,
according to World Tennis.
Near the Bntish High tom-
mission office, a Black Mer-
cedes with a government flag
was full of holes and parked in
a garage forecourt The army*s
ordnance director had been
shot as he drove from the
barracks
Meanwhile, the Nigerian
government radio station Was
broadcasting orders from Dim-
ka. At Ambassador Easum's
residency, fhc WCT players
drank coffee, played uble ten-
nis and went swimming.
The chaos was over in about
one-half hour, according to
World Tennis^ and the mili-
tary recaptured the radio su-
tion
Dimka was broadcasting
when military men approached
the station with guns He im-
mediately fled the sution for
his home, which was a few
hundred yards from where
Stan Smith was staying. Two
days later the government ad-
mitted that Dimka had es^
caped.
Easum decided to evacuate
players Dibbs, Soloman. Lut/.
Van Diilen and Stockton, who
were suying at the Federal
Palace Hotel.
These players had bcpn re-
laxing by a swimming pool
when # mmti with a gun or-
dered them back tp the hotel,
according to World Tennis
They were brought to the resi-
dence of an Amcn^^n embaity
official where they Hayed the
remainder of their tiae in
the local ^■^'^■*>* in Lagos
tried to pemiade the WCT
players to continue playing,
according to World Tennis.
After all the Nifcrain govern-
ment had plMned Hut event
for momha and spend a great
deal of
VOTE
Gray*s magazine account re-
vealed that the Nigerian gov-
ernmcfnt officials had promised
^Mt the players could fly to
Rome for the next aieek^s tour-
nament on time. The tourna-
ment was never finished in
Lagos The WCT players drove
out of Lagos Sunday mormng
and flew to Accra, Ghana
Two months later the tour-
naments final round was com-
pleted in CMKM, Venezuela,
another stop on the WCT tour.
where Stockton defeated Ashe
Borowiak defaulted his semi-
final match with Ashe because
of ilin^t
The Nigerian experience
would have made a perfect
dmry entry for Ashe's book,
"Arthur Ashe; Portrait in Mo-
tion" with Sports Illustrated' s
Frank Deford. published last
year The book was based on
his life on the professional
tennis tour from^June, 1971 to
June, 1974
msTcmm ,
CLOSET CRACKEP'^ What rs -it^ H is an attempt to-^/|
help UCLAer s who thinit they may be, gay or bi-saaual to
meet m small groups similar to a dinr>ef for twelve straf^pers
It If an oft -campus small . informal anonymous gathenn^n yutmrm
you meet people with similar feelings It will be hosted by
three students from ttie Gay Student s Union The date is this
Friday evening. May 7 Call the GSU 24-Hour HOTLINE
477-7660 for details, time and place Your privacy reepected
Take this small step out of the closet
2.397.52
SAVED
I
for the Summer
Interviews today at
1:00, 4:00, & 7:00 af the
University Religious
Conference
|. (corner of Le Conte & Hilgard)
please be on time or
^ call 479-4139
txzlQlr
CjomcfCidfvfi
\
24* hour phoU) s*rvk«
ot bd oir comero!
Bel air camera & hi-fi is no\N
the exclusive Mission Cpun-
try Photof inishmg dealer for
our area htfust 24-hours* you can have
your Kodacoldr film processed, pfi.nts
made and returned These are profw-
sional quality prints in silk or glossy
finishes No extra cost no more waiting
IN TODAY BACK TOMORROW
Mission Country Photof inishing is noted
for Its quality, service and highly trained
technicians working m a modern labo-
ratory S0€ for yoursetf you wont
wait long' *-^^
'Weekends and holidays CMcepted
/
921
WoircQmerQ&hHI
90024 (2131477 966«or 870 9616
SlvO Lo»
OO0 MiMn MOTHlOv \a\\f<3HH'*.t
■A
u
The Man J.D. Morgan Loves to Hate
Come hear:
MILT KAHN
• renowned sports critic
* author of Mllfs Mirror — a confidential Letter to
Sports' VI Ps.
• frequent critic of Chancellor Young, J.D. Morgan
* Plans to replace Johnny Carson on the 'Tonight
Show."
Friday, May 7
12 Noon
^ Grand Ballroom
Spon<Of>d By Aitocttefl
-ogf*M;s;uiiiwi ugiiiitixi Lu
uncw
■Mfe
\ -A.
'•1 f.
-K^
■* i
1
f
g
o^.
iMMdcRAvr
IMKD
AND PLANT SHOP
1S50 WMtwod Blvd., LA 474-«S$7
FiiMT Craft - SuppilM and immm m IJacfwm WMvtng.
Miff PLAMT CLINIC -TuM. ani Sfli »4 pm
•ring this ad for lt%(i diacount on all plantt and craft tuppiiat
ir:
■i; I
h tournament
POSITION AVAILABLE
— Student Coordinator —
Foreign Student Orientation. Program
Academic Year — June 1976- June 1977
Responsibte for implementation of Orientation Program
for newly arrived UCLA foreign students
20-40 hrs/week during summer
Average of 10 hr%/wm&k Fall. Winter. Spnng Otrs
Stipend
Job Description & Applications Available
International Student Center
1023 Hilgard
or
Office of International Students & Scholars
297 Dodd Ha*l 1
Deadline for return of Applications
May 14
By Mike Tev<
OB S^orti
"Wc wcri over twinging, we
were trying too hard, tome of
the women were tcared to
,4mA mmI it showed. Our in>
experience really killed ut,"
said women*! lail^ll coach
Sharon Backus after her team
was eliminated from the Re-
fiimal Tournament in Sacra-
nento last weekend The Bru-
ins lost the first game 4o Nev-
ada Reno. 5-4, and then lost to
Chico by an identical score.
Prior to the tournament the
team had played well in losing
to a more experienced Golden
West team, 2-1 and played
impressively in wins over Ri-
verside, Gal Baptist and San
Diego State. The Bruins were
batting .320 as a team and had
committed only 16 errors in II
games. But, according to the
coach, once they got to Sac-
VOTE
v,»
We are a group of men interested in forming a
Men's Consciousness Raising Group. We
would like to get together with other men who
are interested in beginning a group engaged in
exploring our male role.
We will meet May 6 at 7:30 pm at 190 Kinsey.
We are^^worktng with the cooperation of the
U.C.L.A. Women's Resource Center. Call the
Women's Cehter if you have questions at
825-3945.
» I
J
s
^'
mBLO CRUISE SETS
SAILTOTOUR
WITH THE DOOBIES!
LiielinC GrabahoUoriifcfin^'the
RMoCruiae The Doobie BroChers'currRil
catch more of the new %%ave of Bay area
on Pablo's very fint voyo^
alhoni frooi
and
FABIO CRUSE
:< ,'•
■ •!^Fi'r> > • wviVPVVTCW
Appcariqg Now:
M«y 7th at th« Los AngalM Forum
LP's Now Only
$3.88
llMStlM^My
$4.88
on sal* now through Monday at
TQRNER RECORDS
WMtwpo<j Viliaga
W— t L.A.. CalM.
ramento they seemed to forfal
IIMlf to do all the things they
bad teen doing.
**lt was an overall break-
down. We made a lot of men-
tal errors in base running and
on defense Our pitching held
up but we didn*t hit oowia-
temly,** said Coach Bakcus
• The Bmiaa, however, were
not the only team m the tour-,
nament that was a little ner-
vous, as Nevada Reno and
Cico committed a combmed
total of 13 errors ajaiaat the
Bruins.
In the fint fame, Nevada
Reno's seven errors were what
kept the Bruins in the game.
UCLA got only two hits
afiiaat Reno and only one of
its four runs was earned All
but otit of Nevada Reno*s runs
were also unearned as pitcher
Kathy Deakms took the loss
for the Bruins because of the
poor support she got from her
defense.
.Against Chico, the Bruins
got eight hits, four of them in
the sixth inning when they
scored three runs to go ahead,
4-2. Lftsa Robarth singled and
scored on a home run by nght
fielder Deakms Then pitcher
Cliarlenc Wright singled to
righK and her sister Jamce put
her in sconng position with a
base hit to left. Charlene
scored on a ground ball to
short by Jaae Beyler.
The Bruins couldn't hold the
lead* however, as Chico came
back to tie the game in the
seventh inmng and then won it
m the eighth on a triple a|id a
single.
Janice Wright, who got three
hits in six at-bats, was the
team's most consistent hitter in
the tournament. Beyler went
two-for-eight, but no one else
on the team got more than one
hit
**The competition was
stronger than what we had
played all year. Tl^ey were all
of the caliber of Golden West,
except for the pitching,** said
Backus.
The team closes out its
SCWIAC schedule with games
against Cal Poly Pomona and
UC Riverside today and to-
morrow. Then, the following
week, the World Series begias
in Omaha, Nebraska — a trip
the team would like to be able
to make and be a little more
successful than it was when it
traveled to Siicramento
Champs in action tonight
Seniors from UCLA's Rose Bowl championship football team
will meet coaches from Santa Monica High School in a benefit
basketball gan>e av^ pm tonight at Santa Monica High School.
4th and Pico.
John Sciarra, Norm Andersen, Eddie Ayers, Randy Cross,
Dale Curry, Phil MdCinnely, Jack DiMartinis^ and Jeff Smith will
try their luck in hoop action against the "no-nafr>e" f&anta
Monica coaches, who include Mike Pavich, former three-year
UCLA football letterman. Pavich is presently head wrestling
coach at the school; proceeds will go to the ^wrestling l/eam
which will advance to a mora aompetitive dtvision.
Admission is $1.50 for aduhr and 75 cents for high school
studentSs
ATTENTION MC-HEALTH CARE STUPgWTS
MEDICUS
PRE-NURSES
Nursing School
Application Procedures
Thursday, May 6, at 4 pm
Med Student Lounge B, 1st floor CHS
STARTS FRIDAY
I^IWtll Imtfi Artists • 477 tSTS
Ja-
il Tylef ana Ms
r
Intramurals
Women
volleybalJ doubles competition
is this Friday. May 7 Com-
Tpietition will begin Tuesday.
May 1 1 The women's swim
meet . wilT be held Wednesday.
Ma> 12 Entries are due Tues-
day. Mav It
on
The men's swim meet will be
Monday. May 10 Sign up at 2
pm at the Rec Center on the
duy of the meet The finals will
he held on Wednesday. Ma\
I2« AM those interested m
playing table ttmnis doubles
come to M.G 2(M) this Friday.
May 7 at 2 pm ready to play
t C oed
There will be coed swim
relays for 2 men. 2 women
teams held on Wednesday
May 12 in conjunction with
fhe men's and women's swim-
ming finals. The teams ma\
sign up at the meet Teams
may sign up now for the open
coed volleyball doubles tour-
nament This will be a tour-
nament held for three consec-
utive nights beginning Ma\ 24
Sign ups are due Mav 20 and
varsitN players are welcome
vacation from UCLA and as S
new challenge He has strictly
coaching responsibilities and
no managerial function His
family will vacation in El Paso
v^hen the local school year is
over Scates already considers
ti Paso mudl- different from
Los Anfeles m terms of vollev*
ball
**EI Paso Willie a shock for
me kaoMHie of the volleyball
media exposure.** said 5>cales
"The people are responsive and
supportive, and volleyball is
really the CMily ganoe in town.
Considering that El Paso aver-
aatd about 4.000 a home
match with a losing ^m and
that the Sol will ke moving
into a new civic center that is a
great facility. I expect great fan
hacking
** Regard less of what happens
with the pro franchise. I will
be ready to work with the
L^CLA team when the faH
quarter begins.** added Scates.
"My goal as always will be to
ifciw' 9^ hiC AA >nhi**
1
MEN AND WOMEN
WANTED FULL TIME
SUMMER JOBS
It you are temporarrty discontinuing
your education and seeking sum-
mer work consider tf^is unique
opportunity Large mternationai
firm tias several full time positions
available in district offices through-
out tt)e U S It accepted you will be
working with others your own ags
You can work locaHy travel your
own state or neighboring slaiM
The men and women we are looking
for are ambitious, dtpsndable and
hard working For district office
address in your arsa or for appoint
men! with our local managif. call
Sharry bstamn 9am to S p m
Monday through f rtday
m LA eaa a23-42ag
In Van Nuyt caM 717 Mgl
m MiiiliBMli Sen caH 372-2137
In
i%u mmJ^ ....
M9id
•AESTWOOD VILLAGE,
T067 Broxton Avaruiaf
UCtAeXfension
in coopsration with tha UCLA School of Law
presents
1
»##•
Attorney Assistant Iraining Certificate
Programs in Litigation
Accredited by the American Bar Association
Comprehensive &-month progranns begin Fall, 1976 at UCLA
For highly qualified applicanliMikinf a career in the
paralegal field
Receive fredueie level inetruction from practicing
attorneys and attorney aaaigtants
Leem nnerketable ikills in trial procedurea relewnt to
criminal vytiS civil lew \
Housing
available
For full dauiH
writs or call
Attefiwy Asstttaet Tf amine
Piigiiwii, UCLA Extansioe,
Suite 214, P.O Box 24M2,
LosAngtlMCA 90024
I?i;il»?f!fl711
iKXAcXimaion comnmng eduooaon
Come. . .
Irainat
uaA
Cfty
St«t4
l\f
-J
f
I
MO
TNIS
'mmm
^P*!
-^i
r
H
I
i
CLASSIFIEDS D
•W-.
AOVftNTISIMO OTPlCEt
•2»-222l
TVI9 ASUCLA
fulty tup^orta lh« Uf*l««r«lty of Call-
A#wifttalf»9 ftpac* will noi bm
cwMMMff tn Mw Owly Bcylvi lo
who di»crliiilnat«t on lh« b««lt of
•ncoolry. colof . notional origin, roco.
or tOB. Wallhor Iho Dolly Bruin
tho ASUCLA Communlcotiont
li invoatioalod any ol Mm sor-
«lco« atf^rorllaod or advortlaort ropro-
•ontod In Ihit Isauo Any p«r»on bo
llovinf that on advortlaomont In thia
laaMO wlololia ftm Boord'a poHcy on non-
mocHfnlnotlen alatod horoln ahould
ePNMnunlcolo complolnta In writing to
tHo Bualnoaa Monagor. UCLA Daily
•ruin 1 12 Korckhoff HaM. 30t W«
Plaxa, Loa Angoloa, California I
For aaal«ta««c« wilt) ftoualrtg diacrlml-
notion probloma, call: UCLA Houaing
Offlca. (213) •25-4491; Woataldo Fair
Houaing (213) 473-
»*OBK N PLAV SHOPS FQP SINGLES
• 1- - 27:i jy4U 4th Friday
• M..:>M:r.L drea 938 1037 3r(l Sal
• VALLEY 340-0441 every Fridny
• SAN PEDRO S47 1656 every Sunday
FRFfMAN INST WotiMood 476 24S3
CHILOfieM. agoa 3^,
aecoplod at tlio lAnlvairalty Paront'a
Nuriury Scliool for aumimor an^pr
FaN onroMmonl. Thia coop
UCLA ttyjiwt. alaff . and tocuMy i
hoa AM/PM aoaalona. For Info coll
lAfwiMII)
ASUCLA Travel
Service is going to
Russia!
UCLA students, faculty and
•tiff Bre eligible to travpi
to Leningrad. Mpscow, Kiev
Yalta. Tbilisi & Viadimer.
July 14 - Aug 5 for $749 00
all-inclusive from London
Call 825-1221 or come to
A level. Ackerman Mondays
Fridays 6 00-400 ■ ^
i^tt.
campus
wedding
announcements
kerckhoff ]2, '
82506|l
EAT Oirr PASSIOMS PCRSOMS
^CRS^CCTIVCS by author, locturor.
counaolor ZIMA ONANO STUDENT
STOfie WCSTWOOO SOOKSTOMCS.
QLlMDALf
10.
ol Itri Mo-
242-nSI.
(1"T)
PORTRAITS z^A
taken now J
for Graduation
1
app^infmmnf
otuc/o
^coffipus sf udio
fbO hfrckhoH hall 623 061 I m271
open mon fn 8 30 4 30
HOW DOES A BRUIN
BEAR DECORATE HIS
ROOM?
^ith UCLA blankets, pen-
nants, cloclc. helmet lamp
and radio, glaasware. mugs.
t>6art~and sl«spa in a UCL A-
nitee.
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackarman Union
•ducatlon
If M 10)
omnonml
MA^PV 21at Saby Huoy atay away
from Long Soocli iMra and laaciwtoua
Mbortlnot 'Meiwfcii piapla look booull
tul wtion you mf drunk
<0M0)
FPANTASTIC Loaor Moy 14 ia yppr
lucky night. If you accopt my invMa.
The Winnor
(OMa)
STANSaUMV Von Boyoga En|oy*
En|oy' Europe with Ziggy
(OOlf)
QUEEN Swoalor Tlianka for my ftrat
pofoonal Vou know wtiora lam. M.W.
(OMO)
MCLLV roily Happy Mm you poophood
LoM Micholla and Mom
(OMt)
PERSONAL growth group Opon Thura
12 -2 Women ft Reaource Center Kmaoy
1.0.53M5 ,,^„^
WOIMEN' We are .organising groupa for
aharing A auppotl Sometlmoa caN con-
aclouaneaa ralatng Organiiallonal
mooting 500 Thura . May 6 Kinaoy 100
Come and aee if you d like lo participate
(• M •)
MEG - To our noat praatdant. Looa,
That Jowlah Kid
(OMO)
• «• •••• m «^
I
DEAR Brilliant Tigger-Good luck with
your algte toat-koop bourtctng-reinom-
l>or Roo iovoa you.
our
LEGAL Rrobloma? Froo logo! aaalatanea
400 Korckhoff 82S-2SM (UCLA Slu-
donta only).
' (0 M 7)
MUNCHKIN:Happy
lor a groot 0 montha. Leoa, 8M.
OMO)
•ffitmtainment
SAVE moooy wtBi over ISO
and antartalnmont dlacount ooupona
unOI noat yoor throughout Loa
Sand $3.06 plua 304 handling
lo l.p.S..P.O. Boa 0772. Morltia Dot Hoy,
CA. m*i f7iri2i
EXCELLENT McCartnoy tieliota (4 of
thomi). WIN aactianga for Chicago con-
cort or boat prtce 300-4503
(7 Mil)
*^ ^ ,^..^ .^>^ T^iSi minOi, iiitl
Wodnoaday aftornoona. Wild Whiat
Bridfo Club loss Woatwood Blvd.
470-SBSS. ^^j^
music
BANJO.
Archlop 1050, with Scrugga lunora
EacaWanl cc
(Mua MO)
for rsffit
•RUIN TV 4 aTERCO RENTAta
COLOR TVS
woolily/ NMfHhIy
OOta^
$7.00/
:
b/whHa T.V.'a • $7.10/mpwBt
CaN: 275-1032
MOTf Our aHcea
ewrvent
REWT-A-TV $10.00
alu4ofit dlocounta. Dolhrory to 0:B0.
>•»;,.
ARROWMBAO epMM In gulpt of«a
•ieepa 0. OOB/2 deya. $100/7 dpya
W7-1407.
for sals
10
rpontlne chain for aala Sacrlfico
OSS. 00 020-0077 ovonlnga and
nr
n? * ^i;
ir RRfWOLE
$1000 It
IBM Typowrllar Mo«fl C" A-1
(10 M 0)
MCCARTNEY mn^ Wlnga
kola Eacollont aoata Ipf
at «ia Forum 003-7SM
for sals
for
wantsd
Texoa Inatrwaioiir
CtMlVliS soo
• 4-lo«of Olock •§
NCViK
ni
BRASS Napd a«id Fsa»aarO fpr a Ml
a«te bod Anlioue t17S.fM Eeoninga
RtOMT young guy tor
backpacking, lonnia.
• 12
Itri
Mai
ELECTRIC RIono Unlvoi CR 110
Eacallent condition $275/ boat of for
C«M 033-4443 ovonlfiga or mubiagi,
if m t«
li
7SS1
a All
•75-
fi2 M tat
JiBiicua
BUSINESS EOUIPtifiMT
11343 Sewie Miimae Pi WLA
CALL ay-yrai 3ai weaio«fte»«oteioP«»y
Pentel Rolting WHters
Mack only - reg. Mt
S9C
^uonttttoa loot
ASUCLA Siiidonia Sloro
Art/Enginooring* Supplioa A
Ackorman M-Th 8 X-7 00 F 8 30-0 00
hsip wsfitsd
l«RAL OfRco
wk Contact
0 4P S. •
Noyoa at
(10 M 12)
Bypueap
STEREO componanta ARS apaohara
(like now) $175.00 Dynoco FM3 tunor
SSO.OSO; FM anianna $7 SO 000-4040
(10 Mil)
BoApct Camanila WInoa
Boi2w.oaptfat.wooi-
Ca«4
(IS M 10)
STEREO cpmppnonta: Slutfontdla-
aOOKCASES, 7 a4 i1 . pirte wood, por-
Oally atalnod $50 each Sabiiai trumpol
racondltioned. $175 473-0000.
(10 M 11)
brantfa ¥tM9^ OBI -BSOS. 001-2023
(IB
MEDICAL TRANSCRIBERS
anood 54.00~a.00/hoiw ^wvt
llf»«_ Culvor City 071-0004 Bnclno^
(to M 12)
BEAUTIFUL, eiguialle wodding df
alaa 10 Muat aoe $175 00 CaUevomnga
no M It I
opportunttiss
$0 15 OO/MONTH Poaltlona avallabia tor
Com far ipp m •oly if
tt. aaW aaOam 470-4130.
(ISM 11)
DUAL 1218 Walnut boae dual covor.
Stanton a beat cartrtdga. OOtESI oppt
S2S0. aoti $150 474-5610.
(10 M 7)
YAMAHA TB-700 caaaalto dock 5200/
offor Kenwood KA 1400G ampllfior -
$00/ offer MaiaN UDXL C-00 caaaetloa
$4/oach Garrott. 4Sf -3300
(10 Mil)
SELL our atoroo and
phono
Do a MWa aandciws- Miba a i
Write: Autfle Accoaaorloa. R.O. Boa
1S7. Manlrooa. Ca. OISBO.
(10 M 17)
MATTRcaaca all new
Fm8
Mag tela - |iia.aa
THE MATTREaa BTORE
itnaPteoBWd. •tSrVanMMya
ai" ■ ■
^•^101
LEARN bffiprovtaaOonot laehnlpua from
Second City teacher Claaa moota:
7:00 pm. Wodnoadoya Coll Stoao
(13 M 0)
^PERSONAE*
C#ntBf of DraniBtIc Arts
Announces
A appcial three wmk workshop
(AavM laih thru 30th)
•ubiBct AUOmON TBCHOMOUaa .r^
The following subiects will bm
covered
BASEBALL Coochoa and Managora
Eiperloncod roeulrod Bovorly Hllla
118 Mill
drl«or r>ol
_ - , ^_ lake VW from Loa An-
foloa te ownor In Waahington DC.
EacoMonl condition, now Hroa. angina,
paint Rollabliity and raaponalbillty
rapmiod. Wnia Barbara Ruaaal. Altlcua
Corp . 1041 No Farwoaa. LA 00048
(10 M 7)
ITIOUS SNiBiwiif CMp not
ameloa Earn $1 00 lo$5 OOeoch Dalalla
204 In coin and atampod addroaaod
awwilapa BNI GInotoorg. Boi 1003, Olon-
dpla. Ca 01200. (313 Eaal Broadwey)
(10 M 7)
*WhBt mo caatlna director la
rldol
In jfour tawy
' w
BOaf 001 'a and othor atoroo cpm
offor or iMBe. CaM Rboari,
'74 LE8 Raul Curioai; Blarahall 100
amp. Imogoatro ochoploa. cry bohy
and Fftaay at S R.ai. CbI
(to M 0)
rsssarch subjsds
BOOEN (DB Wm
and plM»no Inpula.
aflarORM.
FM. $500. 400-2220
ftfl M im mm
SHERWOOD S-7210 racolvor $185. pok
of acouatic auaponalon apoakors $175.
both $340 824-1820. Hodrlck Halt
10 M 10
McCartney tickota Loa Angoloa and
San Franciaco tickota CoH
-2401
*^ <n aa tn
WEDDING BAND- 1 0K gold aim 0% Op-
pralaad $175 wIN aoll $120 Call 478-
)fpra«udy
Rayo $2.00.
(14 M 12)
WORK JUPT THE 8M1WW OF
POPMANCMT PAmi Oa PULL Twm
(r
aurvey at h
1 A«t $3-84 hr
cor.
2 Invealtpetor irameea
pw day I
3 Move kimMiife i4.ia hr
4 Wallers 21 an up $2.80 hr p|««s Mpa
t Dey camp codneetora $130 adr.
T SSSL Oewlae Rep $3.iihr. : '' '"' ■^"
4 Bua nuawa. U-U hr
CALL «rft-4821 FOR APOOfWTMf NT
\SOB
TORY
c«>
ANYONE who hea
fts m ry
ALCOHOL
10 M 10
ria aa ^9\
stia ELBCTRoonca
Tl BR 00 A BR 01 A, BR 02. BR 00. olc.
T(
11
RANASOfOlC Mpneciidar.
aiiwSMIiw. 0» Cat Oeus. 477-0733
(to M 7)
FEJNDER VMafor 12 ahtng end cuatom
caao. Eacollont condition $275 00
4S7.7S70. ,,,^y^
— — Bent. iMMoeieto o^onlng In aeoerty
k^l HBIa lar mm year. He«ra ^ai - itppi
nt $15 00
02-130 CHS. Ray-
14 M 7
(Bmi). SSao p/hr. CeB Mi. TeRBi IRr
IT 277-2012.
_^ nsMjei
Vee eanl leee
I
STOVE. Goa. very good coftBIBen. $00
Rofrlgorelor. $20. Ceo 300-0310 aftar 8
(10 M 7)
RBRBON IP do 3 hr
NoOywoed $2.i0/hr Mvo
0701
#f« M api
(10 M 7)
WANTED fhta 10 le at ler
ang Salary
luturo
Call: 213-000-0740 or
(10 ITT)
(04 hour).
(laUT)
FIVE Ruah aool loddar-bock dining
choira Varnlahod natural finlah. Ea-
collont condition $20.00 oech. 400-
3070 aftor 4:00 p.m. ^^^ ^ y^
111
OaS 47S-4417.
(HUT)
aaponooo. CoN Shpron
RART
14
rpBlPla. $120. Fewr O-BO-14
11010
).«77
(10 H 01
naoir)
ROLITICAL Aetlvlota: Bl
lingt
'a
For
Mm
to the Conlectlona
OepBrtRMffH Of Bie AwWCl»A
atudenta' atore for your
IBeSier't Dey carda and rMbI
LeOo ef fiAce preaenta, tn-
BlaiRia OBRdiia. Open il-Th
Tssa-Traa: F Trds^aa-.a 10-4.
/
ntOkr)
BOB. mgmt oppty. Cltiaona Actlee
(10 «T)
»to^ aoN By HelpiNa Oaiora
HYLAND DONOR CENTER
BAaYSnTER
0A1O
no BIT)
^LASSIFIEOtID
COM 747-3087
(10 M 7)
PSYCHIATRIC aflor
aduita 10-38 Houra and dutioa are
tIaoMa Conlact Jyna. 037-0148 MRPF
ia-4. TTh 0-1 or Torry. 838 tOOa M-F
'•^ (10 M 7)
» ,4-
houra).
ioamatroea te d
piaea CaM Sn*
ri
MSB (BO
(10 M 7)
COUNSELOR. LIvo-ln w/adel. Sin-
gle. ai yra^elder. BJk. end/or oa-
porlonca In aeclol acloncoa. Call
botwoan 8 am - noon. — T tlOl
(10 M 8)
ssrvicss offsf sd
(10 M 11)
LBAT. ORE.
all apBlaete. ReeoonaMo ratea. 1730
Weelweed. O9S-#1B0. 1BB10
037-0474.
MO
UCLA
your chlldran or drtva your
Cooat thia
to Eaat
(10 Mil)
PROFESSIONAL
hew to ploy
fMNpr -^y oar.
■iie. SOI 0000
no M 11)
CHANOE Gomo Toka cRtfife ef
iaL47S41S7
(10 M 11)
010
(parw S mm}, 04S BmOo leSna. OISS
veloe |oB. Free diainaala. feelpry
(ISM^
MALE MIDWIFE
MOVINQ COMPANY
bya
•d a P
biTf
HOUBESITTER - eveHehlo 0/1/70.
WIVWV, VSfy OSpSMSf « ' . WW *OTIMSnt,
UCLA GfPdMRli. PPMI C. Anockor. 347-
B271
riOMIO)
MOVING: Roaldontioi. oportmenta.
ir«o/8moM )aha. Local 0 long
na oart
BALLET: F«n way te Beeuty 1300
Weeboaed. end Unhr. YWCA. 074 HP-
aoYOfveod. 0
Oai SpiiMI mlaa. 2 m mon
weeOly. Irene Berela. Dlatlngylalied
(10 Otr)
(10 M 7)
HOUBESITTER
(IS m 11)
#ia f%»0*
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLI INSUflAMCf
"••-••^ Too NliR7
MOVINa Hi or out? Wo aMvo tur-
Rllura. appllonooa. apla.. hoeaea.
leweot raloa. Iroo oatlmatoa. 47B-
StB7.
(10 M S)
TYPINQ. dictation via phono pr
aeaaotio Aiao logol oaporlenoe.
MIn. ehorgo 01O. OOS-IBSS bofore
0 PRL
(10 MO)
Control Contor of Hollywaad. SS31
Nad. BidlaOia.
MOi/mc?
original-
asRvicca
HAIRCUTS $3 By
(IBQir)
ns Olr)
-1111
(lOOlr)
'i^TON EXPRESS
MOVERS
Ne«oBSS1-3B27
Sf
(10 CRT)
NATIONAL
tha Borrlnfton Ploxa. W.L.A. 11744
Wllohiro - 477-0020. 070-3307 WIfh
aiera Ifiep SB yra. aaporiapaa. Holp
te atady-rolaln-rolaa-aloop Boo our
lalaphana Y allow Papea a4. Spaclal
(10 0»)
IndlvlduaAa. In -offlca or aaall ordor-
iehn (BJL. MJ^.) 470-
(lOOir)
THE aODYMEN
473-
aL4r7-
icss offsrsd
(10 M 10)
V? • ••••e# ssao
RIDING LESSONS
•nia
TtVEINLOBAM-
BNTBR.
17*1
(lOOir)
(10 M 7)
AUTO Inewri
(10QIP)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
UOHTHOUBE RMURANCi SERVICE
leaf a found
I FOUND aOMETHINO?
H^y^ai^e ^noto a pw or orvHO Wi
IR. •••^•••^^fW
i ^uet come Into tNo Dolly Srwlnl
I (naiiaRliO nipprlHiawl and MB «p1
I yoy iRBiil tp piBBP an Bg In
I Leal a FoNRd obNbrR. Aa I
[aandae. JHI JOS FACTORY
Taowmw I , ^w^^mooo Mmo*, RRB fWRl-
^^^ ^m^ LiiM m^m~ y
Wm ^h* ^^ mm m^ m^ ^mi mmm m^ ^v ^mt ^m ^^ ^m ^m.
1
LOBT firldey 22 April Bright groon
473-B^IO.Imlaali HYMOt
ORIVBIO la Wop
12. Would llho aomoono lo af»aro
drhrlng 474-5104 ^^ ^ ^^^
10 UCLA
3:10. Car
1B7S la Jun^1077 . Ill 7SB8.
(31 Mil)
TdF la
2 Islands
10 Days
OAHU AND CHOICIOF
RourxJ-trip Pan Am Jot Rainbow
Sorvtoe mdudlr^o Hot Food wHh
Complifnontary Champagne
5 Nights Hawaii '8 RoofHotol on
faihTki
\Maihilii Boach
Hort^ Car rentat 1 fuN day ijn-
llimtod fniioaga (gaa extra)
Valid tloar«ae roquirod. minimum
drivor age 21 yoan
Catamaran Sail off WaikiKi Bpach
Hortz Bonus Coupons
Full Color Hawaiian Memory
AIDum (1 Dpf room)
Ploaaant SMRBBt Mai Tai Cocktail
Party A WlolCBRta Breakfaat
Exotic Soutfi Soas Shell Lei
4 Nights on Noighbor Island you
taiand Accommodations
Kahaoa Boach Waaort
Condominium
Kauai Kauai Islander Plantation
Kona Kona lalarnlpr
• No«ghk>or isiarKl Flight ^im Aloha
Airtihoa
• 4 day Hortz Car rental unlimited
mlloage on^our Noigfibor island
(gaa extra)
T(X»R PRICE PEFl RWSON
INCLUDING TAX A SERVICE
FRIDAY DEPARTURES
Adtorman Union A 213 with EXPO
MondayfrtdOf^ 10^ aaS-1221
0S.7S. 4B7-1BBS. 2132 W
I >
Sill (dayal. 47S-1011 (eoee|. Wo Mm
(23 oai
ISC
TOURS A TRAVEL
Spring Summer 8 Fall Charter*
Pan*
Munno
f itntifiifl
'^«w..-(ltrlp Irom $2|^^|
isr m^r, TxtnM local a^a
r ■ Owe al minimum coal
' I l> ir 'Ti«li
e e e #
myjc
TO
ESCAPE - SEE THE WORLD'
Wjy
ASUCLA Travwl S#r«lea
uetA
• fSfhIa lo Europa
LAX-AinstardaNi-LAX
• napamwi oof
JunaT 7
Juno 21 11
June 21 12
June2S 5
June 2S 0
June 29 10
July 5 d
Julys 0
July 12 4
July ia 4 ^
LAX-Lofidon-LAX
61081 June 10 11 I
L5a226 June 22 6 I
L56222 Juno 22 2
M MO Omt *am WgMi w
HAWAII
LA-MOMOUAU 8«S WW
roN/twraN
tlons...SATA
1^.
.NilarnotlWNaf
ABK Ua FOR AMYTMflMO YUU
WAMT TO mow ASOUT
continued^
.^^ -iV,
> <**^>m
-etASSIFIED^D
-rf-
J
'i
CMAfl TCRS {pmnmi uttinoai
Owr 3M Hi^lt A dai*« with <»«p«ftur««
•i«v 2 to 2^
^ LON tM 7/0«.10lOi
O tM 7/1«.A^
« 7/9t-%fOit
•4 7/B*-^12
97
41t
41«
col
479
479
11
19
i
9
7
9% 419
9
LAS- AS 7/U6.9/30 •
AMi CM 7/14-9/19 •
Uy|. £j 9/09-tAI2 9
MU EJ 7/O9.A/S0 9
_ JX 7/17-9/13 •
aC M 7/17-9/29 <
CJ LAI- itj' 7^1-9^1 f
ZNM U 7/09-iaiM 19
H A W All 1 A 2 vwMM tromSl99
MYC 1 2 3«M«<it fro«nt199
ORIENT (Many daiM from 499
Contact ASTrA lot ovr 200 offtar fltgMt
with <|aparturat from L A San Franciaco
Chtcago Boston Now York <Mashington O C
'Chanar rag roqutra 99 day advanoa iMMiking
prtc* •ul>fact to 20% incraaae
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL, fciaiiit tromt2»2
YOUTH. Europa i-yf from9907
APEX,22-46 90dayadv t>ooti Eur frotn9440
TAHITI SUPER DEAL 937s
OMOER NOW
TRAIN A FERilY TICKETS, CARS.
CAMPER RENTALS. RAILPASSES
INTRA-EUROPEAN STUDENT
CHARTERS '^
SPECIAL CRUISE OFFER
to )1 or 14 day Cariooaaa'S Amarica cruiaa
on iMia inci air form LA l mia Miami tranafart
QtM no-charga 2-«irti a<r aiilanaion trovn $799
TOURS
JAMAICA 9 days
ITALY IS auf
LON PAR AMS 15 dSyt
MiXiCO 8 days 9199
HAWAII 8 days
BICENTENNIAL. 9
NEW YO«K CITY 9
Many oMtars. long A sfton. budgat 9 datuaa
Ona-aiop sanrtaa ..tor spartdwMa loiiia. cruiaas.
fcoMls. cors. domssiic 9 tManMMoMl Hettvltng.
FBA miC COUNBCLING
TK:te«l DsWwary
OWN M-# 19-9 ALL VCAM
SbitfBBt TrivBl IfcMclatiBB
■S^lSSiUSSHi
ISC
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT
CENTER
SEBVING THF uCiA (OMMUNITV
A ' S ^Hlf NDS
^023 Milgard Avwnu*
»-4 Dally
TOUR9' TOUR9' TOURS'
JOIN US FOR
M«itco by Pnvalv Tram i 7 5/9 $70 OC
La« V»gas Grand Canyon Palm Springn
5 14-5 17 $90 OC
Santa Barbara Soiwang 5 IS $7 OC
Jnivarsal Studio Tour A Busch Gard«n«
5 22 $14 OC
• Magic Mountain 5 23 $9 Of
iNorth«rn California Eip«ri«ncr
5 28 5 31 $90 OC
- Siud«ni rat* non •iud«r«t rat** ••auaDi-
A" lour* inrtud* •ranaportatlon ttgh\
ing •nirancs l»m» anar k* anrt in«lging
on ovamight trip*
Our goal Is to creaia an micrculturai
• ichanga in a ralaiad friandly
alrT>osp^•r« ar>d to do this at a
minimum coat to you
473-2991
"» • •
tutoring
CNIfltSk MAM^srlfi. PiMiliif nallvo
t»«ll-«ap«ftonco4 «rlt^ Call
CroBommi. IMMgyl. •m«ll
fl40B1
MATH TiHoflnp toy MJL
(S4 09r)
tutorinQ
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
S0t7 Santa Monica Blvd.
In
Santa Monica
LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION
TEST PREPARATION
30 hf claoo Bdglw Juno It lor July 24
Taal.
•QMAT coursa bogint Juna S for
July 10 loot.
•SPEED atAOIHQ courto Boglna
J«i«M 2B
-CAREEN GUIDANCE
•29-4429
typing
TYifJSc"
larfii papars. ••••yt. thooas. dlftAor-
talldna Call: NoBa timoff 3tf-3B49
or 3M.3t14. ^^^ ^ ^^^
TYPING of
■Mort
Kdttiy
diaaortationa and
ralos Call
(25 M 12)
TYPIWO
Torifi
T-V
(2ill 12)
LIGHTNING TYPING CO
Thoala tpociallat
Froo Estimatas
PROfEStlOMAL COLLEGE TYPtWO
SPECIALIST
Tarm popors. Thoala. Diaaartations.
Faaturas -Foratgn Languagos, Scio' coa,
liath, TaMas. DtWams. Music, Edillng.
CoufMMSllng. Xarosmg. Printing. SMHMnf .
Stuciant Hotaa 399 31t1
27S-09SS ar 27S-9f|71
/9« nsri
do N. Tarm
ate. Calf S94-
<»o^
RUTM C. DISSERTATIONS. THESES,
STATISTICAL. FAST, DEPCNOASLE.
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK. MANY TYPE
STYLES. SM-Sttf. . ^
)
PROFESSIONAL Typinf IBM
atfucatlonal, aclantillc. othor Oon:t
731S.
(»Olr)
RUTH:
MSQlh
EDITH • IBM. Tarm
diaaartatlena. roaunsaa. lattaN Edit
1T«7.
rsa/pf. IBM Salactrlc. MId-Wllahlra.
ami)
rypwiQat
IMS
2_; (ISQtrl
PROFISSIONAL «rrt«ar wRti B.A. M
Ovar
/
mom
ACCURATE IBM Salactrlc
papara.
talM/Tliowaand Oaks Itraa
20as aflar 3 p.ai.
•0B/49S-
(SS M 7)
THESES, tarm papara. raporta Faat
•••"•"•^ MS M 14)
PROFESSORS wifa apaclalisaa In
lyptfig book manuacrtpla aiMl acHaMny
****• ffB 99 7)
JOB AppNconIa: Automatic latMm am
taahara
tat Judy 472-4771
It)
Can Pat 274-1911.
EIPERT-loctwUcaJ lypa«g-mat*i scton-
lic-lf«aaos. dissortotlona. books days
92S-34S2 avamngs 2gt-20B4 Charlotta
. as J4
PBRFBCT PAGES by proloaalonala En-
s'*'* Omda w/12 yoors aaportanca IBM
Corraci Salact. Chooaa lypa alyla
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houaa this summar in aactianga lar
a pMaa to atay Raiamnaaa iandatisd.
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Lafal Sacratary H^mr eampua. 47S-
7S9S. , (SSMBI
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19991
479-2917
(29 M 9)
HOtiSE
Starting July.
your ha
Uf9 away 9 monoi porlod or lonoar pia>*
tarrad Good r«iaranc«s Call Bant. 29S-
42<M/ 399-4991
r. wMa Bnd two daughlars July
r 19 Contact Qoll Fuhr-
(29 Mil)
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wBB K^MOn AWa. via. ■! ^.4^^^^ ^flft^ia^^k^MBA ^M^M<Ak ^^^a
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19 2 Badrooma. Larga courtyard.
9S2 ymkmfmn Ava. Ho. Wllahlra. 479-
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SINQLE apartmani suBlaaaIng lor aoas-
mar onk Mock Irom U.C L.A Juna 1-
Sapt 1|17S ma. 473-S904 m M ia
la aRam bagmnmg Jur>a
999 •24-2S0B
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(33 M 0)
S249J9 2
UCLA In
4791.
471-
(29 Mil)
WALK to UCLA
91
479-1177
(S9M1M
FOREIGN 9ludant aaaka Amarlcan
vaMMiy to Nva npith wwi pay rooat and
board Cal 9h»r 9 024-1191
(H M i}
GOING on Sabbatical noat yoar? Naad
graduata studani as houaa
Barma Vrona. 936-Sf70
479-
alttar'' Call
(as Mil)
MINUTES from UCLAt SInf loa. fur-
ntaRad ana badroom, luiury -conaa
nianca - roaaonabia prica 2001 So.
479-2129.
(29 O^
(33 M 14)
brIfiBa
tury CMy. 47'
(S9M9)
BTTERNATIONALLy
laia to baayait houaa
cansaci hw L.aa nngaiaa
S19S.
la Laa
SUBLET :2 badraama. I-Mock to UCLA/
Waslwood Vary light quiat. vlow.
Parking. Furmahad $300 not a dorm.
Awallabis Juna 1 Ron:473-0S35^ ^ ..
29 M 10
1175 ATTR Fum lorga ona
aaparala garaga Laundry lacllltlaa.
1991 9o Coming LA. Ml 3190. lar
FURN larga aln«la wIBi aalm MMRan.
walk to UCLA Saoo Ihcl uBBBaa. 279-
3679 or 031 -0490 ^^ ^ ^^
FURNISHED/ Unfumlanad BaaKalar
$140. SInglaa II OS Pool Hoart pt
HERftK>9A BEACH VACATION SPA-
CIOUS COMFORTABLE FAMILY
HOME AVAILABLE MID JUNE TO
MID-AUGUST $2300 TERBIS NEGO-
TIABLE CALL 370-1340
(ISjM 12)
at 474-
rsaai 71
ACADEMIC C
apl/hauaa ta
9/15 990-0971
lor/ rant
7/1-
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(714) 7S1<«724.
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York City (
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999 OAYLEY. acraaa from Dyfcatra.
471-
1799. 47j
474-9171.
pot ok 9 9altalr. LA 00025, 020
477-7744
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111
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1 Badraam . 2 BdBi. A
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(29 MIT)
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BMAnP, apddmiid i badroom apartmant^
conwanlantty localad 9 minulos from
UCLA and downtown. Iraahly pomtad.
now carpot and drapaa. 9729 Clamaan.
479-1205. 030-1547
0 MONTH loaaa Juna 21 Jan 1 Woat-
waad. walk to campua (W mMb) Com
ptaioiy lurmanoa moaam 9 aarm., 2
BaM. atu^.
MOM 7)
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room and board r
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EXCHANGE roalS with kitchon for
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Bath lownhouaa. lurnlahod All coa-
vanloncas. 95S0. Nonsmokars only.
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(29 M 7)
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FEMALE atudant Houaowork and
^^ ^^1 a'f0..oo^a
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KAY Typing. adHIng Engllah grod
■7472.
(29 0TR)
2 MALE Jowlah um^r^m4» noad 2
lar apt naat MO - aaBdng
UCLA. 471-1799.
(99 M 12)
mmm
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(92 m 12)
474-7122
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^ ■
Bmfer Bruin star Ashe recaffs Nigeriart scare
By Hunter Ka|
Spoff1% H riler
On Frid«v, hcbruory 13.
1976 m Ugos. N^sm. fonMsr
UCLA 9Ur IBMMM pfaiyer Arth-
ur Ashe and Jeff Borowiak
were pUying a 9eiiii-ftMil
BSBtch in (he L nsoo Tennis
C1B99IC. the first pfBi9S9IOIMl
tMimament ever to he held in
hUck Afnca
Three days emrlirr. Nigeria *o
Head of Sute. General Mur
tala Muhammed. had been
B99a5sirlated bv Lieutenant
Colonel Dimka. the m^ruiser
•f tlM Niferian. army ioochail
tesni. I —
" Never will Akhc to^get what
tMMMpired in LBfB9. where he
along with srveral other Acner-
icsn p rotes sioMBl stars and
oVer It9 spssMMors were or-
dered to leave the Lsgaa Ten-
nis Stadium by two Nigerian
military officials.
"The locker roosi st the
I agos stadium was filkd with
ammunition.** said Ashe BS he
watched the LCLA tennis
Notices Un^ity Official
UCLA STUOCMT HEALTH SERVICE
OFFICIAL NOTICE TO STUDENTS CONCERNING SHS
SERVICE AND CONCEPTION COUNSELING 4 EDUCATION
(CCCC)
APRIL. 1S7S
EffocBva IntiiiotflBMty . and unM tutlHai noBoa. booaiMO d* i
lya In PspMi liiy tt>a otoaoMM and inoporaB^r ^oM
It in BM SHS inability Co oBoort Bio eooM tff X-r^ya
by roMrrai to tha UCLA Hoapltol and Cllnlct Canlral X-ray
oBiBdttto talll ba raaponalbia for Bia coaM Q^ aM
otolMnod Birou^ Bm UCLA HoopllM's X-foy
including laro-manMiiBfrapliy potior inad at St
X-flAY
CLINIC
t.
ThoBO coats will ba kapt aa low ao poaalbla. tor fHiiiB
Bid UCLA HoapiUil and CHnic 9 X-ray tacMttoa. By
ProtBoatonM Faa for raadln9thafHm9. whtch wMoBilBRiMtoBd
Bm SHS RatfBlBBlM akaady amployad tor BiM
Coats for Ihd ^f^mmX maiorlty of oucti tllnia shouM ba c
9tudonto prtvdM and/or UCLA-aponaoroB^ hsdlBi InoMiBwei
upon tollowlff>g aoMMMhad procadurat wtlh ttta hops ol SNS
UCLA Outpatlant Raglstration and fiUng of approprtoM cMm
SlMdant9 tacad with uncovafod ehargaa tor aucb fibna inoy Ba
by SHS Adminiatrativa 9taff to obtain aoaiolanca Itiroug^
BppMcdbM UniYarsHy apaclal mauranca proaM
Financial AMo. but wIM not ba covarod or raimburaad by Studant
olhar
As soon as It Is known, tha Administration's Nnd< docision w\
X-ray aqyIpMont. %n6 f utura SHS X -ray sarvtcos aapactad win
'EKcapliclw: (a) Chasi films ordarad by SHS Choat CMntc for , .
pH TutoorculoM9 control; (b) FUnw ordarad durtng spaclflcally -ordarad
to Emargancy Room by SHS phystcidNa.
Btey 12BI.
CCEC
Of ^^^ ^fijtBf%tt wM Ba
»acauaao4a
Bif ettrWc appoiiiBudwM oo appU poat claas
tor contracapttve information
on Bia Hfsl ISofitfBy of
halddurtng
noon In SHS
II M.
can not ba
tlwaiy
at.
For tuiBMi
uncartatn at ItiM Bmd ddial Bid status of
SHS sarvtca wilt bd.
BrtBrwiatlon can •2S-BBS4.
team in a diUl match here on
campus at the end of March
against Southern Methodist
University Alihe Iui4 otoppad
in Los Angeks lor a flKm vtsit
beloiT going to MMWaii fm a
challenge match with Swedish
star B^om Borg
Ashe who won the NCAA
singles and doaMes cluuNpiMi-
shifH in his senior year Bt
UCLA in l%5 before going on
to world HBffJBi ID amateur
mad later proffeasiBMBl tennis,
chatted about his Sigerian
experience at UCLA'i Sunset
Courts beiorc practicing with
former UCLA plaver Jeff Aus-
tin
"Wc were very fortunate we
escBped the turmoil and chaos r
at the stadium and in the city.**
saui Ashe **l was out there on
tlie ccMUl playing agsinst Boro-
Bftak and all of a sudden mili-
tary men came onto the court
**l -have )ust. won the first set
m the semi-final match in a
nine-point tte-breaker against
Jeff-
There wert only two British
journalists on hand at the
stadium David Gray, who
writes for a London newspaper
and W(trUi Tennis magazine
and John Parsons of the
Ltmdem Dativ Mail
A thorough account of the
Nigerian tournament, written
b> Gray, is in a recent issue of
Horid Tennis
According to W<trid Tmtr^.
two nnen came onto the court,
an army captain with a gun
and a stick and another in a
semi-military uniform. The
captain stood in front of the
clubhouse 9nd shouted. **What
are you all doing here? We are
in mourning You are making
money Are you all msd?
Please go. please fo."
•*The mitiUry guy loH^tw
leave while waving his gun
hack and forth.** said AsIk.
According to World Tenms,
Donald Easum. the American
ambassador in Lagos, found
Ashe in the crowd and walked
with him to the parking lot
Easum reportedly told Ashe to
go to the AhsenCBM ( ::<f)aNS\
at the end of the raad if there
was aay" more trouble.
PafBBMS of the Lamdm Dmt-
i\ Mail tried to go to the
Reuters office in LagCM I he
military captain hit him on the
baek with hu aick. according
to Worid Tmmi^.
Ashe and BoiMWifck. who
were staying with Ambasiater
Easum. were driven hsck to
tiM residency at nearby Ikoyi.
Beoerding to Ashe
Gray wrote how )ie tried t«
phone Colin Fos^ Reuters*
corrcapondent in La§09. with
the story Fox was arrested.
and when Gray went back to
the office to cable London,
poliBK arrived and paancked
the office, the article explained
i Ashe said he had conducted
tennis diwes jin Nifsris before
the FebntBry-vMit when he was
scbednM ta eoaduct s
for Coca Cols
**! eeuldnt work the
bBBBSse of the disruption.**
Ashe **There w. )me q
tion about whether WCT
(Warld Championship of Ten-
nis) wovid make the tnp to
LagcM
**Nigeria is very apoils mind
ed They want \p develop
strong sports programs and
vimpeie cni an international f
level The Lagos tou
arrangements had been
upon by WCT regarding piny-
liig ccNiditions The State De-
partment gave Its approval and
everything was going well until
Frtdav The crowds were grest
(Conlinudd on Pb09 17)
e
I
r
-.-r
CLASSIFIED >ID
cycloaf scootoro
forsalo
1974 VVBPA Claa, aiad
999 ad./est 9179 471-4B
(41M9)
I
■^m
/
J
I
If s official : Scates will coach pro team this sumijier
mi
3
I
By Michael Sc^dheimer
DB Staff Writer
Al Scim, tfv awft successful coach mi collegiate
volleyball Nitl^ry, will spend hts nff ■iMun away
from his UCLA job as the prolensronal head coach
(or the bl Paa»»jMaf»z ^1 of the Intcrnattonal
Volkyball AsMdation (IVA>.
SoHCt and his UCLA assistant Andy Banachowski
left yesterday for El Paso, and the twosome is
expected to have their first practice with the new
tcftin today
**l accepted the El Paso contract late Monday
night.** said Scates **The contract runs through
September 15 of this year, with no options I will
give pro volleyball a one-season tryout to see if I like
it'
Scates had talked with UCLA athletic directof J.
D Morgan last year about the possibility of taking
the professional job after completion of the Brum
Volleyball season. "'My recollection is that it is all
right for a person lo coach a professional Heam as
long as his collegiate tfKm if not in s^raiLir
Morgan.
**! have no objections whstaticvci as long as he
fScates) IS operating within the rules and regulations
of the NCAA. I think that coaching profesaMNMUiy
will make him a better coach.** added Morggn
El Paso-Juare/ had the wont record in the IVA
last year at 6-18, but club president Wayne VaiH
denburg expects the record to be reversed **l am
delighted lo have a coach of Al Scates* ability
coflung to El Paso.** said Vandenburg •'Getting Al
not only is a prestigious move for El Paso, but also
for the IVA.**
Contract terms were not revealed, btit there was
no denial that Scates would probably be the highest
paid coach in relation to player salaries in pro-
fessional sports
*•! can't say what- my contract terms arc. but the
offer from El Paso, including fringe benefits, was too
good to turn down.** said Scates.
UCLA'S Dental School
The Sol had three coaches last year and several
player problems but Scates will remedy the situa-
tion, according to Vandenburg. **A1 has proven to be
an outstanding collegiatr coach, and I am twc that
he will be abk to adapt easily to the profetakmal
gamic.** said Vandenburg
Perhaps the most important benefit of the Scates
move to pro volleyball is for the other franchises in
the league. Several players might now sign pro-
JetaiMMl Goalneit because Scates is ih the league,
and the credibility of the IVA^should now improve.
"Having Al Scates in the league should have a-
trcmerwiously good effect on the IVA,** said BurT
Schultz. director of public relations for the IVA
**Ars experience will not only make a great con-
tribution to his team, but he will also be an asset to
the other coaches in the IVA, especially in ternf of
game strategy.**
Scates IS treating the El Paso iob as a summer
ViCentinued «■ Pafe If)
<«.<
presents Its
Annual Minority Recruitment
and Open House
Followed by a
Dance for Recruitment Day Participants
,J
Where: School of Dentistry, University of California, Los Angeles
When: Saturday, May 8, 1976
Time: CONFERENCE — 2 to 3 p.m.
CONFERENCE — 2 to 3 p.m.
OPEN HOUSE — 3 to 6 p.m.
DANCE — 7:30 p.m. to 1:00 a.m.
^_l:-
FEATURING:
CONFERENCE
i. Orientation
2. Introduction to the Profession of Dentistry
3. Minorities in Dentistry
4. Question and Answer Session
OPEN HOUSE
1. Tours of the Dental School
2. Meeting with Admissions Officers and
Counselors
3. Application Assistance
4. Meetings with School Faculty, enrolled
minority dental students, and practicing
minority dentists
r
<r
^■i
DANCE
The Student National Dental Association
and the Associated Chicano students will
sponsor the dance
There will be no charge for the dance and Uve entertainment will be pro¥ided.
fr
— Council on Programming —
— Presents —
A Turkish Cultm^l Evening
A delicious Turkish dinner
A documentary on Turkey
by C. Le Louche
A teminjr:
^Turkish Un^niige
Reform and
F^erson Perception**
by Dr D. Cucekifki
UC
TYPEWRITER CITY
4781-7282 WESTWOOD
479-
j
OUVETTI ELECTRIC!
CHANGEABLE TYPE BALL
^At spacing, carry
not $700. not $500: . ONLY
$269
Adler Port w/ case
Brothers Port w/ c^
Printing Elec. Gale.
Printing Eiec. Caic. w/ mem.
i
— May 6.76
6:30 PM
SALES and REPAIRS
rd
MMt«r Charg«
M
Vofcane XCVIII, Number 23
Unh^rslty of CaMbmia, Loe AiygaJia
.'A:-
W«4nMday, M«y f. 1f7»
,-■1
Reagan sweeps primaries,
passes Ford in delegates
ay Mary Batii MnrriU
DP Stair Writer
Former California Gov.
Rortald Raafao took the Iqid
in the race for the Republican
preiidential nomination yet-
tetday. winmng the Alabama,
Georgia and Indiatia phmariet.
In the Democratic race, for-
laer Georgia (lovernor Jimmy
Carter was VB»yrpnsingly vic-
torious in three of the four
primaries, wmning in Georgia,
Indiana, and the Distnct of
Columbia, loting only to Gov-
ernor George Wallace in his
home ilale of Alabama.
On the Republican side in
Indiana with ib per cent of the
total vote in the results werr
Reagan with 288,157 or 51 per
cent. Ford with 272,103 or 49
per cent.
For the Democrats, Carter
had 353,080 or 68 per cent,
Wallace with 76,004 or 15 per
cent; and Sen Henry Jacksop
of Washington, who quit the
active campaign, had 61.104 or
12 per cent.
In Georgia with 92 per cent
of the vote tallied the totals
were: Reagan. 68 per cent and
Ford, 32 pet cent Carter took
84 per cent of the Democratic
vote; Wallace, 12 per cent
In the District of Columbia,
with 45 per cent of the pre-
CalPIRGs may be
started at four UC
campuses by 1977
ay HiH Wolpert
Oa Stair Reporter
Califorma Pubbc Interest Research groups fCal PI RGS) wrtfhc
esubhshed at four UC campuses by next year if the Council of
Chancellors approves the plan, according to Don Lesser,
financttl supports, .commissioner
Lesser, who headed the CalPIRG dnve at UCLA last year,
said that CalPIRG has reached a compromise with HC President
David' Saxon
Lesser is currently running for SLC President His opponents
are David Brown, Gerald Hale. Meg McCormack, Victor Nunez,
Howard Schneman and Scott Taylor.
Approval is uiJl required from the individual UC Chanccllortj
who will jointly consider the Saxon plan at their May 5 Council
of Chancellors* (COC) meetiag, according to CalPIRG spokcs-
■an Charles Feinstein ^
PIlfGs were inspired by Ralph Nader as "an attempt to
institutionahze the spint and enthusiasm displayed by college
students,** Feinstein said..
PIRGs engage in public interest projects and lawsuits in areas
:h as jMising discrimination, illegal banking and lending
practices, pollution and many other consumer protection fields.
Neither Lesser nor Feinstein would reveal the terms of the
plan, but called them ''quite fiai; certainly workable **
It was learned, however, that the proposed CalPIRGs will be
patterned after the already existing Minnesou PIRG. and will
involve a quarterly laaa^auon fee increase of SI. 50, Lesser said.
Feinstein said, "Bob Johnson (DC vice-president of university
relations) and Ad Brugger (UC special assistant for student
affairs) agreed that this was a fuic compromise, aad Saxon
indicated that it seemed reaiaeabte."
Fee kmamm
Regent approval will not be naoessary feHHise the fee increase
will be voluntary, apccn-ding to Feinstein
**University HaJI is now trying to sell what they*ve worked out
with CalPIRG to the Chancellors of the campuses involved.** said
Feinstein
These caflBpuses (those on which the petition received the
sapport of at least 50 per cent of the students) are Los Angeles,
San Chego. Sanu Barbara and^bma Cruz
The compromise which University Hall (Saxon's UC adminis-
tration) will present to Che May COC meeting was characterized
by Feinstein as **in between ri^ policy and simple suggestion **
Although only four UCs will have PIRGs, **Once University
Halls sds this policy, it will be a lot easier to^ organize PIRGs at
other UCs heouise students will know that Uieir effort is not in
vain,** Feinstein said '
Unilonn
Gaidelines for the esublishroent of such PIRGs will be
epifonn — protMibly either a 50 per cent vote in a referendum, or
9B per cent in a petition drive,*" Lesser said.'
Feinstein added that *^ winter Quarter of next year, we fully
expect to have a satisfactory funding mechanism.
''This will enabk the four VC PIRGs to pool their resources,
laraia^ a statewide system to coordinate the lacai» ftadaat ma
cincts counted. Carter was
ahead for six delegates. Repre-
sentative Moms Udall of Ari-
zona for four Ford ran un-
opposed in the D. C. primarv
And in Alabama, with tour
per cent ol the precincts
counted. Kcagtfn led with 22
delegates. Wallace led in the
Democratic primary by 15
deiqgalcs with 39 per cent of
the precincts counted
Rogers Morion, Ford's cam-
paign manager, said Reagan
had **A sudden, and I hope
temporary, advantage How-
ever. I remain convinced thai
we have the potentuil for a
first ballot victory in Kansas
City -
Reagan*s triple wif| in yester-
aay*i pnmanes puts him ahead
of Ford in committed delegate
vote totals however, there arc
254 uncommitted delegaiM in
New York and Pennsylvania
who will almost certainly sup-
port Ford at the convention
Either Ford or Reagan will
have to have 1,130 delegate
votes to gain the nomination
oa piwio
ol
f994 ay U
night In
Morton said the Ford cam-
paign will start moving to nail
down uncommitted Repub-
licans "We will move to tie
down the technically uncom-
mitted but strongly pro-Ford
delegations m the Northeast,"
Morton said
Following his three wins.
Reagan said '*it takes some
time for the Kisueii to register,
and added that he thought
the momentum he gained from
Civil rights activist here
by HaJ Eckal9ln
pu*h#0 nan
his Texas landslide had helped
him wm Tuesday
/'We're both going to go to
the convention with a u/cabic
bloc of delegates.*^ Re#.gan
said
Morton said the Indiana
results proved cross-over voj-
init was a mounting problem
for the President, especially in
view ol the (act six Republican
primaries rrmam wherein such
JCootmued on Page 1>
Carmiciiaei to speak at noon
By Kcr Garin
DB StnfT WrHcr
Stokely Carmichael, the po-
litical activist who gained
worldwide prominence with his
extensive crusades for civil
rights, will speak at noon to-
day at Janss Siipa.
Carmichael, who is in town
alter giving speeches at UC
Riverside and LA City College,
will paahahly speak about his
latest venture, a march in
Washington. D C. later this
month, according to Black
Student Association (BSA) re-
proaalatives here.
The march, part of "African
Liberation Day" activities is
designed to give moral support
for those African nations now
fighting struggles for indep-
endence
Carmichael, 35, graduated
from Howard University in
1964 aikj from there emerged
as one of the nation's social
militants.
He cofaMndnd the Student
Non-Violent Coordinating
Committee (SNCC) He was
also one of the organizers for
the *'MisSimippi Summer Pro-
ject of 1964," which taught
Blaelts hoW to read and write
in order to becowc ehmhle to
vote in the nafiaaal CTBCtioBi
ai that year.
"The first Black Panther Par-
ty was a direct i^uh of Car-
BuchaePs construction at the
Lowndes County Freedom Or-
gaaization, the si air faction
which helped to elect the
South's first Black sheriff since
tkft Reconstruction, according
to the BSA
the famous ''Memphis to
Montgomery March** in 1966
During this march, the term
"Black Power" was first heard,
the BSA
In l46S, he creiH^ed the Bhick
United Front and he also con-
tributed in the campaign to
attempt to **Free Huey** (Black
Panther leader Huev P New-
ton)
Though he resigned as Prime
Minister of the Panthers in
1969. Carmichael still con-
tinued his political quests,
forniing the All-Alncan Peo-
ples Revolutionary Party in
1971. the same party organ-
izing the Washington D C
march
Now a resident of (fuinea
along with his wife, singer
Miriam Makeba. Carmichael is
currently seeking to liberate
African nations from their
mother coantnes Carmichael,
with Charles Hamilton, wrote
the book Biack Power and also
wrote the book Stokelv
Speakx fntm BUuk Power to
Pan- A frit amsm.
His appearance today is
sponsored by* the ASUCLA
Speaker*! Bureau and the
BSA
mmm
mmm
i
1,
State files fully open
UC faculty files half open
■■''X
\ SACRAMENTO
liC
lAAfl lilcfuay us lac
tiK inicgrity 0f Uic p«er
MaB> Mirve faculty m^mbert
ta mmkt gmemi eval
itnlet^ ftuch Lommtntt
wottid
lOAN
CMS
TUNE-UP, LUK t OIL $04^
\Ageki> «as ap^rove4l 6-0 ^ tile Scaau
^tc afracies. lada^i^f tke t'sivMtt^ of
^'^ "' "" pcnooal ftipi
Ike Ml m
Jerry §ro«a last year
lOI
35
■I
19S
A-1 AUTO service;:.
894-7075
7957 VAN MIYS ILVD
DMd Witom dHMrman ol IC
Scittte, WMd earlav tftm year ""Our abilicy to
idea the ten availaMc ulent w^mld 49elmt or
<Hiappcmr *
TiK IC Student Lo0^ totd the kgisiaUve
caaHMMae yantercUv that the measure **4oet not
fa iu' esM^*' in alio wing faculty aoaMi to
4km Stm. LaMyMi Jady SamMelMa ilpuLj
to hairing a depannnenta] tumniary oi tile file
iIk actual mater tai open to faculty
,J
The bill however, pro^idci IC
only partial aoeoa to tiKv iin. Vi
^t^^ «^^M^^^M«' l-'€* ^^^^h\- ^M
to fee their paer evahHMw pfaparad by
depitrtaKat la aMstioa. aay ialoraMtioo
tdemtiMng the wa of the coaHKai apoaM^
deified froai the swaaarw
Roben:\ Mi or^M«y re^iimd Ml 4li^
oi imtmkp tOHve fiks Hoawcr, a was
leaded earl er this aiath t<a
object loai l^aai the I mversits
files to faculty may be the only way of
^aianBHMig how much weight depanroents
accord to teadHig quality aad reviaw.
Studeat fcprcjenuuves are convinced
Hdfcfs , btemmt of over-emphaaM on
aad the personnel review proaaaa,
they ooaoade there at ao sure way to
thtt
The AflKncan Civil Liberties Lnion (ACLL)
to the bill because its author
local law enforcement records
bdore the committee vale was ul^^m.
Thtf caused the ACLL'. tu nia|or i|whoc* to
testify m appaaition. chargifig the police are the
Amnesty opinions
more lenient now
SAN FRANCISCO LAP
y^ar atei the CoaiHHMi
over of Viet&aflL^ CaMi
attitudes are
draft evaders
according to a Cahforma poil
34 per cent in 19*^2
Sc%emeea per oeat believe
deserters should receive un-
Fifty-fow per oest off the
peop4e pa^llcd feel asaesty
should he'graated to draft
to 33 per oeat heUevuig they
flbai^ be pvpished like or-
dinary deserters with pnson
■^-^—
•.■;^.
Cbe jBtiliiraifburg
Inn
u
H.
vice jobs for two to thfce
yean
That M up from 50 per oeas-
!« tf^4 and ^ per ceaf ai
Fom-<wo per cent believe
Krmy deserters ihoyid receive
amnestv with alMraate service.
up frofB 3*^ per eeaf la I9'^4
o
117t5 NatioMi Blvd. Los Angeks
Pnroc Rib S4 95 from 5 to 7
Ed Hollingsii^onh and CaroK
Fn A Sat Nights
>o per cent support
iincoaditioiu! amnestv for
evaders, up from P per
ai 1974 and 16 in 1972
la 1972. 25 per ceai favored
A paiBihmi m for draft eva-
that ciimbed m 29 per
oeat HI 19^*4. but dropped tc
18 per cent in the latest poll
*"The trend toward public
laypoft for amnestv appears to
reflect a growing belief by
maov people that those m eaak
or aaderpound have already
paid a heav^ prKe." pollsier
Marvin FkU said.
"^Former President Richard
N mod's pardon for any cmnes
he may have coaMuoed m the
Watergate affair aad to the
tight sentences grven to others
involved in recent haaaKss and
rnnplniag aio doubt
have a htarinA on the
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
xcvm.
May 5. 1976
9na 9M-
^ m9 ASOCLA
Ottrnmuntcmttorn
TS7S Sr sw
ASUCLA Comm%/ntcatiof*9 Bcm^
Smcomj ciMf potwa* pBfO t 9m Lm
I -L
ALL UNUERGRADUATES
. Positions Available For
Student Parking Review Board
Residence Hall Assignment Review Board
Judicial Review Committee
%
Applications available now in Kerckhoff 304.
Applications due Wednesday May 12. 1976.
■f
Blood donations drop
After topping itsi|iioca lijaadiy. t^CLAH Mood Driie
fell below expecutions yeitaaday, but officials are con-
fident ktudcnu Will turn out strong dunng the final thiae*
da)rs oi the drive
Approximately 120 donated blood in Ackermaa Uttson*s
WoaMa*s LaMipe yesterday. , Volunteers were hoping to
obtain 180 donations Nora Munn, chairman of the
volunteers, said, ''We're hoping for an increase and we have
expanded our facilities from nine to 12 beds for Wednesday
and rhur!kdtf> and 15 beds for Friday**
Operations were normal at the Medical Center Muocnt
Lounge where daaattaas aiere fbout as expectad. "Here,
our bads are staying full.** said volunteer Chuck Collins
The blood drive helps support the Los Angeles-Qrinfr
County iUipaaal BUhkJ Program, which requires over Idii
pints of blood a day. County vehicles pick up the donatiom>
my times a day for quick delivery to hospitals and Red
H
f
Some of the blood, according to Munn. "has to be
pr ssed immediately for patients with clotting and
The blood drive will continue through Friday at three
locations Ackcrman Union. Second Ixvel. the Medical
Center Student I ounge, aad at a tent set up in Schocnbcrg
Quad Most are open from 10 am to 2 30 pm
1 he only requirements for donating are that one weighs
110 pounds aiid is 17 years old 1 he opasBMn takas JO
mmutes and there is no pain or side effects
,.!'
Colleges propose essay test on SAT
(CPS) - Getting into college
fiuy involve jumping through
one extra hoop t^ollcge ad-
ministrators, hounded by em-
pioycrs complaining that col«
lege gcads can't write and faced
with declining Scholastic Apti-
tude Test (SAT* scores, are in
turn leaning oh the testers
ihcmsclvcs.^
What thev are proposing is
that SAT tests include jni lessay
test to show whether prospec-
tive students are capable of
writing a group ol sentences
that make sense That strategy.
they hope, will force nigh
icheoU to put rhore emphasis
wnting skili^ if they have
any hopes of sending their
nmduates on to colleae.
SATs currently include En-
glish tests, but those tesu aff^
given m a standardized form '
and corrected by computers
They arc multiple choice or
yes-no questions, emphasizing
grammatical skills rather than
organization ir
But wnting skill, some edu-
cators say, can only be tested
by asking a student to write an
essay that challenges him to
order his thoughts and clarify
ideas.
The College Board, which
oversees most testing done for
colleges, has come up with
four options to include writing
tests in Its battery after some
polite pressure was applied by
Ivy Lxaguc educators and oth-
ers at regional hearings early
this vear:
The options range from es-
says that would be graded by
the College Board. To writing
sample^ that would be l<
iected -on the tests and tor
warded to the students* college,
and porttolios of wnting that
would be reviewed by the
Board as well as the studer^ts*
college.
No decision will be made
until September, but .mean-
while, some schools have he«-
comc distrusting enough of
SAT verbal scores to start
administering eiiay .admissions
tests of their own.
For iifsunce. the University
of California at Berkeley re-
quires students scoring low on
the SAT verbal test to take the
school's own English lest,
which instructs them to wnte a
complete essay.
Surprisingly, while about
halt the freshmen are required
to^tdke the University's test
because of low SAT scores,
almost a third can later write a
clear essav
If the College Board decidci
to include aisay tesu in lU
package after next fall, it's
prohahle that the taslen* prob-
lems won't end there A Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania ad-
missions officer: Carol Black.
IS already speculating bn how
nvuch value the results of the
etaay test would have
Essay tests were included
with the SATs uatil 1968
when they were dropped be-
cause colleges were disfvgard-
iii^ them or minimizing^ their
importance because of what
were seen as basic huifaafe
differences throughout the
country.
an Wins
(Cowtioyed from Page I)
party crossover-voting is al-
lowed
He said that with Waiaar*s
appeal deteriorating, his for-
mer supporters are rallying to
figin **The Wallace demise
has accrued to Reagan's bene-
fk,** Morton said
The Indiaoa lass would be a
setback but not a knockout
blow to Ford, according to
Morton. **The public expected
it and it's nothing we can't
recover from," he said.
Jimmy Carter said in At-
lanu that Reagan's primary
showings put Ford in peril **l
thir>k this IS going to piit Ford
on the defensive; I think he's in
trouble.** he said, adding, "*!
just want to make sure that
whoever gets the Republican
nomination has to face me.**
Prior to Reagan's win in
Indiana, the Ford camp had
dismissed Reagan's wins in
Southern states, saying he was
a **regioiuil candidate** and that
the victories were to a great
rtcgrrr due to Democratic
craMover voting.
But with FonTs loss to Rea-
gan in Indiana, a state right
next door to the President's
ova Michigan, Reagaa'i_ po-
tential vote-getting strength
an uoanttcipated threat to the
ix^mrntum of the Ford caoiH
pdign
Due to Senator Hubert
Humphrey's announcement last
Thuriday Hidl he would aat
saek the Democratic nomiiui-
tion, and Senator Henry Jacfc-
son's wiHidnmal from active
cainpaigning, praspactt of a
convention have dim-
the Democratic
IS SldWly BUI
Unless newcomer Calilomia
Governor Jerry Brown or Ida-
ho Senator Frank Church
nuikes an unexpected strong
showing in later primaries.
Carter wilt soon have one third
of the 1.305 delegate votes it
will take to nominate him
Church's first primary con-
test comes May 1 1 m Nebras-
ka, and Brown*s is in Mary-
land on May 18
Carter received the enoone-
ment^of campaign dropout
Senator Birch Ba)rh of Indiana
Monday, and of Texas Senator
Lloyd Bentsen on Tueidav. ,
Both Reagaa and Ford have
coticent rated their attaeii ^n
Carter Raagaai said he would
he belter able to defeat Caftar
in November, explaining that
since he had no Washington
Ties, he could get out the anti-
estabhshmcnt vote.
Dorothy Nelson,
law dean at
ttbd of yMterday't hair?
liAIC TODAY
For what's happening now
styltng for mmt mid woman
Jarry Radding's Jhirmack products
For appointmant ciril 47S-6151
•uas. thru sat.
30)0 - OFF first haircut
with this ad
«
1105 Gi«n<k»n Av« WMtwood Vill«9«
to speak at noon
Dorothy Nelson, dean and professor of law at the USC Law
School will be speaking today at noon in the Women's Resource
Cemer, ILuisey 190. on the topic of **Refkaiotts of international
Women's Year"
A long-time advocate of women's rights. Nelson wtU also talk
about women's roles and nghu in general \
Nelson has served on various committees of the American Bar
Associatioiu including the eommittec on education m judiciai
administration, which ihe chairs.
In Los Angeles, she tenwl on the Employoe Relakabos Board
and the Mayor's Ad Hoc Committee on City Ftnanee. She it ako
the treasurer of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha*i of
the United Sutes, an iaaependent world relifKNi which believes
in the unity of all people and the abolition of all prejudices
Nelson was aaawd Lom Angeks rimes Woman of the Year in
lf|A. She has also reoeivad tiK UCLA Law AlumniH of the Year
ifward in 1972. the UCLA Proiwiinail Achievement Awards in
I96«. the 1973 Torah award — a Umversity of Judaism
Hiuaanitanan Award — aad most recently the Madaihon Award
from the Worid Peaoi! Through Law Cemer in ff75.
She also ptesidsd as co<hairpatiati of a paaal for the White
HoMe conference dn children in 1970 and wat a rcpctaeaUttve to
the International Women's Conference ia Mexico last year:
Nelson has been dean of USC^s Law School for ten years, the
first wMsan to hold taoh a position Her publications iscltide the
Judicial Administration mA The Admumutration of Justice,
Committee on Public Lectures
And
Cultural and
Recreational Affairs
Present
Ruth Mintz
In a Poetry Reading
Thursday, May 6, 8 p.m.
Sunset Canyon Recreation Center
eiiismBmgnT
around Carter.
-J.
i
«
t
4{
•1
^>m
"Create Your Own Jewelry^
I BEADS
of every Variety
GLASS • BRASS ' BONE ' STERLING
SHELL ' STONE * WOOD * TURQUOISE
AGATE • NUTS * PITS * AI^ETHYST
• PUKA •
JEWELER'S EMPORIUM (R)
6013 Hollywood Blvd.
Hollywood, CA 90028 .
463-4855
J
1
*7
The African Studies Center
presents
Glen H. Cannell
, lecture -
So/7 Problems
in the Sahel
Wednesday 3:00 pm
2150 Bunche Hall
Any Couple Eligible
DATING?
MARRIED?
Participate m^ Special Study of Romantic Relationships
stt' r" ,<'>v ' oupi<e 5«*l^o
«vh6 cam participate?
Dating living luuflhe? enQHQfii o' nifi^ttft "jpt
>>a» dated at least 6ric<»'
WHAT DO VOU DO? , ' '
: aliit- >iH partne* Eachot you w(it t>e9ivena
* .»| qu^s;
WHAT IS It A»OUT'>
T^ questionnaire covers <i broad ranye of topics T^ii MClMdes questions of ^n
mtim^e ano c tiai natiiie Your ansM^ers will be li«p^ stnctly anonymdus
«^HAT DO YOU ^fc ; -. - ' : .■ - _^ __________ ' - _
EatM p**»^on Will t)»- jMid St M and will also- receiwe a full %itmmmrsi n( irm
rfnmarct) results
r WHEN DO YOU SHOW UP ANO WHERE''
I Curr»e wtth yon' i n-'Mf-r )c fhif large i»>( Ui<*- -x/" m hram Hall ^SygnoicK^
T '^ Ro9m 1 1 '8 S^^ '^ :
^^Thursday May6
t.rn*^ r>»^»weer! p rr and lOp m on the dales I
lay May 10 Thursday May 13
For more informalion cati this number in the
Psychology Department 825 2039
Refreshments Served
SAVE'
POTTERY MAKING CLASSES'
Saturday
Tuesday
\Medn6sday
PLEASE
'Tuition
lot
Lei us gel you
THF POT FARM
STARTING
mmf 7 to noon 6 Weeks WHEEL I $45.00'
May 15 10 noon 6 Weeks WHEEL 1 145.0
May 10 74) PM 6 Weeks WHEEL I S45.00
Mey IB 7 9 PM 6 Weeks WHEEL i $45.00
May 12 330 5 PM 6 Weeks CHILDREN S WHEEL I
jNo Practice Time tor Kids) $29.00
CALL us FOR COMPLETE CLASS SCHEDULE
tools, clay giaxes. tirtng. mrni practice lime All cloaaes Hmlted
I »• conlirme^ only MpMi leeelpl el M%
m Pie tun of melting your own ppMtrt MOW* Owr
I starls nghi at the beginning'
SANTA MONICA
2909 SANTA MONICA BfrVO
|AT YALE) 90404 .
828-
7071
OPEN 'DAYS
CALL
Now for
Brochure
& Info.
mi n
10
CA
(213) 47t-7M|
II
2^
Plays win cash awards
Local writers honored^
pp Stair Writer
The ii'inners of the 20th
A nnuar Samuel Goldwyn Writ-
ing Awardi have been an-
nounced by Charles Speroni,
of the Colkge of Fine
Am, and all three are from
UCLA
This If the fint year UCLA
itudenu have swept the con-
test, aithoufh the competition
House overrides
child care veto
WASHINGTON (Af> The House voted 301 to 101 Tuesday
to override President Ford's veto of a hill providing $125 million
to help the states meet new federal standards tor child day^care
centers.
The measure now goes to the Senate, where a vote om
ovemdmg the veto is expected Wednesday
In vetoing the bill last month. Ford said it would ^'perpetuate
rigid federal child day-care standards for all the states and
localities in the nation, with the cost to be paid by the federal
taxpayer (CcMrtiiiuedon Page 17)
Campaign subsidy passed
if open to ' all UC studeou.
George Moran, a fraAMe
tudent in theatre arts, took
.he $4,500 first prize with hu
itageplay. -Upward Toward
Lethe.** wh^rh was piaMBtcd
here earlier thif year.
The two iicoai plaee
jwards at $1,000 each were
given to Erwin Washington, a
graduate screenwnting student,
for hit screenplay, **The Rich-
eat Maak Man in the South,**
aai Geoffrey Hanson, an un-
dergraduate in motion picture
and television, for his screen-
play, **The Lincoln Brigade**
Ninety manuscripts were
submitted for the conopetition
last fall. These were screened
by theater iuis faculty mem-
bers.
The winners were selected
(Cmrtinsad m Page 7)
WASHINGTON (AP) The
Senate passed and sent to
President Ford on Tuesday a
bill that would open the way
for a resumption of federal
campaign subsidies for pres-
idential candidates
The vote was 62 to 29. two
more than the two-thirds vote
naadcd to override a veto The
House passed the measure
Monday 291 to 81
A key part^of the bill is a
restructuring of the Federal
Election Commission in com-
pliance with a Supreme Court
decision, so' that the federal
money, spigot for presidential
contenders, cut' ^^off since
March 22. can be turned 6n
again
_ Bui the bill also makes many
Qther changes in campaign
finance law that opp.o^ents
contend would undermine the
independence of the FEC. add
to the political muscle of labor
unions, and increase the ad-
vantages of incumbent office-
holders.
Ford has said he will care-
fully review the legislation, a
compromise of separate bills
previously passed by the Sen-
ate and House, before deciding
whether to sign or veto it.
He repeated l\ urged Con-
gress |ust to past a bill re-
constituting the FEC to com-
J
ply with the Supreme Court's
Jan. 30 decision that all six of
the agency's members be ap-
pointed by the President.
The 1974 campaign finance
law creating the FEC provided
for appointment of four of the
members by Congress The
court ruled this was uncon-
stitutional because the com-
mission performs executive
functions
Just last week. Ford issued a
statement protesting that Con-
gress was ^ introducing con-
fusion and uncertainty into this
year's elections by making ma-
ny other unneccessary changes
in existing law
He has^ received conflicting
advice from Republican con-
cessional leaders on whether
to sign or veto the bill
Senate GOP Leader Hugh
Scott said he thought the bill
,was the best the Republican
minority could hope for and
advised the President to sign it.
But the Senate Republican
whip, Robert P Griffin, said
he favored a veto and so did
Rep John J Rhodes, the
House GOP leader
Rhodes called the bill **pro-
union, pro-Democratic, and
pro-incumbent.**
Former California Gov
Ronald Reagan. Ford's op-
ponent for the Republican Pre-
sidential nomination, has also
urged a veto.
Passage was delayed 24
hours when Sen. Lowell Weic-
ker, R-Conn., began a fili-
buster on the bill. He ended it
when the Senate agreed. 91 to
0, to the principle of quick
action on a number of so-
called Watergate reforms.
Meanwhile, the FEC. an-
nounced Tuesday that &ndi-
dates have filed new requests
seeking Sl.B^ million m funds
that would k>ecome available if
the bill becomes law.
Sen. Frank Church, D-Ida-
ho, one of the candidates,
announced he wa$ dropping
plans to campaign in the Qqu^^
necticut primary, prihiarily
because of the logjam over
campaign funds.
Voter registration
to end on Sunday
Students will have until midnight. Sunday. May 9, to register
lor the presidential primary election on June 8.
Vou must register to vote if
you have never voted in Cahfornia.
— ym* tum^ 4#^w or befwe June 8, ~
you have moved and not re-registered at your new address,
you did not vole in the November. 1974, general election
(Brown vii Flournoy). or •
you have changed your^ name or wish to change your party
preference
According lo Protect Awareness, a non-profit political
information service on campus, registrars will be stationed at the
Gyps> Uagon and ai the Bomb Shelter from around 1 1 an to I
pm They will also be in the dorms at dinnertime and on Bruin
V\djk lor the entire dav
•v^
8
I
T-SHIRT MONTH
All out t-shirtt with any design of your
choice are only $1 00 with any $10 DO pur-
chase during the month of May {^xw^ shirt)
AT
Th«F Athletic CH^
Blvd.
1317
#
AN EXPERIENCE IN
OPEN SEXUALITY
EVEIY MAttlED COOPU
SHOULD SEE THIS MOVIE!
The mokers of tHi»
mevi* cHoll*n9« yew
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ond tokc horn* fh« some
ide«f •«« te«, l«v« and
morfio9e Hiot you como in
A Frtm Bv JONATHAN i BUNNY DAM/ Color By CFI
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NOW
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SAN irtNAffOIIM ^jmilf Hv«f 117 tMl
The Student Committee for the Arts
in co-operation with .
DEAF MEDIA
presents
A special sign language adaptation of
Stephen Schwartz's
I
IL
10
Tl
' Enjoy this great musical as it is performed* m the
,p<^tic beauty of American Sign Language
1 and Pantomime
'vcital narration and music will be provided
for hearing audience
Friday, May 7, 8:30 p.m.
McGowan Hall
ADMISSION IS FREE!
IL
-pr-r
ae«B
^^T
r— 7
m
I ASK counselor reef uit men t^or^extfal
i
mi
pro^
fiitftli
Requjrcmcnis that
pectivt CMHMtlor
include
^^ iMiviAg atiended three
quaners at UCLA with a mini-
mum 30 GPA.
— le an uadergrnduaie en-
rolled in the Colleft of Let ten
and Saenoe.
— AvuikiikiMty for the turn-
mer traimng session
— Availnbdity ever> Mon-
da> frooa 4-5 mb for weckK
i
I
By A^ MirtMri karbekuf mofc otf a hnse Irooiiwiiicii to
DB S«nir 1»Hiar draw.* Smy^a said
The Academic Student
Coyatcfang profnai (ASK.) m
looktHf for miifmi who
would hke to work wtth tbeu
parn for fun and profit during
the aoit academic ywm
There are 16 positions avail-
able for the peer academic
CMnatlors yho. "after a train-
ing icMion at the end of the
summer, work about 10 hours
a week. ^ -*
tn the iaft 1^ yenn. coun-
selors for ASK km¥t been
chosen from Midfents who par-
ticipated in the t'CLA Sum-
mer Orientation Counseling
program **!t's (the application
process) going to be different
this year than it km in the
past." said ASK coordinator
Alison Snyder Orientation
counseling is not part of ASK..
but studcnt«> nevk to LCLA are
oowMiAad during the summer
Persons interested in be-
coming an ASK counselor can
atterid either of two miorma-
tMi) meets which are to be held
on Thurdav and Friday of next
week. These meetings are io
expose nore students to iIk
program **l would like to have
gisers They can clarilv re*
to
ocrptioiis to
rules through petitioning
courMelor caii aappK a
with a petitMML but beyond
that the> can only tell the
HB^mt where to file *
RcferraJ
*A foad 50 per cent o( what
we do IS refeffml." said Snvder
She aMad tint the counselors
are ako thete to unconf use the
confusion of aatdemia on this
canpiit. **! think< «ke drt an
invaluable faMiiroe.* Snvder
ilitv traits thai Snv-
der stressed include respon-
sibilitv. resourcefulness, self-
motivation aad an outgoing
attitade. *Tlus » Ivfriv an
autofK>nK>tts jobi;* Snvder said
The ASK counselor works
away from supervision, almost
alwa^w couaaehag students
alone Familiarity with the
campus IS more or less re-
quired v^hile previous coun-
seling experience is aot Ho>s-
ever such experience will en-
hance a person's chances of
getting the }ob
The student counselors serve
primarily as information —
f
.^t^JKi^'
THESaVDIG
C TOUR 6BEEN!
DRJUT
i^^:
Gumnaaa Stout or Schlxtz r«g 75c
R^ SI 15-
Academic Student Coun-
selors are not to be confused
vkith professional counselors
While the professional aca
demic counselors have aooeti
to student recdvii, the peer
counselors do not.
One student counselor said
her )€>b involved a lot of stu-
dent contact **l enioy it a lot."
said Libbv Anne Resslcr
"People seem to appreciate
us.
The peer academic coun-
seling program is pan of the
College of Letters and Science
Enhanced Advising Program
Makinjg the academic coun-
seling program more available
to students m a more com-
fortable atmosphere is the
amia foal of the peer counseling
Attocher goal of the service
is providing informational pro-
grams on careers and changes
in academic requirements
Thev also supply information
ASK coun««k>r* aid tlud»ntt •acb quarWr from
*iMl»«n po«Hlon« available nait ymr
tiont Th«rt are
about admission to various
graduate schools
ASK receives its funding
through registration fees Last
year the budget for the pro-
gram was SI 5. 1 58 According
to Snyder. ASK sees about
250-300 students per week
During fall quarter this figurtr
increases to almost 500
Connputer searches
H,
W
III
Hot hors d peuvras hke Swecxsr. . .
inad luccfami cocJuil franks ^
or hoamma^ potato chxpa-iraa popcorn, too'
NomMnr thboogh ranMiy
"^ 4lo7
C«SM rBu U09 aiMtdtm. WMtwood ViiUqe
(213. 477-3SM. Opac fros 11 mnty <Uj
Research aid in libraries
By Kathv Lope?
— riM StalT Reporter
Three LCLA libraries have; a,
new service available at a cost
— computer searches The
L'RL, Powell and BioMcd lib-
VOTE
rmrtes have aeons lo dau
Tbiies pT compuicrslrom com-
mercial companies. 1 ockhccd
Corporation and Svsiems
Development Corporation
These computer searches can
provide bibliographies ol re-
search sourceij or a summary
of research materials
Among the man> bib-lio-
graphv sources available
through the computers are
Neu York Times Information
Bank. American Statistics lr>-
dex. Congressional Informa-
tion Service. Chemical Ab-
stracts and BioU)gical Ab-
stracts . .^
According to Peter Watson.
Data Service Coordinator the
REGISTER TO VOTE
You need to register if: '
1) You will be 18 by June 8
2) You have moved
3) You wish to change party affiliation
4) You failed to vote in November 1974
There will be Deputy Registrars available on Bruin Walk,
at the Gypsy Wagon, in the Court of Sciences, and in the
dorm lobbies.
For more information call
PROJECT AWARENESS 76
at 825-4847 Kerckhoff 306
DEADLINE MAY) 9
^
coit of a computer search is
Klgh lilt the present time be-
cause "companies .arc ontrring
libraries the data bases. And
the^libraries pav the price tor
computer time."
I h^ cost of ii typical search
from a Nem York Times In-
formation Bank for 15 minutes
would be about 35 dollars 1 he
prices var> accord mg to the
type of source requested and
the length of time needed to
have the sources.
The bibliographv sources
available are rpcent f-or ex-
ample, the Congressional 1n-
f Of mat ion Service has indexes
of information starting since
1970 and the Ncu York limes
Information Bank is indexed
from I96Q Records dating
before the mid-l%0*s wouUJ he
too costlv to maintain, ac-
cording lo Anne Hinkle\
Head Research Department
I ibrarian
rCLA bfffrjed free computer
searches last spring quarter as
an experimental program
About 3(30 searches were done,
mainlv by uruiergraduate stu-
dents Sixty-five per cent of all
the users had a favorable opin-
ion of the services Watson
.icrincd the cxperiincnt ***!•*■(
cessful.**
**This new program with
many more data bases (comr
puten/ed indexes) is an ex-
pansion of the earlier experi-
mental prap»in. But it's ilo
longer just an experiment."
Hinklev said.
"'libraries everywhere are
starting to offer computerized
search servioct, and were iust
getting into the act so that
UCLA students. faciilt> t^nd
rMairchers will have the op-
portunitv to use them too." she
added
T he mam advanCMr <^ the
( 1 ontinued on Pafe l2)
Physics counselor Stern shows concern
L By Jeffrey Brown
OB SlafT Reporter
As an employee ot nearly 10
years, physics ronnackK Pat
Stern tries to display a per-
sonal concern for students
**1 think I've done a food
job,- Stem said -^If I didn't I
4on*t think Td be here"
Stern initialiy hecomes in-
volved with phyttcs mi^drs at
an orientation program Fol-
lowing a one and one halt to
two hour "spieir the students
are given information sheets
describing the physics pro-
)■
ol doliarN
ncv^ fund
Senator controls
gun lobby drive
SA(RAMiM() AP Wundrwh ol thousands
from the state's gun owners are pi>uring in to a
controlled b\ an ultraconservative ^legislator
So tar. the c(,>i»ts ul rtmning the fundi have eaten up virtualU all
ii\ the S4I4.UI0 cowTfilMlied and on.l> S2H.4<)() has been divided
up ami>ng 16 legislative candidates according to repi)rts filed
v^ith the slate -^ , :
ikit Sen H l|^ichardsi>n (R-AroMtia). founder of <Gun Others
of California, said I uesdav the fund's campaign sperKling v^iil
cUmb in the next feu months and could reach S^$O.UUU b> the
end ot the yeai
"that could make u^ v>nc of the iviwcs in C aht oi ii.d
campaigns." Richardson, uho is also a director of the Sational
kiflc Association, said in an interview
H I he fund also has a national arm. (iun (>v%iicrs ot America,
whose gival is to rane more than $1 millK>n by the end of this
year
In adUitii>n. Kicijardson said, the tunO n Ui>nors mav become a
pi>werful neu political group in California to fight gun-contrt)l
proposals
"N^e're n4>l |UM raising tunds. v^c re lUcmitving people v% ho feel
NtrongK about the subiect." Richards4>n said in ari interview "I
v^ant to make sure we know our friends v^henever an issue like
this comes up "
Staunch opp4)nents of gun-contrt»l measures are the ones the
fund IS suppi>sed to help So far. the recipients are 14
Repuhhcans and tvko DemcKrats. all non-incumbents. — ^^=-
"Incum^bciiij^ axe hig^ tinoii§h_U) iiike care oi themselves/'
Richardson said
Richardsiin said about mni.(MM) requests for monev were mailed
in California, mostly, to gun owners, subscribers to hunting
rnaga/ines and the like
He wouldn't sav hovi many c(>niribut(ions 1h4 cowe in. hut
said the average w«> no more than Slo At" S4 1 4.000 in receipts
jv «)! last week, that works (»ut to 4I.4(M) contrit>utoTs
One name on the list i>f $50 d<»nors. is Jbfrem /irfibalist Ir
vkf>o plaved a gun-toting (»-man *>n "I he HBI" lelevisi<m series
Bui the fund aliw^ hav s^mie staggering expenses mdre than
SM4>.tMMMof. fMMiafe mi tar this vear S:^ (MM) for various mailing
TfciKl oll^ fK'artv S^^VOfK) for ct»mpute-r cosjs
less that SIO.iMM) IS listed lor salaries Richardson said he
receives no pav from the fund
gram In addition, they are
told of the "pitfallsT^ involved
with the major. Stem ex-
plaina^.
"I do so many Uttle thiofi.''
Stem said - a kM ^ P^P^-
work, aafivcrtng qimiinns and
giving general inlbmiatton
The most important thmf^.she
said, is **to build up credi-
bility "
**lf I don*t know an answer.
I try to find out or direct the
Mudent to someone who
would "^
Seheduir cards
Stern insists that the stu-
dents cooie into her office each
quarter to fill oyt schedule
cards I he pUTp<M€ of tlie
cards, said Stern, is to deter-
mine whether they are pr««
pared for their courses
In addition. Stem explained.
the check-in at the beginning
of each quarter allows the
students to interact with each
other. **They need to work
together"
It bothers her. she said,
having students unwilling to
believe someone is trving to
help There are "far more peo-
ple c^oncerned with students
than students feel." explained
Stern
^ •»■/
I
to
see someone iom-
ing up a career.** said Stcrm
"Ptople should not be here if
fliry are h^re with no fad,* "
she said As a resuh, maay
studenu are placed on
tion or ditmiMcd. Stem
that It wastes money, time
a chance to continue in colleft
"They shouldn't have been
here.** she said Either they
were not nuture enough o€
tfty had no pnonties **
Stem's involvement with sti^
dents has transformed her o^
fice into a conglomerate of
memorabilia games, photo-
graphs and odds and ends-
Right to own guns
Campus elections today
The end ui itic brum Walk signs and the leafletting is
jimost in sight as the undergraduate and graduate
associations hold their primarv elections today and
tomorrou
Run-oftN tor uiKfergraduate offices wtH be held next week
on \^ednesda> and 1 hursdav
Polling b<M>ths are located at the following locations
Kerckhoff Pla/a. Bunche Hall, the Bombsheher Oickson
Pla/a. the Inverted Fountain. Rolte Quad. GSM. the Law
School Patio, the northwest end ot Pauley Pavilion and
Student Health Service I hcv will be open from 9 am to 5
pm
SACRAMENTO (AP) A
proposed state ban on future
gun coniyol legislation W4is
approved . 1^ a Senate com-
mittee Tuesday
Ihe measure b> Sen H L
Richardson (R>Arcadui) would
ask voters in Novembier to put
the guaranteed right to bear
arms into the slate constitu-
tion
The measure would not
chanfe existing law But future
restrictions on gun ownership
or sale would require a new
constitutional amendment and
public vote
The propu:^d amendment,
which was rejected by the Sen-
ate Jiidiciarv CoflMHllflr iJKfi^
weeks ago. won passage this
time on a 6-1 committee vote,
the bare minimum needed
It was sent to the) Senate
flooJT^ where it needr a two-
thirds majority tor passage
Richardson said he already ha^
about 24 of the needed 27
votes.
A similar measure, by As-
semblyman John Briggs (R-
Fullerton) will be heard Wad-
nesdav m the Assembly Crim-
inal Justice Committee
If It fails. Richardson said,
an attempt will be made to §et
enough members' signatures to
puU It out of the committee
and onto the AssembK floor
Voting tor Richardson's
measure were Sens (ieorge
Deukaejian (R-Long Beach).
Donald Cirunsky <R-Watson
ville). Robert Presley (D-Riv er-
sideK Alan Robhtm (D-VaQ
Nuys). Altred Song.(D-Monr
terey Park) and George Zeno-
vich (EXFresno) Opposing it
was Sen David Roberti. (D-
Los Angeles) It is Senate Con-
stitutional Amendment 49
'Jordan speaks
on Revolution
Wir^throp JorJa-n. pro-
fessor of History at VC
Berkelev. will present a* lec-
ture entitled "Race. Afpr and
Sex Rtvcrberatu»ns <•( the
American Revtilutui at H
pm toda^ in Dodd 147
I here is ■# aiknission
charge and iht public is
invited I he lecture is pre-
sented bv the I'Cl.A Bi-
centennial Committee and
the Committee oni Public
Lectures series
VOTE
A Public Lecture on
MAYA
ARCHAEOLOGY
Prof. Gordon Willey,
Harvard Univ.
'"Factors in the Rise and
Fall of Maya Civilization
Wednesday May 5 8:00 PM
RoKe 1200 UCLA
ff
Pcrtentvd by Anlhropo4ofy Lm4MfM*Mie Slud«mi
tfunding nudr pomblr by UCIA fto%ttm I*tk f ofce)
AKo SpomoriKl By I )Cl A GrjdwM* S«o«len«» ot ihr Ar< hj«o»OBy Pr<i|Min
friend* of Afrh*rlo)ty UCIA Ijtm Amerwin C
S
I
I
9
I
-.-n- '
J
Awards .
K ontintd ffrom Plft 4|
r
from eight finalists b> Samuel
(loldwyn. Jr. Ernest Lehman
( scrceTi^ritcr of "North by
Northwest " "The King and 1."
and •*l-amii\ Plot") and Fverctt
Ziegler. president oi Zie-
fler Ross literars agents.
The competition boasts past
winners FrarKis Ford Coppola.
Noel Black and Martin Zwei-
back Colm Higgrns won sec-
ond place in 1970 tor his script
**Harold and Maude.** which
later became a popular motion
picture
When the competition was
originated by Samuel Goklwyn
j Sr in 1954. all, types of crea-
tive wiiting were cHgiMe Since
then. It has been limned to
stage pk^y%. screenplays
televMMi plays
UCLA
□RIVE
^^^^^^^^V^J
s
■
MAY 3-"^
# «
# m
Onfiwaily. GoWwyn Sit
tok all rights to the winning
scripts for possible production,
but flow the wmaers are free lo
rhi-^'* f..rti»«>r pitrKtittx for
their o^n \fc(»rkv
ACKCRMAN UNION SECOND LEVEL M F 10 2 30
SCNOENIEftC QUAD TENT M Till 3 30 E 9 12
MEDICAI CENTER STUDENT LOUNGE M F 11 3 30
Sponsored by Student Legislative Council
Student Welfare Commission
• WP*:
•1st 75 donors will rec*»i¥e a
<r«»A DC A wi«rvr r%r frtchk<»0**
' ^
.11. fc
"•f—
19!;^ i^-
T
J
<
^—fer
cjoiy bruin
Letters to the Editor
Mardi Gras
Chavez
Editor:
On behalf oi the entire 1976
Mardi Gras Cqmrn-***^^ I would
« like lo Uke rhis • tunity to
ji enpMihs my. lapprti .w;.on to "the
. entire UCt^^ campus community
^ for 'ihmt help in making Mardi
2 Gras 76 the success that it was
. With the help and invaluable
advice we receive from the
various departments throughout
the University. ULCA is able to
put on the Mardi Gras in the
smooth and efficient manner
which It does
A special thanks goes out to
all of the (ampus organizations,
dormatorips Iraternities tnd
sororities whKf^ built ^nd oper-
ated the S5 successful booths on
the Mardi Gras field The booths
look«d better than ever bttime
and months of hard _w€wk
definitely paid oh Each ^nd
every one of you is to be con-
gratulated for the sKow you put
on for the entire Los Angeles
area.
This year MardT Gras elected
to extend its operating hours to
include dn addittonal day of
activity! — Sunday fudging .from
the attendanc e ami c rowd reac -
lion. »his was a popular derision
as It allowed more families to
rniov Mardi Gras The mam
■-■•■r
rc»sfK>nsibilitv tor the success of
thi«. tirsf Sundav of operation
n^usi .tit*' with the particrpaiing
^Miups Thanks to vour coniinu-
ing support, the protect was
<»normouslv successful TcVur ef-
Jorts throughout the event ami
during th<> ( lean-up operation
arv 1^ b<* highly ( omiTXMvded
Once again .i ihjnk you to
the entire ( .imfxis community
t<»r enabling ih< Mardi Gras
C or»»inittee to fHji t»n <me otlhc*
f>esi events r\ ri Ml vour "fim«»
*irn\ cMforfs .irr ^MMtK .ip-
()f#M Mtrd
_, Alp« Rt>«e
Ekecultve Chairman
Marili Gras '76
EdMor:
United farm Workers Presi-
dent Cesar Chavez spoke ^ a
Solidanty Rally attended by er
.1,680 UC students and workers
on Thursday. April 22. 1976. m
the Cr^nd Ballroom AFSCME,
local 2070 AFL-CIO, MEChA. la
Cen/e and UFW Student Com-
mittee organized the rally that
focused on tKe UFW initiative
petition and the drive to or-
ganize UC employees into a
union of their own.
Banners. Mloons and placards
lined the Qr^nd Ballroom calling
for support of the UFW and
organization of UC employees
into AFSCME. the campus union
for non-academic employees
The program had a wide va-
riety of cultural presentations
featuring the Ballet Folklorico. a
contata by firm Workers, and
the Average AFSCME Band (a
group of UC employees) who
sang unioh songs
The audience heard spokes-
person. Cliff Fried, President of
Local 2070 of^ AFSCME. speak on
the similarities of organizing
Farm Workers and Public Em-
ployees, i.e.. their lack of col-
lective bargaining, and decent
working conditions and wa^es.
Cliff Fried also spoke of con-
tihumg and working hard to
guarantee tKe Initiative position
of t;he UFW.
The main speaker was Cesar
Chavez who. after words of
solidarity to the groups who
organized the raJly, sp€>ke m a
f ff #f .^'^ incisive maruHir ikKKit
the Initiative drive and why the
UFW had to do it He said the
UFW. is taking the issue to the
People, the issue clearly being
that the Farm Workers have a
right to vote tor a Union of their
choice arid that an iruiecisive
Legislature and grower-
repression had stopped this pro-
cess and the people would have
to decide Chavez explained the
itekin taray for fh9 mkdnkght train from
background to the cutting of
ALRB money to the harassment
m the fields Chavez announced
oyer 490,000 signatures ha^ jbeen
collected. The crOMrd roundly
applauded him and many stayed
to pick up both AFSCME and
UFW and MEChA literature
Some UC workers joined
AFSCME on the spot. For further
mformation on AFSCME and
how to- join, call the Union
Office.
C8ff Frtarf
PreMdent 2i7e AFSCMi
Abby TtKMiiai
Steward 2tF7% AfSCME
Games???
Editor:
Since entering UCLA as a
. I have participated in
fr
many intramural sports, and
alw»'«- with «»reat enthusiasm It
IS a good feeling to be involved
in outdoor activities, to be with
friends who like to en|ov them-
selves, and to be able to
exercise my study- weary body
As a freshman, I was introduced
to mtramurals with the assump-
tion that we played for fun. not
for blood, and for physical
pxernon. not an unnecessary
victory
If my teams ever won. then
that was fine, and if we did not,
that was alright too. However,
after four years of avid partici-
pation, my outlook has become
faded, and the enthusiasm has
fallen flat
Within the last few years I
have come in contact with peo-
ple who canlriot seem to under-
stared fhat miramuraf sports are
synonomousN>vith good limes. I.
and others nojelDubt. have had
to put Up with poor manners,
foul language. discourteous
behavior. and general im-
maturity Many students seem to
take *intramurals so serious that
win a few. lose a few" is forced
to make room for win at all
(OStS." ,
Granted competition is in-
gTBtf^^ in us from early child-
hood, and It IS a necessary parr
of all sports, up to a point But
when the competitive spirit
interferes With an adult's rational
behavior, then something has
gone wrong The adage "win-
ning isn't ;everything, it's the
only thing" has been adopted
by too many tearT)s, and the true
purpose behind the intramural
program has been ignored, and
perhaps forgotten. I only hope
that future participants will
recognize tfie value of coopera-
tion as well as that of competi-
tion
Ub^ CM
Tom Hayden: Who needs another politician??
by Gary Von Ever and Pat Murphy
(Editor's note Von Euer and Murphs art'
students here and members of the Rev-
olutionary Student Brigade )
Tom Hayden says the Arr>erican dem-
ocratic" iyilewt. w*l>v all ♦♦^ laulfH. t^ Atrfl
the best that peoplf> can gft so thev
should work within it — bs voting for
p«»ople like him
Hayden has one advantage over other
politicians who say the same The Amer-
ican people have a deep desire
to change society and remember him for
his anti-war work and support of pro-
OPINION
gressive causes during* the 1%0 s. Aly
Altrk4y ustng rheiorrc about the big
corporations and playing on this sincere
desire icK chanf^e. Hayden has been able
to win some support, particularly among
students and former %fudf»nt<. But what
does he offer*'
This vear s elections < omr at a nm<'
when the people face man\ attacks
Millions have been laid off the last few
years and many Titerally faor starvation as
ur^employment insurance is cut back by
the country's wealthy rulers Education
and social services are sliced in an
attempt to stave off the deepening
capitalist crisis The threat of war looms ^
(»n the hori/on as military budgets fatten, f^
and th«' government mentioHs resuming
the draft ^
fn the mtdst of these attacks the
American people are fighting badi in a
more organized and conscious way thaVi
at any time since the T930s 60.000
workers rallied in Washington last year,
demanding jobs and booing the poli-
ticians, union hacks and other front men
for tf^ capitalists off the stage. Ter>s of
thousands of students have demonstrated
this year against cutbacks, tuition hik«
and the closmg of schools People see
the whole system crumblir^g around us as
the ^pitalists show their readiiMM to
sacrifice anydhe and anything except
their profits. Hayden's puny reform
program is espoaed as an attempt to stop
a charging elephant with a slingshot
PeopJe who have learned the nature of
this system f.-om rheir daily experience
do not suppK>rt Hayden because they
kr>ow he would lead them into an am-
bush When more and more people war\t
to fight the rich and their, rotten system.
Hayden says keep cool, rely on him and
others like him who want to ride the
nr^asses backs into office. Whenever the
people's struggle is rising, liberals pop
out. trying to channel the energy and
<
struggle along lines acceptable to ih^
"two-party system" and, most signifi-
cantly, the capitalist class But we won't
be taken in by this crap
The only way to bring about real
change is by organizing the masses of
people and relying on their struggle This
genuinely popular fight, led by the
working class, is the only force that can
change society
What is Hayden's attitude toward the
masses? |a-e Fonda put it clearly: "Tom
was involved in the mass movement
before it became fashionable" In other
words, the struggle of the masses is not a
serious thing; rather, it is a passing
fashion, so before long, people wiii learn
It IS useless to build their struggle in-
dependently of the rich and their rule
book. Like Hayden. they wiM "wise up'.'
and realize that voting is all they can do.
Then everything will be in its propef
P^*cc — Hayden scuttling between oH
fices in Washington and Sacramento, and
the masses goin| from "|ob" offic^ to
relief center, scratching to survive in a
system bound to go downhill.
But wait — Hayden calls for full em-
ployment! Aren't we being too harsh?
Not in the least Any feci can "caM" for
full employment, peace, "real demo-
cracy" or any pte in the sky he c#n
imagine Hayden's program is full of
"proposals" for how to convince the rich
to work in the interests of the very
people they exploited to get rich! He
says. 'We don't ne^ socialism — the
only system that can solve people's
problems — and in that phrase is the
essence of his program: perpetuation of
wage-slavery, criies. unemployment and
war. He prn^ himself on the fact that
his "common sense" goes about as far as
Tom Paine s did 200 years ago. But realitv
has changed and what was ' progressive
then (free enterprise) is impossible today
"when ifidustry is developed, over 80 per
cent of the poople are workers, »nd a
few monopolies run evervthir>g.
An impossible program is reactionary,
partkrulary when it is pofiMe to build
our struggle along a different road,
toward revolution and the liberation of
all mankind. To hell with the rich man's
system and all strawhat pimps Mie Hay-
den! We've carried the rich for 200 years
— Let's get them off our backai
(For info on July 4 dvno A other work,
«ee RSB table on cnnpui.)
• 1 ' ■ '
And even more letters to the
■■ci "If
o
Food Run
I'm pretty sure that I
with Dick Gregory's comments
that "food II a basic riflit "
However, I am definitely sure I
disagree with last Friday's letter
by Marcy Tiffany about these
comments.
One of the major reasons
many people cannot "supply
their own food" is that tf»ey
have been forced to produce
unproductive products (^uch as
some upper class luxuries and
military hardware) for the
markets of others, and not food
for meeting their own needs
Since we are all interdependent.
I am not sure true &el^%
sufficiency would every be pofr-"
sible But.* for much of
the world, any chance of achiev-
ing this independence is now
gone ( — their self-sufficient
economies have been destroyed.
Therefore, it would seem mis-
taken to blame these people for
their apparent inability to feed
themselves.
1 am saddened by Ms Tif-
fany's righteous anger at the
thought that she might be
forced to help a hungry person
eat. Some obviously feel (unliki^
myseltl that the right to own
that which they have produced
IS quite important However,
even if people do feel they have
this right/jit would seem greatly
outweighed by the tragedy of
hunger I wish those bothofod
by the thought of being taken
advantage of would have a little
more compassion and under-
standing towards those, who are
not productive." Certainty there
are many reasons for the in-
ability ~ even the unwilling-
to produce And. rewards
(as well as acknonrledgement)
for people who produce are
«ot always as great as thev
perhaps should be.
Basically I would hope people
would think about whadm they
might have the rtspomlbility, -or
at least can make the choice, to
help those with human needs.
Since Ms Tiffany decided to
cloae with a plug for "private
property.'' I suppose H ,h my
obligation to <;lose with a swspe
against it The "right to keep
and use that which is
produced," if seen as important,
would very much seem to sup-
poVt ending the system of wage
labor For. in this system those
who labor are only paid for part
of what they produce (the rest
goes into profits"), and many
(the name Rckrky ring a bell?) do
not have to produce at all in
order to have
Steve ftoM
AHM, A Humanist Movement
consumption of a substance,
whde abortion » a question of
ideology
I maintain that it would be
moral tyranny for these anti-
abortionisu to impoic the im-
pMcMions of tf>eir philoaopKy on
everyone
Not Champs
fending national champlofM The
Defending National champiorH
left the team with their coach —
Chuck Df>bu«, so they could
continue as champions There is
currently only or>e member on
the UCLA women's team wfK>
was a membef of the 197S na-
tional championship team As
for the others, they have yet to
earn the title "National Cham-
pions "
In regard to your article in the
Friday April 31st Daily Brum
about the UCLA women's track
team.
Bullshit — They are not de-
Ktiievel
Tom Hayden offers us dan
devtf realism in plMt &I the
bland variety (or cHkkmm fan-
taay?) usuaNy peddled by igti
lifhment potecians What ex
arfly ure these devdahly daring
stands of Mr Hayden?
Well, he is for women's equal-
ity, full employ rT>em. good
health care better education
ar\d a debate with Serwitor Tun-
ney He is against b«g business,
profits, pollution, mass starva-
tion, and nuclear war
That's terribly bold stulf. Tom.-
but I'm casting my vote for Evel
Knievel all the same
lacv ^^l|P^
e
I
I
Abortion
l« personally, am sick and tired
of reading self -righteous tirades
about "murder of innocent
babes" in tf>e Daily Brum Giv-
ing abortion legal sanction does
not force anyone who is of-
fended by it to have an abor-
tion And people who are
offended by abortion, no matter
how poetic and/or sincere thetr
reasoning, still should not have
the right to keep others from
using that option I may be
offended by cigars, but I have
no right to prevent other people
from smokine them (especially if
I'm not in the vicinity!) Cigars,
of course, are a question of
Ddn Rather hpre for "W Minutes' with pro asMsIn Dawson Shot and our now
poNcy of Intarvlowing paid killers— Tell us Dawaon, ia lotey a good day tor a
•hooting?
GRADUATE STUDENTS!
The following referendum items will appear on
the GSA Ballot:
f -
INITIATIVE AGAINST RACISM AND CUTBACKS AT UCLA:
Do you endorse the following:
1. We dSMMid annual minority recruitment. t>egtnning Fall 76. of
1,411 undergraduates and 428 graduates, including freshmen
Mnd transfer students, ttie same as tf»e peak ym^r of minonty
admissions in 1973. until minorities are represented at least
according to their percentage of the population of Los Angeles
County
We demand special admissions tor minority, bilingual and
working class white students at the previous rate of 1?%
We demand that the University, in cooperation with private
foundatiorw and government agenciee. should plan and insti-
tute a five year program of tin^Mgraduate scholarships and
graduate fellowships for minority and working class white
students admitted to the University.
2 We demand ttiat the University of California impleissnt the
recommendations of tf>e Chicano Taafc Force Report
3. In view of tt>e compMe lack of Affirmative Action in UCLA
hiring to this dale and the lack of efnpk)yment for greduates of
UCLA, we demand an end to ttie laCMlty hiring ifwrnn and
increaaes in faculty hiring to be impiSMSfiledailotows: A) In the
departments which have experienced a atiarp incniaaii in under-
graduala enrollment, such as Political Science, chemistry, and
Biology, increaae tenure-track teeching faculty positions to meet
the standard of 15/1 student/faculty ratio. B) Decreaee by a
campus-wide dspaftmental avemge of 50% the atudent-TA ratio
without restricting enrollment but by doubling the number of TA-
ships, in accordance with the demand of the TA s union. C) AM
hiring, whether into new positions created under (3A) and (3B)
above, or into existing positions, must t>e allocated according to
population proportions of Los Angelee County of ethnicity and
aex; D) To rectify existing instances of racist, sexist, and elitist
practicee at UCLA, we dewnsnd that the following professors^
students and staff be reMlPted immediately 1) Dr Humt>erto
Bracho. 2) Ms Rocio Camacho and 3) Willie Morten
4 We demand a reversal of thm cutbacks in Student Health
5. We demand an end to all forms of police harrassment of
students at UCLA, particularly of minonty students and workers
am) leftists Disarm the campus police.
S. We demand that the $405 mcreeae m tuition for out-of-state
and foreign students be rescinded immediately
IRANIAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION INITIATIVE:
The U C.-iran Profect aSoms tf>e Iranian Refime. sue of th% most
rapNMiee dictatoishipa. to set up a so-called "Persian Study
Center" on campus. The Iranian StuMiits Association at UCLA
•ist auch ties with a regime that holda over 40,000
mostly students, and which has eiiecuted over
300 patnots m lees than three years, is. to say the le^. mn insult
t6 the students of this University We further belive that the UCLA
iacilitiea ahould not be put at the disposal of the fascist regime of
Ihe 9Hah Do you approve of tt^e U.C-lran Protect?
r
VOTE MAYS & 6
^
1-
I^W^^'^W^^
T
1
i
^
»
m
J
YomH'Atzmaut5746
Israel Independence Day 1976
♦
•f-
"T
We, the undersigned, state our
belief that Jews, Zionism, and
- Israel cannot be separated!
Zionism is the national liberation movement of the Jewish
people. It was through the efforts of Zionism that the Jewish
people have been able to return to their national home, the
State of Israel. Over a million oppressed Jews from Nazi Europe,
the Soviet Union and Arab states have found refuge and
freedom in Israel. Only in Israel could they express their
nationaNdentity and culture. The Zionism movement has been
at the forefront of the Renaissance of Jewish culture and
' identity throughout the world. The destiny of Jews and Judaism
are inextricably tied to the land of Israel.
We therefore express our solidarity with the State of Israel on its
28th Anniversary. We hope for the Zionism goal of peace and
justice for all
Norman J A Eskif)d
David lieber
Daniel Rosenthal
Shosana Cerson
Ruth finer Mmtz
' Izcob Biale ^
Sarah Nissim
Irvinfi & lean Peters
Dan ft^vff f
Irving Weiser
Marcie Schoenberg
L Cerson
fudy White
Marinne Marschak
Martin Leska
Ralph Gottfried
Stanley Hecht
Prances Richtman
Louts E. Davis
Eleanor e Coutin
Harry Wasserman
Doreen Seidler- feller
Chaim Seidler- feller
Miriam Ash
Roiinda Rochim
R Sackett
Rita C. Okrent
Sharon Baumgold
Elizabeth M Kotler
Floss Alper ^-^ —
Josef Shwartz
Dory frank
Michelle Shwartz^
David lay Millstein
fern Levitt
hiarry Kotler
Daryl Temkfn
Gary T Greenebaum
florence B Brawer
Arthur M Cohen
Robert Cerstein
Yale Mintz
Susan fletcher
Rose Jeff
Martin feinblat
Robert Ungar
Karep Bamberfner
David Young
loan White
Michael Goldstein
Jove fensen
Sipymour Luhf*t^tfy/
I Mel Wachs
f^ed Bogin
Neil Reisner
hiarvey Deutsch
Isaac R Kaplan
Larry Matalon
hah hiaber
I sa belle Ebert
Ellen Israel Kahn
Pamela C,ershman
f Wiseman
ludea Pearls
Rabbi & Mrs. Julian
M White
Gary D Class
Richard Silver stein
Philip Moinester
Marcia Creensite
Jonathan Medved
Lea Eckerling
Jeffrey David Mann
Richard Platkin
Elliott Bubis
Steven L. Spiegel
Michael Rappaport
Arnold J Band
Janet hiadda
Roman Vishniac
David Berner
Rabbi Richard N. Levy
Marilyn Levitt
Rose T Shapiro 1
Janet Langbaum
M Cerson
Irving 5. White
Neill Ward
Carl Sunshine
hielen Stern
David C Jacobson
Maria Ludlan
David Okrent
Rivka Cinton
Solomon Sochaczewski
Pnina Rappoport
Helma Halpern
Jacob Dimant ,
S. Robert Creenberg
Alice Han berg
Janet Bieber
L.D Berkovitz
LtfKia Spitzer
Klax Alper
Randy Stem
Orr^aih Becker
Baruch Link
Nehemia Yust
Hadassah Inselhvr^
Sandra Smaller
Jay Zingmond
Julia Hanberg
Beth Jessica Asch
Ehud Kofman
Esther Beck
Racelle Rosenblatt
Juliana Civian
Louis S. Kramer
Jeffrey Rabin
Susan Cordom ^ ^,
Irving Cooper
Elizabeth Storch
Serlinda Mehr
Steven Friedman
Moshe Halfon
Judy Eisikowitz
Bernard Zajf
Lori Coldrich
Jay Hayman
Debbie Kleinman
Ira Berman
Myra Reisman
Judith Axelrod
Michael L Dubrow
Michael Hoffman
David Snyder
Joel Sheinfeld -
Rachel Richards -1_
Judith Berman — ^-
Chuck Slosser
David Herskovitz
Shuta Roth
Dr Abraham Anowicz
Dov Hack
Michelle Kramer
Lucy E Dale
Diane Maltzman
Debbie Rich
Gary Mart el
Cory M Rindner
Allan L Berkowitz
Maureen Katz
Laurie Alper
Deborah Carol Schwartz
^retz Prusan
Susan Rindner ^
Lmda Savich
Lisa Kalson
Joe Kaufman
Sol Gura
Michael Dtshon
Andrea Cork in
fosef Pelzg
Helen Zajf
Vickie Golub
■\
Julie Dane
Lissa Roberts
Gary Blair
Carol Rosenberg
I. Speaor
Nadine Wildmann
Gwen Meldes
Samuel Cerstein
Noa Naitnan
Joshua White
Francis f^tet
Yoav Peled
Beth Malitz
Victor Mellon
Rick Grossman
Pesha V. Gordon
Mark 5. Meskin
Morris Animow
laura B. Pearl man
Sally Behar
Reggie Rollins
Yoav Paskowitz
Sandy Markmaui
loan Bebow ' ! /
Jeff Werthan
Jeff Pott ^,
Albert J Koopman
Shirley Rosenthal
Leslie Alexander
,j
Howard Gordon
Joel Rembaum
Anne Fleiichman
Esther Gura
Harris M Lyons
Beth Sochis
Marge Balopole
Maria Zaif
Russ Wolpert
Mark Feibelson
Gary S. Lewis
Ellion Semmelman
Seth Reed
^^ichael Shimshoni
»
Elliot Sorkin
Leana Leach
Ida Apter
Lusannet Weinberg
Rona Kransner
Linda Singer
Steven Brower
Richard J Shapiro
Norman Nadel
Gary Liberman
Robert Asimow
Sara Flint
t
Lillian Asimow
Robert Kaufman
Miriam Prum
Paul Gertz
Marilyn May
"Mark Rosenberg
Jonathan Levy '
Belinda M Glatstein
Joan Solan
La^y^renceA. Weitzen
Mtchael Benesh
Gloria S. Blumenthal
hiadine Etkes
Lisa Sorkin
Myron Hecht
Teresa Waxer
Uala T R utter
Sharon S. Berlin
Susan King
David Mose§
Lori Barish
Debby Chinski
Gail Gornick
Ann Serbe
Ephraim Schaket
Sancfy Akselrod
Lois H Werthan
Allison Minas
JCaren L. Fom
Yehudah Hartman
Allan and Roz Swartz
Mel and Shirley Newman
Deborah Shapiro
Sharon Pearl
Deborah Spielman
M Baruch
Elair^e Feuer
Lee Aura Manus
Mark Raphael
Michael Finkelstein "
Perry Lee Keyspn
Gilbert A Crodsky
Diane Preisler
Arlene Patricia Mandel
Shelomo Morag
Bess Waxer
Leslie Kern
Savina Teubal
Robert Cohen
Marbara Raben
Francine Levine
Yves Markan
Flora Lydler
Decision upholds
prominent reverse
discrimination case
\i
Med student tuitiort
SACRAK4FNTO Stale I egi»l«iive
AmM a Alas Pm km kern mkM to
pft»yK>v.'d ttntmn s(.*ttCfwe l# UltDmm^ft
i ( mcdicni students ii> practice wlierc
C aliiurniam need them most
The plan. »mfcsied la»t ,<weck b> %taff
depend on
members of the As&embl\ Committee on
He^h Sctencet Education, would require
medical studenci to defer payment on all
tuition until ihe> begin practice However,
iome UC tmiwil doctors would be charged
more tuition than othen.
Under the prapMil, Hadanlf entering a
naadad service, tnch at peneral practitioner
or who serve inner city and rural aivnt thort
of detkMK would reimburse the university a
minimal amount
B\ contrait. itudents electing to study an
overcrowded medical specialty, such as
general surgery or who chose to work in an
adequately served area, would be required to
repay a substantial part of the cott of
medical trainmg.
(CPS) ^ Reverse descnminaiion ftntrally understood as
discrimination against white males as a resuh of programs geared
tor minorities is constitutional under "proper circumstanct
the New V ork Slate C ourt oi ,Appcn4i ruled rccenilv
The New York ruling came in a suit filed bv. Martin ( Mevs
an honor student at Brooldy^Cattegc who was denied admission
to the Oownsutc Modicaf Center of the State Lmversrtv of New
York Alevy claimed that his right to equal protection guaranteed
under the 14th Amendment of the Constitution had been denied
because ot specmi preference given to minority applicants Alevs
IS while
Reverse discrimination became a public issue as the number of
affirmative action programs for minontv groups, increased With
competition lor lobs and profession^ school slots growing
cutthroat, the issue mushroomed into an emotional and a^ yet
unscitled amitU^^isy A growing number of white males h^e
complained that their constitutional rights were being denied
when programs in hiring and education gave preference to
minority groups Suits charging reverse discrimination have been
filed against umversiti€;s and professional schools around the
country *
**ft would be ironic." said the New York court in outlining its
stand "were the equal protection clante used to strike down
measures designed to achieve real quality for persons whom it
was intondtd to aid **
But in acknowledging the constitutionaliiv of reverse discrim-
ination, the court emphasi/ed that "it must be shown that a
substantial interest underlies the policv and practice." and that no
••less objectionable racial claHification ' would serve the same
purpose
The court «ho.tK»nted out that rt was not snnctKMiing the
blanket use of such "benign discrimination* policies "If such
practices realK work, the period and extent of their use should
he temporary and limited, for as goals are achieved. tbciP
utilization should be diminished "
Other cases dealing with reverse discrimination arc pending in
several states A suit tiled by an unsuccessful white applicant to
the medical school at the I niversitv of Cabtornia" at Davis is **lt makes no difference
awaiting decision Ky ihe Califwn+a Supreme Court A i^mversity^- Whether the approach is •hard
The amount repaid
the laadpt's parental income
received from his or her practice, the ilaff
said Currently, all students a^ DCs fiv^
il ichnoli pay S60D each school ytmt in
ration and education fees, rtpwdteii of
•onliy
The staff prof«tal addresses a public
policy question which has been irouMing
lawmakers faced with e¥tr-incrcasing budfet
requesu in the health lOMan;
fkmt¥y, should the^ state subsidi/e stu«
dents for S50.000 or more worth of training
at ivlativelv little cost to the student, when
the student ma> end up practicing fUKral
surgery in Beverly Hills'*
The tuition plan alio attempts to reconcile
high student demands in areas of health
sciences where Califormans have no need
The suff said additional funds generated
from thoae paying higher tuition would help
ftnance expansion in such fields as nursing.
dentistry and veterinary medicine
I
r
Church opposes
contraception ads
NEW YORK (AP) Negative
reactMMS. ranging from a stiff
"no" to a qualified "not now,"
liave risen in church circlfs to
the idea of permitting contra-
ceptive advertising on radio
**Totally opposed." says
Bishop James S Rauscn, gen-
eral secretary of the US. Cath-
olic Conference in Washington.
D C . adding that the idea is
"one which man> people right-
ly find repulsive"
attornes speculated that whoever lost in t'he California Supreme
Court would appeal t4) the I'.S Supreme Court
I he nation's highest court has al read > faced the question of
reverse discrimination tmce. m the eelehrated IMums case, when
a while 'male *sued the I'niversits .of Washington Law School for
cfiscrtminating againsi him because he was white But the
Supreme C ourt sule-stcpped the issue b\ ruhng that the case wrak
moot, since Defunis was allowed to attend the school pending a
decision and was on the verge of graduating; h\ the time his case
reached the high Li>uri
.Neither side was pleased with tht decision But the Supreme
Court will undoubtcdK have a ^^ c ond chance to hear this
n»mplc> social question
seir or soft sell.' contraceptive
advertising should not be in-
troduced into American homes
en 4hf . televtstofi ""iicreen."- he
says
It 'IS not justified at thts
lime." sa^s the interdenomina-
tional communications com-
mission of the. National Coun-
f
WE WANT YOUR BLOOD
Rec Center
poetry recital
MCnB
the UCLA ( ommittac en
Public Lectures and the Of-
fice of Cultural and Recrea-
tional Affairs will present
Ruth Liner Mint/, poet,
ranslator. teacher and lec-
turer, reading from her
works She will speak at K
pm tomorrow in the Sunset
Canyon Recreation (enter
fhere is no admission
charge and the public is
invited Mint/, a native of
the iJkraine. is the author of
man> books of poetrv. most
recently Jerusalrm Ptprms
and h>\e \"nK<. /V5.5-76.
due in the fall
MEN AND WOMEN
WANTED FULL TIME
SOMpR JOBS
If you are temporarily (hscontinuing
your education and seeking sum
mer work consKler this unique
opportunity Large international
firm has ttvtral full time positions
available in district officatttiroMih-
out ttie U S If accepted you will be
working with ottiers your own apt
You can work locally .travel your
own state or nofgtTlM}ring states
Tht mon ani nomon we are lookmg
for are amt)itious doponiabie and
hard working For district office
aiirott m your area or for appoint-
mont with our local manapor call
Shorry betwoon 9 a m to 5 p rr>
Friday
f jin rnr
III LA
In Van Nuys caN TpT-Jpgl
In Anan^im call 714-S30-P7Pi
■
i$
The International Student Center
Officially Endorsed Contribution
To The
Los Angeles City Bicentennial
The International World of
American Cooking"
A montfily pretentation of dinner music and
tainment featuring different countries whopedtahes hmri
become part of ttie An^rican menu
To be held at
POTPOURRI*
The International f^mmtmnt of the
International Student Center
1023 Hilgard. V»peNiood
^ALWAYS ON SUNDAY-*
Sunday. May 9 Russian Dinner and Entertainment
Dinner and Entertairwnent $5 00
fi on - Q pm Mnthpr^ Hfliy '
■r\
ci\ of Churches. The commis-
sion sayt experts agree that
broadcasting already '*has
played a major role in stimu-
lating and validating*V increased
sexual activity among teen-
(CotinMaieerajtll)
9
I
UNIVERSITY EPISCOPAL
COMMUNITY
Eurhantt Sundays 6 p.m. supper, program
Thursdays 12 05
The Chapel saO J-lilgard (at Westholme)
Chaplain Terry lynberg, 475-1830
Cowm designed individuaHy for you.
J
Planning for summer or fall?
Be original
By appointment only
SaHy Carrol, Dceigner
(213) 7M-4928 Van Nuyt
~r
m-
i
WmOHT, >^WIfOy MUycat V aw P.ri
ttiat Pf Ifipa weloaaM ooiplc relief
THE
M-
s*-^ ^"^
/HU§IC4L
JOW PLAYING
Treat fs/lofher and t>^'' *^-'
^n unusual e^r^*''^'^^^
* • » • m^ ■
aanT.i) se-3 ie«4 ap
4ao*t
-r-W*
m
toioir
uamcfoAhHi
PRINZ
Half-price Sale
^
Prinz Hiker
Camera And
Gadget Bag
Ust $32.30
Prinz Albert
Tripod
Ust $38.50
Heavy Duty
Prinz Samson ^
Tripod
-$24. '7
Ust $49.95
\,
bdoircomciQ&hHI
927\«^»«fWoodBlva LO» Ang«l»» 90024 (213)47 7 9569 or 879-9616
W •iOCk S of UClA )n WMMOOO Houf« MooOoy - Sotuf OOv 9 6
i
%
^
UCLAeXfension
Habeas corpus trend
. , . _ P- .— —
WASHINGTON AP - It is
called ihe. "-Gran Writ."
It^ legal name it habeas
corpus, a Latin phrase that
roughly translates to **produoe
the body " Thousands of pri-
soners uie It every y|Bar.lo try
io get out of prison. And now
the Supreme Court is showmg
of cuttmg back on its
**lts root principle is that in
a civilized society, fovernmcnt
must always be accountable to
the judiciary for a iiian*i im-
prisoiiment.'* the court said in
1963 "If the imprisonment
cannot be shown to conlorm
with the fundamenul require-
ments of kA. the individual is
entitled to his immediate re-
The most recent evidence of
that trend came Monday as the
court rejected the appeal of a
Louisiana black man seeking
release from life in prison for a
murder committed when he
was 16
A writ of hatoii corpus is a
court order to authorities such
as prison wardens to either
release a prisoner or grant him
a new trial.
Since 1867, just after the
Civil War, federal courts have
been empowered ky Congress
to issue such orders to state
prison officials. Under a series
of Supreme Court rulings m the
I950's and the I960's the
scope of the power was broad-
ened greatly
Under this reasoning, the
justices authonzed federal
courts to free prisoners on the
basis of complaints about co-
erced confessionii, jury dis-
crimination, lack of defense
coiisfel, illegally seized evi-
dence and other grievances. §y
1974, the number of su:h com-
plaints filed in federal courts
by state prisoners had reached
more than 7XXK) a year. 1
In i case three years ago.
four of the court^s present nine
justices indicated they thought
It was time to reverse the trend
One of the (our. Justice Lewis
F Powell. said federal
judges should not consider
unlawful evidence claims if the
prisoner had a fair chance to
Contraceptive ads . . ,
(ContiiHMd from Page 1 1 )
agers and that contraceptive
advertising would further abet
the trend
However, the commission
suggested research into results
of such radio and television
ads in limited test areas to see
if it would m tact reduce
venereal disease and unwanted
pregnancies, as proponents
claim would occur
The commission says it
doubts that would be case The
reactions came amid rising
church criticnsm of television
content
"-""The exploitation of sex and
violence on television is a con-
tinual national disgrace." savs
Harrv N Holhs. Jr . of Nash-
ville, lenn . director of familv
and moral concerns of the
Southern Baptist Christian Life
Commission
I he new. anxjctir>» were
touched oft by word that the
National Association o( Br^ad-.
casters' (ode Board is consid-
ering whether to relax restric-
tions against -advertising ol
nonprescriptive contraceptives
Roman Catholic teaching
opposes contraception, al-
though surveys indicate manv
C atholic couples use it It is
condoned hv Protestant. Or-
thodox and Jewish teachings.
[he inte.deni>rTVfi^ationa}
commission cited statistics
about teen-agers of "'O to HO
— ■
Computer searches
(Continued on Page 6)
computer searches is thai it
saves time *'lt saves people
research time which could be
spent looking at printed mat-
erial. In terms of time, it could
save people a week or an
hour,** Hinkley said.
Because this service is of-
fered through libraries, the
librarian can adivsc what to do
research through a com-
puter or do-it-voursel! "the
operation- here is designed to
go through the reference lib-
rary." Watson said
According to James Cox.
the acting assistant university
librarian. "The relativcK high
cost of searches will probablv
go down in two or three vears.
v^hcn there is more usi- hv the
m cooperation with the UCLA School of Law
Attorney Assistant Iraining Certificate
Prograrns in Litigation _..
'•••
Accredited by the American Bar Association
Comprehensive 5 month programs begin Fall, 1976 at UCLA
For highly qualified applicants seeking a career in the
paralegal field
Receive graduate level instriictipn from practicing
attorneys arxJ attorriey assistants
Learn marketable skills in tnal procedures relevant to
criminal and civil law ' '
Housing and employment assistance available
Applied! luns available
tmmediataly. For full details
wnie ar call
Attorney Assistant Training
Programs, UCLA E
•
214. PC Box 74902
\ ^)s A
I
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I Nam* ■ -'
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UCLArXiensior^ corthnumg cducorioD
Come...
Train at
uaA
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present them lii state
TIk court currently n review-
ing that tiiue ^
Meanwhile, the justices have
adopted nmv rules, subject to
congressional ap|Mr«VftL which
would restrict the unlimited
privilege of inmates to hie
haiaM corpus petitions as of-
ten at tftwy wish.
The prisoner, Abraham
Francis, asked to court to
overturn his murder conviction
and lile term on grounds that
blacks were underrepresented
on grand juries by a system
which excluded day laborers.
It was this claim which the
Supreme Court said Monday
shouki either have been raised
at his original trml or not at
all
Dissenting Justice WilUam J
Brennan Jr said the decision
weakened, if not completely
overturned, a 1%3 Supreme
Court ruling that only ph-
soners who ''deliberately by-
pass** state court procedures
coukJ be prevented from
making their constitutional
claims
per cent increase m unplanned
births. 276.000 annual abor-
tions and « 42 7 per cent gen-
eral rise in venereal disease and
said there was apparent need
for clearer contraceptive in-
formation
.^/^
But the commission says it
doubts contraceptive ads
would he truthful and that
moreover, such ads would in-
fringe-on rights ol parcni-s vi^ho
believe their children should he
discouraged' from sexual activi
ty outside marriage
Broadcasters were asked to
examine alreadv existing ad-
vertising with the aim of modi-
fying, materials that encourage
"irresporisible sexual activitv *
public "
"We want to advertise and
publici/e this new service so
those who can afford to use it
novfc can find ways to use it."
he added.
Watson suggested one ^i
to minimi/e cost. Students
working on a project for a*
class can do one computer
search and share the cost
among them and "this would
lower the cost for them." he
said
LRL and PowelPs Educa-
tion and Psychology I ibranes.
offer computer search services
from data bases primarilv in
the field of social science
T he Biomcd I ibrar\ com
puter services are mamK from
the life and heiklth scieni-c^
fields I his librarv has been
providing a Medline search
service since 1^72
1 he 1 ng I nee ring »fid MaW
Sciences 1 ibrary will be
another hbrary to offer ct>m-
putcr search services Com-
puter searches can be made h\
comj^k-ting a request form ai
the refer'*nrr Hr^k of thf three
librarK's
\'>
VOTE
VOTE IN GSA-USA ELECTION
\
TODAY
or>«
tor aac^ offioa
MICSIOCMT
Faufaan Brackaan (School of Put>l»c Haalth^
fWrtlaln] . •
FIRST VICf
Btil Cormiar (ScrK>orof Law)
IWnlalnj ,
TL-'
SCCOWO VICE PUCStOCNT:
Kan Paiiaqua (Graduata Schoo* of Manayamant
fWftiaJnl • ■ . - -—
nCFCRENDUM rfCMS
INtTIATIVE AGAIMST RACISM AND CUTBACKS AT UCLA:
Do you ar)dorsa the following
1 Wa damartd annual minority racruitmant, baginnir>g Fall 76 of
1,411 undergraduataa and 426 graduaHi. including fraahman
fnd trantfar studantt. y^^ ^a^m^ as tha paak yaar of minority
•dmiaaiont m 1973 until "minoritiaa are- rapraaaniad at, laaat
according to thair parcantaga of tha population of Lot Angalaa
County
Wa damand tpacia) admissions for minority bttir>guai ar>d
working claas wfitta studants at tha previous rate of i?%
Wa demand that the timvaraity m cooperation with private
toundatior>s and government agencies, should plan and instituta
a five year program of undergraduate scholarships and graSuaie
fellowships for m»r>ority and working class white students
admined to the University
2 We demand that tt>e University of California implement ttia
recommendations of tr»e Chicano Taak Force Report
S. In view of the complete lack of Affirmative Action m UCLA
hinng to this date and the lack of employment for graduates of
UCLA. We demand an end to tf>e faculty hiring freeze and
incraaaae m faculty hiring implemented as follows Af In tha
daparmams which have experienced a sharp mcraaae in ufHlar^
graduate enroHmarrt. such as Political Science Chemistry »na
Biology, incraaa^iaaure-track teaching faculty positions to rnaet
tha standard of 15/1 student/faculty ratio. B) Oecraaae by a
campus-wtde departmental aoaraga of 50% the ■tiirtant Tn raSa.
without restricting tf>e enrollment but by doubling the number of
TA-ships in accordance with the damand of the TA s union C)
All hinng. whether Into new positions created under (3A) and
(3B) above or into existing positions m<ust be allocated
accordir>g to population proportions of Los Angalaa County of
ethnicity and sex D) To rectify existing me instances of racist
aaxktt and alitist practices at'UCLA we demand that the
tottowir>g professors, studems and staff t>e reinstated immed-
iately 1) Dr Humk>erto Bracho 7) Ms Rocio Camacho and 3)
Willi* Morten
vcs
NOi
D
D
D
4 Wa demand a
II of the cutt>acks m Student I laeWh
5 Wa dtmand an end to all forms of poliot
studants at UCLA particularly minority stu(
and leftists Disarm tha campus police
of
and workers
D
6 We demand that the $405 ir>creaaa m tuition for out-of-state
and foreign students t>e rescinded immediately
IRANIAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION INITIATIVE
The U C -Iran Profact allows the Iranian Regime one of the maat
repreaatva dictatorships to sat up a so-caned Persian Study
Center" on this campus The Iranian Studants Association at
UCLA t)elieves that such ties with a regime that holds over 40.000
political prisonart. rvioetiy students. ar>d which hasejiecuted over
900 patriots in laea than mrae yaara, «. lo tay the laaat f\ inauM
to tf>a studants of this University We further belies that tt>e
UCLA faciirtiae should not be put at the dippoati of the fascist
ragima of tha Shah Do you SMp>oasof the U C -Iran Profecf
Polls open 9 am-5 pm
Polling Locations:
Ackerman Union
Bunche Hall
Bonnbshelter
Dickson Piaza
GSM
Graduate Students Only
Center until 7 p.m.
PRESIDENT:
Pauline Brackeen. a candidate for President of GSA. is
a Public Health Student She is currently the Second
Vice-President of GSA and the Chairperson of the
Registration Foe Committee In the past, she has been
involved in programming efforts with many campus
groups She has served as Chairperson of Programs
Task Force. Co-directed a Community Services
Program and served on the Chancellor's Advisory
Committee on the status of women She promises to
work for improved student government and greater
involvement of graduate students from alt segments of
the campus community Indorsed by the Health
Sciences Council. Public Health Students Associa-
tion. Graduate School of Management Students
Association BGSA and CGSA.
I8t VICE-PRESIDENT:
BijII Cormier, a law student, is currently GSA Com-
missioner of Research and Planning He is also a
member of the Registration Fee Committee, the Board
of Directors of the International Students Center, and
several other campus committees Cormier offers no
empty promises, no meaningle^^s rhetoric just a
willingness to work in the interests of all graduate
students ^nd the demonstrated ability to work
effectively
2nd VICE-PRESll!)ENT:
Ken Paslaqua. running for Second Vice-Presfdent. is a
Management students with experience, awareness,
and responsibility He currently sits on University
Registration Fee Committee making recorfiendations
and channeling. student input regarding the expen-
ditures of your studerifTiees He is a past Com-
missioner of the Budget of the Graduate Student
Association His promise to grad students is to work
for fiscal responsibility and reform, a continuation of
programming, and an increase in Graduate Council
funding through GSA Get involved and vote on May
5th and 6th for a candidate that can and will do the jOb.
Endorsed by Graduate School of Management
Student Association. Public Health Student Assocwi-
^on. Health Sciences Student COtJhcTT BGSA and*
CGSA
Health Science Store
Law School
Pauley Pavilion (northwestern)
Placement Center
Rolfe Quad
may vote at GSM and Placement
J:.-:^
J_
Improve Your Learning Experience
V^^n^.i^S 10 00-12 00 3 00-5 00
3 00-5 00
1000-1200
OR
May 18. 19. 20 10:00-12 00
STUDY WGRICSHOPt
Monday. May 10
OR
Monday. May 17 115-4 30
Enroll for any 9mnm LEARNING SKILLS CENTER.
271 Dodd Hall or 825-7744
A,a«fvtc4 of Studant 4 Campus Affairi for all regularly aorolled students
t 15-4 30
THE DRIFTWOOD
Jqzz Concerts, Fine Dining,
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and all that Jazz
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ballet
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* Imrrm^mmlt * Advmnced -
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Enroll Now! 391 *3959
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We can save most students up to 35% on student
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POSITION AVAILABLE
— student Coordinator —
Foreign Student Orientation Program
Academic Year — June 1976-June 1977
Responsible for implementation of Orientation Program
for newly arnved UCLA foreign students
20-40 hrs/week during summer
Aveiaga of 10 hrs/weak Fall. WinteT. Spring Qtrs
Stipend
Job Deacnption & Applications Available
International Student OafMer
1023 HJIgard
or
Office of International Students & Schotars
297 Dodd Hail
Deadline for return of Applications
May 14
0nt/ 0r tat nnn0 n c
(£di(^r s note: the Jirector of a certain
mrnUal reputed to he opemmg in Macgoaan
Hall this week wishes tit remain narfiel^ss in
prim, ahmg with the members (»f the cast.
ActidalU. their names are all puhlu kntp^ ledge
In another L)B_expo%e,^ we w ill name namey
when ttf review the production )
By Catliiy Seipp
The dircLiui of the thcather ans department's
production of W«»t Side Story likes to use the
word 'ensemble* a lot I he musical, by
Leonard Bern»t€in and Steve Sondhcim. is
• bcinjj done according to his thcorv ol the
ensemble "There arc no leads." he sa>s "We're
doing It totally as an cnsctnble piece " He will
admit that the lour main characters m the plas
— Maria, Tony. Anita|and Bernardo are on
stage more than the rest ol the caM "But "he
adds. "I didn't cast for leads, fc very one is
carrying an equal amount I care as much for
one of the .Sharks as I do for Anita, for
example" Everyone Icels verv important
Which the\ are " V j
West Side Sicyry has been rehearsing tt)r six
weeks, and is already sold out for all^ its
performances One cast member estimates thai
the play rehearses lor about 24 hours a week
I he cast^and crew, who arc all students and ^^
per cent theater majors, receive academic credit
lor iteMLlimc unlcs*, thev have ^?ihausted the
amount of credit which is allt)wcd .toward the
degree Many ol them have
- The director says he is "very verv pleased
with the casting process" When asked il it was
hard to find people who are talented dancers.
»ngers and actors, he said. "No it wasn't Ves it
wa*. ^ course, btrt i>€i.A attracts those kind
of people Ift's say they were hard to find, but
they ¥/ere there It is a ^er\ verv gitted
department "
An actor walks into the dressing room to see
if his niakeup is all right The d^rector says._
"This is Steve He plays wait, wc don't want
to vjay his name We don't want to rum the
ensemble feeling This is a cast nnember "
The cast member talks about the auditions as
the director leaves the room "The try outs tor
West SMe Story were the most exciting aud-
itions Tvc ever done " he says "He (the
director) was really lair and; spent a lot ol time
trying to find out what your abilities wefe You
had to do a monologue, and a song, and
you'd maybe sing your monologue or dance
your song The audition kind ol evolved trom
that"
The set for West Side Story is stark but
effective It consists mainly ol scattolding and
wire feoces. »hich the actors are constantly
lumping on or climbing over I he i>rchestra pit
IS very large "We have more orchestra mem-
"bers than the original Broadway production
'West Side Story' : the gang's all here
*yk9A Side Story'
hac).* says musical director T-revor Thomas.
"That s because we have more s^ace Broadway
pits are notoriously small and cramped But we
ha^e room for the strings to be equal m. voJiimt
H> the brass and the winds "
Thomas' background is opera, which be
"personally Aould rather work wVth: most
musiciils are not that chalJengmg But West
Side Story is an ahs<r>luie |oy to work with I
don't think orchestras enjoy musicals as much
.«^ opera, pit members are virtually unsung
heros in the musical it's much more grat-
ifying to pla> opera We»t Side Story is an
exception because it's so marvelouslv written
It's brilliantly orchestrated, and there are a lot
of elements that are akin to opera
The director is sitting naM* the back of the
theater, watching the rehearsal "What were
d<»mg now." he says, "is getting them to dance
to all the individual instruments, and not vl> the
beat, to a single violin, for instance, or a
trumpet " Although he has choreographed the
sh<»w. the director is not a dancer ("I move
•a gwiemble productioa
•^H.. »n 0.*%nI fc«Mf»(
very well; but I'm not a dancer ")
The fences of the set are only screwed into
the ground, nut set into the coricrcte "The
actors^warnvt^i 45 minutes before the sht)w so
rhey are' in condition to )ump over the fences
lightly, wntfoout makirvg them all fall down or
getting hurt The actors are all very well
trained Wc haven't had any accidents on the
set alt bough a cast member did twist his ankle
^^hile crossing the street "
"We're doing this m a timeless wa\ " mu>c^
the direc|or "We don't know where that space
IS and we don't kn(»w who those people are
Were jusi telling a siorv We're stuck with the
dialogue, which is dated, but we're not saving.
All right, thtu IS 1954* Were also saving I his
IS a theater * You can see the lights were not
trying to hide them "
Costume Designer Audrey Chase says. * I hev
are supposed to be ^O's costumes, but thev had
to be simplified ;for the labs that tiered skirt
that Ahita wears is verv much a 5()*s dress, for
example, although she w^ould have worn it with
more petticoats And we bad la keep in miaif
the color scheme, which is maroon and blue for
the Jets, and black and white for the Sharks
I'm not sure, but I think that color scheme is
_part of the Bicentennuil thing iJic rcd^ w
and blue, and then the black is |ust to bfcali up
the monotony "
While the orchestra is repeating a scene with
the actors for the third lime, the director is
duscussing co?iiuming problems with Chase,
who dtxrsn t like a dress an actress is wearing in
the scene She wants her to wear a peasant
dress _.
"Well." the director says "She does have a
very legitimate complaint about the peaaaat
-"■redress
^What s that^' asks Chase ^^
"I can'i^remember. but iiji a very legitimaie
complaint "
The cast has moved on ic Manas "I heel
•Pretty" number, which she does with all the
Shark girls "In the script." he directt»r savi,
"Maria does this ai<me with (V ', v\^{ \
use all the shark girls, because it Maria would
be carrving on like this, slw^d be with aU the
g'irls shf'd played and screwed around with
That s what I mean by ensemble ' I use all the
cast ijs much as pi»ssible In the knifing scene
there are tinly foui guys in the licript But I use
the whole cast, because there s nothing Irke th^
•'pint i»1 the cast m a scen( *'
\s Maria and I t»nv are rehcarsmg a love
scene the director points to them and says.
"Ihese two don't get any more attention than
the least person in the cast They don't get
vpecial dressmg room?4. or any special priv-
ileges I d4|n't treat anybody as if they,' re morel,
important than anvbody ebe Jt's a philosophy,
but It creates a good feeling."
Then there hasn't been anv jealousy in the
cast'
"Oh. there's always ihiH.' savf^ the director
"But we woried that out in the first c6iifle of
weeks " He adds. "This cast u very much an
enseTTihte 1-our ol the actors have bronchitis
right now but they wouldn't dream of missing
a rehearsal because of it "
I he orchestra is taking a break now. but
some musicains are still practicing individually
m the pit An actor walks by and yells down.
*< 'm(»n. keep it quiet down there' We're trying
to do a show " and then bursts into laughter
Assistant musical director tli/ahcth Sacks
discusses the chain of production First, she
says, ! .rs dance to rwatdings then there
are basic vocal rehearsals Then a basic dance
get together Then a readthrough [hen block-
ing then the whole thing is put together with
ihjc technical crew "What is absolutelv fab-
ulous." she says, "is to see all these independent
parts welded t<»gether at the cx\6 " \n<i then
you've got a show
Concert Reviews Concerts Reviews
On Campus
Thomas
Harmon
The Bicentennial fever has
swept aside the understanding
that everything American is
not neccaiarily good, and last
Friday's coiicert of American
organ music, featuring organist
Thomas Harmon, is a case in
point The first two pieces on
the program, a Voluntary and
a Sinfonia written in the lale
I700's. laem to have been writ-
ten for a calliope €if a Sears'
chord organ. The next two
pieces were written a century
later, but they stilt reflect the
same wearisome triviality
which characterized the first
twt) works.
Fortunately for the ladinice
as well as for American musi-
cal prestige, the second half of
WW pr"Pim. ftV which Har
mon moved from Schocnberg
Hall to Royce. included more
creative works bv I lysses Kay
and Charles Ives, as well as a
"Pc>em" \iM Viola and Organ
eo Sowerbv. in which
violfvt Milti»n fhomas dis-
plaved great sensitivity and
art 1st rv
The rnusic ranged from bor-
ing and true to energetic and
ongrnah ^t Hai^mr»rr\ tech-
nique was consisticntty excel-
lent, presenting both good and
mediocre music with clarity
and precision Throughout the
concert, one longed wistfully
for a traditional magnificent
fugue, but of course, there isn't
much American baroi|ue to be
found
— Adam Siefler
^r
Off Campus
Steven
By i athy Setpp
I he Steven Peck ia// Dance
Company, now at the Coronet
Theater through May 16. has a
phenomenal aruount »>f enerj:\
and a kinky originality which
teeters constantly between
tackiness and genius At its
best. Peck's eccentric choreo-
graphy crackles with wit and
innovation. At ilt worst, it is
coy ahd in campy bad tastd'. M
when the male daaotrs bear up
the women to the tune of "^n
American In Pans" and then
whine. ''Come on. baby I wa^
only kidding *'
Of the two dances performed
on last Wednesday's program
'Sammy Flagg and the
Stars aad Stripes" and "Ibis is
Ciershwin" "Sammy Magg"
was much more disciplined and
superior "This is Gershwin"
was over-long and rather disor-
ganized, although Peck
haiding aad in a tuxedo wa>
charming a* (ic*^-^^in.
.^ one ol the besf things tt> come
I
out of the Bicentennial cele-
bration It IS a frenzied salute
'o America, and what it lacks
»n elegance and style (MiXs
I ibertN i> raped bv a strcbl
>uing. in the opening scene) it
makes up in exuberance and
M>me crackfnack dancing
P*-*^tv uaiices with a lyrical
Itrade and a perpetual leer m
'This IS Ciershwin" he beha\es
'•ke a dirty old man all the
choreography is se\\ but ii is
moM M) when Peck himself is
(lancing with the girls But
'Vck IS a strong. <»riginal tal-
ent, and he has the go«Kj seaae
'o parodv his own egotism at
the same time be indulges in it
If his odd choreography «if-
len degenerates into tacky
cutencss. It can aKo flame out
«n flashes ol offbeat genius
^>ne can even forgive him his
•dmtic lighting design which
^oqsisls of two black ' I'hts
* • shine into the eyes ot the
'^ '.»f It
A unique 'GodspelT
I he Student Committee ior tiK Arts and the Sign Language
Club are sponsoring a special pradadiaa of Codspefl May 7 and
8 in the I itile Theater in Macgoweri hafl at 830 pm Admission is
fret dUiS' there will be a receptum after the Saturday night
perfi>rmance
t
This production is Special heeause 'It is for hearing and deaf
j^fp*^.'^ accofding to Fileen ifu/ne^^. who » 4feMurer of the
Sign I anguage Club and Pro* ^r of the play "It's done in sign
and pantomime While an actor is using sign language, the songs
are sung by a corresponding person**
The cast IS from Cal State Lniversity at Vorthridge's theater
arts department "We're intercelad in bringing it to atlirr areas.**
said Kuznet/ "We're trying to gel a program Marled on campus,
to bring the deaf communiiv here They don*t ccnne here, they go
to El Camino college, where they have a program. Northndge is
the center This is the first year we've even had a sign
club on campus " i
*
fheri. will be iiiut itiuMcians in this prouuction ot
"One thing they're experimenting with.** said Kuznd/. **is pasting
out ball<H>ns to the audience The deaf people can gctualtv feel
the music thrcmgh the hailooas**
* III
WORKSHOP IN ~
TRADITIONAL BALLADS
attending to racordad and printad aourcas of tha
English-speaking world (abtmctantfy at our diapoaal).
the emphaaif on unaccompanied singing (though
not exclusively)
Contact Clark Branson (451-0531)
Auspices .W LA GARLAND SOCIETY
EARS PIERCED f Ri
with purchase of
7,95 Earrings
Birk's Jewelers of Westwood
950 Westwood Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90024
Phone 477-8009 879-5313
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By far the Best Ribs we ye fried m L A
Hf»r*ICJ t R^rritri
COMPLETE DINNERS
Casual Dining
•rom
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Dr. Anthony Btsa A Dr. Jon Vogel
OPTOMETRISTS
Eyes Examirled
Fashion Eyewear
Contact Lenses A
Soft Lenses
Omnarn M(orfc and
Enter g Reoa^ri
in
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477-3011 477 3012
Mon to Frt 10-6
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}
SEPI'S GIANT
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15
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discount on any
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with this coupon
good through 1976
- *i-
PERFECT FOR
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(order early)
852-0077
By phone $10 00
By Foot from $20 00
GRADUATIONS GETTING A JOB. Birthdaya, Anni
i^^fiirig Nignn. Fi
Housewarming, Getting s Data. Father's Day.
\
■i-f.
I
I
/
_-i
— *>
Awareness
it is about time
people begin to become more
aware of what is going
on in the other part of the world
to reach out to feel and
touch each ofhers' culture
realising it is one world
after all
peace
Ifs Learning
International Movements: human rights, non-violence
(May 10)
International Arts: Noon Concert, Exhibitions (May 11)
International Health and Environment (May 12)
International Affairs: Angola, Korea, U.N. (May 1J)
Ifs Fun
Asia Night: Chinese, Thai, Japanese, Korean (May 10)
Europe Night: Hungarian, Rumanian, Spanish, Turkish, Irish,
Russian, Greek (May 11)
Africa Nightt€thioplans, Morocins (May 12) tzr^— — —
Latin America Night: Chile, Mexican, Jamaican, Brazilian (May 13) -^
■ I ^ \ - ' ■■ .
(Free tickets for the above evenings available at Ackerman Info
Desk, FSA, OISS, ISC — call 825-4940 or 825-3384)
International Faire (May 14)
Exotic food,'' noon-performances, artifacts, displays.
International Dinner (May 15)
Excellent opportunity to try foods from all over the world
Japanese magician. Belly Dancers, and other performances. - __
Tickets now available at I.S.C- (1023 Hilgard) and F.S.A. (325 Kerck-
hoff) $3.00 ($2.50 students) very limited capacity.
All part of the 1976 UCLA jnternationai Week
Sponsored by^
Foreign Student Assn., Council on Programming (I.S.C.), Program
Task Force, Program Advisory Board, Student Legislative Council
Ji
"'T-
t-OmC ! There are over 3,000 international students from mc
than 100 countries at UCLA. Make use of this unique opportunity
we may not be able to afford to hang around next yearl
ONE WORLD FOR PEACE
Labor sfrfkes: many go unnoticed
(AP) Labor stnkcs arc
disrupting tite in cities and
towns acroif the country
Some arc nuking the head-
lines, but moftt. as usual, just
vex the \%ym ei the hometown
(oik
Cement truck drivers mrt on
strike m central Ohio. So are
doormen and elevator oper-
ators at some luxury apart-
ment towers in New York.
Add to the roster the nurses at
JI hospiul in Connecticut, dt.
It very men in 13 Midwestern
and Rocky Mountain states
and the city workers ui San
Francisco.
There It hot, in fact, an
outbreak of labor unrest
There are some major strikes,
but most are just the local
strikej^ that go on every day
and pass largely unnoticed.
Among the ma^ sirikci is
i^^J^o-wcek^ ««ll»y| by
«>.000 memben df the United
Rubber Workers afain«t the
big lour of the tire and ruMKr
industry
The rubber workers arc
seeking an mimcdiate raise of
$1 65 an hour plus a catchup
cost of -living protection
throughout the- life of a new
three-year 'contract The wage
demands are reportedly far
-^ c*ceia of company offers,
and little progress was made in
continuing negotiations.
The rubber workers strike
could have ramifications for
the national economy Auto
makers have warned ihev
could run out of tires and
rubber parts in two more
week> and would be forced to
curtail production
panjrlr funning alt fiot
its mnc pkmmM with manage
ment mtnmmm.\. but olliciaK
Another illegal drug
SACRAMENTO I AP Icaislaimn ^.,r.^A .
' ^' I cgisiauon aimed at crack tnfi
down against a popular illegal drug cleared the Assembly
Monday by a unammous vote Assemblvuoman I eona
Lgeland (D^San Jose), said the drug phencycl.dmc. which
is used legally by veterinarians as a iranquili/er. was now a
popular r^w -high for many voung people
She said I n an interview that people smoke it hke a
marijuana cigarette and the drug eventua^lv does irreversible
brain damage:
Her two bills would make it a felony to sell or possess two
mgredienu of the drug p.perididc and cvclohexanone
with the intent to make phencytlidinc. kno^n as "PCp^ or
"crystal.**
Thc^ bills also would add pipendinc to a stale hst of
controlled substances, requiring anyone trading legally in
the drug to report tu the Slate [department of Justice
The voles were 64^> and 67^) on ihe two hills
Fhey are AB 2843 and AB 2H44
I
^
said production is down M) per
cent
Negotiations in the An-
heuser-Busch strike resumed
Monday in Washington under
the auspices of the Federal
Mediation Service, but there
was no report of progress
Issues which vary from plant
to plant include grievnace pro-
cedures work sUindnfd« and
manning wages mi\6 fringe
benefits
In .San Fran^ cable cars,
trolleys and buses have been
shut down (or a month by a
strike by cilv workers
At issue are wage cuts ap-
proved b> the Board of Super
visors lor I.H50 crafts workers
Campus events
MMUIIC£IIENTS
-fmwm %^ Mill ttiitu(« <l«nnef S3D^
8 30 pm (S? 50) music and songs 5 X-8 30
pm May 7 Internalional Studsnt eeni«f
1023 Kikiard
-Tan mmk it VMr Iihimim mm
May 9 rs ttK last day to rsQisttr so t>e
:>ure to 00 so af orw of the foNMMno
locations Brum Walk ntir ttie Gypsy
M^agon Court of Soencos and ntar
Bunche
— Afl E«Mi«| af CMn« featuring me
TytHirns ptrforming two one-aCtS. 7 30 prr]
tomorrow Kerckhoft Cofttt NtMM
—fn^ kwwmwm 1% can Mp you find
out rtie National presidenttai cindiiflMf
stands on the iMots Visit Kerckf)off 306
and fill out a card ant Hit answers will be
sont to you
—•Mid Irkw will t)e r»«id 10 am 2 30 pm
••itMliy 7 2nd level Ackerman 11 am
330 pm today and tomorrow 9 am-noon
May 7 ScDooftberg quad and 11 am 3 30
pm todav May 7 Medical Ctnier Student
Lounge Call 825^1484 for an appointment
or sign up at table on Brum M^alk cliem
q^aO Of flunche walkwav
«M^ »rv W^astMngiofl appticaMAs aro now
available m Kerckhoff 306 Deadline is May
12
— OM 8in|Mi TMruMMM players cHick
the draw m KcfckhoM 400 \sn your match
assignments time date and court If disft
are any problems call Bart at 4794011
, -Uki iMii iM| ««Mrlel SdiilartMi it
fcMni ofltftd t>y the Chiiiese American
Ciliffns Alliance Foundation iimiiod to
students of Chmtst anoMlty 'who arc
presently sophomores at a recogni/ed
coUoge or university m the Los Angela'
area For an application write Chinkhe
American Aihan Lodge 415 Biiwm Imt
Los AngoMs 90012 or contact the Scho
larship office Murphy A 129
— ftllawthipt information and deadline
on extramural funding for gradatle student
and postdoctorais are available in the
Fellowships and Aisittantship Section
Murpgy 1228
— 8MdMl BrMMMMMp C«Mr stattod by
trained interns will help you find ifunding
for your ideas Open daily noor>^ pm
Kerckhoft 401
Meanwhile, federal medta-
lofs HI Washington mei Mon-
day for the 26th da> with
bargainers representing the
National Broadcastii^ Co and
striking techmctan^ and i^ws
writers
The strike began after L700
members of the National As-
sociation oi Broadcast Engin-
eers and Techmciaos rejected a
5 per certt incrcMe in wages
that now average S375 a week
^Picket lines went up at NBC'
studios in SIX cities, but the
network, after some difficul-
ties, has functioned with few
problems noticeable to viewers
Also continuing is the two-
month strike of K.OOO leam-
sters union beer bottlersi
against Anheuser-Busch. Inc.
brewers of Budweiser. Busch
and Michelob beers The com-
Child care . . ,
(C offitinued from Page 4)
F-ord urged Congress to enact his own program under which
siales would establish and enforce their own dav-care standards
hord has vetoed 48 bills and has been overriden eight times
rhe day-care centers look after the children of workinM
mothers and have 'hctn cited as one wav women with small
children can get off welfare rolls and into jobs without leaving
their children unattended
The House vote on the bill was 33 votes mmn than the
required two-thirds maiorit\ to override the veto
When the roll was called. 243 Uemmrats were foined by 3*
Republicans on the win«ing side, overpowennie ?4 I)emi>crafs
and 77 Republicans I
Jhc hill ^ould suspend umir lulv I a rtHuucmeni that child
day-care centers. i„ quahfi lor lederal funds must meet lederal
standards on staff persons on hand lor children aged six ^ceks to
SIX vcars old A prcvi,ous suspension, enacted last October
expired feh I
I he Malfinit requirements j^ange from one child per staff
member lor the voungest children to seven voungsters per staff
iwember lor children between four and six vcars iHd
Luder the ^wU..iMw%efH S2^ btHnm annual limit on snaaf
service program funtfs wx>uld be bxmsted bv $125 million ihrouKh
Sept ^0 with SKM) million betag allocated to slates based on
popuUiHm and the res+ sph\ aecnrd tfvgtt. t4ir»rmrrd far aid in
meeting somdards
I he bill aJsi) extends 6ftd/%dds incentives lt)r the dav care
cenlers to htre welfare rccipiems m meetmj? stall^needs I nder
these prc»visions. states could reimburse the centers lor the cost ol
emphnin.^ x^eUare recipiems up lo $5.|gH) annuallv per worker
-miernsfiips IKmillBnil OppirtMfillni
and local volunuwr positions are avaiiaM
HIMI
WHtri me tidraolk fadi
^J^^^'ougn EXW Acfcerman At23 or call Otto P/emmaef and slarrtng Dana Andrew^
S2S«3i
directitf 0y
in trig Dana Andre*
5 pm. today MelniLr
PrMidien iuin OECA as a
unsumei mvesiigalof Visit Kercirtwfi 311
01 call 8?5 2820 Volunteers are also
tor environmental Mni6 tooO pro
IS
-4IC saiiM ami u^^rwm
now availaMe for two year term with UC
Studont- LoOOy m Sacramento urnich pays
S780S0 a month MitaifdMiiiNB include
tieing ^ fumk UC fiaduate and mterott in
eOucationtI «iuis ^ick up application m
KercMiorf 306 Deadline li May 7 or eil
CiKfllTS
■mi Itai daft will present its
•ne concert 8J0 pm torngni
Sct^OMbeig auditorium Free lo^ Uu.a
SiMiiMit S? toi oMur miiimi iKMlly
staff ma mm cUmus f3 pmrai ad
mil
«i oroup
5 7 prr)
Y^e^^
will tffio from foNi-ftiii It
today Coop f-ree
~JiVM LiiMwfl ^iMlil Witt pffMM a
concert noon fomoffow Schoenboro
((C Offitinued on Pate |g)
A Tennis BaH Fanny Caddy for men and women A gr^at nmr
tennis practica accessory. Hold up to Wva extra tennis balls
behind and out of the way of tne playing action.
It's sharp looking, durable, and super light weight You'll hardy know it s there Its designed
to help you get more than double the continuous playing time with ease. (Please indicate your'
waist size) Rush $6 9S plus 5(W post. & hdig (Check or |mooey order) to J E M Industries
P.O. Box 64295 West Los Angeles, Cirt. 90Q64 (2031 oUanfield Ave - WLA > do not send
lu tills aUUr^i^s)
I
rrandsco
GIVE
BLOOD
■^T"
TODAY
tent-
schoenberg
quad
11am-3;30pm
2nd floor
Ackerman
10am-2:30pm
Student Lounge
Med Center
11am-3:30pm
Sponsored by
Student Legislative.
Council Student
Welfare
Commission
■ >
■ fi
LB! mm vs
■4--~
^..
\,
/
VOTE
I
(C onlimird from Pucr 17)
— ia> Kjrp. ivpMHiiM will (Kt^tni a
UciUly ««cita^ tJfr pm >M«y ; IcNJUNig
Litit lUMltr UaA lUiiMlB taCM% tUtI
and wmtr cttMfit |1 ottwr stuiMli S2.
Otntral adwmwn O"
SfflMMS
-fMim iR iM Mm Mi Fin H Mtyw
CMrlilZfllM I pm tonight Rotfe 120G
— tmc Nmn lipiirt. i workshop 57
pm today WomefliRttource Center
->Kinsty tSO
IMM li Hi liM 3S pm
•tmche 2tS0
OiiMt tpdiinr. 7 pm tonight
Campui
lundte 3HS
pm today Boetter 8600
-Liidii n Umnmlm t Hmtmm m
Hf9 CMim ma wMfcs bag lunch lilli
•y iiiwcm A 163
MtMIV tMHl ot Hit use Lm
Will :»pMli. AooA-i pm today
Kmaty ttt
-TiM lelMi it dM An if TMlNai by
Madtime Hunter UES this watfc t firad
uaie School ot Ediicalian coiioquium noon
tomorrow Moore 3rd Moor
-ifHIHI Md OwMHrY il HMMi tea
piVlMKlH by Dr Tony Hugli. Scnpps
Cltnic and Hiiaircti Foundation 4 pm
today QHS n-m
-H^^
-Mifaaltc laUli Lific S 7 pm to
moirow Boeiter 3400
345 pm Knudaan 1240B talk 4 pm
todav Knudtan ^172
— Tbi Fitw<i FirtdtH lyUMk TTF TCMf
dO#ae 345 pm taik 4 pm KmiidMn t24fli
2 pm tomorrow Knudsen 1
1240B
3 30 pm May 7
M€fTliSt
•wdi l||iUiiiM|i
Mondays. Wmtim 2171^
Thursdays Ackerman 2*
3-5 pm
and taO'll am
-ToMMai Jiii groups mM ombi 16-11
am today ^ 3 pm tomorrow and t-10 am
May 7 Math Science 4223 Cad CSh2031
iUfMliii MMin with Aaiia-
of StudMli. Offidi of Rati-
and iH dMBidar of Wm Sfei^M
Mwy ti¥iii| fooia. tomorrow. Nodridt Fire-
side lounge May 1Q Riobor Firoaide I
and noon. May tt. Karcbhoff 411
*«MiMM Vi|i 4 5 9 pm. Miir MM 2-
3J0 pm tomorrow Acborman MM Suf-
gaited donation Si
— Fr«Hb CawMin Irhp. 730 pm.
tvery Widwoiday Iniarnmionof Studant
Center
Mftdpor
In «!• *lif tn flM most teautiful
in tfw MntortainmsfiC wotM-
ThMtra In thm hmmrt of Orlffitii
th« kSitf in primo
of thm HmdmHmn^mw
Thontro is prottiilo ofior yoy
ALL NEW SUBSCRIPTION SERIES -
You can be part of the exciting first year at the New Greek Theatre by
subscribing now to one - or all three - of the super Summer Series 76
You will, be m on the start of a great new tradition
••«• 91 .OO On mmch S«teMHptlMi Ticket
rf SUBSCRIBERS will rocoivo a full seaaort
calendar with anothair-ipacial order form
at a later date
• Special Members menu pnces at ti
tine Los Angelea reotaurams
The Dresden Room • La Poubetle
Maison Gerard • Robaire s
a And Special Members Rates at th<
outstanding Southern California
attractions
Busch Gardens • The Burbank Studios
Magic Mountain • Manneland
Sjubscrit>e now for first choice of seats
plus all theoe savings
Your subscription aeriet order comes with
The New Greek Theatre Membership Card
which entitles you to many special New
Subscribers Benefits
a PRIORITY on choice seats for all shows
•■FIRST CHOiCi of tickets for Special
Attractions
a ASSURED Reserved Seating m the same
choice location tor all attractions m the -
series you choose
a NO WAITING at the Box Office
a ALVUAYS assured of seats for those hard-
to-get sold-out shows
• SUBSCRIBERS can buy Single Tickets
on a limited basis prior to open public
sale for all Non- Subscription events
Sorry, no telephone o
Series Subscriptions
Fee cem^l*t«
iiccepted on
YOU AM» THl MONT AMD TMI
660-84
• II
Curtaifi Timo
All evening performances will be§i«l
promptly at 8 30 ,
^arklno |-
Ample FREE parking is available for
patrons of The New Greek Theatre
FocMltlos For Nondicappo^
Special seating arrangements are
available for wrteeichair patrons
Om« te tlie nmturm •!
DEADLINE FOR ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS IS MAT 15
Mail Orders Filled m Order of Receipt For seating together orders NMiSt be received
in same envelope Please submit mmmmrmtm checks or charge information if orderioo
more than one category I ~ ^ i»
Tliootro Fartlos mn4 Group Solos
Can: 12131 810 tlOO. Write Group Tickets.
The New Greek Theatre 2700 N Vermont.
Lbs Angeles Ca 90027
tHpftow Offer ln^ Mmw IS.
Mail coupons with stamped self- ad dressed envelope to The New Greek Theatre
2700 N Vermont. Los Anjaiai. Ca 9p027
.^"
SCRIES
semes
JUNE 26-28
SAMMY DAVIS, JlC
BLOOD, SWEAT a TEARS
^ ^ ■' .
JULY 28-AUGUST 1
BURT ANTHONY
BACHARACH NEWLEY
JUNE 30-JULY 2
THEJPINNERS
DONNA SUMMER
JULY 19-21
SEALS & CROFTS
^ t-
AUGUST 2-3
AUGUST 18-22 ^ •■
BELAFONTE
AND INTERNATIONAL COMPANY
SEPTEMBER 1-5
RICH LITTLE
AND SKCIAL QUEST STAR
DANFOGELBERG
AUGUST 10-12
DAVID
CROSBYXNASH
\ GRAHAM
A
JULY 10-18
(NO PERFORMANCE JULY 12)
THE D'OYLY CARTE
OPERA COMPANY C
LONDON
OILBCRT A SULLIVAN
JULY10-13
UCLA • awp tmm Ali-Americen ftdk Taygan »fi
l!^ .^"7?'?f^'"- y*"""^""-' ' «•€ s MMW Newberry tn'lhrW ^
25. ^ '•fSJH *i2^««««*««^ <»uai match of the seaaon. mmm ^ ^
%mC. $-4 Ta^^isa tMaHed the duel match season wtm a apettaaa t-t r-
recefg, at h4a VMeg aiwiles poeN*on -r— ^
TayfafvbetMia play la fhm CalNomie State Cfmm^imi^m^ m
•^^•» •^y w^ laaiwiiiialas Bftan Teacher Bruce Ntchali ana ftleve
Mom The rswiaat^ei of UCLAs laoiii la eon^aMnf In
facMaiials af aie Loa Angeles TaMHa Chia which
John Aualln. Tany Ofahani. Luia Enck lah
Brutns piaylht at «i* LA TefwHa Clyh.
f
Nich ha«afi laat V
DROP-IN ENCOUNTER GROUPS
Am KASV WAV TO MUT THf OPTOSfTE MX
^•* •^AST A MtAMtmOFUL neLATlOf^SHiP
Bwary Snndav and M^eOneaaay Ht^ — ^ m
Mi T-i'-»< ^^^ ^ SpauJding Ava Hol»yw'<iod DONATION
OOl-fl^l 4 btm east of f „y%« Near Suomi Smi $7,50
SEPTEMBER 8-12
GEORGE BURNS
CAROL CHANNING
AUG 13-15
THE BAND
AUGUST 26-28
OUVIA
NEWTOH-JOHN
JULY 14-15
TNI MUTES OF KNZAMCC^
JULY 16-18
SEPTEMBER 22-24 '
THE
CHINESE ACROBATS
OF TAIWAN
VOTE
STAirrs j^NAMr
•t theM spwMly MiKtod tfiMlPM
aCSIWMI Uaitttf Artists • I?? JS?) CtStt MCSA M Cimiii« • Mtf MM
MA CitT CmtNij • 114^391) aCSTMraSHI U A CIMNI4 • N3 IM
Bicsntsnnial
ASUCLA is getting ready to
RETURN YOUR MONEY!
11
at
32. la
Of Tt
The 197i
(WCT)
In
If you haven't gotten a redemption envelope GET IT NOW* Follow the easy
directions on how to caicyiale for your bonus — put in the receipts from all your
purctMMe from the Students Store from March 10 through /^pr il X) and turn
It into the Bonus t>ox m either Store You M get a check for 1 1% of all your pur ^
- including tax - in mid-Mey*
LAST DAY TO TURN
IN YOUR ENVELOPE:
SATURDAY. MAY 8
^^^■■■ii^i
I
i
s
Bruins
^^ktr
I!
I
Dl Spmru Writer
In 1 giimc marred by 65 fouls, the Cj^lifornia High
School All-Sun defeated the visiting Soviet Union
Junior Nationals 74-72 (Sunday mght), •• Rich
irmnning of Marina High hit a 2IMbal bsnk shot at
the firuil buzzer Three future Bruins played m the
fiine
James Wilkek. a 6-7 forward from Dorsey High,
Gig. Sims (6-9) from Redondo. and 6-« Darryll
Allums from Lynwood all played key roles in
enabling the California squad to defeat the Ruiiiant.
Always wanted DCLA
Wilkes, who many feel already displays a similar
style of play to that of Richard Washington, said,
••I've always wanted to attend UCLA I never really
considered any other school.**
The CodC'ity Player of the Year l^ls that il Wash-
ington or Marques Johnson tuhrns pro this year, he
will be expected to play a lot "I am going to UCLA
with the attitude that Vm gpiag to play,** said the
confident Wilkes ^~
Some skeptics seem to think that the UCLA
basketball dynast) is over lo this Wilkeji replied.
"They'll find out in four vcars "
Excellent i^anie
Sims, the C\h 3-A Pla>crc>< the Year, played an
excellcn|,gamc against the Russians, blocking 3 shots
U.S. — Soviet game
in the opening minutes of the game and intimidatii^
shooters throughout.
**l like to block shots; I always have and I always
will.- he noted ,*^
Sims decided to attend UCLA because he feels it
it a great chance to learn more bsiketbAll and play^
with teammates of very high caliber, He also feels
UCLA IS in a good area and thinks the coaching
staff IS excellent
As to the Washington-Johnson situation. Sims
said, **rm confident Richard wiU^ go hardship, but I
don't know about Marques I think Marques is a
better all-around player than Richard, though **
thinks forward '
Sims, who has played both forward and center in
high school, thinks his future in college is as a
forward He feels his greatest need for improvement
is defensively, where he will be called upon to giurd
a smaller and quicker forward
Darryll Allums, a 6-8, 220 pound forward-center,
who was conucted by 130-200 school, decided to
attend UCLA because it was local and is well known-
for its academic and athletic excellence.
**! will be very fortunate to attend UCLA because
I can learn with the best," said Allums "How much
I play IS determined by what Richard and Marques
do m the nesu- future.**
1
The Russian team pknif9d a physical brand of
basketball, very similar to that of the RaiiiMi
Olympic Team. However, utilizing tlKir superior
qmekmm, ikt Calif omia AU-fit^^ jumped off to a
f 8-3 lead ^ sHMy kaakau tkc end restihs of rtaak.
When California ooacii Tom Hawkins rrpiarid his
SUrters in the first half, the Russians slowed the
tempo down and came back to a 37-29 half-time
deficit. ^
The Sovieu stayed close to California throughout
the second half and had a 70-69 advantage with Ims
than a minute remaining
With 32 seconds to go. Long Beach Poiy*s Michael
Wrley made a steal at mid-court and was fouled on
the ensuing lay-up Wiley hit one free throw and tied
the game at 70.
Wflkct steal
Five seconds later. Wilkes knocked the ball loose
to Rich Branning. who missed, a lay-up, but Wiley
was there to tip it in and gave California a 72-20
lead
However, with nine seconds left, Wilkes fouled tie
Soviets* Vasili Fedonnov, who made two free throws
and tied the game.
This set the stage for Branning's dramatic 20-
footer that banked in from straight away after
circling the basket.
^r
I ••
jrf^- ■'■•
i-
«=Sf"
A ;.i
f ..
\ •»
Read your yogurt labd-and Johnston's.
Then you decide which yogurt is best.
Conky Jojinston says:
What we leave out of Johnston's Yogurt may
be as Important as what we put in Most yogurts
mte made with artificial flavors, artificial color
ing and preservatives added.
h would be easier and a lot cheaper for us
to add artificial ingredients, too. For example,
it costs us 20 times more to use natural coloring
THE PREMIUM YOGURT IN T
Try ihmt n€w flavors Pkun Kraay (made with a unique biimd U
crMfnychocoipte fudge vMtih bits olwttlmjt) Our other flavors Bmmn
L«mofi Chlflon. Peach. Orange Ptr^eapplc. Plnaapphi. S^cdbtt Red
for H'»>^ SundMik tfi A^ticoiPinaippU. Chenv ViMila Pktn, and
and 6 times more for natural flavoring. But we
don't put anything into Johnston's that dmm't
belong in yogurt.
You'll spend more on Johnston's Yogurt
because we spend more to make it. But I think
you1l agree, Johnston's is worth the extra pen
nies in taste alone.
taft pad plums* and CliicilaU Walnm (our own
BovsenbaiTV Caramd Pecan. Cheny. French /^ipJc
•nd Plain AiK) look
Space Queens take IM blnll
By Kcfi hr&m
OB Sports Reporter
In women's basketball, the Space Queens
(Luniiisting of voiieybaU players) won the A-
diyision championship Team member* in-
cluded Leslie Knudsoa, Mar> DeUo aiui Sue
^wing The cunsoiation was won by a team
consisting of intramural officials Jane Won-
man, Linda Akom and Celeste Grijalva
Alpha Gamma Deiu Sorontv wjon the B-
division titje. Their capuin and leading scorer
was Cindy Lewis Other top performers were
Meredith Lyon and Sally Beamich The Hot
Socks took the consolation game Maria
Pielact was the high scorer for the Hot Socks.
Three teams won the womens badminton
doubles competition They were Uuric
Livingston and Kim Rountree. Donna Hamadu
and Gayle Takahashi and Barb Wise and Chns
Battele. The singles champion was Carolyn
Gill.
Women's flag football turned out to be a
sorority battle in the A-dtvision title game, as
Alpha Phi defeated the favored Tn Delts, 7-^.
Alpha Chi Omega defeated Ad Hoc 12-2 in the
consolation.
The Hot Socks won the first ever women's
intramural soccer title
Men's intramural bowling saw Barney*s
Bombers win the Monday laigMe. Top per-
formers were Russ Jmci (164) and Bnd
Withers Team X tbok the Twiiiy title Terr\
hmo (176) and Fletch ICistler were the sund-
outs. with all team members averaging over
160 With Steve (irAson<l90) leading the wav.
Front Row won the WedMfedav league Top
pciiornmges oi the year were Todd Lavin of
ZB] with a 234 high game and Fel Wiurralde
who rolled a 243
The Reiber Renegades and the Barbaruins.
two dorm teams, fought it out for the soccer
title, with the Renegades winning in suMen-
deaih. three penalty kicks to two.
Weight lifting competition conaiited of six
v^cight divisions The winners were Chris
W^jng of AGO flJO an4 under). Don
hrcdcrickson of AGO (136 and under). Gar\
Considine of ATO (170 Md under). Richard
Lewis, an independent (IK$ and under). Bruce
Nicholl (2(X) and under), and Dave Kurrasch ol
Beta Thcta Phj won the 200 and over division
The three hfts included a squat, bench press
and dead hft High totals were kurrasch (1220
te.K Nicholl (1140 Iba). and Fredencksoo
(ID70 lbs).
Tom Spivak of Phi Happa Psi won the
Fraternity raqueibalJ title and the independent
ekftmp was Will Jordan Phi Kappa Psi took
tfce rugby title with Donald G. Skinner win mng
in squash
Women basketfaalers
HI i
By Mike Ftecfold
DB Sports Writer
Although, the UCLA wo-
men's basketball team fell
short of a luitional champion-
ship, an AAU team composed
of some Bnuns did not The
team. Nation^ General West,
beat teams like Snitz. Planter's
Peanuts, and Wayland Baptist
(a team which was third in
xollegiate women's basketball)
to capture iia firti AAiJ tHie
National General West was
beaded by player-coach Ellen
MotlKt; this year's Brum
mentor Abo playing on the
team was mirtint coach Chris
Howell Other Uclans to
pnrticipate were seniors Leslie
Trapnell and Judy Lewinter
and junior Lon Allen And it
took a turnaround 12-footer
on the buzzer in the final game
by Trapnell, starting Brum
center this past teaaon. to give
the team the title by one
point
Two years ago. National
General West captured third in
the nation ip the AAU tourna-
ment The tournament directly
follows the collegiate cham-
pionships; ihe competition is
similar Many teams have tlie
very same players that their
collefB team had
However. National General
West IS more ol an all-star
squad
Last year a team of the four
previously mentioned Bruins*
Barbara Mosher and Monica
Havelka of the Long Beach
State 49ers, and five other
players, all coaches, had to
settle for second place in the
prestigious tournament.
Havelka scored 53 points in
National General West's four
games to earn the title of MVP
for the AAU championships.
Her teammate Mosher (sister
of he«d coach Ellen) also aver-
aged m double figures for the
Gallup. New Mexico series
The championship did not
come easilv
The 49er$ Mosher and
Haveleka combined for 35
points in the quarter final
round game in defeating Snit/
Trapnell scored 12 points, all
in file first half National
General led by su at the half
and widened it to. 73-60 at the
end
In the semifinals. New
York's Planter's Peanuts fell
victim to the champions, 70-62.
despite the lact that four of its
players scored in double
figures This time %!osher and
Havelka combined for 29
points and Sheila Adams
former dominating center lor
UCLA., added 13
-^ The finals provided The
closest game yet. 167-66. av
National (jencral needed a last
second bucket hy "Trap'^ to
give them the win Mavis
Washington paced the victors
wuh 15
There IS a
difference!!!
MAKE AM
Oofiala at Adiorman Onkm, MadtcH
Canlaf and Sdioonborg Oami
THE COUNCIL ON EDUCA-
TIONAL DEVELOPMENT
(CED) will be considering course pro-
posals for the Winter Quarter 1977. and is
prepared to sponsor innovative courses
of genuine academic quality which
would be of interest to the campus
community. Such course proposals will
be due in the CED Office no later than
Monday, May 17, 1976. If you are in-
terested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educational Development. 3i2l Murphy
Hall.
- 1 -^
Contribute
to
UCLA's Women's Newspaper
short stories sports
a'^ " photography
reviews news
poetry 0rose
also need essays on feminist theory,
women's status
COPY DEADLINE: MAY 10
112KerckhoffHall 825-2640
o' ripe'itfice
: MCAT
: OAT
: LSAT
: 6RE
: AT6SB
: OCAT.-:'
: CPAT
SmeKctann •
Cou's^t tn«t SIP •
\t itf fo* u^f i
: ECFM6 "^*"^ =
: NAr L MEO BOS :
: SAT -VAT :
2 2124 So S*pui«^d« Bivd •
• LA CA 90025 ^
• (213) 477-3919 I
' Foreign Student Association and iSC's Council
on Programming Invite all Foreign Students To:
FSA SPRING GENERAL MEETING
6:40-8:30 PM
— Non-Resident Fee Increase
— 1976 Intemational Week
— Upcoming FSA'Election
— Council on Programming
8:30-10.00 pm - International Dinner will be servea at a special rate of 50 cents
($.50) to all registered Foreign Students attending the General Meeting
10:00 pm - 1:00 am Live band Todays pleasure: Music And Drinks
FREE FOR ALL
Date: Friday May 7th, 1976
er-kM*
1083 Hill
)
.1
I
L-
Students from the Middle East
and
Developing Countries
Prepare yourselves tor management positions in Banking & Finance
through a new master's degree program designed lor you and
offered by the:
rNTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF BANKING AND
.— lU FINANCE AT SAINT MARY'S COLLEGE
A representative will be on your campus TUESDAY; MAY 1 1 at 9:00 am
to provide information and answer questions.
GSM 1379 ^
I I
For further information, write or call the:
THE PLACEMENT CTR. BLOG. 1-G '
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF BANKING AND FINANCE
:' AT SAINT MARY'S COLLEGE
P.O. Box 101
Moraga. Ca 94575
(415)938-9674
o
Passing Ae hunfles
consisienf ih"75tl*'#* WiltuTis, no^ being hetp«t % "pCt^ CO*rH
|im Bush. Boyd Gtttf>ns. who made rhe iShB team and is also
working out at UCLA 75 NCAA chimp Craig CaudiM. inconsistent
Quentm Wheeler equally erratic but talerUcd Harold Schawb — ru
set a personal besi o» 49 9 recently at CairvetvUle during the Florida
Relays and Shin*^-
Newcomers wh»j >t* made ^xkm >>tnd9^ m learnirig the event sre
Arizona State's -Rick Walker. Ocddentals Cer>e Taylor, who was a
surprise seicond at the NCAA last year and is iollowing a work-out
plan sufgisaed by Mann. Randolph Williams ol Kentucky StJIv— ' he
was an enuaHy surprising third last year at NCAA and Kjnsan Nolan
Cromwell who's putted a cUimber of big wins and last limes to go
with them A piitoent queition lor Cromwell is hofw many/ ol hts
good races is he leaving behind him in the early part ol the season
Local talent should hav- nethmg fo sdv about the oiii<ome
•OO. use's Tom Andrews ran the race ol his IHe lavr Satut jnd
put himself right in thi* forefront ol the picture tor Montreal with
his bla/ing 49 4 time Teamfhdte Kich G^ayb* > highlv
talented and (ould f )lv make the trials finals although that *«
stretching it a bit pjirrhaps. Still, he s one to watt h
Bruin Grant Siederhaus ran super blv in the early part of the year,
but has been hit with a reiiirnng leg injury It he s healthy, you can
discount that miserable 5Vfe against LSC jnd look for j time in the
49s Whether that will earn him a spot in Montreal is debatable. But
he s dangerous dmi time will tell No one is (ounting him out by a
long shot, yet
There yoo have it prohablv (he most wild events on the trac k
Therr s no telling what (.an gcj wrong over ten hurdles Rod
Mildburn almost didn i iTiake the 1972 team Son^ethmg |usi as weird
( ould well h n on the wav to Viontreai
-U.S. Team PreduiioffH: High Hurdles — Charles foster |err\ Wilson
Tom Hill Intermediate Hurdles — [im Bolciinn Ralph Mann )am<>s
KinK ^
OlYMfK MEDAL PREDICTIONS:
footer (US/. Bron/«' V\ilsof ' *"
Bolding <l S). Bfitn/t' Mam , ,
HH-Gold Drul ii-ai-
'H^,olH Pa^'"*' •
mK*m
..Iv
ff
>■-»
Ble^d for us
I
1
\
VOTE
Give blood
to the Red Cross
this week
1
*
I
— OCLh
BICENTENNIAL
EVENT
Race, Age and Sex:
Reverberations of the
_ American Revolution
Fifth in the UCLA Bicentennial Lecture Series ^^^^^ ^^^
Winthrop Jordan ^^^V .m^ I
Professor of History. Univensty of California. Berkeley, Professor Jordan is author of White Over
Black: American AftHudet Toward the Negro, 1550-1812 and a former Associate Dean of Minority
Affairs in the Graduate Division
May 12 — Final lecture Series MARY B>ETH JORDAN. Associate Professor of History,
Cornell University: "THE REVOLUTION AS A WAR OF LIBERATION FOR WOMEN
\
WEDNESDAY, May 5, 8 PM
No Admission Charge
DODD HALL 147
Public Cordially Invited
ted by UCLA Bfcenteomai Comrrutl** »rt0 Comminee
t)«»c UKturet
J
>* ' ^.'
Spring practiceheginning for Polobruins
•> lo^ Hebcr
DS Sporf% Writer
You can tell ipnag m in the air The %un r*=^*hinmg. the
are gf^wing and spring practice hai surted lor the UCt A water
polo umm.
The Bruins aren't in action until September 1 1 when they meet
the Alumni But coach Bob Horn is hoping the promts the
pok>istft have showed so far will carr> them to their first national
championship since 1972
-Were going to have a pretty iolid S4)uad come next vear*
Horn said Right now. we're experimenting with some neu ideas
we'd like to use next season.** ^
-It's goiflf to be a dogfight for the championship this year
There's five teams that could win it Cal Sunford IC Irvmc Cal
Sute Long Beach and UCLA **
UCLA will afMn be pressed b\ Cal and Stanlord in the Pac-« .
The Cardinals who were ranked number one for much ol last
year, will probablv have their best team ever California does lose
last year's NCAA MVP Jon Svedson. but the Bears arc three-
tirxie defending champions and will still be lough
Graduation has also Uken its toll on ICl A Gone are All-
Americans Robert Webb. Rick Coyle. Brian MclC.nlr% ^nd Jim
Hester
The Bruins do return eleven lettermen from last Vears NCAA
third place team
-Our strength has to be our depth and balance." Horn said
-So far. I really cant sc^ any weak points *
WMh the graduation of Coyle, there are some worrv ab<^ut the
goahe position With the improved pUy of Jim Fit/patrick and
Scott Moser. the problem no longer exits Plus UCl A has signed
Dave Rosen, a goalie who was the most sought-after poloist m
the nation this year, to a national letter of intent
•Rosen could really help us a lot next year.- Horn said "Its
going to be a toat-up (at goalie) to see who starts "
At this point, a possible starting line-up would probablv be Joe
Vargas. Jeff Stites. Don Spiccr Rick Sherburne and John
Norris
Gregg Fiscalini, Rick Clark and Victor Katayama have also
had an impressive spring and should also figure m the Brum
lineup
UCLA also signed a^iother top recruit. Chris Vargas tJcKs
brother), to a letter of intent Vargas, who is left handed, has
been ^nown to give t%e opposition fits since southpaws are tough
to guard
In the upcoming weeks. UCLA will compete in tournamentsjn
Irvine and Sanu Barbara in preparation for the summer AAl
season
- (
J
r
'.^
9
\
.m^m 2
\3
V
T
t>
^MilCl
'^^'
\
f -?.
-'A
• •^»
^4
►♦< '••
.»
Speakers Program in conjunction with BSCCUS presents -
STOKLEY CARMICHAEL
/
0
reknowned Pan Africanist & organizer for
All African Peoples Revolutionary Party
Speaking on changing conditions of Pan African Revolution
Wednesday — 12:00 Noon
Janss Steps
^oif>ntfir>d b» to»iili»>«> Qtnmt^m '^iMHoni i nipinlgtfmn f *
1
.y
etASSIFIED AD
AOVCRTIftlMG OFF ICC t
ll«rclihoff Mill 112
OftAOLIMt 1«tlO A.M
Thm ASUCLA Cumwmwtcationt
fylly fuppmrH tti« pnlv«raity of Call-
A4««r1i«inf •#•€• will i»«l to« mf^
oallabii tn «w OaMy Bmln !• awym
who dltcriminal*^ on Iteo toattt of
ancoslry. color, notional origin, roc*,
pion. or aoa MoHhor Mw OoMy ftruln
Mio AftUCLA Communlcoliont
» Invoottgolod any of ItM tor
vieoc a^oniaotf or advoni»or« ropro-
•onlod in IM« Im^o Any poraen ^•
llovlnf Hiol on o^vortlaomonl In Ifila
I^OMa »loioloa Mm Boord't policy on non-
#lacrlnilnotlon statoO horain thoulO
communloolo comptoinli In «irNln« to
ma •ualnaat Mana«ar. UCLA Dally
•mm. 112 KarcMioff Ka«. 30t Woalwood
rtoaa, Lot Angolas. Calltorn'o §0024
nation protolomt. call UCLA Moualn^^
Off lea. (213) 125 -4411 . Waataltfa Fair
(213) 4y»-3
WOHK N PLAY SHOPS FQH SINGLES
• 6EV HILLS 2^J J940 4m Friday
• WILSHIRE area 938 1037 3rd Sat
•vAi I t y 340 0441 i>w«ry Friday
• SAN PEDRO S47 1656 every Sunday
' REEMAN INST Wettwood 475 2453
r
CHILOIWN.
accaptad at ttia Untvaralty Grant's
Nursury tcltooi for tumnior and/or
FdN a nr oHitiont. This coop ocImvoI for
UCLA tly^int olaff . and laculty tamlllaa
Koa AM/Mi aasslont. For Into call
(Ann M 11)
~ ASUCLA Travel
Service it going to
Russia!
UCLA students, faculty and
staff are eligible to travel
to Leningrad Moscow Kiev.
Yalta. Tbilisi 4 Vladimer-
July 14 - Aug 6 for $749 00
alNnciusive from London,
Caii 825-1221 or <;ome to
A level Ackerman Monday>-
Fndays 8 00-4 00
campus
annocincements
complete
copying
service xerox
kerckhoff ]2\
82 50611
of 1971 Ra-
-July 10. 1076— Can 242-3101
(1 IIT)
STUDENTS wanlad to form UCLA -
G.A.8.F (Group Agalnat Smdilng Pol-
tullon) Call Ken Herman 390 1 7S0.
0 - 10 pm. ^^ ^ j^
passport
identification
resume photos
;50 henkhoH hoff 825 06? 7 t^7l
opon mon-^fi 8 30-4 JO
WHAT DOES A BRUIN
BEAR WEAR FOR ACTIVE
SPORTS?
UCLA sweatshirts, sweat-
pants, jogger's outfit, t-
shirts. shorts, racmg trunks
sweat soci(S, and carries a
UCLA gym bag and beach
towel
Bearwear.
ASUCLA Students' Store
Acicerman Union
OMAT oirr ^Asaiofiit Pimomg
PCntFICTIVEt ay aulhof lacluror.
counaaior ZINA GUANO tTUOENT
ITOMC WESTWOOO •OOj^TOUCS
led tor
•aa you In
1342 or 472
If M 10)
music
SAMJO. Oltoaon tJeotorlona fia-2li.
Archtop tost, with tcrugga lunart
EacaMani cendHlon. loaa. Caao. $000
020-32S9
(MuoOlO)
psrsofiai
FATTY 0 ^rrf
ad In yaalarday
day* Fifth Floor
aruin wouldn't put
Had Blrth-
(OMi)
PATTY - WHI you buy up tor US'* Grata
lul PETE Don I trip it » caauai Sproul
5N
fOMSl
IDGET Shar Somawttare ovar ttia rain
bow may ail your draams coma true
Happy 20th Birtttday. Tar
ALL of Dan Mandaxa trlands (both of
Iham) mr9 invltad to tut birthday party
Saturday May Sth at Tha Cava 1425
3rd St Santa Monica
(OMS)
" 1
PCRSONAL growth group Opan Thura
12 -2 Woman tRatourcaCantar Kinaay
1*0 .S3MS „^,„
WOMEN! We mf organizing
sharing A aupport. Somatimaa caN con-
•ciouanaas rais ng Organisational
maating 5:00 Thurt May 6. Kinaay 190
Coma aiHl aaa if you d Nlia to participate
(OMO)
TO Via. rata wtio
Too ikm6 you Had^tb loaa your baal
rr. Tha KATa ^^ ^ ^^
WANTED An and to fraudulant
• dt Eric Saltar tor Btetent Walfara
Commiaatoner He doMaovs.
(6 M S) .
MEG - To our nail praatdanl Lo«a.
That Jawiah Kid
(0 M 0)
GLICK<-flotaa ruck old mmn' Glad to
999 you m9<i9 It to »t9 Tha wairdoa
*"*^^ fOMS)
JULIE SUE Misa yo6 loli* I promiaa to
call or vialt aoonf Leva. Katie
(0M5)
CHRISTOPHER Happy 19th kiddof
JOHN Happy Aimlaoraofy How
bringing me aoma doughnuts'' Pia
Two - Ctn^
(0 MS)
CHICK ENM AN Happy Slrthdey CMyf!!
Junk food tnebaas. haaalad caattas and
iBcea (hot and blah?) aaida |ust ba-
twaan us CFU's - wa atlll lova ya -
and m9 (no trap).
(OMS)
OURS
finally
lor n
Happy 10th Birthday Vou ra
legal Now l won t gat arraolad
(• M S)
OtAR BrMlianl Tlfflar-Good luck wNh
your algia laat-kaap bouncmg-ramam-
bor Roo lovas you a la 7
It THERE a ranaliaawra
wanU to aaplora craatlvlty with 1^9"*
turns tt«aatar danca art muaic Ron.
473-0535 Qalabrala Ufa 4 am^tidruil
faaHnoa. ncji Ihtattactuatixmg
OMS
LIGAL Problams'' Fraa la^al aa«««**«*ca
4B0 Karckhoft 825-2596 (UCLA Stu-
*^^> IB M 7)
'On oioiivv
MIon 4/30 at 7:00 p m
Gaorge 024-3440
(OMS)
- UCLA
BacHiiBs lor diaci
of your poat inwotverrtant with ttia Hora
Krishna Movamant Call §20-5494.
16 M 5)
LOMELY? Ra
aapartanca for m
Dt Paplau
Call lor ini
o-rt
h/
Mvlsrtoinmsiit
EXCELLENT NkCartnay Odiott (4 of
BlomM WM aoellOfifa lor Chirago con
or boot pilaa. 3BB-0BB3
■ (YBIIt)
for fwtt
[BRUIN TV. a STEREO RENTALS
COLOR TVS
^'Ooaiy/ aaonfnfy
004 a day
Slaraoa 17 90/monMi
Limllad aupply avaMoBIa
Black/ while TVs $7 SO mMiBi
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MOTf Omt aneas ai* aiaaaaalaa te uCtA
tiuoant mtm eMwam Reg aaida iJii, J
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Rf NT-A-TV tlOJO
•luBont diacountt Dollvary to 0:BB
ARROWHCAO eeBlfi la
•ieepa • $10/2 daya. $18a/7 Beya.
88'-^^«^ -. -^
for sals
STEREO C(
(iaa naw) S17S.00; Oyfiaeo FM3 lunar
SBB.BBB. FM anianna $7. SO 935-4049
(10 M 11)
BOOKCABfS. 7a4i1
OaNy atalnad. SSO aach
racondltionad t17S 473
wood, par-
r trumpat
(10 M 11)
BEAUTIFUL aiqulslta wadding dratt
aua to Must aaa S175 00 Call evamnga
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MO
DUAL 1216 Walnut baaa dual ci
Stanton 8 baat cartridge 681EEE cool
1250 a4^ S150 474-9010
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YAMAHA TB 700 caaaatta dack S3BB/
offer Kenwood KA-1400G aoipllflar
$90 offar Maiail UDXL C-90 caaaaMoa -
S4 each Garrett 465-3306
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BELL our atarao and Riewe ptiono
naadlaa arvd cartrtdpaa le yois
Do a iHOa aarvldng. MeBa a BtBa I
JVrlto: Audio Accaaaorlaa. P.O. aoi
1S7. Btontrooa. Ca. SIBBO.
(10M17)
Come to the Cohfectlons
Department of the ASUCLA
Stukdonts Store for your
Molher s Day cards and glftaf
Xots of ftice pre««nt^, in^
eluding cahdiot Open M-Th
7:4S-7:30; F 7:4S-B:30: S 10-4.
aOBE 901 'a and other atarao corn-
no M 10)
'74 LIS Raul Custom. J^arahall 100
omp. Iroagaatro achoploa. cry boby
wa-podoi. 020-2330. avanlnpa .
(10 M 0)
aoOEN (Oa 210) alafoo raeal9or Tape
and pRene Inputs. FM. $100 400^2230
ORM.
rin M im
BMERWOOD S 7210
of acoustic auapanalen
both S340 024-1020
S18S pair
mk9r% SI 75
Hall
10 M 10
McCartney ttckats Los Angalaa end
aicaNant San FrarKiaco tickats Call
Jim 024 2401 ,„^,^
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pralaad Si 75 wUI sail $120 Call 470-
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condHlon. S20 Col Ooug. 477-0733.
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FENOtR VMapar 12-atnng and cuatom
caaa Eacallanl condition. S27S.00
Daolaa. avaa. 4S7-7670 ,^^ ^ j^
STOVE Gaa. aery feed condRloo. SBO.
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FIVE Rush seat lapaar-back dining
chairs Varnished natural finish is-
callant condition S20 00 aach 4SB-
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$12B Wm 0-00- 14
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MARANTZ Amp (naer near)
tUiph quality walnut spoabars Turn two
channal mio lour or uaa alone for
great iBiinOIni alarao S200 00 Doug
atlar 5 00 820-1771.
(IB MS)
IN aoifels - Kees. B
halchcovara. natting B rope. fiNMiy
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1
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for sals
MATTRESaCS ALL MCW
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Twin
- FmS
Hint Oati Sitsas
THE ASATTRESa STORE
nrva Piaa Bwa. aisrvanivMya
477-4101
I1S1
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$140.00 70S- 1030,
(10 M S)
(ooir) ;;;;
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equipment Select CaHfenila WInaa.
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BUSINESS EQUIPMENT ^
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CAI.L47S-77S1 ISi Weal ol San O*e«o P«vy
FOR Bala Fooa ball labia Full aixa and
claan Call 300-0711 Aak tor Ban
(10 MS)
HARMON Kardon alarao • AM/FM~
slarao. BBR turntable caaaallo. dual
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»
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Brands Valley S01-0B4S. 001-2B23.
B»1-BB73;b10 BBBL
fIBOBI
Writei 8
black only - reg. 80C
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ASUCLA Studanu Slor*
Ackerman. M-Th S.30-' 00 F »ao-<:fle
opportunitiea
SEE THE REAL
AMERICAI
o^Vfvo ■ DfcwfvWfvfnwi auiiiiiivi
triewtng hunger, poverty. urtMn
unrest mnd racial dlacrHwInaHon
ftrsl, hand. And do Bomalhing
to change H. Jdn tvNh students
from thruout the U.S. In a
oaMadlve Mng group. Contact
CcumenAcai Summer Semlce/
LoB AngelRB MS-SiaS. Ask for
Lou Knowles. M-F •:30-4:30.
[13 M 51
LEARN ImproetaaOonal lachnlqua from
^S^ond City taachar Clasa fn99»9-
7:BB pm. Bfadnaadays Call Slava
Saonga 002-2BBS. ^^^^^^
"""•PERSONA?
C«fit»r of Dnmctte Arts
Announces
A BRBCIBi thfPB W99k
(Apnl 12th thru 30th)
•ubfoct AUOrnON TECHNIOUI8
Tha following oubjacts wtii be
ch subjscts
WANTED Subfacta wIPi acna on tha
IP perBaiaaie m a ioaoon;h study
bM Boo ' mrda mm bi*
of slun from tha iippar back
Plaaaa coma to room 52 130 CHS Pay-
M 815 00 14 M 7
maaya
(14 M 11)
WANTED SuBlactB with mufUpia e "^
SUBJECTS
naadad tor study
Paya 82
040 5236
COM02S-0027
(14 M 7)
WANTED An 9f%d to fraudulant want
ada Eric Saltar lor Studani Walfara
C<
««9 «•-•«
CAEN or
lltlOl
). 477-31023
(12
.V NNN Eton's
traa hairatylinf . For n»ofe Into cell
471-0230 Tuoa - Bat
(12 0lr)
Help Seff by Helping OflWfS
$5-S60 month for Blood Rtaama
HYLANO DONOR CENTER
1001 Gayley Ave Westwood
478-0051
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11)
0911 fAI
'zrr. ^otdiiiMCa^'^
The Insfde Lane
>• (.
U.S. facing unaccustofned competition in hurdles 1
^^^■^^■■^■"i^
Guy Dfut. the French hifh
hurdler who was f«ffiAbCd lirst in
I he wofki Ust year and n the
Oly mpK HH favorite af Mor>-
treal. wai asked about hi%
< harKM at the Olympio aher
^ut indoor season here m
America His answer I have a
bener chance in KAontreat than I
have her now \A*hy's that^
'There will be onK three
AmerKans at Montreal instead
ol etfht here"
So oiW could have sumrr>ecl
up the situation better Drut is
unquestionably right m thjl
regard — in the hurdit races,
rhe LS. » a veritable fadory of
world-clafts performers
So other country even r^mes
close to the consistent, high
quality hurdlers, in both the
high and intermediate hurdles.
y*rhfch the USA has had over the
years ^nd t97§ is no emc^pH^n.
But. for once, the road to Amer
icao yictory in the hurdles is
fomg to be a rocky or>e. i^ it ts
ro be at all
In the hifh hurdles. Drut is a
clear favorite He s be«fi racing
internationallv tor years^Last
he clear>ed out evervone
in tigHf 9rui grabbed a share ot
Rod Milburn's metric world re-
cord as weH. He ranked first m
the world, something that a
foreigner hadn t done ^wnce
1959 And a foreigner hasn i
won Olympic gold oyer the till
sticks sir>ce T92i! Oruts road to
the top will be fraught with
obstacles as well
_ Some of the most important
obstacles will come from the
U.S. ol course The leading
Aiaiencan hurdler at the frky
meot IS Charles Foster tprmerlv
of North Carolina Central faster*
dtstirvctive because oi his bald
head save Ux big si^items. ran
very, doii tf Drut aM Ia9l jr^ar
and coUtd well take the gold for
hirT>self He led the world m
1974. but took a backseat to
Drut laM year
Old pros Tom Hill and AiHie
Davenport are vttlt trouhd artd
running well ISU star Larry
Shipp ¥vho won the SCAAs last
year, ts also rounding into shape
at%d will be a factor Ex-Tro^an
lerry WiHon proved his talent
Ia9t y^af at the AAU meet by
winning the final lafter Drut and
foster fell down) in o*>e ol the
fastest electric times ever —
13 56 Current Trojan Mike
lohnson aho has a reasoMflMr
shoJ at making the US squad ^
Thgat -are a virtual logjam «jl^
UCLA stars and grac^ waiting for
their shot at the Olympic TnaK
Charl€9 ftich barely ■Hjiii a
place on the 1172 te^ and wilT
cert/inlv challer^ge again Clim
Jackson ranked 15th in the
world last year certainly en-
visions a place on the L b squad
^
and hts wcKkuui^ have shown
good possibilities that he fust
might get tf>ere
Current Rruir ^lat lames
Owens so brilliant at the tail
end of last year and the'begm-
nir^g of tfie current campaign
tMiled o^f recently Bui if he
urn his form there will be
few that can stop him
Other US po99iyei mclude
hot trosh Dedy Cooper of, San
i09e State and Sljeve Dare us of
State, who won the Te«as^>TaVr
and beat Shipp with a fast 13 57
«lectrK ttmc^ Shipp s leammale
TiTen Misher and long Bearfr
States Mdton Turr>ef who ran
13^ elertric last year and could
pos\|bly run taster on that given
-dav ^Mike Shir>e of Penn and
• ** Kobe' >>t flf>rida Slate
ffUNf 4 tfeshmani r o re-
corded swift lirr>es t^ *von
Compffilion from \
Drut a#wl the Americans tome^
print tpAlK from Sas- rr\sn\t
dnd PRtaaid German «Vre^^ns
Frank Sieback and Th>mas Mun
kelt. along with4klaus Fiedler at-*'
tMifh while Poles Ian Pustv and
brothers Miroslaw M^d I es/ek
\^o^i|ril9ki are equally c ompe-
lftiv# Another comp^^tiior rnH to
be taken lightly ^ i^iban AW
^tndi^o CasAnSk wfyd won a b^L
over llt^h at the Pan Am
late laat year
"^"fn The imer medUtf V Things
get tougher tor the L. s, ta*th
iul as there aca manv more fine
tofeign competitors to cloud the
pirtufe In this ••vMf»» *i •< »K*.
-T — ■'■■■ ■ ■^ ■
-Rich Perelman
\n •*•'.( .in «kho ^A-**' »een gc^
tor 4 ¥^hiie r>oc virKe.ftei Qa^-
les turned the trnk in 1%4 Arsd
It ¥von I be eaAy this time
AU>unO '
PnncipaK in the wa% . ate
Briton AJAn Pasioe who dis-
mjntfed everyone lavt veai —
• good for .1 twN tA^ho con
jied his m« the
high hufdk^ .UOtil fUst 4 ifw
^eaf^ age GMie ol PaMues.ila-
vonie wH t<ms was Ugandan liohn
Akii-BuA who set the track
M(>rld atire with ' ncro^lMr
-i ' ai w«n^ Mur-
tinent question Ick Akii-Buti
c an he d< iicam ti
later/ Mavbe r>oi but Ke fta^n i
faded 4v^as 4t aV ^2
These tv^u along ^»ir^ »<renrh-
man lean Claude NaMei. provide
t>tf- rnatn <om^>e!NHon har the
« > (<»ntirtpent whoever rhev
may be Besides this big three
'^r*v '^f jl plethora of
i^ihK'it-^ «%;<«> ti««e had big ef
♦'»'Ts and accompanying last
:.'T»es but are noi a*- '«»"vi4f>»ni
as any ol tK#» Abov«
Withm uJ. ihor€»s t¥so unt-
<4p barrier Wirlers siar>d out
Ihe> wciuici be Oklahoman ftm
Boldmg and Muni. ♦ ^
daliM Raiph Mar^' K..?h have
been at the fop ot the A.merMan-
vcene tor years and il-np^^ro
rh^r thfs dte safe choices for the
.me> Beyond those twcj m
the usual dofhght for third
JAmes ktng. conqueror <»'
VlAnri 4ind gold m^dalfst in. the
prcMess at the Pan Am Gaf
S4*emv to hjvf the edge at this
point o.eV'fhe rest ot the field
Ht^ times hAve been last ^nd he
ra^e^ ,1' othe^ tham the
afc" 'I U S duo in
i: lAtps But there ate^
ifiers, kfio« k ' K in the
p«i/>rM o«al door
like veterans Br ii« ♦• Ck#r
tm? ifcho had the eighth tastesi
time in the world last yejr Bob
C asvleman who didn t do an\
fhinp ^r>ectaculari h«it «fa\ #ly^Av%
(< oaatiaiaacd on Paft 22)
I
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9
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CLASSIFIED
.-J
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The Bnm spiceis — six of seven NCAA's ~ and counting
•y
UCLA iMtf Wm bMl wpHtytoall lai^fit m ttw country
(ti a MMd of fmm ploy ong Al Iclii
coochktg batwg rotponolMt for wk%n^ fh9 tlxttt
In Iho tchoel't IHilory.
■trotoQy of bringing Wm iMfM
oM having th« players poali of tooson't
woi-blondod mixlurt o< •xporlofiot OM
•lo Bfulns on* of Mm boat cHamplowiiiip looms
WNIi aowion Frod Slunn, Donny CNno and
FrankMn providing loodorship. Iha Brulna war* abia to
rabOMnd from an oponing round loaa to Fappardifia
and win nino straight to caplyaa tlia natlOfMl ctiom-
plonahlp
Moit yoor. fha outtooli la Hiat as bilgtH
Nina of 12 tournannont-ajipartancad piayars ratum.
Including tha NCAA moat valuabla playar Joa Mica (at
right) and All-Anvarlcan David OlbrlgtM. OMiii atffars
coming bock ara aaMar Patai AaMoy. outsida hitlar
MNia Gottschall and middia blocfcars Doug Raba and
Doug Brooks tha only ■awlof on naxt yaar s squad.
WHh that lava! of axparlanoa. UCLA will not b« hard
pioaaad by naw NCAA scholarship -tavals that limit
racrultir>g
Tha liay lattarman It NNca.
Ofdy a a^ptigmoaa, Mica, at ttda poAnI bi liii
la ona ol mo bMl aoboyboNors mmr to ptoy Hofo. Evon
with a good aooMii. Mica aold ha did not play aa woM
dMO lo a alioyMar Iniury
a UCLA't waoti ipot at Iha atari of tha
yoor. but O^rlght, Aahlay and
•i^*U»rw-
of
of
TMa yaar UCLA probably bod Ma
fraahmati. With a yoor of abpoHanra
K.C. Kabar and tlwgiw 9mm wlli praaa
for starting barths.
Matt Alboda, Dan Fraaman and Girag
wMti a back bilufy. could ghpo
H Pidildrti Larry tod« Md Dovid NlcHola,
ankia injury kapt film out of laogua play, am
to play. th9 taom mm liava avon hmto lattonnon
axporlonoa.
Evon wHh tfia ralumlr>g playara. Ilia BPMbM ndflit
find It tough rapaating as laagua cfuMnplgiia. NoHt
yoor Brazilian Olympian Calao Kalacf>a will rwtum to
use. moking Itia Tro^ons Iha Brulna moat fi
But with Iha
for Paulay Pavilion,
almost two yoars.
axtra advantaga
tantatlvaly scftadulad
Bruins tuiva riot loot In
afKl his piayars will ftava an
,^.i-
ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE
DAY
May 5 - Wednesday
8:15 am MINYAN
at home of Rabbi David Berner
428 Veteran Ave.
Tefillat Yom Ha-atzmaut
10 ani - Af ROYCE QUAD
Displays and tables with infornnation of interest on
Israel tourism and education.
Noon - COME JOIN US
At Schoenberg Quad for Israeli music, dancing, and
felafel
5:30 pm - ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE DAY
DINNER
At URC, 900 Hilgard. $1.50 Donation. Please call
474-1531 for reset'vations
8:00 pm - ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE
CELEBRATION
At the UCLA Ackerman Union
YoelDam Tel Aviv Band
Beify Dancer Israeli Dancing
Shirat Hayam Chorus
•-e
\t
wm
J
m
:^i;A.w.
rr-f
Sp
ed by VHj. iZA *nd HiMW
" I
I
r
'■ Ij^-
V
Ucla
VokifiM XCVIII. Number 22
Unlv*rsNy of CaMomte. Los Anpiln
4, IfTt
Arts productions mismanagement charged
Reg Fee group also asks budget cut
■y Frsfik Widder
Di StsfT Writer
Strong charfcs of niismaMi§etnent
Imvc been leve&ed at the department of
fine aru productiont ( DFAP) in the
Registration Fee Committee*! final
budget recommendations to Chancellor
QMJrles E. Young.
Ako included in the recommenda-
tion is a cut of $46,000 m the DFAP
budget request ^ of approximately
$378,000 for 1976-77.
Reg Fee's action comes in li^t of a
%2mM0 deficit in 1974-75 and a
projected deficit for this ytta, 1975-
1976. of $liMM.
**We as a committee representing
student interest cannot tolerate the.
continuous deficit positions and msift
that fwcal responsibility can work when
combined with responsible manage-
ment/* the recommendation states
Responding to the Reg Fee charges,
Ed Hams, DFAP director, said, ''We
do have a serious problem, but it
cannot be linked to naiMigraient. It
includes the greater national economic
ition.
''For several years/* Harrit said.
Tine arts around coUege campuses has
done kndly nationwide, and only now
IS there a gradual increase back tovwafd
the aru.
"UCLA has one of the largest, if not
the largest, fine arts programs in the
country.** Harris said. **We have a lot.
of different audiences to cater to.
The problem is not a simple one.
On the ooe hnad, we have a respoa-
SI bill! y to offer a varied program that
students and the community are in-
terested in; on the other, we are
constrained by a limited budget.**
However. Reg Fee member Robert
Rivero disagrees. "Obviously there
must be some hard choices that will
have to be made. *
^— — — — - — ^eWrmi «vii — •■• •- 1 ''-'».i;:. / .'....
..**If they want to keep operating at
the current level, they should make a
bigfier effort to attract more endow-
menu," he added.
"They are either, going to utilize
extremely efficient fiscal planning to
accomodate the current budget, or cut
the level of productions and explain
why they have to do so*** Rivero said.
**I seriously question whether we
oieed such a large department/* he
added.
on the attendance by stu-
dents, which IS low, I question whether
students should be funded through tlK
Staiant Committee for the Arts (SCA)
at the present level," Rivero said.
Echoing Rivero's wMia, Ken Pat-
Inqua, the Reg Fee member in charge
of the sub-committee on DFAP, said,
**lf there is a program that definitely
loKs money, as many of the programs
that DhAP schedules. then wc
shouldnU schedule it.
SfisBl HaiMi
*There is so much need for funding
for Student Health and athletics that
what we give them (DFAP) — which is
studied extensively ~ cannot be used
to make ' up their losses on program-
Reg Fee money is to be used only
for admimstrative costs as specified by
the Reg Fee committee. However,
according to Paslaqua, some admin-
istrative costs are transferred to cover
the~ high cost of c«Mrrts
**I wouM like to see a break even
program,** ^Mlnqua added.
Paslaqua also urged more emphasis
on obuimng endowawnts from the
commumty.
Harris, however, demed that DFAP
was not concemad with planned pro-
gramming "DFAP and SCA work
together m trying to set up both high-
riak and low-nsk programming. Un-
fortunately, in previous years, ws have
been committed to more high-risk
programming for our aisdiaacw.
Afeenfdii^ to 'Harris, many of the
problems are inherent in UCLA's
proximity to the Forum and the Santa
Monica Civic *^ompetition is ficroe
and many times UCLA cannot com-
pete in drawing low-risk pop per-
formers to. Pauley Pavilion In ad-
dition, our overhead is high in just
opening the tenn. It costs $3,000*'
However. Harns said, chmigps aae
being made for tii'. Upcoming year
More pop grtistg and other low-risk
performers are being scheduled.
**We are also emphasizing our out-
side contnbution organization *Fneads
of the Performing Arts at UCLA,*
Harris said "We have received a small
gnmt from the National EndowoMM
for the Arts and have hired a full-time
individual in charge of fund-raismg **
Harris did not know how the Reg
Fee cut might immediiitely afipoi titt
program.
Single GSA slate^ficd-^--nSwami running for
agreement -GS A president on~"^
By Mike Dasl^ian
DB SUIT Writer
An agreement between can-
didates not to oppose each
other and general apathy arc
seen by some candidates as the
primary reasons for there being
■o competition in the Gradu-
ate Studenu Association (GSA)
elections this week
Eight people originally took
out petitions for the three GSA
offices. President, First Vice-
President, and Second Vice-
President, according to John
HilK Graduate Elections Board
Chairman. Only four turned ih
their petitions, and one. M
Munir Moon, withdrew on the
last possible day from the 2nd
Vice-President's race This left
three candidates for three of-
fices. Hill said.
Cormier, who is the only
person running for 1st Vice-
President, said many other
people had indicated an in-
tention to run, though they
""never got around to taking
out petitions.**
Originally, all three
didates were going to
against each other for Presi-
dent, according to Ken Pas^
laqua. candidate for 2nd Vice-
President The id^ of running
a slate did not occur to
them until later **We got to-
gether about two or three dnys
before the [Api^l 21 petition]
dcndbne; discussed pnorities,
and decided we could wmk
well together,** Paslaqua said.
Pailn^iia, a ma—Brmrnt stu-
dent, said he had no 4aairc for
the elaaions to be mmo^fmmd.
**1 was very strong m man-
it in insisting tlHl>^ochcr
run, too,* he said **lt
wasiB*t the type of thing that I
hushed up,** lKt\Bdded.
According to
Moon, who is also a
ment student, withdrew ba-
be had dacidad not to
^disorder' platform
Asking graduate students to **bring disorder to your local
government.** Swami X announced his candidacy for GSA
President yesterday as a hoax and a practical )okc
The candidacy was the brainchild of Alex Spatam, GSA
Budget Commissioner and Swamfs campaign mnangrr. Sfninni
said the reason Swami is running is ""to make people aware of
what a farce an election is when you have only one slate and to
bring a note of levity to an otherwise tragK situation.**
Asked whether Swami X is eligible to serve as president if he
were to win, Spataru said "Of course not But maybe she
(Pauhne Brackeen. candidate for president) will do a little better
job if she knows she was opposed by Swami X**
When asked for a prediction of the outcome of the election^
Spauru said **lt will be a landslide for Swami X.**
Swami said one of the mam reasons he is running is that **l*d
like to see my picture in public *" He added that another reason is
because **l enjoy s good practical joke.**
Swami X explained his various proposals for the office of GSA
Presidem as follows:
**lf elected. I will prove that government has gone beyond any
rational definition of corruption and insanity
''If elected. I will arrange the math department so that two and
two no longer legally equal four. ^
''I will get the Chancellor and all his aides weU and imyiaid
**! will hire Dick Gregory to rewrite the official American
ran
C
he
proached ijidividually by
Pauline Brackeen, candidate
for Pre ■idem, as early as the
first woefc «l the gunner. At
this timi. Cspmisp
(
...■J
I
I
^ A
<Ni.racr 7)
,t
Mii*
SUMMER JOB OPENINGS iDavden examines poverty
UVE-IN counselors are needed to lead trips,
tourand other activities for a group of 120 Jap-
anese students staying at the UCLA dorms
July 30-August 13.
SALARY: $500 plus room, board and expenses
INTERVIEWS: See job #1300-22A at the Place-
ilient Center.
by the council on Overseas Study Programs 4n<i the I.S.C
1
BRUINS GIVE
BLOOD!
Spons d by
S I u ^ • * L c y I ;5 » a li w ^- o
Welfare Comrr n
■'r>_ii J-
Yale College Summer Term
May 3(}^August 15
For students interested in the Social
Sciences, the Yale College sunrimer
term offers a wide range of courses.
Introduction to th« Study of L^gal Institutions ••—
Psychology f nd Law — Sociology of Law — Th«
Common Law — Lagal and Moral Dacision Making — '•
Psychology of Languaga — Cognition and Education —
Monvarfoal Communication —
Public Managamant and Policy Analysis — Modals of
Dacision Making — Houaftng and Community
Davalopmant — Govarnmant Policy and tha Economy
For further information about summer term course ^
offerings write or calh
Summar Tarm Admissions, 1 502A Yale Station
New Haven. CT 06520 (203)432-4229
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Tom Haydea: The luimc con-
jures up police and demon-
strators batthng on the streets
of Chicago. Abbie Hoffman,
the SDS. conspiracy trials and
courtroom theatrics. Vietnam
Tom Hayden sat in a second-
floor church office in San
Francisco^ -rondo wn Hunter's
Point district, talking to three
Catholic priests about poverty
programs, economic philoso-
phy, and why they should
support his Democratic pri-
mary challenge to Senator.
John Tunncy
Pale, shm. looking slightly
rumpled in a jacket and tie, he
AOdded as one priest said
government programs were in-
effective and were "breeding a
Lou Stoumen
to speak today
Academy Award winner
Lou Stoumen will talk at 8'
pm May 4, in Oickson Au-
ditorium 2160.
Stoumcn's lecture, **Pho-
tography. Paper Movies and
Other Mysteries,** will be
presented by ihe Committee
on Public Lectures and the
department of theater arts.
Grand Union
dances at 8:30
Grand Union, an experi-
mental dance-theater Company
specializing in improvisational
movement, will give a concert
at 8:30 tonight in Royce Hall
Tickets are available at the
Central Ticket Office, Mutual
and Liberty Agencies at the
door.
whole generation of dependent
people" in the poor neighbor-
hoods where the priests
worked
-No ifsy om-
"There's no way out of tht
dilemma if the system doesn't
change.** Hayden said laconi
cally -We'll get hke the
Roman empire, decadent and
affluent at the top, with the
cities run by social workers
and police."
He advocated price control
less spending on defense a no
m'ore on the cities, putting
consumers on the boards ot
regulatory agencies, super
markets and health clinics
Even more, he sa!d. the
country needs **thc equivalent
of the early Christians in the
(Continued on Page 3)
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Voluma XCVHI. Numbar 22
Tuesday. May 4. 1976
9eh€tof fmt. mucmpt durtng hoUffy^
and day a foilowtng hoitdmya. and •«
ammation parioda. by rha ASUCLA
Communtcationa Board 306 \M9$t
wood Piaza. Lea Angaft. Cahtorma
90024 Copyright 1976 by tha
ASUCLA Communicationa Board
eima poataga patd at tha Loa
Ofttca
MECHA PRESENTS
^**r-
"CInco de Mayo Celebration
May 5th thru May 7th
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS FOR 1976
Cinco de Mayo Activities is as follows: \
39
9-4:00
10-11:00
11-11:30
11:30-12:00
12-1:00
CInco d« Mayo
Displays
Botana
Mariachi Uclatan
Carlos Vasqoez —
Editor of Sin Fronteras
Antonio Rodriguez —
National Coordinator of CASA
Hermandad General de
1:20-2:X
2-2:30
2:3CK300
Flofenck) Yescas -^
Indigenous Dar>cers
La Pena Movil —
Indigenous MusicaFfiroup
Grupo Folklorico
Thuredey
11:00-11:45 Fkx del Puebk). nr>u8ical group
11:45-12:15 Ricardo Sanchez. Playwright,
jourrwiist, and poet
12 15-1:00 Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzalet.
chairpenon and founder of
the Crusade for Justice, or-
ganizer of the National ChK
cmno Youth Conference
1:00-2:00 Teatro Prii
Mays
Women's Lounge &
Grand Ballroom
ChicarK) Studies Cen-
ter
Grand Ballroom
Grand Ballroom
, -4i!»r|
Grand Ballroom
Grand Ballroom
Grand Ballroom
Grand Ballroom
May 6
Grand Ballroom
Grand Ballroom
2:00-3:00
Saul Solache. first Chicano
muralist and Roberto Chavez,
director of the Chicano Stu-
dies East T. A
Grand Ballroom
Grand Ballroom
Qiand Ballroom^
1 '^
Thursday
Die de la Chlcena
May 6
•>
Women's Lounge
5 30-6 00 pm Javier Pachecb - Poet
Rolfe 1200
6-6:45 pm
Olga Talamante —
Chicane Activist
Rolfe 1200
6:45-7:45 pm Parcel Discussion
,
leabel Chawag - Community
X
Organizer. Member of Prensa
Sembradora
Liz Castro — Activist in
1
Women's Movement
*
Ana Nieto Gomez — former
1
1
Profeeeor in Chicano Studies
1
Dept of CSUN
Rolfe 1200
Friday
Dance a Concert
Mey7
9-4:00
Displays
Women's Lounge
a:00-9;00
Teatro de la Esparanza
Qrand Ballroom
9-10:00
Satwr
Qfand Ballroom
10-1 30
II 1
Siva
Grarul Ballroom
•
Hayden on poverty
fCeatietMl fruai Page 2)
cataconsbt — spiritual reform'^
and "replacing the quantity of
things with the quality of lit e **
The pnests liked him but
didn*t appeal completely con-
vinced, particularly when Hay-
den spoke up for a woman's
right to abortion One later
called him **refreshmg, but not
fuJiy _ thought out in some
Bilingual icIkmiI
The next stop was a bilin-
gual vocational school for $00
adults, mostly trom Central
America, in the Mission Dis-
trict. While rapofters trooped
through classrooms and
watched a rehearsal for that
night*s festival. Hayden had a
freewheeling talk with the
director
They emerged and. to Hay-
den*s surprise, director Rosario
Anaya said she would support
him
**He's coming to the com-
munities, and moat politicians
dont," she explainict
"And ril be back." Hayden about 30
added.
small, crowded car
later, be muted,
a tikx payer revoh
social programs
because the system
Students for a DemocnrfU'
Societ>. SIX years suice he and
six others were acquitted ot
conspinng to incite a not at
the (968 Democratic conven-
tMMi, two years since be
aad bis wife, Jane Fonda, last
visited North Vietnam to make
a movie.
visited North Vietnam to make
a movie.
He divides voter reaction to
his past into three groups a
small group that admires him. a
larger group that dislikes him,
and the largest group ot all.
that reacts to him with "cu-
riosity, puzzlement, skepticism
but with a kind of openness 1
appreciate.**
At a Berkeley women's De-
mocratic club an offshoot of
the liberal California Demo-
cratic Council which endorsed
Hayden ~ be spoke of beings
one of the •'people who were
right on tough questions when
It was wrong to be right "
That audience was full of^is
admirers, as was a crowd of
9t the opening of a
Hayden beadquatneri^fn 1 for-
mer real estate office in Rich-
mond, some of them veterans
of Eugene McCarthy or George
McGovern campaigns
'M've t>een toUowing Tom
Hayden since l>etroii," where
Hayden worked in the early
SDS days, said one supporter.
Greg Johnson "I think he's
paid a lot ot political dues "
The atmosphere was much
different at a Sacramento busi-
nessmen's luncheon where a
questmner asked Hayden
whether he might ever t>ehave
in the Senate as he bed in
Judge Julius Hofmann*s court-
room
He didn't flinch from the
question
"I'll tell you this if there's'
another undeclared war that's
being escalated without people
in high office criticizing it. 1
think it would certamK he jus-
tifiable to organi/c demeeilra-
tionv. even it the government
tried to take away our First
Amendment right to demon-
strate." he said.
Summer Session 1976
University of Southern California
Take Advantage of the Wide Range of
Summer Courses Offered by USC
Accredited Courses
Workshops
Seminars
Evening Classes
Recreation Programs
Special Programs
Intensives
Clinics
Cultural Activities
International Courses
4*
Registration Begins. June 5
For information telephone (213) 746-2641
or write to
Office ot Summer Session
Ccfle^a of Continuing Education
University of Southern California
University Park. Administration 356^
Los Angeles California 90007
\
i
5
in a
minutes
-There's
agatnft
which ar
't working, k would be
better for that woman to be
running the 4mmm school
system. We have to form some
kind of alliance, help them win
control.
**If you lose the election, you
llave to co^e away with a very
strong base for future elec-
uons "
The polls say Hayden is
loatag this election Tunney —
son of k>oxing champion Gone
Tunney. easy winner over ifi-
cumbent George Murphy in
1970. endorsed by most oi the
state's well-known Democrats,
— has held a wiitfe ^aad from
the start. A California Poll in
mid-April said it' was 58 to 15
pet cent
Hayden claims much of Tun-
ney's support is **soft,*' that
most voters are still undecided.
And win or lose, he addes, he's
not gorag away
''Obviously I wouldn't be
putting myself, my family or
my fnends through this kind of
work and giving this energy if
this was just a one-time filing,**
he said in an interview. -We're
trying to create a long-term
movement."
Hayden is 35 It's been 13
years since he helped found
Jhere\sa^\
difference!!! l
: MCAT
: OAT
i LSAT
: 6RE
:AT6SB
: OOKF
: CP4T
: FUEX
♦I iiafrwct
a
Smjii cUs»et
Caufia% mm ma e
rfl»w«i of tkani 0
it\wa% jMi Ir Hw 0
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mai9ftatl •
mt*m
: NJCn MEO BOS :
• SAT-VAT :
^ '
24 So SapMiwaea Bivo •
LA CA foots •
(?13) 477-3919 S
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Tuiti— Up to 5 uoits $220 6 or more units Additional $10
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Summer Sessions. 22 Wheeler HaN
. University of California Berkeley. CA 94720 (41 S) 642-561 1
Electric cars test driven
By Jin Pettz
DB SUfT Writer
While the prospect ol elec-
tric cars racing do#n our free-
ways still seems distant,
scientists and hobbyists ga-
thered in Boelter Hall Satur-
day to discuss and demonstrate
current electric vehrcles and
their future possibilities.
Sponsored by the School of
Engineering and the Electric
Vehicle Society of Southern
California (EVS), the displays
ranged from renovated Cor-
vairs to modern prototypes,
including an electric tricycle
Proud owners who had either
bought or built their exhibits
offered the audience ol about
-^'i'f:.
rr.-cr-trrL-rt
"/>
/
X
60 people free rides.
One vehicle, called an Elcar.
was built by Erwin A. Ulbrich
of Whittier and can travel up
to 50 miles on one charge at a
top speed of ?5 miles per hour
**Obviously, its not for the free-
way.** he said, "and a toul
recharge takes about eight
hours."
Freeway use
Apparently, very few elec-
tric cars are made for freeway
use. Batteries have not yet
been designed to store the
amount of energy contained in
gasoline Most arc strictly lor
city transportation only.
One UCLA graduate. Robert
La France of Westchester, con-
verted his Corvair to electric
power five years ago and to
what IS known as an "* Electric
Hybrid Engine" more recent l\
The Hybrid, according to ti
FranctK has two encrgv
sources, batteries and gasoline,
and noij^ gives his car a top
speed o(ff5 miles per hour But
he added. ^'It^s top cruising
speed IS reatjy only 55 miles
per hour: the other 25 is for
acceleration.**
Many of the cars contained
foreign- loo king objects under
the hoods. A Buick Opel,
owned by Don Nel«)n of Tus-*
tin. was powered by a 120 volt
DC aircraft generator Another,
an Electro Prin/ 1. had its two-
cyhnder engine taken out ^^ its
owner L.F. Schat?) and was
replaced by a mesh of elec-
trical wires and batteries.
Top speed
An electric tricycle, which iis
owner Ed Walker of Long
Beach said only costs one cent
a mile to run. has a top speed
of 40 miles per hour Built b>
Walker as a hobby, he said, "ft
started about five years ago in
my garage, when I had built an
electric motorcycle."
The displays followed two
lectures on which type of en-
ergy storage, batteries or fly-
wheels, best suits electric cars
Andrew Charwat. P rait nor ot
Engineering and Applied
Science, outlined the flywheel
as ' a potential energ> device
but emphasi/ed that it still ha>
many problems
•*Sixty SIX percent of the
total energy delivered is wasted
in braking." he complained
"and w^ need to have a con-
tinuous transmission to accom-
modate the flywheel, which
runs at a vanetv of speeds."
ScKial impact
Moreover, Charwat ex-
pressed concern for the aadal
impact of electric vehicles. "It
would take a big change in our
social habits," he said, adding
"?*We would have to make ser
ious changes in our system"
Douglas Bennion, Professor
ol Energy and Kinetics, ex-
( Continued on Page 5)
"More human and ttive than the Royal
Their finest act is in giving Shakt
Scotch z. Sirloin
restaurant
LOBSTER-CRAB
RIBS-CHICKENSHRIMP
STEAK PRIME RIB
Company"
-1. A. EXAMINER.
back to the people"
- COL UMBUS DfSPA TCH
Tuesday - May 4
Noontime - FREE
UCLA Sculpture Garden
Bring Your Lunch & Join in the Fun
&bar
NOW APPEARING
CDNNINIIBAM
CORNER
9-2 tues.-sat.
SCA
. it-<i»4
pico and sepul
478-4458
Meditation techniqu<^s told
DB Staff Writer
Since Linda Oben believes
tkat '^much of what mediuuon
it luippeiu through direct ex-
perience,- the UCLA Exten-
tioB ""Worlds of J^editAtion**
seminar Saturday focMed oa
the techniques of mediution.
Olsen. from the Cahfonua
Sehool of Professional Psy-
chology and Center for H«al-
iag Aru, told the audience to
relax gnd "^concentrate on your
central inner tiiaoe. WImi
brought you here? Feel the
peace around you -
Dennis Jaffe, the coauthor
of TM Discovering /finer En-
ergy and Overcoming Stress
aad a social psychologist,
warned against negative energy
and confusion. He explained
that an aspect of mediution is
^'developing your senses and
educating your senses to tunc
in"
Immt journey
Meditation involves an **in-
ner journey,** said Olsen, which
requires an **open and inno-
cent** explorer Besides search-
tag for specific answers, the
■Kditator experiences a
•ease of whokaeitr she
Ahhough pcopk control
dKir bodies aad their envi-
ronments, they do not think of
the **coDaiant flow of thoughu**
as something that they control.
Jalle said Studenu nuy tit
through a lecture, he ex-
plained, without hstening.
Through mcdiutioo training,
**we learn to pay attention to
oae thing at a time,** he said.
Wle4o«
WithiB each penoa is wia-
dom, an awareaets of *Srho W€
are, where we are,** said Oteaa^
adding. '^W^ are unique indi-
vidual bemgs headed oa
paths. Discovering our paths is
the process of wisdom.**
Olsen directed an exoercise
to help people find their "truth
place** and focus. ""Get relaxed
aad centered again,** she in-
structed, pausing for the noises
of shifting bodies and creaking
chairs. "X^oec your eyes and,
think of something you love
object, place or pet. Inugine it
really vividly. Let yourself feel
It.
^Ask yourseK what you love
about it Find one or two
words that describe the fechng
and make a difference.** The
oaly sound in the room was
the buz2 of the electric light
fixtures. After five minutes,
CHien said quietly, **Take tiaK
to finish. When yov*ve fin
ished, apen yoor eyes."*
As Che noise level of the
Cars • . .
(CoBtimied from Page 4)
plained different types of bat-
teries as energy sources aad
predicted. **lf wt could build a
batter^ of 200 watt hours per
pound. It would quickly put
the internal combustion engine
out of business/* Currently.
however. batteries contain
barely a quarter of that
amount
•^Technologically, we are
solving these problems slowly **
he cautioned
Moderator Larry Glazer.
president of EVS and fonaer
UCLA student, admitted the
electric vehic4€ "would not save
a great deal ot energy, but the
advantage is the energv doles
not have io be petroleum-
based You can get it anywav
you can generate electricity."
In general, he said, it is also
a well-established fact that
electric vehicles cause much
less pollution than internal
combustion engines.
ACCOUNTING AND
HNANCE MAJORS
LET US HELP YOU TO
BECOME A CPA
CPA
REVIEW
?13 ST? ft73
714 541-1911
213 Ml 3K1
7M2Si77»
MOM MAT SS S MOV. St
1/3 °' USA
nqm returned to normal, Ot-
apa said, *The habitual wav we
(CoatiMMd oa Page 4)
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
Let ut tuip your persooai •f1«cls homft ¥V« a#t
tntmr
PACIFIC-KING in* »M Vai at
4aa
«iials m
tor 230
IT
Yale College Summer Term
May 30-August 15
e
I
r
Attention Pm-ltod Students
Study at Yala this summer and complate a yaar of
lactura and lab in:
OrQaiiiC cliaaMevry
Qanar al Chamtotry ...
Oanaral
1
Plus a unique opportunity for Science Maiort. An
integrated approach to the study of
QEMmca AND BIOCHEMISTflY
For furtt>ar information about summer term course
offerings write or Call: ^
anNMiiac Tenn Admiasiofia
1S02A Yale Station
New Haven. CT 06520
(203) 432-4229
i
i
I
.p..
TUCaOAY
as well as study in depth the
^ty
andcalHorapher Hew«N
mg both beginr>ir>g aruj
Hebrew caltigrapny. so
learn how the scribes do it
Tueedeyt. 7 30^ p m
cofvwarKl
4
A courte far, aioa« imereeted im
ieemtng tie nature, hietory. and
preedcii of jjeyieh heNdays end
life-cycle oiMaianlea. We shall
plan group ceietnatlohi of theee
evenlB. as we oanaidsr thmr thieo-
logioBi impHcellons Led by
Devid Berner and Chami Seidter-
Feltef. DtrenofB of UCLA Hlllel
artd Gary Qrsertebeum. Rabbinic
Intern at UCLA Hillel Meets
Tueadeyt,^ 5:46-7 p.m.
bH
and oourtting a women tor a mirv
yen. In deaNr>g wNh Vieee auea
we wm aneifi|ii lo unoar-
what moHvetedthe rabbis to^
their deciaiofw ar>d wiM
to search for alterna-*
withmttie tradition Itself Lad
Chaim
UCLA HMlei
Tueadeys. 7 30-a p m
WMME
vvX) Hitgere Ave«
3re fleer.
LA. CA 90034
—•'(
eiaieaMa
An Introduction into the vei
of llterelure in the aible. t
M «iibbi
Jewieh and crHloai W<
lea of the origin of
THUaaOAY
For ttKMe of you who can alraedy
apeeK rmof^w, nvf« iv inv c^i^wr*
tunity to uee~ it in an mfomnal
aeltihg. You alao may learn aoma
new wordaf Led by Mimi Aah
Tueadeys 5 46-7 15 p m
At laept 70 mterpretationa eHiat.
aaaia inform ua, tar every
of ttw aiMe. Thia immenee
iHeraturaJwa produced aoma of
our moat intriguing talea and
alorlea. artd verioua axamplea will
be studied in our aeaaiona WeJiM
Saaaw the ta«s from ita aibllcel
odgin through the Hebblnic lltere-
tura of the 2r«d ar>d 3rd centuriea
Texts Will be in Engliah and eo
pieolOMa bectiyound m Midraah
ia required Led by Rebbt Oevid
aerner Director. UCLA Hillel
Tuaadeya. 7:30-9 p.m
legal. iHerary. hiatoricel. andt
il themaa in verioua aiailcal
Is Judelem raeMy a aapicl
religion? Led by Rabbi RloheM
Levy;- Eiiecutive Director. Loa
Angelea Hillel Council Meets
ly 7 JO-9 p.;n.
The ahlrel Hayam Chorua wlN
perform Yiddiah. Ladino, and
lareeM foMi muelc aa wan aa Mtur-
gloalaettir>ga by a variety of Aieer-
icen. Curopeen. ar«d Ruaaian
eaaipaeere. AbNity to read muaic
not requiredr.Lad by Jey Haymen
Meeta Thursdays, J 30-10 pm
ConCmuing our atudy of the status
of ttw waawn in tradittonal Ju-
deiam. this quarter wa will artahfse
further tha marriega arn) divorce
aeginntr>g
no previoua
by Mimi Aah
7 30-9 p.m
for thoaa wMh
Ti
begin the weak of April
12th Enroll at tha firat claaa
ir>g H you cent nielw H ana
come tha newt or later
held at URC auMdlng . 900 HMgerd.
3rd floar. (Comer LeCof^.
acroas from aolar>icei Oerdene.)
forthm info. GaM Fred. 41
WA
.•'
BICENTENNIAL
EVENT
Race, Age and Sex:
Revert>erations of the
American Revolution
Fifth In the UCLA Bicentennial Lecture Series
Winthrop Jordan
Professor of History. Univeristy of California. Berkeley, ProfMtor Jordan It author of WliHs Ower
Black: American AflMMdas Toward the Negro, 1 550-1 81 2 and a former AMOCiate Dean of Minority
Affairs in the Graduate Division
May 12 — Final lecture Series: MARY BETH JORDAN. Associate Professor of History,
Cornell University: "THE REVOLUTION AS A WAR OF LIBERATION FOR WOMEN-
WEDNESDAY, May 5, 8 PM
No Admisaion Charge
DODD HALL 147
Public Cordially Invited
by UCLA
:tt^tT$fKtzi
-> i ^
Ji ..,_
/'■■:
I
!
TUNE-UP, LUBE & OIL iOA*^
iJOi -gm.^SS
ovmuuii
»ml
Quake probability denied
«
A-1 AUTO SERVICE...
m7 VAN Non iivo. 3^7075
A panel of emrthquakc eJi-
perti concluded Friday that
there is no greater chance than
usual of an earthqujike m the
Lot AnfekM area, despite a
fofHMt by a Caltech professor
that a qikake will strike withio
a year
On the other hand, the panel
pointed out that *^ moteme
or major earthquake could
occur in the area at any time,
as is true for many other sim-
ilar feolofic areas of Cali^
ornia.**
In short the review of Dr.
James Whitcomb*s prediction
by California Eartbyialrr Pre-
diction Evaluation Council did
not significantly change the
professor's own advice - that
the forecast should be con-
sidered as a scientific iBit, aad
not of great use to the pubbc.
The nine-member panel,
made up of iteismologisli and
iMatfad by the sute geologiit,
convened at Caltech to eval-
uate Whitcomb'i prediction to
last waek.
WhHcomb reported that
sound wave velocity chMlin Ml
the earth's crust in a large area
north of Los Angeles could be
a premonitory sign of a quake
Such a quake, he said, could
be of aMi|iMiide 5.5 to 6.5 on
the Richter scale — rough 1>
the size of the 1971 San Fer-
nMMto Valley quake in the
same area.
where the wave
speed "^chaafss iPere observed
overlaps an unlifted region of
land known as the Palmdale
considered by other
as a possible
quake
I
The Center For Afro-American Studies
Presents ^^^
Mr. Max Pau
Dependency TJ^ory and
The CarTEbean Case
oon
,197
nter for ATro-/ _
3107 C™'pT)el! Hf'c'IT'"
««jOpen and Free to the Piinlir_____
The paneKs report said. -Af-
ter hmited study of the data,
theory and methods of analysis
involved, the council did not
conclude that the probability
of an earthquake in the area in
question is significantly higher
than the average for similar
geologic areas of Calif or nm
"* Nevertheless, the data are
sufficiently suggestive of such
an increased probabihty as to
warrant further intensive study
and testing of the hypothesis
presented by Dr Whitcomb"
Relax . .
(Contimiad froM Page 5)
think about time is altered** in
meditation. Time, she ex-
plained, seems to slow down
because much feehng is ex-
perienced **in one word"
Jaffe feels that the mantras
supplied by Transcendental
Meditation programs are good,
but people can find their man-
tras '•from within "
Turning to the use of medi-
tation for healing. Olsen ex-
plained that people must visu-
alize the disease in their bo-
dies "The visualize the natural
process in your body that will
go after it. Visualize the area
of infection and the white
blood cells eating it.** she said
/
UCLA's Dental School
presents Its
Annual Minority Recruitment Day
and Open House
Followed by a
Dance for Recruitment Day Participants
Where: School of Dentistry, University of California, Los Angeles
When: Saturday, May 8, 1976
Time: CONFERENCE — 2 to 3 p.m.
CONFERENCE — 2 to 3 t>.m. -
OPEN HOUSE — 3 to 6 p.m.
DANCE — 7:30 p.m. to 1:00 a.m.
FEATURING:
CONFERENCE
1. Orientation ^^
2. Introduction to the Profession o? Dentistry
3. Minorities in Dentistry
4. Question and Answer Session
OPEN HOUSE
1. Tours of the Dental School
2. Meeting with Admissions Officers and
Counselors
3. Application Assistance
4. Meetings with School Faculty, enrolled
minority dental students, and practicing
minority dentists
DANCE
The Student National Dental Association
and the Associated Chicano students will
sponsor the dance
Agreement alleqed cause ol single slate f
3
EfAckeen ftrtt asked him to
ma on her tUte. "^We had
worked together on several
ooaunitteci mmd in GSA and
Tb sure that she felt that I
would he htr hM dwioe far
handling the external aflain of
tiK Graduau Students Associ-
ationr Connicr said
According to Cormier, after
his initial conversation with
Brackeen, several people ex-
pMMBd Milerest in running on
another slate whidiitt would
have headed. Cormier said
several others influential in
GSA were also promoting such
an opposition slate.
Cormier said there were sev-
eral reasons that he declined to
run on such a slate. One was a
lack of time to run an active
campaign. Another was a lack
of desire to hecome involved m
what he called ''politics and
ivering.** Cormier said, **!
was jiware that if 1, as a law
stu^lat, was to run on my own
slate, attempts would he made
to run other law students
**1 told those supporting me
that 1 was runmng as 1st Vice-
President They tfaoiiBd that
they did aal want to run on a
slale oppoaad to ne, and they
withdrew their applications^
Cormier said.
Another reason Cormier
gave for the presHMx of one
unopposed slate on the ballot
wait that the slate represented a
compromise between two fac-
tions within GSA. **1 was often
an mterinediary between the
two positions, and when 1
decided to run as 1st Vice-
President with Pauline, that
represented some compromise
of the two positions.**
He explained the two posi-
tions by saying, **One style
relied a lot on the personal
of a group of
and commitiee appointees and
lobby log llMt went on behind
''The other style was more
direct and a^aa ia tlK pre-
■iatatinii of issues and did not ^
use 'behind closed doer* lobby-
ing tactics.**
Alex Spataru, GSA
Commissioner, objected to the
lack of dioice thu year, saying
''As far as Vm concerned, the
elections are a farce.** He also
termed the elections **a totally
ndiculous exercise in futility **
Spataru said one phenome-
non of GSA elections is bloc
voting. Four major blocs exist
within GSA - Health Sci-
ences. Law, Management, and
Engineering, and students tend
to vote for candidates m their
own group According to
Spataru, Public Health student
Brackeen approached Paslaqua
and promised to deliver Health
Sciences m return tor having
Paslaqua and the Management
voles ht would protiably at-
tract.
According to<, Spataru.
Biacfcaea fMad the problem of
Cormier changing his mind
and deciding to run for Presi-
dent **Btll had saaaad thoughts,
he even had a slate,** Spataia
said
I
another law student to C
persuade Cormier to remain on ^
the slate ''At the 3M dead-
kat* Greg Veal showed up in
the office; he was from Laar
also ** Spauni laad Veal was
ready to run for First Vjea-
President if Cormier had de-
cided to run for President
Sipckeen denied any knowl-
edge of such a plan, while Veal
eould not be reached for
f
Spataru claimed Brackeen ment.
Candidate Swami . . . h
(Cootinoed frota ^age 1) I
history text tor the American hiflory department W
**! will hire Cal Worthington as the head of the economics •
department w
"All students ort the campu& waiting lor Jesus to return will ^
undergo a psychiatric examination ^
•*All personnel of the Violence Center will get a Ircc ticket to J
the Pussycat Theater and MasMigc Parlor
-I will then oflcr my brain to the science department at ^hich
time the entire statt will convert to /en Buddhism
Swami X concluded by exhorting graduate students ti» "\iuv
for X Swanu X as a vole for ( n*,mu «nsanit\
^.B. Frank*!, M.D. Medical Group
Hair Tranapiantation
Acne-Complexion
Plastic Surgery
Dermatology
Allergy
Phona for Personal Appointment • Medical Literature on Request
All Medical and Health Plans « Credit Cards Credit Terms Available
LOS Angeles 6423 Witsfvire Blvd ; #105
LaKewood 5203 ^ak^wooo^'Bivd
Huntington Beach 810t Newman St Sfe C
655-6533
' 531-7420
(714) 540-6805
VACANCIES
J
JUDICIAL REVIEW COMMITTEE, an advisory body charged with
providing a continuing review of campus regulations and judicial systems,
is seeking undergraduate and graduate students to (ill three vacant
student representative positions beginning Fall quarter This is a stipended
position, which involves active participation in weekly committee
meetings and research task teams.
We're looking for people with exceptional verbal, analytic and writing
skills. Experience is not necessary; the initiative and desire to offer student
input at a high admir^^strative level is essential.
For further informaiton contact the University Policies Commission
Office (825-7906), Royce 126, for details. Deadline for receipt of resume is
friday, May 7.
I
I
Foreign Student Association and ISC's Council
On Programming invite ail foreign students to:
FSA Spring General Meeting
6:30-8:30 PM
Non-Resident Fee Increase ^"
1976 International Week
Upcoming FSA Election
Council Qn Programming
8:30-10:00 pm: International Dinner will be served at a special
rate of 50 cents ($.50) to all registered foreign students attending
the general meeting.
• ,
10:00 pm-1:00
drinks
am: Music (Live band: Today's Pleasure) and
FREE FOR ALL
I
Date: Friday May 7th, 1976
Place: International Student Center. 1023 Hilgard Ave
Ph: 825-3384
govern
ibilfty.
goah ''
\ '
iiH>i' 'jj
MMAaMM^
I
4
f
U
=>
Lettcre to theEdito
DB Editorial
Lesser: a proven leader
All fh% candidates for prasidant of
tha Undargraduata Studant Asaociation
(USA) want to fight for studant In-
taraats, and most of tham mgrmm on tha
j^ important issuas. But good intantions
- don*t gat vary far in this jungia of fd
^ tapa — in ordar to accomplish any-
^ thlr>g, • studant body prasidant must
^ ba abia 1o nagotiata with profassional
InagotiatofS, discuM finances with pro-
fassional financiers, and icnow bureau-
^ cratic procedures as wall as the
bureaucrats. Tha president must also
ba a skilled leader with concrete,
feasible, and well thought-out ideas.
We support Don Lesser in this week's
elections k>ecausa he has proven him-
self in all thaaa afaaa.
L4|at year, Lesser led the successful
drive to establish the California Public
Interest Research Group on this cam-
pus, a task that took hard work, effi-
cient plannin(|| and hard-line nego-
tiations.
Most candidates agree that to be
truly effective, ASUCLA must be auto-
nomous (that is, free of Administration
veto). They also agree that estabNshing
autonomy will take several years. Only
Lm^wf has proposed a permanent
mechanism with the hiring of a pro-
fessional advocate to maintain the
effort, so that the difficult drive for
autonomy does not have to be started
anew by each year's student govern-
ment.
Leaser's negotiating abilities should
play a key role in laatoring student
control over ASUCLA funds for the first
time since 1933.
Leaaar recognizes the parking pro-
blem here, but, like anyone who has
worked with Ralph HMdmr, realizes that
building more parking structures may
be environmentally unwise. Lesser
advocates running bus lines with
ASUCLA student controlled funds to
the four major centers from which
students commute and buying or
leasing buildings for studant housing.
Leaser's record with CalPirg and as
Student Financial Supports Commmis-
sioner this year, as well aa his well-
formulated programs for increasing the
effectiveness of SLC, show that he
deserves a cfiance as student body
president. Don Lesser deserves your
vote for president this weak.
^^residential candidates rebut DB endorsement
David Bnmvn
I am not going to give you a
bunch of political hogwash by
attacking my opponents, instead
I just want to say I hope the
itiidsnts take a minute to go
over the platfornns of the candi-
dates and go out ^nd vote. I'm
running for President because I
believe Student Government
should be by the students but
most of all for the students.
Thanii you.
Meg McCormack
Thjf presidential race i§ re-
marltabie in that there are many
good candidates aspiring to the
office. The choice is therefore
difficult; however, it is my feel-
ing that a realistic approach to
student .government will do
much to overcome the currently
static condition of our Student
Legislative Council.
I can't knock the qualifications
of the other candidates because
I'm only cenain of my own. As a
member of the Campus Safety
Tatk Force, the National Student
Association's Representatives
consultant on Student Control,
the Director of the lUpe Sym-
paftium, the converK>r of NOW
on this campus, and the reporter
who covered the Student Legis-
'aai^t Council, I feel that my
knowledge and contributions
^re real.
I think that the focus of stu-
dent government upon peri-
pheral issues 9ndi grandiose
schemes has lent to student
governnr>ent an iir of noncred-
ibjlity My aimir>g for reaiittic
(such as 40 more parking
spaces fiow instead of 400 in
4hree years^, and accomplishing
them, we can. gain the momen-
tum to press on to larger things.
You can read everyone's lit-
erature »nd try to believe the
endorserT>ents, but you're stiS
going to have questions. Come
talk to me on Bruin Walk and
decide for yourself.
Vote Meg McCormack Pres-
KJent.
She wants to make the place a
little better.
Victor Nunez
The Daily Brum seems hell-
bent on duplicating in its opera-
tions and reporting methods all
of the inequities tha» «(ist in the
off-campus press. The DB seems
to be concerned with such is-
sues as fairness ^nd equity only
when they art directly affected.
Although the Committee to
elect Victor Nunez President
requested from the DB their
reasons for endorsing a less
experienced candidate prior to
submitting this rebuttal, they
were refused this information.
Again, the DB's anitude is "stu-
dent-citizens be damned"
Rather than try to anticipate
all their rationalizations, we
would like to remind everyone
to take • terteus iook at Victor
Nunez' record of three years of
service to UCLA's student-ci-
tizens, which the DS has chosen
to ignore The facts are that
Victor Nunez has buiH the Com-
munity Service Commission into
the largest and most eMactive
commission in Student Covern^^
ment providing opportuni-
ties for more than 2.000 stu^t
volunteers.
Being concerned with the sky
rocketing cost of a
cation. Victor Nunez developed
the iobs for students program
which helps many students to
support themselves in gIVihg
direction to their own lives
Study carefully Victor's record of
work on such issues as rape and
safety, parking, housing, trans-
portation, and problems of the
commuter student.
After giving serious consider-
ation to the above, we would
hope that you would corurur
with us that Victor Nunez is
•••^aed the best candidate for
the office of Undergraduate
Student Body President, and
vote for him on May 5th or 6th.
Howard Sdveimai
About twelve pea^ is all that
It took to "endorse'' a candidate
for SLC President. This Daily
Brum endorsement should be
viewed as the opinion of these
twelve staffers. In determining
who will be eleaed to serve as
our next undergraduate pres-
ident, how significant should the
opinions of these imm staffers
be?
In deciding who should be
president, each student must
look for the qualities in a can-
didate that make him the most
qualified. I have extensive com-
munity involvement with organ-
izatiom. legislators, and admin-
iftrators. As a member of the UC
Student Lobby. I have becofiie
familiar with the UnivefsJty of
California administrative system.
' **5? ^^* *^ understanding
«aadtd m fiscal matters to serve
as an effeaive president Aaive
and epen communicatk>n will
be my policy to effect the ne^-
ed chanfcs m the 'system.
Some of the more ^prctiing
problems on campus include
student safety and the rising rat^
of crime Programs Mke the stu-
dent escort servi<;e need to be
estabfKhed to insure safety of
students. Effort!} must als6 be
made to curtail our current
^•ousing, parking and Student
Health service problems. I am
also concerned with the func-
tionir^g of SLC Our elected
oHicers shpuld not be allowed
to raise their stipends.
This past year stipends were
raised by as much as SO per cent
An independent organization
should handle stipend manam-
T^ent of SLC or a ballot refer-
endum should be put forth
when the raising of SLC stipends
is propoaed.
Vote for a candidate who will
*«rve the Interests of the in-
dividual, a candidate who knows
Kerckhoff, but is not part of the
•Kerckhoff Hail Clique." a can-
didate who will enter office
without favoritism towards anv
group. '
Scott Taybr
Over the past year. I have
served the entire campus com-
'T>t»nity M a §m^a\ represen-
tative. Now the tin^e has come
for that same community to
make a decision. That decision,
as to who wiH be our president
will not be an easy one. The
qualifications of various can-
didates coupled with the many
promises for change contribute
to the difficulty But in spite of
these, the underlying question
in this year's election is who will
actually pet Ihinai ^Ofie. The
answer can only be found by
determirung which candtdatt is
unsurpa^ed in getting results.
My record as the only under-
graduate on . the University
Building Commtttee which this
year secured $6 million from the
Regents to build over 7(io new
student living spaces on campus.
as the sponsor of legislation
opposing double-decal parking
that limits student parking space,
as chairperson of the CarpodI
Task Force; the impetus for 300
new car pool spaces for waiting
list students, ai chairperson ^
the main Registration Fee Pro-
gramming Subcomminee, fight-
ing for student-oriented use for
$9 million, and as the creator of
the, Freshpaiton Internship Pro-
rgram which provides 35 student
aovernnr>ent positiom for Hm
year students who had very little
charKrie to beconr>e invoK^ed be-
fore, shows that I have made
inroads into sonr>e of the major
perrenial problems on our can>-
pus.
I sincerely believe that the
greatest attribute I can bring to
this office is my ability to work
with people and accomplish our
§fiak. With this in mind, and
recognizing that the only mear>-
ingful endorsement is the ef>-
<lorsement made by you this
Wednesday and Thursday at the
poNs, Vd like to ask you for your
*^ipport, so I can opmiiHie to
The deadline to register to
Jte in the June primary elec-
tion IS May 9. 1976 If you wish
to vote jfou must reiser this
week with a deputy refistrar of
^^aiers You need to register if
you have r^e^^er repumted
before, if you have moved, if
you want to change your party
affiliation or if you failed to vote
in the last general election (Nov-
mmkm, 1974). if you will be 18
by June 8, you may register now
It has been demonstrated re-
peatedly in the last few years
that thf student vote can be a
significant factor in elections. It
surprises some that students
generally vote in higher per-
centages than the population at
large Even so. onSy about half of
all eligible voters bother to cast
a ballot. Fifty per cent of the
electorate is obviously more
than enough to swing an elec-
tion. Considered one by one
we have little power in a bloc
as large as this we can be a
:isive influence.
pus II takes only a lew mini
to register and il's worth your
time, even if there is only one
issue or candidate on the ballot
that you care about
For further inforn)ation, con-
tad the Project Awareness qHice
m Kerrkhoff 306
Catliy CHno
Research Aiiiitawt
Reject AwareneM *76
Grfzio
SUMMER JOBS
$210/wk
Must Be
Oependab\m '
hlardworking
Willing to leave L.A srea
Today* 2:M pm
Lnivfrsity Lutheran Chapel StrathnKKP & Gayley
ae Oil Time
STATE Of TH€ ART
9M4I I
(7ti
tafl^t
Project Awareness ^ has
been organizing a registration
campaign intent on reaching
every eligible voter on campus
You will find registrars this week
on Brum Walk, in the Gypsy
Wagon grea, m the Court of
Sciences, in the dorms and in
various other locations on cam-
We art writing this letter to
iufmcnt the article written
about External Affairs Coordin-
ator Michael Galizio Aside from
fixing staplers, running from
office to office, and signing
requisitions, it should be known
that Mike is the drivir>g force
behind the entire external arm
of the student body govern-
ment.
As proiect directors, we often
face bureaucratic run-arounds
Mike has the unique ability of
being able to cut red tape
During moments of frustration
he also provides encourage-
ment Without Mike s ability and
energy, our programs would not
be as effective as they art
Sieve
ffofect Aw4
Mary |o
U.C. Student Lok%
NeHa Carber
NaHtMial Student Lob^
Pam EaUer
Metro Loovy
M«M • • Mr- B ar 't Mi^M iMi 1 *
A— <tfcli at <iil«ri cmm m
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Td. (41S)a48-11fi
Something New ■ Exciting in
Auto Insurance
If you don't have liability insurance the new «m«nciai
re*ponsit)ility law could affect you m if 75
Modified rates tor Qualifying Stugants
Call Today For Your frt Ouotetien
245-7 27 S Hova Rofat — Will Troval ft4-0t44
Mercury Insurance Agency
I
Yale College Summer Term
May 30-Augus! 15
i--»
Correction ^"^
In Friday's Da//y Bruin we incorrectly stated the orfariization that
floyd Banks re^iesented We apologize to him. the organization we
incorrectly attributed the article to and th^ Committee Against
Racism of which Banks is a member
Spend a Summer at Yale
A complete 9mm— ter. full credit, a wide selection of
couftat liinlit by Yale College faculty
offers such tjnique programs as:
Calafitol ilmiflca — An •xammation of tf>a
formative yMirs in tha aavelopment of an American
nation
Rfca^— A study of film through production,
analysis, historical development
Forms of LMarary Modsrniam — Studies of thia
modernist period in twentieth century fiction,
poatry. drama in Europe and Americf .
For further information about summer term course
offerings write or c«ll :
>MWiB' Tarm Idmlisloiii. 1 502A Yale Station
Naw Haven. CT 06620 (203) 432-4229
GRADUATE STUDENTS!
The following referendum Items will appear on
the GSA Ballot: ""^
aMTlATIVE AGAINST RACISM AND CUTBACKS AT UCLA:
I
Do you endorse the following.
1 We demand annual minority recruitment, beginning Fall 76. of
1.411 undergraduates and 428 (graduates, including freshman
and transfer students, the same^as the peak yemr of minority
admissions in 1973. until minorities are rapraaantad at laaat
according to their percanlaoa of tha population of Los Angeles
County
We daawnd special admissions for nr^inonty. bilingual and
working class wvhite students at tf>a previous rate of 12%.
We daaMnd tf^t the University, in cooparation with private
foundations and government agaociaa. should plan and insti-
tute a fiva year program of undergraduate scholarahipa and
graduaaa fellowships for minority and working claaa white
atudants admitted to the University
2. Wa demand that the University of California imp^mmMi the
racoffvmandations of the Chicano Task Force Raport. -
3. In vi«w of ttie complete lack of Affirmative Action In UCLA
hiring to this dale and ttm lack of employment for gradiMMaa of
UCLA, wa ^amarid an and to tha faculty hiring fraaca and
In faculty hiring to be implaaMntad as follows: A) In the
Its which hmm anpafianoad a aharp ir>cfaaaa in ui
graduate enrollment, such as Political Science. dWRMry
Biology. if>cfaaaa tenure-track teaching faculty positions to
tha^ standard of 15/1 student/faculty ratio; B) Dacraaaa by a
campus-wide dapariaiantal avaraoa of 50% the student-TA ratio,
without restricting enrollment b^t by doubling the numtier of TA-
ahipa. in accordance with the dan>and of the TA s unian; C) All
hiring, whether into new positions created \m&m (3A) and (3B)
above, or into existing positions, must be allocated according to
population proportions of Los Angeles County of ethnicrty and
. aax; O) To rectify existing instances of racist, sexist, and elitist
practices at UCLA, wb demand that the following profeeaorm,
students and staff be reinstated imniediately: 1) Dr Hunfit)arto
Bracho. 2) Ms. Rocio Camacho. and 3) WUlie Morten
4 We dawand a reversal of tha cutbacks in Studant Health.
5. We demand an 9nd to all forms of police harraaamant of
students at UCLA, particularly of minority students and workers
and leftists Disarm the campus police.
6 We demand that the $405 increaae in tuition for out-of-atata
and foraigfn students ba raacindad Immediately
NIANIAN STUOCftrt AStOCUTtOfl tfHTtATIVE:
The U.C.-lran Protect aliowa tha Iranian Regime, oni of the moat
rapraeeivs dictatorships, to sat up a so-called "Pf%mn Study
Carvlar^ on campus. Tha Iranian Stuiairta Aaaociation at UCLA
^iisvM that such ties with a regime that holda over 40.000
political priaaaars. fvioatty students, and which haa executed over
300 patriots in lees than three years, is. to say tha laaat an insult
to tha atudenta of this University We further balive that the UCLA
facilitiai should not be put at ttia diapoaal of tha ftaacist regime of
•te SiMih Do you &pfprfM4 of the U C -Iran Project?
VOTE MAY 5 & 6
I
1
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This 1% the place for Rib Lovers^
By for tfw Be^i Ribs we y# tried in LA
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LoufplConybn Turn Right And ^ou » C There
I
DATSUN
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ft
Student, faculty, and alumni
fleet discounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
* 684-1133*
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1^
1 Men's Haircutting
m at its best
■ Long & Short Styles
1
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W OR 9Mai QR 34245
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(acroM WMtwood Theater)
WHh Thto Coupon
If cH#ck Is
no* or
1 5% Off
CHAN'S GARDEN
C«nton#M A Mondorftn Cutokw
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Good Sor^rico, ^fe% Parking at
Woatwood Canlar. lank ol AaMftea
wOaso LlnflMnDOiK Dr. WaaiwooOt L.A.
Phona: 479-7715. 47f-77M
L—— .———.-» Ttiis IS A rotPON. ctT xi a tisi. u— — — — J
SAVE
POTTERY MAKING CLASSES*
THE POT FARM
tTAnTma
Mn 7 IDhmm I WHks WNEEL I MiB
May 15 KMwa I «Mu WHEEL i t4Ui
May 10 7-0 Ptt f «Mu MEiL I S45Ji
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May 12 SJO^ P« I Wasks QHLMEn WHEEL I
Its Prasta Ttaw Isr UiBj SaJi
CALL US FOW COaPLTTt CLAM
SANTA MONICA
2900 SANTA MONICA BLVD
|AT YALE) 00404
828-
7071
OP&i 7 DAYS
UNA WBITMULLBrS
ALL SCREWED UP
*4
It is every bit as romantic
as 'A Man and A Woman .
kOt
Joseph E.Levna p'Mmf
And Now 1%^
AMmOy
• An AvCO
^9*^*%-
9m ttM«m «(kr«^|p a«l4«fa
tmmmmxmt Miaiaatii
•Miwa»L«t fltiafM
^tM aM aiifln tf 141. Mi A Mi i^a
ai iimaaiw wf !wi»fs>i
NOW
■>Lm H MS atMW^M
PACtflCS
ms
WHVMiai tOUllW-AVt •• CAI«OM
0nb0Pba i nm0nt/
I
By Patrick Healy
You>c the news director oi an independent television station in
Lo4 Angeles You have nowhere near the resources necessary to
compete with the huge network news operations.
But you do have an ace in the hole the hottest new show in
syndicated television. Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, on your
station every night from 11 to II ^0
How do you build up your nrws audience'^
If you're Chuck Riley and your station is KTTV Channel II,
you supplement your regular 10:30 news program with perhaps
the most outlandish program in television reporting hisvorv
Metroneii'v Mefrnnews at IT^O
Admiucai> noptng lo cash in on the big audience garnered by
Mary Hartman Mary Hartman. ^Metronews Mrtronews takes a
flippant approach to covering news that is unlike anything else in
journalism even Hunter Thompson. And says Chuck Riley,
the head man in the Channel 1 1 news operation and the
originatx>r of the Metronews Metronews idea< 'The feedback so
far has been just great "
Though several legitimate news, items always are thrown into
th!e~ll:30 show, the emphasis is c&rthe off-beat Charles R owe,
the co-anchorman on both the. 10:30 and 11:30 broadcasts, thinks
the Metronews Metronews "fills a void that wasn't being filled
before It's an expansion of one type of news reporting,"
Qa Metronews Metronews you'll see two news men, ties
looacAMl, leanmg back m their chairs on a set that resembles an
office As they joke and ad-lib their way through a half-hour,
you'll find out about the latest prices in the grass market, credit
discriminatiofi_a§ainst womeiu a man who hypnoti/es frogs.
»crew-ups b> the Internal Revenue Service and government in
general
Before commercial breaks you're liable to see a picture of
Democratic presidential hopefuls Jimmv Carter and George
Wallace, with word balloons drawn in that have Wallace saying.
"Please stop dropping peanut shells down mv colUr." and Carter
responding --Then get your v^hcel off my foot."
Rowe said he divides his time abMit equally in preparing for
the two newscasts, in contrast with Chuck Ashman Rowe's co-
anchor on Metronews Meir.mr**s Ashman works closely with
the producers in preparing the shiow. usually going into the field
to do a film report, and wntts about halt the items
A prolific talker both on ^rul o# camera. As*«nan lovrs^io^
brag about the show, its go.xj ratings, and its viewers "We get
the Mar> Hartman audieptc probably the youngest, most
sophisticated audience lor jf,. ^how in television history "
Though Ashman did not amcnve the show originally, he had
been influential in determining the type of items chosen and the
format ol the shou "I start off with the premise that news is
entertainment," Ashman said adding thai anyone in the
television news business \fcho savs otherwise is being hypocritical
"People do not want to j^o to bed uptighi,'' Ashman believes,
and therefore the 1 1 30 neus is feared for the people and the
hour."
Though Rowe originalK uas atraid the lightness of the 11:30
news -might hurt his creditability as a journalist, he says he
doens't have those fears anvmorc partly because after 10
weeks the show is finding its n»cfie and no longer relies on pure
shock value "Wc prr«ientcd stoned we probably shouldn't have,"
said Rowe. He paused, belort addmg. "— stories thJU borderdi
on the gross, quite frank l\
"Let me give you an example Ashman said, referring to the
Item he did after Howard "Bo" Callaway resigned as President
Ford*s campaign manager ^i the end of the item. Ashman
tagged on a little schtick that Calloway should have worked for
the Democratic candidate Mdurice Udall. so that it would have
been Mo and Bo.
"You get the news across and so there's a laugh at the end
What the hell is wrong with that?" Ashman demanded
Television news has been tailed a second-hand news source,
and even the staff of Metronews Metronews does not ipind
admitting it gets the bulk of its stor> ideas from local news-
papers, wire and video services, the National fcnqyircr. People
Magaziat. and^even viewers send in news tips that prove usable
Actuallv. Metronews Metronews is not that much diflerent
from portions ol conventional news programs on independent
stations, where coming up with good, solid story ideas has always
been tough As Pete Aleshire. the night assignment editor,
described finding news lor the regular show at 10 30. "fcssentiallv
we're looking for something of genuine interest If that fails, then
we look for the unusual the weirdo stuff "
On one particular day riotable for its dirth of legitimate hard
news. Aleshire said. Channel Ms reporters and film crews ended
up covering such items as the Pet Rock Olympics in long Beach
a group ol petition-writing kids who want the Simi Valley
Freeway completed, and the opening of the Sherlock Holmes
Play All thetkC items came either from press releases or the daily
calendar printed, by the City News Service, a wire service to
which most news operations subscribe.
The only spot news of the day was about a criminal suspect
who barricaded himself in Pico Rivera
Because the 10:30 newscast so often has to resort to weirdo
events, items i^ifyiariy end up on both the carfy show and
Metronews, Mctrmirws.
That Malronews Metronews has been a success in the
markHplace IS un€|entat>ie It generally gets a larfer audience
than the 10:30 news, despite there being fewer televisions. turned
on at the later hour
In spite of the newcomer's popularity, Channel It executives
say they are not planning to change the format of the early news
•*We look ar ourselves as a publisher who puts out two or three
newspapers a day." said Bob O'Connor, the program director
"The 10:30 news is catered to one type ol audience, and the 1 1:30
to another audience entireK "
Notes from a closet soap opera addict
flic
he
aad tlie siro«f.
in joy
aftd fear,
vou
it
That IS
Afsea ^iJioa's Bible
• dK 011UI of the
*Aa M> Clttklren,"
has a
as the
«# tbt aaap opera
t OiMr was ooce mia-
for the real Bibk by an
at AlC. but a kM of
tlmp about *'A11 My Chil-
<ire«'* are mtsuken for real hfc
b> a lot of paopk: fans, exe-
cuuves, the actors themselves.
and now Dan Wakefield
whose book All H«r Cluldren
(DouWeday, 182 pafes, $6.95)
it about the soap opera and
Nixon, Its creator
Wakefield is. in his own
words, a "closet soap opera
addict ** He IS also a very pood
writer and AI Her CkAdren is
for the most part a funny,
clever, fonipy little book
about a subject which has
previously only seriously been
written about in fan maga>
zines.
His mam subject, Agnes
Nixon in contrast to the
inane scripts ilie \ writes, a
shrewd and likeable woman
wiw ad%ritei Wakefic>i, "Yoy
lia*^. n. be careiui oi nein^ too
iraughi." The nruktng
soap opera abounds with ab-
surdities, and Wakefield is at
his best when he records them.
For example, he recalls, a
writer's comment on the dis-
appearance from the show of a
marry. "Sometimes I think
Agnes is wniing my life," said
Frank
However, AH Her Children^
main problem is that Wake-
field falls in love with his
subject and sometimes writes
character **One night Bobhv
went upstairs to polish his
ski IS ~ and he*s never been
heard from since. I guess the
writers forgot." Or when actors
Charles Frank and Susan
Blanchard fall in love and
about It with an unmerited
softness and sentimentality:
"This . IS where Agnes has
brought us. we who arc a part
of the audience and so are all
her children, this is her gift, lo
bring us here and nuke us
believe it
One can't agree with Wake-
field when he compares "All
My Children" to Dickena,
Conrad, and James. Neither
can one feel sad wfien he
writes, "The moat popular
stones of our time will never
be seen agaiA." The l^pes are
■laat
destroyed Big deal They
might be interesting as arti-
facts, but to rank them with
great Hterature. or even with
^Upstairs, Downstars" is ab-
surd.
Wakefield is nght when he
says that all soap opera
watchers are not moronic
housewives simply because
they like to watch daytime
serials, but neither is **AII My
Children" equivalent with The
fwtrah of a Lady simply be-
cause they «re both wntten in
serial form. When Wakefield
—makes sitch danns, he is guilty
of hemg too fraught.
StiU, AH Her Chiji la is for
«■» — SBBvt psit Vvry^ ^■sa*«M*^
img, and if Wakefield occaa-
illy takes his subject too
Agnes Nixon never
does. When her graaMMi||fMar
is angry at a nval soap opera
which she feels is imitating
"AU My Children," Nixon re-
^Ki serenely. '•No, dear,
they're not copying, aad I
don*! think that woflMMl*s fwiig
to get a faee hft. The writer is
a very fo«d Horyteller. and
hes had the wmmm aad her
huahand toying with a gun.
aad 1 bet you anything some-
one*s going to get kilkd.
Otherwise they nrouldn*t he
showing that j
Tin % Wit
gun so asiich.
-^Ifiam-
^
•f C€/H/HIJNI€jN
«•#»•
Yaa f aa •*
••k«r9M«
fTTACTLENM
^ TTED
HLMTTED
DB ALFRED R BECKER
Optometrist
10959 Weyburn Ave '
ADJUSTED
POLISHED "
Qlia-?1fl
This year you as a contestant oould win J
ti«o,aoron
NAME THAT TUNE
Staff mambars of tha national TV show NAME THAT TUNE ara
conducting intarviaws for poaaibla contaatanta For information
on a preliminary muaical tast. call Ralph Edwarda Productions
Tuasday & Wadnaaday May 4 4 5. batwaan 10 AM and 4 PM at
46a-1641
*
I
The Guidance Center
30t7 Santa Monica Blvd.
SANTA MONICA
GRADUATE RECORD EXAM
iwaparatlon
20 hrs Varbal. Math. Practice Teating
Couraa begiojs May 8 for J ana 12 teat
829-4429 -— — ^
tired of yesterday's hair?
For wliafs happening now
styling for fn%f\ and women
Jerry Redding's Jhirmacli products
For appointment call 478-6151
thru sat
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with thig ad
1
^
t
"t
1105 GI«ndon Ave WMtwood Villag*
Amateur Entertainers
/
and novelty acts
unusual and weird talents, too
needed for national television
exposure on
The Gong Show'
Call: (213) 466-9153
ss<
.ff
It tt
Nuon'k X
». M
and the itfofifc in
probably the
on
definitive voter
California Law Institute
at Santa Barbara
Now occep?ing opplicationt far
Summer Sessien
Storting June 29, 1976
Foil TaiiM leiiim^ncing S«pt«fTib#r 7, 1976
Oaffat any san Haiwf to LU or JO Daa>ats arsduaUi 9mmt for
Caifonas wr tNamr
TtAMSm STU08NTS ACCSriBD
Low School Compu
^ SOS 9431547
'A
it
""^^^R"*^
I
^
f
f Campus events camptts eventm campus
1
1^
I
_^ . < Slln. Imtunnq tut
pirtVNIJMS Ivt SII#'#CtS. 7 3K) pm
IMilioff CoMm Houm
cur
m4 ditcimwii. amii. today flSM t337
aviii«Mt in
12
Mhington
y Karcftholf
^^ NilDfmation and
an ailrafflural flMiiRi lar fraiuei
and poftdodorkit art availiMa m iia
FtltowaMM an<l AtsiaUnUHtp S«cli«il.
1221
ViaN
and fHI out a card and ma
la yau
Irtia. wm fea iHid 1ft am-2 30 pm
laiay-May 7 2nd laval Ael«niian n am
330 pm today-May 6 9 am-noon May 7
SchoenDarg quad and 11 am 3 30 pm
l*iay-May 7 Madical Canter Student
Liiinoa CaH 65-1484 for an appointmant
or sion up at taMe on Brum Watk cftam
or Buncfte watkwfy
la JJtoary IMaaa. m
Hia draw m KercJcfialf
*^'">* art any
piayara.
tar your
Iv ytiir Maaa Opaa «iNy f aiM pm
VmM a
a racoRl UC tradaHi and Maraat ai
iituat Pldi MP apiNiBattaa ai
la Mpy 7 ar ci«
1 30 pm today
adp aifi| tfOM taHi-facit to bop
cilt Baft It
Han't Oym an
0000, May a,
Urn
• I
by
Amafican
M
^
-ValB
being ofltrad
Cttizani All
students of CMfiaoa
presently sopbomorto at a recognizad
collage or umvaraMy bi tbo Loi
drao. For an appfttiiMi writa
Aaiancan Aiiiaa Lfifa 415
Lane Los Anoalaa 0012 or
Scholarship office Murphy A 129
A123or COM
.latn OECA aa a
iwi»aatiMtar ViaM teddioff 3T4
or call •25-2820 Voluntadb pra alto
for environmerrtai amf tood pro-
ta
UC
col-
^ScuZsiL
flOOO,
pvooant Ha
MMI
a by Howard
lactor add ohmIc lacturar 7-1^ poi
Kbiaay 382
M 8M BMa aad flB af mp
8 po|, tomorrow, MoPb
a wpiMHp. 5-7
tOf
bi
afNMol boma concert 8 30 pm tomorrow
auditorium frm for UOLA
for otbar
iUfway 188.
-8MI h88MaM to 8M
tomorrow. ftufidM 2190
M m.
UCLAeXrenslon
in cooperation with tfie UCLA School of Law
.31
Uk
^^^^n^*
Attorney Assistant Training Certificate
'•••.
Programs in Litigation
Accredited by the Annarican Bar A88ociation
Comprehensive 5 month programs begin Fall, 1976 at UCLA
For highly qualified applicants seeking a career in the'
paralegal field
Receive graduate level instruction from practicing
attorneys and attorney assistants
Learn marketable skills in trial procedures relevant to '
xri minaJ and civil law
Housing and employmern assistance available
Applications available
immedtately. For full details
write or call;
Attornoy Asaittant Troininf
Programs, UCLA Extension,
Suite 214. P.O Box 24902.
Los Angeles. CA 90024
1213)825-0741
UQAaiKfliion conrmumg cdyeoMon
Come..
Train at
UCLA
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I
I
tiNa waak's tag Utnth tail,
naan, tomorrow, aMKha A-183
— aaa Saraaiy Wimn af iia U8C Law
School wMI spaak. naon-l pm.
ICinaay 180
-TIM Salaan al 8M Art at TaMMta. by
liiialiwi Hunter. UES thw waatTsGrad-
uala SdiMl af Eiacation colloquium, mm.
May 8 Moor« 3rd floor
pillBlHiBB. 8y Hr tboy NugH. Scnppa
Clinic and ^^aaa8rc^ Foundation. 4 aai. May
6. CHS 33-106
tant
City
Stat*
ZIP
Ma taasiNSi Qai. maata 3^ pm.
Mondays. BuacHa 2178 and 8:30-11 m,
Thursdays. Acfcarman 2488
-TaMMa8 ^H^ r«^ «»MI "laal IP-tl
am, tomorraar. 24 pm. May 8 aatf 8-18 am.
May 7. MaWi SciajMa 422i Cai 8g»l
■— TaaM Mlvmaiai Mmana w^ AsbI^
•MM af SlaiaaM Ortica of Raa^
Ula aad iia iipactor of ttia Siuiant
Counaaiaa Camar. 848 pm. ISRlfM. ipnul
mam Iaim8a. tomorrow. IMrafcay Hving
room May 6 Hadrick FiraaMa Maasa. May
10. Riaiar Rrasida taynfa aad aapn. May
18. KarcWtaff 488
-4(iBMMM Hp. 44:30 pm.
and 24:30 pm. May 6.
SvBSMMd donation $^
ovary Wadfiaaday. MMnaiHaiial
Cawlar_^
Jtajacta a coltaa taar. 34 pm. every
-^iM Rj^Mp CMI. la 90tnQ to Maai. UMi
for a Colorado raft thp. May 21-23. limited
to .14 P8a»4a Find out mora 74 pm.
•aatpM. MPBimaif 400
ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE
DAY
May 5 - Wednesday
8:15 am MINYAN
at home of Rabbi David Berner
428 Veteran Ave.
Tefillat Yom Ha-atzmaut
10 am - AT ROYCE QUAD
Displays and tables with information of interest on
Israel tourism and education.
Noon - COME JOIN US
At Sehoenberg Quad for Israeli music, dancing, and
5:30 pm - ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE DAY
DINNER
At URC, 900 Hilgard. $1.50 Donation. Please call
474-1531 for reservations
8:00 pm - ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE
CELEBRATION
At the UCLA Ackerman Union
YoelDam -
Belly Dancer
Shirat Hayam Chorus
K^J
Tpl Aviv Band
Israeli Dancing
Sponsored by UFU. SZA and Hillel
j~ ■• <■■
I
t'
i
ELECTION
PLATFORMS
MAY 5 & 6 PRIMARY ELECTION
MAY 12 & 13 FINAL
u-
r» 't
ELECTION
THESE PLATFORMS ARE DE-
SIGNED TO GIVE THE STU-
DENTS A BETTER INSIGHT
INTO THE CANDIDATES AND
THEIR IDEAS. THE ELEC-
TIONS BOARD HOPES THAT
THIS PLATFORMS SUPPLE-
MENT WILL HELP PROMOTE
"FREE, HONEST AND OPEN
ELECTIONS."
,-.V
This student govemment elec-
tions guide was prepared by the
Undergraduate Student Asso-
ciation Elections Board as a
supplement to the Daily Bruin,
I
c
r
I
r
1
r
r
r^
I Undergraduate Student Association
USA President ...
1
8
If"
Howanl Schreiniaii
Student government at UCLA
. is invisible Once campaigning
ends, our newly elcdsd oHicials
go into hibernation. Govern-
, mertt needs to be more respon-
sive to the studeor Leadership
must seek student involvement
in the decision process, and
student concerns must be pri-
mary SLC concerns.
I will make SLC a viable, vifti-
ble entity that not only relates to
student nmmiik* but encouragti
student input My plans for ef-
fecting this change include
establishment of "township"
meetings and brainstorming ses-
sions. This will allow more direct
student participation in the
-- issues important to the UCLA
community.
Effective management of
ASUCLA is one such issue. SLC
is empowered with budgeting
this organization, and must see
that the dollars' are spe/^t rn the
most beneficial manner
I am also quite concerned by
the apparent isolation of many
students here Efforts to build d
stronger sense of community at
UCLA are long overdue. Uni-
versity life, more than |ust
earning a degree, should be an
- educational, social and cultural
experience.
And, of course, we ir^ still
face«d with serious parking,
l/ousing, and Student Health
'Service problems.
In addition to my concerns, I
have the leadership experience
required for this demanding
position. I have served as Holly-
wood High Student Body Vice
President (70-7T). And President
(71-72). At Los Angeles.City
College. I continued my dedica-
tion to student concerns by
serving as Associated Students
Vice Pr^siderit (73-74). My com-
munity involvement includes
membership on the Mayor's
Youth Advisory Council, the
W€ft Lot Angeles Community
Advisory Council, and an intern-
ship under the Lieutenant
Governor in Sacramento.
At UCLA I have worked
vigorously to help establish the
financial Aids Task Force. I have
also been an active nf>ember of
the UC Student Lobby.
Take this opportunity to elect
the only candidate who is in-
^ipsndent. has fresh ideas, has
the experience, and whose
number one priority is the stu-
Elect Howard 'Schreiman your
i
J
Each year, we elect a Student
Body Presider>t who claims to
have the answers to the parking
problem, the housing problem,
the safety problem, the student
health problem, and the prob-
lem of outripsQUS prices in our
own students' store.
Yet one problem overrides aft
of these. That is. that all these
"problems" still exist.
All of us pay $5 per quarter to
an oraani^ation <;aU«d the "A»-
sociated Students" of UCLA. We
pay $100 per quarter in Rcfi^
tration Fees to provide us with
"student Mfviccft." In all, we pay
$19 million annually.
What %r9 we gening for $19
million? Not much, if all these
"problems still exist. What is
T\^e6^, if we ite to find crea-
tive solutiorH, is for students to
start (^brjOtrolUng the use of their
own feetr
If students truly controlled the
$11 million that flows through
ASUCLA every year, perhaps
ASUCLA could tease housing.
Run a bus line. Guarantee loans
to start new Greek houses or co-
ops. Run the after-hours tram.
Until then, we will continue to
see our fees spent to buiftd
buildings we don't neetd.
What ii ne«dttd is a PrMJiint
who is an effective leader, and a
dedicated r>egotiater for student
interests.
These iit^ some of my other
issues:
_t
Student government can be a
strong advocate for quality edu-
cation at thie University. Issues
which should be pursued in-
clude: increasing experiential
internships (especially in the
sciences), extending the add/
drop deadlir>e so that students
can take the midterm before
committing themselves to the
course, and abolishing rhe Sub-
ject A fee, improve the class and
give it course credit.
•Student HeaMi:
The Administratton is planning
to cut the Student Health, Ser-
vices budget. What does that
ri\e^ri^ It .means inadequate
heaMi care. The budget should
be exapnded to provide for
more walk-in clinics, i^nd more
peer health counselors. The
waiting period for 9^f\ appoint-
ment at CCEC should be no
loofer than a week.
•Campus Salety:
This campus, because of inade-
quate lights and patrol, is not
safe. Students are afraid to walk
from any living group or parking
structure to the libraries. The
evening tram, more lighting, and
increased foot patrols all could
help make our campus safe
again.
Together, we can make it hap-
pen.
DaviilG. Brown
My bid tor President comes
"my drive to bring Student
Govt, back into the interest of
the students. It is time we stop
building this campus up and do
tomething about the problems
and interests of the students. In
my three years here at U.C.L.A. I
have watched candidates talk
about the problems but thats as
far as its gone Parking spaces
decrease as new buildings take
over parking lots and the num-
ber of enrolled students in-
crease^ Refistratioo lees «re ^n-
the rise even though student
services are cut back The stu-
dents of this campus have taken
a back seat and have let U.C.L.A.
slowly turn into a small N.Y. city
by letting the Regents use our
money for this purpose. It is
time we m^6^ the Regents real-
ize M IS the students that mak^
this school not the number of
buildings. As President I will
bring the students back into the
picture, something that hasn't
been effectively done by student
govt , and take aaion on these
problems instead of just talk.
Each year the numbers of
commuters increase as the num-
ber of available parking de-.
creases. It is obvious the prob-
lem will be with use for some
tinrte, so let use take action now
^ri6 go right to Major Bradley
and work on re-zoning side
streets around U.C.L.A. for stu-
dent parking. U.C.L.A. is 30J00
plus strong and we can generate
enough pressure to get some-
thing done. ^ This is only one
example of the few ways in
which the parking problem
could be remedied. As President
i will work on new approaches
to an old problem.
In the future student regis-
tration fees are ewpected to rise,
esp if the Wooden Memorial
center is passed Student priority
is no longer considered in
spending of these fees as it is in
being diverted into building up
the campus instead of trying to
decrease student problems. I
feel its time that the students get
more priority. As President I will
oppose unnecessary construc-
tion on campus financed by reg.
fees, r will apply more pressure
on Gov. Brown's office for more
state aid for our over-enrolled
school.
I also feel student Govt has
been ineffective these past few
years. The majority of students
on this campus don't knpw one
thing about student Govt, be-
cause student Govt hasn't cared
about how students feel. As
President I will creat Open Stu-
dent Council ineeiMMi which
will be conducted as our L.A.
city council meetings. This way
students can come and voice
their opinions and take part in
the decisions that effect them. I
will also keep up the outstand-
ing speaker program ^fy<i boost
It as much as possible trying to
get the well-known speakers of
our time on campus. I ieel this
adds tremendiously to our edu-
cational experience
instead of our real cor^cerns like
^f\ xmproy^ campus bus system
and child care centers for ex-
ample We believe that the 90%
of us who don't care about SLC
should now have a voic^ in it.
Student government as it now
exists IS a farce Students can
never expect meaningful change
when thefe it no turnover in
leadership, since virtually all of
the candidates have been in-
volved in campus government
before, some for five years.
These candidates have had the'
Opportunity during the past
school year to adopt many of
the policies they will campaign
on. but they have not done so.
Some of the candidates are re-
submitting the same exact plat-
form statements to the Daily
Brum that they submitted last
year. It is rediculous to think
that campus problems have not
changed in a year. The ofily thing
that hasn't changed is the stu-
dent officers.. All they ^f^ doing
is playing musical chairs with
their offices and titles. The col-
lectivity, the 90% of the student
body, will never be effected by
student government until that
student government ceases to
be an elitist clique of students
representing personal, and spe-
cial inter eMi. You can only get a
fair shake when you turn out
the old government and vote in
some new faces.
Our only qualification is that
we are ordinary students. We
have nevef served on or been
associated with SLC. We i^re
students who believe that we
should see some practical results
from the mor>ey we involuntarily
pay Xp student government. The
key issue in this campaign is has
student government done any-
thung for you? If it hasn't then
you deserve officers who will
listen to ordinary concerns
It's time for the rest of us to
have a voice on the "inside."
jerry Hale for President. Chris
Myers for Adm. V.P. . . Vote
Apathy Just for the Hell of
it!
inside out, %f\6 now wants to
make it work for us.
Victor Nur>ez has initiated a ^
point program to stop ulking
and start doing MflMtfiinf about
Rape and Safety at UCLA As
President, he has pledjped to
reinstate the night tram, im-
prove night campus hghting,
create an escort service, install
emergency telephor>e lines,
develop rape prevention educa-
taonel programs, and increase
campus police patrols.
Victor Nunez believes that the
tin>e has come to orKe ^r\<i for
all end the terrible parking
situation and low cost housing
shortages He says we must
lobby to zone out further con-
diminium construction, support
Greeks and co-ops with univer-
sity backed loans to build or
renovate low cost housing, and
begin more dormitory cor>-
struction. The Parking Service is
riddled with injustice. Victor
supports an cf\6 to special staff
privileges ^nd suggests that
parking permits be distributed
on the basis of need rather than
social status. He says the uni-
versity should de-emphasize
parking tickets as a means of
solving the parking shortage,
fight limited street parking, fund
the night tram and improve the
Lot 32 bus service with parking
ticket revenues, ^f>6 adopt plans
for construction of adequate
parking facilities.
Victor Nunez questions why
the University always has funds
for alumni ^nd recreational cen-
ters but no monies for housing
or parking construction. Why
students earn millions of dollars
from tbeir commercial en^er-
^ises but do not control how or
for whom those profits' are
spent. Victor calls for studem
and worker control of The
Board of Control.
Someone doer- care .
Viaor Nunez, Studem Body
President,
VJctorllMZ
Scott
Jeny
's Note: ^^wry Hale (freti-
dent) and Chris Myers (Admiii.
istrative Vice President) sub-
edited a ioint platform.
As candidates for the Apathy
Party — Jerry Hale for President,
Chris Myers for Admirustrative
Vice President — we believe
that moiX students don't vote in
student elections because they
don't give a damn about student
government, in turn because
student government doesn't
seem to give a damn about
them It's generally the same
pgci^liL who run ior oMice each
year anyway, who, once ele<!ted,
join the Kerkoff elite and spend
our HMiiey at their whim for at
best questionable things, like a
$5,000 football helmet on
wheels, exclusive "retreats" etc..
Victor Nunez is a do«vn to
earth, student spokesman who is
fundamentally committed to the
UCLA student body. He'd rather
not be elected President if it
Msani compromising those
ideals to which he has dedicated
much of his life. For too long
Victor has seen student concerns
sold out by student politico's
who cared more for personal
gain, and recognition than for
the interests of the students they
were elected to represent.
Viaor Nunez has spent three
years preparing himself for the
Presidency In two years he built
Community Services into the
larftft most effective commis-
sion in studem government. He
personally directed and man-
aged 2,000 student volunteers
As sponsor of the job Devel-
opers Program, initiator of the
Night Tram petition, student
liasion to experimental educa-
tion programs, academic and
orientation counselor. Registra-
tion Fee Committee member —
he has learned the bureaucracy
Candidates can talk about the
same problems ^f\6 make the
same promises, but few can
deliver the solutions. What we
f\^96 in a student body presi-
dent is action and effectiveness.
These are the qualities Scott
Taylor brings to the position.
Scott Taylor is an informed
and experienced student leader
wIk) is sensitive to student needk^
Scott feels that educational
improvement is a key priority
^f>6 will work for effective stu-
dem participation in the aca-
demic senate, a return to the
nrwjors that students want, such
as Speech, journalism and Busi-
r>ess, the extension of itdd-drop
deadlines to the seventh week, a
nrK>re experiential education m-
voh^ing internships, and the de-
velopment of night classes to
allow students to work, park,
and arrange their schedyln m
thefr needs diaate.
Scon will wurk to nrwve stu-
dent services out of obscure
locations in Murphy, Haines.
Kintey^ etc. 9iT\6 into a centraH,
location such as
(CnrtiBHiil OS Pigt 3)
(Contmucd froei Page I)
Royce Hall He will insure sty-
dent representation on the en-
tire University budget rather
than just the current SSOO.OOO in
student government and the
|10.iiB,>00 in Reg fees He will
implement creative solutiom to
student government's perennial
problems through greater stu-
dent control, long-range plan-
ning, and by dealing with cen-
tral issues.
Scott Taylor has been Presi-
dent of the Inter -Residence Hall
AweciHton, a membet of the
ASUCLA Board of Control Food
Service Committee, and a nr^em-
ber of the Kerckhoff Coffee
House/Ice Cream Parlor Plan-
ning Committee.
And he has alreaiiy maiie in-
. roads into tome of the mafor
proMems faced by students. He
is the studeMI member of the
Building Committee that ob-
tained $6,000,000 from the Re-
gents for more than 700 new
student suites to be buih on
campus He chaired the Car
Pool Task Force, the impetus for
300 new car pool pernuts now
issued to students who were on
the waiting list.
Scon is now serving as: Stu-
dent Legislative Council mem-
ber, General Representative.
Chairman of the Registration
Fee Programming Subcommittee
^f^d Capital Outlay Task Force
member.
The depth of epiperience. in-
ement. and fcnoeiledie that
Scott poHisiei coupled with his
understanding of unrevolv«4l—
issues nnake him the candidate
for student body
lb| McConnack
There a^e usually two
why student government is
as irwffective First, there are
rarely immediate ar>d ungible
results from any legislation that
siudent government passes. Sec-
ond, there is a basu distrust on
the part Of students in gerr>eral
~ because we all know that the
issues thtt year will be the same
as the issues have been for the
last ten years: housir^, parking,
^T\6 finarKial aid And we know
that next year, they will prob-
aMy magically resurface
What 1 would like to talk
about are some ways to make
•(iubiiiii a West
-gymer relations board to ci
local rnerchants for k>wer
r-.we provide a lot of busine^6
•Gel fhe night tram ruQnir>g
again.
•l>o a reevaluation of the
pricing policy in the student
Mete. Instead of offering a re-
bate (which some students n^y^r
use) let's start out with lower
prices
•OHer MCAT/lSAT/GRf prep-
aratory course through ASUCLA
at discounft prices.
•Offer a CED for course credit
i^ job placement
•Push AB 744 (which would
make discrimir>atK>n agairtst stu-
dents in rental housing merely
because tftey ^r^ students illegal
through the legislature this year
•increase campus lighting —
especially around South Quad.
.lOg rule in
This by no meam precludes
the necessity for long rawge
planning There ^t^ several
breed issues, such as irurrei
the number of special
placing another student
•• yei enecber admin-
istrative committee. pushir>g for
more student input in the
course review procedure. I can
lay tise grourxfwork for this.
If you have mtidm M this far,
great Read my leaflets neit
week and find out more.
MEG McCORMACK — mem-
i^^^ .' r ^MKMUTtM. Ca^^iftx T,^aSi K^^IW^A
OVi, V-aWipU* 9wfVt7 tflMl T^m^K,
director of the Rape Symposi-
um. Editor, Interdorm MewiAet
ler, researcher on student con-
trol issue, SLC staff writer for
Daiy Irsdn, etc . etc., etc.
MEG McCORMACK PRESI-
DENT
USA Administrative Vice President
Gay Coliister
The office of Administrative
Vice-President can pioneer in
areas that have previously been
neglected by student govern-
ment and can improve those
pfiegrams that are already es-
tablished. Tbew areas include:
*WESTWOOO CONSUMER H>-
UCATION PKOCRAM. This pro-
gram would provide a compari-
son of Westwood merchant's
prices ^n6 services. The project
would also use student econ-
omic strength as a lever to ob-
tain more UCLA student dis-
counts.
•A lANtl ON CAMPUS would
be a great service and conven-
ience for students. It would
provide services totally sensitive
to student financial needs such
as: loan progranrH, check guar-
antee cards, no cost checking
accounts to rwnt a few
in addition to the aboveriien-
tioned areas of innovation, I will
work to maintain and expand
the Administrative Internship
Program I will also seek to
provide leadership in reformirtg
student services in Murphy Hall
and to Cdiltinue to press for
academic reforms such as ex-
tending our paii/nof pass-add/
drop deadlines.
Finally, the Freshperson In-
ternship Program should be
given a permanent place under
the Administrative Vice-Presi-
dent This would insure that this
invaluable and succi^ssful pro-
gram which has opened new
ppportunities for involving stu-
dents in their student govern-
ment be allowed to prosper and
expand.
•LET'S GIVE 'STUDENT GOV-
ERNMENT NEW DIRECTIONS
ELECT GARY COLLISTER AD-
MINISTRATIVE VICE-PRESIDENT
Christopher Myers
% Neie. ferry Hale (Presi-
dent) and Chrb Myers (Admin-
istrative Vice President) sub-
mitted a Mnt
RHKfi BOnKII
BOB BORDEN worked for you
last year, bring to campus a wide
variety of cultural entertainment,
•emember- the ^J^e Noon Con-
cert Series, the Coop Series, the
Roto Rooter Good Time Christ-
mas Band (Pico and Sepulveda),
or Kentucky Fried Theater < If
any of these events strike up a
familiar tur>e then you . can
honestly say that you have seen
yourself a real commissioned at
work
BOB BORDEN'S perfect atten-
dance at last year's SLC meetings
demonstrates his commitment as
a representative of the student
body In adition he has not only
met his constitutional obliga-
tions, but served as a vr\^i\ with
student interests at heart While
serving as the 1974-75 Cultural
Affairs Commissioner, BORDEN
was in charge of nxist of . tf>e
entertainment on campus He
has proven himself as a capable
and competent manageP and
administrator of his many pro-
grams
BOB BORDEN will continue
this kind of dedication and en-
thusiasm IS you elect him as
Administrative Vice President.
BORDEN s primary responsi-
bility IS improving student go-
vernment relations with the ^-
rTHnistration The issue of low-
cost student housing and ade-
quate parking on campus can
only be resolved by a responsive
University. TransportatioJ^ on
jcampus is pf general concern.
The night tram must be ex-
panded in order to servicr stu-
dents from all areas of the cam-
pus, while more busses ^t^
needed for the lot 32 route.
BORDEN believes that an ef-
fective Administrative Intern
Program should be exp^nd/td
ai^d operating by tf>e end of the
summer Graduate school ad-
missions and the Department of
Woman's Imercollegiate Sports
are just two areas where vocal
student repre^ntation is rvc^dtd.
BORDEN'S behef in a sound
Administrative Intern Program
will carry this through.
BORDEN will strive to insure
w\ efficient utilization of student
monies by SLC. Cutting down
on Administrative Support costs
and revamping the secretarial
resources are BORDEN's other
concerns
BOB BORDEN is e9i^ to serve
you next year as Administrative
Vice President. Make sure your
voice IS heard Make BORDEN
your man
USA Rrst Vice President
Cynthia McClaJn
The First Vice President serves
as a laison between Student
Legislative Council (Student Go-
vernment) and the various spe-
cial interest group organization^
en campus The first vice presi-
dent coordinates the activities of
such groups as Inter-Fraternity
€eiincil, Black Students Alliance,
and Foreign Students' Associa-
tion Therefore, a candidate
seeking election as first vice
president should have expertise
in student government affairs
and an awareness of special
interest groups' diverse needs
Based on my expesience in stu-
dent government I am such a
candidate I was involved, tor
example, in key legal issues
affecting student government as
a member of judicial Board.
Moreover, I am presently work-
ing in rhe office of the first vice
president as assistant in charge
of women's programming, in an
effort to increase the campus
community . awareness of
women's contributions in so-
ciety In this position I have also
been concerned with problems
besetting special interest groups.
These areas include implemen-
tation of affirmative action
guidelines, cutbacks m financial
aid. declining minority enroll-
emtn. increased tuition for for-
eign students, ^n6 nK>re' sen-
sitivity towards special interest
groups cultural needs My in-
volvement m campus politics
coupled with my participation as
a BSA rr>ember and intern for
the NOMMO newspaper has
made me more conscious of the
political needs of various or-
ganizatior>s AddMenally. i be-
lieve K IS essential to implement
long-term goals designed to
improve the quality of life for
the overall student populace
For instarice. improved lighting,
solutions to the parking prob-
lem, ^n6 limit atiom on the con-
struction of r>ew buildir>gs ^te
pertinent issues of this nature
Consequently, the wide range of
endorsements I have received
should not be surprising in lieu
of my political involvement. The
following campus ^leaders have
endorsed my candidacy for first
vice president: Office of the
General Representatives (Scott
Taylor, Willie Banks, )erry Hern-
don). Mfjg McCormick, organ-
izer of the ^iipe symposium; Su-
san Melton, First Vice President,
Nancy Siemion. SLC Facilities
Commissioner; Craig Ehrlich, In-
formation DirectCK. Student
Body PreMdent' Office; Dotson
Wilson, Q\\^\fn\^n, First Vice
President's Advisory Board;
Brian Eisberg, NSA repretema-
tive; Victor Nunez, Board of
Control nnember. ^nd the Third
World Coalition. I am hopeful
the aforemefHioned information
v\d ernlofsements will warrrant
your vote of support for Cyn-
tbia McClaie for first vice presi-
dent..
Mvcia 1. Bisque
The office of 1st Vice-Presi-
dent requires the ability to med-
iate and administrate, it requires
a person who is empathic to the
needs of special interest groups
as welt as a forceful lecisiator
wfk) can initiate and mnJiimiit
new v^ creative programs for
the student body as a whole
As a representative of minor-
ities v\6 special interest groups
for the years of 1973 and 1974 I
feel confiderH that I meet these
qualifications. I worked in the
Campus Events office, urvder
Rudy Nieto, for the past year on
special programming. (1 coor-
cfinated BRUIN WEEK ^f\6 other
similar projects.)
It was during this time that 1
\ie^rne6 a skill vital to the office
of 1st V.P. — Programming Spe-
cial Events. This training will
enable me to work more ef-
fectively with tbe groups tfiat fall
under this olAce 1 am qualdied
to assist them in any endeavors
they ur>dertake e.g Culture
Week. Abo dkktxr^ this period I
became avvere of tf>e inequali-
ties in the budgetir^ of special
interest programming. When
I will correct Mte db-
crepancies to ernure a better
allocation of our funds.
Another one of my concerm
IS the existing Advisory toefd
that consists of nrtembers of tt>e
various interest groups; their
ability to function as an entity
has been limited, thus their
accomplishments have been
minimal. I propose a revision of
the Advisory Board such tfat it
will create a stronger alliance
amongst the different groups. I
¥vould also like to imptement
more |oint ventures between the
various interest groups.
This position, \n the past, has
furKtioned as w\ overseer 9^f\d
has not prepesed enetigh inrK>-
vative programs If elected 1 will
seek budgeting for new pro-*
gramming e.g. Panhallenic.
There we many co-tpatHor*
ship pr oiecti that can come out
of this oMce in tf>e interests of
l.p.C, I.F.C.. Panhallenic* and »
Special I merest Groups, l^oiv- 1
ever it requires u^ interested,
hard-wofking
J.
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VOTE MAY
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Campus Events Commissioher
TT — '-^
Rich LevJer
I am the underdog.
My opponent has Marked if^
the Campus Everrts oHice all
year. He's probably an efficient
candidate, but how much em-
phasis should be placed on this
kmd of dmncJ expenence,
wK«fi co«fipaf«d with ciMCfvity,
enthusiasm, and new ideas.
How about showing campus
films two nights per week, or
midnight shows, or donating the
proceeds to charity — a charity
2 odier than Uni-Camp
O How about a Campus Art
< Show, or Rehalssance Fair, or a
^ Brum Spirit Week that has some
innpact — one that students will
attend.
And concerts: Carole King
wm great, but who else have we
had in the last two years —
Education is the reason we re
at UCLA Lets make culture
weeks »nd awarcfieM^ weeks
more than |ust cirded dates on a
calendar. Let's make them
events — so students will know
they're happening just by
walkmg on campus.
Sure, new ideas »re tough to
pull off, but that's what the
office is all about — getting
things done. Campus Events has
the potential to be one of the
nrK>st productive commissions on
campus. And I want to make it
|ust that.
This year, i spearheaded the
inter-dorm movie program. We
worked with a much smaller
budget, yet produced a pro-
gram that rivaled the one on
campus — just .ask any dorm
residcficf
1 served on Lindsey Conner's
Presidential cabinet; I'm Facili-
ties Commissioner at Sproul;
and I've worked extensively with
dorm ^ogramming.
I have been endorsed by
Robert Kinaga, Inter -residence
Hall Council President, and by
Chris Lamson, Sproul Hall Presi-
dent. I have worked with these
people all year: thev know 1 can
do the job.
Tm running became I see a
need for innovation; a need to
make things happen. I know I
can do it; I need your vote, and
r want your support.
This election is clear cut.
Either stay with, another year of
the old "efficient mediocrity",
or bring in new blood, new
ideas, and a new perspective.
This oHice is Campus Events
— let's have some eveirtif
Jim Bechtel
I am currently working in the
Campus Events Commission. I've
been an intern in that office for
the past year One of my ma|or
profects ni^as the coordination of
Bruin Week, the week proceed-
ing the UCLA-USC game. This
included the planning and or-
ganization of such things as the
first annual Bnibi Parade and the
pre-game street party held on
Strathmore. I have also been
working on the Film Commis-
sion and the Rooters Bus Pro-
gram.
My aim this past year has
been to familiarize myself with
all aspects of the Campus Events
office, in'Ofder to insure that I
have the compeier>ce needed to
run the commission efficiently
1 have the active support and
endorsement <M the cu rr tfnt
Campus Events Commissior>er,
Rudy Nieto.
My plans for next year in-
clude an increase in student
programming, particularly in the
area of concerts and dances.
Alot of groundwork was laid in
these areas this year -and I in-
ter>d to devote alot of time ar>d
energy to them next year. I will
be open to any r>ew and inno-
vative suggestions for pro-
gramming made to me. Any
ideas will be considered.
' The only promise I will make
to you is to pledge my com-
plete honesty and enthusiastic
attitude in all my work. JIM
BECHTEL
In Knsik
Unlike some of the articles in
this section of the Brum, this
entry will not be a platform
statement When you go to vote
on Wednesday or Thursday my
n^me will be the only one you
see under the Cultural Affairs
headirtg It seems that I have the
fermadaible advantage of running
unopposed for* elective office.
Chances are that unless I'm
beaten by Mickey Mouse,
■)
Cultural Affairs
Gerald Ford, my wne-ass cam-
pllfn manager, or any other
write-in candkiMte, I will be the
next .Con)miss'ioner of Cultural
Affairs.' Just so you won't feel
totally shocked by this fact, it
might comfort you to know that
I have bein.. working for the
commission as Director of Pro-
gramming for the entire year, so
I'm well qualified to be the
commmioner of the office. I
also have some intelligent ideas
concerning my prospective role
as a council member, but I don't
have enough speoe m this re-
stricted article to coherently
explain them. (Most students
could care leu about my ideas
anyway) Since tf^ Brum has
gh^en free fpece to all candi
dates, however. I would like to
say |us^ a few things about the
SLC, and student government in
general .
There is mofe to *n SLC posi-
tion than earning the right to be
called "commish" for an entire
year by all your friends. 1 hope
"that I will be able to serve m
part of a productive af>d pro-
gpMw ^C At die risk of being
called "one of those r4dic9\.
egotistical, worthless viudent
government people. " I would
like to offer the opinion that
LiCLA's student government Is
worthwhile. 9tHi n prolMibly>^-
terving of your consi^KiUMLBl
least during election time I
would like to encourage all
students to take ^n active part in
n^t year's getii eminent by
wednf lor qualified snd reipon-
sible candidates. If you don't
think that stydani jpweMMWM ts >
important efMwgli ler yMi le
vole, than vote im die take of
tf>ose wf>o, like myself, think ^
that student governm#>nt rae i
work
One laat note: H* you do
to veat, lake. the time to
fhe boa aefti le lou
Karasik s narrte unc^r Cultural
Affairs A respectable* tally m this
box will si^nOy to me that there *
ate some peadle who share my
behefs about tHideflt govern-
ment
if
Student Welfare Commissioner
m
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Community Services Cornmissioner
DeloresTynMr
idMor's N<ile: No platform
received lor the candidate.
John Kobara
Due to hard work and de-
terminatiori, the Community
Services Commission has
evolved into one of the largest
and strongest Commissions at
9
U C.L.A. The Commission has
been serving the surrounding
L.A. community in many dif-
ferent ways, including both tu-
torial and awareness projects.
The |ob of the next commis-
sioner wiJI be to not only con-
tinue the high standards of the
program, but to also further
improvements in existing pro-
grams, and to encourage the'
initiation of new ones. At the
same time, the Commissioner
must b* prepared to/espond to
the rest of the student body J
through the S.L.C. vote.
After participating for 2 years
in Community Services activi-
ties,-both as a volunteer and
Assistant Director of a tutorial
program, I feel that I have
achieved the awareness neces-
sary to complete this job. I've
seen how the Commission works
on a daily basis, and experi-
enced the problems ind ob-
stacles which volMHteers and
directors face as they work to
serve the community. Addition-
ally, I've realized that an im-
portant facet of the Commis-,
sion is not only to provide ser-
vice for the community, but to
also provide an opportunity for
U.C.L.A. students to get field-
work experience. As Commis-
sioner I would see it necessary
lo continue the effort tp in-
volve rrK>re students in these
activities as part of their edu-
cational experience. Undoubt-
edly my experience with the
Commission has been invalua-
ble, and has also prepared me to
take on tf>e responsibilities of
the Community Services Com-
missioner
Supported by:
Peter Moraga -^ Community
Services Commissioner
Bonnie Maldonado — Director,
Project Motivation
Carl Melillo — Director ChinarK>
Youth Barrio
Robyn Paul — Director, Bridg-
ing the Gap
Cer>e Matsumoto — Director,
Asian American Tutorial
Beatrice Giron — Director,
ASUGLA Tutorial
Rudy Marquez, Julian Fuentes —
Directors, Project Amigos
r 1-
Educational Policy Commissioner
Willie Banks
Although we have come to
UCLA lor a va/iety of different
reasons, the utmost important
reason is education I'm not com-
pletely satisfied with UCLA edu-
cation as It now exist This is the
reason I have declared myself a
candidate for Student Educa-
tional Policies Commissioner. '
Of course I could at this point
in lime list a thousand promises,
bui I won't; I will let the work
speak for itself
I consider the Student Educa-
tional Policies Commissioner to
be the most irr>portant Com-
mission on the Student Legis-
lative Council
This year as a General Repre-
sentative. I became familiar with
the beauacracy in Kerkogg Hall
as well as Murphy Hall. With this
knowledge and your support we
can build a strong and respon-
sive commission that would be
repected and admired by those
who run this University.
This, then, is our duty — to
turn Educational Relaxation into
'Academic Action "
la-», need of your support
Willie Banks
Cnig I. MtdKll
Do you accept or refect Stu-
dent Government's traditional
fo\e in regards to educational
reform? That is the vital question
before UCLA students when
voting for Educational Policy
Commissioner I represent those
who refect the SLC tradition of
inaction on educational matters.
Through my involvement with
the United Farmworkers, Project
Awareness, and most important-
ly, being a student without
"connections " I have been ex-
posed to Student Government's
nx>de of operation. I am forced,
after every encounter, to isk the
question: "Who is Student Gov-
ernment serving; am I to believe
It is the students?" If you. too,
have raised that question.
I know we have somethmg in
con^mon. How many times have
you laughed when reading the
BRUIN that the most significant
isiue at the last meeting was
trying to get enough people to
establish a quorum; or how
about debating who will chair
the meetings?! One cannot fail
to see the humor of the currerrt
student government.
Yet, rr>eanwhile, we are con-
fronted with severe educational
problems;
1 Departments that rarely
consult students wfien forming
course offerings .
2. Programs that will leave
you with a degree but no job
3. A system that forces stu-
dents to bear the burden of an
individual T.A.'s failings . .
Clearly, changes are needed
Personally, I believe students ^re
tired of being disappointed by
SLC. tired of knowing that SLC
fails to initiate the needed edu-
cational reforms, reforms that
should include:
V Active student participation
in the ifllection of course offer-
ings.
2. A tair review practice to
insure that .students do not suf-
fer due to an individual T.A.'s
failings.
3. The establishment of edu-
cational practices with an em-
phasis on learning ratf>er than
grades.
Choose the candidate for Edu-
cational Policy Commission who
has noH participated in a Student
Government that traditionally
Ignores the students, rather,
elect one wfio commits himself
to providing the necessary lead-
ership to truly represent the
student of UCLA.
DO NT FORGET TO VOTE
FINAL ELECTION:
MAY 1 2th AN D 1 3th
« <
Pail Gmi
Edtoor's Nole: No piatform mm
recefvefl lor ine
Job Lbpp
Aher going to UCLA for two
years. 1 must ask myself. How
has the Student Legislative
Council affected my life? What
has it done for the improvement
of my welfare? The answer is not
much.^
Students at UCLA are affected
more by. tf^etr respective Ipcal
governments than by SlC; if
tf>ey live in the dormitories, it is
the floor officers, if they ifive m a
fraternity or sorority, it is their
respective Waders. These are the
individuals that have the most
impact oh the rules ind regu'la-
tior>s that govern the student.
The reason for this is srniply
that tfte SLC is too closed and
removed to affect the individual
student in daily life. Can you as
the reader of this article, tell me
what the SLC has accomplished
in the past year and what it is
currently undertaking as projects
and programs? To further com-
plicate matters. SLC appears to
have r>o apparant direction or
§oek they want accomplished*
other than to provide jobs 9nd
status for the elected official and
their friends. Programs from
various Commissions overlap
one another and may even be at
conflict. This IS analogous to a
group of football players with a
baseball. Just, what ganr>e are
they playing?
A step in opening the door to
SIC would be to print a rr>onthly
supplement to the Daiy inriw
which would inform students on
current and future SLC activities.
Also included would be, in this
supplement, student views con-
cerning the pro and con of SLC
issues.
Almost every SLC candidate'
will fell you that Housing ar>d
Parking are two m^^or issues ind
t(jey will do something to al-
leviate the problem Does this
then mean that there will be
fourteen eiectad eiiicials work-
ing on the same problem? I
feel it would be better to con-
solidate fourteen .into one It
wou not only save time ^nd
student money, but perhaps
with a concentrated effort a
solution might be found CAL-
PtRG (California Public Interest
Research Group) under the con-
trol of the Student WeH^9
Commissioner, is o/ienied
towards informing tf^ student
of student concerns, such a|'
text booi^ prices, health servicei
CALPIRG IS in essence the devils
advocate for students
Currently tf>ere sre many
commuting students anef%dtng
UCLA. Last year, the Student
Welfare CommisiiMier had 9r>
organized carpool, but there is
httle trace of that program this
year It is time to revive car-
pooling and make it once more
a functioning program For the
commuting student t propoae a
project caBed Brown Bag Day,
where commuters wiU be aNe
to meet »nd talk with fellow
• commuting students, fKMices for
such an event would be pub-
lished in the Daiy Bruin
Jim Rossn
I am running for the olfJcv of
Student Welfare CommissKH^er
because f see this office as one
that has not lived up to its full
potential Part of the probiem
lies in the fact that Student
Welfare is relatively unkr^own to
a majority of our Undent body
In short, my very first project, if
aiecttd, wmM be to acquaint
the students wUli file valuable
servKes #ifeMd to them through
this otfiloe This publicity cam-
paign would take several forms
a student poneyiiiiirnt mforn^a-
tion counter solely for the pur-
pose of answering questioris and
directing students to the ap-
propriate offices, also there is
the possibiiif. of opening
another Student Welfare offKe
on tf^ other end of campus^ as a
convenience to the students But
I propose more- than publicKy I
plan to re-shape tf>e com-
mission by expanding tt »nd
brmging ft into new problem
areas which it has previously .
ifnored As of today, the Stu-
denf Welfare office deals with
student health care ft involves
the Situdini l^ealth Service, the
sale of cofitreoeptives on
campus snd rh^ ?^er Health
Counseihng program Student
WeHare also runs tf>e help- line
9nd PIRG, a consunr>ers int€»fest
grou^ These ^re all excellent
programs tnd de\er>fe to be
contmued be >t we must
fitem Why IS the Stu-
Health Service cutting back
on Its badly needed services
while the University invests in
other worthless project? Fur-
tf>ermore, if we have a con-
sumer group such as PIRG.
shouldn t we be able to organ-
ize as a studervt body Mnd make
student discounts available m
the high-pnced Westwood
»? If elected f wiN work
rard the realization of tfiese
goah
Even metre than rhts honvever.
I want StuderH Wcllave to meen
exactly what it was irtiended to.
mean everything in the
of all students That is
why I propose the following'
r>ew progi-ams the set-up of a
campui 'Wydiint pfMection ver
vue so that students from the
dorms jtnd sororities can go i<.
the library at night without be-
infi; harassed, a student refer
endum in all Reg. packets to
emplasize your cor>cefns. a lar
ger seminar program to feUeci
student mterest. no minus A
plus system fcK grades next year.
ind much more A great many*
SLC officoff who I had the op-
portunity to work with this year
have publicly endoRwd my can
didary, but in tlie end it all
Tomes down to you the student
Take the tinr>e to go x>ver rny
idaas, 1 need ynur support' Help
lo elect MM ROSEN to smttre
effec five STUDIJ^T Wit f ARE
COMMISSION'"
Eric by Salter
Eric Selter. both as a freshman
intern, and as the Assistant
Commissioner Of Vildenr Wel-
fare under Dennis Mitchell, has
had a full year of expeflaMW m
the Welfare Office In the last
year Eric has played »n im-
portam role in several mafor
ASUCLA prograrm. among
which »r^ Alpha Phi Ome|^
Carpool — A r>ew program now
99% the eKperirT>ental stages. As
commissioner, i would work
to fully implement this program
arni help alleviate the oitical
parking shortage on Campus.
The Freshmen Intern Program
-^ I have worried lor the Out-
reach program created bv Scots
Tairlor tnd 6t > eloped throufh
me &l^firm fif the General tep-
r*»s#»ntatives I fully support the
"cept of trained freshmen
interns helping other freshmen
through the rrd tape of Mufphy
Hall dnd would extend this
program to aid^^ Ail undergrad
uaied at thr untversitv not only
With inleriimian rlwough
my OoHiMteoncv Plan My plart
IS tf» represent the student in
Murphy dnd Kerdi^hoff Hall whcj
has difficult ifs which he hims«*lt
are unable t^o solve
Peer Health CounseUng -
One of th4* programs under th«*
auSfNces of the Student Welfare
Commission is Peer Health
whic h provides
s«*rvKe 4nd contra-
cepthres lo the student^. I be-
Ueve this^fograrh to be basicaflv
sound, and to achieve a f oiler
understanding of it, both my
iruens snd myself will tram dur
ing the summer 'Peer Health
CounselTng program to more
facilitate ourselves with rt\
functions and noodi
Regulation of Advert isemi'rtt
— I sm concerned with th**
legitimacy of certain Help
Wanted Acfs in the Daley Bruin
I believe that |ob-seeking stu-
dents should fNM fall vtcttm Hi
fraudMlBili^#agrtiwng tnd favor
regulation of these adi •» pre-
vent mtsfortur>e to tf>e student
With a full year ds Asststanr
Commissmner of Student Wel-
fare undet my belt, if eladed, I
can start the machmt^y for my
plans roMmg immedi itgl|>. tlVh«>n
a student comes to me on the
fi^^ day of Fall Quarter IfTIS. my
programs will be ready and waft-
ing. No prociattmataon. no run- '
around I wiB worit lor exactly
what tfws office caBs for the
WELFAIK of tfse STt r>f^Tc
fNDOtSiD BY SCO. . *\:.^K
WILLK BANKSS |ERRY HfRN-
DJtON - ASLCIA Gf^FtAt
tFMTFSFNTATfVFS
Student Facilities Commissioner
luff.,,,,
Mrey
What IS the Facilities Com-
mission?
The Facilities Commrsiower Is
your represent It ive in Murphy
Hall, the student officer who
watcf>es over tlie planning and
» ,. . —
development of the campus fa-
dNUe? m which you Work, eat,
and sleep
The Facilities CommissKmer is
also your ropMsentitive m
Kerckhoff Hall, participating in
the Jt>tlupaaant and allcxation
of our Student Union facililies,
as well as a member of the
Studant Legislative CoumgII,
which
the
litical issues that affect the entire
siudertt
It IS my
think in§« recaptnrenesft lo a mul-
tipliaty of viewpomis. a0^ at-
tention to detail ate ike
importarvt compoAeeai pi a
GoaafuP Operation I lippe to
ip"l>
K rhese two "qualities to
of the yob It n also
that the application oi
tfctmipuei and a careful
aniysn of the benefiH and costs
cotmocied with any operation or
protect mvolvinf campus facd-
mcs wiM result in an improee-
mmm of tlie ««i^ of the p^e-
spMii fliudeiM teP# fiid thoae to
c
In eddtton to the
ities. I shaft do "^ utmoai, as a
rinmbii of the Studeot L
latfve Couficd. to bring
honesty, scrupulous fairness,
civiitfy tihd deooiicy to the de-
cision maJMUg process wiili in-
spect to an ^ugalions ano
ihn
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NSA Representative
Brian Bsboi
STOP WASTING YOUR MO—
NtY!! For 9 out o^ the last 10
B years UCLA has not been af-
filiated with the Naiicmal Stu
dent Association but your dol«-
lars have gone to maintain an
NSA Representative on Student
legislative Cour)cil.
For the past 3 years the NSA
Rep has unnecessarily dupli-
cued wmik being d<me better
by the External Affairs Coordin-
ator. Students have wasted nnore
than $10,000 on NSA stipends
alone
This past year, I was the NSA
V© Representative on SLC. Al-
J^ though I am quite proud of the
^ accomplishments t was able to
A* achieve during my term of of-
fice, I must tell you that the NSA
Rep's office is basically no dif-
ferent than any General Rep-
resentative, and we already have
3 of those
12 out 14 SLC nnembers have
agreed that the po<'i»"^n of NSA
Rep^resentative is wasteful and
duplicative. Thjs issue has been
a political fooibeii for SIC since
January dnd because of this a
vole on abolishing NSA has
newer even been taken, for this
reason I am following the only
cose left open to nr»e. I am going
beyond SLC to rnake my case to
you, the voten.
MY SOLE PURPOSE IN SEEK-
ING REELECTIOr^ to this office is
to achieve a goal that has
eluded me on SLC all year: to
finally, once and for all, ABOL-
ISH THE OFFICE OF NSA REP I
will not collect one penny of
this wasted stipend My only
objective in holding the office
will be to immediately place on
the ballot an initiative to remove
the office from SLC. AS SOON
AS IS DONE. I WIU RESIGN
Throughout my campaign I
will be carrying with me an
initiative to remove the NSA
Rep. I hope that my campaign
will raise the consciousness of all-
students so that they will finally
and clearly understand the dup-
licative and wasteful nature of
the office of NSA Rep.
I »m anxious to answer any
and all questions you may have
and I hope that you will teek
me out on Brum Walk so that I
may have the opportunity to do
|ust that.
STOP WASTING YOUR MON-
EY AND SLC's TIME ABOLISH
THE NSA REP BY REEUCTINC
BAIAN EISBERC"
IvanLKallick
SHOULD UCLA BECOME A
MEMBER AGAIN OF THE NA-
TIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIA-
TION (NSA)?
THAT'S THE ISSUE. PLAIN
Al^D SIMPLE!
Last year's NSA Representative
(running again), urged UCLA to
drop out of the NSA LET'S
CHANGE THIS! WE SHOULD BE
A FORCE IN NATIONAL STU-
DENT AFFAIRS AGAIN!
NSA is the largest, oldest and
'♦Hwt respeded network for stu-
dent lobbying, educational com-
munication ^nd social action —
for and between students
around the world! Minimal dues
(i few hundred dollars) gives
UCLA representation in NSA's
effective administrative offices in
Washifipon fstaffed by students
from acfOfft the nation), in its
potent lobbying force Mf%d in its
network of colleges »nd uni-
versities around the world —
where UCLA's prominence de-
mar>ds it be!
THE FUTURE IS IN POSfT^VE
AND ENLIGHTENED PARTICI-
PATION, NOT INACTIVITY!
KALLICK'S background in-
cludes the following
— Junior, Poltical Science,
UCLA
—Graduate, University High
School
—Presently, Director of the
Associated Students Information
Service
— Staff of Congressman Tom
Rees (D-Westwood). 72, 73, 74
— Staff of Senator Joseph
Montoya, 1975
United States Senator Joseph
Montoya (D-N.M ), on October
2, 1975. said of Ivan Kallick,
"Since Congress returned from
August recew, I have had oc-
caftioo jto review the proiects
you woifkm^ on this summer and
have found your watki Ip bt
excellent. Already, I have intro-
duced several al the bills you
developed . . . Your enthusiasm
and hard work have reinforced
my belief in the value of the
Congressional intern program
9nd I look forward to havir^g
future opportunites to partici-
pate in it."
Student Body Pretident Lind-
say Conner, said of IVAN KAL-
LICK, "IVAN has directed with
distinction one of the most im-
portant Student Government of-
fices — the Associated Students
Information Service/JNFO, this
past year He has feally served
Student Government and UCLA.
I can honestly say that IVAN has
done a great job and then
SOOHJ."
VOTE
IVAN L. KALLICK
National Student Association
Representative
-A POSITIVE REPRESENTATIVE-
Grad Students:
The following referendum
items will appear on the
GSA ballot.
i
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INITIATIVE AGAINST RACISM AND CUTBACKS
AT gClA:
Do you endorse the following:
1. We demand annual minority recruitment,
beginning Fall 7^ pi 1.411 undergraduates and
42S graduates, including Irethmen ^nd tramler
ilydenH, the tame as the peak year ol mir>ority
admtMNNM in 1971. until minorities Me repre-
sented at least according to their percentage of
the popidelioii ol Los Angeles County.
We 6en%i^t%d special admissions for minority,
htfingual and working class white students at the
previous rate ol 12 per cent.
We demand that the University, in cooperation
with private ioundations and government agen-
cies, should plan and institute a five year program
of undergraduate scholarships and graduate
fellowships for minority and working class whUe
Undents admitted to the University
2. We demand that the University of California
implement the recommendations of the Chicaiio
Task Force Report
3. In view of the complete lack of Affirmative
Action in UCLA hiring to this date Mnd the lack of
employment fw graduates of UCLA. We demand
an end to the faculty hiring freeie and increases
in faculty hiring to be implemented as follows: A)
In the departments which have experienced a
sharp increase in un^rgraduale enrolment, such
as Political Science. Chemistry, and Biology,
increase tenure-track teaching faculty potRiom lo
meet the standard of IS/1 ftudent/taculty ratio;
B) Decrease by a campus-wide departmental
average of SO per cent the student-TA ratio,
wfthostt restrictitig enroNment but by
tif.
the iHimber of TA-fhlpt, in acccKdance wRh the
of the TA's union; C) All hirj^g, whetft^er
pOfRions created under (3A) m4 (38)
e, or into existing pofWeatp MiMl be al-
located acccKding to pnpulillen piopertiem of
Lm Angeles ICtNuity of HhnicRy and sei; D) To
rectify eaMng ir>stances el radrt, seiist, and
eNtist practices at UCLA, we demand that the
following professors, students, and staff be
reinstated immediately: 1) Dr. Humberto Bracho,
2) Ms. Rocio Camacho, and 3) WiNie Hoiien
m
4. We demand
Student HeaRh
a reversal of the cutbacks
S. We demand an end to al forms of poRce
harrassment of stmftents at UCLA, particularly el
mirKMrRy rtudmte and workers and leftists. Disarm
the campus police ...
> «.«v»>«i'.*»^« «'«.«.««.«.«««. *.««,^ »^'
i. We demand that the $4fS hicrease in
lof out-of-state and foreign students be rescimled
IRANIAN STUPENTS ASSOCIATION INITIATIVE:
The U. C. -- Iran Pmiect alewt the Iranian
Regime, one of the Moat npuwln dictatorships,
to set up a so-caRed 'Persian Study Center"* on
this campus. The Iranian Stu<ients Association at
UCLA believes that such ties wRh a reihne that
holds over 4t.BBB political prisoners, mostly
students, and which has executed over 3tB
patriots in less that three years, is, to say the least,
an RiiuR to the students nl tMi UniversRy. We
h«rther believe that the litLA lacRRies ^kmdd not
be put at the dlipairf ol the imuM iig^eu at the
Skah. Do you appedve o< the U. C. — Iran
rrofecff .
t
VOTE MAY
^^^^^^
SLC GeherarRepresentatives
EricSlna
. i
If elected SLC General. Rep-
resentative, my matn goal will be
to be available to all students
and act on issues of infftt and
importance to them. SLC's great-
est tailing IS that only about 10%
of under grids are even mildly
invlved with student govern-
nf>ent, as the number of votes
cast iri the last einoion clearly
shows.
Now I don't expect even a
m^ionty of students to be work-
in in Kerckhoft hall But I be-
lieve that every student should
kr>ow where lo go if she/he
r>eeds help. Every student should
know what opportunities are,
available. And every student
should feel the ability to have a
hand in the decision making
process.
As your SIC representative, I
would take every possible step
to open up student government.
One th ig I will do is establish
regular and frequent office
hours so that anyone can talk to
me about whatever they feel is
important. By meeting with peo-
ple I will be in a position to
understand their needs and
inaugurate programs to help
Naturally, office hours are
useless if nobody knows about
(hem. I will take every conceiv-
able measure to publici/e these
meetings, even it means- post^n^
handbills and advertising in the
Brum.
It is ebout time we had a
General Representative who is.
comrriitted to helping students
work on projects that are of
interest to them All to often we
have people in office who nar-
row mindedly stick to their own
interests without much thought
as to what is reaTty needed here
at UCLA. ____
It is not uncommon to find
people holding positions of re-
sponsibility in student govern-
me -#ho really believe that*
undergrads . can r>cver care
about SLC Let me give you an
example.
Last year I worked on the UC
Student Lobby. I was quite con-
<^erned about the fact that very
^ew people knew about the
lobby and I wanted to start a
campaign to familiarize students
with it. However, the then di-
rector of the lobby told me that
students • have never cared and
never would.
She went on to say that an
attempt at campus wide involve-
ment was a futile waste of time.
I didn't believe it then 1 cer-
tainly don't now.
Student Government can be
opened up and made responsive
to all With your help. I Eric
Sherman, will diligemiy try to
achieve that goal. It can be
done!
Km Shcphenl
What are the functions en-
tailed in the office of the Gen-
eral Represerttative? The, prin-
<-ip«i responaibility of the Gen-
eral Representative is to act as
the main link between SLC ar>d
the student community. If
elected, I will emphasize in-
creasing the credibility of SLC
through improving campus com-
munications, and becoming an
"icRve General Repawenutive/'
I ttreii the need to n>ake stu-
^irt goverrunent more acces-
si^ble to thy Mimli H igRfHirti
by establishing Mn open forum
on important issues (such as
Parking, housing, can^KJs wdety).
More they are voted on by
SLC. 1 ieel that a cHRol einim
tion of the present budget prior-
ities IS desperately m&eded
We must work to limit the
Administration's outrageous
campus expansion policy We
nnnd to support buildlig for
student neidiA fNorth Campus
Facility, Coffee House), and pro
^•^ tNr npfrRvn ^ structures
which serve the outside aca-
demic cx>mmunity (eg the
Molecular Biology Institute with
Its destruaion of the ScierKe
Quad)
i^ore student input is ncmtkd
•n this i^ea as well as in the area
of professor and course evalua
lion We as students must insist
on high quality teaching and
force a de-emphasis on research
when It restricts the prvrfeisor s
ability to teach
HanySnoek
I. am not running with the
intent of using this position to
help me get into graduate
school or for any other purpotC
I am running because I honestly
feel that I can and will rep-
resent the views of students,
fairly and impartially.
CAMPAIGN PLATFORM .
1) I promise to be accessible to
all students as long as I am in
office.
2) I promise to represent stu-
dent vi^Ws on problems and
policies tothe best of Tny ability
3) As a senior, this being my last
ye^, I will not use this position
as a stepping stone for other
positions on the SLC totem pole.
Above are the only campaign
promises that I can make, but if
elected I will attempt to
1) Institute a moratorium on the
reduction of parking spaces due
to university cosnt ruction unless
the spaces ren>oved are relo-
cated m another area on or oH
campus (before construction
begins)
2) Push for more off campus
"free" parking lots along the
same guidelines as are used at
the V.A. lot (Sawtetle and Ohio)
where the measure proves feas-
ible.
3) Help Parking Service reevalu-
ate it's nr>ethod of distribution of
parking permits.
4) Bring about the return of the
free night shuttle to arni from
the dorms to the Research and
Bio-Med libraries.
Most of the above views on
parking, 1 have acquired
through my experiences as a
Shuttle Bus Drn^er from Lot 32
ar>d the V.A. lot during the past
year. The ideas were brought up
by fellow students and since
parking is such a proWem, I feel
that it deserves much more at-
tention than it has received in
the paft
5) As I see ft, the stipending of
SLC members is out of control
(ov^ $1,400.00 per year for each
SLC officer) You, at the ma|or
iiifiplirrT of these funds should
have some say in the payment of
SLC members, as to who de-
serves compensation arni ho«v
much. It should not be decided
on by the SLC along
As General Repmentative, i
will listen to your views arni
make your voices heard.
Ma Lie'
^ ^
\
experier>ce ranges from Asst to
the 1st VP of Special Womens
Programs to Comm of Publicity
of the BSA. my issues deal with
Student Employ. Financial Aid.
and TA's responsibility As far as
Student Emply. is coiKerned ¥ve
are told that of aN students who
apply for |obs, B0% are placed —
but we are net told in which
time realm this B0% is placed
this could be a period of S-10
yrs. Also as far as financial aid is
corurerned many students lack
info.; from filling out aid ap-
plications, picking up checks to
securing parents CCBpefatilWl ifl
filling out Parents Confidential
Statements Also students who
wish to declare themselves in-
dependent are often unaware
that they must be decbred as
self-supportive for one fiscal
year prior to applying for aid.
not to forget the fact that emer-
gency loans were $100, now
only $50 As far as the question
of TA's IS concerned. I feel the
question of TA's responsibility lo
the Prof and the dept or to the
student should be looked into
Do TA'sf>fps cbrtsider the quality
of the grad student or the |ob
given. I feel there is a lack of
information as well as a rapport
between the student and various
campus institutions I propose a
council representing the various
facets on campus; Sororities;
Frats., Co^op, Dorms, and Inter-
est groups, who will decide on
issues and problems holdir>g the
most common priority among
stuents via "These Are the
Issues" boxes placed at various
key points on campus, with re-
search emnating from this coun-
cil, lome tyipe of action will be
implemented.
Jay Bundy
My n^rm k Anita 9L LeVeaux
and I am runninfTHrUfwIW
of Cetw^al R«P '^y political
My name is Jay Bundy and I
9m runnmg for the office of
General Representative Platform
writing I* not one of my favorite
activities and I am sure that
platform reading is rK>t a favorite
student activity. I would, how-
ever, Hke to take a few lines to
tell you my qualifications, and
explain why I am running for
office
For the past year I have been
working for the Culture Affairs
Commission as Director of Pro-
gramming I have gained invalu-
able expenernre about the oper-
ations of student government
By running for General Repre-
sentative, I hope to gam a more
active role in UCLA's Student
Legislative CourKil, by becoming
an active voting council rrtem-
oer.
The priffie responsibility of a
general representative is to have
an open mir>d to student con-
cern. I hope to serve as a stu-
dent "o0ibudsman", one who
can directly help students to
find the right cartipus organiza-
tion to assist them in solving
their problems. In many cases,
that orfehization is the Office of
the General Represeruatives. I
feel that a General Repp^enta-
tive must be willing ar>d able to
work on Itudent govprnrrw^nr
out of his own office
I am hard-working and willing
to spend the time to rgpftsent
you on Student L«fi|lative
CouncN. I will iKM compromise
the student pwipective while
probing into the perennial issoet
such as f^vkir}^, housing,
ASL>CLA student control, etc
Obviouily, tkete pnklmnn are
not so easily solved or they
ymM have been u^yed bfig
Lm0^, I leel that tfw cfwnt of
well informed of what it is
doing
Ron Hacker
1 see the position of Ger>erai
Rwetentitive serving the mam
link between you the students
and your student government
It is the General Rep who has
the responsibility of coming to
you to find out what your parti-
cular neodi and problems are
Issues that concern the student
at U.C.L.A. can then be brought
before our student governrr^^nt
and hopefully, adequately dealt
with
I feel that to carry out this
responsibility I must, as your
General Rep. make ipedal ef-
forts to come into personal con-
tact with you My efforts in this
capacity, will incliMb getting
together with the interest
groups on a regular basis, in
order to gain insight into their
special programs, as well as
seeking input from all sections
of the campus populace Stu-
dent govt should not be so
distant from those people that it
was created to serve
Although the General Rep
acts as your mouthpiece m stu-
dent govt , it IS also valuable if
that person is innovative as well
as competent I believe this is
needed 40 resolve some peren-
nially perplexing problems that
5
pUfiie our campus, glong with
constructing ways for student
govt to better work for you. A
few of my ideas to combat these
conflicts include.
1) ftadtm HeaMi Center - To
cut down on the tremerkkMis
i^ing list at the SHS. with an
apl^ntment profram It works
in private practice Why dont we rw
have It here^ m
2) Parking — Making the sec- ^
tion of Cycle Drive from the ^
sunset exit to Drake Stadium O
one way. eriabling parking along ^
the side, adding approximately
100 more spaces A short range
solution could mvofve ir>e«pen-
sively paving unused land, such
as area by Gayley A Veteran
3) Student Store - Hawe our
new All-purpose ID card serve
as a credit card toward the pur-
d^Me of bsBhi imd supplies at
our student (owned) store
Aside from innovative ideas, it
IS always^ essential to hold ^otHe
and cultivate successful pro-
grams, such as the freshmen
Internship This program got
more students involved with
SLC. It eased tedious work of
commissioners, and allowed
them lo concentrate bn more
important matters
You deserve a all only
br^cause of the $5 that each of
you pay towards student govern-
ment, to take advantage of these
programs and ideas. & to be
competently represented I hope
that you will grant me the pr»-
vildge of being your General
Representative.
■
DONT
FORGET
TO
one wfiich
VOTE
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PRIMARY ELECTION
UNDERGRADUATES VOTE
AT ANY OF THE
FOLLOWING LOCATIONS:
KERCKHOFF PLAZA
BUNCHE HALL
BOMBSHELTER
DICKSON PLAZA
INVERTED FOUNTAIN
ROLFE QUAD
GSM
LAW SCHOOL PATIO „
PAULEY PAVILION
(NORTHWEST END)
STUDENT HEALTH
SERVICE
THE POLLING LOCATIONS
WILL BE OPEN FROM
9 AM TO 5 PM.
Each candidate was gjven the
opportunity to express his or
her ideas and viewpoints. All
platforms were printed exactly
as submitted to the Elections
Board by the candidates. The
Elections Board did not malce
any grammatical or editorial
changes in the platforms. All
candidates were given an
-f
equal
amount of
space in
which to express their ideas
and any that exceeded the
allowed limits were cut from
Women trackers takesecond
■"—r
By J»Quc Kanptclirocff
DB Sports H rtter
UCLA*t «MWn*s track team
made a fo<Hl tliowinf lait
weekend and pteead Mcond in
the SCWIAC league cham-
piooshipt at VC Santa Bar-
kara
Althouffa coach Pat Con-
nolly had hoped her team
mouid win the league ttUe, the
was noi unhappy shanng the
runner-up position with USC,
behind Cal Suie Northhdfe.
**We could have won if I
wanted to uke a few chances,**
explained the coach. "^1 could
Iwvc had some of the women
running more events, but this
year heing the Olympic year 1
wasn't going to take the
chance.**
By taking chances, the coach
means she was not willing to
teve the women with mjunes
compete in mbrie than their
own individual events. If they
did, they could have further
injured themselves and been
out for the rest of the season.
Connolly felt ii better not to
Win the cliampion^sTiTp Than
possibly prevent one of her
tracksters from trying out for
the Olympics.
Several of the women were
able to either equal or better
their lifetime best in their
events. Kann Smith, for ex-
ample, threw the javelin 18-7
to equal her best and win the
event - 40 feet fi|rther than
San Diego State's Donna Die-
tnch who took lecond (142*3**).
Cindy Gilbert took first
place in the high jump with 5-
4. but was off her best by two
inches becauar tiwre was little
competition in her event., j
**The caliber of the hi;gh
jump was so poor 1^4*1 they
spent one and a half hours on
the lower heights before Cindy
could compete,** said Connolly
**Therc was no competition to
•he didn't jump as high as she
could have**
Lisa Vogelsang and Karen
Graves took their liletmie best
in the shot put. with Vogelsang
Uking thu-d in the shot, 36-10
Lisa also placed second in the
diicui with a disappointing
133-1. She has thrown over
145 feet
The Bruins came in two and
three in the 220, with Gayle
Butler taking lacaad in 24.5
(her icasoB*! faslett) and Duinc
Kummer third in 24 6 K.um-
mer also took second tn the
long jump; with 18-5 su
inches over her best jump
The AIAW aatioaals dMm-
pionships are but two short
waeks away, but Connolly will
not halt the pace ot practice
tor her team " We*ll put in a
good five days of pnalice each
week,** said ikt coach
UCLA
f
DRIVE
HAY 3-7
Swaapatakaa
Sign-up wtian you donata blood
UKEMAI tmii SECMI lEfEL «-f M-IM
SCMIMEK HAi TEIT MTIi 11 i:lt 9 912
MEilMl CEMTEI ntMMT LtM€E Mf ll-I3f
Sponaorad by Studant Lagialath^ CotmcN
Sliidant WaHara Commlaalon
appta 82S-14S4
I
L.._
Speakers Program in conjunctiori w/ BSCCUC presents
Stokley Carmichael
t
♦ •*
renown Pan Africanist and organizer for
All African Peoples Revolutionary Party
-1!
Speaking on changing conditions of
Pan African Revolution
I
Angola
Zimbawee (Rhodesia)
Wednesday- 12:00 n
at Janss Steps
• If
n
Netterslake
<
iy Gregg L. E
DB Sport! Reports
Id a asich that had a littk
bit of evtrythmg, the UCLA
woiiiai*t tennis team capcurad
Its sacond straight Southern
California Wonien Intercoltegi-
ale Atllktk Conference (SWI
AC) tennis titk.
another SCWIAC title
•Ki^'
It :W|M the fourth
in five years for tiK
from Westwood.
Pa«la Saith, in
finest perforvaaoe of the year
won the wm^m duuBpionship
and combined with Cindy
Thomas to triumph j in the
doublel oMarutioiL
In all. Smith wat undefeated
m the II Matrhrt she piayed.
beating the top three USC
women en route to her tiagies
championship And ahhough
her powerful victory m the
finals over USCs iMtaa HaJ-
quitt (6-1, 6-2) was certainly
overwhelming. Smithes semi-
S
1
i
TROMCIU.
rOR THE SHVUGE IAN
TM
This is the dahcest tan ever. Arxj
you set It fast vs/ith Tropical
■tend, t>y Coppertone. tt
smells like fresh coco-
rkJts.ArxJ It has strange
^^OPiCAlBlt^
oils. It lets the sun tan you
wild. Unleash the savage
tan with Tropical Blend.
Then watch. The natives
will get very restless.
8^ Co
''PERTONE*
fmal win over USCi
Desfor may have bean man
impreuive
Smith started ilo>wly. loaMlg
the first let 7-5, but aaaa her
giniiaiUfnkn. which had be-
trayed iKr early m the match,
suddenly were scoring, and
Smith took off. She took the
set 6-0, and after faO-
ing behind 5-0 in the third, she
oiflK tack aad won the next
six gaMM in iMOcenioa, com-
ing back from 5-4 in the tenth
game when the was down
match point 5-4.
Desfor OMMMiaBd to slow tbe
onslaught by salvaging the
twelfth game to tie the match
6-6, out Smith again denied
her by winning the tiebreaker
5-3
It was a daaMc performance
by the freshman Smith and
gave her the momentum to run
over Haiquist in the finals.
**Paula served well, lobbed
well and used her drop shot
well through the entire tour-
nament,** remarked a pleased
Bill Zaima. "^She showed that
she was the best player in the
tournament.**
In the doubles, the outcome
was exactly as expected as
Smith and Thomas won
handily They defeated a team
of Gretchen Gault
by a 6-3, 6-4 score.
The Bruin duo won each
■Mtch in straight sets as4
added this championship to
tlKir ever-growing Uat of titles.
They have captuied the Ah^
zona toumameat, tiK Ojai
Woaien*s Open aad sow the
SCWIAC championship
Susan Zmto played extremely
well in a roiiraaBoi perfor-
,w N<
'4 'I
Forum &
Internatianal
Briefing
Nickolas
Benton
USLP
senatorial candidate
How The Interna-
tional Development
Bank Will Solve the
Mid East Crisis
7:30
Tues. ntte
Westwood Hyatt House
930 Hilgard
Hunts Room
tlK e^ecttll ooa^Mlition.
Although sufTering from a
weakened condition that has
caused her to be iiader aHiiflal
supervision, the freakaiia won
her opening singks obatch be-
fore falling to Desfor in the
sacond round. In the doubiM,
she and Jenny Geddes naiai
off two straight wins before
losing to the No. 1 team from
Long Beach State.
Kim Nilsson gave evidence
that she will be a force to be
reckoned with in the coming
years, as she performed weS/
although she finally lost to UC
Irvine*s No. 1 player, Jean
Nachand.
••Kim beat everyone she
lihould have beaten,** said
Zaima. ^She is as good as
Nachon is, but she needs the
confidence to go out and beat
someone who is ranked above
her like Nachon is.**
Thomas continued to k>ok
although sht Wii
unsuccessful in defending the
singles title she won last year.
Thomas was defeated by fiaal-
tst Haiquist in the semi-finalt
7-6, 6-4, m a match that
could have gone either way.
''Thomas is very close to
playing outstanding tennis,**
remarked Zaima. '^Very close,
but she's not"
''She needs to win the big
match It appears that she lets
up m her matches, ajKJ that*s
cost her important wins. She
certainly could get back to
how she was playing last year
if she gets her game tofether a
little bit better. -
It was a very satisfying win
for the Brums and most cer-
tainly placed them as one of
the top three teams in the
nation. Paula Snuth is proving
herself to be the top female
tennis player in Bruin history,
and if she; decides . not to go
next year, the Bruins' future
looks rosy indeed.
The women arc now com-
peting m the Southern Cah-
fornia Sectionals, which in
terms of individual rankings is
more important than . the
SCWIAC championship.
belQlr
camcrQ 6 hift
PamhViie2
Wswer
$2.49
Ust S4.50
id Air Comaro 4 Mi-fi hot moda o ipaciol pmthmm on tlia
POfw.Vu« 2 ilida viawar fraia GAf , ond w«V« poMing Hia
•ovingt olof>9 fe you. Th« Pono-Vw. 2 hot o viowiog oi
1 9k Michas K 1 ^ inchas hot 2X mognifkolioti. Hurry,
it iMWlad to our currant invaiilmy.
belQircomciQ4hHI
uBiiSiiu luiwin^wnuujs |jsjii;;-f
Rec office keeping campus community busy^
By Fred Scliwarti
DB S^OTta Kaportar
It is BO soMll feat to keep
the UCLA commumty satisfied
in the area of recreatiosal
services, but the CXfice of Cul-
tural and lUereational Affairs
(CRA) is dOiBj the job more
than adequately.
The CRA. a division of Stu-
dent aad Campus Affairs,
operates an extensive list of
recreational facilities and ser-
vices on campus, including a
variety of cuhural programs.
**The rec program is an es-
sential program for students,
faculty aM stirff, and parti-
cipation is steadily growing,**
said Peter T. Dalis, dean of the
CRA.
Basically, the CRA consists
of five subdivisions, one cul-
tural and four recreational.
The cultural program provides
art Mn<\ dance classes, a poetry
reading series, an outdoor film
series and vanous drama pro-
ductions. Last year's Bicenten-
nial production of "^South Pa-
cifft^'* attracted over 10,000
people
The cultural aspect of the
CRA IS rather *^4ow-keyed and
personal** according to Dalis
The organization operates on a
much larger scale in the recre-
ational facilities during the
1974-75 school year
**ThAS atteiMlance total does
not tell the true story. The
actual count is much higher
because of use during non-
supervised hours when a count
could not be uken." said
Dalis.
By far the most popular
facibty at UCLA is the Sunset
Canyon Recreation Center
Over 185.000 people passed
through the turnstiles at the
Rec Cenjer last year for
swimming, cultural activities
and several other services
The center features three
swimming pools, including one
in the process of completion,
picnic and barbeque areas,
multi-purpose playfields
meeting and lounge rooms and
an amphitheater
The CRA's range of sporting
programs goes far beyond
aquatic activity The intra-
mural sports program. Univer-
sity Recreation Association
(URA) and non-credit activity
daHKS cover almost any leisure
or competitive activity under
the sun.
Ovtr 15 milNii Europeans
rMe Mtorblktt, mm you
cm too. safely and
economically ...
MOTORIZED
BIKE
CIMATTI MOTORIZED BIKES 828-1030
1207 S. BERKELEY, S.M.
4 Wilthirc Blvd i
A Public Lecture on
MAYA
ARCHAEOLOGY
By
Prof- Gordon Willey,
Harvard Univ.
''Factors in the Rise and
Fall of Maya Civilization
Wednesday May 5 8:00 PM
RoMe12M UCLA
^^
Amhr
Aho
UCLA Graduate StudefHiO^ ttte Afc*i«fU*uf T ^"f""^
of riJLJIWfatl UCLA Latin Amerk*n Cef«l»r
Student! k&^ tht opportu-
nity to cdflipite in any one of
60 team or individual sports,
join 30 or more I HA special
interest clubs or enroll in a
wide variety of activity classes,
all supplied by the CRA
Women are becoming an
increaiMKtIy coqunon sight on
the sports and recreation scene,
particulanly in the non-credit
activity classes, where they
make up two-thirds of the
enrollment
"Women arc becoming more
conscious about their health
and abilities. They arc trying
to learn new skills.** uttd Dalis
"'The increase m participation
IS quite noticeable This is the
firiii year we've had a waiting
list for women's lockers It's a
new experience." he added
Interest in recreafion has
grown to enormous propor-
tions at UCLA, as shown m a
student affairs survey taken
last year Among 140 needs
listed in the survey, students
placed recreation in the top 10.
which included such necessities
as housing. financial aid.
health services, academics, per-
sonal counseling and |oh place-
ment
surveyed listed recreation as
"absoluteK essentiaP and one-
third said It was "very impor-
tant ** Only five per cent re-
sponded negatively, claiming
recreation was "slightly or not
important "
Totals arrived at by the sur-
vey estimated that 20.000 stu-
dents, or approxinuitely two-
thirds of the entire UCLA
studenu body, Imd used re-
creational services during the
year. That total is hi§ittr tima
any other student service at
UCLA
Evidently, the students are
getting what they are paving
for, since the CRA's $700,000
budget IS comprised almost
totally of feg fees I he sale of
Recreation Privilege Cards,
required of (acuity, staff and
continuing and summer stu-
dents to use rec facilities, aids
onlv a minimal amount
"Moat of our budget goes
for staffing, and approximately
one-fourth of that goes directly
back to students Wc employ
about 400 students as lile-
guards, reterecs and other
officials Our goal is to give as
much as we can back to stu-
denls sum if came oti| of their
pochau.** said the UCLA gra-
dtiate
Since graduating in 1959,
Dalis has bten an active part
in the growth of recreation
services. As a physical educa-
tion major, he immediately
moved through the PL depart-
ment and into the CRA, which
formed as an outgrowth ol
several committees to coor-
dinate campus recreational ser-
vices in 1962
In 1965. Dahs became head
ataistant to Dr Norman
Miller, dean of the CRA then
and vice-chancellor of student
and* campus affairs now Dalis
finally ttuik over as dean ol thr
CRA in 1970
At the age ol 3K. Dalis has
spent over 20 years aiding in
the develop me ni ol UCLA's
recreational services "Many
trends and lads have panad
and Icit Right now it is tennis,
which pofCf us wHh the pro-
blem of insufficient facilities It
IS det initeK our biggest pro-
blem. There are over 50 (KM)
people at UCLA, including
faculty and staff We're
crowded into a very limited 40
acres." said r>alis
y
tDdoir
LOmcro & N-f I
Car Stereo Center
When you'rr in the market for a car stereo system, you want to choose
from a larf^ selection erf tcjpquah I y units. At Bel Air Camera Ic Hi-Fi, our
cat stereo features the full Craig Hne of fine equality car stereos. Craig
makes a mcxlel for every UMIf and for every budget B<caus<* Bel Air
Camera k Hi-Fi discounts pncrs, you recrive more value ff >r your ciollat ,
in addition ro finec^ualiiy nierchandiseandextelleni serviceafter thesahlt
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
FREE
One Pair Of Craig 9417 Auxiliary Speakers With The
Purchase Of Any Craig Stereo Unit At Regular Price.
Ohm fapir«t On Moy 22. I97S
Ihm
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
^
telQircQmeiQ&hM
-^^
v^liocfc S aUKXAm W9ftmooQ. Noun
•• n
V
K
i
i
J
---■ 'T
CL ASSI Fl E D
aovehtisimo q^icss.
TIM At UCLA C4
iMlly •upporls th« Unl««r«ity 9I Call-
t
-■>•'.
<
A4v«rtl«lftf 9pmc9 will Ml. ^
wlio di»crliiilnat«« en lli«^««lc •!
•fic««1ry, color, nollonol orif In. rocoi
(oMplon. or aoK MoMhor Itw DoHy Bniln
n^f th« AtUCLA Co«»mun(c«lion»
Board hot mwuMfiiJ any of itM aor-
vl€0« •dvortlood or odvortlsof* r«pro-
•onlod in this t«*u« Any porton bo-
ilo«lnf Itiot Oil od««rtt««m«nt t«i tfilt
lMyo«iololM tM Coord's poMcy on non-
dlocrlfoinoltoo ttotod horoin should
ooNioiunlcolo oooiplolfHi Ifi wHiIng lo
th««tustn«s« Manofor, UCLA Dolly
•rulfv 1 12 KOfckhoff HoM. 30t Woohwood
Plaxa, Lot Angola*. CalMornia 90024.
for aMiolBnoa adih houaing dlMcrlml
nation prolilomt. call: UCLA Housing
Otflca. (212) t2S-44f 1 : Woalalda Fair
(213) 473-3
aginouncfiKlnt*
n N PI AV SHfjPS FOP SINGLES
i ) 4th l^riday
af^» w.tH w(l Sat
Mf IMAN >N
A- ■*.
i
ASUCLA Travel
S«rvk:« it going to
UCLA ftudents faculty and
staff are eligible to travel
to Leningrad. Moscaw. Kiev.
Vaiu. Tb4l»ai4 VlAdimer.
July 14 - Aug 5 for $749 CX)
all-inclusive ffom London
Call 825-1221 or corrw to
A level. AcKerman Mondays-
Fridays 8 00-4 00/
n
Oeia
of 7-Up CtMopf Big 1ft-
{
of courao). WMo «ioy laal m Hio AiUCLA
Studonis tloro Conloclions. ■ lovol,
Ae«wrmon; open M-Th 7^15-7.30: F 7:4f-
• JO; i tfr4
r
Of 1071 no-
lo. 1t7f— CaN a42-31f 1.
our)
LOOSE SHEETb - 4C
BOUND REDUCTION
LEGAL SHEETS - 6C
121 korchhoff hail
825-061 1 i258
OMEAT Oirr PASSIOM8
PERSPECTIVES by author Iscluror.
counsolor ZINA ORAMO STUDENT
STORE WE8TWOO0 BOOKSTOMES.
PORTRAITSl^
taken now
for Graduation
Caff for mppmintmtnt
1
• f r • J
150 krr<^ofi haU 075 0«Tt 1
op«*n tnon tf 8 30 4 3Q _
S5sie£
i
WHAT DOES A BRUIN
BEAR GIVE FOR GIFTS?
UCLA clothing for children
and adults, bears, muga.
glaaaware. watches, desic
acceaaofiet. jewelry, per-
sonalized shirts, trophies,
football helrnet radio
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
lad toy
■aa you. In
1942 ar «7a-
nutm
Tho
c#.
• •■*«••»#••*••«•••••
av I'c
4)
!P
ItM 4)
(•M4)
.«*•#•»•*•««•«<•
(8 114)
HAPPY tintidoy. ChHstlna Marlol
tNaMnf you sunaMno ond raltitews
PAHTS W« Nfoi
L3VVVM mnd
ralcof
two yoofs
r Vou II got yours In
« M 4
TO M W from ilHMMtoal Tt-tiank* tor
on ontortoinlng •woning. Lovo. ttta groon
yoMr
bor Roo k»«os you.
loal-lioop bourtcirvg-romom-
8M7
HAMRV— Wo hopo you win for gononM
roprooonHlivo. tob. Jan, Sua. Robort.
• M4
StHtSHmc M teoopa gotting elottdy.
Thonlis for ttio lost 5 months. Hop* all
worksout. n gf ^
PELLOW Iff
pienic, tun ond goodlosl an Inapt torovor-
AMtMOWta. g K 4
LORENZO-How s buslor? SMII on cloud
f moving up lo 10. Much lo«o Oftd choco-
lo«t klsoos - Toddy s friond. § m 4
WE LOVE you May and Nancy. Wotcoma
lo Iho slalafhood of Alpha XL looking
forward to ttta groalssi spring ^»mnf
»•<' • M 4
IS THERE s rona*ssanc« person
wants lo, ssplors croatlvlty witl
films, ttioaiar dancs. art, mualc Ron,
473-0888. Colobrsis lit* A smotionol
lootings, not tniolloctualiiing
a n n
LEGAL ProMoms? F
488 Korckhoff i2S
only)
(UCLA ttu-
C8M7)
18 Thors a
waffvis lo aaplofo crsattvlty wHh ma?
Films, thoator. dancs. art. colobrota
Ufa A amotlonal faallngs. not Inlol-
loctuakcing. « M 41
i^n bfOnoa porson who
4/28 at 7:00 p.m Ptoasa call
*'^'*** I. •• f.
HAaE Krtshna - UCLA
saoking formor dtsclpios tor
of your post Involvamant with tha Hara
Krtshna Movomant Call 828-S484.
ro M SI
TO at wHo iDBipt Chdot as tiair per-
il Lord offtd Saviour. ( aak you Ip
for rant
aauiN T.v. a aTcaco acNTAta
COLOI^ TVS
AMMOWHCAO
tiaape 8. 88t/8
»y-ittr.
In
ya. 81tt/7
ISQir)
lor sal*
8t4t.t0 7tS-1838.
(10 M 8)
tCLL PUT a«o
Doa
lo your
a
m£xsL*ffm^ '•-^^
(10 M 17)
formal*
Come to ttie Confpctiona
0*pprtmpn1 of the AtUCLA
tludenta ttore for your
Mother t Day carta and flftpl
Lots of nice treaenta. in-
cMHig cdntka. Open M-Th
7:4t-7:tt; F 7:4S-t:St; 1 10-4
T
f
MATTiuaaaa au Nf w
up Ia4t%
Mi ' ttiaji
MArmaaa aTOM
aqui
81 tofundoMo
C18. 180
topoot Solos. Dopl.
St Prsrtdiiiui 9U,
(18 M 4)
tOtE 801 s and other storao com-
er trade. CaNi
(10 M It)
74 LES Paul Custom. Morohall Itt
amp. ImagaalrjB echoplex, cry bety
t. teleol Celltemla Winea.
MuL 8811 W
Ca. 88808
lit car)
OmL WATERtEO frmrn*. mattross.
liner. 870 with small leak ttO If I
foeeir 7i3-S887 avos
TENNIS rackets strung Iffnporlol gut-
f 18 tost nyton - $7 Folrway grlpa- 13
Can Ja 382-4376 ^ ^ ^
(18 M 8)
KIMO-tlZE
lop of tooly-Poa-
aOQf N (Da SBt) Mafoe racaUsi Tape MC'Mlca. 8280 474-4708
phono InpuM. PM. 8160 480-22S8
• ^- flO M im WW-tALL meoMf
lots of fun Can 87
(18 M 4)
coffidlilon.
/in is at
SHERWOOD S-7210
of acoustle iuapsnsion
both 8340 824-1828
8188, pair
8178,
Hall
10 M 18
POP Sola F<
ctoon CaN 388-0711
FuOiiaa
McCAtTMCV
•■coNont Sen P
Jim 824-2481
<10 M 8)
««« M «A
tAMD-18K
817S wW son
Loova
pold sits 8'/i op-
SUt Can 470-
-^ ^fOM 10
HAa«K>N
e. a
r. sint
AM/PM
Ita. d«i
K-8888.
(18 M 8)
Tl ta 88 A ta 81 A. ta 82. ta M. ate.
M^-Cialf
Ti
11888 tenia Montea th»d.. WXJk.
Rata ELEcraoMica
Cat 478^8880 for boel
'OAtM thow WIffmor- Now 28'
TV Console 847$ bast offar Diane
§25-3275 or 401-7008
(18 M 4)
ItM Typewriter Solectrlc" In good
condition, bast otter. Aak tor Mike
7:1
(18 MO)
PANASOf^lC tepsmeeffdsr very
condition. 880. Col Doug. 4774)733
(10 M 7)
PENDER VIMegsr 12-strtng mnt custom
case. Escallent condition 827S 00
Oanisa. avos, 4S7-7878. .^^ ^ ..
opportunltl—
STpVE Gos. very _
Rotnforator. 825. Cell 388-0318 allar 8.
flO M 7)
cuaroM
888 le 888. CaO 872-8888 (24 hour).
(It M 7)
FIVE Ruah seat laddar-bock dining
chairs Varnished natural finish Ea-
csllant condition S20 00 each 490-
3870 after 4:00 p.m. ,^^ ^ y^
Tttet-Pour Kotyiprtng Field ER-70-
14 alool redlale. 8128. Faur O-80-14
ait
NATIONAL aCAUTY PAOIANT
u^f C714)
■ i> Us
171
Ischniqus from
*tocond City' toochar Cloas asdOlt:
7:00 pm, Wodnoedeys. Call tlovo
ttranga, 082-2t8B ^^^ ^ ^
*PERSONAE*
CBnter of DfrnmBflc Arts
AnnouncBS
(10 M 0)
MARANTZ Amp (naor now) and two
high guetty wolnut spookors. Turn hao
channal into lour or usa alons tar
greet sounding slarao. 8200 iM DaMp
aMer 8:80. 828- 1771 '
I (10 M 8)
A ipdcial thraa wodk wortiahop
(April 12th thru 30th)
auNoct AUDfTION TCCHNIOUCa
Tha following tubiactt will bt
WOOOf N aarrels - Kepa. t
hotcticovors. netting 8 rape,
cretes 8 bosoa. old bernwaad. 881
r^n
Tex OS lnstnititBiit^
aoiiiVws.^ "*"
• 4 tevoltteck •O
NO/IK
Ffiaty PI t P.M. Cat
mummmamttm
aubjacta
/IHilCU
WANTED
tola
Of MHOf fT^OVI
oaawtasaam
stsas.
ia M 7
CTt
(14 M 11)
(itoai
wanted
.1
y€n
na
wAurr
fins, tady earvdltlan
Must run. WttI pay 81
al47<
Call Ian
(12 M 4)
l»ee halretytnp. Par
271-8288 Tuaa • tai
(laoir)
r
talf by Holpinf
85-8tO/month for
HYLAND DONOR CENTER
1001 Gayley Ave . Westwood
47t-0t51
ki
(14 MT)
Ptntel Rolling WrHart
black only - reg. Sit
59e
ASUCLA Students Slara
t— *»i^anfmee
Acbei man. 'M-Th
3uv SoAic»«
jMcMORfiS
itiidonts Slara I •^ #
gSappliis iilsipl d^ XT ^^ ZTTT
i i>-7 « f tio^to S^ijlh€rti Q^Hfi^
WANTED truing backs for hlHsldo
plenang Herd. seHafying. auldoar wofli.
talurday and Sunday— May § A 8. CaM
472-1014 aflar, 4:30 pm 83.00/hr.
WANTID— trulny beclia far hMI-
aldeplentlng.Herd. aetlsfylng.
outdoor work, teturdey 8 tunday—
May OS 8. Call 472-0104 after4:t8pei.
'**'• rta ss m\
holp wanted
PART TMMI MCAT and DAT
•ar Teal
818. per
8818.
VSt ar I.
«7f.
(18 M It)
ttLLINQ
(18 M It)
HOUtCKEEPtll
(18M1t)
a^^^ai^ ^^^N^POv otto
. Immediate opening In I
•ar 9mm year. Naasi Ipm • llpnt
Itaa). 88J8 p/hr CaN Ms. TaMn lar
aaurt 478-Stii.
r«a ss tai
VttT peol ildi; 8
Tuoa. Tliurs. Frl.
1 '
. 1-4
; 474-
(18 « 8)
PCatON to do 3 Hr
HoOywood 82JM/hr. Mva
8701
(18 M 7)-
WANTED girts 18 lo 22 lor
TMs
tor solon compotton ofid tuturs
Salary open Call 213-888-0740 or
ns M 7)
NIGHT Nuaac
Reaaarch preset on tia
tMtten Infant Dadti la
part time night nurtae for 11 pm-
tam ahlfl. If Intereated. contact
a«ie Oaldal. R.N.. M.t.. 2at-a2tS.
(18 M S]
*Wliat Mid Cdoting director la fyp omo
monutocturer's rep In
m
cemmleelen. aspansas Call Stiaran
niMTI
golos to owner la Washington O.C.
Eacstsnl
paint Ralleblllty end raapanalbtNty
Carp.. 1841 Ho. F
(18 M 7)
OtMT)
and edMMMwtl y^j** ^8-35 Hours end duties ere
"T 12-4. TTh 8-1 or Terry,
ana ••-
(18 M 71
tAaYtlTTtR
bays 8 A 10
(18 M 7)
CLASSIFIED^itD
help urantad
on
iiee-«iao «*
i2 ja hr pliw
1 1i l«r aat a bun
CALL srt -aati ^oa ApaoiNTtscNT
THE JOB
.Affi£
• >«•
'^sm
difa
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
Rafuaaa? . . . Tpo High?
tow Monady aaymorvM
arUDENT DiaCOUNTS
. . . Aak for Ken
POLITICAL Activists Sletewldo cltl^>-^M
MOVING In Qi out? Ws movs fur-
nlturs. appliances, opts . houses.
lowest rotes, free astimatss 470-
8187
(18 M 8)
TYPING, dictation via phena or
ceasatta Also legel o«peri«nce.
MIn chargs tIS 388-1888 bafore
8 pm.
(18 M 8)
ing pooplo. Joa mvaNes cen-
pettanMig, fuvMiffoising. oaaa-
•00 mgmt. apply CItlsons Action
Lssgua (213)40a-0530.
(18 M 7)
ceuneetng end Mrdt control couneslkng
by undBfator>ding
conf
porsoniwl Pregnancy and tirdi
Control Cantar of Hotly wood 8381
Hotywood thrd Suits 513 HoOywaad.
481-4881 ^ _
(18 Olr)
5888.888-8878.
(18 M 28;
W ANTE O— Seamstress lo do pleae
CaM 372-8880 (24
fl8M7)
WAmflt/Waltrossos— rort-tlme,
svonlngs. unlgue, top rostourent.
OHcallant tips. Eaporloncod, since-
raly inlarastad. apply, evenings
(18 M 4)
MOi/inc ?
CAMPua acavjcES
tor
3tt-t31t
LOtaHtlOW Live- In w/edol. tin-
gle. t1 yra^alder. aJ^. and/or os-
parlanca in soclel sciences. Cell
bokaeen 8 am - noan. 888 8384.
(15 M 8)
HAiaeirrt 88 ty
leomavg i
867-4551
's
(18 Olr)
ONAL
GOOD Pey tar teat, aacurala.
typlat. Type bills m doctor • oftic* oncs'
month Call OR8 1233 ^
mants Call 408-1884 anytime
(18 Olr)
PREGNANT? Ws cars 24 hour
SIGN Ptecar wanted tot mornings.
Sun a«as. Approi 3 hours total S12
amokand start Dapandabia car rtacas-
sary 473-1181 ^,,^^,
(18 Olr)
COOK wemed lar UCLA fratarnity FdM
or pan hwm. SaMry approi S450 par
mo. Phapa 47t-oi3T ' ns ai sj
AOaNNISTRATIVE/CLERICAL
Research protect studying causa of
Sudden Intent Death hes )oa opening
for s tut or pert Mma person for ad
minialralhm end cterlcel taaks Typmg
proflcloncy sapMlsad Previous oapa
rtencs m medlaal resoorch dasiratole
If miMdOlit. cofHoct Sue Goidel. R.N.
M.S.. 8tS-8l85 ^^j ^ j^
VTON EXPRESS
MOVERS
Mpeing af^ Hauling
Rich 8S4-2ttt
Newell 851 3827
8K>VtMO 8 Haatng. Large 8
CaM MB 488-1013 mi Fred 458-1448.
(18O0r1
MUSICIANS String boss. Orxtmmmf
•or weeks nd tMy 21-23 smaM
478-8788. 828 8Mt
(15 M5)
WANTED Driving Instructor Port Itoae
to full ampioymont in summer,
to 2S or oldar by Juna IS 54.00
per hpur la elprt CaN 88t-tt88.
(18 M 8)
NATIONAL llipweMi taelNula klaw of
the terrlngton Pteta. W L A 11744
Wllshira 477-0025. 070-3357 With
mors than 30 yrs eaperlencs Help
le atudy-reteln-reles-aloep tee our
telephone Yellow Popes ed Speclel
(10 ONI
SoN-Hypnosis
or moll order—
(S.A.. MA ) 470-
(18 Olr)
LIVE in darm cauneeter (21 or elder)
nsadad for girts boarding school In
Alhkmbra, 8ttt.8tmanPi 882-4151
(15 M 4)
THE BOOYMEN
Quality Auto Bady
RopaK A Pamtlrtg
470-0040
(Oaasor Gory)
Ii#*ft rvpcir •(
W««( L A •
®
isrsigs Mf>;
LET US GIVE YOU A FACIAL
FOR ONLY SI
Chnstmo Shaw of aeverty HNIs raquiras
madets lor her MdeN traintrtg canlar
Regular sertea of traatmants can ba
|uM dnp by tar aa haar ar ea la Ipl ua
pamper you. Call 278-7084 lor your
ChflBtne thaw. dSt fl Caaiaaa IMae.
SuIN 210. tovorty HMN
court. Alee oaurt
eiae. 478
fItOIrt
FtMALE
Mho to
CeNe et 824
MALE MIDWIFE
MOVING COMPANY
Gat Datvarad by a Nurea-
MldwMary ttuoard aMI t ^lyt
Ttiaraplal, In TrabNfigt
Apartment tpiaMltoM - Hugo ntw
ipt. in
NMrvaylM
Ctt Mob t74-Stt3
(Formerly of Have Truck Will
Twoti twt aob a Dono Truciiln«>
FRANKLIN A KUR Editors Ovarall
aiiirtiMMiii thoebs pepars 474-
388-5054
«ta 10 4)
IliWii
ACCOMPANIST— singars instrumonta
llals-naad le practica'> Givs s rscitaP
PtOfMot whh mony yoors sipanortcs «»ill-
lag as work wtpi you Raeaonobia rales
■• — ^ Grad 4771320 Kaep trying
.(10 M 10)
j% •• m% • e e • • • t
RIDING LESSONS
-Facutty-FamMaa-aMa
•ANSA Apsr»««a rieiAfl ••i»aii«am«««
•^•rowp isMona sna pfivm^* eniiarwA a
A PRNSAL ALTERNATIVE IN LOt AN-
GELES FBtLKOO TRAINING CtNTtR.
COM8V AVE 88884. 888-8701.
EDITOR Wrtlar Eapoftonoo
books thosss dissertations Cllonta
878-
(18 M 7)
AUTO Insurance Loaroet rotes lor
students or ■mpleysss. Robert W Rhee
-7270 070-8703 er 087-7873
(10 Olr)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
Tea Y
LIGHTHOUSE INSURANCE SCRVICE
384-1101
Aek lar Don or Roy
t ALLEY : Fun.wey le toeuly 18t8
Weelmaad. and Xtm* YWCA. 874 HN-
inlermedletas. advaneed. 8
821 Speclel roles. 2 or amn
weekly lreff»e bereta, Distlngulshad
(MOOrl
JOt Hunters
superior psitli
Woman /Men
- tar a
Is vMbI. Laaae i
tOMOOOM. xo^psai
ML
(ItM 7)
HOUSESITTER Available Mature
sap«r*«nc»d formar tioma owftar Ei-
aMmncss CaM tuckaiaw. 88t-
(1 days 274-0527 svant <^
(10 M 11)
•Lowoot a
-iOonthly
AaaOW IMtURANCE
W7
HOUttPAIWTIwa - Orada
I foi
i; ti
(18 Olr)
(18 Ob)
lest shy?
snd sheky l»afors siams? Cell Joe
(10 M 4)
loot A found
I FOUND SOMrmiNQ?
JW ymi'ea fPNNg • ppt m
tmya. wa wsfit to halp ypN
I ^Ntt PMiNa Iplp MM Dally amln
I CMosNIoa OippiMiiaiit ana lot va
I ypu want to pMoa an at M tia
I l-aM a Found cohMMi. Aa a pNttc
I ttMttt. THE XO FACTOaV
A08MCY Wiihaoot MNd.. «»NI tun
tha ad at no COM to youl
HtLP-LOtr N
Jeai. Pepsonpi
477-1388 Hoop
Wr^POOVM laflVV Ivwi Of
1 trown Rowerd 55 00
LOtT ahmlee
wolch tatwaa
Sankmental vel
o. Women s. sMoer te«M
n Engtnaariwg - Lat 0
^ Rawerd 320-0et7
(17 M 4)
traval
IHaN
Ar* you going io Iran thi« nummsr
Daily /47 Flightii
Contact
Amiri Tour A Trsvvl Sorvlcv
«• "- ^ in%m\ Blvd No 419
«ood CA 9O02S
Tai 406 5259
\tmr^^mr tluOcnlt SS4J 00 round trip
tUROPff
H.yJC. 8188
(213) 273-7S22
(88 Mb}
LOWCaat
Kong. Telp _____
London, Parle. Medrld. lustab. New
VadL and HaewB. Par deioM aaH 074-
8811 (deyel. 478-1811 (eaee)
(23 Olr)
ISC
TOURS A TRAVEL
Sprtng %itmmmf A Fall Chorlars
"""•nnon
Parts
Madrid.
1 Roundtrtp from 1200 00
Hm
U . t- •
■Bf * "15^^^
•*jj**'
^tmHttSA i lit'
.4
•
Ttmttnn
0 i
1 • P P •
9,
ASUCLA Travel Service
UCLA Chanar Plight
t High It to Europe
from hyMtPtto of
aiamplaa:
LAX-Amtlerdam-LAX
FNghfo DopoitMii Off
1C7S4
11C75
12C75
15C75
17C75
1tC76
22C76
23C76
27078
Jur>a 7 ' T
Juna 21 1 1
Juna 21 12
Jur>a 2t S
Juna 2t t
Juna 29 10
July 5 8
July 5 9
July 12 4
July 19 4
LAX-Lonaon-LAX
tltei June 19 11
LSttlt Juna 22 t
L56222 Juna 22 2
8429
842*
Itaa
$429
$429
i42t
8429
1429
8429
9425
8415
8379
H.V Uai Owar 1000 ftafM* lo
wmmmm or 7S •
i«««aipaaiiaeaa*
• iravai maurswaa •
•ar t
aisai
SBiwm
HAWAII . .
(partidi Moaiig)
weakly edptrtuei
LA HouncuLu siee two «Mti«
wawi awd Uaiii aiaii aiiaii ^
\
FLUa Car RanlaM L
rpll/Eurall paaaaa . .Accomoda-
< llefia...aATA fita ..InlarnatlDnai
I.D. Carda
Wmtt TRAVEL COU8iaCL|8IOI
Aaa ua for anything vuu
WAMT TO KliOW AaOUT
TRAVtLI
TPA/aSERVCE
\Mkmn A-213 (wMh EXPO)
Friday 10:00-4:00
1221
88.78. 4t7-1tt8. 8188 «.
WAIKIKI HOLIDAY
• Dayt
Monday Departurea
$249
all taaao
• Round Trip Unitpd Jpt includino
Compiimanury Hot Food a
»
r
r* ■ ■*!
• 8 Oayo-7 Nights Hawaii o
Hoipl on Waikiki Batch
a Aound-tnp Tranofart irKiuddtg
portaraga. 2 ppgo par paraon
• Flower Lai QPS8<iiig
• Catamaran Sail off Waikiki Baach
• 100 Page Full Color Mamory
Album
• Htwaiian wolcomp
• liti Tai Cocktail PaHy
• Saaatat Tlpo at Roof Holtl
• Mambarohip in f^gposnt Waikikl
Satch Club
• Sarvlcaoof
Holiday
LAND AaaANO€88ENTa OtHV
FHOailTt
Ackerman Union A 21| wNh EXPOl
88tnday-Fri«sy HM
canfin
(10 M 10)
■«^
*• ■ - %r
-CL ASSI Fl E D >fl D
I
i
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. (
trav«l
trav«l
CrIAH f CRS (iwrtisi iiMings)
Ov«r 300 flight* A dai*« with 0«pariur««
from A|kti mru Ocloto«f May 2 to 21 wvatts
. LAS' ■« •n9-9fm ^ tMi
l.. ^J LCM JX •/lft-t/10 • 4M
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7/a4.t^2i
7/i«-MM
7/24.«/l2
lU
•3
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97
CM %/9^-%ni^
CM t/tC^A/ai
CM e/1«-10/14
At 1/21 -t/n
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11
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9
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471
479
479
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72^^ CM •/••-•^is
CIjCC uu(- ej t/ot-^i^
•^ flU EJ 7/(».i/30
JX 7/17-S/13
•n 7/1 7 ■9/29
EJ 9/17-9/11
JX 9/17-9i/Q9
EJ 9/94-9/25
U 7/01-9/01
EJ 7/09-10/09
NEW CHARTER DEST. !f!
AFRICA (QtMna A Nigaria) St79
VUGOSLAVIA itrs
POLAND 1999
QAECCE 1497
SOUTH PACIFIC ta99
TAHITI SUPEn DEAL U79
HAWAI1 1 At
NYCi 2 3*.^
ORIENT Many
from 1 14
ir(K9 499
Contact ASTrA tor ow«r 200 othar fitghts
with doparturat from L A . San Francisco
Ctticaoo. lolpii. Naw York Wa»h)«ifi«»i. o '.
'Chartar ra§ naquMv 96 day advano* 9«oiitng
prtca ftiib^act lo 20% inci
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL. Eaatcoasi (romt2S2
ITX. us Eastcoaat from 9273
VOUTH, Europa. 1-yf >f/om|907
APEX, 22-45 60 day adv Mod' fuV Uom 9440
OUDCH NOW ^
THAIN ft FERRY TICKETS.
CARS. CAftlPER RENTALS.
RAILRASSCS. INTRA--
EUROIPEAN STUDENT
' CHARTERS
SPECIAL CRUISE OFFER
to. n or 14 day Caribt>aan/S America cruiM
on Italia inci air \ofm LA J mivMiami. tran«t»rit
plus rto-charga 2-«»li air aKtantiort. from 9700
TOURS
JAMAICA 9 dayt 9399
ITALY IS dayt mt
LON PAR AMS 15 days |f|f
MEXICO 6 dayt tt«
HAWAII 8 dayt tM7
AlCENTENNiAL 6 dayt fflM
NCW YORK CITY 9 days
long 9 thod Oudgt 9 9Mya
STUDENT TOURS
Ruttia |R pataat) 3 wlit irtci from Lon
from ITS
Ha«Mii 2-«4i 3 itland MKlutiva 9499
Iraland 3-wti mclutiw* 9999
ASTrA tlu9ani-tra««l «Hh
250 d On« Pailitsr Square
Calgary Alta T2G ODS
(405) 265 2660
ISC
INTERNATIONAI STUDENT
4)
<;r nvii>«r: Tk^i
10* J M
KKWRT
tic-lhaaa« dtaaartati
•2t-t492
J4
En
TOUR9' TOURS' TOURS
JOIN US f OR
'Maiico by Private Train 5 7 5/9 $70 00
at V«(|aii Grand Canyon P
5 14:. , >.. ^.,
Santa Barbara SoNang 5 15 S7 00
inivartal SliKllo Tour A Butch Gardent
' 5 22 $14 00
• Magic Mountain 5 2'J S9 00
Northain California Eiparlancr
S/2i-5/31 SBOOO^
""'" - ■'•••• 1
I All loun include 'raneporUllon Mgtii
Melng •'•••.».. . !»«, toaclit and lodging '*
on o««r< .« I
I Our goal It to craala an Inter u-iura'
♦•■change In a related Inendly
it^iotphara ar>d to do thit at a
T>»n»mum coat tc you
PERFECT PAGES ^
gltoh Qrada ta/Q yaar* ■■padantt I
Corract Satact CNooaa lypa alyla
SSS-20S7 _
JiMtO
19
fms)
(SEMIS)
faat
• am Of
Taffii
raaaonabfa
tS1-t7S3
bafora
(SEN 4)
ACCUHATE ism talactric papara.
thaaaa. dlaaarlaSona. laaumaa. Waal-
iaka/Thouaand Oaks araa. S0f/4tft-
202S aftar 3 p.m.
(2S M 7)
TMESES, tariM papart. raporia Faat
mn6 aecurala lyp4fHI by a«parta<«pail
mnmcMMmm aacrauiry R4
14)
473-2991
"* • •
PROFESSOR'S talla apaclallaaa in
•oil fnonuachpta and acholorty
SaMVwiCi pica tityn alila. 464-
/9« aa y\
CARS M EUROPE
RENT OR SUV
CIAL RE0UCTI09IS TO
EACHBRS S STUDENTS
FREE CAT ALOO ^
EUROCARS
^PUNSET BL¥Oh4mA.
271-
477-6646.
126 J 4)
KAV Typing, adttifif . Enfllab grad.
DtaaartalkMw apaciaHy. Tarm papara.
maaaa. raauiiMa, mmn. mm 626-7472^
1 OIOTR)
LOS ANGELES
RROFiMIONAL CLUD
1406 Waatwood Slvd . LA Ca 90024
(213) 879-9121/ (213) 477-1162
TQC CHARTER FLIGHTS
TO EUROPE
(Lots of Others)
MHi PnoaTQC
•379 *
490^-
<M
»7f
L49lfla 9/16-7/12
6153 9/19-9/24
B922-3 9/1S-9/07
061911 S/-19-9/09
LS9229 6/22-7/06
13 9/22-9/21
9/29-9/23
9/29-9/14
9/29-7/12
7/03-9/30
L 77092 7/09-7/19
6709^ 7/09^10
ELF07109 7/10-9/10
L97132 7/13-7/99
7132 7/13-9/94
071 79 7/17-f/l3
B909-5 9/0»*iMI7
91/31-6/20
SAM- 10/19
9/29-10/11
|$12S. Oapoall raqulrad par paraoii.
^^^^^a R^^^h i^B^ P^^^^M Ira I
■ 66 dpya pfipc lo
il Socratory. Noar
476-
CSiOlr)
PROFESSIONAL WRITING. EDITIfiG,
IMOEXINQ, RESEARCH EOOKS.
JOURNAL ARTICLES. DISSERTA-
TIONS. PROPOSALS JAIAES WINTER-
FIELD. WEST- HOLLY WOOD 121-6606.
(28 M4)
XEROX 2'2C
niirsn
KINKOS lilTSu
RUTH C DtSSCRTATKMS.
STATISTICAL. FAST
SEV09 DATS A WEEK
STYLES
<»Qlr)
PROFESSIONAL Typing. IMI I
aducdllofMl. aelofilNlc.
tutoring
SPEEDY, occurala ISM lyplat - roa-
CHINESE Mandorlfi
woll-a apofloficod
Individual
Cos
.»4 0N\
HE ERE W Laaaona. Tuioflnglni
PraparaMon for asamt or laavkig tor
Can Avnar 9S2-5354 M-F 6-6.
(24 MS)
MATHT
T«p
)
EDITH
rHQM)
CANADIAN
CAMPING TOURS
I COME WITH US ON A CAMPING HOLI-
IDAV. Trawai tha Alaalia Highway and
inaida P9a999ii9. 22 dsiya |495 Hika
I in tha Rocfkiat of Banff National Park
12 days 1219 Canoa tfta Churchill Rivar
in Northarn Saakatcfiawan 12 days
$382 M^als and aqutpmant mcludad
Flaxibla.: itinaranet Sharad dutiai
Friandl/ d{tn^aphara^|4^ali m our
76 brochiira Wnta to >
JAZZ PIANO/ALL STYLES.
for boat proNaolOfial OMdiShif
794/pg. IBM Soloclric MM-Wllahlra
FLASH FIngara
EscoMont arorb.
roloHal aonrfea.
'S4 0in[
THE GUIDAMCE CENTER
In
(StOar)
PROFESSIONAL wHIor wMB %Jk. In
fUCLA) «« Mpb MIS OEM
Oaor II
LAW SCHbOL ADISmiON
TEST PREPARATION
(ESQir)
Juna 16 for July 24
Taaf
OMAT cowraa baglna Jwna 5 for
iidy 16laaL
SPEED RFADiNG couraa baglna
Juno 29
CAREER GUIDANCE
LIGHTNING TYPING
Fraa
AL COLLEGE TYPING
ClALffT
Tarm popora. TKaa^. O»aaar(at»ont
Faafuraa-Foratgn LonfMbfaa. Eciancaa.,
Mabi. TaMaa. Ofograma. Muaic. Edinng
CoMooabna. MbaoMna. PRnfmg
trp«wg
BM apts furnished
MINUTES Ifom UCLAf Sln«foa. fbr-
nlobod ona ba^robbi. Iwiury -eonaa-
nlanca - rooaonobia prtca 2661 So.
Sopulwoia. 479-2126.
(28 Qb)
SUMMER Raloa. Spocloua aingloa.
16 2 bodrooma. avail 8/t6 Larga
(26 J 4)
SUBLET:2 badrooma. 1 -block lo UCLA/
Waatwood Vary light, qulal, «4aa>
Parking. Fumtahad 8300 not •
1. Roa:4
10
6UMMER Ralaa. Spacloua ainglaa.
1 # 2 badraama. Larga courtyard 882
Vo9aron Aaa. No. WHoiNra 479^646.
(26 J 4)
8178 ATTR. Fum. loaga ona badroom
aoparata garaga Laundry facllltlaa
1681 So Corning. L.A. 868 8J60 lor
appointmanL ^^ ^ ^^^
FURN. lorga aingia taMb aatro
«aMi lo UCLA. 6206 IncL uObbaa. 276-
9679 or 921-9466. (26 M 6)
FURHISNSO/UntiinMdiibd
814S. SlREli9 8166. Pool. Noon of
(S6 09r)
9S6 DAY LEY. ocroao from Dybalra.
(27m1S|
SHARP, apocloua 1
c on vanlanby localad 8 minulaa tram
UCLA and downtown, fraahly
naw carpot arvd dropaa. 8726
476-1266. 999-1847 ,,^ ^ ,^
l*T 99 Y%
8275.00 2 BEDROOM. 1^
bulltlna 3814 VInlon Ava - Pofma
Ant 2 - 6J6-7766 61 9 p.m.
(27 M 4)
MitSa to share
ROOMi8ATE
2 badraam
8166 J6 aaa
wanlad to
FEMALE
:urtty
860/
(2
4)
(26 Q9r) t-t:
2 MALE Jawlah unnargrada naad 2
roonmiolaa lor apt naal la« wabilng
dialanca UCLA 473-1796
(26 M 12)
FEEUM.E
Brant-
locaHnnl 867.66 mo
(28 M4)
CHRISTIAN glH
nola b
■pi. Walking
8100
UCLA.
473-7621.
(28 M 7)
tor sublssss
U C.LA. inna 1
1-8178 NM 473-8884 -« ^ .^
^a aa f o
OSMIS)
(29 M 4}
6INOLE/POOI, Soaorly-FalHaa mr^m
Juna 22 - Eaplawibar 26—8120 tnci
houses for rsnt
SANTA M9WI99 • boi
Sbodroom . 2 bMb. J
DoBambar 18. 8EE^«
ISEMtn
8666 BRENTWOOD
bnmocubrta 3 bodro
nMHd. Moy- Augual
om. 3 boBi Fur-
474-2464
(MM 4)
8678 mo Raaarva noarl 366-3118
(26 M 4)
booch Unfumiahad yard, porbtng. 8278
mo Linda Albartano. 362-1676 or 366-
^^** (26 M 8)
8 MONTH laaaa Juna 21 Jan 1 Woat-
walk lo campua ('*) mktm) Com-
lurnlafiad modam 3 bdrm.. 2
babi. atudy pool. viow. gulat alraat.
81666/mo. 472-4198
(3
7)
SANTA Monica - Huga 3 badmom. 3
bath townhouaa. furnlahad Alt can-
vaniancaa. 8980. Nonamokara only
Juna lo Sbpiombar 480-2340
(20 M 7)
house for
man Ooba. Pool toHh
1 bolh. Eaay accaaa k
way 884.800 Allar %-A
house to
b»
2 bdrm.,
U
(21 M 6)
2 BEDROOM
8260/mo.. fumlabad
Oaya-974-9723
prlvala
32 M 16
unfurnished "^
turmabad. Own
8166.00
6:00 pm 279-1
Air c
32 M 16
HOU6EMA'rE wanlad Larga houaa
'/I Mock from boocb.
866/mnnm. 369-9614. — ^^ ^
(32 MS)
FEMALE, tagglonon. Hova houaa to
abara with raaponalbia famald $186
plua. Pala OK Daya. Vivian 874-2846
(32 M4)
housing nssdsd
<SN1S|
LAW Studant nooda quiat turnlaliod
lor 2>. ens l9996y 264-6BS2.
(22 M 4)
FEMALE Studant Studant naada apt.
la abara bagbinmg Juna. PiaNi 8F9-
FOREIGN Studant aaaka Amarlcan
family lo Mva wMh WW pay room and
boofd Coi tihm 8 824-1391
(23 M 9)
navt yaor^
aludantaa
alttar? Call Bfrnia Vrorta. 836-9676
(33 M 14)
BTTERNATIONALL Y known or
bafalE
Mm la babyaM houaa m¥t% pa
ol bi Loa
Angalaa f—. July and Augual. Plooaa
canloct tua Loa Ai^alaa daalar at 474-
8116.
i%% m 7\
ACADEI9IC co^M wNb no«9
mm nood
9pl/houaa to iaio Ibr/fanL d
6/16. 266-6671
bout 7/1-
WANTED: Houaa lo fonl May
24-Sapk
176-1642
2 oma.
(23 M 4)
(714)
UCLA. 6^16 - 9/16. CdH M. Ci
of Ebon., UCR. (714) 767-^.^.. ,
<BSHn
inTT hoiwe exchenne
474-6172
(S4M1SI
room A iMMrd
UCtA
upfor finales
DB
SfortE Writer
Over the weekend, the
UCLA iDen*8 snd women's
crew^hsd their last tune-up for
Ihe Western Spnnu. The
spnntt src Mmy 14-15 st Sah
Pmbk). CslifomiA, with the top
squsds sdvancins to nstioosls.
The Bruin women fsvr iheir
crew profrmin s big booet Sst-
urdsy st Msrins del Rey.
Competing Agsinst the crews of
Long Beach Sute, USC and
Loyola, the Uclsns* varsity
eight won the first annual
P Miller Cup
The Miller cup represents
the fvBt trophy race m women*8
crew history at UCLA. Do-
nated by the women*8 crew
from We6twood. it was fitting
that they should capture the
initial award.
Win MOt BMy
The win did not come easily.
In a rematch with Leng Beach
State, the Bruin eight almost
let the cup out of their pos-
tBEBion. Falling behind from
the very surt, the blue and
_i#Bkl had uist suDugh energy to
spnnt to tbt win in the final 20
meters The Bruins* victory
margin was only six tenths of a
:ond.
UCLA then met Loyola (a
victor over USC) in the
•-Grand Finak" for the Miller
Cup. The LioMS,.who practice
downstream frooi the Bruins,
were no contest" for the win-
ners. UCLA led the wrhole way
and was given the cup, which
was presented by Miller,
UCLA vice-chsaoellor of stu-
dent and campus affairs.
In the women's four ••non-
contest," UCLA had no trou-
ble rowing iu way to an easy
win over Long Beach Sute
and Loyola (USC did not
enter a boat.) . ^
Men at Newport
UCLA*8 oaen^s crew traveled
to Newport BsRck« where it
competed agBiMt some of the
top basEs in California The
race re6uhs were nuxed for the
Bruins and they served as a
preview to the Western
Sprints.
On a cold Sunday morning,
the Bruins* varsity eight could
not overcome powerful Calif-
ornia. The Bears regarded as a
top power on the Weal Coast
(Along with Washington), had
to come from behihd in the
final half of the 2,00(>-meter
contcBt. As the six boats
passed the midway point, the
crowd was astonished to see
the Bruins in front But just a
few meters later, the Bears
moved into the lead where they
would remain It was their
third straight victory in the
Newport Regatta.
The winning time of 6:07.2
by California wsa indicative of
the quick times a 12-knot wind
creates
OCC tops BrukM
In the trfft race of the day,
UCLA was topped by Cal.
Orange Coast College and
Long Beach Sute in a quick
frsshman four race The ligh|-
weight eight Denis provided
the mo8t thrilling race of the
4By. In a photo-fmish the Rick
Galhano-coached lightweights
from UCIA were announced
the winners by less than one-
tenth of a second
The ensuing freshman eight
rase was a severe disappoint-
ment to the Westwooders The
Bruin team placed fourth in
the six-team race, but they
fimshed well ahead of fifth-
placed Loyola and last place
use
The Bruin junior varsity four
surprissd even thsRBBBhfSB when
the> topped four other squads
en route to a narrow win. The
four rowers were able to con-
vert a boat OMKk up just the
day before mto a thiti esfond
winner
Ninth Yictory
In the junior varsity eight
race. Orange Coast captursi
Its ninth victory in the 1 1 -year
history of the regatu. fighting
sff • Cal rally The Bruin JVs
fimshsd third, ahead of three
other ichoob
Cabfornia. with tWM firBtt
BMd a 6Bco8id. walksd away
with the trophy Pilflaer Cup
(overall points) Orange Coast
had a first and a second phMe,
but did not enter the varsity
race So the Bruins, with a
WKSmA.. in the varsity eight, a
third in the J V eight ani a
fourth in the freshman eight.
were able to nip OCC for
in competitioR among
eight schools.
As the ractRg oSRSon comes
to s close, only one event
rensins in\o€ lo the Western
Sprints This is the Grand
Interclass Oar Members from
the freshnMUt sophomore, ju-
nior and senior claaees will vie
on Saturday morning for the
top honor The sophomores
won the ooolSBl lost year, so
look for the juniors to be
tough this week.
P
>
I
r
Snee outstanding gymnast
\
In the Bruin Gymnastic
Classic Friday night, Joe Snee
of Long Beach City College
won the OutsUnding Athlete
of the Meet award by virtue ot
his first-place finish on the
parallel bars and a second-
place finish in floor exercise
Finishing behind Snee on
the parallel bars were Richard
Pascale with a 90 mark and
Herb Massinger with an K.H5
Snee's winning mark was 9.2
Snee*s teammate Sieve Davis
woo the floor ex competition.
with Snee placing second and
Rich Robinson and Icrry Judd
tiod for third
Pommel hor«e
On the pommel horse, Joel
Ulloa won with a 9.4. followed
hs Shawn Miyake of UCLA
with a 9.^ John Greene of
use was third. *'^'
Elliot Schness set t Pauley
Pavilion mark with his win-
UCLA was second irt 9.4
Shaw wins vauN
The vaulting was won by
Sam Shav^ of Long Beach
State whose 9.65 mark set a
Pauley Pavilion mofk. For his
efforts, Shaw who was this
year's NCAA champion m the
event, was awarded the Out-
standing Individual Perfor-
mance of the meet award
Richard Pascale and Steve
Davis placed second and third,
respectively
UCLA gymnastic cooch and
meet organizer An Shurlock
summed up the' meet by say-
ing. "As expected/ it was a
great competition, with some
outstanding performances thai
the Uns Fcallv cn»oved **
- ieir
J
Intramurals
Men
Votteybatf dtntWe^ AU "A" teams rrport to Pauley PiviMML
ning
9.55 score on jthe rings
Dave Rasnick was aseond with
a 9.4, followed by Howard
Bessen of the UCLA Med
School.
On the high bar there was a
three-way tie for first between
Steve Sargcant and Ervin
Ruzics of UCLA, along with
Chad Nounnan of LBCC All
scored 9 5. John Hart of
today at ^ pm I he men's s-wim meet lor fraternity, dormitory
and independents will be held on Monday May 10 Sign up at 2
pm on the day ai the meet at the Rec Center Men's badminton
signups will be taken in the IM Office through May 6
Women
This Friday. May 7, is the last day to sign up for volleyball
doubles Play will begin next Tuesday May II The entries lor
the women's swim meet are due Tuesdav May II. This wilt be »
one-dav meet to be held on May 12 trpm 3-5 in the Rec Center
Pool
Coed
There wili be coed swim relays held in conjunction with, the
»fnen*s and women's swimming finals It is a one-day event held
Wcdnesdav May 12. from 3-5 in the Rec Center Pool I he
entries are due May 10. and there wilLhe 2 men^nd 2 women on
each team. Entries for the coed open volleyball tournament arf
being taken now through Mav 20 in M(i UK Varsity players are
welcoinS'to play in this tournamenl Play begins Mpndav May
24, lor "3 consecutive nights
CLASSIFIED >ID
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Scales to take head coach job for pro B Paso team
-.-I.
By MiclUMi
DB SfOfti Writer
UCLA voOcytell coach AI
Scates wftf expected to accept
thu hemd coaching job for the
El Pafto/ Juarez Sol of the
Internatiooal Volleyball At-
tociation (IVA) last night, the
Daiiy Bruin hat learned If
Scates ukes the pro job, he
would add credibility to the
MUMd year league.
S Scates j^d his chief assis-
^ taut; Andy Baaachowski, are
^ supposed to leave toniorrow
^ for El Paso to train their
J for the surt of the IVA
» at the end of the month.
M Not iMvIng UCLA
I By taking the professional
H job, Scatet will not have to
leave UCLA He said. ''If I
take the El Paso job, I will still
be the head volleyball coach at
UCLA next season.** Scates is
in the unique jKMttion of being
both a professional and college
coach in the same sport at the
sane time.
Since the UCLA volleyball
season has ended and the IVA
iaaaon closes before the start
of the 1976 fall quarter at
UCLA, Scates will not be in
violation of his Bruin coaching
- — agreement
fringe benefitk, would be
very hard to refuse.**
■My not be the only
ioVktgt comch to be involved m
tke professional league. Gus
Mee, tke iKad voUeybaU caach
at UC Sanu Barbara, and
Eddie Madiaio, tht bead
coach at San Diego State,
**lt looks Mke I am going to
El Paso, but I will make a
decision for sure by Monday
night,** said Scates on the fligltt
home from MuncM^ Indiana,
where his Bruins won their
jixth NCAA championship.
^El Paso has made me an
offer, which, including salary
could become player-coaches
in the cities where their col-
leges are localsd.
*M think there is a good
chance that Gus will do it
(player-coach) in Sanu Bar-
bara and Eddie in San Diego,
but I will be stnctly a head
coach," Mid Scaler
By accepting the IVA job,
Scates will have the oppor-
tunity to do something he has
wanted his entire volleyball
career "For the first time in
my life, I wi|l be stnctly a
coach and not have to worry
about the other details The
general flsanager will handle all
of the other consummatory
arrangements,** said Scates
Mike Bekins, John*8
brother who played for Pep-
perdine, said, *"! doubt serious-
ly whether John would have
with El Paso unless Al
head coach."
Jaoohs wm a sur on the
1972 championship team aad
IS currently an assistant coach
at San Diego Sute. Since the
IVA is a coed league, women
play an important part. Chris
Talunas, a former UCLA wo-
men's star, is also on the ros-
ter.
Leave toaMNTOw
rhowski said that he
expected to leave tomorrow for
El Paso with Scates Bana-
chowski's job will be to help
train the team in the next
month before the start of the
league season on May 28. **I
will help Al train the team for
the next month, and then over
the summer I will help him by
scouting opponents,** said Ba-
nachowski.
There will be 4i UCLA flavor
to the Sols, as former Brum
All- Americans John Bekins
and Jeff Jacobs have signed
Of Bekins, the NCAA Most
Valuable Player last year,
Scates said, **1 think that John
IS one of the greatest setters in
the country today and . he
should be one of the best in
the IVA"
There are many rule changes
in pro volleyball, including a
lineup usually consisting of
four men and two women,
with everyone staying in the
same position throughout the
match. *^I think it will be mma
to coach in pro voUeyhall be-
cause the rules mean that you
will be coaching specialists in
every position,** said Scates.
For the man who has won
SIX NCAA titles in the seven-
fear history of the event, his
professiofltil gaali are no dif-
ferent. **Naturally if I am going
to eotKrh I am going to win the
championship,** said Seaicif.
Since he had Uttk to do with
the selection of has tnua, he
might have to get used to
losing. With a 40-match
son, it figures that he will lose
more matches than he did in
the last seven years at UCLA,
but come September, Al Scales
may win his first professiotuU
volleyball title.
^^Hri^m
cr^tn well "fcU
ASUCLA TICKET OFFICE J j^ MOn}
• amn^ it^lnnypnt : 7^7^5«t'ucLA c«iil25-06ii •m. 259
-u,-
"TtT — ■'.''■ ' ' ;
% m
.v.. 1 J —^J^
f
Volunw XCVlli. Numbw 3S
UnlvvrsHy of CflMofKM, Los Angola
WodriMdoy^ May 26. 197t
Senator Church to speak today at Janss Steps
The Idaho senator will discuss his bid
for the presidency after 20 years in the Senate
■y Joshua Alper
DB Staff Writer
Senator Frank . Church of
Idaho, a candidate for the
Democratic nomination for
President, will speak here at
m today in the Janss
Senator Church entered the
campaign late m the primary
season, but in his first primary
election, scored a surprise vic-
tory over former Georgm Gov-
ernor Jimmy Carter May 1 1 in
Church, a member of the
Senate for 20 years, received
nationwide attention this last
year a» chairman of the Senate
Select Committee on Intelli-
gence Activities, which un-
covered the clandestine domes-
tic andjorcign activities of
government intelligence agen-
cies
Among the abuses of power
exposed b> the Intelligence
Committee were the CIA f'les
on 7.2()0 Americans who op-
posed the Vietnam War. FBI
harassment o( Dr Martin
Luther King J r and political
use bv the Nixon Administra-
tion of Internal Revenue Ser-
vice information
The Senate voted 72-22 last
week to make the Intelligence
Committee permanent 1 he 15-
member permanent committee
will have full subpoena power
in monttonng the FBI. CIA
and militarv intelligence acti-
vities
Church also serves as chair-
i«
Cites indecision on SB-1
Finch assails Tunney
„ By Mary Beth Vlurrifl — -
DB Suff W riter
Advocaimjt states' rights and the need to trim do«wn the tederal
bureaucracy, Robert Finch. Republican candidate lor VS.
Senate, campaigned in a political science class, a law school
forum, and in Meyerhoff Park yesterday
The former Lieutenant Governor of CaUfornia under Reagan
and Secretary of Health, Education and Weltare (HEW) under
Nixon said he would, as Senator, encourage reorganization ol
government agencies according to their function rather than by
their constituency
He criticized federal control in alt areas, saying ''the federal
government has a tendency to institutionalize the problem rather
than the solution ** Finch said a rat-control business would be
analogous to most federal agencies "If you kill all the rats.
you*re out of business.** he said
PoBtkaJ poBcks
Criticizing incumbent Senator John V Tunney. Ftncfc said •*!
would argue that he doesn't have coherent political poliaes ** He
cited Tunney*s waivering positions on Senate Bill I. National
Health Insurance, the SS7. and the B-l bomber
"In last week's B-52 bomber vote, we were entitled to have a
vote from John Tunney - and we didni get one,** Finch said
Last week the Senate voted to postpone a decision on building B-
52 bombers until after the November presidential election
Tunne> was absent for the vote.
Aagola
Finch said he would not have voted for Tunney*s amendment
which prevented funds from being appropriated to support
American militar> participation in the Angola civil war. Finch
claimed the amendment weakened presidrntial power in foreign
aiiasrs "The president should be able to take steps in what he
defines as oyr self-interest.** he said
Finch called the proposed National Health Insurance pfipMi
*'literally a misnomer.** aiid said the program presupposes the
U.S. 1ms a federal health delivery system
Federal licaltii eare
**Until you lay 4Sown federal staaiards as to how doctors.
pMMamedics and nsaiiGal panonnel are traiiHd, you can*t talk
atotit a federal health care prograan,** he said.
In a Daih Brum interview following the Meyerhoff Park
question and answer anHon, Finch said he did not favor Senator
Tunney's proposed "'Competition in Energy Act." This Act would
break up large oil companies into soMBer units, aad prevent
them from owning other energy sources Breaking up the oil
companies would serve to diqpane the talent and money
to develop new energy sources in the next 20 years, lie
man of the Subcommittee on
Multinational Corporations,
which made several discoveries
concerning some of America's
largest corporations, including
LockheedV payments of huge
kickbacks to Japanese politi-
cians and businessmen and
nT*s attempt to provide $1
million to the CIA to under-
mine the democratic elections
in Chile
Church was an early op-
ponent of the Vietnam War,
advocating a military aid cut-
back of $I(K) million in l%6
and in 1970 co-authoring the
Cooper-Church Amendment
which limited US involve-
ment la CambixJia
Church has opposed I) S
action in Angola, describing
Angola as of **no strategic or
national interest to us,** and
suggesting that the US suy
out and let Russia 'hang itself
there just like they let us hang
in Vietnam "
,->*'
fmnk Churiph
GSA vote censures three
By Cbrk Pakiter
DB Stair Writer
. The Graduate Student Association (GSA)
voted to censure three of its members Monday
evening
A resolution was passed accusing Martin
Nishi. president of GSA. Bill Cornuer. com^
mtssioner of research and planning and first
vice preMdeM elect, and A leu SjWtaru. com-
missioner of budgeting affairs, of having
allegedly ''misused their executive power **
The Senate meeting turned from s quiet end
af tlie year wrap-up 4o a heated round of
accusations as J.C. Ephraim. a GSA rep-
resentative, said Nishi tned to ''manipulate
information available to the Senate** and said
he was. along with the two other GSA mem-
bers, ''unfit to serve *'
Asked if he tkMight his ipolitical imafe had beea
frotn his position in the NisMi cabinet. Finch said it
probably gained some lustre since he resigaed his post, aad
returned to California to practice law.
Finch iSHpnd his poet as Secreury of HEW in November
1972. **! didnt haw aoqeM to the ririiiiin'** Finch said, "so 1
§ot out.**
Nishi dented the accusatmns, saying they
were ''unfounded** and in turn, accused the
GSA funded Audio Visual Media Program,
directed by John Rier, of falsifying documents
m connection with that program The program,,
designed to involve low income minonty youths
in using audio visual equipment, has been
accused ol financml impiiianties
The disagreement bagan wIba David Engk,
a GSA representative, brought a motion to the
floor to recall Nuihi, Spalara aad Cormier. The
three are completing their last week in their
present positions •
The motion was amended by GSA rep-
resentative Winston Brooks to censure instead
ol recall the three GSA nembers. The motion
passed 15-8 with two abstentions Only a
maiority decision was needed for it to pass.
Besides accusing Nishi ol "willfully misusing
his powers,** the motion aUcfid he had at-
tempted to bypass the Senate in various
nutters. The motion called for Cormier to be
"tned for his crimes** for ^an attempt to rob the
GSA of their autonomy by sneaking in a move
to alter their constitution ** Spataru was
accused of attacking "the solidarity of the GSA
in his feeble attempts to create clnos in that
body.**
Nishi answered the accusations against him
saying, "To attempt to recall us in the last week
is s political move, only a pohtical move.**
Turning over his chair position to "^Piui^eat-
elect Paubne Brackaen for the remainder of tie
neetiag, Nishi called the aOBMations "vague**
sajfMig he had acted in the interHai of GSA and
student. government. He ated his efforts to l^lp
""GSA rooover financially over the last yeai^
among the constructive pt^LZii he has aMide
while in office.
ini called the motion a **lait Hep in a
to cover up the ataBaa^HMat af
moaey** in GSA He, too, daiiiad tibe aBcpHiaM
ia tkt aMtioM.
Cormier was aot isanot at the aMctaaa. bat
Nishi said tht
with tBe ooMtitutioa
The question of exactly what "censure'
ana« ink iaterprctad by several GSA mmm
ban. Oae aember caiid flip agme a *ayH
bolic slap** while Ephriim said the label
inclaiid a rttttkUktm on wha$
11
t
/
f
I
i
i distinguished and continuing achievements'
,1
♦ V
f
<
Julian Cole elected to science Academies
By Mm Pdn
DB Siair Writer
Jufian D. Cole. protaMr of
■tcteaiei and ftmcturet in the
Sctiod of EnflMViac here.
been fckcted to the prcsti-
fiouft National Academy of
Scienccf and the National Aca-
demy of Engmeerin|, both
within the tpmn of one month
ATTENTION FRESHMEN
Thatv m stil imm! Participate in a tiydif aa lacial acquaint
^ncm Taktfs 45 minutes, pays $2 50 Come to Franz Hall 3S58
dnytime, or call 83B 3551 aher 500 pm
•
2
Cok, who also serves
profetspr m the dapaftmeiit af
■MlMBiatics, was recofniicd
hy tktt Academy of Scieaoct
for his "dittipfUAshcd and con-
tinuing achievements in on-
"2
s
Jewish Women Programs
an evening with
PHYLLIS ^ICp '^
Author of ^
woM^eM« •
r- P^^^ay, May 27
W/' Dinner 6:30 pm $1.75
Reservations please $1.75
HiUel Council at UCLA. 900 Hilgdrd Ave.. 474-1531
^
,.■'{■■-.
Lunch • Dinner • cocktaili
Banquet FacJNfiet
t jBtlHgittrimrg
;3
mt
475-2525
11 7*5 National Blvd. Los Angeles
Prime Rib $4.95 from 5 to 7
Ed Hollingsworth and Carolyn Coy
Fri a: Sat Nights
T^
MMMMnrHSH
Cy««t
FRIDAY, JUNE 4 ? 30 pm Sho^^
STARLIGHT AMPHITHEATRE
StMC* ^vk tyrtan* I24t L«ciilie«i Vi«« Bri«« Siirt— >
■ifwi S« IS. Mw SntrvMl tStS (ladartn ranuac'
A»««ia6l« at All T*Cll«trQn OutMs
^•<H*c*<f ^ laoii t ifuimLUtt coocam
In particular they com-
tnaitfad his coiMhbutions to
the development of perturba-
tion and similanty methads of
applied mathematics, both of
which aid the study of fluid
mechanics.
Four weeks ago. Cole was
elected to the National Aca-
ly of Engineering, the
»t professional honor an
American engineer can receive
The Acadcmv cited his coniri-
butlon^ **to education, litera-
ture of engineering and ap-
plied science and creative ap-
plication of mathematics to
fluid mechanics '
*Very pleased'
**! was very pleased, natural-
ly/' Cole said "\ think it
shows a certain appreciation of
the science community in gen-
eral for your work and the
main thing was it was given by
your peers "
Cole was one of 75 new
numbers elected April 27 at
the Acaderrvy of Sciences*
inth annual meeting ♦» AVa*h—
ington DC. bringing its total
membership to 1.190 The Aca-
demy, a semi-official arm of
the government, calls on its
.members to submit reports
should' the government requjrc
scientific technical information
"I like to do problems that
have a practical application."
Cole sard He keeps busy re-
searching and teaching the
fluid mechanics of aerodyna-
mics and ^ marine hydro-
dyviamics
To facilitate his work. Cole
uses similarity and perturba-
tion methods of mathematics
which he helped to develop
He has written a book, used by
students in his classes '*n each
method
Aerodynamics
An aerodynamics class,
which Cole claims "is a popu-
lar subject." has been investi-
gating the properties of planes
flying close to the speed of
suutHJ SiiKe supersonic planes
are still too expensive and
cause sonic booms. Cole ex-
plained, he and his class are
helping to find the properties
of pianes flying at lower alti-
tudes, or "transsonic** speeds,
I' sing the two types of ma-
thematics he helped develop.
Cole has been computing the
effect ol shock waves experi-
enced by transsonic aircraft
From hff< Tindings he hopes to
develop some way of dis-
sipating them
Other courses of fluid
mechanics under Cole's super-
vision include marine-hydro-
dynamics. a graduate course
on water waves. ' wave resis-
tance in ships and hydrofoils
and the properties of polJution
. Recently Cole and his as-
sistants have been tracing the
air flow around the tos
Angeles bas>n to see exactly
where air pollution origmates
travelsv „ .
riM
forma Institute of Technology.
The Facific Palisades resident
IS alto a member of the U.S
National Committee for Theo-
retical and Applied Mechanics
and was elected a Fellow of
the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences last year.
With the help of the medi-
wal center here. Cole employs
his background in fluid
mechanics to study the
workings of the inner ear. or
cochlea A unique structure
niled with fluid, the cochlea's
design IS being studied in re-
lation to Its operation It is "by
no means a solved problem."
Cole said,
In addition. Cole has been
researching the propagation of
electrical signals in nerve cells
He helps measure how signals
travel down a simple nerve
cell
Jofnlig the School of En-
gineering in 1969 as chairman
of the mechanics and struc-
tures department. Cole re-
ceived his PhD from the Cali-
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
yo^mm XCVnt Numtef 3a
Wedr>e9day May 26 1976
PubkwMd 9¥9ry wMrtiy tiurtng tff
Khool ymr •ncmpt aunng fioM^t
and etmyt fotK/mtng ^o^idaya. antf •«-
mninmttoo gmrtoO^. bf «!• ASUCLA
Cpmmuntcattom Boif^ 30t Wmt-
Lot An§atm, CsMorm^
CoqifngM 19?9 by trm
ASUCLA CofT^rrfuntcmtiong Bomrtt
Second cmm poamm pm6 mt mm Lom
OWtea.
»•>
Jwn
Patncfc HMly
Amw Voung
FOREIGN STUDENTS
VOTE: For the 25 members of the EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEE of the FOREIGN STUDENT ASSOCI-
ATION
VOTE: Wednesday & Thursday at 325 Kerck-
hoff (FSA) and 297 Dodd Hall (OISS). Thursday
also at Boetter Hall
VOTE: between 9 am and 5
pm
Write-in candidates possible!
Gponao^d by Studant Lagiatattva Council
Official Un^ity Notices
MANDATORY UCLA STUDENT IDENTIFICA-
TION CARD to b* itsu*d to all studonts
conUnuing In the FaH Ouarlar 1976 through
June 4 in Iha Ackannan Union Sacond Floor
Lounga according to tha following trhadida
4 May 24: A-F
May 25: A-L
May2t: A-fl
May 27 thru Juna 4: A-2
A currant Ragistration Card and ■uppurtNa
Manllflcallon — which muat Irtduda a |ih»H
graph (Drhrar't Licanaa. Paaaport. ale.) - ««
IM raqulrad prior to iaaManca
Effactiva in tha Fall Quanar'l976 lia Manfl-
fjcatfon Card, along with a currant RafMmtlon
Card, will ba raquirad in ordar to tranaact
<>"i^ialb(Minaaa, racalva aarvtoaa or particlpala
Part of Women's Week
Womeir debate E.R.A. effects
My JaaMe Eglaaii
DB Staff Wff«iflr
Ty-Juan Markhain bebeves
ikm if the Equal Ri^hu
Afliendmeni paiici the Ameri-
can public will lulfer from the
. "man> absurdities that the
EfcA would create " Mmr>
Nichob feek that under the
present United States laws.
4iicnmination on the haaia of
»eK ii kfai
Spoaiorad hv Women s
Week. pro-FRA attorney
Nichols and STOP ERA Long
ittch Area Chairman Mark-
ham debated the issue of **The
Eiiual Rights Amendment -
What Will It Mean'^ yesterday
on campus hefore a unall
cro%^.
Winning an impanuri loas of
a coin. Markham began the
discussion by emphasi/mg the
need to understand tb^
Fourteenth Amendment "h
guarantees each citi/en equal
protection, immunity and pri-
vileges." she explained After
the amendment passed, added
Markham. the Supreme Court
ruled that different treatment
ol men and mt^mttn was aol
necessarily wrm% H it helped
the baakh and talety o< ibe
people.
Although the health and
safety clause originally was
coaatmed to "keep woman in
the home and in her place.**
Markham said, the times have
rhiapid aad legislaiari have
altered their interpretation
Other new laws -fvork to
guarantee women equal pay.
Markham commented adding
**!f discriminated against wo-
men do need to file their
cases" Credit laws and edu-
catioa legislation alto act to
help women, sbe said
When HEW developed Title
Nine, with its provtsion that no
»ex segregation would be per
mined in any area. Markham
•piC Ibe resulting **hu§e pub-
lic cry- was answered by
changing the "absurdities** If
the ERA passes however any
absurdities would be "locked
in.** she explained.
The passage of the ERA,
;d Markham. would be
-as wise as. uking aa atomic
bomb to exterminate a few
mice"
Explaining the hR \
Nicholi laid that onlv its
passage "will faarantee that
Homen or men cannot be dis-
criminated against soIeK on
the haMt of lex" The Four-
teenth Amendment, she ex-
plained, has **Doc bam good
enough hecauae diKri mi nation
is still allowed , on a national
INTERNATIONAL GRANT-IN-AID
A Mmitad numbar of Grania-m-Afd to famala
graduata liK^aiitti will ba avvardad lor tha l97#-77
damic ymr by tha Altruaa Intarnahonal Foundation
Application forms ara availabia at tha Offica of Intar
national Students & Scholars, 297 Dodd Hall (825-3159)
Application daadlina is Juna 11. 1976
UC vice president to resign
Robert L Johnson. UC vice-president of I niversii> and
student relations since 19*^0. witi resign his post m July to
become the first president o* the National Center of Health
Education
Johnson has served as the official vice-chairman ol the Board
of the National C enter since its inception in October 1975 He
calls his new appointment "a very exciting opponuniiv "
The Center was an outgrowth of the President's Committee on
Health Education that recommended the formation of a nati
center to ed^ucate the public- a bt>Mt health attitudes
Johnson had been instrumental in I'Cs implementing, the
Affirmative Actiori program staienide He said it is his
involvement in thi!^ and other programs thai gives hun mixed
feelings about leaving Tve gr,o\(kn to trulv love the University "
he said
As IC vice president. Johnson has been responsible lor
tmversit> and alumni relations student affairs, student financial
aid programs, gifts and development and the I niversitvs Natural
Land and Water Reserves Svstem * , ^
He has been ^ith the Iniversitv since 1958 vkhen he served on
the Berkeley campus as vice-chancellor for studem affairs and
later as vice-<.bancellor for administration
^"J^O. he joined the I ( Sy^cmvkidc Administration as vicc-
prriMkni of adminismaion and later he assumed responsibilitv
for i:4m«rsitv aii# ttudem refattons ^
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The ERA would provide a
firm foundation for future
legislation. NtLh^ls cemn-
mented. and -will strike out,
once and for all. all prmmmm
of existing sute laws that con-
tain sexual discrimination/'
Paiaage of the amendment will
resuh in a "major saving of
Uine and effort, wHhout
leaving loops, gaps and poa-
sjble contradiction.** she said
Since the ERA has become a
symbol. N»chi)ls explained,
many people are using it to
decide "how thev feel- about
changes in women's Uves to-
day **There has not been all
that much change as we tell
ouriHves.* she added Manv
men and wome^. however,
have "sei/ed the FRA/^ said
Nichols, "as a symbol of a
threat to home artd familv A
great deal of opposition to the
ERA IS an unspoken fear on
the part of women that passing
the ER A will chanjec their
lives '
Because ol these views.
Nichols explained, "all of us
really do have an obligation to
go out and rartk about the
FR \ and explain it "
For UCLA Studants
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ATTENTION PRE-HEALTH CARE STUDENTS
f
i
MEDICUS
MCAAP & AMCAS
ELECTIONS!
Wednesday May 26 6 pm Dr't Cafeteria
BBQ
fh/s IS the place for Rib Lovers ^
By for the Best Ribs we ve fried m L A
Herald E %^mtri»t
COMPLETE DINNER^
5 t Casual Dining ♦'^o'^52«75
i I HARRY'S OPEN PIT RRQ
1434 N CRESCENT HEIGHTS at SUNS€T STRIP
10 Vinutps Ucwf> Su#iset Blvd to
LourelConyon lumNigh* And v^u i c I h^re
I
1
DATSUN
''Acres of Datsuns"
Student, faculty, and alumni
fteet discounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
* 684-1133*
m
4
Five weeks of study, travel
and fun
in Mexico
For teachers, high school, arid college students Accredited
classes in Spanish, Mexrcan culture, music, art. etc at beautiful
Monterrey Tec*College $650 includes tuition, board, room
laundry and trips Earn 2 semesters high school or 6 college
credits
For details and catalogue contact group leader Dr Richard
Martin between 8 and 9 30 any evening at 478-3(6S7.
The Business Advisory Council
of the
I nternatfonal Student Center
Presents Its^Weekly Seminar
Thursday, May 27
Dr. Richard Shively
Chief EnKinf><>r FlertronK Mtlwofies & MaKn*»iics
^"What Does My Company Look For
In Hiring Employees^"
Dinner - 6;iO Seminar - 7:30-9:30 PM
All accredited foreign and American students invited
International Student Center
1023 Hilgard
Phone for Reservatlon^ - 477-4587
81 -year-old judge rated 'well qtialifled'
Opponents criticize^ge
DI Staff Writer
Afc if ikt mam liisue in the race to unseat an
8 1 -year-old incumbent superior court judge
who has been rated "well qualified** by the Los
Angeles C ountv Bar Aibociation.
Samuel S Schwartz and Elana Sullivan,
running tor superior court judge, office one,
contend incumbent Emil Gumpert is too old to
hold elective office.
According to an evaluation by the Los
Angeles Bar Association, however. Gumpert
was rated ''well qualified** while Schwartz and
Sullivan were rated onlv" "qualified "
**Well qualified*
"Well qualified** indicates superior fitness to
perform judicial duties based un professional
ability. cxpcr*icnce. competence, integrity and
tenvperament "Qualified*' indicates only salis-
lactory fitness as viewed by the committee
*'By the end of his term he'll be HH years
old,** Schwartz .<)aid Lawyers "jokingly refer to
my opponent as 'father time.*** he said
Sullivan also said Gumpert wa& too old and
added "the judicial council did try to get judges
over 70 to retire."
Could retire
They both said Gumpert could retire as a
senior judge and still serve the coun so long as
he was physically and mentally able
Gumpert, however, said the issue was not age
but rather the "ability to function mentally '
Gumpert cited Supreme Court Justice Oliver
Wendell Holmes who served "in his nmcties*'
and said Holmes "did a great job "
"Pve saved the County over a year in court
time by spending more time on the job," he said
Gumpert added that this saves the taxpayers of
I OS Angeles County over $1 million annually
Hide his age
Schwartz claims his opponent was trying to
hide his age in his campaign literature and that
Gumpert has become more limited because of
his worlti[ng only civil cases "His courtroom is
4iUk as far as a jury is concerned." Schwartz
said He said Gumpert could not handle long
cases. •
To further back his claims that Gumpert was
too old, Schwartz cited a recent article from
the Los Anfgei^s Times
In the article.' Calif ornia^.,Oief Justice
Donald R Wright reportedly said. "As pre-
Samu«l S Schwarti — claims
hidt agt
Elana Suttlvan — courts mrm
siding judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court
in the 1960s, I found that the judges who
continued past age 70 were, with only a few.
exceptions, the problem judges of the court "
Wright made no specific referiences in his
lener tp any particular court judge or ju&tiibe.
bowever, the Times said.
Gumpert said the claim thai he is less
effective was "a lot of hogwash " He said he is
"booked up three months in advance" and had
chosen to specialize in personal injury cases
*'\
"Waift a chante
**l take a very positive view.** Sullivan said
"I think people are open and want a change.*!
Spanish Speaking Mental Health
Research Center Colloquium Series
presents
JOHN SERRANO
Chief of Social Services
Eastern Los Angeles Regional Center
for the Developmentally Disabled
The Development of Culturally
Relevant Social Services
Date: TuMitey, Jum 1, 1976
Tiffie: 2:00 pm
Some qualifications given by Sullivan were
'6ver. 12 years as a workers' compensation
judge, her understanding of **interpersonal
dynamics" and being one of the few qualified
women
She said the courts are "over balances! with
men Less than 5 per cent of the judges in the
superior court are women "I tfiink I have
much to contribute." s^ie said
Sullivan also said Gumpert had tried to stop
her from using the tale of judge because she
did not handle jury cases. "It is my lawful
title.** she said
Limited
Schwartz sajd Sullivan was also limited,
because most of her experience had been in
workers' compensation. He then said he
thought she would serve the public better by
keeping her present position.
Schwartz cited his 30 years as a trial lawyer
and his experience as Commissioner of^ Adop-
tions as his qualifications, in addition to union
support.
Gumpert said he was "not campaigning at
all " He said "I think the people recognize the
service (19 years) Pve rendered** "I lUnd on
my racerd." Gumpert said.
Drill team to perform
The Mount Vernon Jr. High
Dance and Drill Team will
give a free performance at
noon today in the Kerckhoff
Plaza, accocdint to DetaoB
y'lapn. ■wimmt to First Via
Pniiilent Sutan Melton.
The performance it part oft
program by the firtt vice praii-
dent to familianze Black
youngMm with UCLA
Campus events
i iyai WL
m%n
7 30-10 30 pm May. 28
. by Alpha
QlllMflt.
t1
Tt
S1S0
Hitkm
will IM
• pm
-Tirai
IpM 1110 Srlii N iM
■trtonned 4 15 pm tomorrow
W^ 28 MacGowan H9\\
•■■Mwr Tmt of ttic art
pm tomorrow matt m
-IMtt Umm %\mmi ImmtL ti'30 am
12JQ pm. today on (iCTVLA monitors m
Caap. Apycc Gypsy Wagon and Meinitz
Hall
an4 Muat
CoflM
•liiiinUS2
WIN piay rodi toMi
8 pia, ; tomorrow Kerckho^
S^WMAIU
9^ pm today
mjJ^pimmm AMCAS «ip
pttcaHfm and tlHllMi Iw nasi yaaf »
board 6 pm loapy CN6 Ooc1ar» Gila
ttria
•vary Widmiday Ackarman 2412
-f rMcH Caovarutloo Iraap. 1 30 pm
tvary Wainiiatv iniarnati
picii MP a Praiici <^iapfinaii
vflir >n(ormaiion bfilM. avaiUblt on
campus tMgirmifif Juna 2
— UmeMii
■ppticdiions tor
Gras office
Walk
picli up
summer at ttie Mardi
A level or on Brum
field work emparlance
tttrouo^ community larvicf and loarnmg
Academic credit available student de
Mdlape own )ot} dascnption wlt^ aasis
tance Visit Kinsay 394 ro call 125-3730
— fMWil Trip UpHipa for San Oiago
May 31 and Mexico, ^uni 22-2i art w$^
aPtc m Kerckfiofi M8 avary day and at
of UCLA Fishing Club
lia«. 8 10 pm evtry Widwaiday
at 8 30 10 30 pm every Friday tntar-
national Student Center 1023 Hilgard ^^^
— ffiMMiMpi information and dbodlma
on extramural funding for graduate stu
in
Murphy 1228
and AaaWtanfshtp Sactton
w\^ local voluniaar potibons are available
now ttwouo'* EXTO Ackerman A213 or call
PraMdMR. lOin OECA at a
canaumer investigator Visit KerchtH}ft 311
or call 825 2820 Volunteers hit also
naatfad tor environmental and tood pro-
jects -^ "
RtJi
-4 Caa^at N Far Yea wnaaaaii starring
SuMn Hayward tnofi Dan Oailey will be
srN>wn 5 pm today Malnit/ 1408 Free
' -iMMfear A Way al Lis. followod by
discuation 7 pm tomgm Bundle 3116
—IMa a film from Sanagat by Ousman
Sembene will be sf)own 7 30-11 pn African
dinner 5 30 8 30 pm (S2 ^i May 28
iftternationai Student Center
OlMXiTS
— larly Mvak wMi Vateaa aad MMrMMtt
presemed by UCLA Collegium Musicum 7
pm tanigDt Scfioenberg foye' ^^^
— flaie EaaaaWlaa. wHi present a noon
concert noon tomorrow Scftoanterg audi
tor lum " ^ffit
— MMla aad Baaa al CMaa aad Raraa. wiii
ba presented 8 X pm May 2i Sdioonberg
auditorium S' lor UCiA jjtudents faculty
,- an aiiernaiive
noon today tunefie Ai63
-VordI I Rigelelta as Moaic iraoM 4
pm tomorrow Scttawiiaig imie Tnaaiar
a Cawpaay Laafea la M iNrMi
6 30 pm dmnar, 7 30 pm talk
tomorrow International SMMt Canlar
f^w . ^ -^ . ^.-
-to VHmwm, a ripr—aMmi af'iw
Jewish Oalanae Laagva
tomorrow Acker man 3517
■■■■■I M Pi III M
3 30 pm tomorrow Fraai
laM
w^^F^"^ •y^BB» m LMMr naaaaB, e
pm tomorrow CHS 33 1Q6
— ilMary by iM Eye aad Ea some un
Mploited traditional sources for rtte writ
•ng of African history 7 pm tomorrow
Bunctie 4286
— Jaaa aad Baaari Kaaaady MaaMnal lO'
iaia. 00 tuc foreign poiicias of Namjf
Kiaaiajai 7 30 pm tomorrow ftadd W
t — riaeai lar Wawao. a diacuasior group
for faculty staff and student women with
multiple raiaa. naan.aaary fnoay ^^^rptiy
3334
raiMaaMi >■ Iraiiiiim 12 30 pai
tomorrow BooMar 2444
taawrwi ir Palar
on the ^ationship potwaan straaa
and dttaaaa and aanscendaniM , aiodiiaaoii
as a paaai^ii iHrapautic tool 8 pm. June
1 MPt auditorium
■tfnats
— BroM Hfi Laiiaaia CIA modts 3 5 pm
Mondays Bunche 2178 and" 9 30 H anf
Thursdays Ackerman 24QB
-^-Aaadaial Yafi. noon 1 30 pm today
and 2 3 30 pm tomorrow outside by Janas
steps Suggested donation $1
Mr BvaaM coordmatiM awai
tag 2 pm today Ackermar^ 2481
-MMbi ipaa CaaaaaNai i03Oii30
am tomorrow Murphy 1312
today Murphy 1312
3 30 pm tomorrow Murphy 131?
— OraaM tMBaaai 7 g pm every Thursday
iniernalional Student Center
^••aai^ a AoMaallve EnglMari. 3 pm
May 2i iooNor S2B4
— ^riLav BpBi Caaaaaiai. 1 1 am-nodn
May 28 Murphy 1312 •
-Baard el Caalral. apan to tne puMtc 13
pm Ma^ 2> Ackerman 38B4
^VaNdBPMM FMdBi. Mcture and demon
siraiion ai ma ftahtng Clab nwotmg 3-4
pm today Adwrman 2dBB
Tadays
Fishing 3^ pm AU 2412 Hatha Yoga 5
6 15 pm Womeo's Gym 200 Team Hand
ball 6 tS4 pm Woman s Gym 200 indoor
Soccer 8-10 pm Woman s Gym 200 Shoot
ing Pistol 1-2 pm Bifle Banoe Judo 7A
pm MAC B 116 Wrattlmg 3-5 pm MAC B
11« Water %H\ 4-5 pm AU 3617 Con
•orvation Lactore sartai. noon Bunch<
A 163 Go 3-7 pm MothnScionoas 3B1SA
Finch
Extension TV class
UCLa Extension's con-
tinuing Jienes. "Television in
Perspective What makef, TV
Tick*^ will preient Gene Rey-
nolds, producer of MASH and
Charles Engcl, vice-president
of Universal TV. from 7 30-
10 30 tonight in Dickson 2160
Reynolds and EngeJ will join
course coordinator Richard D
I indheim for an examination
of the inner workings of suc-
cessful TV programming Sin-
gle enrollments wilt be ftoAd at
the door
(Continued from Page I)
**l haven't seen or talked to
him (Nixon) since he called me
once on the phone and that
was so he could ask me some-
thing about his book.** Einch
said
He said he is in favor ot the
Equal Rights Amendment, be-
cause 'there is vers clear,
harsh discrimination against
N^omen *' However, he dt>es not
normallv tavor constitutional
amendments '-
Emch said he 4oca not ap-
prove of federal or slate at-
tempts to legislate atftual ccni-
duct **l have enough liber-
tarian instincts to feel there
should not be any legislation m
this area at ail." he said
Einch laces nine other Re-
publicans in the Calilornia
primarv June H
His appcararKe wa^ spon-
sored b\ the Associated Stu-
dents Speakers Bureau
GSA . .
(Continued from Page I )
censured could relate to the
public (as in a press release)
while acting in their GSA posi-
tions
Nishi contested both defini
tions and no set answer was
officially declared
The controversial audio vi-
sual media program finance
handling was discussed' in CMl-
lunction with charges against
Nishi and Spataru
Nishi said It was his belief
that^ the audio-visua) progiam
"had falsified. documents"
When contronted" with the
statement that the maMer had
been investigated and dis-
missed. Nishi said "ASUCLA
had not investigated trfts**'
N IS hi said the matter was being
looked into now by the assis-
tant vice-chancellor C harles
McCTure** office Those dis-
agreeing with his view in-
cluded Ephraim. Brooks and
Kevth Reece
VJrite
•'•d of yMt^rday's hair?
F»" 1 a M
For what's happening now
styling for mon and woman
Jarry Radding's Jhirmack products
For appointmant call 478-6151
tuas. thru sat
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with this ad
1105 Glandon Ava Wastwood Villaga
I
Career Semirxir For Minorities Interested In
Urban Planning and Architecture
Keynote Address By:
Mr Lcroy Higginbothcim
"Exacutiv/e Director
County Commimity Xlevelopment Ctxjrx il. IrK
f
1
Ora
Career Opportunity Information
Time: Friday, May 28. 7 p m. - 1 am
Sunset Recreation Center - Vista Room
Sipufi«or«d Bv
Thsr MiTvmfv Ai^xidticw at PliMviars. and Archilwt* lX:i^ PJf
FOOD MUSIC REFRESHMENTS
, ALL WELCOME
The Staff of
Wjestwood Chiropractic Office
Invites You To An
OPEN HOUSE
Monday through Friday, May 3 - 28 •
12 Noon 'til 2 PM 4 5 PM 'til 7 PM
1429 Westwood Boulevard
Westwood, California
(213) 477-2964
Your Host -
Howard Malby, D.C
Refreshments Facility Tour
f
I
Tfys weeks
Special
^andwic}]es
in the
Vending
machines
BEEF, PASTRAMI,
and
SWISS
on RYE
'////'
PftSTRAMIand EGG
on
KWSER
ROLL
' -f'
tiL,4l,
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■eaji -J* . J— jj jaff%^^
T^
irilH*
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'■■gu
1
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\
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doly bruin
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I
The Rich get Richer
By Tom Chihon
(iditor'i noie Chilton is j sfudenf h4»-*. trM^ « member oi the
ffevo/ufiooary Srudem firfg^de )
Todd Olsen. in his Letter to the Editor o* May 19. bends over
backM^ard to ignore reality »nd distort ¥vhat the Revolutionary
Student Brigade is tryiofj to do. He makes the ridiculous statement
that "if the rich hive been on the workers backs, they were thrown
off years ago When did this happen^ The rich, the handful who
control the giant corporations like CM. Standard Oil and Ford, »re
today trying to make workers ilave even harder through speed-up,
job combination and forced overtime combined with massive
layoMi. They're doing this because of the crisis they're in — they
have to up their sagpifig profits
OPINION
But It's not only the workers who have the rich on their back ~
it's the masses of people in this country workers, farmers, small
businessmen, veterans, national minorities, women, students and
youth in general That's why the mam slogan of the demonstation
says "We've carried the rich for 200 years — Let's get them off our
backs! And it's true — for example, we're students, so how are the
rich on our backs?
To understand this, we first have to understand one basjc thing —
that to the rich, profit is king. Everything they do or think is guided
by one principle — how can I make a buck off it^ And that s how
they run education (and they do run education, for exarpple. check
out tf>e UC Board ol Regents — it's made up of some of the richest
parasites in the country and corporate lawyers who work for them).
To the captitalists, education » a way to help them make a buck.
To most students, however, education is a way to get a skill af»d
find out about why things ^re the way they are so we can do
something useful with our lives — and. f#r a lot of us. it s a way to
ensure that we won't have to live likip our parents do. (It's no
accident there ire so many pre-medi here i But what stands jn the
way of our accomplishing these things is the capitalists and their
system We work hard for 4-10 years only to find we can ! even get a
'|ob after graduation — the capitalists aren t finding it profitable to
use more teachers, chemists, engineers or whatever How many ot
the people trying to get into the pro^e»&ional schools m the health
sciences will actually get irv^ And why is that^ Because we ve a\read\
got all the doctors we r^eedf Hell no
What It comes down to is, Whaf^choices are we offered under this
system? We have ttie freedom to be unemployed or join ffep
military, to be undipeniployed or to stay m School
So the rich are on our backs directly, but indirectly too — . we
have td^ tive in a country being torn apart by a dying system that
will do anything to save itself, including sending millions of us off to
fight in one of their wars
Mr Olsen tells us that the RSB enjoys using Revolutionarv
Rhetoric' a strictly meamngless collection ol verbiage It he would
get his head out of the sand he could see the cor^ditions people m
this country are faced with — 10 million people walking the streets,
unemployed, while those still on the |ob are worked literally to
death, whole cities going to hell, education, health care and
transportation rotten ar\<i falling apart, divorce almost as common as
marriage, massive alcoholism and drug addiction, in short, people s
lives being destroyed
Mr Olsen would also be able to see that these demonstratiom in
Philly are something that can make a difference They'll be an
important step in unifying the different struggles being waged
around the country by students, veterans, workers — employed and
unemployed,^ and others These demonstrations will also be concrete
proof to people alt across the country that there are people fighting
back, that something can be done and that they can be part of
doing It So can you — come to Philly, jyly 1-^ (For more
information, come by our table at the Gypsy wagon or Bruin walk )
aN .ifiiHMrnitiii
_ I
\
\
I , -
V......
HIK SM ^'^-
9 r r r
,M, T.^: AiN ^^- '-^
\
Letters to the Editor
Ui.
Editor:
i want to, ^peak up for the
United States of Anierica and
what this country represents.
The choice for the people of
this country to make is between
communism and a democracy
based on religious freedom I do
not thmk that '200 years is long
enough, but that this nation is
|ust beginning to set loundations
tor the new order of the ages
Our founding fathers arrived
in this countr> with the spirit ot
righteousness At the price of
their lives, they built churches
schools,' and linaHy homes
These people thought more of
Ihe fuUjre than of themselves
Many people starved rather, than
eat gram sayed to plant for
future generations
The foundation of this country
IS based on God This country
.has phrases on its currency say-
ing. In God We Trust The flag
contains the ideas of uniting as.
One nation under God
We live so that all future gen-
erations can have the freedoms
ol worship, speech, and written
expression
Opposed to this way of think-
ing are groups who hold selfish
human reasonings Communist
doctrine says that the way to
world peace is through violent
revolution Supponers hold such
views as. "Fight or Starve." and
that anyone who owns propeny
» rK>t a member of the people
The people who are motivated
by communism think more of
themselves than future gen-
erations.
^Mple who want to practice
religious freedom in North Ko-
rea are mercilessly killed or
tortured PrMdini of expression
in the USSR is controlled by the
stJic. Children listening to mis-
sionaries in Red China had sticks
pokf^i m their ear drums, while
the missionaries had their
tongues cut out Is this the kind
ot kfe that the United Slates
wants?
The time has come for the
American people to decide be-
tween communism or demo-
cracy bmmd on religitMii free-
dom. fKJt as ideologies, but as
ways of life, between selfish
standards ar>d rifhte<>us stan-
dards based on God. Where are
the people who still say. "Give
me your poor and huddled
masses?" Where are the people
who love country more tfian
self? Who are the people who
attend the July communist con-
vention to make the United
States a communist nation? Who
are the people who are going to
attend the June "God Bless
America Festival' dedicated to
the United States as "One
Nation Under God...?' President
Kennedy said, '^sk not what
your country can do for you.
but what you. can do for your
countTv It IS now trme for the
people who stand for America
to come forth for Arherica.
Where do you stand?
Patrick A.
Gah
Editor;
I have been following with
gcowing apprehensior^ the line.
of argument that has come from
the article on Gallo acivertise-
ments in the Brum by J. Tiske.
What started as a simple mis-
interpretation of the First
Amendment by Mr Fiske has
snowballed into an ' attack^ upon
our most basic of constitutional
rights, that of free speech.
We are informed by Roberto
Rodriguez of La Cente that if we
believe m the fight "for basic
human rights. " we must take up
"suppressing and censoring the
few wherever and whenever
possible." I find this contention
not only frightening but repul-
sive Just who. Mr. Rodriguez,
are included in this vague term
'the few?" Does it include just
Gallo or all corporations? Does
It include the store owners that
sell ^heir products and the pri-
vate individuals that purchase
them What do you mean by
suppressing"? Does this entail a
bullet ridden wall and a blind-
fold?
The purpose of the First
Amendment is to protea our
free society (emphaU mott m-
suredly intended) h-om just such
dictatorial intentions as you ex-
press. I should like to point out
to you that if not for this most
precious of "basic human
rights, your paper, views, and
thoughts would ne^er see the
ligbt of day. It is in this tytlem
yOM so avidly attack that you
'^ •«5»* your views, even
though they do not support ther
system. The system you offer m
return is suppression and cen-
sorship in the mme of our
"basic human rights Such
19B4ish doeMnpeik is typical of
the repression of Nazi Germarvy.
Chile, and any other dTaator-
ship this battered world has ever
spawned.
I deeply believe in your right
to express your views. Mr. Rod-
riguez, however I may oppose
thetn. I also deeply believe in
Gaflo's right to be heard, or
Richard Nixon, or Huey Newton,
or anyone else that has some-
thing to say This >s the mearnng
of a free society, and I think you
would have as , much cause to
mourn its passing as I Freedom
means nothing if it does not
mean freedom for all, if this be
romantic and idealistic, then
perhaps this world could use a
little more romanticism arni
idealism.
S. Clarli
Editor:
Hypocritical
It seems highly hypocritical, if
not an outright misuse of funds
to even consider tram service
during the daytime to save a few
lazy slobs the inconvenience of
walking^ to their classes from tfie
dorms. There isn't a tram made
that 'doesn't pollute in some
way, and we college students
are supposed to be aware oi
these things as we decry other
more ubiquitous sources of
smog
But if we are going to indulge
in these questionable services,
perhaps those responsible will
consider free linrK>usine service
from the San f^ernando Valley,
where I live. sif>ce there are
probably as many or more UCLA
students living out here as there
are in the dorms, fraternities,
sororities, etc. Of course this
makes the rather grandiose as-
sumption that democracy plays a
part in such decisions.
Rather than become em-
broiled in an apportionment
controversy, why don't we aW
just give up our absurd polluting
impulses and spend our Reg
fees in slightly more "aware"
ways (and I don't mean Woo^wi
SpiDft Centers) or give the god-
damn mor>ev berk.
C.
mor>ey
JewisTi Arab dialogue: an open letter to the Arab Student Organization
By Gary Blair and Lance Finer
fiwfor's rfote Biair i» a funtor here
m^fCHing in Political Science, Finer is
Sophonriore maforing m iconomki )
It seems to us that Arab students and
»n Arab professor on this campus do not
want peace in the Middle East, but want
to pursue this conflict to their own
OPINION
political ends You fail to present your
party's true side of the attempts towardi
a solution You misrepresent the majority
of Palestinian opinion on the West Bank
All one ne^ do is read Al-fafer or «-
Wanon, two nationalist Arabic dailies m
Israel that advocate a separate Palestinian
state solution, as npppiid to a secular
t*emocratic (destruction of Israel) solu-
tion, to see the divergence of opinion
You can hide behiruj your mask of mis
translated information, or you can re-
move it and begin a dialogue.
You fail to criticize your own side in
articles, while we wpttw a variety of
viewpoints in hopes of establishing a
peaceful sokiCion to this conflict One
only has lo reBd the UCLA fewish newv
paper Ha'am to see our various ideas on
peace in the Middle East. Vou . however
provide no possibilities. Is this your
strategic
As lews and Zionitts. we urge dialogue
with Arabs in hope of readiiin. some
possible solutions to the conflict. How-
ever, we don t tee mn^ Arabs stepping
forward to meet us halfway We know of
three Egyptian PLO representatives who
hawe moderate views on the conflia and
two others. S^bn Jins (PLO research
center. New York) and Said Hamammi
(London PLO representative} who have
come out with statements that rnany
Israeli doves feel trt conciliatory towards
this issue, and therefore a step in the
right direaion These are only five out. of
the many Palestinians that exist m the
world today
We jews have several formal organi-
zatkam in the United States — Yo/ma,
Breira, The Jewish Peaie Fellowship, and
in Israel the newly formed Israel Com-
mittee for Israeli-Palestinian Peace who
advQcate. separate but equ^ nai»o*»af
determination for all peoples As it
stands now. the PIO officially wants their
self-determination at the expense of the
Israeli's This cannot be Who gives the
PIO tf>e right to play Cod in determining
who • a people and who is a religion^ It
•sclear tnat any group that diefines
themselves as a people, are a people We
lews recsf^ize the Palestinians as a
pnptr. atid hope that they will soon
have ^ indepandint state of their own
Why ihen cant the PLO recognize the
lews as a people and let them have an
in^ipen4ent state of their own^
While it IS true that Israel is militarily in
control of the West Bank and Caia. she
IS r>oi there out of any great desire to
rule extra territories Rather, she is there
out of necessity Israel was forced to take
over the West Bank in 1%7 because King
Hyssein was massing his troops there in
which to attack her with While we urge
Israel to give back the West Bank and
Gaza as soon as possible in return for a
puaranteed genuine peace, we must not
forget who was in control of the West
Bank and Gazi from 1945^67 and who
was denying the Palestinians their na-
tional self-determination in that period
It was Jordan who had annexed the West
B^r^. andtgypr who had held the Gaza
Strip under military occupation Where
was the Arab world protesting that
blatant denial of national self-
determination'
finally cant you find quotes from
othef /umist philoiophers besides
Thedore Merzl who recognized that
Arabs also lived on the land, like Syrkin.
Pmsker. Ruppin. and Suber? We could
afso quote your leaders most evlrefiiisls
remarks like those of Hawatmah (head of
the Popular Oemocratic FrocM for the
Liberation of Palestine) und Habash^
(head of the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Paleftine). a*|id others, who
still want to- "kick the lews into the Sea",
and who have grandiose plans of a
victory parade on the ruins of Tel Aviv
•ut we try not to because we believe
that such a pfopegwida war will ne^t^r
bring peace Even though they ^re few
ar>d far between, we bend over back
wards to seek out any statements by the
Palestinian leadership which couW ^
interpreted as expressing national self
deSermination for both Palestinians and
Israelis We are even accused by others
of being too naive and trying to r^Mi
between the lines They tell us lo expose
the PLO for what it really iv, We say no
Fnough of this destructive ^w of words
We are searching for their mm4mmm
elements, and we would hope that they
are searching for ours. Because only by
seeking out m%d reinforcing one anothers
moderate elemei its ran a |ust and lasting
peace come about
e
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There iS a 'vl
difference!!! •'
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Pre-Oents
Our last class aver-
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FOR PRESIDENT
l^
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MAY 26
12 NOON
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inmenb InciGx
last Knights' : a clan for all seasons
By Adam Purfrev
••He'd take a drink that was ottered 'im. even
if he*d hatta st^uce/e it outta an armadillo's
assr barks Red Grovcf (Dick O'Neill): Bradlev-
ville, Texas liquor store owner and loyal
retinue of the Knights of the White Magnoha
Red*s speaking of another member Skip
Hampton (John Ashton) who jusi comes to
the White Magnolia's meetingf to gulp down
tome '^buzzard puke" and play dominoes.
L D. Alexander (Charles Cyphers), the
supermarket owner potentate, oversees the
meetings held m a Heabag hotel owned by long-
time member Colonel J C Kincaid (Bert
Conway) Fellow KnightsOlin Potts (ken net h
White) and Rule Phelps (Hcnrv Vernon) cheat
at horseshoes and Milo Crawford (John Dcnnu
Johnston) continually **looks after maw " An
old black. Ramsey-Eyes (Alvin Miles. Jr )
Urkes vigilant guard downstairs in case some-
body unsavory dare try enter the secret meet-
ings
These very plauisible and very funny char-
acters ^ the mood for Preston S Jones' The
Last Meetinx Of The Knights of the Whitt
Magnolia, now playing at the Company of
Angels on Waring .St and Vine As directed hs
Harris Yulin (who was a great C laudius at the
Taper two seasons back). White Magnolia's
humor, ensemble and professionalism is simpl>
astonishing and the show remains a far more
winning ticket than any concurrently running
large theater event
Jones'' fictionali/ed fraternitv ts a cross
between the KKK and the Shriners The White
dinner Take All^
WMte Magnola
frazzled fraternity
Magnolia, as described b\ Cyphers, was a hu§e
organization that steadily lost its members to
the Elks and t)ie Moose lodges Thev all
wanted t' hocaii animals ** he laomu. But all
IS not lost to the seven exunt members Rufc
lound a new recruit from Silver City "Silver
Cityr cnes the C olonei, TU have ncnhing to
do with thoac yellow-bellied soos-of- bitches*-
The Knights convince the senile Colonel io
accept their gawkv new recruit I onnie Ro\
McNeill (Boyd Bodwe(l) He rpim through a
hilarious indixrtn nation ceremony invohmg a
lighted cross and impersonations ol the moon,
the west wind. and. ironicalK enough, mudoai
The Knights' hopes soar can this 4ie» tha«
hefinning t>t a new age fur the White Mag-
nolia* Eventually, through the aid of DPs.
heart att. r>cdipal fit and a case of the runs,
their fauh in their union shrivels up as much at
then squalid meeting rcn^m (superbly 49m§m4
b> Ciarvm Eddy).
Jones' dialogue rings true to the characters,
setting and action, which is lent further
credence bv the actors' nnarvelous ensemble
work There arc dramatic underpinnings to the
Knights' lives, so that they seem three-dime n-
sioned and not cartoon^Hat
Especially fine >n the excellent cast are
O'Neill as the irascible Red Grover. Ht»vd
Bodwell as the chicken recruit and Bert
C onwas as the daft Colonel.
*As a film version has. gone into pre-produc-
tion, this terrific production will not be our last
meeting with the lUtights of the White Mag-
nolia. And for that, we can thank our lucky
horseshoes.
All heart but no soul
By John JB WiKon
There is such an aura of all-Amcrican wholesomeness about
the Huntington Hartford's Winner Take All that one is almost
afraid to attack it. But it is Often the most fearsome targets that
are most worth attacking*" '
Russell Hunter's book* and songs make an adorable little show
out of what should have been astoundingl\ big and pcmcrful one
There is much cuteness to his dialoge but there is no action
Everyone talks and nobodv really acts out what thev arc talking
about. If you don't think about what you are watching, vou may
find this kind of play enjoyable; it has a heart a mile wide but no
soul.
Hunter has done a gross injustice to his source material, the
radical Claflin sisters. A hundred years ago the> were the
darlings of the free thinking set. running an uitra-liberal
newspaper, a stock brokerage firm on Wall Street and a lecture
circuit on which they each took turns espousing equal rights for
all minorities The also believed in free love and abolition of both
the death penalty and the marriage contract Victoria even went
so far as to run for President in 1872. with Frederick Douglass as
'tier Vice Presidential choice The action was both valiant and
vainglorious.
But Hunter shows us onK the vainglorious, painting the
women as -bunko artists wht» bilked Commodore Vanderbill into
hacking their stock brokerage bv posing as psychics (when m
realitv thev were dcvpui spiritualists who believed in the
"otherwhere") He make^ their newspaper's coverage of the
Henrv Ward Beecher scandal into a vendetta (when it was really
used to point up the hypocnsv of those who opposed free love)
As he ultimatelv makes them into babbling buffoons, with which
threatened males can more easilv cope
Patricia Morrison plavs Victoria with a beautiful voice but no
stre^h. The one fervent speech we see her make, when running
for President, is tult of fists pounding the podium but lacks the
mesmeri/ing qualities that make the real woman oar ol the
foremost speakers of her da >
Janet Blairs Tennessee, stuck in a wig and make-up that make
her look like she just got sunburned in a cyclone, is a
simpleminded weak sister who subverts herself to Victoria's
wishes. She is bubbling, buovant and brainless
If Hunter wanted to make a musical xomedv. he whould have
looked elsewhere for material the Claflin sisters, after much
convenienflv overlooked in hisiorv books, deserved a much better
rendering than Winner Take All gives them This show
suKntutes brashness for bra\er\
tmd Blair: weak jfMl buoytmi
More bad 'Breaks' for director Arthur Penn
By Adam Parfrey
Like the plaintive song-cr\
of the jaded seafarer, **W hat
do you do with a drunken
sailor'" director Arthur Pcnn
Mcms to ask. "What do you do
with a shallow script and two
big stars?" Instead of throwing
the project overboard. United
Artists decided to go on with
this confused if fairly interest-
ing disaster called The Missouri
Breaks.
The screenwriter. Thomas
McCfuane. a novelist of merit.
has had interminable problems
in previous translations of his
novels to film He himself
directed the dull 92 in the
Shade and Frank Perrv shot
the ranfid Rancho Deluxe. Bv
now It seems obvK>us his quirk v
plots and offbeat characters
V work better on paper than np
t'flltilotd
1 he Mi5iv>un Breaks
rrrns some cattle r\\<t\
'H
onscientious leader being Tom
I t>gan (Jack Nicholson), a
man who enjoys his business
^ut loathes the consequences
^ wealthv rancher (John Mc-
' lam) hire* on a regulator
framed Lee Clavton (Marlon
Brando) to '•rcfttJate" the acti-
^'«»cs of the horse thieves
'ben comes the showdown
Penn. McGuane. Brando and
"^i^^holson alt must assume
»!uilt in not ipropcrly delmeat-
'"|i or making much sense out
^ <be characters BraaiAa. ac-
»rding to his mood, is a dandv
^•iH an Irnth lih. a coldblood-
<^d mumbler who enjovs skew-
^'ng fmopk throMfh the eye-
^all or a ftmte man of nature
vKho rhapaadi/es to his horses
^"^ ak Brando ts interefl-
M to walch but hare he for-
• kcs dep«h tot meaningless
eiic His iransnion to mur-
derer seems fullv arbitrarv
Why does he steal horses''
Does he care about his woman
(Kathleen Lloyd) or does he
worrv more ab<iut his corn''
Michael Butler's too dark and
washed out cinematographv
further hinders clarity, consc
quentlv. much of Nicholson's
nuaacc aad emoting is lost in
the sfeadowft.
lafrtiue Kathleen Lloyd, with
caref^ll> twee/ed eyebrows, is
dull to look at and hear in a
part that can he described as
nebuloush tndescrihahle . As
her fathc hn McLiam daiS
all he can to create the aristo-
cratic swaggrr his part de-
mands In this he tails but
di^cs extraordinarilv well later
eye His first film, the very
symbolic Mickey One. dis-
played this talent superbly
Over the vears. however, one
can see that his specul trait
especially after Boanie and
Clyde is rapidlv wearing
thin His previous picture.
^iifM Move!i. though an ab-
sorbing failure, was a failure
iionethcleit. Penn's fatal flaw
seems to lie in his inability to
make a satisfying total impres-
sion, rather than truncated
pieces of aaprandi/ed trifles
in
[IV
•fne
: skewered
fii
h
— iv^nn II iffM' Mg Miw. Bun
nir and ( lydei li ^ spi
fine sfvhv* even m iv.
Mill, (here afe interesting
turns of plot and it*s enjoyable
to watch Baaado's quirky per-
fnraMacf tmi hear John Wil-
liams* equally eccentric per-
«.nssi\e score The stars cost
three milliorv dollars out of a
V million dollar p' It
th«^ bit of'stuiiH) 'a/ing
ma^ ^ ks the BreakN
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the Classes You Missed, and Borrow
Their Notes.
Paragons make it to classes; talce good notes and
get good grades.
Then ttieres the rest of the world.
So right now. while there's still time, hunt down a
Paragon, bring their notes to us, and well copy them
for' you — FAST Then you and the generous
Paragon will have time to study them, -ind you'll
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may be a V^iXdii^n ^
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^f9m Samtnar
WOMEN'S WEEK
MAY
By Hi ,_
Tbe dale was May 17, 1954 when UnHed Sutet Cbief Justice
^arl Warren aanoiuMd a unamnouf Supreme Court daciBK>n la
iavor of aa ll-year-<^ Black *'rr*tT acbool girl tmmmk L«iia
ferown in the case oi *Brown Vertut the Board of EJmbImi of
Topeka, Kansas. *
The unanimous decision of the US Supreme Court rulsd tiMt
lation of children m puhAic icbeak solely on the hMit of
deprives the children of a minority group of equal eiacataofi
opportunities.
Author Richard Kluger has written a thorough, lengthy
histoncal account of the Supreme Court Case titled Sia^it
iwtice (Alfred A knopf, $15.95, 823 pages). The author's
descriptions of the arduous high court battle vividly explain the
difficulty of reaching the decision on segregation a& exemplified
hy accounu of how some of the highest government officials
argued that segregation does aot deprive children o( equal
education if the physical facilities and other tangible factors are
equal. ^
Klugcr, a former executive editor of both Simon and Schuster
and Atheneum Books and author of two previous books (Wlien
t^e Rough Breaks and National Anthem), gives a clear
impression that the 1954 court decision was perhaps the most
significant judgment in the 200-year history of the United Surtaa.
Occurring nearly 100 years after the Emancipation Pro-
clamation, the 1954 high court decision, as described in Simple
Justice, may have been falsely optimistic
Wiih the United States' Bicentennial Celebration only a few
months away, the country's public schools have been made an
instrument of social change which Simple Justice tends to
overlook
Klugcr's book doesn*t mention that there is still only a small
percentage of Black schoolchildren attending classes with white
children.
Simple Justice is filled with descriptions and analgias of over
100 court cases and offers an inside view of the National
Association lor the Advancement of Colored People's (NAACP)
work toward integration Black political efforts involving the
^grcgaiion issue and desegregation efforts are examined by
Kluger in an informative manner, with clear accounts of Howard
Umversity Law School's development, led by noted Supreme
Court Justice Thurpaud Marshall.
Simple. Justice appears to inform the reader more than
n^sary about topics unrelated to the book's primary issue —
SQfRgation in the public schools. The segregation and de-
s^egation issues are still heavily challenged and debated today,
with the controversy over the busing of school children across
communities receiving a great amount of exposure by the mass
media across the nation while filling courthouse and local
schoolboard agendas nation-widc on a regular basis
Although Kluger's book doesn't include most of these after-
effects of the 1954 US Supreme Court decision, it serves its
purpose for the most part as an informative historical reference
book.
/ ^^
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books to hdp you enjoy,
understand, and protect
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SerKJ now for our
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•fHl K PT» Womfn s fl^iu«< r ( f>f«««r 0€tP Siudi^i Km%xs\*u>.i, ( ,Minr.l
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LSAT?
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points after taking our
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power to get into the
law school of your
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Sponsored By
Cultural Affairs Commission
of the Student 1 ftgi«ttati\/A rn^^nrlt
■»-*i
^mm
wtDfcAL OPPORTUMITY 1 'Doris Day*
LffJ
tla?T?il
(213)477
^79-5255
HAIR DESIGNS
FOR MfcN A WOMfcN
|C>ur ClicMt Nm<|s arc ^wmyt
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CASA DE ROBERTC
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C ufting by Mr RoWfto 477 5220- hy Appc
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•fi«OCIiS 0#UqiA.o<»»»iwo< a Houft MonOOv S<Wu»<JOv 9 ft
By JiilMi JB WibM
All tho»c who have inickcrcd
at Dons Day*» tcrccn imafe
over the years will no doubc be
surprised to discover that the
•Ur herself joins the snicker-
iag in her autobiography. Dorii
Day, Her Own Story ( written
with A E Hoichner, a Wil-
liam Morrow book, 305 pases
$8.95) ^
That is hardly the greatest
revelation in this intelligent
..and candidly written book
which unravels Day's life story
in first person narrative It
•cems that Miss Goodie-Go-
^ucky has had her share of
difficult limes, trials and trau-
mas And she tells it all in the
form of a soul-searching docu-
ment ♦
Day started as Dons Mary
Anne von Kappelhoff in the
German section of Cincinnati,
Ohio, learning about her pa-
rents' divorce when she heard
her father and mother's best
friend in bed in the room
adjacent to hers At 13, her
hopes for a career as a dancer
were shattered when a tram
collided with the car m which
she was riding home from »
performance At 18, jhe was
married to a jealous psycho-
path, who beat her even when
she was pregnant with her first
and only child. Terry.
At the height of her success.
she was married to a third
husband who was despised by
everyone in the industry for
being a bloodsucker who used
the star Marty Mclcher creat-
ed a paralegal, and often to-
tally illegal financial empire
from her income, which disap-
d^he pillow talk
peared into dust just before he
died By 1961, Dons Day had
spent 20 years in the film
busineia, creating the fantasies
which sustained many a frus-
trated houaewife. and had
nothing financially to show for
it
It is one of the ironies of the^
book that Day declares
throughout her desire to have
pursued the life of a housewife
~ to have led a simple, happy
and contented Ii4^f obscunty.
It is a fantasy fMared in her,
mind since she saw her own
parents' marnage disintegrate
The first person narrative is
accompanied by the comments
and recollections of friends,
relatives and co-workers, all of
whom speak of her as a kind,
considerate and totally pro-
fessional
In the bo(»k*f final ironic,
note. Day closes her narrative
by pointing out that while
millions may adore her as a
movie star, she has no major
love interest in her own life. "W
everyone loves- me so much,
how come I'm alone?" she
aaks. How come indeed^ Her
book reveals the woman with
the plastic screen image to be
an intelligent, loving and warm
human being
Of «Mti« ky NMrt
Day: ladtien bMieatfi
.1 I '■!
n
4
Here now!
,The great HP 27 — 200.00
scientific, financial, statistical
non-programmable calculator
HP 25 — formerly 195.00
now 165.00
Sale of Demonstrator models:
HP 45 (scientific)
HP 55 (scientific)
HP 70 (financial)
I
195.00 worth of FREE
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Hn« of H«wtoM-Pack«r
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•«»ctron,cs b te^<1 7wttti school supplies) mckfmm\
-7711
mon-thurs 7 45-7 30. fn 7 45-6 30 sat 10^
Cubs
^
: II
-^ iy Gregg L. E(
DB Sports Reporter
In all the clamor about
UCLA's stolen playoff benh, a
couple of things have been
forgotten that should be noted
First, the Bruins would have
never gotten the opponunity to
be denied if not for a couple of
freshmen. Iim Auten aruf Steve
Sphtl
Second, and more import-
antly, ihese two labored most
of the icason m relative ano-
nymity on a team that won a
league championship, had a
.771 winning percentage, and.
of course provided the fire-
power for that miraculous
-comeback i^|Mit iiSC
That team is the UCLA
junior varsity baseball team
Under the direction o{ two
year coach Mike Gerakos, the
JV team was 18-3 m Southern
California Baseball conference
play, won its divisiqn. and then
defeated Chapman for the title
They were 27-R-bverair. beat-
ing use two of the three times
they met It was a remarkable
record for the "Cubs." as thc\
caH themselves., and in some
ways even more astonishing
when viewed in detail
The JV team acts strictly as
a farm club for the varsity
Ihis means that its members
can be. and often are. callled
-up to the big club when the
varsity coach decides he needs
some help This is fine for the
varsity, but at times leaves the
.IV 1X3 shambles
"Wc had pitchers playing m
all different positions." related
(ierakos •'In fact, some of our
los.ses can be attributed to the
fact thai we had to play every-
one, even pitchers, and some in
spo's thev were unfamiliar
with-
in these circumstances,
strong leadership becomes im-
perative due to the disheart-
ening effects of shuffling the
team around It was provided
by Gerakos, a former UCLA
baseball player now working
for his masters in physical
education His stressing of
"Cub" pride provided the foun-
anonymity^ wn tide
dation on which the skills of
the baseballers could be built
This pride led to a team effort
that was a tribute to both the
coach and his players.
In speaking of the success of
the JV team. Gerakos stressed
the fact that there was not one
outstanding star, each ^pteytr
was an integral part of the
team and had to be counted on
to do his best if the Cubs were
to do. well _ ,
**For the most part we just
bad nine players," said Ger-
akos •'That meant that every-
one was going to play and
have to put out "
And put out they did. as the
aforementioned Auten and
Sphtl, along with teammates
Tromba. Combs. Johnson.
Spillane. and others gave l(K)
per cent every game They
played in front of "crowds" of
20 people and less (usually
relatives) for the chance to
play for the varsity, but also
just to play the game
T hr team was led bv Jitn
Auten. a very personable fresh-
man from Van Nuys. who var-
sity coach Gary Adams terms
as potentially one of the great-
est hitters UC LA has ever had
he batted a sensational 4()2
with four homers and 14 dou-
bles He possesses a •*rrfle*'
(baseball parlance for out-
standing throwing arm) and
displayed that talent more than
m the use series (ier-
akos calls Jini "the most con-
sistent plaver we had on the
team "
Steve Sphtt. that "preitv boy
from San Dicgo" and more
recenflv "miracle t^orker." hit a
solid 333. whacki-ng seven
homers to lead the team The
best pure hitter on the sqtiad.
Spli'ti \»ill definitely sec a lot of
varsitv action next vear?
A key for this year's icam
was Its defense
A rule most knowledgeable
baseball men abide by is that a
team must be strong up the
middle if It expects to liucceed
And the Cubs weren't lacking
here either
I he keystone comhinaiion of
\..
A<W»'
'«f fr ■ ►• » ••■ •**! M'
Nf S
IMHTKO AflTISTS, WKST1IK>00
•m tthiff. la r» in ewpfl \in \m m\ ^m iv^ in ^s «M^n
vntm
P9
vmtn >• MM tei «f NHrfi afvisn
shortstop Kelly Combs (318)
and lecoad baseman Rick
Dosul (298) provided an out-
suhding double play undem.
with cenierfielder speedster
Tom Spillane ( 280. 15 stolen
bases) roaming the outfield for
errant fly balb
r At first base Craig Johnson
combined both power (7 HR*s)
and average (286) and ex-
hibitad super potentuil for a
freshman Judd Wallenbrock
was undoubtedly the best de-
fensive third baseman in the
league as he commuted luat
nine errors all season
Rounding out the JV\ oi
tense were catcher nm Am-
mentropp who batted a hard
280, and desigruited hitter Joe
Unden (2.34)
Pitching IS the kty to any
team's fortune and the JV's
were blessed with many fine
hurlers. particularly Ray
Iromba An intense compet-
itor, fromba relied on a sink-
ing fastball and the artistry of
changing speeds on his pitches
More often than not opposing
hitters uould beat his pitches
into the ground, where thev
were easily gobbled up hv the
SUMMER
JOBS JOBS JOBS
College trained n\er\ and
women will be considerad to
supplement our parmanent
staff in di^strict offices
throughout the US These
posrtions are full or part-time
summer lobs We are taarch-
mg for applicants who are
ambitious dependable and
hard working Excellent op-
portunity for^ advancement
You .may continue to work
on a part time or full time
baais next fall if you desire
For'distnct office addraas. or
for appomtment with our
local manager call Robbie
after April 18th 9 am to 3
p m Monday through Friday
at 213— 47«-0422
wfield behind him.
_ . hts record to ^
2 with a microscopic I 30 ERA
and was calked up to the big
club late in the season for
additional pitching depth
Lou RodrifiM2. the only
»ophomore , on the team.
sported ao 8-1 record on the
year
"He's done a good job."
commented Coach Gerakos.
"His most important asset is
that he believes in himself and
he*s a real battler He's got a
good fastball "
Dave Rucker (6-1). Phil Ru-
land (5-3), and Scott BoUeas
(2-1) rounded out the staff
Rucker was up on the varsity
occasionally and Bollens did
an excellent job as fireman,
racking up 9 saves Gerakos
feels Bollens is a darkhorse
with a good sinking fastball
and. perhaps more import-
antly, a lot of poise in tight
situations.
h was the second straight
league title for the JV team
and It > a measure af how
uttfkortant thu program is that
niae . of the fourteen who
played varsity this year were
JV members last year In fact.
It would hardly be an exagger-
atuM to say that it is oa the
JVi where the players learn
*nd refine thetr skilb and on
the varsity where they put
those skills' to
With this
Auten, Splitt, Spillane.
Tromba should definitel> help
the varsity aeal year Each of
the other JV members has the
potential to make the big 'club
and could easily jump into a
starting positMM. Another yaar
of satMAing Will probably
await these fine young pros-
pects, however
The JV taaajTlhis year
played with a determination
and pride only seen in the
highest quality teams They left
a lega I winning in adverse
conditions. %yith no recognition
or praise, and without having a
set team.
r
i
5
EARS PIERCED FREE
with purchase of
' 7.95 Earrings
Birk's Jewelers of Westwood
9^ Westwood Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90024
Phone 477-8009 879-5313
__ The African Studies Center
presents
Boniface I. Obichere
lecture
and Development
in Contemporary Africa
Wednesday 3:00 pm
2150 Bunche Hall
They re here-Sailor. the spectacular
English band with the amazing new sound—
for thei r first U. S. appearance ever!
Sailor's already tx)wled over Britain and
conquered the Continent with a sensational
stage show and two fantastic hit tunes, "Glas
of Champagne ' and "Girls. Girls. Girls." Now
they re moving on America, with a coast-to-
coast tour and a brand-new album called
Trouble ' (includes their
hits). Don t miss them!
Sailor Let them
show you a good
time. On Epic
Records.
CSSTAMiyi VA Ci«t«i4-M«IM4 MMCf U A dty di
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CLASSIFIED^D
J.
TiM ASUCLA Cowwwuwicaliow
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lorffiM B poiiC|f on
Advertising apses will not bm
aswAflols w% ttis Doity pcuivi lo onyons
srlie dlscrtmlnatss on ths basis of
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ma AtUCLA CoMNNunlfatlOfts
» insssdpalsd any of tt«a sor-
vtcas advsrtlssd or sdvsrtlsors roprs-
sanlod in this Issus Any parson bs-
llovlng that mn advartlsamont in this
isaua Mawiaa Ma Bddid s podoy oit non-
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CATHY~1 ,4dr. 1
i IRWia VPB bnh
B# RBVB yni
bi Ipsa, lar^
NMM)
CSRadtewiMlad||llOaadMd.1
aid. l-baeb FM ataroo raf. Illd aad
Md. Radarf dSd^lTM aflsr %/
(10 M M)
WOOOCN RanaN - KdM.'
■Mdb hatchcttitttaw ^T^^
hatchcovora. noMRip a'rdao iL^^
•rdlos A b.aa.TidddriS^';^.
N Adip,(liadd) 7S
•-jr
(MM 27)
(It MIT)
(■MM)
MAY
ri«Jt>
(•MM)
a. dia
OtYMRUS OM-I MO M n«i 1J
(MJE)
dddTiiaady ip ay.47»-7dl2.
WELCOME
ofPM
II
LJi.C.-Mappy21al
Laoa la you A only
Halp tram W.V O.)
aorsHai-
%AJL. (wMl
NMM)
(MMM)
na«M»
STEREO aawpaasala: Stttdant dia
VaNay ^Ml -MAS. Ml .2Ma.
CM
•dr ddld
. ■•■
••
BEAUTldUL lata oMdai apip
pletua I1M Hurry! Mual aad
r L« SRdip
(10 M M)
dICCARTNCY AMD WMQS
MEY AMD WINGS M aaaa(
laR. nMN aad Oass 374-ddM
MCCART.
(Id M M)
SMaRWOOD «aaaNor-M«m
d.t% THO. 1J FW ■■imMiRi
aid. •24- IdM. niwdiii
la/anannal,
. •wiandta
(1^ M M)
an. ate Sat dtoy 22-Juna 1 lldSS
Ma. 4. 47d-21M. .^j, ^ «^.
(10 M Sd|
dK>VtNQ
120.
IM/2
(10 M M)
ir TV. IM Cdd
1118
s
SAW
(10 M M)
TOY Fo« Tarrisr
-IMS.
#ti M 9m\
FRai: 0
Cod 271.
mn- pdrt OoroMn shopord
(11 M27)
^HWwifti mil i—
SANTA
lor UCLA
. - _ ••••^•"duraMasloraadn.
df 3 bra. dwn. diru Fd. bapinnlnf S:1S
am doslllons will last thru and ol
ars an a C4
i13N2t)
^od a d d a a oo a^o o > • ^ ^ ^
^ fERSOHAt
h
Auontotm Honni
for two 3 act pidys
(rolds oppn to dil dgds)
hmifc schotarahipa srs svsws6^s
in fhm toitowing workshops
^ ACTING
DIRECTING
PLAYWRITING
DANCE
CALL US AT
§37.3011
r^B— rch SMbj#cts
•SYCHOLOOY
• dm and 1 i
•/11/71.
(14 J 2)
CASUALLY OR SERKMISLY DATdiia.
SONRLUS
THER
EARN II
n4M2S|
MMALE aaaallal and flwtlat
lbi(
(12m2S)
dHT. rdiM.
(12 J 2)
.1
>.d77.
(It Obi
♦
J^J^Iralydnf . For
CLASSIFIED
wanted
f
HdiR Sdff ^ Hdlping OStprt
$S-$aO/monlh tor ~
icmmahmrmd
UNQtNTI
HYLANO DONOR CENTER
1001 Gdylpy Ava.. Was
47S-00S1
^JJJM^I Monofomont. Clorlcol d
T a BN^OVMBNT AQCNCY
(Foa 4 Froa)
ddfvicdd ofior^ travdl
hL
SM.
id7
MEDICAL SCHOOLS ABNOAD
Hawmg admiaaions pfddldmt tor
madicai schpoT
WE CAN HELP YOU*
For bddimaiiuii wnta to
•4S pddidy Avd
hdip
1 wwitod
'«
RNOTO Lad Tach Sludant poalfton
vB^ BMHMM
S5
Apply Campus Sb*.
biiais Juna 1
fid M aat
1d-1l hra.
WtF, iMI
•ddtAppH
Mb, «Md
iddim.1
f batwsa
n 10 • 12 nana.
(IS N 27)
WAMTBO
lorOMAT.
Mar bi
dddaRai
dMSi A anadad pmp
r7waabddyaSaaM44
(19 M M)
7iS-Sl21 ar 4
(liJS)
NOUSEdAINTING QraSa
folng psopis Youtlilul
(1SMM>
ataiospdoro.
WANT $ $ $ ?
■ 1— -H^' ""uu^jnoui ins WLA sn
STUDENTS' oarn up la ISdd* /wb I 1 H^^'^- atCRETAS
Nadonm OfRea S^ply Cd. naada lud I E^'^ '^^ OdERATOi
d pan dma ha^^^NMna. Esoryona 2!!SS^^' WAREHOi
M/hr. Draw agaldil M T-imrTT '" ^ 'V!"" ^^'^^V '^ ^
No asaarlMMn MM>**AmrM /».» m. days* ddid holtdawfl' Wm i
M/hr Draw agilinl M
No aaparianca nocoaaary. Call Nr
Rdfara. dSd-CMl. 0-2
(II J 4)
UMMER
JOBS
^m can g.vo you moMpy. ^^y ,„^
WoKtbility dur.ng dia summer months
by laii.ng our tamporary assignmonts
throughout tha d^LA sros If you Sf«
?iLi2r!i.*jj£r'^^"^ ^ccTiiis
S2^^!i* ORERATOR. KEYPUNCH
ORERATOR. WAREHOUSENAN. or
Vy-'yf-- ^ "•^ VOU1 Coma
" t ^iglNi Idday No faas' Nams your
days' Hm hoddays' Wm naod you
t
/ . 1 T-OtRfyT-dUN
ASUCLA Travsl Ssrvlos
UCLA ObaHar FbpM da
ITd RRl lod WW Id
in
MR Id
LAX-Amslsrdaiii-LAX
^NfM • n^MRp, # PI
11C75
12C75
15C75
iac76
22C76
23C76
27C7e
30C76
Jund 21 1 1
Jund2l 12
Jund2S 5 .
NATIONAL
Wa Sarrlnft^ P|pM. w.L A 11744
Wlishirs 477.ddM. d7t.33l7 WIfli
mora than M yra. aaparlanca Halp
Id dludy-ratain.faiaa-alaop. foo our
>
• Movs fwmilurs (saavrtonesO). 14 .M/hr
• Tutor aonM. ersll. gym a wroaHIng
•1
a Clathlnf «•!•• t2.M/hr tor isl wS lo
ta.Tt/hr.
10 T
. CALL
f
MOVING Koaldantialaparifoants.
•Jdaaa. Usia/smail )ods Local d lona
2»»tonaa Cad Bamay 3dd-d7M anyiinuT
MOVINQ7 Apartnwnt apaalalial to
aludonta and hupo Irucli 111 00/hr.
3 podm aaparlanca OTA-ddtt
7' ■ nd J 3)
Junp29
Juiy 5
Julys
Julys
July IS
sa u tmk m
10
4
4
i3
I4M
pm
$429
1429
UCLA EUROPE
CHARTER
SPECIALS
LA-LON-LA
NOW OPENf
_ . Thp
CHNMTINE SMAW
FACIAL SALON
TtC JOB
fiCTCPY
lis
ddun Alao caurt rantal BranI
asaa. 472
Wgltorun _ __
t7S/wb pbM mom and
«>•
'If I 9\
10 yrs plus with awn
or passonfor •aif Mon>FrL
DdlVER-COUNdELOW
Odmp. 1t yrs plus «
•■••" or passonfor
1128/wb. Cal 3M-10M
SALLET: Wun way ta Soauty 'l3dd
"^^^ "nd Unhr YWCA. 174 Nd-
(II J 2)
joa
tima I par
Tharala
^^^M» \#aR
'ur virtualty unflmitad.
you but your-
(II J 3)
Ml-Mdl
(II J 3)
STUDENTS & I
TEACHERS
WELCOME AT
KELLY GIRL!
Men snd Women: Earn
extra money during summer
break while enjoying a
variety of temporary assign-
ments. We provide tempo-
rary jobs for all clerical
ar>d/or industrial skills.
^WORK WHEN YOU
WANT, AS OFTEN AS
YOU WANT. •YOU
DONT PAY US - WE
PAY YOU!
Intormodlolos. odvoncod • lossona.
•21 Ipaclai ralaa. 2 ar mora eloaaaa
ily Icana Sorata. Oiallnnulshad
-r/tmmm. Ml MM
' (MQR)
A RRNiAL ALTIRNATIVE IN LOS AN-
~ t; J»-MO TRAMRNI CENTIR.
COdWY AYE. dSSaS. Ml Wdl.
(MOlr)
LERNAN
MovInQ
§S7-214S
_ lApartmantt. Officpa
[ProldddlOfMt SdrvicM for P^nutt
dLUS..RRANKFURT. ZURICH
HAWAII . . .
(
LA-iddMiULm
LA-HONOtUtU
)
MEXICO...
MAZATLAN air 4 lodQ fr IHdM
NEW YORK...
1.2;} wks roufxJtfip on TWA fr iMd-W
PLUS. Cdr RonWN LidoMi...S>R
rpll/Eurpll ppaaaa. ..Accomodd-
tlona ...Studdnt Fllghta witliln
Europd/Adid ..Inlornallondl Stu
1.0.
tV UR Omt tot
JMWiNaBF Oy fB s
trM« MMkauM • OfWm
FRtOROASMIC? Wmnan wRa
(1^J2)
PNtE TRAVEL mt ffiSff LRdQi
ASH US FOR ANYTHING YOL
WANT TO KNOW ASOUT
~" V«J
(HOir)
W-TON EXPRESS
MOVERS
Rich
NdWd«SS1-M27
i
asocla/^
TRA/EL StRVICE
^'dWn A-213 turn
(IdOdl
•*
47»41d1
It! J 4)
Call US 8-5:30 p m daily or
9 am - 1 p.m Saturcjays.
KELLY SERVICES INC
Fullerton 7 14-879-9702
Long Beach 213-432-S791
Lod Angalea i2l3-
Bewaiiy Bfvd 668-6750
WUahifaBM. 361-7961
HoiHiSaWa 213-724-6910
Newport Beach 714-633-1441
^ 714-547-iSSS
213-792-4176
213-642-1569
Van Nuys 213-763-2530
Westchester 213-645-0750
Westwood 213-477-3951
Whmier 213 696 9M7
equal opportunity employer
R^UTO INSURANCE
DTORCYCLE INSURANCE
ELECTROLYSIS. Unwontod fpolpl d
•dio matdad. Froo aonauHation. Ma.
ai. 477 41M.
(MORI
ISC
iNrtHNATlONAl STUOCN
MnwiUG • MMuN<
UJ7I MHpSfSaMMu
t S Osiiv
rouni' rouns
^Nortnsrn CsKfofms F.o*m.«,.
• lutfvnl *•).
I •n«c«« and toOftng
''"OOdt It leers*
• r>g» In
• pTlWr* and
CanWr of HnRywodd. SMI
^ 111.
IHiii
d d d
CM OH
Orsnge
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE NSSURAMCl
Mia ar Fsad dSd-lddd.
ntoin
• Beet
IWIOR)
2 TO ta
-•AY RUONTS M
CALLaK>NW
ffvcaaas4738
i
t
-A
•- -tm
■te*a
J'.
1
t
* ■
i
4
travel
rid— offered
^•7-
I
I
I
t
I
I
I
^sf^-^fi'
fA
^o
I it:
LOS ANQCLES
PMOFCttlONAL CLUB
1400 WMtwood Blvd L A C« 90024
(213) 879-912V (213) 477-1162
TOC CHAHTEfl FLIGHTS
TO EUROPE
(Loli of Others)
Utn PncmfQC
ISC
Tokyo. Hoii«
LOW Cost
Hoofl Talps.
London. Psrla. Modrld. Zurich. Mow
Voffk. wm^ Howai. For dMM mH 474-
3211 (days). 47S-lfii (ovm).
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charter Flight Service
0>tef 1000 fliqhti to Europe this
Summer • Dtscounted Student
♦tights to Europe • Charters ♦'-'
Ha\**aii and Weiico • Student
Faculty discounts on car purch<i
**s rentals and leases • Study
fours • Camping Tours • Ur
"^ "•: CJ Student Tours • «dii
• Fly drive European ar
r.r i. rnents • Mint Tours • Motpt
Accomodation • Hostel Inform. >
•^ • International Student ID
Is • Free travel counseling •
:-aPO Travel Library
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING'
TOURS & TRAVEL
spring Summer A Fall CiMnvrs'
1. ondon
-Shannon
Pam
Madrid
-Franlifurl
BruvMiia
Zurich
Roundlrip from S2M 00
Hawaii and n*w yorfc
Roundtrip from $189 OC
NEW STUDENT TOURS
JAPAN
Jun« 26 -July t#, 1976
July 17.Augutt 6, 1976
Contact Chhstio at EXPO
•25-0831 or A-213 Ackormon
Studont UrWon
LOMDOW fmm LA R*Mrv«d t^at Mckat.
On* way nmm P»nny RinowooO Al
•74-77M (lay«/tM-4f 70 avat
(23 J 3)
CHAMTERS and vacation packofoa
dn Pmrt Am 747 to Hawaii 'OuoJawjlL
8 Amartcon/Euroaa CoM lUrry
ISC also runs local mrmm tours
by car mntl bus at minimurr rrtf,\
{22 Om
r 1
■■ •ntofmatton
r
9 6 Daily
• • • #
r
ASOCIA^
TRAe. SERVICE
Unlofi A.313 {turn EXPO)
- larir
1221
LOWEST FARES
Wo mmk9 onr't moot for alfiioot
half faro Fly to:
MMdIo Eaot
•OOK now T.G.C FLIGHTS
CALL
EURASIA TOURS N TRAVELS
274^361
Opon Saturdays
iS.Tf . 4t7>m3. 2133 W
In
(23 0tr)
CMJJ^*« MaliaiM ^ UnNpm. ^
NoNdaya froir England - tnrtuiiai i
trip alrfara A ho«al~tompla e
hoUdaya (2 wlu about 12S Mghor):
Coala Srava tit; Mapla. S133; Maiorca
tllJ: Vanloa t102: Timla $13S SmoI
S!L ^^^"^ «133; Canary Manda
1173; Munich $133; Alhana tISS Corfu
tlS3r Crala 3210: Rhodn 1210 -- aod
"••^ynwra. Can Undrax 8f1-370S lor
f9»^^mnon% mnd lor aM. ot your traval
(23 M 28)
Smrvtng fhm UCLA Community
y^f^^fy I CHS (partial iistifMM)
Ovae 300 flights A dalas with dapartur.s
♦rem April thru Octobar stay 2 to 21 «vaa4is
Fram/Ma. Oalaa TTsaai riio,
^ Ta
^ uu- AH iffa-^/m 14 4aa
2^S JX 7 13^24 ia 4ai
^flF- BM 7 10^25 • «M
'B i/as^i3 11 43a
8t 7/Oa^t2 10 43a
a? 7 24-6/29 • 4ia
•3 7/M-ft/04 • 4tf
84 7/34^12 7 42t
•7 t/Q»-tl^0S •% 4tt
AS 7/05^-30
CM 7/ 14-9/ 16
Ej t/Oft-ailB
£j 7/QMI/30
JX 7 '17-6^13
BM 7/l7.a/9
fcj 7/Ol<8^01
EJ 7/06-10/06
CARS IN EURO^
RENT on SUY
CIAL REOUCTIONS to
TEACHERS A STUDENTS
FREE CATALOG
EUROCARS
SUNSET BLVO . LA. IBS
271-
niRORE from 8381.
N.V.C. 81SS.
Cal Jack (313) 273-7S22.
(23 0kD
«s
tAX-
HAWAII 6 2
NYC , 3
■^j^
Irom 6166
from I
ORIENT Many datas ..^..,^
Cohiacf ASTrA to- ovar 200 othar fi.ghit
«"th daparturas from L A San Franc«aco
Chicago aoaton. Htm Varn. mioaniiniuii O C
•Chanarnag •aQuifa6idavaOiiancaiN»o«..r,g
P"cf> s.ipiact to 30% inciaaaa
SAdr
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL, iaateoast --^laa
YOUTH. Europa 1 yr trom6a07
APEX. 22 45 60dayadw toOO& 6««« fro«n6440
TAHITI SUPER DEAL S37»
• ORDER NOW
TRAIN A FERRY TICKETS. CARS,
CAMPER RENTALS. RAfLPASSES I
INTRA-EUROPEAN STUDENT
CHARTERS
SPECIAL RIVER OFFER
'■♦/aO LAS VEGAS COt.OAA0O RIVCR
AfTiNG OAANO CANYpN inci 3 nitas
hoial 3 days rafltng w'gaa« 6 niaaia dmnar
9how ail tranapo«tatton sighfaaa«r>g |3«i
TOURS
JAMAICA. 6 days
ITALY tftaaya
LON PAa AMS IS days
Mexico 6 MM
HAMTAii 6 days
BlCCNTENNIAL 8 daya
NCw voMM <:rr^ % day*
Nany oOia««. long t aliort. budgat 6 daiuna
hotats cars aaaiaadcAMlBviwaanalMlwONt.
PSA FRf C counaiLMio
isssr»aWaws. Ttckal OaMwavy
OOffN ai F «6-a ALL Vf AR
ALSO ANNOUNCING OUR NEW
ACADEMIC YEAR FLIGHTSft
1676-77. -QalUana 6 L A7
DspanRaium Mootn^ »>..«• ^irt«i OaacMina
•6/20/76^21/77 ,o. $419 Jurw 17
8/26/76-6/21-77 ff) |4y« Juna 25
9/22/76-6/2177 « $419 July ?^
|CI EE STUDENT TRAVEL (477
9166
v^^
^^\^ts^'
t
I
I
I
I
DRIVING 10 Mtchigan mid Jufia RMara
6li or part way S^iara a»par
'30 J 4)
MEEDS dnvar Ijor aiy car io
]f^*j' P«y 1100 Laaving Juna 14|h
****** <20 M 28)
tutorinn
SASIC PHOTOOAAPHY
Enrollmant •tarttr>g now for Thursday
•v«ning« baginniog May 27 Radgeni^ia
rataa m^ivKlualizad 'ostruction %i\i-
<ldnts muat hava futly ad)uttabia camara
8 iigritmaiar Fully aquippad <imrkfoorr
avaiiabia
ART'S FHOTO
3181 SwfiadI, LJk. Ca. 80038
(313) 413-3343
LSAT
Frofram apacMcally
LSAT 8 ala hmm
forRMr-TS
lavMloni ai
alructor Saat praparaflon avaNdMa dt
any prioa 880. Far mmn ^nfo-rnaS9ii
Cdjt 371-2314 TiMd. Tliwra. dr Frl
aaanliifa or wiNa le Law Soorda. Soi
1037. Bavarty HMa. Ca 80213.
_^_^_ (34 J 3)
EXPERIENCED
I GUITAR laai
* df HQi/iUMli
Fraflc^
''•vIdwIorflfMla.
Ffwich Dapl 408-1740.
GUITAR
df lORi/vodli muaic. VoMT hema/i
I. rm iwdapawddRi A
-3210.
**■ (34 M 30)
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
3017 Sdnid MofiteAjMag.
In
Santd Monica
LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION
TEST PREPARATION
la^ma Juna 19 lof July 24
Taal
-GMAT court* bagins Juna 5 for
July 10 last
SPEED READING cowraa bafflna
Juna 28
•CAREER GUIDANCE
82S-442S
LSAT. ONE. MCAT. GMAT Tulortng
all sublacts Raaaonabia raias A
MandaH Education Canlar 1736 Waal-
wood 475 5183. 1081S Vanica 837
8474
(34 Olr)
ENGLISH
ancad ESL laachar n 1 11 all 1
Ooya. avaninga. waaliawda. 378-
•o UCLA compua. WaiUnf
" 470-3373
(34 0irt
MATH TMtoKRf ^ mJk.
ORE
"00.
(34 0lr)
JAZZ PIANO/ ALL STYLES Loom Joy
craoting your own OHnff. JuOlord Ao-
^vddch to iiiiliwaiilaiii. J
c1 IhaoraOcol
LSAT. __ ^
Individual, amall O^oup T^atructloii.
007
(34 0lr)
CHINESE Mondorln Poliinf ..^latlao
I?^*^'' ••''-•■P«'»«»»cad wim CoM
Crodonlfdl Indlvlduol. omoM
•SS-ISOS.
— — — (34 0lr)
typing
t^^-
t^\
I
I
I
ISROPESSIONAL WRITING. EDITING
MDEXING. RESCAPCH feOOlCS
JOURNAL ARTICLES. DISSERTA-
TI09IS. PROPOSALS JAMES WNTTER-
FIBLO WEST HOLLVWOOO 331-8000.
(38 J 3)
TYPING af f>oma RodddnaMo fMod; ndoi
Can HaWn at 381-8331
(38 J 3)
IddtSfbund
tOST: DidRidnd f^ m VMdfa na»
l^adorol SonH Groot aontHnantal
•Mod. Rdowd. OMnd. 874.0Src
ridMoflM^Ml
ElMWLanOii iidiH6dld6Rd>a
<RiiNilo
typiiHi
^
XEROX 2- 2C
ftiinmixKi
osEin KiNKos rrzr
PROFESSIONAL wrilor wltR S.A In
EnfOah (UCLA) artO topo and dMI
d«B. 0«or 38
EXPERT -NcHmcal typinf moth acian-
**€-Oftoao«. diaaortationt boolis-daya
VS-
OSQirl
KAV Typing adltlng Englialt grad
Diaaartatftona apaciaity Tarm popart,
latlart IRM 828-7473.
(38 OTR)
Lofdl Socrotory Noor coinpiM. 478-
(28 J 4)
TYPING.
Top
popora. otc.
Judy {%Jk.
(28 0lr)
TYPMQ: Foot
Sdldctrtc Tarm
f a%
Low
Mam. Com 478-1133.
M.A.
(38 J 4)
LIGHTNING TYPING CO
7ha8ta Spacialiat
frmm Etltmatatj
PROFESSIONAL COLLEGE TYPING
• SPEOALI8T
Tarm papora. Tlioait. Diaaartalient
Faaturat-f Of«H|n Langua^at. Sciancat.
Mam. Tablat Diagrams Muatc Etfittng.
Coonaallng. Xaroalng. Printing. Binding
8tvdant Ralat 3M-3191
DILLV
1043-131hStfooi. Santa
303-3721 or 308-8303.
r3SM37l
Ptidno 478-2747(daya) or 837-3008
(oaod.)-T68inifcUrdioa. ^ao J 4)
HEAVY Nta typinf ..larm pppara. olc
Vary raoaonaMa... 403 -8233 aorly mom
dr ollar 740 p.01.
. _^ iSSmSS)
TYPING-Alt kinda Faat noot - oe-
eurata 784/ pg IBM Salactric Mld-
Ponilng Joonna: Mt 0000.
(3SOl^)
TRULY YaiMv Typki,
Foal accufola t«Mm
1712
J 4)
PERFECT PAGES by ^ nfiiilaiiili ui^
*8fc 19d<6. m/ 13iyra. aapartanoa IBM
«Met. SoMct dRdddd lypa alyla 800-
3007
fSS J 41
JOB AppMcanta Automatic lottara o«o
<^**MP*r. mikckmi. and aNminola typoa
Pduloy-TactinlcolTypMBSoff««ca WLa!
477,8848 ^
138 J 41
TYFINU of
Koltiy df«or8pRi
(is MSB)
oducatlonai. actantlflc. othor. Oddt
EStS.
*WTH C DfSSSRTATKMM.
STATISTICAL. FAST. 1^
SEVEN DAYS A WICK
STYLES
<'*Q*> CHO«E tYPE FACE - Tano
38 J4
FLASH Fln«ort Socrotorlal Sarvtco
eaeollont worfc Prompt attonMon. *
pick-up 8 dol N
474-BBBS.
J 41
Edltmf. SCREENPLAY SPECIALIST
(•OP' MRMM Pork) 8B3-1B49
/ MSJ3)
DC
t3.
(30 J 3)
(HOir)
Mi Oil
CIASSIFIED AD
J 4)
apl» fumi>h#d
LUXURIOUS 3
807.00 038-4340
08 J 3)
(IS J 8)
8340 VERY
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ddcunty ooragd Aldo wlt^
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Taiiddd 478-7028
540 Qlonrock - S43 Landfair
478-403-510-516 Landfair 477
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••^ •„ •
Tennis finals beg
■i'
i
I
I
DB Sports Wriltr
UCLA'i defending NCAA
ipioRihip tennis leani be-
action this morning in the
92iid NCAA championships at
Corpus Chriila, Texas.
The Bruins, who are favored
by oiost everyone to win the
sctoifk 12th nationaJ tennis
crown, have their four singles
stars — Peter Fleming. Brian
Teacher. Ferdi Taygan and
Bruce Nichols — ready for
today's first two rounds of
singles play in the single eli-
mination tournament
UCLA coach Glenn Bassett
decided yesterday to enter
senior team captain Teacher
with freshman John Austin as
a second doubles team instead
of the Nichols-Austin doubles
pair he had ongmalJy decided
to enter on Monday. Teacher
had stayed in Los Angeles
until yesterday to receive treat-
ment for strained shoulder
muscles
**Wc have until Thursday
when the doubles competition
begins to decide on our two
doubles teams that will play.**
said Bassett yesterday
''Brian and I decided to
enter him in the doubles, along
with singles, and if he feels he
-CAA*t play aftfr his singles
Batches on Wednesday, we
will substitute Bruce (Nickoli)
lor him
**! had to make all of my
singles and doubles entries on
Monday, but subttitutions can
be made until k singles or
doubles match is ready to be-
gin. Once a player competes in
a first round match, no sub-
stitutions can be made, even if
a .player wins and advances tp
the next round **
Bassett explained that he
didn*t enter Teacher m doubles
with Peter Fleming boMMse the
Flemmg-Taygan team he
entered is an **adequate team
under the circumstances.
**Peter and Brian had played
together in doubles all season
and would have most likely
been seeded first in the tourna-
flwnt,'* said Bassett **B«ri with
Brian's shoulder still question-
able, f thought It safer to enter
Peter and Ferdi. yvhom I think "
have as good a chance as any-
body of advancing far in the
tournament
"Although Peter and Fcrdi
have never played doubles to-
gether, they are both excellent
doubles players and have been
practicing well here all week
We need as many points as we
caa jet from ^w lo^
team If I had entered Brian
with Peter and Brian had to
default, we*d lose our top dou-
bles team. I have to go with
Peter and Ferdi hrnmc I
know they are healthy.
Before leaving for Corpus
Chnsti yesterday. Teacher said
his shoulder was feeling better,
but that he didn't know how
close he could come to lOQ per
cent efficiency this week
**! will find out very soon,**
said Taariwr. who hasn*t
pli^ad a set of tennis in over a
week.
Peter Fleming, UCLA's
number one player, is con-
fident about hts chances in the
tournament
**rm not going to lose to a
player in singles who isn*t from
UCLA I think Ferdi could
very well reac^h the semi-finals
or even the finals in singles
Ferdi and I are ready in sin-
gles and doubles,** he said.
*'We*ll be able to see how
Brian's right shoulder is when
he plays his first match. 1 just
hope he can get us a few
points. If Brian can't play
doubles I don't think we will
be hurting that badly.
**John and Bruce defeated
USC*s Hans Gildemeister and
Pac-10 in the works?
J!ac^ officiah formalltr
yesterday by issuing invitaCiom to Arizona State Unkmnky and
the University oi Arizona to nnaot with conference oHiciak
Mod discuss possible expansion pUm.
In a lonor sent by Chancellor Young, chairnrtan of the Pae-
g's Fr9%i6cn( 9nd Chancellors group, the two Western Athletic
Conf schools, to join a Pa.c-| committee investigating
expansion plans.
Young wrote, m the leffer, that the invitafiofi was iisuad
"with the explicit understaruimg that no decision has been
reached" as to whether or not the conference will expand
The presidents of the two schools indicated to Young earlier
this month that they w^ould be willing to discuss Pac-8
expansion on a formal basis with confererKe oH'taak.
Formal discussions will m6st likely begin within the r>ext two
nrK>nths
Both schools vt conMmmd to be ma^n NCAA athletic
powers and their athletic rooofds Mnd financial ouiIooIl are in
better condition than many of the Pac-*'s current members.
J-
T^
Intramural Sports
Men
-*ii*^
The men's track St field meet for fraternity, dorm and
independent, (including individuals), will be Wednesday. June 2
in Drake Stadium. Sign up' at 2 pm on the day of the meet at the
stadium The All-U finals will be held on Friday. June 4.
WoflMO
The women*s track A field meet will be held Friday. June 4 in
conjunction with the men's finals ^ign up on the day of the
meet.
Charles Strode and Stanford*s
Perry Wright and Gene Mayer
in dual match doubles com-
petition early in the season.
Those are both good wins.
**\ want to win the team
championship very badly.** he
continued **This. is my last
NCAA championships since I
am turnin|[ professional "
Have
Dinner at Hillel
^ and help plan
Summer Events
Wed. May 26 5:30 pm
Hillel Studi*nt tbuhge
900Hilgard 474-1531-
(dinner on us) -
Dr. Anthony Bass & Dr. Jon Vogel
OPTOMETRISTS
Eyes Examined
Fashion Eyewear
Contact Lenses &
Soft Lenses
Custom Work and
EnwQ- Repairs
m
.Westwood
.Viiiage,
ll32WestwoodBM
477-3011 477-3012
Mon to Fri 10-6
Set 10-4
The Student Committee for the Arts
in cooperation with the Committee on Fine Arts Productions
presents
Provocative, Profound, Pertinent In A Political Year-
Comedian
MORT SAHL
-ON CAMPUS!
Two Schoenbefg Hall Performances
Saturday, June 5 - 8:00 & 10:00 p.m.
Both PerformariGes 16 be videotaped for re- broadcast
at later date
All Tickets $2.50
Available now at Central Ticket Office, Kerckhoff Hall Ticket Office, at box office
1 hour before performance if available. For information, 825-295)3.
^ ^ ^ 4
^'
Ucla
i-i-
VoluffM XCVIII, Numter 37
UnAwirtly of CalNoml«« Lm Angtltg
TuMdsy. liny 2S, 197«
BOC votes $198,000 for wood fixtures
■ m ■ ■ ■•
Decor justified as aid to
Students' Store's sales
By Umim Rapattoni
DB Stair Writer
The ASUCLA Board of
Control voted Friday to aug-
ment the Students' Store ex-
pansion budget by S 198.000
after dticovehng the store de-
signer had inaccurately esti-
mated the costs of the store's
interior.
The money for the augmen-
tation will be taken from
ASUCLA net income over the
next two or three years and
Will not iignificantly affect
ASUCLA*s future financial
transactions, according to Exe-
cutive Director Don Findley
.The present figure ot
SI 98 .000 is based on new es-
timates made by the same de*-
signer. Richard A Kremer. for
a wood-fix tured interior,
r j^When asked why ASUCLA
is rrlying on estimates made by
the designer who made the
original estimate erron. Find-
ley responded. "I feh he
(Kremer) had enough informa-
tion (backing his estimates)
and secondly, having been so
tar off in his first estimates, my
guess ii thai he prepared his
second estimate more care-
fully-
September apaaiaf
Findley added that ASUCLA
IS not consulting other de-
signers because of a lack ot
time The expanded store is
scheduled to open by next
September
The Board's decision cane
after a lengthy debate over
Brown — the ascetic
in house of bunnies
' ~~ By J<Mhua Alper
DB sua Writer
California Governor Jerry Brown brought his presidential
campaign back to California Saturday, mingling with about
K(X) supporters at f^ugh Hetner's Playboy Mansion West m
the hilis above UCLA
Upon arrival at the sprawling 30-room Tudor Style
mansion. Brown was asked by a member of the crowd of
reporters what he thought ot the mansion, especially in light
of his own ascetic ways.
''It's a bit much." said Brown, after a moment's besi-
tfticm
In more substantive questioning. Brown was atked to
reply to Senator Frank Church's alleged remark tbat
"'the Presidency is not a training job.** an apparent reference
to Brown's brief tenure in public office
**Reading the congressional record tor 20 years is no great
qualification either." retorted Brown
Brown also challenged former Georgia Governor Jimmy
Carter to, "disclose in detail his reorganization plan ior the
federal government" and critici/ed those who believed the
nomination was alreadllL wrapped up
"Two weeks ago. the pundits and.poobalis of tlie
(Ciiiih i am Page 3^^
whether the Board should opt
for a wood fixture interior
(like the present one) or a
cheaper steel fixtiired one
Three ettinrutes were pre-
sented to tbe Board One
called for a wood interior es-
timated at SI 98.000 Another
proposed a modified steel in-
terior (using mock wood cov-
erinp like formica), estimated
at $138,000 A third figure of
S78.000 was the. minimum es-
timate for an all steel-intertor
store
Student Board members,
Howard Brand. Martin Nishi
and Lynn Kaufman voted
against the wood fixtures, in-
sisting that most studei^ts don't
care whether steel or wood is
used
Altmet More kvyan
Undergraduate Student
Body President Lindsay Con-
ner and graduate student re-
presentative Brian Mudd voted
for the wood fixtures saying
that such an interior would
(Continiiad on Page 9)
Compares it to H-bomb
Mead hits plutonium use
By J<
E>B Staff WirlMr
the economy on tlij^ uie of plutonium
as power, contends Margaret MckI, *^ aa
drastic a change m the safety of the world as
wlwB we moved from the atom bomb to the
hydrogen booib.** DiscuiMC *nK Plutomium
Economy: TIk Need
to Know** kifoic a
ty crowd in the
JtoMm yes-
terday. Mead spoke
**as as individual, un-
der the auspices of
tiK Scientiats* Insti-
t«tc for Public Infor-
mation" and the As-
^HHt0#— Students
Speakers Program
The Scientists' In-
stitute IS interested in
clarifying the issues
to enable the citizen
''to make up bis
nuad,** Mead ex-
plained **Wc con-
it aft tntuH to
DWKonc to vole
on tomething tkat be
knows nothing
abottt."
Pnliiylaiim the
changes wrou^ by
technology* Maad re-
caBad that in tbe
summer of 1945, the
INK writmg a book
dkmm what the world
would be hke after Worid War IL -^Aad then
the hmob wmt off. It was perfectly clear that
the world had rhinyd icn¥tfi. And I went and
took my manuscript and tore it straight
lerful theory of deterrence — IIk more
bombs one side has, the more the other gets.
What you do with the bombs doesa*t matter
You count them.
In the 1950*s, sdentisu became distufbatf and
experieaeed gmh as they considered the bomb*s
effecu. the aatbropologist related. And then a
new passibility arose
of ueaag nuclear eiH
ergy '^or peace, for
economic 4e%vlop-
meiK, for power for
people who needed it
aad for awdical re-
search,** Mead said.
Tbe policy of build-
ing nuclear planu be»
gan and **We thought
that w€ fsaie doing
commented, adding
wryly. **bke junior
high school — people
who invented that
thought that they
were doing something
food .•
Althou^
liferation
were set up, they "did
plained. **S9 five
yean afo. tbe Samt
Unioo and the United
With tbe advnt of tbe booib. Mead
aseated, *Nve now bad the pa war to
every bvii^ tbing oa this planet. This power
had never existed before, aM aace we bad it.
could never undo it.** Tbe Alone Age, she
.Jed,|**is the first age tbat ever aamrrf ksett**
To joKe the power peabkm. *^wc buih up tbe
up nuclear plaoSs
I'oasnrti^g with tbetr
allies* Tbe wMia^ sbe
of under military autbociqr
and whik *^ae wete trymg to decide atat to de
with tbe wasie, we gaerded it.**
PlmomMi, the aMst pom&mmm
oi BMclpsr plana, was **|Nit away,""
as act very safe, h«t it
ooly bad tbe atoM
x&t RywrogBB vvmo.
Currently being proposed u tbe jmc al
as **eveff^day fuel ia |
tbe world,** she eiplained. Tbe
nfbstinrr woukl be shipped aa traiaa.
I
*r
i__Early matriarchy theory '
f
3
Women had major role
ta
WriNr
pnmilivc
y
burdened down by childbirth
Mid restricted to gathering a
few miserable roou around the
caves, accordiag to anthro-
••■ips* Bla*«lri«a
p9««^«MirMi»»«lli«4i*il»lk«r«afe«pii«t«kri»tft««
-h CC/H/HUNICN
vaa Tsa •!
use
NTACT LENSES
FITTED
REFITTED
jifftfttiMood Viliags
DR. ALFRED R BECKER
Optometrist
1 0959 Wey bu rn Ave.
ADJUSTED
POLISHED
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^
MEDICUS
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Tuesday May 25, 6:00 pm
Rm 13-105 (naxt to Btomed)
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For teachers, high school, and college students Accredited
claaaae in Spanish. Mexican culture, music, art, etc at beautiful
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ciadits
For details and catak>gue contact group leader Or Richard
Martin between 8 mnti 9'30 any evening at 47t-3M7.
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rnisnrrffwrr in A a^
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filters up to 2000
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rate Ex-
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HjOK^ has proven itself in actual usage in many
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$29a%l5post Paid Plus 6% Tax
Dealer Inquiries Welcome
Nk»^-f-f«IPia«m|«9#4»pi««t«*«pp»4aMI^M^4A4te'
«««i»eHM*«*lM«i4»
pologist Evelyn Reed
The UiUh, however, Rccd
said b that women obtained
the nmor supplies, preserved
the food, developed the rudi-
ments of the arts and sciences,
and organized a suMe life in
these early matnarchial so-
cieties
Author of \%onienS Evolu-
$kmi FroMi Matriarciuil Claa
to PatriardMl Fanily, Reed
discussed her feminist views in
the Grand Ballroon) yesterday
as part of Women's Week.
Her book revives the ques-
tion of matriarchy, which ^'has
been ignored for half A cen-
tury/' Reed said, adding.
"Women have been told that
their problems come from a
detective anatomy ' My bgot
tells how capitalism takes ad-
vantage of the fact that women
have children**
Social origin
Once wemeh become aware
of the social origin of their
problems. Reed explained, thev
will be able to **break through
the myths that keep them in
their place which is. as you
know, down."
Illustrating her point with
the educational series, the
"Ascent of Man." Reed point-
ed out that "one doesn't sec
anything against women** in
the series. No evidence against
women is needed, she ex-
plained, "because women are
virtually invisible in this one-
sided picture of history
This
"blanking
out of
women** in history has led
women to believe that ""they
don't amount to much.** Read
aaid. adding. "And so they
lMven*t done much.**
Cover up
By referring to women as
biologically inferior. Rccd ex-
plained, capitalist rulers ;*can
justify the social oppression of
women and resort to Mother
Nature to cover up their
crimes "Females, however,
"were biologically the ad-
vanced sex because they were
the ones on whom the ad-
vancement of the species de-
pended.** she said
The essence of matriarchy
represents a sisterhood of wo-
men and a brotherhood of
men. said Reed, commenting.
"Humans had to change na-
ture's mode of survival and
overcome individualism and
separation. They created com-
munal egalitarianism" The
question is, she added, "which
sex led in this transformaiion?**
It was the women who "were
in the forefront of this trans-
formation and laid down the
social rules by which these
primitive societies were gov-
erned,** Reed explained
Drastic changes occurred,
commented Rccd. to transform
th^ human nature of primitive
society "into what it has be-
come today ** Women in search
of t heir own history and ac-
complishments. she added,
"will come more and more to
sec what has kept them down.**
Anthropologist Evolyn Rood doscrlbod hor ttioory of matriarchy In
riy ■noliaii at part of mmmm% Wook.
Program to orient
foreign students
Students interested in meeting foreign students and
learning about other cultures are being sought to lead
evening or weekend group sessions next year.
An micrculiura^^aadership trammg program, sponsored
by the Office of International Students and Scholars (OISS)
will teach about 30 students and spouses how to help
Torcign students deal with differences in cultural back-
ground this summer.
"One example of cross-cultural misunderstanding is the
simple act of smihng. which most Americans would
consider a natural and friendly act." Asaociate Dean Carol
Saltzman said
'However, a newly arrived Korean student might
misunderstand such behavior, since in Korea smiling or
talking to strangers might he considered impolite." she
The training program is aiined at increasing the partici-
pants ability to communicate with persons of different
cultures which 'requires the development of a non-
judgmental, investigative attitude and i high lolcranrr fnr
amhiguitv " J
I rainees wilt parti
CUMM
itself IS free and is scheduled lor the weekend of July 23 25
in an informal oH campus setting J here Will also ht- thret-
evcniiig sessions in Jul> and August
IntcrcMed students can pick up appliciitions n ihr OISS
rimtrt ~*
ite in a total of four informal dis-
aroitps in cither tall or winter 1976-77 The training
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Volufia XCVtII Numtwr 36
ly. May 24. 1076
K. mmapi aunng hokdmyg
mnd 4mif% totlomkig hoitOmf, ««#,•«.
ar i^ Aat/6LA
Lot AngBim. Clifornim
!•?• by ttm
ASUCLA CofnmunicmtionB aoartf
Second omaa pnamgt fimtd m lh9 Lo§
Pmtnck If ly
Alma Youno
nt
h
CfiC MMlOal
Qaoff Outrw.
of
nt
Pwmr B i
StslNvortti
Msfc Ommm
Adam Parfr«y
Howard Posnar — On Campus
Laura Klwntr —
CtfHofS
BranOy Alax«nd»r
LuMm Cunningham
Bratt HoNar
. Aft DvacSof
Michaal Laa
OawM ^Mriifin&0
Mary Bath MufrM
EvafHi
JanaMf«9oa
LInai Koialia
CaVty Ftanman
MNia Kuril
Joyca Dalail
Mancy Lili
Richard
Wrttars
^
Jaqua Kampachroar
Hunlar
Michaal Sondhatmar
Patti Sullivan
Kan Barg
Jim Brandt
Kathy B««nnan
Comall Chulay
Elaina fmumr
McGalltard
Tad Bhaptro
Viciii Vanoa
EmMy WamQrow
Qay Horada
Many
Mar* Rubtn
--loui^ V\atanabe
Ja«r
Carna Ptdiman
Joanna flBaio«r«:h
Humanistic psychologists set conf efehce
By Rim WolpaH
DB Staff
Everything frooD **Prisoner*ft
Hifbu" to *^x. Stroking, and
Sodcty** will be diacuaaad at
lllg 4ch Annual Weitcni Re-
il Conference of the As*
ition for Humanistic Piy-
diology. said conference dUMr-
man Robert C. Snyder.
UCLA professors Thelma
Mom and David Bresler will
be among the presentors at the
caoferenoe, billed as the ''larg-
ett humamstic psychology con-
ference ever held m the Wes-
tern region.** Well-known psy-
chologists Carl Rogers and
RoUo May will also attend,
**Humanistic psychology is
about each of us as an indivi-
dttal human being and about
what we can be,** Snyder said.
He added that there would
be over 215 presentors making
over iW preaentatMMM,
wtt anke use of vinial tadi-
mqucs and aiidimnr partici-
pation at oppomi to being
pure academic papers.
The confercaoe will be held
o« the MepBrial Day weekend
and will occupy the entire El
Corte7 hotel and eooventioa
center m San Diofo.
In additioh to the workshops
and presentatioiu, there win be
**interaction-filled evenings,**
music and dancing, and **al-
mott around the clock" hospi-
tality areas
For those who do not mind
getting up at 6 am on week-
ends, the day will start with
"several different forms of
medrution** at 6:30.
There will be a "Job Oppor-
tunities and Career Directions
Information Exchange Center,**
where job interviews can also
be arranged
rficn ii MeyBniofi at noon
Robert Fifich. Republican
candidate for United States
Senate, will be on campus
today from 1 0-1 pm« address-
ing political science and law
students in the morning and
holding a question-and-answcr
session in McyerhoM Park at
noon.
Finch was hcutenant gover-
nor of Calilornia under the
Reagan administration and
headed the Department of
Health. Education and Wel-
iare under (he Nixon admin-
istf^tion
f:.inch will speak in Royce
162 at 10 then hold an open
lorum in the Faculty C oi'
tercnce Room ol 4 he law
school at 1 1 . J
Finch faces nine other Re-
publican hopefuls lor the U.S
Senate race in the California
Primary June K
Prof talks on
OPEC today
Sepehr Zabih, a political
science professor at St. Mary's
College, will discuss relations
between oil producing and
industrial nations from 1 to 3
pm today in Bunche 2209 A
Zabih's talk is free to the
public.
Brown's party
vVIt tCtt"
91'wim
(Continued from Page I)
Potomac considered this campaign
that it*s wide open,*' said Brown
Brown*s supporters, who contributed S25 each to attend
the late afternoon cocktail party, strolled around the lush 5
Mm4 one half acre estate admiring the cockatoos, macaws
and monkees in Hefner^ private /oo. wandered through the
spread ot redwood trees, lounged dreamily by the indoor
swimming pool, or hstened to the three-piece, three-singer
soul band playing in the backyard as they waited for the
governor to arrive
Brown, after being welcomed bv Hefnar, rallied the
crowd by recalling the "resounding mandate** he received in
last Tuesday's Maryland victory over Jimmy Carter and
urped his supponers to help him ''try the impossible** in
making a strong showing in Oregon^
Governor Brown is running as a wrife-tn candidate in
Oregon, while Carter. Church and Arizona Congressman
Morns Udall are listed on the ballot
Signed I2M biih
Brown stressed his activity as governor, noting that be*s
signed into law 1200 billsf including legislation to give tax
deductions lor conversion to solar heating and a bill that
restricts all toilets made or sold in California to 3 and one
halt gallons per flush in an attempt to conserve water
Currently, toilets use 7 gallons per flush
The governor brushed over foreign policy, saying **foreign
policy bc||;ins at home,*'iMid observed thai expensive defense
systems are futile if our cities are crumbling from within
Brown received enthusiastic applause from the audience,
which was about 50 per cent Black, when he committed
hiniself to full employment and said that **lf Blacks don't
make it. whites won*t make it either**
The speech was interrupted by the screeching of one of
Hefner's cockaiaoa. and Rrnwn quipped. **That must be one
of my opponents, he sounds kind of fuzry on the issues.**^
Jimmy Carter has come under widespread criticism for
being "fu/zy on the ismes.**
Brown, apparently still hathered by earlier queHianinf
about his attitude on hiring women to state olfioc. noted
that he appointed the first wnmpn cabinet member
(Secretary, of Agriculture), in addition to Secretary of the
Highv^ay [department, numerous judgships. and a member
of the men*s parole hoard.
**! thought a wonMn might know better than anyone else
whether a man was ready to come out or not.** Brown said
The Cfovernor stoppcii to talk with a few guests hefofe.
leaving the mansion. He returned to Oregon Sunday to
campaign faft»e» JBT •n(ia%r*s emctal nninn>»
Thelma Mo«. well known
lor her work with Kirliaa Pho-
mpaphy, will lead a session
callad **Explorauons in Rirhnn
Photoginyhy " ^^ possibilities
of disenae detection in plants
and animals will be ahnwa
through this process, which is
supposed to capture energy
foroea on film.
MoiB fym
show a preawnad **
ergy.** as well as the **phaBtnm
leaf effect.** in which a Rirlian
photograph of a torn leaf
shnwB no evidence a^ the nHS-
aiM secuoo.
Chairman Snyder said **col-
lege credit from two different
colleges win he available to
pnitiopanu for
done at and related to the
cojifcrenfli ** However, this
cfaiiit eannot be tfaasfenad to
UCLA without a pacilinn.
There are still ahont,700
pinoet open lor aayoae who
can pay the 999 regialration
fee. plus S30 for food and up
to S30 a 'day for a room
I
Regents yield to irate locals
Ry Jeff Lapin
OR Staff Reporter
The University of California Board of
Regents made several conaamions last week to
local residents who arc uking legal action to
prevent the cxpoMicMi of the UC San Frandaco
Medical Center Campus
Though the Regents refused to BMIk the
concessions legally binding, they were adopted
by the Board as a measure of **good faith ** The
Regenli hope the concessions will provide the
incentive for the concerned community mem-
bers to abandon all litigation
^ The community-sponsored legal action has
haen blocking the University's plans to con-
struct a new denial chnic and to modernize the
San Francisco campuses out daAed Moffit
Hospital Residents have argued that the
construction and expansion of the area will
have a major negative impact on environmental
and social aspects of the community
Recently, however, a court decision ruled in
favor of the University, allowing them to
implement their plans, but the residents are
now appealing the decision.
Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy, who is an
ex-affeio Regent, has been .diligently working
n
to reach a compromise With the community
and University McC arthy's negotiations ended
with nine recommended cnnanBinni which were
brought before the )oint seiaion of the Grounds
and Buildings and Finance Committees last
Thursday
Eight of the recommendations pneaed They
include the permanent preservation of Uni-
versity-owned park land, the sale of certain
Umversity hmd for residential iiae and one
mymg that the University would not expand
any further after the building of the pn
dental clinic in the campus* immediate
The Board did not accept the ninth pro^BBnL
which would nuike the other eight onnaBBBions
legally binding However, it concurred with
Regent DeWitt Higp who said. **I think the
Board, by accepting tlMie proposals, wdl, m the
absence of overriding public interest, remain,,
constant **
Following the Committee meeting. McCarthy
said that this could possibly bring an end to
litigation, though he could not be sure of the
feebngs of the community
The full Board went along with aM the
committee's recommendations, including the
one not to make the concessions legally
binding.
I
{
I
Attention Couples!
Casuaiiy or tanously datiny. co-
habiting angagad and rnat^riad
couplas Earn |i 50;^ parson plus
by taking a confidential
tionnaira Coma anyiima ba-
7-10 pm on
OAKLEYS*
Men's Haircutting .
at its best
Long & Short Styles j
OR
(
AppowitmnfiiB
1 OR 114245
:|M1 Onyloy
ORi IVnatwood Ttiantar)
WBather Report's
''Black Blailc0ir
A celebratioii
of melody and
Weather Reporters Zctvyrinul,
Shorter, Pastorius, Thompson
and Aciina give their
listeners more than
they've bargained for.
Qzice again.
The richest, m<
exciting album
created by the
pioneers of
progressive
music.
"Black Market ^
from Weather Report. C
Some like it hot.
On Columbia Records and Tapes
Appearing May 30 and 31
at the Roxy Theatre
and album
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Consumerist hits Swine Hu vi
!• SWMC Flu
acti%ist Fraa Let
>ibci, «*f yw
bdoir
-TOBIS.
li • Me piclyp» tai to
fed to draw about ^ in the fight for
also M»L\Lt,^ %tudcnt&
more involved
MaifcZTOO
$550«»
'C-«
Sf*'^
aad e%i»
i-C
Hervic
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Dr L^
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Dr. PMl
c tt a
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t _
z.k*^,rx.Om
beSoircQmaQtlM
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to Burch. fiuckar po^cr
o# tilt total eaerf>
WOMEN'S WEEK 1976
MAY 24-28
TUESDAY N4AY 25
THURSDAY MAY 27
'Ti
f^.^ ^.
NS. ILVXT
Slide on LS ^i
Fpminia Studjpo \Aiork
..,. • »T—
I
WEDNESDAY MAY 26
QuadPHVUIS
AUV^oimrS
AL J517 Scl>-H€^ — for l%<
FRIDAY MAY 28
— a
th^OowMe
•-T1
Grand lailrooi W<
(•* Concert - Vicki
AU Wonwi s U
ol Minoritv W<
Crarui Ballroom YVONNE B. iURKf (ASSf
spitMuorcd) #
Kimcy 190 iMbiam
AUWintn'slooni^ef'
^•llieMaeRc^
Panel will discuss
Prop 15 tonight
•« AdBM PMIer
Di M^ V^riief
ol 1b«r will taaa am tiK htacfiti
)5. tiK coatrovcr&aaJ measure
tites stale's MKiear power sourcei^ tonifrht
B M A 1 1 i 1 1— Cirand Ballroom
ifrliicli will ipprir on Uie June I baMot m
15, o«ilaw» tlK hmhJM^ and usage ol nuclaar
at cu§mfOa^mmii dK CaWomia Legislature km
15. «1h> viir be represented by
ct tbe Liyversitv of Texas Nuclear
CO tiwirman of No oti.l5J
to be a safetv measure
They feel the biU
to be shut down
to tiK ttrryf sumdardt that will be set up d
of Fropotft'ton 15. represented by Dak
a lomer General Electric nuckar engineer.
Iwcii. pffCMdent of ^oytci Survival refute the
thai the pto^onticMi is a shutTdown measure They
thai the fmtmmt only provides fof the Leg»lature
tale the pliMMs are and uon to shut them
:tses of Yes on 15 have added that the
assures safe storage of poiioooMs -nfim which are
m the event of an acodeni
Aa addnooal pot aMde by thoae tavonng Propniitiaa
15 • that ft 4 per oe« of the mane\ funneled into the
haigB8^agaHMt~'the'maaaove~^has been proided by "
od coaigOBMS aoi vanoos. other inter
counter thai the
hberal tactiom m the sute
^o-
Agnl
"Are your arms ui a sling?
Can yoi no loogCT laiaeyoiir
arms to wrne a patlcaid^ You
hoow who IS running this
country'' Agnbusincis is.*^ she
said in an angry voice
Lee IS her own person She
mkd while she wa« dooig a T\
shoiik in New Yorii and en-
posing a com pan V for defec-
tive microwave ovens. "The
prndoctf I caoie to me ahd said
to cool it because they wanted
a soli show.
"l said boBshft Nobody icUs
me what to say." said Loe. who
^1k herself a "disturber oi i^
peace "
She said she is not afraid
about the hmguage she uses
V^hen she compAmacd about
burnt oot tcirvisioas after she
discovered 19 famihrs m New
Jersey had died of the TVs
shon cimtitiog. *I wem to the
Ftre Manhafl m S€^ York
about this He said that they
didnt think to look into the
TVs. and I said he ought to get
off his ass and kiok **
Cofktlnwoos hatUt
Lee said mat to be a con-
sumer actiwi If to be in a
continuotts banle **To me. the
world m a btjg picture that is
cfoohod. aad I .
pictures'^
Lee also emphasi/ed that
does her
government organizations
don*T wmni rhe pHMie to knou
that such devices as micro-
wave ovens ate harmful
Lee dcacrihcrf the microwave
oven as "^od^s gdi to warm
the hamburfrr." and described
how a profciaor at New > ork
I nivervtv diaoancaed micro-
wave emissions damage the
eyes
- ixe said we hmmi iiihl bach
not let them get away with
anything
"Look at what you are eat-
ing, kiok at the food served in
the caletena. that » no way to
go." she said *We have no
nght to giu goffhagr to our
children
"^^c gel cars that UU apan
and take dmgs tlHM can hdl as
That n the afMKc af
tr\ Are w«
1^ take the
Swine Ftn Vacci
there m no
body pollutes
aroimd ",
ol «. Yon are
■H von mean
imd "Every-
LetV mm ii
Meaif .
mx^iH im
Although the plan sovids arnnamnMUy appeaUng, Mead added.
*lM oar has anaJyzad that aaglMir planu are nManaemical **
Shippiog phitonium around the world is "very dangerous^
Maad said, "and when yon mmi sonm, you can make a boBh
very easily.** Through research, she added, scientists have
daooucred that nuclear pomar is not aonftanucal If the binader
program is launched, however, it will "condemn our children, our
childrens children, and on as far as we can ut^gine.** Mend said
Mom paople "do not realize the situation, There is no way that
you can pralact your bodadnnes in ihc air." commented Mand.
adding. "Many people turn off the nuclear problem because it's
too difficuh to think about **
By protecting 'our children," Mead emphasized, "we're
protecting adiar paapir*s children for the first tune, theie is no
contradicuon bMsaan palhnlisai aw care for the entire world "
Aad unlcM a world is devised, she added, m which there is no
Jaase plutomum anywhere, ""we can no lai^K protect our
children or other peopk*s children." ^ — '
The plutomum lasoe and Proportion 15 are rdasad. Mead
txplaiaad. in that research that will enable scientists to discover
more about plutomum She described Proposition 15 as
oaatomg. commenting. "If you don't want nuclear plants, you
uale yes. If you do want them, you vote no Tr\ some kind of
parody on Yes. We Have No Bananas' "
Receiving a sunding ovation. Mead concluded, ** Right now,
we hvc in a world where each country's safety ts the safety of
others It u an incomparable opponumtv Bv the time wt
develop the technology to stop the danger, we may be able to
devise a social system where aU countries can live in
BOC meeting .
fm
na29 Wi
• ■ II'* '
PBSNERS & LUNCHES
WmiLos
47746 U
/f''-«"1(,' ■h.i
I
r
f Continued from Page f )
attract more buyers and in-
crease sales
"You're not going to get the
same kind of sale^ m a steel
store as a wood store." Con-
ner said
The Board also approved the
1976-77 operating budgets t^nd
the estimated actunl vear-end
resulu for 1975-76
Although Find ley had hoped
AS UCLA would come out
$15,000 ahead of their net
income budget, mid- May es-
timates do not show this
**The picture is not as rosy
as we had hoped, but it
:s like we are very close to
reported Findley He
are not the
TTnar results, which he sai^
could swing either way
Final results will not be
availabk unul late June, ac-
cording to Findley
Befbre the budget was ap-
proved. Howard Brand ac-
cused Findley of trying to
naike himself look good by
getting his service managers to
amct an overly optimistic bud-
get (Findley*s contract with
ASUCLA B up for renewal
will be decided by the
this Friday.)
Brand stated that it is a
common practice among man-
agm to "stretch the budget to
show an inciaaar in busir>ess
to hope for a better job "
Brand later retracted his
«atement!> after l-mUicv pro-
duced evidence to the con-
tr^jy
The Board also approved the
creation of a new "services
director** position. The direc-
tor will take responsibility tor
the traveh service, lecture notes
vending aad new service area
devclopnient. which is now
under the supervtsma 0i the
project director
While ASl CLA )«- paymg
tor their mistaken (Ktirnatcs of
the expanded Students' S|ore
costs. Findlev informed the
Board that thev came within
$1,000 of their estimates for
the Health Store expansion
The final bid came to
$127,777.
•
5
Available at
your local record stores
I
-""i;rr=rS5""
"\'
AR MATTRESS
^jj^
1976
gTATE Of THE ART
Ain LIFT
2217 n<
Y
Am
aiTin
Tal (4191
11«
SEMINAR
Spend WadnaKiay. May 26rh w/tth Dr Jamas L CoilBiPiaa and let him show you ha^ to 'MASTER Tf ^1 P'ROJECT CKA.N I
GAME H€i« is an exciting, otkc only opportunity to Icam first hand from this former UC faculty merribar and Fut)r)9ht Ufctu .
how you can shane In the billions, yas billions, of ddan ghian away aac^ yaar by fadaial. slale and kxal gov«mm«nt agenrwH^^*
w«ll as pm/ate foundaions and c
• HoKv to find funds atkI how to apply lor grants
• Deodtrtg what and when to propoaa
f How to NMitc^and package your proposal to gam aitanhon
• How to determine wi^ial your project should cost
• Defending your proposal and negotiaOng a contract
ONE TIME ONLY!
THE ECKMAN CENTER PRESENTS
"MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26th,
9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.in.
WALK FROM CAMPUS THE PLAZA THEATER 1067 glendon. wes
ADVANCE ^^
TICKET^
SALES
TICKET SALES AT ALL MUTUAL AGENCIES
INCLUtHNG 140 KERCKHOFF HALL AND IKAVEL
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BLVD. -ALSO AT ALL LIBERTY AND TICKEIRON
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Eu^ry time you think you*ve got her pegged^
mhe surprises yowu
When the world discovered a night-club singer, they
found they had a Broadway actress.
When movie stars looked Just one way^she went to
Hollywood and redefined the whole idea —and became
the biggest star of them all.
When her place was safe as the greatest ballad singer
of all time, she started doing rock.
And now she's recorded an album of classical music.
'^Classical. . . Barbra." Ten exquisitely performed,
lovingly interpreted art songs by Debussy Schumann,
Orff. Fauf€:andc^hersr^ "- — — — -^-^-^ -
*"Classical...Barbraystreisand.There isriKmy-
bcKly else who even cornes close.
On Colamf^ia Records and Tiipes.
AvaiTabte At
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CLASSICAL BARBRA
W ^ .'•-
I
4
SchroedeTreviews hislreaf
in office, describes VP post
By Patty Cram
DB Staff Wrilv
Tomorrow nigftit. a year after taking ofTice. John Scfaroeder
turni hit poftiiion on the Student LegiftUtive Council (SLC) o^fer
to Gary Coliisicr, the incoming adminiitrative vice pretidem.
Looking back on liif term, Schroedcr explained "The
Administrative Vioa Rmidem could be considered a gionficd
frneral reprctcnutivc "^
The position it "anything that you want it to be," Schroedcr
said, adding that ''The problem ii that no one ii exactly suie
what he's responsible for and what he it not retpooaible for in
the day-to-day kind of things. *"
The position, like the general repretcnutive and pmadentiai
potts, has no committion under lU junsdicuon, enabling it to
deal with iaaiict, according to Schroedcr.
The important issues of his term included the Sports and
Recreation Center, the intullation of a fiill-time campus tram
and permanent location for the on-campus foa#^OK)p
Besides issues, Schroedcr was concerned with *lhe Admin-r
isirative Internship Program, the operations of the tecrManal
pool and Project Awareness.
A succcttis of his term was the placement of interns in offices
not previously using them. The intern program at.tempu to
involve students in administrative arca^ on campus to increase
student input "The quality of people who applied this year was
high, and I hope this quahty would contmuf," he said.
The setting-up of the retreat budget book was an ac-
complishment Schroedcr called "a comprehensive way of dealing
with the budfet'*
The program he is fondest of is Project Awareness, but he
aMcd that many of the duues concerning that program were
carried out by Michael Galizio's office
One minor disappointment was the bi-quarterly reports
required of commissioners, program directors and other members
of the Kcrckhoff student government hierarchy This year,
Schroedcr was charged with collecting the reports, but some of the
reports were turned in late, the quality was vaned and student
Judicial Board was called in to rule on the withholding of
stipends of SLC members who failed to turn in reports,
according to Schroedcr. '
Another disappointment was the delay of the identification
card, but this delay was only temporary as the program begins
next fall.
^^Schroeder said one major obsucle for any SLC member is
jetting adequate and complete information when trying to work
on an issue. .
Using his experience as last year*s campus events coni-
missioner. he provided advice and background infontiafion to the
novice members of Council, Schroedcr said
The position's effectiveness partly depends on the degree of
cooperation between the president and the admimstrative wee
president, according to Schroedcr "I think there was more
cooperation than, in the past,** he added.
Schoedcr*s successor, Gary Collister, has his own ideps for his
term.
T4iii-4irst 4S to incorporate the Freshmen intern Pro^ara,
started under the General Representative's office, over which he
has jurisdiction The West wood consumer program is an area he
places high on his prionties.
An issue he plans to work on is that of student control. **rm
an advocate of researching and exploring possible greater control
of funds." Colbster said
Collister says he will attack the problems concerning lack of
quorums, attendance, long-drawn-out council meetings, and
others that he feels impairs the abihty of SLC to produce
effective legislation He believes the solution is to split the
Council in two sessions, one on Monday and the other on
Tuesday, and to inform the members of the issues to be discussed
at the meetings on Wednesday.
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1
I
dcNy bruin
Letters to die Editor
Ihg fee
m« accept lh« nomination? WhartvartMd you gut that idaa?"
»
As peace drags on
bjy^ Adam Pfeffer
(Editor i nate Pfetter /i <) ^tsff many computers ^o iee what
J0riter for the Daily Bru»n.) advertising campaign would
1*residential hopeful Ronald arouse the public but we had
Reagan s recent surge in popu- come up empty handed. Then.
larity obviousiy inditatev that thr~^~by ace idem/ one ©f
American oeoole are tirfd oi
waging peace
people
OPINION
In J •"•cent interview, Reagan
maintained he would be in -favor
of sending U.S. troops to
Panama in order to protect
our canal I don't think
there's ever been a President
who wouldn't have had to say
ves Reagan added m regardv
to ending p>eace in order to
defend America^ rights to the
Panama Canal.
I confronted Albert Uproar,
president of the Uproar Adver-
tising Agency, with the situation
and asked him if they were
involved in any way with Rea-
gan s latest statements
■| guess I have to admit that
Uproar Advertising Agency did
take Mr Reagan s account and
was responsible for Reagan s
latest peace deescaiation cam-
•*But why?" 4 asked ^
"Well. Reagan came to us
pleading for an issue he could
take to the American people
which they could really unite
behrmi He explained that since
Nixon's resignation in 1974. the
American people have drifted
into a state of indifference^ He
contended that the CIA iiMie
was used by the administration
to try to wake up the country by
letting ail the detaiJs of its op-
eration leak out but the anempt
was unsuccessful." Uproar said
"How did you come up with
the P^TMma Canal issue?"
I questioned
"To tell the truin it was by
accident. We were preparing for
Reagan the standard political
campaign with a hazy abortion
starni. a strong anti-busing stand
and a general attack on inflation
and unemployment We had
been testing and retesting for
months with the help of our
my
tants stumbled on an old pla-
card which we had designed
during the good old days . of
World War II. which read.
Things go better with War-n-
SoldTiers " ..
"Weil, in a flash, I realized
that was the ad we were looking
for,' Uproar continued.
But why Panama^' I intpr-
rupted
paigns lately?" I asked
"Do you know how hard it is
to come up with good material
these days?" Uproar responded.
"No. t wasn't aware^e^oii-
tical advertising business was in
much trouble,' I commented.
"Much trouble, hah! Without
a good, substantial war it's vir-
tually non-existant," Uproar
replied
'But with the Panama Canal,
we have finally found a war
Americans can be proud of."
Uproar exclain^ed
Do you feel, then, that peace
" I had called the agents of the ir atmost over, f ask^.
After reading the article in the
Da//y Brum (S-20) about the cost
of the proposed lohn Wooden
Recreation Center, I am once
again amazed at the lack of
concern for the welfare of stu-
dents this University so often
displays.
I am a freshmaii pf»-nursing
student and find it more difficult
each day to achieve this goal
here . at UCLA. I am speaking
specifically about the availability
of courses to students who need
them. After finding out that only
50-aO students out of 400-600
applicants are accepted into the
School of Nursing at this cam-
pus, I checked into programs on
other campuses. I was met with
many prerequisites that are not
required by UCLA, two of them
being anatomy and physiology. I
went to sign up for these
courses the first day they were
anrK>unced in the Brum and was
floored when told that unless I
was a kinesiology maiqf I would
not be able to get into the
classes. The advice given nr>e was
to go to summer school, which
for two courses would mean 8
hours a day, or to concurrently
enroll in another college and
take the counes there How-
^%fer, I can do neither of these
because of other classes I need
to take. Unless there is sonr>e
miraculous way I can convirnre
sonr>eone to let me into these
classes. I will not be anending
nursing school as I should in my
junior year Why the problem? I
was told that they just don't
have the staff or money to offer
more sections of the classes.
fCuirentty there is only one
^^ction of each daw being
for because of lack of funds to
hire more teachers? iSJOOOJOOO
could certainly hire many
teachers to better accomodate
the needs of the students Is the
student's interest ever really the
issue in this University? Do we
have to sacrifice the academic
needs of students for a recre-
ation center?
Am&lher point tftat may ako
be mentioned is the parking
spaces that will be lost due to
the construction of the center.
With the parking situation al-
ready as bad as it is, again I aik,
"Are the students' interests real-
ly at heartr
I was looking forward to ob-
taining my RN degree at UCLA,
but unlcia I want to take fhre or
six years to get a four-year de-
gree because I can't take the
proper counes, I will have to
seek another tohool which can
more effectively meet tf^e edu-
cational neads of the student.
Rodriquez
I read with interest the lener
by Roberto Rodriguez in Wed-
r>esday's Brum. In his cool, calm,
and level-headed manr>er, he
carefully refuted the argunrtents
of Fiske and Kofelis by referring
to them m "moronir "dbmmr
as peddling "bullshit." and be^
ing "on the uke "
Moving on to his next tnafor
point in defense of tfie UFW, he
stated, .
"Idealistic notions about rights
must be done away with."
He then goes on to conclude
his letter, "The pattern Gallo
irid acribusiness have es-
over the
prospective enemies and they
had said they were booked with
other, more important interna-
tional crises. You don't . know
the agony I was going through.
For a while, we were really
optimistic when Castro de-
nounced the Ford administration
for Its handling of tf>e fishing
boat incidents. Our crew was
working full time on a catchy ad
to unite Anr>erica in case of a
war with Cuba," Uproar ex-
plained.
Did you come up with any-
thing?" I asked.
Yeah, how's this. The Castro
Subvertibles.' Pretty catchy,
right?' N
About Panama. " I replied.
"It was the only remaining
alternative We kr>ew the Ameri-
can people were not familiar
with how we stole Panama but
only with how we built the
Canal with AmerKan blood and
sweat.' Uproar said.
"In addition, we felt the con-
troversy would catch on with
the American people, thefdbre,
Presideht Ford wouldj have io
discuss It." Uproar adbSa^^
'My God. do you think
just maybe the lest of tf>e
candidates in this election
will also have now this
sounds funny but have an
issue that they could start talking
about?" i inquired
"I don t krK>w I don't think it
IS reel*y possible. iboHph, ' Up-
roar arnwered.
"Ha^e you come up with any
catchy ad»crt*»<ng cam-
Uproar, though, totally ig-
nored my question and in a
trance-like state, walked away
singing, Boom, boom, whizz,
whizz, oh, what a relief war
whizz, oh, what a reliet war
IS
ȴ
taugfit).
What is my point? Quite sim-
ple actually. Why is the Univer-
sity considering raising the regis-
tration fee $5 to raise $5,000,000
for a "recreation center" when
tfie students are being deprived
of tfie education they are paying
unconstitutional?^
Far be it for me to
ttiat this is slightly irKromistem;
but I think it would be appropri-
ate in this Bicentennial year to
adopt these ideas ar>d revise the
First Amendment. Mr. Rodri-
(CoirtiMicd on Page 9)
C io&ina ir on (JS)
^Another bunch of letters
ree exerciM of
the
fbalt make no
iie fr
or abridfiwe the
flom of speech, or of
Of ibe ngfRi o^
poooMMy to
"f.S These rights apply
to myself and nm to
'Wnkeadng'
Friday's front-pace article
about a *' mtnd-reaiaing" com-
puter requires both a correc-
tion and a question
First the correction the com-
puter is not reading anyone's
thoughts Rather, k has been
programmed to respond in a
ibiiple way to certain ger>eral
patterns of electrical activity in
someone's brain, as picked up
by scilp elortrodes. Through an
ingenloMi yie of biofeedback
learnings some of tf>ese patterrH
can be correlated with the ac-
tion of an experimental subfect
looking at arrows on a TV
screen, iut it is up to tf>e sub-
iect to loo4r at one of tf>e four
arrows which ir>dicates a move
in tf>e maze ganr>e — merely
thinking abcMit a move iis not
enoMfh. At bcit« the computer
might be said to be reading
some of Ms. OeRienr>er's actiom,
but it is not reading any of her
tbt ho b wasting h^
Cio ol pink quite nicely witf>-
out any help from computers^
thank you. but my guets is that
the Department of Defense has
tomethi^ More in mirni than
guiding a rat throuoh a m^e *
My. guiding a tank through a
mir>efield, or a missile to a tar-
fOL If this is the purpose of
Prof Vidars work, then I ask
him to stop
A biofeedback communica-
tions link boneoon a student at\d
« TV maze gan^ is interesting^
harmless and |ust a bit funny. A
biofeedback communications
link between a pilot' and a
guided missile is frightening,
dangerous and not at all funny
Computers, like any otf>er tool,
should not be used in ways
which are dangerous to children
and other living things
P.
ly
r
pie affected is greater,
than we can probably conceive.
ErKMjgh coTKrern {and effort)
That IS an amount each of us
will have to ooine to terms with
iut, for most of us, that amount
would surely seem to be much,
much more tfun at
• sv
Qnceni
Now for the question why b
the Department of Defense pay-
ing $100,000 per year to support
Prof. Vidal's project? If the pur-
pose of Prof. Vidal's work is to
enable a ooMpHiar to help m
''proM the pank button" (to use
hb own words). tf>en i suggest
This past week, lehMe we were
cAebating the latest Ko^elb car-
toon, half a billion human be-
ings were starving Only half a
million were being held political
prisoner. Wars around the world
were destroying the lives and
hopes of countleu others.
We must somehow give
enough concern to tf>ese prob-
lems fnot^ corurern No, we
should rK>t forget our own prob-
lems — for human suffering,
even that of the relatively well
off, is sonr>ething to be helped.
Ar>d the suffering arourui us, as
~mtkh the fe^ of the world, is
bound to greatly irnrrease
■ut we must care aho, per-
haps even care much more,
about the problems of those we
may not be near enough -lo toe.
For^ these problems are much,
much worse than abooit any we
X'l I
H a Zionist were to compli
mont me. then I would begin to
worry about my credibility
However, criticism from any
Zionist will only encourage me
to fo on exposing their racist
practioos against the Palestinian
Arabs, the legitimate inhabitanii
of Palestine.
I take full responsibility for
the typographical error which
appeared in my article, Da//y
Bruin May 18. However, I really
did not expect an educated
person to deal a low blow or
take such a cf>eap shot at an
unintentional typographical er-
ror, then capitalize on tftat error
in an attempt to distort my
article. Every honest reader re-
alized that my error was unin-
tenbonal and that the rest of my
article, ("The Victim. Palestine")
verified this fact
To begin with, Mr BubiSr--l
r%eyer questior>ed how you paid
for your advertisement. The fact
remains that whether it be 1200
or 200 pennies, money was paid
for an attempt to redefine
Zionism
To clarify, Zionism was re-
defined as a national liberation
movement The obfective of my
article w«5, df course, to prove
the opposite.
In addition, if one is to have
credibility, one does not shed
error ano ingMMionaiiy onn vie
Hfht on documented facts In
your article Mr. iubn, you dis-
played concern for other
realderi who may not find the
time "uack down' my quotes. If
I nr^y Mr. ftubis. I do believe
tfiat your priorities are not in
order. Your mam ct>ncern
thoMJd be for yourself. bcciUM
there are readers wIk) took time
lo verify the quotes you ob-
viously did not!
To conclude. Mr Bubis. yes 1
did ihter>d to incriminate
Zionism with their very own
wortbf You talk about justice?
What justice? A previous Prime
Minister of Israel, wf>en Med
tubether tf>e Palestinians were
not also entitled to their home-
land, anna tiled, "What are the
PlIoMliiiansf ' Newsw—k. Feb.
17. 1969 Does that sound like he
wanted /ustice? Piease, Mr
Bubis, won't you find a few
moments from your busy sche-
dule to "track down this
quote?"
Ol Arab ilgdentt
UniCanp
.*--*J
As summer
another sc hool year comes to a
close, a good number of stu-
dents are still perplexed cOn-
c erning what to do this summer
There's ahvays summer school
for those so addicted to educa-
tion rhat even the relatively
short Faster break gives these
students withdrawal pains
Here's an alternative, il you
have not been fortunate enough
to find a summer |c>b, or it you
find school dtstaste4t^-M^^:aiied
UniCamp, sponsored by the
LTniversity Religious Crinf»»r#»nrf*
(URC) at UGLA
lune 29-luly 7; fufy 9-24 |uly » f
August 11; August 15-23; August p
2S-September 2. The first two f
days of each ienlon are devoted ■
lo courwelor training The
•horter soitiOrH arc u
viligid boys and girh (
12>. And the two longer
are for diabetic cMdren ft-12
and 13-16)
Counselors nmed not be dia-
betK to work in .the >' diabetic
sessions Previous counseling
experiences IS not necessary ior
any of tfie icsiiom
The only requirements are the J*
desire to work wMh kids, the
desire to work hard and help
plan his/her session's activities,
ar>d, a desire lo have fun S
There will be a highly recom- *
mended C ounv^lor Orientation
Weekend at Camp. May 28-30
All persons interested in coun-
seling this summer are invbod lo
attend You will have a chance
to^ee the (amptbe, participate
•n activey workshops and meet
other rouniokii ii
For further information and
applications, contact UniCamp
at Its office. 900 Hilgard Avenue
\m URC building) and at the
Mardi Gras Offue
Kkliard Clamer
UniCamp
■4
I
f
I
the more
letters to
the Editor
the better
Discussion of Nuclear
nitiative
C)
,-,-i
DR. LYNN DRAPER
(Head of Nuclear Lab, at Univ. of Texas)
DALE BRIDENBAUGH
fFormer C.E. Nuclear Scientift) r
CHARLES BURCH
(President, Protect Survival)
PAUL LORENZINI
fCo-Chairman — No on 15)
May 25 ~ Grand Ballroom — 7:30-10:00 pm
by: O.E.C.A. (Community Services Commission - SIC), Campus Chapters of American Nuclear Society arui
Proiect Survival, L.A. League of Women Voters, Environmental Law Committee of the Beverly Hills Law Asfoc., The
Barristers Environmental Law Committee of L.A. County Bar Assoc.
V
^^
♦-ss. .*
f: ♦
•^ ^ .
«•«
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To Hellman and back in •Scoundrel Time'
By Tooy Fcyav
Of kte, virtually all media have been confronting the era of the
McCarthy blacklist Enc Bentley*t play Arc Yoo Now Or Have
Yott Ever Been? chronicled tiK trial of the Hollywood Ten.
CBS*s Fear oa Trial dealt with the firing of CBS radio
personality John Henry Faulk due to his alleged left-wing
politics. All told, these efforts make for some rather dark
nosulgia^
One of the moat revealing and damninp documents on the
period is Lillian Hellman^s Scoundrel Tina (Little, Brown, 155
pafea, $7.95). It is a brief but telling work in which the acclaimed
writer (TIm Little Foxaa, TIm Children s Hour, Pentimento)
laments how under McCarthy's ^ign **Truth made you a traitor,
as It so often does in a time of scoundrels.**
••It was a tought Spring, 1952," Hellman recalled, exhibitmg a
alight propensity for understatement. She was about to ap|pcor
before the House UnAmcrican Activities Committee (HUAC),
and her lifelong compamon Dashiell Hammett had already
appeared and faced an imminent jail sentence.
Additionally, Hellman was forced to sell the farm which she
and Hammett had cherished for many years, and Hammett's
income was liquidated by the IRS ^acsuir of unpaid back uxes
They both faced being banned m Hollywood, televuiion and
radio, and at one point Hellman would have to take a part-time
job in a department store to support herself.
It certainly was a tough Spring, 1952.
On hearing that she had to appou" before HUAC, Hellman
sought out legal aid from Abe Fortas, a well known Washington
lawyer who later became a Supreme Court Justice. Fortas
suggested that she enlist the services of Joseph Rauh, and
Hellman took the advice.
Rauh agreed with Hellman's decision only to answer questions
about herself, a decision pivotal to her defense. It was an
unquestionably moral stance but a risky legal undertaking-
Nonet(icless, Hellman was convinced that, **!t is plain not cricket
to clear yourself by jumpmg on people who are thentoelves in
trouble.** ^-r-~
Others voiced similar outcries pnor to testifying before HUAC,-
Helim.in: dark
but most succumbed under the pmsure Hellman recounu a
curious dinner with playwright Clifford Odetts. who spoke
admiringly about Hammett*s convictioot ood swore that he
would ttoad up to the Comnuttoc. When he did apfioir. Odetts
renounced his radical, beliefs and named names.
Although Hellman*s personal history goes toyooj her dramatic
HUAC confronution, the trial is certainly the emotional high
point of the book. Her famous line — -I cannot and will not cut
my conscience to fit this shear's fashions'* was a powerful and
defuint cry, but equally impressive was the precise manner m
which she overcame HUAC
Firstly, the Committee wanted names, which Hellman did not
give However, they couldn't accuse her of being a "Fifth
Amendment Communist** baoause she explained in a letter that
nte^would I'ntify about herself Comcqucntly. Hellman s defense
disallowed her being forced to take the Fifth Amendment Her
lawyer Rauh concluded, "They had sense enough to see that they
were in a bad spot We had them beat, that's all ** Miraculously.
Hellman had triumphed over the Committee
Hellman asserts how it is altogether fitting that Nixon would
have graduated froiii the ranks of McCarthy and ascend to ^he
Presidency "And yet.** she observes, ** one year after a political
scandal of a magnitude still unknown, we have almost forgotten
about him (Nixon) We are a people who do not want to keep
much of the past in our heads It is considered unhciilfhy in
America to remember nualakes, neurotic to think about them,
psychotic to dwell upon them."
Hellman ends Scoundrel Time saymg, "I have wntten here that
I have recovered 1 mean it only m a wordly sense because 1 do
not believe m recovery The past, with its pleasures, its rewards.
Its foolishness, its punishments, is there for each of .us forever,
and It »houki be **
Woody Allen is surnng in an upcoming movie. The Frool,
which deals with the entertainment blacklist Hopefully, it can
approach on film what Lilhan Hellman has dor^ in j>nnt with
regard to this troubled tm:^ in our history. We mutt not and
cannot forget the scoundrels of the past lest we commit a greater
crime of historical myopia in the present.
Baker's 'Talismans' are charms
By Amy
Carlos Baker, known for his hterary
studies on Hemingway, has ventured into
the fictional domain. Hit latest work, Tim
TaHnmw aod Other Stories, (Charim
Scribner's Sooi, $7.95, 183 p.) recapturm
*^like a ticket of admission into the paat«**
calm times, quiet times; times that pre-
•woably still exist in the rural sectors of
our country.
Saker*s stones seem like a chronicle of
events that happened to a variety of
people. We sense the memories that give
the stories life, but we continue to keep
them memones; maintaining distance, we
become listeners, observers, of other
people's lives, rather than active par-
ticipants reliving the memones along with
them Becauae these stories contain a
tive mood and viewpoint, they
<v
:ome reflective pieces. They move at a
tempo as if to dwell on one par-
ticular event. However, they do move
prospemively. for reflection generally leads
to revelation.
The characters embark on a path of
indirect and unintentional discovery For
instance, we find in ''The Prevancator"
that Gnff, the young man, becomes the
lisr he never thought he wai. The char-
acters* revelation is always ironic, but the
irony is soft and never too surprising.
In the **Red White and Blue Pickup,"
we find old Uncle Plmy. who wins a
pickup truck when his nephew puts his
name on a raffle ticket. His nephew then
drives over to St. Elmo io dehvcr the
truck, thinking how much he will enjoy
this prize m his okl age. But he discovers
It **The old man got so -excited about
wtnmngi he juit up and had this stroke
aadl dieil**
Some may loae patience with these
reminiscent rewknast, find the stones a
littk too lethargic. But regardless, these
stones do susuin their charm. There are
also some exceptionally well-done stories,
-Cote d'Azur- conuins a shght touch of
Hemingway and concerns a couple*s
turbulent rclalionship while they are in
France.
**One of the odd little images thar stuck
in the mind. Residues Links to the
distant past that had been forged in a
twinkling and then lay there forever, or as
long as you lasted. They did not rust, they
stayed bnght bke bright meul, waiting
until chance oocaaMoa rediscovered
them "—an appropriate summation of
Baker's ttones.
n^-i-^i— ^i«k
On Campus: Animated
Frehch Films
An hour-and-a-half program of short animated films from
France will be shown tonight at 7:30 in 1409 Melnitz.
The films were made by Pink Splash productions, a group of
four French animators who distribute their films together.
Sponsored by the UCLA Ammation Workshop, the Pink
Splash films arc currently playing in their sixth record-breaking
week in Pans j»^
Pictured below is a scene from La C hute by Paul Dopff, who
will be speaking at the screening. Dopffs most recent film was
official Cannes FesliviT entry.
El
SINGUl 18-35?
iflBSKl gi[3D[l(?iTg m
The Claar Craak Canter tor Hurrian Ralatiom it studyini Mala/
Famala lova and fnandthip ralationships Oparating under agrant froma
foundation, iha 18 month proha taakt to find out what is
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and har own naads; Why soma ralationshipB turn tour, why tome
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To thit and, tht cahtar it pairing rasaarch tubiacts wliam tastt
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^ ^^^^ ^'^' ^^ ^^^^""^ *^" ba for tha two paopia to meat on a
daSa or oihar arranfamant Thart is no charoa for thti tmr^tpa em
caotar wants to complata its profact and you want to meat tomaofia
with ipaaNi m«NtMt or you wouldn't have read thti far
FRE
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'1 I
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ASSOCIATION, Write-ins possible.
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between 9 am and 5 pm
ityaant Lagislstma Coyncil
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A flmltid luj mixar of Qrants-m-Aid to temeke tore^
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Application forms ere svsilabia at tha Offloa of Intar-
national Students A Scholars. 297 Dodd Hell (a2S-31Sa)
Application daaaiine is June 11, 1976
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The Suff of
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Invites You To An
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Monday through Friday, May 3 - Ji
12 Noon 'til 2 PM & 5 PM 'til 7 PM
1429 Westwood Boulevard
Westwood, California
(213) 477-29S4
Your Host -
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PjdIliyTour
IIIIICIU)
I
1
<VI
s
Ks-;
of bve at first sight
Adderly
Tribute
never leen tiie guiUnit before.
Perhapt they ludnH
— Howard P<
What began as a star-
ftudded tribute to jazz great
CanncMikMUl Addetiey (^ad a
benefit for the Addcrley Scho-
larship Fund) turned into a
very long and somewhat awk-
ward ftaf^udded tnbutc to
Cannonball Adderley Thiinday
^ night. Fettiviuef began at 8
^ and continued, with one inter-
^ mission and !»everai rests be-
^ tween sets, until 12:45, with a
3 significant decline in quality as
^ the evening dragged on.
J Still, the show was a high-
I class affair as jazz marathons
fi iP' Nearly everyone scheduled
to show up actually did, which
if a^ rarity with benefits And
the biggest surprise of the
evening was the arrival of
SttSfth Vaughn, whose unac-
companied ''Summertime" was
as good a blend of expression
and virtuosity as a singer is
likely to produce.
The evening featured two
basic rhythm sections: George
Duke and Victor Feldman on
piano. Ed McCurdy and Sam
Jones on bass, Ed McCurdy
and Louis Hayes on drums,
and Mayuto and (briefly) Airto
Moreira on percussion Their
work under horn players (Nat
Adderley. comet; Blue Mitchell
and Oscar Brashear. trumpets;
Ernie Watts, sax; Jimmy
.Cleveland, trombone) was solid
and strong r-^ everybody had
piayed together with Cannon-
ball Adderley at one time or
another Jones, Hayes and
Feldman played behind Kenny
Burrell as though they had
Baroque
Ensemble
Ensemble tor the Cantata
**Non sa che sia dolore.** R&9h
cliffe sang consistently and
brilliantly, the other per-'
formers played with new found
spirit and clarity, and the
whole effect was delightful.
-> A^— I Siegief
Bach lovers filled Schoen-
berg Hall last Fnday tor a
concert devoted to his works.
The UCLA Baroque Ensemble
nailed off rather hesitantly,
but the second half of the
program more than made up
for a slow beginning.
The first work, a Trio^MMl-
ta in C. was precisely played
but lacked animation, and
seemd a nervous and tentative
start for such a talented group
Shendofi Stokes began the
Sonata in G minor for Flute
and Harpsichord in the same
uncertain fashion, but his rich
tones and deft technique
showed through clearly in the
third movement.
In the S«Mta in G for
ViolUn and Harpsichord, Stan-
ley Plummer*s cnsp bowing
and vigorous style made the
allegros sparkle, but the same
qualities made the largo too
intense Bchs Karp played the
harpsichord solo w'^^^ grace
and style and smoothed the
edges of the three sonatas.
The first half of the concert,
taken as a whole was like
champagne without bubbles
The whole group seemed
slightly nervous, as if they were
playing for their teachers in-
stead of their student*;.
The concert picked up alter
intermission, when soprano
Mar> Rawcliftc and three
more string players joined the
Student
Composers
of the evcnuif wat-Mark Carl-
JjMl*!. "Patchen Songs,** a col-
lection of poems by Kenneth
Paiciien, set to sone fOfffMVs
meteiiM by Carlton and ten-
dered by Baritone Milton Fhe-
•en and pianist Paul Reale
Semor Tim Mukher)ee*t
Quintron-Cinq** for guitar and
orchestra dosed the profrmm
on a somber and thoughtful
note.
— Mary
t^i
Five fniaptes and one un-
dergraduate in the music de-
partment got the chance, nnder
Hk Mspices of the Contem-
porary Music Festival, to pre-
sent their works m Schoenberg
Hall Saturday. Considering
that most compositional theses
are Mnply written down and
filed away in the Music Li-
brary, it was a nice change to
have the pieces presented in
concert by George Packer and
the Contemporary Chamber
Ensemble The reciul, how-
ever, was not without its per-
formance problems Ted Shref-
fler's "Illuminata," a three-,
section work scored for seven-
teen instruments, never quite
teemed to achieve the tonal
and dynamic contrast it was
mnnt to have. Similar prob-
lems, perhaps in the energy
level of the performers, oc-
cured in Burt Goldstein*s
"•Chamber Concerto" and
Jimes Horner's "Conversa-
tions''
In contrasts '^Kalpar* IWb—
in Heifetz't thesis scored for
string orchestra, had a flowing,
ainsost mystenous quahty, aiid
was highly effective in the way
tonality faded in and out of
the piece. Perhaps the highlight
The music department's
Contemporary Festival ended
on an upbeat note Sunday
ni^t not only did some
people actually show up in
Royce Hall to hear works by
four faculty members, but were
treated to rather good music
by the wind Ensemble and
nuusd choirs on stage.
Paul Des Marais' Brief Mass
(for choir, narrator, and per-
cussion) made use of the Mass
text in English, three Medi-
eval mystical poems, and ''In
This Trembling Shadow" the
Elizabethan lutenist-com poser
John Dowland. The ancient
interpolations in the 20th-
century tonality of Des Marais
gives the whole thing ^ sort of
historical universality, and
takes away any sort of f<x:al
point The wor-k succeeds more
on AA int^ii^ct uaI l^vf^l tli^A ma
^^TT Mil ttllvilVwft Wit tVv^t %mMmti99 wUm
emotional one.
On the other hand, Boris
Kremenliev*s "Crucifixion," for
band and organ, is very vis*
ceral indeed Written originaHy
to accompany a set of draw-
ings, for a documentary film,
the music has a tiny hint of
Cecil B. Demille in it Direc-
tor Kenneth Snapp and or-
ganut Hmoms HanBoa 4ealt
with it heavily making the
most of the tt^nnt if not the
calms.
Alden Ashforth. who 'speci-
alizes in electronic musK, con-
tributed something of a sur-
prise in "O Magnum Myster-
ium,** a motet composed in
RenaisSMMe style, with an al-
most entirely diatonic ¥me^
bulary Pamela Scanlon han-
dled the lyrical leprino solo
lovingly.
The Prayer aad Kyrie from
George Packer's Missa Soans
(for choir and band) was the
most "modem** work on the
program.
It has all the chches that
make 12-tonism unpopular,
but they don't seem to be ends
in theiiitehw as they fre-
quently do with Packer. Ten-
sion-producing deviess, such as
ascending pmllel semitones,
still predominate, but are part
of an ovemtt prafmsion m
this piece
Still, unbroken tension in
music, especially tension pro-
duced by obvious means, can
became just plain annoying
after a while, and there is no
resolution of any sort until the
30-minute work is nearly over.
The Prayer was dispatched
wkh accuracy and intensity by
baritone Cameron McDonald.
T^ iCyrie fared not so weU
with Donn Weiss and his 150
singers The ensemble Weiss
had maintained throughout the
evening deteriorated consider-
ably in Packer's dissonances.
— Howard Pi
ABUSE OFPOWER
,\-j
CIA FBI
IRS
JFK
RJK
former Congressman
ALLARD K.
LOWENSTEIN
"•*
#7 on Nixon's Enemy List
UCLA Law School
Tuesday, May 25
1:00 pm Rm. 1345
Sponsored by SlC Asaocialed Students Speakers Program SBA Speakers Prognm\
ly Gfasg L.
Dft Spmm Writer
It was a love at first sight
ICim Niiiion, Nk». Four player
for the UCLA women*! tennis
team, knew as toes as she saw
the Westweod aimpus that it
wat hsr fCMMol.
**! was JDOif to go to use
at fimr Nilison said. **But
then I went to viait UCLA,
and I really fell in love with it.
I, love the area and i was
scared of the ar^ around USC
. .Also. 1 thought UCLA was
hctier te. lenms "^
**! Mai to he a diver hut it
«■• too deaferous. I cut my
head when I hit the board on a
dive and my parenu aikad me
Why don*t I pUy tennis*.**
She learned fast, and ad-
vanced to No. One tn Southern
Calif onua in just two years.
She attributes much of her
earlier soaaav to her coach,
Robert I indainff.
*'He*s a perfectionist and one
of the best coaches around He
uught me all the strokes, and
whenever I go home T work
out with him. He's so good.**
Being a mml\ womui. Nilt-
son relies on her backcourt
gaoK exiewively She admits
that she*s trying to round out
her game by learning to come
to the net more
^When 1 was little. 1 could nt
play the net because I was too
small," commented the fresh-
man from Rolling Hills High
"Now I*m trying to come to
the net I can't make two or
three good volleys like Paula
can. so I have to make a good
approach and then pm it
Ntlsson fmsesses a dedica-
tion to' the sport necessary for
top- notch players "'Tenms' is a
vear-round sport If you want
to he good, you have tn play
everyday."
^hc" "was disappoimed with
the overall collegiate competi-
tion she faced, and understand-
ably so The majority of her,
opponents were simply not
good enough for her. and
when she did face a tough
match, she was unprepared
This led to unfulfilling victories
and frustrating defeats for
Pre-Meds
*free advide and counsel-
ing by nied students and a
fornner admission com-
mittee TB^.
'Practice exams under
Simulated teat conditions
'Tutoring, make up ses-
sions and audio tapes at no
cost.
*ln depth preparation for
the separate parts of the
test by enpeils in each
topic.
'Optional sessions for spe-
cialization
'Documented results of
our former premeds — now
medical students
Cai (213) 473-S724
or wfila
1007 Broxton Av*.
Suite 20
LA, Ca 90024
Call US for an irwtiaiion for a
\
Nilsson. and at n ,
ch^atoient with her No Four
position in the lineup
**We played four or five
matches m a week, and Paula
(Smith) was really exhausted **
recalled Nilsson. --I think Bdl
Zaima could have switched
(Siizan) Zaro and I to play No
One and Two and give Paula
and Cindy (Thomas) a rest
And we ^ould have gotten
some more^ competition **
Yet, it*s a measure of Kim's
tcamplay that she says that she
would much rather he Number
Four on a top team than Num-
her One on a second-rate team.
"Sure I'd like to he Number
One. I think you have to feel
that way if you want to he any
good But Tm happy for Cin-
dy SheY i senior and every-
thing, and she deserves to he in
the top two. And Paula
she's just too tough**
in the upcoming Nationals.
Nikton feels that it will he the
play of Zaro and herself which
will he key to Bruin hopes
"We have a fantasuc doubles
team with Paula and Cindy,
and both of them have an
excellent chance in the sitigies.
If Sue and I do well, then the
tSMn will have a real good
chance.**
In the past, the Junior Na?
tioaab have not baea particu-
larly kind to Nilston However
she*s loekiag forward to this
ysar's competuion.
"When I wai jnijiif. Hk
tournaments used to be sudi a
draf. it was the mme places,
playing tkt mum people. There
was a lot of preisurr not to
lose
*'But now Tm travehng all
over aad playing different gu^ls
aad really having fun My
menul attitude has changed,
and now 1 don*t get as nervous
as 1 used to**
Ah hough tennu is her first
love,. Nilsaon is ceruinly active
in other ateaa. She is a mem-
ber of the Kappa Alpha Theu
soronty and really enjoys the
life. And as far as school goes,
she terms it merely '^really
great **
She is an avowed Bowie faaj
and her room u decorated hrith
the rock sur*s many facadea.
She freely admits that she hkes
to party and go out often.
**^Whatever happens, hap-
pens.** related Nikson Tm a
little confused about what 1*11
do in the future, but V\\ just let
things come I may Uke a year
off and go on the pro tour. Td
like to travel and see all those
neat placek. But, really, Pm in
no hurry.**
Shift, is what you don't have to do on our oat saving
ClflMtti Motorlaed BMm. Powered by a Zcyda.
cyliruicr Minarelli engine and u^ighinq only
96 pounds, tha Cimatti gals an annazing 125 150 mpg
hs low price puts it \AHthin reach of young and old a}tkt>
il
[
!
■ \i''«i
Cimatti Motorized Bicycle
nm Wiiiiin BWiL/SanU Mortka
^28-1030
7
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•w
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f
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ATTEWnOH »»WE-HEAL^rM CARE STUDENTS
MEDICUS
SufidiV'liiiiy 30
Chatsworth Pprk
t
4
f
m
I -
PfwFoodI
•IjnUp In A-«M Nm frmm KflM
■^— — t^^— ^
PrOVNMQ
The Rac89
'/-
The Indy 500
t
W
I
s
H
S
T
U
D
I
S
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o
I
L
Q
NEAR EASTERN
JEWISH
COMMUNITIES
Jewish Contribiiiionft To ZioniMi And The
JmMi RcfMusMfice In The l^mnd al Israel
Prof. Yona Sabar
Room 24 12
Ack.
May 25
Noon
Now that, the hockey leason
has drawn to a dote, bssket-
ball is down to a ho-hum final,
and bsiehaU is more than 90
feet away from the pennant
stretch, what is there left to be
excited about in weekend TV
sports action?
Well. there*s always the Indy
Sn — at IcMt this weekend.
An occasional hasehail game
is fine, but with a season of
162 of them it fets somewhat
repetitive. Car racing used to
be exciting, but now exate>
mcnt only secm& to generate
from the Indy 50fi[ ^nd the
Grand Prix,
Grsndj Frix interett III this
part of the country has been
rejuvenated with the renewal of
the GrsBd Prix- West at Long
Bea4th. But the big one is still
on Memorial Day weekend in
Indianapolis.
With the "Mondaynization"
Rnegpid
of holidays, making Lincohi*s skidding and sliding in the
birthday. VetesMM* Day. etc torrential downpour, and two
all land on Moaiiy. Memorial can careeaed into the wall.
Di^. IS no exception. ^j, ^f , .^.^^^^ ^^e skies
Thus Memoria Day will be ^ ^^ ^p ^„^ ^^ ^^^^al
May 31. but the Indy 500 will jmin, of preapiiation on the
be the day before ^^^ck. interfering with the
As the day approaches, a
Kttle reflection is warranted
The race has not become much
safer as the years have pro-
cessed, even with changing the
site of the contest from the
traditional Brickyard
/ Last year rain pptmaturely
halted the affair — marking
only the fourth time in 60
Indy's that the race has not
gone to completion
Those who like spectacular
accidents and high speed, high
risk crashes would have de-
lighted in last year's race
It reached a pinnacle on the
174th lap of the contest, when
three drivers ran into each
other, some others were sent
Pick up your portfolio and
take a merciless look If you re hit-
ting the mark creatively but not in
execution, take a look at Canon
The good things youVe
heard about Canon SLR s are true
One of the best things about them
Is our line of nearly forty lenses
from fisheye to super-telephoto.
including aspherics^nd our ex-
clusive fluorites They represent
the optical state-of-the-art This
means they have sharpness and
contrast and they don t have flare,
distortion or annoying aberra-
tions Mechanically they can t be
topped
Our camera bodies are a
beautiful blend of form and func-
tion They'll help you work surer
and faster because once youve
run through the controls, opera-
Sharper.
Sural
tion is second nature The meter-
ing system common to the F- 1 and
FTb nr>easures only the center
12% of the finder area Consis-
tently No matter what lens is 4n
place. Whether you re into the
Zone System or shoot from the
hip. you II come to rely on it.
Best thing is; a Canon is
priced within easy reach There s
no time like a Bicentennial year to
declare your photographic inde-
pendence and picture America
with a Canon Your dealer will be
happy to show you the profes-
sional F-1 , the remarkable FTb or
one of our other fine SLRs. the
electronic EFx>r soHdTX YFstttnm
soon
Canon
power of over 800 Indiai
residents
The officials were thus
forced to call an early end to
the race after 435 of the 500
miles. So Bobby Unser walked
away with a purse of over
$200,000 and the second place
Johnny Rutherford pulled
down a mere IMjOOO plus.
There was some Speculation
at to whether or not Unser
would have been able to keep
his lead over Rutherford since
his turbo apparently needed
more boost. However, the spe-
culation ended at just that
speculation — when the race
was suddenly forced to a halt.
As Unser took his victory lap
— windshield wipers not in
motion since the rain had
stopped as suddenly as it had
begun he must have laughed
all the way around And all the
way to the bank
Thi^ year will not see llldy*s
first female driver, as would-be
qualifier Janet Guthrie had
repeated engine trouble and
couldn't make the field.
Wally Dallenbach seems to
be the msot likely to catch
Unser and Rutherford, as he
Ud a good portion of last
year's affair . AJ. Foyt is
always a factor, winner of six
USAC National Driving
Championships Gordon
Johncock was the USAC
leading money in 1973 and he
won the lnd> 300 that year
also Tom Sneva was the
Rookie Onver of the year m
1973 in the US Al Unser
could challenge his brother, he
was also hot in 1973 . . there
always seems to be a darkhorsc
in contention near the finish
Pancho Carter. Roger Mc-
Cluskey. Mike Mosley. and
Billy Vukovich. son of former
great driver Billy Vukovich Sr
are possible conierKlers
Whatever the outcome,
whether the race is run to
completion or not. one thing is
pretty certain It was more
exciting back in the day% of the
Brickyard ~ watching some of
those old. great races on film
beats the recent races anvday.
Special UCLA
Student Rate
8.50
R\ dppoiiitinriil
Alec or Arnold
475-8566
WILSHIRE WEST PLAZA
10880 WILSHIRE BLVD
WESTWOOD. CALF 90024
T
-_i-
^^
Getting
(Contin(M*d frtNii Page J0)
The indiefaiigable Stones, as radiant now ds he was is tn 1i yqw
old bronze n:>edalist at Munich, is now lumpma at bone B^aHk^t!^'^
He'll face - cie«erm.ned field .n ^iont^eal'^ bSt heTLTT:? oo^^
that he » ready with 7^^^ and 7^v. ,ump» .ndosrs and a 7.4v. Drake
Stadium record against UCLA earlier this season/
tehind SUMM are Pacific Coast Club teammates Tom Wbodi and
Rory l^otinek. Kotinek having graduated from UCIA last year
Woodi is an easy p.ck for second, but Kotmek .n,ured his arm
throwing the lavelin earlier this season, and how well he will
recover IS a question that only time will answer But, if desire makes
any difference, then Kotinek will be going to Montreal This
reporter has met few athletes with more d^erm.nation than Rorv
who truly sets the standard for competitiveness
The b«t of the rest of this country ,s probably San lose Slate
redshirt Ron Livers, who has the world's best mark for ,ump.ni
til? L r J"' '''^'1 *L*'«^' ^^* ^-® ^'^^^ ^ l^^^P^ 7-4% for !
iOV4 inch differential, best ever by anyone But. he's also a world-
class perform^' in the triple fump and will have to decide which to
choose for a shot a the Carney. ^ ^^ ^^
The Deep South has produced Georgia's fames Barrineau. up to 7-
4' ; in 76. and Terinessee's Mark Branch. 7-4. The M.dwest has
former world record man Pat Matzdorf (best of 7-6'/.) e.-Colorado
great Bii jankunis (7-4 m '75) and.lowan BrII Knoedal (7-3) alone
with Dennis Adama. ranked 14th m the world last ye^r for his 7 i
efforts The West ha^ vet Rey Brown (7-4 best tn 74) and Cal State
Northridge Clarence Frazier (7-3 indoors '76)
Best outside of the US are Canada's Greg Joy. with the foreign
athlete ensemble at UTEP -- he s done 7-4. Frenchman Paul
Poaniewa (7-5 and he s a siraddler). Soviet Alexsander Grigoryev the
European champ, and Rolf Beilschmidt of East Germany (7-4''4 last
year) Beyond these, there »re a plethora of 7-3 ♦ jumpers with a
dearth of consistency
US TEAM PREDICTIONS Pole Vault - Dan Riptey. Earl Bell. Dave
Roberts High lump - Dwight Stones Tom Woods, Rory Kotinek
OLYMPIC MEDAL PREDICTIONS Pole Vault - Gold Dan Rip^
lUSA); Silver, Wladyslaw Kozakiewitz (Poland) Broo/e, Dave
Roberts (USA) High lump — Gold. Dwight Stones (USA) Silver
Tom^ Woods~-fUSv^t Bronze, AfexsanfterC rigor yevTCJSSR)
-The Free, University of Iran j f
's
Th« FfM Unlv#rsHy of Iran is accepting applications for Acadamic aiid
lachnlcal posts and Is offaring scholarships to Iranian nationals.
The Free University is a new and innovative institution established to
respond to the increasing demand for higher education and the
continuing need for qualified manpower throughout Iran. A distance-
teaching format will be Osed to prepare, initially, professionals in two
areas, teacher-education and health sciences Programs in the areas of
rural development and technician training are presently being planned
Course materials (eg correspondence texts, radio and television
broadcasts, home experinr>ental kits, etc.) are designed and produced
by course teams These teams consist of subiect-nr>atter specialists,
educational technologists, radio/television producers arnj editors A
network of local centers established throughout Iran will be staffed by
tutors who will assist students in the use of course materials and who
will guide practical work experiences
The Free University wishes to identify qualified Iranian nationals who
might be interested in wor4(ing in such a context Academic posts are
currently available in the following areas medicine (M.D. degree).
nursing, public health; physical and natural sciences; social and
t>ehavloral sciences; education; library science; Iranian studies; rural
development. Scholarships are also being awarded to qualified
students who wish to continue their studies. i
Interested persons ^re requested to send the following information to
the North American office name (first and last), sex. U.S address
(street.. city, state, zip), phone (including area code), university, field,
and level They should also note whether they are interested in a
scholarship. inforn\ation should be sent to rifl Miirlli
I
r
5
J.
PO Box 282, Rumson, New Jersey 07760. Those who have already
applied need do nothing further Those planning to return to Iran this
summer may also contact directly Mr. Firooz Firooznia, director.
Manpower and Development Center. PO Box 1 1 -1962 Aban Shomali St.
Karim-Khan Ave.. Tehran. 15. telephone 891521.
— ^
Meet
-I ' - B
•^-^g-:
■WIIPI
Republican Candidate for U.S. Senate
Tuesday May 25
Meyerhoff Park
12 Noon
C4=.--it-,-*-::.T(
■#
€
• ;
4
CLASSIFIECMD
AOVtHTlSIMO Or^lClt
lUrciiholf Nan lit
IS
ASUCLA Cvmmumemtkonu
lutly sup^ortt lh« Un«««rstly of Call
1 9 pO*Cy AN WOW-^WCWWiBPOH
Ml •!• Oa«y •'uir to amy«»M
who tfiscrimifioiot Of* tho i^otto mt
try ebtor IMl»«M04 O'tf Ml. r«CO.
o* SOB PiOfiRO* Iwo Dolly wwiiP
nor lh« AtUCLA Communication*
•••rtf hoa OMWoAfaWM any ol •!• Mr-
vtcoa Otfvortiaod or aO>vortiaor« ropro-
•tnlotf «n Ihift •••u« An-y parson ba
Uo«t«»f ttioi 99% otfvofitaomofif ti ttiia
ioaua liololit Wia toofd * poMcy on nmn-
diacriminalton alafad harain ahOMM
coMwnumcaia complamta in writing to
•ha tuainat* f^mnmg^r UCLA OoHy
Brum i12Karclihotf HaN 308 Waatwood
Plaza. Lo» Angcivft CalMornia 90024
. f vr . Motatonca artlh houamg dtachtni
nation problam* call UCLA Houamg
Otfica (213) •25-4491 WaataidaFatr
. Houing (213J 473-3(M9
ATTENTION Singia Paranla CaM
Paranlft without Partnara Santo -
Monica. Dtacuaalona. apofta. portlot
cMMran • acttvttlaa tas-OOro
(Ann M M)
campus
announcements
■..' . ', . '
1..' ■
•r--r.
Efid ftm Ouarlor hght on Um«f
6*1 fw ASUCLA Lpctur*
nioiM 190W. CompiiHr Mto of
•ro stMl avallabl* at ItM
l.«etur« ^k>l•t Couffilar In ttia
ASUCLA tm^awli'
Im^mt, Ackomian Union.
complete
printing
service
l\|M*M'llllt|l
ImimIiiik
ininM-oHliiiu
121 krnkhiiK h^ll
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identification
resume photos
osuc/o
mpvsstudi
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open mon-^ri*0 30-4 30
COMITATUt: Motflovol-
Joumol ollara SSO ptixm for
•mcla tas-itTo
3t
O J 4)
WHAT DOES A BRUIN
SEAR WEAR TO CLASS?
UCLA t-shirts (hundreds of
styles in the ASUCLA Stu-.
dents Store), custom-im-
printed t-shirts. footbalf
ierseys sweatshirts, hooded
sweatshirts, jackets hats,
socks. ar>d carries a UCLA
gym bag or bike bag
Bearwear
ASUCLA Students Store
Ackerman Unic
1
announcements
(1 MM)
ftm. Al
•ahMrtoMMlSi
••. CON»0 hOOf O^Otft hoit
II
It
KATHV Ummmn. Thta Biiia congratu-
lottonal LMltIng fooMrg l» noxt yoor
Atwaya amHa A Mah Mah ^ J ^,
MAflTIN. What oioa can I aay aacopt..
congratulatlonar? lovo your travallno
buddy ICalMooft. *
(• M ai)
•iw^" • hana foe vio
Wod. nNo woa fun-^n ua anytlma lai
kiv D.G. RaMaci.
(• M 29)
announcements JiiJiZ
ELLY Thanka a mNNon for »ia flowors
ing our yoor togathor a groat
Vo4ir Roomia
^^^^^ (fM2S)
ELAINE Mutchnlh God arM gat you tor
this' If H9 doaan t rm^r^m la mina Only
r^ „^. JI.M. T.G ^^ ^ ^^
LYNN You dtd (tf Congradulatlona la
•to moat boauUf ui aong gtrt! Lowa. Kovyn
(0 M2S)
if VOU NEED SOMEONE
TO TALK TO.
CALL US.
HELPUME
•25-7646
\ *
atiaai!Lu«.lha
(6 M2S)
CAMI<af4aa ilppar)-Our "baby'
laadarff! AXiO Is supor proud of yaii.
You ra gonna ba graalf Kaop shtning and
Gat funky '^'Funy lova, Iha too.
(6M25)
CONGRADULATION8 Charllo? Wa
know you could do It Lova. your 4th
Moor-groiiptoa Can wa hawa your auto-
"'■'^' " liSlli).
HA^rvSMiday
OurSlal
i^la
I6M29)
ATTENTION Rlabor
INmiIw la •^mr^/wnm arfio
auppon lor miNA praatdont LoTs
197S-77 Wm boat yoar yot tor Ulabar
Howard Schrainan. _
)
OCSSIE Can^ Thank -you. thank
•tank -you. • dtnnors you aay?
Inflatlonf Thanka again. Martin.
1% I
-you.
PAOOYhaa
ni
ft M»>
TT.^Mo.3i):||p«^gi,
too Tliani for
Luau for two L
No. 37
(•M29)
JK • Happy 21al! Soy you aura ara
gotting oldt Go out and colobrata!
Loaa. Your Woowdaa.
(•M2S)
OLD alyla peMIca got yoo
to tfia tludonta for Sroam mooting.
ftMM)
UCLA
ofSMman.
NANCY -t
apaclally ono aa
1
taondofful aa youl
wn4 luv, yoor
(• M 26)
ItTt May 24-26 CaM
Woman's Roaourca Cantor for mora
|6ni»)
L.M.C - Happy 21 at SIrfhdavf Tvai
■e^ ei^er wmen eve mucn isk
Loaa la you 6 only you - SSX. (adSi
^^^^ !• M M)
entertainment
r pm. «6 67SS
17 J t
S1JI
Wodnaaday atlorneona Wild Whiat
Club 16SS Waatwood Blvd
r7 0lr1
PINBALL WIZARDSfll
^u^u% ^ACHMMCO
A n^mm
1 1i27 WESTWOOO BLVD.
lAAANil>ASN»NARRRei
.titertainment
•^•
Waak
hour
H Mia
or foil day for S4 SO/hr.
Topanga Riding 61a-
6. 121 Old T(
(7 J6I
for rent
1212
2 oRleaa. Soiamln-
DELUXC
7«iSt
Mg. 2
X-ray. daaoloping phyalcal ttiorapy.
complalaly oparathw CaM Softy EXS-
*^ (6 M 26)
RIAN06
from Xun^f
f 666^51.4
for
for
from llS.eO
All
(6 J 4)
ARROWHEAD cabin In quiot araa.
aioopa t S50/2 daya. S1S6/7 daya
»^'*" (. o«
REirr-A-TV 616.60 month Staroa/HIS
atudont dlacounta Oallvary to 9:06.
47S-3S76. 2262 WaaKoood.
(9 Otr)
BRUIN T.V. a STEREO RENTALS
COLOR T V S
Waokly monthly
66«aday
Slaraoa 17 50 month
Limilad supply avallabia
Slack/ wmia TVs - S7 50 month
Calf 275-1632
NOTE Our prtca* art OlaaoiMilaa to UCLA
■ ludvns wttti'curfvnl flao. SOid
for sale
Cuaiom aiakan
baM6craflod In
not found In
S160. 477-2736. loaaa
•KII6. oaporby
quamy
akla.6136-
(16 J S^.
20 GALLON hoaogon aquarum. aNant
giant pump, hoator nilar. docoratloria.
S colorful ftph-boat oflar-muat mU-mov-
Ing-6a4-1663.
(16 J 2)
CB Radio raguiarty S116 aa« 666. 1
aM. 6-lracli FM storao rag Si 10 aoti
66S Rabart 626-3766 aR* 6/daal.
(ISMlil - - • ._
6466 or
NAiiip.(haad)76WaMi
6-10"
(16M27)
MOVING 6ALE
a. aranga craloa and
93S-1465 atlar alH
(IHJtl
OLTMRUS OM-1 MO S6
6200 620-S323
1J
(16 J 2)
Tex Of lastrvinenr
Tttati -layja rianw
caavSiToOfto**
loaa Mion HR 46 V«fd^
La«« RPWToMi
LM. IT a • Tdg (tin. Cos. TmT
iNV) • D«c-06o mm ate
ilCUS
113S3 Santo Nh
CikLL ara-mi 3m
Mvicaai WLA
WMtofSanOtapoFwy
17 SUMM
RO OM6II. EacaMaiil caii«>
r la Ny. 47S-7SU.
MOVING 1
■Ola In got
461-2371
tola • 6
idconSM
Ion. 646 or boat oRar
(10 M 26)
(pair). Mvai aaa
476.6614
(16 6
inn klN. CaM
621
(16M16)
(16 M tS)
(16 M 26)
16- TV. 646 CaM atlar
S11S
5
6W
663
(10M26)
SCAUTMFUL Mil
pkrtua 6166 Hyrryl M«iat
La
(10
nto: SlMdontdla-
6TEREOC
VbRoy '661-664S. 661
i-ttra, Mf^ML,
(10 Otrt
I. I
for
T
MATTRf SSCS ALL MfW
6aao up k
TwOiOalB
fiiaaa
THE MATTRCSS STORE
11714 Plea a««a 9937 van buy* a*«a
477^iai
>antoC»tyl
•a»-4ioif
LETRARRtUR Equlpa akf booM. Nat
12%-brand now fto lining -690 Rtek oaoa
274-6137
(10 J 2)
- NUNDERTWASSER-Framad original
In acraon S466 alao high gMaOty gallory
-^-' Rick oaaa 274-3137
(16 J 2)
WOiHMS
667
It
(16 M 26)
S30 dining tablo/cfiairs S1S.
gM aquarium w/ all aqulpmant S3S.
MOO w/ 6anyo focokrar
■poakars 6360.
CaM 361-6716
(10 J 2)
REFRIGER ATORI % yrau^ld. 1 1 6 cu ft
goM. aicoMant condtn . 6166. avail 9/20
Tadnbod. hand-mada. larga rough hand-
mada daak. S20. rough and labN. SIO.
a«oll now 460-3670 ... ^ __.
(10 M 26)
MCC4^RTNERY and Winga concart
tickola EicaHonl aaots for Juna 22nd
at Iho fontm. 663-7664.
(10M26)
1
Exclusively Oursf
ASUCLA Trader
thong sandals in a
burlap signature
bag
just $6.89
Sandals are bfack with biu« and
gold stripa9 m the sol69. and
blue thongs Vou can u9e the.
striped bag for a beach carryall
""' ASUCLA Studonta Store
SPORTSWEAR
B Mvol. Ackamian Union
m-^ 745-7:30; ( 7 46-6:30 t 10-4
62S-7711
WOODEN Sarfola Koga. 6 ^ ,
batchcoaora. oolllng 6 ropa, funky
craloa a boaaa. old barn wood 931
MOVING 6ala 9 Oanlah aoM S166.
armchair 636, btdraam aal 6366. 473-
(10 m 26)
IAICW9Q. brawbig awppMaa 6
»mont. Soloct Calllomla WHioa
la Nut. 6312 W 62nd St. Waal
ehooiar Co gpp^ Oib^aaa
nsob
(10 M 26)
dualcovor. 6h
T
616. 473-;
616 each
iMmow 61-2
626. SbngrayfeMw
(16M26)
MCCARTNEY
cloalng nights
6F bckala,
Alao. wont Monk<
loo. Raul 634-2461.
(16 M 27)
TliR66ASR61ASR62.SR66.
T
11
Slad W L.A
NCES ELCcmoiiics
ACOUSTIC 196 Saaa i
306-6717
UNR Twa 16"
S260S0 CaM
(16 M 26)
QUEEN Walar Sad CaM.
Name pad 6166.66 Oay
- SM 422-3961
(16M26)
MCCARTNEY AND WfNG6 MCCART-
NET AMD WINOS SO aacoMant aaoM
MR, niMl aaM Oavo 274-6066 oaoa.
(16 M 26)
COMi COLLICTlON~gi
¥ary abaap
(16 M 26)
OM. OM-1626. oaanbiga. (to M 26)
MOVING ORLlbiiRoia. pMoM. Mteh-
Ob. QIC. Sat. IBay 22- Juna 1. 11623
^^^^^^^^^^W^a ^^e* ^f 9#e^MS^^p« a^^ ^A ^^k&
ASUCLA Students' Store
SEARWEAR SALEI
UCLA t-9lilrto. owbbtaMrta,
RMiS^ Ma RMfb. Morei Ratio,
Lovbl Ono Ackorman Union.
Tt
nr
t ■
' - • ■ , ,
1
froo
V- ' ' /-•
"»
NIL#f M
awAiai
m. 366-3166
baaf 10 yoar
Oog WM pay
(11M20)
RRSI Mi
aM. i6aM
can aaonli
or boM Nawiii
ago. 476-6664
1 Vary laabig.
(11 MOO)
FREE 6
puppy A
CaU 271-3
ma part (Son
•62.
wan shapard
1 la wing boma
(11M27)
opportunities
OANTA Monica Corp has aavarai pool-
6ons immodlalaly avallabia for UCLA
atudanta to arork In our offlca tor a min.
of 3 hrs NIon thru Frt. beginning 5 IS
am ^oaltlons will last thru and of
summar mt%^ mrm on a commiaaion baala.
Praaontly amployad UC atudania aver-
aging S13 50 par hr If you arm kiaooie
moMvalad and wMIIng to worli caN Serry
Starr. 629 5433 ^_ ^ _
(13 M 26)
l^aaeaaeoeeeeaooa
nmm
AUPmoNm NOW I
for two 3 act plays
(roloa open to an ages)
/>m/fod mhofnhips af »¥»ii*bm
in thm foHowing workBftotM
ACTING
DIRECTING
PLAYWRITIN^
DANCE
CALL US AT
137-3011
needed
h subjects
ROYCHOLOGY aaportmant. One hour er
leaa. Roy 62 90
2726 balween 9 am and 1 pm
Mm FfMay. eaplraa 6/11/76
^^ (14 J 2)
CASUALLY OR SCRIOUSLY OATInQ.
COHASrriNG ENOAOSO AND MAR-
RIED COUPLE6 needed for ipaclel
queatlonrtek^a atudy €ARN Si S6/RER-
60N RLU6 FEEOSACK Coma TOGS -
THCR anybma 10-5 iifKin Room
FRANZ 925 2036
(14 M 36)
OERRBSSEO 6tudanla
II Com 366-9122
for
(14M20I
wanted
rmso.
679-7S61.
(12 J 2)
CAOH or
11616
)
(12 Qb)
f
Help Self by Helping Othofs
65-660/ r?H>nth for Blood Ptoama
HYLANO DONOR CENTER
1001 Gaytoy Ave . \(Veatvvood
470-00S1
1
Ct2M20)
free helratyllng. For
271.4066 T(
mte call
no Obi
Kelp wanted
21 yva. 472-7474
(16M2S)
OTOMIASncS
tumbling. 21 yra. Eaperlonced with
6-11 472-7474 or 616 6076 pm
(16 M 20)
RIANIOT/
ed for CbHioee Chrt
(16 M 26)
PHOTO Lab Tecb
tor mmmmm a
to IS hra. par
^LASSIFIED^D
tj-
Wf WILL HSLR VOU OO TO lORAEL
THI6 6
your trip Id larael tbja 6ummor and
yoo iNIb a
Syoi
neat FaO aa
WUJS
anier for
m Arad
larael. WrHa now with raauma to
26 A MHMr
06130.
\
EXR WeNera.
wanted
, /-!..
icoa offered travel
(16 M 27)
WANT S $ $ ?
J^a can gi«a you mpnoy wanety and
tia«it>il»ty during the summer months
by taii»ng our temporary aaav"bRms
throughout the WLA «oo it you am
• TYRI6T 6ECRETARY. ACCTINO
CLERU POl OPERATOR. KEYRUMCH
OPERATOR. WAREHOUOSMAM, or
tnyiMng elaa. Wa need YOU? Coma
•n 6 ragiHii tqdoy' No feea' Nemo your
days' Paid Holidays' We need you
MEDICAL SCHOOLS ASROAD
H««ing aomiaaiona pioblema tor
medical achooP
WE CAN HELP YOU'
For irvtormation writa y?
S43 Oowoy A9o.
CSffMSa Rarb. Maw Joraey 07010 )
NOW OPEN!
The
CHRISTINE SHAW
FACIAL SALON
T-OIRL.T-I9AN
12321 Oema Monica SI
WLA 626-9661 EOE
HpUStPAINTINO
WANTtD Mior M awRi 6
forOtSAT caflafler7
(15 M 26)
RHY ED malar al
amak kvairucbon
Mr 2 boya. 11 6 12
(2 daya/weeb) 7/36/76
9 yr old gbt
9/26/76
OREAT 6UMMeR JOS EIGHT WEEK
REACH ORIENTED DAY PROGRAM
TWO WEEKS HIGH 6IERRA MU6T
HAVE GOOD 6TATION WAGON OR
PA66ENGER VAN EXRERIENCE WITH
CHILDREN AND OUTDOOR6 472-
nSM36t
faculty rolof
(16 Ob)
bar.RhD ollors
Joy
(16 M 26)
STUDENTS &
TEACHERS
WELCOME AT
KELLY GIRL!
Men and Wqfnen Earn
extra mor>ey during summer
t)real( while enjoying a
varjety of temporary assign-
wwiils. VMe provide tempo-
rary jobs for all clerical
and/or industrial skills.
-Lawset Student Roio6-
-Monthly RoymonM
ARROW INSURANCE
345-4905 007-
i
Ck
1
1
^^
0
1
thm trm
<
i
»M
loRi
af
mm
SStT!
rola 66
126
ippSi.: 2T6-7009
tdw. 426 H, CawMan b«Ne
1 210. Roaeny HMa
eamab^'f ttoonmit >f ti.m)*! \
t aabaw
Mi
0021
lUSMNa
m aen4e<
pepera.
I.
diaaonallona JudNh 361
(16 J 2)
ASUCLA Travel Service
UCLA
ir6 RRI IRR MM to
M
UR to SM
from twmdroda of avail
LAX-Am6t#rdam-LAX
^NfM i OopMluw • of
11C75
12C75
15C75
10C7S
2?C76
23C76
27C76
30C76
Juno 21
Juno 21
Juno 20
Juno 20
July 5
July 5
July 8
July 10
11
12
5
10
s
0
4
4
$420
$4ll
1420
$420
$420
$420
$420
$42d
PREORQA0MIC7 W4
rarfly tieaa orgaama can
brief anocMaa traotmant 92S-0243
(19 J 2)
c!!b iL^'lm^'^ •hon-lrl 6100^
'i'^^* ^^^^^ s^we ee^.
no
M20)
SUMMER
JOBS
*WORK WHEN YOU
WAf^T. AS OFTEN AS
YOU WANT. *YOU
DONT PAY U6 • WE
PAY YOU!
Call us 8-5:30 p.m daily or
9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Saturdays
KELLY SERVICES INC
Fullertoo
Long Beech
L06 Angeles
Beverly Blvd
Wilohire Blvd
Montebello
714-879-9762
213-432^791
213-
656-8750
361-7951
213-724-6910
Newport Beach 714-833-1441
Oronge
Pooadena
Torrance
Von Nuys
Westc
714-547-9535
213-792^4176
213-542-1569
213-783-2530
213-645-0750
213-477-3951
rr
Camp Cawnaaa
9t tiatarti
2. naaaamh iman
HaaWf t2 7Slir
] aNi6haeNalp
•ra ta44lw
»r tlHc
S ^BOVHOI^ AMSfl^
NM 9199 •*
• litaa>wa»' tl3S««
7 Oawral OWiea
Mar.
■ Pan TtawTidai
r Mhr
" l^^^M^^^^w s Mvv.
daay t2M-998aam
NATIONAL NypnuaN MaOMM Now at
IRa Sarrlngton Rlexe. W.L.A 11744
WMahlre - 477-0020. 076-3367 With
OMra then 36 yra aaperlonca Halp
to atudy -rataln-rolei-aleep 6oa our
lelephona YaHoar^ Ragea ad Special
(16
PREONANT? Wo
366-1111
'6-TON EXPRESS
MOVERS
Moving and HauMne
^^ Rich 0042000
^Boaaoo oa i - v08 f
UCLA EUROPE
CHARTER
SPECIALS
■1
LA-LON-LA 6/19-9/09 §42§
LA-eRU66E L 6 9/ 16-6/66 $429
LA-RARI6-LA 6/2
PLU6 PRANKPURT ZURICH
HAWAII . . .
LA-MOiaOLu, |ia4cjn»«
t A-HnfiOLUiu |1M hK)
Km
(16 Olr) CLiCTROLYOlO Unwanted faciei 6
CALL 47».aa2i aoa appoimtimwt
VW MANrFSMAMCS OSRVICE 626.66
aale method ^rea conaultetlon Me.
1626 Weahaood 01. 477-2100. \
no Olr)
indl aid Malt, m-olflce er moll order-*.
'•""M pNaaa. iolin (BA . m.a.) 470-
7037
(16 Olr)
^•Mn^Alee eowrt renlel SrenlwooO
flOOlrl
kklta. rWCA. 674 HO-
PART
63.00 per hoor adO
(16 J 2)
Inlermedlolee. advaneod. 6
621 6pealel loMa. 2 er at
weelily Irene l^f&tm. DlaHngulaHed
MI^JOOO. -i
tnom
MEXICO...
MA^ATLAN air 6 »oOg fr 6166J6
NEW YORK...
tj.3 wlie^Ouftdtrip on TWA fr t166iir
PLUS Cm NofMoM LaoMRe-..6HI
rall/Eiirail Roaaoa...Accomoda-^
lloni S.tudenl FMghtt withlrf
CuroRO/Aalo... International Stu
doni ID Cofea..
«Lv uai Owr laa
o» "hi • eempma laura • thiay
• Onant an^ aiiaaia tmn
M-Oea M
ALTlRNATtVE IN LOO AM-
INO TRAMNNO CSNTtR.
COOKY AVE 60004
rta o«r«
Ti
119 M 36)
(16 Olr)
1613 or Prod 466-1446.
(16
ASSWTANTM
-616.66 dR Mr-
Lf RH AN
Moving
M6M201
WSI le wmaMmmar
676/«di plua room mn4
Eyi^ 467.214.
Mm^ %Aportmont9 Officoa
ofoaaional Sorvico9 for Poanut9
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
NoNiaadT . . . Too HlftiT
STUOCMT DISCOUNTS
• • • ROR lor Ron
ASK US PON ANYTHING YOL
WANT TO KNOW ABOUT
lAVCU
"IraferTcwcT"
A-213 (wRR EXPO)
10-00-400
1221
Whittier
equal opportunity employer
M6 J 2)
ORIVER-COUN6ELOR.
caoip 16 yra pMa
wagon or peaaenger ven Mon-Prl.
6126/ wa. CaO 396-1646 eae.
ridea offered
ISC
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT
(10 Olr)
msm
(
OM.)»yaM
f.avtNG T^.
mmuHirr
only Undorcleaamon arelcoma Cell
476 6606. ^^^ J ^j
I
(16M27)
OALEO
(16 M 66)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
OSRVICE
IN Ut
Ntrrm^rn Ca»ilomie4ju>*"'-"'-
304-1101 I
Aali tar Don er Roy I
(10 J 4)
MOi/inc?
or^i> '^t^ I
>«••»• ••«* aoia^iWRant r«i*« *.
.••• •r»f««poflallon Mgnt
-•« •nm. ka «f,4) 'o^OSHi
HBH^B&Paata ar *
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^— - ^k
'■■^■■vw »^ n > — « .
1
'■"•-• a
•
■ * to you
•
ooooo 0 0 ooeeoo
0
•
(10 Olr)
i60VING Raaldentlel. epertmanta
'■''^.
i
If
■^'y—- • ji.-j
— CLASSIFIED ilD
I «^
ISC
TOURS & TRAVEL
Summ«f A ^ all L.n«rt«r«
Lowdow
Shannon
Pant
Madrid
Frankfurt
Houndlrlp from S299 00
Hawatt and Naw Vorii
Roundtrip from $169 00
►-. ■-'. .•; .-r
■:■'■ t ■' ■
r
#'«.j
I
•1
LOS ANQELC8 '
PMOFCtSIONAL CLU8
1408 W«ttwood 8l«<d L A Ca 90024
(213) 8^9-«12l/,j2l3) 477-1162
TQC CMARTEPI FLIGHTS
TO EUROPE
(Lots ol Oth«fs)
ISC alto runt local araa tour*
by car mnd >iit at minimum coat
Call o« 'Of mil
Mtn ^neaTOC
L4tlS3
•1M
II
1-13
0S26t
Bt2f-i-i
LM2«2
ELFOTOM
L770i2
B708-6
El.F0710e
L87132
7132
07178
L1S8313
LM
•/1S-7/12
•/ tt-d/oe
•/22-7/06
a/a-t/21
•/2S^23
«/2t^14
7/034/30
7'06-7/19
7/0S-«/l0
7 10-«/10
7 '13-7/26
7'13-«/24
7/17-t/13
A/(O-t/07
6/31 -1/20
MM- 10/ 16
9/at-f0/ii
• • #
379
$125. Oapoalt raqutrad par parson.
Ltmiiad spaca. Book rtow Plaaaa try]
and book 80 days pilor to
ASOCLA^
TRA/EL 3EFA/ICt
Umtmrn A-ai8 (afMtt f XPO)
- Pfldav 10:00-4:80
828-191
<:HCAPIE HoMdaya by UnHrmi. _
HoOdaia trom England - tncludaa r<
thp atrlara 8 ho«a»— Santpla ona WMk
lyt (2 wks about 12% titfhar):
Coala Brava $00; Piaplaa $133; Majorca
$110; Vantca $102; Tunia $130; Boaal
$00; DubrovnMi $133; Canary lalandi
$173; Munich $133; Attiana $150; C«rl«i
$183; Crala $210; Rhodaa $210 - and
many mora Can Unltrai 601-3700 for
»aaan»al4o«a and tor aU o< your iraval
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charter Flight Service
Ov»?r 1000 flights to Europe this
Summer • Discounted Student
* r to Europe • Charters to
and Menco • Student &
Faculty discounts on car purchas
rentals and leases • StJdy
tours • Camping Tours • Unregi
Med Student Tours • Rail
,es • Fly drive European ar
,..,,w.nf. • i^ini Tours • Hotel
tn • Hoste* Informa-
tc 1 • International Student ID
cards • free travel counseling •
EXPO Travel Library
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING'
tromtiaa
.^rorr^tiaa
Contact ASTrA lor o«r«r 200 olHar tltghia
wtth daparturas from L A Oan Franciaco
Chicago Boalon. Naw Vorli Waahtngton DC
'Chanar rag waquiia 66 day aovanca boofctng
prioa MiOfact to 20% incraaaa
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL kaaicuaai »<
YOUTH. Eufopa 1 r' »^
APEX , ^-46 OOOayadv book Eur from6440
TAHITI SUPER DEAL $375
OMDER NOW
TRAIN A FERRY TICKETS. CARS.
CAMPER RENTALS. RAILPASSES
INTRA-EUROPEAN STUDENT
CHARTERS
SPECIAL RIVER OFFER
1-6/28 LAf COKTRAOO mvtP
%FTiNG C*^Mr«w CANVOf^ tnci 3 fwiaa
tai 3 days ratlMf >w/gaar t rwaaH dwmar
at*om all trarMpoflatwn tgr^taatny t3i1
TOURS
JAMAICA 6 day*
'■^ALV f5 Oay«
)N PAR AMS ts day*
MEXICO 6 day*
HAWAII 8 day*
eiCENTENNlAL 8 days
NEW vof^K CITY 8 days
Many o(tHK« long 4 ihortj
Ona-sloaMnNca lar
haiBH. car % daanaas * MNMaall
PtA Ffl6C C<
TtelMi Bail wry
O^N il-F 10-6 ALL VCAP
A^IA
zx~
LOWEST FARES
Wa fiiMM ofiflo MO#t fOf oiinodt
h«lf tmrm Fly to:
Europo
MM#o EMt
Atrtco
BOOK NOW T G C FLIGHTS
CALL
EURASrA TOURS N TRAVELS
274<S3t1
i0.7f . 007-1033. 2132 W.
In
(29 om
RfNTORBUY
SPCCtAL REDUCTIONS TO
TEACHUIS S STUDENTS
ma CATALOG
CUROCAflS
SLVO.. LJL OOil
2n-4SM
N.V.C. list.
(21t)
(23 0»)
ISCA, r
ALSO ANNOUNCING OUR NEW
ACAOCmC YEAR FLIQHTtll
1676-77. *OaMaNd 6 L.A./Pa««i
0«ipart/fW<ur*» Matidl
•6/20/76- -6/2 1/77 ,o-
6/26/76-6/71/77 ,«
6/22/76-6/21/77 g'
^tnai Paadliwa
Jur»a 17
Jurta 25
Juiy n
Z I E E STUDENT TRAVEL (477-
»
hitoriiHi
-T
GUITAR I
•I laii/rocii i
I'm
(34M3t)
(34 in IS)
ORB. LSAT. nMiar ladl
Individual. aaNrfl froup Ifiatmetlon.
(34 GOT)
CHINESE Matidnrtn nolilf»« natlva
taachor. wall-aanorloncad with Call
Crodontlal. Individual, small
•33-1000.. (34O0r»
LSAT. GRE. 0K:AT. OliAT Tmwliii
all 6ub|ac|a Haaaonabla rata* A
MandaO Educadon Contar 1736 Waal-
arood. 47S-S103 lOf IS Vanict 037-
•^ «40«
ENGLISH
anoadtSL
r^a I a%
la UCLA
(B«Olrr
ibyMJ^Orad.
mm)
STYLES. Loam Joy
^^
ML
tutoring
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
SSI 7 Santa Mooted Slvd
m
LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION
TEST PREPARATION
20 hr ciaaa Oaftna Juna 10 for July 34
Taal.
-OMAT coursa basins Juna • lor
July 10 loal
-3FEED READING couraa bafina
Juna 26
X AMEER GUlOAMC#
S2S-442S
typing
EXKRT-lacbnical typing-math, acian
ttc-ttiasat. diaaartattona. bookt-doyt
•2S-34S2-avamn9a 200-3004 ChartoMa
FLASH Flngart Sacratarlal Sorvica
EiMOllont work. Prompt aflofitlon.
picli-up « dai H noodod 032-3000/
474-6002
;474-
tmom
XEROX 2^C
lunimoni
nr: .
KINKO S
PROFESSIONAL writar wIMi B.A. In
EnfOab (UCLA) wM typa and mm lann
as-
II
(StOIr)
KAV: Typing. adINnf . Enfliab grad
Dtaaartatkms ipacidWy Tarm papara.
»%99—. raaumoa. laRprs ISM 020-7472
(25 OTR)
Lafdl Socrotary. Noar
accurala/p4cli-up, datlvary/rlfni
nrtaa'tandii/IOi 3100
fua— r— noy/^w> #^— . »J4)
TYPING Tarm popors. ate Studont
fOMa. Tap QyiM|. Judy (SJL En«iah).
''•'••^ motn
TYPING: Faat, accurata ■arvioa at aaa>
ratoa. ISM talaclric Tarm
__^^ baaaa. ale 002-0000. 023<4310
(MfMa). ^^^ ^ ^^
Ca0 47S-1137.
M.A.
i#l
p» ^p^m*
.)
470-3747(daya) or 037-3030
***m • ««
•^0 A »» . Oia typing.
Vary raaiawabli..
(nmM)
(MM3S)
curata 70a/pg. ISM toloctrlc. MM-
r ammg. «ioafif«a- joa^BOOO.
(»Olr.)
LIGMTNN40 TYPING CO
Th»aia OpactalHit
Frao EadmatBi
FROFE00IO8IAL COLLEGE TYPING
•FECIALIST
Tarm papara. Thaaia DiaaartoMona
Faaiuraa -Foratgn Languagaa OctatKraa.
TaNaa Diagrams Muaic
CounaaOng. Xvroiing. PnntMig.
Sludant Ratat 313-3101
Lot
N. Tam
, ate. Call 304-
RUTH:
DCLLt
1043- 12Si
r30M37>
J 4)
TWNC by LIZ ISM SELICTRIC S.
''""'^" TYPE FACE • Tana
Editing. SCREBNPLA? SPECIALIST
(naar GrtlSM Pofli) 003-1040
#P0 J**'
typing
•r
474
(MM»)
Y
Loot
(30 J 4)
PAGES by
w/ 12 yra
IS
130 J 41
JOS
ebaopar quicbar.
Pauiay - Tachntcal
477-0040
aimimata lypoa.
Sarvlca.WLA,
130 J 4)
TYPING of
0 pm - 030-020ft
C
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Tap
(SJ^. BniS8li)
f3SGlr)
oducallonal. aolonllflc. otiiar Don't
^ OiOIrl
RUTH C OISSSRTATIONS. THESES.
STATISTICAL: FAST. OEPEMOASUL
S8WI DATS A WEEK MANY TYPE
STYLES. 030-0430. ^^ _^
fl» Gin
270:0300 ar 270-0471.
19* ntri
:curata. CaO iSSr
'20 Gtr>
itlona. roaumoa. lottors Edit
-1747
SPEEDY, accurata ISM lyplat - roa-
^'^^^w^p fv^aa. Mwo 'rwoaaionai aonpi
•Mi T^aala Typbig. CaO Donna 303-
(3SG«r)
FREE
(20 J 4)
fumishMl
WALK TO UCLA
Spacious Bachalors. Singlaa
1 A 2 Badroom Apia
10041 Strafhmora Pod alavators.
aacurtty garaga Also with
SPECIAL SUMHW RATBS
540 OlonrQck 543 Landtatr
470-403-510-516 Landlair 477-001
UCLA.
to. SIM. 377-
(30 M 4)
aM. ''
ray
(30M20)
Sir.
diJOl
^OMfcpttStJ
'^;
^7v
^^LAISSIFIEDtID
•oahdro
houaa to ahara
I |l I ■! I
J_
for
.a.
noo
003-7301 m
GUIET Joartan girt.
OMrimoni Oy campaa In taM
MM-3~
sal*
(S0m4
FURNlSHSD/UnturnlaHod
$140. SlnsHi t^SO. Paal Noon pf
FEMALE - la
r#am. dag 0«.
$131
bi
RJ
latMsM
WANTED Ta
$07-3130.
aar "SS OPEL
J 31 \^
■ikilte
a. mh
urn
MIMISI
(SOGlr
07».X103^
r30MMl
SUMMER
1 0 2 boar
OU Volofan
Spacloua aingloa.
a. Larga courtyard.
Aaa. Ma. Wiiahlra. 470
W1.
JjJiM. Paal. aacurtty. % im
tliS/ma. 473-S$S$ aNar 0
MaSarn 3 OS.
(33M30)
for
$4 T^OOOT or 041-0000. _ _
Oi.OSO Ml
$1
HIailSI
(30M2SI
OAYLEY, acroaa from Oyhatra
473-
(S3M3T>
CS0M3SI
1071 VW Oyparbug. RobuIN ang««»a
Clutch, brafeas. aacalloni condition
MMO or boat ottar Evaotnga. 472
MINUTES tram UCLAt
47O-2130L
Iwr-
(30Gtr)
Juno lat. Call 300-0300 Koop
(32 M 30)
(41M3i
¥W73
WEST
apt 2
$230. 004-0107 allor 0:00
(S$M )
(20 MOO)
A/C.AM/PM.
OCEAN
TOPANOA
or 400-1704
(41
(30M3S)
kITIO
(32M20)
apt«a Ufifumtohii IT^^
PONTIAC
» •nd
laa ruii*% grool 474-0031
Srontwood Avail f-10
7042allar4
(30M3SI
iKHising
(41
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WALK TO UCLAI
Can 470-7040.
IS.
tTt .1 9\
OUSLET f
:h tor
451
bi larga
0
(30 J 3)
«0- YEAR-OLD VOUI8G Man M^
1 SEDROOM. atova. rot old Vanica
L Ma
$100
SUSLET
$100 naar F
Juna lat July 10«i
0
LJL
I pafSai I
Baaarty
T8 PINTO aodan. air. radio, carrtor
.faad oandMan $l40S/aNar 030-3040
(41 M 30)
00 MERCURT Mantago Automatic
P.S.-P.S^alr. 00.000 miloa - Good
Aflar 0:00 473-0100.
Htm 30)
OPEL GT T9. 4 apood. r
doan. original ownor 1
139-1041
120 1230. or
,-•
(41 M SB)
JJ«J»CA OaadcondM
SOW. "** "*^
Ian • 4 daar.
ia/o«ona 474-
141 mSS^
30 PiAT oso. Mass am
malar OISBW
baal aflar 704-0013.
(41M3S|
T3 PUT 130 Span L eai«
34 JOO mt. MMpaSn K Ofoa.
Daaa 47O'OS40 300-7073
alaaao.$1000
141 M 27)
•
VW SUS. 0 gii. ASI/PM aMfaa.
naar Nraa. aacallant condition CaP
allar 040 p.m 303-0470
(41N3i|
Mcyclaa for
aala
(20 M 30)
M37)
OUSLET July. Auguat Larga
I, turnlahad Vanlca
Juna M. 030-1801
^97 M30)
SO VOLVO PV 044. , .,___
5io iiTfcso*'** *' ^^ ••••^31:
Ml M 301
- $171. 2
$310.up. PaaL naar baaab. 3
27)
07 OATOUN Ratadalor eanvartlbla.
06IE rpom In
$170. Two
474-7477
(30M27)
m
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JLS-
ar7J4)
SUMMER RENTAL
■ptSa to 9hmrm
W.L.A. $100
Upla$3$«dL
0100 10-0
MSM30)
034.2100
j. __^ (41 M 20)
10S7 VW SbUAUBSACK NabaNt mm^
SiM ONiat aoH Soat ottar 277-1030
a^^f 0 p.m.
STUOCMT DISCOUNT '
lOOST REPAIR WHILE VOU WAIT
1S% OFF ON PARTS AMD
ACCESSORIES WITH ID
HANSOHRT
LIQHTWCIOMT DICYCLtS. MiC
, MSia VMaga
(2 SLOCKS PROM CAMPUS)
1071 OAYLEY AVE.
(41 J SI
in mm
COUPLE wanM la
an 1 ar 3
FEMALE aliara 2 1
Oaks Laundry facli t%mmr buallna
$07.00 avoa. 700-4072 Oaya 700-7311
Ca3J2)
3 bodroam apt. w/Urapl
iHitiat/ieffddr. $S7:O0
cony. pool, cloanlng aorvlca. aratlH-
MOM Ml
(S3M3SI
MUSTANG 70-303 V-0. aula. .
paint. 10 mpg aacall cond. - taal
470-7300.
(41 J 3)
(Mil SI
JEWISH
aummor api
474-1531; B
VW SUG. 31.
rack nmw attacks, aacc
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joins mates
for NCAA tennis
•y H
UCLA*t three-time AU-Amencan tennif star Brian Teacher,
who had remained in Lot Anfcks to receive treatment for
■trained miuion in hit right shoulder, will fly to Corpiu Chmti.
Texas, today to join Xour teammates and coach
Glenn Bastrtt for the NCAA tennis championships opening
tomorrow ittorniiig.
Teacher, who hasn*t been able to play tennis since last
^ Wednesday when he hurt the shoulder while hitting a backhand
2 overhead at the net, told Baisett early yesterday morning by
^ tckpteae tkat he Relieved he could be able to play in singles.
^ Moments later, Bassett and Teacher agreed over the telephone
• to leave the Brum senior team captain out of the doubles
^ coflnpetuon in order to fuUy concentrate on singles and lessen the
m chances of aggravating the shoulder
■ As a resuK, Bassett, who had to turn in his list of four singles
fl players and two doubles teams by yesterday morning, entered
junior two-time All-American Ferdi Taygan with Peter Fleming
as one of UCLA*s two doubles teams The 10th year coach of the
defending national champion Bruins entered Bruin sophomore
Bruce Nichols with freshman John Austin as the second doubles
team.
**My shoulder was really hurting all weekend^ said ieacher,
who reached the championship match last year in the NCAA
doubles with Brum freshman NCAA singles champion Billy
Martin, before losing to USC*s Bruce Manson and Butch Walts.
Teacher said he received numerous maiaages and did stretchmg
exercises and yoga over the weekend in an^,. effort to help the
shoulder.
*"! think m be able to give it a good shot in singles,** said
Teacher yesterday morning while getting ready to catch a 9:30
flight to Corpus Chnsti
UCLA jmm picked by most collegiate tennis coaches as a heavy
favorite to win the schooPs 12th NCAA championship in the
sport.
Bruin No. One singles star Fleming had predicted the Bruins
would win the championships by at least ten points a week ago.
But that was before Teacher*s injury.
**It was certainly unexpected when Brian hurt his shoulder,^
laid Battett. "But things like that happen in sports "Players have
gotten injured before just prior to the NCAA's.
:*^1 don*t know how Brian will be able to play with the
ihiDuldeT, but he is a senior and has a lot of experience in
NCAA competiton, having played in the three previous
* championships.
**Without Brian in the doubles will cause some problems
hHPcauae Brian and Peter would have probably been lacded firtt
. or second in (he doubleiT*
Reming and Teacher had won the Pacific Coast Doubles and
Pacific 8 championships this season en route to a 11-2 overall
won-lots record \
**l think Ferdi and Peter will play very well in doubles
together,** said Bassect. \
Sinoe< Fleming'and Taygan haven^ played doubles together this
^season, it will be difficult for the NCAA coaches who make the
•eedings to rate Fleming and Taygan high, or seed them at all,
for that matter.
**If they aren't seeded they will be facing the toughest doubles
team in the earlier rounds, which will possibly often go three sets.
They would be more tired for their singles matches the following
day.** , \ .
Fleming told the Daiiy Bruin before leaving for Corpus Christi
he believed the Bruins could win the championship wihtout
Brian Most of the UCLA players leaving Saturday didn't think
Teacher would be able to nuke the tnp.
finaly over for
•r^.-^i
My Marc
DB Spwta WHiar
The season officially catel for the UCLA
baiebAH team yesterday when the NCAA
filled the final two berths m its 34 team
playoff. The JBniins were not nsawd.
As expected, Minnesota, which finished
•ec«Mid in the Big 10, *was selected as the
fourth team in the Rocky Mountain re-
gional, which will be held in Tempe, Arizo-
The University of Arizona, which pinyt
Brigham Young University tonight, will
travel to the Midwest Regional if it defeats
BYU That would give Arizona second place
in the Western Athletic CoiiiewBCc.
If the Wildcau manage to lose, the final
spot will be filled by Southern Alabama,
selected by the NCAA as an alternate fhould
BYU wm tonight.
** We're disappointed that we won*t get ^
chance to be i in the pMiyoffs,** head coachf
Gary AdanM said after hearing the news
** We wanted the chance to show people we
have the type of club we know we have.**
Aasastant athletic director Keith Kelley
WM the penoB wbo .rBcei¥Bd the telephone
call from the NCAA, inforaung UCLA of its
exclusion from the totinWBent
The news did not Aock anyone CfMMded
with the Bruin baaetell team, since the
choicea of Arizona aiid Minnesou were
expaoM. The coaclM are ill— ^ working
on plant for this summer and next tenton
will spend the tmmmtr coaching a
in Alaska this sjummer' while aMistant
Glenn Mickeds will lend the West-
Bruins, made up mainly of current
UCLA players, on a two week tour of that
area after finals
With five of this year's pitchers having
thrown their last inning for UCLA, Adams
has been concentrating his recruiting in thn^
area and Ms landed two of the top jumor
college pitchers in the area >
Greg Hams of Long Beach City Cottefe
and [>ave Schmidt of Los Angeles Valley
College will both be attending UCLA in the
fall. Schmidt just recently agreed to come to
Westwood after turning down a full scholar-
ship at Arizona Hams signed earlier after
turning down both Arizona and USC.
:l-
i'
Mica honored as Al-American
By Michael yiailiiimer
DB Sports Writer
UCLA continued its voUey-
hnll tradition at last week-end*s
annual United States Volley-
hall Association (USVBA)
championships held in Sche-
nectady, New York.
NCAA Moft Valuable Play-
er Joe Mica helped spark
Maccabi Union of Los Angeles
io the men's open title over the
American National Vol lev ball
AsMCiation (ANVA), 11-8, 9-
12, \5^\\. All games were
played on an eight minute limit
of actual playing time, causing
the discrepancy in the game
scpres.
Chuck's Steak House, led by
UCLA All- Americans Fred
Sturm, Denny Chne and David
Olbright, got third place in the
men*s open division The Brum
threesome were eliminated by
ANVA in the semi-finals.
Mica and former UCLA All-
American Larry Griebenow
were first team USVBA All-
Amer leans from the Maeenbi
team. Former San Diego State
All- American Chris Marlowe
was USVBA MVP as a setter
for the Maccabi team. Sturm
was a first team USVBA All-
American and was named 1976
USVBA Rookie of the Year
(the award goes to the player
performing the best in his first
USVBA championships)
Chne was nanried a second
team USVBA All-American,
while Olbright was an honor-
able mention USVBA All-
American.
It was a fitting conclusion to
the year for Mica. He was the
standout player on UCLA*s
sixth NCAA championship
team in the seven year history
of NCAA volleyball and now
he played for his first USVBA
team. Even
did not get
he was the dif-
team beating
championship
though Mica
USVBA MVP
ference in \\is
ANVA.
"Three weeks ago when
Maccabi played ANVA at
Long Beach. Maccabi lost tn
straight games,** said Harold
Prugh. who was referee for the
championship match "^This
time Mica made the big dif-
ference in the Maccabi team
winning.**
.Sturm had a tremendous
tournament and probably
earned a shot with the USA
National Team, which will be
traveling to the Soviet Union
and other European countries
later this month Chne and
Olbright also had fine per-
formances and could have
earned trips to Europe with
their play.
Other local players who were
accorded USVBA All-Ameri-
can honors included, former
UC Santa Barbara stars Gerald
Gregory and Eric Pavels, for-
mer San Diego State All-
Americans Bob Stafford and
Mike Cote. current Ohio
State All-American Marc Wal-
die. former Pepperdine setter
Mike Cram and Pepperdine
redshirt John Zabnske
;.<» 1
Tntk ari Rrit 1h Mk In
Changes in technology , methodology highlight vertical jumps
This last look at Olympic events for this summer will
be at the two events recently most affected by radical
changes in technology. No other events have been so
Visibly affected in recent years by the advances oi
science and technique as the pole vauh and high junnp.
In bach, it's an added wrinkle that has given an
"extra edfe" to various competitors — an edge called
unfair by sonte, that is, until the complainers them-
selves have nrtastered the newfangled methodology
Such was the case in the Munich pole vault, where
USA competitor and world-record holder Bob S«i§P(tffi
was not allowed to use the revolutionary new "green"
Cata-Poles ^nd "blue" Sky-Polas — thc^very polfs that
he 9nd other U.S. entrants Steve Smith and Ian lohnson
had used in the Trials. Predictably, the complainer,
Wolfgang Nordwig of East Germany, won the event at
1d-0V^ — )ust one more incident thai m^rr^ the 197^
Ganr>es for the USA.
But this is 1976. Everyone, but evaryor>«, n u»ing the
new poles. Most of the great vauHers around ^re rK>w
utifia a "Banana" pole, in which the pole is actually
pre bent to allow even more lift for the vauHer And,
wofidar of woodlers, these have baan fiven the official
MaHing by the lAAf Mnd the IOC, controlling ik>dies
ol llic Olynrvpics
Now, the competitors. An American didn't win the
lor the first ti.TW in 1972, and an An>erican might
Kch
caught up wtth rh^ U^A and wiN
serious competition m ternr>s of numbers than in 1972.
Most prominent »re the vaulters f-rom Poland.
Midystaw Kozakiewicz, Wo)ciech Buciarski »nd Tadeusz
Slusarski are an impressive trio, and all .three 999
capable of winning medals. Already this year, the Poles
have cleared 1S-3V^. 17-6 and 1#-3, respectively —
INDOORS!!!
Last year, "Kozak" flew over 16-4V^, 9nd he's already
established hinnself as a tough competitor. He'll be the
best foreigner at Montreal.
Beyond the Poles, there are really only a few other
potent possibilities for the Ganr>es outside of the USA.
Still in Europe, Soviet Yuriy Isakov and teammates
Vladimir Kishkun and Yuriy Prokhoryenko have proven
themselves worthy of mention, but there Mr9 a veritable
raft of other USSR vauhers who have scaled the food
heights, but ve not as consistent. Prokhoryenko scaled
16-<r/4 on May 11 at the Pravda Cup meet in Sochi for a
national reccKd, so he's ready
Also in the chase are Australian Don Baird. who
attends Long Beach State. He's as food as they come,
but has occasional trouble clearing o^^ening height. If
he can qualify for the Olympic final, he's a food bet to v
Clear at least 18 feet. Others deserving of nf>enfion are
Finn Antti Kalliomaki 9n6 Japanese contender Itsuo
Tak a nez a wa.
Wtthin our shores, there ^rc so many good vauhers
d\ rhp TriaH and snii have high hopes fof gold T^^ *>r^^
three go. of course
The logical choices are San fose State grad Dan
Ripley. Arkansas Stater Earl Bell and world record-
holder Dave Roberts Each has cleared 18 feet thtt
season, and alt have personal bests in ihe suatotplieve.
But, that's not to say they won't faher Someom always
comes out of the woodwork to place at rhe Trials It
might be of>e of the following:
use star Russ Rogers, who's had multiple injury
fMoMaass this year but did clear 18- V; in Hawaii, vet
Roland Carter, who joirted the 1B-fo6t club this scaton;
es-UTEP star Larry lessee, vet Casey Carrigan and e«-
Bruin Ron N4ooors. Current Bruin Mike Tully has yet to
dear IB feet, but his potential shouldn't be urnier-
estimated. A clearer picture of Tully *» dunces will
efoeige after the NCAA's, where he'M compete against
Bell and Baird. among others
The high jump is a flop. Literally SirKre Dick Foabory
showed the world his revolutionary technique ^nd won
a gold medal with it m Mexico City in 1966. the trend
has been mora and more to liie flop, and with startBof
-resuhs.
The flop has producod woM records, indoors ^
out. It has produced a state ol t^e art that has ne^er
been hifhar, as last year saw 12 tntf^ clear 7-4, nir>e of
them floppeis. All seven An>ericans over 7-4 used the
flop. And. incredibly, the Ha^ km
iStonai
C
en P
1«
VokflM XCVIII, Numter Jt
UnlvofBlty of CaNfomUi, Lob
MofNtoy, May 24. 1976
300 march to end minority program cutbiiclcs
Confront VicerChancelior
By Adaoi PMNr
Dt Staff Writer ___^
t
Cites opposition to Angola, SB- 1
Tunney points to past record
**lf you thank 1 can be bought
for SS75, you*re crazy,** said
California Senator John
Tunney, retponding to pointed
qucftioninB during his Jmam
SlBpt appearance Friday be^
fore 2000 studenU.
TiHwcy, wbo IS being chai-
k^JIBd for the Democratic Sen-
ate nomination by Tom Hay-
den, noted that the St75 coo-
tribiition by ARCO executivet
Ind had no effect on hit
authoring and ^^MpMn^g of
tlic Competition in Energy
Act, wiuch niHid iBBifc % the
■mior oil companies into amU-
er units and end the oil com-
pany ttrai^khold on alternate
energy touroei, such as geo-
tlMrmnl stanfli, oonJ and shale
otl
**I don*t see how anyiMK can
say Fvc been influenced by
that contribution when Tve
tmtten and wfmmmr^d the
tounhest antt-tnist MB in 25
he lecalled his role in halting
U.S. involvetnent in Angola.
Timney authorized an amend-
ment to the 1975 Defense Ap-
propriations Act which barred
funds for CIA use in Angola.
This amendment turned
arotmd a situation that un-
doubtedly woidd have led to
deepemng U.S. involvement in
an African civil war on the
side of racist South Africa
against Black nationalism,**
Ttmney explained.
Noting that he had opposed
the ABM and Trident sub-
martne defetiie systems. Sen-
ator Tunney defended his ctir-
rent support of the controver-
sial B-l bomber on the basis of
matntaimng equahty with the
Soviet Union.
*'We must look at what the
Soviets are doing,** Tunney
said. **We can't afford to allow
the Soviet Union to increase
their armamenu relative to the
(Conttnuad on Page 4)
Timaey then took
the offetisive in criticicing
Hayden for MBflfBi^ $76,000
from his wife, actress Jane
Fonda, while Tunney hns hm*
ited contributions to
to Sl.OOO nr
*The Sl.OOO hmit apparently
nppllas to everyone but Jane,*
Ttmmrjkiod Tmney caustically
The fMBtiomng, which at
times hncnnr haatrd and hve-
K. foUoasad Senator Tunnev*s
brief praMMSd MBBCh in which^
Demanding thni the University admit more minedty student!»,
about 300 people, most belonging to various Third World groups
here, partiapated in a campus-widc march which concluded in
front of Vice Chancellor James Hob&on inside Murphy Hall
Chanting "no more cutbacks,** the iitudents made their way
through Murphy Hall with the intention of confronting
Chancellor Charles E Young. As Young was attending s Regents
meeting in Berkeley, the crowd swelled before Hobson. who
stood waiting at the end of the hallway on the leeond floor
**l can*t do anything hut submit these (demands) to the
Chancellor,** Hobson tokJ the restless congregation He was
adding that the demands were compatible to admini»tmtiofi
sentiment when great cheers of "Hobson. you liar, we'll !«et your
ass on fire," drowned out the rest of the Vice Cliaficellor*s words
Next yea A BSA chairman Rocky Mitchell explained that the
goals of the rally Were to **rai9e the awarencfts of the Iniversity
to the plight of Third World students ** Among the demands that
the Third World coaliuon are seeking to get adopted include
the Chidnno Task Foree Repon recommendations, which deal
with the dispanty between the stated C hicano populatit>n ( P per
cent) and its DC population (3 7 per cent),
the elinufution of "standardized tests and OPA.as eiMrance
cnteria for Third World- students,**
**more financial aid in the form of grants:**
a five-year plan, which would raise the I hird World
population in relation to its population in the state.
"total control over admissions and recruitment of I bird
World students into the I nivcrsity,**
and "recruitment of Native American students from the
reservations** with no out-of-state tuition aM<«t'hed
— *+or Third World pcup^ there is nothing that we value more
than freedx)m, equality and ihdependent^c And it s that value,
which IS intnnsic to our makeup. Which forces us to be the
vanguard of huroinity,** WfcChA nriember TTitbeff Cedillo siid.
fieanng signs that read. "Increase Minority Admissions.** **Stop
Elimination of Third World Students,** and "the recession is no
excuse for cutbacks;** the students began their trek from the
ILerckhoff Quad area
GSA freezes funds
for media service
Urban Workshop charged $33
in tax on the rental, yet does
not have a city business li-
<tensc I he report claimed that
charging the tax was fraudu-
lent
Sources close to the program
denied fraud, calling the whole
problem a misunderstanding.
The report said Spataru
went to the add rest listed on
the invoice from Urban Work-
shop and found s company
called Mead Redevelopment at
the location A company seCrl?-
tnry said Urban Workshop and
Mead Redevelopment were un-
related The secretary said Levi
Kingston, the Urban Work-
shop Program Coordinator,
**keeps a phone in the back
and comes in iirrsiionBll} **
The secretary said Urban
Workshop dealt in real-estalc
development, not audio-viiual
remah.
When the charges were made
at the May 5 meeting GSA
prtsidsnt Nishi said he wantad
•o investigate the check haff c
releasing funds for the pro-
gnnn. **This is the only thmg
that naods clarifying hdore I
resume signing checks.** Nishi
said
CSRB Co-Chairman Keyth
flaeoe ohyaaiad in Nishi*s
temporary continuation af the
freetc of funds **Thnt*s saying
By Mike
DB Stair Wrhsr
Allegations concerning po-
tentisl misuse of Graduate
Students Association (GSA)
money have led to a temporary
freeze of funds for a Com-
munity Services program called
**Uses of Audio-Visual Media **
Several people involved with
Community Services have
denied t {legations that Urban
Workshop, a video rental com-
pany, fraudulently chargad a
tax on videotape equipment
rented for the pragiani. They
cinim enough documaasnsinn
has haen produced to prove
this and other charges false
GSA President Martin Nishi
and the Community Services
Review Board (CSRB) are
conductiilg invistigBliani mlo
the silcfBtinns. Nishi has
frozen the funds on the pro-
gram pending the investigation
CSRB will give the rcsuhs of
their investigation at a meeting
tomorrow. acBBBding to CSRB
member J. C Ephraim
The charges were made in a
repofft defivered to CSRB
earlier this month by GSA
Budget Commissioner Alex
Spataru The report quest lonod
allocation of S583 for rental of
one video-portapak recorder^,
front) Urban Workshop I he '♦
mone^ was to pay for 10 days
of nstlhf the video porupnt
According to the report.
vourc
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Rape suspect to go on trial
' > . ' ■ ' I
Jacques Cousteau favors^rop 15
<-♦.
■y MkheMc Duval ,
DB SfafT WrMcr
After numerous conunu-'
spread over the last three
months. Cecil Jerome Robin-
son, the 17-ycar-old susp-ct in
the April 5 rape of a student
on campus, is scheduled to go
on trial tomorrow m Santa
Monica Supcnor Court. Rea-
sons for the delays are un-
certain, but It IS suspected
by many, including the Dis-
trict Attorney reprcficnting the
victim, that plea bargainings
are involved.
Eig^ crimes are stili down on
campus however, s fashten
editor for Playgirl Maga/ine
had her two carrying bags
stolen while she was at Royce
Hall One of the bags was
made of leather and important
from South Amcricja. The
other was a $425 Gucci.
In another incident a writer
visiting campus had his $100 J.
Magnin courduroy jacket
stolen from the top of a chair
in the bowhng alley while he
was playing pin hall.
Other inaiw included
~ the theft of a $450 trom-
boae bdoaging to a UCLA
bandsmember from a daet-
rotom in Schoenberg Hall;
— a $1400 motorcycle stolen
from the pole it was chaiaed ta
in the Riebcr Hall parking lot
It was a 1975 Honda and the
owner had the keys in his
possession;
the discovery ol the Iom pf
a $231 respirometer and a
positive pre!^sure breath worth
$524. somctimT^fti the last six
months They were; taken from
a room at the Center for
Health Sciences; and
a peristaltic pump, stolen
from the drawer of a work
desk. The pump was valued at
$630
Malicious mischief to a ve-
hicle was ruled the apparent
motive in two incidents 6n
campus May 1 1 Someone
•used a key to scratch the paint
clear to the meul on a parked
car in Structure Eight, and
iaiar that night, according to
police, someone entered a
loehcd vehicle parked in Lot
Dae and ransacked it. A white
sticky substance was then
sprayed allover the rear
window and u^aa various por-
tions of the interior The police
report stated that ''No signs of
forced entry were observed.*
Calls nuclear initiative
a ^reasonable safeguard'
S. "
i Doa't
ca
reerot
fbra
» '.
A-
Campus women's groups
form coalition to gather
ideas and channel funds
By J. Nathan Jones
DB Staff Writer
An organization has been established on campus to help
women with their ideas and to channel funds for those purposes.
"Women's Board will help bring the ideas of women to this
office," said Cynthia McClain.* recently-elected first vice-president
and former assistant to first vp Susan Melton.
"Women's Board will help enhance the creativity of womcn^
and be a new form of expression it will be a place where they
c^m experiment with their ideas and what they want,** she said.
"They can come together, give their ideas, work on them and
put together a program to show everybody where we are coming
>from Womcn*s "Board witt let women say what they like and let^
tkfem be different."
Every special interest group on campus will be represented on
Women's Board, such as the Black Students Alliance and
McCHA, said McClain
Last year many of these campus groups complained they didn't
have power over their own budgets because the office of the first
vice-president had signatory power over their biid§Bls, she said
"Because of this. I. have agreed to give up my signatory powers
on a quarterly basis (to be renewed each quarter it it doesn't
work out,]| on the condition that each group send a representative
to Women's Board and they not miss more than two consecutive
meetmgs." she added
MClam said she is doing this to ensure continuity on the board
and to make sure it does succeed
Women's Board come into being at the beginning of the year
and, accordmg to McC lain, will channel ^women's resources into
the first vice president's office. :*
"Basically, until Women's BoaTd^aj; created, the Women's
Resource Center was still doing most W the Women's program-
ming," McClain said.
"But the\ had no budget. They arc an administrative need, so
thev are not budgeted to fund a program Thus, the need araae
for programming designed specially for women to be housed in
the office of the first vice-prcsidicnt.*'
McClain also said that Women's Board will set. up ihc
grams and have the funds. *"Thc WRC just sits women aoWri'
they can talk This isn't what we want." she said
McCain said there has to be a central place where everything
IS hou^icd. some type of communication and coordination
between j different groups on campus.
"Bcforip, women didn't know where to go to fund their ideas,"
she said "There was no central place to take their ideaa. to
Women's Board will be a help" Sh< also said that it will be a
way of kjeeping funds straight and knowing how much money is
being sp^nt by whom.
The Board is budgeted for $4,000 this year, and McClain said
she woul^ ask for 50 per cent more for the next fiscal year,
beginning July I.
Ahhough the board was set up at the beginning of this year, it
IS now programming for next year.
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Volume XCVMI, Numbar 36
Monday. May 24. 1976
m0UMh9d •vfy w—kday Ounng rrw
aaaee' yar waompt aurtng fmii09y9
and daya tollowing holidays, and a*-
ami nation parH0d9. by tha ASUCLA
Communicauona Board 306 Waat-
wood Ptaia. Loa Angalm%. CaMornta
90024 Copynght i»76 by rha
ASUCLA Communtcattom Board
Second ciMt pbamgM paid at tha Loa
jMTi Slabing»r
■naging wm
Patrick Haaiy
Ann* Young
Aaalatant a
n Kan«
Eric Mar<tol
^Bui 9tQnoiaai
Ouinn.
MichaS* Duval, aaaltlant
Frank Stillworth
Howard Poanar -- On
Laura Klamar — T
Maltaup Editors
Brandy Aiaxandar
Cunningham
Bratt Hollar
ArtDlraclor
Michaal
DB Stair Wfiier
Uadvarater explorer Jacques
Cousteau, claiming nuclear
aaergy a not the only solution
ta Aaierica*s energy needs,
w^Bkt Friday in favor of Proa-
)5, the hifrlaaf aafek
initiative.
Speaking '^as a citizen of the
and **on behalf of no
organization whatsoever."
Cousteau told reporters^ at the
Beverly .Wilshire Hotel that
** safety forever is the caaeapc
we first have to face.
^^Proposition 15 is an ex-
tremely reasonable safeguard
for the people,** he said ** After
several months of meditation,
today my duty is to strongly
recommend to vote Yes on
15.-
Cousteau dted leveral alter-
aatives to nuclear energy, in-
cluding solar heating and cool-
ing, geothermal power and
wtad -electrical power. These
ahematives wouid not reqaiie
a larger investment than
nuclear power, he contended,
but **would coat kis to oper-
ate.**
AHhoogh admittiag the al-
ternatives would not he an
easy answer for energy de-
mands. Cousteau suted they
have been demonstrated to be
feasible
**if something fails some-
where, theie is no consequence
for man — none," he said.
Calling on Americans to
"^take the time to reevaluate the
problem,** Cousteau challci^gad
the safety of nuclear energy.
With the world as it is, he said,
nuclear energy will not be safe
for "Hens of millions of years.
**Becaaac the nuclear system
is vulnerable to social dis-
orders, because reaaors cannot
be dissociated from bombs, the
oaly way to insure safety in a
nuclear age would be to esub-
lish a world-wide dicutorship.
a gk>hal tacMty where no in-
dividual freedom could be
tolerated.** he laid.
In addiuoq, Cousteau
pointed out that while nuclear
plants themselves may he
clean, the wastes and heat
pollution they releaae is a
haiard.
''Never has a choice been io
importam for mankind,** he
niit adding that the decuion
will resuh in **either a smiling
future or an atomic Big
Brother."
AIk) in attendance for'Cou-
steau*s brief statement and
question-and-answer period
were rock singers David Cros-
by and Graham Nash, who
have joined the Cousteau so-
ciety in supporting the initui-
tive.
, **We better think about what
we*re doing before we go any
farther.** Naah said, "^because
that's (nuclear energy) the
thing that can put a stop to it
all-
**Moat prohiiBM today are
reversihiB*'* he added, **hut this
one isn*t This one is out of
I
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I _^" . - -^"■
Regents Won't consider morality in investments
t-: "!
By Erk MmM
DB Steir Writer
SAN FRANCISCO ~ The
BoAffd'of Regents dioiiid not
to iavcttifMc more **iocMUiy
tnictive wayi of voting the
on tik S633 milbon
worth of ftock owned by the
University of California
Regent Wilham M Roth, at
the board meeting last Friday,
propoMd a committee to for-
mukte a policy on proxy votes
Roch said this committee woiiid
cofliiier .the *^iiiorai and woemT
as well at the fianacinl ioi-
plioitions of the way UC votes
on projLi^. The propoeaJ sug-
gested that the oooiiiittee look
it the-poliacs of, certain other
universities.
This wo«W cknaie the ex-
isting pfMQhvoting policy. Ac-'
cording to UC treasurer
Owsley B. Haaunood, Univer-
sity pobcy sutes that it should
vote proxy in such a wiy as to
l^iimiff the value of its in-
iwffiiitt. He said tlHtt tiK
policy also states that it it
improper for UC to take a
stand on social and moral
laiues related to stocks in iu
portfoUo.
Regent Dean Watkins said,
"^It would be morally wrong"
to manage the University's
investment portfolio in any
way which would not enhance
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its value.
Regent ^umni Represenu-
tive Edwafd A Morm ako
oypMid the CMiideration of
non-fiiiMwittl Mi^ in proxy
voting in ipite of the
of other universities.
Casting proxy votai
cial and moral itSMt, accord-
jllf >to Moms, would require
the UC to take a stand on
thMC iMiiet aad rattrict aca-
demic freedom He taid **We
should be the one University to
show the world what academic
frgcd— really means.**
Regent-dengnale EvI F.
Willens agreed with Regent
Roth. He called the policy of
not looking closely at the so-
cial and moral aspacts of proxy
voting "a cop-out. ••
In spite of their v^xnferotit
argument, the Regents who
supported Roth's proposal
were m the minority, and the
University retained its existing
investment policy.
In other business, the Board
of Regents' comnuttee on Edu-
cational Policy discussed a
report on the twp-year-old
California PoMKondary Edu-
cational ComnMMion (CPEC).
The Commission is charged
with planning all higher edu-
cation in California.
It is mmdt up of 23 mem-
ben; 12 iwpumni\n% the gen-
nting
of higgler
eral pubtic aad 1 1
Uk vanoui tacton
educauon in Califi
SooK Refcntt expressed
lean that CPEC wwli over-
is a planning
a kind of a
super Board of Re|^ts for all
poaiiec6ndary education in the
sUte. Regent Roth called a
Student Body Presidents*
Council report, which said
CPEC could remain an ,un^
biased third party, "'naive "
However, he believes the Com*
nussion could be effective if all
concerned make /sure it stays
wiihm its hmitatioiu.
UC President David S.
Saxon said he liked the con-
cept of CPEC as long as it
slicks solely to planning. Hc^
said the Commission cannot
plan higher education and, at
the same time, conqn-n itself
with the dky to day operation
of the collefes in the stale.
UCLA Chancellor Charles
E Young spoke in favor of
this measure, which would takr
effect only during a campus
fund raising di^ve. The bene>
ficiary of the fund drive would
have to be recommended by
the chancellor of the campus
where the drive tnkes place.
Senator Tunney
(Coalifi«|diro« Fa«e 1)
United ^States; Japan, Asia and
Western Europe would be com-
pelled to yieW to the, Soviet
Union without the presence of
a strong United Sutes,**" Tun-
mgjf warned.
The senator also noted the
deterrent value of a strong
*The B-36 was one of our
sutisntful weapons, and
it was never used,** Tunney
saii. |*Having that weapon at
our diipoaal helped avoid war
in the Mr% and 5<rs; in fact. I
consider a strategic weapon a
failure if it has to be used,** he
concluded.
Explaining his opposition to
the Kennedy-Corman National
Health Insurance Bill, Ttnaey
ssiid the bifl was loo expensive
^uid didn*t provide for a supply
of doctors, nurses aad para-
adequaie to roieet the
Tunney also criddzed the
Ford and Nixon adminislra-
tions for not wirnriina the $30
(C
on Page It)
t
Margaret Mead talks
today on nuclear issue
By Joanne Eglasli
DB Staff Writer
Anthropolo^t and author of books varying from her
1928 Coming of Age in Samoa to her 1972 Biackberry
Winter My Earlier Years, Margaret Mead will discuss The
Plutonium Economy The Need to Know** in the Grand
Ballroom today at noon
Sponsored by the Scientists' Institute for Public Informa-
tion and the Associated Students Spankers Program, Mead
recently has studied contemporary Western culture and the
relationship between character aad social forms. She is
adjunct professor of anthropology at Columbia University
and visiting professor of anthropology in the department of
psychiatry at the University of Cincinnati.
Mead represents **a household word,** commented
Barbara Cassidy, a coordinator of Women*s Week 1976.
HutMcad/* slie added, **is an exception from most
MMMMful women in history.**
Following Mead, the kick-off speaker for UCLA's first
^onrien's Week since 1972 will be anthropologist Evelyn
Reed:
"Women, in the past three years, have ^ined certain
.J"-^_ .^""^y explained -We're covering not only the
MvanoiMent of women but also the continuing discrimina-
tion against women.**
On Tuesday, key tyfzrtxt include a pnad diaciMeion on the
Discrimination of Women in Employment from 10 am to
noon in Ackerman 2412 and a debate on the Equal Righu
Amendment from noon to 2 pm in Architecture 1102.
Phyllis Chesler, author of Women and Aiotkteu. will
vpcak from noon to I pm in Schoenberg QuMd on
^^ a«Mday The issue of abortion will be reviewed from 2
pni to 3 pm in the Women's Lounge Thursday's main event
ires Sandy Hill from KNXT news m a BMd on
imafes of Women m the Medui,- from noon to 2 pm in
ihe Grand BaUroom And Friday*s prognun includes a
fflCliliinB nt Frmmitm and lissialisni aiili WiUii
KiVil m AckOBMm Union's issond Og^ lounge
^
--J
Affirmative Action programs
_^__ _ -». •—^ * ' ■.^m,^^ ■
termed internal colonialism
Something New Exciting in
i
./
ranee
By Inannf Eglnsh
DB Stair Writer
, Believing that Affirmative
Action programs lead to inter-
nal ciiinnialum, Pierre van den
Berghe contends that "It is hcl
nocident that the Affirmative
Action policy was implemented
dunng one of the most corrupt
pohtical eras**
Professor of sociology at the
University of Washington,
Seattle, van den BerglK du-
cussed ''Affirmative Action
Liberation or Intenial Colo-
nialism** Wednesday in Haines
Hall for the first annual Alpha
Kjippa Oelta lecture.
Alth<^u^ Affirmative Action
can be viewed as an **attempt
by well-meaning liberals to
overcome barriers of racial
inequity** and end discrimina-
tion against minority gronps«
said van den Berghe, the cyni-
cal viewpoint is more reahstic
**1 am disturt>ed at Affirma-
tive Action,** van den Berghe
said, **because I recognize the
consequences of Affirmative
Action.** He said that Affirma:
tive Action is entrenching
racial and ethnic inequahty in
American society, thus creating
the "opposite effects of its
declared intent ion . **
The most basic issue invol-
ved in Affirmative Action-type
programs, explained van den
Berghe, is the relationship bet-
ween the individual and the
Bisle. The two modes of this
relationship are the iiKlividuai
and the ^^Uecttve. he tai
adding, **lf the. aim is to mini-
mize inequalities, then 1 believe
that the only sensible way to
ificorporate is on an individual
basis." ^
— Other structures result In
internal colonialism, since citi-
zens are divided into first-class
groups and second-claas
groups, van den Berghe ex-
plained. Pirst<tass citizens are
treated as individuals, while
minorities are handled collec-
tively
Van den Berghe used the
Indian reservation system as an
example of internal colonial-
ism **lt is my view.** he said,
**that Affirmative Action,
whatever its stated intent may
be« results in indianization* of
minority groups m the United
The basic contradiction in
Affirmative Action is that ""you
cannot fighlr^ rnasm with
raasm,** van d^
/-
ex-
plained "Optimistic statements
are hned on a naive view of
the political system ** Affirma-
tive Action programs' main
effect, said van den Berghe.
have been to **fBt Blacks,
Asian Americans, Chicanos
nad so on at each other*s
throats and to make America
more race cotiscious.**
By labeling oeruin groups,
competition begins **as to who
gets how much of the pie." van
den Berghe said, developing
coiwiivit\ He added that he
iacognizes the syndrome to be
simtlnr to one in the colonial
system.
A structure is created in
which the university appoints a
-Vice-President for Minority
Affairs** with another structure
under him "Yoo find people
wh^ose role it is to be the
official Black and so- on,** van
den Berghe said, adding, **Tliis
IS what I mean by the colonial
structure.**
Backlnsli eilsct
As a further negative effect
of Affirmative Action, van den
Berghe described the "tecklash
effect** on the White popula-
tion. If they believe that Af-
firmative Action favors mem-
ber* of minority groups "over
the dcminant group,** he ex-
plained, "they unleash hostility.
It is just enough to fdt mil-
Uons of white Americans tre-
mendousJy angry.**
Van den Berghe views as
**dchumani/ing. (^emeaning iind<
paternalist the eftects o(
Affirmative AcMn ai^ainst
minority fronps. It is negative
he said, to be labeled «iv
second-class citizen who re-
quires help, for example, to be„
admitted to a university
An institutional problem
exists in American society, ului
den Berghe feels, where people
are blocked by criteria **not
relating to their efficiency in a
job.** The first kind of attack
he said, to be made upon the
American system is "throwing
out tests of admission not
related to performance on the
job " Van den Berghe ex-
plained that he would prefer to
accept open admissions at the
university rather than to make
a "fetish of standards.**
His second suggestion was to
base any criteria on socio-
economic dus criteria rather
than racial "If the state wants
to introduce criteria to com-
pensate for discrimination that
has existed in the past,** van
den Berghe said, iMinl cnteru
is not the solution
* n voo Oon t hav« iia^My msurafica the oe^ ♦manciai
raspgnaitoiiity law coui<l aft«ct yow m ia;s
^Aod<tled rati^ for Ouaiitying Students
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(213) 466-9153
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2nd Garden Theatre Festival
of Los Angeles at UCLA
UCLA Architecture Quad
***
Free For All
\
m
I
Friday, June 4 thru Sunday, June 6
^
^
•
All
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*
1
J
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^K^mm^i^^m
-J
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7:00 pm
7:30 pm
8:30 pm
Friday, Juna 4
6:00 pm BICENTENNIAL PERFORMING ARTS
PROGRAM (BPAP) "Finding the Real
Anierica,'* A Bicentennial Play
JIM MANDELL, Singer/Songwriter
RENE BLUES QUINTET, History of the
Blues
GARDEN THEATRE PRESENTS. 'Ice
Cream Alley" An Original Musical with
narration by Johnny Gibson-Couser, Mu-
sical arrangement by Arthur Wood The
musical, set in the 40's depicts "the life-
styles, strivings, frustrations, dreams, and
successes" of a group of blacks living
along Ice Cream Alley in Memphis. Tenn.
A stirring mixture of jazz, blues, and gospel.
BALLET FOLKLORICO TOLTECA, Mexi-
can Regional Folkdancing
JANA HELLER & GEORGE KELLER. Gui-
tars, Dulcimer. Mandolin, and Celesta-
phone Concert *
CHRIS BLISS. Rock & Roll Juggler
7:30 pm
8 pm &
10 pm
8:30 pm
9:30 pm
9:00 pm
10:00 pm
•10:30 pm
^teturday,
12:00 pm
, T:00 pm
2:00 prri
10:00 pm
10:30 pm
Sumtoyi J
1 1:00 pm
3:00 pm
3:30 pm
4:00 pm
5:00 pm
6:00 pm
6:30 pm
7:00 pm
June-S -— — — — -- — ' — — —
JROUGADOUR PUPPETS. Xastte Hastle
at Rainbows End" A Children*s Program
BICENTENNIAL PERFORMING ARTS
PROGRAM (BPAP) "A Children's Program"
MEMBERS OF THE IMPROVISATIONAL
THEATRE PROJECT. I.T.P.. MARK TAPER
FORUM, Theatre Fun for Children of All
Ages
T^;^E QUARTER NOTES, Female Barber-
shop Quartet
PETER FELDMAN. Old Time Banjo/Fiddld
In Concert
CONCHEROS EN AZTLAN. Mexican Dance
THE FUNKY KINGS (STEKOL. TEMPCHIN.
SHEAR), In Concert -
CORKY & WHITNEY, Variety Show
NANCY NEVINS, Singer/Songwriter
HADARIM ISRAELI SONG AND DANCE
THEATRE
For some 15 years this talented company
12:00 pm
12:30 pm
1 :30 pm
2:00 pm
2:30 pm
3:30 pm
4:00 pm
5:00 pm
6:00 pm
6:30 pm
7:30 pm
8:00 pm
8:30 pm
under the direction of choreographer^
dancer Shiomo Bacar. and his leading
dancer Dina Van Minnen has been pleasing
audiences throughout the western states
Their program includes singing and music
as well as dancing, which ranges from
traditiohal Yemenite and Chassidic to
modern youth kibbutz dances.
SMOKEWOOD, Bluegrass Concert
MORT SAHL - 2 special concerts in Scho-
enberg Hall. $2.50
LOS ANGELES ACTORS THEATRE PRE-
SENTS "Trevor." A one-act farce by John
Bowen. Directed by Bill Bushnell
THE PIET PAULO SHOW FEATURING
YVONNE. International Magic Team/lllu•^
sionists
LEAH KUNKEL A KNUCKLES. In Concert
EDWARD MORRIS. Comedian
My Special World witfi Bob Kaye — Chil-
dren's program in Ackerman Union. $3.50
^^R CO THE
EAST WEST PLAYERS AND TOTAL THE-
ATRE ENSEMBLE, 'SWAP, and Other
Animals." A Children's Program
TROCHI MOCHI, Chicano Puppet Theatre
LOS MORENOS, Mexican Musical Trio
CACHE VALLEY DRIFTERS. New Grass.
Progressive Bluegrass. In Concert
SONG OF THE EARTH, Traditional Songs
of the World
ARABIAN NIGHTS. Dances of the Middle
East
I SOLOISTI DDI ECHO PARK. Chamber
Music
DAVE O'HARE. Mime
JIMMY ALU & HIS DIXIE ALL STARS.
Dixieland Music
JANE GETZ. Singer/Songwriter
JOHNNY DARK. Comedian
Teatro Mestizo. Chicano Theatre from
Centre Cultural de la Raza. S.D.
- free fresh orange juice & pther goodies -
ON CAMPUS
WEEKEND
ctrtlur* « r,cre.tion affairs and camput events coiT.rT)..,.on SETATHON in
coopefBtioo urtth committee on fine mtt productKins
u
Innovat
^nter
volunteers
J
.t
r.)
I
<^
Students offered counseling experience
<•«%
\DeiiiM DofosliefT
• Suir Writer
The Southern California
Countelinf Center offert a
unique opportunity for people
to help others and gain Qfil
hftod counseling experiepce as
. wcil.
The Center, which has been
called /'the mo«t innovative
nmital health agency in the
nation** by the National As-
sociation for Mental Health,
operates on a non-profit, all-
volunteer basis, providing
counseling services for persons
who could no! ordinanlv af-
ford to leek help
According to Oenise Smith,
administrative < director of the
Center, UCLA students have
served as volunteer counselors
and often come to the Center
to work on speciki psychology
projects.
At present, the Center is m
■0td of both counselors and
non-clinical volunteers for
typing, telephone and desk
work
The Center 4M1 orinized in
Ifl6 by two psychology pro-
fessionals, Benjamin Weininger
and the late Hans Hoffman.
During the first year, five pro-
fessionals, donating their time,
supervised the work of 20 vol-
unteer counselors who saw 90
clienu
Today, approximately 80
volunteers see 1750 clients per
year under the guidance of 30
professional supervisors
Client fees, ranging from
zero to 515 per Jieek, are
based on income and ability to
pay. .Seventeen per cent of the
Center's cUents pa> no fee, and
74 per cent pay less than four
dollars per week
The center is not tunded by
an> government grants since
they dq not operate on "the
medical heahh model,** that is,
clients are not seen by paid
professionals.
The majonty of the Center's
income comes from client fees,
friends of the center and fund-
raising efforts
Ckents come from all age
groups, but are primarily be-
tween 20 and 40 years old
They are from all racial, eco-
nomic and educational back-
grounds
Group wtmkam
Types of counseling offered
include individual and group
sessions, family and marriage
counseling, special group's for
protetioners and an activity
group.^ The Center also oper-
ates a round-the-clock tele-
phone cnsis line.^^^
According to Smith, the
Center gets counselors from all
walks of life In the past, many
couMTors have iised their ex-
perience in the Center to go on
in the professional psychology
field Some, however, have
been with the center for the
entire 10 years of aptiation
s
The' Center is currently aim-
ing at developing the para-
professional aapcct and hopes
that more counselors will stay
t with the Center for longer
^^Txo^ of time, she added
The first step for potential
counselors is the submission of
.f tonlidential ' resume, which
should include education, oc-
cupational ex pcnencc. personal
therapy experiences and * a
shon biography.
According to Smith, there
ar^ ae. set adiicational or cv
perieojce requirements for being
A counselor Rather, accep-
tance is determined on the
^on*s potential to be a good
However, thev do
require that the applicant Ims
received some past personal
therapy This need not be
tonnal psychoanalytical ther-
apy! but should provide some
insight into the expenenoe of
being a client
This information is reviewed,
and, if the applicant is eli-
gible, an interview with two
experienced connsclors is sche
diiM
Accepted applicants then
enter a two ta six month ori-
entation phafe, where they
perform a variety of. tasks
designed to orient and involve
them wi-th Yhe Center com-
munity ^'
rh|: final step of the screen-
ing process involves a five-
f^ evaluation group. This
phiie provides Mn opportunity
for the applicant \o judge
whether the Center fits his
needs and time lor^vhe OgMar'-s
sAtf to assess hj/ abilities.
Afterwards, two months are
spent in training,' in which the
applicant serves a^ an intake
counselor. iRccptiJfg n<fw ch-
eats 9mj n\g\\\if€t week and
attendii^,: evajCstion mmmm
aa^ MifltahoiA
I Munlhlj pledge
^■ce^ couflBcior, dig person
cynmi^p.. hi^niaeif to six hours
^pet week &i direct counaeUog.
participation on intake, taper-
visioin setaioat. sta^ meetif^
and aX^onitjJy plejdge
••Tlia aauriselor pjlcdges be-
gan m a necessity tp keep the
Center's doan ap^i.** Smith
said. I
The amount of jhe pledge
vanes according to' wImM the
counselor it aMr td pay. and
although no counselor is
turned down if he iS unable to
pledge, most have been quite
reil^aasive to the! idea, the
I
b
r
I
5
Co-founder Weiningei^hc-
lieves that one off the most
unique aspects of the Center is
Its educational benefits for
both clients and c^ounselor
"Clients who h4ve learned
inappropriate ways of re-
sponding to stress learn new
ways. Counselors constantly
evaluate and change theataelves
or their perspective through
interaction among themselves,
their ' clients and their super-
visors.** he said
The Center is located at
5615 West Pico Blvd
a S Schwana candtdat* for Mip#fiof coMrt ludge. olflc* oiw. wHI tp««li
ly »t noon In M«y«rhoft Pmrk Schwarti is running against tncumbant
fudga Emll C»um^r\ and Etena SuWitan
$1 UCLA STUDENT TICKETS ON SALE NOW
at Kerckhoff Hall Ticket Office & CTO
Keith Jarrett will do a free residency date/time/
location to be announced
— SCA —
This weete
W->^
Kandwicries
in the
Vending
BEEF. PASTRAMI.
and
SW155
on RYE
PftSTRAMIand EGG
on
KflSER
ROLL
v^
,y
I I ATTENTION PRE>HEALTM CARE STUDENTS
■I
MEDICUS
Yoga Cimical
Application to
Madicine
Tuesday May 25, 6:00 pm
Rm 13-105 (next to 3ioq»ed)
Health Advocates, Counselors
hold Health Faire tomorro>v
W7
UCLA SUidcnt Health \dvocatcs and Peer
Health counselors have created and coordi-
nated a Health Fairc to be held from 10 am lo
^ pm tomorrow in front' of Janss Steps
A ding to Pat Masters director of the
^ief Health C ounselors," thr purpofe of the
faire is to increase jhe awi-^encfs of health
issues an(< concrriii on campus, and to identify
the existing on aiul off campus organizations
available to students.**
According to Masters, sincr Student Health
1% the prim. -ourcc ol health care on campus,
the laire will serve a vital function. She said
••people have such a sterile imafe of health,
we'd like to bring it down to reality at a level
that students can identify with"
The Student Health Science staff will be
available at the fajre for questions and inior-*
mation. Thirty five community organizations
Service funds .
with free screening and teaching programs will
be available
Some of the iCfVMt being offered are the
American JCancer i\. the UCLA Mobile
Dental Chnic. and the Sickle Cell Foundation
Other lervtcei, luch as hypertension screening,
biofeedback demonstrations, acupuncture in-
formation and relaxation dMiit are also being
offered
Another facility offered is the Mobile -€ye
Chnic. sponsored by the West wood Vtttn|^ of
local Lions Club. The unit will provide free,
painless tests to persons over the age of 30 or
persons over the age of 18 with a history of
glaucoma or diabetes in their families.
There will also be free entertainmeiit in-
cluding luggiers. clowris. music and skits. Free
refrrshments wiU also be provided. ^
^tlaina Haheeb
♦•
PYRAMID ENERGY? . .
An Open Forum
Monday, May 24 — 3:00 pm
Royce Hall 160
Sporttored by Pyramia Energy Research Society
(( ontinued from Page I )
guilt V until proven innocent,
Reece said Reecc added that
the charges were "simpU alle-
gations **
"As far as I'm concerned,
the program has done nothing
inappropriate I think I speak
for the Board." Reece said
Nishi reiterated that he
wanted to make one inves-
tigation into that check '*You
will review the things in the
memo. I want to review the
one check," he told CSRB.
Other allegations have also
been made, but Nishi has so
far cqnfined the investigation
to allegations regarding the
check
Nishi's preliminary investi-
gation found that Urban
Workshop was not registered
and did not have a business
license because it is a non-
profit organi/ation The com-
pany charged tax because it
had originally rented the
equipment from Audio^Video
Craft. According to Nishi. Ur-
ban Workshop paid tax to
Audio Video C raft and charged
tax when it passed the equip-
ment on to the program He
called the transaction a '*cash-
flow** arrangement.
Shortly afterward, Jane Bar-
ranies. Student Government
Accountant, sent an unofficial
memo to Nishi calling the tax
a *use tax.^ not sales tax use
tax is charged to all rentals,
and a company does not need
a license to charge it, Barrantes
said However, a company
charging use lax must be reg-
istered with the State Board of
Equalization, Barrantes said
She added that at the time! she
had not ascertained whether or
not Urban Workshop wasjeg-
istered .•
4-
i
'• >
WOMEN'S WEEK 1976
MAY 24-28
MONDAY MAY 24
;. r-
n -
1 -2
>
1
4
10
•M Women s Loudk*- WOMAN - animated historv of women
Grand Ballroom EVELYN REED. anthropoloKist
AL Women s Lounge JUDY CHICAGO, artist i
Grand Ballroom WOMEN DANCE - mannmK tried dance theatre - alice & kat.a
' '['
TUESDAY MAY 25
10 -
IJ
\ 4
4 S
12
M 2412 Women s Legal Status
\ti hiteiture 1102 Equal Rights Amendment
Al 2412 Wages for Housework
M 2412 Working Alternatives for Women
M ^Sl"" Woman to Woman" film
WEDNESDAY MAY 26
10
11
12
2 -
3 -
5
8
11
12
2
3
4
8
11
10 - 12
12 - 2
2 - 4
AL Women's Lounge Women s Health C are
AU Women's Lounge Birth Control Methods
Schoenberg Quad PHYtllS CHESLER Women and Madness
AU Women's Lounge ABORTION - a woman s right
AL 3517 Self Help — For Women Only.
Kinvey 190 Dialogue on Interpersonal Relatum^lnps.
Grand Ballroom Women s Concert - Virk. Raridle Miss Alice Stone
THURSDAY MAY 27
M Vtefiien's Lounge Slide on liS women s hisicrv bherna Cluck
Cr^nd Ballroom Women and Media — Sandy Hill KNXT Ne%vs
AU Women s lounge Feminist Studio Workshop
FRIDAY MAY 28
12
1
M Women s Lounge the^Double OppitAiion of Minor.t> W<>rr, .
Gradn Ballroom YVONNE B BURKE lASSP sponsored)
Kmsev 190 Lesbians
M Women's Lounge Feminism jtnd Socialism - Willie Mae Reeil
FOR MORE INFO — CALL 82SOQ4n
**Now I understand that it
was a misunderstanding and
CQuld have been solved very
simply by asking questions."
said John Reir, Uses of Audio
Visual Media program dir-
ector, of the initial alJegation
Rier refused further comment
on the allegations.
Reece. of CSRB, said the
cash-'flow arrangement oc-
cured because urban Worii-
shop was an intermediary be^
twee^i Rier and a studjo ac-
tually renting the equipment
Maintenance problems with
the equipment caused Rier to
stop renting from thf studio
and withdraw his money from
the Urban Workshop account
Reece said the arrangement
was not noticed earlier because
the guidchnes of the ^program
did not require Rier to include
receipts. '*At best, wiuti iijs
i 111 nyi I ■ ■ I aii^ Mill I -■ ' ■ ^' I " — '«
(Continued on Page 16)
Prof asks government
help for new towns n
By Jim PeHz *
OB Stair Writer
L4Mf-terfn financing and incrcaicd fovernmentaJ mfm^nNlity
are etsential to the development of new townsw Harvmf^ )mm
proiesM>r Charles M Haar taid Wednesday
•"Urban tofethemeM is the business of America," Haar said,
"and while new communities will not be built in a iay, I think
it^l high time ' we got started**
Haar. former Und and property advisor to the ILennedy and
Johnson administrations, has rccenUy served as a consultant to
the Congress aad headed a tasiL force on urban affairs and
housing.
_*Ncw towns exemplify the dilemmas we have tn the whole
WtaB icene,** Haar told about 60 people at the Graduate School
of Manafement. "You're gudtting at so many thinp **
Citing lack of long-rangt finandng as the main breakdown of
new communities, Haar said the enormous inflation problem
during construction time places new town* immediately in debt
Govtnwmfs obligation
•"Finance begins lo underly your overlying purpoae,** he said
**There aren't nmmy people m the market for that sort of thing.**
To alleviate this strain for new towns, Haar called on fhe
government to accept a **moral obligation** of assistance at the
local levels.
*An intended approach is the government guaranteeing
revenue aniiapation bonds,** Haar proposed New communities
would borrow these bonds in anticipation of %hs land increastM
in puice ^
"There is the great issue m the new community," which results
in "paying the price while nothing is going on," Haar contended
As a result, many recently-formed communities have been
unable to pay their pilk Should the government foreclose thete
towns, however, it would lose virtually all of its initial
investment, Haar explained
Need for stratcffy
"There's going to have to be some strategy," he added, "and
use towns jum going to have to be let go "
Looking back over the last two decades of what he termed
"uncontrolled urban growth," Haar outlined programs which
apparently failed in developing soutid new communities
One plan, the New Communities Act of 1970 (Title VII).
intended to guarantee a flexible mortgage to local areas for
housing but failed to foresee the nse of inflation
According to Haar, Hk $360 milhon appropriation failed to
create a "self-containe<f urban patter, a close relationship to
housing,** and significant integration **lt looks like a total
disaster,** he said.
"There was a bit »f* oversell ing at that time," he added, *'but
the whole business ol real esute mortgaging mpney i)k not going
to stay around "
Haar's ulk, last of a four-part scries of pubiic lectures tn
propert) and TiMpd "finances, was sponsored by the Graduate
School of Management's chair in Real Estate and Land
Economics '
-.1
1
I
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riff COMHiTl DISCOUMTJ>ltUG STORES'
ISSCMPfMNS • VIMMMS • COiM
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What is a BIEKEmTOCKT
Th« difttngutvhtng f«atur«
of th« Birk«nstocli Mr.tlai
It th« iT>olcJ«d (ooipnni
contour. M hVAt intciii »ii t>v
OlMarving rh« n«tur«l
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Tha patantad footpfmr
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If you can*t go tMrefoot. go
B1RKEM81XMK
. New Location:
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10912 Le Conte
(By UCLA Main Entr«nc«)
WMtwood 477-737T
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12121
Regents Belcct
Berkeley student
as student member
SAN FR ANSISCO - Daryn S Peepks mt Bdected for a
one-year term at ihc Student Recent Friday by the Board of
Regents. She reptaoet Carol Mock whose tern will expire June
Peeples was choiaa as the laeonl^' person to fill the puki trom
three nominees ciKtM by the Student Body Presidents Council
The two nominees who were not chosen are Anfeli Black well and
Steven R. Wade. Both are second-year law students at Berkeley
and UCLA, respectively. ^_
Peeples it currently a senior majoring in English at the
Berkeley campus. She also serves on the Registration Fee
Committee there.
Though she was accepted at Northwestem's graduate school of
journalism starting next September. Peeples said she will
postpone graduate school to carry out her duties as Student
Regent.
During a -press conference after Friday's Regent's meeting.
Peoples said, *•! think one of the mam issues I am interested in is
the registration fee increase " This, she believes, is an issue of
student concern over which the Regents have control. Peeples
said she was asked to look into departmental cutbacks and
dismissal of some faculty members, but claims these were
matters related to invidvidual campuses and not the Regents
She describes herself politically as **left middle of the road *
Being from Georgia, she said she is from a very conservative
background
-i Eric Mandel
Daryn S P—pk9%
tti itH
From Micronesian Traders . . .
whW»
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For men and women, terrific tropical sandals m UCLA colors
- yellow and blue stripes, topped and bottomed in black
neoprene The thong - comfortable blue nylon And the
sandals come m a natural canvas bag. with a gold and blue
stripe plus our name You can use it for carrying your swim-
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sportswear b level eckerman union 82S-7711
open mon-tnurs 7 46-7 3d fn 7 45-6 30 sat 10-4
**fc
m!B^P!^^SS^
Carter invades Brown's turf
Pushes leadership'
to State Senate
-^t-
^ CMi Bowi
lO C4
SACRAMENTO ~ Jimmy
Carter brought his <^w>|^tigp
for tiK Democratic praniito-
tial nomination to Governor
Broara's doorstep last week,
stressing wluit he said was a
aaed for a reorganized execu-
tive hraach and an aggressive
In an address to
last Thursday in the State
Senate Chambers, Carter nid
iMi promise for a **reorganiza-
tion of tbe executive braadi of
tiK federal government is a
coraarsUNK of my campaign
for the presidency.**
Carter did not spell out his
plans for reorganization plans
which Governor Brown has
charged do not exist
**We are not talking about a
craak program,** Carter told
legislators. **We are Ulking
alia lit a meticulous ana^m of
bow the number of agencies we
presently have ~> more than
1900 — can be reduced to
200.**
Carter was warmly received
by the bipartisan crowd of
legislators, although reacuon
to his speech was mixed. One
Ifgiiistor. Assemblyman Alister
McAhster (D-San Jose), des-
cribed the former Georgia gov-
ernor as a **varm, friendly
m being.** while another,
iblyman John Dasconoel-
los fI>-San Jose), said he
thought Carter's speech
**almost jnsulting** in its
plicity.
Afterward. Carter spoke to
an estinuited 3,000 peraans at a
noon rally ourside the Capitol,
whsfc he again was cordially
received. tliMgh there was
settle isolated beckhng InMi
supporters of other candidates.
**This country is hungry for
kadership,** Carter told audi-
ence.
**Our nation is best served by
a strong. aMPSuive and ia-
depeiident president, working
INTERNATIONAL GRANT-IN-AIO
A limitad numpar of Qrants-m-Aid to female
graduate students will be awarded for tfii 1976-77
demic )f%mf by the Altrusa Internatiortai Foundation
Application forms are availaPle at the Office of inter-
national Studenu 4 Scholars. 297 Dodd Hall (825-319$)
Apphcation deadline ie June 1 1 . 1976
with a strong and i
m
^But,** Ik said. "CaajWis is
inherently inenpabJt of IcAdci
ship There is only one person
in this country that can set the
standard of ethics, excellence
and greatness . that can
rule out discrimination, hatred.
or injustice, and that's the
presidem.**
While stressing the theme of
(Continued on Fnge 19)
OATSUN
M
Acres of Datsuns
Student, faculty, sind alumni
flBiBt discounts
— ^Q^ S Arroyo Parkway
•684-11
ft
Official Un
'r^^
to CaNfonHa
^Jsfr
ity Notices
MANDATORY UCLA STUDENT IDENTIFICA-
TION CARD to b9 i98U9d to all sfudonts
continuing in th9 Fail Ouartar 1976 through
Jun9 4 In tha Adiamnan Union Sacond Floor
Lounga according to tha following schadula:
IMay 24: A-F
liay 2S: A-L
May 26: A-R
May 27 thru Juna 4: A-Z
A currant Ragistration Card and supportiva
idantlflcatlon — which must include a phole-
graph (Driver's License, Passport, etc.) — will
be required prior to issuance.
Effective in the Fall Quarter 1976 the Identi-
fication Card, along^lth a current Registration
Card, will be required in order to transact
official business, receive services or participate
tn University sponsored programs/ activities.
'Vt**
COMMISSIONER
RICHARD TUTTLE
of the
California Energy Commission*
will discuss the
California Nuclear initiative
(Proposition 15)
and other energy related issues
♦»v~
Monday, May 24 at Noon
Law School Faculty Conference Room
(Rm. 2423)
* The Ertergy Commission recently voted to oppose Proposition 15
Atnitmmtm
nn4
-•J
S;'
-tt*jt ".
,•>
--/
\^
*
..» -
Fear and loathing in Campbell Plaza
-)
m
i
The UCLA archipelago: an anonymous
«ca of fearful, prptexd souls inter-
ipMWd with vending machine islands.
Respite from the academic swim, per-
haps; a place to coax i cellophane-
wrapped repait from an unfeeling ap-
pliance, becoffi* ktfSfificiary of a surprise
windfall in the change slot, ' or more
likely victim of no change at all 'We
seldom question their presence here,
tacfHy acknowledging their existence as a
OPINION
By Peyton Mason
concession to convenience, invitation to
annoyance, or both Aesthetically they
are a lesion upon the campus, physio-
bfically and psychologically they are
dtebolocat engines of mayhem, at least to
me. For these reasons and the ones I
outline in the true story following, I
demand they be immediately unnlugged
dnd heaved into the deepest tr es of
the Pacific Oct >
It was a night of crazed Santa Ana's a
few weeks ago, when the^ew indiviMafe
brave enough to venture outdoors were
soon blown inside by an incessani,
raging, wind I Was heading for the
Research Library, quickened by the
brawling scirocco, when I jjcddod to
stop for a pack of cigarets in CampbeH
PUza. As I entered the Plaza, the wiinf
sladwnod considerably and I saw him. A
tall bony figure, manic hair swirling
around disordered eyes, wildly yanking
on a chair screaming. "Man and chairs
were made and everywhere they are in
chairlsl", invoking Rousseau and Levia,J *
think, in a singularly eloquent curse.
I n^ood, the chair was chair>^ to a table.
He seemed insane. When he saw me he
bogan hysterically weeping and tearing at
his hair.
"Five years I've been at UCLA," he
croaked between sobs, "and these in-
fernal vending machines have neyer
ceaft«d tormenting me. Now I'm forever
damned. I've given up my soul to the
devil for a hero sandwich, correct
change and the black art of vending
machine necromancy. Oh, What price
omniscierwre!"
1 stood shaking, transfixed as he
fumbled in his pockets and iammed tvyo
dimes into the ice cream machirte.
"Up from the ninth ring of hell, little
bugger, now is the time! ", he screeched
maniacally.
He grabbed the ice cream sandwich
Letters to the Editor
,.t
Lucy
This IS in reply to the letter
from an anonymous source in
regards to the picture of Lucille
Ball which appearod in the May
12th Daily Bruin. I noted in^our
letter that you said that you
were "surprised" to see how
pleasant and very attractive she
IS. You also said that she ap-
pears, in the photograph, to be
much older in it than she actual-
ly looks Well, to appear old
does not necessarily make you
unattractive 1 would hate to
think that people will think that
as I grow older, I will auto-
matically grow unattractive. Un-
fortunately pepple don't stay
young forever, but they can slay
beautiful, which I feel Lucille
Ball IS — very beautiKjl. As far as
«pir~^*tack of concern" for my
subject. 1 love Lucy as much as
you do.
Paula Lauren Clbion
(raplief. Daily gruin
Guns
Recently there have been sever-
al letters to the editor cortcerning
ha»4|un control in the Daily
Bruin. The letters seem to indicate
that this is a simple question It is
not
First, "antigunners" usually fust
don't like gurH. and "gunners ' do.
Larh side can find almost any set
• »• statistics to support any posi-
tion they want Legislation pro-
posed by either side runs into
proelems ot enlonement, just as
the US experience during prohi-
bition.
"Cunr>ers" want guns for
hunting, target shooting, and self
defense Handguns are wanted
primarily for self defense Argu-
ments used are the tren>endous
and ifKreasing crime rate Other
guns are much poorer as a defen-
sive gun than a han<lgttn. A high
power rifle buHet can go through
a house and kiH neighbors This is
one of the reasons that police
don't use rifles. Rifles and shot-
guns are not easy to use quickly in
a self-defense emergency within
the confirres of a house; they are
too long, too powerful, too heavy.
Being powerful, there is a power-
ful recoil, which means many peo-
ple, especially the old. or a small
woriian or man. would be .unable
to use it. If one wishes to "pack a
rod" for defense on the streets,
only a handgu/i would suffice
(even if illegal in many cities). If
other arms were as "good" as a
handgun, then police, detectives,
the FBI, etc would use them.
Most handgun killing figures are
unclear Who is killed by whom? If
•here were 306 handgun homicides
in LA. last year, and 64 per cent
were committed by the police in
the line of duty (official murders),
then why should handguns be
taken from the gunners, since
accidents, murders, famiiy argu-
ments, suicides, etc., amounted to
only 16 per cent of gun homicides
(or about 50). I'm sure more peo-
ple died from knife wounds than
this Any argument that the cops
must have been shooting people
that were using handguns is bad
speculation. Even if they were
using handguns (the criminals),
what was the situation they were
shot in? Also, even if haruiguns
were abolished, would criminals
lose access to guns, or would there
be a black market or underground
on guns (such as prohibition?).
If handguns are banned, how do
we confiscate them? Door to door
searches? Do we make criminals of
gunners that refuse to give up
their guns? Who pays for the
confiscated guns?
"Gunners" argue that banning
handguns will mean that some
totalitarian government, either
foreign or domestic will be able to
take over. iM that many jobs will
be lost for those that manufacture
handguns. They also argue that the
police are not copinf with crime,
which is true; that an arni>ed hon>e
is a safe home, which is false; and
that banning handguns will not
take guns away from criminaK.
which IS debatable They also
(Continued on Page I ^»
(NeopolHan, I believe) and sprinkled it
with some hastily-procured powder. He
dashed over to the microwave ov^ns,
threw it in while feverishly pushing
buttons and began shrieking some
Satanic incantation in Latin.
"Bum. burn!", he cried as he modMd
the heaver>s and twitdiad a madcap jig.
Smoke began pouring out of the oven
and a nauseous odor invaded my noftfils.
He flung lipen the door, scraped the
pOKwier into his hands, shrilled some
more Latin and tossed a handful oif the
black pmifdk^ igairHt the candy machine
Instantly a bag of sunflower seeds
sprouted into a ten-foot plant. A ladybug
flew off the giant sunflower onto my ear
and told me I was the illegitimate son of
Howard Hughes and never to ride on
trair>s. A bag of peanuts turned into a
frowning jimmy Carter Fig Newtons. as
if affirming the law of gravity, fell from
the trees in alarming numbers. M and
M's hopped out of their bags into my
hand and proceeded to meh. The Three
Musketeers and Oh Henry were ener-
getically debating some obscure literary
point Over at the soft drink machine,
some hideous apparition calling himself
Mr. Pibb was fiendishly pilfering to-
morrow's paper cupi. Trapped inside the
sandwich machifie. screaming to be let
out, was Adelle Davis, damned for her
ungodly passion for french fries, forced
to ipend eternity Mting cold chili dogs.
THe cold rrnlk machine becamg an
aquarium filled with non-fat chocolate
milk. A miniature figure in a wet suit,
who looked like Mark Spitz, was thraslv^
ing helplessly about. I tossed him a
Mocha lifesaver which dinel»ed in the
Viumin D. He waved goodbye.
The remaining powder was dashed
violently against the hot coffee machine,
which blew up into a balJ of blue smoke!
An armless Mrs. Olsen, naked as a
rhountain-grown Venus de Milo. ap-
pead when the imoke was gor>e. I
fainted. When I regained my semes, Mrs.
Olsen was fanning me with a 1978 UCLA
diploma. I was going to graduate with a
degree in English. I fainted again. When I
came to Mrs. Olsen was gone, the poor
soul who sold his $oul was gone, the
vending machines had all assumed their
normal shapes: Behind me the Reaeerch
Library was brightly lit. The vending
machines hummed the Notre Dame
fight song. The wind began howling
lin.
was anew face — M afber wit
S a new face — afH)er Fbrd , Ktffidan
were new -races—
r^.&'wm wa^ a ryew
Qdavi be a'' new f^e
ahaaa
...thslts when. ^
tSce dPf fA wail, roll
xie and mldL
'Jk'W
i..loo5en my
or It
% » «
■A.
U.S. influence In South Africa
By Francesca Sautman
(Editor's note; Sautman is a member of the
Progressive Labor Party here).
Although Southern Africa nnay seem far from
UCLA, it would be wise for us to have a dear
understanding of events there Kissinger's recent
threats against Cuba indicate that the U.S. rulers
might make Africa the kickoH for World War III
The struggle currently centers in Rhodesia,
where talks between the African National Council
ar>d Ian Sniith's white-supremacist regime have
broken off This has caused a reunification of
OPINION
several nationalist groups and an intensification of
guerilla warfare The Rhodesian go»ernencnt has
responded with huge callups of reserve troops
and has put 200.000 Blacks from villages along the
border with Mozambique into concentration
camps {LA. Times. 3/71. »/7^). Mass arrests of
Blacks suspeaed of being "security hsks" have
occurred {LA.T 3/9/7^). The news media would
have us believe that the U.S. is op^eaed to the
racist regime of Rhodesia and South Africa and
nrwely opposes Russian and Cuban intervention
In actual fact, the U.S. has been the staunchest
supporter of racism ar>d colonialism Some cases
tn point:
1 The U.S. supplied Portugal with weapons to
maintain its colonial rule in Angola {Wall St
lournal. 12/22/75). After Portugal's defeat, the
U.S. loined South^ Africa in supporting the CIA-
sponsored FNiA and UNITA.
2. The U.S. has armed the South African
government of John Vorster to the teeth with
Jjjcapons designed to crush local rebellions. An
ITT subsidiary was the main supplier of electronic
gear for the police and military until recently,
when the subsidiary was sold (partly due to
pressure from church-group stock h iljii i) (W.S./.
3. Despite US aMHHnt to honor a United
Nations boycott of trade with the Rhodesian
government Congress passed the Byrd Amend-
n^ent. which allows importation of chronne from
Union Carbide's mining operations.
Why does the suppeMdIy "democratic" US
support racist, fascist regimes in Africa? The
answer boils down to simple econofwki. US
business makes hundreds of millions of dollars in
profits from its African investn^ents. Ninety U.S.
multinational companies have operations in
Southern Africa, including Phelps-Dodae. ICenne-
^!i}\ .^^"^^^^^ Mining, Union Carbide, etc
{^Sr 3/29/7S). The racist oppreasion of Black
workers is an etHKmous source of pfoiil to theie
companies Thu^ US business and radit
oaPag**!^)
V1l» t>mti Brutn
Only 8 more
m — "
argue that only 2/10 of one per
cent of the nation's handguns
are invoh^ed in gun crimes each
year (who knows), and that there
are fiow XXM gun control taws
in the country that are not en-
forced (who krK>ws?).
Basically, the gunners say, "I
warn my haruiguns." and ghre
reaiaru why they should have
them. The "antigunr>ers' also
produce tons of sUtistics and
argunr>ents to pmm, the world
would finally be sale if we ban
gurH. Nobody /4nows. everyone
speculates.
Still, this is rKM the end. Some
gunners want everyor>e to be
able to poiws any weapon they
choose, Nncludir^ Nike missiles
and ICBM's, while some would
settle for being able to possess
rifles. Antigunners x^nge from
wanting to register all handguns
to the banning of all guns. So
many opiniom, so few facts.
id Mttsiui
Names
I Stan this letter, let me
*ay that lately I have been hav-
ing difficulty recalling what my
rmme is. I place ru) blame con-
cerning, this situation on my
mental state. Instead I attribute
this difficulty to my environ-
ment I find that the reason I am
constantly forgetting what my
name is. is that I barely ever
r^eed to use it. It is the sanr>e as
attempting to- learn a foreign
language without ever tryir^ to
ipeak it.
Sirure my appearance into the
real world at about the time of
my graduation from high school.
I have found that I am less and
Olitzky
(I had to check my driver'%
license to be sure of the spelW^
intf* but instead by such awe-
inspiring combinatiorH of leMers
and digits as S56-94-435S or I-
$70451 My entrance into college
bestowed on me the right to
bear a new representation of my
Pgyn, U 63425 43g. F4ow my
perenis wem to a great deal of
trouble ar^i thought to choose a
name for me at the time of my
birth, and I must apologize to
them for the fact that I hardly
ever use it. ■
Today's world het ghren In to
what I call * symbolic names." a
collection of identification num-
bers ar%d abbreviations that re^
resent real people and rea)
things To document this con-
cept is a relatively easy proce-
dure. All that, an individual must
do is to have a look around her
or him and examine the sym»
bolic names that have replaced
old familiar descriptive nan>es of
things.
Consider UCLA as an example
(The intended pun may not be
so obvious). There are many
numerous organizations on this
vast campus, none of whose
names I know. I also admit that I
do not know their symbolic
names as I get very confused
between similar things such is
CAC. CSC, and QIC, all of
which are organizations on carr;!-
pus But this IS |ust a small
example of my ignorance What
or who IS CASO. CAPO. SLC.
PTF, UPC. SWC. FSC. ISC. QSA,
URC. and ESUC It took me over
three years to learn that CAL
referred to the University of
California at Berkeley and not to
the whole collection of UC cam-
puses (UC IS an abbreviation for
Uninenby of CalMomia for
people that aren't sure)
Anelfier note about abbrevia-
tions. On nr>y Study List under
Days what does R stand for^
Well 1 hope you see n>y point,
that it it aN very confusing.
., But let us not ignore idertti-
fication numbers Being a Com-
puter Science major I annbute
the increase in identification
numbers to the increase in com-
puters People in the rompuliJi
field seem to want to use identic
fication numbers instead of
nanr>es. Aeeple ue p«eit identi-
fication numbers, student num-
ber, employee numbers, social
security numbers, credit card
account numbers, and bank ac-
count numbers in an effort to
make handling data about them
easier. It seems simpler to work
with a given length string of
numbers and digits then varying
length personal names. And
how about obfects Things don t
have names anymore, they have
numbers Think about the last
time you went^ into a store to
order ^a part for lomediing you
owned, and you couldn't get it
because you didn't know the
part number You know what it
was called, what it did. and what
it looked like, but you had no
idea what distirun numeric rep-
resentation It went by.
People that use computers
themselves must have an identi-
fication number to use the ma-
chir>e Here on campus to use
the exter>s4ve computir>g facili-
ties requires a" account num-
ber. I penonally have been re-
ferred to as KC478SLO, OC-
060543, EC130SLO. CLUBIIIg,
and I currently exist under the
nurnber FC461SLO
Not only have compuier^
helped establish identification
numbers but they have also
done their part for abbrevia-
tions Computer scientists and
are very big en ab-
brevialiofH Programming lan^
!(uages are almost always re-
erred to by their abbrevialiom.
There is PIC, Pit, fO«TRAN,
COtOi. AiCOl. and tPC to
name a few Coft^eny
chir># names have been
to abbreviations D€C. COC,
IBM UNIVAC, and H.IIAC are
all abbrevialiom To list all the
different ibbieiiiiliMns ibat exist
in the computer Md would in
Itself be a task for a coimgMter
and not foe .coc.
In ronHusion I would just like
to say that people may refer to
me as U. 62^123 436 5S6-94-43S5
SLO. or any other symbolic
name that represents me. but it
would really make me feel more
like a real live person if they
would lust call me Seth
'^ Seth dttiiiy
Math-Computer Science
P
I
r
I
f
more on PLP .
(Contiiiaed from Page 12)
ments have worked closely together to keep the
profit margins high, '
The tremer>dous upsurge of struggle against the
racist regimes has caught the U.S in a snag
however A recent article in the Wall Sf Journal
(3/23/76) entitled. 'Black-Rule Movement .s
Spreading in Africa, Putting U.S. on Spot" says it
all. Policynnakers realize that only overtly racist
forces in the U.S. will support a nru>ve to send
troops to save these regimes They are now
investigating the possibility of making deals with
nationalist forces to save some of the U S.'s
interests This was the purpose of Kissinger's just-
concluded African tour, which included talks with
several nationalist leaders. Kissinger promised lots
of "moral support" for Black-rule movements,
but said nothing about ending the incredible
exploitation of Black workers by U.6 corpora-
Mhat^ your bank doing
for you after sdioolt
When you graduate, your bank becomes more impoitjuit. You'll hav^
more financial obligations, mofe heed for flexibiHty, and more need for
Grc<;llt. You want a bank that can meet all these new needs and still keep
your banking simple.
That's where we come in.
MMggAces. With o\^r twice as many kxatlons as M|rolher
CaBfomia bank, we^re iiwl^ilmt by if you're moving, its easy to
transfer your account to whichever office is moit convenient for you
Mote convgnicmLe. Our All-in-One* Checking Plan simplifies
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McM aeivtoaa. Mh alM off er a iKiida vafialy of olhar cii^^
siii^ngi plara arid can ha|p you find the one thatV right fo^
More help. Next time you re in, ask for a copy of "The College Graduate s
Guide to the Havdait Job in the Worki*' h s 16 pafts of htnli on finding a job. Yo
nrii^ aiK> «Mit to pick up our "^^a to Save M^^
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So why no* stop by soon and tafc things over \»fc sarwe mow CaUfomians
than any oiiar bank. In sdiooL And aflac
*VyQu
BANKOF AM ERICA
of A«
•rraaA
roic
tioiH. This strategy oi dealing with natiofialist
leaders has saved Cult Oils $2SajBS4XN) opera-
tions in Angola, where the MPIA has agreed to
allow Gulf to resume produHiaii (WSI 4/S/76)
The only ans\f^er to racist oppression in Aim a
or the U.S. is to fight kn tCKialism, to build a
Wiaii revolutionary movement that cuts acroit
national lines and unites workers around the
world The ruling elite of the U.S knows that
such a mo»aimnt will mean the end of their
system of exploitation, and this is the reason for
the intensification of ra< isf and nationally! ideo-
logy being pushed m the rr^edia and here at the
Uruversity This has many forms the myth of
"reverse racism," blaming of unemployment on
"Mlegal aliens, racist harassment of Blaik stu-
dents on the pretext of a rape investigation
These are reactionary attitudes which divide us
and sucker us into uniting with the ruling ♦•life
They must be defeated
l>
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The Aiaociation ol CcNwifNirative Education Students
ACES COLLOQUIUM
Date: Monday, May 24th
Place: Moore Hall 346
Time: 6 p.m.
Topic: Educational Policy and Practice: A Com-
parative and International Perspective
Moderator: Antoine Nteziryayo
Participants:
Peter White (Non-formal Education and Consciousr>ef§-
raising in Ecuador)
Larry Estrada (Technical Education in Mexico)
Ramon Flores (Philanthropic Institutions in Central* AmeHc
Kathi Fischer (Political Idcokigy and Educatiorf Reform i
Chile: 1964-1976)
Bob Verhine (Community Schooling in International Per-
tive)
David Lynn-Hifl fFrencK Education ar>d Social Stratifica
' »
One 'Bluebird* flew over the Cukor's nest
By C^tky Sdpp
It would not be quite fair to place all the blame for The BMe
Bird on direaor Geor§e Cukor. He has been aided and abetted
by a whole pack of UsIiiHf screenwnters, composers, lyricists,
art directors aad choreographers. And then, of course, there is
Elizabeth Taylor, who is so spectacularly miscast in all four of
her roles that she seems more like a giant cuhou&ity than an
actress But Cukor is the director and the majority of tii fbih
for this disaster should probably be with him
This film version of Maunce Maeterlinck's claitac fairy ule
about two childrens* search for the Blue Bird of happiness is so
utterly sterile it is hard to believe
Ava Gardner is a richly decadent Luxury and Jane Fonda is
superb as Night, but these arc only cameo roles and don*t have
much to do with the rest of the story. As a matter of fact,
nothing docs The film is basically a series of scenes which are
only very loosely tied together. Cicely Tyson as Cat is the only
cameo who is in the film throughout.
TIm Bkic Bird was plagued with production problems from
beginning to end, but there is no excuse for Cukor's sloppineti.
In one scene, the children take what they think is the Blue Bird
1 .
from the Land of Memory but iu>ibiiie color fades at toon as
they leave By a miraculousiv speedy process of evolution, it ako
clMnges from a starling int j p^on. That it just the sort of
thing that children notice
chiidren.
and TiK
is aimed at
Three Russian ballet stars from the Kirov — Valentina
Gamblova as Water, Yevgcnv Schcrbakov as Fire and especially
Nadejda Pavlova as the blue Bird are obviously wonderful
dancers, but wear the leaden choreography by Igor Belsky and
Leonid Jakobson hk^ balls ^nd chains around their feet Like
everybody else in the cast, thev arc wasted.
. The inanity ol High Whitcmorc's and Alfred Hayes* script is
matched by Irwin Kosial's whiny music and Tony Harrison's
idiotic lyncs In o^ scene. Huabeth Taylor as Light spies a
colMih blue cartoon bird flyiaf way and, as the camera moves in
to treat us to a giam close-up of her face, gives it **a blue halloo."
Then the whole cast joins m singing "a blue halloo" and that is
tHe big musical number The rumbling sound the cast and crew
of Tlie BItte Bird probabK heard as they were filming it must
have been Maeterlinck turning over in his grave.
Taflpf: w,
'Baker's Wife* kneads work
By Jolm JB Wilson
It IS difficult to come up wuh a
description demeaning enough for such an
utterly uninspired and embarassmgly
executed prod^iction as The Baker's Wife,
at the Dorothy ^handler through June
26.
Based on a famotts 1940 French tUm it
IS a farce about a small-town baker his
luscious wife who runs away with another
man, and the townspeople's effons to
bring her back so that the baker will once
again make his delicious bread for them
In any form it would seem a trifle, hut
adapted as a musical it is all the more so
Most of the musical numbers arc forced
into the plot, as opposed to nsing out of
it. One such forced number is an ode to
"Fresh Hot Bread" which lasts four
minutes and is sung m quietly reverent
tones by the entire cast
TopoL from the film Fiddler, makeii his
American stage debut as the baker who
refuses lo face the fact that his wife has
left him for another man The ignoranee
and stumbhng sloth of Topofs character-
ization alienates his audience and further
robs the show of any appeal The star
also doesn*t use his booming voice, and
the tiny, tinny body mikc attached to his
neck carnes the rustling of his. costumes
as loudly as it (foes his singing
Of all the performers who carry their '
bodies inappropriately in this show,
kpading lady Carole Demas is the least
appropnate She is physically short on the
cndowrneattLjaeeded for the role aC tte^
sexy wife. She too has a body mike, yet
her voice fails to carry over the or-
chestra. The audicne became noticeably
restless during her big number, a five-
minutc droner about childhood fantasies
of flying away Vith a meadowlark
The one voice that does come acroes
strong is that of Kurt Peterson, who plays
the egomamacal chauffeur who runs off
with the wife But the effect of the voice n
lessened by the actor's use of body
mai'ement.
The rest of the cast consists of the
villagers, about s dozen in all. who
coMtantly squabble, bicker and attempt
to upstage One another It is a *minor
revenge that the stafelMnds operating the
turnUbles used on the set have not yet
learned lo rdi^Fve them smoothly
If the Civic Light Opera ioesn't grant
refunds on tickets, it shokd'd mtiu mm
exception for Baker's Wift,^pbtsibly the
wont show CLO has ever put on.
LA Jets
LA Jets
RCA
-7^
^
Gimmit Bmek My BuUeis
Lymyrd Skymyrd
MCA
The first album by the LA
Jets is hard to classify, but lies
somewhere between top 40 and
progressive rock
The music itself is good and
easygoing. It is not oppressive
like some hard rock, nor is it
overly simple like some pop
music of late. Depending on
the listener, it can be either
relaxing or lively get-up-and-
dance music.
While all 1 1 songs are excel-
lent single material, there are
some particularly good cuts.
"Dancm' Thru The Night" (to
be reteaMd as the first single),
is an infectious tune; **Music is
My Life** is a happy tribute to
rock and roll; "Never Satis-
fied,** ahhough simple in lyrics
and nothing new in theme, is
well-sung and convincing.
Muffled vocals present the
ooly real flaw in the album, as
in ''An Eleimilal Song** and
**Money Money.*
Tht album as a whole ex-
hibits talent both in^trumental-
ly and voeaBy, etpecially from
Mrong lead singer l^aren
\
Gimmie Back My Bullets it
the third helping of Lynyrd
Skynyrd to hit the record
books and the only thing new
about the album is the title. It
sounds remarkably like Sccoad
Helping, the band's second
album. There is no new di-
rection or growth to their
muaic at all.
If. by some chance, you have
never heard SecoMl Helping.
you will hke Gimmie Back My
BuBets. Guiur, a la Skynyrd,
i« -always great and in this
collection of rock and blues
they are up to their usual good
things. The album is good, but
if you were expecting anything
new or different you will
probably end up mumbling
**Gimmie back my money.**
—Jerry Hale
portant new force in rock
The material is back-to-the
roots, fifties-style blues-rock,
totally ignoring the advances
OMMle on the genre by such
people as the Stones and Enc
Clapton. The album contains
some okay original material.
mostly by Or. Feelgood's Wil-
ko Johnson and cover versions
of late 50's-early 60*s rockers,
ahhough at times it is difficuh
to tell which is the onginal
song and which the rehash
Best songs inchide ''Back In
The Night** in the former cate-
gory and **Riot in Cell Block
^^ in the latter Both songi
arc a httle more "catchy** than
others on the album, but
otherwise no different.
Or. Feelgood are all able
musicians, doing a fine job as
producers and an allright job
of mixing as well With those
credentials they should be able
to take their music forward
mto iht seventies There are
already too many groups
taking 15-vear steps backward
-To«
^Rnhrrta Kavf
Dr. Feelgood*8 bouncy
blues-bated boogie music is
hardly brilliam ^p
tablish the band
as an im-
^
This Week
In place of the usual musical extravaganza, those good
folks in the Coop will present three Marx Brothers films —
Moakcy BhImh, HoretiealBers andCocoanuts ~ from 4
to 8:30 Wedneaiay. Not only are the movies free, but there
win be ^oh, ecitacy!) free p^^orti And as an extra added
attraction, whole Coop pizzas regularly S4.40 are, for thit
hmited time only, a mere $2 50
Meanwhile, back in SchcK-nnerg HaU, the music depart-
ment IS putting on three frethics Flutist Susaniui "Not-
Half-Shabby** Watling and guitarist Mark Bird occupy the
auditorium Tuesday at\iioon playing music by Bach.
Giuiiani, Frescobaldi. Tclcmann Vii^.tobca. Ravel aad
probably a few others.
Thursday, same time and plaice. Sheridon ^loket and kit
flute students will perform mu ic by Allea Strange. KuhfaAi.
Robert Russell Bennett, ^nd cast of seveoO.
Thursday at 4^ |^ in the 1 ie Theater. JoHph Kermaa
of Berkeley will lecture <'n Verd*'^
"Look into the Future**
should be velitkd "Look iato
the Past** because all the wmft'
are rehashed chord profret>
sions that have been heard
^numerous times before. (One
of the songs IS directly off
Journey's first album ) Putting
this fact aside there is still
nothing on the album that
would make you waal to Iitten
to it again the next day — or
the next year for that matter.
This is rather surprising
coming from a group with
Journey's talent and varied
\nusical background (Bowie,
Santana) But despite the
musicianship, the songs are
very unexciting. They leave tiK
listener with the impression
that the tune Uken to Iitten
would have
falling
Journey is hving proof that
It uke more than manual, dex-
terity to bmiB— a suc<
It an interesting group
because they aren't what they
Oespite a number one
(''How Long**) and suc-
ce«iful album, they remain
relatively unknown And
though they hail from Bntain,
thetr musical style could pro-
best be described as
:*• country " Tine For
it iaieed reminiscent
of Greg AUiMa*s Laid Back.
with a few touches of Marshall
Tucker and Lynyrd Skynyrd.
Aoe n, tosaanar, -lOMBeatur-
ably eataer to lirten to than
either Lynyrd or Marshall
Tucker. TIkit writing it solid,
the vocak excellent and the
playing very taeieful, tiKMn of
annoying drum solot, organ
and interminable guitar
which other such
teem unabif to avoid.
Thmt For Aaotiier is a
thortMtghly enjoyable albiMiu
full of strong but fentle oweic
and many Ingh poiott, partic-
ularly Phil Harrit's beautiful
guitar playing and the excellent
»>»gal pofioffiMi wrp« ii» all
J
E
I
s
H
S
T
U
D
I
E
S
c
o
L
L
Q
NEAR EASTERN
JEWISH
COMMUNrriES
Their Jewish Contribiiiioiia To Zioniam And The
Jewish Renaissance In The Land of Israel
Prof. Yona Sabar
f
I
Room 24 12
Ack.
May 25
Noon
FOREIGN
STUDENTS
Foreign students wishing per-
mission for off-campus summer
work and Extension of Stay should
submit applications to OISS, 297
Dodd Hall by June 8, 1976. These
applications will be taken to the
Immigration Service by a member
of th^ OISS staff.
—Mi Moffin
TheSuHof
Westwood Chiropractic Office
Invites You To An
OPEN HOUSE
Monday through Friday, May 3 - 28
12 Noon 'til 2 PM & 5 PM til 7 PM
1429 Westwood Boulevard
Westwood, California
(213) 477-2984
Your Host -
Howard Malby, D.C.
Kefr«hrVi*ttT5 ~" F Jtllliy Tour
#
I
.'
f •
»
1
b
*
L^ , 1
■
_=sr_ iMit u^^^i
^mumrn
Pre- 1 n ventory
Clearance
Save plenty this week — and help out your fellow
atudents, so when counting the Store's Inventory
starts, they won't have so much of this stuff around!
Inventory starts Saturday, May 29
store closes at 2:00
In Gifts:
Large canvas colored tote bags
Large canvas zippered duffle bags
Blue zip tote bags
Large vinyl zippered tennis bags
Canvas book bags
Plaid travel t)ag on wheels
3* ladies' white briefcase
fe" ladies white briefcase
2 ' tweed, briefcase ^
2" black vinyl briefcase
2' blue denim briefcase
Smog valve cleaner
Gas tank protector
Hanging plant set
Plastic lined cloth tote
Cassette holders
Record cleaning cloths "^
Record holders
ng.
sale
799
3.M
8.99
4.99
8.99
4.99
8.99
4.99
8.99
4.99
14.99
8.99
14 95
7.99
15 95
8.99
23.95
9.99
14.95
7.99
20-95
8.99
69<t
IOC
1.49
39*
3.39
59C
4.49
1.59
1 .89
39«
19«
S«
IOC
'- ..,
From School Supplies:
Sheaffer 2002 pen - marker or ballpoint
Scripto thick marking F)encils
Asst. standard and fine line fehort 'e^ds
5.00
3.75
39C
IOC
25«
IOC
From Art/Engineering Supplies, A Level:
*•
mon-thurs 8 30-7 30 fri 8 30-€ 30
Vanguard acrylics
70C-2.25
45Ci1.50
Rembrandt colors
2.50-3.75
1.25-1.89
Assorted greeting cards
70C
40C
Assorted message unit chalk boards
7.50
4.50
Clip trarpes
4.50-600
2.25-3.00
Assorted posters
from 25C
Aunt Lydias punch rug patterns
1.75-2.50
1.00-1.60
Bucilla Instant Tweed
90C
60C
Bucilla denim iron-on patches
2.00
1.29
,.\
a and h levels ackcfman uruon 82f>-77iT
b l#v«l oper
45 fi ■ " sat M) .J
Funds frozen
To celebrate completion of east wing
(Continued from Page t)
taying IS that Community Ser-
vices heeds to tighten up our
7uidciine^," Reece i^id
After the mitial allegations
were made. Ricr faw Niahi a
letter from Kathy Van Leeu-
wen of the- rental division of
Audio-Video Craft. The letter,
dated Feb 27, 1976 Mui in
part, "^Regarding the acquis-
ition of video equipment from
Audio-Video Craft, lie., for
John Rier Customer rented
equipment from our com-
pany .. ** The letter made
no mention of Urhan Work-
shop.
The letter, later said, *Tbeie
dayi were separate cash ^y-
ments, not one advance pay-
ment as is the present and
active rental agreement.**
In a report containing a
second series of allegations,
Spataru, the GSA Budget com-
missioner, said the '^present
and active rental agreement**
referred to was the second
rental of equipment by the
Community Services program.
This rental went into effect
with an agreement dated
March 1. 1976/ two days after
the date of the letter, the re-
port said.
Nishi asked for a receipt to
substantiate the first rental
agreement. He also requested a
statement from the Averett
lyouth home where minority
youths who participated in the
program live, saying that the
youths actually were partic-
ipating in sbch a program
The letter from the home,
written by its director, Clar-
ence Brown, affirmed the ex-
istence of the program and
stated that technical audio-
visual equipment was used 10
times in the months of January
and February. The use of the
equipment for filming "'will
culminate in a documentary
both created and filmed by
youths which will benefit not
only these youths but also the
larger community,** Brown
said
Brown praised Rier*s pro-
gram, saying it was successful
"booHMC of Mr Riers ded-
icatioa aad skills as an in-
structor ** Brown went on to
thank GSA for providing the
program.
Rier gave NitlH the receipt
number 2360. for the first
renul agreement. The report
questioned tius, stating that
since the invoice number oa
the March 1 agreement was
1972 and the number on a
later (April 14) agreement was
224i, it would be illogical for
the earliest agreement to have
the higiMM invoice number
A salesman for Audio- Video
Craft, Carl Vickery, stated that
rental forma 'WK numbered in
chronological sequence and
that form number 2360 would
be from either May 14 or May
15, according to the report.
Tbe report said the owner of
Audio-Video Craft, Ernest. G.
Van Leeuwen, verified this.
Owner Van Leeuwen also
wrote a letter to Nishi stating
that the total amount of mon-
ey ($583) listed on the rental
agreement dated January 29
appeared to be in error. Van
Leeuwen said he could only
find records of SI 20 worth of
expenditures during the time
the first rental agreement was
in effect.
In a post script. Van Leeu-
wen added that the $120 figure
was not ^atertutely certain,**
but he also said ''We are sure
that he (Rier) did not spead
$583 here prior to March 3,
1976.**
Reece questioned the sig-
nificance of Van Leeuwen*'s
Itter, sayirig "The letter itself is
very ambiguous. He doesn't
say anything.** He cited the
uncertainty Van Leeuwen ex-
pressed in the letter
Reece also commen^d on
the allegation in the second
report concerning the non-
sequential invoice numbers. He
blamed Audio- Video Craft for
this discrepancy, saying **lt
comes back to their accounting
procedures being question-
able.**
"1^\
psptijos
pretantt
Fascinating, mMmingM parsonal Mstortat
of studants and QraduaiM
... inapirad by ''A Chonia Una^
0'^
With:
Btlly« Tj
tarry Dickay. Mary Rltlay
In ttw nadRioo of
PLUS
''Ona Damn Thing Aflar Anolhar''
(Faaturing axcarptt Iraiii Bia tMaava 'IMri
Marion B1I ~ Original Broadway Star of Brigadoon
Carol gartar ^ Naw York thaaltr rowadHnns
Afton Pitt — Musical Director of "Tha Chinaaa Folllaa"
Monday — May 24 — 8:30 p.m.
UIESTUOOO PbflYHOUSE
(Mmi le
buggaatad Cor^tribwtioo « S2
riir fyin m aas7
*?•««
<44< _
U*-,—
Architecture open house held
Tlir School of Architecture and Urban
Planning celebrated the completion of the
remodehng of its east mmg with an open house
Suaday May 23.
The reipaMad wing contatas aew admims-
trative ofTioes, a bbrary and a student lounge.
The remodeling was finished dunng spnog
vacation following a planning praaaH of three
years according to Mickey Wagner, public
iafonaation officer for the SdKHol.
The planning process, termed "^iter input,"
involved students and facuhy
-Everyone gave their ideas as to how they
wanted spice used and what was most
important to them,** Wagner said. The sug-
gestions, sach as more library storage and
studying space, were incorporated into the final
phin.
The final phui was designed by two faculty
members, Thomaa &. Iteeiand, Jr., and Peter
ICamnitzer. .
The *%iaer input** system was devised by
Susan Dumak, a student Her praons evolved
into her master's thesis.
Student participation was continued with a
student contest for designing the student
lounge. David Weaver's
^MlgBai mail skMs for students
An open house^^as held for campus officials
and colleagues on May 19. in addition to the
one for oammumty fnends and profesaiaaal
aitaaaiai on Sunday. Wapaar Mad.
The professional community was invited as
part of a special program it has with the
school The school **wants to relate very
actively to the professional community,**
Wapner said As part of their education,
students work in the community so they can
••relate realistically to the profession," she
added
The School's library conuins the Library of
Architecture and Allied Arts of Los Anaeks
collection The Schoofs library was rtriiaaiid to
serve the local pralaniaaal community as well
aa the School and campus, Wapner said. She
added the School would like to becooK a
center for the Los Angeles architecture com-
mumty.
During the open house, both works by
students and facuhy were displayed. There wrc
models of Los Angeles, communities and cars
Scale n^bdels of the remodeled sections were
also on display A di&phiy of books of past
Southern California architecture and slidrs of
the area were also presented
10%
discount wtth coupon
on dry claaning only
ExpiraaMay21,ia76
'V
10%
diacouni with a
on dry claanina.onlv
ExpifasMay21 1976
Number 1 Dry Cleaners
1126 Westwood Blvd.
478-6310
next to McDonalds
Complete Dry Cleaning and Laundry
Parking in Rear
I
<-.
J 4 j>MHt1W>M.LU>, n^f^^
I
m
1
z
I
The adiool of Archltaetura and UriMn Plafifilna
.^,«
JOIN TEACHER
CORPS
We need more Blacks.
Chicanos. and Indians
to train to teach low
income kids!
If you have a Bachelors'
Degree did not major
or minor in education,
have no certification
or teaching experience
and have no Masters'
Degree, you qualify.
You Get.
2 Yaart of coDaga -
tuition fraa
A Maalaia Oagraa in
Education
' A Taadiar CartMication
* $i25 00each waak
' $15.00 for aachdapandant
* Vets alao eat G.I
Programs are located in
rnoat alalaa. the District of
Columbia, Guam, and
Puerto Rico
TtKhsrCirps
311
2S0
Lit AaariM.)CA HOIS
(7T318K-72M
Applicatrons must be
SEMINAR
Spend Wednesday, May 26th wtth Or Jame^ L. Costanza and let him §how you hou/ to "MASTER THE PROJECT GRAKI
GAME" Here is an exciting, once only opportunrty to learn firsthand from this fomner UC faculty laeiaber and Fulbright lecturer
hdv you can share in the billiortt. yes billions, of dollars ^ven avway each year by iedeial. Hale and iecd go^/emment
\Mtll as pnvate foundations and corporationt.
• Hou/ to find funds and how to apply for grants
• Deciding nihat and when to propose
• HoM/ to write and package your jiiiipasii to gam attention
• Hou/ to determine what your project ihpuld cost
• Hsieading your pwposiil and negoSating a contract
I
ONE TIME ONLY!
THE ECKMAN CENTER PRESENTS
U
submitted by May 30 1976
MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME
WEDNESDAY. MAY 26th,
9:00 a.in.-4:00 p.m.
WALK FROM CAMPUS THE PLAZA THEATER 1067 GLENDON. WESTWG
ADVANCE ^ TICKET SALES AT ALL MUfUAL AGENCIES
Xir^VPT ^ INCLUDING 140 KEKKHOFF
■J*^*^* ^^ SHOP INTERNATIONAL 13
SALES BLVD. -ALSO AT ALL UBERIY AND TICKEIRON
AGENCIES.
BOX OmCE OPENS WED.. MAY t6tl
SPECIAL LIVE
AHON
TIME ONLY
:>.^a
m
00
mm
■■•■r-^-^
41 ,
/^
s.
I
i
i
3
Educating In
Self-Evaluation
Talk By Lecturar
Dr. Sam Lynch
in Graduate Student Loungt
Mbore Hall
Wed. May 25 12:00 1:00
byPahwCkib
] Senator
-*^
■x^
miiiioo iHootcid l»y a Tumiey
aawndment to the 72-73 HEW
budftt for the conitruction o^
new modioli ichooifl mkJ htt
the AM A for its rettriction at
trmined inedicftl penonnel,
pointing to UCLA m Uk ex-
junpic. ""
CMtel
The UCLA Medical School
receives thousands of quaUfied
mpplioitions and admits ooiy
ISO or so If thaft ttdc a cartel,
then Tve never seen oae«** said
Tunoey.
Timney spent cottsiderabk
time in hotly refutmg a Hay-
das rampaijii iaaflet, which he
txrmad 'Vidictiknis*' and *t«fl
of iMi.*
mJtUmtn^ rPOfR tdegraoBs from
Sfwator Hubert Humphrey and
American Civil Liberties Umon
Washington chief Chuck
Morgan, Tunney sought to
disprove Hayden aUegatioBf
that Tunney oppeecd the
Humphrey- Hawkins Full Eoh
pioyment Bill and supported
only a reviaioa o^ Senate Bill
Humphrey^
ed Tunney for hit iyp|k>ft of
the Hiiaphrey-Hawkiiis Bill,
and Morgan's telegram lauded
Tunney*s oppoattion to Senate
Bill One ^^
m
1
You're Invited To
Square Dance
with Alpha Lambda Delta
and Phi Eta Sigma
'•■<"«■
Fndav, May 28, 7:30-10:30 pm
Women's Ginn 200
Members free, Guests $1, Couples $1.50
campus events campiis ev
saMM) 5 pM, May B. msimk mm. rfss
valvftf in tht cBrnp^ign for tlif ?7tti
iMM0 Visit Itw tlMt on Brum WsNi or
caN 322-573S
JMWMfal >widtnt tor griiMBli si»>
mm bo hold 10 sm-3 pm.
Uatsa and in froal ol HFI.
Ackorman fimid taaroom Froo.
L pick If
tHolMl
Grot ofMoi. Ackorman A-lovol or on Brvin
Walk .
or csfl
HMdOd ISf
im OECA as a
WsM Kofckfioff 3V1
Voluntotrs art alto
•ad tPdd pro-
wwtg by J S. Baca
prtoofiiod iwsa,
SMdNoriuffl Fftt
UCU
pivtcNisdbv
Acadtmic crtdit avarlabtt. ttudtnt dt-
own lob dssBhpitn wWi assis-
Vttit Kintoy 3M <n call 825-3730
. ^vtp ^PHipi^ for Sm OiSM.
May 91 and blanico, Jipw 22 2B wm mm-
m Kanaaaff iOO tvtry day and al
KubtKk and starring Malcaiai McffwB
wM bt thown 5 pm today. Mtliiitz )4m A
saarf suMact will bt ahawn first
--Hm iiiiiaiaiiHi wNl bo saawn S-10
pm. tomorrow Inttrnational Studtnt Can-
tor. 1023 Hilgard Frtt
— I Gai Btf N Ftr fas WMaaahL starrif
aiavad to Junt 5 Spansorod by faar
IMaNh Counaaiars-
if nm fntamm. M
1411
Mowdayt Haints 208
bi
nignt Dykftra
•1 pm. tomorrow Moytrtwft Parit
I «M TarMm 3-4 30 iai.
tomorrow. BaalMr MOO
fwnofrow. Man's Gym 133
h Ml BMbU Paid aaiaaan
I's artist. 7-10 pm. tomorrow
Kmaay 3B2
-TMrd"
multiphoton procasaat. 3:X pm. May 28.
Boolttr 8600
—Alaailaaa BatytMaf. an alttrnativt.
noon May 28. Biiiioaa AIBS.
BunctM 2178 and f-JB-ll am.
Or Robort Bylat will tpaak foMowmg a
britf busintts matting 3 pm today.
304
Yaaa noon- 130 pm. today.
1 JB pm. May 28 and 2-3:J0 pm. May
27. aaMiat by Jaaaa stapa.
$1
tM, Christian sorority
BJB Maaiays. For intanaaliia caM
or W^mBf -
8 pm, awanf
KaaB^. 2^ pm. MAC B IjB ICdwii. S^
^m, waman s wf^ asa. ^aaaana/Pisisi.
i»-1 pat iIBi Baafa fialaRy. 4^1B pai,
AU 2«8 FlyBli. 74 pm. KM 480 BafC
ovary aftarnaaa. Harticiiitart aardana.
#a pm, BMC B iiB.
SJaa pm. Raid 7 KaraM. S-7
pm. Waman't fiym aa BkaatArap. aaan-1
pm. Mmfi gpm 11€. Naapa. UBaJB pm.
MAC B W NmNMb. Ma-1 pm. BtaM
Dyaaira Bac Bat BaNMa. 44 pm. Daek
Party ~ Marina dal Ray Beat Haaaa.
F«hm8. 3^ pin AU 2412 HaBia V
ttt pai. taaamaa 6ym
Soccar. 8>10 pm. m
baB. B:«« pm. mamart
iNaad-
I. Wanmn s 6ym SB BB
ino/PMsi 1-2 pm. BMa Hbbm. Jado. 2^
pm. BMC B m Wfaagb^TsTpm. MAC B
11i WaMr Ski. 4-6 pm. AU 3B17_. Qm-
A1B3 Ba. 3-7 pm. BMB Maaoaa JBISA
TbaridM
3JB4 am. ^iaM 7 Air BNIi
Plalal. B4 pm. Bifit Banga Waman's
KaraH. S4 pm. Waman't Gym 280 ABciia.
74 pm. MAC B 118 Kaapa. 9JB4JB pm.
MAC J m KmiB Fu. 24 pm. MAC a Sb
B4 pm. MAC B m
74B-11 pm. was aaaat BMBi cmb-
Wiitaaad ftvd.
.^ iBaatL 24 pm. lia-
mtns Gym 98
ttawvHwiiamB. ^3a4 pm. Waman s Gym
W KaaBs naan-? pm Woman's Gym M.
n_2 7 ym^ »1nrtjf|||tiif| riBfiBai
MBS. • i?,pm. Sanaai Bac Campr
Bm
Tunney
^
fComtMiMfd fro« Page IS |
The senator also commented
on Hayden's recent medui ex-
penduures of ovef ^100.000
**You can*t bave it both ways,
atber you are a media can-
didate or you aren*t. 1 would
like to welcome Tom to the
ranks of the media candidates."
Tunney aaid.
Hayden, who haa ioiproved
his position m the poMs from
15 to 32 per cent against Tun-
aesr'B subk 52 per cent, has
Carter . .
(CoMlinuaid from Page 1 1)
strong leadership —
obvious attack on Brown*«
leadership style — Carter also
maintained a humble, learning
posture:
*^1 don*t claim to know all
the answers,** Carter said re-
peatedly. **1 am iust like you. 1
am an average human being. I
grew up on a farm.**
Carter later told the Daily
Bruin he thought himself to be
a stronger leader than Brown
*M think he (Brown) brags
about the fact that leadership
should be left alone.
frequently callad for a debate
with the senator When Hay-
den supporters raised the issue
dunag the questioning. Tun-
ney shid he would paiianpatc
in a debate with all the can-
didates (thrre are 8 Democrats
oppoaiHl Tunney) but not with
Hayden alone.
-Apparently Hayden doesn't
think all the rartidairi are
worth heanng.** charged Tun-
ney, adding **Hayden*s view
doesn't seem to me like a
people's candidate **
Education majors:
Create a demand for yourself with the sctool district or
n
I
are needed to win the nomina-
tion. One Carter aide said his
candidate should win at least
100 more delegates and go
over the 1,000 mark as a result
of six more state primaries
next Tuesday
college of your choice* TMohing pMitions are scarce,
•drninistrative jobs in education are less scarce. Public
and private school districts and colleges need persons
who help pay their own way. Now you can become skilled
in the strategy and procedures of graintsmanship arxj
effective proposal writing. Education gets its funds for
inrK>vation frocn government and foundation grants. Get
an advantage over other job seekers; show that you can
help in getting funds.
Get grantsmanship training rK>w .
for yourself!
Create a demand
**1 know his popularity in
California, and 1 arn presenting
myself as ag^essiveiy as 1 caa
as an alternative,** he said
Although carefully avoiding
making a flat claim that he has
locked up his party's nomina-
tion. Carter noted that as a
result of his six primary vic-
tories he has 906 del6|[ates
lined up' behind him. while
Brown has only 1.5 delegates.
The votci o( K505 delegates
During his tnoon speech.
Carter touched on his pro-
conservation stance, an iaaiie
which his campaign staff plans
to publicize heavily m Cali>
forma college campuses and in
environmentally-con&ctous Ore-
gon Carter's staff has diatn-
buted leaflets showing that the
League of Conservi|tion
Voters, a natiorul lobby, have
given Carter "outstanding**
marks on environmental issues
while giving Brown only a **fair
rating-
Carter said as Georgia gov-
ernor he vetoed a 12.050.000
dam project to be built over a
BUjor river in his home stale, a
move which one staft aide said
made him a folk hero in
Georgia,
Attend: "MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME,"
Wednesday^ May 26th
9: 00 am until 4: 00 pm
Plaza Theater, 1067 Glendon, Westwood
^
^
^
^
f
«
5
Tickets, at $10« available at all Lft>erty, Mutual arKi
Ticketron outlets including the Mutual outlet in 140
Kerckhoff Hall. Remaining tickets will be available
at the Plaza Theater Box Office starting at 8: 00 am
on May 26th
IMPORTANT TO BE THERE? You be the judge. 63%
of the participants at the last 80 seminars were practicing
education administrators and teaching faculty . They know
what counts, don't miss "MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME
OFFICIAL NOTICE TO ALL STUDENTS
'/•♦
Beginning today, students who will be continuing in
the Fall Quarter 1976 will be issued a UCLA Student
Identification Card in the Ackerman Union Second Floor
Lounge according to the following schedule:
Today: A-F
May 25: A-L
May 26: A-R
May 27 thru June 4: A-Z
A current Registration Card and supportive identification
— which must include a photograph (driver's license,
passa port, etc.) — will be required prior to issuance.
Effective Fall Quarter 1976 the Identification Card along with a current Registration
Card, will be required in order to transact official business, receive services or
participate in University sponsored programs and activities. Examples of instances
when the Cards will be required are:
Official Business: filing petitions, drop/add a class
Services: Student Health. Libraries . .
Programs/Activities? intramurals, admission to athletic events
. • * ♦
NOTE The Identification Card will be required for admission to foott)aJl games played poor to instruction m the Fall
./ '
.1'
if
I
f
<
•
' ^ . • ■•/
The Free University of Iran t Boyd r-r^:
/.
Th« FfM University of Iran is acc#ptirH) applicstions for Acadsmic and
tsclinical posts and is offsring scholarships to Iranian nationals.
The Free University is a new and innovative institution established to
respond to the increasing demand for higher education and the
continuing need fpr qualified manpower throughout Iran. A distance-
teaching format will tDe used to prepare, initially, professionals in two
areas, teacher-education and health sciences. Programs in the areas of
rural development and technicifltrj training are presently beingplanned.
Course materials (e.g. correspondence texts, radio and television
broadcasts, home experimental kits, etc.) are designed and produced
by course teams.' These teams consist of subject-matter specialists,
educational technologists, radio/television producers, and editors A
network of local centers established throughout Iran will be staffed by
tutors who will assist students in the use of course materials and who
will guide practical work experiences
The Free University wishes to identify qualified Iranian nationals who
'might be interested in working in such a context. Academic posts are
currentiV available in the following areas: medicine (M.D. degree),
nursing, public health; physical and natural sciences; social and
behavioral sciences; education; library science; Iranian studies; rural
development. Scholarships are also being awarded to qualified
students who wish to continue their studies.
Interested persons are requested to send the following information to
the North American ottice: name (first and last), sex. U.S. address
(street, city, state, zip), phone (including area code), university, field,
and level They should also note whether they are interested in a
scholarship. Information should be sent to FUl-North American Office,
PO Box 282, Rumson, New Jersey 07760. Those who have already
applied need do nothing further Those planning to return to Iran this
summer may also contact directly Mr. Firodz Firooznia, director.
Manpower and Development Center, PO Box 11 -1 962 Aban Shomall St.
Karlm-Khan Ave.. Tehran. 15, telephone 891521.
(c ufaiiiriBi r^fc lit
But die idea c^f quitting the
touD was a difficult one
"Having never quit anything
in my life, it was pamfui giving
up the one thing I had always
»trivcd for. explained Boyd
"But I icli It was in my
belt interests to pursue more
long range foak.**
~Toyd never regrets the time
he put into playtiig football at
UCLA but he doetn*t regret
quitting either.
**lt would have
•
playing against USC and in
the Rose Bowl against Ohio
Sute**. 4reiAarked Boyd "Bat
foot bail isn't everything"*
Intramurals
Men
The fraternity, dormitory and independent track A field meet
will be Wednesday, June 2 in Drake Stadium Sign up at 2 pm
on the day of the meet at the stadium The All-U finals will be
Friday. June 4
Those who are signed up for the open coed volleyball doubles
tournament be at Pauley Pavilion tonight at 6 pm ready to play.
It is a double ehmination tournament and will be held in Pauley
for 4 consecutive nights
WoMcn
The women's track Sl field meet will be held in conjunction
with the men's finals Friday, June 4. Entries will be uken on the
day of the meet.
Baseball playoffs . . .
(Coiitiiitted fro« Page 2t)
round and letting the two independents pimy," the letter sutes.
"We feel the two conferences ought to be split the first round
But, then, someone has got to beat Bannister and his mates and
it might as well be GonzagaT
Yet, the spot Berry is talking about is the one most figure
would go to Minnesou if it finished in second place. Arizona
could not play in the regional baoMise two teams from the same
league (Anzona and ASU) cm not be pUced in the §mme
playoff
Another problem is San Diego Sute. If Arizona or MinncsoU
IS kpocked out of their berths the Aztecs, according to one
person in the NCAA, would have the inside track on UCLA
based on its .three wins over the Bruins this scmml
That was on Friday By today, thanks to a letter from assisUnt
athletic director Keith Kelley, ajnd ar^mcnt from head coach
Gary Adams and letters and telegrams from the baseball coaches
in southern California, the NCAA committee may feel dif-
ferently
Everyone will know for sure this afternoon. . .
■ ATTENTION I
niYSicmn
IBANKLQANS!
nail Business Administration (SBA) guaranteed :
ate ovailatJle atttie Western Banic of Commerce,
Ivanlages over conventional banl< loans are:
■ Liberal advances
■ Terms to 7 years
■ Favorable Interesf rates
For further Information call Hugh SmMIn or Bill tutnet at 477-2401
-••: :v
*•«»
'\
WESTERN BANK OF COMMERCE
1251
*WMlMood*s 24-hour Bonk"
ttvd.. LA. 90Q24. Member FDIC
., . 40, ^«#
.•. •*
(.
i '.
^ ♦"
iV- —
Lecl-l-Thin-6 from
ealthfllte
Rite,
*0 CAPSULf 5
90 capsulM
reg. 533
2.99
OLYMPIAN — Ann Meyers, an Ail-American on the
UCLA women's basketball team, has been selected to the
United Stales Olympic Team which needs to finish first or
second in a Canadian tournamem next month to qualify for
the games.
Meyers ts one of twelve so honored. Also picked from
Southern California was Nancy Dunkle of Cal State
FuUerton. with Cardi Hicks of Long Beach picked as an
alternate.
We carry a comptete line of Health Rite
vitamins and food supplements — come see
what we have that will be good for you'
confectiom b lever ackerrrian union 82d <
open mon-ltHin 7 45-7 30. fn 7 45-6 30 sat 10-4
students' store
Meet
•:...l.--
.. .— r^t'Or
Republican Candidate for U.S. Senate
Tuesday May 25
Meyerhoff Park
» 12 Noon '
_i
mmm
I
m
r
<
.»•■...
.1'
Boyd never quite fulfiJIed childhood goals
TTf^
i
It
J
f
By Gregg L. RtM«y
DB Sponk Writer
In high »cKool. he was pictured in a* sports
maga/ine surrounded bv the likes ol Rickv Bell and
Weslev Walker.
In junior college he once icored three touchdowns
and rushed tor 135 yards^ in a gaac he played less
than two quarters before being injured
.He came to UCLA with the confh that h^'
could play football for the Bruins, an eventuality
that would lull ill his boyhood ^MMns.
Liifortunately, Mike Boyd never quite made it.
Today, when'lhe handsome polidcal science major
reminisces about his playing days, he talks of the
sattstaction gained from competing with the best
college players in the nation
''It was a great experience", remarked Boyd as he
sat relaxing on Brum Walk
**And even though things didn't turn out the way I
had hoped they would, it was something 1*11 always
remember."
Boyd was all-League in the toughest junior coUepr
conference in the coumry. one that has produced
such stars Mark Harmon and Bernard Jackson, now
a starting cornerbac' tor the Cinncinati Besfali.
He was recruiter* heavily by the Ivy League
schools and moit c lainJy would have gotten the
chance to play had n<. decided to attend one of them.
But, like thousands of other Southern Cahfornu
High school student!, he lonfirf to play for the
Brain blue and gold
**Ever since I started playing football the attraction
to UCLA was there,** said Boyd "When 1 was a little
kid I always wanted to play at the Coliseum, where
so many players had played before.* The Bruins,
though, were not particularly impressed with Boyd's
talents as they busily entertained more highly touted
prospects Although disappointed he was never really
contacted by UCLA, he never conaidered playing
anywhere else. To him it just meant that his lifelong
goal would be just a bit harder to reach
He, "had to keep bugging the coaches to even give
an opportunity to even set foot on the field **
O ce they did. Boyd was given a tair chance to show
his warat. He soon displayed enough talent to
l/.y varsity ball for the Bruins, but to his dismay.
not in a starting role.
*^Ai the surt, just beiilg a Brum uniiorm was
excitement enough for me," ralnlai Uk muscular
junior "But realizing 1 was not going to be a starter
made me remana i^r ittiues m relation ro how much
football meant to me."
Boyd had reachatf i^plMinu of being on the
varsity roster and nothing more For the first time in
his life he was faced with the realization that he
wouldn*t be playing regularly However, more galling
to the strong willed athlete was the fact that by
playing behind players of AU^American caliber, hia
opportunity for starting was ml It was a harsh
lesson for a maybe overly ambitious athlete
'^l was tired of getting bumped around in practice
and not getting a chance to play regularly.** related
Boyd "1 was putting more into it than I was getting
out of It.**
t Continued on Page 2#)
tfi
c
Speaker's Program Proudly Presents
DR. MARGARET MEAD
. • ■ f-
■* -
World's Renowned Anthropologist
|H|
.
'
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I600-<»:00 5»«l Pk«r. AeK-ii-K***
There's still time to have your portrait taken in academic apparel, too Come to
the Campus Studio for the details.
TaaaHl^
You can wmmt rt if you want to —
and it's yours to kaap.
What trta hack - tharw won't tM
•nothar graduating class who
can waar ona lor s kmg ttmaf
ISO karckhoff half.
11 ^271
PASSING ANOTHER HURDLE Sophomore James
Owens, star UCLA high hurdler and one of the few bona
fide Bruin NCAA championship hopefuls, finished second
in the Californui Relays at Modesto JC 110 hurdlcy to
Washmgion freshman Robert Gaines Both finished in 13.5
Owens is considered a possible candidate for the United
States jOlympic team this summer Last year, as a freshman,
he finished second in the Pac-8 championshipt in his event.
open monday-friday S:3(M:30
X
I
f
I
I
■4
-r-T'
I
*-r— *"'•-
•r-
Monday, May 24
12 Noon
Grand Ballroom
Sp<»nsr>rr*(l h\ ^ssnn.iTfH STuflf»nfs Spfsikcrs Proef.im 'Sruf)f»nf I f»L»ivlaTtve Coiinril
Discussion of Nuclear
Safeguards Initiative
DR. LYNN DRAPER
(Head of Nuclear Lab, at Univ. of Texas)
DALE BRIDENBAUGH
if Former C,E. Nuclear Scientist) — ^ '■•'-■■ ■ '.-
CHARLES BURCH
(ff^ident. Project Survival)
^ i >*..:,
PAUL LORENZINI
(Co-Chair man — No on IS)
May 25 — Grand Ballroom —
by: O.E.C.A. (Comnnunity Services CcKnmission - SIC), Campus Chaptars of American Nuclear
Project Survival. LA. league oi Wonr^n Voters, Environmenul Law CofTMniClce ol the Beverly HtHs Law
Barristers Environmental Law Committee of LA. County Bar Amoc.
7:30-10:00 pm
Society ^nd
Assoc. , Tne
7
( -•
I'l ir ai
--1
7
eLASSIFIED
Aovf utisimg o^Ficf t
I 112
t2S-2221
•#««rti*ing ralM
If word* II TMay. S cohmcuIIw*
MOO
0€AOLINf 10 30 AM
ordvr*
^1
4-
■i
I
<^
H
TIM ASUCLA CommunicaMom
fuMy tupporlt th« Unl««r«Hy of CaM
tomia • policy on fMf«-#«crtoiiliiallMi.
Advvrtising tpac* will net bo mm49
mvatimbl9 in fho DoMy Brui^ to onyono
fvho ditcrlminstot on lh« botit of
anc*ftry color national origin roco
religion or —m Noithor tha Dally Brum
nor lb* AiUCLA Communlcatlont
•oard hm* mvvsligatod any of Iha tar-
vica* advartitad or advartltart rapra
•onlad in thia laaua Any paraon ba-
llaving that an a^vartlaamant in Ihia
laaua violalaa Iba Board * poUcy on non-
diacriminalion atatad harain ahould
commuf^cala complainia in wrttlr>g to
Iba Buam««a Managar. UC-l-A Daily
Bniln. 1 12 Karcfcbofi Hal. 300 Waabaood
Plata, Loa AcigaJaa. Calllornia §0024.
For aaaiftartca witb bouaing diacrimi'
nation problama. call UCLA Houaing
Oftica (213) MSOti ; Waataida Fair
Houaing (213) 4/3-
announcemcNTits
ATTCNTIOM
"Paranta «fi
Monica. DMei
I'a a
PavafiM.
^artnars". Bdfild
•30-0070
(Ann M 20)
campus
announcements
r
.>•
End tha Quarter right on timof
Gat your ASUCLA Loctura
Notd* NOW CompMo Mis of
nolot Bf ttill avoMabld at •»•
Lactura Nolo* Countar In tha
ASUCLA Student! Store. •
M. Ackerman Union.
wedding
announcements
kerckhoff ]2* *
82506|l
PORTRAITS
taken now
for Graduation
tinfnfnt
a%ucla
cqmpussfudfo
ISO kerckhoff hall 825 06' f «27l
open mon-ht 8 30-4 30
COMITATUt: Medieval-
Journal oMefS 1^ prtxa for
1070
(1 'i 4)
HOW DOES A BRUIN
BEAR DECORATE HIS
ROOM?
With UCLA blankets, pen-
nants, clock, helmet lamp
and radio, glassware, mugs,
bears— and 8l«aps in a UCLA
nitee.
BAarwoar
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
campus
annbuncements
bi AtJO,
Fr
(1
0
A^rtYMOla
I an baw la 181 am Iha AMC AS
Alaa. coma bear about neat
a new MCAT
n
)
personal
CA.P -HI. from CMcago. P.M
(0 M 24)
TO my Thata XI Big Bro Steve. TbMdi
you ao much for tba Dodgara/Bed game.
*» MPiH ta^. yaur LltBe 81a, Carai.
<• M 34)
^PADOV Muffpby bea a baad ceh| ^
ir VOU NEED SOMEONE
TO TALK TO.
CALL US.
HELPLINE
i2S-7S46
TOOTS-Tbenba tor 7 beeuttful monttta.
To aay **! laaa^ ypu " la to undaratala
(OMSOI
Vau mate M
biaaea ahaeya. your 8Mla
(0Ma4)
CONOBAOULATIONt Doctor Harry
Cbbtl Walcoma bacli le L J^. About ttma
you ioobed for a "real" profaaalon.
Victor
(0M24)
COOKIE La Rue: Happy birtbdayf Hope
waa fantaatic Sea you
^•* (0 M 24)
HOW ABO. FInafty remembered to
MI 1 fmr • monthMp*u» 1 tey) today.
4 mora months until No. 1 la mine
With ItM coming of June my love la t«Mb
you for a memafabia BfaaaaMan and
22nd birthday Sue. ^ ^ j.
JAN Since you now
Bruin, tit* nait atep la
Hapyy 20lb with love and
alwaya
Dally
(0M34)
QOODCY - Seven montba could be
but a beginning of a long beautiful
)ourrtoy Poraonally youra.
(8 81 84)
DAN Arraola — You re tttapMalBBiieiaa
to my Mergaret lot's go to beN to-
gedier. Qeog. IB Admirer.
(0 M 34)
WOMEN'S Week 1070. Btoy 24-20 CaM
Women a Beaource Center for mora
(•m28)
LJi.C.
21 at BkHtdeyl I've abeeya
we much moaa tun -
Love to you 8 only you - BAJ.. (wHb
belp from W V O.) (8 M 18)
entertainment
PAUL MkCarmey
(7 M84)
fiai
Wedneaday aflernoona. Wild Wblal
arldfe Chib. 1888 Weatwood aivd.
If
AUTIPUL GuMar
IbtaNfM
COBK aid and an^ay a
md waali and ddaa. By Bia
BaM or full day For $4.88/br..
v..
->_J:
a
In
Beaervatiorta. |Y2 00 for aincara aware
PC Boa 1211. Beaerty NHte.
88212. 213-2721802 ,. ^ ^^,
(0 M 24)
for rent
OatUXE. medical 9t BonMI auBa 1212
78iSt Santa Monica. 2 alBcea. 3 aaamm-
Ing. 2 conaultatlon operating, racovary,
X-ray. developing, phyaical therapy,
complaialy operaMva. Call Betty EX3-
(8 8128)
LAKE Arfciiabud-.iBaMIc eaBbi. beaub-
ful location Sleep 8. Fireplace tOO
long weekend. 1100 week. 888-0504
<• N 24)
PIANOS
from tuner
880-4614
far fani from StS^OS
for tele. AM rebuHt.
(8 J 4)
ABBOWHEAD cabin In ^ulet aree
Sleepe 0 $80/2 deya t180/7 deya.
«7.,4«7 ,,^
BENT-A-TV. 110.80 month 8tereo/l
aNMtont dlacounta Delivery to 0:08.
878-8870. 2383 Weetwood.
(#Olr)
BRUIN T.V. A STEREO RENTALS
COLOR T VS
' WaaMy/ monthly
88t a day
Slaraea $7.S0/montb
Limited aupply avaMebla
Black/wb^la TVs • $7 90/ month
Call: 27S-1032
NOTE Our pncvs art dlacountaa to UCLA
•luOant with currant n«9 cares only
for sale
17' SUNBIBO GHder Escetlent ci
Mon Reedy to fly 470-7012.
(10 M 20)
MOVING Sole - 6 flowered convertible
aofa In good condition $40 or beat offer.
451-2371
. (tOM26)
ASUCLA Students* Store
BEARWEAR SALE!
UCLA t-ahlrto. owpatohlrts.
BMiao, Iota fiiofo. Movtii ^Btlo,
Laval One Ackarman Union.
Monday and Tuaaday only,
10:06 8.m.-4:00 p.nt
1
BBAMO now jaL Cant 188 apeebem.
ssaa Stt ^^^^^0% ^^^^^^ ^^fc^ ^fc _ _ .* ■ a^
WMIa. Sisnia Nm. 478M8. 478-8814.
MO M 28)
MANPSILHOBOO buBI to afdar Mam
AMTkermenn kita CaM Merc 821-8848
•^"^^ (18M1SI
Met eoi^tt^Mi o^avb^ ^h^m ^^e^en ^e
m maba aflar Eveninga-880<4847
(10 M 28)
MOVING aala. twin mefbeai
$20. deek $20. table $20
$29. caM 828-2048.
• SBB^aali
faMgetbtor
(10 M 20)
APARTMENT alaa porfbla weahing i
cMne wNh apbi dry. $119 portable B 8 W
18" TV. 848. CaB after 9:30pm 471-8181.
(10 M 20)
MATTRESSES ALL NEW
Save uplo48%
Twin
Fua
•iiaae
THE MATTHaaa STORE
117^4 Plae BkPd. 4237 Van Miiya
a( ~
477.4141
8J% TNO. 1.8 PM
MOVING SAL84umlture.
en. elc Sat. Mey 22- June 1. 11023
Ma. 4. 470-3145 ^,p „ jgj
OEAUTIRJLMM
■aa. $188
(10 M 28|
cloalng nighta Alao. went Monbeoa
aMuwa. Sf BobaM. laa. Patil 824-2481.
(10M27)
STEREO campanente: Student die-
Volley. 881-8848. 881
131^8871.118 1881
(18 0lr>
8
Cael $188.
$18
81^.
$18.
for sale
BEFBIGEBATOB 1 V, yre. old. 11 Aaa. tL.
mm, eaaiMiwlogadln.. $180. avaMjyiO
rwmaea. nena-moaa. large rougn nond'
$20, rough and table. $10.
188-1818. ^^^ ^ 2JJ
MCCAATNIRV and WInga concert
ticketa EaceNent aeeta for June 22nd.
at M»e Forum. 003-7004. .
(10 M 18>
SALE Luggaga Eacellent condition
V ar anbre lot. 385-4784 week
4:88. Weekanda anytlma
(10 M 24)
Exclusively Ours!
ASUCLA Trader
thong sandats in a
burlap signature
bag
just $6.98
Sanda(8 Bre black with blue and
gold ttripat in tha solai. and
biua thongs You can usa tha
stnpad bag for a boach carryall
ASUCLA aUfdanto' Stora
SPORTSWEAR
a laval, Ackarman Union
m-th 7:4S-7;30; f 7:45-8:30; • 10-4
S2S-7711
WOODEN Barrela - »Cef». A
hetcbcovera. netting 8 rope, funky
cretea 8 boaea. old barnwood 031-
MOVING Sale • r
mrmcf%mkr $35. bedroom
$150.
471-
(10 m 20)
WIMCMAKINa. breedng euppBea 8
eaulpment. Select Calif ornle Wlne^
The Grape Nut. 0312 W 02nd St. Weal-
cbeeler, Ca. 80045. 048-4818.
(lOOlr)
Tl 8B 50 A. SB 51 A. SB 52. SB 90. eM.
HP • Craig * Corvua • Novua
Telephone anawertng Machlnea
11888 Santa Monica BNd., W.L.A
REES ELECTRONICS
Call 473-2080 tor beat prtcea
•r
ACOUSTIC ISO aaee A8IP Two IS"
Oaad power $200 00 Cell
^^^^ 110 M 2S»
(3UEEN Water Red. CaMf. Woad
freme pod $100.00 Day - 08
(10 M 28)
MCCARTNEY AND WINGS. MCCART-
NEY AND WINGS 50 eaooNent aeala
muet aeN Dave 274-0080 evea.
(10 M 281
COIN COLLECT
(10 M 28)
Texas lastrvBBeaf
Tmms tmutnmmmitt aa <ii*aal»
TtabM Maai nan si laraa rianu
caaVws ha)
• «-!•«•* Slacli ••Mamertn •ItOtaNi
NOVIK
/IBilCUS
BUSN4E88 EQUIPMENT
nssa bama Monica m wla
CALL«7« 77«1- SM WMtotftan
HELP1
10
RrN
(11 MM)
47
(11 MM)
FROt: 8
271
part Q^rmmn %h^pmr^
(11 Ml?)
opportunit
■lu^
laawbbiOMr
3 bra Mon Bmi Fd
^oeillone w«N laal
a
UC
811J8 par Br. B you
<ad4»
eppertunitl
oeeaaeeeaeeaaeeo
PBRSOMAi
^•
It
Auonmm nowi
for two 3 act plays
I rolao opan to ail agas)
Umitm<i $choi»rship3 are
m thw following workshopt
ACTlfSlG
DIRECTIf*4G
PLAYWRITING
DAMCE
CALL US AT
8373011
h subjeds
STUDENT raaaerching BueMey Amend-
aonla to Intarvlew atudenta who've
la aae bielr UCLA fbea. Nomaa
wM not be uaad. CaN 477-1328 or 828-
CASUALLV OR SERIOUSLY DATBUG
COHABrfBHO. ENGAGED. AND 8MA-
RIED COUPLES needed lor ■podaf
q«iaatlonnalra atudy EARN $1 90 PER
SON PLUS FEEDBACK Come TOGE-
THER anytlma 10-5 weekdays, Boam
4SMC FBANZ 825-2038.
(14M28)
OEPRESSEb Studenta needed for
irch! Ce« 188-5122 elter 5:00.
(14 M M)
wanted
f
Help Self by Helping Others
$5-SS0/monthlor Blood Plasma
HYLAND DONOR CENTER
1001 Gay ley Ave.. Westwood
478-0051
etc. 082-4272.
(12 M 20)
BEVERLY HIba Men a Helratyllat oflera
it— bairatyling ^or more info cell
271-8218 Tuea - Sal.
^ (12 0lr)
CASH or
Mualc Odyaeey. 1 1010 WMabbe (
)
(18 Otr)
help waiited
EXP Waltarm.
ra, buaboya For
10 12
1001
477-
(15 M 27)
BUS drtver«<cloes 2
dHvbig record 21 yrs. 472-7474.
^ (15 M M)
OYMNAirici Inelructor-trampoOna;
tumbling 21 yra Eiperlenced with
children. 5-11. 472-7474 or 888-8070 pm
(15 M 25)
PIANfST/Orfomat. chob
ed for Chinese Chrlatlen Church.
ly Servleea 822-8803 mW¥ 8-1.
(18 Mi M)
WE WILL HELP VOU GO TO ISRAEL
THIS
yaor trip to larael iMa Summer and
ya« talth a CaMass stipend
B yaa cananB yanreeN Id da
neat Pod ea Loa
for tie WUJS
GREAT SUMMER JOR - SMNT
REACH OMMTED DAY
TWO WIBRS HIGH
^^ygQOOP STATION WAGON OR
CNtLBRCtl AND OUTDOORS. 472-
(18
I)
21).
(IS HIT)
cor^inv&U'
CLASSIFIED >ID
halp
wanted
•
URGENTT
ladaetrial
fjaodMaT Level. Technical.
Btonagamant. Clericel 8
QrbdyaMa 8 lb»da»ifaduaiaa
T.R. B
MRLOVIMNT AGENCY
(Pee 8 Free)
SawM Mawics at aaoi
S.M 181-4107
help wanted
j^.
RHOTO Lab Teeh Modent poeMon
tar saaamer only Hourly poy iggm
18-15 hrs per
Muat heva
graphy eaperience Apply 121 K<
before June 18 825-2221
i (iSoiM)
•aSary Ei
478
WANTED
M modi 8
7
(ISM
PHY EO
or
landc
Ipf 2 Bays. 11 8 12, pbM 8 yr old fk4
(2 daya^waab) 7/28/78 Bwwugh 8/10/78
SU8 _
^^^^ •ss* isss ess
(It M M)
aaryicaa offered
STUDENTS &
TEACHERS
WELCOME AT
KELLY GIRL!
Men and Women: Earn
extra money dunng summer
break while enjoying a
variety of temporary assign-
ments We provide tempo-
rary jobs for all clerical
and/or industrial skills
*WORK WHEN YOU
WANT, AS OFTEN AS
YOU WANT. •YOU
DONT PAY US - WE
PAY YOU!
Call us 8-5:30 pm daily or
9 am. - 1 pm Satuixlays
KELLY SERVICES INC
FuUerton 714-879-9762
Long Beach 213^12-6791
Los Angelas 213-
Beverly Blvd 656-6750
Wilshire Blvd. 38t-7S61
illo 213-724-6810
.A
I
818 bMeap
81M
n
Cell ma
(18 J 4)
moi/iriG ?
CAMPUS SERVICES
Aak for
3tS-S318
AUTO Insuri
atudenta or
818-7270. 870
LaWaet relee
W
(16 081
.' USE
N may
#«a A*r«
ices offered
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTOMCYCLE INSURANCE
TMHIfli?
aTuoewT DtacouNTS
.
Newport Beach 714-633-1441 i
OfRfiga 714-647-9535
Paaadena 213-792-4176
Torranca 21 3-542-1 5ie
Van Nuys 213-763-2530
Westchester 213-645-0750
Westwood 213-477-3961
Whittier 213 8S6 0447
equal opportunity employer
ELECTROLTSia
L
«»i^
^aawbpa. "rae
18M
477-2188.
(tSOIr)
TELEPHONE Salii ElseiiBalBB Oal-
Salary 8 banus Weefcly Sieve CaffaB.
481-8888. 8-8 ^^^ ^ ^
RNOTOURAPIBC SaMa.
wm
lam
d ArtsPHm
C15M27)
SALES Wasfaad Eaei
Income vHth beneflta. Ina
■Ba
Ma
ni lai year
adib appartunity ipr aRi
ataaafaaiant BJL aaeal
478-8181.
I»a4
4?t-1188.
(15 J 4)
VTON EXPRESS
MOVERS
a«>d Hauling
RlchSSA-
881-
7817.
m-A.. MJL) ^n-
(MOir)
THE aOOVMCN
8
470-OO40
(Dave or Gery)
OOVMCN ^^^\
r Gery) ^^^^
f aaa^ >apeir •(
mmtn LA •
He 4 leraHpn
pvaaa
I A
MOVING Beaidentlel. aparimanta
r/smad )aba Laeal 8
S833 828-3770
(15
n« tH^^
SUMMER JOSS
CAU.
i .^
478-8187
(18 M M)
MEOICAl iCHOOta ABROAD
Having sdmNBlons problems tor
medical school''
WE CAN HELP VOU'
For information write to
841 Daway Ave
CllWaieo Rafli. New Jaraay 07010
NOUBEPAINTINO - Oreda Rrpfaa-
ASUCLA Travel
MCLA
ITo nei loo
y
1
lo
by UnNfoa.
(18 M 281
ARROW INSURANCE
14S-4S6S SS7.
bipakMveS
(2 «ba about 11% hlflier):
188: Naplaa SIM:
S1 10; Venice S102. Tunia
888; Oubiavnih SIM;
SI 73; Mumob SIM; AB>ena 8188: CaHu
S183; C«a«a 8218; Rhadsi 8218 - aad
Cad UnNrea 881-3788 tar
Sw»e W9^ SW ^M
(21 MM)
CHARTERS and vocation pacbatas
on Pan Am 747
8.
^w^v v%^^w^ak ^^vevsesis vesvNMSs* vseev sv
Me aorrlnfton RIaaa. W.L.A 11744
Wllshlra 477-8828. 878-3187 With
mof then 30 yrs eaperlence Help
la study^ireleln-releB-aleep See our
telephone Yellow Pepea ad Spec lei
(lootn
aaom
' APe SEE THb WORLD
1111
(MOb)
trW BUlNtENANCE SEPIVICE SM.M
LAST CHANCE TO BOO><
MR lo aid
ef BVi
of
fUghM.
LAX-Amsterdam-LAX
• DapBiSypi 8ol
11C75
12075
15C75
18076
22C76
23C78
27C76
30C76
Juno 21 11
Juna2l 12
Juna2S 5
Jufia29 10
July S S
Julys S
JutV 8 4
July 19 4
IS
1429
1429
94aa
1426
S42#
UCLA EUROPE
CHARTER
SPECIALS
LA-LON-LA
LA-aRUSSEL8 8/18-8/M
LA-PARIS-LA 8/M-8/M
♦
PLUS ..PRAMKPURT ZUBICM
HAWAII . . .
LAJMONOLULt^OMi (
iik-HcmoujL\Jlim
Aloocoairt rental arenhaead
472-I8B1.
BALLET Pun a»ay lo aoeuty. 1188
and Unbr. ywCA, 874 HB-
Odvenced. 0 lesaena.
Dlatlf»fulehed
mom
.-T-nrj
ACAOtlMC TEAR PUQMTm
I4L.A7I
«i/nitM«*i
'OOD/Ta-a/M/rT lo.
fi/r7 to
1/77 f
s«ia
s«ia
S410
CI E.E STUDENT TRAVEL (477
17
(MObr)
CHARTERS
M.7S. oay-iaM. hm w
llEXICO...
MAZATLAN mr 8 lodg tr SMSJII
NEW YORK...
1.2.3 vNis roundlrtp on TWA fr
RLUa Cor RanMio LaoaMa-.*»*<
rall/Euroll poa8O0...Accoasod0-
tlOnb. ..aiuiant Flights within
Eufopa/Aato...imMaoaowol Stei
aofHLO
•IV
01 -y
TRAVf L COUNaMJMMI
ASH Ua ROR ANVTHIWO VOL
WANT TO KMOW ASOUT
Simasi Lappa 8
1811 ar Pfbd 4S8- 1448.
(18 Otr)
RIDING LESSONS
Z. tra¥#l
CARS IN
BENT OR BUY
TO
8
CATALOG
aLt^.. LJi.
871
TOUHS A TRAy£L
Caytrol Cenler alJIaByeraatd. 8MMI ■•■J^ *^ —g-?— <
48i%8tl'/ *^ *^ *^*' "'!:. oL!; SaoOad. Cos iiab (HI) fl
Parta
Matfno
' » *
Brua*«>»
7 .,1 It n
ndlr»p f'on^ %299 'M
Hawaii »f>6 New Vo#S
houodtrlo trom ft 44 00
(18 0lr)
1HE Joe
fyCTORY
(21Df71.7SM.
itlOB)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
CHARTERS
2 TO li
08lt WAV RLIOHTS m CURO^
«r«ia loura
i*C ttuk e4 ffttnimtim co«
•II IJ« f#>f lr>
tM4-iiat
A^ •■r Pwii wr Bg^
LOWEST Pmom ' CALL MOMTY
DAYS 836-7961
or
riMW
I
CLASSIFIED
trav«l
i
I
I
si^:
liiH
o»
>^
CHARTERS .,.<i«
ffo«ft A«»rN mru Octmm mmfi m li «mim
UU- AM 7
LOW W
mo
^A«
co:
PIU
hr
LOS ANGCLfS
WIOFEtSIONAL CLIM
1406 WMtwood BWd . L A C« 90024
(213) 879-9121/ (213) 477-1 1«2
TQC CHARTED FLIGHTS
TO EUROPE
(Lots of Oth«ft)
r -1
o
♦ ■ ic
61S3
8622 3
061911
LJ6226
13
6/i>-r'i2
/6/ 15-6/24
•nS-6/07
6/V»4/t6
6/22-7/05
6/22-6/21
6/26-6/23
-11 6/2I-6/14
La6262 6/26-7/ It
ELF07036 7/064/30
L77062 7/06-7/16
■706-S 7/06-6/10
ELF0710e 7/10^i0
LJ7132 7/13 7/26
Mm Pric« TQC
S379
376
7132
07176
B603-5
L166313
7/13-6/24
7/17-6/13
6«1»-6/07
6/31-6/20
9/04-10 IS
9/28 10 n
379
376
zm
376
446
371
ZMR
JX
7/1»^/»4
16
•R
7^6-6/16
JX
7/27 -Mr7
76
6«^6-0/l2
61
7/06-A/12
62
7/94.«/»
63
7/94-6(^04
64
7/64-6/12
67
6^0t-6^0i
66
Mi-#^
A*
7^86^/80
CM
7/14-6/16
EJ
6/66 I^W
CJ
7/Q6-6/90
JX
7/17-6/13
•R
7/17.6/M
fej
7/01-6^1
EJ
7/06-10/06
416
416
476
47t
lfOfn6t66
front 6166
Uotn
$125 Deposit r9quif4 per person.
Limllsd space. Book R9is. Rteese try|
arid book 60 days pNor to doporlufe.
IRAN
Art you going to Iran thtt •ummer
Da«iy 747 Flights
Contact
/mift Tour 6 Tr«w«l Service
6725 Sunt«t Blvd No 419
HoMywood CA 90028
Tel 466-5259
Iranian ttudenlt S843 00 round trip
HAWAI1 142
NYC 123
ORIENT Many dales
Contaot ASTrA for over 200 Other fligh|»
with depsrlurat from L A Sao Francisco.
Chicaoo •oslon Hmvit Vorfc «Maaningion D C
■ Chartet reg requira 66 4ay adwance aoolMng
price subfect lo 20% •ncfsose
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL. Msicoast ' r tWI
VOUTH. Eurooa 1-yf trom6607
APEX.22 4<) OOdayadv tittok Eur- f romtASO
TAHITI ^UPER DEAL »37»
OROEM NOW
TRAIN ft FERRY TICKETS, CAR8.
CAMBER RENTALS RAILPASSES
INTRA-EUROPEAN STUDENT
CHARTERS
SKCIAL OFFER
6/21 - G/28..i:ds Vegdsl
Crand Canyon ?* Rivpr
Paftinn on Colorado.
...S341.0n (Incl.)
TOURS
JAMAICA 6 days IMS
iTAiY 15 days 6666
i.ON PAR 0Mt. IS <a»S mo
MEXICO f dsyt 6166
HAWAII 8 deyt 6347
BICENTENNIAL 8 days 6466
NEW YOf^K CITY 8 days 6666
Many ulhart long 6 short, budget 6 deluxe
Oft*-«lo«>aanMc* tor «wofM«Mele«ivs.cru«ae«.
holatt. car* domaahc S MMefMeMeM
PSA FREE COUN6CLING
instant hasarvahons Ttchal OeMwary
Of»CN feU-F 10-6 ALL VEAh
AatriCM Staitat TnM»l AttMlallaa
124
[211] 47t-4444
EUROPf— I
LOW Goal
Lmm49m, P»r«a. mm4rm, Zurich. N««r
Voft. ana Ma ail. Pm aalal oal 474-
3211 (aaya). 47f-l0ll (mm). Wm aloe
tutorii
ENGLISH
B8L
2S02(
/9e I s\
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charter Flight Service
Over 1000 flights to Euronr* this
Summer • Discounted ^
Mights to Europe • Charters to
Hai**aii and Mexico • Student &
Faculty discounts on car purchas
es rentals and leases • Study
tours • Camping Tours • Unregi
mented Student Tours • Rail
Passes • Fly driye European ar
•^angements • Mini Tours • Hotel
Accomodation • Hostel informa
tion • International Student ID
^^'ds • Free travel counseling •
'0 Travel Library
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING!
^RWNCH Ti
lo UCLA
47t-3373.
MATH
(a4oinj
toy MA. Oraa.
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
M17 Santa Monica Blvd.
in
Monica
LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION
TESt PREPARATION
10 hr class begms June It fm inly 24
Teal
•QMAT course begins June S for
July 10 losl.
•SPEED MEADING coursa beains
jMne36
•CAREEM GUIDANCE
ASOCIA^
JAZZ PIAMO/ALL tTYLI t
e^^ aMM a^^
F^^ •••' ■'^■•'
6 maiiwsiiiBii/ai
LtAT. apt. MCAT. OMAT
•II auto^la Paaaawatoie rates A
■aacaaaa OawMi I73t Wesi-
47Sf1t3 lOf IS Vonica §37
lfO>r|
1 €
tiitorifio
'I.
(14M38)
(14 IN St)
EK^fMICMCBO MaUee ffm»»
Saociai grammar^lMeralure review
Sapinnefs/seniofs Higniy
•a. Frencti Oepl 4tS'174f
Ifidlviaual. email growa inatructlon
(MOir)
CHIMtSE MandaHfi Pvlilnf nmttw
laacher, wofl-eaporloncoa with Call
fornia Creaentlal. Inaivi^ual. aasall
typing
TVPt6k>/a<Hiny/muttt-e«portancad/tBat
aecurala/plck-up. aaHvory/rtghlaous
TYPING Term papers, etc Stwdant
Tap Ouaaty. Judy <• Jk. tnfSali).
mom)
TVPf NQ Faat. aecurate servloe al,^
sonable ratoa. I«M Saiectric Term
^my, Itioaaa. ale. fSS-iSOO. tsa-tsif
(aHpMa). r»t J 6»
SPf CDT. accurala ISM typlat - raa-
cssoti
EXPERTiechnical typiwf matn. ecion-
fic-theses. dissertations, books aays
t2S-3452 evenings 296-20i4 Cliarlolle
^^ • «
FLASt4 Flngara tacratarial Sarvlea.
Eacelient work. Prosapt attention,
pick-up « aal if needed i22-3itS/
"*'-' ,<1J4.
TYPIIiG:
474.
t»om
PPOPCSSIONAL wHtor with B.A. In
EnfNali <UCLA) wM type and odN lann
haaaOr ale. Over 2S yaars ei-
Eaay paililnp. Campoa
One day aofvlaa. BMDalanay.
(SSOtr)
KAY Typing, editing English grad
Dissertations specialty Term papers
aieses. resumes, letters ISM 626-7472
(Si QTR)
Lofal Sacratafy.
Maar eampua. 47S-
osom
XEROX 2' ?C
KINK OS L^LSZl£
.11 ' ■• Cj I S^ * L U ' L
(»MSS)
TYPfHG by LIZ IBM SELECTPIC II
CHOICE TYPE FACE - Term Papers.
Thaaas. Manuacrtpta. FlaM Sluaiaa,
Editing. SCREENPLAY SPECIALIST
(naar OrtlfNh Pafk). SSa-IOas
(2SJ2)
TYPINQ. T
Tap
(SSOir)
;»entlflc.
1
73 IS.
(isoai
RUTH C DISSCTTATIONS. THCSCt,
STATISTICAL FAST. OCPCNOAOLC.
SEVEN DAYS A WCIK. MANY TYPE
STYLES. ilS-S4«S.
OSOlrl
or 27f -M71
-21155*
fSSOtrt
typing
CaS47S-llS7
i4!
47S-I747(aaya» or t37->tas
NEAVY. Ma typai«.
Vary laaaaaaMa... 463 -4232 eany morn
or allar 7«S p^.
(2SmSS)
TMNIPIC
fbara tMiSS 47f -
(SSMlfl
TYPINO~Ail
curate 7ia/p«. ISM Selectrlc. Ml#-
(2SQIr.)
LIGHTNINQ TYPING CO
Theais Specialist
Fme Estimeles
PNOFf tSIONAL COLLEQE TYPING
tPEClALiST
Term pepers Thoala. Oissertettons
Features -Foreign Language* Sciences.
Mem Tebles. Oiagrems Music Editing.
Counseling. Xerosmg. Pnnting Sindmg
Student Rates 3ff 3161
da tt. Tana
thoaaa. dlaaertatlona. etc. Call 3S4-
^6#r for Ifsie aalMMla. — ^^^_^
. (M Qlr)
NUTH: Selacbtc.
issoan
1S4S-12lh Stfaat. Santa
MS-S721 or SSS
(25 M 27)
Faat and
ar SSS-I
la tas-
ISSJ4I
a|H» famished
tt4S VERY
2 barrooms. S
laaairy One child. Hmm
Freeway and La
•5S-33S0.
(ssMas)
LANOf S
Sir.
iS4 Olanmolt
(aSJ4)
FUNNISHCO/Unfurnlshed bacheiar
1140. Singles lltft. P«oi Hoart af
jpToa^aaod. 10834 Llwdifeuk 47S-Mg4.
(ao QlrV
$14S FtWWMSiigD
bll^tean. Oaaaaalad.
-7SS1 ar 4S6 64Sa
(asm 4)
S.M. Flat tar raiM. 3
•Ike ride ta UCLA Garage. tISS/
|aSMS4)
WALK TO UCLA
Spacioua Sacttoiors Sirtgioa
1 S 2 BaSPBom Apts
10941 Strathmore Pool
:unty garage Alao with
RATIS
540 Olenrocii - S43 Larfdtair
47S-4S3-510-516 Landfair 477
SUMMER Rates. Spaalaai aingiaa.
1 S 2 bedrooms Large courtyard.
SS2 Vateran Ave No WMahlra. 47S-
•^^ (as Olr.)
SSf OAYLEY, across from Oykstra.
MINUTES from UCLIIf Singles, fm-
nionce - roaaonaMa price 2tOl So
47S.2120
(2SOIr)
apt»e unfiimished
1 SCONOOM
L No
S1SS
197
OWN
12S1.
fStMast
SAilTA
SITS, a
aaadi. 3
i^^im^)
fITS T«eo
474-7477
Hrjd)
■I
dp^ 2
paal. Saas SS44lf7 afior 0:00
mm )
SI 79 Spaclaaa 1 ba^raom Carpet
to
tias^
iSBMSSI
•rantar^od apt.
. $i3a.ss
(as Man
a FEMALtS «aa#ad la allava aMT a I
a#t. on Strathmore Avail June 19.
S1iaJ0/aia. Beae 473-0034
r9aM an
SS3-at10 antr 7:00 pm.
ISSMfT^
.^,
in WLA lar Siat
SI 30 626'0313.
(JSMST)
LOOKING for
•a ahasi
ar after. Ca«
If
(aomas)
ACTIVE alMoSc people for furnHhog
mm^rn apt Pool one block from
$110 - UrMHa 470-1033.
(30 M 20
bauiry 2
apt. WLA tISOJS
#ant. Bnte9 SSI 9430; 740
If MInMMi Id UCLA
raaai. $119 pliia ulMtiaa
M2S)
PRIVATE raom in 3 badr
$112 CaO
S.M.
iDnen
(2SMaS)
1 PCNSON
2bdrm.apt
$110. 47S-SaS3
aianm at
(aSM3S)
.a
s
(as M SSI
RCSPONSISLE. taaaimate
eranlod June IS. Minutes ta UCLA.
Large bedroom $110 plus utilities
130 M as)
a EASY Going poapM lo
in furnished. Weatwood apt Pool.
sauna. |acuul. piue aiaw. S14S aa.
(3$ m 34>
PEMALE
tiMehon baPi. near UCLA. $77.SS/aia.
starting 0/1S. Esanlnfa 470-3083.
(aOMSO)
OUIET Jewish girt, seeks same lor
irlmei
-3S47
apartment by eampua In fall S
SS4-
(SSMPSI
SSS/ma
473-3103
/MM Ml
sas-s3io.
$100 por aiaNSi plao «M.
for subl
OCEAN Paft
raaiaruSy
(30 Mas)
•rantwood. Aeall 0-10. $399/monNi.
SM-704a alMr 4. (IS M SS)
QNCAT for
aaar UCLA
mmnings. earty
47341dS.
(aoMss)
1-^Sopt 1 $140 Cutear city
(3S M 34)
SU9LET July. August Larfo ona
bedroom, furnished Venice. H9mf
(3SM37)
M kaaaa alaoa la
Sante MonMa. SSlJf tm.
(»mrr)
TWO OmLS naadad ta
laaaiandSaMlna
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for
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Apt la
a Weybum
477-0441
rooiTi A bosrci
fxchange hf^j^
•utosfor sal«
•Mtos for sato
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$130
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plus Cell e
1
Ihang in
vemngA Ave ar
OaMSS)
(3SM24)
ATHLETIC guy w
haaaa. liaoi 9
Call 9ud7S4-1
la aliaia 2 ba
(32 MM)
PRIVATE
fpi. 6. whan a
dHving Pf—
462-0301/076 3S46
(37 M 30)
1071 VW SuparSuf RiiaMI
Clutch brakes escelient o a axilla a
$1600 mf beet oHer Iveniags 473-
197f PIAT 12
I CI
479-0940. 477
(41 M S0| ti..yfn
tUSLCT 2 b«r apt Juty-tapt $379
tMJS sunny
mm 94)
SULEla
ly tu
Sanaa $100
S4S pm 279- 1SSS
fw .1 a*
SUSLET
7/1^0/30 $J7S aia
WLA
uSmies iftcluded
0-11 pm
(30 M 24)
PPIVATI fOMli. SaSl. c<
ties $75 month male eichange
personal household help 7 30 0AM
end Saturdays no cNldsan 470-0747
(37 M 34)
soom for rent
SO VW Van.
condNlon $790 4»4
El
(dlMSS)
VWT3
k. A/C. AM/PM. mIchaMn
ar 4SS.1796
(41 M 29)
T3 FIAT 1
34J99I
Daes 471
•aa.$1999
(41 Ma7
pURNtSHCO 1-badroam 10 min cam-
pus Foot Patio $390 plus utilities
O/aS'0720 477
(39 J 4)
Monica $1M. 030
9^1-0/10
a9M34)
Large yerd ttrsplece eti estme Grar
student prelenod. lemaie/aMie A«oM
able June 1st. Call 305-0356 Kee^
"^"^ (93 Mas
Koiising needed
WALK to UCLA from
room and bath student
1930
473-
(30 M 20)
GIRL quiet tumistted alRfN in 9ei
Air home Fri«ele enirenaa. bath, tile
cooking. Refrig pool, utilities No
smoking $190 472-1030
(30 M 29|
PONTIAC 06 it696W lagon. air
Ssaa and iranemlaaMn. pawer steering,
brakoe oms great 474-9931
(41 M 39)
73 PINTO sedan, air. radio, carrier.
$1490' offer 030-2040
(41 M 20)
bicycles tor
CaN
0.
2T
t 939
97 ALPtNG SyaSaam 4 speed greei
aandltlon Good gas Hera/ soft lop
). otter 624-2471 ' . <41 M 27)
houses for rent
IS- YEAR OLD YOU6IG Man high i
aaalar atier>dlng prteaN ectiool in
aH room and partiei boerd with mdlviduei
In Severly
Pm-
Waal LA mrmm WNI pay $380 par
CaN 373-0400 6:00 fjh to4 30 pm
.-., (33Ma7)
10 UCLA $37$.
479-1 ass.
lasMao)
GUEST Houee 1 mSe UCLA iimik^tm
newly built hideewey Cathedral ceiling.
beams, slaeping loft, full kitchen.
aMNIaa liicliiSad. $3S9. 1S3 1110.
(39M27)
JULY-Auguat. 9anta Monica houpa. One
from beach $4S0 UMISaa in-
451 2394 ^ ^ j^^
BRENTWOOD. .Pm 9ie
bedroom hoa
lul
MALE graduaN over 21 neat.
r, no kHcfien prhmeges,
191 Mallllwi. 474-9147
(39 M 37)
OUIET. privple rooai/bath kitchen
»s teundry Weetwood-Wllehire
:uity student. Cad alter 5 39p.m
4/4-7122 ,„ ^ ,^
SSO/month PLUS c
fkits leseont for nifw
4197 after 4:00
TS RENAULT 1$ lo
AM/FM/tape stereo
93790 7 03t»-3030
(41 m 37)
1670 V W Fastback. rebuilt engine,
transmission, new clutch, pami. 14S9
call Den et 655-0104
(4.1 M 27)
iilfl479-
(a9Ma9)'
74 TOYOTA Chinoak "mmi c
Ice boi tmii pop-top. 19/34 mag
3192
STuocNT Ditcousrr '
MOST NCPAM WHILE YOU WAIT
10% DPP ON PARTS AND
ACCEtSOniCS WITH I.D
HANS OHRT
UOHTWCIOHT BICVCLEt. NSC.
bi the VMase
(2 SLOCKS FROM CAMPUS)
1071 OAVLEV AVt.
473-2009
(41 M 37)
(33MaO|
PsM. M use
IT Jaly and August
while apt hunting Ca« 395-9723
(33 M 24)
$90/mon9i PLUS c
I f9mr aM
479-41971
1973 FIAT 129
Usee EsceiMent c
aa« $1990 $399
476 9940 477-0795
U1 M 24)
%m C*''' "■•'•••••• .^ M*afc*k< 0*«t#«
fiKec
HOME lar
Up to $36 wk. espeni
01U 10-4 wliPya.
eutoefor
Can Elko 275-
(33M39)
m^m 1 1
9UM6iER RENTAL - 4
Fumlahed orw mMm
mo. 474-3399 Juna-Sapt negotiebie
C30M3S)
COUPLE wama to
loaae on 1 or 2 bedroom apt for $3S0
or leea Nam MM Jam to Mia-Septi
473-43SS. (33M39)
SO OPCL Rallye $ track, awiga^air
9394771
mm U$f 0
1 Stf*r(«
aall $379 479-
141 M 341
■••f%o«
•i67«
ENCtOCS 73,
^^KlU *••« l^^wW» ^^V^Mt
(41 M 3S)
(41 M 3S)
FURNISHED home Your
Fireplaca, tarraa
CaN efler 9 pm EX4-9999
. : < — -L
$l9S/aia
OletrteL
(39 J 3)
I
($990) Pool table, otRar amenitlee
•79-1349. rw) .1 at
FEMALE loommals lo aham ft
apartment immedietely. welking dis
lonce UCLA* Cpll Eheryl evenings
M 34)
house exchenge
1999 MOO Roadater 49.909 Ml.
Naw - ck«h/lap/paint Asking V1999
9414999 ar 9414995 ^^^ ^ j^j
WilshireWest i.*^
Bicycles '-^ ^^'
73 VW 0U9 w/bad Oaan
(313)931
HI M39)
OPEL GT 73. 4.^ ,
clean original owner 925-1229. or
141
0AM FRANCI9C0 boiPM? Tf
M
30 ml/ gal $590 00 Moma/aeawi
•*^* <41 m 391
71 CHEV Vega OT IMMhback AM/PM
Ea candltioo Farslgn sludem leevtng
Any gaaa otter $1300 479-9927 after
•••"• (41 M 39)
MG 1072 MNOQET EaiMlMfit aaad-Ta
aMaa. 910SS 930-4442
(41 M 20)
09 MU9TANG Mach 1 (2old wNh Ral
16^ Oiwieent* ev« mm*t
J
477-31St
^'
:t7a0. 3 OSONOOMO. 3
Aug. 1979 - Oapt 1977 W
Air conditioned 9994793
(39 m 24)
June or
July. Muat be In eaey MmMO tSaMnaa 01
WNaMre ONd For I
contact: Paul and 9ue
19th 9t 9an Franciaco. CA. 94114
(415) 9934999 ^3^ ^ ^^
y%y 0U9, 9 , »-
iifoii. aitallaol (pndiiian Can
p.m 392-9479.
(41 M m
11941 Wilahira Olyd L A 90025'
\ ; i^
cycles, scooters
for sale
house for
room A board
99 MERCURY Montego Auti
p • -P 9 air 56.000 miles
$999 AIMr 5:90 4734109
(41 m 39)
new cerburelor/clMlBh. new bal-
/Ibaa. iMwe. nitm eaeallsnL sharp!
aa« $1799/aRar 313434-1497 Jock
(41 M 39)
1674 H06IDA 390-4
condition, many estrar $.000 milee.
6650/ otter 9aaM SSS4SO0.
143 M 3S>
3
30 ft
akylighta. private sundeck Slack to
iNMRtpa. naa^ naNa^ai. ^^w.ewi ^^w^w
477-3310
ROOM mn4
HRpard Ho(
937
lor $15$
lor
479
(31 M 34t
(39 (Mr)
09 VOLtO PV 944
very clean $790 or best 0^i9f $39
7919 afte 300 j^, ^ jft
Eaal.
r Oeel
473-3979
(41 M 34)
COMVEfmOLE 99 Omck
lap. pabM. araa. $999.00 472 7930 after
9:30 p.m, <41 M >9>
OATOUN 1999. 91M. laS bar. raeba.
cassette radlels. very cleen $1300/
aNar 313/341-1197 J61M39)
TOYOTA Corona 1973 Air. AM-FM
311
99 VW. Recant Ovenioul body, paint
ported, very clean. $979/ otter Call
own 474-6139.
(41 m 29)
74
ac
aftor9
943-9991
(43M39)
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3 JOO aii Ilanf
(43 M
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5
Bassett — builder of championship
a
m
i
ly Hunter Ki
Dm Sports Writer
it no doubt in my
mind tliAt omtk bisctt if the
kctt collegiate coach in the
country.** — UCLA unffm wit
Peter Fleming
Flcmmg has only performai
under VCLA*s Glenn Baasett^
this season, after transferring
to Wettwbod from the Uni-
versity of Michigan But the
Bruin ace adnals that ImmI
has helped him greatly in
learning to play top-notch ten-
nis against the best compethr
tioo on a regular basis.
Fleming isn*t alone in this
analysis. Previous UCLA
NCAA singles champions Jim-
my Connors (1971) and Billy
Martin (1975), suted on
numerous ooOMionf that Ba»>
sett instilled great confidence
in his players by emphasizing
that a player must learn to win
hc% with mriital tough-
when their physical per-
fomumoas are on a downgnde.
Connors, and Marnn, aloof
with loads of ojther world dMi
tennis stars who have played
under the Bruin coach come
teck to Westwood to recieve
coaching tips dunng pauses in
the highly competitive year-
round professional circuits.
•'Since Pve been at UCLA, I
have seen them all come out to
practice on the Sunset Courts,**
said Flenung, who left with
Brum teammates Ferdi Tay-
pan, Briice Nichols and John
Austin for the NUAA
championships in Corpus
jChristi, Texas Saturday
***Connors, Martin, Jeff
Borowiak, Jeff Austin, Har-
ron Rahim, Steve Krulevitz,
Bob Kreiss, Roy Barth and
many others have returned to
see the coach,** noted Fleming.
"One of these days UCLA
ought to hold its own tourna-
ment with jusl former UCLA
surs. It wouM be great with
Arthur Ashe, Stan Pasarell
and so on down the line. I'd be
lucky to crack the top five,**
voiced the ouupoken Fleming.
Nearly everyone involved. in
the game of tennis is effusive
when the conversation centers
around Bassett.
While gaining more and
more world-wide exposure
daily, tennis continues to be-
come one of the world's most
popular participation and
spectator sports.
Meanwhile, Bassett contin-
nas to churn out NCAA
championship squads at
UCLA, where tennis blue-chip-
pers swarm around like bees in
a hive. High school stars
practice weekends at UCLA*s
Simaet Courts just to be
around the workJ-cbus stars
piaying under Bassett
The junior players are hop-
ing for the chance to hit a few
practice bnUs with a Fleming.
Teacher or Ferdi Tay-
t*s accompbshments at
'Weitwnpd in the Inat ten years
are unequalled anywhere in
collegiate tennis.
Bruin teams have swept tp
167 dual match wins while
taatng merely 18 umot Banett
mok over the Bruin coaching
duties from J.D MotaM in
1967.
Morgan, who had guided the
Brums to seven NCAA crowns
and four runner-up finishes
from 1951 to 1966, left the
tennis coaching responsibihties
to ■MKtt Ml Older to devote
all of his time to the UCLA
sthMc diredMBhip. which he
had accepted in the summer of
1963
p\c his
Bruin players
billed
with former pypN. IfTS NCAA
Champ nilly Martin
While
players,
Martin,
tt^s former '*A champion on the pro- been able to ovcrconie the
such as Connors, fessional or college circuit has pressures because of their dedi-
Borowiak, Haroon jto be able to play long matches cation, motivation and aspira-
Rahni siid~bdiers, continue to
win prestigious professional
toumanients including Wim-
bledon and Forest Hills. Bas-
sett has made a big effort to
promote tennis on the col-
legiate level.
UCLA, through the efforts
of Bnsaett and Morgan, staged
matches inside Pauley Pavilion
this spnng agains top rivals
use and Stanford
The Bruins are seeking a
second consecutive NCAA
cliampionship and fourth
under Basset (1970, 197J and
1975) in his ten years at West-
wood. Last year, UCLA
clinched the NCAA title before
the semi-final round, through
the efforts of Billy Martin,
Brian Teacher, Ferdi Taygan
and Tom Kreiss.
This year, Biassett*s Bruins
took their sixth Pacific 8 dual
match championship in the last
eight years, winning the
Southern Division Pacific-8
tournament in Westwood.
Like another famous UCLA
coach, Bassett*s coaching
philosophy is based on funda-
menuls. Each player 1ms to
concentrate on winning his
individual matches while sup-
porting the team point total
with spirit, in addition to bat-
tling out matches on the court.
Bassett is known most of his
players is the toughest coach
in practice they have ever en-
countered.
'iMKtt's workouts are ex-
cruciating. All the players
practice varipus strokes daily
while playing several sets
against each other Running
the steps at the Sunset Courts
Stadium in sweat suits which is
also often on the practice
agenda.
-If you can't play when you
are tired, you wiH lose a good
deal of the time,** said BnssetL
**! like my pbiyers to run to-
gether or on their own Condi-
lioning is so important in ten-
nis. I hate to see great players
with an the strokes lose, just
kaoraae they arcn*t in the
proper shape to play consistent
top-notch tenni
in both doubles and singles on
the same day, day in and day
out. Look at the NCAA's for
example. In order to win the
singles or doubles champion-
ship, a player has to perform
in matches for seven straight
days against the best college
players in the nation.^
Bassett was a Bruin himself,
acting as co-captain on
UCLA's first NCAA
championship team in any
sport in 1951, under UCLA's
first tennis coach William
Ackerman (1928-1950). Bassett
played behind eventual NCAA
singles champion Herb Flam,
who advinced to the semis of
Wimbledon one year in the
1950s.
**Herb W9s a great pUyer
who was ranked among the
top ten players in the world for
several years."
Bnsaett was a local player
from nearby Santa Monica
and surred at both Santa
Monica High School (1942-45)
and Sanu Monica City Col-
lepe (1946^7), prior to trans-
ferring to UCLA.
Bassett advanced to the
quarter-finals of the .1950
NCAA's in both singles and
doubles, defeating Cornell's
Dick Savitt, who later wrin on
tt win Wimbledon before rc-
tiriiuL
l*s coaching career
at Santa Monica High
School after a stint in the navy
in World War 11 and a long
amateur circuit career high-
lighted by three years in
Europe dunng the late I950*s
He also competed at
Wimbledon.
His Sanu Monica High
%mmm from .1%! to 65 won
142 of 144 dual matches, win-
ning five consecutive Cabfomia
Imerscholastic Federation titles
in six years
BMKtt IMS indicated that
collegiate players are much
■lore mature than high seliool
players mad face added pres-
sure baeMne of the heavy
traveling and ex|K>sure through
ihc media ^
[ "Moit of mv UCLA nlavi^
tion of becoming top tennis
players,** said the 48-ye^r old
Bassett Many of the high
school players aren*t as dedi-
cated." " -^ "
It wouki be an understate-
ment to say Bassett is a tennis
fanatic. He arrives at the Sun-
set Courts e^rty each monung
to
inimdiial
Usually wearing: ' a
Bruin tennis cap, blue
breaker and white tenms shorts
and sneakers, the affable, ea^-
going iMactt flMlpas from
one court to another, giving
hints to each player.
Nearly every player, young
or old, who plays at UCLA ts
The Bruin coach tries to help
as many players as lie
running summer tennis
for youngsters with Billy
Martinis father for the last
three years
Bassett readily admits thnt
he enjoys coaching now as
much as he enjoyed playing
dunng his playing days.
Had there been a profes-
sional tennis circuit m 1950
like there is today, Bassett
would have most probably
used his tenacious competi-
tivenss and control style game
to work country clubs and
tennis stadiums ' around the
world for a living.
**l know I would have turn-
ed professional had the condi-
tions in the 1950*s been like
they are today.** said the Bruin
coach. .
Bassett has already lost a
handful of players to the pro-
fessional ranks, including Con-
Rahim. Martin, Rayno
irs, et. ah
"*\x wasn*t a hard choice for
them lo make at all,** Bassett
admitted.
"The money was there and
they wanted to - earn that
money Some players have to
be a bit more realistic about
pro tennis. Soiine players need
the year's experience on the
college level to mature in the
mental phases^ oi the game
Baseballers to be
today if they're in
notified
NCAA's
ly Marc Dellim
DB Sports \%riter
Today is the day the UCLA baseball Brums find out if
they will be invited to the NCAA plavoffs Although the
chances are slim. the> still exist
The NCAA selection committee will fill the final two of
34 playoff berths today after having a conference call
among its six members The two openings are in the Rocky
Mounuin regional and the Midwest regional
The two likely candidates for the berths are the
University of Arizona and the University of Mmnesou If
both finish second in their respective conferences, they will
probably get the jbids — Arizona to the Midwest and
Minnesota to the Rocky Mountain.
Arizona needs only defeat BYU tonight to cam th^
second place spot in the Western Athletic Conference The
Wildcasts defeated Wyoming in two straight games over the
weekend in a series between the two divisional second place
teams
Meanwhile. Arizona State dumped BYU in two straight
in a series between the two WAC divisional champs to earn
the league title and set up the Arizona-BYU game tonight
If Arizona wins, it will most pertainly earn a playoff
berth If BYU nuinage^ to defeat the Wilcats, it might not
be chosen. That would leave a berth open for another team
According to at least one source, Harland Berry of the
Northern Pacific league, the Bruins will be named to the
playoffs tomorrow
Berry, who is the commissioner of the Nor-Pac league (its
champion, Gonzaga in going to the Rocky Mottntam
regional) sent a letter to his friend, assistant fasMMH coach
Glenn Mickem, dated May 19 (last Wcdnoiiy).
•^Glenn,** it sa^ not sure what the NCAA i& up to. but
understand UCLA will get in. Last word we had topnght is
that Gonzaga. Arizona Sute. Memphis State and UCLA
will go to Tempe (.the Rocky Mountain regional), but won't
be announced until May 24 (today) StHI doa*t know how
chuck Braytons little clambake was arrw^ed Wonder if
Arizona will go to New Englaiid.'*
MiokeM doea aot know where Berrv got his information,
except for the fact that he is the head oC a leafa
champion is ptoyMtg in that regional Berry knows
to be able to write Mickeiis i^out the tournament draw
••Of course we*re unhappy about the way the dra^ ts
made for District 7 (Rocky Mountain) matching the two
conference champions and asMviatic entnMi in the first
V
(C
«arat*M>
Bruin
Vol
XCVill, NumlMr 35
Friday. May 21. l»7t
UCSD students aDegedly harassed Saxon
1.
Eight *La JoUa Ten' members found guilty
By
DB
Seven of the UCSD students
iai^iived in the **La Jolla Ten**
iMsmp were found guilty of
obstructing the paiaage' of UC
president David Saxon and
refusing to comply with in-
structions from University of-
ficials, according to findings
released yesterday by UCSD*s
Public Informrtea Office
Another of the 10 students
found guilty of obstructing
Saxon*8 pSMife only. Tlie
other two defendants were not
found guihy of anything.
The heanngs were a result of
the ^November 25** incident in
which students allegedly har-
raaied Saxon during a qtiei
tion-and-answer session about
CIA involvement on UC cam-
potet.
Three charges of violating
the school conduct
ultimately brought against 10
students^ who collectively
opted for a heanng with coun-
sel
The charges were that the
delendants. known as the La
Jofla Ten
— used physical abuse or
conduct thai threatened or
endangered the health and
safety of a University official;
—were resisting, delaying or
Computer uses electrodes
to read student's thoughts
DB Staff Writer
Yesterday, a woman seated
herself in front of a computer
termituil in Boelter Hall As she
aoi there, mouonkss, UCLA*s
IBM 360 computer read lier
mind and used her thoughts to
solve a maze problem
The woman and computer
were seemingly given the powers
of ESP by a technique of "bio-
feedback** being developed here
under the leadership of engi-
neenng professor Jacques Vidal
and with the financial backing
of an agency in the Department
of Defeiuie. The only links be-
tween subject and computer
were electrodes which trans-
ferred the subject *s brain wav^
to the computer.
The-fubfcci. UCLA sopho-
more Susan DeRiemer, faced a
television screen. Displayed on
the screen was a maze with a rat
symbol in the center and lour
directional arrows (up. down,
left and right ) at the edges of the
Five electrodes were attached
to the back of DeReimcr*s head,
with a sixth attached to her
forehead. The electrodes mon-
itored the weak brain waves —
also referred to as electroen-
cephalograph (EEC) signala -rr
as she concentrated on which
direction the rat should move to
leave the maze
Amplified a million times, the
EEG signals are transmitted to
the computer, which interprets
the siannii and moves the rat
aocordinfiy.
The experiment can be de-
fined as biofeedback, said Vidai,
since anni|Mii m involved in the
experience and the aubfect sees
the results of her action. Mutual
training occurs because the
subject must **train the com-
puter in the first run of the day.**
he added.
(Continued on Fngt 5)
Two attacked
with chemical
Two women, bolii stu-
dents here, were atsauKed
yesterday afternoon with a
caustic chemical m unrelated
incidents in the University
Research Library. Yester-
day*s incidenu raise to five
the number of attacks on
with
caii. TIk fim odciifrad
November.
Aa in the previous inci-
deiit^. neither of the womrn
WW the chemical p^netd on
dieir clothing in **the hip,
thigh area/* according to
Jim Ward, Univenity Pubbc
Information Officer The
^ * of the
feh a
n They
in|tirad.
The women** dothing
uken by U
to be MHi^ii^ ..
of the clothing 9f oae nf the
women burned in dK three
earlier attacks rewiii that
m ktr
obatnicting the pi
Umversity aJKrinJ; and
failed to comply with
ord^ from UCSD officiate
who instructed the crowd to
diapenc.
The final decisions in the
hearing will be those of V ice-
Chancellor and Dean of Stu-
dents George Murphy Murphy
will decide on the stud^its*
punishment.
According to Bnrhnra
Firgcr a UCSD Public Infor-
mation Office spokeswoman.
Murphy has sent letters to the
guilty students explaimng the
possible penalties. **He won't
tell us what they are.** Firger
said **We (the public infornn-
tion office) are trying to talk
him into sending us a copy of
the letter.**
Impartial ofltor
The hearing, laisting 12 days,
was handled through Murphy*s
office UCSD prolHaor of
physics Robert Lugaimant was
selected to be an impartial
heanng officer His job was to
compile the facts into a report
of findings. The findinp con-
sist of a verdict for each of the
10 students and a two-and-one-
half pafc summary oi the
hearing, according to Firger.
In his summary, Laganiwni
cited the **morc than 100 exhi-
bits, eight witMses for the
Umversity and 24 witnesses for
the charged studcnu.^>^^ko,
references were made to "^two
or three disruptions'* during
the hearing and oi the fact thnt
the hearing was **ofien
tumultuous.** -
Saxon appeared as a witi
for the defense, testifying that
he wnan*t threatened and that
the incident was *^exciting,**
according to UCSD Tritnn
Times article. ^
Jhis testimony invalidated
the first charge and serionaly
weakened the University's case
against the studenu, aecording
to the defendants
That '"shows the fUmsineas
of the charges in the first
place ** said Marc Fannon. the
delcnlant ruled guilty of two
chargini *The Adtmnist ration
manafed to convict on minor
charges They had to drop the
charge that seemed to me to be
the basis for the whole thttlg.
** Faculty and students
thought the thing should have
been dropped after Saxon
testified, he wasn*t threatened
but the Administration
couldn't have backed down
They would have lost^^ lot of
face,** Fannon said.
**We will be put on admini-
strative probation. Tm sure of
it,** said Fannon
Administrative probation
could eliminate a student's
participation in regent or chan-
cellor-appointed committem. k
also requires a student to stay
on good behavior. ''It means
don't do it again.** said a
spokesman from the Office of
Student Affairs at UCSD.
"We would be Oft the edge
of being kicked o«t (iof
school).'* fMid Fannon **lt*s
going to be a thought in the
backs of our minds. The Ad-
ministration could arbitrarily
j(Continuad on Pafs S\
Micholson uses humor
to field flak on new fikn
By Lori Wrist irg ^
Academy Award wmner Jack Nicholson appeared relaxed and
casually dreHad as he Miad ^vestions here Wednesday on
almost every subject from persona! secretaries to his saMl-to-be-
released film. "The Miwanrl Brenks.**
Nicholson was guest speaker for a seminar on the recording
and motion picture indwlhes being offered this quarter through
the Gmdnate School of Management Speaking for about an
hour before a crowded class of about 100, Nicholson was very
candid with hia jwpnMes, often evoking laughter from tfie
enthusiastic audience
David Geffin, a BUmser Bros executive and Inriar al the
seminar, criticized Nichobon's new film in which he cn-Mws with
Marlon Brando. Geffin noted that Branrin mhI Nichahna were
each paid SI. 250,000 for their work in the film, which
today. . .
Riiipindii^ to a iMiaM's qnanion about Gcfftn's
cntique of "MiMOoh Breaks,** Nictolaon at first seemed
by the query
1t hasn't even been relaaaad yet,** Nicholson said. **I have to
he nMad. ''I don't think it*s very good ~ h«l ^m^ leU
anyhm^.
''It's not a mmmkt Tm vaal fond aCr he conunuai. "i nwBad to
work nath Brand n, ubiiianily. It wm fabulous ii if >ina with
hatter flhnn you can inHpnc. It*s ni
with soattsni who*s thnt gnod.**
NichnlMU did not deWe deafly into his acting
did tall his audience he wmm 12
"I didn't have
said "I took
years, haeniK 1
timining b^ore I
_ » ^ _ a J
to act I think I
far 10
(
to
l
^
"^■f
►>
.f"
o
\
■•"l
tf^^.
VolufM XCVIII, NumlMr il5
. t— — ■- . . — - ^
iJaily
UnhwraHy of CaMofMH. Lm AngilM
,.S — •• -V--
npiiiij^
y. May 21. i97t
UCSD students aflegedlv harassed Saxon
,M
• - ^ ■ ■ ■
Eight 'La Jolla Ten' members found guilti;
By Lcittc Gcbcr
DB Staff Reporter
Seven of the UCSD students
involved in the **La Jolla Ten**
hearings were found guihy of
ohstructing the passage of UC
president David Saxon and
refusing to comply with in-
structions from University of-
ficials, according to findings
released yesterday by UCSP's
Public Information Office.
Another of the 10 students
was found jnihy of obstructing
Saxoci*s passage only The
other two defendants were not
found guilty of anything.
The hearings were a result of
the "November 25" incident in
which students allegedly iHir-
rasscd Saxon during a ques-
tion-and-answer session about
CIA involvement on UC
puses.
Three charges of violating
the school conduct code were
ultimately brought against 10
students, who collectively
opted for a hearing with coun-
sel.
Dcf I n iiBii
The duu'fes were that
defendants, known as the
JoUa Ten:
— saed physical abuse
conduct tiuit threatened
enda«iMid the heahh and
safety of a University offidnl;
— were resisting, dekayii^ or
the
U
or
or
Computer uses
to read student^s
B* JoaMic EginA
DB Stair Writer
Yesterday, a woman seated
herself irt front of a computer
terminal in Bocltcr Hall. As she
sat there, motionless, UCLA*s
IBM 360 computer read her
mind and used her thoughts to
solve a maze problem
The woman and computer
were seemingly given the powers
of ESP by a technique of "bio-
feedback** being developed here
under the leadership of engi-
neering professor Jacques Vidai
and with the financial backing
of an agency m the Department
of Defense The only links be-
tween subject and computer
were electrodes which trans-
ferred the subject's brain waves
to the computer.
The subject, UCLA sopho-
more Susan DeRiemer, faoed a
television screen. L>isplayed on
the screen was a ma/c with a rat
symbol m the center and four
directional arrows (up, down,
left and right) at the edges of the
screen.
Five electrodes were attached
to the back of DeReimer's head,
with a sixth attached to her
forehead The electrodes mon-
itored the weak brain waves
also referred to as electroen-
cephalograph (EEC) signals
as she concentrated on which
direction the rat should move to
leave the maze.
Amplified a miUion times, the
EEG signals are transmitted to
the computer, which interprets
the signals and moves the rat
accordingly.
The expenment can be de-
fined as biofeedback, said Vidal.
since analysts is involved in the
experience and the subject sees
the results of her action. Mutual
training occurs because the
subject must *lrain the com-
puter in the first run of the day,**
he added.
(ContiMNd OS ruff 51
Two attacked
with ctiemical
Two women, both stu-
dents here, were assaulted
3ialerday afternoon with a
caustic chemical in unrelated
incidents in tl|e University
Research Library. Yester-
day's incidents raise to five
the number of aftarks on
women with caustic chcmi-
cnb The first occurred last
November
As in the previous inci-
dents, neither of tile wmmm
saw the chenucal placed on
their clothing in '^tkt hip,
thigh area,** according to
Jim Ward. University Public
Information Officer. The
wmnen becnoK awnrc of the
chemiqd eton they fek a
burning MkHgtion. They
were npt strioily m/ured.
The women's clothing was
taken by University
to be analyzed. An
of the clothing of one of the
women burned in the thiee
earlier attacks i«¥onied that
the chemiGil wed on her
obstructing the proyeps of a
Umversity official, and
— hdlid to comply with
ord^ from UCSD officials
who instructed the crowd to
disperse.
The final decWass in the
hearing will be those of Vice-
Chancellor and Dean of Stu-
dents George Murphy Murphy
will decide on the students*
punishment.
According to Barbara
Firfcr, a UCSD Public Infor-
mation Office spokeswoman.
Murphy has sent letters to the
ihy students cxplaimng the
paaahies. ''He won*t
tell us what they are,** Firper
said. **We (the public informa-
tion office) are trying to talk
him into sending us a copy of
the letter -
^ r Impartial offQeer
The hearing, lasting 12 days,
was handled through Murphy's
office UCSD professor of
physics Robert Lugannani was
selected to be an impartial
hearing officer His job Was to
compile the facts into a report
of findings The findings con-
sist of a verdict for each of the
10 students and a two-and-^ne-
half pi^ summary of the
hearing, according to Firger.-
In his summary, Lugannani
cited the **more than 100 exhi-
bits, eight witnesses for the
Uhiversity and Id^iir^nemii for
the charged studenu.** Atoo,
references were made to *^wo
w three disruptions** dunng
the hearing and of the lact that
the hearing was ** often
tumultuous **
Saxon appeared as a witi
for the defense. iMtifymg that
he wain't threatened and that
the incident was **exciting.'*
accordiag Iff UCSD Triion
Times article.
This testimony invalidated
the first charge and serioael|r
weakened the University*i aaaa
against the students, according
to the defendants.
That "shows the flinMMHai
of the charges in the first
place ** said Marc Fannon, the
defenlant ruled guilty of two
chai|p». **The Administration
maaa|*ed to convict on minor
charges. They had to drop the
charge that seemed to me to he
the basis for the whole thing.
''Faculty and studenu
thought the thing should have
been dropped after Saxon
testified, he wasn't threatened
but the Administration
couldn't have baehad dawn
They would have lost a lot of
iaee,** Fannon said
-We will be put on admini-
strative probation Tm sure of
It,** said Fannon
Administrative probation
could eliminate a student's
participation in regent or chan-
cellor-appointed comnuttees. It
also requires a stud^ lo stay
on good behaviar.^^aMaas
don't do it again.** said a
spokesman from the Office of
Student Affairs at UCSD.
**We would be on the edfe
of being kicked out (of
school),** said Fannon "It's
going to be a thought in the
hacks of our minds The Ad-
nunistxationcottkl arbitrarilv
WMoison uses nunior
to field flak on new fibn
V
•y Lori
Di Stair Writer
Academy Award winner Jack Nicholson appeared relaxed and
casually dressed as he fielded quesuons here Wednesday oa
ahnost every subject from personal secretaries to his soon-to-he-
releaied film, '"The Mlssowi Ircaks**
Nicholson was guest speaker for a seminar on the recordiag
and motion picture industries being offered this quarter through
the Graduate School of Management Speaking for about an
hour before a crowded class of about 100, Nicholson was very
candid with his responses, often evoking laughter froai the
enthusiastic audience.
Dauid Gclfin, a Warner Bros, executive and leader a( the
vcvnmsr; vi mvMjMi iiidiwon* new tttnt tn "Wflmt -ne -
Marlon Brando Gefftn noted that Brando and
each paid SI ^50.000 for their work in the film,
today
Responding to a student*s qucniaa about Geffin's negative
cntiqne al "Missouri Breaks,** Nichalaaa at ftnt saaaMd irritated
by the query.
ti ■■■■ I cvvii oora ffvicnsBB yv^
wait and see what paapk think.** Pausing for a
saMling, he added, ^ doa*t think it*s very good
anybody^
-*lt*s ak a awvie Vm real fotid af,** he conti
work with Brando, ahasaatly. It irae fabulous
better than yam caa imagine. lt*s never a
with taaMniie wlto*s that good.**
Nicholson did not deive deeply into his acting
did tell his aadiaaec he spent 12 years as a
before appearing in work which mm «al
**! didn*t have any^ipaciil training Miafe I
said, "i took chans and proiMnonal
years, basBMe 1 wanted a chaaae to act. I thtah I
aat hi
**lhave to
for 10 soKd
i
I
a
t
1
I
v^^
UC may influence corporate morality
4 >. .-
'.•'
^
;■
SAN FRANCISCO —
will be
mimni awrt uroi^ m Uai-
vmty <rf CAltf<
policy a Hk Board of Rc^niu
today pfO^
UC
of
for
S633 nuliioo
fivi^ it the ptmattml
laihmmot over
of the ooiipoMUooi m
tliey have imiond. TIk
of Iktt influeooe bos beeo a
maior cootroverty for at least
nuttoe oo lA%«fQBtnt laid UC
ftoald "rat* the votes of tbeir
cofporate leciinties m toaaily
ways*
Dovid Wikoo. however, loid be
believes tbe reaoluuon wm too
fH^pe and reqiiMod a oae-
aoaib delay to convince the
Scoate to lormuiate a more
cowrete propoaoi. Tbe request
dcnM^.
iasmoral to vole io a way
wouid foiMO Ike vaiiie of Aa
Regent Willuia. M. Roth
oo tbe olber hand, the
Senate resoUi-
tKNi wbicb was po«ed yesterday
by tbe loord of Regenu Coos-
Regent Dean A Waikini
expressed opposition to the idea
of tbe university considering
aooal or social issues in tbe way
it casts Its corporate proxy
voces He said. "It would be
ATTENTION PRE-HEALTH CARE STUDENTS
MEDICUS
MCAAP & AMCAS
ELECTIONS'
n
\
fh/s IS the place for Rib lovers'
By for the Best Ribs wve ve fned m L A
#rom
1
PYRAMID ENERGY? ..
An Open Forum
Monday, May 24 — 3:00 pm
Royce Hall 160
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tbeir proxy volia. He
tbe retolution was too weak and
fuffeited tbe fUfnli fonn a
committee to explore tbe var-
ious finaoriai, social and moiii
Student Regent Carol Mock
sunealed that tbr umventty
remam neutral and abstaw on
proxy voles. Hmmm, another
Refent laid OHRpiiMa nsoally
take abstcnuons to aHan a vote
in (avor of flmaafBaMBRi pobdcs.
The resolution will be voted
on at the full Board ai Regenta
mcetmg today.
* Efie Manirl ani Jeff Lapbi
Consumer affairs
speaker at noon
The Office of Environ-
mental and CoMOKr Af-
fairs IS sponsoring a speech
by Fran Lee, consumer ac-
tivut and "^disturber of the
peace,"* toiay tt noon in
Mcycrhoff Park She will
cover a number of topics
including Swmc Flu Vaccine
(is It a boox?), cydamates.
dogshit and childhood
bliniacsa. Sbe has bad her
own TV ptufiam in New
York and has appeared on
such luitional TV shows as
Mike DouflM, Johnny Car-
son aad Steve Allen. Lee
has been active in tbe field
of consumer protection for
c>
UCLA Daify
BRUIN
Vobana XCVMI.
FfMay. May 21. 197S
ar 9m amucla
AMUCLA
PATTY HEARST
Authentic replica of
FBI "wanted" flyer
— a reel collector's
item. Send $3 plus
25 cents handling
to: FLYERS. PC
Box 30352 (3P3 Ro-
sario). Santa Bar-
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HIGH ,
ADVENTURE
STARTS AT
2500 FEET
IIJMlOlf SrOIT PIk
PI
CI«TI«
v.-
Tunney speaks at Janss today
Campaigning for bis neead tem in office,
U.S. Senator John V. Tunney will speak on
campus at noon today at Janss Steps.
Elected to tbe Senate in 1970, tbe Demo-
cratic senator bai Muhored 73 bills, resolution
and amendmcau that passed tbe Sennie, 25 of
which have gone on to become law
In 1975. Tunney authored an amendment
that prevented funds in tbe Defense Appropn-
ationt Act from being funneled to tbe CIA and
military to sponsor American involvement in
the Angolan avil war.
Dunog tbe same year. Tunney mtroduoed
legislation that would break up major oil
companies into imsliitr umu and would pro-
II I >i
bibff oil company Qwnersbip ol altemaie energy
- — r
Senator Tunney
Subcommittee
JiKlmsry
tbe Cowututional
is a mrmbaf oi iba
tbe Joim Committee on Atomic
EjMrgy. tbe Special Conumttec on Agmg and
tbe National Commission on Supplies and
's pobtical career bsfW in 1964 when
be was elected to tbe House of Represenutives
from Iflspenai and Riverside Counties, and be
was riilirtid in 1966 and 196ft. He ran for
us. Sonate in 1970, defeating Republican
inctmibent George Murphy.
ziUNE.UP, LUBEl OILJOdM
COaPiifl W/PnfSs mm^W
I
A-1 AUTO SERVICER..
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(Continued from Page 1 )
Nicholson's talents are not
limited^ only to acting; his
credits also including writing
and directing. However, his
first love, he confesses, is act-
ing
"'Tve always enjoyed acting
the most baOMHe it involves
the least amount of respons-
ibility,** he said jokingly
"Actually, the work itaalf is
laally fun"
' Currently directing a
Western. Nicholson said the
film has been three years in the
making and represents the
longest project he has worked
on. According to Nicholson,
tbe film IS a mythical Western
which takes plbce dunng the
time of the hunting and fur
trade around 1840 — **when
people still thought the world
was flat,** he said wryly
**It challenges m an area that
really hasn*t been cbtiitnged,**
Nicholson explained. **lt deals
with, a man who bebeves his
time for dying has come and
he has to reinspire the people
around him to see his way of
life-
Describing the qualitieti
which make a script attractive
to him, Nicholson stressed thai
he seeks diversilty in his roks.
Something specific
**A script has to be some-
thing I haven't ever done be-
fore." Nicholson said "Tm
looking for something that will
challenge me as an actor and
let me grow as I*m doing it. I
know what kind of role I want,
so Vm looking for something
specific.**
Although Nicholson said his
roles rarely resemble his own
personality, he said he
identifies moat with tbe part he
played in **Five Easy Picoet**.
adding that the role
lot of the qualities of someone
very dose to him.
The airing of movies on
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MARIACHI LOS ATREVIDOS
Traditional Mexican IMusic
Mon. — May 24 — 8 pm
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TICKETS:
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/„
I Park dedication opens 'Westwood Weeic'
^Dancing, singing, eating
i.r
'- By Km Ci
DB Stair Wrilir
UCLA*i Foiklonco dance
group will be amom the
entertainmenf scheduled for
the dedication of Westwood
Park this Suaday
The christening will tigaal
the start of "Westwood Week"
as proclaimed by City Hall.
SooK of the other activities
during Westwood Week in-
clude a speciial display oi aa
80-foot diorama of historicaf
oiateriais to be seen in the
Contempo- Westwood building.
The diorama tracM the his-
tory of West Los Angeles from
the early rancbos to the pre-
sent
Along with the Folklorico
group, others to perform will
be the Contreras Dancers, the
West Los Angeles Community
College Dancers, the West-
wood Co-op Dancers and
"FIdt PicifcAfl; Fopte." • Busical
group:"^
Mayor Tom Bradley will be
at the dedication ceremonies
slated for 3 pm, at the park
locaiad at 1375 Veteran
Avenue. Also to tfftar aa the
program are CongreitaMn
Alphonso Bell Sute Senator
Anthony Beiienson, Assembly-
man HowM^d Bcrmaa, Siipcf-
visor Ed Edelman and city
councilmen Marvin Braude
and Zev Yaroslavsky
An exhibit of official records
and memorabilia, consisting of
maps, land sales records.
paper iiies and old photo-
iraplK of early Westwood caa^
§ho be viewed at the aark.
The exhibit has been con
ordinaCed by Mrs. Rowe Badif
Baldwin, a former public re>
lations representative for the
Jaass Investment Company
wktn Westwo^id VtUage was
/
HIMWai
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 2
SiATS tCUtVf Q
IMonica
CMC
«V«4>4
Ticlwtron Mulujn
M4«i 0*§f\ AcctptMl
>■ 0«t>c«*JiJ996l
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W.V^IfcV.-.V.-.^.v
MARTYN
OF LONDON
offers you a precision and
geometric hair cut, shampoo,
conditioner and blow dry for $12.00
^ _with "Ian Wolfe."
1. By appointment only.
in
Westwood Hyatt House
930 Hil^ard Ave. (2nd floor)
475-4477
SWINE FLU
VACCINE HOAX??
Come Hear
FRAN LEE
Consumer Advocate Metromedia TV, New York
r Speak on Swine Flu Vaccine
and Other Topics
Friday May 21
Noon
Meyeriioff Paric
Spohsorvd by Office of Environmental and Consumer Affafrt
(Community Servicas Commission - Studant Lagisiativs CourK>il)
Pholos from Blanche and
Bob Campbell, founders of the
fifiC raUil business in the v\\-
Iftffc, Campbells Book Store
will also be presented
The celebration marks the
•tart of eapMiion of the
facility The park, now seven
acres in area, will grow to 20
acres in the near future.
On Westwood Park*s ground
are a children*s playground
picmc and hmiiriipid areas,
basketball and volleyball
courts, two tennis courts, a
director's office and restrooms
When expansion is complete.
the park will have a swimmmg
pool, an auditorium, a gym-
nasium and several meeting
rooms.
The festivities start at I pm
and Will run through 6 pm
Food and drinks will be sold
and there will be free parking
at the Tishman Westwood
parking structure, I0%0 Wil-
shire Blvd and the Federal
Building, 1 1000 Wilshire Blvd
Meson seminar
today at 330
**Colorspin and t^e Q-
squared, Q- bar-squared
Mesons" will be presented by
physicist Robert Jaffc, MIT,
to the Elementary Particle
Theory Seminar at 3:30 pm
today in Knudsen I240B
Speakers Program Presents
SENATOR JOHN TUNNEY
, I • ,-.-,
K
r
i
1^
■ ■.>
/■•
Spooiofed by Anocialed
iday. May 21
Janss Steps
12 Noon
tudents Speaker* Program/Student
Tq JoHa Ten* guilty
(Continued from Page I)
crack the whip on us any time
jttst Uke they did with this
The defendants . do not,
intend to curtail their political
activities on campus.
They (the Adnunistration)
are saying 'we intend to do the
lightest thing to you. so lay
back and uke it* they'll
find out that we mrt not inumi-
**Wc arc people that con-
stitute a political threat to the
Admimstration. ' The whole
down to it We
want to be Off! an e(]ual level
with the administration so that
they ean*t overrule our deci-
sions,** laid Marco LiMardn,
also found guilty of two
dHtffn. **We go to school to
develop our minds lt*s
counter-productive to let paid
administrators make dccisioas
we could make., If we had the
power, we wouldn't let the
CIA on campus. We want
decision-making power.**
Like tlw aikl
''I kind of expected these
result^.** said Fannon. '*The
whole book's been written and
this is like the end.**
According to. Luaannani.
IS '^inappropriate* tor him to
diacuss the heah^ unul
''Murphy takes actioas.** He
•aid that he was **ufider no
prcaaurc** during the hearings,
although admimstrators have
been "avoiding talking** to htm
Murphy '^wouldn't be bound
to my findrngs," said Lugan-
nam. **but I would be very
surprised if he didnt adhere to
my findings"
Murphy, who has been sick
with mononuclaoiis for the
past three weeks, aecording to
his secretary, could not be
reached for comment.
ARTE Mfll fUALlTT
V ea M i^Nag Hi Ma M tf
7JiuiiiaMMiMiala4
mis eMfSfly aivS.. aswNy MMi
fmim^zTHmmVi^mi
OATSUN
VOLNSWACIN
BMW
/-*. _
IKVClf
397
PARTS
Mind-reading computer
(Continued from Page I)
For the first run with this
techmque, the subject focmcs
on each of the four directional
arrows in turn. Simultaneously,
a series of quick flashes in the
form of a red checkerboard
appear superimposed on the
nmze The flashes trigger the
subject's individual brain wave
patterns, which are read and
■aalyzed by the computer for
later recall
In the actual expenmem. the
subject focuses on the appro^
pnate directional arrow after
determining which way the rat
should move. As the triggering
flash IS displayed, the computer
draws on its memory to identify
the brain wave pattern and
moves the rat in the correa
direction.
The highest consistent results
possible arc "up to 97 per cent,"
Vidal said. If the computer
responds correctly, the subject
can move the mouse out of the
maze in the minimum 12 moves.
Iff SI.
WEEK DAYS
a am - 6 pm
SAT
9 am - 5 pm
Sf^ Saata
U ttl ^tmmmm
DeRiemer described her own
feehngs as *Yrust rated and
challenged ** She explained that
the looks at the oiaze, waiting
for the light to^ appear. "The
light tells me to focus and I
do. A lot of the time I know
I've made a mistake before the
rat moves. It's mainly sitting
and communicating to the
computer "
Since the muscles in the neck
can cause mterference, De-
Riemer added, the subject must
be phvsically relaxed "but men-
( Continued on Page 7)
LINCOLN hlMtX
MaiN iT
•9^-
in the beginning . .
There was the prayerbook
A creative shabbat service
I
on Creation
services
6:30
Frrday, May 21
dinner
7:30
program
8:30
reservations Hillel 474-1531
900 Hilgard
' «
We Invite All UCLA Students A Staff to take
advantage of our special discount prices on foreign
car parts and most accessories Just show your ID
Card & we will give you one of our discount cards —
FREE of coursa*
■ rtWT -s^'.a!''i",;i»iT\j ^
PROFESSIONAL GRADE TOOLS
only $?■" per set
MMCiDES
VOLVO
OPiL
WOMEN'S WEEK 1976
MAY 24-28
f-gywcil
\
MONDAY MAY 24
11 - 12 AU Wonr>en's Lounge WOMAN" — animated history of women.
1 -2 Cr^nd Ballroom EVELYN REED, anthropologist
2-4 AU Women's Lounge JUDY CHICAGO, artist i
6 - 10 Grand Ballrpom WOMEN DANCE - manning fried dance theatre - alice & katja.
TUESDAY MAY 25
10 - 12 AU 2412 Women's Legal Status *
12 - 2 Architecture 1102 Equal Rights Anr>endment
2-3 AU 2412 Wages for Housework
3 - 4 , AU 2412 Working Alternatives for Women
4 -5 AU 3517 "Woman to Woman" film
WEDNESDAY MAY 26
10
11
u
2 -
3 -
. .. •
*
f
5 -
8 -
11 AU Women's Lounge Women's Health Care
12 AU Women s Lounge Birth Control Mc#l^di
2 Schoenbarf Quad ?H\IUS CHiSlER Women »fHi MadnaM '
3 AU Women's Lounge ABORTION -- a soman's right.
4 AU 3517 SaH Hdp — for Wonr>en Only
6 Kinsey 190 DiaJbgue on Interparsonal ReManihips.
11 Grand Ballroom Women's Conoart - Vkki RanAa Mte Alice Stone
THURSDAY MAY 27
10 - 12 AU V¥— m'a Lounge Slide on US woman's history Sherna Giuck.
12 - 2 Grand Ballroom Women and Media — Sandy Hill, KNXT News
2-4 AU Wonr>en's Lounge Feminist Studio Workshop
FRIDAY MAY 28
10 - 12
12 - 1
1 - 3
1 - 3
AU Woawn's Lounge the Doubie OpproMlion of MirH>nty Women
Gradn BaHroom YVONNE B BURKE (ASST t^mmmmti
Kir>sey 190 Lesbians
AU Women's Lounge Feminism Mnd Socialism — Willie Mae Reed
FOR MORE INFO — CALL 825-iVI4b
■to,-"
It
Black Cultural Week
<f'
I- ■ .
Today: 12:00 noon Omowale Ujamaa
African Dancers and Poetry
Kerckhoff Patio
1 :00 P.
If
The Wiz
If
1.
St. Mathais High School Production
Grand Ballroom
3:00 P,
II
Prayer Meeting or, The
First Militant Minister" by Ben
Caldwell, performed by CBD III
Players
1^
Saturday: 11:00 A.M.-6:00 p.m. — "Stoned" Soul
Picnic Griffith Park Lot 7 near
Greek Theatre
• ■ t - ■ ' - t . . • .
• Free Food (First Come First Serve)
__^ We need drivers to meet in front of Acl(erman
Union 10:00 A.IM. Saturday Morning
10:00 P.
Danceto the Music of
Daybreak Grand Ballroom
All Events Free and Open
sponsored by BSA, BGSA. SLC. GSA. and PTF
Chinese film festival begins
The IntcrnatTonir Chiactc Film Festival
Group hcr^ it pretcnting a ieriet of films
depicting the Peoples Republic of Chim thit
Mary K^Mrn, ^ titt Expcnmenul Educa-
tional Program, laid the program con!»iii:» of a
'^aariei of films and pmmti discussions on thoie
fih
The films will be screened and diScussed
begmning at 7:30 pm on May 21. 22 aad 23.
*^ott of the films have not been shown in this
*rea." said lohkr She said the films were made
m China and have "cither English translations or
tubcttles**
^.The fOms raage from documenuncs on sheep
herding to fictional portraymk of the Chinete
People's Liberation Army
Chta»-Shan I and Lueii Ptng Yei^ are co^
directors of the Feitival Group The program
was funded ihroogli Projea Task Force and
additional aid was given by the Expenmenul
Education Program and Caoipus Programs and
Activities.
The project wm conceived and organized by
students.
Tonight, the program will be held in Melnit/
1409 Saturday the fOms wiU be shqwn in Rolfe
1200 and Sunday the program will return to
Melmt7 1409 In all eight ftlms will be shown,
with different movies appearing every nighl.
The films were supplied by the^Club for
Understanding China and the U,S. — China
People's Friendship Associauon The fihM wm9
~ ^ by Chinese citi/ens
— Chris fainter
The NEW Blue 'n* Gold hair salon has
REVOLUTIONIZEO rtsetft -^ iStot onty
have we remodeled our shop and added
a 2nd floor for women's haircutting; but
we again are up to date on the LATEST
cuts and styles!
Featuring
e
Brain waves and computers
s»»°°!
cov
^^t>ri
fO<
VA«^
\y<^
\v>^
^id^
SS<^
(Conftnued from Page 5)
Ully alert." She surtcd work
with the maze Intt summer.
Leaving DeRiemer in the
booth, Vidal and his research
team gathered around displays
of the mazes. The rat began to
move ;;DeRiemer generally
performs extremely well/'
commented Vidal, adding after
the experiment ended, "That
was perfect.-
Vidal emphasized that the
expenment waa controlled by
brain waves and **no hands ** By
implementing a direct dialogue
through a form of biofeedback
between the brain signals aiid<
the computer, Vidal hopes to
discover how machines can
enable people to understand the
functioning of the brain.
Although he is interestad in
discovering **about brain *ign^tf
per ie," Vidal said that direct
communication between people
and machiftes can also help in
cases of dysfunction The dys-
function might be permanent, as
with paraplegics or temporary.
as in the case of a pilot inuao-
bilized by high gravity stresses
Machinery could be controlled
without direct OEianipulation
f Conttntted on Page I a)
Curly Uni|
Body P^niinnentg
AND
Of.
M.
»o,c
Ore
We now carry J H I R MACK
products! Come and visit us at the
All New
Blue 'n' Gold Hair Salon
10908 Le Conte .
Westwood Village
473-5863
Insanely funny outrageous aad irrsverant.
=».AvBnv MAGAZtNf
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CSNSiA mm ^snorOM 683-421 2
CEIMITOS AtonOra92f4 553 1
CITY » MOUSTSY Putna Hiiii
« ^ 965 bse;
eoVJSA f-m Twin |St-«50
BICaiST^wwiCtMmrytaT 9g::
AlNSnsSA Ain^mtKa Cintm« 289 31161
COSTA MiSA Cinvni Cmm 979-4141
CO¥taa Coy«ntDfiw»-in 331 S23^ -
CTPSEtS CypftH Twin 826 18S0 t
SOVNET SiKMvcaM Cintma 8S2- 1 1 21
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PASAOENA Maim s Hatifi
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SANTA MONtCA Cinama-on ttia Man
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TttSrai TiMtfi Iwm S44 14
Cmi Twin 379 24SI
_ VMMPvtifSS^SaS
-JiMlf PtSPSMBS UiSlnMi
0n<(»-»nS2l 2SS6
TASZANA MtMta 9S6- 1 1SO
mwrmmnm cimwiawwi iS2 44S3
"••••HIGHEST
RATING."
KATHLEEN CAMMOLL. Ntw YwHi N^wt
IKDFORD/HOFFIUN
ALLINEPRESUNTSIDr
^st.
CXJMMUNCATiQNB CXMPANv
Kfh
MUM YOU
421-1831
mvisi
Brum 477
All
lii^-. - »«.M.. Ss. taf Qmss S4;-43Si
7aBSS ;ru 9JUMS - Arts . TiSi
714/«
•9-4441
AtrtSPM
Tupln 3S2-0090
AttMPli
•AT -SUai.: U:
•:m A lA'.JS WU
' STMIT AT {
531-1
Hi WSy3»ert>i^lw 714/534-1282
SMOWii STANT AT DUSK
••AT
S:30A
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714/9942400
I8S3-33S0
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PW.-AAT.. 12:M •
S:ISAll]MMf
Dnsmi 7i4/t44'M0
TrtSAfrtSPfT
2rOO 4:19 • #11
TV }51SSSi
^ •; 7«p 4 ttStmi
The Hazards of Being Male
Male Self Hate
Earth Mother is Dead
'^^ Loet Art of Buddyship
The Gentile Goddess; Avenger of the Jewish Princess,
Shiksa-Guru to the Jewish Prince
with Herb Goldberg
Herb Goldbero PhD Prpl*«K>r.of Psychology CAl.forn,. Stato Un.v«r.,ty Lo.
»ogist in private practica. aumoV of Tha Hassf^ of Satng
•f a»90 co-Authof of dmmtlwm isir with Dr Qmor^m Bach
clinical
Survhring tha Myth ol MaacuMn*
Sunday, May 23 7-10 p.m.
$2.00 memt>ers non memt)en $2 50 URC 900 Hilgard
NALL,
i; 7tSe p,tm.
tl.
fm pntftti
THEMAIi
WHO MAKES
MO MI8TAKE8I
NIGHT
and the City
^ %^
.y
/
mBIUIBSL
-CIA(M|.
COLOM ay DC LUXE
!
-— >»i*W'««— ll ■! ■! I I I
^.'
/
♦
I
I
doiy bruin
pol n f
The University of California and Minorities: 1976
\
(idkor's note fhres n a rfiidbw
hmre »nd a member o/ MEChA)
At the educational levd, mi-
norrties are still relatively in the
••me poiilion they were 10 years
tfo: groMly under-rppr^iented,
9rHi subfected to irwrttutional-
OPINION
I
ized racism The American edu-
cational system is a reflection of
American soci<^'s attitudes and
fallacies regarding minorities
Theoretically, the fundamental
role oi the educational insti-
tution is to meet the baftic needt
of society. Hence, the schools
produce lawyers, doctors, teach-
ers, etc. to nfieet those nasdi.
Now consider, if you will, that
Chicanos constitute 17% of Cal-
ifornia's population, and is by
far the immn growing seciflr ii^
the 4>.S. By 1980, the Census
Bureau estirriates that one out ol
^ery four citizens in California
will be Chicano Yet, only 3% of
the student population in the
University of California is Cht-
cano.
One of the pre^^ailmg mjscon-
ceptions regarding minority stu-
dents IS that "they're here be-
cause of handouts " fven
though the Chicano population
in the State h 150% Urger than
the size of all ttkm minority
populations combir>ed, only
2S.5% of the EOF students ire
Chicano in the U.C. And out of
a total of 20J0O0 undergraduatci
at UCLA, only 80 come under
"special action " Of those 80,
Chicarxx are not the majority.
The University is a public infl^
tut ion and has a committmeht to
the ta* paying citizens of Calif-
ornia to meet their needs Indi-
vidually, working class people
obviously don'r pay more taxes,
but collectively we certainly do.
As Cesar Chavez stated. " . .
those who have the least give
the most, and this holds true
for the working class in terms of
taxes The underlying function
of the University is to meet the
tnl0fic9ti of the corporate society
(many of the VQ. Regent ve
millionaires). The instiiMtiew's
By Poll Flores
»nd working-class Anglos en-
counter the worst effects, as
manifested in the University m
the form of financial aid cut-
backs, inflexible entnnce cri-
teria, gross under-reprcsentniofi
at all levels, and in the insen-
litivity of administrators. How
eKpUtrt that the
rate of increase of Chicanos at
the U.C. has fallen from 17.2% in
188»« to 8% in 1973-74 except
m rhetorical promises^ Or take
into account that the number of
Black students at UCLA has de-^
CTeaied by 600 from last year to
this ymmr Pil« iipMi pNes
documented i^Kiwci. UtustrL _.
the systematic exclusion of mi
norities to elitist instutiorn like
UCLA.
Given t^ aforementioned
context, on May 21 MfCM and
{Comttmmd oa Page f^
tracking system allows for the
failure of minorities through
standardized tms, curriculum,
and racist administration
Today the situation is not so
much racial as it is economic.
Even the middle-class sectors are
feeling the effects of our de-
caying economic system — an
inef-itability m capitalism. And as
usual. Blacks, Chicanos. Asian-
Americans, Native Americans,
KM. )
groovyf Discuuien. rtHlos. sp88cli8t. SBmlnsri. rtp Qmns.
i ii8«8r knew being a woman ceuld toe ee exclHnil
kJ^"^-^
Ddify Brum
Ak* Skort Mrf iffk
anrf AImi Mirliirl
"le^Ct Mff VMNM M nut
c.
I
l«-*5
rw
tiii
•TiS"
•N «M» Vl
k
Daily Bruir,
CHINESE FILM FESTIVAL
MAY21, 22, 23
7:30 p.m. each evening
No Admission Charge
^Melnitz 1409; Saturday, Rolfe 1200;
Sunday, Melnitz 1409
FRIDAY
OPENING NIGHT SPEAKER: Dr.
Paul Pickowicz. Dept. of History
UCSD
TOPIC: "Cinema. Cultural Change.
and Politics in China"
FILM: "From Victory to Victory"
(2 hrs.)
PANEL DISCUSSION
SATURDAY
FILMS;
"People's China" (20 min.)
"Educated Youth to the Coun-
tryside (25 min.)
"The Sparkling Red Star" (2 hrsJ
PANEL DISCUSSION
SUNDAY
FILMS:
"Ode to the Yimeng Mountains"
(45 min.)
"New Landscape of the Red
Flag Canal" (45 min.)
"Peking Acrobatic Troupe" (30
min.)
"Children of the Grassland"
(45 min.)
PANEL DISCUSSION
CO-SPONSORED BY: International Chinese Film Festival Group
Program Task Force
COORDINATED WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF: The Office of Experimental Educa
tional Programs and Campus Programs and Activities Office Members of th*
Division of Student and Campus Affairs
A Diary on Palestine
(iditof's nare Ibrahim ii a
H^tdeht Here snd a tnmmtm ol
'** i prganiiation of Arab Siu-
denu.)
This is a compilation oi events
thjf took place m Palestine dur-
ing the period from March 17th
to March 31s%i 1976 The events
will prove that the principles
upon wh«ch the state of Israel
jtself and by which Israel
\
\, ,)
OPINION
justifies its anacks on the Pal-
estinian people are no less ra-
cist than the policies of South
Africa or Rhodesia MofMMr,
like any other colonial refime,
the behavior of the Israeli
authorities show that Israel is
reaching the end oi the line
March 17th: 11. 14, and IS-
y^MT-okd Palestinian youths were
wounded when Israeli troops
Ured at demonstrators in Jeru-
salem, Bethlehem, and Jericho
Meanwhile, Rabbi Mpshe Lev-
inger, leader of the senion at
Qiryat Acba. admiMd on Jireoii
lefevtsion ftiai he ordered some
of hts follo«ireri to shoot at Arab
demomuaters in Hebron. Later,
ite London SurnUy Times re-
ported that the same settlers
detained at least 10 Arabs and
set ferocious dofs against them.
All of the Arabs had to
be treated for cuts, bites and
injuries as a result' of the attack.
March ISth: A ger>eral strike
was called In Jerusalem The
Itfoeli authorities threater>ed the
Palestinian shopkeepers with
three months shut dooii'i H they
iemained doted for #iat day
On the same day the mayor of
•eft Sahur, Jiryts Tawil, and the
town council reiigfted in protest
against the Israelr military after
they entered the town hail and
^e*t up the dorks.
March 19th-21gi: Demooiira-
tions against Israeli occupation
were held at Ramallah, al>Bira,
Nablus. T»jl Karm, Kalhul. and
Hebron. Curfews were imposed
on all of the towru but deoioii
stratiom continued in Hebron
until March 28th.
March 22nd Death of a 4S-
year-old man as a result of beat-
ings by Israeli troops In Salfit,
near Nablus As a result the
mayor of the town ar\d the town
council resigrted in protest. In
Jerusalem, the occupation forces
shut down_the Arabic news-
paper ai-SKe'b for ia days. Th»s
is the second shutdown of the
^me paper in two months AIsq,
an 11 -year-old boy died as a
resuh of his wounds. Newsmen
were prevented from covering
the funeral which was ordered
to be carried out in the early
hours of the morning In Beth-
lehem, the mayor and seven
town councilors resigned in pro-
test against the continued Israeli
^lifression against the Pi
ians.
March 23rd: The Creek Cath^
olic Archbishop of Jerusalem,
Hilarion Capucci. was assaulted
by Ramleh prison officials for
refusing to break his hunger
strike.
March 24th, 25th. 26th Denv.
onstrations continued in Ramal-
lah. Nablus, and Hebron against
occupation despite the mass
arrests, beatings, and flings of
the, Palestinian people.
March 27th : Israel _^,
two Palestinian doctors to Il_
anon. The two doctors, AH
Natashi, Director of Hebron's
ieit UU Hospital, and Ahmad
Haj, director of at-Bira Medical
Association were taken early in
By Mahood fbrahim
the morning before a milnary
tribunal The defense attorneys
were not toAd oi the dierpes
against the two men. They were
immediately whisked out of the
u
cr-
I r~*i
^lar ch 2Sth: Two schools
were shut down in HebrrH\, and
Hfty (50) Palestinian girls and
three of their teachers were
arrested for forming road bloci»
in Jerusalem Moreov^, 60 per-
sons were detained by Israeli
authorities in H^hrpt^. They
were interrogated, beaten and
released after two days without
any charges whatsoever against
them. Also, three persons, T
Arabs and a Jewish woman
were arrested for distributing
leaflets against land expropria-
tions that were planned by the
Israeli government
March 29th Israeli troops fire
at Palestinians in Sakhpin killing
one of the demonstrators The
«Own was placed under a cur-
few Eight more people, sonrie of
whom were Jews, were arrm$od
for distributing more leaflets in
^to the land expro-
priations.
March 30th A general strike
was called in the Arab towns of
the Galilee Israeli troops fire at
demonstrators in Tira. Nazareth.
and Sakhnin killing 6 Palestin-
ians and wounding many There
were at least 26 arrests
Merch 31st The Rakah party,
comprind oi lews arni Arabs
introduced a motion in the Km-
esset for a vote of no confi-
dence in the Rabin government,
however, the motion was de-
feated and some elements in the
Konesset tried to -expel the
members of the Rakah as a
disciplinary measure
March 31st is the end of the
month but not the end of the
Palestinian struggle The Pal
esiinians continue to resist the
occupation forces arid continue
to eipose the fallacies #id
myths created by the Zionist
^OQ^anda r?Sachines. As a Pal
estinian I am proud oi my peo-
ples determination to light Is-
?li military occupation
they tree the land and its
pie. -tarn also happy to see that
more Jews are inwiiog the strug-
gle against racism. opprenAen.
ar>d discrimination for they have
realized that ultimately we have
to live together as e^uah
I
More on Minorities
fContinued frooi aj
The Third World Coalition, in
conjunction with UC Berkeley.
UC 'Sanu Barbara* UC San
Otofo. UC Riverside, arui UC
Irvine, will demonstrate on the
UCLA campus to voice the
plight of the working-dass stu-
dents. You should join to voice
your cry for what is a basic
democratic* righi — a fair and
decaant education tor all We
de^nand: 1) More financial aid
allocations 2) Elimination of
biased standardized tests and
CPA as entraoce criteria.
3) More voice in admissiorn arui
recruitment of minoaities by
mirH>rtties. 4J Parity of the Uni-
versity minority population with
the community's pooulation
To the Third World students:
Your voice and support is
ooded because if it wasn't for
the loud voices a few years ago,
you wouldn't have been [present
here in the first place That is. it
wasn't solely through personal
initia#iw thai minonti*^ were
able to come to the University,
although this personal initiative
should be seen as a lourg of
pr»de to each ar%d every one o(f
you Rather, it was throufli the
collective eHotrt of students,
community organizers, arni poli-
ticians that pressured eBUil in-
stitutions such as UCLA to open
up (tv d€>ofs. The institution
didn't open the door, the peo-
ple did
To the rest of the student
population Your support 4s also
flooded because you who pro-
cess to the rhetorical tenets of
democ racy and equality should
practice what you preach And
you should take an honest look
at yourselves and what you
s«af>d foe because this institution
is a reneclion of Ametica s fal-
lacies, and of each one of you.
If you can't support us physi-
cally. support us morally by
writing to th^ following Charles
f. Young, David S^xon UC
^1
I
Your
editorial cartoon
could be here
Discussion of Nuclear
Safeguards Initiative
DR. LYNN DRAPER
(Head of Nuclear Lab, at Univ. of Texas)
DALE BRIDENBAUGH
(Former C.E. Nuclear Scientist) '"^
CHARLES BURCH
(President, Profect Survival)
PAUL LORENZINI
(Co-Chairman — No on 15)
May 25 — Grand Ballroom — 7:30-10:00 pm
HMvd by: O.E.C.A. (Community Seivices CommisMon - SLC), Campus Chapters of American Nuclear
Project Survival, L.A. League of-Women Voters, Environmental Law Committee o^ the Beverly HilK Law
Barristers Environmental Law Committee ol L.A. County §m
Aisoc . The
«
Irf
-WtlHflBn^HpBiM^«Bi^
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(CoMtiBiied from Page 3) ^
television fell under tharpen
cnticism from Nicholson He
atuckcd the television industry
for putting movies on telee~
vision simply to **keep tapital
moving.
**l lilLe seeing moviai in a
movie theater and that*s where
1 think they belong," laid
Nicholson, growing indignant
-The wiqr they're going into
the home hke com flakes, I just
don't' like that. The product if
being undartoid in order to
4evelop an outlet
DitiMiLas movies on TV
-I thought I was safe from
being on television hcrauit of
the content and language of
my films I think it*s a misuke
to ever put movies on tele-
viiioa. It's a question of
spreading money and I think
it*s mindless and I hate it ail an
actor - ^
Interrupting Nicholson, Gef-
fin asked him whether or not
he thought showing movies on
television helped develop new
artists.
**Yeah," responded Nichol-
son somewhat hesitantly, **but
tlaifs not my problem right
now/"
Elaborating later on the
MMie subject, Nicholson admit-
ted to his audience, **rd be
lying to you if 1 told you I got
into this business to help
others Tm just against TV
movies because it's bad for the
movies — bad for the product,
the audience^ bad for the
economy of movies, but great
for the economy of television "
On a lighter note, Nichol-
son infused some humor into
his response to a question
iiskijng whether personal
secretaries are still hired by
actors and how well paid thcv
are '
'*Well paid** lecretafy
"Weil, I have one," Nichol-
son said. "I hired someone
whose job it is to watch me
while I'm working and that
being her job, she is, of course,
paid very well," he said w^h a
ily smile, drawing laughter
from the audience.
Uncertain of what the future
holds for him, Nicholson it
most concerned about giving
the moat of what he has to
each project he undertakes,
always completing what he
starts. He says he it interested
in the suge and may consider
it at tome point in the future.
**rve always wanted to be ia
a lot of movies.**
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Two ausar hit
"Bobby
and
Pakeezah**
(in color and with
Engiiah aubtitloa)
for
Kelley sends letters stating case
*".
.- p*r-
Baseball playoff chances still slim
ay Marc
Da Sportt Wrilar
While UCLA'i clMKcs for selection
to one of the final two berths m the
NCAA baaekall plairolTs remain slim,
UCLA it doing everything it can to
ture the Bruins are not over-
if the right circumstances occur
If Minnesou ftnithet second m the
Big 10 and Arizona finialwt scoond in
the WAC, those two teams will pro-
bably be the finaj two selected How-
ever, if the Goph|crs fimsh first in the
Big 10 and/or Arizona cannot claim
second in the WAC, the openings
would sttU remain.
San Diego Sute, Denver and South-
em Alabami are reportedly the teams
in the running for the openings (should
Minnesota or Anzona lose out), but'
tlif UCLA administration is making a
case for the Bruins
Assistant athletic director . Keith
Kelley, who has spent the entire week
dealing with the matter, has wntten a
letter to Chalmers Port, chairman of
the selection committee stating UCLA*s
\
Head coach Gary
sent information pertaining to the
strength of the Bruins, their ichadvle,
their league and the caliber of baseball
in Southern California.
According to Kelley's letter, one
problem has been that everyone, from
UCLA to the Far West Advisory
Coirn'mittei^ assumed UCLA would
gain an at-Large berth because it won
the Cahfoirnia Intercollcgiale Baseball
Association Although knowing it
would not be automatic because the
CIBA did not have the six teams
needed for automatic qualification,
UCLA assumed u would be chosen.
In reference to the selection com-
mittee, the letter states in part that
It [the committee] acted upon in-
suffiaent information which we failed
to provide because the quality of our
schedule, the experience of history and
the national respect with which the
CIBA IS considered lulled us into the
presumption that we would be se-
lected "
However, UCLA was not the only
party to take the selection for granted^
according to the
The very people on whom you rely
so heavily for advice — the very p^opk
who your committee had chosen to be
\3ik t>ft% and ears in the West and who
were charged with reporting to Kal
Segrist also presumed that UCLA
wcmld be chosen and so no forceful
case was made,** it sutes.
The letter goes oo to state thai **
these same gentlemen were
'shocked* and *dumbtou tided* that the
champion of the CIBA and a team of
UCLA's cahber was not selected One
considered it a catastrophe for colle*
giate baseball* **
After explaining the problems^ 4n-
volved, Kelley built a case for UCLA
earning one of the two final berths -
if things go the right way in the Big 10
or the WAC
"UCLA is the only team still to be
considered for an at-large berth that
can claim the championship of a major
conference,** the letter sUtes It also
goes on to ulk about the strength of
the other teams in the conference and
the importahoe of winning the league,
even at the expense of losing some
non-conferenoe encounters.
The letter also dealt with the correal
aational poll, in which the Bruim are
naked 14th *" We can not aaoapi
the raaluaat as a precise tobi, but tlwy
are a good general uMlifiator o^ the
respect with which teams are.coa-
sidered by you and your colleagfaaa,* it
says. '^Can your opinions be to is-
accurau that you would name San
Diego Vute, Denver or Southern Ala-
banik to an ai-large berth when UCLA
"is ranked 14th and noor of thaaa ii
ranked in the top 30T*
In concl^slon, the letter states that
**ff Arizona wins and Mini
we don't really il»i a
lost one of thoe two at-large berths
even though with better information!
your committee very hkely might have
given UCLA a berth on the first round
**But i( Arizona and or Minnesota
should be eliminated, UCLA is the
strongest remaining contender **
The letter, addrtatcd to the chaimum
of the committee, wit] be sent to all
OKmbers in addition to NCAA con-
troller Lou Spry. Adams' argument
mailed out with Kelley's letter
Stanford, use and Trinity ready to challenge netters
By Hunlar Kaphm
urn Sports Writer
UCLA*s defending national
champion tennis team is fa-
vored by most coaches to win
the umversity's 12th tennis title
acxt week in Corpus Chnsti.
However, Stanford!, USC
and Trinity appear to have
enouf h talented players to
offer a strong challenge.
UCLA is the Southern Divi-
sion Pacific-8 champion,
having easily defeated chal-
lenfers Stanford, USC and
Cahfornia laiT weekend.
In hcad-to-hcad dual-match
competition with USC, Stan-'
ford and California, UCLA
was 5-1 followed by Stanford
at 4-2, use, 3-3 and Calif-
ornia. 0-6.
In the final stages of the
dual match campaign, the Tro-
jans tied the Brums at Oyai
Valley in the Pacific-8 inter-
collegiate crown (Southern Di-
vision of Pac-8) and later
ended UCLA*s dual match win
streak at 17 straight this season
and 36 in a row over the last
two years with a 5-4 tnumph
Sunford defeated USC twice
by narrow 5-4 scores in dual
match competition and also
won the National Team Indoor
Title in February at
Wisconsin by trouncing USC,
7-2.
The Cardinals didn*t reach
their expectations during the
regular season in 1976, largely
baeaaie of Gene Mayer*s back
problems.
Mayer, a junior, is the bro-
ther of Sandy, Stanford*s
NCAA singles champioti in
1973 and doubles champion in
both 1972 and J973. ,
In addition, the Cardinals
lost two-Hime All- American
Nick Saviaao, oofy a junior, to
the pros a few days prior to
the beginning of the teaaon.
Also, the Cardinals were
dealt another severe blow when
John Whit linger, a NCAA sin-
gles and doubles Utlist in 1974.
turned prdiettioaal last tum-
mer.
However, Stanford wasn*t
alone in loaing top players to
the pros. In a^ition to UCLA
losing Martin, USC lost its ace,
junior Butch Walts this spring
after it was determined he was
schoiaiticaHy ineligible.
UCLA*s Teacher is the na-
tion's highest-ranking collegiate
player at number 23, followed
by Fleming at 29, Gene Mayer
at 34, San iaac Statc*s Hank
Pfister, 46, Ferdi Taygan, 57
and USCs Bruce Manson, 60.
UCLA has three na-
lyrranked players on its
1976 sqlM ^as it had a year
4igo with Martin, Teacher and
Taygan
USC IS led by Bruce Man-
son, who at 5-4 features an
aggpneive bachcoun game
with quick footwork and Rod
Laver-style writt action volleys
Manson teamed with Walts
to defeat UCLA*s Martin aad
Teacher to win the NCAA
doubles crown last yeKr;r6-l. 6
4, 7-6. Manson and Walts also
woa the Pan Amencan Gold
Medal at Mexico City last year
and the Palm Springs CoBa-
giate doubles crown.
Manson defeated UCLA*s
Teacher in the lemis of Oiai
earlier this season and hat
handled Stanford*s top two
players. Bill Maze and Pat
DuPre. in dual iliatch compe-
tition this year.
Manson will be joined by
sophomores Chris Lewis, Mike
Newberry and Andy Luocheai
at Corpus Chnsti.
Lewis and Manson will be
seeded high in doubles, having
won the Ojai doubles crown
over Sunfonfs Mark Mitchell
and Gene Mayer.
Ia addition, Manson and
Lewis defeated Teacher and
Fleming, 7-5, 7-5 in USCs 5-4
upset of UCLA in the lecond
dual OHadl between the two
schools
Stanford will bring a four-
man team of OuPre, Maze.
Matt Mitchell and Mark
Mjtchell to the NCAA's next
week with DuPre and Maz.e
teaming in doubles along with
Matt Mitchell and Perry W right.
, Trinity may be the dark-
horse of the tournament, es-
pecially considering the
tournament is being held at
Corpus Chnsti, Texas Tnnity
is located in San Antonio, only
100 miles from Corpus Christi
** Although we have an enroll-
BKat of juat over 3400, we
havalaadt of tennis foBowers,**
said Trinity's coach Bob
McKinley. a membti of Trinity's
NCAA championship team ol
1972 ^■*
, McKinley was a four-time All
Amencan along with Dick
Stockton, the first two players
to ever receive four awards in
NCAA history
Tnnity returns everyone from
Its 1975 squad which finished
third in the NCAA's behind
UCLA and Mianu Returning
from the 1975 feam are seniors
Bill Matyattik, David King, and
Jim Timmim alogg with soph-
omore All-AmericBn Bill Scankm
aad sophomore M ik e Grant
Scanlon reached the quafter-
finab of the NCAA's, defeating
UCLA*s Ferdi Taygan in the
round of 32 last year as a
freshman Scanlon hat takea
world-ranking profetai<mal Ibe
Nastase to three sets before
losing and dropped a clote two-
setter to Juany Cpnnors earlier
this year.
Six batmen honored
By Marc
DB Sports Writer
Six members of the UCLA baseball team
to the California Intercollegiate
BasefcMll Association all-league team by the
conference coaches Wednesday. The total
represenu the largest contingent of lirtt-team
bertht in UCLA hiit<My.
The Bruint had three-fourths of thair infield
plaaad on the team, although ose was as the
Bitignated hitter. Only ahoftatop Raymond
Towatead, who missed the first 12 league
games becauae oC batkcthall. wat aot aimari to
the t^aad.
la additioa to lint baaaww Ken Gavlord
(the DHK aaco^ batemaa Eahby DalUt,
fiaMcr Da^^Teaaiaa, natrhrr Deanit Delany
and pilrhtr Ed Cowai^ tnae also hoaaaed
Foui;.al the players — Gaylord, Dallas,
PenniaO aad Caaraa — are teaiors. Hi
Delaay
to the Pacific
overall but JB4 in league action when he alto
had lix home rvat.
Dallas: Led UCLA regulars in batting with a
.310 average but hit .333 in league play. Led
UCLA with 65 hfU for the teaacm. Led the
Bniiat in runt scored (2t) and hits (33) in
league play. Excellent second hitter who helped
Pemuall to hit tlalaa bate recoil
Henderson: Perhaps the mosi consistent
hitter on the taaai far the entire teaaaa. He
movad to third baae wlKa Towntend caaK out
after basketball Hit .302 with aiae hooK raat
aad 37 RBI. tied far,4eaiii haid. Ia laaaae. he
hit .322 with 17 RBI and;aiji home ruaa, tiad
for team lead.
Peaniall: The tia#e taaaaa lacord haiitr for
ruat (59) and mkm haM (3i). He broke dbe
old
Teacher injured
1
the
(223)
16
by wt asd aiae* rttpactively. Was
juil live tiBKi aad, hit JB9 at
ama. He alto M the tna ia i
laid for the taad ip daahiat (10).
F
UCLA^i aBlH^r batahaB pliTm:
Gaylord: Led the Bruiat with II hoi^ maa
of ai^tA ^ conference
23
liKoaly
Dave Hill wat injured ia
number oae. Started the fiaal
the plate. Hit .257 with teven
I4# at-bata. FWc of thoae were in
(57y anir^
ia for both the entire
(19) Hit 272
UCLA received a tcare Wedaatday afternoon when tennis
All-American Brian Teacher stroked a backhand overhead
at the net and heard a cracking nouK in his right shoulder.
**Bnan strained some muscles in hu shoulder.** said, Dr
Gerald Finerman, after examining Teacher Thursday
afternoon.
**We made thorough observations and Brian is mcaiving
various kinds of treatment of different modalities **
Fortunately for the Bruma, the NCAA champtonnhips
don*t begin until next WadMaday.
Teacher will he able to recetve whirlpool, rub-dowat
and /or acupuncture for the aaxt several days.
**! will be talka^ to coach Baitett huer on today,** said
Ftaennaa. *There is the possibility that it may be advisable
for Brian to stay in Lot AagilM for the next several days
before gMM to Texas **
The UCLA team is scheduled to leave for Texas
tomorrow.
tenior and he it to tmportam to our leam't diMHat of
winning the national championship **
Teacher m hkaly to be taadad aaM>ng the top five phijma
in ti^glta aad among the top two ar three doi
arith partaer Peter
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IJCLA goes for another IMCAAtenn is title at Corpus Christi
•' Hunter KaplM — — — i^^"^— ^— - "^
•' Hunter
Dt Spaffli Writer ^
UCLA will uke at least four playert to Corpus Chnsti. Texas,
tomorrow in order to Imvt three days of practice on the Butt
Tennis Stadium courte bciMe die ^nd NCAA tennis
pionshipt begin next Wedacaiay. '
Brums Peter Flemmg, Brian TeadKr, Ferdi Tayfui aM
Nichols WKt making the journey south to try and defend UCLA*8
1975 championship, held *at the saoK location.
Although the Bruins lost Billy Martin, last year*! freshman
NCAA singles champion and doubles finahst, to the professional
ranks last summer, they are listed as heavy favorites to win
UCLA*s 12th Mtional utle
Fleming has more than adequately filled the slight slack m the
Bruin hneup caused by the loss of Martin, winning 19 of his 20
malelies this season Fleming, who transferred to UCLA from the
University of Michigan laet year (he had to sit out the leason in
f975 becavee of NCAA transfer rule), will most probably be
seeded first in next week's tournament.
Teacher and Taygan will also receive high seedings, accorc^i^
to Bruin coach Bassett. Teacher and Taygan are three-time and
two-time All-Americans, respectively.
Teacher's win-loss record this season is 16-2 while Taygan is
13-2. Teacher's losses have been to Sunford'i Bill Maze in Palo
Aho and USCs ace Bruce Manson at Ojai Teacher won his
second conference singles title last week, defeating teammate
Taygan in the finals before teaming with Reming lo win the
Pacific-8 Southern Division doubles title over USCs Manson
and Chris Lewis.
Teacher and Fleming will most hkely be seeded in the top
three in dou^)les, having won the Pacific Coast Doubles crown at
La Jolla earlier this season and defeated Sunford's top team of
Pat DuPrc and Maze twice and USCs Manson and Lewis in two
of three matches.
In previous years, any NCAA member school could enter a
maximum of four singles players and two doubles teams in the
NCAA championships.
The NCAA team scoring was Ubulated by awarding a single
point to each school every time one of its singles players or
doubles teams won a match.
The scoring system will remain the same at next week's NCAA
championships, which concludes on Mcnwnal Day
However, the number of players competing and the cntcria for
which they are selected changed this year
"The idumament was getting to the point where the number of
entrants was neanng 256,'' said UCLA coach Glenn Bassett
Bassett is one of eight NCAA District rcprcsctitatives on the
NCAA selection committee
i'>o^" y^^ ^^^ NCAA has cut the numbei of singles entnes to
128 and the doubles teams to 64 (128 players)," noted the Brum
coach.
The NCAA committee, compris«jd of coaches from the eight
-NCAA distncts across ihe country, selected 20 top teams from
across the nation that will be able to bring four singles pUyers
and two doubles teams to the NCAA's. The panel later named 20
additional schools that will be allowed to uke two singles plavers
an^ one doubles team to the tournament
"Wc also named eight individual at-large singles playeti and
tour at-large doubles tcAms to round out the draws of 128 in
singles and 64 teams ih doubles,*' said Bassett
Next Monday the NCAA committee will spend most of the
day seeding at least 16 singles players and eight doubles teams
according to the Bruin coach
The scedings arc more important than some people think
rfw"*^^ top-i^B4ed players are placed at the top and bottom
of the draw in order to prevent them from pUying pach other in
the first few rounds," said Bassett
"Thus, the tofv-ranking players will usually face weaker players
in the first and second rounds and, as a result, have a shjtht
*
Flem^,
^vantate in pK:king up pumu toward the team title Every point \
IS prec^us when tt comes down to the Mm championship Sw
W^° -cveralchampiondiip. decided by one pomt ^
en^triSf ^ ^T^.""" P*""^^* ^»°-*^ '^^^ <«"nng the
LvTJ^ *" "^^"^^ ^*^ champKMiships are being held and the
level of compeution faced during the year
UCLA players have received top scedinp ever since the NCAA
i^'^noJ^w'''''**!.*^ *^«*" "* '^ ^^ »• ^^ »"n>rise as UCLA
mc U!>e have dominated collegiate tennis during this penod.
and^have captured 22 of the 30 NCAA championships held im
_- "^^.. ^^M tournament ii extremely tough on any player.
yuUy in Corpus Chnsti, niliere the wmds blow with the beat
and humidity extremely high," anid iMiett
^kl« ^^if '^ ^° ^" ^"^^ "^"i** ^ doubles matches to win a
championship ,n either event Laat year, for eJinMle, BiUy
V^"^^^ 15 matches last year in a week, winningX singJoi
!^t.!r^'''* T"^^ ^"*" (Tenckcr) to the doubles championship
^^v^^'^Ia "^^ "^^ •• extremely rough on any player
cqjMWiy under the conditions at Corpus Chnsti "
.J!^T^ indicated that all pUyers compete under the same
^e wiS* '*'***" ^^^^ ""^ ^^"^ '"'''^ ^***" ^*»^" ^y
IV w f^T^' P»«ycr with a booming serve and volley game like
Kcter (Fleming) is bun more by the wind than a pure control
»kI' ilnl^^ n ^^^^^ *" " «^^ condition as possible for
^ne niLAAs I believe conditioning is perhaps the most
importam eleroem m achieving success in the NCAA's "
Th^ following schools have been selected in order to bnng four
singes players and two doubles teams to next week's NCAA
championships:
^CLA, Stanford, USC, Trinity, Houston, Arizona Sute
lexas, Georgia, San Jose Sute. Southern Methodist, Ohio Sute'
Pepperdine, Alabama, Princeton, Oklahoma City, Florida'
Brigham Young, North Carohna, Miami and Uuh
The following 20 schools were chosen to uke two singles
pUyers and one doubles team to the tournament
Michigan, Oklahoma, Louisiana State, Pan American,
Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Kentucky, North Carolina Sute
Memphis Sute, Auburn, Minnesou, Oklahoma Sute Missoun'
Kansas, Arkansas, Texas Christian. Rice, Arizona. Cahfornia
and Long Beach Sute.
MarylaiKfs All-American guard John Lucas was selected as an
^"**"«^ wngles entry, as was Gordon Jones of Florida Sute
Jones ^e UCLA freshman Billy Martin a toagh battle before
losing jM, 7-5 in early round action in last year's touraeyv
-XK
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SANTA MONICA MTNS:
PLANNING CONFERENCE
r
You are invited to learn more about the
mountains and have a direct impact on their
development. You can actually help design
the first National Urban Park along with As-
semblyperson Howard Berman. Councilperson
Zev Yarslovsky. and Educator Julian Nava
as well as other notable planners as planners
and professionals.
Saturday May 22
9mn% to S pm
Sunset Canyon RecrMllon Cmttm
No ReMrvations NocMMry
•pO#^«or#d By V*c« Chancellor •
Consumef Affairs Community
Council. fHmnH of Iho Sarvta Mon.ca Mountaint
of Environ man ta I anO
- Studant Lao*«*«tlva
CONTEMPORARY ART SURVEY
in conjunction with
California Institute of the Arts
presents
DOUGLAS HUEBLER
SLIDE LECTURE/DISCUSSION
FRIDAY, MAY 21 8:00 PM
diCKSON AUDITORIUM 2160E
UCLA •
o«o^-iM EMcouMrm oroupT'
AM KASY WAT TO MEET TNI CWOIiffn
AMD rrAMT MEAMMaiM. URATIONMI
E»My Sundiy and IMMnMOay NiM - t«o pm
Pmi) LmdMnan — CJlpartaneM 'Owu* Lmm
I
f
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a
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University of
San Fernando Valley
COLLEGE OF LAW
Announcing:
FALL SEMESTER 1S76
• fiM MM! 3-y««r day program
• Part-Hma day and availing prograww
Fhr sc hcjol is
fUllY ACCRIDiriO
*• hv Jhe ( (jcnmiriw at Bar f x.imrrw^s
Suie ttdtf oi ( aliKKfii.i
8353 Sepuiveda Blvd Sepuiveda, Ca 91343
a
10th ANNUAL U.C. BERKELeY
JAZZ FESTIVAL
Cliirlts Mingus Quintat
w/ Nit Addafly
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
Gatfit Benson
Weather Report
Hubert Laws
rMMM
aui
•Btoli U.C
iM
McCoy Tyner
Ramsey Lewis
Bitty Carter
Ronnie Laws
iMdrlckt
9tmm9m
THESJUnfG
CYDDBCREEN!
DRAITBEEBSOc
GuinnMS Stout or Schlitz. r«g 7i$
IjUg SI 15
Hothortd'
• I I
li^ Swedish
i, cocktaiJ fraaJu
(213)477-
4ls2L
punnr
11 avvry day.
^
T"ir
■ -. .i.^iiag
♦ *
I
-turn
KM
i S
1
11113
PIZZA
GR 8-0123
Op0n 7 Dof%
] \AMfo7AM
Barrtngton an J Buna^
Blvd GRt-0r3
New spirit squads
For tlie iMt two weeks, pvtp
of the UCLA camput have
been buzzing at a higher than
usual volume in anticipation di
the yearly selection of members
of the 1976-77 tpunt squad.
And yesterday idPtemOofi, the,
dance team, cheerleaders, and
the mascot representing UCLA
for next year were annoui
Twenty- one judget, osder
tlK iiwrtinn of Campus Pro-
granH Aiaialant Activities
Dean Tony Garcia and pro-
gram aMitlaals Jay Omelles
and Oeoff Hamway. sat
through hours of competition
and elimination, winding down
to the final toUl of 16.
Next year's nticot will be
What is a BIBIUEN8T0CK7
I
f
Th« dtstinguithing immXutm
of the Bifkvnttock vandal
is Ttva molctad footprint
ea«N9ur. It Ma* tntpirad tov -
ototsrvtny tha rtfltucal
function ' of tha foot oq
soft asrrh. A yieiaifn
turfaca «upoortf tita arch
of tha fo«it and invitat tha
gripping action ot tf>a toa».
Tha patantad footprint
contour it compoMid of
highly alattic cork. it
bocomas tlambt^ with
body vwar mth and -moldt
itaaif to your faat
tMcoming mora "your
own" wwith avary ttap yoi'
tatea.
If you can*t go tMirotoot. go
B1RKEN8TCK'K
Hmm iocSHpw:
Birkenstock Natural Shoes
10912 La Conta
(By UCLA Main Entranca)
WMtwood 477-7371
fc>
UNIVERSITY OF
IFE, NIGERIA
Positions available in the Natural
Sciences, Social Sciences and
Arts. Immediate openings in Phy-
sics, Chemistry, Biology, Micro-
biology, Biochemistry, Engineer-
ing and Nuclear Engineering; Dra-
matic Arts, Fine Arts, Music, Re-
ligious Studies, Archaeology, Mo-
dern European Languages, Music,
Philosophy, English, Language
and Literature.
Contact Professor S. Adegoke
Professor F. Oiuwole
Professor B.O. Oloruntimehin
African Studies Center, UCU\
825-3860
Interviews in the
African Studies Center
May ^1 and May 24, 1976.
JUryn tvft, OMmif mp
her spot ai alterniu from laiC
year. Ruit win carry the
INTttifioui titk of Jotephinc
Bruin
The dance team and the
cheerleading crew have seven
members each. The daaoe t^am
hai three people with
expeheiice as previous tcftm
members.
Chmci Arrankia and Shmn
MMi IMmi are returning for
their taeond straight y«w;
Kathleen Skillnuin was a
rr of the dMKB lasm two
a§o; Lynn CAdoa,
Chariina Chandler. Laura
Felto and Janet Joanou round
out the squad
On this 3fear's cheerkadmg
team will be Martin Courtney,
Fred Denitz, Sue Gleckner,
Fred Harris, Cami Marcus,
Karen Self and Norma
Spurling
— Mttc
Intramurals
Schedules for next week's
intramural sports will be ready
after noOn today in the IM
Office
Men
The fraternity, dormitory
and independent (including
individuals) track Ml field meet
will be Wednesday June 2 in
Drake Stadium. Sign-ups will
be taken at 2 pm on the day of
the meet in the stadium.
'\
The women's track A field
meet will be held in conjuction
with the men's track Sl field
finals Friday June 4 Entries
will be taken on the day of the
meet.
THE UCLA CENTER FOR AFRO-AMERICAN STUDIES
in cooperation with Fine Arts and Special Productions, Program Task Force,
and the International Ethnic Arts Council
presents
A Special Tribute to
Julian ^^CannonbalP' Adderley
A Three Day Festival at UCLA
Benefit Concert Royce Hall May 20, 1976 8:00 P.M.
Featuring
limmy Cleveland ~ - •■. ;■;'
Mayuto Corre«;-^^^^ ' v^ . . .;
George Duke
Victor Feldman
Louis Hayes
Sam Jones
Watts Youth Combo
Nat Adderley
Airto
Ernie Andrews
David Axelrod
Kenny Burr^^ll
Waiter Booker
Roy McCurdy
Blue Mitchel
Flora Purim
Ernie Watts
Harold Land
Patrice Rushen
-*-•■■'%,
Instrumental Workshops
Schoenberg Hall (Music Building)
10 A.M. - 4 P.M.
N4ay 21 & 22, 1976
WORKSHOP SCHEDULE
iberg Hal, UCLA, May 21 and 22)
May 21 — Schoenberg Hall, Room 1402
10:30 to 12 — David Axelrod, composing and arranging
Lunch
2 to 3 — George Duke, piano
3 to 4 — Ernie Watts, reeds (with piano, bass, and drums)
11 to 12 — Room 1325 — Jimmy Cleveland, trombone (with
accompaniment)
Lunch
1:30 to 2:30 — Kpom 1440 — Kenny Burrell, guitar
2:30 to 3:30 — Room 1439 — Roy McCurdy, Louis Hayes,
and Walter Booker, drums and bass
May 22
10 to 11 — Room 1325 — Nat Adderley, bass (with piano,
bass, and drums)
Workshops are FREE to aH
Concert Ticket Prices: S7.50, )6 50. and SS SO (limited numb^ o( (2:50 tickets avaiUble to UCLA
Tickets availaMe m flkt UCLA Tick«t OHice arxTat all Mutual Ticket C'
3:30 to 4:30 — Room 1440 — Latin percussion (instructor
to be announced) ^
Softball cancelled
A-^tfttfeH Educational Center
|v MOlc Tevi
01 Sporti RcpotUr —
Even thoufh they finished
with 1 fine 13-4 rvoord and
ue^ for the league champion
ship, maayiof the players on
tlK ««pn*i ftoftbaU team an;
diMSlMMd with the outcome
of the season — a feeling
heightened after a proposed
playoff gaoK with Pommm to
decide the kague champion-
ship was cancelled
''We were in a had fiiiMiQaJ
situation we didn't have g
home field and there was no
chance of fetting one before
the school year was over Any-
way, there was really nothing
to accomplish from it We had
already beaten them (Gal Poly
Pomona) .once and at far at
Fm concernpi. we are the
league champions,** said coach
Sharon Backus.
Many oi the players, how-
ever, aott*t tee things the same
way, as they would hke to
officially win the title outright
and add some consolation to a
relatively unsatisfying season.
**It*s really anti-climactic,**
said Laura Mishima. **We
wanted to redeem ourselves
from the way we played in the
RegK^nals.**
**I was disappointed We
wanted to end the season on
an up-note. Being co-champs
isn't exactly the way we'd like
the season to end^-said Becky
Lewthwaite. *'lt would have
been nice to lay that we were
the best. I thinit a playoff
game could have been ar-
ranged! The game being can-
celled is kind of indicative o{
the whole season. We never
reached our potential," she
said "
A lew of the playeia alto
expressed the idea that a play-
off with Pomona would have
helped the Bruini as far at
next season is concerned, since
the fMK would have given
them a little' more expcriMCC
-and more expoture to tougher
cottpcti|Mofi.
"' ^- •iiiied t hat
^ said Sue tnquisir "I
don t know if the title mmh
that much but jutt to have the
chance to compete againtt
them again would be reaton
enough to have jthe playoff
fUK. Dunng ihc year we
didn't play very many competi-
tive teams and we should uke
atfvaaUfe of the opport unity, *•
the addad
**! think It would have
helped for next year, having
another game under our beh,-
laid Lisa Ruharth ^I think
there %«re a lot of things that
caaie into play concerning the
playoff fame that could have
been handled differently 1
don't thinlL anyone feels salit-
fied with the season or with
ending up in a tie We feel we
could have beaten them again.**
However, things look betiar
for the Bruins next-year as far
at avoiding another tie for the
title, hocmmt Melanie Kyler,
the haid tlmwing pitcher from
Golden West }C will be play-
ina io^ tile BrviiHi next season.
-r'^ , (oatabliatod ttdC)
Wi Prepan Jou It Tikt tht Following Totts:
(for Colloga Admlaolofia)
SAT., L.S.A.T.. Q.R.E.. M.C.A.T., A G MJk.T.
W« Alaa OMtr Tiitormg m All
• Cat %m
47S-S1t9 t97.t474
ITtS
MAKY HXRTMAN I
FKK MARY HARTMAN
It t ■ bum rap
t T-«h»ft»
Har Ilia • a bumm«r tha's Xmkmn
•aoMg^. it's tim« to stiow your
colort a pyrt rad haart
tMhind btack caga ban. on a
quality whttt shirt ta 00 par tMrt
9»nd fii9 •hin(«) at ttiM) •aeii
Ch«ck sduit MM. am D Mtd H La O
a«iHl ch«icli or mon#Y ora^r to:
MIFI ^.O. Bai 4144
QrMid CaiHfl gla.. NY 10017
I
■44 •% tM No C O 0
-_4
I
I
•
Campus Events Film CommiMKX) of tha Studant Legisletive Ccur^cil
Pratantt
A ColMMb'
ano Rotx?'*
.aion P
Ackerman Grand Ballroom Friday
May 21 7 A 9:15 P.M. Admission 1.00
I
4
ASTONISHING! Tin Drw Ins
M nrirf srat'
L04
TV
— CHARLEt CHAMPLIN
cot ANQCLCS TIMES
AKMtGMVrr
—richard cuskcllv
hcrAlo examiner
wiunfr
-PAULINE KACL
THE H^¥t VOUKER
AOBERTDENiRO
TAXI DRIVER
AMX'VHIUJm
> 4 • MMTM '
IJOqEKyTHT] ALKRT WXtCS » loM |HA»^KBm
LfiONAftDH/uiitis iFrmtionii
airf CYBtLL SHEPHERD as Betsy
Education Illsyors:
(
Crssle a demand fof- yourself with the school district or
college of your choice! Taaching positions are scarce,
ailministrative jobs in education are less scarce. Public
aiid private school districts and colleges ne^ persons
who help pay their own way. Now you can become sicilied
in the strategy and procedures of grantsmanship and
effective proposal writing. Education gets its funds for
inrK>vation from government and foundation grants. Get
an advantage over other job saekers; show that you can
help in getting funds. <
I
Get grantsmanship training now
for yourself!
Create a defnmnd
\^
^gypttfo 467 4147
UA Cinmmm Cmnfr I, 47S-9441
ARCADIA
Cd«wara» 0»v«<1n 447-4179
S*nt« Anttf 44»-4200
CANOeA ^ARK
^rli Ortvf-tn 344-4211
nwwiim
^lOOtu UriW»in JSm'^^'^O
LONG MEACH
Circi« Oriv« in 434-4513
•lOilTMRlDCC
CmmnxB Cmnff
993-1711
PICO RfVKRA
Fi«tta [>»¥«in
4*2 7941
SHCftMAM OAMft
L4 R«M«c 744 1311
UA -^r.- , bA? ' 3§3
WEST COVINA
AHand: ••MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME."
Wednesday, May 26th ^
9: 00 am until 4: 00 pm
Plaxa Theater , 1067Glendon« Westwood
4>
^
^
^
TiclteU, at $10, available at all Liberty, Mutual and
Ticketron outlets including the Mutual outlet in 140
Kerckhoff Hall . Ranaining tickets will be a¥»Mable
at thePlaza Theater Box Office starting at 8. 00 am
on May 26th.
IMPORTANT TO BE THERE? You be the judge. 63%
of the participants at the last 00 seminars were practicing
education administralars and leaching faculty. They know
what counts; don*t miss 1IASTER THE PROJECT GRANT CAME
Any Large Pizza $5**
//
your choke oT toppitifi^
12 oz. soh drinks 25c
Real Italian Pizza Delivery
''Brings you the experience of
fre^ hot deltvery jyjt Dial:
by oven equipped E-X-P-E-R-l-E-N-C-E
motorqfdef (397-3743)
Holland cast removed—
I
r
SATURDAY. 6 P.M.. ^J^X^^JJSSP
KWST • KLA COSTUME PARTY
■^M MiTf -CUM mw • 3rt p«gi-i>«"— WW
PAINFULLY FUNNY ^tie most :
eftective piece o" ,
Agrif-/.
LUDICROUS LUNACY
tunny than GROOVE TUBE ... ,:.„.
CRAZY... d tiuss " een iviui^i r kyIhuN
and NBC SATURDAY iNiGHT
•LUNACY, nt. ,^^,„^,
Aoody Allen:, :>LtLrLK ,„,,..
'OUTRAGEOUS... Harvard -^
Lampoon irreverence r
completely off ttie a
9y MldMil s<
!>• Spom Wriltr
Brad HoUaad, UCLA tuod-
out frethmiin biLsketKall guard.
iMid^ the daat removed from his
toll kmm km week and hai
begun rehabilitatjon training to
put hiantf at **100 per cent**
by the time practice begins on
October 15
**lt had the cast removed last
Wednesday and the doctor said
1 thmrii be able to ^y
huketbttll at full-tpeed by the
middle of July,** laid Holland
''My recovery prograa in-
cludes whirlpool treatment's,
tensing exercises and othef
exerdtci designed to allow me
to be able to flex my knee to
the full extent.-
Holland suffered the knee
injury back m the spnng of his
senior year at Cretcenu Valley
High School and* played in
pain much of last season for
UCLA. Holland is very happy
thAt he had the iBiftry to
repair ligament and tendon
DATSUIV
M
Acres of Datsuns
Student, faculty, and alumni
fleet discounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
* 684-1133 *
ff
a»:{''
•NUimooc •i»o»i(«
\JJ ■
Held Over
V
^r
-;'#■•
^ ^>*- HALL XMCS
UNITED ARTISTS, WCSTWOOO
i
StiiLlJI,*JU??'' .^' ^ "^ '* '** *" ^^ '« HS »»f«
COSTA MCSA UA CmcNij • Ml IMA ORANCi UA Cl, Cuern^ • 134 3f II
NCSTMlNSrCR UA CintflM • ifl3
HO PASMS rm% EMCACf IMNT
The Staff of
Westwood Chiropractic Office
Invites You To An
OPEN HOUSE
Monday through Friday, May 3-28
12 Noon 'til 2 PM & 5 PM 'til 7 PM
1429 Westwood Boulevard
Wt^twood, California
(213)477-29*4
Your Host -
Howard Malby, D.C.
Facility Tour
Refreshments
SEMINAR
■ k
t
• How t6 find funds and how to apply for grants
• Deciding what and when to propose
• How to write ahd package your proposal to gain attention
• How to determine what your pra^ should cost
• Defending your imyunil and negotiating a contract
'•ii
ONE TIME ONLY!
THE ECKMAN CENTER PRESENTS
MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME"
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26th,
9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.in,
LK FROM CAMPUS THE PLAZA THEATER lot? ouendok. wiesiwoo
TICKET SALES AT AU. MUTUAL AGENCIES
'
ADVANCE ^^ ^
TICKET ^ INCLUDING 140 KERCIOIOFF H>UXANd' TRAVEL
QAICC ^^ INTERNATIONAL. 1355 WESTWOOD
^'^Lta BLVD. -ALSO AT ALL LIBERTY AND TICKETItON
AGENCIES.
BOX OFHCE OPENS WED.. MAY 26th AT S:00
^rr*" *^"iMfMifc l^im iinit--| HI I III
SPECIAL LIVE
PRESENTATION
ONE TIME ONLY
!10°
00
'1 ' " '
^My doctor Mid the
tion went very welt with a 100
per ana yacovcry, it should
make roe better than new,**
said Holland. **I am going to
fPork very hard this lummer to
make sure 1 do aol lotc
ground to any of our other
guards.**
HolMy added. "The surgery
is going to help me, haciysc
With my knee stronfar. I <wii]
be able to jump higher, move
quicker and be faster all-
around. If 1 did not have the
surgery, I would have been
worse off next year."
A part-time starter this year.
Holland has begun ihtrming
free throws and will slowly
progress in the other psits of
his game as the kneee becomes
stronger Holland said that he
piMined to work out all sum-
mer in PMikt Pavilion and
that he itanted to test the t nee
apMHt top-fbght competition
TiMt competition over the
summer should come from
teammate Roy Hamilton, an-
other surtmg guard candidate,
who said that he will be at
UCLA all %ummer also
Holland believes that
Richard Washington and
Marques Johnson will sign
••hardship.- but he is optimistic
about the chances of the 1976-
77 team without the two All-
Americans. ** Without Marques
and Richard. I still think we
have the talent to win the Pac-
8 championship/* said Hol-
land
The freshman said he ex-
pects a tough battle with
Hamilton. Raymond Town-
send and Jim Spillane for the
two starting guard ^ots. but if
his knee is healthy, he believes
he Has an **excellent charicc** of
starting
Batmen . . .
(ContiiMicd from Page 1 1 )
Cowan; Came back strongly
from a sore arm to finish the
MMon with a 10-2 mark. He
«M undefeated in four league
Marts and won his last eight
decisions overall. Had a 2.43
earned run average in league
games. 3.50 overall. Led team
with 69 strikeouts but had 36
in 37 league innings.
Head coach Gary Adams
also indicated that left fielder
Dave Baker (.277, 7, 37> and
first b«isem«ia-right fielder
Brian Viselli (.2g7, 2, 19) just
missed bciaf selected Baker, a
sophomore, hit 281 in league
fliy with 19 RBI (tying Gay-
lord) while Viselli. a junior,
batted 396 (48 at-bats) in
conference play
Computers.. .
(CnntMiiiri froa Page 7)
In situations where "^ou want
«n extra hand.** added Vidal,
direct brain-to-machine com-
flMads couid be applied An
intriguing poaaibihty is "the use
of brain HgMls to bid the arm
or finger to press the panic
button. Reaction time could be
cut down," he commented
the project u part of Com-
puter Simubrtion. Vidal said
**Some of the machines that
we're using have been here for
12 years. Moai of the equipment
is from govemnr.cnt surplus. It
costs about $100,000 ^mt yi^v
for the Imerfacc Project, but the
jaalaaaJ i tU i >>> ■p,npiii
profecu
■ »:o. « ■■'■•:■
,. A
...^^.l .
t
r^
.. \,
i
r
May 20th thru May 22nd
I
f
The Discount Pants Store
Jeans, shirts, jackets,
sizes 26 to 42 • Gals sizes 5 to 16
Hr>.
DYNAMITE DISCOUNT PRICES
ON BRAND NAMES
DURING GRAND QPENIN
• 1000 ITEMS AT «a99
* 1000 ITEMS AT Mj99
• 1000 ITEMS AT *5.99
* lOOOIs MORE TO «12.99
if FREE HUMPHREY FLYERS TO THE FIRST 1000 CUSTOMERS!
it
The Discount Rants Store
1923 WILSHJRE BLVD AT 20th. SANTA MONICA Ph 393-4536
Next to the Gap Store. Open Mon.- Sat.lO to 9. Sual2 to 5.
I
lera
MMtaJK
5e
I
n ANOARIN ( N N
(CHINESE DINNERS & LUNCHES
-I
i.i
11829 Wtishic€ Blvd
We- s/
Op«i 7 thv Ttfl ^4ldnlghl
477^14
-^1 . •
Campus events
ICfMning
far
•ipi. AcMr«M wlMi iHi m froiR «f ah
. Mmilii Ivtlriiif ImmMI Fviitii
TflNMni. mil it Hilg •
* PARTY*
Theta Delta Chi
547 Gay ley Ave.
All-U-Cocktail Band and Beer-Bust
* Friday Night May 21st
8 pm - $1.00 donation at door ^
Barefoot Boogie
Dance In Our Sand
wood For turVior
4774303
m cil
tor
-ll
MmmoM
y&m OECA at a
ViaM KaraMiiir 311
laTS
1 or
of tndia.
today itoMa'i %fm at
JMll. buy tai
. Eaatom Europaaa aai
milntiom tor Mi tummtf aTlUt Mar*?
Grit aHaa. ktmrnm A-ltvtl or on Brum
walk
~SW Arts Woali 1%, will toature a
facuny staff and ttviaM vt iHaw Pol
laM and displav caaaa. toiav 7 46 aai-d
P*** Vaa rt • lad flai ttvNi iraiM I pm.
2 pm tomorrow and 2 pm. May 23 ?cnaan
barf Ltttit THaator. Baaui Am Bai § pm
g* 33tt and patic Tha California Mis
' wdl be avaitoMt m
tim
rat lnaa JaUa aad Taia Tumar wM
la mmm 7 «i t:iS pai. iMMii Aal
man araad laimiii r attta iaar
Larrt «Pif Pa alHtorn Ml and 11 pai.
Catotoria SStaliia
aadftiai|afidlBrMaBF«Biw#
It slown 730 pat toaiflit ItoMlz Haii
•lit. .^
Kalrtoli aad
WIN Pa Shawn 5 pai May 24. Matoitz Y40I
A aaart aaiiact van la aHaara first
Jraaia^ cammuniry sarvioa and laarmng
»c crtdit avaiiabta studtnt da
own jal iascnption with
Visit Kiaaay 304 or cali
Mai Trtp tlpaaa. tor Si —
May 31 and Mtxico. Juna 22-29 ara avai^
aMa m Karckhotf MO aaary day and at
maatinos of UCLA Ratoap Ctol
— fair Oaaa. O-iO pai awary MtoiaMiay
at 1^30-10 30 pm.avary Friday. IntonialtoA-
•I Stadant Cantor 10Z32 Hilgard Frae
an axtramural fundinp tor fradiflto ilu>
<tonls and paatdoctorais ara avaitolto m
ttie Ftftewshipi and
Murphy 1220
wfW ,
ali-JS iach concart 8 30 pm. tonight
Schaaniaff aaditonum
— Maak hi Ma MaadL lawricai'i art
tongs will tM parlormad 8 30 pm to-
atorraw. Paiaall Liirarv Itoiunda TiohaM
and fraa upan rwQum m Wm
toHpitora. will have thatr
anil ma UCU fartoiaai^ Afitot.
0:X pm. tomorrow Sdiaaafeavg auditor
lum
-MbbM af AaartoaL wiN la praaaMad ly
tha UmvarMy Chanit. Madrigal Siiifara.
Mans 6toa Chib. Waman't Charal Sactoly
and tha SympHanic Wmd Cnaantoto. I pm.
23 '
r^
,r!
works ly JS Bach and Raval will la
pnaaatod aaan May 25 Schaaniaig aad-
itofium Fraa
(C Hhiiiii on Pafc tf)
(
HEN AND WOMEN
WANTED FULL TIME
SUMMER JOBS
If you are lamporanfy discontmumg
your education and sioiluno sum-
mer wark consider this unique
opportunity Large international
firm has several full time positions
available in district offices ttYrough
out the US If acceptad you will be
working .with ott>ers your o^n ago
Vqu can work locally, travel your
owa state or neighboring states
The iRon and women we are looking
for ore ambitious iapunrlidto and
hard working For district office
address m your area, or for appoint-
ment with our local manager call
Sherry between 9 am ta ^ ^m ,
Monday through Friday
These warm
Spring nights
Join US on
the patio
Watch the
world Stroll by
Enjoy our
. Fettucine or Linguini
^ Our Chicken
Cacciatore and
milk -fed veals
With firie
wines .
candlelight . . .
flowers
§••4 ClCi^DON AT
^^AL#AWUM^ WSTI>rffi
Campus
events
f. -\
id
Faff IS)
\^ "
hoff
•Mry Friday.
fdm
.3
t
24 mL
Tommy wM to
totlJt
8 8
Park. 0 anK6 pai.
^y^ I? -^i^ ^ Spohsortd ly Patr
il Hta hii L 3^
pm. May 24 Law School Y411
■bm wM iBBBMrtol. CaadMMi Bal Hmk
*1 pai May 25. Mavarhoff Park
— I»twl AMI MM TaMan M:3D pm.
— ^w*"^ UtoMptoa aad VatotoL ii
May 25. Man's 6y«i 133
H NM MbMi. Paul
rt ariM. 710 pa^ May 25 Kmaay
^"b pm.
2170 and 930-11 am.
Mpm
11
AcMrman 3014
organizational
today Boaltor
to
24 Oykstra Firi
200
a PM, May 24
i Don t make a ■
career of lookiiig
,^^^ iorajoh.
' I ne Advei^ising Center's ^
only purpose is to give you a comprehensive
end working understanding of advertising
Every vital aspect of it
• Account Management • Creative Concept
• Photo Introduction • TV Production
• 2^^P^^^ ^^*9^ • '"ustrotion Workshop
• Public Relations • Advanced Concept
• Creative Execution • Photo Workshop
• Copywriting Workshop • Pockoge Design
' • Cbsses start week of June 14
396-57191 i
No Summer J
Don't Panic!
It you are a hard worker and
can leave California for the
summer, call 479-4139
$2,500
^ _^ .. , ...:4L
n f r
- 1:00 am
v..
featuring
i
Pf-e ed r , US EVENTS COMMISSION
in coniunction with Inter Residence H Counc
3L "^"
4
4
CLASSIFIED
.'•<
aovehtisimg offices
lUrciihoff Nan 112
church
f "I
•ntortainiiMnt
"CTTC*
8UMOAV MAM: tSO. 10:M. 11:lt
«ilcC«nl»f(MONNp
Chap«4 (Qay«»y/tti
fCNv. S«r. M ia)
5:00
'\
Th« ABUCLA Cc
fully supporu th« Unl9«rtlty of C«lt-
iMvite't psitey oil Mon-disciinMrvitton.
•#p«rt»fnf tpac* will not to« !!••#•
•MiliM* In ««• OaMy SrulR lo wiywi*
wlio tfl»crifnin«t«t en th« b««it of
Micostry. color, national origin, roc*.
f«ll0«on. or Ma Noltttor ttto Doily Bruin
nor thtf ASUCLA Comoiuritcotions
•■■r< hM Invoftiigotvd any ol Mo aor-
vtcoa advartlsod or advartlsor* ropr*-
aonlod »n tftis taauo Any porson fo«-
llovlMg ftiol an advorfisomont in thit
laauo wtolfllaa Wm Boord't poMcy on non
#locrlminotlon slatod horoln should
communicalo complolnit in writing le
tho Bwalnoss Manager. UCLA Dally
•ruin. 1 12 Korckhoff HaM. 30t Woatwood
Plaxa, Lot Ango.iff. California 90024
For aaalalMiea wNh housing dlocnmi-
nalion probloma. call UCLA Housing
OHica.(213)t2S-44«1.Wpatoid*Fp4r
(213) 473-
WISTWOOO
•72
(Ouatora)
Unl« rwCA,
472-
NOSIN: I liavo Mio atrawborHea and
aom* pinaapplas loo. FoycH-up lor soma
daiquiris and a Luau for two Lova,
• M.
<iM21)
tYLVIA O.:
9$if oiplortnf oliaaaa cawaiiia at Oo-
i^na. Wlaconaln. Don't alap on Iho ro-
" — ^ Happy 21a« Umm "
(• M21)
incwiicnte
HUM^ A BMf't - TNarai lor batng Mia
froat ptopi* you mrm. Vay^va aiado
ATTcIntiOM SIngIa Fi
Faran^a jaltltout Fartnara". Santa
Monica.| Diacuaaluna. sporta. partloa.
It acttaMoa. sas-ooro
(Ann M 2S)
FMEO. Handy, Rlcli. and Folo. con-
gratulatlono on pledging Noit tlma
aiall have Strowborry Og^'a •
campus
<
z
CM 11)
■^^ Tmciiart aatiamo margln-
dBWIy. S4 foal (tftpparo) and aoynlbifl
Why not oara. loo? OOMC bow:
(• M 21)
HAFFY Birthday Llltia Sprout Your
a aNittt Lovo. Judot. Flaa. Faiar Boar.
^■~ (• M 21)
IF YOU NCEO SOMEONE
TO TALK TO.
CALL US.
HELPLINE
•2S-7B4S .
UJ
Z
s
SYLVIA; Yau'ia Bia amaat Bdof I ....
tfM iaa. UBLT oX? I lova you. Harmon.
(SM21)
WbylabaNIa
f You'ra gonna dio aomoday.
D«
JJothlngJIallo^f Loonoy Klllol, Cd
(•M21)
TO T.E
tbo bin and C J Bhodo t
(S Bl 21)
complete
primifig
service
i«pr«eiiiiiK
KindinK
miniru*diiu*
ILM Vri.khoK hdlJ
COMrrATUS:
Journal aNoraSiO
-ItTO
ZST Linio Slatort: Your warat
(
»•).
ffMtl)
■MILIO Lives CM MOW A
PHI SETA SAIOER.
(•M21)
•t
'. L
(SUM)
la a
partallNa.
(•MH)
passport
identification
resume photos
FUMflY
(•M21)
La«a. FA Jr. (S^
LEGAL FraSlaina? Fioo lofL
«S Kardihoff. 82S-2SSS. (UCLA alu-
*^' (SUM)
osuc/o
SEAUTIFUL Lady aumdng S/IS tm
of Suncho: You ' ~
iaa. 47t-tS72.
compvs sf udf
ISO kmrckhoH hall 825-061 1 m77)
opmn mon-ht'i JO-4 30
your favorlto flavora A lopplnga for
AMy Karon Cancor Fund. Sunday. May
23. S:SS-«:M. 2 i iinf^
(•M21)
I-S Waak 107S. May 24-2t CaS
Woman ^aourca Cantar lor mora
•^.
CQf^TESTANTS
WANTED
BREAK THE BANK
ABC 11:SS •am. M - F
W# wmnt outgoing, tKCiting
itants for TV. goma show.
CALL DANA 11 ^.m.-S pjn.
(213) 277-i363
COME out and on|oy a booutHul
Wooa-day and amali-ond ftdaa. Sy ma
hour, half or full day. For |4.§0/hr..
eaS Tapiwaa Hiding Ate-
II; 121 Otd
(7 J 4)
music
ftM21)
FIAMO
379-53S6 aftor 3:SS or
M21)
sociatevents
SOCIAL In privala homo. Sal. May
t12JSIor
F.O. Sob 3211
S8S12. 213-272
(•MS4)
ALL-U- CodilaM. Band, and Soor-Suat.
F#day ntfUt at Thota Dolta dhi. Sao ad
onpaga?
for rsffit
i.2ofNaaa.3ai
1312
DELUXE.
7ttiSt.Santal
kiS. 2 ^ ^ ^_
*-»». doiroloplng. ptiyaica) tharapy!
'"^^ oporathPO. CaM SaHy EXS-
LAKE
ful location. Sloop t. Firoplaea.
lORg waoftortd. SISo iaaal&. S8S^HiS4
FIAMOS
M
for rant hrom tISJS
lor aala. AM
(t J4)
AMMOWHBAD cabin In Mlot ^rmm
SJJ^S, SSS/a dara I1SS/7 dara!
(tOir)
inia^ DolKrory to S:SS
(tOir)
\mmum t.v. a STERio rentals
COLOR TVS
Wooaiy/i
§0a a day
Slaraoa $7.S0/i
Mi T.V.i - S7.S0/mondi
Cad: 27ft- 1S32
10 UCLAI
;£ •draalo
(• M 21) ■••* '"'
0.f% TMO. It FM
S
(10
I)
•n. ate Sat. May 22-Juna 1. lltSS
Mo. 4, 47S-214S. pg M 2S)
for
(t
of indaar 4 ,— -
Fidwta grown by horticultural
Yjtl Sunday 1b-i 211ft Lonnlngtan
-* — * Sonorty Qion 4 Olympic)
r«a at '»-••
Jl
WOODEN Sarrate • Kofi, A
haichcovort. notting A ropa jpnli
er«tot A boaoa. old barntM^iTss
ftpm.
<1S«t1)
WHAT DOES A BRUIN
BEAR WEAR FOR ACTTVE
SPORTS? I
UCLA sweatshirts, swwat-
pBfits. jogger's outfit, t-
^lirts, shorts, racing trunks,
sweat socks, and rarrtai a
UCLA gym bag and
towet
f> M ») aEAUTIFUL hNa atonal aaiar
LJB'C * fibppif ••aiainMiaymmalMMga
Laaa la you A anir yo« - ns±. («Hh
L«.
(IS « SSI
fiani W.V.a.)
(•MSS)
mmn\
■aaaloaa.ttiMli.
m.S8l 47S-1S4S
nSHtf)
<1S«SS|
PAUL
iMa aMn^
L Alao. wmmi
nSMtT)
(7MS4)
SI.
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
iLtti
irmzw
CAMPSITE
CAMPING EQUIPMENT
AT
Tanta,
VAM NUTS SLVO.
OAKS,CA.SMn
It's the Return of
1950's Prices!
Vou can order any nf thd many
UCLA ciaia ring dsftigns MMias of
mw^rt stainlMt st— t-^nd Ihsy
only coat
$49.95
Q4t Delivery m July-Augutt
ASUCLA Students Stoiv Bmrwmr
8 level. AcHeman UlUon, 825-7711
MOVINQ Sela - S*
Ehalr SJS.
siae.
aal SSSB. 473
(10
I)
DffSSSEM {*2 mirrora) -9XTt2- f
drawara - naw coat SIM - win aaii
for $100 Call •24-1340.
(10M21)
lAKIMa fciiiiiiiix auppiaa A
aeiil»wiant. Salact Callfamla WIfiaa
Ilia Ovapa Nut 4912 W SSnd St. Waal-
"• 1 **a. ^^oaa, a4e*4SSB.
(IS Otr)
Tl SA SO A, SM tl A, S« S2. Sa SS
HP- Cfala - Canma-MMM
11SS0 Santa Monlea Sl«e.. W.L.A.
aCES ELECTPONICS
Call47S>JSSStorbaaf|
ACOUSTIC 190
3SS-0717.
(SM») N|^-SaAy
T«»o IS"
IM Can
(10 M SS)
QUEEN weiar Sad. CaMf WaatfpatfaaM
pad f tSO.00 Day - a« 4SS.|iai
I10M2SI
NCT AMD WIMQS SO
27
(10 MIS)
MATTacSSCS ALL NCW
Savayp
tirtnaaii
•lit JO
THE MATTRESS STORE
11T14
at
477-4iai
^
•)
(10 M H)
sars.
210 am.
*fmm9^\
STSacO eaaiponanta: StMeani eia-
Vallay. 001-OS4S. SOI-SSSS.
WI^SSTS.tSSSSSi.
(ISOtI
Navaio. ^uni. Sarvto Oomi
^tloaa atart at SS JO
. 10t)0-630
ASUCLA Studanta Stofa
Sporta waar
B iaval. Acliannan Union
•«to
Tex OS Insfi'VMeiir
Tl
Tmm
riiaii mnm riaaii
lis.
MSIfiO. Caal SISS.
OlOaaaH
SI -2.
(10MMI
MCCANTMSRY aiid
(10M2S)
noMan
no MM)
N You'ra QoHig to Sa I
* — ■ - ^*- " -'^ •
you can otHaryoyr
You'll aet suminer delivery and
you can weer your olTtoMl cleee
liftQ for Fort Quener
ASUCLA Studenu Store
Comtjo Besnasai. I
2cee^2B^^^jQjiH|i^_^^
cenVes 300
• 4-ia«ai Slack •§ Maaiariii • 12
%Mm
n
SUSmSSS EQUIPMENT
iiMiaawnMiiim ai wla
CAtL47a rrai 3m WMtots«not«aor«»y
CAR Sl<
wMli^
nad E
47
(10 M 21)
4l^
*1^
•f Nwaif
^iir.tli
Only $2.50
laatunng ttw woita ol
Van Qogh
om.
9 A.M.- S P.M.
May 17-21
Traahousa North Patio
Ackermmn Union
free
fyS- S ate, part Omrmmn
CMI27l.asS2.
(I'lMfT)
opporttifiitt—
• • 4 • • • e e e a a a a a •
KMSOMAB
C$9i9f 9f Vmmtk
h
mnioHmm
for two 3 act playa
t
(
to all
)
in thm lottoming workBhofm fe t
ACTING
DIRECTING
PLAYWRITING
DANCE
CALL US
WT-aaii
. ^
SAMTA ^ ^
aiadlalaHf MMaSM Mr iiCLA
la wavtilii aer aaiaa Mr a aiM.
ol 2 Kfi Man Mm Fd bafMelM S:1S
aai. Poalllewa #lli laat tArw afid of
ana
. jyad UC
SISJO par hr N you
iMi
■, TV-
rtaataei
04Mtl)
\tttitw^
CLASSIFIED
resMTch subjecte
D SlMdawta
122
far
(14 H 2S)
-^:.^
ic— Offered servioee offered
Help Self oy
SS-SSO/inenih lor lloed
HrLANO DONOR CENTER
1001 Gaylay Ava..
47S-00S1
nSMlS)
VeM. MM pay siSS
CaiS40-72lO
(ISM 21)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSUHAMCE
RelMaed? . Tee IRfli?
STUOCNT
•er Ken
ILiCTROLVSiS Uawaalad laclal A
^^^ ^etr parmanaeiM i^^^^ Aa^^
(If H SSI
aSVOILV HMi MM'a
9r9* lialratyllef^ ^er
271423STUI
CASH m
11010
)
lefa call
(12 0lr)
a*
4ua It yra plua. moa-trl IIOoTwT
CMI 44S>IMi ava v'ww/wm
.^ (IS M 20)
SUMMiR iaea- 1210 a m—k Mnal
Ca« 47S-0454 •wmaiar
(IS M 21)
•ala laatAod Pfm
loss Ma«iw«pe M 477-2103
(lOQlr)
HOUSED A INTMia • Oraea
(ISOir)
flSOlr)
wenled
URGCMT! "
lor a« typaa of |oba:
' noloaartftf ,
Indualrlal. Manafomant. Clarlcal S
OraduaMa 4 UndartraeuaMa
AOCNCY
T.R. tSIRLOVMCirr i
(Faa A F^)
SewM MaMca M
S.M. 2SM107
1.
2.
1.
4.
i.
4
7
•.
t.
ia.
Mja
tiM«a
MHr
ZNr
mttr
O-M Ma) M M
CALL «7t-0M1 POP
THE JOB
f;dopY
lor 2 beya, 11 A 12. pha S yr. oM flH
(2 daya/waaA) 7/3S^7S MpbmIi S/20/7S
avail. Aak lor CtieOR
1721
lis M 2S1
ARROW INSURANCE
•Ha SarrlnptOA RMaa. ML A 11744
MMahlra 477 -4024. S7t-2SS7 WltH
••ra ttiaa 30 yra aaparlanca Halp
lo study rvtaln-raiaialaap Soa m^f
^"opwowa T aMow
a ad Spaelal
rteOirl
1111
(ISM 21)
....... Out-
Oolng paepla. Youthtwl atiliaiapliara
SaMry A eaetp. Waaidy SMva CarfeS.
(IS M 27)
10
(lOOlr)
VM MAIWTEMAMCf StRVICC: SSS.SS
pS M 21)
2%) eean Alao eeert raeMI Srontwoed
SALLCT: Faa way |p Raaaty 1SSS
"—- - and llMa. VWCA, S74 NS-
47S-Siei
lis J 4)
C
Q
or
STUdENTS &
TEACHERS
WELCOME AT
KELLY GIRL!
Man and Women: Earn
extra morwy during sunrimer
break while enjoying a
variety of temporary aaaign-
nr>ents We provide tempo-
rary jobs for all clerical
and/or induathal skills.
^WORK WHEN YOU
WANT. AS OFTEN AS
VOU WANT. •YOU
DONT PAY US - WE
PAY YOU!
21 yra. 472-7474
(IS M SS)
iMNitollnf . 21 yra Ii(
S-11. 472-7474 ar
a laAAA^^
tMaWy^lrawa Sarata. OlatlnpulaRad
(10CM1
(10 OR)
aiACM ORKMTIO DAY
TWO Maaas hmim
CNILORf N AMO' OUTDOORS. 472-
(1S
1)
(IS M Sn RMRCUTS SS Sy
flSQSr)
MOVIMQ: Raal4«af«al.
Call ua 8-5:30 p m dally or
9 a.m. - 1 p.m Saturdays
fXELLY SERVICES INC
ncx/inc?
FiMy PM^paa Maaaan^aa i«
Ow MR yaar- 7 Rapa a anaS
«ta iMn
nOQRI
•A.M3.A.
f
«
MB
'
1'
. 1
. . ■
.1
I
•
< ■' "t ' '-
. \
'. -1 ■ '■ ■■■■
\
traval
0
VTON EXPRESS
MOVERS
Mpaliig »n^ Haulinf
RMh SS4-2SS0
N««all ssi-aasT
NV^NOSlSaw
Individual* lf»-efflca'or mmh f4mr—
imjk. MA)47S.
(MOar)
T
asqclaT^
rRA/ELS£RVC£
KNOW tomorraar'a aaawara tadd^
UMaa A-nj (aMU fXRO)
iai
S3.00 to Fayi
St. RaaaRa. Ca S1S3S
Sl.00aae»i
(itM21)
THf aOOVNIEN
OaalHy Atfto Rddy
Aapair 4 ^alnMnf
47f
)
■ ■a«rl r«aclr af
®
ISC
S ta»aipw 9mf
«»Ml L A.
kwt
FOUND 1
Ta
a allvar walcli on
caH 0«af 47t>4104
f17 M 21)
TOURS A TRAVEL
Spring Summar 4 Fall Chartara'
lo
London
Shannon
Pan*
Madrid
-Franlitun
■ ojaaaia
Zurich
Itoundtrtp trom %29% 00
Hawait and Hmm fork
Roundtrtp from $169 00
political
SC also runs local araa touri
by car arHl bus at minimum co«r
iTRWD M RM
12:00 Ackarman
MOM
Pftday.
(ISM 21
I tor Information
9 6 Dally
• • • •
#• #
traval
I ■
In
SS.7S. dS7-1SSS. 2iat M. Otywipit
a TO 12 WEEKS
ORK-WAY FLIOHTS IN EURORf
LOWCST RRICaa - CALL MKHITY
DAvassa-Tsai Evtasss^ras
OS OR)
ASUCLA Traval Sarvlce
•m ONif aMciai
UCLA CKartor.FNfUl Sanflea
If a nol loo MM to RooA a Chartor
lor CAHOpapd aaoM may
UR lo Ria RoM ol
RRrRI #
Juno 21 11
JMrM21 12
JuTMia 5
Juno 2S 10
Julys B
Julys a
Julys 4
ialvia 4
UCLA EUROPE
CHARTER
SPECIALS
HAWAII
• •
I)
"S/sarM-A^/rr «» • $ai4 Juaa i7
S MM Jii«y»
C.lt.E
TRAVEL (477-
714^7^#7i2
^ong Baach 213-432^791
^o« Ang^lst 213-
5r^»^ BNd. aaa-a/w
J^'**"*^'* Bl¥d 381-7961
Mnwuanii 213-724-6910
^•••'Port Baach 714-933-1441
714-647-9636
213-792-4179
Toffanoa 219^42-1699
VanNuys
213 9<6 0750
213-477-3951
213-999-0447
-flM
(ISM
Mrro
SISX
TT I AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE JHSUmmiCM.
risosi
.TaoVi
^- • .^. A9« U9 Foa A$iTmmm r
I -^ i aMMTTO
tA-MOMOLULU tMi iMa vaak*
"MEXICO...
MAZATLAN Mr S MOq ft 9imm
NEW YORK...
i;rj«»iw foonsaip on TWA u si
atU9 Cor MoMiiM i issfcia
roM/Euroll ,
lions... aiMaoNi Fllfhta arlfliln
aomLO.
n.?MO Omr «M
a» -M •
1
a* .. VJi" V
CLASSIFIEDS D
v.,
LM AMQCLtS
(2113) fT^^IM/ (213) 477-1 1«2
TOC CHAMTEPI FUGHTS
TOEUROPC
typing
mLPnmmoro
ia»
Mm
mM}
Pwm
MM Pnmroc
-13
HB9-t ^
6^2»-»'i4
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LTTOK
7/a».rtf
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7'«^I0
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07171
7 17-M3
k^ Uyi- 7* «^»^t3 ft 4«
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^H- uui. Ej •^Vfr^i'W • 4«
mCC PBA fj 7^»««« • 4M
^^^ JX 7/17<«rl3 • 4M
z an 7/17^9 • 4«
^^ uyi- tj 7/oi<M>i • 4*1
HAWAII «2..«M i,«„ti«
NYCt2 3««^« fn.u|lli
ORIENT M.^«M» r,o.4»
Contact ASTrA fof 9*t 2M om^f Ht^nt.
•'tn ««panur»« from L A Si»A ^r«nci«co
0«a9d toMon N«»vof«
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL, 'it mi
YOUTH, Eu««p* t.y,
APEX ..-46 «4^M» ttMH iur
TAHIT' SUPfR DEAL tS7»
OIID€R MOW
TRAIN A FfRRY TICKETS CARS.
CAMPER RENTALS RAILP ASSES |
INTRA EUROPEAN STUDENT
CHARTERS
SPECIAt CIHMSE OFFER
WH FM M
• p«
jm
iatvat)
(iiii»l
Mtf M.VX. tita
J 4)
at3)
fttO^ TNI Ti
1149.
itM. Pmi
o»i
TO
in.
(2f Mn
§14
(at MM)
LKaHTNlMC ry^MiS C?
TI _
AL COLLf OC TY^fMC
•fCClALlST
T»rw 9*9»r« T«i«sit Ot«»«ri«i,on«
•I
••?^?^^!f_^fA^ a4H«t« flit/
PiMMl
WALK TO UCLA
142
LSAT one MCAT.
•II autoi^cU R«
I. 47S-S193 1(
W1M913 4^31 ••k'20 j7f
OiOM t^0«-iat4 449
IflSf 0«^eslt r«quir«4 9#f^ person
•nrl
IRAN
A'v you going to Iran ttMs •uffMn*^'^
Daily 747 FU^M
CcoMct
Am«ri Tour 4 Tra«»( S#rv»c«
472S tywm BMI No 419
MoByMBOd CA 90028
T»i 444 5259
ir»f»»«r ttu^cnts S843 00 fOxinC trip
»trH>rm\
TOURS "*"
.AMAiCA ^ iSvm
.^N PAff AM6 ?3 ,
MEXICO • mm
HA(MAl(- • dBy«
mtCCNTfMMAL • 4l
Nfw vbHK crrv •
mmf o«Mf«.ion« 4
»ro«»t7«t
•#74.
»!• r«l«». A.
173f WmIt
19 V*iMC« •37-
a4 0lr>
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477-
motn
RUTH:
ttfl4
utm^/^mmatmtm
TVPMG toy La • ISM SCLICTMC N.
Olliii»)
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I2!'!** V*** *-^MMi*fy faclMtiM
t»§1 S« C*rfiiii« LA tSSISM f«r
(atM2f)
C4lHlM« SCREENPLAY gPf CIALIST
c«r«
1»SA
T«:ii«t
O^MM-f 10-4 ALL VCAA
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1*1 to4ire««« L«rf« cowrtyartf.
PS J 2: •« V«9»«Mi Av« Mo Wllanir* 47f-
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CM Olr )
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[213) 471-4444
mom
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There will be a special Classified Page June 4
so MAIL/MING YOUR "GOOD-BYE, BON VOYAGE. CIAO, ADIOS. ETC." TO
112 KERCKHOFF HALL, SM WESTWOOD PLAZA BY JUNE 2.
FOR $1.75
i«v
f)
^
^
^- '^^-
1
4nde>t€alendaF
Campus
Ob euBpot thit weekend.
■lucb filmic activity is pro-
mised. In Ackermao Grand
Ballroom tonight. ICen Rus-
sclTs Tmamj with Roftr Dal-
trey and Ehon John #ill show
at 7 and 9 pm, SI. Jules Das-
tin's Ni^^ljH tiM Ckj and
^ Danny Mann*s Our Man Flku
S; will screen at 7:50 pm in Mel-
*^ nitz; tickets are availahle at the
#« door for $1.50
tt At the Vafifhoiid this week*
Z end. The Bl$ck Swan with
•s Tyrone Power and Bird of
^ ParaJiM are being shown. The
bb two films are a part of the
Vagabond's one week tribute
to the 20th Gentry Fox dye-
transfer Technicolor process.
Also on campus this week-
end is the Chinese Film Fes-
tival, sponsored by the Inter-
national Chinese Film Festival,
Group and the Program Task
Force. Tonight in Melmtz
I4©f. Dr. Paul Pickowicz will
discuss cinema, cultural change
and pohtics m China after a
showing of the film Froai Vic-
tory to Victory Tomorrow are
three shorts m Rolfe 1200 and
Sunday in Melnitz 1409. four
short subjects will screen. Each
program surts at 7:30 pm. -
Eddie Albert, Rip Torn and
Ann Revere. '^
Vmiumimi, a, film^ by
Emile De Antonio. Mary
UmpMm Mid H4Mkeil Wexler.
is the sole weekend bill at the
Fox Venice.
Setmmmg tonight at tlie
County Art Museum as part of
the Wilham Wyler Film Fes-
tival are The WcitcnMr, star-
hng I>ona Davenpofl^ Walter
Brennan. Slim Summerville
and Gary Cooper and Wuther-
iag HfigiHi with Laurence
Olivier and Merle Obcron.
Saturday. Tkc Little Foxes
with Bettc Davis and Charles
Ehngle and A House DivMed
With Walter Huston will play
'-r-.'^
^.-.
Dassin^s
Music
Movies
Delbert . Mann*s widely
praised The Birch interval will
open tomght at the Avco Cen-
ter Cinema. The film stars
Kingfisb w^^ll perform to-
night at the Starlight Am-
phitheater at 7:30 pm The
Jerry Garcia Band will play
Sunday evening, festival
wmtang, at the Sanu. Monica
Civic Auditonum
Joan Manuel Serrat will
make his Los Angeles prenuerc
Saturday at 8 pm at the Wil-
shire Ebell Theater, 4401 W.
8th Street. Serrat, who lends
musical mterpretations to the
poems of Machado aiid Her-
nandez, is exiled from Spam
for his insistence for singing in
his native Catalan language.
"Thumbs" will play his flam-
ingo guitar in concert with his
disco band and hard rock en-
semble Sunday evening at 2
am in the Sproul Hall sixth
floor lounge. At the Trou-
badour. Charlie Musseel White
and Michael Bioomfield will
pcfform, whik at the Roxy.
Steve Gocimmn and Martin
Mull are schedule to warble.
Robin Williamson, formerly
of the Incredible Strii^ Baad,
is offering a workshop in the
traditional inatrumental monc
of EqflMii, ScoHMid* MKl Ire-
land. The program omU $5
aad will be presented at the
Los Feliz Apple School at
4155 Russell from J^^o 4 p«
Mn Sunday Far further in-
formation, call 665-5613
The music department is
prrif.iiting three concerts this
wmkami: Friday night at 8:30
in Schocnbcrg Hall, the Bar-
oque ensemble will play an atl-
J. S. Bach program.
Saturday night, same time
and place, the Contemporary
Chamber F—ibk. directed
by Georpe Packer, will per-
form the works of six com-
position students here.
Sunday night. Packer will
himself be featured as com-
poier, along with fellow faculty
members Alden Ashforth. Bo-
ris Kremenliev and Paul Des
Marais. The University Chor-
us. Madngal Singers. Men^s
Glee Club, Womcn*5 Choral
Society and Symphonic Wind
Ensemble, directed by Donn
Weiss and Kenneth Snapp, will
premiere Aihforth*s O Mag-
JHMB MjTfierfmB and portions
of Packer's Misaa Sonus
hymns by Wilham Bilhngs and
parts of Sousa*s El Capitan
will also be heard The concert
is in Royce Hall (the only
place, where all those people
will fit) at 8 pm. Admission to
all three concerts is SI for
students here. $2 for other
studenu and $3 general
city madness
,»v
**You*re a dead mmn, Harry Fabiaa.**
This line comes somewhere near the end of Jules DaMffi*s
NifN and tke Cky (1956) and is but one of many chilling
OMnents in a film which deals with professional wrestlen,
gangsters and the perils of ambition It is being shown along with
0«r Mas FMhI Saturday night at 7:30 in 1409 Melnitz aad
admisaion is $1.50.
Richard Widmark is Harry Fabuin, a smaO time crook in
London who is forever hatching up schemes to launch himself
into the big tinie He enlists the aid of an ajpng Greek wrestler in
his frenzied pursuit of fortune. Fabian ia^a^ man in ooMlaMt
HigMl threatened both by his nruny enemies and the potential
betrayals of friends
Night asd dM CHy is a superb thriller with an intelhgent script
by Joe Eisinger and fine cinematography by Max Greene tlM
captures the madness of life in a city of shadows.
-To«y Peyser
Theater
A major opening this week-
end is Winner Take All, a
musical dealing with 19th cen-
tury feminists Victoria Wood-
hull and Tennessee Claflin. at
the Huntington Hartford. The
Hartford, by the way, will be
presenting the multi award
winning Equus in mid June.
Other new productions in-
clude three onginal one-acts at
the Matrix: All at Once, All
for Nothing and TIk Wound;
and Slomiy Monday, a
''strange'* one-act wntten by
UCLA student J. Anthony
Nino will be at Immaculate
Heart College at noon today, t
pm tomorrow and 2 pm Sun-
day. The bill also includes
another one -act. Admission is
free
Continuing at the Dorothy
Chandler Pavilion is TIm Bail-
er's Wife surring Topol The
Ahmanson has Neil Simon's
Cattfomia initle and the Mark
niptt Forum, is presenting its
four dramas ih repertory.
Speakers Program Proudly Presents
t
Dr. Margaret Mead
World's Renowned
Anthropologist
Monday^ May 24
12 Noon
Grand Ballroom
SpontOf«i by A»ociated Students Speakers Program/Student Legislative CounHl
Reg fee referendum postponed by SLC
By Rotert Walrii litlBMMHBIBHB^ "'^J^i^-i^ ^
DB Staff WffHv I^^^B^^^^^^K^ ^^^ nia^iraundifif^ provi
DB
The Student Legislative Council (SLC)
decided Tuesday to hold a stydent referendum
•■ a pnpMud rcfistrauon fee increase
ialL UHlaad of iMMIime dunng the rei
af jUia quarter. .
The referendum, which if parsed would
eaahk Chancellor Charles E. You^ to petitiM
tiM Regents for a S5 per student increase in reg
(in the fornr of a student indenture tec),
raise five of the eight million dollars
to build the propoaed Joha Wooden
Spons and Recreation Center. This indenture
fee would be almost identical to the fee
tiy being assessed lo pay to the Acker-
Student Union and would likewise be in
effect for a forty-year period.
During the four-and-a-half hour nteeting.
which began three-quarters of an hour late, the
ments of a set of "undieiiUndings" under which
the probated center would be built were under
debate The '^undersundings** were included in
a letter sent by Young to SLC.
The "understanding" receiving the most
ob|€CUons from SLC otoMerned the degree *of
itadaat control of the design approval and use
of the Center.
Reading frDip the ChanceUor*s letter. Don
Lesser. Finantial Supports Commissioner,
attacked the ^'advisory to the Chancellor**
hmiuuon on a proposed Board of Governors
that would oversee the
A »
•rSb ?*uaBaraundiQg^ provides for vary
questionable ttvieat control al the building.
and 1 think we should seriously caaiider that
before putting this to the students**
Lesser was joined by Donald Findley. execu-
tive director of ASUCLA. in his appfaiMl al
the ^^understanding "
This depends on the cooperative. frKndly
benevolent nature of the liniversity Ad-
minialraiioa. which has in the pMl been the
case But in terms of effective, perpeiua^l
control, I don*t think that'fi what you're lookinc
forr ^
John Sandbrook. the C'hancellar*s repre-
sentative at the meeting, defended the wording
of the **undcrstanding.s*' as **juit a
that doesn't come into play
ChartM E. Young la ask i«f tai
that **Thc language in the letter (»ent by Young
outlining the 'understandings**) was based on
previous experience gained in running the
campus over the l<ist 15 years." but was
••obviousK •negotiable."
After the vote was taken, hindlev, who litt
ex officio on the Council, suggested that an
opinion survey be held on the desirability of a
Sports and Recreation Center and reg tee
increase. This would give the Chancellor a
choice between "the survey in ^pnng or the
referendum tn fair* to be tised as iiiiliiiaiiiif
the Willi ngjness of students to a«nai thcmiielves
a fee
However, due to a lack of a quorum when
the suggBHion was made, no afltiail aauld be
taken.
Ucla Daily Bruin
Voluma XCVIII, Numter 34
UnAvBCBlty of Callfomla, Lot Ang^lM
I ^
Thuraday, May 20, 1976
- - [ ' ' — ^ ■"•• "■" ' — = pJ : : — .
Administration accepts night tram proposal
By Holy Karti;
. DB Stair Writer
Night owls will be able to
ride a campus tram a|ter dark
starting next fall, according to
Administration offidalt who
a proposal wntten bv
Open air vehicles will start in fall
ii
student goverhment officers
According td Hugh Stocks.
administrator of communica-
tion and transportation ser-
vices, at least one and possibly
more open-air vehicles will be
run. Trams might also be used
during the day. he said
The triggering action for the
project Was uken by the stu-
dent government, which was to
submit two reports to the Ad-
ministration One report was
evaluation of last spring^
UCP student senate protests
enrollment on Yom Kippur
By Mfta
- 1
Tbe ASUC Davia Senate nnimmnarty
paaaed a laiolotion Monday ooademalag fhe
Davis administration for thetr "insenaitivity**
in making the first day of the 1976 fall
quarter (October 4) coincide with Yooi
According to Vice-ChanceHor Elner Laarm,
•CodhMtt muit akftm up on the first day of
■ciiaol in aiiar to avoid Wmmg dropped frooi
overenroUed daiaet.
ASUCD. taaatr Speaker Leonard Iven-
taadi laid three Jewiah students conplained
to the adminiftration upon finding out about
the scheduling conflict. According to
Iventoach, the administration said they laid
owHiaakai thg ooaflict when planning tbt
academic calendar.
Purcell said the three would stin go to the
meeting to explain what has hap-
Vice-CbaMaUor Laam explained the
ministration*! pmk^tm taying, "The position
we have taken is that we have taken Mapa to
MWire that aapane wtio is not here on the
first day of daaa will not be penalized in
terms of their getting into the daat.**
Learn said the procedure Ifor studenu to
iaaure a plaoe ia a dais fs to give the
inatnictor written notice that the student will
be abaent Otherwiic • ftateit **may be
automatically drappad by tlK prolcaaor.**
Laam said. He explained that tlHi is normal
procedure at the beginning of any qaarter
Tkt three studenu, Bhaa Purcell, Mark
FriaiflMn aad Greg Sterling, are in San
the UC Regenu E^mmmml Pi
agendk. but yesterday afternoon Regent
DeWitt Higp
it forth before
a coapflwaiK which h
latirfaciary. Purcell said the
ttill uaiasMad am wint u> do, but that
Other itcpa Uk administration baa taken.
aooM^iiig to Laanik ^f9n to send aaiai to
tbt fwaity inforauqg tbem of tbe wlBaliaiL
Additionally, notices were plaaad ia the
catalog aad ia tbe Cal Aggk uiformiBg
of thit procedure, be «id
said lasAag n6tes to tbe faculty
was aot a good solution. ''The admini-
stntioo camol tell tbe htaitf what to do
Tbere's no gfaarantee tbe ftaiilis will com-
"If the adaHHBlration is
wbaf guarantee 4o me have
tbat the ^Mafdty won't be insiiasilisi^
Iventoschj'said that Hillel, a campus
Jewiab myiiiMiun. aad tbe
theu sopport of the studenu ooflnion
system, which used one vehicle
and grew m ridership from 200
people per week to more than
900 per week, according to the
evaluation which finally
reached Stocks last month
Also received last month was
A ^Oposal for next fall that
envisioned one tram making a
night circuit around the cam-
pus The Administration will
pay for the system next fall.
but funding after that is un-
clear
The funding is made even
less clear by the poasibility that
the Intern could include more
than one tram, dependmg on
the avaihibility of funds and
the resulu oi a campus trans-
portation study to be done in
the next five months by the
private firm oi Gruen Asso-
ciates.
Stocks said that no matter
how many vehicles are asad,
student government will pro-
bably be askad to pi^ at the
rate levied for the running of
ju* one tram.
Undergraduate Administra-
tive Vice Prasiiaat John
Schroeder questsaaad atetber
sls^aals should have to pay
tm any portion. Tbe origiaal
intent was for Student LifgUa-
tive Council to help fund last
spring's tram aspenment. but
not to make josm funding a
pemaaent arranpeaettt if tbe
experiment was a sanpa,
Schroeder said.
He added that he would
have to e&plam to next falTs
studem giiwiiiwim tbat toul
Admimstration sapport woiM
probably end in Decerobof.
Stocks mJA, m ftiitfi
Nouri^c for fall will be the
is not yet sure of all the avail-
able monetar> sources Further
in the future, he added, it is
conceivable that another pro-
ject could take priority over
the night tram
Schroeder said that salety-
wise, the tram is a high pri-
ority project under the parking
fine fund, but it could be set
aside by some projects if other
criteria were used He believes
the Coliseum rooter bus could
be considered more important
because it benefits a wider
campus population than a
night tram and helps to aaae
air pollution
However, of alt possible pro*
lecu. the night tram is the only
one without an alternative
funding souroT. and for this
reason the tram should be a
number one priority, he ex-
The options in running a
tram system are endless in
number. Slacks said Whether
one vehicle is run or a more
extensive dby and night system
depends on the ffoaasH
tions of tbe Gruen As-
tociatas study In viewii^ po-
tential sites for campus parkii^
lots, the study will alao aaiass
tbe Bead ftM* other fanas of
campus traaaparution.
One faailion is tbe route of
the tram, which last spring
lowing Circle Dnve.
government officers
the tram concluded that
riders traveled from the
to tbe University Research
Ubaary aad from tbat Itbcary
to soronty row. ■* — ^ ^'-^
pbrnaan must
whom tbey are
a fall route.
I
I
psripbsry if tbe URL
I.
Anyone InterMtod in holding a r#-
spontibia position on the 1976-77 Blood
Drive CommtttM, ptoase call 82S-1484.
DATSUiy
"'Acres of Datsuns
student, faculty, and alumni
fleet discounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
i-1133 *
ff
Eisberg moves to
^ . ^
NSA
I -ty Chrk Paintcrl
Dl Staff Hhter
i.lan Eiiberg. ihc incumbent NatiooiiJ Student Af-
socution (NSA) rcprescnutive, is trying to eliminate his
position as he pr^Mmaed in bis campaign platform
Receiving 63 per cent of the votes cast for that position,
Eisberg defeated Ivan lUiiick to become the NSA repre-
sentative for the second consecutive year
Eisberg said he is doing all he can to tee thanhf NSA
SLC post IS abolished He said SLC has added the question
as a referendum lo be put before UCLA students on June
3rd and 4th. If the referendum fails to receive the required
two-thirds vote in favor of abolishing the position, Eisberg
said, "*! would consider resigning"
{Continued o« Faff 6)
A-1 AUTO SERVICERS .
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27S-7641 656-6225
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Afiftrican f»#r<f >»nfcAfw»iaifa
• • •
• • •
• • •
• • •
Services to be
held for Zeldis
Dr Louis • J Zeldis. the
assistant d<pan of Student af-
fairs for the School of Medi-
cine, died last Monday of a
heart atuck at the age of 64
Zeldis was also a professor
of medicine and the vice-chair-
nMin ol the department o(
pathology
A service will he held in his
memory today at \ M) at the
MPt Auditorium, Room C8-
183. Center for the Health
Sciences. In lieu of flowers, the
family requests that contri-
butions be sent to the I oui.s J.
Zeldis MD Memorial Fund
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Volume XCV1II Numbar 34
Thurtday. May 20 1976
Pubt»»h0d •¥0ry MM*d«K during th^
during hOka»y»
_ hottomya and ^m
amirmtton period: by ttf ASUCUk
CommunicaUong Bomrd 309 Wmat
wood PImza. Lm Angmtm; Cmlitomm
90094 Copyright 1979 by m»
ASUCLA CommunidatTOnt ^gjTg"
S^ond cIMi potm^putd at tha Log
Angafa Poaf Offiea
lf»-CliM
Jim
Editor
Patrick HMly
Anna Young
Aastelani ■uainaaa Martagtr
Susan Kana
\
Editors
Erie Mmndm
Aac« Short
Paul SigrioreHi
G#bft Outnn,
Michaiki Duval, assttuint
EtfNoftol Olaacton
If 6 ftoraon
fmnk Staiiworth
Sporto EdHort
Marc Oallins
Stuan. S«i¥ar»ia«r
indai
Tof»y Pvyaar
Aaalstant IndvK E<
Adam Parfrey
Aaaoclata Indai EdHort
Hommrd Pomwr — On Campus
Laura Klomar — T
Makaup Editors
Brandy Alexander
Luaarr* -Cunningharr
Brett Holler
Art DiraelBr
Mtchaei Lee
Copy
David Whftney
Maiy Bolh Murrill
Cawipua CvacilB EdMor
Jane Wigod
Lmaa Ko^elit
Cathy Fiahman
MMie Kurtz
Joyce OaiulJ
Nancy Liiienthal
WIra EdMor
Richard Nelaon
Wrttart
MNia finrngotd
Bob Halwf
Jaque Kam,>achroor
Hunter Kaplan
Jaff Laiar
Michoel Sondheimer
Patti Sullivan
Joe V<
Staff
Priaciila
Sue Miller
FREDASIAIRE GENEKELUT
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a french jean store for men & women
Storewide Clearance Sale
50«/o - 75% d«
LAST WEEK SALE ENDS SAT. MAY 22
In West wood
940WeMwoodBlvd
Phone 477-6867
Mon.-Fh. 10-9
Sun ^^ ^
Sees little accident risk
f
"T
Prof quells nuclear fears
f
^
TiM riikft of s ttydesr
poivcr pieitt aoddeot have
diaiorted aad ate taeU ia
to otlKT types of
Proimui N<
of Ihc
•etu lofthute of Technology
(MIT) aeid Tuesday
KasiDussen, head of MITs
nuclear enfineehng
mem, said, **I gness we*re
ly the victimi of our own
safety rweai,*' and that thu
record has confused the public
shout reactor aocidenu.
Speaking to about 75 people
in Young Hall, Rasmussen ex-
plained the fuidings of a three-
year, $4 million study he con-
ducted m finding methods to
oseasure the potsibk nsl^ of
nuclear power plants.
Ne fatalMts
-We*vc never had an acci-
dent at a nudav power plant
that resulted in lenous over-
heating.** he claimed, adding
there ha«e,^en no (aulitie&
associated with commercial
power plants which produce
electricity.
However, Rasmussen con-
ceded short-term effects of
ifscaping radiation could "pe-
tentially include cancer, ge-
netic defects and thyroid prob-
lems But according to his
study,* 'nhey are too small to
erasure.**
The overall aim of the so-
called *^Jtasmussen Report"
was to estimate the hazards of
operating a riuclear power
plant in comparison to hazards
cf other potential accidents*'
Using slide charts, Rasmussen
exhibited comparisons of auto-
mobile, industnal and airplane
fatalities to those of reactors
and Slated. "In perspective, the
risk IS much smaller
Airpiaat craUi
"We [the public] don't think
an airplane crash could kill
IMii people." he said, "but
with nuclear power plants we
think they could **
In addition. Rasmussen
claimed that the possihilay of
a meteorite hitting the earth
and IriHii^ 100 people is al-
beit the mmt as a reactor
Ib reapeiHe to quaptidns
etevt Pffepaiiiion 15» tlir ^-
daar safeguard imtiative on the
June 8 halloi, RaawMen le-
phed, **lt*s a had law. I dont
think it*s m iipnal appiinh to
the nuclear safity question."
Rasmussen rnrnplaiaad about
the Union of Conoacued Sci-
entisu "distorting the rkks of
nuclear power plinu in Utt
public's mind We should be
up to our earji in conservation,
but we can't |et aO the energy
w« wmd from conserving/*
Should an accident
the consequences of
radioactive materials would
depend on factors hke wiai^
rain and a high inversion con-
dition. These would determine
whether the accident wOuld
*'nm9e from nochii^ to a sen-
eus accident^ Rasmussen said
To maaaure the leaciioui of
relMaad radioactive particles,
weather models have been huih
which observe how the parti-
cles wottkl both disperse aad
dilute.
Nudaar pewu plant prob-
Icma eriae from two forms of
undercoohng, Rasmusaik said,
either a breaking of the cool-
ing system or its failure to
operate properly
Today *s reactoit^ iMse a
'^negative power coefficienf
which automatically shuts the
reactor off if it tries to over-
heat However, many readers
retain up to five per cent of
their heat and large amounts
(CouthHMd eu Fagf 14)
In the beginning . . .
There was the prayerboolc
Shabbat Service
]
Servicea
6:30
on Creation
Friday. Mey 21
Dmnm
7:30
HMIel 474-1531
900 Hilgard
g
i
r
i
Proorap)
^
,^ *-
SUMMER WORK
Earn $2,500
must be:
hard worker
able to leave California
reliable
Call 479-4139
for appointment '
i
No Experience Necessary
Acsardlae la ISIT prof«Mor Morman 11
tH« posaieimy of a
GltMimnK pillar t»f c<in
, stam V ir^ .i chanjinrnj
w»>rld fht* Jc'Hi|;n t»t
thi* Nch«H»i»cr Is loM
^ 'back m thcr dim p.iM of Siiin
Anavian ^l;u^ crjh»nian»hip
Until I8*>^. it rrmaincd nam<
leiUk. when Auittralian saiK>r>
adopted It AS thr regulation
hecrr quantity Kir youilf leatnfn
(A V4 pint mug was tcx) much.
a 1/2 pint glaAH t(H> lirtle ) So rhi
wMP'WiMst.lxiiiDm V
glaM wah chrwtrned \m 1 1 1 1 i u
namft;»^a ship midway betw^'fi^
a cururr and .1 fngmr ' ' "^
The !ichtH»ni*r haitn'r fkimv* H
a IcH And nei thcr ha>C
Bt'cr It H <vrill made with prt iiuuiii
ingrcdufi i iiheniagc of
brewing exprnrncr that never
changes A great beer dotupi't
change Olympia tK'ver will
y
teioir
B lie
A Classical System
At A Top 40 Price
i^c t.«>Wt. k. i> W
..^ t^U L k t 4. t
..L : : - U &. t. k
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4. LI Li w V ..
^ Lx k.L u L k
- L k L
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. LlLI L k u
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u k I L L L L •
r
*
1^
I i 1 i t
4H>-niw»
23lStAM/Mk
990
aum
JUST
E
^}^
IE CARROLL'S
Le Chemata
L
/
Women's European Clothes
at Good Old American Prices
[■
9056 Santa Monica Blvd.
(Directly across from the Troubadore)
I
Los Angeles, California 90069
276-4905
Open from 11:00 a.m. to 7 p.m. ev^ day
■ Clustfd Sundays
1 .... -^^.^.i I > 1 1 iin ii,rt I
t 1
I
m
:\
.ft,
tir«d of yMtorday't hair?
HAIR TODAY
For what's hafipMing now
styling for mmn #nd womon
Jfty Roddlng's Jtilrmac;^ products
For appointmont call 478-6151
tuM. thru sat
3.00 - OFF first Kaircut
— witf) tMs ad
1105 Giandon Ava Wastwood Villaga
-/
V
%
THE BUSINESS ADVISORY COUNCIL
•f we InlciiijCioffijrf Student Center
ill weekly Seminar
JOSEPH BAIRD
Prei . Occidental Petroleum
''How Difficult Is It To Conduct Business Today
Domestically - Overseas f*"
Thunday, h4ay M
Dinncf6:Jt
7:
All accredited students. American and foreign, invited.
INTERNATIONAL STUDtNT CENTER
1023 Hilgard, Westwood
jt>^one for r<?>ervattons 477-4587
ONE STEALS.
ONE KILLS.
ONE DIES.
L^
^?» .,
\
<V
MARDM^^^diCK
MANDO NICHOLSON
THE MISSOURI
•BREiKS'
I
UJJOmLiJTNCM mmm
■«.»»»fT« ••OM«*4.iM*rMif »00«»l
• T.I
Starts FRIDAY, MAY 21
PLAZA. Westwood • 477-S0S7
PtX. HoHywopd - 4S4.6113
IM ^aamaum in i^ c? mo cintinila br m lm Aipin %n-mri
•sTTEo itntTs TmMi » 4232 m WYS HWE-a idi Hm m-n\%
H awnawi-a. e bnh 44M4a
u MBH MNi-a u ian niwr
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Ewtai fiiiiw8ntm
ENCMO ElCMt 784 8233
U MIMOA ij Miraa fli 2888
FOX Oiitri 493401
VtU8l Mil^r^SMiB
ai-7881
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J
Mentors ac^Jlm ate freshmen
By CarsI
I- .
Da Staff Wrii8r
r^i ptte to the lize and divert»-
liaKl nature of thk Brobdinf-
aaplD campus, entenas *^^
deott often feel like the LiUi-
putiont uk Guiliver's Traveb
tJMir first year. But now thaw
18 a progran to help acclimsia
tho8e fraahaim who face prob-
lenM of perK>nal, social and
aradamic adjustnient.
The Mentor Program ii
compnaed of 600 concerned
UCLA factihy, staff members
and upper division students,
**people With human skills who
ftt together with students dur-
ing a transitional time,** said
Edward^ Anderson, director of
Academic AdiouHement and of
the mentors.
' Anderson described how the
Idea for the program germi-
nated hut spring at a breakfast
with Jules Zentner. assistant
dean of Letters and Science.
Stadaart alici^tkMi
''We happened ito be dis-
cussing that there were not
enough people in student
service roles, and how Iliident
alienation is prevalent during
the first year. Students also
don*t come to see their pro-
fessors,** he said.
Given food for thought, An-
derson and Zentner were
motivated to begin a summer
recruitment of mentors Work-
shops were conducted to give
the participants an overview of
the pro^ram*s expectations.
The initiators encountered
many probicms, however, in-
cluding financial ones.
**The program,** Anderson
explained, **is done by volun-
tary work. Vice-chancellor
John C. Ries has been very
helpful though, and given us
80|Br funds for a telephone
and secretarial assistance But
we have no full-time help.**
Lack of communication was
another sore spot for the new
program, according to its di-
rector ^'Wc had a lot of dif-
ficulty getting students as-
signed to the 280 mentors we
had recruited. We couldn't
serve all 2,000 entering fresh-
men. Since commuters don*t
always hav^ a direct tie with
the University, we decided to
concentrate on them," Ander-
son said.
Yet, the addresses on the
hand-picked applications of the
commuters were often incor-
rect because mentor volunteers
only had access to applications
''Whatsoever passeth be-
yond the bounds of mo-
deration ceases to exert a
beneficial influence/'
— Baha'i Faith
For further info, call 394-7971
<?
VIONNE
NOW THRU SUNDAY MAY M
/"V^ Shuberr Theorie
i({J /Century City
aOX OFFICE
OPEN
dated November, 1975.
**Wc were working ^rith lisu
of students who were offered
admission, even though some
weren't enrolled for fall," An-
derson exclaimed, adding, ^Wc
sent out letters describing the
Mentor Program, but many
studentk didn't respond. We
didn't know if they were in-
terested. After all, they had
been bombarded with hterature
already.**
Diaaacluintcd
Understandably, he com-
mented, many of the mentors
became disenchanted but less
than 10 deserted. Fifteen hun-
dred students were eventually
assigned by fall, though it ai
not known how many actually
participated. Anderson said by
June he will know the results
of a survey sent out to
**aMaiea8** for their evaluations
and suggestions
In addition, Andasaon said.
"This year is going to be more
imitive because we*re estab-
lishing a network of com-
munication. We*ve already re-
cruited 600 mentors and we
welcome more So far they run
a whole gamut of types, from
lab technicians and doctors to
professors and vice-chancel-
lors.** 1
To spark the interest of in-
coming freshmen, the Mentor
Program is empiovmg a lighter
system, Anderson i^aid. Letters
inviting students to join will
only be sent to those who have
returned their statements of
intent to register. The letter
will ''ask the students to return
a card with their phone num-
(ConttnMcd on Page 1 7)
Think
For those trying to deal
with problems of their
sexuality . . .
An informal, discrete
dinner sponsored by
three fellow UCLA stu-
dents will b« heldlhls
Friday evening off cam-
pus.
For information contact
the Gay Counseling Hot-
line: 477-7fifTn
A Living Legend
SHLOMO
CARLEBACH
One Night Only
Beverly Hills
High School
SNDAY. MAY 23
7:30 P.M.
it Qan. Admisaion
13 Stlld8Nl8
For group ratat. call
\
T
Court
r
* Dl Staff Et^
The California Suprenae
Court will very shortly <
the case of Allan Bakke,
claiflos to have been ui
stitutionally denied adi
to the VC OavM
school
3 decide on 'revereen^cTsfn* case
Davis special admissions suedl
Bakke is claiqiing reverse
acrimi nation.
The university is defending
8paaal admission programs to
iU schoob, programs dfflignrd
to insure disadvantaged stu-
dents, usually minorities, a
chance at entrance to the
school.
The Supreme Court heard
oral arguments on the case
March 18 of this year, and win
announce their decision -very
soon, probably this momh,**
Gary Morrison, a UC attorney
said. Morrison was among the
UC counsels who argued the
I m csBse was appaaiad to
Suprcnie Court tram a
erior court decision entered
March of 1^75. j
In that decision, the court
ruled against the university
''The special admiMons psp-
graiq at Davis violates the
Fourteenth Amendment to the
United States Constitutioa,
Article 1, Saction 21 of the
California Constitution and the
determine if the applicant aa grain with a GPA as low »
fil!*?!"^"!*!?^* accordiag to HI.** Manker aMad.
th8 UC bnef The chairman of the special
Apphcanu in the spadal admissions committee, after
^wmammm progran are rated the interview for entraaoe to
FedcnU Civil 'Rights Act of ruled.
1964.*' according to the sup- -ru
-^ ^^ 1 his special admissions com-
ptogram ought not he a
on now.
Even if the special adaia-
sioos program at Davis is rvlad
unconstitutional, this could
have aiany different effects,
depa*d«f on the wording ei
^, ^ . ^ ^ ^ — most fMmising applicanu the decision and upon what
plicants in the general ad- to the regular admissions cook laws the decision is based ac-
program, F Leshe mittee. Dr George H Lowrey. cording to UC Berkeley hiw
the superior court associate deaa and director of professor David Feller
admnsioas at the Davis mc^
ical schooL said
lion purpoaas only the medical school, makes an
other appbcants in this oral aad wntten report about
Manker. the superior court
judge who heard the case.
erior court decision.
Under the Davis plan, of the
100 phuxs avaikhk in each
year's entering daaa, there are
16 places reserved under the
special admissions program.
The 16 places are liUad by a
Special Admissioas Commit-
tee, made up of faculty and
ftudenu from the Regular Ad-
missions Committee.
Each application is
mittee has the power to review
applicanu who would other-
wise have been summan^ le-
jected
nJttder tha faneral adnw* , __
iions program, an applicant „.„ •
will not even be considered *^
who has a GPA below 2.5.-
Manker said.
**The court nught say that
^^ . iay adoussioas program to any ■
The regular admissions com- school at the University, grad- i
mittee has final say and may mite or undergraduate, which '
confirm, reject or request more — ^ —
infnrniatiaa on the special ad-
missions applicant.** Lowrey
makes a distinction based on ?
race, is invalid.** Feller said 1
On the other hand, the court "
could be very specific. "They 5
The special adnussions pro- could say that this particulaf ^
_ am is ostensibly open to **all program is not proper, but
economically orj^ educationally that does not rule out taking
disadvantaged ^tudents,** ac- into account race.*' Melville
taged it
cording to Lowfney
Manker ruled otherwise
Aim at stronger voice
-Yet in the entering class of ,^^, .^.^ wmc.wwc
by the ficultv chair^aTi; "^;'^^PP*^t* were admitted noting that -no white student
oy me laculty chairman to m the special admissions pro^ has been admitted under this
program since its inception in
1969
Nimmer, UCLA law professor
said
In fact, if the court makes a
narrow ruling, saying that the
Davis program is iinrnnslilu
tional but that other special
Camp
••This special admissions pro- admissions programs could be
gram discriminates in favor of legal, it nuy give advux or set
mbers of minonty races and
for a new type of
nst members of the white program, Nimmer said
By LesHe Gchcr
DB Staff Ripastai
The May 12 United Veteran Association
(UVA) meeting was spesinl because it was the
first general meeting the organization has held
in oyer a year.
"This is more people than I've seen at other
UVA meetings,** said Susan Mehon, first vice-
president to Student Legislative Council (SLC>.
Last quarter. Melton froze UVA funding
^^louse she feh the organization was, inactive
and non-represcntativc of veterans.
Funds were released at the beginning o(
spring quarter due to the msistenoe of con-
cerned veterans
The implication in Mehon's sutement is that
after months of inactivity, the UVA is emerging
as an organi/ational outlet for veterans* views
and concerns
According to Randal Wmtctr. UVA president,
the attendance of 14 at the May 12 meeting
wmar disappointing. There arc over 1,000
veterans on campus.
Lack of fnorum
During the meeting. Winter postponed the
planned elections for hwrk of a quorum (25
members) He read suggestions for changes to
the UVA constitution, but added. "We won*t
race.** he concluded
bother voting on them becanae there arc not
enough people.
**Biit the constitution isn*t really impoitam.
What*s imporunt is that there are vets who are
interested We (the UVA) can do thioas **
Winter said ^^^'
**Therc are people here who want to do
something,- said one member quietly, nervously
smoking -A veterans* organization should be
different from other organizations We
(veterans) are concerned with living day to day
— we should be a lobby group. It's frustrating.
Viet Nam vets are caught in a different
situation than Korean and WWII vets we
don't have the same love for the government.
Lots of things arc being screwed for us **
- Viet Nan
"Vict Nam was not a popular war, so the
sentiment of the country and the government is
to try to AM^rt the people who were in it,** said
Dmvc Glazier, an active UVA member
Many veterans arc bitter about delays in
work-study checks and their economic situa-
tions *i think that*s an imporunt interest for
veterans their money. It's as unifying as
Softball or anything else,** said one veteran
Another added bitterly. Tve almost never
(Continued <ni Page I a)
Since Bakke's case is han^
He also ruled the program considered under both Calif-
•*sets a quou m favor of racial ornia and US law. the dc
imnorities
Manker, however, went on to
cision could be unappealnhk.
If the cpim holds the pro-
rule that in ather of the two gram invalid under the Calif
years Bakke applied to Davis, ornia Constitution, "ThatTthc
he "would not have been ac- end of the matter; it cannot be
ccpted for admission even if appealed ta the U.S. Supreme
there had been no specuil ad- Court because the ultimate
missions program.** For this
of what complies with
reason, the judge refused to the California Constitution is
order Bakkes admission to the Cahfomui i Supi^mc
DrnviM
Although Bakke originally
sued the Regents, the Regenu
also sued Bakke, filii^ a
comphunt
Court,** Feller said.
However, if it is ruled in
violation of the U.S. Constitu-
t»on« then the case could be
* to the U.S. Supreme
I he effect of this crosa- Court, which has the final say
complaint is *^o bnng the issue
of the legaUty of the special
admission program squarely
on federal matters, he said.
In order to rule m favor of
Davis, the court must sustain
before the court regardless of the special admissions program
whether the operation of the on both sUte and federal con-
program resulted in Bakke*s
faihire to be admitted.** the UC
bnef said.
*^It is conceivable that if UC .,. ^ p.^«„ v,u«ir
had not cross-complained, the either the sute or federal con
constitutionality of lU admis- stitution, Nimmer said
stitutions. Feller
Davis could lose the case on
constitutional grounds, how-
ever, if the program violates
Miniature computers could aid amputees
By Jeffrey Brown
Dp Staff Writer
Miniature computers con-
Uined within the body may
eventually aid poeple with arti-
ficial hmbs, according to
UCLA Professor Jon Lynum
of the Biotechnology Labor-
atory.
Lyman has been doing re-
search on artificial limbs for
over 25 years. He has akendy
utilized **mini-computer8**
about the ^size of a stereo
unit** to simplify the asova-
menu of amputees. However,
he said, the use of micro-
prooeseors would enhnnoe this
movemem because of its sanll
wee and versatility.
MicroprooBsaors, much hfce
those employsd in haind calcu-
lators, would eliminate the
rOoof— nKe ninvensanBa nv ntti^
fnal lihiHs, L3rnian said. Pre-
sently, a sapaaate set of con-
trols is naaiai for cnch limb
movement.
joim, thus enabling smooth,
coordinated movements, Lyman
explained. -The computer sup-
pbes the missing infonnation
that the nun can*t supply,** he
said.
Limbs iited with modular
microproceuors would be ''at
least no more difficult and
often easier^ to fit to amputees
than convemional types, ex^
piMid Lyman.
**A lot of neuromuscular
of the inability to transfer the
appropriate information on
control of the muadea,** Lyasan
said. Such injuries as para-
plegia may he corrected by
utilizing "jumpers** to com
tcansactions of the
chord, he exi
would include fitting and
training.
**The fact that it has tnfcsn
25 years to get this far reflects
pretty much the complexity of
the problem,** commented Ly-
■nn. He said that overall, he is
optimistic about sueeeas of the
research, but is alsn awnre of
the pitfalls and problems which
could arise **! don't expect any
rairades.'* Lyman added
Eventually, he said, **we
would really like to have a
Usi^f a pattern
system, micro
'*lt nuiy he a long way away
in the future,*^ Lyman laid
__lcomc
of an action, not ahout each
There are surgical pmnaanH in
connecting existing nerve
stumps to inputs and outputs
of nucropsmeaasnr oempntin.
Lyman estimated the coat of
nrtificial limbs usina micro-
procaisnn at a majuaMBi OMt
of S3000 to S4000. adding the
i
i
a—i.
'-^^ustrnm
WP^F-T^Pf' 'I I lijAl^l ■■■ L.. I
rimifci I !<»• -J.
1
I
M ASTFR 1HE ^QJECT GRANT GAME
CMME ** Hm to «i MMng. onc« on4^
yoM tiHi thaw In iit Mltaiii. yM
A STUATEGIC ytfTIKMCH
Mn^ Mfti MMh Dr Jwim L Comnm and krt him ilieiir you hoM^ to >M5TEII THE PRQiCCT GRANl
to iMm IM hpii fcom thto foniMr UC iaculiv mambar and FuM^
o^ dolMi gi 11 ■iiMi Mrti t>aaf by
dai and piMia tomem Mpni lo (bnd iNa
mining and conwrnmiv action pvapHW you wMiah lo ooMbet
miiw iiiij. May Mtlki wiH Dr Cnmnwyou>>(Utb«iniw«id. YC^ WlU-P066eS6FIMMWMrrHODSAND
TO SNARE CATEGORICAL FUNONC OFPORTlMmES You vnUI laam ho»»^ to ipat
hoif lo tum fopd idaas imo iu% lundad paolacli Hap* it tha UMagc aMMadi lo iPMtowiniiihIu in a
Lirtad babiM an |u« a iMv otf tha Amp you Mil laam
• Hou/ to ftnd bndi and ham k> ap^ ior
• Daciding vvhaf and vvhan lo paopeaa
• What to do if youra not ^fk^tik for fundi
• Honrio MffHa and pad^p yaur ■MBaBil I
•Minn and how to ipHMli Ilia Ubg agncy and id» Jo
• HoM' to be in tha knear about aiarilBbit fundi
• Datarmining if tha compitian for fundi w faar (or. ¥dwn to « tt out)
•HoM' lo dalarmmc wMhai your pro^act ihouid coii
H yew iMMb ai« cut/HoMT to niod%
Plan on ipandlng Wadnaiday. May 26lh «Mth Dr Jamaa L CnHanai and you loo m«II1
idaal appoftunity for iacuby. mif and iludanii to Mna up a iumniar proiact. do toma Hgnlftcant
OOrVT MISS THIS ONE Thtoniy Sk)ulhmm Cakfamta
Eisherg
■'/'
Hare Man
fupport vMOffhk«hlla com
WHAT T^IEY SAY. . .
-Haw VMiaai J. Suih«n S4. SaaMl«
UwMwntv
-MV Wailm Padflc UrawmMy
MaMii E Tong. Jr, Ralph FoMar MuMum
-Date 1 \fmn Butkk^ Oiahm Fbica DapMt
nwnt
Armuttm Ihe qumtton jmt m 1 famukm H in
Suiwi Gilrov SwaMpD Libwy SpMm
V/«rV MNb/ and of auffkwnt dgtaH to bt of
hmntpt lo pmfbwtanab MiNang ptwfc
-Cmq A Ramay. l>hD ffm- Chid of Staff
Rwaichi Vi^ HoipMal N«wingk>n CT
o/ MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME
Well utarth the mm md »f«ovwy / inumt»d
-nuwt R CttnphdIL 9lan Daador. Con
HifTwn for Haalth Dmmhpmtnt
li muti MN
-E^ktmd Wanton Anoatt Daactor of Stu
dant Aid. Untwiiaiv of AUnfM
£jKMW*if . ^pUKlca^ cufi|pftfnan|iMa. thottfht
ful daorfSrpiaMiaad
Jam** F CoihTH Alifnt Oaan. Eduoi
" Syracuw UntwrMty
(CoatiMMd frofn Page 2)
Eisberg said hit rriifglirr would cguic a tpecigJ ckction
in the fill lo fiU his pogl. ,
Even if he does not ceugn, Eisberg said he will not accept f
the Btipend which goes with the potiuon. He has acclbptgd a
stipend all this year, though
Eisberg said he decided the post should be abolished
dunng the coursf of his current term Traveling to an
annual NSA meeting in Washington, DC last August,
Eisberg sftid he was "^unimpressed ** He researched NSA
backgrovatf and found three main points to substantiate his
stasd for Ibc abolition of the post.
ONE TIME ONLY!
THE ECKMAN CENTER PRESENTS
"MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME"
AN INFORMATIVE. EYE OPENING AND HARD HITTING LIVE PRESENTATION
BY pR. JAMES L COSTANZAHaACK FROM A NATIONAL TOUR
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26th, 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
WALK FROM CAMPUS THE PLAZA THEATER 1067 glendon, westwood
ADVANCE
TICKET SALES AT ALL MUTUAL AGENCIES
Tir^KFT ^ INCLUDING 140 KERCKHOFF HAiX AND TRAVEL
SALES
SHOP INTERNATIONAL. 1355 WESTWOOD
BLVD. -ALSO AT ALL LIBERTY AND TICKETRON
AGENCIES.
BOX OFHCE OPENS WED./MAYd6tli AT 8:00 a.M.
mHmnwmmi t*»:«uMvft timim umpm m;
fTECIALUVE
Pla£SE^fTATlo^i
OP^ TIPiE ONLY
l!lfi
00
**We hsvnit belonged to NSA for nine of the last 10
years,** Ekbcrg said, **yet there is a representative with
voting powers on SLC.** He said UCLA has not been a
member since NSA was cavfht being funded, infiltrated and
directed by the CIA dunng *^he majonty of the years of the
1930's/' _
Eisberg said tiMHPe isc two other organizations to which
UCLA belongs and tca^ a representative They are the
National Student Lobby and the University of California
Student Lobby Neither representative has a vote on SLC.
A third reason to abolish the post, according to Eisberg,
is that the functions of an NSA represenutive could be
carried out **more professionally by the student body
president's office.
*'What 1 did could have been done by a general
representative,** said Eisberg. "*Vm proud of what l*ve
accomplished, but . . . it*s a waste of student registration
fees**
Eisberg said the abolition of the NSA post is not
necessarily permanent. He said that in the future, if UCLA
were to rejoin NSA and s need for a representative on
SLC presented itself, the post could be rje-created.
Memqcance
^ wiaiiiiaiB wmMri
fk\mi Pan (PI §)
(WHITE HEAVEN IN HELL) p
ZATOICHI CONSPIRACY
' (Final Part)
id.^
22 Id 31
TOHO LA BRfA iMfATR^
CHINESE RLM FESTIVAL
MAY 21, 22, 23
7:30 p.m. each evening
No Admission Charge
Friday, Melnitz 1409; Saturday, Rolfe 1200;
Sunday, Melnitz 1409
FRIDAY
OPENING NIGHT SPEAKER: Dr.
Paul Pickowicz. Dept. of History
UCSD
TOPIC: "Cinema. Cultural Change.
and Politics In China"
FILM: "From Victory to Victory"
(2 hrs.)
PANEL DISCUSSION
SATURDAY
FILMS:
People's China" (20 min.)
Educated Youth to the Coun-
trysMfle (25 mIn.) - .^.,
"The Sparkling Red Star" (2 hrs.)
PANEL DISCUSSION
Ml
«<|
SUNDAY
FILMS: 1 '
"Ode to the Yimeng Mountains"
(45 min.)
"New Landscape of the Red
Flag Canal" (45 min.)
"Peking Acrobatic Troupe" (30
min.)
"Children of the Grassland"
(45 min.)
PANEL DISCUSSION
f
' CO-SPONSORED BY: International Chinese Film Festival Group;
Program Task Forca
COORDINATED WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF: The Office of Experimental Educa-
tional Programs and Campus Programs and Activities Office. Memt)ers of the
Division of Student and Campus Affairs
P'lma Supplied by Cluh tnr Untimtaamrtrtinf] r.h.na anH I ic-r>K;^, Piroplni rrlond^r...
'r-^'
norr
Fundraiser for Art Council
ThicJves'^Market Friday
Members of the UCLA Art CawKil art;
preparing for their ninth biennial Thieve*t
Market to be held this Friday and Saturday ia
the Century City parking structure
The tale of donated itemi. ranging fron»
jewelry and clothing to art work, antiques and
furniture, constitutes the councifs sole fund
raifcr. according to Nancy Berfer, chairman of
the event.
The Aft Cotmcil, whoieaaahership is ope«
to
anyone with an intereic tn the arts, lends its
support to the UCLA art commumty through
the Thieves' Market proceeds. Among the
programs they sponsor arc annual scholarships
for art students, special exhibitions in the
Frederick S. Wight Gallery (siich as the current
Japanese show), and special lectures and
acquisitions for the galkry, sculpture garden
and art department.
The council asks only that the donations bc^
useable However, Bergcr said, they have
received many outstanding Hems, including
clothing from Naulie Wood Wagner and Mrs
Johnny Carson and antiques from Anne
Baxter.
Volunteers are on hand to pick up donated
items, and full-value taa deductions are given
Merchandise is collected during the entire
two-year period between the sales gad u stored
in warehouses provided by the Broa4way
^yrtment stores. .aiid^Great Wigterg Savii^
aiw Loan Assoctatton
Marilyn Dirkson. a council member in
charge of collecting the doagiiaaa, said ihat
thu long period between sato allows them to
collect more merchandise as well as items of
greater value.
Dirkson compared the Thieves* Market to an
estate sak, saying that buyers can find some
real bargains on valuable it^ns She added that
the sale has been very saaeiMful m past years
DoroshcfT
Ecology group growing
By C.A. ConneMy .
DM Staff Writer
Sunficld Ecology Organiza-
tion a nine-month-old Santa
Morjica group, is just cstah-
hshing Its "pcoplcpowcr" base
as an environmental research
and education organization,
according to its executive di-
rector. Joe Hutchins
Sufifield IS hoping to initiate
a free door-to-door collection
of recyclables, a free newsletter
for all residents <>f Santa
Monica dealing with topics
such as how to conserve energy
and to estabhsh a "lotal com-
prehensive library that will be
full of environmental infor-
mation," Hutchins said. The
non-profit group also wishes to
provide programs, for outside
orgamzations including films,
lectures and field tnp«
**This is an action program,**
Hutchins said. **We don't wish
to be political lobbyiils."
Hutchins emphasized com-
munity participation. "We're
also trying to encourage par-
tictpatioh from students,** he
said
**Rather than being anti-anti-
anti, we want to esublish good
rapport with the community.*'
Hutchins said.
The director pointed out
that before elections, the rpcm-
bers of the student population
m^ be involved with legis-
lation and issues dealing with
ecology, but after the ballots
are in, they may feel hke a
""rebel without a cause We feel
they can become viabk in the
proaraak** said Hutchins.
itcMarchtng issues, pre-
pafing and teaching environ-
curncula for ele-
tiientary and junior high stu-
' dents and creating the pro-
fessional-appeanng work that
IS needed for publicity of the
ecology program arc examples
of desired Jktudent contribu-
tions, said Hutchins
There are five people on the
board of directors presently,
from a membership group of
fifteen jthat help put as often as
they can. Hutchins saui, Some
of the members of this group
were involved with the first
attempt at an ecology group m
Santa Monica
**The Santa Monica Tra^
Bnga4e initiated a trial run of
the door-to-door trash col-
lections, it was primarily of
newspaper and aluminum."
Hutchins said
The group did not have the
right equipment to make the
venture feasible, said Hutchins.
^ 1 tie members are now going to .
try it again '"with a little more
fervor," Hutchms said.
The Sunfield group is
waiting for the aty's decision
on which environmental or-
ganization will be granted
funds and support for col-
lecting the recyclable goods
from the community.
The . canwip from such a
gram would be u»cd to provide
the community with continued
free information and programs
""The Environment: An En-
dangered Species," IS an on-
going film and lecture series
which the group is sponsoring,
Hutchins said The May 26
profram is ""Nuclear Energy:
The Curse or the Cure,** aad
will feature two movies.
Story corrected
Patila Richards, a junior m conpanuive literature at
use and Jan Pnw, a mvaii^ major at Cal Sute LA,
contributed to the article, printed yesterday, entitled
"^International Women's Conference.** The article was only
attributed to Nadine Wildman
FOREIGN
STUDENTS
Foreign students wishing per-
mission for off-campus summer
work and Extension of Stay should
submit applications to OISS, 297
Dodd Hall by June 8. 1976. These
applications will be taken to the
Immigration Service by a memt>er
ot the DISS staff.
'"Energy, the Nuclear Alter-
native,** and ""Fifteen Against
Proposition Fifteen."
Program speakers include
Dale Bridenbaugh. one of
three nuclear engii^eers who
resagnad from General Electric
in protest of the lack of ade-
quate nuclear safe guards and
Dr. Paul Lorenzini, director of
the Breeder Reactor Prognun
for Rockwell International,
said Hutchins.
The group is currently
meeting at the Ecology Ceiiter
of Southern California, in
Westwood. with further in-
formation available at 828-
2867
fyiTterelSa vj
• difference!!! X
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CMTMt mmf •
Tipt tociMim tm Z
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mithi Mt #
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:
71M SoMlti
(2191 477-Jilf
• -_!ty
z
•
TYPEWRITER CITY
WESTWOOD
478-7282
Royal MC Std.
Adier Port.
Smith-Corona Elec.
Lloyds Printing Calc.
SALES and REPAIRS
479-7282
69
79M
9||00
1089 Gayley Av*.
L^-
■MHOiMM
1
ij
i
w
dalybnjirf
poim
.*.f
Your reg fee monies
by Pat Lyden and Julie Mebane
( Editor 'i ooTe; Lyden and h4ebine are members
oi the UC Lobby Anr^ex here).
Although the Campus Registration Fee Com-
mittees have finished their work for the '75-76
school year, the reg fee isftue is in no way
considered a dosed cm. Although nothing hlT
been definiteh^ decided, a reg fee increase could
be agreed upon at any tinf>e before September:
therefore, opinions on |he matter should be
activety voiced by students now in order to have
an effect on the decision. The intent of this lener
OPINION
is to inform students of what is happening with
their reg fees on the University and statewide
leveKv
First, many students are urnure of what their
fees are used for here at UCLA. A substantial
number of student programs and services, at least
in part, are funded by students' registration feet:
Campus Programs and Activities Office, Campus
Ceremonies, Recreational Facilities, Intramurals
program. Spirit Squad, Counseling Services,
Placement Center, Registrar's Office, Financial
Aids Office, Admissions Office and Student
Health, to name a few.
tabintly, there have been increasing requests
to raise reg fees, primarily for two reasons. Son>e
UC sdiook have been incurring deficits in their
operations of the above programs. Other cam-
puses have also embarked upon extensive build-
ing projects, so the reg fee increase is one way of
maintaining the necessary capital outlay for thmm
expansion programs! As a result, the Chancellors
from almost every UC campus have com-
municated to President Saxon's office a strong
desire for an increase to cover these costs, which
pou\d range from between $10 and $50 more per
quarter
The Student Body Presidents' Council and the
Student Lobby Office are not yet convinced that
we should oppose such arjt increase. If we do
move in this direction, ^however, it is our
responsibility to suggest alternative nr>ethods of
solving these financial difficulties One possibility
is to charge i/ser fees for some services. Student
Klealth is an example; although we have so far
enjoyed the luxury of free health care, charging a
fee might help alleviate the financial burden m
other programs. Another suggestion has been to
make cutbacks in some student-funded areas. For
instance, in the area of Student Services, reg fees
go to the offices of the Dean of Students, the
Vice-Chancellor of Student Affairs, the Registrar,
Admission^. Financial Aids, and to Counseling
and Placement programs. This area of adminis-
tration has been a major source of growth in the
last five years. Is it^all necessary? If so, should it
be fur>ded out oi reg fees? Perhaps the state
could become its source of revenue, or ma^te
part of our educational fees could be used for
this purpose.
The Student Lobby Office is involved in. the reg
fee issue to perform the funaions of intercampus
coordination as well as representation of stu-
dents' wishes before the Regents. We need to
know what you want. The systemwide University
administration has until now been neutral on the
issue of a reg fee increase* so students should
make their feelings known before a decision is
made. Your comments or suggestions should be
directed to the Chancellor's Office (2147 Murphy
Hall), the Reg Fee Committee (c/o UPC, 125
Royce Hall) or to the UC Student Lobby Office
(306 Kerckhoff Hall). No maner which way you
feel about the increase, the time is right to say so.
G<»»eu •TAT* ¥M«AlOllS
\(¥K9^ M 'S«llL*«ar His
{Jitir^ ^ y 1» kJ^r
pMLtfers. U^tmth i» y dl
i'elU ^M 4^ Ku€ fo
<k>^feuHK'pliue. A^isKe^
bu4 frcfcn ii^i'M^eA
himiclf.
Letters to the Editor
Nasser
IdHor:
I want to shed some light on
Imad Nasser's article in the
Bruin on May 18. In the first
paragraph it said, "... a few
Zionists at UCLA paid almost
$200 to the D B. (in an ad-
vertisement) to redefine iTion-
ism. They said Zionism is not in
any way a national liberation
moven>ent." Mr Nasser's quote
is so absurd that it is difficult to
be sure exactly what he's re-
ferring to. If he means the full-
page ad appearing on May 5,
the anniversary of Israeli inde-
pendence, then he is wrong
about two things. That isn't how
(Continued on Page 9)
I/u' ( CLA C('nt(^r for Afrn-Amoriran Studies, in cooneration
/III / \ I t ^ -M"^«'cilfi'M/tilf/f///>. f,
- - - ^ ,
lid the liit('nhUi()Hdl tthnic Arts Council
f)rt'st'nts
Special Tribute td
I
Concert in Royce Hall, Tonite, 8:00 pm
featuring
NAT ADDERLEY. AIRTO. ERNIE ANDREWS. DAVID AXELROD, WALTER BOOKEr!
LOUIS HAYES, FREDDIE HUBBARD, SAM JONES. IVIAYUTO. ROY IV^^Y,
BLUE MITCHELL. FLORA PURIM, JIMMY SMITH. ERNIE WAHS
Concert Tickets: $7.50. 6.S0. 5.50
All net concert proceecJs go to the julidn Adclerlv Memorul SchoKirship Fund
Tickets avaiiable now at the UCLA ( entral Ticket Office (825-2953i
FREE INSTRUMENTAL WORKSHOPS — May 21 &
__^_ 10:00 d.m. - 4:00 p.m., Schocnberg Hall
22
, More letters . . .
!• ■'
I Continued from Page H)
t^ ad was paid for. and th^t
isn't what it said
My name appeared as a sig-
naior oi that ad t contributed
one dollar, as I assume the other
JSO signators did, to use the ad
It a public expression of our
•pinions and our drearm. The
statement, clearly designated as
a belief, sani that Zmmbmu the
national liberation mpMMMBt of
the )cwish people The state-
ment concluded; "We hope for
the Zionism goal of peate and
justice for alt."
In our statement, we aftirnr>ed
ouf conviction 4©^ Zionism;
which includes hope ano sen-
sifivfty to ffie legitimate needs of
aH people m the Middle East. In
this way, we clarify our stance as
well as acknowledge the com-
plexity of the difficulties in that
part of the world.
Mr. r^aiief's article is not a
counterpart of our ad. He ex-
pimmed opinion as fact, untruth
as truth. He thus destroyed his
own credibility in the first para-
graph of his article. The re-
mainder of his opinion, imm "a
sober presentation of facts"
throufN various quotatiom irv-
tended to incriminate Zionism
with its own words But how can
anyone believe the article?
My only concern is for the
''eader who does not have the
tiftie to track down every one ot
Nasser's qudtes. H the first para-,
graph IS any indication, then the
reader would most likely find
the remaining quotes also to be
taken out of context or even
blatantly maccurate
Mr Nasser's article is clearly
intended to inflame rather than
to inform. Is this the way lo
achieve
all?
peace and jucHce lor
Pride House
I have been the psychological
consultam to tt^e Oaff of Pride
House since July, 1975. In that
capacity I have anended weekly
group and family therapy
sions there, as well as supervised
the staff in terms of their psy-
cho-social treatment of the ad-
•■•cent residents. All of this is
to say that I know the program
intimately, being well ac-
quainted with the staff and r
* idmts. I was very troubled by
the story in the Brum about
^riiie House for the two mafor
reasons that: 1) the story con-
tatfwd mayor elements of misin-
formation and 2) the story did
not begin to impart the atmo-
sphere of deep support, trust
ar>d involventent between staff
and residents that exists in Pride
Hoiim; in fact it intimated the
opposite
First and foremost. Pride
House has never in the
10 months I have consulted
there, had more residents living
on the premises than it was
licensed for at any time Second-
ly, the issue of benching was
disturbing in its ^Kesentation
>^es. the adolescents are
benched when acting-out oc-
curs. Would you expect no dis-
cipline or consequences for
negative, disruptive behavior?
The rK) consequences approach
was the approach by the parents
of the residents in Pride House
:X.
wMcb ultimately created the
necessity for these adolescents
to require long term residential
treatment Why do the Pride
House residents cooperate with
*"€^^ a consequence as
benching? Because it is part of a
staff response which is over-
whelmingly positive, concerned,
and irwohed with these adol-
eKents, which, for the most of
them is a new experience. I
must emphasize, however, thai
the writers of this story truly do
not' know this program at alt
given that benching or any dis-
ciplinary aspect of the program
is an infinitesimaljy small part of
the activities of Pride House.
Who confronts and is most -in-
tolerant of acting-oubt in thf
adolescent residents of Pride
House? The other adolescent
residems m 99 per cerw of the
situations I have witi
I cannot emphasi/t* enough
the positive. psycholofiainy
healthy therapeutic milieu at
Pride House The staff is the
most talented, sensitive and
caring group I have ever had the
pleasure to work with
David WeMKli, fkJD,
Profciiof of Medkal
Psycfcelogy
Nfl, UCiA C<
Uh HeaMi Sci
Gbriao
first methadone program in Los
AnpalM County This program
evolved into the f^Pl Drug
Abuse treatment pr^am cur-
rently featured »n several Brum
articles.
In C>ecemt>er '75, the Touche-
ifoss Performance Auditors (re-
ferred to in the May 12 Brum)
staled at their exit interview that
this program was among the
three best of the 25 programs
they had audited
This IS not to imply that they
had no concerns, but these were
minpr and. as with any audit,
the total condition of the pro-
-am required equal ernphasis
on assets as well as liabilities
ftalpli W. GloriaAo
I
I
I
Inr •»%9. the NPI opened the
%
Speakers Program Presents
f *
SENATOR JOHN TUNNEY
r
I
I m
y^f
^XA%% K^%\%\ vjivt:ii> i,\\ OZ3-/4l!i
T
Friday, May 21
Janss Steps
12 Noon
Sponsored by Associated Students Speakers Program/Student Legislative Council
■•?**-
iiV
cnber t/Q in
f
i
^vco Center
Cinema I
^Vincent Paul, Francois
SfVf N ilAUTIB
l:fi. S:40. 4.*to! •:M, 10:
'11
Avco Center nixt stop, otRNvincN
Cinema U
Friends in need
'It
VlllAGi
MtCH INTItVAi — PG
«:••. Oris.
Avco Center
Cinema ill THi SAnoft }nho ma noM
OtACi MOM THE SEA •(•)
^ "^ I 31 1^40. 5-43. •.HIO. 10 10
Beverly
iAMY LYNDON
%$m W^ 1^0 S IS t-M
H l« ntM. 0:IS
Beverly Hills
MMOWTNB
NEST-^ i
UP — PG
Brentwood I
ECHOES OP A
S IS
mum%>
IS
'Y
TNi STOtY OP AMU
. By ' TO0y vVj^w
^ Akn mmmmM 4o^Qi mtk an uo-
numiAfe. There h Uk writer who
ftan he cannot write. There is the yoting
finctor> worker who hopes to bocof a prize
fighter and the iKtory owner who facet the
foreclosure of his hiiiincM
If thu ail tOMids like the basic fodder for six
momhs of a soap opera, you'rr ahsohiteh oght
However, the manner in which CI
kiillr ViBCMl. Past FraMd
{m the Lot Fehi) it decidedK
and Baket for a realistic, insightful and
unusualh nM^nug film
Francoit^ (Michel Piccoii) it a weil-io^do
4ooor who exudet an air of nHdacal ^icincy
in holh h» fmkkc and private life Hb wtf^e
(I4nr« DiBfcws) • Wounth unfaithM and as
the mmy priipiMu. we tee Fraacov nan^riins
kat about the "^vho* and mam nhniM the
"w|i\" of her nifidebt>
being a gPHt wrwer hm m mmkkt to compkte
an\tbinf His !#•§ tiaie unfinished ttotrel.
ahhonghiinhid hhom h;^ hafinnii. « a sourer
ei grcm tannest Jean fQtffmd Dnpaadieu) m
the fUaiL It piavrd
Ml
). He is seen as an affectionate,
and paiaftiHy vulnerable nun.
Initially we fear for Vincent's having to lose
the factory he has hoih from nothing, but this
it overshadowed by hii bankrupt social life
The scenet with hit ex-wife (Stephnme Audran)
are particularly touching. We sense her strength
and tetf-atsurancc in her new life and witaMt
Vtncent*t apparent pertonal upheaval and
regret at having left her
What the film doet to well it thow people
facing crises in their livet and the different
ways they confront their problems. Not all of
them emerge from their turmoil, but their
struggles are I fascinating and memorable.^
In a partifularty dynamic soene, the three
men go to see Jean's professional debut as a
fighter What we want to see it a first round
knockout for Jean which will also be a
■jfhohc tnump!) for the meii; but Sautet does
not go for the obvious Humanely/ he has Jean
win on a technicality and decide aa( to p«MC a
boxiiig career
At the end of the film, the three main
charaaers are appropriately crossing a street
They have just finished discussing whether
Vincent will ever get back with his wife After
pausing a mpment, Vmcent shrugt hit shoul-
ders and smikt, saying **Who knows^ Anything
is poiaihle.'' The movie concludes on this note
of optimism which only nngs true because of
the hardships we have seen Vincent. Francois^'
Brentwood 11
m4
OAYS OP IHi CONDOt
O lOSaffgkSMi I
CHINATOWN
-# a-as %m ^%mm t>ao_ t la
Campus Previews
Bruin
4r»-
1^
Adderley
Memorial
Century
Mazo I
4 a 10
Centvry
Plaza II
Tmh
Cnerama
Dome
PAtT ■ — «
Crest
Cinema
David
Ernie Ai>-
^urua.
works
win he a tpe-
tnhme to ''Can-
by Axel-
as well as
bv
workshops
»rcd by mAmyiMikM.
pasionMig ia the
he ghvc m Schoeii-
Hal an May 21 and 22.
10 an to 4 30 pas In-
ariil be offered in
and arranging. pi>
.iBitar. trom-
S*30. M.59 and S5 50 are
die Central
I Mutual and
ikith all pro-
directU to the
rnnd \dmission
is free.
involved in the program, m
groupings ranging frcMn Mark
Carlton*s settings of kenneth
Patchen poems for voice and
tpmno to Ted Shreffler's ^11-
lummau." a 12-tone work for
17 instruments Robin Hcifeu's
"^KAlpa** it tcored for string
orchestra, while James Hor-
ner*s X'aswaisations** it scored
for two looae women
Burt Goldstein*s Chamber
Concerto aad Tmb Mukher)ee's
"'Le Qumtron-ChK** round out
the program. Goldstein treats
each of the nMUmBeats in his
chamber setting aalaisticalK
while Muker>ee*t piece features
a prominent guitar solo.
The different instrumental
combinations caused piodiic-
tion problems. particula K
since this caamus it rather
•
lackiftg ia availaMe ttnng pUy-
fOHOU'
FoK Venice
'■/
Student
Composers
"We had to hire sasK people
from off campus for the con-
cert, hut moat of the «ork is
being do«e by the Chamber
EaBemble." noted Ted Shref-
fler
The pfogniin was orgam/ed
hy Shreffler. wha ased funds
Spasaai of Fine
GSA, asid fron the
Student Coasasittee for the
Ar«s Stiiiaas tiahass to the 8
HoBywood
Ptoofic
partt
iMf^fix
-•>... . ^
T.C.
Atlantic
TC. Atlantic foraierl>
kmmrnm to thsasaais of ^^^
'iMcd faaa as C^naa Devenus
Appcan Ml the Cuikhalf Coi
te Howe satt^ at t. piinnng
ac^nttk and tIacUK guitar >
-f.
Paul and the others endure.
AI#o on the bill it the Academy-Award
nominated Short, Arthar aad UMe. Direaed by
Jon Elte, Kristine Samuelton and Stephen
Kovact, it it a documentary on pioneer film
distributor and historian Arthur Mayer «iid hit
wife, LiUie. The film it a delightful look at the
fliM): faMly al nMn
Mayers* lengthy involvement in the movie
industry. Arthur, who will be 90 this month,
teaches clasMS throughout the year at Dart-
mouth, use and^Sunford
The Mayers are captivating and alert people
and the film it a testament to their ability to
continue living life in the pretent.
Sailor': see- worthy
By Robert Kocbler
The Salor Who Fell Froa
Grace With The Sea (at the
Avco) hat a mythic magic that
it both troubksome and mag-
nificent That it it the fu^t fihB
adaptation of the work of the
graatest Japanese wnter of hk
generation, Yukio Mithima,
thould tell you totnethmg right
away The ttory reflecu the
tpirit of thit complex artitt
who committed hara-kin at the
height of hit phyticai and crea-
tive hfe. It playt with your
expectatioat to an extreme
degree about death, murder,
honor and individual worth.
The fihn, quite faithful to itt
original material, it at tur-
priting at Mtthima*t tuicide
The most danng aspect at
work here it writer-director
Lewis John Carhno*t trantla-
tion of an Oriental letting to a
thnenaf hiy Anglicnad one
(Dartmouth, England) It
teems more than an acqui-
escence to Mishima*s wish (one
so strong that it was writien
into his will) that SoEar never
be filmed in Japan. There is a
desire in Carlino*s work to
bnng East and West together
both spiritaatly and philo-
sophically.
No saasMr is the beauty of
ooaat grandly
Cariino pliui-
ges as taso the wnrid of a
ghastly baad of little boys.
They are lad by the asoat hor^
rid demon boy sinoe The ban-
cents (Earl Rhodes} who
praachas to the wide-eyed
youngsters that ^'everything
that your pareals said is bad,
is faod for you.**
Oae of these boys (Jonathan
Kahn) is the ton of a
do but nelancholy
(Sarah Miles) who is his rally
American sailor (Km IChttof-
ferton) To Milet he it pure
tex, to ICahn he it pure nature,
an adult untouched by the
hypocritical forcet of civili-
zation
When Krittoffenon decadct
to marry Milet, settle down
and become ''another adttH,**
ICahn*s dream it dettroyed and
blood lutt taket lU place.
What entuet it both an ex-
pression of Mithima*B ethic of
man*s purity and lU prtser-
emotiotit The film has a tinit-
ter element of the unexpected
that you grow to admire, as
Carlino sets you up for one
thing and delivers another.
Mott impofftaatly. The Sail-
or Who Fell From Grace
WWi The Saa It a ule filled
with awhetypcs Miles is
Woman, Knsiofferson it Man,
Kjihn IS Child and there is
never any doubt about it be-
cause the actors understand
Carlino*s intentions totally
boredom by a virile and qwe^
vation at all oosts.
Despite the film*s cat dia-
sections, aiurder, aiasturbation
and love-making, one is struck
by Carlino*s emmem tattefal-
ness. The filmmaker in him has
found a perfect tiuasiatiea of
Mishima's frrlingi thnt in the
w0mi of thinp, thasa is beau-
Carlino's soaenplay has
found the
to play with an audience's
This is Bot to say that sotne-
one like Kristofferson is a
walkii^ iy^ihol, but a
you
at ivffnet
is a film daase with
ad ideas. The real
of the wcNt is that
nothing for
the
afraid of The fHm
Manns Westwo6d I
LIPSTICK
1:30. 9:90. S:30. 7:90. f:
f
I
/
Manns Westwood II
THE DUTCMESS A THE DItTWATBR POX
[ 1:00. S :9S, f OS
TAKE THE MONEY A EUN
4;00, 7 90, 11:00
Manns Westwood III
GROOVE TUBE - R
1:90. 4: IS, 7:00. f 49
PLBH GORDON - R
9:00, S 40. S:2S
An Aiihu Thmafr»
Merolto echoes of summer - po
9632 Culvvr Uvd 7Q0, 10 30
It^Zi^r EABY BLUE MARINE — PG
Ssfulor AdmiMMo S2 00 •:1S
Coil thcotr* for thow hfiNN
A Lo0m0nh Thmatrm
7 Cmmmdy Hit* I
Qmty WiW^f A <aadiUw Kahn m
Monica I SK«riM«i Hmtmt
1 333 M ^t.*^ SMARTER BROTHER
Sonlo
45) %i
al%M
OlO MACUU
A tommmh Thmotr^
Pawl Maiuriky't
.. . „ NEXT STOr, GREENWICH
T^°J!]*i£ " VIIUGE
1322 2nd Str««( .
451
HARRY AND TONTO
A Lommtnim Ihmatru
Music Ho
9036 Wilfthtr* tlvd
27<
im«in %
FACE TO FACf
S— fritif liv UWiijiyjn
Or— My p«w«ffwl and oUvctinf
• •lot«mant|»« b« h««rd V-^
GKafWt Oiompltn LA Itm—
Moftn't
Notional
10923 Lindbrooli 0rtv«
479 3t4t
BAD NEWS BEARS
-. 4. a. s, 10
SSidiiieht Sh«wt Sft a S«t
S/Sa THwrt — KiMf K«nf ^ SMMty mmd III*
NuArt
Theatre
11272 Sonto
i7t-637V
479 5249
S/ai Pri -
M«>4>i Tl»«v Crnm*
I
S/SS Sat.
^HiWSS^VII
S/SS S«Ni.
Y»«« Al«wy»
S/24 IMm . I
S/IS T<Mt
Hm Day
S/24 W«4.
Cmmm/ ?l»a«'N km
Pantaaes
7UI
Dv«fin
AU THE PRESIDENT'S
MEN — PG
12 90. 9 00. S:90. SrOO 10 90
Shaw Sri A Sat 12 4S
X-Ma
I VMU, I WIU
IS
FOR NOW- R
Picwood
EMMANUEUE, JOYS OF A
WOMAN - X
M aMfi 4:00 S A Saa apaa 19:91
A Lm9mmh Thmmfrm
Plaza
%M aabt.O* mn in Imui (M««
THE MISSOURI BREAKS
479.fe77
Regent
JaR
Iniah
I't
STAY HUNGRY
Royal
nSs/saMa
S¥(fVr AWAY
^aa 11 A 1 pm atdy
-*^^^«
trnii
/
»/
>
i oho SWOtO OF VENGEANCE Part 6
Lo Breo
ZATOICHI CONSPIRACY
Wf 4^2342
31
UA Onema
rl
474-41^4
TAXI DtfVER
1 4. 4. •. 10
UA Cinema
Center H
14744)65
v s
A%i^ofd«
ONE FLEW OVEt THE
CUKOO S NEST
1 15 3:J0. 5:50. 1:05. 10 25
UA Cinema
^ ,,, SANDSTONE
Center 111^ 355. 70^ 1005
(The Original) EMMANUELLE
tOM9 Wv^lwofH^ A«^
W«Jvwood
*7436^
2:15. 5:20. 1:25
UA CINE/V\A
CENTER IV
THE MAN WHO
SKIEO EVEREST
1 45 5 05 • 30
ECHOES Of A SUMMER
3 20. 4 40. 10«
UA
WESTWCX)D
VISION ' R
4J*H>t5''JO«
477^75
VAGABOND '^*'-^
250« v^.*/>.r« _. 5 H S 21
2'
S 23. 5 M. 5
THEATRE
VANGUARD
90 U MvifOM A^
Lot An9««M 276-9VI7
$2 00 G«n«fol
T«M« Mcy 25
THE RLMS Of X>N JOST
t:00 pm only
$1 50 fmililj Mfith ScHmI 10
Monns
Village
961 Bromon
WMfwood 47S0576
END Of THE GAME
2. 4, 4, •. to
l/r
^« Sat Jk Sun
HAMMHNMO
MANMNHEAO
MAC^INCN
OtANGf
>4 Sim - 8mmi
HoLHWc :.;
SUN.
- -0 COS'
Winners comp«>t#
»r> the ♦•noK
S300 fosK
KENTUCKY FRIED
THEATRE
rhe be«t el KFT t
l«%t 5 VMIVt
10303 W ^ke m»d
356.2643
BEATING A DEAD HORSE
^* 4 Wt I 00 A to 00
X>EHEN0EtSON
SbNNYlAND SUM AND
HIS ■LUES BAND i
30 PIER AVE.
HERIffOSABE '" ~
TCL 377 69t1
Brico myth unmade
L>-/
By H4
A legend is often nothing
more than a simple story with
a few unknowns. A favonte
kgend in this era of the emerg-
ing woman tells how Antonia
Brico was deprived of a prom-
ising career as a conductor
because the male-doipinated
musicai establuhment refuaed
to let a woman lead orchesuaa.
Though Brico conducted im-
portant European and Anonca
orclieftras in the 1930*1, iK~
has spent moat of her last 40
yenn in Danger* inching and
conducting her own Brico
Symphony.
Loot somewhere in the story
of the oppressed woman was
the question of whether she
was good enough for the big
leagues in the first place. As
long aa the questions remained
unanswered, there could be a
Ugend of What Bnco Could
Have Given the World The
evidence has been scanty: her
performance in the Hollywood
Bowl laat summer was terrible,
but the Bowl is hardly the
place to judge a 72-year-old
woman
Bnco*s deinit allHim. a Co-
lumbia recording of Mozart*s
Haffner Symphony oimI over-
tures to Omi GIovi
Brko: amblgiMMa debut
Magk Flirte and Tht Mnrringe
of Figaro, isn*t going to show
what she could have done, but
will retire the legend by show-
ing what itf€ can do now. If
the recording is taken as rep-
resentative of Bnco*s talents, it
suggests that she is not fvent,
but competent
It alM> sugyeau that she is
aemewhat better than a good
many second-rate male con-
ductors who hold major posi-
tions If Columbia lMMB*t fixed
Bnco in the musical firma-
It has mahhihod her at
a victim of sex diocriaiMttion
Her reading of tkft HafTner
(with New York's MoaUy Mo-
zart Featival Orchotra) it
forthright and surpriaii^ly cn-
Wfth Brioo*i poBdmnt for dow
tonpi. The pretto finale is a
real live preoto that generaiea a
yod deal of excitement. The
9fmfk€Uf is done with con-
•iderable precaeioa aad no eg-
temal nnneBii. In other
hands. It hat been treated more
expretaively, but Bhco*s Haff-
ner it an unmisiakaMe aiaie-
ment of joy.
The overtures, on the other
hand, are patnfully slow and
annoyingly clumsy. Brico es-
chews fire for neatneat, which
she doean't always get. Trero-
olando figures that should
serve to flynatain tension while
filling space become obtru-
sively imporunt under Brico*s
baton, and all three overtures
bacome ponderous and unen-
gaging etudes instead of bnl-
liant musical gems.
The ambiguous picture Bri-
co's album gives is Tiot as
favorable as poetic justice
would dicuif ~ but poetic
justice belongs only in legends
anyway.
Music for Piano and string orchestra
KEITH )RRRETT
J with soloists
^ JAN GARBAREK. tenor & -
.soprano saxophones
. CHARLIE HADEN. bass
Friday, June 11, 8:30 p.m.
Royce Hall UCLA
$1 UCLA STUDENT TICKETS ON SALE NOW
at Kerckhoff Hall Ticket Office & CTO
Btt Will do a free residency date/time/
location to be announced
— SCA —
ITS NOT TOO LATE!
MAKE UP TWO YEARS
THIS SUMMER ,
AND EARN ABOUT $500 WHILE DOING IT!!
START THE ARMY ROTC ADVANCED COURSE
. NEXT PALL
AND IBRAO SniDEMTS
SEE REPtESENTATIVE
ROOM 131
MErS 6TH
ONCAMfUS
CALL t2S- 73M
LEARN WHAT IT TAKESTO LEAD
I ,1.11 1.
-far-
r
I.
Ings Recordings
Comiktca mmd Flmyt
Ml
M
Mere, Lm mmtwe Memmgere,
Cmimmbim Odymtf-Y 337H
L\
Se Ai
A cntic onoe asked Darius
Milhaud what he wrote with
The composer replied **a pen-
cil- This is apparent on thu
recording: Milhaud was a
spontaneous musician who
rarely composed at the piaao
and alaoat never reviied his
work Caatatc dc Lcnfant aC
d« la nMTt is a set of poems by
Bel^an poet Maunce Careame
put to music by Milhaud His
gtntle, spontaneous yet pol-
ished treatments of the poetry
evoke with much integruy the
delicate relationship of a moth-
er and her young child
La Mute Menagere is a set
of musical descriptions of Mil-
haud's life with his family in a
small campus cotuge when the
composer was on the facuhy of
Mills College in OallJand dur-
ing World War II. His spon-
laneous music evokes imiges
of a calm and peaceful life m
Cahfornia, far from the stnfc
of his then war-torn homeland.
France This recording preienta
well the refreshing genius of
one of the great composers of
this century.
— Marc PalmicH
Smmmtas for
iammc Stem,
MC 33713
The rich, melodic fil-ahoM
sonatas are hard to resist, es-
pecially in such an attractive
package as this. Stern pUys
^•^complctc assurance, beau-
tyi and sumptuous tonality He
never grates of resorts to ec-
centricity, and his conceptions
are always on cue Pianist
Alexander Zakin plays an
equally important role and is
equally line, though ever-so-
shghtly more thin
Included arc the Sonau No
I in G Major. Opus 7g, Sonata
No 2 in A Major. Opus lOU
Sonata No 3 in D Minor.
Opus 108, plus Brahms' own
transcription of the Sonau for
Clarinet m E-Flat Major, Opus
120. This IS the first recording
of this reworking and is beau-
tiful indeed
This two-record reisaue is
well recorded by engineers
Fred Plaut and Mtkoa Chcnn
wuh no overbalance on eithci
instrument
DRIFTWOOD BAR
It2l
399^ W33
Misiii
tAY Oft APS t
w/ BUDDY AUNOID
Ifca arum)
i^LllJi
Mista Brevii im C. K. 259
CHmimm CmM^pietrm, AtmeBes
MurmeiMier, Peter Sckreitr.
Hen
j:8:
Rtk
of
bert Kegel
PkMfpM ^Sm H7
Orchestre
by Her
Nokody is setting the world
on fire in this recording The
two brief Masses 1^ a Mozart
not duitc out of his teens arc
good j but not great music, and
the performers give a com-
petent but undistinguished ren-
dition In Its favor, both music
and recording have clarity,
conciseness and tunefulness,
but both lack fire. Sound qual-
ity IS excellent
— Howard Putner
J^hf '^(m^tCuH^ Scti,^,^^^^^
'2- S
-<-.«;
SiiV
MjU>
nil/ uAA^ tOu
tM9*0 A*yU*^S' It
/
I
y
'\
May ai 37
iAMIS 111 STAYLIV
Wn Altey as
't
McUBS
Ml Pin ll?i
Siiti Ittici
I2I4W
t.l IIMIS HAVHM. MANIMH l%s BlMlKii AAt I. H M OH l»S
•»«• ktmm. 4, s. a a
JOHN STlWAtT
21-22-23
M. PEEBLES
STREET
CORNER
SYMPHONY
24-25
THE
RUNAWAYS
26-27
ETHOS
SS FOOLS
*56-23O0
=nri
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THE STONER
2113 St»n«f Av«
w»«f I A W02S -
477 7339
%—f a Wtn«
Food, Gomoft & othor
^ina#Of SfMffi
••^ 20-23 ^
Chorli# Muta«lwhif« plus
Michod Bloomfi«ld
ain as-30
John Kl«mm«r
•0«1 miTA MOmCA ■UWK.L.A. tTW^eiM
lO'S
47»-«V7«
iMndt, dinnm
MmmfH cock««*l»
FOa THOSe WHO appreciate QUALITY
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CHAN'S GARDEN
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JUNIORS
TNI aoLLO novcf of ocLicATEaacMa
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WESTWOOO VILLAGE,
T TONIGHT'
^
SA^ '
J
I
eatures that Make Southera Caraptis^T^
aod Dynamic Yearbook.
I. The 1976 Ro»«r Bowl.
1
If you vA/ere at Pasadena, for the puene you 11
remember the way you supported the Bruin
••am how you cheered, screamed, cb^^^,
sang, and encouraged our men on to their 23 10
VKtory over Ohio State Southern Campus 76
captured that afternoon in over 50 vivid color
pictures that move you through the prgfHrr^ and
halftinr« festivities, the early Ohio State drives
that ultinnately failed, the big Bruin defensive and
offensive plays that brought three touchdowns
arKi a 23-10 victory, and even into the locker
room for the post-game celebrations.
S
e
e
f
r
-r
2. A Panoramic Look M the Way We Were
- From IK81 to the Eariv 10 h.
Learn about UCLA's origm and
history through these beautiful but
forgotten pictures of the places,
people, and things that have been
part of UCLA's growth You*ll see
the campus when it was just rolling
hills and farmland , . the changing
styles and life up thrpugh the
years surprising pictures of past
students, some of whom arc famous
today the war years . the
easy-going 50s . . .arvd thejurbulent
60s. In a year when America looks
back on its past, you can look back
on your university's past and get ^
better perspecbve of your own life
as a student today.
3. UCLA Today.
The 1975-76 year is captured
beautifully in these candid
shots of life on campus.
Don't be surprised if you are
anrK>ng those who were
caught through the lens of
our roving photographers.
4. A
johTiodinq (juide^
Bob Ehrnr^nn and Ruth ParMil are
part o^ the consulting team from
UCLA's Placement and Career Plan
nmg Center They will provide you
with vital information on — job
prospects in today s market how
to prepare effective resumes . . .the
different kinds of employment agen-
dm and how to work through
them how to organize your job
*^*^^v how to pf^are for ttit
interview . .sahhw you can ex
pect in certain fiekis and in various
F»rts of the country and much
more.
5. Ab lo Depth Took at TCLA •
TV Motion Pictures Department
Find out about one of the worW's
— h«tt ^nii arts depart menlt and why
it has continuously praduced out
standing akimni such as Lbyd
Bridges, Carol Burnett, Francis Ford
Coppola, and many others Well not
only examine the merits of Ihe
department but also some of its
problems and shortcomings, and
well even show you how one stu-
— dant, Jamaa Fanaka, nnade and dis-
tributed his film internationally.
7. Prizes
6.
The
of 7tt.
For Seniors and other graduating students, this important
^ section marks the end o( years of study md the moving on
to another phase of life - perhaps advanced studies or the
start of new careers Class pict^jres and yeaiteoks. like good
agjng wines, become more precious as the years go by and
this section wiJI. no doubt, bring warm feelings to the hearts
oTmany M alumni decades from now - tong after some of
the bek?ved pets and friends have pwMd on.
U^ ^Z/^i"*""*^!? ?«*^ r*' »^ »»-*»• «<> winner, drawn iron, among
reL^^ ^ yearbook buv«. Some pri«. have already b«rn wmi, but t2
remaining pnzcs are: ^^
MAIN PRIZES TO BE DRAWN ON
JUNE 7th, 1976:
•Funds equal To a futf resident scholarship
for one term or quarter, valued at $210
$228, compliments of the Department of
Administration.
*A chokre of
.,a) a 2 month student Eurail pass for two
valued at $390. Includes unlimited 2nd class
rail travel through 13 countries.
• b) a 1- or 2-weck charter flight t Thmii
(subject to space availability) for two
p)ersons on Continental Airlines with
champagne and dinner included ($378
value).
c) a Ski Mammoth parfcaQp for two in-
cluding a 3 days 2 nights kxlging at the
Sierra Nevada Inn, 3 days lift tickets, round
tnp air transportation from LA Mammoth,
rourKJ-trip transfers between airport and
lodge, arxJ daily transfers to arKi from ski
lifts (subject to space availability) Value
$268. All choices are with the compliments
ot Ihe ASUCLA Travel Service (Ackerman
Union A.213) and Southern Campus 76.
OTHER WEEKLY PRIZES TO BE
DRAWN ON MAY 24 and 31:
Donated by ASUCLA
• 5 GoWen ASUCLA Service Store Dis
count Cards entitling recipients up to 20**,
off at the General Student's Store Card is
validated with persons name arxJ
fk:ation, and is rK>ntransferable.
• 1 complete set of Mars Pens ($35)
5 perma piacque Bachebr's diplomas
valued at $15 95 each . or the equiva
lent towards a higher degree
• 10 free cap and foem lentais for aeniors,
valued at $6 each or the equivalent
value for graduates,
• 5 packages of 9 wallet -sized cofor prints of
a photo to be taken by Campus Studio,
valued at $14.50 per package
• 5 prizes of 10 free bowfing lanes
• 10 prizes of free one-mch classifi. ds in
the £>afly Brum
• 2 coupon books valued at $10 each for
use in the Coffee House
5 prizes of omelettes for two
5 priacs of lunch for two at the Gypey
itoigon or Deli, vakied «t |j^ eeeh^ —
* 5 free barwna splitr
* 5 prizes of 25 free copies of resume
5 printing and duplicating cmipon books
vakied at $25 each
Donated by the Dept oi Administration
5 free copies of official transcnpt
* Season tickets to home football games for
two
^ f^9e concert season tickets for two to all
€¥cnts sponsored by the Fine Arts Dept
* Breakfast with the ChanceHor
* Prepaid filing fee for diiiertation or any
graduate theM
Free extension course rvialued at approx
•60.
• A $50 Savings account opened at Security
Pactfic Natx>nal Bank, Westv^md Village
* 1 ■■■rtoUML camera strobe, vdued at $50,
compliments of Bel Air Cmfmm and Hi-Fi
Southern
Campus 76
288 pages S8.00 (pliiifs SAH tarn)
Deadline Extended to jue 4l
your check or
Order your copy by
order to:
Soiitfiem Campus
ASUCLA Ticket
Kerckholf Hall 140
Available Midjuoe
LA, Ca. 90024
/^dri t1 Of) if v/nu
to you. For further inf
(..,
i
call 8252221
r .^,
s^
9
30
i
Today, Thursday
California Mismanagement
Review Avaiiable in Potlach (GSIM)
.,i
\
(..
MARTYN ^—
OF LONDON
'offers you a precision and
geometric hair cut, shampoo,
co/iditioner and blow dry for $12.00
with "Ian Wolfe."
By appointment only.
m
i—V
Westwood Hyatt House
f,^!::^::'" 930 mgara Ave. <2nd floor)
475-4477
LUNCH COCKTAILS DINNER
For a delightful change of pace and a
unique experience ingourmet dining visit
AKBAR Cuisine of India
Specializing in fhe most authentic curries,
kababs, biryanis and tandoori preparations
(Cooked in a special Indian Clay oven)
Relax in the exotic atmosphere of our beautifully
decorated cocktail lounge
Spipcial party room for your convenience
Open Daily from 11:00am to 11.00pm,
All major credit cards accepted
Reservations (213) 822-4116
590 Washington StreH in Marina Del Rey
POTPOURRI
THE INTERNATiONAL RESTAURANT
1023 Hilgard, WMtwood. Ph.: 82S-33M
InvltM you to try W* SPRING QUARTER MENU
5 30pm
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Kototet
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Tacot
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(Maxico)
Normandit
Chicken
(fraocai
It 4 Sour
(China)
Swaat4Sour
(China)
Fridsy Sfscial
Etnntc Dmnm
(S2 50)
Lunch A Dinner includa. Soup or aalad, hot •ntrea cJiinli
ALao: Intamational aandwichea on pita bfd with aoup or aalad and
Drink $1 25. hMlthy lunch. $100 Ch«ra aalad $1 00 aaprmo $45
Cappuccino $ 60. daaaarta; 40
UVE ENTEUT AINMCNT •vvry W«dnMd«y Nl9lit erOO-MOpm
FOREIGN ENTEHTAINMENT. mmy Frfd^ Night SiW-tUOpm
OR FILM 7'tO HOinJH
(Intomsllonal Omwm •vvry Friday NIgtit •:30-1(hStpiii)
WE ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
INTERNATIONAL MEANS AMERICAN, TOO!
Consumer Affairs positions
LA sum mer inter
By Clurii Sutton
Dl Staff Rfportcr
Today is the Utt day to
apply for fiUMMT internship
pwiiioi With the Lot Angeles
Buraui of Consumer Affain.
The student internships for
the downtown olQoe will he
unpaid, offered on*y to UCLA
students and will involve
j0-eening telcph<
in complaints as part of their
duties, accordinf to Cindy
Mikami. director of volunteers
for the Bureau
''It's the firit time we've used
a group of students like this
dBVntown," she said
Presently the Bureau has 140
volunteers m its downtown and
branch office, Mikami said,
pointing out that UCLA stu-
dents will be able to receive up
to 12 units of academic credit
through the 199 independent
study course
The Bureau's Van Nuys of>
fioe Kits volunteers from the
National Council of Jewish
Women The office on the C^l
State LA campus it aMiined
entirely by student volunteers,
performing much the same
functions as the UCLA interns
will have in the downtown
office, Mikami said
ture of tlK internships, stu-
dents will have the opportsaky
to become involved in a wide
variety of the Bureau's acti-
vities.
In addition to screening
complaints, the interns can
also serve in advertising veri-
fication, making sure adver-
tisers will sund behind what
they say in pnnt Interns will
also be able to speak before
groups as part of the Senior
Citizen Coru»umer Education
Program.
Mikami, herself a UCLA
graduate, said she feels the
interns will add to the Bureau's
efficiency and effectiveness.
Tm excited about it, we're all
excited about it," she said.
Other possible uitem duties
include distributing and up-
dating the office's Consumer
Protection Booklet and doing
general or specialized research
for future consumer education
material.
According to Mikami, the
interns will be given a tramii^
program and then will be able
to start handling consumer
problems right away.
Applications are available
from Gary Freedman in the
UCLA Office of Environmen-
tal and Consumer Protection,
Kerckhoff 311.
Med scholarship info
An informational meeting is being held at noon today in
Room 63-105 m the Center for the Health Sciences for
undergraduates who are planning to enter medical or denul
school. The purpose of the meeting is to discuss a schoUrship
available to these students
The scholarship, part of the Public Health and National
Health Service Corps Sctelaffship Training Program, consisu of
a stipend of $750 per month plus tuition and fees. In return, the
recipients are required to provide direct patient care after
graduation.
This care wuuld be provided through one of four organizations
the Bureau of Medical Services, Hospitals and Clinics, the Indian
Health Service or the health care facilities of prisons and the
U,S. Coast Guard
Although students are not eligible to receive the scMarship
until they are in medical school or dental school, apphcaiions are
available to undergraduates.
For more information, call Harriet VandeWater at 825-4181 in
the Office of Student Affairs m the medical school
— RobcrU Kaye
Veterans Association . .
Speech .
iCaatinued from Page 3)
ot radioaaive energy after they
have been shut down.
'*You must provide adequate
cooling even after you've shut
the plant down," Rasmussen
stressed
To find potential risks, cer-
tain causes, called "iiiitiatmg
events," must be examined,
according to Rasmussen.
Causes such as pipe breaks,
lots of eleancal power, acci-
dents with fission products
being removed and a break in
radioactive conuiners all were
studied as potential risks
Should one of these happen,
h^ added, the accident would
still be small, with time to
make corrections.
(Continued from Page 5)
seen a veteran get a Basic Educational Op-
portunity Grant (BEOG). They say we can't
qualify because we make too much money off
our veteran ^ — *^ "
What most people don't undersUnd is that a
veteran 4s not the normal student, according to
Glazier. ^I know veterans who are married and
have one or two kids. Besides going to school,
they have to work and support a family.**
"In applying to graduate school here, I
played up my activity in^ UVA," said Chris
Taylor, UVA vice-president "They liked that
and I got accepted So get involved, it helps "
Veterans have different feeUngs about the
UVA It was suggested that a survey be sent to
members asking them what they are interested
in. Veteran-related issues change and the UVA
should change with the issues, according to one
member.
Most members are enthusiastic at the
mention of sports Many have become fnends
by partiapating in UVA sporu. A few more
quiet members, however, put their emphasis on
the political aspect of the UVA,
"There's got to be something for the UVA to
do We can't just come to a meeung and have
cookies I mean, I'm 30 years old I Jgn't
think you're going to get veterans coming (to
meetings) by saying the UVA is a social
J^rganization Tbal'i mrsnini
commented.
Ken Buchanan, ipnlmi—i for WEDIHC
(Military Experience Directed Into Health
Centers), a federally-funded job placement
service for veterans, talked about job op-
portunities for veterans in the heahh field.
"There are 200 ways to direct college school-
ing into the health field," he said, explainiag
that MEDIHC can provide veterans with
information they need to get jobs.
"Vcu don't get enough school credit" for
their miliury skills, especuiUy at UCLA, said
Burbaggn, a WWII veteran. ''Viet Nam vets
dont get thar fair share."
J^ "'^^Jng ended as veterans agreed the
UVA has the potential to help veteram voice
opinions Said one veteran, '^If we become a
pressure group to show our survival i$
dcpMKlent on when the school geU out work
study checks and on what the government docL
we^ will be effective."
"I gueM we'll have another meeting (this
quarter)," concluded Winter.
Official Notice To AJI Students
• cation Card th order to •
al b.
'CLA Student idenfi-
Stuaenrs continuing .m the Foli Quarter w.ll be jg^ f^^ 24
.n the Ackermo Second Floo' je according to f ^,ng .rhedule
Moy 24 A F
May 25 A I
May 26 A R
May 27 thru June 4 A Z
* - -nt Reg.^iroT.on Cord and support.ve .dent.f.cat.on - wh.ch must mdude a picture
ar.ver s license, passport, etc w.ll be required pnor to issuonce
NOTE '^e Identificotion will bp rpQiHriiH fnf rtH,T,..c.«« . • „
. - ,, -'^'w«" yumci piayea prior To "nstru •
'He rail
• yvjiuu" yumci pioyea prior To 'nstru
I3l7vtfes^woo<i
^SSm. ^WT fKESS KSlGNSt COUHB
C$100 far Viy ABove wMi$to.OO h«CHAS£)
* ALSO • FRSNCMCUT-oiMn -fr
brkshop to plan urban park
ly A.M
DB Stair Wril«
A publii planning workshop will be Md
here thu Saturday to plan aad ^^ri the
foroMtion of an urhaa aational park in tlK
Santa Monica mountains aai i«Hiu>re area
The workshop u entitled, "Land Use
Transportation and Human Values The
Santa Monica Mountains and Scgahore
Urban Park, and, according to Andrew
Barnes, profect coordinator, it will be uiuaue
for a number of rzumm, — ^?^?a__
Contrary to usual planning projects, the
ia 10 be planned has not yet been o^
fidally designated PmeiiUy, the land where
the urban park would be ikiMMed coniisu of
paicels owned separately by the city, county
and various private parties
There is still a bill before the Senate. SB-
1640, which if ggMed will allocate federal
funds to organize and set up urban national
parks. According to John Peschkc. special
assistant to John Tunney, federal funds
would also be available for acquisition of
private lands for the park if the bill passes.
These lands could fill many gaps in public
lands and allow for a smooth, continuous
Ahhough the bill has not pmmi yet the
plMMuag workshop will bring all the penaae
^ ■•^■J.'" •*••*" l^M" wiU have to meet
M the byi It gHMd.
"We're bringiM them together before it's
officag% 4mmr BanMs said Thu way, the
mmmg is relaxed, he added; it is a work-
»«P. n0 a bearing. Alto, even if it doesn't
gait, all tbe people gaaiatf to form an urban
^ark will have met.
AncHber unique aspect of tbt woftthop u
of. i^ /i"^**^ "• *"^^^ '^ ^ planning,
mttead of karning about the plans after they
iliri^'^^!!^ «»^. aame. said The
workshop will be attended by not onlv
engineers and planners, but also histonans
politicians, psychologists, architects and
represenutives of other ftelds to add to the
planning effort -We would really Uke to see
the public attend," Barnes said -You don't
Aavc to know about engineering or water-
shed to be able to judge what a good park
would be like" ^
^ UCLA is hosting the workshop, which will
meet m the Sunset Canyon Recreation
Center However, the University is not
funding the meeting.
ARTE
fMAim
7JiULtogMiiigitsi)a4
BM •nww Msl. tsiwlv IHi
Nr «ipi zhmm wr744v
PSYCH STUDENTS
UPA and Pti Chi
Have a new office
1513 B Franz
Come and see us for
Job and 199
information
Freshmen mentors . . .
(ComiMed from Page 4)
hers and addaettes if they are
interested That way we'll have
people who from the beginning
have indicated they want a
mertmr." he said
Bat what exactly does a
mentor do''
Anderson gladly explained
wbgt the role of the mentor
does and does not require.
"A mento is not a quasi-
founselor <3r therapist But he
or she can meet the students
on a personal basis, not as an
advisor or information re-
ceptacle If a per-son needs
different types of expertise, he
ean use a mentor for friendship
or referral," he said.
The mentor can also help
alleviate one of the ujider-
girding fauhs of the University,
according to Anderson **What
increases alienation and lone-
lineat here v^ that the Uni-
versity seems to operate under
the moihds operandi of student
telf-referral. But if you ahwys
have to ple^ for. and stand-
in-line for imormation, it's not
* long before you conclude that
people don't care.
"Caring from my standpoint
is an active, not a passive,
process of involvement. The
only expecutions we have of
the mentors is that they initiate
contact with their mcntecs.
once before they come on cam-
pus, three times during fall and
twice during the subsequent
quarters," Anderson said
The position of mentor, he
PUBLIC WORKS
Htlariggg ggg touchiiig"
sMBii LmmiL LA mm
"A perfect exampte of the
CfMtjve procaM in aiglign"
Fridays and Saturdays at 9 pm
The Church m Octan Park
fe Hill St (Santa Monir.a)
Telefphone 399-1631
continued, can be used as a
vehicle for nuny possibihtes.
depending on what the mentor
and student decide While the
average number of students
mentors have is six, one men-
tor took on 20 The general
consensus of mentors, Ander-
Ipn said, is that "mentonng" is
quite rewarding.
Mentor Betty Levinson. co-
ordinator of the Study
Reading Division of the Learn-/
mg Skills Center, commented,
Tve enjoyed it It gives me the
chance to be with students in a
very different way. Pve served
them coke and milk and
cookies and watched them be-
come less frightened during the
year "
One of Levinson's six raen^
tees. Joe Hampton, joked, -|
was floating down a nver of
obhvion and Betty threw me au
repe.-
Potentuil mentors who want
to help "mobilize caring
people" can conuct the pro-
gram's coordinator, Doree
Glaser, Campbell 2213, ext
58425.
AUTO
INSURANCE
YES — you need auto insurance
All the more reason to contact us for discounts up
to 35 to most students - another good reason
tor being in college.
See or call us in Westwood
477-2548
Agents for College Student Insurance Service -
1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build
mq) LA 90024
/
*
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
Let us ship .)fou« -persoffiel
♦nismetloil ppcKagine a«ie i
PACIFIC-KING
«%a«toieli
int WMt ttfi at.. Les
4t2-tet2
Miists in.
for220 voMs
17
ri*"_^i;*''''*'» ^'^' ■•••Ileal Croup
Hair Tranaplantation
Acn«-Complaxion
Plaatic Surgary
Dermatology ^^^
— .... A'i?i?y
Lot Angalae
Lakewood
Huntington
6423 Witshire Blvd . #1(M
5203 Lakewood Blvd
«101 Hmmmmn St . Ste C
(714)
055-6533
531-7420
THE
come to one Of the most unique
ever presented on campus
COSMIC BEAM EXPERIENCE
WITH •'
sP
J
FRANCISCO
CO»ScioSS^Es5*tC^h^^
Dr. John Lilly
FRIDAY - NOON - SCHOENBERG HALL QUAD
hring your lunch. Mo '
— sea —
J
f
I
m
1
} ■
SWINE FLU
VACCINE HOAX??
\
Come Hear
FRAN LEE
Consumer Advocate Metromedia T^. New York
Speak on Swine Flu Vaocine
and Other T6pics
Friday May 21
Noon
Meyerhoff Park
Sponsored by Office of Environmental and Conaumer Affairt
(Community law^joii CommiMion - Student Legialative Council)
Texas Instrument
i0M0Tk)NI
1 RATED
Campus Events Film Commission of the Student Legislative Council Presents:
3
^ >-
» }
I *5^
VtoUnr
J^
•klllB^
"fonvny
ultmi
Qapton John EnNitrtii HdJli Moon Pmi f%dhtiim
Tofwrahond
Una Turner A^ The Who
ACKERMAN GRAND
BALLROOM
FRIDAY
7 & 9:15 pm
MAY 21
ADM $1.00
Campus
events
«M to IMM IS aa»4 pai. May 2S.
IMia Mi «a Iwi ai NM
T«nwMi. wiH la Mi f
May 22. S«mmy Pacific Ptaza. M^tttwboi.
Far tmftm mm call 74M«1 or m-
U
art iM Itiiy I
viawt wilf bt hMi tomorrow KtroMMir
311
Java. Koria. 6r<
Italy, aaaa, Hawrroa. WaaiaR's Syai M.
-4teU iMlai CM iiilMli. boy till
aai browM among Eastern Europtan ani
aMnan tHanai, 2-5 pm. tomorrow GSM
2250 —
T«r of tht Comar for Health
Sciencat. 2 pm. toiay meet in Sdiaaaiarg
lobby
-— SaMMip CaMHOlar HaaraMaaM. pick up
appMcalionf for ttw summer at ttta Mardi
Gras office. Ackrman A-laval or or Brpin
walk
pick up a Protect A
wtifcb wilt be available
-tSM ArU Week 71 wiK feature a
faculty staff and student art ^ow Pot-
latct) and ditplay daeet. today 745 am4
pm 7 45 am-3 pm tomorrow Yei'ra • load
Mm ClWtIi IraM 8 pm tomorrow 2 pm
•ai I ffli. May 22 aiid 2 pm, May 23
tcMiatirg LtttM Theater Beer Suit ani
participatory arti featival. 3:30-7 pm GSM
3391 Beaux Arts Bail 9 pm May 22 GSM
11 and patio The California Miiman-
Review will be available m Pol-
latch throughout the week
-TaiMlnr UCLA women s nianpapar is
availabU today and tomorrow. Brum
Kiosks and Kerckhoff 117
— PrsfrsB Irewii field work expartaact
ttiroyoh community service and leammg.
Acaiemic credit available student ie-
velois own |ob description with aoaia-
tance Visit Ktnsey 3B4 or call 825-3730
— flsblaf Trip tlge ypt for Redondo
Beach Harbor tomorrow San Diego May
31 and Mexico June 22-20 are available in
Kerckhoft 600 every day and at meeting^
of UCLA Fishing Club
— fsNi Bnss. ft- 10 pm every \MeiaMiay
a 8:60^ H^ 30 pm. every Frrday tntumatiaeai
Student Cemsr 10232 HUgard Free"
— IMMMMpB information and deadline
on extramural funding for graduate stu-
dents and postiactarMa are availiMi ai
the Fellowships ani Ailitantship Section
Murphy 1228
trained interns will help yo\j find funding
for your idsas Qpsfi iatly noon-4 pm
Kerkchoff 4B1
and lacal volunteer positions are available
now through EXPO. Ackerman A213 or call
825^)831
PrMssHsB. |oin OECA as a
mwsstigator Visit Kerckhoff 311
or eaM 888 giSO Volunteers f a4ae
nesiii lir savirDnmeMal and laai pre-
HLM8
IM iHaaa and Tks Blai
Irm «^« tM shown noon-2 30 pm today
GSM 33256
-TSBBI starriai Bafir Oalfry. Aaa-
Marfaral. Ettbn John and Tma lumm will
be shown 7 and 9 15 pm tomorrow
Ackerman Grand BaNroem SI at title deer.
(C
OM Pate If)
«
Special UCLA
Student Rate
8.50
B\ appointiiieut
Alec or Amo!d
475^566
W!LSH1RE >WEST PLAZA
10880 WIL$H1RE BLVD
WESTWOOD, CALF 90024
->.i..»<i
Campus events
(C onlinued from Page IS)
Kvk
Larre will is
wm bs
Hai 8190
or
Ms C% ani Bar
7:30 pm.
BJ8 aai 11 pm
8 98 at
HMI.
By BIS NaasBad BMa OmB
m. Mian ilapiar. 53M:30 pm.
(8288). tonight international Student
CenMr. 1023 HMgard
— MU BnoH fnsalM. will
aN-JS
M
sonfs wBI is
Pustti UBrvy
eii portsna 8 pm.
CofiBs Naaaa
8 X pm May 22
I«Mi8ia
wHI have their
Bv IBs UCLA Chamber
BBi the UCLA Nrfarming Artists
9M pat Blay 22, SchoenBarg auditorium
—iMi af AMTta. wMI be pfessnieu by
the University Chorus Madrigal Sinasrs
Mans fiMa ClaB. WaaMn s Qiarai Saciety
May 23. Boyce auditorium r
. -, by
Bis Stack SraiuaM Stuisnti in Manage
mam ani Bw Blsoli Law Students will be
hekl noon-3 pm. today Executive dass
rem. 2ni Beer GSM For information call
7 30-9 30 pm tomght. Franz
-Cssasials rirwssi TsMs «i
noon 1 pm today GSM 1284.
-Bew BlNlsBn Is CisdaillaB
Tsiay?. this week s Business Advisory
CeaaeH seminar. 630 pm dinner 7 30 pm
talk tonifht. internatioani Student CeaMr
-Jafe BbMMi M a BssBaM8 MsrBsl this
week's Graduate School of Education
colloquium noon today Moore 3rd floor
~frai Lss. a controversial consumsi
advocate will speak noon, tomorrow
Msysfhoff Park
a discusiion group
studem women with
every Friday Murphy
Hot tip? 825-2638
tor faculty
muB
3334
today. CHS 33-105
4 pm
M BpiiB fUm sBis
7 pm.
Find out about living at
The Westwood Bayi
at an
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday, May 23
1:30 — 5 PM
eat — talk — work — schmooz with us.
^ Information will be available about
summer residence and fall membership.
6ia Landffair Avenue
478-9327
WITH PIONEER SPEAKERS
AM-FM CASSETTE in daah fviodei 903 witn many faa-
4iuraa and with maaaPionaar speakers yo." car really
comas alive STF^^
WITFTPIONEER SPEAKERS
AM-FM B-TRACK in-daah Model B03 with supar sound
and tua convierjce of B-track tape A killar syafm fot yoor
car tor only y. "^
QLENOALE1106S Central 240-40ei
SiilS?^^!^'!^/'' ^® Topan^a Canyon Rd,. 9».2^70
WEST COVINA Next to L icorica Pizza 960-3661
MOWTEMELLO 2525 W Beverly Blvdv7?4-«207
ANAHEiBi 271 1 W Lincoln 1(714)821.6070
WEST L.A. 12437 Santa Monica 820-1445
Haiifs Bi-F 11-B Sat 11-B Sw> ILB
/.
Black CiAure Week
Presents
Black Leadership Forum
featuring
Mr. Earl Graves
Publisher of Black Enterprise Magazine
Topic: Black Economic Power
Thursday, May 20, 1976 t2:00 Noon —
Executive Room — 2nd Roor GSM
H'
fr-
• *
and
Ms. Barbara Walden
President of Walden Cosmetics
Topic: Starting your own Busirtess
'i
Thursday, May 20, 1976 1:30 pm
Executive Room — 2nd Floor GSM
♦ * ♦ OPEN TO THE PUBLIC * * * REFRESHMENTS * * *
bx; aOSM. aOSA. aSA. l*Tf
r^-r:
%
1
1
3
SMta Monica HHM It ipomorfng • Rhrtora pmrfy
May 22 Saturday Night 8pm at Iha Marina Dal Ray
Oakwood Qardan Apartmanta 4111 Via Marina.
Rock with musk: by ^'CMabratkNi" and f>artk:lpata
in a danca contaat. Caaino teblaa, pr\29% and food
will l>a available. Admiaak>n $1.50 mambars and
$2.00 non-maml>afB. UJWP supportad.
I
IK
I
INTERNATIONAL GRANT-IN-AID
A limited number of Grants-in-Aid to female foreign
giaduate studanii will be awarded for the 1976-77 aca-
demic year by the Altruaa International Foundation
Application forms are available at the Office of Inter-
national Students & Scholars. 297 Oodd Hall (825-3156)
Application deadline is Jur>e 11. 1976.
m
This is the place for Rib Lover\'
By far the Best Ribs we Ve fried in LA
Heraid Endminer
COMPLETE DINNERS
I Casual Dining ♦^^"^ S2 . 7 5
I HARRY'S OPIN PIT BBQ
1434 N CRESCENT HEIGHTS ot SUNSET STKIf
10 Minutes Uown Sunset Blvd to
Lau» el Canyon lomJ^jghr And >^ou re There
COPIES 2
No Minimum Over r.
KINKOS
CHECK OUR TYPING SERVICE
Topanga Center for Human Development
Drop-lnr Encounter Groups..
We invite you to try drop-in encoumer groups as a way
of meeting new people and exploring new, creative ^ays
of relating to them.
Friday nMt, • FM: 2347 N. TotMHifa Canyofi aiv«L, T
)mf Mite, S fM: 1351 N. S^mM
173S wirtiiuid aM.. aais. w
For brochures call;
45S-1342
Member, $4.00
Non-membert, 15.00
MAKES BAD WATER GOOD.
AND GOOD WATER BETTER.
H2PK® Portable Water Purifier
\i. 1 . ■ i' - ':,V . ■•:■,■
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ing essential trace minerals. COMPLETELY
DESTROYS harmful coliform bacteria in pol-
luted water. E.P.A. Registration # 36430-1
Filters up to 2000
gal 1 qt/ minute
flow rate Ex
bottled water txj^
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many hi
ot (killars
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14 OZ
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H2OK® has proven itself in actual usage in many
different parts of the world under some very
difficult conditions.
twid Check or Money Order to:
i|erdsrT)(ii) arxl ^h
8610 Aqueduct
_ >SIOPost Paid Plus e% Tax
Dealer Inquiries Welcome
Stiafaclion QMannt—d or rgbim withtn 10 days fnraoompiliiefcjiia
Four for a title
■ • 'y-x
SWINGING FOR A TITLE —
These four UCLA tennis
stars will attempt to bring tlie
NCAA title back to West-
wood wtien they begin play
next week. They w^ Peter
Fleming (above top), Ferdl
Taygan (above), Brian
Teacher (right top) and
Bruce Nicltols (right). Photos
by Randy Gllle and Allan
Fenfgin of the DB. staff and
CAffiipus Studio.
HMipidMlfl
m
frofetaor Douglai Hobbi
succeed Profctaor Thoouif
"^acobi as UCLA*s faculty
athletic fcpreacnutivc July 1, it
was announced by ChanceOor
Charles £. Young.
Dr. Jacobs, who will retire
from his position as professor
of chenustjry at the end of next
moBth, hBi filled the athletic
pott since 1966 and also serwl
an earlier term from 1961 to
1963.
Dr. Hobbt, an associate ppf^
feasor of political %cyewot^ win
become OCLA^i member of
the Pacific Eight Council and
will also serve on the uni-
versity*s Athletic and Recrea-
tion Policies Commission.
A native of Rochester, New
York, Dr. Hobbs was educated
at Harvard University, re-
ceiving his Ph.D. theie in K964
He was a Robert Treat Painc
Fellow there m 1958-59 and a
Graduate Fellow in I959<60
He has taught at UCLA since
1964
He has won thr^e tok^hmg
honors at UCLA, the 196S and
1974 Pi Sigma Alpha Awards
for Distinguished Teaching in
Political Science and the UC-
LA Distinguished Teaching
Award ui 1969.
He has been active in the
affairs of the Academic Senate
and has served as chairman of
itt system-wide committee on
ntka ^nd juhadiction. He has
Ae been a hearing officer for
UCLA*s staff personnel.
He is coHiuthor, with Martin
Shapiro, of a book, '*Thc
Politics of Constitutional
Lav7 pubhshed in 1974.
Dr. Jacobi, a research
chemisi, served as president oi
the Council of the Pacific
Eight Athletic Conference in
1972 He hns nlK> played an
active role in UCLA's Aca-
demic Senate and was its
chairman in 1967-68.
Intramtirals
Coed
Today is the last day to sign
up for the open coed doubles
volleyball tournament The
tournament will begin this
Monday, May 24 m Pauley
PaviUon for three consecutive
evenings Varsity players wel-
come.
SAVE 25% ON
EVEREAOY
BAHERIES AT
PRONTO MARKET
Every day Pronto Market
discounts the full line
of EveReady biHeflM
25%, including those
long-lived alkaline bat-
teries. Whether you
need to rettoke the fires
of all your camping
lights, traraietor radios,
protable tape racordars
or just every day flash-
lights, you will find the
best buy for the best
battery at Pronto Mar-
kets.
Wa aooapt BankAmari-
card & Maslir Charge.
-=t:r
FOREIGN^
STUDENTS
Worried about the out-of-state
tuition increase?
Come to our Placement Semi-
nar on May 20, 12-2 pm, 3517
Ackerman Union, and find out
how you can work during the
summer.
Also information about
- home-coLmtry employment
- graduate schools
Sponaorad t>y
Student Legislative Council
SANTA MONICA MTNS:
PLANNING CONFERENCE
V
You are invited to learn more about the
mountains and have a direct impact on their
development You can actually h.elp design
the first National Urban Park along with As-
eiemblyperson Howard Berman. Councilparaon
Zev Yarslovsky. and Educator Julian Neva.
as well as other notable planners as planners
and professionals.
Saturday May 22
9am to 5 pm
Sunset Canyon RecraaHon Center
No Raaarvatlons Necessary
Sponsored By Vic« Chancellor • CommittM Off«c« ol Environmental and
Consumer Affairs Community ServiOM CommiMion Student Legitlativa
Counai. Friendeof the Santa Monica Mounta«r>t
r
i
r
•
BecomI a part of the action.
\.
s^
OFFl
Scholl
on each pair of
Exercise Sandals
\
t
the 'originaf that to^
so gcxxj , . . and
feels terrific
Smooth sculpted European beechwood
Exclusive Joe-grip
Foam-padded leather straps
In tx)ne/blue/cherry/denim/¥^ite
tn-color Sizes 4 to 10
v
Bring this ad with you and aav«
S2 00 on each esai Joekin pair
'4
SPECIAL ^2JDOOFFl
$2.00 . ^, $2.00
^^ 12.00 OFF
ki Wf
$2.00
$2.00
WESTWOOO VILLAGE
1000 WESTWOOD BLVD.
omar WMlwood A Waybum
MO-Mt — Mae. h FrL
)
ymm
^iiim
l!«Bn
tht life if yoMi car's or
twcydrs ^t mi mnm
nibbar pvts by protactiiifl it
the
It F
I
i
I
I
I
I
I
I
^
I
I
I
J
I
I
I
I
(MQaTR€,Rat_._
l(Rx»che, Mazda RX2i3,0«c.).. ,^
v«xvBttBpMTi«o.Vblwo,etc I .6296
Jlmpala,Rivieni.Elitelciriro,etc.) 7a98
Motorcycle ccvers
Call or send coupon to Co^/er That Car (2ia|
t24B Palisades Ave SM . Cal 904Q2 36^426
Address
Cjty_
M^<e
Model . .___
Year......: ._
Allow 6vveeks for delivery.
-, Zip
Price
6%Caltax_
Total
No COD'S
MEN AND WOMEN
WANTED RH.L THIIE
SUMMER JOBS
W you are tamporarily discontmuing
your timNion and Meking. sum-
mer work consider this unique
opportunity Large international
firm has several full timt ^fftftHrm
available in district offices mrough-
out the US If accairted. you will be
working with others your own age
You can work locally travel your
own state of naifliboring stalit.
The man and woman m are looking
for are ambitious dependable and
hard working For district office
address m your area or for appoint-
ment with our local manager call
Sherry between 9am to 5 p.m ,
Monday through Friday
In LA cat •23-42tt
In Van Nuyt caN rt7-30S1
In MiWfcaHii! Ben c«M 372-2137
In AmUMlm call 714-S39-07M
3.
UCLAtennis histoiy .
>p.omor>dby NV
FUN PARTY AT
/'j
J
r/l
u.
isnci
Sunday, June 6
4:00 - Midnight
$5.25
C A.K' D^V^r'V r .>tluC*'0**%
Admission to Disneyland, unlimited use of all
adventures & attractions, FREE PARKING.
fickete en lait STvic€ Centf , Kerckhoff 140, while th#y (ast
i
My Hi
DB S^orb Wriler
It IS unknown to mmny sports followers that teimis has been
the bread and butter* sport in UCLA's prolific NCAA
championship-producing atMetic departmeot.
UCLA's basketball dynasty, under coach John Woodea,
produced ten coveted national championship trophies. However,
Brum tennis teams have won 1 1 national crowns, which ian*t
surprising when you consider the two current top-ranking players
in the world are Arthur Ashe and Jimmy Cowsan, Mth former
UCLA NCAA singles champions.
Ashe and Connors aren't the only former Bruins on the
profesaiooal drcuit by any nicani. Top-ranking Americans Billy
Martin, Jeff Borowmk, Jeff Austin and Steve Krulevitz are
former Bruins, as are Sun Paaarell (Puerto Rico), Haraoa
Rahim (Pakisun), Rayno Seefirs (South Africa), laa Crook-
cnden (New Zealand). Lito Alvarez and Modesto Vasqoez
(Argentina), among others.
The tennis tradition at Westwood haa existed ever since
UCLA's first athletic director and tennis coach William
Ackerman began assembhng tennis squads in the 1920's to
counter the top caliber teams at USC
Pnor to 1946, there were no NCAA team championships
contested However, tennis sUrs from throughout the nation
would play a week-long tournament to decide the nationai
intercollegiate singles champion and championship doubles team
The national intercollegiate cluimpionships are the oldest
American collegiate championship event, beginning m 1883 The
Nationai Collegiate Athletic Assooaiion (NCAA) formed in 1906
and began sponsoring the NCAA tennis championships in
conjunction with the United States Lawn Tcnms Asi
(USLTA - now anined the United Stales Tennis
(USTA).
Ivy League and Big Ten players dominated the national
intercollcgiates during the earlier years, with USC stars such as
Gene Mako, Ellsworth Vines and Jack K.ramer, among others,
winning titles in the first three decades of the 20th century.
^^yCLA-. fi« NCAA ...^ ch«„p,o„ ^ J^ TU.h.1. .a
The Bruins will enter next week's 92nd NCAA tennis
championships in Corpus Christi, Texas, having produced nine
NCAA singles tithiis aai seven doubles champs.
The list of Bruin NCAA champions reads like a Who's Who of
world tcnms Herb Flanr won the singles championship in 1950,
leading the Bruins to their first NCAA team tennis championship
and first national crown in the school's history.
Flam, who was among the top ranking players in the work! for
several years, advanced to- the semi-finais of Wimbledon in the
Biid-1950's.
(Continnetf on Page 23)
i
CONFERENCE
For people who are interested in professional screenwriting
and film making or who just plain love film.
/•
*Guests:
Edward Anhalt
Hal Ashby
Bo Goldman
Ernest Lehman
Abby Mann
Frank Pierson
Darryl Ponicson
Paul Schrader
Maurice Singer
Joan Tewkesbury
Robert Towne
Eric Weissmann
Buck Henry
pothers to bo added.
* 7 days of panel discussions with distinguished
screenwriters and film industry guests
* Screenings and film clips
* Script and analysis and script library
* $3,000 of cash awards for Best Comedy, Best
Worpan's Role and Best Script
MeeU June 14-20. Fee $75.
a winning tradHion
f CoBrtkNsed froM Page 22) -
In 1951. cooch Ackerman handed the tennis co^hing duties to
J D Morgan He promfMly ^m^^ the Bruins to three conicc^
uve NCAA title, m 1952. 1953 and 1954 Bob Per^To"
Livmgrtoo and Larry Heubner were Brum standouts dunna thoae
yoafft. Perry taaaad with Heubner and LiviiMlOo to wm scaa
doubles titles in 1953 and 1954, respeaivdy
After a third-place fmiih m 1955. the Bruins captured their
fourth nationai crown the following season
The Bruins woukJ have been favontes to capture nationai
Sr^Ia " 'r.li^''n!;r' I^CUCLA had beaten their p^e^
the NCAA champKHtthipa^ bi wnai ^h football infractions.
All UCLA athletic teams were kept out of post-seaton
championship events from 1957-59 at a result of NCAA-i
The year after the probation ( 1960) the Bruins, led by NCAA
singles champion Urry Nagler. who teamed with Allen Fox to
win the NCAA doubles, captured iheir sixth nationai title Foa
also captured the NCAA singles championship the folk)wina year
to Iea4 the Bruins to a seventh title.
The Bruins finished runner-up to USC the foUowina three
^ns with Arthur Ashe and Sun Pasa^ell getung hungner and
huniner for the NCAA gold each year
Ashe led the Bruins to the NCAA *gokf' m 1965, winmng the
NCAA singles crown in his senior year and joining with Ian
Crookenden to win the doubles.
Morgan had become UCLA's athletic director, succeeding
Wilbur Johns in the summer of 1%3 By 1%5 the responsibility
of directing one of the nations lafffsat and most successful
athletic departments, in addition to coaching the perennial
national-champion-contending Brum tennis squads, became too
much for one man io handle
Morgan, who had been a Bruin le^nls sur in his collep days,
hired Glenn Bassctl, the co-capUin of UCLA's first NCAA tembs
championship squad in 1950, to uke over the tennis duties
Basset! has kept the winning tradition going, compiling a
superb 167-18 dual match record since I%7 en route to three
NCAA team titles, two runn^r^up finishes, three third-places and
one sixth-place finish ^
Basset! and the fdur-man UCLA team of Peter Fleming, Brian
Teacher, Ferdi Taygan and Bruce Nichols leave for the NCAA
championships in Corpus Christi this Saiurdav The tournament
begins next Wednesday, May 26 and continues through
Memorial Day, May 31
In the 30-ycar history of the NCAA team championships.
UCLA and USC have each won 1 1 times The Bruins have
flirted runner-up on six occasions and ended Up third seven
times.
Southern
r
Campus
UCLA Yearbook
Needs An
EDITOR
r
—^c:iL
I
I
^-*.
-I
Loavo Your Mark at UCLA
Southern Campus. UCLA a yoarbook needs an f ditor for the 1977 Edition
Hmn IS a chance for a creative poraon to help iMveJiho hiatory of next year at UCLA
The Editor is reaponsible for the format, content, coordinating of production
and supervising staff This is a student position with a stipend the staff also
lives a stip)end
A)9ply 112 Kerckhoff Half
Appttcatlont Deadlkie Frklay May 21 4:90 PM
■ATTENTION !
^>HYsicmft*a^
IBANK LOANS!
i^.
Small Business AdnninistrafkDn (S6A) guaranteed
kxins are available atlfie Western Bank of Commerce.
Advantages over conventional txank kxsns are:
■ Ubercri advances
*
■ Tdrms to 7 years
■ Favorable Interest rates
For infoimation and brochure contact
coll Hugh SmNh or Mil lUmar at 477-2401.
SHERWOOD OAKS EXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE
6353 Hollywood Boulevard
Hollywood. California 90028 ^
(213)466-6911
A Non-Profit Educational Organization
Summer classes Bill Kerby's Screenwriting Workshop, Al Levitt's Screenwriting Workshop.
Syd Field's Introduction to Screenwriting, Helen August's Television Writing Workshop. Eric
Weissmann's Legal Aspects of Screenwriting. The New Screenwriters
WESTERN BANK OF GQMMERCE
"Westvvoocrs 24-hcxjr Bank'
t28«
j^
I
.'*.
I
li
-I
Jj.
-CLASSIFIED AD
TVm ASUCLA C«
fully support* lh« Unlvvrtlly •! Call-
iimta't pt/kof an won <l>cf<waiMil«w.
A^vartlslfig tpac* will not to
•MaNiM* m lh« OsMy aniin !•
who #lscrliiilnolot on llio liosit of
•nc««try, color, notlonol or^ln. roc*.
fsM^on. Of toi Nolfftof Wio OoMy Bniin
nor th« ASUCLA Communtcotlont
Board tMM in<>o<titalod any of Ma aar-
vlcot advortlsod or odvortloors ropro-
•onlod tn lhi« tttuo Any parson a«-
Having tfiat mn advarllaamanl InNila
Moua violaias Via Board s pattcy 9t% non-
discrimination fttatad haraln should
commurMcala complaints In tarMIng to
ths Buslnass Managar. UCLA Dally
mn»^. 1 12 Kafdthoff HaM. 30t Waal«Mod
Plaza. Los Angolas, California ••014.
For ■■■liiami «Mi HiM^ing diieHwd
nation problams. call; UCLA Mousing
Offics. (213) SlS-aoi. Waatalda Fair
Housing (213) 473-
ATTENTIOM
"Parants wIMipmI ^rlnars'' Santa
•aS-0070
(Ann MM)
campus
wedding
anfX)unCement s
kerckhoff ]2y
82506|l
COMITATUt
Ma
•1«70
PORTRAITS
taken no^
for Graduation
Call for appoinfmmmf
(jsuila
coftip US Studio
150 hertkhoH hall 875 061 1 k271
open mon^n 8 30-4 30
WHAT DOES A BRUIN
BEAR GIVE FOR GIFTS?
UCLA clothing for children
and adults, bears, mugs,
glassware, watches, desk
accessories, jewelry, per-
sonalized Shirts, trophies,
football helmet radio.
BMrwear.
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
personal
LfOAL
7F
MOM W
Is at
Hair
. Your
PAUL
(• MM)
STBPM. mf rocky roowdi. cant lalw ycw
Birthday^ tor granlta. Mava a gnalaa
**'*^ ^•^ (tMM)
DIAMA - Now that you'ra Oan Hap
aMd N»y Mttla sislar - what* laft?
Mass crapas? Watt mMI AMn Springs.
— ■ ISMMt-
MAIIOlf Lat Janat sit In ft»a front
saat at laaat one* (in har Ms) WHd.
(• M M)
LITTLE B.C Nad IpIb a« fun at SiMia
CM Shipwrscli Thanks Lova LBMa T
(•MM)
MINUTE Man - Congratulallaiia an pMir
to iha Broiharhaad.
(•Mat)
(7 Mad)
itJSOUPUCATi
WaBntiBaf atlarnoons Wild Whist
•vABfa Clua 1«S8 Waalwood BUd
f7 0irt
MAUTIFUL OuNar Strains - c<
parary «a cMsiltat In a Hghi backgrountf^
styls for pardas and wadMiHi. L4M>-
(7M21)
ial
SOCIAL In
112.00 for sincars
KEtTH slud a« kKirth floor Wa loaa
ypu and yaur Body. Not nacassarHy
(•MM)
^^s. ^^ "^ ••^^ Baaarly NMa.
M212 213-272-I0B2.
(• M M)
MAC WIST
If fiMlid H May 22. but I
dPOuM loaa to add you, I «!•• you.
In anaaipr to your first qua ■Bon,
no wa hovan'l brolian up. Aa lonf
ALL-U- Cocktail. Band, snd Baar-Bust.
Friday night at Thata Dalla Chi Saa md
(•M21)
for roffit
In mind A haarl. ovon If nol In
ifjUflU
1212
Sa
OCLUXC aiadteal ar
7BiStSawMMeidea.2
kPig. t oanaunaBui
X-ray, davaloping, physical tharapy.
Can BaMy BJ»-
(•MM)
PUOBLV; Vou
and m da Mm sai
an ays on your
AC Spark Plufs
(•Mac
)
OEAB Egga-A-f 'o • you wM soon ba
frlad for scrainBdng ttta Chi OmEQQa
LAKE Arrowhisd: Buadc caBln.
twf Ipcallon Slaap • Firaplacs $00
»nd tIdO waak. •M-«S»4
(•Ma4)
(• MM)
HOT8MOT W<
Good tuck on yaur
la Bia Big School
2Lorrro
(•Mat)
PIANOS asaMadls tar rant fram $15 00
from tunar. Soma lor sala. AM laBuBL
H4
(•J 4)
ADBIENNE N you wata k>oklng at my
naval wtiars would your mouth ba7
Naat Mms swaNow m Mo-BaM.
(•MM)
XWW LaNar. Ba praparadf Tha orchid
Is gonna
bafora May
naaa Ma ours. Lova.
AMMOWNCAD caBIn In gulat drao.
Slaapa •. IffO/a daya. $1SB/7 daya.
M7-14d7.
(•Qlr)
RCMT-A-TV SIBjM
sludanf discounts Dollvory to •:BB.
47S-3S7t. aasa Woalwood.
com
uraan
(• M 20)
IBRUIN TV A STEREO RENTALS
COLOR T V'S
MARIAN UBrarlan.Happy MMMay. loay
mmmm\ Losa, Al and Ray (G. A. and P)
'(•MM)
MONTE-Gat smart,!
ball, dancing, diving, snd drowning
UnforgattaMlai Happy 21 Slaapy Roal
(•Mas)
MX s day
$7.50/month .
LlmMad Mdiply svailaMM
;k/wnila T.V s - $7 M/i
CaM; 27S-1t32
NOTE Our pctcv* •»• dfcoiiwWS lo UCLA
»lud»n» mtm cynvnt Msf csfds atMy
Happy 21st:Oldaf you gaf. Mia
It s to bo a "SEX SVMmOL ' Lova. Woofff.
(•MM)
for sale
BOB (MSIV) Did you raa ly loss it bat
Frtday (14 Msy 1«7d)? Your concarnad
'"•^ from LawM. ^^ ^ ^^
LACY. Happy balatad birthdsy Wa losa
fwtt. "Tha Bundy Boys PS. Ht AdaNa.
(•MM)
EMILO LIVES! THE ALPHA CHI-0
KNOW
(• M M)
DEAM Karan? Tlianin for iBa fun
last Thuisdsy night* DG% ara all right
Gana -EN Traian Knight
DIANE
H
Day" wNhout
Lor. Us A
you
WOMEN i Waak 1078 Ntey 24-M CaM
Womon s Boaourca Canlar for mp^n
|iiB»)
LJB.C. - Happy 21al
Only $2.50 each!
loatunng Nia
Osii
in
Chsgsii Miro Homsr \MyMh. msn>
hai-
Laaa la yau S aniy you - B.SX. (wRB
W.V.a.) fS M M)
9 A.M.. 5 P.M.
May 1721
TfB^house North Patto
Ackamfian Union
•••% THD. U PM
(10 MSB)
.«^
.)
(UCLA
#M21)
^^^^nwitortainmofit
MOVING SALE-
9m, aiB. Sat. May sa-Jana 1. 11BBS
^piBEMnara. Na. 4, 47S.21dS. . TZ
(IS MIS)
•EAUTMUL Lady
m Buncha Yau
47g.^S72.
I ay^x In fiant .
9M'f Bruin but
Maa cMi
(•M21)
SANYO M watt RMS imffm
t7»/allar 47g.lBI2 aRar • pm.
(IS M 21)
CONTESTANTS
WANTED
Lv.
(1SMSS)
your favorlis flavars • tappings far
iS\SS!!1^^7ZLiZ!nT''*^ BREAK THE BANK
(•M21) AaC 11:aB am M • F
rOU NEED SOMEONE
TO TALK TO.
CALLUS.
flMalMPaal
SySJS. 472-1
(1BM2t|
for salo
Ifs the Return of
1950s Prices!
You cBn ordBT sny of Bm mony
UCLA>plBM ring aoglons rfiBdB of
Idwoldrt stdinldod ttool-dnd thoy
only cost "
91
QBt Dolivory in Juiy-Auguot
ASUCLA Students Storp BBBfWBBr
B lovol Ackaman Union. S25-7711
MOVING
armchair tM
r Oaniah soM SIM.
sat taOO 473-
(10 m M)
DRESSER ('2 mkffor%) .•'X3'X2 • •
drawars • naw cost SI SO - will sail
for $100 CaM Oa^-ISOS.
rtOM21)
aoMtpmawt. Salact CmMfnkm WInaa.
Tha Orapa Nid. Sn2 W Bind St. WaaC-
chaslsr. Ca. SSB4I
(IB
WOOOEN BarraM • Kagi, « .,
halchcovars. nailing S rppa, funky
c'P**« • bo Has. aid bsrnwead. 021-
Tl SR M A SR SI A BR 92, BR M.
11i
Blad., W4L.A
NtES ELECTRONtCS
472.2BMIar
TWO IS"
no
QUEEN Wi
f 1O0.M Day - RM 4M-M01
(10 M M)
MCCARTNEY AMft
NEY AND WMUQB: M
laft. muat saM Oava 274
MCCART-
(10 M m;
I MATTRESSCa ALL NSW
FmVI
Kl««« SsW - ttia.t4
THE MArmaaa store
11714 PIsi
stMsnlNgl
477^101 '
c%
"(naw, S^SB). "Oayr
HI. SSS - lap
(10 M 21)
SKrs Ftadiar abi sisal 210
bbHNngs, graat condHlon. SMB.
-7100
no M Ml
MCCARTNEY
Call Jos or Art
rid M Ml
STEREO
ants: SluOant did-
Vallay 001 -•Sas. ••1.2023
S21-M72;^gaB-0M1.
(1«Olr)
BMNAN JEWELRY
at
^*d|0. ZuTM. Santo Domir>go
Rrloaa alart at M JS
ASUCLA Studants Stora
Sportswaar
. B laval. Ackarman LbMon
O ABI/PM
2 RSL
4aO-2100
(1« M M)
McCartney TIckata. Bhiat aalf this
(MuaM21)
). S2S.BB. Sony Tapa
mm mmt, S7SJS. Tap»
472.2SM.
(1^ M M)
foraala
["Tea Of iRStrwniaat"
T1
COBVoS 500
• 4-lavai Slack ••
NOVUC
nvsiwrji TioMM
12
naSMMaansi
11
CALL sra-fTai
EQUIPMENT
•snkwai WLA
3 SI WMisfbsfiOisasFwy
N Vou'fa Qo«ng to Ba
Juniors NrxI Qumrtrnf-
you can oidar your clata
You'll got tummar delivory and
you con wsor your officMI cIbob
rmg for Fall Qudrtor
ASUCLA Students' StOfB
Come to Beerwepr B IopbI
Ackerman bniot^
opportunltiad
h
AUfHTWfm urn I
for two 3 act plays
(rolBS open to all ages)
Itmiimf MChoiBrthipg Bf-mimtimbt^
m th0 lotlQwin/ff^wofMshapB
ACTING
DIRECTING
PLAVWRITING
DANCE
CALL US AT
§373011
SANTA Mentoa Carp has
MSMiliii avadaMs lor UCLA
•o work m oar oMIas tor s m*n
a< 3 hrs Mon MWu ^fl. baglnnliig 5 15
rnrn^ Positions will last thru snd of
MaPM*e* end ass an s comrmssion imsis
RxsssnBy iwipluysU UC sludanis m^t-
sging S13 SO psr hr If you »rm incoms
aiakvalad and wMHr>g to work caN Barry
BMrr. •2SM33
(13 MM)
needed
h subjects
DERRESSED Studants naadad for
i( OaM SaS-S122 amr S4S.
(14 M M)
CASUALLY OR SERIOUSLY DATBIQ.
COHABfTBIG. ENGA4
R«D COURLES
•MiiMiiiiialii study EARN 01 M/RER-
SOM RUI8 FEEDBACK Canw TOOE-
FRAia.
INFANTS a«ad 2-11
at UCLA In Mia
f14 M Ml
(14 M 21)
ITALIAN
(IS MSB)
SS-SSQ/
tBff By NMllpR,, ^p„
RHNiRi ler aiBBa^SCasa
HVLAND DONOR CENTER
1001 Oeyley Ave . Was
47S-0051
(10 M Ml
SALE L
EseaNanl
CSUS Rrof
rks faoMla Inlarastad
^farslgn c
Is/ music/
(MM 24]
(10 MM)
HELPLINE
CALL DANA 11 a.m.-S p.m.
(213) 277-i
MB1EO Ceal SIM
lis
$1-2
(10M21)
>raa half tytlfig Far mors im*e r^
t^-^am Taas - Sat
(12 Qlr);
CLASSIFIED AD
11B1B
(12 Qlr)
TNIMRMia Of Bes? Maw national
ma BdiRii Mf ^ttmmn saiualliy saaks
latlars for publication about sosual
aapaRanaaa (wRal fmtt'm^ daRa). Mm
laalaa (what yau'd iMia le Be) and
t>RIVE V.W. M
Yam WM poy I1M.
CdM SdS>72lS.
(1fM21)
help Wilted
URGENT!
i. Clartcal S
SUndsrgi
RECORDING ENOINEERINO
NOviUfcblUSlClAN-PRODUCLR
^GQRAMMED TO IMPART SKILLS
YOU NEED TO WORK m THE
RECOROINO INDUSTRIES
RECORDS-VIDEO FilM-
BROAOCASTinG
BASIC ADVANCED IN STUDIO
LECTURES
OOLO • QRAMMY AWARD WRINER
aiLL LA2ERUS. WMT
LNBftED BNROLLJBENT 4 MORE
BIP0...7SS-74S4 OR 7S2-M22
— nS M M)
[THE BOO VMEN
JROW tomorraw s mmpm^f laday
•sasaiy navavMf bes anaawss. BftM
St.
•3A0 la F
•IBS
ELECTROLYSIS:
lealelS
(1«M21)
aafa
b«aa 10 yrs pl«M
Pf— aanaunallan Ms
Bl 477^1M.
mom
•N.SlMO/wli.
(U M M)
WANTED - Slora managar S selaa
gMP'i^ fer MjMm shap Fidl A part Mma.
S 9r
Call 4SS.3S^1 batwaan 11 M S 1:M
(IS MM)
VTON EXPREM
MOVERa
HpuNnf
RIcti
B81
47Sn32 Near
(IB MM)
(!• m M)
MNV SO
for 2 beys. 11 S 12«
(2 daya/waab) 7/2S/7S
Rayc
snih
STUDENTS &
TEACHERS
WELCOME AT
KELLY GIRL!
SUMMER Jobs
t210 a waak Muat
ba abia la laloi
Caa47S.B«M
(ISM 21)
•UMMMPJOBO
FULL OR Fdirr TIMC
t Arts S CrsMs 1
Nmisi. sssa-tiass lor
2 Ws«w Ssiaiy 1
-iitruiii isii 111 tm
tISSSIar
Men and Women: Earn
extra money dunng summer
break while enjoying a
wiriety of temporary ass4gn-
ments We provide tempo-
rary jobs for all clerical
and/or industrial skills
s
4
S
• fMNsry MJa
7 asm ss!r». JMAO hr
• WsNw sr imMmsb U ht
9 Prm
10 Oikiwi 4 Hrs
FOP
ARROW INSURANCE
34S-4Sa8
472-1401
ar |HM far
(M M 8M
aaaQaaaa aaa #sai
RIDING LESSONS
THE JOB
TO^Y
NATIONAL -^in III] MmBImM. New al
IBa Barrlnglan Riaaa. W.L.A 11744
WHt^krm 477 -OSM. •7gSS^7 With
mf IBaa M yrs. asparlafics Halp
la •tudy-ralaln-ralai-slaaa Saa o^r
lalaphana Yallaw Ragas »4. Spaalal
•1114
(IS
RREONANT7 Wa
•1111.
jauaumm
• • i •• *.<•»■• C«i-««»«
.^^gyai^gmil
(IS OR)
VW MAINTENANCE SERVICE: SM.M
(T
S
•Ml)
arona •Ts^fstafr
WSf 'bga 21 M
aclhrlMas at Urd
47S
*WORK WHEN YOU
rWANT, AS OFTEN AS
YOU WANT. •YOU
DONT PAY US - WE
PAY YOU!
Call ua 8-5:30 p.m daily or
9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Saturdays
KELLY SERVICES INC
FulleHon 714-879-9762
Long Beach 2l3^4a2*e7^i
Los AngelBB 213-
Beverly Bfvd 658-6750
Wilshire Blvd 381-7951
Montebello 213-724-6910
Newport Beech 714-633-1441
Orange 714-547-9535
Paaadsna 213-792-4176
Torrance 213-542-1589
¥afi Nuys 213-783-2530
Westchester 213-645-0750
^A^twood 213-477-3951
Whittier 213-696-0447
equal opportunity employer
(ISM 21)
WE
V'our voicaf EscaMant gay lar'
-•77»
(1SM2B)
an a
court Alsa caurt ranlal. Br
•PBM.472
lid
BALLET F««a aray la Baauly. 12BS
and UpN. VWCA. S74 HB-
(ISM 21)
J^u-
Intarmadlalas. aBvancad. • laai
•21 Spaalal lalaa. 2 ar a
waably. Irana Sarala. DlaRngalaliad
(1SQR)
(ISM 21)
1B12 ar Pfod 4d^-144^
(I^QR)
A RRBMAL AL
CHARTERS dnd aeaaBaa paabafaa
an Ran Aia 747 la HawaB/Oualaaidl^
S. AmaRoa/Euraps CaN Karry HaRB*>
•n-SSM. SSS- 1222 ^^
lost Jk fOUfMl
" ■
-
MRESCRimON Ql lound S-17^M
on lawn bibasia RpMa A RspiN taM
•7».^BM. Aak Mr RaBBi.
(17 M IB)
LOST Aprs M Msy j. Taa
wnn gdie bane. Baaear. hi
47d-d21«
(17 M SSI
^OUND-idBMa Braaalat bl tienl pf Rew.
aM UBsary MiMpgii la aMba. CdM
•SMI Jaann. ^^^^ ^^
g^jyg9M%..~§
^mBM^mMC^KM
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laes Ackanean SMS.
DamalaBia
IS - ^rbmt.
fid M 21)
InMfol
nvf MLptAM-
noi/inc?
Loarost ralas ler
^W
ar 4S7-7S72
(1«Olr)
MOVING Mssldsntlal spartmafHa.
afficst Largs small |obs Lacaf • leng
dislancs CaM Barney 3M-47M
N sasa
^^ /1« OSr»
f SCAPF SEF THF WORl H'
ISC
TOURS A TRAVEL
Spnng Summ*' 4 Fall chsft»f«
I onrton
Madrtd
Frsnkfurl
ROiindtrlp Uom t29S 00
Hawaii and Hmm Vork
Roundlrtp from 1^69 00
runt iorsi srss loura
Uy LB- and bii» SI minimum coat
ASUCLA Travel
Mia ONLY
UCLA Cbanar FMfM
ITS net IBO MM lo
Ml
for
ba Mcceplpd up le
• Ctienar
LAX-Amsterdam-LAX
FRfhtd flMRBiBMl MBf
11C75 June 21 11
12C75 June 21 12
laCTe
22C76
23C7e
27C7S
2429
$42*
June 29 10
July 5 i
July 5 9
July • 4
July IB 4
$419
$429
$429
$42#
UCLA EUROPE
CHARTER
SPECIALS
-LON-LA
LA-BRUBBELS S/IB-B^M |4M
.JMANKFURT, ZURICM
HAWAII . . .
LA-MOMOtULU •«• «M>
MEXICO
MA2ATLAN Btr S
NEW YORK...
123arks roonginp on TWA tr SMB4R
Rt.ua Car
rpll/Eurpll peases. ..Acci
tions Student FlIeRls wItRlR
EufeRe/AMAM...Ii
'» ■
^m
,2-,
—p
i
CLASSIFIED AD
LOS ANOCLtt
MIOFISSIOMAL CLUB
140t WllUmd Mwd . L A C« 10024
(21 J) •7t-tl2l/ (213) 477. ni2
Toc CNAirrcfi fliohts
ToeunoK
(Lots of Othofv)
Min -Pncm tOC
-n
irmm
B7W-6
ELFOriQt
7138
07irf
M03-5
Ll9t3l3
Ot(Mt
LIMMZ
•/lft-7/12
t^Yt-a^24
•/23-7/OB
•/22-t/2l
•/at-a/23
•/3»-7/1fl
7^4/30
7/(»-7/1f
7/fft.«/10
7/ 10.*/ 10
7/13-7/26
7/13.1^24
717^13
•/03>M17
S/3l-t/20
9/04- 10/ tl
t/at-nvir
37f
L»mlt»tf tpM*. Book flow. Wiit ^|
Isffid book to «loyt prtor to
>4S0Cl>1/^
TRAa. SERVICE
Umon A-213 (wNh tXPO)
- Fr«tfoy 10:00-4:00
•20-1221
JJtTAIfr Piiipun Photo* In color
li.Tl. a7-1033. 2132 W Olymptc Blvd.
Las Ai^^fttea
" (23 0tr)
EUWOPf — IsTMl— touOi Amoflca. ttu-
dont Olfhtt yoor-round. ISC A. 11007
Ipn VMoonto m^a M, LA 00040 020-
§000.
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charter Fhght Service
Over 1000 fi.qhts to Europe thii
Summer • Discounted Student
' Thts to Europe • Charters to
wan and Mpxico • Student &
^acuity discounts on car purchas-
f% rentals and leases • Study
tours • Camping Tours • Unreg
d Student Tours • Rail
>f b • riy dnve European at
""^'■'^*' • Mini Tours • Hotn
jn • Hostel Informa
• International Sludenl ID
cards • fr^^ travel counseling •
f^ XPO Travel Library
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING'
travol
tr«v«l
CHARTERS (psnisi htm^n
"0 #SI«t wilh 4m0%r%uf*
•lay 2 lo 21
0«or 300 Nil
WI WILL HtLP you OO TO ItMAeL
LAB* AH 7/
LOM 0#) 7/04 10^
M 7/t3.a/a«
B« 7/10-0^
LA|. 7f %n^^M
Ptm 01 7^0^12
41t
07
7/24-^12 7 4ai
•% 4Vf
fha
47«
fromtlOi
Irom tlOS
AO 7/00.0/30
cm 7/14-W10
£j O/Oft-0/02
CJ 7/00-O/30
*^*^ jB 7/17.0/13
^^ M 7/17.000
^-^ UU- kJ 7/01-0/01
'MM fj 7/00^
HAWAI1 1 A2«*M<is
NYC 1 2 3 «HM4i«
ORIENT Minyd.!,.
Cor>lact ASTfA for ov«r 200 otr»«f flight*
*'tf> d«p«Mur»t from L A San f r.ncitco
Gh»c»9o Ooslon tsi«w ror* «Va«h.r>gion D C
Cr>«rt«r rag tm^tttm 45 day advanc* bdaliina
prtre sub|«ct to 20% incraaM
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL. E^.iLc>«,t rroff«aoa
YOUTH. Europ* 1-yr froiVMOf
APEX.22-45 aOctSvadv booli Eur fromOMO
TAHITI SUPER DEAL tars-
ORDER NOW
TRAIN ft FERRY TICKETS, CARS.
CAMPER RENTALS. RAILPASSES
INTRA-EUROPEAN STUDENT
CHARTERS
SPECIAL CRUISE OFFER
'0 Mo. 14 day Caf.bb«anvS America cruiae
on Italta .r>ci aif lorm LA 1 nit» Miami. uanalarn
plus no-charga 2-wM air aatvoaion from |700
ITOURS
JAMAICA 6 days .^^
ITALY -15 days ZZT!
I L ON PAR AMS todays Zm
MEXICO S day* lift
HAWAII 8 days tM7
OiCENTENNiAL, • days OliO
NEW VOf^K CITY 0 day*- IMi
Many olhar* long A thon budgat A datuxa
I Ortv-siop Mrvica lor awflOwtOa lawr* crmaaa.
holal* car^. domasMc A InlafMllwial ttciiattrtfl
{PSA FREE COUNSELING
Inttani RvMrvaliortt TIckat 0«tlwafy
OPEN M f 10-4 ALL YEAR
AmoiIooo Storioot Trovol Aooociatloo
1 924
S0024.
Lao
(2181 4TS-4444
IRAN
Are you going to Iran tr^i* ■umm#r-'
Daily 747 Flighli
\ Contact 1
Amiri Tour A Travel Sarvica
6725 Sunset Blvd No 419
Hollywood CA 90028
Tel 46€ 5259
Iranian ttudrnta $fl4,T 00 round Irip
OCL>l/
ummmn chartciis
^^. ^ ^^ ^2 WEEKS
ONE-WAY FLIOMTS IN EUROPf .
AVAILAatE i
n^KKL'tUP'* - CALL lOOWTY I
DAYS S3S.7Si1 EVES SSS^STIS
LOW
L#ffl#OII. Psfis,
ymK aM KmmO. Mr OiUS mm 0?4-
ani |4iy«). oro-IOll {mm\. w»
SOUTH AMERICA
Amoion-Junjlo (
VMir trip to larMi IMa
pr««M« yM wHU o
•wsl VMrN y«
Hrmmi. Write
aiM20)
S I Mtf M.V.C. OlfO.
(213)
(SOOir)
CARSINtUROPt
RENT OR SUV
^CIAL RtDUCnONS TO
TEACHERS ft STUOtMTS
FRUCATALOQ
rCUNOCAM
rr sLvo. LJL issi
271-4300
ISC
INTFR^ATIONAL STUDENT
CFNTFR
btHWiNG ' MMIJNITY
4 , .
1023 Hllgard Avenue
%-* Oa4tv
Totmoi
Touns*
■m ub FOO
totorina
LOAT. ORE. MCAT. OMAT Tulortn«
•II aublactt Plaaaonabia raiaa A
•■■"<■■ EdMcaHon Cantar 1730 Waat-
wood 470.0100. 10O10 Vaniea. 037-
0474.
OUfTARI
of loOi/roGli
I'm
AU
(S4M3S)
(24iii2f)
to UCLA
470-3373.
(»•
fcTM
<MOlr)
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
a»17 S«ilo Monica
In
Santa Monica
LAW SCHOOL AOftllSSIGN
TEST PREPARATION
lOlor JwlylA
20 hr.
•QMAT couraa Oaflna Juna 0 for
July to taat
-SPEED READING couraa ba«lna
•CAREER OUIDAMCE
S2t-4429
(24 Mil)
Poliinf fiotlaa
" Can
18 DAYS
SUMMER DEPARTUREI
CMlMcti ONrtMM B^^^Mi
EXPO CENTER. SSS-SSSI
Film PtaaawMSuiir May 2S. 12 Noon
1?'
Jr>iwf»r%ai Studiri Tour 0 B"
5 . . i . ,
• Mmcj . M ', s 2J $4 0(
N •' ■ v.-rt...<»fnln ^ r- .
$90 00 I
siudani rata r>orv aiudant rai«* a«anat).>'
All Inurt irwiud* iransportollon Mgr.
« •nir.nr. '••t •nack« afMl lodging
Our goal It to create »n inidrcultural *
^■•-hange in a relaiad triendiy
atmosphere and Ic do thia at a
' rnin;mum coa» to you
■ asi
(20M30)
curolo 704/P9 IMM Soloclrla. MM-
WSrtMra. PorOlng. Joonno. Mi JWQ.
• to Air »
J^ Tjrpinf ftanrtca OuoHty typinf
—T" — ~^-|M it 2ir
CoO 470-1137.
LIGHTNING JyPiHQ O
Thaa«a Opaciol*at
^raa iaiwnalaa
PROFCOOIONAL COLLEGE TYPING
SPECIALIST
Tario papart Thaatt Disaartationa
Faaturaa -Foreign Languagat Ociancea
••at^ Tablas. Otagramt Muaic Editing
Counaalir>g. Xaroaing Pnnbng. ftmaing
Qludanl Patea 300-3101
, i«i» Tm
t^oooa. diaaortotlona, o«c. Coft 304-
7007 lor fraa aoSmola.
MS CRD
RUTH:
TVPWK3 by LIZ • MM SELECTRIC II.
CHOICE TYPf FACE - Tarni Papara.
Tlioooa, Ntanuacrlpla. FlalO Sludlaa
EdHlno. SCREENPLAY SPECIALIST
(noor OilMSi PorO). 0S3-1S00.
no J 2)
Top
a^ttcollofiol. aclontlflc. otbar Don't
7310. ,^ -^ - ■ ^**
rtooai
PAGES by profaiaiunli.
_ oda w/12
MM Corract. Soloct-
(2SMS0t
RUTH C. DMSCRTATIONS. THESIS.
STATMTICAL. FAST. DtPCNOAMJT
SEVEN DAYS A WCEK MANY TYPf
STYLES. 030-0420 ,^ ^
(20 Qlr)
TYPMO/BOrTINQ. IMS.
TYPING at homa. IMM Eh4
(20 J 01
XEROX 2' ^C
.nrriri kinkos iil^mt-
l20M>1t
^9lnQ
rtOY.
MS CM)
RRPCRT-iactmicai typiiif-maltv aclais-
Se-moooa. ataaartotiona. boo«ia>aayo
FOO-2004 CbonaNi.
M J4
FLASH Flng ara Sooro^Hpl SaaJJao,
Eacollonl w«rli. Prompt aflontiMi. '
P*cli-Mp ft #01. N waiOai. 022-30SS/
' <2iJ4l
(Si Qlr)
ESSIONAL wrHor wWi
(UCLA) »« lapo ona I
ole. 6«or SI
OS J 4)
S.A. M
(2SH21)
J^*^^7P««0 odmng Eitghab
Tarm
MM 030-7472
(2$OTR)
•pts fumishad
VOUCLA
»lor« Singloe
A 2 Bodroom Aptt
To«aaf ApofMMlli 4TT 0001
10041 Sirathmora Pod olpvotort
aacurity garaga Atao loMi
SPECIAL SUMMER RATES
Olaw Folf Tortoco 470-7030
540 Qlonrock - 543 Landfair
470-403-610-610 Landtoir 477
J
FURNISHSD/Unlurnlgiioa
1140. Smtloa 0100. Pool. Hoort of
<2SOli|
1 Mnn. Wo» %l
lvi_lmmod P»ol - 010% Olanrocli
(S0MS4)
t140 FUNMlSHeD
kHchan Dacorolad
0S2-7301 oir O0W-44S3
MS 01 4)
f^IllIIi*2!L^5J:'^ o^'-oi 4 lift/
(20MS4)
1175 ATTR Fuffi |m^
aoporata o«fPS« Laundry facllltlaa
!r*\*^ Corninf . LA 065-3300 for
(20M21)
SUMMER Roloa Opacloua ainf loa.
2-t I *^rooma Larfa courtyard.
••2^Vf««*»f Aea Mo WHablra 470-
*^ OAYLEY. ocroaa from Dylialra.
471.
MINUTES from UCLAt SInfloa. for-
"* ' oom, banMry -^ono^
iblo prlco. 2S01 So.
(20 Qlr)
470-21]
apta. unftimiohod
En«llah Oordan UtlllNoa Slovo ond
^^*S«>[alor Protaaalonol Proforrad
410 Ocoon Aaanoa. S.M t3Sf
(27M21)
(S7MS4I
shaff«
^^OKfcpuscJ
«E«SM
*^-j^y^
._ >j
../-
apta.toahf
forsubl
jggyalng nooded »^|Ap» fi^^^.'
RESPOOMMLE, roomate wanlad
15 NIWMlH lo UCLA Oam lM«a bad"
$110 plua ullHUaa 030-0040
(20M20)
PRIVATE room In 3 badroom 0 M
apartmant noor Soaeh Sbora luicttan
$112. CoO SM-0S03
(20 M 2$)
51 to 00 ONE bodroom aot f%^ u? . a
»urnM.|^d JunTtn^Ton^Si^
•aiore 1 1 pm ■^-^-••^
_MtH21>
y^ ^O^i »or J bdrm. 2S boPi a^
»»•'•••» w L A 020-1100
(20M21)
for
koop trying
SUM.f T lo
(33 M 20)
J-_^. .._!.
1 FCRSON naadad ^M^MTbir-
ruahad 2 bdrm apt Waat«»ood MonOi of
Juna $110 470-0253
^30M26)
^' ttw junmaf 2
»• atudanl or pro-
FEMALE aliora 2 badroom. 2 both wl«i
3 girfs Pool, aacurity ', nn campua
$100 mo 473-2003 oRor S
t20M2»
JIEOPONSISLE, reemmata
wanlod Juno 1ST Minutaa to UCLA
Larga badroom. 0110 plua utihtiaa.
(2t M 25)
____ (20 M 21 1
tunny
jJEWt^t^moN
. Raima by baach Into «
Jung YtddiaNieil 472-0725
»»» %l »H
t»0*cony Unlur»..K^
Srantwood 1200 monfhlTMO-aii?
(20 M 24)
»y Frof at UOC taani.
..rtui^ ^, ^ \! J"'* o' •»»«Mr and Auguai
•'••IH opt KunMng Call 306 4723
(33 M 34)
*KiOIC •tudant Sachalor apt
0»od piano AvaNiOli^l -0/TD ianta
^^^mkcm $150 020-2000
MSM24)
HOMEim
Up to $30
0100 10-0 wbdya
■ tl i^maig M
■ i WVMf 1 1 9
'r*aaa Call ENio 276-
(33 M 25)
I f ASY Oolng poopla to ahare badroom
In turniahad. Waatwood apt Pool
■ounp. )acu^zi. plua -mora $146 —.
(20 m 24)
FURNlSHEa 1 badroom apartmant
Sjjniwood Avail 4 18 $200 month
020 7642 after 4
i^ M 20f
FEMALE roommala ahara atngla «v4tb
kitchan bath nmmr UCLA $77 50 mo
atarttrtg 0/15 Evontnga 473-3032.
(20 M 24)
HOUSM
COUPLE wanta to houaa ait or gat aub
•••aa on 1 or 2 badroom apf for 0200
or laaa from Ohd June to Ohd Saol
(33 M 26)
OWN lorgo. Hirniabod bodroom. nait
to UCLA Sundack laundry garaga.
Ouiat not nmm frata AvaHabla Juite 15
$150 Ofann 473-0536
(28 M21I
NEED Femaia roommate prafaraoiy
graduate atudant or aenior S«var4y Glan
Blvd Evaninga 552-2573. doya. 270-
5502
(20M21)
OWN Badroom (two atory apartmant)
$112.S0/mo. Non-amokar grad atudant
Jalf. 030-2710 aflar 10 pm Days 264
0433
(20M21)
BRENTWOOD For Oia ^
badroom boo bath furmahad with baauTT
ful viata 0000/ mo 472-2404
(30M20)
hou»e exchangg
SUMMER RENTAL 4
Fumlobod one miia
mo 474-23M
homa
$760 00
(OOM 26)
SAN FRANCISCO
mania with ua for iHia month -Jurte or
itdy^Myat ba in easy busir>g dloMnoa ol
'•MMm Blvd Fo» turtfter mformabon
contact Foul and Sua Kroanlcli^ 3071
toth St San Franclaco. CA 04114
(415) M3 MBi
(34 M 26)
FURNISHED noma Y««r HiaraSlOS/mo
Ftrapiaca larroea. RoaMontiai Oiairtol.
Call aftar 0 pm EX4-SO00 ( jg . j*
rogmA board
FEMALE ihar* one badr apt pppl
•acurlty bidg Buaa* $00/ mo. 030
550-0S20
«^<» .^
WAMTCO roommola ahom 12 badroom
apt. atartirg lata Jurte-aarly July apt
bunt logaawr 020-1030 ml^ 5 PM
, ^ . (iMM^)
MALE Roomata ahort luxury 2-l>adroom
apt WLA $150.00 Prafar grad atudanf
Bruca 020-0420 nllaa^ waabanda: 740-
(20 m kO)
HERMOSA Baach compltflvty fumiahad
homa available waably ($275) Monthly
($050) Pool table othar ameniliea
379-1340.
. t%n t a»
$750 3 BEDROOMS 2 baO« Fumlabad
Aug 1076 • Sopt 1977 WoodMnd HlOa
Fool aarvlea and qmt^mrmt includod.
Air condltionad 80S-0793
^_____^_^^ (30 m 24)
5 MONTHS Aug 1 Jpn 1 PocMic
PMNoOat Fumiifiad. 3 badrooma pool
dpaa ie ocean SOOO/monlh 454 2001
(30 M21)
ROOM and board for $196 mor.h
H[lp«'d Nouaa raaldanca tor aroman
•87 HHgarO Waatwoad 470-3046
(MQtr)
room and board
help
FPtVATE room bath. eooObig McHi
tiat $>5 month molo - aachange
poraonm houoahold bolp 7 30 9AM
and Salurdaya - no chddran 470-5747
(3TM24)'
house f or salo
j$12$
476-1000.
badroom. baOi In large
com. 2 -both apartmant
SoniB Monica Blvd
(20 M20)
$75,090 SPANISH
Immaculate 3
^^•*~~- wmm iorga 2 badroom apt.
Own baarooin/bothroom $145 00 Hm»t
S/1S • 0/19 470-2075
(20M20)
CRy
'••)
for sublease
CONDOMINIUM. 2
loft firapiace 20 ft Owmad caNlng.
akyllghta private aundack Block to
Wllahlra. naar Fadaral $00,500 ownar
477-a>1S.
WOMAN Pbychoiogiat. 20. In
Ir aaaka 2
oa fhm-m
Ing. pa/aonol pbyalcol cara Room,
boord and aolory car oaoSiBia Vanic^
:h. amoS yard, and gor^
^WMTPps. ass^s 9ra ec
41lf m99k m MMf Coll Oari 023-0490
(37M21)
-r3T
-. ^^^ B<V^dbOim ^M^ai aK^kAMift
M^oi oiwyfol liN ratii
SUBLET 2 bdr apt Jidy-Sopl $275
lupins?* '••^ ^^* aunny with bolcony
020-2701.
(20M24)
TRAOrriONAL Wathaood homa Firm
$171JS0 No of Wllahlra 9 rma plua
Omplacaa. ale (bHarlor noo^i ON of
wocb) Cofl:R Fowars BKR 271 OSOI
(31 M 21)
OUtET prtvpta foom-jbath kitchan
prtvilagaa laundry Waatwood-WMahlfa
Mola foculty atudant Call aflar 6.30pm
474-7122
" iSSl
1 boMom. Boat Oulat building
^ ^^ $^«> $20-4530 Early morning
(20M25)
or
FURNISHED
cony. pool, claanlng aarvlea. walk
S-30/0-20 $425 470-6340
(20M26)
FURNIMMO Apt. Ie auBlot 2
Md Waybum.
Com 477-0441
(20M26)
TWO OMLS noadod lo
Ma 6/^0-10/1 $07 90 aach pHia ataclH.
eRy. Qaraga flrapMca graot locobon.
roo w •»••«
SUBLET FufiOa
7/1-0^. tSFS
RoSk
4?S^
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W.LJ^.
AaMM.no paw.
M8SS-11 p.m
(20M24)
SUQLETJuna
7042.
«
Sapt
Own
$112..
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MOBILE homa 0 « 40 Sonta Ntonica.
Adult Park No pola Pool compi
lumlahad $5,300 oaMi 030-0357
■ /^< m »i \
GREAT 2 badroom atanar
ulaa Irom baach on guiat
•ooaaa lor bow or ^pmpar NMo
arfth aallng araa. lOihuui
dimng room $51000 Wynn 477^001
(31 M21)
house to share
FEMALE W
room, dog OR.
$130 plua Com
700-OM1
bi
Ava or Qnia
(32M30>
MALE la
Baaoa. 9100 monoi
SMS pm 270- 1000
PRIVATE mom/booro tn prlvola homa
lor ampMyod paraon 270-0000 ait%m 1
nm Aa^^Ate M^ MMi
honta Famola gmauoM abidant. kRMigo
(OOM 30)
QUIET priaala room/W
lagaa. Munary. Waobao
MiidR gtMOwd CaOM
7ia
iM.MMRaaaiWi-
lor $:» pm! 474-
#30 M 301
0BB.OO MALE graduob
amakar no kilcftan pri
dl4Mnta Ml Mote Mm.
1 oaar 21 aon.
474-0147
(30 MSN
$OB0aiaBi PLUS eon^
Sum Mooona lor nbia y
«107 ut%m 4^00
ooroMfMOTS-
MSMSS)
(22 J 4)
PLUS
r oM
47S-4t07 afWr 4
•IN In Rokorfy HItIa Eaac location
$2P» from UCLA. WBBi M B.H
9t7%/mo CoO 274-2101 «^ .. •-.
1 2w ai sai
104. CaM 309-0304, foop
(a^M2S)
ttSO PRfVATC SuNa. Dr a
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(41 M 30)
^ OPEL Rollya 0 track, moga. olr
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030-0771
(01 M 30:
1072 FIAT 120 wagon 4 .(iMd Om,o
Nraa ticeillani condMlon 30M Mual
•on $1000 $300 balow Blue
^SSO - MOB Roadalar 4S.SSB Ml
(41 M 24|
or 041
iiiii
(41 m 8S)
1SS1 VWf MLIQ. __ ... .__
Oraa. ganaralor muat aaO $379 470^
1923 anytime
141 M 241
GT 73 4-4^
claan original ownar 029 1229 or
1041
(41
MERCEDES 73 2B0 BEL 4 9 mini. Mua
Marao air mtchaHna ana ownar CRMi
tS«410. 470-1722
(41 M 20)
SUBARU OL CoMpa 1074 11.000 ml
222 2729
72 VW (MIS w/bad Clann (213)031
OOM or 009 4970
(^<M3^I
71 CHf V V^a GT l^tehbock AM FM
El condition Foreign aludani leaving
Any good oPar 6130O 470-0007 ahm*
Op.m
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MG 1072 MIDGET EacaOanl eond Lo
mHaa $1050 830 4442
^41 M 20)
SO MUSTANG Moch 1. Qeld with ftai
k1 Cloaalond 4 apd air
. Ouatom chrome
' carburator cluleh naw bat
lary'llraa atereo runa eicallant iharp'
Muat aall $ 1 700 offer 2 1 3-034- 1407 Jaek
(41M3S)
07 SMICA Good c
30 ml gai $600 M Mome
0410
(41 m SSI
VW BUS 9 poaaangar AM FM
new tiraa aacallani condition Call
aftar OMpm 302 0470
141
SB MERCURY Meniooo Aulnmdllc^
F B -P S . air 50.000 milaa Gooc
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(41 m 2S)
90 VOLVO PV 544 naw clutoh brc_
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or 302-7140
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(41 M24)
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(41 M 24)
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5 30 pm
00 VW BUG Vary good oondlflon
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8340
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(41
I
OATSUN 1000 01M. rod bar racka
caaaatta- radlala. vary claan $1300
oMar 213 341 1107
(41 M 29)
TOXjOTA Corona 1973 Air. AM-FM
$2400 oNar Olaea 026
-3310 0m
(41 M ats)
/'- -^ -
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loooad at diacount lo abidanM. lOeuRy.
•laff CaM 041 7344
(41 Olr)
t2M0VA 0-cyNndar very g^d running
eonONIon aakbig 290 muat aaN laavmn
country 477 ^'^
(41
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09 PORSCHE IBS SC CtaaaNr rabuin
angina aacell^fH oondltlon white
$6,000 306 5157. 304 0712 avaning
momlno.
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73 TOYOTA CoroNa EacaManlpondl
Hon fantaallc mllaage $1045 OBO
707-4251 Ed
. (41M21)
T2 VW Bug aacallani oondNlon. low
(233 GNU) muat aoM 701-2001
(41 M 21)
BUIC* apadal 07 low mllaage TWR 327
474-0002
(41 M 20)
1074 TRHMMH TRO Fronch Mua m/
rook mIcbaMiia EacaMant con-
■ 340-7200 302-7140
(41 M21)
1000 FIREBIRD aaooMoni oond low
mnly $3000. grant car 300-0410
(41 M 30)
|41MSS|
parfact vary claan $079/offar Call
SMn 474-0130. Evona^o/wnobonda.
(41 m 20)
bicycles for
1073 CHEV Impolo; alnt eond Air
-^' $1000 476-M73 or 300-M11
iS-% aa 9n«
1073 PORSCHE 014 17 WMM/Mock
' m. daoandabla. oood c
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(41 m SB)
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(41 M211
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7073
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$1000
141 M371
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^f^9^nm M mph
470-3491 Paut
(41 mSO)
1073 OATSUN 34BZ,
1S70
04 JSS40. 314 KYM (213) 303-'
(41 k»2l)
STUDENT DISCOUNT
I MOST REPAIR WHH^ YOU WAIT
1#% OPF ON PARTS AMD
ACCCtSOmCS WITH li).
HANS OHRT
LIMNTWIIOHT MCYCLfft.
(2 BLOCKS FWOM CAMP
ISn OAVLffY AVE
47S.J
HOOIOA ItTB CS 80S 3JSS oH riwM
3JSS on
I43HID
There will be a special Classified Page June 4.
so MAIL/BRING YOUR "GOOD-BYE, BON VOYAGE, ClAO, ADIOS. ETC." TO
112 KERCKHOFF MALL, 308 WESTWOOO FLAZA BV JUNE 2.
15 WORDS Oft LESS f6r t175
r'
m^
mr'^^m-nim-m^
t
V ,
E:.^
■f
i^
f^
% A Single Voice
I
J The case of the missing (for UCLA) playoffs—
t
in
At first %\^f\c^, it appears that
the UCLA banfeall team was the
victim of questionabie judipi^
wnnt IM truins were over-
looked because thetr overall
record was only 35-25, despite
playmg in one of the best bMe-
ball areas m the country
Now it ^^pfv\ there may be
more to it than just question-
able judgement.
It's obvKHii thU UCLA
S; eliminated because of its overaN
• record," says Keith Kelley, UCLA
% assistam athietfc direaor and the
5» nx^rk trying to figure out just
S what happened. "The question
^ is who did the eliminating "
J It seems that Washington State
I was contacted last Friday about
|« being a possible choice for both
a touirnament bid ^f\6 i tour-
nament host. Yet. the actual
seleaions were not supposed to
be done until Monday.
"From our conversations with
Washington State, we know it's a
fact that Glenn Oman, associate
director of athletics at Wash-
ington Stale, was contacted by
(NCAA Controllef) Lou Spry.''
says Kelley. "Spry indicated to
them that it appeared likely they
(WSU) would be seleaed as a
participant in the West regionais
and also would most likely host
the regional. If offered, they
were asked ^ they would ac-
cept."
And yet. how could Washing-
ton State host the tournament if
three Southern California teams
were the other participants. It
.would be economic suicide for
^ the NCAA to pay for three
'.teams to travel to Washington,
rather than one to Los Angeles.
Hw^ is where Northern Colo-
rado would seem to conr>e ^r\.
With that school in the tour-
nament, it wouldn't be a case of
three teann flymg f^om the
same area. It wouldn't look »
bad. Were the Bruins dropped
because of this?
Why Washington State? Let's
just say tht Chuck Brayton, the
Cougars' head coach, was the
chairman of the NCAA baseball
committee until last September
1.
"Why they jUbmm ^ Morther n
Colorado in the Far West
regional is beyond anybody's
imagination," says Kelley.
"Washington State is a good
team ^d deserves to be in there.
The Far West Advisory Commit-
tee, to a man. was unanimous in
its opinion that UCLA should.be
in the regionais no maner where
they were held."
Neale Stoner. the athletic di-
rector at Cal State Fullerton. one
of the tw6^utomatic qualifiers'
in the tournament, states flatly
that he was neyer contacted by
an NCAA official about hosting
the West Reeionals
Members of rhe Far West Ad-
visory Cofnmittee knew nothing
about Washington State being
contacted by Spry.
"My recommendation to Kal
Segrlst (chairman of the Far
West Committee and a member
of the six-man selection com-
mittee) was that UCLA tnd
Washington State be the two at-
large teams in the Western re-
gional," says Bob Bennett, head
coach lit Fresno State and a mem-
ber of the advisory committee.
"In fact. I recommended San
Diego State as an at-large team
to travel to another regional, as
second place teams have to do"
Bennett was unaware that.
Washington State had beerT con-
tacted as a possible host and
participant.
"I suggested that with aM the
teams in Southern California, we
try to get the regionais at either
use or UC Irvine. I even of-
fered my services to help or-
genixe ttie event "
There is no rule that the chair-
man of the advisory committee
has to listen to the recommen-
dations of his members. Ap-
parently, Sofrtst didn't
"I Uiked with him friday and
Sunday and gave him all my
input Sunday What I did didn't
do any good. I though the pro-
piOMl I made was an acceptable
or>e ~ but it wasn't even close.
"I was dunMoHii^ed to hear
the choices," Bennett says. "It's
a catastrophe. Even if the winner
of that league doesn't auto-
matically qualify, it can get In as
an at-large. They can't not take a
team that plays in that caliber of
league Look at its history (12
NCAA titles in 29 years)."
Well, they didn't tnd Bennett
isn't the only surprised member
of the a^V4fory committee.
According to assistant coach
Glenn Mickens, Mel Krause
head coach at Oregon and a
member of the West comminee.
was just as shocked as Bennett.
"Krause didn't know we
weren't in the playoffs until I
told him Tuesday night," says
Mickens. "He said alJ three
members of the committee went
for UCLA and Washington State
9nd sent the recommendation to
Segrist.''
According to ^ secretary in
the Texas Tech athletic depart-
ment Segrist is ^'out of town a
lot." and could not be reached.
So. it's, unclear where UCLA
was shot down, but it seems the
action took place before Mon-
day's conference call Too many
thiMi iooiii to indicate it.
Washington State was con-
tacted about hosting the re-
gionais before they officially
qualified. FuUerton. already
qualified, was n^er contacted
about hosting the event. All of
the advisory committee mem-
bers reconr>mended UCLA, yet
Northern Colorado was parked
instead
Adams, when talking with
Spry Saturday night after win-
Marc Dellins
ning the CIBA title, was told the
committee rarely picks an at-
iarfe %mm if it hasn't won 62 or
63 per cent of its games. UCLA
won 58.3 per cent of their games
this y^»T. The UCLA athletic
news bureau was not contacted
by the NCAA for information on
the team until Wednesday ^h^r-
noon, even though it was ot>-
vious earlier that the school
might win the CliA crown.
Put It all together and one
^Meition remains; who eliminated
UCLA — 9nd when?
t \
celebration by
fer to<
The Student Committee for the Arts
in cooperation with the Committee on Fine Arts Productions
presents . .
J
MORT SAHL
ON CAMPUS!
Two Schoenberg Hall Performances
Saturday, June 5 - 8:00 & 10:00 p.m.
Both Performances to be videotaped for re-broadcast
at later date
All Tickets $2.50
Available now at Central Ticket Office, Kerckhoff Hall Ticket Office, at box office
1 hour before performance if available. For information, 825-2953.
., .. /
Vol^MM XCVIII, Number 33
Unl««raHy of CMtomla, Lm Anpalw
tm
WcdnMday. May it, 1979
Nonresidents to pay $1,905, up from $1 ^00
Tuition increase to hurt foreign students
ly Mm Ptitz
DB Sliifr Writer
ttudents wmt not
properly repmented when the
UC Board of Regenu passed a
IhU nKTMsing out-of-ttate tui-
tion and as a conteqamKe, ktm
Mhous financial probiemt, ac-
cording to Foreign Student
Association (FSA) Coordina-
tor Bettina Schwctbcim.
Hmtd by ^ tke Regenu
March 19, the bill increases
nonresident tuition from
$1,500 to $1,905 per academic
year begmning Fall Quarter.
1976 The hardest hit will be
thote on visa tutus who are
not able to obuin California
residency. Schwethelm said
Bevin Dusty. ASUC (Ber
keley) co-president and chair-
man of the Student Body Pres-
Mients CouncU (SBPC). spoke
in support of the increase. He
explained why he felt out of
•tate and foreign students
should pay tor inflationary
increases in operating the Uni-
versity:
**Studems have been taking
advanugc of the situation. If
It's costing the sutc more, then
damn it, the out-of<«taic stu-
dents who come into the uni-
versity sliould pay for it "
Dusty suggested Um other
groups faced far givnter bur-
dens than foreign and out-of-
suic studcnu. '*This university
IS not even accessible to Blacks
and Chicanos." he said, adding
that out-of-state students
would have to pay the in-
crease **rm sorry,"! just don't
think you can defer it."
In response. Schwethelm, of
the FSA. said access of foreign
and out-of-state students may
be greatly Umitad 4$m |g
increase in nonresident tuiti
**Many students told me they
would be unable to continue
their education if the tuition is
on scholarships,** she said
However, the Student Body
President's Council (SBP( )
approved last Thursday night s
"grandUther clause'* which
would supply students already
attending the University with a
waiver to co\^r the increase.
Grandfatlier clause
Although entering students
would still face the increase.
Schwethelm called tlif grand-
father clause ""one step m the
rights direction.**
SchwctheliB complained.
however, that Student Body
President Lindsay Conner let!
a March 12-13 meeting of the
SBPC before the issue was
discussed The .SBPC eventu-
ally supported the increase
without his presence
Conner admitted that he and
Sandy Cohen, first vicepres-
idem of the. Graduate Student
Association, left the VC River-
side mceMng early due to pre-
yious commitments.
•H IMis thar belief. Conner
claimed, the meeting would
only last wiMt be termed the
''originallv listed day,** Friday
March 12 ''What was on my
calendar was for tht otte day,**
he said, "and that's what San-
dy and 1 planned f or **
Forewamad
Sam Wahon. co-director of
the UC Student Lobby, claims
all mcnitTers of the council
were sent ah agenda which he
said **forewarned that it would
be a two-day event "
Conner said the agenda ar-
rived the day before the mwt-
ing and "By then it was far too
late to do anything about it."
be said
When asked it the tuition
hike had been raised ott Hie
day he was present, Conner
replied, "absolutely not "
Parker Lee, former student
body president at VC flavis.
when asked if foreign students
were mentioned, said "unfor-
tunately not "
'Paranoia inove' .
lee said the SBPC support-
ed the proposal because other
(C ontinued on Page 4)
may b« gPsaOy imitstf by Wm
Committee recommends
charge for SHS visits
:zszsi ^^ detectives recover stolen
property worth about $25,000
DB Staff
Stodettts will pay for Student Health Service (SHS) visits
beginning within two years if g recommendation by the
SHS Long-Range Planning Committee (LRPC) is approved
by Chancellor Charles E. Young
The recommendation, not yet in iu final form, would ask
for an average charge of $19 per visit in all services except
primary clinic, menul health and contraception.
Maurice Otborn, Director of SHS. had asked LRPC to
consider a fee system after the Registration Fee Committee
refused to recommend a $211,312 budget mcrcase for the
1976-77 school year.
The Planning Committee taat forn^ed rn May, 1975
NoMMe SHS had been in the red, for nine of the past II
years, culminating last year in a S500.000 debt
In his budfpl request to Reg Fee, Qi^arm Manad
Student Heahh Service's troubles on "reg fee's inability to
grant augmentations** in previous years and "increasing
workloads of rising utilization and deniMiii for service.**
Reg Fee, in iu recommendtions to the Chancellor,
claimed **The baaac problem is the naMifMHBt praaUacs in
SHS." The committee expreiMd concern that once a Mer
fee system wat approved, SHS mMH^ment would mm
fees until they were **priced out of the reach of many
studenU.**
For this reason, reg fee refuses to consider a user fee
system until SHS managMgal u able to exert more control
over Its budfM.
Specific complainu were that SHS discontinued a subsidy
which usad reg fee funds to underwrite free health insurance
for imdents last year and did not return the savingi to reg
fee as it should have done fnitmd, SciMlent Health used the
mooey to create etghi new full-time positions and one hall-
time paakion on tbe Student Heahh payroU That laase
year, SHS made caliai^ in general surgical and emergency
services. In addition, sabiidiii for services provided by the
UCLA Medical Center were ehminated
Bill Cormier, dtttrman of the subcommittee which review
►HS, daiMS Stadaat Heahh's failure to maintain its level of
» fVgn with a hiiy#> iii^r^ma^ im, p^^^^^^^l .,>^>^#>. >k>.
Student Health is not wisinanapii; it is ummnagcd
Hr Midlife Dvvil
DB Staff Writers
UCLA campus police de>
tectives recently recovered
nearly $25,000 worth of stolen
property during a routine in-
vestigation of a burglary.
Lieutenant James Kuehn,
head of operations at the
UCPD and detective James
Pembroke in the burglaries
investigation division, were
investigating the theft of a
$540 X-ray film from the
Center for the Health Sciences
when they were led to a south
central medical cbnic. There
they found the film, along with
three stolen typewriters and
two calculators.
Clinic personnel directed the
detectives to a Wilshire district
camera and TV shop where the
remainder of the stolen proper-
ty was found
kKluded in the find were
three University typewriters
and two X-ray cassettes,^
valaad at $7JgB. TW re-
maining gnods, uken in other
Los Aageles burglaries, in-
cluded several SiM IBM type
writers, assorted calculators.
ptaiaaiars, caaaaa laani. taoe
decks and a gun
One person has been ar
rested in coongdiaa ' artth the
X-ray film theft and las
wit*i grand theft
spread otit over ttie tasr eight
months, beginning in October
of 1975 The burglaries on
campus often involved opening
unlocked offices and sneaking
in, or using pry bars to get the
doors open
"That's what you call hard
work,- ' Pembroke said,
pointing to the pile of good!>i
recovered But' difficulty still
Ites ahead oi the olticcrs as
they try to match serial ntrm^
hers on the items with their
owners Ares has already had
to call IBM to discover whom
the typewriters belong to
"People jusi don't write the
serial numbers down." he ex-
plained
of
the UCPD detective dtvinaa
•aid three others were expected
to be taken into OMlady in the
next few weeks.
None of the saapacu have
any connections fhth the Uni-
vcrsity
TIk Universtty thefts were
^r-
T
A"—
UCLA
T^ am
-i
i
DATSUM
I
4
Acres of Datsuns**
Student, faculty, and alumni
ll«et discount*
10T S/Arroyo Parkway .
1-1133 *
t
l.:,-^
I
The NEW Blue n' Gold hair salon has
REVOLUTIONIZED itself! — Not only
have we remodeled our shop and added
a 2nd floor for women's haircutting; but
we again are up to date on the LATEST
cuts and styles!
Featuring:
\
fO^
\<cy^
Xs^
ftO
.*<^
X>^
Curly Uniperms
&
Body PermanenU
AND
We now carry JHIRMACK
products! Come and visit us at the
All New
Blue 'n' Gold HairSalon
• 10908 Le Conte
Westwood Village
473-5863
Think
GAY?
For those trying to deal
with problems of their
sexuality ...
An informal, discrete
dinner sponsored by
three fellow UCLA stu-
dents wilf^e^ef^tlTTs
Friday evening off cam-
pus.
For information contact
the Gay Counseling Hot-
line: 477-7660
In the News
New tremors hit Asia
World
MOSCOW (AP) New
earth tremon struck parts of
central Asia today as (be
Soviet fovernment moved
medical supplies, building ma-
terials and food into the Uzbek
republic, struck by a poweif ul
earthquake Mondiy.
The official news agency
Tass gave no indication of
damage or injuries from the
latest tremors and there was no
explanation for, the shipments
of medical luppiies. Officials
said Mofiday*s earthquake
caused **damage in a number
of places'* but no casualties.
Tass said the new tremors
measured 3 to 4 points on the
12-point Medvedev scale.
Monday's quake, which was
centered in the middle of the
country*s largest gas fields,
measured 9 points on the
Medvedev or 7.3 on the
Richter scale, a force sufficient
to topple stone buildings.
Israeli Killing
JERUSALEM (AP) Is-
raeli police killed a 21-year-old
Arab man when they opened
fire on a band of rioters Tues-
day near the Church of the
Holy Sepulcher during day-
long clashes in the heart of the'
Holy City
Ches of, 'The Jews arc
killing us and we will kill the
Jews,- rang out at the funeral
for the slain man a few hours
later.
He was the third Arab to die
in three dtyt of intensified
anti-lanMli uaratt o« the oc-
cupied West Bank The latest
daalk and the clashes brought
Israeli-Arab antagonism to a
new pitch
It was the most vMtmt out-
break in Jerusalem in nearly
four months of West Bank
rioting in which 10 Arabs have
liitn killed by lifiei~Torcet.
Officials have listed most of
the deaths as accidental or self-
defense.
Republican Party **because he
said I waaB*t a true Republi-^
can."
McCloakey said tbe GOP
deteriorated in California
during Reagan's two terms as
governor.
Mrs. Pettis called herself a
conservative who will vote for
Ford becaufc be **hasn*t dcioa-
^gued on the
State
National
GOP rerun
PORTLAND, ORE (AP)
Three Republican congress^
men said here Monday that the
GOP will suffer a "rerun of
1964** if Ronald Reagan wins
the party's presidential nomi-
nation this year
Republican candidate Barry
Goldwater was soundly defeated
by Lyndon Johnson in the
1964 election.
Representatives Pete Mc-
Closkey of California, Shirley
Pettis of Cahfornia and Joel
Pritchard of Washington
joined with former Oregon
Congressman Wendell Wyatt
to issue the warning at a news
conference at President Ford's
campaign headquarters.
'*lt would be a disaster for
this country if we didn't learn
anything from 1964," Pritchard
said. *
McCloskey said Reagan
once asked him to leave the
SUMMER WORK
Earn $2,500
must be:
— hard workei^
able to leave California
reliable
Call 479-4139
for appointment
No Experience Necessary
Speakers Program Presents
SENATOR JOHN TUNNEY
Friday, May 21
Janss Steps
12 Noon
Students Sfmtmn P»oy«m/SHi<iwt Uglriartye Couno«
RTD vote
SACRAMENTO AP A
S200-million bond issue to
build a ^'sUfter" rapid transit
line in Los Anfeles would go
om tbc November ballot under
lefialiiiMi winning Senate
committee approval Tuesday
The bill by Senator Alan
Robbms, D-Van Nuys, would
ask state and Los Angeles
County voters to approve is-
suing the bonds and repaying
the money from the county's
share of state gasoline tax
funds.
Robbins said he thought the
federal government would pro-
vide about $700 millix)n in
matching funds, enough for
completion of m 30- to 35-milc-
long starter hne by about 1981.
Voter* in the county will
decide June 8 on a one-cent
sale tax increase to build a full
transit system
But Robbins 8Mt. be thinks
the sales tax measure will lose,
as it did in 1974.
'*Thc people, in my opinion,
are unwilling to vote a one-
cent increaae in the sales ux
for rapid transit,** he said in an
interview.
His bill doesn*t specify the
transit route But he said the
legislature hat fon^ on record
as favonng a route from the
San Fernando Valley through
downtowa to rhf fciirbiM dia--
trict.
The bill, which needed five
votes in the Senate Public
Utilities, Transit and Energy
Committee, won approval on a
5-2 vote mad was tent to the
Finaace Committee
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Voluma XCVIII, Numbei i3
Wadnasday. May 19. 1976
PutM9h0<J 9¥9ry wmkdmy tiurmg tfm
tehoot fmt, mto^ 4kthng hoMmf
•n6 &aim »oMomm§ aaMMra. m^ •«•
•mtn&tton pmriod: by th0 ASUCLA
Communtcstwm Bomnt 309 Wml-
Mgotf Ptam, lot Afi§ttm, CmUfomm
ASUCLA Commun$c9tiona Bomrd
Second ciMff fioamm f^^ mtfmLot
Pom Offtc9
Ann* Young
Paul
Stuan 9n¥9'tmin
I'
Focua: women'a relationship to aociel
Women's weelTbegins May 24
•^ Sara Cmm^mmm tk* i*«r ««»ti w« -r ^^-.. • • ""^^,'' . . u
i
IV Siara G
OB Staff WrMar
*8 waek. to be heid
May 24-28, wilT focua oa wo-
Bm*s relatioaaiup to aociacy.
according to Suzanne Hen-
dr:h, a member of the wo-
mea*s week plaaaiag commit-
tae.
by the Wotaen's
tittwaak Witt
coacentrate on different ia-
stitutions aad tbeir effect in
■biaim roles in areas such as
BMicine. pobtica, railgioa aad
the media, Heainck Matf. Wo-
atta*s status within aocaecy's
structures will be examined
with historical emphaais. Cur-
rent probleav caaaKM^ m-
mtm^ sutus and plans for
change will aiao be diannad.
Ewry day will have a special
theme, covered through films,
speeches, panels and a concert.
Hcadricfa said all events will be
conducted with the oppor-
tunity for discussion during
and after preaenution of in-
f<Mnation. Dialogue betweeen
the audience and speakers dis-
ling individual expenences
expanding ideas will be
encourafed.
Hhiarical penpeciivf
The week will begin by fo-
cusing on women*s roles, past,
present aad future. Judy Chi-
cago« feminist artist, will speak
on women's art and society
She will relate a historical
perspective of women's activi-
ties and her own struggles in
life. Anthropologist Evelyn
Reed will discuss the origins of
women's oppression
Wooen, discrimination and
the hiw win be Tueaday's
theme. Representatives from
the Coalition of Labor Umoa,
Feminist Credit Union and
ACLU will immn th'i
legal sutus and how ^gy aie
working to change it. Aooaid-
i^ to Headrich theae groups
are working to aad diacnada-
ation by attempting to improve
pay,
win be further
exainined by groups working
outaide traditional structures
for thfiK improwamats. Buai-
nesaes like Olivia Records and
Sisterhaod Baokatore will ex-
amine nontraditional jobs
women are creating for thcm-
To further self-undersUad-
iag» Wednesday's pragram wiH
consist of panels discussing
various aspects of women's
health. Phyllis Cbesler. author
aad psychologist, wtU discots
tactics used by psychology and
psychiatry to opptaai women
Society's perception of w<k
men and women's view of self
will be examined in a paael
about women aad the media.
The panel wiU include media
affihates Sandy HOI. KN>nr
news, Carolyn Baker. CBS,
and Marilyn Solomon. Chan-
nel 13 ^
The week will conclude Fri-
day, concentrating on women
and their political power Con;
(woman Yvonne B Burke
will speak on women in power
and the traditional role of
government
Burke's speech "will be fol-
lowed by a. discussion of fern-
Voting trends vary
in lobby's study
By Chris Bow
SACRAMENTO-— Jimmy Carter, who leads alt Demoeriftic
candidates in the presidential primaries, may have limited
support among college students, accordii^g to^aurv^ afuuaaiY
voting by the UC Student Lobby.^ — "^~^ — ^^~~-^- — -~
An examinauon of voting patterns in 64 precincts populated
pradonunantly by students showed Carter trailing Representative
Morns Udall of Arizona in Massachusetu and Wisconsin and
lost to Alabama Governor George Wallace in Ronda.
*^C>aly in IlUnois did Caster clearly win the studem vote,** the
Lobby said
These initial results," said Jess Hamerling, Lobby co-director,
indicate that college students who strongly supported McCarthy
and McOovem m 1968 and 1972 do not fed comforuble with
frontninner Jimmy Carter.**
In Massachusetu and Wisconsin, liberal candidates UdaH and
former Oklahoma Senator Fred Harris, won a plurahty of the
studem vote, the survey showed.
UdaU captured 31 per cent of the student vote in Maaaa-
chuactu and 54.9 per cent in Wiaconaia. Harris won 24.1 per cent
imsm aai aaaiahsm. led by
Wdhe Mae Reid, socialut lead-
er. The aapccts of socialist
revolutioa totally separating
woawn from auUe government
and institutions will be ex-
Maiabd, Hendrich said
FBas 8«iM
The laat awamtu's week was
heid in 1972. in laoeiit yaan^ a
ssdayTMay 19 3:00-4:30
2173 Bunchc
lOCH BARTOV
: LEGITIMA TE
women's fihn series have been
held. Hendnch expiawad, ''It
was now time to do an o\erall
program and synthesize the
different areas into one total
program emphasizing power
aad rolea.**
Thr awak u sponsored by
the Program Task Force aad
Stadent Legislative Council.
who prqyided over $5600 in
funds the Women's Resource
Center, the first Vice President
and the Aasociated Students
Speakers PsiMam
RIGHTS
ISRAELIS
Author Hanoch Bartov ia a past nricmbcr of Boiard of
Diractora, laraai Broadcaating Authority (196M; IfBi-T?)
Executive Board. Wnters Ass n. 1968 72 Awardad the Prim^
r"'™^t^?^ ^°' I'teraHaw. 1974 He rgpiaacntad the
Israel PEN Centre at International meetings in the
Netherlands. Koraa. Yugoslavia arxl traiand At preacnt
he la^Preaident of !T1 (International Theatre Inatitute),
" Center. - j
SpcMMPKl by: hftiil A Slud«nt Znnmt AIIuvh «
hmmm (NN
CHINESE DINNERS & LUNCHES
11829 Wilshiff* BK/d
Near \^>faigais
_ Wesi Los An^cfat
bppn 7 Daya Till Midn«hr
477f>.S]4
COME AND HEAR WHAT HE HAS TO SAY .
ESPECIALLY WITH THE UPCOMING
NOVEMBER ELECTIONS ...
MORT
SAHL
SAt. — JUNE 5 - SCHOENBERG HALL
two performances — 8 & 1 0 P
All llck«lt: $2^0 availabi* at Karckhoff Hall
and Cantral Tickat Ofaoa on Monday. May 24.
ttiaaa concarts to ba fllmad lor ialaviaion
— SCA/DFAP —
Needs An
Editor
Together is a special
interest newspaper serv-
ing the Womens Com-
munity. The editor is
responsible for staffing
and content of the pub-
lication which is put>-
lished twice per quarter.
Apply in 112 K«rcfchoff Hall
b«for« 4:30 pm
Friday, May 21, 1976
I
r
9
1
!»;#^*-- -
I •
Anyone intorMt«d In holding a r#-
•ponftlbla pomltlon on tho tt7^77 Bloo4
Drlv« CommlttM. dImm call 825-1484.
4
Dr. Anthony Bast A Or. Jon Vogel
PPTOMETRIST:
I
THE BUSINESS ADVISORY COUNCIL
of the International Student Center
presents ili iweekly Seminar
JOSEPH BAIRD
Pres Occidental Petroleum
"How Difficult Is It To Conduct Business Today
Domestically - Overseas^'
Thursday, May 3t
J -' Seminar 7:|»-9:30 pm
All at ( redited students, American ^tnd foreign, invited.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT CENTER
1023 Hilgard, Westwood
PIfdse phonr for rewrvjtions 477-4587
fvaturing OUADft APHONIC SUHHOUND-SOUMD
" C.mury'. RAWimoUNT CINEMA TMEATtR
m
.¥
m
J
J
ClMfUVY C
PARAMOUNT
CiacMa
• OPS »»-aowi>
nAimooAr
CREST
S!^*^«* I CENTUEY
•^••MttoMMM J Drive-la
• 00000>IOO»»»l I tWOHW ST^T i>T 7^1
Carter takes Michigan
— ^Bro^vn wins in Maryland
mary
Carter
41 to
By Joiima .Alpcr
DB StalT Writer
California Governor Jerry
Brown, in his first PfnidcntiaJ
primary, deahh front runner
Jimmy Carter, former Gov-
ernor of Georgia, a stunning
defeat m the Marylaad pri-
yettcrday, outpolling
by 10 percentage points,
38 per cent
Carter narrowly defeated
Ahzona~'CDngressman Morrir
Udall in the Michigan primary,
44 to 42 per cent
Brown's surprisingly large
vote margin gives his campaign
the momentum and credibility
Brown will need both to woo
uncommitted delegates and
score well in the upcoming
Oregon, Nevada and California
primaries.
Brown is opening a New
York headquarters today and
planning stopovers in New
Jersey. Rhode Island, and Co-
lorado to discuss his now-
potent candidacy with those
states* uncommitted delegates.
Jimmy Carter, still leading
the democratic race with close
to 700 of the 1503 votes
needed for nomination, is
facing the decisive fina4 stretch
of the primary season.
Brown's victory over Carter
in Maryland, coming a week
after I^aho Senator Frank
Church's surprise defeat of
Carter in the Nebraska pri-
mary, could signal an irrever-
sible slow-down in Carter's
nomination campaign.
Carter needs the momentum
of victory, and the extra cam-
paign contributions and media
coverage winning generates to
do well in Oregon. Nevada and
California all western states
naturally leaning 4o Brown or
Church.
Congressman Udall, while
making a strong showing in
Michigan and picking up 60
delegates, still has yet to wm a
primary election Brown's entry
into the Maryland race helped
Udall by diverting Carter from
the Michigan campaign, but
Udall was unable to turn that
advantage into a victory over
frontrunner Carter.
In defeafting Carter, Gov-
ernor Brown spent about
S200,000, according to Rick
Cotton. Brown's Marylaatf co-
ordinator. Carter spent about
SI 50,000 according to Carter's
deputy National Campaign dir-
ector, Phil Wise
Brown wai helped in his
campaign by a curious com-
bination of Maryland citizens.
Many young people supported
Brown with the kind of fervor
that was dMnctenstic of Rob-
ert iCenne<fy and Eugene Mc-
Carthy's supporters back in
l%8 • - _
At the MM time. Brown
was the choice of Maryland's
established Democratic ma-
chine, headed by Governor
Marvin Mandel, who faces
trial next month on chargei of
mail fraud and racketeering
Governor Brown, who ^
wiitred some California legii.
lators by his abaences whik
campnigmng, will be rcturni^
to California for 12 hourT
WedMiday night and Thurs-
day morning to dispense with
accumulated state buauMi and
will then resume the eampai£n
trail. ^ *
Ford breathes easy
After crucial wins
•y Paul Farhi
DB Staff Writer
President Ford is breathing an audible sigh of rchcf to^ sfter
scoring "must" wins in the Maryland and Michigan primaries last
night.
Ford's wins ostensibly slave <Vff the momentum of Republican
challenger Ronald Reagan — mbmcntum buih up by the former
CaUfornia governor's victorics/in five of the latt six pnmancs
If Ford had suffered another defeat in last night's primaries
especially in his home state of Michigan — it was believed the
President's campaign would be m seriom trouble.
But a Reagan challenge never materialised as Ford was
declared the winner in both sUtes, barely an hour and a halT
after the polls closed.
With 57 per cent of the precincts reporting tn Michigan the
president's margin of victory was close to landslide proportions
Ford had 64 per cem of the GOP vote to 35 per cent for Reagan,
which gave Ford the lead for 54 delegates to 30 for Reagan
In Maryland, where neither candidate worked up a campaign
Ford had 58 per cent of the vote with 72 per cem counted The
President led for all of the sute's 43 delegates
^ _ ^ (Cootintd on Page 5)
Affirmative
Action talk _ ,^
today in Haines
I Pierre van den Berghe, pro-
fessor of sociology at the
University of Washington,
Seattle, will discuss **Af-
firmative Action: Liberation
internal Colonialism" at"
2 pm today in Haines 220
r
PSVtRpS
An Explanation Meeting
praaeiils *
In the tradition of
With
Bilfye Talmadge. Perry Dickey. Mary Rittey
yar*Qn tgff — Originiii Bruedw^ ^^^i^^ ^
CMOtCMyf - Nm> V.Kt, thMMT CMmSLw.
Afton Pitt - Musical Director of -Th« ChliWM
FMdnating, m«Mliigful pmwont
of students and QradualM
insptrad by "A Chrnm Uim"
Monday - May 24 - 8:30 p.m.
ucsnjgo^
tm
Contributioa — %2
PLUS
Two physics talks
in KnuQsen today
A particle and a solid sute
physics talk will be given today
at 4 pm
**Discovery oif Pion-Muon
Atoms" will be presented by
Aaae HaU, SLACjo the eie-
mentary particle journal club
in Knudiea 1-172
''Structural and Vibrational
Properties of Amorphous Sem-
iconductors** will be presented
by David Beeman, awnriatr
professor of Physics, Harvey
Mudd College, in Knudsen
124ii.
Coffee will be served at 3:45
pm in ICnudsen 1240 B for
both groups.
Tuition . .
(C ontinued froa Page 1 )
schools were chargiog higher
nonresident tuitioB tlMm
UCLA He called the increaK
a *>aranoia move,** cbiimiBg
'tuition doesn't cover the
of out-of-fUte studenu.**
The SBPC
the move, Lee sUted,
of discrepancies in the medical
school tuitions.** ••Unfortu-
nately, there are very few for-
eign students in aMdical
•chool,** lie said.
Conner, who said *•! «aaa*t
plaaaed with it /the increase),**
reinarked the RcfHMi had
inore or laM ^aciiatf em Ike
asyway ni die SBPC
^ortad it. ''It iPBf not
SBPC wMm&i mmmr he
■mii^BBaBB^
The increase was recom-
March 10 by UC Pres-
it Divid Saxon to Rcfentt
of the Committee on FtaaiHe.
According to Saxon's re-
•nhe
• IT
(ConiiMMi M PavlfT
Ford bandwagon out of a rut . . ^
[C niihi I J frM p^ 4) count from kM nights two worst day in May ** Emm
Supporters of the President
had feared that Rai^aa*s bid m
Michigan might be pushed
over the top fa^ the crots-over
support of the 100,000 Demo-
crats who voted for George
Wallace m 1972. It apparently
Game, as Ford had his
election night m two
BMHIths.
Stuart Spencer, deputy man-
Of the Ford ramp^^
said the resulu would be a
tremendous psychological
to the President's cam-
Spcaoer called the out-
a shot in the arm and
said Ford is now within teach
of a first ballot nomination at
the GOP convention in July.
He added, however, that ''it's
still going to be a very tough
fight.-
Spencer's caution is in view
of the iact thai^ Reagan stUi
leads in the national count of
delegates. Including the partial
count from kMC nighfs two
primaries. Reagan had 515
dekfaias to 431 for Foid. It
tvii take 1.130 to choaaa a
nofftinee.
"This we said would be our
worst day in May,** ^
•aid. but added -I don't thini
anyone could say Michigan
was crucial to us ** The former
California governor aasd he
still feh confident of winning
the nomination
Lambda Chi Alpha's Funhouse has won the Ma Crandall
Sweepsukes Award for the best overall booth at this year's
Mardi Gras. The Crandall trophy was awarded the
fraternity at the charity qarmval's annual hSKiuet last
Friday at the Valley HiUon
The Funhouse was adjudged best on the criteria of
creativity and net profiubility Judges mcludad Chancellor
young. Mayor Bradley, Councilman Zev Yaroslavsky
television weatherman Georg^Fischbeck and former
Olympic star Rafer Johnson ^
According to Alex J^Ul^ Mardi Gras executive chairman,
the Funhouse was a large walk-through booth that featured
sensory attractions such as visual light displays, a
surrealutic, sloped room on a 45-degree angle, suspension
bridges, cavern-type settings and waterfall effects
Rose 9aid the Funhouse difad out the Phi Kappa
Psi Kappa Kappa Gamma House of Horrors for the pn/c
Survey of voting trends
(Continued from Page 31
of the student vote m Massachusetts while
receiving only 8 per cent of all Democratic
votes sutewide
Harris withdrew from active campaigning
following the Wisconsin primary.
The strength of Udall and Harris in student
precincts appears to have come at the expense
of Carur. Wallace and Senator Henry Jackson
of Washington, Hamerling said None of these
candidates, the survey showed, garnered more
than 8 per cent of the Massachusetts student
vote.
(By contrast. Carter took 14 per cem of the
sutewide total, Jackson 23 per cent and
Walaoe 17 per cent.
Carter faired better with college students
(31.5 per cent), but ran below his statewide
averafc (37 per cent). - ^
-Based on these resuhs,** Hamerling said, "L
am fairly certaiai^ that Carter will have some
senous prohtens IStracting votes of Califomu
college students in the iime Sih primai^"
Cahfornu studenU have consistently formed
a l>loc, voting for the more hbcral candidates in
the Democratic party.
Carter's campaign workers concede their
candidate is not the initial choice of the
students, but sajr students will eventuaUy side
with him if they are informed of the isaiies.
Shea Dixon, Carter's northern California
campaign cootdiaator. attnbutes the IlUnois
victory on college campuses to extensive
campaigning and media advertising
'^Students dont have aaeaas to television,
except news (programs), where all they get are
media images," Dixon said "Advertisements
inform students on the isanet.**
H^ added -When students are informed,
sec that Carter is more than a snule. tlMK
he i^sQot fuzzy on the iawes and they arc
■'•]■'.
TrherefS,
L
r
attracted to him**
Carter, who bnngs his presidential campaign
to California this Thursday, beginning with a
speech before the Sute Senate, plans to spend
$350,000 of his $550,000 California campaign
chest on media,** Dixon said
Whether Governor Edmund Brown. Jr., will
be the student favonte in June remains un-
certain Brown won a plurality of the student
vote in the 1974 general election but did poorly
with students in the fahanMtorial primary
More than 74 per cent of the student votes
cast in all four primaries were Democratic,
compared to 25 per cent for former Cahfornia
Governor Ronald Re^gaa and President Gerald
Ford.
In the Republican primaries. Ford roHed up
higher percentages of the student vole than
Reagan in every sute except Florida, where he
and Rragin ended iit a virtual tie in student
precinds.
Ford's best showing was in Massachusetts
where he received 71 2 per cent of the toul
GOP vole cast m precincts surrounding Har-
vard and MIT.
While college students are not taking part in
the presidential campaign to the extent they did
■n^^Mwa "an# -T^Tx^, w ne n ^tnoaaands^ worked for
liberal candidates who opposed the Vietnam
War. the Lobby's study of voting patterns
showed that student interest ran high in all iomx
primaries.
While data showed that roughly 45 per cent
of all registered voters in precincts surveyed in
the four states went to the polls, Wisconsin
student precincts had a 57 per cent turnout
"This would indicate that three out of four
registered studems went to the polls in Wis-
consin,** Hamerling said.
S
A
T
FOREIGN
STUDENTS
Ti9f ttCililitlltr
>0f<
fill
«tj| 4n.s»tf
APPLICATIONS for the Foreign Students'
Association Executive Committee available
NOW at FSA, 325 Kerckhoff and OISS,
297 Dodd Hall.
May
May
Sponsored
imt^m
c
3
f
By rwM F
Dt Stiff y^tMm
Tbe owtfuUy niflMIt ^
^^ <rf tlie modern Amerioin
coikje student it quietly
Maged buckskin jack-
^** P^Me iigns and sit-ins as a
symbol a( a bygone era
The Imitliy locks that grew
wild on students in the late
Men's hair sty ling shops: the hair
1960*1 and early I970*i are
today being carefully sculp-
tufcd into layer cuts, thap and
perms. So much is neatneu in
fact, that barber shops — now
rejuvenated as "men's styling
Mlons" — are raking in the
caah of the youthiul clientele
that hasn*t had its hair cut in
yoin.
'Biiftfnets t% really good,
says one Wettwood village
fiiini*s stylist, **and a big per-
ccnuge of It — ptobably 73 to
W) per cent ^ it from UCLA
students and some from USC.
It seems to be picking up.
too."
Other local styling shop
•wners teem to agree that the
Hayden and (Jerry) Rubin. ,
But now that he (Hayden) ii^.
running for the Senate iwmmi
of from the police and Rubin
goes around weanog do«M»-
kait busmess suits, there's not
much point to it. What Vm
trying to tay it that the tpint
that originally wat behind long
hair it '
mm'9 ttylM: hair today
STARTS FRIDAY
at
WCSIWMi. mtH Artifts . 4774575 CtSB MfSA lA Cil
' tJ Citl Cmmu • 134 Mil VCSTMmSTII. MX C
NO paaact this enoaqement
'\
113 1541
businets one-time long haired
UCLA students give them is
responsible for making their
work as profiuble Mxlay as
any time since Delilah pulled a
pair of clippers on Samson.
§o what became of the long
hair over which many a stu-
dent waged war with his par-
ents to grow? The answers arc
as varied as the new hair cuts.
Radical OMvement
**l tend to believe the theof^
that the end of real long
hair came with the end of the
radical movement," said Dan
Maat, a UCLA graduate slu-
..dent. '•I mean, we had long
hair before it became the thing
to do because we identified
and sympathized with the
Ittics of people like (Tom)
First A
PIERRE VAN DEN BERGHE
Professor of Soc.ology, University of Washington Seattle
Affirmative Action: Liberation or
Internal Colonialism"
hi
Wednesday. May 19. 1976 2 00 P.M. Hames Hall220
No Admission Charge Public Cordially Invitea
EVERYONE INVITED TO
AN ARABIAN NIGHT
-- Belly Dancing
— Folk Dancing
— Music
— Arab Fashion Show (Authentic Costumes)
— Refreshments.
Saturday May 22 8 pm
International Student Center
1023 hilgard Ave.
Admission Free
t>y Orgao^atlon of Arib
-UCLA
The stylists say thai sort of
explanatiqn just docso*t cut^it.
They credit the boom in their
business to fashion conscioni-
ncii -^ not waning radicalism.
•^Originally. I think it (long
hair) was a symbol of outward
rcvoH fcfmtt the svftem and
•odtty In iMMr»i. m wlien n
started catching on among
yomig people, it Imguk htak-
ionable to iMve lo^g hwr.- lajd
Uommrd Oetto, a Weitwood
iiini*! hair stylist.
Back to jtert
**As A fashion, though, it had
to go hack to short Fashion is
extreme; one week bell-bot-
loms will be m, then straight
pants will be in then it will
swing back to bell-bottoms. U'l^
the tan^ way with hair/*
Dcaso added.
According to David Chavez,
a local saion owner. "It has
nothing to do with people
being less radical than they '
once were It has a lot to do
with appearance Times are
always changing and trends in
hair styles change, too Styling
used to be a novelty. Now its
a necessity."
It also has something to do^
with convemence
-People arc getting tired of
taking care of long hair," said
Craig Millcf, a senior who had
his hair styled. '*My hair
started looking groat. It was
too long and full It needed to
be styled T
Flying kmk
Manny Chacon, who«e Vil-
lage shop gets about 30 per
cent of Its business from
UCLA students, agreed '*Peo-
( Continued on Page 7)
LEARNING SKILLS CENTER
Study-Roadlff^ Division
FINAL EXAM WORKSHOPS
Essay — Monday May 24 1:15-4.30
Multiple Choice — Monday June 7 1:15-3:30
Atfirnncn Signups NMMsary
271 Dodd Hnll 825-7744
This It a sarvice of Student 4 Campus Affain
FREE to r#gulafl|y •nrolled students
C«T^Ev^„ H.m Comm...«n of tt« 8h-^ l.,^,^ co«««.
^^^^n Grand BaNroom Frttfay
/"/
apparent to a revolutionl
«CntiBniifcuiPait4)
pk iust got tired of havmg ail
tltts hair flying m their faces
With long hnar, you coukln*t
swim or play sporu. You al-
mnys ended up using a rubber
^tmd to tie your hair up into a
ponytail With stated hair, you
can take care of it a lot easier
There's not much problem
."At the beginning, styihng
was a novelty, but I don't
were then placed ftivottfiiont
Hu hair and an aeidic diem-
•cal was applied. (The chem-
ical solution breaks down the
texture of the hair aa4 mmkm
It conform to the ihniK of the>
rollers.) After rinsing the solu-
tion out, Reardon spent 20 to
30 minutes under a hair dryer
Was it all worth the $20 he
paid?
"I don't know,** he said **but
tki^i, .u^.« .u * uun I iLnow. ne saio but
1^^^^ -l^ ^ -nymore.- if | don't have to ,« .noth^
he added People want lo get hair cyt for six Vr »ev7n
^ Tlo^'^f ^"'' ""r 'e ■»««»- « ••" be 0?;ou4c .f
■■• a lot of time with it.
I ••core' wkhin the week wnh
11, it'll he worth it **
ReacHoM
He just might, judging from
the reactions of some UCLA
women to the curls.
*"! don't claim to be a
spokesman for women or any-
thing, hut I think they really
go for the perm. It really looks
1 lot more masculine than
long haxr.** It also looks a little
freaky,** one woman said
frontinued on ^age 15)
wi!h purchase of
7.95 Earrings
Birk's Jewelers of Westwood
950 Westwood Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90024
Phone 477-8009 879-5313
FREE I
r
Others fed that the hair of
students has gotten shorter and
■••ter in direa relation to an
ever-tightening job market.
The reasoning is that the
longer and wilder the hair, the
less chance of impressing a
contfrvative employer. "\»^
Chaiiei Sundhet^g^ tfran of
UCLA's Placement and Career
Planning Center, thinks thei'e
might he a connection
"There is nil] a real danger
tlrat an employer could make a
subjective judgment on and
that could tip the scales toward
a 'no* answer,** Sundberg ex-
plained
"Long hair,- he said, **is not
aa critical a subject among
employers as it once was years
Sfo. Howevi^i:. generally speak-
ing, I personally advise the job
seeker that his long hair could
be that one bit of irrelevalncy
Hist the interviewer will focus
on.
''He- (the interviewer) may
not even be aware he's doing
it,- Sundberg continued, *^ut
often the hair can uke atten-
tion away from what i» impor-
tant. The student who is grad-
uating and IS concerned a^out
getting a job is obviously
better off if he ehminates, to a
degree, possible irrelevancies
that the interviewer might be
distracted by.**
Cm eosti
The price of a style job m
enough to scare off anyone
who's wondering where his
next tuition check is coming
froaa. Though some shops
dlFei introductory and student
discount rates, prices in Wairt-
wood range from S^30 for a
styled hair cut.
For that amount of money
— plus a non-required but still
welcome tip for the barber —
• the customer can expect to sit
in the chair for as long as two
hours while the styhat Ttech-
mcian-^anyt Deaso) cuts a new
hnvdo
One of thoae new cms is the
perm, a coiffure wmnt by
Harpo Marx long before its
pMBant 4sy popularity Since it
caught on about a year ago,
dozens of straight-haired
students and businsM
hsi their hair curled into the
afro-like perm Originally,
perms for men were only done
in wnf n*s beauty
fact which could cause the
''permee*' considerable em-
barassment But within the
past few months,
have turted doing the job
instead
John Reardon, a junior, got
his once wiry lotks permed
into what now looks hke a full
hand of
n iil W ilisally because its
easy to uke care of,** he
"If my hair gets mashed down,
all I have to do is pull it out. I
haven't bought a comb for it
mud Tve hsdh a week.**
Reardon sud he iptad two
hours m Che plMp gslting his
Casual Dining
HARRY'S OPBN
Th*$ li the place for Rib LovertI
By for the Best Ribi we v« fri^ m L A
COMPLETE DINNERS
$2.75
trom
1414 N CKESCINT »;f€lCHTS ot SUNSfT STSlf
10 A^.mutes U( ^n Sw>#»v#t glvd to
I Out el C orryr»n
And^ -) ore Th#r«
•v^-
tlr#d of yMterdays hair?
IrlAII? TCDAT
For whafs happening now
•tyiing for mmf\ and woman
Jarry Radding's Jhirmaclc products
For appointmant call 478-6151
Uias. thru tat.
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with this ad
11 OS Glandon Ave Wastwood Viliaga
^* — "-1
The Jewish Holiday of
LAG B'OMER
find about it at the Millel Holiday workshop
with flabbi Chaim Seidler-Feller
JMadnesday, May 19th
6:00 p.m.
HILLEL LOUNGE
FREE DINNER FOLLOWS
HILLEL COUNCri UCLA 900 HILGARD AVE
474-1531
aulo-nsuranoe
lates
AMER-I-CAL
1434 Wcitwood Soulevard a S«lto S a Los
nf ^Iimrf^lni Inaiiii raanmiiiSiJt
Call Pay or Night ^ (213) 47S>S721 |
MINORITY WOMEN'S FORUM
a workshop and discussion on
survival and political issues
of concern to third world women,
in and out of the university.
WOMEN
CENTER
190, wed. mav
involved iMving lie
dews and cut Steel rollers
fllOSIEF.iCA
■V
if-^
I
1
..., i-
J
f
3
dciybfuln
polnr
Letters to the Editor
rin ni*
UBcooni
General uudent body el<c-
jf^tiom ire 0¥f nom, ^nd Foreign
•- Student Association (FSA) elec-
eC tions should be conning up soon.
^ This big event reminds me of
j| the big event last ye^r
I Last )fear there was a group
called the Coalition for a Bener
FSA which promised to iMtsh
out of state tuition for foreign
^ studenu (among other things) —
grandiose dreams, you might
My? Well, people were Ignorant
enough to votf for coalition
members who proceeded to
occupy 75 per cent of the FSA
seats.
You want to rwmm the FSA
'75-76 record? 1) The big thing
the auociation has done was the
International Week this past
W0«k. (Thanks, Alan Wong) 2)
Almost three fourths of the co-
alition members quit after fall
'75. 3) Quibbled over ISC and
still hasn't changed It much.
4) Ar>d sent out 500 question-
naires to a "random" sample,
trying to determine if mis-
management is the cause of its
(ISC's) failure. Plcttte take time
to exercise your mathematical
genius and figure: of 500
questionnaires, 150 were re-
turned. Of 150 responses, a little
over 50 per cent (perhaps 90?)
said that it was indeed due to
mismanagement Do you really
think that these 90 or so people
represent the views of about
4,00p foreign students on the
UCLA campus? They certainly
don't represent me! Well, these
are the major accomplishments
of an association that got about
$4,000 this past schoolyear from
SLC just to be able to operate.
Oh, gnd by the way, out of
state tuition has increased from
$1,500 to about $1^75 effective
fall 1976. It just goes to show
that this past year's FSA mem-
bers (at least, those at the «wx)
are full of it! -^—^
take, or they are products of the
educational sytlcm which pro-
duces alienated intellectuals'
To defend the rights of an
^•nemy of the farmworkers on
idealistic grounds clearly bene-
fits the enemy.
iCoMM »nd Fiske are mom
concerned with fkm rights of
murderous criminals then with
the plight of the victims — the
farmworkers.
What people must realize is
that we do not live in the ro-
mantic and idealistic world of-
ICojeli? or Fiske. We know that
"rights ' ire guaranteed for the
rich exploiters, while laws art
m^6e and enforced to restrict
the majority.
The decision that people must
make is whether they want to
support a system which benefits
a few at the expense of the
many, or whether thm^mW fight
for the many. If one chooact to
fight against the few then that
means suppressing and cen-
soring the few wherever and
whenever possible This is a
reality. Under this system that
benefits a few, both classes can-
not have rights. One class has
rights at the expense of the
other class. Thus, if one sup-
ports the farmworkers, it is
obvious that we will be fighting
for basic human rights.
In fighting for farmworkers'
rights, or poor peoplcfs' rights —
if it means taking away rights
from Callo, agribusiness, and the
rich — then so be it. It has to be
that way.
Idealistic notions about
"rights" must be done away
with Kojelis and Fiske have yet
to step into the real world of '
struggle.
We at La Genre believe that if
one is sympathetic to the strug-
gle of the farmworkers, then
or>e should actively support
them by any meant possible
The pattern Callo and agribusi-
ncu have established over the
years is insulting, impractical,
Immoral and unconstitutional.
VeoccfeoMt
Roberto Rodrigiiez
La Genre staM
^^•7 to. JO,..,
* tup OP cofft^yo
nss- s-fli?
"Wont rou lain M* In a cup of coftoar
Committee forms anti-busing rally
By Bill Green berg
<£difors note Creenberg is a Graduate student
here.)
According to Chief Davis, theHFS LA cross
burnings against minority families — particularly
Blacks, but also against Japanese and Jewish
residents — are a. "random occurrence" LA
TIMES, May 14.) not part of an organized racist
campaign.
OPINION
This letter is in response to
the bullshit written by J Fiske
and the Kojelis cartoon which
ip^MTod in the Daily Bruin on
May 10, 1976.
We don't really know where
. <o Jxfin, yet it seems that it Is
UMint responding to alienated
intellectual morons. Where have
Kofoln and Fiske been all their
fives? Here we have two clowns
who are outraged over the
deni^ of first amendment rights
to Calk). Do we ever see them
outraged over the fact that poor
People are dented basically all
human rights? I think not.
- 4n portraying Callo as The
victim and the UFW at the vil-
lain, Fifke and Kojelis maniiett
their complete ignorance, or
they project their right wing
idealist subjectivity.
It is asinine to compare the
UFW with Nazis and Fascists. If
anyone is to be compared with
the Nazis it would be Callo and
Agribusiness.
It must be pointed out that for^
two college students (who are
suppoiodly educated) to deiend
Callo points to one of two
tHifift. Either they are on the
RSB
The Revolutionary Student
Brigade had a full page ad-
vertisement in the May 12 issue
of the Daily Bruin. In their ad
the RSB announced their inten-
tion to march on "Philly." dur-
ing the Bicentennial celebration,
in order to throw the rich off
the workers backs. Through that
the RSB proved that they are not
students of history. First of all, if
the rich have been on the
workers backs, they were
thrown off years ago. Also the
I^B doot not offer any alterna-
tive formt Woovcmment for the
one the RSB intends to tear
down, unlike the Rebels of 200
years ago.
Like the other "Student"
groups of this type, the RS8
enjoys using "Revolutionary
Rhetoric," a strictly meaningless
collection of verbiage. Futfior-
more we would have r%ever
known what revolutionary
Wie RSB ate, H our free
had not let them make
of themselves
Nothing could be further from the truth. Thetf
crott burnings are the result of a U.S. ruler's
carefully planned campaign to whip up racism on
a nationwide basis around the issues of "forced"
busing and "reverse" discrimination, jimmy
Carter s "ethnic purity" speech; the frantic
scramble of presidential candidates to proclaim
their opposition to busing; the justice Depart-
ment's open support for the (ROAR-affiliated)
Boston Home and School Association s Supreme
Court suit, which would put an end to Boston
school desegregation; the Boston Building Trade
CouncHs denrK)nstration last week against con-
struction ,obs for Blacks -« such events mark the
un olding of this racist campaign, in which the
politicians, sell-out labor leaders and federal
bureaucracy march to the tune of their corporate
masters. *^
Not to be outdone by their Boston counter-
parts, the LA Board of Education is working full-
time to build a racist anti-busing movement in
llianks Howard
LA. First they pasted an anti-"forced" busing
resolution, which outraged community forces
students and workers forced them to rescind
Now board members Howard Miller and
Kathleen Brown Rice are going from school to
school trying to win parents to oppose school
integration (To build opposition to busing, board
members like Miller have created the myth of a
busing plan which would involve, for example,
the busing of students between such distant
^points as the San Fernando Valley and South
Central LA).
Miller is coming to Palms U High School (TOB60
Woodbine Ave, West LA) this Wednesday, May
19, to address a 7:30 meeting of "Bus Stop," an
all-white ami-" forced" integration group based in
the San Fernando Valley. The goal of Miller's visit
IS to whip up racist hysteria in West LA.
The Progressive Labor Party will picket this
meeting, beginning at 7 pm. Our demands are: A
decent, workable plan for quality, integrated
education; Stop the racist hysteria! Burn the cross
burners! We hope that UCLA students, faculty
and workers will join this protest against the racist
anti-busing movement.
For the goal of this movement is not only to
destroy all our public schools (witness Boston,
where education is almost non-existent for Blacks
and whites afike), but to pave the way for
apartheid and fascism.
The bosses' Boston plan it going rtationwide.
We must organize now to defeat it.
press
fools
lews for jesus was thrilled to
learn from reliable DB sources
that Howard Hughes hat left im
125 million {DB S/13/76)
Htm we'll be able to do what
we've always wanted: we'll have
guilded posters, |em for jetus
Mquifwd t-shirt», a Coodyear
blimp renovated for our propa-
fiMM purpotot and, of course,
an unlimited supply of hat de-
lightful literature to decorate
Brum walk The possibilities are
endlam. Perhaps we'll even
make a contribution to Chabad.
We never knew you, Howard
Hughot, and had no idea voo
cared. . ^
ivan
Ri
Kmh
lews for
IMir
The recent articles and letter
regarding the mandate of the
People itMimwn alleeedtv
-^a<ie by the new stud^nSi
president. Meg McCormackTi
totally misrepresentative. The
cartoon (0 by Kojelis, atide from
b«»ng sick and sexist, only
served to reinforce this mis-
representation. It is truly sad
that the Daily Brum has not
owned up to the fact thai one of
its writers mitqtiofed Ms. Mc-
Cormack by printing this state-
fnent (and out of context at
that). A retraction is something
the DB it u&ually unwilling to
give. Hcmmfmr, accurate report-
ing it, I hope, not too much to
ask. Come on you piaplt at the
Of, why not try to be a little
f^ore ro^K>nt^ble, wnd a little
l«i Imdilmi grabbing. You owe
at leatt thit much to your read-
11m Ott^ inMn
International Women's Conference
By Nadine Wildman
M«k:o ChI ^^h!1 ^, '^•""r^' »*«««'» Conference m
N^ewco CHy nor al the UCLA MtoMwi's Center on May S but after
reading the article D9 May ( concerning Oean N^mTlm^
il^'JTJr' *f '^ ^ ^*^ '° d'Werlntiate b«3 rtTSS
.^lonof deletwet ^,h>t.ng m an ordenTand friendly
^
OPINION
iltUS iSTdilr'n^Si:" '•* '"••"-••on*' Pe«:e doe. no.
Mwcate tne childith mm-^wduCTn^ aa.on» o< the lar,e number of
ZSSi J!!lr*^ out en mamft when an Israeli ddwMe
!r"iL"J ,ty"— »' wiiliiH *t riw conference. "— •-«
ht»A\i^^^.^jl^^li^''^'^ '^'* **•'• '"" '°°k.ng for
th, ,«r JlZT '^"^"''"^ '*"» •««>" De»n Nelson irnpl*, that
the prcM somehow distorted that event The press merely reooriw^
what actually occurred. Any manipulation of the coXrence^^
r«J«y undertaken by delegates of countr«^s more \r^xl^ZZJ^-
.„^**f*^ ^ Pf*""' truly concerned with feminist i«ues. «»• ««
'T'' "" ^ "**" Nelson s misrepreseniaiion of what haooened
« the conference The pMuge of a resolution d.^idfcd ag^^T^
'oTalli::^ ."•'"^' "^ '".'""^^ women, ~ ^.nterni
ZtS^^ rl ""'°""""* l^" '*>* conference was underm,n«J
oy (MMiates from countries where women are still r«lM«ld to an
Ariir.*^T' "^^ •^".'«'«"'»V •'"d «H:onom.cally!Vm Saud.
a^ I'J'JlZl*^ !!".'/*'• J***" «°'''* °^'^ conference would have
»en realized and that the press would have been able to report
more positively on the conference We ame 'that the oress mCu
bring oo, the true meaning of these corZ^c^^'sTj^ZT,^^,
cL ^ir •*'* **^ responsibly m reporting the events in Me«ico
fh?Uni^*^:ir «/"P°"^''"v •" reporting the true nature of
Both ,^.1 '^'"•;°" '"November directed against Israel
J 1 ,^ resolutions have 4>een condemned by unbiased
individuals, groups and nations "noiaseo
cn^Zrl!^J'°^, '*"%'!" ?:•" **'" '" 'Sponsible a. the next world
conference in Iran The choice of locale is ironK considering that "
enr«!!l k'"''!'"'^"' *" '"" *"* ^" documented as eKtrJmely
repressive by Amnesty International Should there be protest
denionstratwns of any sort by Iranians, we hope that there will be
"°^'°"'°" -f* •♦**' 'ro* nature, 'by a core of K>ornali,ts trained to
rvpo^^tMrit We feel that a responsible, informed press which
reports actual eyents, free from political bias is What will helc
actualize the goals of peace and freedom for women and all
everywhere.'
f
r
PLUS... on//o^omr//f ToM^/fs^s:
Letters Cont.
II
Dormies
In latt ««ek's Bruin, the article
on the dormitory survey stated
that most poople believe the
dormies to be immature,
though at first offended by this
statement, I realized it to be an
all too true fact In September,
however. I Vntered the dorm
with different viewpoint. E«-
p^cting a high caliber of maturi-
ty from my feHow inmates, 1 was
appalled by their actions. My
initial thought was tha^ we had
been invaded by an army of 13
year olds Much to my dimay/l
fourui I was mistaken: it was the
people with whom 1 was to
spend the next nine months!
For a large majority of the
students living in the dorms, it is
their first time away from home.
At once, almost all of their
restrictions have been lifted and
they are free to do at they
please. The problem appears' to
be that these students have
trouble handling all of this new-
found freedom. Instead of usinR
this freodofn m a positive man-
ryier, tome cfiosie to break fur-
"'ture, light fixtures, or put
holes in waNt. Yelling obtcen-
ities At other dormt at two in the
morning (when some people are
trying to sleep) and throwing
food in tfie cafeteria have be-
come the favorite pastimes of
many.
In these students quest for
fun arni their regression to fkt-
nior high tactics, they have
made life m the dorms un-
pleasant for the other riiidoim.
Although I have made some
lifelong friends, enjoyed some
of the best times, and indulged
in a few of these sophomoric
tricks. I do not leave the dorm
with regret It will be with relief
that I will dose the door to my
pigeonhole on June ISth. never
to be a dormie again, t looli
forward to September and a
new retidence where I won't
^*^« to ipglogiie to visitors for
the aaiont o< my neighbors.
•m.j^
BOOK
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More letters . . .
Faiw
During my two years at UCLA
I ^i:^^ been bored and 6^
%x^6^ by many acknowledged
experts as they read from
volumes of notes. Unfortunate-
ly. I have had very few teachers.
Teachers are those rare people
who through their personal pre-
sentation of the material convey
a -genuine love for their field
With thoughtful answers to their
questions, the students becomes
the center of the classroom
experience. One teacher has.
risen to^ .the top in my
experience at UCLA.
Carl Faber has not been re-
hired for next Fall. As a true
teacher. Faber has m^i^ a stand
against the dehumanization at
UCLA. All of us have
experienced the tiny glee in the
professor as he/she outlined all
of the work that will be neces-
sary to pass the class, and we've
all had to sit through the quarter
while some one is again asking,
"How much is the midterm
worth? Is It on a curve?" Faber
has been fired for providing a
real learning environment. They
say that they ran out money, but
^eall know that's not true
(How mikT\>f new buildings ^t^
going up). Faber's ratings in the
student handbook are among
the highest recorded. Faber's
dismissal after ten years of lec-
turer status is a statement about
what is happening to the Uni-
versity, W it already hasn't hap-
pened.
For those who would like to
make their feelings known as to
what Fab^ lia*^«neant to the
undergraduate psychology pro-
gram, pieaie contact Harland S.
Lewis 1249 Murphy Assistant
Dean of Students Write him or
go in and tell him. Act quickly
for the quarter is almost over.
Ken Fr
posters, buttons, photographs
^nd products.
Powm Kidley
WiMMff 9k %m Ubrary SUN
Mie
Dinrepancia
Beadeograpby
In rcipoiifte to the two pre-
vious articles about the Camp-
bell Student Book Collection
Competition, i would ftke to
clear up the facts about my
entry. "Beatleography." I sub-
mitted an entry of 100 per cent
hooks, although my entire per-
sonal collection of Beatlealia
includes materials such as books,
magazines, fan club publica-
tions, films, press kits, shirts.
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t^MTA
• «»«.
M-F 8 30-5 30
Sat 8 30-5
Sun 11-3
The Complete
AUDIO
VISUAL
VIDEO
Market Place
Ametron Rents/American
Electronics
1200 N Vine
!1
Edkor:
May I point out some dis-
cr^paincte in your article on
May 12 concerning abolition of
parking on Westholme Avenue.
Your picture showed a "No
Parking 9-6 pm" sign. The signs
potted on Westholrne now say
"No Parking Any Ttme." Your
article stated that \^fV:\x\% had
previously been "2 Hours 6-6
prt\." This is alto incorrect —
parking on Westholme used to
be for "1 Hr. S-l pm," some-
thing quite different, in that
students were able to park from
about 11:30 am onwards for the
rest of the day.
WesthoJfuc iaras the dos«t
street to the east side of campus,
a long street, with the most
space parking. Now, those of us
who relied on it ^r^ forced to
compete for the dwindling num-
ber of spaces on the few little
streets remaining. It is a ludi-'
crous situation when one has to
plan one's class schedule around
the parking situation we tolerate
. here — being unable to take
three consecutive classes be-
cause one must take time to 90
and move a car from one place
to another, entailing a 10-15
minutes' walk each way And
the bright-eyed idealists who
Klvocate mass transit wottid do
^•tler to keep silent. Any In-
formed, realistic individual
linows that "mass transit" simply
^••i not exist in this town. The
»▼»«■•«, ceitainly, but not the
transit. '
' ■» •
What is mam ridiculous is that
^e are constantly being told
there ii no ifKi^^ room for park-
ing loti at UCLA, etc., etc. But
they managed to find space for
a new '*9\\^mvi\ center," mA now
Hiey v^ planning ycf anoltier
"•P^ts ar>d recreation center"
(«* jf we needed one!) .which
students will be expected to pey
for «it of increased registration
fees. I for one am rnit paying
another cent to memorialize
•o*'** man's x\9xn^ on a facility
we do not ^nnA, when, for the
privilegt ol fMvltine on oM^ut I
have to pay the exhotMtofil turn
« one dtiRar per day, and I
cannot do even that %Mf^^mk I fit
*iefe br eight in
emmybody can win
76^!lIli!L*"'*"*^ »chievemenn^ in television dunung the 1975-
76 MMon were honored Mondav nj«ht at tHf JkTh 1-!? "Jv'*"^
Awards Telec.... much of the '.ro„ •^^trmL'iJX^^S
HundJ^^f- **"•"•»«" ^ home teS " v'^^s ^
After the arnv.l ordel had T^Trt^\l^^,^"^^
r S'C-" -r^ - ^- «- ^ ^ «
witn questions and gave their final sutements
Text and Photos by Jeff Upin and Maria Levine.
'\
,-iw
CHINESE FILM FESTIVAL
MAY 21, 22, 23
7:30 p.m. each evening
Na Admission Charge
Friday, Melnitz 1409; Saturday, Rolfe 1200;
Sunday, Melnitz 1409
FRIDAY
OPENING NIGHT SPe^KER: Dr.
Paul Pickowicz. Dept of History
UCSD
TOPIC: "Cinema. Cultural Change,
and Politics in China"
FILM: "From Victory to Victory"
(2 hrs.)
PANEL DISCUSSION
SATURDAY
FILMS:
"Peoples China" (20 min.)
"Educated Youth to the Coun-
tryside (25 min.)
The Sparkling Red Star" (2 hrs )
PANEL DISCUSSION
SUNDAY
FILMS:
"Ode to the Yimeng Mountains"
(45 min.)
"New Landscape of the Red
Flag Canal" (45 min.)
"Peking Acrot>atic Troupe" (30
min.)
"Children of the Grassland"
(45 min.)
PANEL DISCUSSION
Film Festival Group;
CO-SPONSORED BY: International Chin
^__ Program Task Force
COORDINATED WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF: The Office of Experimental Educa-
tional Programs and Campus Programs and Activities Office^irr^S^rs ^"Sie
Division of Student and Campus Affairs
Filmt Siinnliad b¥ Club tn» u»>»<»i«<
Peop^'
Assoc latior
I I ATTENTION PRE-HEALTH CARE STUDENTS
MEDICUS
Dr Handy
Phyaica^ Thfiipy 4
AHiad Health fields
WadffiMd«y May 19 6:(
Rm 43-105 CHS
3 • J •
f
Today, Wednesday
Talent Show
"Caberet"
The African Studies Center
presents
DAVID ABERNETHY
lecture -
The Ethics of
famine Relief
Wednesday 3:00 pm
2150 Bunche Hall
." i ■
■•<
j^
1
• i
<
4
1 -
1, , ••
■ .
*•*•
•
THESJEVIN6
O' TOUR GBEEN!
iMX:
DRAFT
GuinnMt Stout or Schliti. jffeg 75C
► ■• ♦
DRINKS 75c
R«g. $1.15
III
FREE
Hot hors d'o«uvr*t. hJca
"^^^■^■» insd xucchin*. cocktail fr«xik«
or homemad* potato chip«-fr«« popcorn, too!
MONMT
:•: • I
4lo7
nnuMT
(213) 477.3WB. Op.n from 11 .v.ry diiT^
-enfeer
inmGnt/
y»*
•y Robert Kt
The intentions of filmi
Haskell Wcxler. Emile de An^
lonio and Mar> Lampton in
making Undergroond (surtiiig
today for a week run at tlw
Fox Venice) are highJy laud-
able Miraculously, they were
aWe lo make contact with and
film the major figures of the
Weather Underground, releas-
ing the filni in such a way that
their views couW be widely
discussed As far as an infor-
mational programme goes,
I nderground is fine. As far as.
a movie goes, it's terrible.
The filmmakers* actions,
both in the desire to get the
Underground's views out into
the open and m fighting the
highly publicized FBI sub-
poena which requested all
prints of the film, were coura-
geous, a noble sund for First
Amendment rights and against
government intervention. But
UadergroaMi, as a piece of
The film the FBI didn't want you to hear
nnr
r»t
Marvelous 'Mountain' mime; superb,
political cioMia, is docile ia
comiMMon to Hearts aad
Wiads, de Antonio's own MIM-
hoyst: A WMe C omedy or the
-billed Lf. Stones Weekly
^Froai iu inotption, Uadw
•roaBB, as a movie, was
doomed Stace the Weather-
people (Billy Ay res, Reraardiae
Dohrn, Kathy Boudin. Jeff
Jones and Cathy Wilkerson)
•re fugitives, their facet
couldn't be shown on full view
to the camera. Wexler was the
cameraman, and he devised
scrims, optical devices aad
mirrors to shoot through in
order to film them at all All
we see for an hour and a half
are their backs and the film-
makers' faces, shots in shadow,
or group scenes from the neck
down. This sort of thmg is so
comital after aVhile that it geu
very much m the way of the
message
What the Weatherpeople say
IS what the film is aboat, but
•ddly, this too IS pan of the
problem I'ndergroaad eads op
being a very long communique
to the American pcopk, aad
those already famHiar wTtli
their history and philosophy as
well at Marxist activism in
general will find out nothmg
they didn't already know The
big hope of taderground was
that something new would
• rise out of the discussion
between these peof^ eager to
Urfk aad people oafer to listen
The tragedy is that the hope is
not fulfilled
An ironic moment occurs
• bout one-third of the way
through the film Jeff Jones
complains to Wexler that the
camera is somehow blocking
communication, and asks him
to turn the caoKia off. keep
the upe recorder on, and, as
he said, **we*U get the same
thing " How right he was Ua-
<>rgroaad is the first filmed
upe recording in the history of
cinema.
Matrix
Theatre
By Catby Setpp
The Mad Mountain Mime
and M4istc Troupe, currently at
the Matrix theatre, will be
performing there May 31
through June 6 with a preview
show on May 26 In spite of lU
rather precious title, it is ab-
solutely excellent; funny with-
out being cute and disarming
without being coy. The audi-
ence loyed it. Director CW.
Metcalf commented, "Our best
shows are in mental institu-
tions, but this one's going
pretty well loo."
The show's essence is the
unexpected Metcalf stutters
terribly, but introduces each
piece with the slickness of a
stand-up comic. In '^Growing
Your Own," Metcalf and Tom
Pierce mime rolling a tenr-foot-
long marijuana cigarette.
"Tbcae v/ho are offended by
marijuana can pretend we're
growing rutabagas," Metcalf
told the audience.
The troupe, which includes
mimes Metcalf, Pierce and
Seus J R Metcalf and musi-
cians Jim Danelh and Bob
Goldstick, performed 13 peices
out of a listed repertoire of 21.
Four of the best were "Check-
mate," "The Bargain." -Jhc
Faac place" and "Things."?^ -
In "Checkmate," Metcalf
and Pierce arc cronies in aa
old folks' home who alternate-
ly cheat at chess while the
other sleeps or pretends to be
dead Metcalf is a department
store janitor in "The Bargaia*^
who falls in love with a
mannequin (Seus B Metcalf)
who bears an uncommon re-
semblance to Little Orphan
Annie. In "The Face Place" a
Quasimodo-like Metcalf trvs
on three separate faces which
laugh, harrumph and tsk, but
ends up buying a Quasimodo-
like face.
Five members of the Mairi>
group guest as a door, a re
frigerator, a stuffed English
chair, a telephone and a tele
vision which haras.s Pierce m
"Things " Metcalf and Pierce
will be teaching Mime classes
through the Matrix theatre in
the near future, and judgmr
from the results they have
gotten from the Matrix group,
they should be well worth
looking into
> ., ,4
'Survivors'
^ynthaxis
Theatre
A Birthday Party
and Open House
Women's Resource
Center
We are celebrafTng our fourth birthday.
Please join us for cal<e-cutting cere-
mony (at 12:30) and lots of talk, music
and goodies. r
Wednesday, May 19
% Marc Pahnieri .,
Survivors is a piece of ex-
perimental theater conceived
and presented by the New
Artef Pbiyers at the Synthaxis
Theater in a communal effort
to explore and to understand
the plight of the Jews in a
Europe terrorized bv Nazi ag-
gression.
Sanrivors takes shape as a
traia joorney to the concen-
tration camps la Tf33. During
the journey, the tbcatrical ex-
pUnalioa is made as the action
loaiely shifts back aad forth
between fouf decades. Espe-
cially cfiactive is a post-war
ne involving young children
in Hebrew school Before the
school day begins, they are
suiubly rambunctious. While
they play, their instructor
enters, obviousFy burdened
with the ;painful responsibility
of confronting the children
with their first glimpse of the
holocaust The children res-
pond with sickened disbebef.
as they had been spared this
knowledfe until then
The scene just described leu
the stage for three "lo^a
•cenes" in 1933, 1940 and 1947.
Obviously chronology is of
secon/l4;ry imporunce in this
prodaetkai Whereas the child-
ren in the post-war classroom
first eacounter the holocautt
by wm4 of mouth, the le>ven
delNClfld in the three love
scenes encounter genocide as a
very real experience in their
youth These lovers are the
pareau of the children The
children are. by extension.
survivors of the holocaust
Sarvivors thereby makes its
essential point We are all
survivors.
Siirvfvofs purports to be
exploratory theater. Therefore,
no props are used and no set is
found on stage. All illusions
are effectively created with
elements of mime and the .dm-
logue and actions of the script
The play is based on sevwal
workshops in which survivors
end children of survivors
shared their experieaom with
the actors. Direct6r Armand
Volkas is himself the son of
two people who survived Ibe
Auschwitz concentration camp
Much research staads bebtad
this production because it deals
W4th a subject that must be
eaplored, as ^snocide can not
merely be accepted The New
Artef production is sufficientiy
imense to allow 'tM survivors
room for personal exploration.
;r
o
• It
Kinsey190
n to Three P.M.
825-3945
•m^
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Storewide Clearance Sale
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LAST WEEK SALE ENDS SAT. MAY 22
In Waatwood
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—^ COMMUNITY
Sundays 6 p m supper, program
ihursdeys: UJi
The Chapel $60 HHg^rd (at WesiKolme)
Chaplain Terry Irnbarg, 47S^iajO
LOYOLA MARYMOUNT SUMMER SCHOOL
HISTORY OF THE CARIBBEAN
S«ll«
A 19 d«y (juiy 14 - AMg 1) »c«/jir »tudy lour wtH vill ♦romLo* Anaek or
the AmerK-n muOtNTIAl LINfM -imu M*f.« Th. Snuly Tour <«.lt
plji^ empha*!* on the sfw^ th^t ihe lour H^.^yiiasd sud wM oiilue
>e*«^ed readincs relevant to th« HMIory ol the Csribbe«n Df Art V«w
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Oiracted by Jaaaie Dizon
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For information and reaii nations call 464-9921
Runs Thun - Sat 8 PM
Sun 6 PM
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FOREIGN
STUDENTS
Worried about the out-of-state
tuition increase?
Come to our Placament Semi-
nar on May 20, 12-2 pm, 3517
Ackerman Union, and find out
how you can work during the
summer.
Also information about
- home-country empioynn«nt
- graduate schools
Sun 11-«i
'11
1
I
us Concerts
Bill Evans
•r^
^Tunnelvision^:
myopic humor
." *•* '
I
At least one third of the BUI
Trio wai worth littenii^
to in concert at Royce Hall
Friday night ^ —fly Evaat
himiclf
Evans* style is distinguished
hy his unique prowess in eom-
plex harmonic improvisation.
While not quite as flashy as an
Oscar Peterson, who would
fiJBdii II Uy onHflwnt a simple
harmonic pattern, Evans im-
provises not only complicated
melodies^ but intricate hann^
tties as wvlfr
Unfortunately, the ensemble
was 66 and two thirds per cent
unpurc Not that drummer
Elliott Zigmund was all that
but the sheer nebulous-
of his playing sorely con-
flicted with Evans* involved
improvisations Even worse
was Eddie Gome/'s bass. Not
only did his irritatmgly sharp
playing never take Evans into
account, it was ugly besides.
Despite these hindrances,
Evans' brilliance shone through
the obnoxious^ haze
— Joi»eph Gore antf
Adam Parfrey
!Jtravtnsky's ftfnapHHBt of
The Star Spangled Banner,
written in 1941 to celehrate the
coi
lenship (aa4 marring with
jectioB bom of wartiase para-
noia) had to be the bigfest
conversation-piece on the pro-
gram. Not only was h meeg
miaaMe enough to bring a few
souls to their feet, but sounded
taAtr tame by present stan-
dards
Carl Ruggles* "Sun Treader"
was replaced (parts unavail-
able) by Charles Grifiiis* arch-
tmpressionist "White Peacock*
and Samuel Barber*s just-plam-
beautiful Adagio for Strings.
The two concert standards
were given' sympathetic read-
ings, but suffered from scratch-
iness and poor intonation in
the high strings. The same held
true biter in the program with
Ives* ** Unanswered Question**
and Copland*s Dance Sym-
phony, one work of his that
doesn*t sound like a buckaroo
holiday.
Daniel ICessnefs ^Mobile**
was the only '"modern** (and
self-consciously so) piece on
the program. Its four move-
ments are meant to be played
in any order, which is a good
indication of its lack of any
sort of direction.
— Howard F
The applause soaflMd to center
around the singv — it didn't
peak until a good five or su
seconds after he walked on
ttage, and didn*t end until after
the sixth encore — but his
performance didn*t seem to
affect it much.
It ftes Without saying that
Gedda can sing extremely well
(he is, the program notes as-
serted, the most recorded tenor
in history). He displays power,
authority, facility, and often
great beauty of sound.
I— t -U<
By iilrtiarl Pi
A wild spoof of the future of American tckvinai^ Ti
vMaa, (now at the UA) is not a movie to be lalBen serionaly. but
as enterumment that offers some laughs.
Along with Mike Mishlovct and Bnd SwimofT, Neil Israel
respecuvely co-wroie and co-diradad tMi farcical vision of a day
in the near future's TV hne-up including regiUar propMMBing,
commercials, news, and public service annoiianriMiili.
The year is 1^5 In only a few iiioaths since iu debut,
TunnelvisioR. a network corpbtation, IM defeated tu entire
The Cal Sute Northhdge
Orchestra performed the latest
installment in the music de-
partment's Contemporary Fes-
tival Thursday in Schoenberg
Hall, and a few changes made
the whole show rather less
contemporary than planned.
A sellout crowd in Roype
Hall applauded for about two
hours, despite occasional inter-
ruptions from Swedish tenor
Nicolai Gedda Sunday night.
tnouj^, ne vo-
calizes without itiuch point.
His program, consisting entire-
ly of late Romantic song
arias, was marked by a
deal of vocal tone untouched
by any attempt to communi-
cate, often sacrificing expres-
sion for sheer impressiveneM.
For all that, his pitch was
not terribly impressive, espe-
cially in the early portion of
the concert, when he sounded
both constricted and vague in
pieces by Resphigi, Pratella,
Camevali, and Donizetti. He
warmed up and loosened up
for soagi in what panad for
French by Duparc, Faure, and
Massanet. His rendition of
Turina's **Poema en fonna de
canciones** . wm^ Mpassioned,
but lacked the . humor of
Ramon de CampoaflMHe*s
verse.
The encores included operatic
crowd-pleasers (as if anything
wouldn't have been) by Tchai-
kovsky, Giordano, Rachmani-
noff, and Bizet.
competition and so affected the pubhc that they do nothing
except watch it all day The network is now being reviewed by a
Senate investigating comnuttee in regard to its questionable
programming practices.
**But people need to fantasize,** argues Phil Proctor as the
Tunnelvisioa chairman, "thu has bee«Miie not a very pretty
world." One ^y's condensed line-up proves that it hasn't, since
David Eisenhower is now the President, and Charles Manson
and Sirhaa Sirhan have their own TV shows.
An f rapt may still exist, though, thanks to other iliafri as
The Pregnant Man, about a one-time playboy who now Marches
relentlessly for **the woman who knocked him up.** Mmmarnkm
When?, a new game show, provides further delight as contestants
are quizzed on the details of their most embaf'raBitng moments.
All in all, these antics maintain a delicate l>alance between
Mary Tyler Moore and Jules Feiffer" Comparisons to TW
Groove Tnbe seem meviuble, but whereas the first IIbi went to
unusually ^ grpis extremes for any response, TaHMhMan uses
genuine wit and energy for its laughs.
Editor Rodger Parker deserves special credit for sustaining a
terrific pace from start to finish. There is never any time to think;
TaandviskMi is either funny or it's not. Only afterwards does the
tastelessness of several vignettes come to mind.
o«..
v" ■
On Campus
Free screenings of early television j>rograins starring Jack
Benny will uke pUoe today at 5 to 7 pia and 7JQ to 9^0 poi in
1409 Mehiitz. — ^-
Irving Fein, Benny*s personal manager and most recent
biographer, will be on hand to answer questions and introduce
the remaining programs on the agenda. The shows include:
Wayne and Sinister Take an AffirtianaH Look at Jack laagr, A
Horn Blows At Midnight, Jack Has A Sick AMgator (with Paul
Lynde), Jack Meets Maa Bygravcs and How Jack Met Georgp
The iCLA Center for Afro-American Studies, m coopeidin)n vv/f/i
UCLA Fine Arts/Special Production^, the Prniirdm Task Force
' '- ftnd thf^ hit(^rrhitirnial Hluiic Arf^ COuncil
A Special Tribute to
I
Concert in Royce Hall, Thursday, May, 20, 8:00pm
1^^ featuring
NAT ADDERLEY, AIRTO. ERNIE ANDREWS, DAVID AXELROD, WALTER BOOKER,
ENNY_BURRELL, JIMMY. CLEVELAND. GEORGE DUKPr VICTOR FELDMAN,
LOUIS HAYES, FREDDIE HUBBARD, SAM JONES, MAYUT^ROY McCURDY,
BLUE MITCHELL, FLORA PURIM, JIMMY SMITH, EPilE WAHS
Conceii liLKuiN. $7.50.0.50. 5.50
All net concert proceeclb go to the Julian Adderlv Memorial Scholarship Fund
Ti( l^f'r^ available now at the UCLA Central Ticket Ottic^^ 825-2953)
FREE INSTRUMENTAL WORKSHOPS
May 21 & 22
10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m ^rhoenberg Hall
Ich
.11 r^ii;
Camp
•ItbthSl
TNTMHi. Witt
May 22. ttcurity PacMc
For htrmm mtm ttM 7
4303
11 or 477 ^f*-*""*" crtdit aviitablt ftu#Mt ##•
«« it HIM M«y 21 KordtHtff
311 _ _
Mi. Java. Koroo. Groooa. MpMaiitf
ttaty noon. May 21. Womon't Gyoi 2M
-VOM ImMb cm mUmm. buy. aaN
ani IrwMi mmm iMUM iWlpiin and
-Pia May 21. 6fiM
mmmmi ■§ avary ^m and at
Jm Qi mt Cmm lar Maiith
2 pm. tomorrow. n«at m Sctioarv^
^^HMHIB CHRHMT iHNflHHI Biflk im
apilimiofli for mis summtr at tht Mardi
Grif afWea. tkditm^mn A tawtl or an Innn
7J0 pm ffdim Dyiittra HafI
C«MMMm pcfc up a Proiact Ai
baaklat wtMdt will ba avaMai
soon
—ISM Am Waali 71 will ttature a
faculty itaff and studant art show Pot
latch and diapliy caaaa. lai^f and to-
morrow 74S ani-9 pm 7 45 afn-3 pm. May
2^ Univanity Printmaliar't tiiaw nooo-4
pm to^ noon-2 pm lenmyaw. 6SM
2343 skfts and improvisations, naon-1 pm
laity Vi^ii a GiM iM CMrta Imm. • pm.
May 21 2 pm and I pm. May 22 and 3 pm
May 23 Iclwwibirg ilMa lliaiMr. IM«N
snow Cateit. 8 » pm. tMMiltt. IMi lai
Boer Butt and participatory arts laati^al.
330-7 pm tomorrow GSM 3301 Baaux
Arts Bail 9 pm May 22 fiSM 391 and
patio Tht California Mismanafamant Ho-
viow will tM avaiiabla in Potiatch ttirough
out rtw waaii
Tli CMBini Maa. Th rt A
and Mrnv i tti ImhImis will bt
3 15 pm MMtiwaiT Littit Thaa
l«r
-TMMbv UCLA womans
y •yi0 30 pm evary FrMay Iniarna-
"•"••Jtlit Cantor 10232 Hilfard Fraa
''^'^■■Mllpi mformatioo mH-
on •xtramural funding for
piiiioctorais m mtmm m
Murplty 12fi
trainod iniarna wW lialp yaa fhid
£jr« r* °^ •^ --^^^
local voiuntoar paaiianu are availabit
•irough EXPO Ackefman A213 or caM
io«n OECA aa a
lumar invaatigator Visit KarrHfiolf »f1
-! fL" *^-?SK ¥oiuntoors are alao
"^ for environmtntai and food pro-
Ma iMMi and Til BMi ..^
Tr^ wiM ba Hiown noon-2 JO pm. to-
morrow GSM 301
-TMay ftarring Rogor OaHry Ann^
Mar|af«. iMMi Jaim and Tma Tumor wHt
ba fhawn 7 and ttS pm May 21 Aciiar
man Grand Ballroom S1 at tltt door
BigM. wiil faaturt songs and
orctiastra t>y tht NiMliitf MmMc CMt
5 3M 30 pm Indian dinnar 5:3M 30 pm
(S2S0) May 21 inttmatioaai Sl4»itiit
Ctmor 1023 Hilgard
BGLA iMipi UaMMi will pnaaM m Ml>
JSlMllcanaan B30pm May 71
barg auditorium
Hair st\
(CcMitiiiucd frooi Pafe 7)
Perms nMiy. be the ''frcakieit,- but layer cuu art the hmM
popular, the aimp^iMt. and, at about S8, the dH^est of all the
non-standard iMir cuts.
Explains Chacos, -With the Uyer cut, the hair is cut wet and
basically all the same length It's a balanced look, natural - not
plastered down. You don't need hair spray with it.*^
"Not everyone can get a layer cut," Chavez sairf. "Some people
come in and say they want a layer cut. but they don*t know wlwt
they're talking about We explain what style would look best for
them. We try and make an individual design that is best suited
for their face. The type of hair cut the person wants and the type
we give them is not, always the same. It's sometimes a
compromise.** ' x
IndividM
In making an individual design. Chavez said the stylist will
look at the bone structure of the cuitomer's face and the texture
^•»*^o«dHK>n of Kw hair ^'Thcn we tranafoiw Tf from one "rtiapr^
to iaotlM.i,*' he said
Adds Dcaso, "^A lot of people hide things thing they should
show with the way they wear their hair. In making an
individual hair style, we tr> and bring out the uniqueness that
everyone has because uniqueness is where it's at It's beautiful.
Two hair cuts that several slylists say is the coming look for
men ma> put a dent in their business One cut may be too simple
to require a trip to the stylist hair slickered down in the fashion
the kadmg men of the movies in the I930's wore The other isn't
really a hair cut at all; baldness, a la ICo>|ak.
Tuition increase ...
(C ontinued from Page 4)
and is directly related to the
inflationary effecu of salaries
and price increases on instruc-
tional coiU in recent years.**
UC Rcfent William M
Roth, a mcartici of the Com-
mittee on Finance, said he
**raiBed the qintina'* al foreigii
students but
reaction of
**! hmy bacp
increatet for 0t§gm^^ ht
•Mai, *^in partkular far for-
^tfn iiMiMia.**
8Mi Ik Minted in-
txMird for everyoMt bM aaid, **I
pmi lilt pMMHto af
voting wat' tlM iuMon
fniMt up, the
state itoaU mqi Nriker than
the
are important enough to
the regenu to let ut conunue
our educatioMB.'*
Foreign ifwdtaii at UC Ber-
keley alto expmied CBMCcm
over the iiMlaae. Ted Gooie,
the Foreign Slaient AdKiaai;
said **We expect our non-
immigrant enrollment to drop
of, with a possible loai of
ahMt 130 stiidaotr" Gm^
alto clained **there was ao
the
The FSA here hopes
to OMUte another appeal to tht
reyenu thromfi the SIPC aai
appraach Ommmm
In aMilMi, Ihey are
a petitioa to have
for tuition puf-
Schwcthebn taid the FSA
knew nothing about the in-
craate until two w^ks after it
was pattetfVEveryo
d
V
"An Ai
ifofaia aAer
to
to Cal-
cai oh-
_ , today HoHiof 220 Z
-Hi^iahi H taafea MM 3-5 pai.
^^^Hf. MIII^RO Zi90
-« imn$mm uaa a faai 7 pn
Ml 01 feiiy
y pm tsatgh
caha a to
__ aiss AffMlM Bf uN.
Wiay. BundM A-ii) '"I.
«iatMp Nnai. ipiaiiroi ty
tlw atack Graiuotf StuiMlB in MMiott-
a mm bt
i4 tm tomofrow lwasat>»t
and floor ABM For m
cH
ARTE
THf STUDENT
COMMITTEE
FOR THE ARTS
*^II>C^'aV ^^-'.^-^^
r
rao. franz Tm
12t4
^^ a CSOiOCttOf luilMM
Tiiiyf . Ihii wooli s twtmosf Advisory
CmwcM sitiinar. %M pm. (Nnfar. 7J0 pm
Cfo
. a I iMBiaoi HsrlHi ttta
wook s Gratfuitf Schooi of Eiocatioo
urn noon, tomorrow Moore. 3rd
-T*%
I
Witt tpoik tton. May 21 Moyw-
hoft^k •
— CMbm tor tNam. a dactsiiifi group
for facufly stiff Mi iMpm women witti
muaiplo rwios. nooii^amry fndoy Murptty
- 4 pm.
CNB 33 106
aM ipprMai a inai fHm
Mid doUU. 7 pm. May 2i.
SI stuoentI
TICKETS
at Kerctiod Hill
Ticket Oftite
S2 STUDENT
TICKETS
at UCLA CtiMrai
Ticket Office
650 IMastwoed
PUza
\
I
1-
UCLA 10.
Cird dfid
ilMo 10
roquirti Itr
purctiMt tf
Hi ticktts
3-5
2171 aiid 9:30-11 am.
aaday Ackorman 2412
. 7 3d pm.
imarfiationai StudM
arataiar
today Ackirman 3864
7 30 pm.
Modttat Or Handy wHt spoak an
ptiysical Itiorapy and aiM flalis. % pm.
tonioht CHS 43-106
-4aiiaM Vtp 4-5 30 pm toasy atd 2-
tW pm tomorrow AckornMR WA Imo-
donatior fl
pPMl CM. Mam to virrap your
^ ltd. 3-4 pm tiMay. AilanttR
3412
• pm. avary
7-9 pm. ovory TI
3 pm. ta-
ll TICKCT8 ON tALC NOW
tm . May m 6 30 P M • Royc« HiM
OAflNICK OHLSSON. planlat
a powerful t«chnicior>. a atrong iiNioical mind an
mtorosting artiat" (HofcNO C nmnanaif)
tlM nCKCTt ON aAUE NOW
am . Juno 12. t:ao P M.
ourr AM sumirr N
with Launnao Alwama. aamoy Koaooi A Horto CNia
A Santy aud art o^oniiHi o< troot gurtartoM
%iM Ticicrrs ON sali now
Sm May IS a 30 P M • aOioar>0arQ Hall
ehic anqehscn a tvnoN WNUNrs
•UfiOANCi . -
•am a biMOfraaa m »M boolt
8ur» May It. 2 30 P M - aoyoo Han
M. DOMALO C. XmAWtON
Oontal anlHrepoioyy 4 primaiaiByy
Thura May 20. §30 P M - Aayoa Hall
CANNONBALL AOOOILf Y TfUSUTC
(ttokom m Corvlral Ttckat Offloa only)
Appearing May 24 A 25 at ttio Roxy in L.A.I
•-N
<.J
^*i
■EN AND WOMEN
WANTED FULL TIME
SUMMER JOBS
It you are temporarily dtaconttmiing
your education and mfclng sum-
mer work, consider this unique
opportunity LarQe international
firm has several full time positions
available in district offices through-
out the US If acctptad you will t>e
working with others your own age
You can work locaily travel your
own state or neighboring ftatat
The men and women we are looking
for are ambitious, dependable and
hard working For district office
a^aat m your ^rea. or for appoint-
iMfit with our local manager, call
Sherry between 9am to 5 p m .
Monday through Friday
In LA cal •23-42ia
*n Van Nuye can 7a7-a0S1
In Itonhatlen Bch coM 372-2137
In Anohekii mN 714-93a-07aa
Tracksters finish eighth
It cmine aa ■• surphae when
Prairie View A 4 M took the
AIAW title from the defendii^
natiooaJ champion Bruint laat
weekend at they womeo*s track
championehips at the Univer-
•ity of Kansas. Manhattan.
WiBt miy be surpriMf la
the lact tlM Pnihe View
placed fifit in only ^hrae evenu
— two of which were relays.
UCLA, quite a different team
from kat year's which swept
several events, was never con-
sidered in the running for a
aacond straight title.
The Bruins did well by plac-
ing eigth with 19 points in a
field of 48 teams. Cal Sute
Northridge, who nudged
UCLA for the SCWIAC
title juat two weeks ago,
19th whik use didn't
score.
**The athletea were at fan-
tastic quaUty and wc need a lot
ef 4ltpth and some sure bet
winners to win (the title) next
year," cmmmtnied Brum coach
Pat Connolly.
The
WHY WORK FOR GENERAL DYNAMKS?
Since 1965 the cost of living has increased
76 percent, v\/hile the General Dynamics,
Convair diviston engineering salary grades
have increased only 40 iq 55 percent. Mean-
while draftsman and technician wag^s have
increased by 90 percent during the same
period.
In 1965 top technicians'and draftsmen were
earning $2,300 per year bdow the maximum
of the Associate Engineer classification. Today,
all of Convair s Associate Engineers and 75
percent of those in the next higher engineering
classification earn lower salaries than technical
personnel.
Engineers at other aerospace companies have
been more fortunate While the average en-
gineering salary at Convair is $19,980 per year,
Lockheed (Burbank) engineers average over
$24,000 per year, while Boeing Aerospace
Company engineers average over $22,700 per
yfear. The trend is the same among Associate
Engineers, whose average earnings at Convair
are $12,554 per year while the Lockheed
(Burbank) Associate Engineers earn more thpn
$14,900 per year and the Boeing Aerospace
Company Associate Er>gineers earn nrK>re than
$13,7db per yeor.
A recent study by Banker's Trust Company
revealed that the General Dynamics Salaried
Employees Retirement Plan Is Inferior to the
plans of at least nlr>e other aerospoce com-
panies (including Lockheed, A^cDonnel I -Douglas,
ting, and Hughes).
Dynamics collect nme ond one-half for
overtime hours worked, salaried employees, If
they are paid for overtime, are subjected to a
maximum Overtime rate linriit and other res-
trictions. In the near future, Convair s tech-
nicians and draftsmen will have higher over-
time rates than CNiy of Convair's salaried em-
ploye
It was to correct such inequities at General
Dynamics, that the Convalr^drvtslon salaried
employees decided. In 1 972, to form the Na-
tlonaJ Engineers and Professional Association
(NEPA) in San Diego. NEPA petitioned the
National Labor Relations Board for an election
so that Convair professional employees could
determir>e by election whether they wanted to
be represented by NEPA. General Dynamics
bitterly fought this. Consequently, although
NLRB elections are nornrxjlly held within a few
months of the time a petition is filed, ours took
two and one-half years to arrive. Even after
NEPA won the election. General Dynamics
refused to bargqin in good faith, until threatr^
ened with legal action by NEPA ar>d summary
judgement by the- Notional Labor Relations
Board. It Is now nearly a year sirKe bargain-
ing began and no ogreement is In sight.
General Dynamics is proposing reductions in
present benefits, IrKluding the Savings & Stock
Investment Plan. Although NEPA has held out
the hand of cooperation. General DyrKmiics
has determined to wage war against Its profes-
siorKil employees. AAorale is at an all tinr>e
low, while resignations are reachir^g new highs.
While technicians and draftsmen at
ral
As you , seek a career Tn your profession
consider General Dynamics carefully ... very
corefully.
IFESSIONALS ASSOCIATION
Affiliatecl with the International Union, UAW
8333 Clairemont Mesa Blvd., Suite 211, San Diego, CA 92111
•4 pmm ««r toy tlM
h aise nid that this
wai pro^bly the Beit col-
legiate women*! track met in
the last three ytmn.
UCLA placed in the top
seven in five events, which it
not had coiidering it had oo
diHancr or relay entries, flier
weather conditions hmmifamd
many of the athletic perfor-
mumu and as a resiik the
marks were not exceptional.
Karin Smith did the ex-
pected and gave UCLA Jts
only first place of the meet in
the javeiin. She only threw
161-6, but this was a good 20
feet further than second phwt
Marsha Poppe of Kjumss
State. Althoui^ this is quite a
bit short of her best at 187-7, it
is a good mark considering the
level of competition and the
cold, windy weather.
Evelyn Ashford placed sec-
ond in the 100 meter dash in
II .6 behind Roinly Bryant of
Cal Sute Los Angeles with
11.33.
**I told Evelyn to run slow-
ly.** said ConnoUy **She is still
coming off an injury and 1
didn*t want to take aay
chances with her."
Evelyn also scratched from
the 200 a» ConnoUy feh it wes
in her best Interest "not to ran
the 200.-
Diane Kummer placed
seventh in the long jump, 19-
\%, but this was only niaa
inches off fint place Sharoa
Walker of Seattle Pacific wha
jumped 19-10*/^. FroB a
coach's point of view, Con-
noUy was^ pleased with Diane*s
performances throughout the
three day competition.
ILummer also competed in
100 aatf Ji^ mairif^g the
Inals in the latter But
t^f nine jumps, three in pre-
lias, three in the semis, aai
llw in the finals, ske was too
tired for the i|Ninting eveats.
The discus has trsflifiaaal|
been a siroag event for UCLA
and senior aewcomer to track
Lisa Vogelsang kept ap the
•trength by placing sixth with
MO-^*. The oaadi, however,
was somewhat disappointed
with her throw, bvt attributed
it to Lisa*s lack of competitive
experience ia tftck.
There was noticeable im-
provement in Cindy Gilbert
and she plaoad wvcnth in the
hiffk jump. Her improvHMat
was in style rather than height
aad coach Connolly fails it
■hould sImw up in paper soao.
For UCLA to win the tklr
again this year, it wmM have
to have woo evwry event it
feels the
wen although the rcsaks were.
**We tried to do
we did. It just
to
mented the
/olleyballers liead to New York
•J
— ^ •y I ■■■■■Bi anaMiii'imef
pi Ipails WrUif
The nnligiste volleyball seaaoa japy have
come lb a doae, but several members of the
NCAA chiimpionshu) UCLA squad will be
pUymg this week m fiiiiBmiaij, New York, at
the Umtcd Sutes Volleyball Association
(USVBA) National ChiimpioQ&hips.
Fred Sturm, Denny Cline, Joe Mica, David
Olbright. Steve Suttich and rcdshirt Larry
Scott will be playing on different teams in the
men*s open division
All-Ameri<
Sturm, Cline aad OlMght
will be playing with the coUegiate all-sun, a
4rauMag tcai^ for the United Sutes Nauonal
team. The perfonaaaoes of the Brum threesome
will determine whathar they will be leaving at
the end of this month with the U^ team Dor i
tour o{ the Soviet Union and several other
European countries.
Mica will be pUying for the Maccabi team of
Beverly Hills He was "recruited" on the team
to be an ouUide hitter and with the sophomore
NCAA MVP in the lineup, the Maccabi squad
tM one of the favorites for the open title.
Suttich is going to the nationals with a
Northern California team that he has played
with the but two years. Suttich, a setter at
UCLA, will also nuddle block and hit outside
for his new team.
Scott, a member of the 1975 championship
team, will be playing with the Patriots, one of
the top seeded open teams Scott has played
with the squad all season while redshirting at
UCLA and the experience this year should
BMike him a surter candidate next year for the
varsity.
UCLA head coach Al Scates and assistam
coach Andy Banachowski returned from their
new^jobs with the EI Paso/ Juarez Sols of the
International Volleyball Association to attend
the annual team banquet last Sunday at the
Chart House restaurant in Westwood.
Scates said of his new team,n thmk we ha^
a good chance to win the jm'o championship T
am still hopeful 1 can get some new players,
but we will he better thaii the 6- IB record of
last yeaf.**-
Assistant %o the AtMctkr Director, Angelo
Mazzone represemed UCLA Athletic Director
J.D. Morgan at the banquet and said that
Morgan was -very proiid" of the volleyball
leams^* accomplishments and was hopeful it
eould continue aext year
^ — -JS presented the
scholarship award by Alumni Association
representative Herb Smith and Cline also
fteeivtd the award as **best ail^aioaai player **
Sturm was given the award as *o«Maading
offensive phiyer*- and Mike Franklin woo the
trophy for -best defensive player **
Scates wiU return to Los An«eles again on
June 8 when his pro team macu the Los
Angeles SUrs UCLA All-American John
Bekias, the NCAA MVP in 1975. couM be m
iha -Sells ■*^***^* linawii*
There have been reports that Mica and
possibly Olbnght might go "hardship- to the
pro league, but Mica and Olbnght said at the
volleyball banquet that they woitkl return for
their jumor years at UCLA UCLA women's
AU- American Nina Grouwinkel did give up her
semor year of eligibihty to sign with the pro
league.
The majonty of the players on both the
NCAA champiooBhip men*s team and AIAW
championship woinen*s team will be competing
m the upconung Intramural Mixed Doubles
VoUeyball event.
Sturm played on the winning team last yaar
with Chris Battel but was not sure if he would
return to defend hw half of the title. Three of
the favored teams are Greg Giovanazzi from
the men's team and CUure McCarty of the
women's squad and Doug Rabe from the men's
team and All-Amencan Leslie Knudsen of the
women's squad, plus the David Nichols-CoUeen
McFaul unit.
Many membere of the mai*s and womaa*s
iOM will be playing in beach toumamenu
across Southern Cahfornia over the summer
Former UCLA All-Amencan Jim Menges and
former UCLA basketball player Greg Lee are
the beach tournament favorites in the open
division, but the majority of the cuxtent Bruin
players will be in the lower divisions
The Giovanazzi-Mica team could be favored
in one of the lower classification touraaaKnts,
where the winners get a free tnp to Hawaii to
compete in another tournament.
ABCs Witfc WorkJ of Sporu hax tenutively
scheduled the showing of the NCAA champion-
ship volleyball match between UCLA and
Pepperdine, for Saturday. May 29, it 5 pm
Since the Bruins won in three games, the
ity of the match should be shown.
If you>c ^kiff>9 to 0Mr
^A'lkkrnaaa; \m havo the
books to help you anpoy,
urKlerstarKl. and proloct
it better.
SerKJ now fcsr our
free catabg.
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\Ne cmn aave moat atudents up to M% on atudent
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agents for College Student Insurance Service
1100 Glendon. #1447 ("Monty's" BIdg.)
SEPI'S GIANT
SUBMARINE
15
C
MASTER ™^ PROJECT GRANT GAME
GHANT
-i :■
: ■■%
■ ■ ■■ ■ «
^ discount on any
Giant Sepi
with this coupon
good through 1976
tkxt timt you nerd h«lp.
infar
or just
A STRATEGIC APPROACH
Miy mB/fi M0Kh Ot
hoMT you can ihw m tha iaom. yM blioni. of
«mI m pihmtt inMHJianiB and caa
and
TECHNQUB TO SN^ CATEGOWCAL FUteMNdOPmmfmmS Yoy ^llM l«m
hoM/ ID turn 9cwd Kkas mio hj%f fundad pvQiacto Haratodia
Unad btkMf mmrutf*moiitm tfdnp you Midi ham
• Honv ID ftnd lundi and Kom^ to i^^ for
•Daadknadial and a^ian to
• M^af ID do tf ysMW not
• HoM/ lotMtit and pmeka§t yaar aiupUMl to gan
•\MMn and how lo ptwoli the Ming afMicy aid «mIio lo
• How to ba unrem-knam tbam aillabli funds
• Wl«ai to do If yaw iimdi aM oi4/Ha» IP rtiod^ pi^itt npa
•DalM^ng your niijpuiri and aapBiBing a canmct
* PlanonipondimMWMiday. MayaiiiMNliDr J^MaaLCcaamaaNd
tor iaadiy. aaff and aadana to Una up a tummar pniBct do
a eani|ja|N|
DOrvT MSS 7HB ONE Tlia
WHAT THEY SAY .
to fund via tporaoiad
PHOVEN METHCX)6 AND
to
ma
M4il
com
/
SJ
pnojECT cmAKT Gmm.
Can
-HV
J5|M«a^
/
am
E Tong. Jr ftH^ Fi
OlMOaralSaf
of
aatear
^AflMiwy PIO AM ChMfd Staff
ft a& a.^ ■ ^* ^ ^ ^t^^
ONE TIME ONLY!
COLTER
frif;ilk fn
S25-'»46
1
^««^^p^
Pi ■!■ r#Mi lAak l<»r>
tU<M
"MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME"
AN naXMMATIVE. EYE OPENING AND HARD HrmNG LIVE niESEI^A1K)N
BY DR JAMES L CX)STANZA-BACK FROM A NATIONAL TOUt
WEDNESDAY MAY 26th, 9:00 a.iii.-4:00 p.in.
wAiK fWM CAMPUS THE PLAZA THEAIER iat7 GUNDOM. annwDOO
ADVANCE ^^ nOVjMUB AT ALL MimML AGBtOBi |^BiUaa~
TICKET^ wojuoato !<• KEacKHOFF HALL AWD Taaii ■■^B'
■JUDl-ALSO/^
feS^MMIMl
*i
E-^SSui^ .
-^
r
a
'<?'
V
z A Single Voice — .
I NCAA slips called third strike past Bruins
Imt ai fOrrTk Wh ^m
J
The time: Saturday. May 15, at about 4:|i ^m. The
srte Sawteile Field. The situation Brian Viselli has just
•inilcd in the winning run to give the UCLA teoball
team the California Imwcpitgiate Baseball Association
title Mnd a chance to play in the NCAA piayoHs
Well, two out of three ain't bad. Viselli did single,
t*ie Bruins did win the CIBA tifle hut tk&f prob2>ly
-Bfen't gotng to the ptayotlK^
A six man Miection comminee has daddad the
Bruins not belong in the same tournament as teams
like Washington State ind Northern Colorado. It has
clecided that the Bruins are not worthy of participation
in the 34 team event.
It's true that UCLA's overall record i» just 35-25 while
WSU finished 36-12 and Northern Colorado 24-7. All
UCLA did was win wrhat r?iay just be the Tnughiif
conference in the nation, despite the fact it has only
five teams.
When you combine the past history of UCLA. USC,
California, Stanford and UC Santa Barbara, you find
that these teams have won only' 12 of the last 29
NCAA titles. That's horrible.
This year Stanford finished 42-23, Cal ended at 33-20-
1. use at 33-28-2 and UCSB at 17-29.
ielore Cal State Fullerton went to the nationals last
year from Distncv Eight, the last team not currently a
member of the CIBA to go was Santa Clara — in 1%2.
The last non-California team to qualify for the World
Series from District Eight was Washington State — just
20 years ago.
for three years ~ 1%7-t§ -- ih* Padllc-4 played as
one division In one of those yman, a northern school
(out o^ California) even manafad to finish as high as
third place.
Vet UCLA isn't PiwiidiiiJ as good as WaMiinfton
State because H plays teams like Cal State FuNerton,
^^^^^^ *"^ Arizona, in addition to its league
oppononts. The Bruins even rlcfMNiid Cofm^ — an
NCAA bond team which had a better leoion than
WSU.
There are two berths left in the lournament. ofie m
the Midwest and one in the Rocky Mountains. A Big-lp
second place team has a chance M getting one of the
two openings We can all see why. The Big-10, a
biM^II hot-bed, won an NCAA title as recently as
One of the ^ms with a chance to finish first is
Minnesota (35-8 overall). If the Copiiis finish second,
they will probably be invited. The other two teams in
the, race are Michigan, which has an «Mcellent 1S-t5-1
record, and Michigan State which has actually won 14
games while losing 22 and tying or>e.
The first place team will automatically be in llio
lournament, /ust like mott of the conference winners,
md there is no argument here.
The problem is that the six man committee has seen
fit to jubge UCLA as an independent, rather than the
champion of a strong, yet non-qualifying conference
When you are in a league, you structure your game
to winning that leaitue The early games before
Marc Dellins
conference play are mod to -get the players n
the conference iOMOfi.
The nu^mmtk fMMi am mmi to keep the players
sharp Adams used those games to get his pitchers
ih»Tp for the weekerKl conference games. Vou paa^t^
*y Jjjjon't win many games when ah Ed Cowan or a Tim
O'NoM or a Steve ftianch* pitches pm throe inntf>gfc
The Bruins didn't. Giving players days off durii^ the
week will haunt AdanrH now. Like the time he gave his
l^Wolf and secorid hitter the day off and loai to
Chapman. Like the day he had just half of his starters in
a game and lost to bywli. lust because he wanted them
ready for the league games, the games he felt were
Scho//
on each pair of
Exercise Sandals
OFF/
.-r--^
the 'original' that looks
so good ... and
feels terrific
Smooth sculpted European beechwood
Exclusive toe-grip
Foam-padded leather straps
Never mind the fact this UCLA teaMiIlM eeBred mof«
runs and stolen more bases than any in sdiool history.
Never mind it won 11 of its last 15 le^ue games Never
mind it played half its games on the road.
Many teams never venture far trom home and end
up with good records because of it. The Bruins were
23-7 at hooie this year. That almoA matches rioiliujii
Colorad's record, but it's just half of UCLA's mmom.
The CIBA was formed to cut expenses, instead, it cut
the Bruins' throats. If this were the Pac-a of 1«75, they
would be having a conference playoff this weekend
with ^Washington State The winner would be in the
playoffs. And tiiore isn't much doubt who would win
But It won't happen. ViscNi's single gave the Bruins
the CIBA title and a chance to get screwed by the
NCAA. They seem to have gotten both.
A Living Legend
SHLOMO
CARLEBACH
One Night Only
Beverly Hills
High School
SN0AY.MAY23
7:30 P.M.
Donation $6 Gen Admi
%3 Students
For group falas. call
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located in
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AMiVtK
TadMrCvpi
T(
31)
Ui Ai«ilM. at «13
inaia2s-7a4 >
Appticationa must ba
subnuttM by M^r aO. IVt.
^kiii|Mi9^MH ^islllyvnpB
fltt
T«» el thefr^««t peHormarKret ever > traci and field h«ve
*ne Ml IM toes jump «nd triple lurnp. toib Beamon s If^lVi leap
'f'^^t ••.'^"•«> ^^ '^y ^^ be equalled, at leaM ai >^
level AiMJ |u« IMI tuemier in the Pan-American Garnet, Brazilian
loao Oiiveira tripie lyed »-eH in the rarified air of Mceico to
shatter aeelMr mm% «Midiii| reeaid. Baih mets are itill ftunwine
ieamon with the n-A, whde diveria will be in MontreaJth«
summer to «^ a gold w^^dik for h« country durmc the 21st
Olympiad
for Olfvefia. the rtMd le^oAd will be his stiffest lest ever Up urtgh
his leap mto the history books, the ei«nf had been dominated by
one fn^f\ Viktor Saeeyev ok tfic Seviel Union Ranked first in the
world in the TJ for eight consecutive years, Saneyev's series of fuaai
during a competition usually average better than his beaten
oppeaents' best jiiwipi otf the day!!
Truly, the showdown for the gold medal will be contested
exclusively between these two mee. No one eHe is ckMe, butthe
battle for third should be interesting.
Leading the way right now is An^erican Tommy Haynes He set an
American outdoor record of 56-5W aaainst Oliveira. yet lost by more
than TWO F€£T! Still, he ftgures to be the \eit^^u^ American and is
picked by nwit everyone to be right in the fight for a bronze If
Hayr>es pops a biggie, he might surprise of>e of the top two but
they'd have to be suffering through a bad day for that to h^iptn
Also promincec on the world scene ate coeipetitors like East
German |org Ofeim^. who reached to SS-tV? in 75 and teammate
Lother Cora (54-11); Polet Michal joachimowsii. co-favored for the
bronze with Haynet, Andrzej Sontag ar^ Eugeniusz Biskupski — all
of whom reached S4-10 V4 or better \m year; Oliveira s Brazilian
comrade Nelson Prudencio (5$-6Vi); Finn Penntti Kuukasjarvi
Romanian Carol Corbu and Soviet Analoly Piskulin
Best of the U.S. are Haynes, foMawed by CaAeb Abdul-Rahman
(formerly Milan Tiff), who reached 5S-«Vii at Mexiee CHy whike
watching Oliv«ira; |ohn Craft, who seems to go on forever;
newcomer Anthony Terry, who won the AAL meet litl yeer; Sari
lose State redshirt Ron Livers, who's already out to S4-11 this seaiee;
UTEP vet ArrK>ld Grimes. wfK> reportedly bothered by in/ury — he
sum^teid S5-4 last year iwiaari; St loieph's sensation Ed LenneK,
currently tearing up the Eastern Seaboard at 54^; U.S. Army
performer RayMd Oupree and Troian Tom Cochee. who's itiiun
time and again that he can produce that big |ump when it's needed.
A veritable truckload o^ Bruins ar^d ex-Bruins ate in this evertt.
N4o« prominent right now are currem star Willie Banks and alum
James Butts. Banks, thoMfh he havi't flashed the SS-foot magic of
last seaibn yet. is a good bet to be in the thick of the Trials if he's
not worn out. It's a long teaion from March 6 all tbe way thfough
iyna, but if. anyorse can handle it, it will be Willie After what Ke's
4mm in the past under pressure, it would be ^Imm. foolishness le
eaunt him out of the running rKiw.
Butts, already out to 5S-7V^ wirid-aided and S4-1% legal, teeeii te
be in excellent position. He's a vet and knows what to So Other ex-
Bruins to watch axe ClarerKe Taylor (54-11 J/4 in 1974) and Harry
\xeerr\^n, who kept the presaure on Butts for a ooupie of years here.
Add to this list the aluteawiaioned Rahman and one can see that
UCLA has been on top of the collegiate TJ scene for soma ttmt
R0IBf
Even with Beamon gone, the beg |ueip is still reaching out to
great distances. Yufoabv Nenad Stekic thmed tf«e alt-time best at
sea level out to 27-8 1/4 ia a Pre-dympic meet at Montreal last
Hjmmer Pole Grzegorz CyMMd lost only twice during the year and
split 1-1 with Stekic in winning the World University Games He also
tumped 27-1H swiea.
Notable ameeg lona jumpers from abroad is Soviet coiepaiiior
Valery Podluzhny, praMbiy the mott consistent jumper year in and
year out. Others to watch include Nigerian Charhon Ehizuelen, whe
won the NCAA U ior Illinois last year. Swiss juniper RoV Bemhard
amd Ausaie Chris ConMeasit.
. The list of Amencam with a decent shot at the Trials and beyond
that the Games is so long that there are far too many to give anf
kind of fair sampling. So, lH pick amd dmmt and hope for the best .
On top of the litf has to be Amie Robinson of the Maccabi Track
Club. He's been afoun6 seemingly fofener, m faa. he ranked first in -
the woHd in 1971, right before the bst Olyetpig. He had to settle
for bronze at Munich. He's healthy and ready to go
Beyond him, it's a mish-mash. The 72 gold medalist %My&i
Williams dbesn't have to worry about being tied doNii with USC
meets anymore and can train at his own pace, which has prodyaad
some big \sxm^ already. Al Lanier is another long-time vet with
^»d credentials Danny Seay and Thco HamUlon, both Kansas^grads
«ho have firte records to msmak to their talent. Add Bouncy Mao re
•nd^Stan Whitley to your M« el heiB tin* greats. Austin tay 'fMm^fer
Anthony Carter is rapidly emerging as a threat lor tile NCAA tide
this year. But» most prominent in that right wnd and the lind of the
«s Miiiiiilppl SMa ftar Urry Myrkks, who rocketed 2S^ V4
nation
He backed that up widi a 31-4 V4 laser
to
on.
Well-kfieM in
Bood a jumper as anyone H he hits die take eH
27.plui leaps are oltan aiaawinfl at only 2S feat
«MeMe two feat in back of die bewd. Sdl, he's
iruin fans have IMe to
^y widi die TJ and JB-TV^
rimde apile that's given him trouble aR
l^ TIAM PtaMCnONB: Us« Jmi^ -
Williams. iMry Myrtdu Tf^ |enp - Tommy
s as
s
he's
S2
— Geld, Arnia
KLA/83
i^-o:^
Southern
Campus
UCLA Yearbook
n
r
i
I
Needs An
EDITOR
. -1.
Your IBevli at UCLA
So^Khern Campus UCLA^s yearbook needs ah Editor for the 1977 Edition
HBie IS a chance for a creative person to help leave the history of next year at UCLA
The Editor is responsible for the format content, coordmatirvg of production.
and supervising alaff. This »a a student position with a stipend the staff also
"^^^^^ — a stipeitd.
Am^ 112 ICerchhoff HaM
Deedllna Fridey Mey 21 4:30 PM
KD.LEE^
you looking good on campus or
ofP in j«ans of Cone denim. Comfortabte
•nd practical, this all-cotton denim
room m your budget for other
thinga Hia i«ans and her jumper
tn a m6e range of sizes Aek tor
H.DLae at your favorite
campus store. /"V^yifi ^|
demm
i
> •*.
^
h!
m^
^m
I
I
9
f
- V
CLASSIFIED >ID
AOVINTISIMO OFFICta
IF YOU NCCO tOMCOHf
TO TALK TO.
CALL US.
^AUt
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riMM
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fully tuppoft* tfi« Uf«t««r»Hy mt CaN-
Ipnite't piMcy «
tktHfnkBkm§ ftpsc* will net
pmHiMp Ifi Mw Oafly Bniln le mtfi
wtip tfl«€rtmlnat«t on tb« basis of
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w auL Mammr Hm OoMy Bruin
nor tfia ASUCLA Communications
•oord has Inwosiiealod any of Itia sar-
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Having that an advartlsamant In tbis
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Hta Buslnass Manafor. UCLA Dally
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For aas4stanoa «Mli hotiaing dlacrtml-
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31 '
[Batmen apparently strlkrtjut irririayoff selection
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By Marc DcNto
DB Spmm Writer
UCLA*f batjcball team, which won the CIBA
title just four days ago by defeating USC. will
apparently not get the dMHe to compete for
the NCAA title
The Bruins were not one of 32 teams naoHd
on Monday to participate in the NCAA
diviiionai playoffi, which begin next week.
Only two spots remain open in the ,34 team
iieid and it seemf doubtful the Bnttnt wiil^
picked to fill either oi them.
UCLA did not receive an automaiic berth in
the playoffs becMMf a laagpe mutt have six
nembers to be an automatic qualifier. The
CIBA, a fint year league formed to cut down
on travel expenaet, fielded just five teams this
Yet most thought the Bruins would still he
picked to pUy in the Far West playoffs, which
will be held in Pullnuin, Washington. However,
the NCAA selection committee chose Washing-
ton State and Northern Colorado to join
-automatics" Peppcrdinc and Cal State Ful-
ierton in the Far West playoff
Hurt
''We did what the NCAA asked," head coach
Gary A4mm tsid, -and we've been hurt by it
We split from the Pacific-8 to save money
when the NCAA was aaking everyone to find
ways to cut down (In the past, the winner of
the Pac-8 Northern Division and the winner of
the Pac-8 Southern Division would have a
playoff with one of the two schools spending
thousands of dollars to fly to the site of the
other institution).
-We tried to get a sixth team We wanted
Cal State Lot Angeles but Sunford and Cal
didn't because they didn't want to have to fly
down here four times (USC and UC Sanu
Barbara are the other schools in the league).**
The basic reason given for the non-selection
Is that UCLA's overall record of 35-23 is not as
good as some of the other teams selected for
at-largc berths in the tournament.
For example, Washington Sute finished with
a raeord of 34-12 while Northern Colorado
compiled a wmrni of 24-7
•When I think of the games where i threw
my starters a pouple of innings and then
hrmight other guys in to mop up ** Adams
•eii. Ml fmiahuig the sentence. ''We worked all
year to win the league title and now they say
our record isn*t gecd enough.
could have won OMre of thoee gefiies
but maybe not finished first in the conference
We could have had a better record but then we
wouldn't have been considered at all (Only the
champion of a *non-i|ualifying' conference is
considered for pott^teason competition).
According to the Los Angeies Herald Exam-
iner, Lou Spry. NCAA controller suted that
UCLA was not pic^d hrrjMur **any team that
loses 25 games ca^ be very
Rated
Coikgiate Basebaii a semi-monthly (dunng
the season) Arizona-based publication, would
seem to disagree with Spry. In he latest
Division I poll (dated May 7), the Brums are
rated 15th in the nation Cal Sute Fullcrton
(sixth) it the only team on the West Coast
rated ahead of the Bruins
Washington State, on the other hand, is not
rated in the top 30.
Adams and assistant athletic director Keith
Kelley spent the day coming up with a strong
case for UCLA getting one of the two final
berths. But the chances for this are outsideT^
best.
For his part, Adams is still hopeful ^Tm
telhng people who call that we are not in the
Far West playoffs but f hiy^^ihere is stiU a
chance we may play somewhere.**
The final two spots will be filled next
Monday. A second place team from the Big 10
and a second place team from the Western
Athletic Conference seem to have the inside
track on the openings, which are in the
Midwest and Rocky Mountams.
Black (kiltiiie Week Program
Wedhesday, May 19, 1976
7:30 pm to 9:30 pm Grand BaBroom
a concert by:
Southern California Young AduH State
Choir of the Church of God On Christ
Guest speaicer - Robert Allen, editor,
Black scholar
t
1
Spon»o«cl by: B.G.S.A.. B.S.A.. S.L.C . G.S.A. and P T.F.
Michigan primary victory vita] for Ford
Brown makes his debut in Maryland
By MMm
DB SurfT Wriiv
FWMiUiHl Gerald Ford, kiier of fiw con-
acctttive Republican prgiidgtitiml ArtmAr^^^.
Mtdt a tobd victory in today's prasary in his
^hooie «Utc of Michigan to slow the momentum
of hit rhillr^grr, former Cahfonua Governor
Ronald ReagaiL
On tlK Democratic nde, California Governor
Edmund G (Jerry) Brown, Jr., is making hit
first chaUmpe to former Georgia Governor
Jioimy Carter hy entering the Maryland Demo-
cratic preference primary
The key to succes for Reagan in the Repuh-
hcan race could be whether or not Reagan
gains the support af Dennocrau who might
wdinahly have voted for Alabama Governor
George Wallace Voters are allowed to croM
over party Unes in the Michigan pritnaries, and
the support of sone of the 800,000 who voted
for Wallace w the 1972 Democratic pnmary
could be enough to give Reagan an upset
Ra«0H^ howrver, is not expecting victory in
Michigan/ where 84 delrgaigi to the Republican
convention in July will be selected. **rm the
oMardog. lt*s a longshot. A victory here would
be sooMhiag of a miracle,** Reagan wmd.
Neither Reagan nor Ford hat campaigned
T
pergonal]}
at stake.
pointk in
-("•^•i*,
in Maryland, where 43 deltgatas are
Ford had a lead of 30 percenuae
a poll taken a month ago, but ihc
sharply dwindled in the wake of
Fond*s five tlrmight lossei
Governor Brown entered the Maryland race
loo late to enter a elate of convention delegates.
A win in the preference pnmary is important,
however The victory would give Brown a great
dcml of fiivorabie publicity and could help sway
delegates who arc uncommitted, even though it
does^ not hind them
Bi-own believe!^ the Maryland pnmary to he
crucial to hu campaign 'The people of
Maryland hold in their hands my future in the
Democratic presidential nominatt^n,** he said.
Carter mimmi/cd the senouinsss of BMwn*s,
presence In the fight tor the nomination, saying
that Brown was not a serious canA^te for
President but merely a pawn in the stop-Carter
movement
Representative Morris Udatl. who is OHB-
paigning against Caner in Michigan, expressed
his approval of Brown's challenge to Carter "I
think we are serving the country by Jerry
Brown taking him (Carter) on in Maryland and
me m Michi^m." Udall saut
Ucla Daily Bruin
VoluHM XCVIll, Numb«r 32
UnWwaHy of CaUfomia, \jom Angdas
TuMday, May It, ItTS
Legislators
Prop 15 alternatives
By CWit Bowman and
PaBi
DB Stair Writers
Sacramento — Legislative
leaders have developed a ooa-
promise to keep alive three
nuclear safety bills which were
weakened by amendments last
The three biUs are designed
to offer voters nuelnr life-
pnwi alternatives to Fropon-
tion 15, the nuclear power
piMM initiative on the June 8
ballot.
ThetScnnfe Public litihties
Transit and Energy Committee
Inat Tuesday night adopted
amend menu to the bills which
AssemblynMin Chnriw Warren
(D-Los Angeles), chief backer
of the bills, said left them
**meanii|g|ni and a sham.**
Lait^ Wednesday, however,
Warren met with Assembly
Speaker Leo McCarthy, Se^
nate PrealiBnt Pro Tem James
Mills, Committee Chairman
ABM Alqniat and Preble
StolU of the governor's offioe.
atid a partial legislative resolu-
tion was reached
RcsorrtctkNi*
Warren told the Daily brum
**There has been a resurrec-
tion.** and that the fomproRMe
proposal **wiU make passage
more likely.** Alquist has sche-
duled I second heanng on the
amended bills for tonight after
closing the Tuesday night hear-
ing before a vote was taken.
The three bills originally
contained most of the guide-
lines of Proposition 15. bitt
with changes intended to make
the initiative*t concept more
to organized labor
and nuclear energy ^
Both the initiative and the
three bills would ban future
nuclear power plant construc-
tion until the legislature found
that safe disposal methods for
wastes were available
individual ctm:^
" One bill alto calb for a one-
yeiir study by the Sute Energy
Commission on the feasibility
of locating future planu under-
ground.
The Brown administration
gave support for the three bills
early last week, but Alquist
says the governor's belated
action **indicates only that he
found . a politically profitable
issue lo stand on."
The amendments. which
were approved by the com-
mittee on a 5-4 vote, gave final
approval of safeguard plans to
the Energy Commission It
alio exempted all power plants
now under planning, for which
at least SI 5 million will be
spent, from any safety mea-
sures conuined m the bin
Blocking passage of the bilh
(C ontimied on Page 4)
UCLA minority admissions
protest subject of meeting
By Mike
ition planned for Friday to
tBe UCLA administration*s
will be an^ng the
which Mckinnty
imponant. rse caiiao lor a
enabUng UCLA MlBants to recruit
from pfndominantly minority
ii being sponnMii by the
ThM WoHd Coalition, vtMi is conpriaed
of the Wtmk Student ABhwre, MEChA, the
Asian Students Union and the N^tive-
McKiipney satd there are appinnimately 35
in the Los A^gelat am winch are
nantly minaiiiy ami which tipnld
from sndi a Mgram. The UCLA
oo«ii work 10 boon a weak in tBt
and he paid through work-amdy he
The time, pboe and nntnre of the
he imammi at today's
Fred McKinney, 1975-76
TiK UCLA admi
in t
He laad it
areas of
nu. Within the category of spacial
McKinacy
hie them to
MpBhfly hdofc they
aai MclLianey mad.
u> Mryjaafy. todays
will alio he giving
whefe the
lax in its
I
mmmm
mm
wmm
i
I
rt^oven' ^rMJRL lot
;"
•J
Tlic metered parking lot be-
hind the Univenity Reteftrch
Library (URL) wmi wrapped
with five milet of stnng by five
female UCLA art mmitnu
working Thunday in the foggy
early morning hoitn to crtate
aB *iafUUation piece** sculp-
ture.
The untitled sculpture took
three hours to *^w€ave** ai the
five students and five of their
frieads (who prefer to remain
anonymous) ipanned the 23-
car lot with an intricate wvb «f
string stretching from tdeter to
meter.
The project was originaUy
planned for the architecture
quad where it would be seen
and enjoyad by the campus
community, but permission
was denied because of fire
ions.
7
SMI
HAIR DESIGNS
POR M£N a WOMLN
Our Clacacf Need* are Always
Numero Uno!
CASA DE ROBERT
I I66S Smia M«inica Mvd. WLA
Cucting by Mr Roberto 477-5220^ By Aj^pc
4
.^
C'lV^M nMo»»M»»
• f« (
We II send you a tree txx»iuet on Avocado Seed Growing
if you H slend us 25C for hanrtting and postage Address it
Seed Growing PO Box 2162A Co«i Meaa, CA ^^ ^^'^6
Altnw4 6 wKs for delivery Offer eapim Oer 31 ):?m.
INSIDE Bvonr
CAUffOtNIA AVOCADO
THERFS A FRS TKBL
ANDSOMEONilO
uucro:
''We wanted to make some-
thing beautiful for the carapoa,
tomething to break up campus
Jipathy and kt people know
about the art depart nient,**
explained one of the flaunts.
Chuck Cmmoi, ■■■■lint
'm«M|§er of parkiflf services,
said the parking lot sculpture
caused no problenns or com-
plaints, but laughingly added,
"H hope this doesn't happen
very often.**
The acolpture was di
tied at noon when the artists
and frieaif climbed into an
inter-campus limousine and
were driven through the hoft
web, which broke with loud
crackling sounds and /ell to the
ground.
BRUIN
Vofueie XCVIII. Numter 32
Tueaday, May 18. 197f
_f
/,
atntnmtion pmriod: by lh« A8UCLA'
§0094. Co^rtgM fOlB dr
ikSUCL4i Communteariofm
Patrtck HMily
Ann* Young
Job hunting guide
free at B of A
A niew booklet, offering job-
hunting guidelines for colleft
graduates, is available free at
Bank of America branches
throughout the state.
''The CoHait Graduatc*s
Guide to the Hardest Job in
the World** is a B of A crea-
tion, which presents sugyei-
tions for job apphcants from
employer's view
Included in the booklet are
guidelines for goal planning,
resume prepBfition and letter
writing, and interviews
Ml VM paniInQ leC
Campaign info
now in Powell
Campaign literature fpr
national, state and local
candidates, plus information
on state and local proposi-
tions, are now available for
reference in the College
Library News Room, 2nd
floor Powell Library
UC Movement
today at noon
UC Movement Theater, a
showcase of choreography by
undergraduates in the dance
department, will present its
final concert at noon today in
the Grand Ballroom. Admis-
sion is free. ^
K«n Bmrg
Jim Brandt
Kattvy
•wry Kvm
McGailiard
Ted ShaptfQ
ykekt Vi
EmMy
^t Guti«frw
Mancy Harada
Qay Harada
Qkmrm NsfcBQiri
■ijp^fw.'
Vi
CflMiy Y<
HoSylUffto
(
Southern
Campus
UCLA Yearbook
Needs An
EDITOR
Immf Your Mark •! UCLA
Southern Campus. UCLA's yearbook naadt an Editor for the 1977 Edition
Ham ia a charx:* for a craathw paradn to help leave the history of next year at UCLA.
The Editor is reepof^k>le for the Ibrmat. content. coord«r>atinQ of production,
•nd supervising staff This is a student position with a stipend the ataff alec
receives a stipecKJ.
in Kerckholf HeN
Figures called gues^
Reagan tax story denied
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A
for Roes id Reagaa
Cal-
iforaia foveraor paid no fed-
eral iaceaK tax in 1970. Bet kt
declined to say how ofiuch
Reagan did pay.
"Thg reporter apparently did
eal siady Um matter very
closely.** Reagan aide Peter
Hannaford laid of the report,
whjch appeared in Sunday's
Sew York Times. There's not
one of tlKir figures that's cor-
lect. Their guesses as to what
he paid are simply t|uit aad
they're not correct.*
The story said Reagan paid
no federal income tax in 1970
aad that he paid much lets for
1971 aad 1973 than a person m
his hracket wouid ordiaahly
pay. It said Reagan paid about
haif what a taxpayer in hu
taicket ordiaahly would have
It
the years 1972
1974.
Tlie Jlifiaf slery said
its conclusions on
aaalysit af
about his iacoiae aad taxes for
the years 1970 through 1975
HMt Rsagaa has aMde public
since (he start of his format
campaign for the Republican
presidential nomination.
On Feb 1, Reagan released
a statement of his net worth,
which was put at SI. 45 million
He said at that time his tolal
gross income from 1970 to
1975 was S810J7I.
Two weeks ago, after Presi-
dent Ford challeiiged him to
produce his 1975 tax return,
Reagan issued a statement
saying he had paid $106,507
Analysis of the linuted infor-
mation that Reagan has so far
made pubbc indicates that
what he has done is within the
law. the Timei said The paper
Mid it appears he auKle invest-
ments that were specifically
for their tax avoid-
pocential.
Hannaford said Rsagaa did
not plan to issee aay lute-
in: on the rimai article. He
had been coatactcd pnor to
publication of the story but
had decbned to answer what
he described as *%rery dcuiled
questions "
ReagSB has consistently de-
clined to make his tax returns
public.
'Mt*s the governor's belief
that seeker for public office
should disclose whatever is
naasspry to show there is no
conflict of interest or potential
conflict of interest." Hannaford
nid. **lt*s his (Roigaa's) posi-
tion that he*s already done
that.-
Meals as part of pay halted
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The state Court
of Appeals ruled yesterday that the res-
taurant industry cannot force mimmum wage
employees to take SMak as part of their pay
unless the worker gives written consent.
Sayiag administrative regulations in con-
flict with applicable statutes are null and
void, it reversed a San Franasco Superior
Court ruling.
Evelyn Whitlow, Division of Industrial
Welfare chief, announced a new policy in
1974 regarding certain provisions of the
State Industrial Welfare Commissidh's mini-
mum wage order
Restaurant industry employers previously
liaf lii riglK to uke a credit against the
minimum Wage for value of meals furnished
employees. The new policy prohibits taking
such credit ; without specific written consent
of the worker.
The California State Restaurant Associa-
tion obtained a court order preventing the
new policy from being put into
and Whitlow appealed
Yearbook buyers offered prizes
L.. — !
"^ ordering a yeart>6ok a
student mSy win a Eurail pass
er a flight to Hawaii.
According to Sunny Wise,
section for Southern Campus,
and other prizes are be-
offered to get students to
purchase Southern Campus.
The loain prizes include the
two-month student Eurail
pass for two valued at S390,
tkt one or two W9tk charter
flight to Hawaii for two per-
soas oa Continental Airlines
with champagae and dinner
included (value S37S) aad a
Ski Mammoth package for two
(value S268).
TIk drawing for these prizes
wM be June 7, but there will
be weekly drawings May 17, 24
aad 31.
Wise said Southern Cmmpus
was asi^g a special drawing
system in which cashiers code
each order with four numbers.
When the drawing is held, four
number which correspoad to
aae of the orders are taken
from a hat and the winner is
notified
Two drawings have already
been held. Wise said On April
20, "Pam Husband won passes
and rides to Mardi Gras for a
group of three,** she said.
''On May 10, courtesy of
ASUCLA, Cathy Yasuda won
one set of bearwear or jogger*8
outfit valued at S30 and Mi-
chelis Oissar ami aas
plated pen set (valued SiK 20^"
Wise added
Southern Campus can be
ordered at the cashier*s office
in Kerckhofr 140 at S8 48 per
copy
The ASUCLA Communica-
tions ioard "decided liat the
yearbook would be two dollars
cheaper this year.** Wise said
Foosball benefit for MD
A marathon foosiai tournament for muscular dystrophy will
be held at 9 am, Saturday. May 22 at the Security Pacific Plaza.
924 West wood Boulevard in West wood.
Sponsored by **UCLA Students Against Dystrophy.** the 15-
hour benefit will include representatives from San Diego State.
Cal-State Loag leach and others. Anyone wishing to coflnbute
$25, either by theaHeNss or with the help of pledgers, may play
in the event.
Foosball, popular on high school and coMsge caa^Mlses, is
miniature saeiser in a pinball type fanaat. Players control figures
on the board by twisting extending rods oe each end.
All proceeds from the tournament will go to care and lassarch
programs for mi
-<?-i
Needs An
Editor
rh»s IS thm place for Rib Lovmr%l
By far the Be%f Ribs we ve fn#d in L A
COMPETE DINNEtS
Casual Dining *'»"<* 2 ■ T S
NAmiT'a OPWM PU BBO
1434 N CSfSCfNT HilQHTS •« SUNSfT STtlT
10 Mmut*^ Uo^n Sunv^t SUd to
lOuc»l Conyon Turnlfight And Vqu i c i h«r e
-^ lirad of yMtardaya hair?
HAII? T€IDAT
For virhat'a happening now
styling for man and women
Jerry Redding'a Jhirmack producta
For appointment cell 478-6151
tues. thru aet
3.00- OFF lirat haircut
with thia ed
1105 Glendon Ave Westwood Villege
LUNCH COCKTAILS DINNER
For a delightful change o^pace ar>d a
unique experience in gourmet dining visit
AKBAR Cuisine of India
Specializing in the most aut+ventic curries,
kababs, biryanisand tandoori preparations
(Coolced in a special Indian Clay oven)
^Hax in the exotK atmosphere of our t>eautif ullv
decorated cocktail lounge
Special party room for your convenirn( e
Open Daily from 11 :UOam to 11 :<X)pm,
All major credit cards accented
Reservations (213) 822-4116
590 Washington Street in Marina Del Key
Together is a special
interest newspaper serv-
ing the Womens Com-
munity. The editor is
responsible for staffing
and content of the pub-
lication which is pub-
lished twice per quarter.
Apply In 112 Kf cteJuiJ il«M
b«fora 4:30 pm
Friday, M#y 21, 1976
Karl Marx &
Jewish
Emancipation
Prof. Amos
Funkenstein
J
t
w
1
•
H
t
T
U
D
1
I
•
*
May 18 12 Noon
Room 2412 Ack.
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9m
1 .
5?Z©S -f MOT f»es OBJGMSt C0tO«S
mMTSHIICTS 42-50 te$S,00
AW PIUMTIM6 ^ ^ =>
(flOO far ANyAftOVC «»^ $k>.00 fURCHAS£)
•AUO«FK£|ilCM-CUT^iM»i-f ««pmcn
iburiauE 8IVLE5* Alk MU5H
By LMli W,
DB Suff Wfllcr
Internatioiial food, belly dancing and
important frivti bifhlighted the finish of
International Week last Saturday
About 400 pcrsoat attended a dinner at
the International Student Center, accordiflg
to Bettina Schwethelm, coordinator of the
sponsoring Foreign Student Association
(FSA).
Diabes from eight different countries were
served, including such food as ''Chicken
Tikka,** a Pakituni dmh with cubes of spicy,
riMtod chicken served with nee, or **Pi'
rozhki,** a Russian pie stuffed With meat and
provided entertainmeai at tbe event.
The fMiU were addressed by tbe Paki-
stani ambMMdor to tbe U.S. and 30 mem-
bers of a Soviet youth delegation.
TIk striking feature of tbe Pakistnn-U.S.
relations is that it is a friendship that has
lasted over a quarter of a century,** Am-
dor Sahabzaba Yaqub Khan said.
He said that even though national interests
hnve not always coincided, tbe relationship
between the two countries has been one of
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Belly dancing, featuring both traditional
and modem dances of Egypt, Tuniaiftr Inm^
Morocco and other Middle Eastern countries
by the Aisha Ah Troupe, proved to be the
myor attraction at the dinner j.
MiMit^' singing, illusions by ^nimada, a
■Miler Japanese magician, and a film pre-
sentation by traveler Renee Taylor also
*.-_*a;M*M
Khan, after describing the Pakistan- U.S.
filMtoas over tbe last 25 years, said be
expected to see a **steady duration** in
friendly relations with tbe U.S. in the
foffieeable future
The Soviet delegation
and presented a pennant and a book on
Ukrainian paintings to the FSA. Schwethelm
accepted them for the FSA, saying, **1 hope
that we can all have a better future tomor-
row with all of us living here togetber on
one continent, on one earth.**
Blacks-in-media aid proposed
922 GAYLEY AVENUE
(at ttConln)
WESTWOOD VILLAGE
Good May 18th thru May 23rd
Spanking last Friday before
a Black media conference here,
members of the media dis-
cussed a propMsd Black com-
munications conference.
The purpose of the con-
ference would be to **give
Blacks who are interested in
the media a job,** Frank Stall-
worth, editorial director of the
Dath Brum, explainad to a
group of students here
William Lane, a cofumnist
•or tne ^vorifl t^re^vs ^yBBMntn*
said most people are concerned
IT'S NOT TOO LATE!
MAKE UP TWO YEARS
THIS SUMMER
INDEAMiABOUTSSIMWIiLEDOIIiBITJ!
START THE
RdIC ADVAICED COURSE
NEXT FALL
Int IhMm rHMliat
t VCTi
$11 1
SKCUL fmaum rm
urn OMS STUKNTS
sec SEniESEIiTAnVC ON CAMPUS
looa 131
■crs cva
\
CALL 125* 73t4
r
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD
ac^
with television because of the
recent dismissal oi several
Black people fronl that ind tit-
try. V Blacks are being fired
from television for various
reasons,** Lane tnid. "It is a
pattern it*s going to hap-
pen all over.-
Lane said most people are
not aware of tbe reasons be-
newspapers, radio and
are not telling what
is^ going on.
"Prq^ncii is failmg for the
itack people. Everything we-
seek "^, have to beg from
white people,** Lane said.
Several years ago the Na-
tiooal Association for the Ad-
vancement of Colored Peopk
(NAACP) pressed for quotas
to enable Blacks who did not
have tbe chance to prove their
qoniifieations to get joba, ac-
cording to Lane.
Prop 15 . .
He commented that some
people claim the qiK>ta system
is no longer neocnary, that
whites who have lenionty
should be employed initend cif
the inexperienced Blacks.
There are no Black writers
for Black programs, said Lane.
He said that progranu such as
Tbafs My Momma** do not
accurately depict Black people,
but instead the ethnic biK:k-
ground of the script writers.
Donna Sands, formerly of
ratfio flUttion KDAY, said the
Blacks must . **join collec-
tively.** She advised Blacks
interested in media to **do your
homework.**
Suilworth said the next con-
ference would be a general
meeting for Black students
here intcreslad in media-
oriented emplo3fnMat
— Jeffrey Brown
(CoMinMd froik Pngi 1)
was the lequireroent of legialn-
tive review on tbe adiqancy of
BMclear safegnards.
Opponentt cooiviai ilMlid
ononis are subject to pofitical
whiflBs, while tbe energy com-
minion is nK>re likely to base
iu 4mmam on uriiniial aerit
■Kken of the bifl said l^ia-
lati^pe feview is netini to pro-
tect :he public*s interest in
nndMr safety and to
that tbe energy
created by tbe L^
year, would act quickly
£airty.
Tbeimeorc ,
nuclear plna^ sCaO in tbe pfaui-
inilend of reqntrhig the two
of tbe LcipiUntuie to
cati-
of the Energy
the
reqiiifci that
appfO¥e
resolution
ConMMHMns
that a new plant be
That, Alqnit laid, pcrvenu a
" nnyority of
of
up a bill which afTirms an
by the -
If
fu
the
being phinned by the Lot
Angeles Department of Water
and Power and the San Dieap
Om and Electric Co. — is ttiD
uniaaaKnd, Alquiat said.
provaL then the only
tbe
he niaotod it by a
both
In speech
condemns
'«,•.
.« s •
•
•
-
■ •■.:^.|
fm.
n 1
, ...
1
— f
By \Lm Garin
DB Stair Writer
The downfall of Brazirt mi-
litary dictatorship by non-
violent means is tbe way Bra-
zil's race relations proble
Ballet soloists
on UCTVLA
^wo soloisu from the Los
Angeles Balkt Company
will perform on UCTVLA
today, along with Aztec
dancer Pablo Cabrehal,
mimest Richmond Shep-
herd, and members of
UCLA*s Mexican Folklonco
dance troupe
Tbe show, which airs at
11:30 am, will also feature
International Woman*f Con-
ference delegate, Adelaida
Del Castio. and UCLA
MEChA leaders discussing
their demands for more
Third World students in
higher education.
solved, according to
Gilliam, histor> pro-
fetaor at the Umversidad de
Coimbra in Portugal
Gilliam, who was part of a
P^^^fun laat Thursday spon-
sored' by the Afro-Brazilian
C uliure Group Commemorat-
ing Brazirs aboUtion of slavery
SS years .'ago, said something
•ytteanuic can hraak down the
HOniNC
WtS
yr
y^
Brazil
'^Revolution is a eewy word
for a lot of people,** GiUiam
said. *^Vm for a non- violent
revolution, if that's poMMe,*
She saw the racial problem
in Brazil as no different from
that anywhere etee. •'i can't see
liberation oi Blacks m Brazil
as different from the bberation
Lc on Manoel Quenno. the
Black historian who played a
major role in Brazilian aboli- | 4pm to 2am 7 daya a
tion of slavery
Gittiam is currently on leave
of ahaenee from \}myttn&mA
de Coimbra and the Sute Uni-
yertity of New York, where she
also teaches. She received her
degree in Latin-Amencan
Studies here and has done
giaduaii work at Anuoch
College
SHELLEY'S
ExpfwT BEP/ui mm
rumnTcwT
' ^77-7660
PE£R conmaimg by af>d tor tno—
dealing wim m«ir MMuality
fey UuOmnx
I
r
( (Mjrtt
DISCOUNT
PRICES
Student gets
Senate job
Oil Graff,
ichool senior.
UCLA law
of fix
M one
of poor people anywhere. *'~^******B^ students to be
GUliam also said that ^^ ^**^ Seiuite Internship Selac-
MIT professor
to lecture here
on nuclear risks
Fj-ofessor Norman Rasmus-
sen, head of the department of
nuclear engineering at tbe
Maisschusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT), will give a
pubhc seminar on ''Reactor
Risk AatCiHnent Method-
ology,** today al 4 fni In
Young 2230. .
Rasmussen. recently heaiad a
nM|or reactor safety study
whoae resulta, vaHed the **Ras-
musscn Report," estimated the
possibilities oi nuclear icnctor
failure This report, which has
brought Rasmussen to national
attention, aitempted to place in
perspective reactor risk as
compared to other hazards
The scmmar. is sponsored by
the School of Engineering and
Applied Saenccs and the
Lahaaatory of Nndaar Medi-
cine and Radiation Biology.
Unruh headline
correction
The Bruin regrets any
misunderftandmg arising
from the headline UNRUH
CASE mistakenly
ing over a story annnt or-
ganized cnme (Bruin May
17, iy76).
struggles between the races
occur when their mteresu be-
come overly diverse **Race
relations haeit improved in the
laat 88 years because the world
has become smatter, but for
the moat part, tbe culture there
haa fonained the laase.*'
She said this was so because
Brazil still has retained a
"skvc-ocracy," a situation in
which that nation is still de^
pendent on low-paid Black
workers to tend its big plan-
tations.
But Gilliams noted that of*
ten, the Bra/iluin black tries to
mutate the white mai^ in every
way poaaiMe instead of strug-
^ing against him.
Social upgrading in Brazil
involves what Gilliam caHs
*'whiiemng.** "This is when the
Mick forgets everything about
culture and eats white fobd,
in white clothes aiMi
to ^ leave everything
Black about him behind,** she
said. Blacks there have even
tried straightening their hair in
order to climb the social lad-
der, according to Gilliam.
The epitome of the racial
hierarchy in Brazil was given
by Gilliam m a traditional
Brazilian adage. ''A man's idea
of a perfect situation is whan
he has a Black woman to work
(for him), a white woman to
and a brown woman to
Alao on tbe same progran
as Gilham were Timothy
Hardiag from Cal State Lot
Anfcles, speaking on the.XPn-
version oi tbe Brazilian Black
from slave to free worker,
£. Bradford Bums ol the hia-
tory department
tion Panel for
Committee internship in 1976-
77.
According to Graff, the in-
teriuhip involves working with
key Seiuite committee mem-
bers He will do rwaaich for
potential bilte and work
da^li of bills
'^rm quite pleaiad^ and Vm
sure the work will be chal-
lenging,** he said
His
begin in October and end in
June, includes a stipend of
S764 each month.
Grass was selected after be-'
ing interviewed by a selection
panel in Sacramento He said
the panel paid for his tnp to
Sacramento for the interview
CoHigi^pnduat^ and per-
sons who will be graduating
seniors by next year ^y apply
for 1977-78 fellowiMpi by
writing lie Sanme Internship
Siiactiofi Panel in the Sacra-
mento Capitol.
* Kathy
$ 1 4995
The Craig Electronic Notobook is tbo pockot cossoffa
dictator with iosort-o-word ood reviow feoturas anlf
found Ofi much mora axponsiva racordors. Socouse ftol
Air Comoro k Hi-Fi givos you mora for your monoy, the
Eloctronic Matahaak enmas cowplata with on AC
odaptar and rachorgobta bottartas of no extra chorga.
FREE
1 2 Certron C60 Topes
teloir
WIdl purchoM of O CrotQ -Eioctr onic
. pi«i»iilulili of fhit
ond
Valuable Coupon Expiras: May 28, 1976
bstakcomoQChHI
90024. (213) 477-easa or S7f«0«6
t«tuCU««
927
MASTER ''^^ PROJECT GRANT GAME
r?
A STRATEGIC APPROACH
<n« review. AkpiMt said Ihat ch^^rvao al Yaa M 15
S^ Wiiwiidi^i. MuF atih ««h Dr Jotm L Cmmm and tet hlm|h«^you hem to mm\U( THE PnCUBCT
GAME HawaanaiaaaaaBwaBhjyai niatolpMa^iiia^iaBdlBwiiK^uctoil^
to hind Iht
IPMl MUh to condMO
^ ^^^^Sf^jUbP'. ^^'^^'^Jgo^tJat^^"^^ "^^^ ^^^'^ POSSESS FHQUEN METHODS AND
TO SNAflE CATEGORICAL FUrff)ii|(roniOrTlMrCS You «^
LiMd Mto» aw |ya • Inv ol ito
• HcM to ind lunai mdlmv to
•rfcTidtog M^Mi mnd «Mh«n to
IMmI to do tf ^m'f9 not dl^^lor funds
• Hem to be m-
• Dfltofmi.Miy If the coii^psaton lor fundi M fMr (or. «Mlton to at K oall
• HoM' to datomsna tUwl your pvopact ihould com
•VMwlto^otf
DOirr MKS THV ONE 7W
fmVCr 7NEY SAY
mfMASTLH THE mtOJCCT Q9¥WTCjAMt
ontt ^to. UniiMifW(^ Of
W»vMNUaadar
tobtai
VIKHoiptt^
CT
ONE TIME ONLY!
THE ecmi yv cestejr pmsenn
"MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME"
AN INFORMATIVE. EYE OPEMNG AND HARD MfniNG UVE PRESENTATION
BY DR. JMMES L COSTANZ>V«ACK FROM A NATIONAL TOUR
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26th, 9:00 ajn.-4K)0 p.m.
WALK moM CAMPUS THE Plaza 1HEATER im:
► TICKET SALES AT ALL MUIIML
m
laMiietnvooD
-V'^'u-
t
f
dciy bruin
poinr
The victim - Palestine
by tmad Nasser
Editor's note: N^ier is a mem-
ber of the Organization of Arab
StiMienti here).
The Zionist propaganda ma-
chine hat Kicceeded, for many
j0 reasons, in misleading the Amer-
S ican people and is distorting the
^ facts about the fascist nature of
• the state, of Israel. While the
f majority of the natior>s of the
world describe the Zionist
f
OPINION
movement m racist^ a few
Zionists at UCLA paid almost
$200 to the DB. (in an adver-
tiigment) to redefine Zionism.
They said Zionism is not in any
way a national liberation move-
ment. The fountain head of na-
tional and racial oppression is
imperi^ism, and rei\ national
liberation movements are by
their nature anti-imperialist.
How then are we to explain a
Iteration nrwvement which has
bised itself from the outset on
alliance with the forces of im-
' periaiism, arui which today is a
vassal of US imperialism?
From whom are the Jewish
people to be liberated? Is it
from the Palestinian Arabs, who
are themselves struggling for
their own liberation? Are these
the real oppressors of the Jewish
people? Is it not a strange li-
beration movement which num-
bers anxmg its chief supporters
the Nazi Pr inr>e Minister of South
Africa, Vorster, (who was in
Israel only a few weeks ago) and
the forces of political reaction in
this country, among them such
right-wing racists and anti-
Semites as the Buckleys, the
Reagans, and the disgusting
MoynihanI A; sober presentation
of facts is the only way the
reader can atfcts the nature of
Zionism. Is Zionism racism?
"Whi^n we occupy the Land,
jfte must expropriate the private
property on the estates assigned
to us . . . and try to spirit the
penniless population across the
border" — Theodor Herzl in the
Complete Diaries of Theodor
Herzl. (Paul Raphael, ed). "Be-
tween oiinelves it must be clear
that there is no room for both
peopled ^Palestinians and Immi-
grant Jews) together in this
country (Palestine^, there is not
other way but to transfer the
Arabs from here to tf>e neigh-
boring countries, to transfer all
of them; not one village, not
one tribe should be left" —
Joseph Weitz, former head of
the Jewish Agency's Coloniza-
tion Department Davar (the Is-
raeli Labour Party daily) Sept. 29,
1967. In 1917, at the time of the
Balfour Declaration which "pro-
mised a Jewish heme in Pales-
tine," the Arab population of
Palestine consisted of 92 per
cent Moslims and Christians and
8 per cent Jews. In 1947, at the
time of the UN Partition plan,
Zionist land-holding reached a
mere 6 per cent of tbe total, arid
immigration raised the per-
centage of Jews to one third the
total population of Palestine
That increase was not a natural
increase of the indigenous
Jewish Palestinians but was due
-to Eupepean Jewish immigration
to. Palestine under the proteo
tion of British Bayonets.
Does Israel implement racist
policies? "A racist law is already
in effect (in Israel), the law of
return' which gives every Jew
the right to settle in Israel and
become an Israeli citizen by
virtue of the simple fact that he
is Jewish. The Arabs of Israel did
**Ladlet and 9#ntlefnon of the press, I believe we are entering a new era of student
government For tills is a n^w generation — a generation of peace. The issues were
clear, and ttie paople made ttieir choice. 1 have, therefore, decided to exHe Scott
Taylor to the University of Ruget Sound, and to paint Kerjpkhoff Hall pink and grven.
But I still hear some of you ask, "What gives her ttie authority? The right?" And t say
to you, I have a marnlale — a mandate of the peoplefir
not enjoy the same right, af>d
even the Palestinian refugees,
although legitimate inhabitants
of the country, were not al-
lowed to return" — Eli Lobel,
Israeli writer: "Palestine ar\d the
Jews'/ in the Arab World and
Israel, p. 85. "5,620 Arabs have
been sentenced in the Gaza
Strip alone for life imprison-
ment and hard labpr; among the
prisoners there are men over 80
years old and children between
12-14 years of age. — Ma'ariv.
May 3. IfTI. Are all fe4s
Zionists? Are all anti-Zionists
anti-Jewish? Are there anti-
Zionist )ew's?-."The conditioning
of American Jewry by a Jewish
flag and a dual citizenship in
America, is more than we can
accept. The secularist creed has
overreacted tself. We have been
watching with anxiety the secu-
larization tendencies in Ameri-
can Jewish life . . ^ the unre-
mitting efforts of certain groups
to put American Jews behind
programs of International poli-
tical pressure ... We refuse any
tenger to be religious acrobats'
We cannot pact with th^ unat-
tainable position in society
which 'JeWish' nationalism a& a
creed impotes uporr us" —
Rabbi Elmer Burger and lessing
Rosenwald: Manifesto of the
American Council for ludaism.
1943 Any comments after thsiC
quotations would be superMb-
ous.
Letters, letters, letters, letters, letters, letters
Giy
TlMk fay communrty has re-
ceh^ed a fair amount of atten-
tion in the pages of the Daily
Bruin of late, most of it posi-
tive, but, with the controversial
'slave auction,' some has been
less than helpful in conveying a
balanced image of gays. This
letter is a personal invitation to
ti>e UCLA community to partake
in one of the purposes of the
University, namely, dialogue and
exchange of ideas. The topic
gay liberation, is probably not
one that is upper most in your
mind, but like many other social
issues, leKuality ar>d sexual dif-
ferences it a subject that is
important ar>d has some impact
on all of us. While most of you
may be 'Kir>sey O's' (exclusively
heiapaaMKual), the facts are that
a very large segment of the
population are Kinsey 1's, Z's,
etc. thru 6's (exclusively homo-
sexual). That meaiii each of you
are presently acquainted with a
number of gay people and will
be dealtng with them aM of your
lives, knowingly or not To the
that you undemand how
.they think, feel, act and view the
world, you will be bener able to
function as compassionate lov-
ing human beings.
Thefefore, 1 personafty Invite
each of you to attend the Gay/
Non-Gay Diaiogue, this Thurs-
day, May 20th, at 8 pm in the
third floor 'Upstairs Lounge of
Kerckhoff Hall. You may grow a
little in your experience throtfgh
an evening of verbal exchanjge
in small groups. If you feel
threatened by the idea of such a
dialogue, perhaps you would
benefit most from such an ex-
cfiange of vie%vs.
GlefMi EHkflon
Urban Planning
Sautman
In Barry Seutman's reply to
Mr. Fiske's letter dealir^g with
Galk) wine advertising in the
Bruin, Mr Sautman igrK>res the
ob»loui argument that the Bruin
has the right, under the First
Amendment, to print whatever
ads it might wish to print ar>d
instead takes a lir>e of argurr>ent
I find particularly disconcerting.
Mr. Sautman contends that it
was Mr Fiske's attitude that
allowed the Nazis to take over
Germany This might be so,
though I seriously doubt it;
however. Mr. Sautman s attitude
teems to coincide directly with
the Nazis themselves. What
other definition can be given to
the cofrtention that First Arr^rKl-
ment freedoms be limited to
those persons or organizations
whom Mr. Sautman supports, if
not fascism? if this be the
glorious future the Profreasive
Labor Party has in mind for our
constitutional rights. I sincerely
hope it dies a quick and quiet
^feeth. But though I fear your
ideas, Mr. Sautman, I respect
your right to say them I just
hope they fail.
laenard S. Cbili
f ottlkal Sdence
McCormack
pronouncements is even more
absurd when you realize that
she received less than 8% of the
votes eligible to be cast.
Cieary, the true mandate
coming out of this election is
that 85 percent of the under-
graduates on campus wanted
r^either McCormack nor Taylor,
let alone anyone else When this
many people do not vote, it
seems only logical that apathy is
not indicated as an explanation.
Rather, the will of the people
demonstrates an opposition to
student government as It b pre-
sently cor>stituted. Ms McCor-
mack would do everyor>e a favor
If she followed the lead of the
last president who won "a man-
date of the people" and resign.
people involved in Mardi Gras
could atttend a catered roast
beef dinr>er at the Valley Hilton
Hotel this Friday to congratulate
themselves on the fine job they
did.
Come on. SAardi Gras. don't
you think that with only $80,000
going to Uni-Camp each year,
Sl,5d0 could have been put to
better use than a free dinner for
those involved? I do.
I invite Mardi Gras to try to
justify this expense
Bnice IdLodsr
(idkor's note SCC and Uni-
Camp paid for the banquet.)
Senior, Ec
PIP
The first thing Meg McCor-
mack can do to "make the place
a little better" is stop making
ridiculous flalements. Anyone
given over to making such gran-
dious statements as 51.5 per cent
of the vote repMMMHng "a
mandate of the people" ob-
viously lacks credibility This
Mnf to
As or>e who attended Mardi
Gras this year. I would like to
thank on behalf ol Mardi Gras
all those who donated lime and
money to the event so that
4e§arding Mr Saatman's
iMer (of the Progreialve La^or
Party) appearing May 13. let me
feipectfully suggest that quali-
fied help is available at the
UCLA medical facility. There »
hope for the victim ot thp recto-
cranial inversion.
Mr
A democratic media
1
by Tom Wetzel
(iditor'$ note: Wetzel h a
graduate Uu€ient in phtfoydpfn
The broadcast media is an
important instrument in influ-
encing public opinion. Control
over this media gh^ povver to
OPINION
influence the directioa
Watchirig TV, I worWier
Jt the people who presently
this poieer. As far as
what 95 per cent of AmaricarH
see on TV, control of the air-
waves is in the har>ds of a few
barons in New York,
baronies are nammd
"ABC." "H§C," "CBS."
Are TV stations going to do
critical reporting about the acti-
vities of these coaipanies? Given
that NBC is owfied by a mayor
defense contractor, can we ex-
pect a realistic assessment of
Anr>erica's '^defense needs?"
Given that Chemical $ank arni
the First National Bank own
large chunks of Time, IrK.. are
the radio and TV stations owned
by Time likely to honestly exa-
mine the pgfittHef el commer-
cial banks?
Of course, you can buy time
on TV — if you have a huge pile
of cash (say $60,000 for a minute
of prime- time TV) and are poli-
tically acceptable to the Media
BarofH What this means is that
the minority of wealthy irxii-
viduals that ornn and nruinage
Arrterica's corporations has con-
trol over media content. Banks,
ifHurance and oil companies -—
all can buy time to convirnre us
they are respofisible ar>d justi-
fied in their activities; a ca^e
that imurance companies are
arbitrary in policy -cancellations,
or that agri-busir>ess exploits its
labor, or that banks discrimmate
against Black r>eighborhoods will
air-time.
What could {Mffy this unde-
mocratic control of America's
airwaves by a wealthy capitalist
minority? The airwaves are the
common property of the Ameri-
can people — lo the federal law
says. A feature that distinguishes
a democracy from an autocracy
is that in the former one has the
freedom to organize popular
Mippart for ones point of vie»
and to present one's case lo llie
paaple. How can this right be
effective if or>e has no right of
access to the medial
State-run broadcast systems
are hardly preferable to our
capitalist rr>edia system. The sute
systems in Frartce and Russia are
subservient to tl^ party in
power State systenn tend to be
dull, unresponsive, bureaucratic,
with a preferernre for the "safe
middle ground. '
Fortunately, there is a third
alternative. The Dutch system
points the way In Holland, any
group can organize a TV station
if they can get 15,000 citizeiH to
sign petitions — they get 2 or 4
or more hours a week, and a
proportionate share of the pub-
lic broadcast budget, depending
on tf^ number of people sup-
porting It The Dutch can turn
on sutioffH run by '"conserva-
tive," "liberals," "radicals," and
"cultural anarchists." An Ameri-
can system' fiiight work like this:
(1| Each year citizens receive a
voucher from the governmerH,
with a prospectus from each
Soup wanting a Station in that
cale; you'd mail it back, irwli-
cating the group it is to be
credited to; each group gets a
proportion of the air-time and
public broadcast budget for that
locale that is exactly equal to its
proportion of the "votes" If
popular support for a group
drops — maybe they're doing a
lousy iob or taste is shifting — ,
they'll lose "votes " and their air-
time will deer
l^<(4%.Z'%
m
■taiiMMIi
HHi
Maybe you giiye ^dnl hoar me tel I aaid I «m
ately Diverse groups, repre-
senting (say) labor and business,
liberals and conservatives, Span-
iiii-speakers. feminifti, and
Blacks, rock and jazz music
freaks, sports or Him buffs, etc
might have statioat.
(2) Each "station" shouJcf be
run by its employees; they de-
termine station poBdm. the pay*
leveh attached to iobs. and elect
the administration, on the prin-
ciple "one pertojA, one vote."
This will maximize individual
initiative and creativity Have
you ever met anyone who feh
an incentive to contribute to
tomething which he or she was
excluded from panicipating in?
Government determir>es only
the total amount for broad-
casting; it should not have the
right to certsor programmir>g in
any way The FCC could be
abolished. "But how is the pub-
lic interest to be protected?/'
or>e may ob)ect. What reason is
there to think that some bureau-
crat in Washington would know
better than the people them-
what is in their "inter-
eMs? It a broadcast group is r>ot
"serving the public interest, '
they won't get the people's
"¥Ot*i" and will lose acScets. This
system I have sketched teams to
me the moit damoirmlc ar>d
libertarian one imagir\able.
More letters . . .
Three Sitn
I re»d with dissatisfaction
Adam f arf rey's Daily Brum re"
view of the Mark Taper Forum's
production of Chekhov's "Three
Sisters." I don't see how any
individual could pretend to re-
view a play without watching it
to the very end, as he bamti of
doing in his article The very
least a critic owes his public is
an assessment based on viewing
a whole play rather than only
part of it. The Lo* Angehi Timm
reviewer, whether or>e agrees
with him or not, felt that "Three
Sisters" came togeth^ in the last
act, which Mr Parfrey did not
see. I« lor one, cannot call the
D^Uy Bruin's review hoaaM re-
porting.
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That's Entertainment, ir
Twice Is more than enough
ifjrjdbnnw
The formula for That's EntcrtaiiMBMi was a brilliant one: all
one fiecded to make SIO miiiion at the box office, was a pair of
scissors, a vault full of old MGM musicals and a modicum of
imagination. Naturally, with such a highly profitable formula, a
sequel was in order.
But Thafs Entertainment Part Two, opening tomorrow at the
Cinerama Doma, is ultimately a letdown. Not merely because the
first film used most of the best footage, but because the first one
invented the formula, while this oi|e bloats it w^th high-glefs
production values and a lack of originality
Jack Haley, Jr., the man who conceived, got the financial
backing (or and wrote the narration to the first one, has nothing
to do with this sequel. And that may well be its biggest problem.
Along with an unabashed enthusiasm for his work and an
uncalculated style of direction, Haley brought a natural talent for
this kind of film.
This time out. Gene Kelly .directs the new footage iwrtced of
Haley, and he has all tlie technical winvdry of Hollywood as
well as about a milhon dollar budget at his disposal. Hosts Kelly
and Fred ^stairc have specially built sets now, rather than
standing before the dilapidated facedsi of MGM*s backlot like in
the first film. They do get in a little hoofing, but the results are
obtrusively overblown and cute. The new segments no longer
merely link together the old footage they have now t>ecome
entities, .ia themselves, with a smugly self-congratulatory banter
about them. ■■-■-■
— Thct»iiiei is^uvided by Leoaerd Geriie:
are often flippantly coy. Genlie r^kn to Maurice Chevalier as "a
Peris origmar and notes of Fred Asuire's costume m the
••Couple of Swclb" number frcim Easter PacaJc, --Even when
pliyiag a bum, Asuire is stiii ta top hat and tails"
More imporumly, the way in which the musical numbers were
linked together and presented m the first film showed a respect
for their content and an awarcncM pf theu^ diffenng moods. In
^^•'^ Two, jamngly different numbers often appear back-to heck,
sometimes cut off at both beginning and end Thus Gene Kelly's
free-wheclmgly athletic roller-skaie dance from It's Always Fair
Weather is seen just before tht reserved elegance and statcliness
of Hermoine Gingold dcnymjj Maunc* Chcweher's romantici/ed
claim, "I Remember It Weir from Cigi The impact of each is
destroyed by the incompatibihrv of the other
The one expansion on the lurmula here is in covering MGM*s
grsat comedies and dramas as weH as the musicals. Oiie ill-
coeceived segment salutes "favorite moments" from the movies
It includes both the famous stateroom scene from the Marx
Brothers* Night at tfie Opera and Rhett Butler telhng Scarlett
O Hara, ^^Frankly, my dear. I don't gfvc a damn!"
All this IS not to say that the Md clips themselves arc at fauh.
They are, for the mpst pert, delightful, many in unintended ways.
It is the handling of them in Thif s EetertaiimiMit, Par^ Tuo that
is diteppeinting.
No pulse in Edelstein's 'Heart'
By Cathy Scipp
Get To The Heart, written
and directed by Rick Edelstein
and playing at the Group Rep-
ertory Theatre until June 6, it
a dismal **romantic' comedy**
which has some fine acting and
a rotten script.
The play is about Pablo
Rothsteih (John Dullaghan), a
middle-aged. New York writer
who wants to get back to-
gether with his ex-wife ''but
not at the price of my bells."
Shortly aiter threatening to
**break her fate in,** he meets
and falls in love with a young
Black woman named Lee
(Janee Michelle) who is inT^Tcw
York on vacation.
Their romance is neither
romantic nor funny, and one
fails to see what on earth Lee
sees in Psblo. Michelle plays'
Lee with a grace and charm
that fg not evident in the
script, but PiiUeghan is unable
to overcome his revoking lines.
Edci stein afpperently finds
Pablo, who is the central char-
acter, charming. But, as Dul-
laghain plays him, he comes
across as an unlikable, child-
ish, neurotic creep a sort of
James Dean wkh middle-ejpt
peunch. i -^
The humor relies heavily on
Jew jokes. Black jokes, inter-
racial marriage jokes, lesbian
lokes. vibrator jokci end ex-
tremely old, obvious or feeble
jokci. An example of the fun-
ny dialogue: "Don't be so over-
whelmed " "Lct*i JMLjMiyJm
whelmed." An example of the
serious dialogue: ''Did you ever
uke a walk with a little girP
Her little hand is just hke a
baby bird nestling in the palm
of your hand " It gets to be
painful.-^' .
There is one bright spot:
Pablo's ex-wife. Audrey, is
played by Judy Jean Bems. a
fine actress and talented
comedienne The material she
has to work with is not great,
and the fact thai she can say a
iine like, "fm basically an 'up*
person . . . sunsets still make
me feel like I'm having an
orgasm" without making yen
hate her is a good measure of
her talent. It is a waste and a
pity that her lines arc so ter-
ribly vile, but she helps to
niake the play a bttk ISH ie.
i nQ0x
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tat us ihip your
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PACIFIC-KING i>i»
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REFITTED
^ ^ Tonight On Campui :
Director James Harris
Producer-director James Harris will be in Melmt2 1409
tonight at 7:30 for a screening of his latest film. Sens Cel
It Levh^^ Admission is frse.
Harris directed 1^b» iijfari laciiMt, a cold war thriller
jKrhich stened Richard Widmark aed Sidney Poitier He
alto produced teflla and several other Stanley ILuhnck
films.
Sight ami Sound called Sent Cel It Lovh^r **an odd
Sleeping Beauty fantasy a stunning plunge by
Kubrick's former producer intonhelaAglMlgt, processes and
consequences of erotic dreaming ... Hs only plausible
precedents are the quite dissimilar short story by John
Collier. 'Sleeping Beauty.' which served as its starting point,
and the film of LoMa, which Harris prodeoed and helped
to script-
~ The film Hers Zalman King, Tise~ftrrow intf KichaiC^
Pryor
The program is presented by the Film and Television
Students Association and the Film Speakers Program.
Hams has previously held seminars on film producing,
most recently at the Sherwood Oaks film school.
A
Official Notice To All Students
EHactiva FaN Ouorlvr 1976, oN ftudants will b« raquirad to hova on oHicial UCLA Sfudant IdMti-
mm in ordar to trontoct oHkioI business, recaiv* tarvicas or porticipeta in Univarsity
programs and activttias.
Students continuing in tha FoH Quarter will be issued cords beginning next Mondof. Moy 24,
in the Ackarnrion Union Second Floor Lounge according to the following schedule
May 24: A-F
AAay 25 AL
Moy 26: At
I May 27 thru June 4: A Z
A current Re^istrotion Cord and suppofttve identification — which mutt include a picture
idnv%r\ license, possport, etc.) ~ will be rmqwfd prior to issuance
NOTi: Th# ld«n9lllCiiion w«M ba r«qutrad for admission to ♦^MrtboH qTTTmri nlniad nfinr tn it
in tha FoH
Stwa^nt & Comput AHtfirt
The Hazards of Being Male
n-
Earlh Mottier ie OMd
The Loet Art of BiiMpMp
Ctoddeee; Avenfer of me JewMi Prkiceee,
SMIifta-Guru lo fhm
with Herb Goldberg
PNO . rroHiso of Psycnoiogy California dtata UmwrMty. Los Angolas, ctinical payctKK
privala pracUca. aue>or oi THa Haaates al ealne •'■••^ eu»i4sl«e •*• ■M^ ^ ■
Ha ia alao ooeueior of CfaaiM Aepaaeleii, wen Or Oaorga Bach
Sunday, May 23 7-10 p.m.
$2 00 members rK>n members $2.50 URC 900 HOperO
Dt. ALFRED R BECKEt
Optometrist
10959 Weyburn Ave
I' " I'
DATSUiy
*' Acres of Datsuns
ft
Student, faculty, and alumni
fleet discounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
684*1133^
OAKLEY'S* I
Men's Hairciitting
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THERE'S STILL TIME,
BROTHER! and SISTER tool
to get your f llgllt
to Europe and Israel
We've got it all . .
• Trevel Group Charter
* Student Tours. Oemping Tours
* Euraii Peee, Student Rail Paee
'Britreil Paee
* Cer Rental. Leaee. Purchaee
* Motele — ell Kir>ds
Europe Student Travel Centre
1007 Broxton, SuNe 15 (Above Mario's R
Tft: ^774711 Mfefm
All students planning to take
Human Physiology
&/or Human Anatomy
(Kinesiology 12 & 14) during
any quarter next year must file a course
application before May 28 in Women's
Gym 124 Kinesiology majors planning
to take Kines. 16, 106, 110, 130, 150 next
year must also file course applications
as above. Questions should be directed
to WG 124, 825-4400.
m. ii
iL_^ »
>■--;-
AIRMATTOESS I TeiMliS OptJITliSt
hai now woo two
(ContinMtf froM Page 1 1 )
today a competitive match.
Teacher
conference
ning over Stanford*! Jim
laney in' 1974 wlien the Brum
star piayed in the numher one
iingiet spec.
In addition. Teacher has
now heen a part of three con-
secutive conference douhles
championship duos, winning
with Steve Mott m 1974, Billy
Martin W/l yem and Fleming
last weekend.
However, Te%cher has had
his prohlems in 4he NCAA*s,
failing to advance past the
quarter-finals lo three tries ia
singles.
**I think Brian is ready to
make a hetter showing in the
NCAA's this time around/*
Bassett. *
1 sure hope ""so, this is
'• tait chanoB.
The better our four singles
players do, the more pressure
it wiii take off ^ur doubles
teaiM.
»j. — .
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OutkkMmankMmMDLmiA
-It wtU be
tiMt our tiQgie^ siem do mcfl.
Ihan has piayad in the
NCAA*s three times, Ferdi
twice and Peter o«ce while at
Michifan.
**lt is in nnflei where we*vc
had our most wmeeau this sea-
son amd where we have the
experience. Both of our
doubles teams (Fleming-
Teacher and Tayfan-Nichols)
haven't played b^oce at the
NCAAY.^— " "
Bassett revealed th«t this
ymf% Brum team has the abil-
ity to win the NCAA's in as
easily as the Btlly Martin-lcd
UCLA squad of a year ago.
The Brums finished with 27
points last year, ahead of
Mmmi (20K Tnnity (19) and
Stanford. Michigan and South-
ern Methodist, all tied with 17
'"With Billy (Martin) winmng
the NCAA singles iaat year
Ind advancing to the doiMet
final match with Brian (Tea-
cher) before losuig to USCs
Manson and Wahs, we had the
team title won before the semi-
finals.** said Basaeti
Intramurals
Coed
This Tliursday, May 20. ia
the last day to sign up for the
coed open doubles volleybal
tournament. Play will begin
Monday, May 24, for three
consecutive evenings Varsity
players welcome to participate.
Those who wish to participate
in the four-man team guts
frisbee contest come 4o the
grass area between the Men*s
and Women*s gym at 3 pm this
Wednesday. May 19 lt*s
BY OF, that*s bring your own
frisbee.
W' )
Thote who w^ to partici-
pate in the foUr-woman team
j|uu frisbee contest, come to
the grass area between MG
and WG at 3 pm on this Wed-
nesday, May 19. Bring your
own fhsbee (BYOF.)
Those who wish to partici-
pate in the four-man team guts
frisbee contest come to the
graas area between the Men*s
and Womea*s Gyms at 3 pm
this Wednesday, May 19 and
hring your own frisbee.
Combiiiad doMfcks tennis
1 his i!k the last week ol play
for the doubles tennis tour-
nament
There l§a*^
difference!!! X
L
S
A
T
•f CM*
ruh
I»t3» 4r7 «1f
COUCATIOMAi CfflffffK
•« •*•* aft
nnis
alftady captured several presti
gious tenms toumamenu this
aMlon, such as at Ojai and the
Pacific Coaat Doubles title
with Ttacher at La JoUa
''One thiag is for sure,**
Fleming. **Brian and I
to Win the NCAA
doublat, aad tlMt*s a quote for
3^our newspaper. If wr don*t,
ini . - '■
The 6-4 senior Teacher com-
-^irnrn wiA 4|m 6-5 Ftemtiig to
give UCLA the tallest doubles
team m the fMK today, ac-
cofding to former tenms great
Jack Kramer.
Although Teacher and Flem-
ing have loat twice in doubles
this HMMi (to Sunford*s Mau
Mitchell knd Perry W right at
Ojmi and to USCs Lewis and
Manson in the UCLA-USC
dual match three weeks ago),
they should be ca^Me of uti-
lizing their booming serves,
quick rdexct, height and ex-
perkaoe to win a doubles
match against nearly any pair
in the world on a given day.
Teacher, who has been
called hy many collegiate
coadHi **a super talem,** used
his gptat quicknev, loag reach
and powerful serve and volley
game to handle ail opposition
last weekend.
The San Diego fUr, who Ihh
consistently been a top-ranking
amateur since the age of 12,
routed Caiifoniia*s Jim Harper,
6-4, 6-3, in hipt weekend's fint
round before avenging his only
dual match loss of the laMon
to Bill Maze with a 6-2, 7-6
triumph in Friday's quarter-
finals.
Ob Saturday, Stanford's
Matt. Mitchell fell to the likely
four-time All-Amencan, 6-3, 7-
6, in the semis an hour before
Teacher b6gan his champion-
ihip triumph over Taygan.
"^Brian is in the best condi-
tion of his career,** said UCLA
coach Glenn Baawft.
**Bnan seeioa to concentrate
more during a match when he
IS moving well on the court,**
said Basaett.
**We all know what a great
player Brian is. If he docaa't
get down on hinfiself durim a
match and giVe up easy points
that he should win because of
a lack of concentration, he
should be able to give just
about anyone in the game
cm
OFF/
Scholl
on each pair of
Exercise Sandals
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the "original" that looks
so good.., and
__ feels terrific
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In bona/k)lua/ch«rry/denim/whtt»
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Bring this ad with you ar>d aava
$2 00 on each good-lookm pair
Tt.:...l-
SPECIAL 42.00OFFI
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Daily 9:30-6:30 — Mon. ft FrI. 9:40-9
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HAM and EGG
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wlHlDW. or ••«. NoNhor Nw OoNy Bvwln
oor m« ASUCLA Communicollono
•oof^ liot looooMpMoO any ol Nio tor-
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LEGAL SHEETS - ^w
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taken now
for Graduation
CoM fmr mppoinfmmtf
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^coffipus studio
r 50 herrJiho^^ hall 87b 06 1 I m771
open mon hi 8 30 4 30
HOW DOES A BRUIN
BEAR DECORATE HIS
ROOM?
W^th UCLA blankets, pen-
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and radio, gla^eware, mugs,
»— and sleeps in a UCLA
Bearweer.
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
tiapponinQs
D.
WO «i N In
y
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TO TALK TO.
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It M n\
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tufl
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forsafo
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[•flUlM TV. a STERf O RCNTALS ]
COLOR TV'S
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slot airtlidoyt t*vo
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(•MIS)
I
$7JS/
TVs ■ $7JS/
CoN: 27f-1SJ8
MOTI: Our r*»» •«
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in thm loUcming workahoQu
ACrrNG
DIRECTING
PLAYWRITING
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CALLUS
•37.jei1
^^^"1
9 A.M.. S P.ii.
May 17-21
Trsehouee North
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ol9 Hfo.
Ol
»r
tUJd por
_ tor UCLA
wilt loot mru ond of
IOIIO(
UC
fir. N you oro
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SUPSS Good lueli lo
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asiti)
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You can oiasr any of tha many
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9l12JS/nM.
JoN. 999-2719
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Washington, Gal dominate Western Sprints
"^L*!?** ^*SC?? Vy sn five of the other 9«R0fiert but hsM vsrsity or Wft9hinfton imm every race.
um Sports Wrilsr ommIi Ouvmil Hecht wai not oveiiv iiaaM. '- In tk« »»*■ vonstv m^ **' "-^ -
H
I
Sy Mike F
DS Sports Wrilsr
SAN PABLO — The 9cenftno of tMo ureckefifi
Weftien) SprinU (coftlegistc rowmg) ws9 not the type
of itory IjStin CThhstie wouli wntc. While the
^tuni was oksy, the outcome ws9 too foMlk,
Friday morning the firftt of 62 weekend rnoe9
begsa. UCLA went to Ssn Psblo, in the Soy Area,
with hopss of winning or placing hifli in many
cvenU. Wft9hington And Cftlifomia '^killed*' their
bopeo ~ the '^culpnts** were never in doubt. Orai^
Coast College had » ^mper sticker entitM ''The
Giant Ukrt,** but it wa9 later obviou9 that the iign
waft flMcly a decoy.
The crewi of Washington and California did not
attempt to deceive anyone m their plan to bump off
the other Pacific coast crews. The Huskies and the
Bears are both known as perennial powers, so when
they combined to win mne of 1 1 firsts, there was no
doubt the butler didn\ do it this tioK.
NiBSty degree weather wpM not the faassB for the
**nstla*' taken from l.?4:30 pm Friday, rather t|ie
windf during that time made it next to impossible
for dsQsai SBCtng Prior to 1 pm. the Bruins won
their opening heats in the men's varsity four and
womes varsity eight, advancing those boats directly
to the Saturday finals. After 4:30, the Uclans
competed in other heats (repechages) for more places
in the finals and qKaiified all but their lightweight
four shell. To start out the championships, CaFs JV
eight ripped through the course in 6:02 The Bears
were closely followed by Orange Coast College
4M0.5), Washington (6:06). and UCLA <6:0S). Cal*s
time was the rcgau*s fastest.
The ^rarsity four race followed The Brums fimshcd
behind th.e Huskies but beat out several other
iqirii. including its closest competition Orange
Coast.
The next championship w« the frcsihman eight
contest la this ooe, the Westwooders were topped
Vy an five of the other qniMers but
OuvaU Hecht was not overly
*'lt was oar first year with the freshman program
so 1 think aa did pretty welL* ahssrved Hecht He
sMad, "Norm (Witt, hand fraili caach) has added a
lot to the program He*s hsipad aat in the strength
and conditioning of all our rowers not just the
fresluaan. He is really an aoaet "
Late entry Washington came on to capture first
place in its third straight contest, the women's fouc^
And then along came UCLA*s women's varisty
eight
The women*s varsity from Wcsiwood would laj^r
be the only sguad to be aaaounced as "winning by a
R^ior upset** as they came trom behind, in their
recent style, to edge out three Cahforma boats and
tiK crews of Washington and Long Beach Sute
In a great time of 3 15.5, the shell of coxswain Sue
Coon, stroke Susie McCarty. Debbie Wollman,
Gwen Baker. Susie Anderson. Robin Hatherman, D
Picken, Dcl4ie Guest, and Patti Argue lies rowed
under ideal condiuons, rowing the type of race that
makes coaches feel they have done somethign
worthwhile.
Normally, calm, head women's coach Larry
Daugherty jumped in jubilauon as his winning
varsity ei^ 1 rnmsii the finish line **lt's great.** said
Daugherty. summing up his feelings which must have
approached being beyaad words.
As UCLA supporters raised havoc and UCLA's
victonous boat celebrated m theu winning shell, the
next race began.
In the lightweight lour race among men's crews,
the University of British Columbia stormed to the
win It was the only race the Bruins lailed to qualify
for
After two races in a row failbd to see either of the
conopirators Cal and Washington take first,
the two perennial powers started dominating the
regatta once again. In the final five races, either Cal
or Washington wcM every
In the aani's varisty ci^t, Wi
half a boat length, Cal aad Oragon Sute jaoc
UCLA for second aad third The Brums finished just
ftve-hundreths of a second after OSU aad aaly I. OS
behind the Msaad pi^N iMis The maior
ilation for the UCLA eight was that they
to Cal than' they had all saaaaa.
Next caaK the aiamtn's foar. adMar UK Bruins
finished a dtsappointing fifth, one isoaad out of
fourth and two ssomhIi from third phMe. The Bruins
only two-tenths af a second from hi9t ptaos« a
»t the Udaas mare able to avoid in all but oae
final - although a hM in tiK finals mean9. sixth
overall.
In another disappaiaiBBat for the Bniias. UCLA's
lightweight eight could ealy msnagr fourth The
Brums could only outdo lowly San ""Diego Sute
The men's bghtweight eight race followed with
very similar resulu The Bnun men also captured
fourth, ahead of dismal Washington State and
Seattle PacifK
Concluding the West Coast championships of the
1975-76 season was the freshman four race. Cali-
fornia took Its third first place in that contest,
finishing second in total first places only to
Washington, which had six in II tnes.
The Huskies won the overall trophy <— the Bob
Hillen Trophy, named for the USC eaach. The
Huskies also walked away with the Ky Elbright Cup
a xup awarded m memory of the retired 33-year
coach of Call far ail
Ho9t Cal. which de9erves a trophy just for keeping
mo9t of the numerott9 raecson time and (in the
opinion of most of the coaches) fair and very
worthwhile, took the only other trophy They
captured the first cup of the day the Frank Reed
Cup with lU victor^ t4n the JV eights.
Note: In eastern sprints rowing. Harvard's varsity
eight raced to its tenth victory m the last 13 years,
oulasting Wisconsin and Ptnn.
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NCAA tennis wirr
By H
^ ^ Dl Sports Wrtler
**We^wfI1 win the NCAA championships by at least ten points.**
That declaration was nade by UCLA junior tennis sUr Peter
Fleming after he teamed with Brian Teacher to overtake USCi
top doubles team of inphaiom Bruce Manson and Chris Lewk,
6-7, 7-6, 6-3, to win the Pactfic-S Southern Division doubles title.
The Brums easily won the team title last weekend with 13
points, far ahead of Sunford IfiveJ and USC CfourJ. Califo
did not score.
Tsygaii
UCLA'i results last weekend were a significant indication of
what may happen in the upcoming NCAA championships (May
26-31), stooe Sunford and USC arc the second and third-ranking
collegiate squads in the country, behind the Bruins.
Trinity is also expaelad to challenge the defending NCAA
champion Bruins next week, led by sophomore Bill Scanlon and
senior Bill Matyastik.
•^ur number three singles player Fcrdi (Taygan) defeated mc
f3-4, 6^3, 6-1 in last weekend's semi-finals of the Pac-« Southern
Division Championships)," said the 6-5, ull, lanky ^niin aee
"Then, our number two player, Brian Teacher, dented Ferdi in
the singles championship (7-5, 7-6).
**If those results don't prove that UCLA has a tough singles
lineup, nothing will,** voiced Fleming.
I he tacts Support Fleming's optimism.
Entering last weekend's action, Fleming was undeifeated on the
season (16-0), while winning all 12 of his UCLA dual match
singles contests. He has been kdieled as the favofi^ to win the
NCAA singles crown by just about everyone all season long
But 1 aygan » no push-over. All he has done this season is win
13 of 15 matches (9-0 in dual match play). Taygan has lost only i
singles dual match in the last two seasons. His two 1976 losses
have been to two of the better pkyers in the United Sutes.
Sunford's senior ace Pat DuPre edged Taygan in three sets at
Ojai, and then teammate Teacher edged the Bruin junior from
Framingham, Massachusetts, in last weekend's finale.
Both DuPre and Teacher could very conceivably wjn the
NCAA singles title, as could Taygan and several other players
throughout the nation. ■ ■ ■ ~"
*"! know what can happen in the NCAA*s,** said Taygan.
**Look at last year. Nearly every publicized player was upset in
the early rounds."
Flemmg was quick to -point out that no school has three
players who could likely reach the finals of the NCAA's.
''Brian (Teacher) played extremely well last weekend,** said
Fleming, the transfer from the University of Michigan who has
(Continued oa Page LI)
The UCLA Center for Afro-American Studies,, in ( nupetainju ivith
UCLA Fine Arts/Special Productions, the Program Task Fou.l-
.__ and the international Ethnic Art^ Council -.«-.
A Special Tribute t
I
3
Concert in Royce Hall, Thursday, May, 20, 8:00pm
1^ featuring
i?i
I
in.
1^
NAT ADDERLEY. AIRTO, ERNIE ANDREWS, DAVID AXELROD, WALTER BOOKER,
ItfNNY BURRELL, JIMMY CLEVELAND, GEORGE DUKrVlCTOR FELDMAN,
LOUIS HAYES, FREDDIE HUBBARD, SAM JONES, MAYUTO, ROY McCURDY
BLUE MITCHELL, FLORA PURIM. JIMMY SMITH, ERNIE wAWl
■J
t
■] '
■j
^Vl I V.
ert Tickets; $7.50. 6.50. 5.50
All net-t^onrort procf ^'k v^ to tHe julijn Acidei.v McMr
Tickets avdildh(f> nmv at the UCLA Central Ticket Ot..
' ^rhol.iJMiip i uiiu
FREE INSTRUMENTAL WORKSHOPS — May 21 & 22
inon .1 m - 4:00 p n^ sr hoenhoru Hall
in-on .1 m - 4:00 p n^ sr hoer
For \A'or Lr c hof^ int/^^rr^^ ^tir^n / J I f ^ 1 1 i * » {
i\r-^
Ik "^ m .^
•.♦.'■
..-/•'<#?-
T' _
'T*^-*
TT
Bruin
XCVIIl,
••ortdBir, May 17. ifTt
Candidate calls for strong judicial branch
Speaker from amnesty group
describes success in helping
political prisoners worldwide
By Carol Starr
DB Staff Writer
Constanttnos Alavanos. a
defending atwlents in court,
was reicasad siKNlly after an
Amnesty international (Al)
news release charged the Greek
regime with holding him and
SIX other lawyers incommuni-
cado and torturing them.
Visiting as a \pnktr during
International Week here. Gin-
efta Safan. the head of ATs
H^/estern Region Advisory
■■■'M9m4, dcscriWd the ^€mp*%
other accomplishments and
"We arc working to free
pew— t artcsted bacamc of his
or her beliefs or ethnK origins,
ppavided that they haven't used
«Mmcc. We work on bchaK of
anyone labfccted to torture or
iaciiig cafHlal punishment for
political reatOM,*" Safa
Started in 1%6I by a 1
Kawyer. Al. a worldwide hu-
wmm rights movement remain-
to all govern-
, spared as a re-
to the atrocitv of World
War II. tiK taid
Heneit a political pnaoaer
who worked in the Italiaa
Mlierground dunng Wofid
War II. tlie viMtor from Saa
FraadMa tiafc luj. **We are
ttmtm tkt Vtu-
iratioa of H
a Uaiicd !S
dm^mi la I
grants Crceiawi of exprtwinii
Tlie huflMa rights orgaita/a
Jiaa lias been gradtialK
By J. N(
DB Stiff Writar
Th€ aaad for a ftrong jadidal hmmk was unpiiaMBad by
Aaron Stoviu, candidate for Office No. 15 of the Superior Couil
in a speech Friday at noaa in Meycrhoff Park
Speakiag to a crowd tiMt ^Hktnd as he ipoke, Stovttz aaked
the paiaaf ttadenu on Brum Walk, **Without a strong >viicial
branch, where would we hc^
t>ttr jmtfAot ayMMi ii on tnaJ today,** said Stoviu **Wiih
cnme inciaasmg, a backlog in the couru, cars being npped off,
and the belief that the poor are aot fettiiig their day in court.**
Stovitz alio kihed out at the ptanat ebadiuons of our pnM
system.
''Our pnsom don*t solve anything.*' he laid. There is no
leaching or motivation. It is just a warehoaeii^ of people **
Stovitz said in order for our pnson systems to work, ''they
need specialists' and people who believe the system can work, and
not broken down probation ofraoan.r
Stovitz alM> mentioned four Unilad StaiSi SuprewK Court
daeiiions. among them the entrapment dacitton, in which the
court ruled a suspect is still at fault even if he buys a drug from
one pohceman and sells it to anotbar. aad the court ^*intiffn that
aBowi a detendant's sutement to be utad agaiatt hma evea if bt
is not told his nghu by the police. £ach of tboK deatioaa, laid
Stovitz, affea our basic finadnnii
*These decisioiu are completely tiiratng around the decisions
of the Warrea Court,** said Stoviti *This is w^ we
people at all levek of the judiciary.**
Commenting on Senate Bill One, the bill now in
would alter the nation's panel code, Stoviu said the bill is
theoretically excellent aad states soaK good ideas to coMolidatc
the penal system.
''However, it does contain some provisions that woold force
ine, if I were asked to vote on the whole bill la lU present form,
not to vote.** . ,
Some of the provisions he objected to weic the ri^ of police
to search a person's house without s judfrs* search warrant la
caae of ''national emeffeney.** and one that allows a defendant's
statement to be used against him though he has not been told of
his rights by the police.
Stovitz said there is plea bargaining in the court because the
system is picsentlv overcrowded "But the court doesn't like it,
iContinuad on Page 9}
in
by this document, which A I
leeii has aot been absarvsd.
Elaborating further on the
movement^ witsston. Saga a
described the travails involved
piercing through the sem-
of legality presented at
the political prisoners* trials
"Al is aware of many gov-
ernment violations before the
trials: especially the use of
torture We research the real
facts which led to the im*
prison ment and torture ot the
dissenter, then present the evi-
dence to the government in
question and ask for the pris-
oner's prot^ion If the gov-
ernment refuses to cooperate
with us. we pursue public
opinion.** she said.
A I can be contacted by pris-
carcerated for their peilitical
ideologies, through political
associates, the me^ia. churches,
prisoners' fdmilics and paapk
in general who have heard of
the movement*s work.
acuve
are two aaMgafMS ol
m Al there are the
*T% arbo agapl
one from tbe
East, tbe West and the Tterd
World, to insure impnitiality in
ottr work We hsve 70.000
merjbers organized in ap-
proAHnaiefy 1M9B mnmm w 32
gates the case to determine if
the di|ssenter is s terrorist.
According to ,Sagan, if the
^Ssaaassners can verify nHM~ mK^
prisoner is indeed one of con-
science, an '^Urgent Action"
can^paifa immediately sparks
imo effect.
AbaBrfi lortaas
Their campaign for the abo-
lition of torture. Sagan said,
involves sending groups to the
prisoner's country to ask far
csp«d action and applyiag pub-
lic pressure by aMiling tele-
grams
"It is necessary to detain
iheK governments who go to
great lengths to oaaeaal tbe
injustice." she said adamantly.
SaBlHi gave examples, more-
over, of casas which A I has
helped to ameiioratc Journa^
lists often baeanK victims of
political oppression. However.
the human rights movement.
was "able to gel Bujung Snisni
Paradisastra. an Indonesian
amier and literary cntic. trans-
ferred from s terrible camp to
a bener one. tvbese his family
couM sae hiat,** she said.
to SagMi, tbe
of I i ycais ans jailad
R attempted C ommuist
coap m 1965
Al has also
Al lensl MI.000
belong to the second
which IS iiimprised of tadi
vidual 4tmar%. she said.
Oace Al has beef alerted to
tanoe of exposing tbe atrodlies
to tbe coaMuinit\ "Thr
aa.
tetter-writing and pcessare
front aM areas of sacirty mtt
AJ is nai aaide a^ af
on the
Icrel. Tbry coom fmm tbe
of
TNe attmist hrroly bdifwcs ^
:...(
I
■4 V
m i«
REALIZE YOUR FULL POTENTIAL
IMPROVE YOU GRADES
Entoy th« bsnsfitt of a proven hypnotic tochni^M fiat hat
9^ii^mm to hamaaa mnm mtourom of mamory. cofiswttration. and
undarttandtng t»r baHar fra^aa aM iMMnf abaalary of itarlal
■iMitoC Sand for convaniaiil Mpa OMtaM that can halp you wn^nm
your own paNMmanca with laaa tanaion and anxiaty Mail $15 chack or
monay ordar to Hypno-Laarn. P O Box 324. li»iti»in. Maaa 02146
(MMt. fwMnli tm 5% aHaa tax) (79 Oraan 9L, ■iiiKiii. Itaaa.)
Soviet tries to^^uY
f
AUTO
INSURANCE
YES — you need auto insurance
All the more reason to contact us for discounts up
to 35"/o to most students — another good reason
^or being m college
See or call us m Westwood
477-2548
Agents for College Student Insurance Service
1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build-
ing) LA 90024
TOKYO AP - JipMiii po-
lice have arrtited a Soviet
journalift and clMffed him
with trying to buy U.S. Navy
•ecrets from a chief petty of-
§mr stationed on the aircraft
carrier Midway, police said
Friday.
A U.S. Eflteaay ipolietiiuui
declined to comment on the
announcement. U.S. military
authorities said they still were
cJMcking. jML ihc, rair The
Japanrte police would not si^
whether the American had vol-
untarily reported his contacts
with the Russian to the Navy.
PATTY HEARST
Authentic replica of
FBI **wanted" flyer
— a real collector's
item. Send $3 plus
25 cents handling
to: FLYERS. P.O.
Box 30352 (303 Ro-
sario), Santa Bar-
bara, Ca 93105.
— [
\MTere Grfegt Ariericans Meet tbfat
THE ALL AMERICAN MJIICEm
t— H%twtf Etm. cor— r Ohto Av.
slr^C ^"*^ ''^H'S COUPON ONE 10 oz CUP OF COCA COLA
I
Police said Alexandre
Matchekhine, a 31-year-old
correspondent of the Soviet
press agency Wwwtli, tried to
buy information on radaf, air-
crmft elecuonic a^fptimtiis and
miliury e^^im Mad Ky U.S
§mmm in Japan and by the
U.S. 7th Fleet.
Shun paper
WASHINGTON AP —
Myfes Arber, owner of the
Colorado mountain weekly,
the Crested Butte Chronic k,
illustrates another side of in-
vestigative journalism He says
he may lose his paper in July
hiraasi' of his stones about
former Army Secretary Ho-
ward **Bo** Callaway.
Watergate hooks and movie
rights led to hundreds of thou-
sands of dollars for two Wash-
ington Post writers. Arber's
story — which contributed to a
Senale probe of CaMiway —
touched off an advertising boy-
cott by Crested Butte busineaa-
nen.
White House
WASHINGTON AP The
White House gates — made of
wrought iron and somewhat
flimsy are being replaced by
ones of solid steel that are
supposed to be crash-proof.
The old gates, installed in
1818, have been run through
several times in the last ^ew
years by persons who were
charged, with unlawful entry or
other offenses.
There are 10 gates, each
flanked by white stone pillars.
These also arc being rebuih
aiKl strengthened
The National Park Service
lays the project will cost about
$550,000 The White House
does not have complete re-
cords, but it says eight of the
gates, pillars and iron rail
fencing erected in 1818 coat
53,518.-7: — -—
30
Thia Ad Good Thru May 23
Unruh case
SAN DIEGO AP — ___„
organized crime figures whose
Engineering Graduate Student Association
Engineers
Elections Are
Please vote in
6730 BH from 8 am to 2 pm
8500 BH (penthouse) from 2 pm to 5 pm
There will t>e a council meeting
beginning at 2 pm in 8500 BH.
*;
publK 10
I95f aaa icill engaging in iiit^pj
activity m California, says a
UMU official
fraerally doetn*t
-1.^ «iad Charles
E. Caaty. a«iMwit director of
the Califomia Department of
Justice. He testified for an
hour before the San Diego
County grand jury Thursday.
Casey said, some persons
listed publicly after a state^
investigation into organized
cnme 17 years ago are still m
illegal activities.
But many are fronting with
kgal-type busineses, he told
reporters.
The grand jury is looking
into claims that pohticaJ con-
tributions have been made by
organized crime. Supervisor
Jim Bates testified aJao, saying
later his appearaaea «m *^ruit-
fill.-
New prisons
SACRAMENTO
Califomia may replace aging
San Quentm prison with seven
smaller pnsons, including one
at the San Quentin site on San
Francisco Bay, a state pnson
official said Friiaiy.
That was first choice among
four recommendations costing
between $162 million and SI 84
million presented by prisons
chief Jiro . Enomoto Thursday
before the Asaemby Ways and
Means Committee.
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Voluma XCVIII. Number 30
Friday. May 14. 1976
PutUthmd 9¥fy
Khool ymr. ^Mcmpt
•nd d9r9 #o<i»o<»^ig homm^ mt •m-
•m$nmtton ptrtoO: tf Itm ASUOJi
ASUCLA Commun$cmttona
MMi poaispa paM &t ftm Lo*
Jim
Afww Vi
All-purpose ID card will
DB Stam WriMr
Tbe new maadatory
ion card, which will
Ibc amynad of lini-
vertity cards now being uaad,
will be iiiMd to continuing
University studenu from May
24 through June 4. according
to Lyie Timmerman, spaoal
to the office of the
af-
"The card wit] be mandatory
in conjunction with the reg
card in fall 76," according to
Timmerman.The new card will
be naaded for aB student scr-
vices provided here This in-
cludes studem iKalth services,
academic sarvioei wmck as lib-
rary scrvieea, Rec Center ser-
vioa and meal services fur-
nished by the dorms. In addi-
tion, the card will replace the
athletic privilege card
The new identification card
been a product of a special
laroe formed m late Feb-
niary^ mi is dai^BBd to
minimize the proWnaa of at-
taimng enrolled
Not
Presently. University rules
do not clearly define wluit
constitutes a ''wpilsrly en-
roBed^ Hisdi m Ttar^mad for
*such a definition is mrntiil to
campus activities such as atlde^
ties and student government
Current University rules slate a
continuing student must be
enroUed for two consecutive
school quarters in order to
participate in any campus ac-
tivity. One problem mvolvad
with this current definition is
whether the summer quarter
should be considered an of-
ficial icBool quarter or not.
• IS
be Issued
Tiin'ncrnian said the task
force "^liai stalled*' in pro-
viding a difinition of ''earoBad
status.** He added that the
responaes he received from
University personaai pertaining
to this question were so
it only further confi
situation Only "regularly en-
rolled** studenu will be able to
obtain tiK new identification
card. '-J~
In trying to formulate a
viable defmition. Tim
md he wfll *'conveae a meeting
«f miyor ^divisimi Baadf* in
order to come to *ai much
commonality as poittble.** He
added he will alao nmet with
the University Registrar (Sun-
ley Chia). '^probably one of the
most important people** in-
voNad in the present situation.
**HoiiiaBy it ii#l be
(the
I
The student identification W
card will be iasised oa May 24 |>
to thoiic penoQs with laat
names beginning with A-F;
May 25, it wdl be issued to A-
L; May 2^ to A-K. aad from
May 27 through June 4, A-Z.
The cards will be lasuad oo the
second floor of
Union.
tlie ^ of this quarter.- fun^ A 4tter
(C
-.,).
A Birthday Party
and Open House
Crime ad
VabaUe turntable stolen
Thievesi joined students in taking it easy in last week*s hot
weather.
The big theft of the week involved the loas ^ a $502 tumublc
stolen over the weekend from the Theatre Arts-Television
department The suspect was thought to poaaibly have a pass key.
The School of Public Health was the victim of a theft on
Thursday. A 50-pound capacrty scale worth S30 was uken off a
Ubfe in a locked room. Other crimes included:
—A $110 opthalmoscope, stolen on May 6 from the Rehabili-
tation Oepartment.
$244 worth of backpack, jacket and books were stolen from
a locked parked car in Structure 14.
—A 1967 VW bug stolen from Lot One The car had been
locked and parked in the center of the lot, awl when the owner
returned. the next day. the car was gone.
In addition, numerous wallets and bicydn were reported
missing.
^ MkBiBt Dvval
Women's Resource
Center
We are celebrating our fourth birthday.
Please join us for cake-cutting cere-
,inony (at 12:30) and lots of talk, music
and goodies.
Wednesday, May 19
Noon to Three P.
Kin<toy190 825-3945
(0
UJ
UJ
O
"' dtnll' Iflti'Tfidliondl I fhfih 't^s (Onrufl
A Special Tribute lo
J
i
Concert in Royce Hall, Thursday, May, 20, 8:00pm
t tf^jturinL,'
NAT ADDERLEY, AIRTO, ERNIE ANDREWS, DAVID AXELRGD, WALTER BOOKER,
KENNY BURRELL. JIMMY CLEVELAND, GEQBGE DUKE. VICTOfyELDMANT^
.OUIS HAYES. FREDDIE HUBBARD. SAM JONES. MAYUTO. ROY McCURDY,
BLUE MITCHEL^LORA PURIM. JIMMY SMITH. ERNIE TOTTS
Tirl^
FREE INSTRUMENTAL WORKSHOPS
Mav il & 22
f
Th« bMt, the moit unusual, the
mott unique acts naadad for "The
Gong Show", a naw nationally
lalavisad serfaa.
Such as: Acrobats, Jugglers, Tap Ofr>cers.
Piippanari. Mimas. Stilt-Walkars. Dog Acts.
Mimics. Harmonica Acts. Washboard arxJ Saw
Playars, Impressionists. Beil-Ringers. Sword
Fire Ealars and Wttat Have You.
Amatmirs or ProfaMionals, Can
^^nucii cMffis Krooucuoffis
(213) 466-9153
Savarol infroctient by AAcCormack
Election violations prosecute
^:
for tiMt entire day.
iM wilt be prokibited from
dkp)mym§ WHiwi bo^rd
signt or vistial displays foa
May 41-
complaints of election code
Tbit ynar was no
Fratellos Italian Restaurant
Featuring this week special
Pizza Dinner
for 2 $3.95
for 4 $6.50 ^/coupon
inciude$ large pizza tor kxtr or a mediiMn paz^ lor two
with any 2 items: soup or salad,
ooKtiL or tea
IMB Nationai Mvd. L.A. Calif
I
(EB) iisteoed to
_A^ doaen cmci brbugltt^ bcforcL
Amm^m ^ MATk Knifkt-
on, EB vice-cbairman, four
infractioni were charged
against president-elect Meg
McCntpni fc dunng the pri-
mary.
on
jtmo automo-
on cam-
lymg inaaan of A-
■■e, the panig of more
oar knllet on dormitory
■I vMMBSion Of tne rcn-
ball regulauoas and pot-
imation of pnnt-
te fourth
were informed McCormack
was gh^M * diteount avatlabk
to aO UCLA miiinii if the
had paid the smaiard phoe, as
was originally charged, she
After the caar was bnard by
the Jailml Board. Elaciion
Board eventually ^aaidad to
drop the case bacaoae of the
about caaaM boun-
e»
a3B-1717 t»«IB
I \^
-^ a - -■* -
SuKMniS
to Kmghton, Mc-
said she was not
the firsl three were
. but she acknow-
; they had occurred,
from cam-
sandwich signs,
posters and graphic
for two hours on
ly, Hay 5, aad the
ChargBi were also levelled
against presidential runner-up
Scott Taylor. ,Taylor*s banner,
held by two campaign workers,
was seen on the corner of
Gayley and Strathmore on
campus
According to the elections
code, except for an official
Bruin Walk sign, signs and
baanrn which are stationary
or largeir than a specific size
illegal on campus.
The EB asked the campat
(UCPD) where the
boundaries o/L the campus are.
**Scott assumed the boundary
was the plaque [imbedded in
the ground at the comer pro-
claiming it UC property]. The
police said it. was the curb. On
those grounds we apoke to
Taylor and ruled that for this
A second complaint _^
that Taylor did not include the
mux of the pterijliii oaad in
hit Bruin Walk vga in the lai
af hii campaign expaaiai, The
charge was dismiiaed baeMae
** previous to the cofhplaiat, we
diicaHad the antter with
Scoct, aad he iteaand it cor-
rectly [in hif account],** rnigla
on said.
An additional compUint
charged that special techmqaas
of typesetting used in Taylor's
literature were far aMre ex-
peaiive than reported on hit
expeate account But the Eleo-
tioa Board did not fbd aof
such violation, Knighton said.
A geaetal repreteaiative oh^
didate, Harry Sooek, told Else^
tion Board that an oppuatut.
Jay Bundy, removed some of
Snoek*s leaflets from an Arrow
Charter shuttle bus. After
reconciling their differences vi
the EB office, the two can-
didates asked for a ruling from
EB.
10%
diacount With coupon
on dry cleaning only
Expires May 21 . t976
10%
diacount with coupon
on dry claaning only
ExpifaaMay21.1976
AMEIH-CAL
I4MW4
•aio
-ft13)47S-S721
Number 1 Dry Cleaners
1126 Westwood Blvd.
478-6310
J next to McDonalds
Complete Dry Cleaning and Laundry
Parking in Rear - .
ki T«ytar%
EB ruled itiMt
fWHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGET^
2 and Acts 4:25
tATTH IfY GOO. TO THf
UKSa
the shut-
tle buMi are owned aad run by
Arrow and not hy^ka Univer--
sity, -we had no jMpdiction,**
according to Kni^tbn.
A candidate other than Mc-
Cormack was also charged
with violating the residence
hall regulation againit posting
more than one eight aad one-
half by eleven lei^kt per41oer
This charge was directed to-
ward Ron Hacker. ^ candidate
for general representative, but
no pumtive action was uken
hacause the leafku were vol-
aaiahly diapbiyed by restdenu
on their room daiaai, Knighton
ID aay mat Gee iMfe Mm e« aa Ha haa alahfer
rr aNALl COMC TO ^aaa ai TNI LAgT IMIva. THAT TNI THa
aKMiMTAai OF TNI Loao*a
TNiTO^OrTNK
tNALL FLOar MfTO IT.
»aAT.coaKvc.AMDLrruaoou^uMTo ^^- — ^i t i_
TMi NOUai or TNI UMD. TO TMi NOMBC OT TMl OOO OT ^m^^^^^^ ' -^"itnilh^^^ai^Mii. >!■■ .fi
Hi ••x TiACM ua or »aa wars, aao wi apax — ^^^.^ i n i
aiaij(aiHmMTHa:roaouTorziOMaHaLLOoroaTHTHi pi»<afr«i wmm^wm^m^
^UkW. AMD THC WOaO Of THi LAW IHOai MIMiaai MM AMD Hi Till af
In
Complaints were made con-
the hstiag of campus ^
itions praaiiad by the
words ^^representative of* on
Marcia Bisque*s literature. She
a raadidite for first viae
»v4.M«^405, BECATWI,<A. 30031
told EB that she liil-
id tli|e fpaapa to iaform voters
aa to the duties of the
the organizat
ited by it EB
the connotations of the phrase
could aot he paoasa to infer
she had support of the groups.
Wh Bibo, Fair
t^ — ■
ffanni
Wilbc Bobu and
Warning wil be
in concert at apdn
the Grand Ballraaai ai
of Black Culture WMl
hoar-long
sored by the Black
Student
Black St
the Prafnm T
Fair
m
The
the
and
■^ fi^f
GSM students out to prove
they have artistic sensitivity
DB 9km w
The Graduate School of
Management Arts Week will
not include a' show entitled,
**You*re aa Unmercenary
School, GSM **
With the help of events
raagi^g from performances of
''You're a Good Man, Charhe
Brown** to a ulent show titled
^Cabaret.** however. GSM stu-
dents hope to prove that
they're mtereslad ia More than
cnsp green bttts.
The nickname for GSM is
Graduate School of Money.**
C9mmented Nancy Mahon
sdcond-year artt nauuifemcnt
student **Wc*d lite to under-
mine that image aad get across
that GSM isn*t only interested
in money but is also interested
m the arts.**^
Although arts amaagrment
lU originated the idea, the
: ''who are making it go
are from all over GSM — ac-
eountiag» finance, marketing
aad staff,** said Mahon
Running from May 17
thi^ough May 23, GSM Artt
Week includes several per-
formaaoes. A peries of skhs
aad tasprovisations will be
Tuesday and Wed-
ly at noon in GSM*s food
facility, Pptlatch. "You're a
Good Man, Charhe Brown**
can be viewed in Schoenberg
Little Theater on Friday, May
21, at 8 pm, Saturday. May 22
at 2 pm and 8 pm, and Sun-
day, May 23 at 3 pm Rolfc
Hall 1200 will house a ulent
show, -Cabaret,** on Wedsiss-
day at 8:30 pm.
. Joann Overholt, business
niiiiigr i of the Arena Suge
Theater in Washington, DC,
arill ^paak in GSM 5391 at
noon on Monday Overholt *s
career combines art and
nuinagement, illustrating the
purpose of GSM Artt Week.
pro-
^r at the GSM aad facuhy
coordiiuitor. defined the goal
of Aru Week as the esublish-
nient of one week in which art
a focal point of
achool life. The
community is giwen the
opportunity to experience and
expiass iu creative side.
in the category of **celebra-
tions,** an Art Show Reoep-
tion will be held in GSM 2343
on Monday from 5 pm to 7:30
pm. A '*Bacr Bast aad fttf-
ticipatory Artt FestivaT will
include, Mahon sasd« *% rhanrc
to work oa a nuiraT and will
last from 3:30 pm to 7 pm on
Thursday in GSM 3391.
Named "Fantasy Night," the
■aaux Artt Ball requires guests
to dress to suit their fantasin.
Surting at 9 pm, the celebra-
tion will be in GSM 3391 on
Saturday.
The Faculty. Staff, aad Stu-
4mKi Art Show can be seen in
ly cases throughout
Brown endorsed
by WiDie Brown
SAN FRANOSCO (AP) —
GoamMir Edmaad Braam Jr.
AssdasUlaBBa WiOie Brown in
his bid for the Democratic
presidential aommation and
amy seak the sappan of
Osiooa aaters in a write-in
campaign later this month
Brown's executive secretary
Staff mtmktn were chscfcaig
oa the paaahihty of the Coser-
hitch and GSM on Monday
from aoon to 9 pm and on
Tuesday throi^ Thursday
from 7:45 am to 9 pm. The
Umversity Pnntnuker*s Show
wUl reside in GSM 2443 on
Msadsy and Wednesday from
noon to 4 pm. Tuesday from
II am to 1 pm, and Thursday
from noon to 2 pm. Open to
all, the Graffjtu Art Show will
be hung .in WSTrng^WWH wo-
men*s restrosaw in GSM and
can be observed on guided
tours on Monday through
Thursday from 12:30 pm to 1
pm, beginning m Potlatch.
Tickets for all events are
available in Potlatch Also
available in Potlatch arc copies
of **The Cahfornia Maunanage-
ment Review." a roBrciiMU o(
articles, poetry aadL
by GSM studentt.
Th/s fs the place for Rib Lovers!
By far the Best Rib% weve fried in LA
H^ratd Examiner
COMPLETE DINNERS
Casus/ Dining ^'^<>«^ * 2 • T S
NARBT'S OPiN PIT BBQ
1434 M Ctt&CEMT HCIOMTS «! SUHSC7 STRI^
lOA^inutet Uown Sunset Blvd to
loorel Conyon Turn Right And Vqu re There
,Beoch weather i$ on fha wuw\
inhonca fhe efhrttprtmenf wear a $andpet^Me$ bikini
m^.4%
SandpefcM
Cuttom §ik»nn
A Spo/tiw«or
Mix up sixas, stylos, colors, prints.
Naod fust o tap or batfam?
ofid sao —
e
f
r
(ku*i Vii mil* MifMi 9» molibw pt«r)
Bikinis
Hond Airbrushod Bikini
Crocnafao Bikini
Crochafad Ti
315Wiiii|inn »
t»7447
T-,-'
15.00
U.OO
It.OO
10.00
r
i
Affirmative Action:
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY OR PREFEREKTIAL TREATHEHT?
.t. I
TOWN MEETING- FREE ADMISSION
TUESDAY, BfAY 18, 7:30 P . M .
DICKSON AUDITORIUM. U.CX Jk.
Modermtor: Keitn berwick. I liBloi iBn
Richara Waaaafatrom
fNoHaiui of Laar 4 PhMaiopliy. UCLA
LBaria M King
DtoBCtor. Fanon HaaBBiLfi A
Log Angalaa Attomay
Taifima Kaplan
Aaat Prolaasor of Hiatory. UCLA
^
I'TW*'
Chinese dinners & lunches
lire BK/d
Ne<ir. Wc^gttc
West Lo» Angcks
Open 7 Oiiyt TiJI MKlnight
4776514
r
4 •
i-f
Southern
Campus
UCLA Yearbook
-.wih-'
^-
Needs An
EDITOR
-, ^^ ^ ^ Your Mark at UCLA
bouthern Campus UCLA's yearbook needs an Editor for the 1977 Edition
thJcJ. Chance for a creative person tohelp leave the history of next year at UCLA
The Editor ,s responsible for the format, content, coordinating of prod uctK)n
fece.veT^s^'?^nd'' '^ "^ ^'''''^'^ ^^'"'''^'^ ^'^^ " "^'^^"^ ^^^ ^'^^' ^'^^
Apply 112 Kaft::khoff Halt
Applicalions Deadlma Fiiday May 21 4:30 PM
NEW!
In rMponse to your requests,
we are now carrying
ACRYLIC
ARTISTS COLOP
Hilhaiocyanins
Green
Liquffex colors & Mediums
aaJyic cDiors — 90C - 2.45
mediums — 90C - 4.24
Get compiete fr#edofTvm every Tect^mqiiy Deticate
glazes cr.sp brush strokes th.ck .mpastosT^ a knrte -
br.U.an and lum.nous colQrs Acryf.c p«.nt .s not affected
by mortar Plaster or cement, so ,t s .(^al for mur2^^
youcan th.n ULwith w«er or LK,uiteK mediums The
claan-up is a simple matter of aoap and «rater>
Complete color selection in 2-oz tubes
^9Ml
^Mfuim mTj >upi4 nlc ^
\
•ft mnqtn^f,nQ\^^.f^^^^ .^ t^^, , ^, , ^^^ ^^^^
jn 82S r ^ M
open
sat 1 n 4
iw^
* •"• pw
>
pr-^*
— <
h«r«'t our
DOUBLE
Copying guarantee!
The world cats
V
7 '
#1: IN BY 10 . .
#2: If Vie mist
the deadline,
it's on the house!
■■* ,
121 kercfchoft*hall
t2S-06l 1 K 282
m-f 7 45-6 30
•at 10-3
Needs An
Editor
Together is a special
interest newspaper serv-
ing the Womens Com-
munity. The editor is
responsible for staffing
and content of the pub-
lication which is pub-
lished twice per quarter
Apply in 1 12 Kerckhoff Hall
lMlore4:30 pm
Friday. May 21, 1976
is
I
3
t
»
/
f
S
•I.
I
DEATH &
TAXES
It's never too early to start planning
Do you know
'■■.•■ ■ '^^ ' ...
— your legal position if you
plan to marry, or to liye with
someone, or remain single?
— what happens if you have no
J will — to your minor children,
to your property? ^
— what California law says
about your rights as a woman
to manage your earnings and
your husband's earnings?
Edna R.S. Alvarez,
Attorney & Lecturer
Monday May 1 7 5-7 pm
Women's Resource Center
Kinsey 190 825-3945
Artist tries to naii down cities
OB Stair Rifbrlcr
Afraid that the earth's ceo-
trifu(pal fbree irauJd pull cities
and flMHiy of the irafuaMi 06-
jecu they CMitain into Wfmet,
Lowell Dariiiif, who tpoke at
UCLA law school Friday, did
Mwethinc ahoai it.
Darlioi, who wit aade the
law schooPs first ^*arttst in
reiMlaMX** by the Student Bar
Association, nailed fajJaiKfi
war mementos and Ameru^tiT
cities to the ground
**No country worth its sah is
without war mementos; if you
lose them, you apparently have
to, go to war again, said
I^Milg, who noted that Eng*
land has had fcace aaoe he
did this in tfT2.
Nan down fleldi
While he did not discuss the
mechanics of his actions, he
did say that it was easier to
secure cities, since he could
easily go out to a nearby field
with a hammer and nails.
Darling has had other ad-
venturous projects. When he
read that atomic clouds caused
by U.S. testing of weapons
were drifting toward Ca—da,
he proposed a huge vacuum to
suck them in and then blow
them back toward America.
Darhng said that this pUin
was modified when he realized
that the fan could blow the
particles past America and into
Mexico, "^kilhng the crop."
To rectify this problem.
Darling suggested large plexi-
glass shields on the border to
protect Mexico.
J»y
Monroe Price, a law school
professor, added that **Both
are trying to persuade the jury
that his grasp of reality is
correct."
Darhng told of his attempts
to solve the unemployment
problem, and, short of tlua,
help, the unemployed.
Since he owns the *'Fat City
School of Finds Art," Darlii^
said he could **hire thousands
of people as art professors and
then immediately put them on
sabbatical leave.**
Realizing that this iis not a
complete answer. Darling re-
cently set up his own world of
unemployment at Hollywood
and Vine.
He placed, on the sidewalk,
a window for people to jump
out of, and hired a chorus to
jump through with krir let-
ters spelhng out
Darhng prefers to call him-
self an archaeologist rather
than an artist.
He said, ''If what I do iant
grtmt art, at least ni be con-
sidered a great contemporary
archaeologiat.**
DarUng said that artiiU do
not have as much trouble mak-
ing money as people think.
After a sUde show, he said.
"You could take this junk, silk
screen it, sign it and praMMy
ftt a O0«|ple hundred dollati
for it.
A Service of OEEP - Student & Campus Affairs
Colleets
One of his completed art
objects is a "collection of debris
of various neighborhoods.**
According to Darling, '*The
best way to see .what a culture
IS like is to inspect what they
throw away **
Darling, who lives in between
the old Woody Woodpecker
movie set and a dildo factory.
!»aid he is no longer satisfied
with this project.
He "would like to tee an
international exhibit featuring
debris from all over the world.**
Darling told an evidence
class at the Uiw school that
**There is a commonality be-
tween law and art; in kw, rules
are debris, and in art, art
magazines are debris.**
Smdent 10 canl . . .
(Conttmied from Page 3)
department heads and directors
by the Office of Campus Affairs specifies that "after the tenth
day of instruction of the-fall quarter, both cards (the new ID
card and the reg card) will be required to transact official
business, receive University services or participate ui
institutionally-sponsored programs or activities. A carrying pouch
for both cards will be supplied.
"New and rc-entenng students will receive theirs (the new card)
during the first week oi instruction of the fall quarter," the letter
added
Timmerman said tkie new card "will be of much better quality**
than the presem Athletic Pnvikge caid. The letter fact on to say
the card •'will have a colored pUstic insert with thin ppteMar
film heat-lammated on both sides**
The back of the card will be used only for serviosi provided by
the University Research Lihcwy. A light yellow card will be
issued to undergraduates and a light blue card will be issued to
graduates.
this week's doutle feature
BREAKFAST SPECIAL
SPECIAL
HAM qnd EGG | TURKEY, PASTRAMI
starring ir
MISEa
and
SWISS
COMBO
ON RYE
aOLL
M/ICHIME MFftR YOl>
Campus «v«Bt8
Afliittanuhip SscImm.
isiM vJSrJZ It m£
It wm
art
m,7M
•r call
liOi ORA as a
^m Kaiiltfwg >ti
VtliMlasrs art also
la
•ni Mar It. VaTii i tsai ■■
• p«.Miy2l. 2pMafldl
^ 3 pm. May a. ~
■ s-yj
TSfftL
. -, ,. __ Alia
BMI. f pM. May 8. tlM 391 tmi sait
TN CaMtomia iNimawajawam Navlaw wM
to aviMillL m HMttdt MPB^mayt tha
Taa'ra §
I"!, mm la
•as 3 IS
21. IrMiR
Tia
IMMsraMi
4:1S and 8JI
pm. May It.
-TipMar. UCU
wtll be availaMt
Sfid Ktfctchoff 117
vaM. waM work tftpananoa
^ community larvica and loamino
AcadamKi cradit avaiiablt. ttudant da-
vslips mm |al dascnptton wWi aaa^
iPnea Visit Kinsay 384 ar eall 825-3730
--fliWti Trip tlfaapt. for Rtdondo
wmef\ Hmrtnt May 22 San Oiaeo, Mip 11
IMI Maaico. Juna 22 29 an avMM M
Karcirtioff M ava7 dty and at maatinos
of UCLA Fiatttno dlai.
— fsii laaaa. 8- 10 pm avanr HMdMiiey
and 1:30-1030 pm avary Many inlar
national Studani Canlar. 10232 Htioard
FOREIGN
STUDENTS
APPLICATIONS for the Foreign Stu-
dents' Association Executive Conv
mittee available NOW at FSA^325
Kerckhoff and OISS, 297 Dodd Hall.
Deadline: May 21, 5 p.n
VOTE on May 26 and 27
at FSA or QiSS.
Sponsored by Stydent legHtafive Coundl
I
vsfB SIM Nt emasii
i pm. lomarraw.
NasMMia
Low Sdiaat 1411
2 pm. May 19. Ndnas
•.""SM**" ^ '•'^ IMMt S3 pm Mny
It. iMKlia 2150
v«a
tm
May 19. Co-op 500 Landlair
ti<ii>a out at lagy
4mm ttata. 7 pm. mTn
-iMM lasrtBw CMai ti Ma
•rjdJNMf rnwaipiiinisa. Arwama. Orazii
ClMa. 3.30 pm. May 19. USSm
^■<i1iii| niMMp a iLaiMM
Mn noon May 19. BonMia A-1«3
Political prisoners . . .
(CwtinucdfrMlPatel) or Write to:
tries can happen anywhere, P.O. Box 106
anytime If the miliury, po- 301 Westwood Plaza
Iitical intelligence and the As an organizer for AI
police arc not kept under strict Hirsch has information con-'
supervmon, including ta the cerning locaJ adoption groaaa
United States, they could and where to lai^ telegrams
their power. o|a hehalf of political pris-
-We don't work for pm-
oners in the United Sutcs, as
our members in Brazil don*t
work for their prisoners. We
remain non-pblitic4l. It would
be dangerous in some countries
a wc 4id^X imagine in Uni-
faay, with vigilantes suppress
9iag information, if Al mem-
bers there tried to expose the
torture. They*d probably be
kiUed. International pnmmm it
more effective, anyway,* she
said, adding grimly, '^People
fr6m all walks of life are im-
prisoned, students and pro-
fesson also
Students who want to get
involved working for Al can
conuct Daa Hirsch, 473-3933,
*t like it and I
Stovitz . . .
(O
the DA
think the
dispensed with.**
AriMd atout his position on
the death penalty, Stovitz said
thai if elected to the court, he
would uphold the law whether
the death penalty was con-
stitutional or not. lu consti-
tutionality it presently being
decided by boch the Stau and
U.S. SMpMK Courts.
"But,** he said, ''I would give
the defendaat the cbanae to be
rehabiliuted "
DATSUiyi
"Acres of Datsuna"
Student, faculty, and alumni
fleet discounts
101 S. Arroyo Pmkwmf
994.1
t-
k
• I tlTI DtUGl
SCOPE
.;J .,
■AT 17 a
MN***i**^^i««4
N>M..i.
-X-;-. J"
dolybfvin
poinf
Judicial Prowess
B> Ciarv Ler Mixnt
(tdKor 'f note Moore «i j slu-
deor here mjifonnff in PolitK^l
Science).
On M^y mh, Prol Joel Ish
present^ a very persuaMMC «r-
gumenr to the e^ect th^i the
power oi^ ludicial review ii#r-
cised by the U.S. Supreme Court
is simiUr to the functional de-
velopment of any other branc h
OPINION
r
i*'
of tf>e* government in that it »s a
reflection of the prfNtefnir»ent
political philosophy of the
people This contention is sup-
ported by a majority of political
philosophers, and is obvious
enough to appear to be incon-
testable. , However, we should
■•• ••op here; rather we should
took to the premises behirui this
concept of judicial review
To start with, we must remem-
ber that the Supreme Court is a
^Hift. and therefore, it has some
-verV iffifkjrtant limitations. The
court cannot go out and look
4or cases. The cases nrnist be
brought to the court, and jhey
must be actual catet. In other
• words, the litigants must have a
persohal interest in the out-
come. *nd one litigant must
believe that the other bas bro-
ken some. law. either civil or
cr^inal Therefore, to get a case
before the Supreme Court, ft
must be a last ijipf^cal, and a law
must have beea broken. This
obviously impUes that some-
body must huive broken a law.
ThiS-j^Uhe ^jstihc4»iion of civil
diinlifdtoiioi.. A group of
peopie feel that a law is un-
constitutional, and, thereiore.
openly break that law so « to
be Me to take their case to the
courts It must follow that the
concept of judicial review ts
inextricably linked to the nation
of civil disobedience since a law
cannot be fleclared unconsti-
tutional until it W brought be-
<Oie the courts.
the validity of civil disobe-
dience within America can be
**en by looking to history
Jefferson and Madison advo-
cated the violation of the Alien
arui Sedition Acts. Webster ad-
vocated secession in 1812. and
Calhoun in the 1850's. Thoreau
and Douglas were involved with
the underground railway. Susan
B Anthony tried to vote in 1972.
Dr Martin LuthiH King, jr., was
involved in the civiJ rights move-
mer^t The list goe^ on. I would
like to close wkh the words of
Di King.-^'l- bave ney^er felt
TTiore a partner in the making of
American law when I was m lail
for breaking one."
Letters to the Editor
Bonus Programs
UFW: not guilty of
paper raids
r-T
B\ RcTut Boxcinuin
( Editor C mme Boxerman
Graduate Stu€ient here)
n a
members of the farmworkers
J^^^S'^^J}'^ yHo have been
I
that appeared on the 6th page
of the May 10th issue I assume
your cartoonist drew it up as
some kind of accompaniment to
Mr Fiske s letter and I must say
that It strikes me as a rank
example of yellow journalism In
the first place. It is not the UFW
that >s disrupting the campus
OPINION
I
pr«ss^s but the student support
groups and rritirisms would
rightfully be addressed to them,
Mr Ffiske and Kojelis, and not to
a struggling organization of poor
laboring people who have
united to gam the same benefits
that most white, middle-class
Americans take for granted as
part of their working lives.
In the second place, to have
used thf analogy of Nazism
concerning the efforts of
students to force campus presses
into taking a political stand ts to
make light of the horror of the
Third Reich holocaust, of which
I doubt the cartoonist can have
*ny extensive knoMcflie. ^nd to
Otstort the actual nature of the
^ftuation beyond all realistic
dimensions The unfortunate
caption could not have been
btWer calculated to hrmg pam
to the many Spanish-speaking
deprived^ oT the^r rights for so
'ong, because of basic lack of
knowledge of their rights.
I repeat the cruelty and
blindness of this cartoon is
appalling I have had a litrie
journalism training in my
undergraduate work. If I recall
correctly, the first rule is get
vour facts straight To Mr KoHts
Iwould add read your history.
lemn compassion Before v<Ki
<^an be a meaningful political
cartoonist, any kind of car-
toonist, any kind of artist, you
must first understand and care
about the issues, not just be the
smartass that gets into print. To
the editorial staff: I am not
concerned with having this
letter printed; that is up to you.
I arx) concerned that this letter -
be understood in the light of a
serious criticism of how well you
do your jobs and I believe that
jrreipowaioty. ,j ^„ accuraie
wicription in 4his imtance. if
not others The Brum is read by
a large number of people, all
susceptible to persuasion and
confusion to some degree, and
to them, if not to yourselves
y^ owe the duty of earning
and deserving their trust that a
ne%vspiper prints the truth. U
this case enemplffies your best
eHorts. turn your jobs over to
someone else M you can do
better, do it
The 11% Spring^ Jlonus Pro-
gram is now over, and I doubt
that anyone is, happy about it
except those that work in the
Studlents' Store. There seemed
to be a lot more problems with
the bonus this year. Before the
stigma that ASUCLA is a rip-ofi
becomes more ingrained in the
students, I feet some clarifica-
tions should be made.
No other University of Cal-
ifornia campus offers any kind
UCLA program is designed to
show appreciation to those who
do business with the Students'
Store and the Health Sciences
Store by rewarding those who
shov^' a desire to receive the
refund It is for this reason that
all prices were not simply re-
duced by 11%,
Only a certain anrtount of
money was allotted to be re-
funded through the bonus pro-
gram For this reason, and based
upon the goal to only reward
those who are anxious to get a
refund, only one envelope was
given per person. This was done
to prevent somaone from gh^ing
refund envelopes to friends who
would not normally have gor>e
through the tnttHmm necosary
to receive money in return.
I 9dmt\ that this type of in-
formation should have been
easily accessible to everyone.
Questions relating to these areas
were valid. Any other questions
were not iMMMry because all
the answers were written on the
refurui envelope. I'm sure many
people have complaints about
the attitudes of ^Mne employ-
<^ But i bekmte aM questiom
were answered as courteously
as possible. A few minutes of
yg^ng could have solved^ all
Mating to the bonus
daily advertising in the Da/7y
Brum along with directions on
the redemption envelopes tell-
ing people which receipts were
eligible, how to record the re-
ceipts, how to compute your
refund, where to turn in yo^r
envelope, the due date to turn
in your envelope and when
you'll receive your refund check
(which IS guaranteed if you fol-
low the instructions). Despite
this constant acfress to informa-
tion, many people filled out
their envelopes ifurorrectly or
didn't attempt to turn them in
until after the deadline.
Thousands of unnecessary
quciiiufu weie Miie<d~cpf
ployees that resuhed in distrac-
tioTH that caused slower cash-
»ering and less ability for em-
ployees to watch for ponMe
shoplifters Because of this, em-
ployees are accused of doing
• nefficie^it work Maybe next
y««r. punpii will take the few
minutes necetsary to learn how
to receh^e a refund, and the
Spring Bonus Program can run
more smoothly It certainly
would be appreciated by those
working in th^ Students' Store
^nd Health Sciences Store, and
everyone could realize how
simple it is to get a refund
M.S. exhibits various symptoms
ranging from dizziness, tremor
and sensations of tingling and
numbness to visual loss and
weakness in the arms and legs
eventually affecting movement.
As with Muscular Dystrophy,
there is no cure for M.S.
Since most doctors obtained
their defigCA with the expecta-
tion of^ treating patients and not
proof-reading college news-
p^psrs, it may be difficult to find
one to employ. However, I am
sure a brief phone call to an
authority or a few minutes of
reftmHrxih m the Bio-Med Library
wiH be sufficient to provide your
'••<*«'» with correct informa-
tion.
Rock of Ages
Medid
For two montKc there was
Apparently an MD is nbt
•"^H>{oyed by the Daily Bruin m a
fT^'-T*^*^ *w» a misuke In
^»e title on Michael Rembis
l««er on Muscular Dystrophy
was ow-lobked. M.S. fas Vhe
JW'*"^ •••wA for Muhiple
MStfO^, and is a HiHh distinct
trom Muscular Dystrophy A
progressive disease of the
nervous system which pre
dominently strikes young adulH,
At 11:30 pm. Friday. May 7,
unsucceiakil candidate for presi-
dent Rocky A. Crabowowitz
committed suicide by jumping
off Bunche Hall. When asked to
comnr>ent as he was i liiidbiim up
•unche Hall. Rocky rapUi
"This is the hipplm moitwm of
my life. I want to thank all of my
supporters for the great ^ob they
did."
A source dose to Rocky laid
that he had naturally exp^cmd
to iit into the run-offs. "He
wanted to win die nm^olfe by
working hfs tail off, but now he
just plans lo ipraad it all ovw
the pavement.^ Another cam-
P^mn aide said, "Rocky aliwayi ^
^» «^ fiwdi of the mimm
M%md cwvyMng he docs. In
fact, on the way down from
■unche he ptam to ""
bis fellow lowri to a «.
Three dars aihar the
"M^enai notksMf Rodty's.
~»^ to FfMWI.
4^ ■
More Letters
''AS
ASUCLA
ASUCLA policy is co prosecute
thieves to the fuff aatmi e| ^he
law ASUCLA IS nat going to
prosecute the ex-cashier
Something i^ ji^rong here. A
student who steals two cents
worth of merchandise will be
prosecuted, but a main cashier
severaj huindred
cash isn't
Sui let s not be vindictive, let
the cashier go. On the other
hand, lets insist that ASUCLA
not be vindictive eitfter; let's
demand that they drop charges
agaihvt all pasf oAenders'^ffnostly
ttudents who were placed on
probation) Then, let the
didilon-makers itart afresh on a
brand-new policv
According to a »store survey.
most students feel that the
ASUCLA Students' Slore is doing
the npping-«|f.. I ImuMf rhst thH
tsn't true, but I. like others,
distrust ASUCLA So here Tim
Bayley. here Don Findley, here's
your chance ^ rather' than
retract a statement that w«mM
make the association look silly,
drop previous diaffes agair^t
<Mhen and achieve a respectable
consistency of action.^
K.Y. Toyama
yOM COtlM
Qfttorad^.
I
A Socialist La
• la
r Party Statement
I ■
The Threat to Free Elections
^The riyht of thtpaaplato freely elect thtr govemmant haa
always been tr>e proudest boMt of American (JamiiijiaL,
What many America nr don t. know is that this npht is under
Fret elactions mmmn above all. a fiee toeNot - giving tha
paopla a chance to nominate candidates of tt>eir choice, to
hear the different positions of ttwae lunning for off ice and to
have all political vi^jvs repreaeniad at the poNa Such a ffea
ballot does not exist m tfie United Hteiaa today
In each of the 50 stales, only the mayor poMtle
Of the rich arnt powarf^l. the Democratic •r^
parties, isre automaticaify plaoad on tf>e baHot AH minority
partiaa - it} other words all thoaa aside troei the two njlteg
parties which stand for eaaentially the same thing - face the
moat strmoant beitot lews in the various alalaa"
These discriminatory laws hana ^aan made more and
more restrictive, and so moie effective m haapirig minority
parties off the American ballot at the very time the nation s
social probfems call for freah idaea and new aotufions
What are some of the requirameiiU that minority partiaa
must meet |utt to gun a place en the ballot lust to gat a
chance to offer aftamaUwaa te the maior party programs''
I
These repressive lews, with their incredibly compien and
arbitrary spacificailona. fiene abaefutaly no constructive
purpoaa Their only eflaet is to suppieas minonty party
^**** *^-^*?*"T^ w>%or party tocfc on the ballot They
malie a oeasplata leookery of fiee elections. wHich should
^"^ "^JEflTj^V!*^^ cno«a not a selection restncted
by raoutgUona sneetad by gie very politiclana rupmng for re-
elaction j
'^aatrictive ballot laws are by no means the only growing
threat to free alections in the United States ~
|ust as^ ominous
'•;;:• -H
In California, a minority party muot fMliar o«er 130.000
signaturas on petitions simply to be if>cludad on the ballot
In Qeorgta a minority party naeds tO44)00 siyiatyras for a
t>aitot slot in MaaaacfHiaatto fiaeffv aa oao in
about 30 000 and so on tf^tfefHout the country
^ each caaa. Hhara ma on ttte mmimum figures in
protect thaaaae^ma from the diaquaiification of
Biaction boards (alaflad by
wfio want no challnngow). minority partiea mi
a^ae gatt>er twice tt>e minimum numtier of s^fnaturea
In ottiar wmm. while ttia mal^r pertias of nch capitaii
arx) politicians ara given gie top boNot
iwiwerity perties with
must tnaka traawnaei
•tarts, luat to qualify for the tight to participeie m what'is
to be a free and opan
MiCmA BLACKOUT
t ■. ■ .. '
i
Wtth #ach yaar. palHical campaigns ara mora and more
^•c***** ^y acoaai to ma aiadia. particularly radio airil TV
But the corporala hmsilBialiit. wfK> maim their profit by
exploiting public aineayea. ronatalaiill| rgfiMt to cover any
activiees but thoaa of the ma|or party w gjusiii -> can-
hroafcaating corporations theiaaalMa:
The one slight cheofi on this power of the media to
who the Amartcan voters will hear in political
a modaal "e^uai liaia*' clause m tt>e Federal
Act Suppoaadly the aquei time clause
was to pesvMa a chance tor all viewa to be heard
Blithe bfoetfcaaters. with the hatp of Congieas and the
Fadaral Communications Commission, have steadily
asa^ad tNa aqu^i time taw Today it is virtually dead, leaving
^Iftortty party candidalsi barfed from the moat important
■^-•^ of motfam communication, and tr»e American paapla
with an endlaaa alieem of pro-Democratic and pro-
THtHi la A MtAL ALTEaNATIVE
The Socialist Labor Pa,rty fays no ^ased on their
performance over many decades, the American peepla
linow by now what the ma»or parties have to offer ~ more of
the tame the SLP beHeeaa the deependmg seriousness of
our country s problems requires revolutionary ideaa and
revolutionary solutions "~
Arr>ericahs were OfK:a proud tttat the nation s political
Pfocesa was open 'to an idees and that esae a» aieai
revolutionary alternative could be peacefully submitted lo
the Amercan peepla If access fo ttie ballot is locked up tight
If It IS given only to^ entienched capitalist perties who
bnng ttieir empty promises lo ttie voters each year, then
American elections will be nothing more thar) hollow
iormalities that change nothing
Only by opening up the ballot to new idaas. new altar-
tiatiyea. and new programs can ma Amarloan political
onoa mors become a uieapon In the hends of a
struggling to solva ttH
Deferxl fraa Electiona*
Support tt>e SLP s Fight to Oat on tf>e Ballot'
Find Out More About tfie SLP Aliarnative'
for inm Socialist LatK>r Party Ticket
JULES LEVIN
for
PRESIDENT '
■
'. . ' '
c
AH
Drif
uv
I
FOI
f
Even after imrwrity partiea have
petition drivea.
ilroeaMDcks
it^ arbitrary intasprataBi
techmcaMiaa has aaahed aiem off
ftteir peMMens For eaample
• In Maw Vorti minonty party
repeetadly subtaciad to ri
coeiceiaaafa vielaiion m
daficiiiiioy mm be <laco>arad to i
• In
acova
valid compli
impfopaily
• inalBlaafI
thf h^l^ ram
ev«
car
with tti# lew
'Wements of a
SLP has
1W?
iiing petitions
H
The
intaia«i^ten
2Syeertasa
mif declared
bylaw
Futioa worn thi itiCH
In aie last two years a new source o< attadis en free
eiecttons has emerged The Federal government has gone
ae tar as lo iHaraHy pay for the pisaiasiitiai campaigns of the
parties wi#) funds out the FedOfeiTreaaury Underthe
It Election Ciaipiigii Hetorm act of tt74 each of the
psrty candieeias is efvibie for up to 15 million to run
iry campeifwa and lao mrtitof* e^ go lo each of ft»e
party eeieiiieas The Oemocfefi and Hapyancans ~
laaaed ftNs law to ima iNeir own peoaets ~ wia even '
t2 mdNon to pay lor aiefr aaaonaf oonveneena
Minority poftias wia wteiii ■ wofhing gfKai ins law Today
Wma IS not a smgti minority party wfigcae meet aie aagibility
leauiieiiients The maior party peaiisiaiis have aimpiy
tumad ate Federal Tveeaury mho Ifiee coaoease cantpaign
eldest (m addieen lo ieavtr>g a thounnd ioapiioies for ma
uaual nch becaersand caipaianf iiiti islt loapend miaibws
mofe buying the candidaia of tf>etr.ct»eioe)
Is this iffiet fraa alacao^ am an about'> A media cucuk
bstwaah cavNNdatas ffom aieioat idertticai part«s paid for
out of the piAlK treasury? Hafta tha Democratic and
'lipi^iioaii perty hadis who are leading thw aNadi en aie
f ree baHoi aolyed tlie nation s prob'ems and thefefore
<*aaa» to SHClii#a aa ether v«ws trom the polHical area'*
Does democracy mean a cttoice^bdtwean s
«*K) fep«aaants capNaaat iniaissts and a
CONNIE BLOAHEN
for VICE PRESIDENT
ttie BLP program calls for a secialist democracy
on coNoctivS ownaia^p and rar^li -and -file control of gie
aaMMir. it calls for atoffMSi ta organise politically and
aoanomicaHy to replace capltaHam with a new
9LP Campaign 76
PC. Box 10018. Palo AHo. CA 94304
a S9n0 rM nr>or© atout tha SLP ca^paigrt
o I want to vofuntaar fof SLP catnpaign work
o Siand ffia a fraa co^ of thm SLP i oHiciBi
lournef the ^tmekly People
Nmme
City
StBia
Tumedmf at 7:30 P.M.
2H W. §m St, ft, 1338
PRf C SPEAKERS FOU OfKHIPS
WHITE - SOaAUST LASOH PARTY
P.O. SOX 3745 LA PUENTE. CAL 31744
1 -.-
., i_.,a#
I
I
it
i
I
Karl Marx &
Jewish
Emancipation
Prof. Amos
Funlcenstein
May 18 12 Noon
noom 24l27tek.~^—
I
w
I
i
N
•
T
II
D
I
I
C
o
r**
o
i >
NewlowPSA
SSSOtoUie SaiFhuicisco
BayAiea»-*»-^
When the Moon oomct up, PSA fares go down. And
Gmuui^Mi boooiiie BvpiiB BinU nigfady
esoipt w9/kKf%% Siindi3r>« hoMHirs.
Phm L. A to San ftaicMOD, OpUmkI.
or SflD Jooe. Or Holly wood-BwiMk to
S«i taadioo. Call your campus rep. Say you
want the moonfbght Brady Hodpa 478-iaia
'"sr-
UiAMilH/
^sjar
mSS6
Map*
TlMn.*iM.
tjapa
^Jr*
MM.gM«
c
•J»PM
POTPOURRI
THE nrrERMATIONAL fieSTAUfUMT
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IffwflM you to try ra tPflINQ OUARTER MENU
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Lunch ft Omrwr inciuda,
ALao: Intamational aandwichaa on pMa
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Monday. May 17th at 8.-00 PM
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(as always)
GnbGPbainmenb index
cv
Editor Vema Fields : the proof Is In the cutting
Sy Taay Fayaar . -^
"People lay. *OIC, Jawa made money So let*f do Jawi 11, lUag
ICoof ttprf niOMter thit and monster thai.* iMind oi just copy-
_■!§. aacaaMftilJiQaaMlM, studios should iry lo ^ve moiiapflatL
something other than the pap they see ail the time on televuion.'!
hope movias can offer that chaofe.**
Not that she doesn^t like the movie, but Vcrna Fiehlt. who
won an Academy Award tor editing Jaws, is somewhat disturbed
at the current state of moviemaking. However, with her past
editing crediu (Paper Moom, AflHtkM GrallM) and present
poaition aa a Universal vice-president/ Fieids has the power to
■ake aome changes
nMBMiklBf aamry
It 1& somewhat odd for an editor to rise to upper industry
escheions, but Fields* filmmaking savvy clearly extends beyond
her editing ability. **When a picture doens*t work, it most often
does not work on many levels. Failure seems to compoMnd itself.
Ahhough I am more conicioos of technique than most, the
bigyeit failure I find is in the ttory. The play is still the thii^ aad
if you don*t really case atout the people up on the screen, it*s
pretty hard to make anythmg else work **
Fields' backfround reveals a lifetime involvement with people
in the media Her father, Sam Hellman. was a distinguished
newspaperman and writer who started out as an editor of Tht
Daily Californmn at UC Berkeley In addition, he founded the
campus humor magazine. The Pelican.
Sacial rcfona
Her husband was Sam Fields, a well-known film editor. They
met when she was doing some sound cutting and he was editing
Fntz \juii% The Wmmm in tiM Window m 1944 They had been
■Mffripd I years when Sam died suddenly m 1954, and she then
went back to work.
By the time she got her first job as a full-fledged editor on
Studs Loiligan in I960, Fields had been an active sound cutter in
both film and television for over six years. She then began to do
documentary 'work.
*•! did films for iodal reform," Fields said, **and I directed
documcnunes for the OEO and the Canadian Film Board 1 did
sound cutting on a film called A Face in the Rain, which wm
edited by Mel Sloan Mel was teaching at USC, and when he
went on sabbatical, he asked if I would like to uke his plnce. I
said 1 would, and it changed my life."
y i^-i .. . *
HsMi: nnicf« riiould not be an edMi« ityte. Yt%
the tlirKtor who puts the style inlo the picture. A
food cdilor UKt the «» in his hM* to
M Jhe flm: the story^ tfie
itit to think that there would be a style in
to ne. is terHble."
It Johnson
Although she was squeezing in the teaching between her
'Pj documenury work. Fields realized thiat h^r studenu
ia«rwllil extraordinary •*It was the class to end all chases.
It had John Milius, George Lucas, Willard Huyck, Mitthew
Robbins it was a great dass. When I was going to make a
documentary on President Johnson*s trip through the Pacific. 1
hired on alj of my students.** ^
Fields remembered how ''somewheie lo this per^ my ref^ota
tion got writ known to young filmmakers, I was cmw af the few
editors in town who wotdd work with these people, and tiwy
"^y^ ' ^" ^^*pf"' •nd supportive They also knew I had ediUot
-a^tMpaMM ^tn my house.** ~ :~'. '. — - ^
Asarcsull of her notoriety. Fields did sound cutting on Peter
T^^^TH^^J ^?^ ^^""^^ TarfiW, and edited Wlwfs tp Oocf,
Steven Spietaii's Sugartand Cxprcaa, Paper Moaa and Geerie
Lucas AiMrican GrallitL -Then, Peter asked me to do At Loag
Law love, and becwnr of scheduling conflicu, I did Jaws insteacf
As It tumod out Jaws was practically .stUI shooting when At
Laag Law Love was in the theaters. It's funny now to think that
1 was choosing between the biMest success and the hiawif bomb
in the world.** ■* ^^
With regards to her craft. Fields esi^plained why the editor's
role IS so often unheralded. **! know this is kind of an editor put-
down, but an ttlitor can fail and not realty hurt anythma too
?!?5L'^ * canwBwnan screws up, the days shooting might cow
530,000. If you start siM>oCint • wnters bad script, its hard to
■lake a food movie And if the director scfVWs up, the whole
picture*s shot I don*t mean to detract from what the cutter ciui
dowith his creative talent, but it coBWi down to a qasifinii of
iwpensibihty Sure, if an editor mAm misukes there's a loss of
time and a liew bucks for reprinu. But they can just hire another
cutter and ptart over agaia.**
Fields also commented on how The word editor is a bad word
•«^tt» done « lot Qi harm. I think that the feehi^ of editing as
•correcting' can caaat lasantment.' A director does not want to
feel that an editor is going to 'correct' his flUWakaa.
"There has ahirays b€en an underlying tension between cditoh
and directors One has the right of control, and the other has the
technical ability It's a very personal deabng, and both parliHi
can be very critical of each other, although I've never ma across
this animosity in specific cases. Actually, I think that cutting is
an extension of directing."
Fields said she was opposed to editors forging out their owa
personal style "As a matter of fact," she alabainiwi, "there
should not be an editing style. Whea saawiiiflii says so-and-so has
a great style. that*s the editor I doa*t want to use. It's the director
who puu the style into the picture. A food editor uses the film in
his hands to develop what's on the film: the story, the emotions,
the fechiifs. But to think that there would be a style in editing, to
me. IS. terrible "
Fields* respaoaibilities as a vice prexident make her available to
work with both directors and executives, btit she has plans of her
owa. **!' m lookina for deals myself, reading scripts, and I'm also
fSiOf to direct. I have a three-year contract with Universal, but it
-^oaaa^S-aiiaw^lwt—l^ WM*i cat. ftn bemf^ Tcbcl and getting
involved in so many things. I'm having a hall.^
At Beveilv Hills Playhouse . . .
Brecht and Shaw collide
On Campus
4
•y Edmund Ashwortk
The Jewish Wife and Man of Destiny.
showing through May 30 at the Beverly Hills
Playhouse, arc two superb, aH-raa Stiort plays
which suffer by being presented together in the
same evening They clash on the same bill due
to their sharply contrasting moads and theme
emphasis.
Bertok Brecht's minor masterpiece of^^
erosion of personal life m Nazi Germany, Tiw
icwMIVIft, IS misukenly placed as the openii^
V^y. PrsGht intended the work to be a play of
denouement, of finality, and this senae is all but
ruined by its position in the program In
addition, the direction (by Harry S. Winer,
whose major credit to date has been the less
i!ll!^^***' "'ovie, LafHid of iiffiBl) is heavy-
handed and stiff, denying the play of nuance so
viul to the mood of the work
This rigidity is also nrident in the per-,
fiiiiaanui of Lorinne VoeofT (as Judith K^sh).
This role is enormously difficuN to carry off
«««Mif»*»y» i» Tiw JtwWi Wiis is virtuallv a
one-woasoo show , VweofT ts a cowH^teat
enough adrew. hat she does not eaode the
controlled hysteria which her role demands
— Hnwrvrr IKIan nf fUitins, Heoppi Rpmuiiij
Shaw*s excruciatingly witty confrontation
between Napoleon and a Strange Lady who
gives the conqueror renewed resolve, fares
much better Director Richard C Wallace
seems far more deft and assured. Wallace has a
girnuine appreciation for Shaw's urbane satire.
aad his directorial flair %\yit% the play a great
deal of heakhy dramatK flow.
This time, Ms Vozoff and her styli/ed
tendencies pay olf: she okviously is far more
comfortable in her role as the Strange Lad>
and here she turns in an affecting aad intel-
ligent pcrformaaae Her interplay with John
Allison is a particuUr dehght His Napoleon.,
while trite and erratic in spots, is uhinutely
both humorous and paisHl. Allison's other
comic loil. Tim Matthews, is perhaps the most
consistently rewarding cast member A^ the
cra/cd. scatterbrained Lieutenant, Matthews
•M»i a fine comic viuhty in his perfuipanrr.
which IS a qaality aoSsMp akaent in ihtf rest ol
the principaK
i^ any fledgtng productiaw tlw tap shows
kaipe their awkwasd. aaiuiain monwms Yet
for the not-too-discermng viewer^ they can
provide aa riTaiaa nf aknsini. if
cello, clarinet, violin, flute,
viola and piano respectively)
will perform Brahms, Vrlla-
Lokos and Milhaud Thursday
at noon. Tis free.
of Sak's Fifth Avenae in the
50*5 is the setting for "You're a
Nation," directed by Kent
Groas.
Tomorrow at noon in Scho-
enberg Hall, Kenneth Snapp
aad the Symphonic Band pre-
sent a free concert of music by
Guinnini, Back. Persichetti and
Grainocr.
Tomorrow at 7:30 pm in
Melnit/ 1409. director Jaaws
Harris will screen his film
"i|o«e CaB It Loving" Ad-
mission is free
Wednesday night m Melnit/
1409, a Jack Benny retrospec-
tive featari^g some af the bte
comic's oM trii ■■mib shows
will he screened at 5 aad 7J0
Irviag Fem, Beaay's
"TT
pker wBI he picsent to aaswer
cpwstioas aad ulk akaat fatnre
Benny presents tioas. (Benny
tioa of film and scripts to the
telrvisiaa likiary here in Hik7.)
The UCLA Performing
Artists fDatiflas Davis. Garv
Gray, Stanley Plummer, Sken-
SlokcN Mikon
The first bill of the hi-
quarterly theater arts depart-
ment's one-act program is once
again being olVered tomorrow
at 4:15 aad S:30 pm, Wednes-
day at 3:15 pm. May 27 at 4 15
pm and htay 2t at 8 pm The
saoaad bill will be June 3, 4, %
and 9
Caaiplsiely wadent pro-
dueod, written, acted and
to he a workshop for tkaater
aiw aa^ors and are opea to
the pnkic for 23e.
The first kil inokidas wa
plays: ^Thc Country Men.**
starring Brat Plate and di-
rected by Mary K linger, takes
place ia tke ceUar of a cokmial
hoase circa I77MO aad con-
cerns tke "fltn^igk of one
man's internal coni
I he Onscowataa^ ~"
"Dinner at the Ranterg's".
directed by Anna Laak. is "a
mid-60's serious comedy where
a son tries lo grow up." These
tkree plays will be showing
tomorrow and Wednesday in
the Macfowan Hall Little
A restrooro is the setting
II n in "Rites." directed by
Malerie Bleich The play is
described as a "black farce
somewhere between reality and
nightmare " "To BoboHnk, For
Her Spirit" deals with a group
of loaiely soals who share the
kokby of autograph hunting.
Tke settiat is tke front of the
21 Club in New York aad tke
director a Brace Rasen The
be perfarinid May 27 aad May
28 in MacGowaa 1330.
The law entry is "Brii^ it all
Back HoiB^** dwBcted by Leila
Haddad and sat ia SnaUl
Town, U.S.A. in 1969 It is
**a black comedy about the
davawncy af AaktiiaMi family
life"" ^ ^
-r\
WMm
JL
I
i
S
' *.
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THERE'S STILL TIME,
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_ Tafc 477^«rBB 4BB-BMd
r
THE COUNCIL ON EDUCA-
TIONAL DEVELOPMENT
(CED) will be considering course pro-
posals f pr the Winter Quarter 1 977, and is
prepared to sponsor innovative courses
of genuine academic quality which
would be of interest to the campus
community. Such course proposals will
be due in the CED Office no later than
Monday, May t7. 1976. If you are in-
terest^Kl in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms hi the Office of the Council on
Educational Development, 3121 Murphy
Hall.
"PAIiFUllY FINMV. .The mssl pnntedty effectiw
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MANY?
Now comes Miller time.
/
/,
\
"^rm^
\ ■
K^mm
i
Th«
f Alexartflerthe Great salvages day ToFXJCLA
i
t
•iRKEUY - Tlw fac4 Track
M FMd ctaMMlUp mM
wai ending, and Steve
Alexander was reMinf in a qu^
^-^^^ Stadium,
[ MMHlOflt iPOIVl Xne r^
- •^ braved uinstroke to
talk to hlifi. It wai very I101 —
about tS In the »uti ~ and
Alenander %vai ttred. He had just
^or»e better than expected in
me decathlon, and at tinrtes even
bold tht^laad. Even kjckier for
UCLA, he had it at the end otf
the
"I wai hoping I Midd win
Jt/'iaid the Oranft Co«t Co?
lege traofte, «vho wai one of
two bright apoti Cor UCLA on a
«fyiiarly vifroidiad afternoon,
••"•ft ^ lOMon, truin track
coach Jim tuah had onk pro-
dieted Alexander had the
potential 10 acore" in fac-«
oonipotMon, but untii the laat
•vent of the day, he wai the
only Bruin to Hnkh on top. And
•J"
•/
•mf he was taking -a woi
A-1 AUTO SERVICERS
.%
i
I
;t
^
r .'
Vou loe, the decathlon takes
t^ beat aiowaim ol bMli mmm'%
Inhumanity to man and
vnaaochnm to paoHlde one of
the most grueling and dramatic
•P«<^«d« in iport. It conate of
ten eventi In two dart, with the
y^^^titort expected to per-
iorm wHh a signtficanc dtmrna of
proficiency in all.
First, there's the 100 meter
«»h. Alexander, whose forte is
i^unning, came in first at 11.1
••con*, Next^ in the long jump,
he finished third, at 21 feet, IIV4
tncfies, Mnd stiH held the lead.
Then came the shot put
Steve, a lanky tdft, dbOMi't
•mm to have the musdes for
that sort of thing, but he threw^
« over X and a half feet iny-
way But now he was mired in
third place overall.
Next came the high jump,
which doesn't look to be
physically demanding, but is.
And Alexander only finiihed
fourth — jumping only 6 feet, 4
inches. Hell, that's almost as tar
as President Ford falls when he
trips over his shoelaces. And the
Prez doesn't throw sixteen
pound balls before he performs
erther.
But track is a microcosm of
life it's tough. Alexander
werM deeper into thM. Even
after burning the field with a 51
second 400 meter dash, he ror
mained third after the first day's
action.
"I thounht thai if I could stay
within a couple of hundred
points (the winner oi each event
gels several hundred, with loMr
totals to the runners-up) after
one day, I could win/' said the
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Everyone nmkm mitmm - but rfi a aecret when
you turn m >our term p^pgr ««,en you araee without
• trace Stpc«( up now«
schoof suppites b t«v»i.
union. a25-7711
open mon-thurs 7 45-7 30 In 7 46-6 30 sat 1Q-4
students' sfor^
■*^"
•Jy ofia from Yucca VaNay. And
we was right.
On Saturday, AlaBandar epefi-
ed action by finishinc Mcond in
the 110 meter hi|;h hurdles,
movinf into tummMpImM
•M In the prooaM. Than
^ dhcus, a thirds
down into that third
aaaln.
Then came the pole vault.
Alexander surprlied hiniBea, add
everybody else/by almost goifii
om m iam0 heights, iut d>en he
up and skyed to 15-5H, taking
the event, dim^ng to second in
the procais, 36 Hoims behind
leader Ed Miller of California,
6131 to 6095. Miller, tiring quick-
ly could only jump 13 feet, for
fourth place among the six con-
testants.
"The pole vault really help-
ed/' noaad Alexander. "It Mp-
•^me with the next event, the
it^ffUn, I though I would be hurt
there, but I got a good first
throw."
That first throw went 193 feet,
•even behind Miller's second
place effort The stage was set
for the dr^trx^ttc finale.
The 1500 meter run is the
traditional conclusion for the
decathlon. 1500 meters is almost
a mile, and h particularly gruel-
ing for athletes who have strain-
eocvery muscle under intense
pressure during the previous 30
hours. Many superbly condi-
tioned competitors simply over-
extend themseWes and collapse
oh the track while /ousting for
the win.
It was oWious to all that
Alexander had a lot more left in
him than did. Miller Further, it
was also obvious that Alexander
was a much better runner than
Stuart Slhrerateln
aN
the icoren an*
iaKander would
to beat Milv by 11 le-
lo win the docaihiow. And
11 laoowdi li a long tinne to
yp in a relatively shaft
Alexander grabbed the lead at
the gun, but after one lap.only
ted by a few yards. Then Miller
•towed, and slowed, the exhaii»-
tlofi catching up to him.
Alexander extended his lead,
•nd going into the Isanie
stretch, turned on the iflU and
coasted in, fifty yards ahead ol
Miller. The countdown began,
the judges huddled, and th#
result was announced,
Alexander: 4:3^9, Miller: 4:50.2.
And the nanf Paofic-a decathlon
champion was Steve Alexander
of UCLA, with 73M points. Mil-
ler set a Callfomia record wah
hii secoruf place total of 73ML
''During those last 100 yards I
put everything I had into It. I
never looked back. I was as tired
as he (Miller) was, but I was in
better shape. Every week I run a
couple miles. It helped a lot,"
Tes/ it did.
Incidentally, thaagli Alex-
ander is only a iunior, he may
not be back next tiaion His
mentor, assistant coach Tom
Tell^ is leaving U£LA to take
the head coaching )ob at the •
University of Houston. And
Alexander may join him.
"f ««y 90 with him dowji to
Houston. We get along real ivell
together, and he really helps
nit. Tm a junior mmm, sp I'd
have to fit out next year ar\d be
a fifth year tofiior at Houston,
but who knows ; . .f"
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/ \
W ECASHORTRAn
lexander4>right
SIS
>
Mid wound up tiedjor fourth
ckaMmg Miy IM (Rogan* lifc^
tunc beat ia Ift-IVi wyic Tnttv
apMi a lM» of 17-10^. ^
With the favoriiea Highlit,
<atno of kaa renowned vaultcn
^^* ' *"*o ^ top potitioaa
_m Suie*8 Scoa Fischer
lerged from obscurity to
^ure the event in 11-0%, six
inches higher then he ever
^-jaMidL — hcfoce. Tooi Ot^
Staniaiao of USC wm aaoend
•■i Bgnr Larry Hint/ third
The Brum sophomore had
several complaints after the
egiBpeutoa was over, citing a
■^^•J|fc»«rf wiad and m-
coaaiaiBBCjr by the officials in
applying the two minute jump-
iag rule. On innc jumps it was
applied while on othm it was
relaxed.
In the high hurdles, James
Owa (13 9) of UCLA finished
third, behind Robert Games
(13.9) of Washington and Mike
Jokamn (13 9) of USC.
Owens, the defending Pac-^
and NCAA runner-up, waa
quick out of the blocks but he
leveled the first two barriers
and never recovered
Gaines, a freshman, ran a
smooth race from wire-to-wire .
in winning his first conference
crown. It was only his third
race of the year — he miaacc
most of the Huskies meets
because of spring football.
limne§ ft a iinde receiver on
the Washington grid team.
But Owens* poor showing
could be excused. Twenty
minutes earlier he ran the lead-
off leg on th^Bruins 400 meter
xday squad which wound up
•econd to use And more
•iony was to come after the
hurdles - Owens ran the 100
ractcr dash Uter m the after
noon and finished sixth in
what was probably the ■ntrtt
cxhausung meet of his career
the controversy centered
around Brum hurdler PhUlip
Mills, who nearly disoualdWl
t'om the oMet *
Mills had late hvaiMBa m
Westwood on Thioadjiy and
h^ to catch a late flight to
yt^ By the time hi Teach-
2^ -.y •«» of the team
TT ■••^ •n^ Mills didn't
r^. «f ^^^ he was runmng
the high hurdles umil the next
morning. He failed to show for
tue event on Friday aad waa
ditqualified from the meet
Only vehement protest from
stated him.
UCLA was fortunate that
Mills WW able to compete The
tophomore from New Zaalaad
took second in the interroedi-
ate hurdlq^^ oa Sattirday, be-
hmd winner Tom Andrews df
use
Andrews led from surt to
finish in posting a 49 9 victory
It was his second straight Pac-
8 title in the event. MiHs was
clagfcad m 50.9. while Rich
GarybehJ of USC and Grant
Niederhaw of UCLA ptebad
third and fourth.
Oc9pim USCs record tally,
the win did not come aisy ior
the Trojans They trailed up-
set-minded Washington by 30
points after the first itoy and
had lo count on overwhelming
performances in the sprints
and hurdles to jet » past the
Huskies.
The Trojaas* Jaoaaa Qilka*
MS the star of the BMet, aathe
native of Guyaaa captured the
W(I0.5) and 200 (21.1) aieter
^ifte and anchored his
to vktory ia the 400
relay (39.9).
A reporter compared Gilkes
to the Six Milhon Dollar Man
*fter the meet, but the Trojan
quickly rliipalid any notion ol
a bionic transphut.
**I*m aaed to ruiming that
many racea." he exphiined -^I
«*« four, including the mile
relay, while I was at Fisk "
dikes atteaded Fisk Uni-
versity in Tennessee for two
years before transfering to
Umversity Park Third rated in
the wa«M at 200 meters last
year, he proved Saturday that
he alao c^uite proficient in the
lower disunces He hopes to
run all three events in the
Olympics for Guyana.
The Trojans ako jncked up
wins in the 400 dash (46.0) and
the mik realy (3.1».6) Defend-
ing champion Ken Ramfie
■Mde it two m a row m the
400 despttr V %Bd leg He
Nirely made it to the finals, as
he fifjished 'fourth la his
qualifying heat on Friday
**! had to get it out of my
mind.'' Randle said of the
stramed ligaments in his kg.
"Today I didn't give a dam
what happened to rt It was a
food head experience? If it
happens agam VU kn^ how
to handk it."
UCLA ako Cared well in the
weight events Jim Niedhart
look second in the shot with a
best heave of 62-8
one of
•nUna al laet waehend'a
Paclflc-t Track and Field
Championshlpa, aurprlaing
everyone by taking the
•vent Above rifht:
wins the pole vault,
1S-5^4, ahnoat a HinI
•r than any of hla|
fhrala. Salow dght Alexander
••« *• •■•t evwfit, the tfOO
•"•••fj^n, mnd with It the
MnHa. OB photos by Jeff Lapbi.
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Wof«hdp,NexrtinWyouWh^aakforacopyofTTieC^
adde to the Hairfe* Job hri the WdtW:' k's 16 p^» of hints on findi^
m^jbo tewr to pick up our "\A^
^~*- »^«^ ««* oAer Owgumer Inf o^^
BankofAmcrica.
SQinhi«rWsanr>hti#.^r^^r^»^#k4.>^ Ui^ ^^^ ^,..^ ^yg^^^^^
mn any other bmk. In school. And
.. "
u
*Vyou
BANKOF AMERICA
of Am«f« n t^TCSA
S-
»e^
i^-
■«— rl
f: - t ; r-r-
in I in J < I'M'
^'-i.
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<=?.
i
f
3
UCLA comts in dis
*-.
— iy Jot Yofcnt
DB Sports Writer
BERILELEY ~ A pair of un-
expactod wtnt, itvenil diiap-
pointtng ddcoU, and a fwirl of
controvcriy marked UCLA'i
abortive bid to capture the
BiDnic" Gilkes leads USC toTecord track
Pac-8 track and field
cmunpionahip at CaFi Edwards
Stadium Saturday.
The Bruini wound up third,
four poinu *^chiiid ruwwr-up
Washington- and 85 marks bc-
hind overwheiming winner
$848 per mont
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I
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Today at the University Religious Conference,
corner of Hilgard & Le Conte
Come By or Call 479-4139
use. The Iroj«ink' win wai
ih»T third MHflit and ninth in
t^ 17 year halory of the meet,
whiie their point touJ of 180
was the higheit in cotdacmoc
hiftory.
The lurpriae Bmin viaorief
came from decathlete Steve
Alexander and high jumper
Ja^n Meiilor« two iinhwaidiil
fiiMf onacra ~vto — wtmtMtd^M
^«n dei^altff competition
A ~ tnniKu from Ofain^
Coast CoUeft, Alexander csme
from behind on the second day
of competition fcr* beat
Caiifomia*8 Ed Miller.
Alexander was in third pkce
after Friday's events but after a
nighfs rest, came through with
The Organic
Jazz of
a blistering performance on
Saturday Miller won the
nK>rmng*s opening events (h^
hurdlres and discus) but Alex-
ander stormed back to take the
pole vauh by over a foot. His
top clearance of I5>5^ was his
higiiwt ever and netted him
••* of a ^poMible 1,000 poinu.
After Ube javelin, the title gumt
^^^wn to thc^ fruehng 1500^
meter run.
Alexander popped off to a
quick lead with Mijlcr cloae
behind^ in third. But on the
•ccond leg, the Bear fitded,
showing signs of the fatigue
that must ineviubly follow two
4ty§ oi almost . continuous
competition. Miller was soon
in last, nearly 50 yards behind
the leader. Akxaoder won m
4:i6.9, 14 seconds ahead Miller
him
til
Monday Only
from 9 p.m.
CLARE FISCHER
Cafe Danssa
11533 W. Pico - 3 Block West of
the San Diego Fwy.
MASTER™^ PROJECT GRANT GAME
APPROACH
gjend WedoM^y. May 26th with Dr James L Costarua and let him show you how to "MASTER THE PRQlFrT PRamt
»»«ll as priUate foundations and corporations These qoverTia«nn«nr^ »nH ^^^^^^
~ch. demonstrafon pro,ects. trTng and c^u^cT 'p^^^ ^'^n* ^d^ '*«"' '"^ ^' '^ •P«-'-'^
?E?^r^i^^'"s^^E^^^,E5L gs^G^o,^^Ti&s;?gx^ ;jii^ '^^f' "^'^ "^™«^S '^^
how to turn good ideas Into fuUv funded nrotem +<-«?. tCj^ , ' . ***" '**'" ^^ ^° *»»' ««^"9 opportunities.
U-ed below'^.r^ K SThe SSi'^Sfc" '^ '*""'*' '^'^ "^ grantsmansh.p in a captivating
•>lou/ to find funds apd how to apply for ^ants
• Deciding what and vA|>€n to propoic
•What to do if you're hot eligible for funds
• How to write and pacl<age your proposal to gain attention
I H^f^'t 'Z1\^''''^T ^^ ^""^^"9 agency and who to promote on campus
• How to be tn-the-know about available funds
• Determining if the competition for funds is fair (or. when to Ht it out)
• "°^ ^o ^^^"Ti|"€ ^*^t your proiect should coat
to do if your funds are cut/How to modify project
• Defending your proposal and negotiating a contract _
munity action, start a consulting practice s"«nmer pro,«ct. do seme significant research, support worthwhile com
OONT MISS THIS ONE 7?,e orrV Southern Colifomia presentation of MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME
WHAT THEY SAY... . Helpfu, or^ o^eu
-Rev William J Sullivan. S J . Seattle
University
/
The most complete and
hour euer seen
-MV Walker. Pad*c Univenity
After 15 v^aorsi of grantsmanshtp. the b^m
muQtlable from any Kxjrce
-Marvin E Tong. Jr . Ralph Foster Museum
Excepnor^all^ well planned and preaented
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We// worth the time and mone^ I inveated
-RuKii R Campbell Staff n»r«or. Con
sumers for Health DMslapment
Minawpuit. MN
^^09t pro^mkmal and mfonmmm.
-E Amii J Warden. AModate Diraclor of Stu
dvit Aid. Untversitv of Artmia
Excetleru. practical, comprehensive, thought
ful. deaH^/ pnmtmd,
F. Cdlta. AniUBnt Dean. Educa
tion. SyviacuM Unjuimu
Answers the question just as I formuhm H in
my mirid
-Susan Gilroy. Santiago Libfaiy System
Ver\f helpful and of sufficient detail to be of
ber^fit to fiiiT^iuinili wnting grants
-Craig A. Ramey. PhD.. Aitt Chief of Staff
ReMarch VA Hospital. Newlngton. cf
ONE TIME ONLY!
THE £CK»MN CQVTE/? PRESENTS
"MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME"
^ "^Bi?^^^JSi^ r^S??S,^" "^^ ""™G "VE PRESENTATION
BY DR. JAMES L COSTANZA-BACK FHOM A NATIONAL TOUR
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26th, 9:00 a.m.^:00 D.m.
WALK FROM CAMPUS THE PIAZA THEATER 1067 GLENW
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PRESENTATION
ONE IME ONLY
1!1Q
00
and juit enough to
the overall title
Defending and three
Pac-8 chamfMon Craia
lyim of Oregon was ^
to compete at Berkeley, but
contracted mononucleosus late
iv Tte ^iftan and couldn't
make the thy louch. Miller
WM .kft at the favorite, with
Alexander considered a pea-
•ibic fourth. But the gritty
blond from Yuoca Valley tur-
IHMi -everyone by not wiltiiM
in l^ 15 4f§Ffx ^Mt.
Meisler was likewise Mmm4
with the atoaee of a major
opponent ~ tim Walker of
^SC — «, 7-2 jumper who
injured a leg in the latter part
of the MMon.
But that didn't detract froip
[Refine field Ten of the II
kmfcn cleared 6-10 but only
Meisler and Washingtn Sute's
Lee Brach managed to cleai; 7-
I The Bruin did it on his first
trv. an effort which eventually
earned him the win. while
••■■Ch needed two attempts
to make the height Both mis-
sed three times at 7-2.
Disappointing defeats were
handed UCLA's Willie Banks
in the tnple jump. Mike Tullv
in the pok vauh and Jame^
Owens in tlie high hurdles
Banks, the Bruin'> top hop,
Vkip and jump artist could
manage a best heap of only 51-
10"/6, good enough for third
place USCs Tom Cochee, the
defending Pac-« titlist won
•fain with a jump of 53-9 on
his fiSit trial of the afternoon
toed^eWSUs Ray Kimble by
. four inches
The performance was Banks'
poorcft of the season and pot-
•ibiy the low point of his two
year career at UCLA He wm
the pre-meet favorite in the
triple on the basis of his 55-1
*ifc-time best (a Pac-« record)
and his coniittent 53 plus
lumping all letson. But Willie
couldn't put It all ^together m
^Berkeley.
nt >ust wasn*t there, ex-
plained a depressed Banks af-
terwards. ^1 didn't have that
killer instrrnct Something'*
wrong. I'm not concentrating
Something's on m\ mind and I
can't get it off Maybe it's
school work "
But the weekend wasn't
completelv sour for Banks On
Friday he finished second in
the long jump with a leap oi
24-9%, five inches behind win-
ner John Okoro, from Nigeria
Via Oregon State Gerald
Hardeman of USC was third
and Jerry Hemdon of UCLA
fifth
Tully and USCi Rms
KQim were pre-meet picks to
dogfight for the pole vauhiM
crown but the battle never
■WiUrialized Both men ran
into difficuhies at a low height
KontinMed oa Page 171
Afccoum
Netters smash field in Pac-8 Southern Division
ly fiuaiar __
DB Spoin Writer
UCLA's tennis team
awakened aft^r a defeat in iu
Baal dual match of the maon
two weeks «p» apMMt USC.
UCLA's Pclcr Fleming,
Brian Teacher. Ferdi Taygan
aad Bruce Nichols left little
doubt they art icudy to lead
the defending latit^nal
ctiiwpiiB Brttiu to di^ NCAA
title in Corpus Chhsti, Texas,
May 26-31, by eaiily winning
the Pactfic-8 SovCliem Divi-
sion Championships held at
UCLA's Sunset Courts
Stadium last Friday and Satur-
day
The Bruins who had clinch-
ed the team title after Friday's
quarter-final matches, finished
the weekend with 13 points to
Stanford's five and USCs four
Calitornui did not score.
Each of the fbur Cahfomia
member Pacific-8 universities
brought Its four top singles
players and two best doubles
teams to West^ood to contest
an NCAA-style event designed
by UCLA's coach Glenn Bas
sett.
Each ichoo! received one
point for every match victory
recorded by one of its smgles
players or doubles teams, just
as m the NCAA Champion-
ships.
— "4 thinK ^tfiC' tournament wii
a sttccess." said Basseti -With
UCLA (17-1). Stanford(l2-3)
and USC (l2-3> bemg the top
three ranking teams in the
country and California a com-
petitive" squad, this weekend's
action gave a good indication
ut what is likely to happen in
thc^ NCAA's Ai least, I hope
'so,** he added
The Pac-8 championships
were discontinued primarily for
financial reasons, but also be-
cause the Oregon and Wash-
ington schools coiildn't com-
pete on the level of the
California squads.
The 22 matches held last
weekend featurjed everything
from crushed chairs and
— thrown ririieii 4o a ^Mekef oC
water bring thrown on Brum
Brmn Teacher's head by none
other than himself
i^ut above everything cH»c,
there was nothing short of top
level colleguite tennis
There were 22 matches con-
teiied and by the time Brum
Teacher had defeated team-
BMtte Ferdi Taygan 7-5, 7-6 to
win the singles championship
and later joined with team-
mate Peter Fleming towm the
doubles title, ii was evident
that UCLA has a
IITT*.
NEW-
WHILE-
U-
WAIT
Xerox Color
Copies from
Original Copy
or Enlarged
from
35 mm
Multi-Copy
in MichMie
Artist Slokv
•15 WMtwood Blvd
Lai An§9\U
Tisfee Bruins. Fleming,
Ti^cV itid Taygan advanced
into the semi-finals of the
Singles brackets along with
Stanford freshman Matt
Mitchell whik both of UCLA's
doubles squads reached the
senus.
Taygan ended teammnie
Fleming's bid to become the
Jim uri A p^ym to m
throHgh an endie lenM un-
defeated by upwcting him 3-6,
6-3, 6-1. Teacher bested Mit-
chell in the other semi-finaL, 6-
3, 7-6, (winning the nine point
tie breaker m the second aame
Sunford played without
number one singles star Pat
DuPrc, who was ofl playing in
the Carolmas in an open
tournament, bat even with the
senior, the Cardinals would
have most likely been far off
the Brum pace.
"I wanted Pat TDuPre) to
play this weekend," said Sun-
ford coach Dick Could "But
P*i fch he needed to try and
pick up some ATP poinU (As-
sociation of Tennis ProieniMi-
ali, which ranks players in the
world), in order to enhance his
chances to getting good plac-
mgs in tournaments this sum-
Pm will be with nl
NCAA's
**l was disappointed with our
performance here this week-
end," Gould added. 'X)ur
younatr pinyeri (freshman
John Rast. soplim»ore Bill
Mai« and freshman Mitchell)
fatigued too much Fhey have
to learn what it is Uke playing
tn the NCAA's H is extremely
tough when players compete m
several singles and doubles
matches nn titt snne div as
nappenad Heit this weekend
But thnt*t wiwi nften happens
in the NCAA's A pUiyer has
to be in top condition."
USC conch Toley was seen
applauding Ferdi Taygan alter
his upset of the 6-5 Fleming.
"I appreciate great tennis
regaidlass of who is playing.**
said tile 59-year old Toley,
now in his 22 year as Trojan
coach. -| recruited Ferdi out of
Framingham, Massachusetts
He's a fine finMse player with
superb groundstrokes and he
Im spln^Mid in the slmdows of
liHy Martin, Bnan Ttncher
and Peur Fleming at UCLA.
He ooold be the number one
plmytT at just about every other
school in the country."
Ta\gan*8 ground stroiebnr^
who
his
had
troubles all weekend T^^,
iMtd both his whip and flsck
writt action styles while Wnsl-
inftetop-tpin forehands and
^••ttinds pM FicBMig at the
net Fleming. Who relies mgatly
on a power-serve-volley gMBe
appeared to fatigue m the third
set The 5-9 Tay^piFifSte
Fleming's serve six time* in the
match.
At one point in the sauwd
set, Fleming voiead the woida,
"He's toymg with me*
Taygan used nearly every
•l»ol ni his repertoire, which is
lerger tiMi nK>st players' Re-
laying heavily on his top-spin
fnniiHiHl nnd bnckhand shots.
Teygan
chops.
set Fleming
Fleming, now 19-1 on the
■•■■•»' Wrely advnncad into
Saturday's semi-final match
with Taygan with a sha 4<6, 6-
jt M triumph over Stanford's
fovfth singles player.
Mitcheil often ,
«g at tfie net wttk well-
backcourt shots and
breaking Fleming's serve a
■A^ociung five tunes while
paachiiig. 3-3 scores on Flem-
i«g*s servt on nine occntidns
Fleming had enough concen-
tration and ^oise to break
Mitchell's serve two times in
the third and final set to end
Mitchell's upset bid.
I
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Dali, Escher, Van Gogh, Monet,
Gauguin, Renoir, Vermeer,
Bosch, Breughel, Chagall, MIro,
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Dates: May 17 through May 21
Time: 9:00-5:00
Place: Treetiouse. North Patio
Level One. Ackerman Union
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all prints are 22x28'
477-4229
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« m AbUULA SluflenU Slofg
(
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CLASSIFIED >4D
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Pfonal
for Sato
X>NM; Vow'w put imI m— niwg into
Th9 ASUCLA CommuffiieatlofM Socfd
tulljf •upporit lh« University of Call
I'a PoMcv an non-^tscrtrntnatlon.
I will fl#|
Im Hit OsMy •ruin IP p«iy4
wlip tfUcrlwiinaUa on tb« batit of
Mieiatry, color, national origin, raca.
fvUgton. or 4ai NalWwr Pia Dolly arylw
nor tha AtUCLA CommunicaMofia
haa mwaaOf lad any o( ma
IPWP and knew mina la ypurs.
Now boul a law lnflnllias...aav
(• M 17)
OT, Tp mm, two yaara m« npl lap Ipi
••••^ pttrnm. Pm tpup anyona? JIL
<«l*17)
THf Waatwood BayM. a kaahar
9fy *• *oo*»jwg toy fummai and laM
vieaa advarllaad or advarllaart fpf-
aanlad In Ihl* laaua. Any parson ba-
llavlng Ihpl &n advartlaamani In Ihl*
iMMa alPlilM Mia Board's poMcy on non
#apHilnp<fn alatad harain should
communicala ccmplainis In writing la
Iha Bualnaaa mmnm^mr. UCLA OaHy
•vum. 1 12 Karchhoff Had. 30t Waalwaad
^laxa, Los Angalas. California #0034.
j^mr aaaistanca with housing dlacrlnil-
natlon problams, call: UCtA Houaing
Of flea. (213) •2S-44f 1; WaalaMa Fair
Houaing (213) 473-3
COMGMATt Omaga
Tan
0 M 17)
MINOY. Happy IMi BirtMay Vou ra
Itffal. and I Napa Ms day is a
ona. Lava. Hprpid.
(• M 17)
ap, no, pp. I
It maan dhrt; haNo:
(• M 17)
campus
■nnpuncMnants
A TOAtT to tha "Styfar Dudas" of
WpaM Nu and Ihalr Hrat champagna
raldlf Wa lava youl Lova. Iha Thalpa.
(• M 17)
TA/0
•/I
S/1t:S/2»ati
MOt. Oaa. Hauaknacfit,
passport
identification
resunne photos
COOKIE U nua: Vap _ _
yaalarday. ap did tha flpamrif TKpnti
you. Lava, Cat
<• m 17)
l>WtW— Yau maan ao much lo itf - You
aiaan laughlar. happlnaaa and Ipva.
Happy (lata) Birthday Lava alwaya.
Donna.
_____^ (• M 17)
LAUMIC Walla Oaud lucfc on
You daums tfia baal. Do you
(• M 17)
', '..l;„
'4
osuc/o
MAIinPULLady
aOMPOha: You
f/i2ip
mpv% sfudi
ioa. 47f<M72.
150 kertkhoH hall 825-0611 n771
open man hi*B 30-4 30
call
#1111)
ICC Croam Spn^aaa— porm lo ACPIiMpr
your favorlta flavara A toppings for
Amy Karmn Cancar Fund. Sunday, May
23, 9:30-a:30. 2 aundaaa/fl.
(•M21)
*HIGH QUALITY
ariivt
of*
•aMcti— »
1t1 li«r«li*M«fiM
SSS.O««f assa
I »«•«*«•«
LCOAL ^raMama? Fmalagal
400 Karckhoff. 829-2Mt. (UCLA stu-
dants only.)
TO a
I -,
W<AT DOES A BRUfN
BEAR WEAR FOR ACTIVE
SPORTS?
aid app a wonda^ui
^_ . liw yaa mahas It hard
HiAP^V ftnnlsaraaii Coaatla. ThaalH
for ona baautlful yaar of lova and
happlnass. Lava always, Marlus
(6 M 17)
BABBIT • What's upT? Hava wa brokan
ypr? Haw about a dais - May 22nd
I kMaw a graat school ploytf W not how
a call? Ellhar way. I pronHaa no
It M 17}
entertainment
UCLA sweatshirttVlWitr
pantt. jogger's outfit, t-
•hirts. shorts, racing trunks.
sweat socks, and carries a
UCLA gym bag and beach
towel.
Bearwear.
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
aijM OUPUCATI
Wodnasday aftarnoons. Wild Whiat
Srldfa Club itSS Waaiwood Slvd.
47t.Mi.
UTtFUL
to
teipl
and waddings. Lun-
(TMtt)
for rent
iitjt
n^uM.
ftJ4)
churchservicee
AMaoWHEAO ppMp In ^ylpt araa.
•Jj^pd •. ita/S apya. $1id/7 daya.
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llbaa wiiiMii aHM.. v. mda waat a« San
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(HMtl)
, Mdg. Is
•chadulad for complatlon fall 1t7i.
A
to suH Call
Pavlman 9r Chuck Wright. CaldwaH
^-*-- Co.. (212) 274.ggii.
CAa Stamo—Hanaat KF 250 FM caa-
••tla with fW and rwd Eicallant condl-
Mon. fTf/paal ollar 47t-5t32
(10M21)
If s the Return of
1950's Pricesf-
You Cdn ord«r any of the many
UCLA class ring designs madp of
lewgfari stsinl^ft ttppl-and they
only cost
$49.95
Gpt Oelivpry in July-August.
ASUCLA Students Storp ppsrwar
B level Ackeman Union 825-7711
MOVING Sola • •' Danlah soM tISO.
drmchair S35. badroam aaf SSOO. 479-
no m SSI
0HfSSCaj»2 mirrors) -€'X3 X2 • f
drawaf^ HSaw cost tISO • will aaN
for 1100. Call 120- 1340.
n0M21)
N You'ra Qdng to B«
Juniors N«xt Ouart^r-
you can ord#r your cIms
ring now!
You'll get suminpr dalivpry and
you can wpmr your official class
ring for FsM Ousrtsr
ASUCLA Students Store
Come to Bearwesr. B levpl
Ackerman Union ^
WINCMAKINQ, totpwlng m^pnu A
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^rlta^Audlo Aeeoaoorloa. R.Opoi
(If M 17)
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478-0051
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SUtOiiER Jobs
ba dMa lo mlaa
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(10 M 21)
STUDENT - If boMca/iMali fpwprpi
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RIOINQ LESSONS
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48^4178.
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MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
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477.JfST. f7i-gisi.
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laarn to laal longar f2S-f242 3:Jf-
(10 M 17)
(10 OR)
DONT DELA Yl _
Book by Phorm. N«w Fliohts
To ^
Europp rS37»>)
•outh Ampnca (SSIS^I
^^_ Tho Oipnt (S4SS^)
^^9^ york (SiSt) Hawaii (SiSf )
Long duration and o/w f lights still
dvailablp Immodldto phono con
firmations Call collsct
WoslcooM ftludpnt Tropol ._..
AVCO CoRlpr 10S80 WNaMro
LAtttM 211/471 SSSi
•^•OOOER CHARTf RS
^^1 TO 12 WEEKS
I-WAV FLIOKTS IN EURORff
Juno 21 1 1
Juno2t 12
<JLino2S S
Juno 20 to
July 5 S
JMly 5 9
Julys 4
Jury It 4
S3
$429
I42t
$429
$42t
MOI !• up to
WCLA BMROPB CHARTBR SRECIALS
LA-RARlS-LA '"^ ^
^2!JWRfJjOE9 . CALL liO^
©ATE 999-7991 EV99 939-9728
^US. .FRAimcP'URT. ZURICM
HAWAII , . ,
LA-HONOtULU aws am mmT an
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MAZATLAN air A Ipdg fr flSSJf
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l.2Jw«M rourHftrip on TWA u |1ff.ig
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tlona...9ti*4loni FlifRta
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CLASSIFIED AD
trav#l
^OFEtftlOMAL CLUa
14W <WMtwotJ Biwd L A C« 90024
<2l3)«7t-ttf1/ (213) 477-1 1t2
TOC CHAirrCR FLIGHTS
TO EUROPE
(Lpts of Oth#rt)
TOC
L4«iS9 t^ift-y/ia ten
•153 « i«-t/24 42|
M22 3 •'iS-t^? iM
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L770C2 7'(».7/1t 3|»
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La7132 7/13-7/M 9M
7132 7/13.«/24 435
0717t 7/17-ii^i3 4g.
•/X»-»07 404
•/3l-«/20 97t
•/04-10/lt 440
•/2t-tO/t.1 370
I12S Ovposit r«quir«d p«r i^rton.
Ltmllvd ipti Booli now Ptaas* tryj
and bsoii tO days prior to
IRAN
Ar« you going to irmr tMt aummwr?
Daily 74; Flights
Contact
Amtrl Tour 4 Travel Sorvic*
6725 SortMt Blvd No 419
Hollywood. CA 9002a
T«! 466 52S9
l»1
eUNo^— I
I. L.A.
11M7
rot-
tt¥ing ihm
fO' f*
^■■^HTcRS (partial listings)
Oy«f 300 flight* A data* w>th daparturat
from April if>fu OctoOar slay 2 to 2i «»aatia
^roM/Ma. Oalas Waaas^rtea'*
■ ■ _, .. Ta .
£ UM* AH 7/03-4/28 14 4ai
^2 ("O** *^ 7/04 10/09 • 449
2^S JX 7/13-9/24 19 499
m»- *" 7/19-9^ 9 499
»g JM 7/27.%/07 4m
79)949-9/12 tl 499
91 7/Q9-9/12 19 ,499
92 7/94-9^ • \tn
^ 93 7/94-9/04 9 419
Q !.. 94 7/24,-9^12 7 4i9
Q. 97 9/03-9/09 9% 41t
^3 99 9/0^-9/24
LAJt- A6 7/09-9/iO
= Aii9 CM 7/14-9^10
h- LAX- Bj 9/99-9^9e
FMA E; 7/99-9/JO
jjt 7/17-9/13
tn 7/17-9/29
LAI- kJ 7/01-9/01
7/09-10/09
I ^^ paw
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OfFiCIAL UCLA
Charter Flight Service
Over 1000 flights to Europe this
Summer • Discounted Student
flights to Europe • Charters ti
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Faculty discounts on car purchas
es rentals and lea«99 • Study
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fjf cements • Mini Tours • Hotel
Accomodation • Hostel Intorma
lion • International Student ID
cards • fr99 travel counseling •
EXPO Travel Library
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING?
CO
asocia/^
- rman Unton A 213 wit»^ FxTr
*v4ondav ' 10*4 8
HAWAII 1 42«»aa4is
NYC 3«raaiis
ORIENT Many 0a«at rrom499
Conlaci ASTrA for ovar 200 olhar fl.ghit
• 't^ daparturaa from L A San f rancisco
Chicago Boston Naw Vorh Washington DC
Chsrtar rag raqu«fa 96 (tay advanca boonma
pt,r^ s.,^t^• — y^ tncraaia
SUPER AIRFARES
BiCEUtLUHiAL. iLMau^M»L uua^aa
^OUTH. Europa 1-yr •-. 1rom9907
APEX ,'? 4S gOOayadv boo* Eur fromS440
TAHITI SUPER DEAL tjrs
- OHOER NOW
TRAIN * FERRY TICKETS. CARS.,
CAMPER RENTALS. RAILPASSEs|
INTRA-EUROPEAN STUDENT
CHARTERS
SPECIAL CRUISE OFFER
I OP Itahs ,ncl air form LA » n.taMiam. irar. ,
? w* air aRtansion tromSroo
f )••
TOURS
TALV 15 days .^
-^N PAP AM8 16(Sm...'. r.. iSt
MEXICO t days ^ tits
HAWAII 8 days $347
BICENTENNIAL 9 days j$tm
[NEW YOAK CITY 9 day* $tm
Many othars long 9 short btjtfgat 9 dt'uaa
I On* Mop aanptea for awvMHtas Imirs. cru*«»«
'»oiait c^fs iswssdi 9 iiilsiwaiaiiaHicn^tino
I PSA FMEE COUM9CLING
intwini ftasarvationt TicSat DaMvary
OPEN M f 10 « ALL YIAP
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tric9R StMB9Bt Tnwl AssKiati«p|
1% 90024. patir fKLk. [gl3| 471^411
tutoring
OUITAM I 1499111 K _
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Flamonco. mt4 pap«ter. ttt^Ml
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•• UCLA _
Oomrmnt—^ rasufia 47t-S|7i.
^«i,G4«DANCE CENTER
3017 Santa Ifofiica B»«d
In
Mmnia Monica
_ 1
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motn
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^MALI aHaia mm Utt aptHiMi
LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION
TEST PREPARATION
Hf cl
CMPfttT-iaetwMcai typin^-i
tic-(hoaos. diasartaliofvs. ^olis-days
935 3492 oaomnfs 2M-20t4 Cliano«a
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famla CrodonHal Indivldwal. amall
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*INC CO
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Froa tstomatas
PROPf SIGNAL COLLEOff TVIUNC
•PfciALiir
Term paaors. Thasis Oissanations
Foaturas-^oaaign Languages ftciancas.
Math TaMas Otagrsms Muatc CdHma
CounseMng. Xofostng. PnnNng. Btni
^ imaem Watas aaa.aiat
apt WtA I1M4I0 Pfo«ar
typing
STATISTICAL. FAST. OMMOAsS
DAYS A WUK. MANY TYPf
TYPtNO— AM kIndB Faal ....„
curate 75t/pg iBit Saloc'irlc. MM-
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la S:00 pm.
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or arhalovor. Faat and
37B0 or 92t-1200.
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lumianod. Juno la Sapt. BSan ai-2ja2
11 pm
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apt unfumishod
1/2 PEOPLE far S MnH. TH _..
Luaurloua - Jum 20 lo A«^. IS llSi par
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appaintmenl
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SUMMER Rataa. Spacla«ii^a*nglaa.
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•12 Vetoraa Ave. H: Wllahire 47S-
—"^ AaaNaMaS^I.
MIMUTSS fram UCLAf Slnglaa. lar-
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lar the summer 2 .^-
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1121 312-S413
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471-2121.
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71S7iarlraaa^ifi.ai.. ^^ ^
TYPING by LIZ - ISM SELECTRIC N.
CHOICE TYPE FACE - Term Paporm.
rhosos. NIanuscrlpts. FloM Studies^
EdItMg ICREENPLAY SPECIALIST
(near Griffith Parli) M2-10ai
f3ft J 9\
WAUCTOMCLA
Spacioua SacHalcrs. Sii.,
1 1 2 iadroo^ Apir
10991 Strathmore Pod. alavator*
9aciirtty garage Also with
SMCIAL S4IMMR RATES
01911 lair Tarmoa 4
540 Oianrock 543 U
471^463-510-511 Landlmr 477-
mom *?
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(21M17)
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diaaortatlona. reaumoi. lotlara. Eait
9paSM9/franMaar. Maai ci
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unftirniahad
FURNISHED 1 bedroom apartment
Sra ntwaad AaaM 9-l«
■21-7142 after 4
121 M SSI
Or.472-11SaL
ft7Mtn
JOS Applicants AutomaHc tellers am
cheaper quicker aiHl ellminale types
Pauley - Technical Typmg Ser^dce WLA,
4775545.
1221 SPACIOUS 2
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Shag.
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apt. In Seworly Hills Eaac lacalian
• min hwn UCLA. Wall to S.H
S27S/ma Cal 274-2111.
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(STMSl)
PROPEISIONAL Typaig. IMS tiaclHt.
educational, scientific, other. Don't
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accurate typaig
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1143- 12th siNHN, Sam
313-3721 ar 1SS4K
' ^ (SSM271
FLASH Fingers Secretarial Service
Eicellent work. Prompt attention
pick-up A del Ifnoedad 922-3111/
OWN large.
lo UCLA ^, ^_
Quiet: nor near h«ls Aaallabi^ J^^^
1190 Glenn: 473-0135
(21 M 21)
MEED Female roommate, preferably
^■"^-ale atuaenl or senior Seaerly Qlen
Eiimlati. 112-2571,
(S1M21)
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(21 M 21)
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121-7472
(25 0TR)
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The Dulnvortli Goyi best the Bukich Bluci. 2^-
13 IB Iht SMMMil Spring footbsil fnae at Drake
Stadiuni last Saturday afternoon, but tke outcome
■* "^"^-.^^^""^ ^^^^^ ^*^ Donahue
^^*-^ P^J** **Oodcr wraps** ihowing only the
veer running plays aad very little of the
improved fmtmg offeose. Daoahue did not want to
»howopening opponent Arizona Suic any of ''new
.i.i....^** xf^i hjiyp ^^^ inicrtcd both offensively
fensively.
did umttil oa Saturday
crop of young playera. who had the
to prove their ability since the seniors were on the
sidelines. The leniors have been here for four years
and I have been here for the last four yean,** laid
Donahue. **! know what they can or can't do and
with five new amiunt coaches, it is important for
them to bt oWd to loot and evaluate the younger
players.**
Spring Practice went very well in Donahues mind
aad he was especially happy with the final week
The kau week of Spring Practice was the most
productive We progressed more as a team in the last
four or five days than in the first three weeks * Mod
Donahue. "It ii eaoourafiag when a team finishes
itroog. because usually a team doc^ the opposite and
gets bored at the end of the spring **
If there wai a lUr in the Spring Game, it had to
be lenior quarterback Jeff Dankworth with kicker
Frank Corral running a cloie lecond Dankworth
played only in the first half and directed his team le
tfse touchdowns and a field goal.
In fact it was Dankworth who scored both of his
team's first half touchdowns On his first series^ he
marched his team 60 yardi m 16 phqw, iconng on i
two-yard keepar around the left side After getting
the ball back, Dankworth drove his team into field
goai position, where walk-on Larry Frank HMfttd a
39-yarder for a 9^ lead.
After quartcitaSk Steve Bukich directed hii team
to a two-vard toMcMown run by Theolii Brown,^
Dankworth, the moit impremve runner ui the same
look osor again _
la the 60 yard dnve. he eompkted two poHB aad
ISO for all but two of the yardi ouide on the ground
On the dnve he had runs of 12, four, e«^t and five
yaidi to bnng the ball to the Bhiei* 23-yard Unf . Ob
a veer opiioB pky to the left oo a third down aad
lei! yardi to fo muauon, Daakworth ipnnted to iIk
ten-yard hue And then cut back away from three
••c^Jcn tOMmplcte a 23-yard touchdown run.
~ The DaakwuuU tann nretched its r6-7 halftiine~
lead to 23-7 when Sanu Monica High School walk
on quarterback Mike McKay found tight end Don
Pedcrson behind the secondary for a 23-yard
touchdown pass.
The lead swelled to 29-7 when inside linebacker
Jerrv Robimon made the defensive play ol the game
Robinson cut in fruot of receiver Homer Butler to
intercept a Bukich pass and sprinted down the right
sidelines for the 5§-yard touchdown
Brown was* the sparkplug on the final score of the
aie. First he found receiver Mike Freeman with a
32-yard pass on the halfback option play After Lee
Smith rushed the ball to the one. Brown piled his
way up ^ the middle for the icore
Corral displayed the stroof leg that everyone
claimed he had He averag^ 45'^ards a punt
(discounting the one he had blocked when a plaver
milled a blocking assignment) and had 63 and 53
yard boots "I had an 83 yard punt in junior
coHefc," said Corral, who averaged over 45 yards a
^unt last year at Riverside Junior College
Even though Corral did not get to place kick in
the game other than extra poinu, he had kicks in
warmups that carried at least 20 yards past the goal
posts on a 40-yard field goal attempt "I kicked a 55
yard field goal last year and 1 made eight kicks 50
yards or longer,** added Corral
One interested Bruin spectator was last year's
in spring game
liUBrterhBcfc John Sciarra. who walchsd Dankworth
look a lot Kke him ^Jeff played real weU, wuh a lot
ai ooaikknce.** sajd Scuma. **He has always hMi a
good quarterback ancc he has been here, but now he
looks a lot stronger and looked great on the
touchdown rua.**
Daaohuc indicated after the gaaK that it ii itill
doK between Dankworth and Bukich aad he eapocts
to use both this isBBoa.
**! know that both Jeff aad I mn going to plmy
illr* ^^ ■••^^L^""**^'' ***^ Bukich **! feh I did
tar hffsi I roaid loda). hut 4 wai hmned^hr-fhr^
oasasc hocause we did not want to show anything **
Dankworth said. ^Basically I think that the puoiic
hkes to see the competition between Steve and I. rm
not thinking about beating out Steve, hut rather
about m> own consistency. Either of us can do the
job at quarterback because what is imporum is
developing things as a team.**
Defensively the Bruins did very few stunts, but one
thing became clear Sieve let rick has earned the
number one nose guard spot coming out oi spring
drills ''Steve has had an excellent spring practice lor
us and o\cr the 20 day penod he has had as good as
a performance as anyone on our football team.** said
Donahue.
Donahue was also impressed with the play of
Robinson and inside linebacker Brad Vassar
Donahue did utiii/c a halfback option posi aad a
flanker reverse otpion pass **Both oi those plavs arc
m our offense.** said Donahue. *^wantcd to jive
Arizona State a chaaoc to see it. so they would have
something else to think about in our offense "
Overall the offense moved the ball effectively,
with feu mistakes 1 here were onl> three turnovers,
but none c^me in the first half The running attack
Innhed jeod mside. wuh Brown and Smith pihng up
yardage Dankworth was the leading, rusher m the
game with 94 yards, which Bukich tied Hrov^n K>r
second with 54 vards
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The miracle of^Sawtelle Field
Mkacki do iMpficii
Trailiei ^-4 « the kMttom of the
nmth iMH^ the UCLA Bruint rmihti
for three runt to ditet USQ 7-4, aad
win the Califomk latefcoUegiate iMe-
hell Afltociation title Saturday aftcr-
Boon hcfore oner 1,600 fans at Saw-
latte Fid4
Irian Vifetli*! run Kohnf langle with
two ouu set off a celebraiion on the
Md which lasted for more t
While
the fam
in the
bleachers chanted "We're number one
and those parted behind the outfield
fence honked their hori^, the Bruin
phiyers went absolutely nuts
Before it was over, head coach Gary
Adams and assisunts Glenn Mickens
tad Mike Gerakos each had a free
shower, courtesy of the pkyeri. They
aisp had a beer shampoo.
The comeback, which has to rank
among the greatest in school history,
wiped out the Trojans after they had
yc so close to stealing the CIBA title
from the Bruins.
UCLA needed just one win in the
7 series while USC had to sweep. The
Trojans won the first two fames, 6-3
aad 7-3, and buih a 6-3 lead afainst Ed
^ Cowan, who ftnished the game despite
allowing 15 httt.
The senior righthander improved his
laoard to 10-2 and sometimes irrmrt
te he pitching on guts alone He
stranded 15 Trojans on the base palte
aad was able to get out of a basM
•^ leaded, one out situation in the ninth
inmng to set the stafe for the dramatic
comeback.
Freshman right fielder Jim Auten
Harted the historic rally with a amg^
to left field and Larry Silver pinch ran
for him. Raymond Townsend, who had
hccnthe objea of many Trojan insults,
iallawed with a single to center, send-
ing Silver to second.
USC coach Rod Dcdeaux then made
-a pitching chaise, bhngmg in John
«canclli, who had beaten the Bruins
two nights earlier.
Dennis Delany, who had homered in
the seventh to bring the Bruins to
within two runs, was unahk to
sacrifice, forcing Silver at third. Dave
Penniall then grounded one to the hole
at short, but Doug Stokke was able to
fordc Townsend at third.
IJCLA was done — or so it seemed.
The Troian band had already played
•naps" and the USC fans were ready to
celebrate the last eat
It never came.
l»hby DaUas walked to load the
haics and then Adams became a
genius Tom Parma, who had run for
Dave Baker, was due up but Adams *
chose to go with Steve Spliu. The
lefthaaiid freshman had been up just
14 tines aU season aad had mif three
The dm pilch was a ball and Sphtt
looked bad swinging at the secaad
pitch But he looked great on the aeat
one, Uniog it to center fiekl far a
•^*. Dekny soasad aaaily and Pen-
aaul slid under the Ug to tie the gaaa
The stands went wild.
Dallas had moved to third on the
phQT and raced home whaaVlsalli, who
^^m^ mto the jMBt-ia the top of
the laaiaf (Ken Gaylord had been run
for), hit Racanelli*s firu pitch into left
for the title winner.
AdaaM, who was coaching third
base, began jumping up aad down. He
shook someone*s hand outside the
Trojan dugout and then took off to
center field. His team fottawed him as
he ran around the outfield like an
Olympic winner uking his victory lap.
"i JMt had to run,- AdaaM would
say later **! had all that energy locked
up and 1 just had to run. I did the
same thing when I was at Irvine
(Adams won two Division 11 n^t ir^^i^f
titles while at UC Irvine).-
For the Bruins, it was vindication.
After loMQg the first two games, most
everyone, it seeaMd, figured they would
lose the third. Everyone, Slait is, cuocpl
Adams and his players.
*Tve said all along that nothing
worthwhile fvcr comes easy and that
you have to keep the faith,** Adaav
said. -You work hard and you don't
quit This team didn*t quit. We was it
the Bruin way.**
In their post game meeting, one
Brum player said, -I told you there
were 27 innings of baseball this week-
end."
••Yeah,** Adams replied, **and we got
thi-m in the 27th.** That response
brought more celebrating from the
Bruin players.
The key to that 27th inning wa4
Splitt, a freshman from San T>iego who
had not played in a league game before
Satufday In fact, he probably would
hpt have suited up if the game hmd
hecn a^inst another league rival. The
piiyer hmit of 21 is suspended against
*^natural rivals."
**In the seventh inning, I went over
and Ulked to Steve,** Adams said. **l
told him it was gonna come down to
the end and that he would be hitting.
"I talked with him just befoie he
went up there. I told him he has a
beautiful swing but that he has a
tendency to pull his head off the ball. I
told him to give me that jaod swip^
to keep his head in and to pretend he
was playing for the JV*s.
"I told him he always hits for the
JVs.**
This time he hit for the varsity, tying
the gant* and^ ^ ^ .^
Viselli, who had not pkyed 7n the
series until going to first base in the
top of the ninth inning.
"I talked to Brian in the seventh
In fact, I went right from Steve to
I told him he was gonna get the
winning hit,** Adams recalled
"Before he went up there 1 said.
This is a pressure situation, more for
them than it is for you,* 1 told him they
would try to get the ball over the first
pitch and to loak for it.
-When we saw each other in the
outfield, he looked at me and said.
*They gave me the first pitch.* **
With the victory, the Bruins won
their first leafMe title since 1969 and
will most likely advance to the phiyoffs
which will prohaWy be held the last
weekend of May The CIBA winner is
not an **automatic qualifier** but it
seems unlikely the Bruins will be
paased up when filling the tournament
brackets.
A conference call between the sin
members of the Division I tournament
oapiMiMws^i
committee tt s|j;|ieduled for 8 am today
and some of the spots will be filled
during that caU. The final assignments
will be made one week from todl^.
But for the moment, no oiie was
worrying about what happens next,
only about what had just happened'
Finally, the Bruins had beaten USC
when It counted and oh, had it count-
ed.
**lt was ^lire the rabbit and the
carrot." one Bruin remarked "Wc kept
teasing them with it, pulling it back
and teasing them ii^fim. They got so
daee and then we just pulled it away."
Ifs doubtful It was piMHMd that way
the whole time but the Bruins didn't
»cem to care. They had kept the faith
and played the Brum way. according to
Adams, who had told his team the
night before to keep playing, that they
would get some breaks and that no-
thing wonhwhile ever caaies easy.
It didn*t come easy Saturday after-
noon but a turned out to be worth-
while.
i
Ucla
XCVIII,
Bruin
Uwiwirtli of CaMonria. Lm
McCormack edges Taylor by 87
Calls victory "a mandate of the people"
y 14. 1176
ly SaBy G
DB Stair WfiNr
Meg McCormack garnered 51.3 per cent
of the vou to narrowly defeat Scott Ta|iar
in this week*s student body presidential run-
off election. Taylor received 1445 vota (48 4
per cent) to McComiack*s 1538 vaiaa.
"It was aerve wsaokiag but I think
it was a mandate of the people,** said
McCormack of her 87 vote victory. She
added that she wanted to eipebaBy thank
"all the people who worked in my campaM**
aad "all the paapk who voted for me/ they
were marvelous.
^ ia ocher votiag Jim Rosen^got 1320 votes
(54.4 per cent) to beeaaK next year's Student
Welfare Commisjioaei, 3am L^y. RiHa'k^
opponent, received 1 104 votes (45.5 per
Gary Collister soundly defeated Chris
Myers in the race for administrative vioe-
presidem by a vou of 1446 (64.7 per cent)
to 787 (35.2 per cent).
McCormack*s ftm action will be to -get
together** with next year*s council and "form
a solid working body.**
Td like to appoim a Fiaapri Committee
^"^n— " nght away," McCormack said,
*aad oar fu^t retreat will be for onenution
io we can start working together dosely.**
After organizing the new council Mc-
Coramck wanu represcnutivcs of campus
special interest grojups to participate in
hadgeury planning McCormack also hopes
•*to incorporate a Jot of Sceifs (Tavlor)
ideas" in her administration.
"1 think a kM of food issues were raised in
this campaipi," McCormack said, ^and there
were jwo really good, really viable caadi-
t
Although this year's stadent body
■it, LndMf Coaaer, did not make an
endoMvat lie feh that "she (hioCormack)
>• HMurp aad will pick up the oUim duties
qaickly ThCTes a great deal to learn aad a
latof lisaas statewide aad at the university
Itart that doa*t wait for the aew president to
be eladed.**
CoMCT said that he could not make an
c«^orietncnt because he "liked both Mca
(McCormack) aad Scau (Taylor) very
"ru be happy to help her (McCormack) m
»ny way I can in the next ttw weeks,**
Conner added. McCormack said sha waald
he ia to see Conner today.
Others receiviag aai« as write in candi-
dates for 4he three offices were Jimmy
Carter, Swami X, Joe Namath, Grep
Motorcycle, Rocky Grabonowttz, Richard
Nixon. Attilla De Hun and fifty two others.
The announcement of the election lesuhs
was made before a "crowd" of fifteen people
in the KerckhofT flail third Qoor hallway.
None of the candida;e)» were present for the
unusually early returns at 6:30 pm but were
quickly conucted by campaign workers.
Scot^ Taylor was anavailable for comment
t
•
h h
svMne
to be iBslBd on didran
here befoiB national ue
By Jha PeHi
OB Stair Wiiiar ' ■ _
T«is aa the **fwiae flu" vims will be performed oa •
childrte ef various aaes at the departmem of peduitncs here.
Claiin *basic conceptual conflicts*
SCA, Reg Fee swap charges
aooo^iai »<> ^ ICcnneth Boyer. a researcher in Infectious
■y F
DB
to
at
gram planning by the Regis
tratioa Fee CaOMnittec. mem-
SCA members and charged the
department with poor planning
Sd m wake of a 1974-1975 pro-
grarnnitng deficit this year of
SKW.OOO
The Reg Fee Committee, in
fntlnwiag Frendent Ford*s decision to vaocinau the
catirc coomry agauist a swine flu epidemic, the peduitncs
department here, headed by Dr James Cherry, was chosen
to develop dosafe faidalBaes for children.
Doctors will be asked to perform three functioas:
— teat a vaociae on children in age groups oi six-ien,
three-five, aad six months-two years, first testing the older
children: ^■^
—develop a close surveillance of influenza virus on
patienu entering the hospiul here, especially slaiaaiB with
respiratory diseases, aad:
—keep nuaierical ubs of hospiul deaths and ciaic visiu
for respiratory ailBHais.
Hare hi haaMM
**We*re puttiag our ears to the fround to see how oMich
inflaena is around," Dr. Boyer said.
**Swine Flu," a harmful, contagious, influenxa virus
originating in pigs, -had very rarely been found in humans.
bers of the Departasent of Fine its budget recommendstion
Aru Productions (DFAP) aad had charfed DFAP with ooor
the Student Committee for the
saying that fiscal
Artt (SCA) have charged the laaponsibility can^worh with
Reg Fee Committee with a good planning,
basic -lack of iiadaniindmg At 'the Registration Fee
for the aru.- Committees budget retreat
^Reg Fee Committees recom- .^foeently. BiN Cormier, s com-
meadatioas to Chaacellor mittee member, said. "We can-
Charles E Young included not tolerate the present deficit
faadiag DFAP with approx- position of DFAP "
imately $332,i60, a $24,000 Pauhne Brackeen. chatrwo-
redaeiiaa over tu present bud- man of the Reg Fee Comma-
frt of 1356,000 The Commit- tee. said. **We are working
tee also recommended alio- from s steady-state hadfst. We
cattng SCA $15,000. which are really not givti^ any in-
coaetitutes a $10,000 re- creases ualsM they are totally
duction of SCA*B reaaesiad airiissij o«er last years ai-
ming deficii of $200,000 or
$100,000. it iust adds to the
problem DFAP, therefore, is
$500,000 below ^real-e^n,""
r aeaNfaa added .
As to funding for SCA. Pas-
laqua said. *We coasidered
$85,000 an increase because of
a iupposed 25 per cent pro-
granimtttg cut by DFAP and
an increase in student ticket
prices from $4 to $2 next year.
Ihis will enable more student
tickets to be offered, and free
more money for. SCA pro-
ductions.**
Ike/ek. however,
-We never have the
tunity to sell as many tickets as
as we would hke In fact, as
ticket prices increase. SCA
hays kis t«:kcU now thaa m
the
I
/
Pebbles Taylor, a DFAP In additioa to the
administrator, said, -The mem- request cut and the _
bers oa Reg Fee doa*t seem to meat charges, basic coaoentaal
he McfMed ar kaowMgeahle caaOhas over the deficii haw
la the arts. Uafenaaetely. Reg also arisen between the com-
Fee • a piiniiiil pasaiaa, yoa aatiee aad DFAP-SCA.
get appoiated hy the Chea- Accilfdiag to Allan Feld
c^Uff or the studeat body sleia, co-chainaaa of SCA, -|t
pfcaiiiiit*' SCA aad DFAP are showing a
The charges afeiasi the Reg profit, thaa they aie aoi doiag
Fee Committee steaaaed from their job. For DFAP to he
several meetings this year that doH^ a fodd job. h shaaM
a Reg Fee suh^oaaunittee caa- shaar a deficit -
damad with bFAP and SCA However. Paehi^aa. Reg Fee
amaihees ia dpiermiaiaa the -CaaaaBiet
ifH^mi hadiM |i ■! of DTAP
^niMdiae to GaaiB Raaek. -The aMaey thai wc pte to
chairman af SCA, "I had a DFAP is lor administrative
faafeqg that they had aliaady coats oaly This ceamisaMs a
ande up their mir * ft was deficit peeHien already. I think
like talhu^ to a hsaeh wall" thif Is whallhev (DFAPldan't
Originally in 1970. SC A was
$60.aieB. Four years ago
an increase of $25,000 was
to SCA specifically to
the SI ptioe af stu-
dent tickets According to
Re/ek. there has been a
$30jeO iaerease in the caM af
tichets aad SCA has aol re-
I
^ A
V.
-If we waat sa
ply aew ptagramaa^e "t free
aad lower prices for more
fund
la Taylar. DFAP
. hegaa raitaig as
pragfamming for next year, la-
cludiag much of its \ocal.
recital .and conteaMorarv
-^
9^
the DFAP and -Whea they Taa a
fgnes* Ni
ai
US Nlil* ii «
7JiUUi«iM|Mtaltli4
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
IM ut ship your personal •tt«ctt home \N% art apaciaiittt m
ntamational packaging and shipping Wa ai«io <faM appliancat for 220 voMi
PACIFIC-KING 121* Wast tlh St., La« Angalas 17
4a2-tM2
Gregory reaches New Mexico
Leaves UCLA banner as
token of his appreciation
DATSUN
"Acres of Datsuns
ff
Student, ficutty, and altmrtni
fleet discounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
My Maiifl Levlnc
mmi Joe Yoccnt
DB Stair Wrttm
Reaching ihk Arizona- New
Mexico border during ht&
cross-country food run. Dick
Gregory teft s t^l.A iMMnsr
hanging outside of a motel. It
was a token of his appreciation
for the UCLA students who
came to hear him speak the
day before he left, according to
John Whitehead, Grefory's
publicity director.
Gregory begsn hit Bicen-
tennial run from Lol Anfeks
City H»li^4MS April 11 in MU
effort to establish s hufiger
fund and *^o raiac the con-
-r'^^Hfer
Franz Hall
1 1 78
Sat. 9:30-
5:30
Sun 9:30-
Z:30
Waakand
Saminar
Saturday
ihd Sunday
May 15-1lf,
497i
is SCIENCE CATCHING UP with MAGIC?
PARANORMAL PHENOMENA
l^rfrogrom Taik'f»rc«
apaaiiHif at UCLA
lood run.
U
Gripping, suspensef ul,
thoroughly satisfying."
KcxaacDsj
miNEPHESKNTSIDr
PATTY HEARST
Authentic replica of
FBI "wanted" flyer
—^ a real collector's
item. Send $3 plus
25 cents handling
to: FLYERS. P.O.
Box 30352 (303 Rot
sarjb), Sante Bar-
bara. Ca. 93105.
The Guidance Center
3017 Sanu Monica Bivd
in Santa Monica
Uw SdMiol AdniMiaa
Teat prtparatioa
20 Inr. count tiaris June if for
July 24 test ~ also
GMAT course starts June 5 (or
July 10 test
- SPEED REAUINCi course
starts Junc^^lk _..^-
— Career Guidance
•2f-4429
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(213)477-9«afort7«4aii
y^
l*vd of the MHtet
to My that fpod it a hasic
nght,** af mfantd in the Dtul^
Brum on that; date.
Gregory has ftinoe run more
than 641 miks of the 3.000-
mile journey to New York,
croMing the Arizona-New
Mexico horder at 4:05 am last
Friday.
Running with Gregory o^.
Friday was E. Gordon Brooks,
gfl Ohio schoolteacher whii
currently hoW» the Guinness
Book record for running from
Lot Aofeici to New York.
Brookf laid that he hehevet
Gregory can break the world
record for running acrots the
United States without eating
solid food. Gregory's diet con-
sists of vegetable and fruit
juices aad an "^organic mix,**
according to Whitehead.
Several Indian groups have
also stopped Gregory along his
Arizona route, wanting to do-
nate to his hunger fund.
Whitehead said.
Gregory is averaging 6.2
miles per hour, surpassing his
anticipated 6.0 mph, said
Whitehead. The toughest part
of the trip so far came in the
Salt River Gorge of central
Anzona, a stretch that reaches
7,000 feet and is six miles up
and six miles down **Hc aver-
aged an amazing 6.6 mph,"
Whitehead added.
Muhammed All f|ew to
Phoenix after his fight with
Jimmy Young to run with
Gregory for a few days. He
hi\d not yet joined Gregory as
of last Fnday, but was ex-
pected to do so at any time.
Following the fight, Ali said
''Dick Gregory is a better man
than i am,** quoted Whitehead
Av^^Lrv^^. t^^
-
FiDOiocRj tor
Gilkes article
TW DaUy Brum wisim to
apdoglie for ranarks BMi4e
km UK April 3$ kmm re-
gar^iig use track star
koBtelaad, tlie aafioa of
GayaM.
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Voluma XCVtII, Numtjar 30
Fnday. May 14. 1976
\y during ffw
afi^av-
Sr th9 A8UCLA
sr «*•
M9UCLA G9mmmmi99itnn9 %mf^-
Future of VJooden Center at stake
Student referendum finalized
,>..•
By Rokart W
Dl Stall WiilOT
ling of a student
referendum deciding the
eaistcwcc of the new S8,000,000
Mmi Wooden Sports and
Recreation Center was finally
agreed upon by Chancellor
CJMUias £ , Yoang aad
kaianced by titt aa-
sire of wfeielius of the Capital
Outlay Task Force (COTF)
and student government,
warning, as one mcwber put it.
**to build the center, but not be
taken by the Adminiairation in
the procas^,**
Furthermore, the Sports and
tBentoefs oi anMCfit govam* nas become sooet
.'z?^f
oieiit.
If the referendum passes and
the Center is constructed it will
be partially financed by an
increase in registration fees.
The rest of the financing will
come from money raised by
Young from private sources.
The meeting held Wednas-
day afternoon between Young.
Vice ChMicellor Elw'in V.
Svanson, Charles Snnd brook
of the ^Wanning Office and 12
members oi student govern-
ment culminated nearly two
months of negotiation between
student government and the
Administration over the
referendum
Young*s destre to construct a
jpports and recreation center
hing
rallying point within
government. **We should hai«
the ability to put our Board of
Control where we think it
belongs in pur association,**
said William Cormier (GSA
first vice-president) at the
meeting. .
This sentiment, to be able to
reorganize ASUCLA without
the possibility of a X^hancel-
lorial veto, nras also expreisad
by several undergraduate stu-
dent government members.
Don Lesser. SLC Fmaiicial
Supports Commissioner and
likewise a member of the con-
ference committee that met
with the ChnnocHor, said tlait^
"T his IS 6nt of the few chaiF
ces we have to negotiate from
Chancellor Young drew the winners of the blood dnve
swaapaukes this week. The following are the winners and
their prizes Bruoe Pebr, a PSA pass to the Bay Area,
Bradley Binder. Walden Lim. Dave Farabee. Alvin Wong,
Mary Donnelly and Mary Nepo, dinners at the All
Amencan Burger: Darrow Weiss, dinner at the Old World
RaMMMant; Laura Kirtz. luncheon at La Barbera*s Resuu-
rant. Jim Louderback, dinner at Alice's Resinasant; Leslie
Suzukamo. dinner at the Old Venice Noodle Company;
Roger Wiley, dinner at the Troubadour; George Anurasian,
dinner at the Hungry Tiger; Rand SchaaL Casey's Bar, and
Susan Getz. the Charthonae.
a position of joU strength.
*^lf apc^^^df^ tiMK kinds of
concerns ( regarding reorgani-
zation) in this referenduai^
then the Chancellor almost has
lo sit lip and Usten. The CiMn-
is asking the stndsnti far
sum o( aaaaey and
tke studenu should get all they
legal
to a
pro-
4»oi limited to the present stu-
dent government Early last
week a "Statement of Aulo^
nomy for ASUCLA" wiw
signed by four of the eight
candidates for undergraduate
stndmt body president, in-
doding the two candidates that
made it to the runoffs*
The statement reads in part,
That ASUCLA is not .. an
agent of the Univernty and
that any negotiations or posi-
tive actions that must be taken
to clearly establish that there
are both vital and intrinsic to
the very premise of student
government on this campus."
Tha Chancellor's reaction to
^tle "nuslng of the **reofiinl-~
aation issue" at the Wadafidny
meeting was guarded; **1 raniy
don't know what 1 would do in
that case Vm going to have to
talk this over with my (pre-
sumably the University's)
counaai**
However, both sides
now agreed. in substance
list of "understandings"
viso4 and conditions under
which funding and construc-
tion of the Center can take
place if the referendum is
passed.
The list of conditions is a
lengthy one: the formation of a
mainly student^comprised
Board of Governors to ad-
minisler the building aad
hmitmg the use of indenture
fee money solely to the con-
struction of the center, not to
any other project (such as
remodeling of Mac B)
Also agreed to at the
meeting was the form that
these "ttndatitaaiings" would
take One pprt will be a letter
frodi Chancellor Young to
both student governments out-
lining the Administration's
committments Another section
will be a joint resolution
passed by thr Student Legis-
lative Council (SLC) and the
Graduate Student Asaaaiation
(GSA) authohzing the refer-
endum and predicated on the
conditions contained in the
Chancellor's letter. Lastly will
be the referendum itself, which
the studems will probably vote
on during the ninth week of
this^q
Insanely tunny
"sStr
aaaaas ana niavaiaai.
PLAVBOV MAOAfINC
JOIN THE LAUGHTER EVERYWHERE
47371
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TS4Ht
J
Volunteer Program At
Ingleside Mental Health Center
The Urvited Veterans Aggociation Ig gponsoring a.
new volunteer program available for all gtudents to
help in a "big brother and/or big sigtar'* aarvice at
Ingleside Mental Health Center
Students will be invited to visit individual patients
on a regular basis vvaekdays (late afternoons and
early evenings) and/or waekendt (all day). The
program allows for aptivltlfg such as football,
tennis. basabaM Bind m some caaaran 8-hour pagg
away from the institution on informal rap aaaalona.
T^ program la initialed to help assist juveniles at
the institution in a rehabilitation project. There are
unlimited possibilities In the opportunities to help
thaaa young people — ages 10 through 18
They need the examples of Individuals who are
not Involved in the staff at the institution. This
enables them to interact with people other than on a
clinical basis.
Those Interested in this program should M^tac^
J. Martin Furtak. Benefits Chairman of the UVA by
calling •2S-1iM or stop by Room 325 Kerckhoff
Hall
MAHDARIN
CHINESE DINNERS
11829 Wilshire BK/d. W.L A. near Wcatgatc
Open 7 days tiB mtdntght 477-6514
I
I
1
?i
Hillel Grad Group
prwntt a
Sunday Brunch
May 16 11 am
laaturir>g a discussion on
Human Sexuality
with
Dr Anna Heinrich
who will dtacusa recant advanaas m our uniiaigliBiii^ing of ^ummn SaKuaftity
NP\ iMMar in PsyaHology OagI at UCLA
^tirm $1 7$ Mon mwaiisara; 13.00
474-1531
900 Hiigard
tato*i
t
.1
.->^,
mt
^P"
V
mm
Thit Organle
of
MofKtoy Only
from 9 p.m.
CLARE FISCHER
Cafe Danssa
11533 W. Pico - 3 Block West of
^ the San Diego Fwy.
s
PbrsMng Square raly for ERA tOMrrow
The Uni Afrirt Coftliuon lioir Uie EUA alfaou working
woamn; Liadft Furfutoii, trooi
the National Conference of
Black Lawyers aad Vicki litcd.
-- i
I
• • •
THE SHOW THArS
SHOCtCiMG THE CHITICSI
at:
fni flpl^fr TMUni
(on thaalfa row)
7456 MalMaa Am.
vVOTi r miiywooo
Paftofifianoas
Wad through Sal.
8iX) P.M.
SMtat Riles S3.Q0
for information &
tions Call:
for the E<|uaJ lUglttt
■KM (ERA) if
■Mch ani mlly, beginning at
noon tomorrow in Penhiog
Square, according to a coali-
tion representative.
The march, in support of the
ERA, wiU end in a MacArthur " (C
Park rally at 2 pm, said a
■pnir— an for the group.
The rally will feature spcak-
MI^-JBcluding actrcas Lee
Grant, Los Angjcles Deputy
Mayor Grace M. Davis and
actress Jane Fonda.
Other speakers to h^ at the
rally include Yphuida Nava,
the producer and director of
the Saturday (KNIC) SiMir,
^peaking on the relations of
the Chicaaa with the ERA;
Ruth Miller, who will speak on
prmdaat m mm Wi
National ^K^omen*s Political
Caiicit«
'Swine flu' tests . .
1)
maybe twelve tii
1933,- Boyer said. However,
three months afo toldiefs at
Fort Dix. New, Jcncy, wmt
struck with an influenza
lated as swine flu virus,
soldier died from the attack
with viral pneumonia.
Ahhoufk iMiiUnt at first,
the government decided not to
take any chances and to vac-
dniate the entire country after
doctors in Atlanu found fur-
ther evidence of the virus. It
Phono:
•S1-t131
DflOP-IN ENCOUNTER GROUPS
AN EASY WAY TO MEET THE OPPOSITE SEX
AMD START MEANINOFUt RELATIONSHIP
EMary Sunday and Wadnasdiy Ntte - 8:00 PM
Paul LirKfeman — ExpaHancad Group. Laadar -^^
1368 N. Spaulding Ava„ Hollywood OonoHpn
4 bNis east ol Fairfax. Horn SunMt Blvd $2.50
ATTEfmON PRE-HEALTH CARE STUDENTS
MEDICUS
Yoga: Clinical
Application to
Medicine
Tuesday May 18, 6:00 pm
Rm 13-105 (next to Biomad)
ROBERT DENIRO
TAXI DRIVER
FOSTER' AlHUtT
as %n^ HARVFY KFrTEL] ^
IK)NAkl)HARk^ i»fTlkH()Yli as Wizard
,„ -nd CYBILL SHEPHERD as Betsy
^NOW PLAYINQ AT SELECTED THEATRES —
LOMG aCACM
Circl* Oriv« In 439-9S13
NOHTMniDGC
Cin«ma C«nt«r
••3-1711 i
Mco nivcnA
'^•••ta Oriv«-ln
«92 79tl
•MCIIMAM OAKS
La R«ina 7 ••••311
TOnnAMCK
UA 0«i Amo 542 7 3S3
WCST COVfMA
Carri Cin«ma ••2-3S79
Etvpt.an 4674 147
wasTwoOo
Pla/a 47 7 0097
AIICAO«A
Edwards Driwv-ln 447-8179
AMCADIA
Sant2 Anita 445-6200
CAftOGA ^AMK
Ctfnova Park Oriwvin 34«-«2Il
caaaiTos
UA Carritoft Mall •24-77?«
CULVCn CITY
studio Ortv-tn 39a-«?50
African Activists Assn
Proudly Presents —
LAMINJANJHA
Schoiar & Associate of
Osageyfo Kwame Mkrumah
lecture and Discussion on
44
Teaching and Ufe of
Kwame Nkrumah''
The man who advanced the struggle
of all African people
. Saturday May 15, 1976
2160 Dickson Auditorium
Time: 1-4 pm
FREE
«•
wili cost the govemment SI 35
■mUkmi doUan.
While othar aaiiGal oentert
in tlw country arc dcvclopmf
jmBomm for adults, researchers
here wifl lest them on children.
-We want to determine the
dotage of vaccine that will
produce protective levels of
antibodies with a minimum
amount of side effecu,** Boyer
Profact tasta 375
The project will test over 375
children and begin sending
fwalto to the govenMMot in
three weeks. The testing should
be over by the end of Jnly.
•oyer said, so that the govern-
■eat can begin the nationwide
vaccinations lale this summer.
To find volunteers for the
expehmenu. Dr. Boyer and his
associates have been visiting
schools and asking parents*
permission. "^We find it*s a
complex naatter to explain,**
Boyer added, **and we have to
0rt informed consent from |he
parents.**
*Tlie vacciae to be tested is
one used in other preventive
medicine and doctors will start
with the lowest doses possible
that would be effective. ^If it
l^oks hke it will uke more, the
dosages will be increased,**
Boyer said.
**But let me emphasiie,*' he
added, **there*i no danger of an
anciromeda strain vims infec-
tion that would alfeet either
volunteers or those who would
receive it."
Wplitmii in 191S
Much of the concern over
the swine flu virus goes hack
to 1918-19, when an epidemic
caused over half a million
dentha in the United Sutes.
According to Boyer, four thou-
sand out of every 100,000 peo^~
pie in Boston during the peak
of the outbreak were killed
anch week.
*AI1 it ukes is an outbreak
to Qocur with evidence between
humans, rather than pip to
humans, to make knonpMgr-
able people worry. about an-
other outbreak,** he said.
A larger percentage of chil-
dren develop the infection than
adukt« Boyer added, although
the infections are not as ser-
ious in adults. In addition,
those with rtipiraioiy prob-
lems, natlnnn, nanrological ail-
ments and diabetes are the
moat soaeeptible.
mes
Needs An
Editor
Together is a special
Interest newspaper serv-
ing the Womens Cbfrt-
munity. The editor Is
responsible for staffif>g
and content of the pub-
lication which is pub-
lished twice per quarter.
Apply in 112 K«rcfchoff
bef or« 4:30- pm
Friday, May 21, 197S
' I
-^
Soy« U.S. bocks 'foHat^ ragima'
Priest condemns South Korea
> « ■ ' -
Bf LnA - Wi
DB Staff WfMar
A Catholic miiaf^ni ,
petted freai South Kores for
nii opposition to the Korean
govenunent told a small Ac-
kerman crowd yesterday that
American foreign policy sup-
ported a ''rotim regime."
The Reverend Father James
Stnott said ^ number efnPi-
ligious and political leaders in
South Korea are accused of
liavi^g violated the country's
eiiiLifncy decree prohibiting
all acts of dissent against the
government.
According to an article from
the New York Times laat week.
a toul of 18 people are ac-
cused, among them 51-year-old
Kim Dae Jtinig» one of South
K6rean Piniimt Park Chua^
Hci*s foremoat pobtical foet.
Others include Yun Po Sun,
78, tlie country's only surviving
THa Ravaraffid FaOiSf
. Soutfi Koraa,
Sinon. a
Naca ol
Iha "rottan
Mn Kofva.
MJUWnWnT Tonsn * MTraMT
TAKING
OFF «
m)
EXCLUSIVaY AT THESE MANII TNEATIES
MUMCSMrnjis
fornaMCcfaa^
^c»*«;^
tU -tUU MMIMi
f-
^^c^
an
>i^
SHI
ini
liSI
former atiMdi lit; Lae Tni
Young, Soatk Korea*s first
woman lawyer, a Quaker wnt-
er. . five Roman Cathoic
pnesu, seven peaiHaors and
Protestant numsten and two
other intellectuals, the TimeM
said V
**lt IS a pobce state entirely,**
Siaoa mid. Ue added that tlK^
Korean people bved under a
**reign of fenr.** Anyone who
oppaaas the regime is labeled a
coauntmist and communism is
treason,** Sinott said
Sinott said that the Korean
government used torture on
students. He snad he had asked
the State Department why the
government did not tell the
Korean government that
America would not stand for.
torture and was told, *^^ do
not interfere m the domestic
policies of other nations.**
"We have ^hosen freedom
here but support toulitanan
government,** he said
Sinott also claimed the Ko-
rean consulates and the Cen-
tral 'tnielligcnce Agency were
also working to suppress South
Koreams living in the U.S
"Two or three ycarf ago,
you could get 300 Koreans
demonstrating in Washington;
now you could get 9 or 10 and
you're lucky,** he said '
Sinott claimed people had
been told not to listen to him
tk&L the Amet'ican cm-
ly called him a dissident. *i
never saw myself as a dissi-
dent,** he said
Sinott said the American
su|>f)ort of the present South
Korean government was creat-
ing instability boGaaie the peo-
ple hate •^Park Chung Hee.
**They may be backed into
taking any alternative.** he
said
University of
San Fernando Valley
COtlEGEOFLAW
PALL SCKKSTDI 197«
•Fi
Iht* Mhool ts
fUtlV ACCRfDITfD
nrie»» of Bar Kamiom.
b
( iililornu
lei: (213) S^-STII
8353 Sepulveda Blvd Sepuiveda Ci 91343
THESSVIIIG
GREEN!
I.I
Mun
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f
i
i H 74
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III
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or ho]
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Ihad succhini. cockta«l franks
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I : • I
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CaaaviBax U09Gli«don. Wait wood Viilaga
1212) 477 3996: Open iiom 11 •ir.ry day
MASTER'™^ PROJECT GRANT GAME
A STRATEGIC APPROACH
and In Him ihoMM you hoM^ lo '*MASTEK THE PROJECT OUNfT
al rinlwi 0mn away •■ch y— r by
Wia IBGM pciVMI I IIIMflt
wmm to krnid the
you !i4ih lo o>adha>
A'^ ¥>'«'^ WsdnMdML May 2a#) ««tth Dr CoilwiH you
TGOiaQUEl TO SNMiE CATEGORICAL FUNDR^ OPPORTUNmES You MM Ihmi haur lo i^
ham Id Han fMd idaat mto hjly funded pray^cts Hmm a itm mmm^c ■pppoach lo panamMdMa m a caemmmn^ mm^r^tat\i»^
Ijmi btkntf mm fum • km &I tht itMigi you vwM
• Haw lo ivid kaMh and l^ow Id apply Iw panii j
• What lo do If you'i*
• Htm to «Maa and padMpt your piapoool Id
• \Aaion and how Id pvomol* tfw funding agancy and vmHo lo
• How lo ba m-aia
• Omttrmwnq ti itm eon^pieaon for londi to far (or. whon lo ai M oull
• HowiD Jaiiiiiai
• ¥fhm lo do If your fundi &m cut/How to modHy paoioct
•Oekmtn§ your puipiMol oad nopaaani a eoiana.
Plan on ipanding Widnaidoy. May 2felh wMh Dr Jamaa L CoauMB and you too will
far fbcufcy. aaiaadaadsanio Iwa up a tunoaoi pw^otl. do
OOrvT MBS THIS ONE Thr oniif Souemm
WHAT THEY SAY, , .
The mnti cnrfdiW antt e*inipn^ht>nmim I
4kr OMMOrir) umi mt
Hopa to an
wDTthuMli cum
ofMASTBt THE PHOJEi^ GRANT GAME
I
fMmU
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AN INFORMATIVE, EYE OPENING AND HARD HITTmG LIVE PRESENTATION
BY DR. JAMES L COSTANZA4ACK FROM A NATIONAL TOUR
WEDNESDAY MAY 26th. 9KX) a.m.-4:00 p.m.
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1
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ATTtNTWH
MEDICUS
Dr. Handy
Physical Therapy A
Allied Health Fields
W«dnMd«y May 19 6:00 pm
Rm 43-105 CHS
Took on new roles outside of home
1776 altered womens^ image
MARTYN
OF LONDOri
By Immm CglMli
DM StafT Writer
_ th Century women regarded them-
selves as ^eipleii, confined and laaifnificant.
according to Mary Beth Norton, but the
Revolutionary War changed their negative self*
'— "■■ by altering their '^feminine conscioua-
offers you a precision and
geometric hair cut, shampoo,
conditioner and blow dry for $12.00
with "Ian Wolfe/'
By appointment only.
m
Westwood Hyatt House
930 Hilgard Ave. (2nd floor)
475-4477
— .^
t
WEENIE
ROAST
Live Band, Unlimited Food,
Warming Wine, Pulsating
Song, Palpitating Dance,
Good People
Monday, l|By 17th at 8.H» PM
ChabBd House (who alaa?)
741 Gaylay (as in glaa with a purposa)
Wastwood (whara it happens)
Norton, at aiiaaale protessor of history at
Dodl University aad autlMf-of The Debate
Over the American Revolution. 1765^1776,
discussed '•The Revolution as a War of Libera-
tion for Women** Wednesday night m Dodd
Hall for the fianl lecture in the UCLA Bi-
centennial Series.
The common theory that pertains to Eigh-
teenth Century women, according to Norton, is
that they ''participated in activities outside their
homes'* aatf ^Mscssed "economic power as the
rules of the house.** Norton added, "I believe
that the role played outside the home is
exaggerata^and the famihal role is under-
played.* \
Pattemt
Ceruin patterns developed for Eighteenth
Century women, Norton said. They marned in
their "early to mid-20*8** and moved directly
from the role of daughter to wife. One fourth
of the women, Norton continued, were prc-
marilally pregnant. They averaged six to eight
children, and many women eventually were
widowed. Female slaves married earlier and
wwdly had their first child at age 16 or 17, she
added.
Since all women's roles existed only in the
family context, relationships consistently cast
women into inferior positions, explained
Norton. Marriage brought responsibility and
less freedom of action, she ^d.
Because of the "near universahty** of mar-
riage, Nprton explained, women understood
that their lives were "always controlled and
confined.*' They were not expected to act
independently or show initiative.
Within what women called! the "^narrow
i|ihere of domestic affairs,** Norton added
"they were not heinkss.** Cooking, baking!
preserving, spinning Aax and caring for child-
ren, however, depnved women of their freedom
to participate in economic a^^tivities outside the
home.
On large planutions. Black women had the
opportumty to deveiafT skUls that white women
could not, "Norton snd: ^Slave Women in the"
Eighteenth Century hved in extended families
and shared tasks and responsibilities White
women did not have thu kinship. The situation
of Black women, however, was "worse thnn
their white counterparts," she commented
Degraded
Women frequently de^^ed themselves
Norton said They described themselves as
"httle and insignificant" in their dianes, but u%
their lives were '^narrowly confined to the
domestic sphere,** their work net not appre-
cmted by society.
The Revolution, however, broke down the
traditional female roles and imnecs. As chief
purchasing agent for the household, women
had to lead consumer boycotts, Norton said In
the army, women assisted as cooks, nurses and
in some cases, soldiers, she explained And on
the homcfront. women such as Abigail Adams
managed businctm.
One example of the altered female role
caused by the Revolution, said Norton, was the
development of women's ability to discuss
political affairs The Revohition, she aded. also
"made it clear that education was necessary for
women " The list oi subjecu that women could
study, however, were hmited by some men. In
one man's opinion, Norton said, women could
not study French because then they would read
French novels. ^
The whole role of Eighteenth Century
women was one of dependence,** Norton
explained After the Revolution, women de-
veloped an increasing ^ei^ of Independence
Im^' .^'i-mK'.,
- ■■rt''.^*<i^.S"
SCA, Reg Fee
(as always)
1096 Gtjtn6on Am V^tettwood Villigt
TBl90horm 477 2355
Hours 9 30 am to 6:00 p.m
Ch«ft» accounts invited
BinkAmencard/Master Charfe
Validated ParHir^ m Building.
^«n^NTIi:MTVS SIK V^
(Continued fro« Pagf 1 )
commended by the .Reg
Committee.
However, according to Feld-
stein, a 1974-1975 attendance
analysis compiled by SCA and
DFAP shows that "Most high-
risk prvpamming attracts the
graalest percentage of student
attendance."
Rezek, %a^ that
even with
the "greatest student atten-
dance and full houses, we
wouldn't make money.
"We. could make a profit if
we had only five major con-
certs a year and could charge
high ticket prices," she added
The Reg Fee Committee, in
its budget recommendation,
had pointed to poor program
pftaiming as part 6f Hi deficit
situation.
IT'S NOT TOO LATE!
— MAKE UP TWO YEARS
'A
I
THIS SUMMER
AND EARN ABOUT $500 WHILE DOING IT! !
START THE ARMY ROrC ADVANCED COURSE
eTTALL
I
' ' ., I ,
AND SMS SraKNTS
SEE ICPICSCNTATIVE ON CAMPUS
tOOM 131
MEN'S CYM
CALL S2S- 73t4
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD
Beginning of Season
Specials
•CAMPSITE*
BACK PACKS
tm Man at SS §6
100 1 lo
buf'
n
7t4-0033
Student Dtscount
Dean Marine g Co
4432 Van Nuys Boule^fd across the street from
Sherman Oaks. Ca 91403 HamtHirger Hamlet
r
f^
~~ - Otympia Sr*w.r»« Comof^y 0«ymp.« WMhington 'OLY**
In a wtirld hufti'tcd K ch.ini.H' . i .MNkk-r
rht- unch.inuMni! chiirch koN
On .1 f.iK-tuI diiy in
CXuihtr. NN. M.kC
Rt»»intokl rccciwd Piitcnt
# I IhO. U\ tor \{ A uk Mminu
>ymph*mv ot ^pnni: steel, rhi'
church Ley w;i> ujhJ by thnv
l!cncr.i(iiin> of rhrrscy ct»llci:i.it^
Oly drinki-rs Niit until cKi- fuiM-iop
w*H* IH uttltt>' qui'stu.ni'J ilthi.uu'h the
Ji>crunin.it^n>: dy drinker will .i|xv.iv>
keep mw cm h;ind tor lav-Si ubhics md
Okltime K)rjk*>
The desmn of the church key hiwni
changed hec;iu?*e it was maik- wirh skill
injei-nuity and simpliciry A yrear k-er
d<»f»n t chunge Uh many ot rhe sunu
^ " n» If it'sdoni- riirht m>inu ir\. vt»u II
t..- . .in unchan«inu ncandard t»f quality
iH»nu rhintrs newr change OI
ne\ er wijl
<
♦"♦■
ck:iy bruin
Promises,
by Mike
director of the 0$fkM oi Bn-
t»t »nd Coriujmer A/-
Promises
iin
or off campus. Let me expla
furthar. Like a iftog chafing its
\mi, tht riniliii •!
With student dOcHons. or>e
always hears the ever present
ubiquitous promises of action
from the cafididatei. This ye&r »
no exception. NormaMy, I i^cfrain
front getting too involved, only
making personal ^odMom re-
garding wfK> among the candi-
OPINION
dales would be the beU. This
ymm. however, sorpe of the
^nd election rhetoric
by the candidates irrvollfef
the office I work for, the Office
of Environmental and Consum<»r
Affairs (OECA) Specifically, I
want to address my remarks to
cominCfHt ^he candidates have
made about two important and
sensitive issues: Forking ^nd
Consumer Protection.
As painful, cynical ind un-
popular as this may sound, there
are no solutions the Parking
Crisis. That ii to say. the Parking
Crisis will not be solved by
creating more fpaeJM, either on
alleviate the current situation. If
anything, the creatipn of new
parking tpaccft will only add to
aitociated with cars and'uCLA
traffic coniestion in Westwood
ar>d campus, air pollution, the
waste of valuable kitftil fuels.
etc.. Quite simply, there are two
facts regarding the parking
problem. Firsi, there H a finite
amount of space on this campus.
and as Rod Rose, head pkanner
for UCLA, has explained to me,
there is not much nrK>re that* can
be fit into the remaming space;
certainly, a new parking struc-
ture (and no or^ has talked
about the cost of buikiing such
a structure will entail or who
will pay for it) canrK>t fit any-
where unless me wish to sacri-
fice something else (perhaps the
Sculpture Garden?) Secondly,
even if a new parking structure
were built, there will continue
to be 4 greater demanjd than
supply; there will always be
more cars than parking spaotft.
In fact the ^ddttion of any new
■no Wvoif w wonoenfis wnofv ■■ mwo99
parking ipaces wilt only en-
courage more people to drive
their cars to campus
With tf>ese facts in mind, it is
the OECA's opinion that, if any-
thing, parking should be more
difficult to obtain, even to the
point of declaring a moratorium
c»n' the comtruction of new
parking structures and spaoin
and aif) increase in parking fees.
Our office is firm with the beMef
that the only solution to the
parkmg crisis on camper is to
get people out of tfunr cars and
into mass transit.
Again, it is the OECA's con-
tention that the solution to tf>e
"parking crisis" lies not in the
creation of new parking spaces,
but in developing alternatives to
auto travel Much has been
made about tf>e Er>ergy Crisis,
afyd i think we can all agree tftat
autos uhd their ■woriiteH NH —
oonfeiilofi, ifiiog» etc '"' reduce
the quality of our livet. tut little
has been ^one to develop al-
ternates. Hem b ffioc the tirne to
advocate iolutions that only
cdntr^Hite lo the problem (more
f€«itinii«tf mm Paft •)
Oai^ Bnim
77^
llw Daihf BnMn
km
9i WHU U9l9y M^WIM*
.■"*f^'
L.
' . . — » / -
■i -..'i^i''
•I;*- 1«
. A^
VW
vn CencerY <^\ \\3
^^Hri^
ASUCLA TICKET OFFICE 7 d*** (MKUi
^>
¥</46^\
• cawrt ii^iiijfew : 7f<r757^«t ucla c«h
fej '■
iMt.
nn
SOUND FACTOR
CRAZY
MIDNIGHT SALE
Friday 11:00 am Till Saturday 6 00 pm
MARANTZ 2325
AaiFMItootiMr IJipsrChMi.
LIST
PIONEER KP 4000
AM FM Car
t139»^
#
KENWOOD 710
Catett* 0«ck w/Doi#y
Ltst Now $US^
249"
JENSEN 6x9 CO AXIAL
$39»« pair
MAXELL UDXL C90
%4.^ oach.
^2632'/2 Victory Blvd No. Hollywood
984-3525 (at Coldwater Canyon) 980-1161
M C
BofA
Tha fvfinl^at pictura of tlia f^mr/*
CNBK AMES- KNX • FM
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^JN^^J^*^"*
'>
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/HUSICAL
TNI FNIST OS lATID MUSCAl COMEDY
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TH€ f IRST riUDI€ MUSICM"
STfmiM CiNOnr MtiCI
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SBMI W PH€lPS^P€T€ft'VliOWft
Ll
HELD OVER! 2noLAU6H-FIUED WEEK I
•toe ttoo- 10:00
Letters to the Editor
Ball
We are writmg this ^tintr to
comment on the unflattering
picture a4 LuciNe Ball in the
Wedwwday. May 12th Oaiiy Bru-
in. We anended Lucille BaJIS
lecture Monday night and were
surpri&ed to sfc h€m/ plaifant
and very anractive iKe H. We
were shockad and disappointed
Mpai » a great lack a4 concern
far her mititct. We do not un-
damaad «4iy the Daily Bruin
would indude a picture with
their article if they did r>oc have
one of fiaar quality
Vote
It
to be that time of the
used in the article about her. It
r>ot only does rK>t flatter her.
but tko dairacts from and dis-
torts her beauty. This picture
distorts her to such a great
extent that she appears to be
much older in it than she ac-
tually looks. Again, we cannot
emphasize enough hoMr disap-
pointed we are. The photo-
grapher displays negligence as
year again.
Velifig. With a capital "V."
The maja>" ^xaatpuf elections
begin this sacred time of the
year. Time for all us students to
exercise that remarkable system
called daaiocracy During the
course of these elections, it
should be apparent that many of
us will be makir>g difficult ded-
fiaat. €ven nrtore so in run-offs.
Voting, a time of question
More from Keesee . .
Soon, the CalMomia primaries
will be here. More questioni.
Our daciikMift now must take
into account the statewide sit-
uation, not iilm our tmommmmk
caaipus. We will be dasMh|| ori
key inuei, includine the Nu-
clear Initiative tnd the RTD
question, ip nefne a cauple. We
wMi also aa aaierfnii liiift the fate
of ^Mn delegMai, so 10 speak.
iMer, will be tlie focus of our
entire eleaion system. The ^r^t-
identiai. The election this whole
country is waiting for, in av^.
Imagine, the people will be
electing the future occupant of
the White House. For four years
anyway.
However there is still one
question left to be resolved in
the minds, hearts, and souls of
the populace. And that itr
Should the rabbit get his trix??
(Coatinued fron Page 7)
parking ces). Perhaps now is
the tixne 10 ask ourselves to
make difficult decisions and
make some sacrifices.
Regarding consumer protec-
tion, I would like to remind the
candidates that a viable, ef-
lecdire consumer pralaction
program already exists at UCLA
funded by the SLC and Reg Fee
monies. As part of the 0€CA,
the Consumer Protection Pro-
ject (CPP) has been working to
arecitalof
oraan works of
Joham
Sebastion
Bach
by
Prelude and f ugu« in C-Major
Chorale Preludes from the Clavier-uebung, Book 3
Prelude arni Fugue in E-Flat Major
Passacaglia in c-minor
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
Sunday, May 16
Corner of Strathmore and Cayley 8:00 p.m
Free
NATIVE AMERICAN
STUDENTS ASSOCIATION
Meeting and Potluck Dinner
Friday, May 14, 1976 •
7:00 P.M.
at: Indian Center West
4836 Sepuiveda Blvd.
Culver City, Ca.
If you need a ride or for more information, call
825-3729 and leave your name and phone
number. -^
help educate the Gonsunr>er
now going on its tpMrth year of
service to students and the conv-
nnunity. If the candidates aie
sincere in their promises of
action, they will utilize the fa-
cilities, resources and talent
already available instead of cre-
ating another, superfluous stu-
dent bureau^acy. We have vol-
unteers experienced in con-
sumer affairs working and ready
to work. CPP is currently har^d*
ling consunr>er complaints, dpinft
research on MCAT and LAST
tests, and planning internships,
with the Los Angeles City »nd
Los Angeles County Bureaus of
Consunr>er Affairs.
I have written these words to
underlifj« the fact that services
lind expertise already exist in'
Kerckhoff Hall, working and
trying to "make things a little
better." The candidates, some
whp have worked in KH for
some tifhe, should do some
homework and find out what is
going on in their own offices
before making proposals that
are based on insufficient in-
formation. Now is not the time
to make poor, short-term de-
cisions (parking) or duplicate
efforts (consumer protectioft) in
an effort to cater to the vote.
The staff of the 0£CA looks
forward to working with who-
ever is elected to help develop
some solutions to these criiicaJ
problems. 1 do not think people
ask for mirades, but I do nod
think people appreciate igno-
rance either.
DIAN FOSSEY
LECTURES
on "The Mountain Go-
rilla — their behavior in
free living groups**
Pasadena City CoMsfa
Tuesday May It,
12 Noon
Forum Free to the
Public
What CouM Bo More
ExcMng?
tttan
control of your MM
The PACE Young Sinews Con-
t>ience prowidea a tool kit a
practtcal ooerea in "How To"
Realize mote of your potantialt
r
for
more information call Stielley
213/937-4000 or mail m thia Gou-
pon to J W Nawweii CorporiNon
4311 Wilatufe BM.. LJi. 90010
TELEPHONE
victory
Bruins have to wait
By Merc
OB Sfena WrMv
use aeofsi five timefl in the firit four
inninfi ageinst itartiiig pitcher Curt Fctcr-
•os sad held on to defeat the UCLA
bassSall team, 6-3, laat aa^ a( Sewtclle
Field before over l,7iS Cgaa.
Tke Tfojan win kept tiK Brmis from
cimchiqg the California IntercoUegieie Bsie-
bstt Aiaecistion title for at least one day.
The teriei continues tonight at 7 pm at
USCs Dedeaux Field where Tim CTNcill (7-
3. 2.77) will throw afainat Enuc Mauritaon
(5-2, 1.83).
The Bruini ittll need juat one win in the
net to win the title, if it doesn't come
tofufht. the Bruins have one more chance
Saturday afternoon at Sawtelle, where they
art 21-7 this season. Ed Cowan. 9-2 on the
year, will pitch that one
The Troiam scored three times in the first
inning against Peterson, who was making his
first start in league action and only his
eighth of the entire season He took Steve
Bianchi*s turn in the rotation, although the
latter usually throws the second game ol the
''He had been pitching better thaa Steve
had been 6f late," Adams said after the game
in reference to Peterson's surt. "If Bianchi
had been pitching and wt gave him the same
kind of support, tlie rcaalt would have been
the same.**
"Pete (Peterson) pitched well enough
where if wc had gotten him the two dbuble
plays. It would have only been one run -
The fim of the two plays came in the fir»t
i'"^^..^'^*!.*** •^ '^ Larry Fobbs ^
nrst. Km Hertel sent a ground ball to
iahby Daias si ■■cioai ^899. Dalles trigd le
force Fs^ et i9cead bat ba throw went
into left field.
D99isBSted hitter Chris Smith foUsesi
'■^ • ^saie run and the Troyam were off to
a 3«0 start.
The elher play cant in the fourth mniaf
aad proved to be Petenoali iinilnii^ The
Trofans had men on i9COod and third with
sat out, to the Brums walked Gary Wiencek
intentionally to set up a double play situa-
tion.
The next better. Does Stokke, did just
what the Brums aiaalsd. He rolled a perfect
double play grounder to Raymond Towa-
•9ad. who apr aaasd lo try to make the pliy
before he had control of the ball He
couldn't pick it up and the Trojans had a
run in and still had the bases leaded.
Mark Carpenter then bounced *a siaaie
into the hole between first and second
the Trofftw had their fifth run of the
Ai that point, Peterson left the ^me in
favor ^'^cfight header Floyd Chilfer
Thle sophomore did a fine job the re$t of
the way, allowing just one run in 5 1/3
innings of work
use center fielder Bollby Mitchell suf-
fered a possible broken nOsc and some
chipped teeth when he was hit in the face by
a Peterson pitch m the fourth inning
one more day
r
Undeidog tracksters face ifhi battle h Psc^ meet
By Joe Y
I>B Sports Writer
The use track and field team fi Jli
Itself in an unusual position this week-
end in Berkeley For the first time since
197 L. the Troians are pre-meet fav-
orites to capture the Infue crown
use has won the pest two con^
fereaoe titles but en both occasions th^
Trofens had to pull upset victories over
UCLA Troy is a solid pick this year
but the TfOjans are fully aware thai the
trend in upset might continue
Aiming their sights at USC are
Orcfon, Washington State and HCLA,
three other Pac-H pijwrrs that have the
guns to uke the meet
The Troyans are exceptionally strong
in the sprints, hurdler and field events
this year Oregon and WSli counter
with talent and depth in the distance
events and a solid group of pertormen^
in the field F he Bruins are trad
Itionally strong in the quarter mile and
field and have a good crew of h*lf
milcrs and hurdlers.
I he I rojan short distance men art-
led by James (ulkcs. a 99aiar sprinter
from Guyana Gilkes was a telegraph
operator hack home hut at USC he
works with a different type^^Hie
kkt lines that mark the end of the Ii9
and 200 meter dashes
GilAics was ranked third in the world
in the 200 last year end is the de-
fending conference aad NCAA cham-
pion in the event He hes a best of 2e.3
in the 200 (best in the Pac-8) ead 10.2
in the 1.00 (ircaad best m the leaguel
and IS a good pick to capture both
His mam competition should come
from two teammates, Joel Andrrws
(K).3 and 20 7) and K.en Randle (20.5).
Northwest jett Gary Minor (10. Peed
20 5) of WSU aad Chris Brethweite
(10.3 aad 20 8) of OrepMp should also
score poinu. and on Berkeley's slow
end unpredacuMe tradu any could pull
I off ail upset win.
The Trojans are also loaided in the
4(M) Ken Randle is the defending
conference champion in the quarter
mile and has a fteti open mark of 45.6
this season But he has run a scorching
45 3 reUiy leg. and CUude Brown and
f revor CampbeH^oest respective bests
of 47i) aad 47 I to back up Randle
Benaie Myles(45.8) has carried aa ai
the fme UCl.A tradKKMi in the quarter
hut his best mark came in the season s
opening meet and he hasn't rnair close
to matching it since then Upset
minded are Brian fheriol (47 2| of the
Brums and Dacre Bowen (46 7) from
Oregon
The HOG meter Itonaiabli may offer
the most exciting race of the aMet
James Robinson of Cal (1:46 9) and
Rayfield Beaton of USC (1:47 I) have
squared off twice this season with the
Mtmr tak4ng hmmn m hath ^aeear-But
UCLA's ( onrad Suhr has come on
Heaag the past two weeks with hits*
tenng I 47 « and I 4« 8 performs
The name Oregon has haooaK syn-
onymous with distance running in the
P«c-« and the Oucks are no exception
thtt year f he marathon aKa from
Eapene current l> have four of the top
five 1500 meter lam m the conference
and three of the top six 5J0O0 meter
runners
But Oreaoa has oae ai^or problem
- Washington Sute also has a bevy of
top rated disunce people headed by a
sizeable portion of the Kenyan Olym-
pic Team.
Ducks Matt Centrowitz. (3:39.8),
Peter Spir (3:41.5) and Randlal Mark-
ey (3:41 7) head 1500 candidates, but
Washington Stater Joshua Kimeto
(3.45.3) IS right behind.'
Kimeto isn't choosey — he also runs
the gruehng 5.000 and has posted a
best time of 13:46.5. the second fastest
ia the leaauc to Oon Ctary of Oregon
(13:45.2). Two other long running
Husky Kenyans are John Ngeno aad
Samson Kimombwa «
The Angeleno 9clm>ls dominate the
hurdles hke no other events The top
four 1 10 meter men and the top four
400 amer special hail from USC
aad UCl A
The Bruin's James Owens has
emerged as the top pick to capture the
high hurdles Owens has a season best
of 13.6 and he's beatrn his two closest
opponents. Mike Johnson and Tom
Andrews of USC at Fresno last week
Owens went through a mid-season
slump when he wound up third in two
^^'•tSi* i^ccs but at Fresno he ran a
smooth, consistent race to easily beat a
star studded field
The Trojans' Tom Andrews has the
fastest intermediate clocking in the
world this year and is a sohd favonte
in that event Teammate Rich Graybehl
has fiown 50 5. and a duo of Bruins.
PhiUip ^ills and Grant Nicdcrhus have
beats of 30 I and 50 2.
Oreaon s li^vc Voorhees has
emerpad as the coalerenoe's premiere
weight maa la li. He*s __
discus 201-8 aad the shot-put 62-2M
and is capaMe cf diptuniig the laaaue
crown in both events
Ram. Vmcaar: af Washington (64-4)
and Jim Niedhart of UCLA (64-0) have
thrown faithar than Voorhem hat they
havea't head as coiuistent Other top
di$cus aien are Borys Chambul of
Washington (200-7) and the USC Un-
dem of Darrell Elder (195-0) and
Ralph Frugubetti (192-2) The Bruins'
Rich Gunther (190-9) should also
squeak in for points.
UCLA's WiUie Banks is to the hor-
izonul jumps what Voorhees is to the
weights. The Bruin sophomore leads
triple jumpers with his haat leap of
I '/i and IS second among Im^ae long
jumpers with a 25-8(6 hop.
The other lap triple jumper in the
Pac-8 IS USCs Tom Cochee who
defeated Banks two wmkM aye His
l^asl ^M M 53-3>/S but he has geared
54-2^ wind aided.
Ahead of Banks in the loi^ jump is
aaocher Trojan, Gerald Hardemann. an
inconsistent leaper who has gone 25-
IO'/4. iaases Lofton of Stanford holds
^ dhSMctioa af heating both laalm .
aad Hardemann this season and John
Okoro of OSU (25-3'//) and Jerr^
Herndon of UCLA (25-2</4 wind-aided)
should alM> score.
Russ Ropers of USC still holds the
best Pac-8 mark in the pote vauh (18-
1(6) but that height was achieved ia
Hawaii two ninths ago aad M^m
hasn't coose aaar it since Mike Tutty
of UCLA has flown 17-9'/;.
>••-• v^**»
i
f
GR 8-0123
lltUWilshir«ll¥i
0|p*n / Doyt
MAM to? AM
6R»-«rj
Netters host UCU Tennis
■vt
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ifSAhdalmAkee
1334 M^esf woMi Blvd
tilMi Hi. Oltf 90024
nMie (213) 473 9549
Corn«r oi Socr^sier jno WiitrMOOd
« iit.rcMf* SANDAIS t^€lTS f*<
iio^ bRiepcAses
UATHIM TOOIS nt»i^ CRA
"FAINFUUY FUNNY ..The most pointedly effective
piece of television criticism since Spiro Agnew"
IM MHlf S
'UmCMMS imU£1 . consistently more funny man
GROOVE TUBE
"OUZY. . . a cross Iwtween MONTY PYTHON and NBC
SATURDAY NIGHT" ^^mmn
*tXCmiClimN€LY FUNNY . .The funniest of all the
irreverent putdowns you're gonna laugh long I
hard •
"LUNACY. . . in the satirical vein of \Noody Allen's /
SLEEPER" /
'OUTIAfiEOUS . . Harvard Lampoon ^
irreverence . completely off the
"NIUN10US...It's a sendup and put
down on every
thing and
everybody from
Resident to
commercials
-LAMHfMU
ly Hi
DB
The UCLA Tennis
bcgHM tm4my at 9
on (JCLA't Synset Couru. It
continucf all day today and
tomorrow Mid fanliifee ike lop
four tinflM pliym aad two
doubles iMHBt from UCLA,
Sunford, USC sad California
UCLA eanch Glenn Baa^tt
thought up the idea of holding
a aovthcrn division Pacific^
tournament using the four mam
NCAA championship fonnat
to replace the Pac-8 champion-
dupe which will not be held
this year
*^Vm confident there will be
some great matfhcs here this
weekend,** eaid the Bruin
coach.** UCLA, Sunford and
USC are the top three ranlung
laaflM in the country
-^This weekend*s tournament
is like a preview oi the NCAA
championships coming up soon
(May 26-31) in Corpus Christi,
Texas,** added the coach of the
NCAA champions.
Bassett indicated^ that irveral
of this weekend *s matches in
the singles draw of 16 phiyers
and doubles draw of eight
teams will have a bearing on
lltt upcoming NCAA seediags.
According to Bassett, a
of etrnd^m of which he is
a moihar, detcrnune the laatfi
by won-lofts records dunng the
enure 1976 year and the level
fd competition faced by the
indtvidtial players.
** Seeds are important ^-
cauae each participating school
in the NCAA*s receives a point
for every NCAA match won in
both singles aad doubles by
one of its playert,** said Baa-
sett. _=._„
**We will seare this weekend
the same w)ay they do in the
NCAA championships.
*The top %ctdc6 players are
placed in the bracket in a
manner where they are less
likely to face a highly rated
player in the ear her rouads at
compared to a non aecded
player. Thus, the chances of
winning the early rouad
matches are a Uttle greater.
Every point counts in the
NCAA's,** concluded the Bruin
coach.
UCLA All-American Briaa
jrpacher is a good example o€ a
highly ranked player who
hasn*t performed to the degree
of success expected by many in
the NCAAs
The 6-4 senior from San
Diego, who will most probably
be selected to the 24-man AU-
at
American afaai tar Ita fourth
caaaecalfve year, aaa
fiiel in the 1974 NCAAs
USC and third laal yiir at
Corpus Q^0iA apd failed to
advance to^ the ifuarter-fiaal
rouad etther year.
Thia fvaataad will be the
final hooK appearance of the
singtefl ttars Peter Fleming and
Teacher
While Teacher ia currently
^xhaustiag his fourth aad CuuU
year of eligibility, Flemiag^
who transferred to UCLA laal
year after attending the Uni-
versity of Michigan for one
year, has announced he will
skip his semor year to invade
the professional circuits.
Fleming, who will undoubt-
edly be seeded first in the
upcoming NCAA champion-
ships (he is undefeated
in aii^les this year, 12^ ia
dual matches and 16-0 overall).
will become the eighth UCLA
player to enter the pro ranks
prior to paduation since Bas-
sett took over the UCLA
coaching duties from J.D.
Morsmn in 1967.
A VERY SPEClAu KIND OF THRILLER
'*' Htrvtfcw
I could murder her in front of your
and you couldnt prove iC
And so the game began...
Folk & Bluegrass
ERIC ANDERSEN
BYRON
BERLINE'S
SUNDANCE
Miy
;30pm
PG
EXCLUSIVE ENOAOEMENT NOW SHOWING
VILLAGE THEATRE Westwood 478^76
Schoenberg Hall
UCLA
Kaickhoff Htm TIetot OWoa
Cantral Tldcat OfHoa.
8CA/0FAP ^
A Women's Shabbat
By Women, for everyone
Friday, May 14
6:30 Services A Feminist Shabbat Liturgy
7 30 Dinner
8 30 WOMEN IN YIDISH POETRY with
NAOMI PRATT*
•N«mi Piwi • Ph O Student m Htttofy UCLA Ms. Pratt hat a itrong
iackfrpund inYiddiah Umpiifa and ciin>irf»
Spoviiofe
HILLEL, MO HMqard 474-1531
' I
C> A OfQ^ni/ifUj
I' '
Track
(Caatinued frooi Page 9)
much more consistent. He was
the fourth ranked vauher in
the United States last year
while Rogers was unrated.
C^nnis Dudlmfr of Cal (17-1)
a Tom DiSunislao of USC
(17-0) should duel for the third
place but the ever-improving
Trojan should win out.
The high jump it up for
gr#bs with five excellent
,jun[^)crs who have cleared 7-0.
Late surtin^ Lee Braach of
Washington Sutc (7-2V7) has^
the current top nurk but hcMl
be challenged by Bruin Jason
Meislcr (7-0'/^) and fellow Hus-
ky Al Darncillc (7-0V7).
The javelin will be contested
by an exclusive group from the
northwest Husky Rod Ewaliko
has thrown the fanhett (258-0).
but a pair of Cougars. Genr
Lorenzen and Harry Kooz-
aetsoff. aad Jeff Carter of_
Oregon arcn*t far behind.
The powerful hones of Troy
should capture both the mile
And spnnt relay with UCLA a
dote runner-up in both events
The Bears have registered the
third best marks in the relays
but could upset on their home
track
Intramurals
Mea
The schedules for soft ha II.
handball doubles and water
will be out to#i9^ alter 12
. Team guts frisbiee con^
will be held Wednesdav.
May 19 3-5 pm Entries are
due Monday. May 17.
WoMca
The schedules for next weeks
Softball and volleyball doubles
will be ready today after 12
noon. Entries are dae on this
Monday. May 17 for the tean
fMHAfrisbec competition: The.
event will be held Wednesday
aftrmoon between 3 and 5 pm.
Next week*t fdiedules wiU
be out today after 12:00 nooa.
Entries for the team guts fri»-
bee contest are due this Mon-
day. May 17. The coatwt will
be held oa Wednesday. May
19. 3-5 ptn .Sign ups are still
being uken for the open coed
doubles volleyball toomament
The deadline for entries is Ma\
pint wiM Hi'piw >hi J4lh
^^ ' >» three LUiini'utivc
Donahui&'s last look tomorrow
► v!
Will the ^HDkie" 5-2 def^
eoatroi the vacr oAaMe? WiU
Dink#orth aHiaiaiB bit
number one quarterbacking
aasuon ever Slava Bakicii?
Who will be able to do the jab
at the aoae guard position'^
Thoie will be the tivw BMia
questions tomorroar viKa the
annual Spring Football
]■ hriri uJL^m at^Diake
dium on a 60-yafd fidd.
Haad coach Terry noaahiic
wil mm **balMMid* tcaav, wkh
the September wmkmn watch-
mg from the sidelines. The
•aphomores aad freshmen
from last iOMoa will do the
playing so tlau the roafiiing
•lalT has a better idea of who
can do the job when the
at Arizoaa State
Flayert saca as running
kadu Weaddl Tyler aad Jim
trowa, faoeiven Wally Hou^
and Rick Wa!ker, offeasive
baeaiea Mitch Kahn, Rob
Kezirian. Greg Taylor aad
Keith Eck aad dcfawve
players Raymond Burks, Oscar
Edwards. Bob Crawford aad
Wilbur aad Harold Hardin will
not play ia dK Spnng
because of senior sutus.
••• •■■*> tmcKT^rlW .Vilili UWK'
worth and Bukich will be ran-
aiag backs Theotis
Jewerl Thomas, Eraie
aad Lee Smith (Smith played
at UCLA a couple of years ago
aad has not returned after
leaving school) Among the
receivers are Severn Reece,
James Sarpy, JC tnuHfer
Homer Butler, Don Pederson
Harley Surk.
tie Pbmona
M-:
By Mike
M Sforts Esporiiff
The thing that could have made this seaean really
for the womea*s Softball team, which finished 13-4 overall and 9-
I in leagiK, would have been a trip to OHika, Nebraska and a
chance to pby in the World Series
But with that pa«iMity ruled out by their poor perfo
the Redonals. the Bruins went
the aflHMve hae-
men that will play arc Oas
Jim Main, Brent
(originally a defensive
tackle). Mike Herrera. Ron
Wollard and 6-6, 270 redshirt
Tim Drew. ^
With kaee iaiaries to tackles
Thb Tennigkeit and Manu
Tiiisieeapt>, the defensive Uae
is *'WidaNOpen'* tomorrow. JC
traaders Randy (Grounds, Sua
Harris aad Wtlhe Nrvds
see action atoaa with Steve
Tetrick, Bruce Davu», Dennis
McCollias, Julius Askey aad
paflMjr Bryce Adkins (aiovtag
from oflensive §aard to aoee
guard).
Linebacking could be the
most solid position for the
Spring game Inside haa-
backers inclade Raymond Bdl,
Brad Vassar. Tea Maepi^^
Jerry Robinson and Jeff Mitro. |
Outside linebackers include
Frankie Stephens, John Faate,
Steve Shoemaker, Anthony
Pao Pao (mowed from runiung
back) and Kaa Walker.
In the defeadve secoadMy
are JC transfer Bob Hosea,
Pat Schmidt, Mike Moling,
Johnny Lynn. Levi
John Gibbs.
i 41 1 c
mtk Tuesday and regained'
some amount of reipwtability
and saeeem as they defeated
Cal Po^ Pomona, 6-3, to gain
a tie for the league title.
At first it was understood
that if the Briiias won Tues-
day's game (which was a con-
ttaaatson of a game that went
nine innings Friday before
ending in a 2-2 tie due to rain)
they would win the title out-
right. But now it seeatt the
Bruins art tied with P>emoaa
and face the possibility of
them m a playoff
soanetime next , week.
The women trailed 3-1 after
four inninup Tuesday until they
**exploded^ in the fifth with
four runs. Sue Enquist and
Kathy Deakins each drove in
two runs with doubles. Dea-
kins had hit a solo homer ia
the fourth to account for the
Bruins* oaly^ raa prior to tkr^
Tifth. Deaiins was also t^e
winning pitcher giving up
four hits aad suiking out two
in seven inningi.
**! really feh giaad about the
THERE'S STILL TIME,
BROTHER! and SISTER too!
toget your flight
tb Europe and fsrael
We've got it all . .
Travel Qroup Charter
* Bliidant Tours, Camping Tours
' Eurail Paaa, Studertt Rail
'Britrail Paas
* Car Renui, Laaaa. Purcl
* Motela — aN Kinda
Europe Midanl Travel Centra
1007 tfoxlon, SuHa IS (Above Marios Raataurant)
Tn w iTw m wm
f
game because the kids were
down 3-1 in the fifth aad they
exploded, they made things
happen. They laally pleased
said oaach Sharon
:kus.
However . this whole busi-
about tying for tfeeleipie
championship never would
have come about had the
Bruins been able to defeat UC
Riverside, a team they played
well against and defeated 9-1
earlier this year.
The Brums got a total of
seven hits in the loss hMl
Thursday, but their only run
came on a homer by Janice
Wright. They also committed a
\\ of five errors, a problem
plagued the Bruins in each
oi their four lanes.
^We didnt get the key hit
We ^ were threatening all the
time, but wc just ooalda*t
ieare. Char (pitcher Chartsae
Wright) had a few excess walks
waB»d nine) and there
a oaaple of errors that let
ia a few runs,** said coach
rkus
To Our
—Coffee House_^
and celebrate the
recorohbreaking 1976
UNITED JEWISH WELFARE
FUND DRIVE AT UCLA
Saturday, May 15
8:00 p.m.
Buenos Aires Room
of the Sunset Recreation Center at UCLA
food, film, and fun
Call 474-1531 for reservations — Hillel
>r
I"
THE COUNCIL ON EDUCA
TIONAL DEVELOPMENT
(CED) will be considering course pro-
posals for the Winter Quarter 1977, and is
prepared to sponsor innovative courses
of genuine academic quality which
would be of interest to the campus
community. Such course proposals will
be due in the CED Office no later than
Monday, May 17, 197S. If you are in-
terested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropnate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educational Development, 3121 Murphy
lit J
ONE
0N£
STEALS
IQLLS.
ONETWES
^
MAMJdm
VRANDO NICHOLSON
'THE MISSOURI
VRLiHr
•>AKniUBrtM$tm
Starts FRIDAY, MAY 21
y^%
AMD OTHER SELECTED THEATSBS
^
.r
11
1 1 Don t make a
a career ol lool
foraioh.
I
I
The Advertising Center s
only purpose ^s to give you a comprehensive
and working understonding of Ojdvertismg
Every vital aspect of it.
• Account Management . • GreO^»ve-Concept__
• Photo Introduction •TV Production
One free ^^ gallon of coke
with any pizza or dinner
1
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• Graphic Design • Illustration Workshop
• Public Relations • Advanced Concept
• Creative Execution • Photo Workshop
Copy writing Workshop • Package Design
• Classes start week erf June 14.
Pfaoui
396-5719
■an
475-6464
< -'•
Coupon good thru
Wednesday. May 19. 1976
intion Coupon When Ordering
••-4M^'.
U.C. MOVEMENT THEATER
xr
*Hi*J , t ■ .i.i^U'.* I. .! '■ ft *W i'*'ii
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:-,
ACKERMAN GRAND BALLROOM
FREE ADMISSION
MAY 15 A 17, 8:00 P.M. - MAY 18, NOON
hr P»0|»i«m rmk Fore* « Tl» CuNural Aflalra
•wSludMit
gstting heavy
By MMu Fifi^^ aJ
DB Sport! WrUtr
While one iisualiy ■wocuitet
crew with bif, brawny,
nuiaariar amb, k is not always
the case. UCLA*f U|(htwei^
crew, averagiiig 150 pomids,
provides an exciting ahernative
to rowiag at the collegiate
levd. . ..u.' ._.._
UCLA"! Iwiaiiaiight crew is
en the upsurge, catching up to
perennial power California.
UCLA*t women*! heavyweight
crew is also gaining rapid re>
cognition.
And then there are the light-
weights.
The women*! lightweights
are interspersed among the
women*8 heavyweight roweri"
— they just recently arc separ-
ating out iar the Western
Sprints. '.
The men*s lightweight racing
program, while having its own
coach and rowers, sometimes
has to suffer Uk stigma of
being labeled **lightwcightt.-
Actually. the lightweight
program is heavyweight They
row as much as the men*s
heavyweights do, their Work-
outs are just as hard and Rick
Galliand. former lightweight
rower, is revolutionizing light-
weight rowing on the West
Coast. Head coach Gallian(J*s
philosophy prior to the
Western Sprints is to increase
the tenacity of the workouts
while other squads arc tapering
off.
Many of the lightweight
roiipers say that the workouts
are extremely difficult The
merits of Galliand*s unique
coaching philosophy can he
better analyzed after this week-
end's competition.
The lightweights will enter
two boats today and tomor-
row ^ an eight and a lour.
In the lightweight eight boat
are coxswain Jenny Williams,
stroke Dan Reynolds. Kenny
Jacobs. Dents Raymond. Bryn
Davis, Mike Lynch. Scott
Carson. ICevin Pifer and Mark
Stiver — ' — '— — ^
Comprising the lightweight
fooi* a*rc Qpxswatn lama
Norton, stroke John Gumbcl.
Guv Wcaser. Kevin I vers and
Pete Wagner
While the lightweight pro-
gram for UCLA crew is not as
extensive as it is at some
schools which have special
boats for lightweights, the
interest is just as high for the
participants and the fans
those who have weathered a
schedule which has deviated
from the other crew's sched-
ules
SUMMER
JOBS JOBS JOBS
^- trained aien and
women will t>e contidared to
supptannant our pefm«r>ont
•taff in district offices
throughout the US Thaee
poaaions are full or pert-time
summef fobe We are teerch-
ing for appNcanli who are
ambitioua. dapeiMlaMe end
herd working
portunity for
You mey cowBum to
y* • PBrt time or fuU time
Jeali fiOKt fen if you deaire
For district office idilnei; or
for appointn^ent with our
local meneger. call Robbie
after April leih. 9 am to 3
P m Mondey through Fridey
at ?13~^7a-e4?2
Vtfbmen netters await Nationals
ly Gregg L.
Dl Sports
I f legMf ptey bas fa
considertng the luueM of iIk
women's tennis leaiit coach
RiU Zauns coukln't be blamed
if he decided to kick beck and
gleet. Yet the awiabir Zatma
docsB*t quite ice it that way
^1 couldn't have expected
anymore thai year — so far,"
ieiid Zaniaa. *^e*ve won the
her courage
aM, iMre toapieHMilif, win.
The tean was sdM^ukd. to
compeu in the Wi
RcgMMMls but Zauna
decided to skip tl^ tout
probkms.'
*^he tournament isn't stroeg
enough for us," said ZaiaM.
^'Noae of the top laeav are
going This ii the toejuaeiiiiri
aed ii*l havieg its
fkft mrh will
¥Cfy haii for the up-
■peUil with Sunford
the Natioeak. Although
the match with Stanford it
important, ZaiaM is strrssti^
the lact that the women should
he concentrating on peaking
for the Nationals
m
I Casus f Dining
swept both the singles and
doubles, Yet it*t an empty
thing. The Nationak arc what
IS iaiporunt All people re-
member IS how you do at the
Natioeals.
To ignore what ahe women,
have accomplished already this
year, however, would be a bit
presumptuous.
No. 1 Paula Smith has an
ovenil 27-5 record which
could easily be 31-1 if not for
lapses in concentration in some
key matches.
**Paela has only been beaten
badly once this year and that
was to (Barbara) Halquist,*^
remarked Zaima. *X>therwise
she's been in every loss she's
had and if she IJM peactn-
t rated more, she could have
won.
Cindy Thomas i% 17-10 over-
all and Zaima feels that her
record could be much better
also "Cindy has lost only to
girls who are equal or better in
ability if she could have put it
together a Utter stronger, the
would have beaten a lot of
those girls she^ lost to.**
With the exception of Smixh.
the ivomen have been stj
with a malady ** which qould
bother them in the Natiohals
Individual upsets have been
few and far between for the
Bruins and the women are
going to have to play oyer
their heads if they expect to
contend for the National title.
ATT the girls have had no
trouble heating opponents of
the same ability, but haven't,
for the most part, been able to
triumph over higher-ranked
opponents. With the Nationals
being a single elimination
Tournament, the women must
beat these opponents to score
well.
Susan Zero ts undergoing
further — "t^ts for mono-
nucleosis and whether she
plays or n6t will be the key to
Brum hopes at the Nationals.
If she IS not able to play, her
spot would go cither to Gay lee
Poliakoff of Jenny Geddes.
Zaro, whose record stands at
19-6. has been possibly the
most consistent of the women
as she has come through with
many important victories Al-
though she has l>een beact with
AMER-I-CAL
1434 W«t«roo4 loulcvwrf •
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35
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f
This 3.30 value also entitles you to the , i
fine jazz of Ray Draper and friends \
direct from Europe and New York in |
their only L.A. appearance, an atmo-
sphere of freedom and relaxation^ and
unlimited access to the sun, beach, and
the paddle tennis courts all right outsi
our front window.
Good ThriL May 15
This IS th0 ploc9 ior Wib Lov^r%\
By for fhe |#tf Rib% wmym fr^^n t.A
COMnCTi DINNERS
$2.75
NJUHIY'S O^m MT SftQ
I4S4 N CafSCfNT HflGHTS at SUNSfT STtlf
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FREDASIAIRE GENEICELUT
THATS ENTERIAlNMENi; RUtrZ
iS> ti(IMM) UJISHI
■iMiTiiornioii
MUfNAfUSi
-•r*!
Wot Coast Premiere May 19
Pacific's CineFBina Dome.
SUNSET iM«r VIIM - NOLLYWOOO
an Th( Opwa OmM tt
Speakers Program Presents —
Aaron H. Stovitz
Candidate for Superior Court Judge
Currently: i
* Head Deputy District Attorney
* Prosecuting attorney in Charles Manson case.
Friday May 14
12 Noon
Meyerhoff Park
^s
Spejker^ Pronram/Sfi
leijfslalfve Counc li
«*-««i-
■ <l^ *
A «
1
I
i
'%
1
f
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{
^
Oml^MuUf
Hie ICE HOUgE
14 NOtIM M»4TOt A^
yAJAD^KV. CJkUHMHiA fllM
fATIONS MUnoy 1-f942
U'H
Turn. IMwl . Thurt •:
Fn. A Sat 8 30-10:30-12 30
•ufidiy 0:30 Show 4 Hootsrlanny
10:30
GEORGE MILLER
LEON ft MALIA
NOTIINE Ulrews' hard work on faie
4pip to 2mn 7 d>yt •
PEER counaaltng by and tor
iling wtth thmr taxualtty
by
ii«t«liw«> cuunctt
«•
CONTEMPORARY ART SURVEY
presents
■^
ELIZABETH MURRAY
Slide Lecture/Discussion of Recent Work
Friday, May 14, 8:00 PM
DICKSON AUDITORIUM 2160E
UCLA • FREE
_ -r^
-L. -
SLC • SCA • FTF • GSA
^
■•
•
• .'.I.-
-
Tomorrow Night
INTERNATJONAL DINNER
at Internationai Student Center^ —
1023 Hilgard Ave. (Parking available)
Food from over 10 countries (6-8:30)
Foreign Ambassador and Consulates
Famous Japanese Magician "Shimada'*
Iranian Group "Golbolbol"
Indian Sitar music Z'"^" _ ^^
Belly Dancers: Aysha Aff troupe
Soviet Youth Delegation
Advance Tickets: $3.00 ($2.50 students)
may be still available at
F.S.A. (325 Kerckhoff Hall)
I.S.C. (1023 Hilgard Ave.)
-i-W
.J
By MHm FI
DB Sfports Writer
All of the loil, all of the work aad all of the competition ai
UCLA crew hat mem ^oikd 4mm to Me weekend €i racing The
Wettern SpnnU, featuring competition aaSMig the top crewi on
the Paaftc Coiil^ witt take ptecc at San PaMa, €mlMnnm f4^
aarf tomorrow.
Back in early Otta^cr, the crews began a ■wwiiagty endiai
day-to-day routine of workouts Rowing, running, lifting weights
and aMorted other workouts were all in ultimate preparation for
this weekend.
This morning there will be the preliminary hiali aad Saturday
the finals for both men and women will uke place
tret A men*5 crewT tougheirxoBipetTtton wtH he
and California The Bruins have dropped two races to the Bean.
coming closer the second time. UCLA has not faced Washington
as yet, but they arc believed tjo be about as strong as the Golden
^
Bears.
UCLA women's crews* toughest competition figures to be
Caiifornui in the varsity eight and Washington in the lightweight
eight.
Long Beach Sute could be a factor in the women's varsity
race, since it came within a second of the Bruins two weeks ago
in the first annual Norman P. Miller Cup race. However* haatf
coach Larry Daugherty thinks liis Westwood squad has improved
its start (its major problem) sufficiently to hold back the 49ers.
Whether either the men or women oarsmen of UCLA din
catch Cal remains in doubt The women rowers have dropped
both their contests with Cal, by seven seconds each On the other
hand, the men have been slowly catching up to their northern
cousins.
Early in the leaibn, the Bears easily downed their animal
counterparts, but just two weekends ago, the story was not quite
the same UCLA led over half of the 2,000 meter race only to
have Cal come back and nip them by two seconds at the
finish.
Whatever the outcome of this year's Western Sprints, where
the top two squads in "each event advance to the nationals, it has
been quite an eventful year for West Coast racing.
During the racing season, one of the most famous people
connected with crew died George Pocock, who revolutionized
the design of the racing shell and enabled the University oC
^Vashington to dominate American rowing for 50 years, died at
the age of 81 A native of England. Pocock esuhlishicd his shell
building business at the university in 1912. Today, virtually every
coHegiate crew on the West Coast uses Pocock racing shells
— Joan Lind of the Long Beach Rowing Association became
the first person on the 1976 U.S. Olympic team by wrnning the
Tinal of the 1,000 meter women's singles sculls trials Sunday at
Long Beach Marine Stadium Lind is the only representative
allowed in women's singly from the US She rowed the course
against five mile per hour winds in 3:55.5.
Today
INTERNATIONAL
FAIRE
9:00-6:00 International Food & Artifacts
Noon: International Perfornnances
"La Petit Carribean" and Mahachi
Concluding UCLA INTERNATIONAL WEEK. 1976 of the Foreign Student Association
Also sponsored by Council on ProgramminQ (I SO. Program Task Forre
Student LtfWhrtH/e Council
9K50 fowaih mmI return
Bartow optimistic
ly Kaa KroOl
DB Sporu BipaftiT
-I mmk there is a 50-50 chaaor that Richard (Washington) and
Marques (Johaaoa) will coom hack to UCLA," head basketball
coach Gaac Bartow said laopKly when interviewed on a KIEV
smarts taft proggaaa.
Dm to the financial probteav of the American iiiktifeall
Association (ABA), this could be the hut year of the real big
aoasy available to coUcfe basketball playm.
and I am sure whatever they do, it wiU he the right"^ thingT^Mud
Bartow. However, Bartow added, *Xjetting the ilium is what it*s
all about.**
Bartow admitted that there are great pressures put upon him.
•note's no way to better what John Wooden did at UCLA,"
said Bartow Bartow beheves tkr peakive aspecu of his situation
are interest m the program, fan support and the fine players that
ac df%>ela|pad through the pragnm.
-We feel recruiting has gone well," commented Bartow "We
needed four big men and that's what we got." He feels James
Wilkes is a great forward and it pleased about signing Gig Sims,
Darryll AUums and Kiki Vandewege.
Bmtow abo commented on other returning players ''We feel
W€ have fine guavit. Brad (Holland) and Roy (Hamilton) have
super takm written all over then. David (Greenw4Mxi) had a
tremendous j^ear and the iky*s the Umit for him.**
'J...
I
-ur*
FASHlON'Xr
LUNCH COCKTAILS DINNER
For a delightful change of pace and a
unique experience in gourmet dining visit
AKBAR Cuisine of India
Specializing in the most authentic curries,
kababs, biryanis and tandoori preparations
(Cooked in a special Indian Clay oven)
Relax in the exotic atmosphere of our beautifully
decorated cocktail lounge ^
Special party room for your convenience
Op>en Daily from 11 rOOam to 11:00pm,
All nr^jor credit cardis accepted
laur nations (213) 822-4116
Washington Street in Marina Dei R^y
The UCLA Center for
Afro- American Studies
in cooperation with the Departntent of Fine Arts,
Special Produaion Unit present
A Special Tribute to
Julian ''CannonbalT' Adderley
X ^ r ee-Day Testi v IT
at UCLA
Benefit Concert
l-sbirts
blouses
skirts
pants
WMtWOOd
Village
921 Broxton
479-5171
Santa Monica
Mall
1256 Santa Momca
395-6956
North Hollywood Sherman Oaks
VaM«y Plaxa (At Van Nuys Bivd )
12112 Sylvan St 14502 Ventura Biv#
980-0031 789-6293
I — ..,
■■■^-r
The UCLA Center for
Afro-American Studies
presents
Or. Claudia MitcheU-Kernaf^
r
May 20, 1976 8:00 p.m.
featuring —
, ■ " ' , " ,'■ '
^NaiAddcflay
Louift Hayd
Airto
FftddirHubbvd
ErnicAndrcwfi
SanilofiM
David Axelfod
Aor'^cC^dy
WaltartoolMf
Nara Purim
^^M^H|f v.lWVIS>fO
JtWHHy ^TMf n
C«orf«Duka
ftmiaWaiM
Victor MdMSM
Mlillireufh Combo
and more
Assistant Prpfessor, Anthropology
UCLA
Associate Direaor of Research
Center for Afro-American Studies
Topic: issues in Black American English
Tuesday, May 11, 1976 12:00 noon
3107 Campbell Hall
• •
• • •
Instrumental Workshops
Schoenberg Hall (Music Building)
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
May 21 A 22, 197S
Workshops Are Free To Al
Concert TidwC Prkct — $5J0, $i^ and $7^ (iHrilcd
iMMnbcr ol $2J» HtktH avalaUe to UCLA iiaJtli)
Tickcte
at Iht UCLA Tkkct OMkc,
at al Mnhirf Ticket Offices
and
Professor Henry McGee
Professor of Law
UCLA
Director. Center for Afrr*- American Studies
Topic: Judicial Review: State Courts and
Exclusionary Municipal Practices — The
Perils of Minimalism in Urban Planning
Thursday, May 13. 1976 12:00 rKX>n
3107 Canipbell Hall
All net concert proceeds go to the
Julian Adderley Memorial
Open And Free To The Public
■^ I ^m ■ —
CLASSIFIED AD
TIM
fully iMpffU th« itmlmmnlitv •* C»ft-
lomMt pilicy mn wan df cf«m«ntt<w.
Atfvcrtisliif^^ a^c* will (!•< M mad*
M«MaM« IM Mw 0«My •rwlfi to wiyofw
«!»• dl»crlminal«« «n lh« basis of
■nf^itry, rnlof ftkll— i^ftgill fca
or Ml Millar 0IO OaMy BnUfi
AtUCLA CaiwiimntcoUows
ird t*m invMllfalod any ol Nw mt-
OLAF • Tomorrow U your Mf tfayf
tft port of MO !••. Cmn^mmmmm.
My low* la your Olwoyo Tulu
(•M 14)
niCO Moppy Blf 21 Novo Fun of
Monto • Gat soma Bush Your Pol.
f« M 141
RUTH S How
It WOOil?
con
MftfoFrotf
T4)
vicat advmrikmmd oradvartiaars rmpf
•aniad in Ihta rasua Any parson ba-
Maving tlial an advartlsantant In Hils
ird's poMcy on non
•iotad Itarain sHould
ilnis In wiIMm tp
MlO BMin9n9 Managar UCLA Dolly
Bruin. 112 KorcMwK Man 30t Wastwood
Ptota. Los Angolos. California 90024
FOr aaalslanca wMh iiouoine «ocrtml-
nalion probiams. coll UCLA Housing
Ofttc* (213)t2S-4401; WoolSl^FpIr
Housing |213) 473-
KICK Wa
Happy 21st
you hoaa a sory
alwaya Lort and
#« at «a»
CAMOt H.
f ffooti Ona at your H§mo
(• M 14)
campus
OOIMG TO LAW SCHOOL? Loom la
STUDY EFFECTIVELY Writa Lagal
Fraparatlon. Inc . 471 Boulli Ogdan
Drtva Loa Anfslss. MOat; dr caM: (213)
"^^^ (1.114)
BlU.—BMp'Tt At BIO imc?
i4M Bo too BOfikad by 8 pm
roulMawBiars
(URC la aaaaar •! La
(• M 14)
JUOY Baar - Happy IBBi lai— wawit
Yaur voyaga to tha Virgin Islanda"
la BawPB la ba s wMd (7) ana. Drtaa upB
taaa B laa croom, CatHna ^, ^ ^^^
BBUB • Sorry wa ra Iota. Basically.
Hoppy BlrPi^y (Koran 20. Us -0) May
your Hfa ba fug al nuPa aippals. aacitlrvg
^mndi gosstp. mm4 luppsrwara Ra-
mombor, oaaiatbiios fastar is rtoi baMar.
Loos. Mafia and Lincla.
(Sm 14)
<^,
OLENDALE Hlgtt C
umon July 10. 1970
of 1071 R*.
can 242 3101.
(1 mu\
CHERV— Happy 23 Vau ra not
you'ra folllr>g batlar. Mictiaal
(• M 14)
, «"
PORTRAITS
taken now
for Graduation
Coll for appointment
DEBBIE P Qomar
you.kld Hoppy
Daddy loaas you vavy
Hors'a looking at
ry,ioby Your
(f M 14)
MARK only tha Log'a noaa knows Gat
wlalias from Iha laatn and tha iMHid
(• M 14)
a»u(ra
imp US sf ucfio
150 herchhoH hall 825 06 > I k27}
open mon hi 8 30-4 30
printiiii;
service
In |M \4 IIMIK
illlHllMlt
niinM-i»-4lHtii
I. 'I kmLhiifl hall
JttrfJii
v_'>H
WHAT DOES A SRUIN
SEAR GIVE FOII GIFf ST
tH MsmdHaw - Mow Nos Trisla. ampty
tn ttia hood. For atia invilad Baby Paca
to bad with har inslaad
. (0 M 14)
IF YOU NEED SOMEONE
TO TALK TO
CALL US
^ HELPLINE
•2^7B4B
— — — ■^^— "Pi"'
DEAR Mr Swan and Hal. Thom for
oiy party I'll soa you In a wot suit
-with four faal of rubbar hoaa coming
out of your faca i Mia aslsrls vulgarls-
Judv Jahods
MTB JR (rsmambar?) - Tha yoors hova
srith lr«numaral>la mmmoh— In batwssn.
To ona of aiy daaraat frtanda. a haart-
-IBM14)
I
I
9
UCLA Clothing for children
and adults, bears, mugs,
glassware, watches, desk
accessories, jewelry, per-
sonalized shirts, trophies,
football helmet radio._
CHAIRMAN S.a.R-
T«a 1
inanBia tioaa aoon us Biroufh
nnais.
Lawry's. pro-MardI Oraa. BURO
GRAB
, poat MardI Oros. spaBBii Isals
andci
iipaiWewi. 4:00 A.M. aRsi buBpst
lallis.
losing 1:00 AM clossas. lea.
nosy
Uttla brothars. organic ranch
laals, and don t torpat pal raaaa«
Thanks. {
I Front
Di
wacoma ...CaBiy
(§ M 14)
Bfisrweftr
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
for anyBdrn iaas
I ahaaya trtad for Bia
bast How couM I
if Cad M^tai^ntaiil
KTWOOD Fi
iwrs|. aaont woramp.
YWCA. S72 IMpaid
47a-7tl0.
11
(4 am FH)
BMWDAY Mass: trSB. lOtBB.IIcJB
(Oayloy/
(4 Olr Ffl)
church
HOB ifi—Hap^ airBiday! Yau'ra such
a foa m aaaf Bvan i
Haaa a yaad day laia
<• •• 14)
HARTY B-Oay John Lf Old chandat nmmr
mm, Biay )ual wa«a
ttwlr da9onarols
' Ll1..._.riin-ii.
m M lai
TWO iBiMla yamif j
panjiliri ■iistlabli
tar a taad Bma SaiMR
l^ralBlanlsCa««a
^^^^^^^s a •^^P Af ^^^^B
iiaa Had: aor lar
RMpola and Baby Fa
•• IB M 141
SBNSITfVE. yannf. laN. han^
ZEM MCDITATIOW RETREAT
t1 la tanday Canductad by Ian Maslar
liar briftfl aiaaplng bag
Buy SoA^c.
S^ufh€rrt Canp^
cwtfUiinfnfit
I1S40 oach
an«y.Call-
(7M14)
SAIft
(7 M %t
flJOOU^ICATf
Wodnasday aHaiaaaaia. WBd Whisi
%fiO^ Club Ifff Wostwood Blvd.
fTOIrt
social •VMils
ORfN DAMCE-SalMsday. May If. • 30
Afas 21 96 S3.S0 Racii band No hoal
bar. Colonial Houaa. 4t10 Whiiaall
k^n%im at RtvarsMa Drtva. North Holly -
Oatalla Oava. M6 1100 Spon-
by Cmat Jawlsh Yoyng Profaa-
Organization ^^ ^ ,^^
tor fwil
PIANOB aw
from lunar
MO-4514 *
for rant from tIS.OO
for aala All rabuMt.
(t J4)
ARROWHCAO caBIn In %^km% aroa
Blaoaa • IBO/2 days llSB/7 days.
M7-1447
(tOir)
WEST LOS ANGELES
PRIME MEDICAL SPACE
Wllshira Wast Magical Plata loci
11B46 Wllahira Blad.. % adla wasi of Baa
lo«o Fwy Ultra MPdaPW. full aocurHy.
hallport. aacaptlonal parlilng. city A
ocaan vlawa Cho«ca apocaa atlll aval-
labla Thia 11 -story madlcal Mdg ta
schadulad for complalion fall 1f7f
Laoaaa hava baon signad for clinical A
radiological laba. pharmacy and raslau-
rant Sulla aixaa to auH CaM BartMira
PwrSmat^ or Chuch Wright. Coklwall
Banbar Co.. (213) 274-«aii
LAICE Arrowhaad- Rustic cabin, baauti
ful location Slaap 6 Firaplaca $00
long waatiand $100 wwali «M-a9t4.
RENT^.TV. $10.00 __,.
studant discounts tSai
47
■»-J«i71>
T^'rtS^
rf»lo »:00
.(tOtr^i
[BRUIN TV. a STEREO RENTALS
COLOR T V S
Biaalily monthly
•Oc m day
Siaraoa S7 50/ month
LbnHad supply availabk
Black/Willa T V • $7 50 month
Call 275-1fa2
MOTE Our a^caa afa dtsaoanlsd lo UCLA
•luaint wrtOt current llaf
.
for sale
awow I - ^ravo Radio * diroct tuning
Dralia BW-4A Vary good condliloh.
470-242B
(iBMIB)
117
(10 M IB)
laont ring. 4 dlamantfs. 3 amo
an 14K
(IBBII^
OlMi 121B. Walnut baaa. dual
SiMilan s bast earu«d«s. iBICEE.
1290. sod S190 474-9i1t
(10 m 14)
COINS LID
1136 \^
Lot A
<r: Biwd
;24
4-w
Euadf C-tB.
I^Maiator
(to m 14)
riBBIIB)
rfBM tdl
for sals
(10 M 14)
Taxoa Inafrwoianf
TiaaM-Msji Tiaaai MTjs TiaaM
•MlVWS ?00 —»»'•-*
»l tmUMcli ••MwaartM •laiMtNi
NOVU^
MS at
/IBilCUS
MMMMESS iOUIPtMENT
lUn lanlB Maaici ai WLA
CAU.47S-f7S1 3ai Waal alMnlXapa fwy
N You'rs Going to B«
Juniors N«xt Ouaii«r-
you can ord«r your class
ring now!
You'll gBt tummer daiiyery and
you can womi your officiaii clasa
ring for Fall OuBTlBr
ASUCLA Studimto' Stora
Coma to BRRrwBRr. B iRvai
Ackarman Onion
SAXAPHONE.' Bauachor aMo. geld w/
rUcfcal Hays, rteh sound, mint condition
laaa aaa is is
•«w. ••* MM (10 M 14)
CALC Ha -45 Cost t290 wM sad
for S135/bast offar 477-2S53aftar tOpm
^•^ 110 M 14)
l*on and Mt»
Ol''tMW W|'
•..Ji'T^
. Q^y $2.50e
laaiunng ttia vranoi ol
^h\
Osii
n
C»«Oili Mifo- Homar Myolh mghy
9 A.M.- 5 P.M
May 17-21
Treehousc North Patio
AckBrman Union
Zaro 100 SB {
(2).
).Bayal1f
(IB M IB)
at. Salact CaNfamla WWios.
Miil.B912W.BBadBt.
OB OBI
amoraMa. ^ • ■• A. fa il A, SB §2. SB M ala
IIMB Sania Btealaa BNd. mJLJL
acES ELEcraoMics
47»-Jiig Ipr baat
STBBEO eomaononls: Studontdls-
aaanli Parsonadaad sandea. 2S m^or
brands Vallay B01-BB4S. M1-2B2a
j HBOm
SELL aur sloroa aiiB mana
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1»7. Manboaa. Ca. ttBBt.
(IBM 17)
BMAM Nu NoNoy CafB. U% DouBIa
jy^^ap-aBB-a. STO Cad H«^
titaaa
THtMATmeaa
tins
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onyalai
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fPaallMRb
^^^^a»
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nd. a
If
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- UJjdl
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SO«fY TC-1t1 ala#a«
for safo
yy.y^
CAMP SITE
CAMPING EQUIPMENT
Quality Camp«rtg hfiiMQfimnx
AT oiacouiiT paioBi
Tonts. SlaapMig Saga Bactipaciis
VAM NUVf BLVD.
AN OAKB. CA f 14B3
., „.^.
aSB TurntaBla. Uf BB. Sony Tapa
fOCOfBar ra«a Nba fmm, STBJB. Topa
focof^or taO.OO 473-23BB.
(IB MM)
PLANT Bala: Hunjdrads of ln#o«r A
planls frown by horBcuHural
Sunday 10 S 2115 Lannkif-
lan (1 Biadi wool Boaorly Olon * Olym-
alc)
(IB M 14)
rr alian^ c
PiBo Blad 10-a
(IBBIBBI
coMCoao
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m
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12
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McCABTMEV Tlckots Must soil this
arook. t20 or bast offar Jur«a 22. SocMon
14 47S-10BB. .•-.•••-»
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Call Jo9 or Art BBS-
(10 Map)
iWHKirtMnities
FaEPAaE Foa suawiEa mow? '
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
iSO'a of top-quality poalMons aval-
iBaia to Er>ginaors. Tach.. mmnui
aapa.. Salas R«pa.. Prograiwman
ate Wrtta for lffi|B^ry today
Mr JAMES
aoa S2S2
Santa MmiIbp, Ca
mt m
SANTA Monica Corp has tavaral pw
llons immadlataly avpt^bla lor ilCUl
studantt to worti in our offioo lOr a min
of 3 hrs Mon thru fh. bofmntng f:1f
am Positions wm last ithru and of
sommar mtd mrm on-^co»indaf ion boats
PrasanHy amployad UC staidonls aaor
afbig $13.50 par hr H f9u mrm
"•oBvaladandwdNnf loworli cal
Starr •2i-SB33
f13 M 20 >
^3 HIT)
noa#oaa##oooaooan
^ nKom )'
it
Mipnioftm MOW I
for two 3 act plays
(roles op«n to all agaa)
in ttm totkmtng
\
ACTING
DIRECTING
PLAYWRITING
DANCE ^
ill
CALL US AT
•37-3011
h subjects
ALCOHOL
pama. UMM
Ban
I-
(14 M iai
(14 M t1)
rid M td>
cx>\^irm^
CLASSIFIED AD
(12 M 101
a ^^ ^a^^^a» ^^^^py
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(ISBIIB)
ts
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470-0051
CASH ar
rtaoBri
«71
IfHa call
CIS OBI
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backpocliinf . lannla. aiooliontfs All
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75B1 fl2 M ia»
THINKING Of Sa«7 Now national
nuipazlfta af Buman aoauollty aoaks
latlars tor puBUcatlon about sosual
(what yoM'sa dtmmV lan-
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f\mm9% arlthoM an ro^uosl. Ptayflrl
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231B. LA BBSS?
(12 MSB)
COBTEZ rocroatl«nal vohlcia prafor
yoo 1BBB-70. CaB day or nifBI. Laoay
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help wnt»ci
CCaTAM
Tai
(IS M IB)
(It M 1B|
aaavBiTTEa
47B-1SI
will arofb arNB your
UCLA. 4?B-iaS. „
r«a M «•»
ITTt.
(If ai IB)
(it M IB)
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poa
THE JOB
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IP/C.I
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as
In foraign counlrlos In^ulra Pr<
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ASSISTANT to
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477-37Br.
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Voliow Papas ^. Spaaial
"^•^ (If Olr)
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ATTINTION UCLA Parants* LI
VW MAINTENANCE BE PVICE: fBf.M
la yaur
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BALLET: Pmi way la aaawty 13BB ,
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Over 1000 flights lo Europe this
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PROFESSIONAL COLLEGE TyPtt4G
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Tvrm papers Thaaia Dlaaertat*ons
Math. Tables. Dtagri
Counaaltng. Xeroalfvg. Pnnting Binding
Student Pates 399 3191
(uom
MATH Tiilortnf by MJ^. Ond
Ruth c. dissertatnnri.
statistical. past,
seven days a wubl.
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apts. furnislied
1 SR APT CoM^. iMni. M.S. Vlow. 2
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1 ft 2 bedrooms. Large courtyard.
992 Veteran Ave Mp Witshlre 47».
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unfurntehsci
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burning fIsdplHd- SoPSlaw
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(27 m 20)
a
14)
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dissertations, roawmos. letters. EdH
Ipat ct
.1747.
|S9 0lr)
f29o8n
JOS
CI
Potday • Technical Typlrtg
477
WLA.
(2S J 41
PROPtSStdNAL wrilor «Nlli DA. In
0 edO lapa PM oMI iBfm
< ale. Ooor 2B yaaia •■-
VS-
WALK TO UCLA
:ious Dachdtors. SingMa
1 ft 2Dpdym Apts
10S41 SMMhmosa Pool
'•IrToffOeo
940 QIanrock - 543
479-493-510-519 LandMir 477
t
FURNISHEO/Untarfilpiiad
t149. Sln«los $199.
(MOtI
aptSa to ghara
2 BEDROOM Apt. NorthrMfp. Pool,
own room: 992 JO. Fampla Mats^asdlMr
proiarrod. Sue. 349-2359 after 9pm.
429M14)
FEMALE SMmmala naotfad lor loealy
2-8tory Brentwood apartment (with
I), iaallabli June 1 at. Judy 472-4771 <
(29M41
1-2
4172 or 924-1995
f^bom apt. Waal L A. $1 15/ mo
furnlabod, parltlng. buaos. Somwono
9/1. Lyn. 479-9127
(29M19)
opt,. 9
9l99/mo Tbn. 479-
■'*^ * f29 M 19)
(29 M 1S|
990/ mo
<nmM)
(a9m2B>
OwnlMdri
9129. Overlartd
479-1999
(MM29)
FEMALE
Own hidraam^BBiiMin. 914SJ9.
9/19 - 9/15. 479-2979.
(29 I
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lb alidaa 2
Id UCLA. $12099/1
474-9797
(29M19)
for sublaaaa
house In Beverlywood for avm
9«brflp«Ma.2
<S9«19|
(19M19)
t can so APT. la auMoi ^^ mnt «^--
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Campus events Campus events
s
r
^SSH Arts «90li 19 Pill t94lur9 9 IIIBP rdciplion S-7S ppi Hoy 17 Saot
taculty. 9MR pod itiMORt ort itaw Fot SmI MM portripsMri oris l$9Bb9l 3J9^
NMii mi ^fmim aM9. mr^ p» wiy 919 mbv m aim. rimm Am in. 9
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17 7 « wm4 m^ JUmi 1t49 746 am 3
MP May 21 UnaMRMy Frintmak9r$ ihoia
iwgM PM. Mm 17 Mid 19 11 9M-1 pPI
19 9P9 W. ««'I9 ft iHi RM
6pfnMay?129in9Pd6p«
3 am. Nov 23 ScbotnOdrg
BdMil HM C99aMt 9J0 pm Mm M
RtHt 1299 J99PP9 Ovorttolf eu9MI099
IMnoSdr of the Arena Stage Theat9r
22
CoNlomio M
4vail99i8 m
IN
wOl 99
NI9V999
faifi $
R 9n laaOarf b wdl 99
4 15 and 630 May 16 and 3 19
pm May 19 MacGowan Li
-TaiMlV UCLA wodi9n$
MM 99 OvoiMMi May 19-21 Brum Ki
117
field aiork
AcpioMK cradii avaiiaON $tud9wi Or
AmvJSI 9f coNdMm
Aft$ noMi iBiBy MBcGodian iSoftMf
1340 Free »^ ♦
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Fr«9
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— #9D iRMi 9 10 MP mm^ wm
mi 9S9>M3ir 9m t««nf ^RiSy Intr
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IB C9P 99I9 yob Sod
Higbway
\ssm on hums evolution Sumtaf
Doasid JoImmbmi,. MdMDlDpM snd co-director of the
InternstionBl Afsr Re9airch Expedition in Ethiopis, will
Iscturc on ^'Current Per$pectives on M9n*$ Evolutiooiry
PaBt," at 2:30 pm Sunday, in Royce Hall Auditorium.
GeneTSl sdmiftaion chsrfe 19 S4.50 snd S3. 50 Students with
ID wiU ke charted $2.50
Johanson has unearthed some important fD9Bai hominid
material dating hsck more than 3 milhon ycDffi — a find
which has brought about reinterpretation of an early phitte
of nnan^s evolution. Johanson will share information about
past ecological settings and hominid anatomy gathered by
his re9earch team during their November- December 1975
The lecture 19 part of the 1976 Leakey Foundation
Lectures and 15 presented by the UCLA Committee on Fine
Arts Productions in cooperation with the L.S.B Leakey
Foundation for Research Related to Mans Origin and the
Commitiae on Public Lectures.
9y8tr999| SaaaiN Faaa99M
ToBOHMS IB MSfi M9 tar SaMiM caM 74S
4491 ar 477-4HS TaanMMaM «M
9 iBi widOMM May 22 Sacortty
Vtad SMBiifcaP
MB 9M a card MM
to you
— #9BmmMm mfor
on axtraoMral tundmo tor or
and 909tS99t9fai9 9r9 aw
Fallowsbipa arid Assislantatiip
Huroiiy 129
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MM 9M U 9bmm il tm
MMirs. %f mm avaiiabia Visit
OCCA. KorcMMff 311 or COM 62S-2B6
m WiihiajMH 999S6BB999 ara avoM
aMa m KorcMioff SM and Oua today
990 MMa
ra 1UB
for CaaMtc Lite
i^acb Harbor May 22
Moy 31 MM MMitG9. Jtma 22 29
Ml KaraMMff 969 avary day
and M M99MM$ 9t UCLA fi9lHng Clii9
M9 iMorM "H
«Mo mBhmmo M AlriOMi mmoic 7M 9M ^
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or call 92S-2929 Voluntoars ara alaa
Mr MiMitaoMMiMI MM toad pro^
May 19 SooBor M90 2
^ ITS-lflil >436 pn •
-loss aod 118 CtlBlMl AMiisalMa M Z
MadMao 6 qm May J9 CMS I3^M6 «
davoMo wrttmg fbiNs 99 9 BMMM M
24 pM. OMry
fiai^d mM Map
a«9lMMa EXFO CaMar DaadlMa «
—fla Tipr by Murray
aMI9a
by tba
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VIM 99 alMvo M MM «n9k's ISC .^y
Niom PrasrMM IMwar 5 394 39 pm MMi
7 J9-11X pm loniEM fMartipiionol SM
dBM CanMr 1023 HMsord
6MB1M initfBWtMmmtitT'n mi^
9t shown 7 39 PM tomorrow Malnit/
auditor mm $1 SO
-TM MN9B6 IBBB Mmv and A 6tM Ma
SH6M. bnN 9a siMibn 729 pM tontpM
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9M9 LaM6BB9i D99. BM9M 3-6 p9^
Mondays StMCba' ?T79 MM 939-11 9M.
Thuradoyf Acbamian 2499
Et SuMid 3 pm May
17 NMnas 304
— Srala 9aaMcrsit «viii discuss Can
ffaaaionai and i>wiatonal racaa. 1-2
CLASSIFIED
1 ^-—.^^
lOr sHoiansa
^
OG6UMI PARK 8HBMM
BMMp vMw. aovon B
97B9. .
r90M in
hoyboo Mar rant
«BnM tm
WHshKeWnt l.e«.«mJ
(19M17>
1 bath appnmont, cornpr
Mr MP. M
479-7791 aNpr9pjn.
(29 M 14)
(91 M 141
119 M 14) J"?
4F4-9t47
(MMSM
Ml MMI
WITH to.
HANSOHRT
Hf
-tr.
<—
I'
0nb0rDatnm0nty
Campus
in organut Peter Hem-
pin will give A free recital
lotfny at noon on the Schoen-
berg Hall organ.
Taaight at %:3» m
Sunday night. Perlormancct
are loM out, but there have
ban empty icau, and getting
in ii pwiihir if not probable
The UC Movement Theater
it tn Ackerana GsmmI latt-
roon tomorrow at S pm. Ad-
■Maion It free.
Halt jazz pianist Bill Evans
laais the Bill Evans trio in
concert. Student tickets are
S 12.30
^ Gairick OblMMi plays a dif-
^ ferent kind of pinno Saturday
•" ta Koyce His program in-
M cludM a late Mozart sonaU,
^ piMM by Chopin, and Mus-
J sorgsky*s ^Pictures at an Ex-
% hibition."
^ Sunday night at 8 in Royce
Hall, Swedish tenor Nicolai
Oaiila will itiig songs by Res-
jpigbi, Massenet, Faure, Tur-
ina, Donizetti, and others.
The theater arts depart-
. Bient*i Waal SMc Story ends
Movies
F W Murnau*s (TIm Last
Laugk) silent clasaic, Svarisc.
and Sm Wood's FW WImno
tW Bdl Tols are the Melnitz
Hall movies for Saturday at
7:30 pm. Admission is $1.50.
For the William Wyler film
festival at the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art there
will be two double features,
each beginning at 8 pm To-
night, Dead fjMl starring
Humphrey Bogart. Huntz Hall
aad Gobc Defl and Tom
Browo of Culver featuring
for %VlMii tlie Bci ?•
Slim Summerville and Andy
Devme will show Saturday,
Dodaworlll with Walter Hus-
ton and Ruth Chatterton and
TiM Lattcf with Bctte Davis
and Gale Sondergaard will
screen.
At the Fox Venice tonight,
Uai Ailibys UanM.
Maodc and Woody Allen*s
Play It Agaia, Sam will run.
uOiik Ken Russeirs To«py
and Stanley Donen*i BadaiiWd
with Peter Cook and Dudley
Moore and Raquef Welch as
Lilhon Lust will screen Satur-
day evening.
The 2nd annual Grove Pr«si
Erotic Film Festival is featured
tonight at the Nuart, while
Martin Scorsese's ABee
Daaiii*t Uvc Hare Anyasore
and Mean Stracte will screen
tomorrow. George PaFs sd-fi
duaic, TlM War of IlK WofMs
and Bill Menziei* TMBfi io
Cone are the bill for Sunday.
Music
Nightclub action highlights
the music scene this weekend.
At the Cocoanut Grove (Am-
boaaodor Hotel), Phil Woods
and Zoot Sims will perform
Saturday at 9 and 11:30 pm
The Roxy has • the rock
group Man tonight and tomor-
row, while Starwood of Holly-
wood IS featuring Albert K.tng
all weekend. The Palomino
Club has Hoyv-<Axton tonight
and Saturday
lElvin Bishop cah be seen
Saturday at 8 pm at, the Santa
Monica Civic Auditorium and
Bad Company and K.aMM wii
perform Sunday at 8 pm at the
Fabulous Forum in Inglewood.
Gracing the Amboaaodor
Auditorium Sunday as well as
highlighting classical moaic
events this weekend is pianist
Mona Golabek, performing'
BoTtok, Beethoven, Chopin
-and Scriabin. Her performance
will begin at 7:30 pm.
The LA Mozart Orchestra
presents its debut concert at 8
pm Sunday in the Fritchman
Concert Hall (2936 West 8th
Street) in a concert that in-
cludes Britten*s Simple Sym-
phony, Mozart*s Eine Kleine
Nachtmusilr an^ Holzburg
Symphony, and works by
Dvorak. Rossini,, and Corelli.
Students tickets are $3.
Theater
The LA Civic Light Opera
m opened its first show
this week, Tlie Baker s Wife,
starring Topol at the Dorothy
Chandler Pavilion The ikow is
a muaionl version o( the film
music and lyrics by Stephen
(Godapeli) Schwartz
Other openings are PialnH
ly at Theater
about the trini
of Juiiuii and Ethel Rosenberg,
at Theater Rapport , and TIm
Lost Maetiffg of tlie KniflMs of
tht Wliiie MagnoHa at the
Company of Angels.
Still running are Neil
Simon*s highly entertaining
California Snate at the Ah-
manson Theater and the Mark
Taper Forum's repertory series
And Wlierc SIk Siofii Nobody
Knows, AsncS, Croas
aud the recent addition
r
THE UCLA SPRING BLOOD DRIVE COMMITTEE
THAN KS
Students, Staf and Faculty
for
DONATING BLOOD
and acknowledges the following for ~
their generous assistance
AN Anwricnn Burger
Old Venice Noodle Com0«ny
Charthouee. Weetwood
Old World Restaurant,
Alice's Restaurant Westwood
La BartMias
Casey's Bar
Hungry Tigar. Westwood
The Troubador
Strew Hat Pizza. Westwood
ViHege McDonald's
PSA
Bay Cities ¥IMd*r>g Co
Air Force ROTC
Alpha Delta R
Bruin Circle K
Bruin BeNeS
Phrateres
ALpha Lamda Delta
DeMa OeUe Delta
Kappa Alpha Theta
Tri Delta
UCLA Phyeical Plant
Daily Bruin
Canvas Specialty
PSA
UCLA PnntinQ Si Duplicating
Dean of Students Office
and
Student Welfare Commission
of the Student Legislative Council
a ••
Be filled by E«|w*te
JPootiiinft. l«atordt
In the News
l?/
^N
rm OfidGirdtt
GR7 1773
More quakes hit
- ^N^
'-TSi
VALOATEO PAAKING
WITH
f3l WfSrwOOOtiVD WffSTWOOO VIUACf
Wotid
"VIONNE
ISAAC "^imiCK
mAYE§
THUMS. MAY » TNMl SUN MAT SO
TCKETS A«« Aiiilibll St Th» BOX OFFICf MUTUAL 4 LtSCRTV
ShuberrTheorne
Century Crty
>€«Tr jfe^^r
t'biii'-
. mrx cxltx
Of net
'<
I
a
Driftwood CouDon
f
2 for J Burger Cgmbmation
Buy 1 burger combo at the Driftwood,
the jazz inn on the beach at Vefiice and
get a second one. Absolutely ftee with this
coupon. "
This 330 value also entitles you to the
fine jazz of Ray Draper and Friends
direct from Europe and New York in
their only L.A. appearance, an atmo-
sphere of freedom and relaxation, and
unlimited access to the sun, beach, and
the paddle tennis courts all right outside
our front window. r
Good Thru May i5 i
Italy quake
UDINE, luly (AP) - Seven
new tremors jolted northeast
crumpling more homes
levelmg a museum. An
expert said aftershocks from
cmM CMitinue for months.
One of the new tremors
registered a strong 5.4 on the
Richter scale. No new casual-
ties were reported, but the jolts
collapsed another batch of old
«a»-and two-story stone houses
in Gemona, a town of 6,000 in
tlie foothills of the eastern
Alps. They also caved in ,a
PUBLIC WORKS
-MPIOVISATIOIIAl THEATRE
"Hilarious and touching
sommA Lomsu LA rma :,
"A perfect example of the
Cfsaltve process m motion
DA¥iE BEnmAM sAttTA momcA ounoon
-;»*.— .* •■
Fridays at 9 p m.
The Church m Ocean Park
235 Hill St (Santa Monica)
Telephone 399-t631
■ m B
ILfA CTFD THE PROJECT GRANT GAME
I •
A STRATEGIC APPROACH
i ■
Spend WiJwd^. M^r 26th vNlth Dr Jipmn L CoHiiM and bt Kim show you how to MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT
J^AME " Hait to an McMnSr once onl^ oppoituntty to learn first hand from thto lonmcr UC iacullv member and Fuftm9ht lectyww
ho» yoM tmCimm Ifttha hiiahi. y biiona. di iJlli ^mnmtmmdti yam by Jaderil HH» and tacai giiniiMiiais niwcii m
ano cKxpaiHatws- i naiv yv^vnaHaM i^vkmb ano pniw^ lOMnaa warn id mno me fponaonra
MMns tmA community aritan iMpMnt you vMlah to i—nttuft
^ftii ipiiiill iiiritfiiBtli Mit "<^n' ^t> >"■ Coitania you uAll be infonmdYCNJ WILL POSSESS PROk/pNi METHODS AN^
TECHNIQUES TO SNARE CATEGORICAL FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES You wlH laam hou^ to ipot ewriting opportunities
houv to turn 9ood kleat into futtv'funded prDpacH Hart a the Unliglc approach to gnMaMWilililp in a captivating i
Unad bakyu/ are )u« a iate of the thmp you Mil laam.
• Ham to find hiridi and hoitv to ippV for panli
• Dadding vwhat ^nd u<hen to propoae
• What to do if you re not aft^ble for Kinds
• Hou/ to vMnte and packay your propoaai to gain attenSoii
• When arKi hoiv to promole the fundhig agincv and vi^to to promote on campus
• Hou/ to be in the ImoM/ about mailaWi furwk
• Detenrantng if the competition for furKk is fair (or. vUwn to Pt it out)
• HoMf to iialaiiiiine wwhal your piofact should coat
• What lo do If your fundi an oM/Hmi to modifv protect
• DalarMang your prapoial and rwgoeating a contract
Plan on spending Wednesday. May 2bih M4th Dr Jamas L Costanii and you too %Niii inailar the ppapact pant game Hew Is ar
ideal opportunitv lor faculty, staff and slMl««i to Inc up • «iflH|»pM*ct do soma apiifc ant rassaufi- support vMov^iM«hile cum
munity adton. start a consuitir^ pracllca.
DONT MISS THIS ONE, Vw oniy Squlkm^ CaHftmm ») sss lium o/ MA67LR THE P^TOIECT G/14NT CiAME
WHAT THEY SA)r^
5 1
Tktmati
and c
-MV UWhsr Pmaikc
15 iMM of pp— iiwNm (^e
SJ
Uniwrvty
urn
. ' "th thr t^w and rf mncy /
K^.tiis R Csmpbsl Stall Daaclnr Con
for Health Oewiopmcnt
1^^^ m^/ mmd
E Ton^Jr Ri^Fc
f
UbnMv
I
XTiaiiA
ando^
PhD Amm
UIK Htitpiul
iu«ea^
Of Staff
cr
olStu
dtnt Aid UnlMfrsHv a( itetoona
EareivfM. iwaiaia^. cvmpr^henmm ihuMglw
r CoMns.
ONE TIME ONLY!
THE eOli«<W CB»TCT WaSBVTS
"MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME"
AN INFORMATIVE. EYE OPENING AND HARD HITTING LIVE PRESENTATION
BY DR. JAMES L COSTAN2A-BACK FROM A NATIONAL TOUR
WEDNESDAY MAY 26th, 9:00 a.in.-4:00 p.m.
WALK noH CAMPUS THE PLAZA THEATER im7 glendon. westwood
TICKET ►
TICKET SALES AT ALL MUTUAL AGENCIES
INCLUDING 140 KERCKHOFF HALL AND TRAVEL
SHOP INTERNATTOWAL, ISSS WESTHWOD
uVb.-ALSO ATALL
AND
» < 'ji
mlraidy i»ciifrMrf ky
tht wiek4o«g talltriiii
The Richter wait u a
OKtfture oi ground motion M
lecorded on »eiflmographt.
Each incrcaec of oiie number
■Hftns the ground motion is 10
times gPMHer A reading of 5
can cauie contiderahk dam-
In Udine, the captul of
Friuli province, more than
90.000 iMidcnts poured toto
the streets, some m night
clothes. They had been
spending their first night in-
doors after camping out for six
days.
At the Trieite Observatory,
icismologift Francesco Gior-
getti declared that the end of
the aftershocks following last
Thursday's major earthquake
was nowhere in sight.
Nationa
Ford plans
WASHINGTON (AP) -
President Ford, hoping to
avoid an embarrassing phnury
loss in his home state to
Ronald Reagan, headed for
Michigan today to seek votes
in next Tuesday's election
there.
Ford, who ha.s lost five of^
the last six primaries, including
Nebraska on Tuesday, is going
all out to win in Michigan,
He onginalfy scheduled only
one trip to his home state. But
with Reagan gaining momen-
tum in the race for the GOP
presidential nomination. Ford
cancelled a weekend visit to
Arkansas and will campaign
Saturday and Sunday in
Michigan.
Hughes gift
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Howard Hughes made a cam-
paign contribution only a
month before he died, ac-
cording to records filed with
the California Secretary of
State's office.
A contribution of S2,000„on
(Continued onT Page S)
UCLA DaUyL
BRUIN
VoMw XCVIII. Number 29
Thursday May 13. 197«
^yrtng ifm
sr ma ABucLA
SOS iVMr-
. Cshtornm
ASUCLA Commyntcmtiona ioartf
— On Camput
Brandy
Luaan Cunniogham
Aft
Ua
iHurrUI
O^k Krmuz
CaSiy rtatiMar .
MN» Kurti
Joyce DaUrtt
Hmncy Lilianthal
Richard Nalaon
fiM9om
Michaai Sondhaimar
^•Iti SuN»«an w,
Tha UCLA C«4«i»r foe AAto-Ammticm
oaaaaratian «nSi UCLA Pin* Ana/4
A Special Tribute to
)uufln "CflmonBfflT
flOMRLCM
0ooi(#f , tHmmy
Dulw, Victor
Hubterd^Sam
Watts, Emto
RoyMcCurdy
AMD
Thurs., May 20 8:00 p.m.
Royca Hall, UCLA
$7.50. 6 50. 5.5^
^u .^ rsnssii rrsussiti tf u a su
Juimn Add9r»9y m^morfl Schoknhimfund
,al»t« Fof
<L »1
Staffer daims adverse effects
Pride House called failure for patients
--*rny-
4.ooiun9 for « SUMMEIIJ097
Mayte ws can h^ip^atudsnts working with our
MHpany Minisd appsMlMaa^y IMO a
Matt as abl* to lalQQals kK th«
MTEHVieWt TODAY
3:a0 Thursday. May IX Hadrtck ¥itM •
InltTS
Wf Al
M
(Ediior't noit:
Cfsjr
Staff WrIlOT
tkit If ike third article m a
with the UCLA Dntg Treatmemi
)
Pride House, a UCLA affiliated drug rehab-
ilitation profraas, has beca calkd ineffective in
pshoMitating clients by pciaaea both currently
rmerly sssecialad wttlr tbe profraaa. —
Hoosc is tbe popular naOK pf the
adolescent treatment program that handles
both residential aod out-patient clients in lU
Hollywood facility. It is one of the doien units
that make up the program.
''In my three months I never saw one patient
ifully leave.** said William Fox, aasoctale
lor from October, 1974 lo January, 1975.
*The way a kid can get well at Pride Hoose is
to get mad enough to leave,** Foa added.
*They don*t push getting out and doing your
thing," said a counselor currently with the
program who asked for anonymity. When
asked about the reason for this, the counselor
saci, **They are trying to keep enough peopic
there to get their government money.**
Gerald DeAngelis, current Pride House
tor, calkd this last charge ''laughable'* and
ta his program are gradual-
via day-care aai oos-
ly phased tato
patient prograoss.
Foa said ooasfsnt administrative and person-
■al abaaaP** * punitive atmosphere aad *^ony
caring" by counselors for clients caused the
program*s failure.
No faaaw ap
Tlwrc ia ao £QlloiK-jip.^ttii3LJa- determtar
Pride Hottse*s therapeutic effectiveness, ac-
cording to a Dacambei. 1975 report oa the
entire UCLA Drug Treatment Program assem-
bled by Touche-Ross ^ Co., aa independent
auditing firm. OeAngelis said there were no
funds to finance such a sutistical follow up on
former chents.
Former associate director Foa cited one
specific insunce in which he said a client*!
rchabibutive progress was stiflai.
In January, li75. Fox becanse temporary
director of Pride Hoase while then-director
Louis Mangoal was on vacation. Dunag that
tine, the meaCal and physical condition of one
particular female client improved greatly,
according to Fox. He said until that time, slie
had been treated like a child and had been
"encouraged to be babyish** because she wore s
(CairilBMaonPagell)
iS
Irene serata
. ballet
[I
OANcmo awTaucnow at m fwhit
TNI nm WAV TO aBAUTV
m» wwTwuoo 1.VD. »■ or mm*m}
and UCLA-V.W.C.A.. flVTHILQAm)
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ay Jha
M Stair Writer
The new diamond lane on
the Santa Momca freeway was
found both effecient and ab-
surd Tuesday by marketing
and fina.noe graduate students
who represenled both sides of
the issue.
Calling themselves a **nuci»>
us,* the 30 first-year graduate
studenu study complex prob-
lem solving together under Ben
Lientz, associate professor of
information systems in the
Graduate School of Manage-
Lientz daims there have
been complainu in the past
that not enough graduate study
has been done in the field.
Now the students have '^a real
problem and tut trying to find
ways to solve it,** he said.
This week's topic was the
diamond lane and the nucleus
"diviiled into groups who inves-
tigated different elemenu in
the project. They iartildrri Cal-
trans (designer of the lane),
single motorists, the Rapid
Transit District, Santa Monica
Bus Company, the County
Board of Supervisors, the
California Highway Patrol and
diamond lane supporters.
The diamond lane is pro-
viding efficient traasporutioo,''
Caltrans represenUtive Julie
McDonnold said. She claimed
there are 3,000 less vehicles on
the freeway now during rush
hour traffic and complained of
the public's ''disinclination to
accept anything new or dif-
ferent.**
Another Caltrans /epresentap
ti¥^ Jaaa Robertson vSp«<l^
said the diiaJioad lane'Satf^|^
Planning for summer or fallf^JT
Be original
■y ippolntmant only
Saly Carrol, Pcilgiigr
(213) 7W-492t Van Niiyt
..^k»ufe<^-
' I
an
ERIC AHDEBSEN
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Ticket info.: 825-2953
*1 tickol par I.D.
Tichots at UCLA Contral Tidiot Offica. 650 WSsatwood Ploaa.
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attending to recorded and printed sources of the
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Auspices W.L.A, GARLAND SOCIETY
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WEST L.A 12437 Santa Monica 820-1445
Hours M-F11-S Set 11-S Sun 11-S
Survey inspects dorm life
By MldMlt Dvi^al
DB Stdr Wtiflm
Dorm residenti are more
ure mad tbe social stnic*
ture ia tkc dormi is more
cliquifli tham residents had
cxpadad, aocordina to a
newly^released survey el
UCLA residence kMik.
In addition, Sproul Hall was
rated as the most socially^
WMBtril dorm, Hednck Hall as
'"HMTquietist and 1tfet>er Halt as
having tbe best staff. Dykstra
HalK for the third straight
year, was rated tbe lowest in
dK ema§Ky ''all around best.**
Six per cent of the surveyed
residents rated Dykstra the
best, wlHMaa Hednck received
17 per cent and both Rieber
and Sproul received 18> per
cent of the favorable opinions.
Front 4atk
The dormitory service a»-
scMcd as having the greatest
value was the front desk ser-
vice. The front desk sorts mail,
aafWBfli phone calls and helps
residents with various other
■iaoaiancoui aaeds.
An services involving food
(unlimited meal portions,
ASUCLA reimbursable meal
coupons, fresh fruit and special
theme dinners) were rated as
liavLng great value.
**I think the center (Ccmer
for the Study of Evaluation,
which conducted the survey)
did a thorough job. The
evaluation is our best direct
«#i!iannel to each resident's opi-
nion," said Stephen Salm, resi-
dence had acfministrator As a
fcsuh of the survey, he said^
two saunas will be added at
Dykstra Hall fresh fruit will
be served at every, baeakfast
and there will be no cutback in
front desk hours for next
ycar.-
Part of 4mm
One interesting note to come
out of the study was that the
students living in the dormi-
tories do not consider them-
seWef part of the residence
hails association group, but
more a part of one particular
dorm. The survey showed that
students tend to be involved in
activities but
survey for next year mr
the installation of a kit-
chta at Rieber Hall. The kit-
ekm will be oa liM ground
floar. Salm said, because *'stu-
denu like ft better when you
daA*t take away any
own
do not take part in events ai
other dorms very often.
The annuaf survey for this
yaar used a new way to assess
the residents* opinions about
pmmktt additions to facilities
and programs for next year.
For each suggested addition,
the residents were given a cost
breakdown and told the dorms
couki only spend S80,000 for
improvements Residents gen*
caally stayed within the bounds
of their allotment.
Alan Hanson, associate dean
of students in the Office of
Residential life, said he *^was
pleased with the seriousness
with which the surveyed stu-
dents answered the questions.
KisBer allclMn
Other positive resulu from
la response to the residents*
opinions on the unexpected
immatunty they found in the
dorf"^ Salm saiid the residence
halls office woaii ^ doing
everything facility- wise to help
upgrade the attitude in the
dorms. ~ — »
in Haasao attributes the
ture atmosphere to '"the
fict that a high percentaft of
frrihHMn are slaii adfaslii^ to
the SMre mature expectatioa
level. They are bn^fhig with
them many high adioai moica,
and at the tiaae the survey was
taken much adjustment had
not occurred.
**An immature atmosphere m
also a natural phenomenon of
iMxm-MBfMf^ Uving tofether,*
Hanson continued, saying. "J^
lot of new people are trying to
teirl attention who haven*t
laarned to hve tofether yet**
Survey shows
Dykstra last
By MicMk Duval
DB Staff Writer
For (he last three years, Dykstra Hall has
perplexed residence halls officials by coming
up the loser in the annual dorm survey
category of **best all ground dorm.**
**We can*t exphiin why,** said Alan Han-
son, associate dean in the Office of Resi-
dential Life. **The students that live there
with whom we've talked have no better
explanation for it either.
*The expectation of the resident may be
lower** Hanson commented, continuing,
'^Enthusiasm about living in the haBi may
not be the same as in the other dormitories.
There may not be a sense of community or
enjoyment of activities.**
Activities
One Dykstra resident agreed **Thcre are
not as many activities as in the otl^er dorms.
People are secluded on^ their own floors;
there i^ no feeling of unity as a dorm/ 1
know people in Richer really identify with
living in a dorm."
Hanson also, said that student perceptions
of the dormitory's atmosphere tend tc be
''k'hd of fickle" in regards to their image of
Dykstra.
'M don*-t know why peaple feel that
[>ykstra is a bad place," One Sproul resident
said. "It's jusi a feeling. It looks better than
the other dorms, but somehow when you can
see into the showers (through the windows)
from the other dorms and they live right in
back of frat row, the feeling just isn*t good.**
(Cootinued on Pnfr 6)
■h
*«
«-i.
DykslreHairs
WANTED FOR
NETWORK TELEVISION SHOW
The best, the most unique, the most novel, the
most unusual, — acrobats, jugglers, tap dan-
cers, puppeteers, mimes, stilt- walkers, dog acts,
mimics, harmonica acts, washboard and saw
players, impressionists, bell-ringers, sword
swallowers, fire eaters and what have you .
To be presented on 'The Gong Show"
A New Television Series
can |i?13) 466-9153 ~
student films j'eleased
Two MFA projects open" —
That Jamaa Fanaka and Tony Zaruidast are
MFA candidates in the UCLA oaotion picture
4qmflaKnt does not dittlmffmt them from the
many others in the same situation. What does
sspaaatc them from the crowd is that both of
them have, almost single-handedly, created
ISfun feature-taiith films soon to be rekasad
1*8 105-minute film, Wekaaw Hmmm
Teteased^ Through ClOWB
International last summer in many cities
throughout the country, wheic it has grossed
over a half-million dollars.
The film began as a **Project Two.** a
requirement towards the MFA degree.
*"! came to UCLA to write,** Fanaka said.
**But after 1 did a Project One,* (wbile eamiaf
his BA here) the directing bug bit ase and I
^saided to try my hand at a full-length feature
fihn **
with it, they caa*t deny it*s a weO-.
craft-wise. That's one a€
why Fm so proud of it.**
Fpaalri has plans to use what he
CImrlts in his
thesis film, which he will begun slMMMiag this
summer With fsaBto from the American Film
Institute and the Afro-Amrrtnan Studies Cen-
ter, he expects this fikn to have **a lot more
** Fanaka wrote the screenplay and ^lans
adit the Him, but with
T©
some new advantafm. ~ ^^ -
**1 didn*t have enough money last time to pay
my crew or hire assistants. 1 had so much to do
that I had no time to step hack and look at the
fihn.**
His next film, Emma Mae, which will also be
a full-length feature, is about a Black girl who
nioves to Los Anfeles from Miaaianpin, and
will star Jeri Hayes, a .theater arts major here
Fanaka, who Wrote, produced, directed,
edited and wrote part of the aMisic for the film,
called it **a product of one man*s energies.
**I did everything as far as amidng a aaoyie.
Every decision was nsade by me,** he said.
Working with the bmited funds of academic
grants, Fanaka employed amny students on a
deferred payment basis, used department equip-
ment and postponed many of his expenses.
**So. what the fikn coat to make isn't relevant
to the film itsetr,** he said. "It doesn't reflect the
lihD*s quality because I got so many things
Merred or for free.**
Fanaka described the feature as primarily for
entertainment ('"that's the -primary reason
people go to a
movie**). but he
added that it does
cettlaia a serious
Myths
**It*s a statement on
BUick ' manhood. It
attacks the myths
surrounding Black
mslmfti aBd man-
**lt*s a controversml
film in that I use
surrealistic images,
such as the penis
stea^uhition scene
The audience can*t be
prepared for it, so it*s
shocking. It forces
them to look ito the
qnnbolism
**lt seems hke a
Black exploitation
film on the surface
luae of the use of
But ths sea is
iMt gratuitous; it*s to
amke a poim.**
Fanaka used both
proismiotml and non-
paaftiiiciiml actors in
tfK fihn. The actor
who phqivd Brother
for film before.
Charles had never
**lt will attack the myths aad stereotypes
surrounding the contemporary concepts of
beauty/ he said. "Enuna Mae would not fall
into the averaae concept of the beautiful
woman. The film will show dramatically how
tmiutiful she is.
**1 write the truth and try to be faithful to my
hiUnry, my own personal background. 1 don*t
think about the audience or what they want to
react to. Fve got to write what matters to roe,
what had an effect on my growing up. 1 will
ahmifs awke controversial films because I've
had an unusual bfe I look at things differently "
Tony Zarindast*s two hour film, Alexis
Bravo, began as his masters thesis. It is
expected to be released within a few weeks
Two yean aao,
Zarindast submitted
the scnpt to the
department and there
was some question
abbor his nuiking a
feature film.
"They felt it would
tie up the equipment
and the editing
rooms, but they
finally okayed it," he
recalled
Zarindast*B film is
unusoal in that he
piays t\^ leading role
and was able to
finance the film-
entirely Oil his own.
"1 had made sev-
eral films in Iran,
some which were
successful. some
which weren*t so
soccesaful; I directed
those pictures and
was paid highly. I
saved all that money,
with the foal that I
would come hack and
4m this fihn Just
what the film would
be I didn*t know
then So. I brodght
back the money 1
in Iran and invested it in this picture.**
Fanaka attributed the majority of his diffi-
gaBHS ia asnkii^ the fihn to the ndam he
bdie^n eaistt in the motion pictiire department
here He said he received no encouraferoent
from the facuhy, with the exception of his
John Boehm, and John Young, the
of thr dspartment.
**This is whatr a Black ama nms into when he
tries to do saniething,** he said. **! came in with
confidence, and they tried to mideraMK this
confidence. It's not a calculated thing but
paydMlniM^ conditioning Black paaple ta
haU hack.
^If a Btecfc amn thinks the syaism is going to
work with hiai, he*s ctmzy. The sfUMm didn*t
attotr aK to anaasad. I did it on my onm.**
He stitt imis that UCLA has the bast fihn
school in tlB oatmtry.
It it caaM ha, ndmt it has the
to be, without
budget was ckMe to SI 50.000. and
people who*^ seen the film think I'm a genius
for having been able to do it on such a
budget**
After getting the necessary funds, Zarindast
then had to deal with "acting prol>lems.**
"I wasn*t suppaaad to pUiy the lead, but the
two candidates who worked for me for two or
three months of fahMfmls walked out This
was due to an invotteaKnt wuh the Actor's
Guild, with the money they wanted and the
percentage of the film they wanted. I've acted
in many films in Iran, and 1 wns a stage actor
as a child **
The film deals with a character, Alexii
Bravo, who has served tiaK in prison afler
beea aatwklp^ al oallahroating with the
while he wns a fOW in Vietnam While
time, Aleais* wile and
I1-B131
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1361 N Spaulding Ave Hoiiywood
4baiaaaat of fmrimx Hmmr Sufwei Blvd
$2 JO
^
I
I
■Mffcatfilrraiut
liiilaciiApr
•0*0
r
AND PLANT SHOP
1S50 Waatwod Blvd., LA 474-SSS7
fmm Craft SupptiM and laatom m Macrama Waawing
Fact PLAMT CUIMC -iMaa. ana Sal >« pn
Bnno mts ad tof ie% diicount on alt piania and craft luppHat
./■■
A Women's Sliabbat
By Women, for everyone
Friday, May 14
6 30 Servicaa: A Fammiat Shabtat Liturgy
7 30 Dinner
830 'WOMEN IN YIDISH POETRY with
NAOMI PRATT*
Naomi Pratt a Pt> 0 Student in History. UCLA. Ms Pratt has a stror>g
aackgrourtd m Viddiah ianguega and cultura.
.^ aaaarvationa: HILLEL, SOD Hllgard 474-1S31
Sponsored by Jewish Famimst Cotleeliaa and
HMIel UCLA Organizing Proiact
THE COUNCIL ON EI^CA-
TIONAL DEVELOPMENT
(CED) will be constdering course pro*
posals for the Winter Quarter 1 977, and is
prepared to spcfnsor innovative courses
of genuine academic quality which
would be of interest to the campus
community. Sucb course proposals will
be due in the CED Office no later than
Monday, May 17, 1976. If ydu are in-
terestKl in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educational Dewfopment, 3121 Murphy
Hall.
f-
C 41 i i
NMIi
he saadu **! never expadad it to be as
tiott. 1 w«B jnst determiaad to
a movie and learn by makiog it, regard-
t iHI^
ll>t
of mairing the film.
But reaardkm of
written by
The story is, in a way, khe Taxi Dilaar,**
Zarindast smd, **in that it deals with a guy out
n/ viMnani y^jh tfl nNramns f HI iiiiiiii Ili'i
It If
u
t
v^
Jt
"i
■*
i
t
I
LJFE, DEATH &
TAXES
ITS NE\« TOO EARLY TO STAITT H>^^#^I^
Do you know
y«ir b9il p«M»f^ H you j^ to Mwrry.
or to lk¥9 wHh tomooMO. or romoin tinglo?
li^Jw iMp^oiis • you lio^^ <IO WlN — »~
to yoMT mlfior chlldPoo^ to your proporty?
Dykstra comes in last
%4
1 just beard it waf tlie
that the food «MM the
wont. I ako foc an imprettion
that it wasa^t kept up well**
laid Mike Teverha^fii, a
Hedrick resident
tow toys about your rightt ot c
your hiMlMlld't •omingi?
Edna R.S. Alvarez,
Attorney & Lecturer
Monday May 1 7 5-7 pm
Women's Resource Center
190 •25-394$
a reputiition
from a couple of years afo
when It was the pits of the
doran," Steve Bucksbaum. a
jecond-year Dykstra anident
satd. '*Sincc then, it*s been
fixed up.**
**1 roally don*t understand
it,** Haaaoa commented. **The
facilities are not lacking and
neither are the programmatic
.daaaala, though architectural-
ly it is the least iMirahk haU.**
Dykstra Hall has one long
corridor on each floor with the
rooms facing one another. The
other dorms have facilities
such as the laundry rmmm aad
the bathrooms in the center of
the haUs.
**I think the long hall is a
positive point/* Bucksbaum
said. *t>ne of Dykstra*s
stroQpHt aapccti it that it has
one hail. When you open the
^•or, 8Mnebody*s there. In the
other dorms you have to stare
at a blank waU.** Bucksbaum
Dykstra Hall dining room — la ttio food liora roolly worao than In tht
also feels that having people
acfMa the hall makes the
dorms more McMk.
As a result of the recent
survey, which brought out the
low residents' opinion of the
dorm, raaiianoe halls officials
MC working towards improving
the dormitory's image.
**We*re going to focus on
upgrading the quality of the
facibty,** said Stephen Salm,
reaidenoe halis administrator
^A large proportion of the
bunk beds we will have next
year will go there We*re doing
everything we can to upgrade
Dykstra*s reputation.** Two
new saimaf will also be added
for next year.
One resident was not so
optimistic about the ability of
reaidence hall officials to im-
prove Dykstra*s image. "It's
hopcleti; it's just too old, the
people are apathetic, and no
one really oares,** she said.
HUM Grad Group
Sunday Brunch
May 16 11 am
iMturing a diacutaion on
*\ •*«
Human Sexuality
with ^
Dr. Anna Heinrich
who will diacuaa rac^nt advancea in our ynderatanding of Human Sexuality
Or. Anna Hoinnch is « co-diractor of tha.Saxual Diafunctton Clmic, aaaialM)t clinicai prof of paychiatry
NPi lacturar in Psychology Oapt at^iK^LA
Memb6r8:$1.75 Non-mambara: $2.00
. .474-1531
Meet at the Upper Lounge
900Hilgafd
IF YDirVE GOT AN APPETTTE FOR UFE
rL
^■«;.-i.^t,U-,. .J.1
b^ DOO RAFELSON
ORIOGES ^^'STAY HUNGIW"
-Y FIELD Oi,^cm) bY DOO RAFELSON
Xb SCHNEIDER ond DOO RAFELSON
4ARLES GAINES 6 DOD RAFELSON
i*?*?™'?^ •«»«) on *»oo^ by CHARLES GAINES
NOW PLAYING
REGENT. VVestwood
A . AEMMLE vhCATMC
477.0059 272-0501
Cross burning probe asked
Representative Yvonne Braithwaitc Burke has called for a
full federal investigation of recent crois burnings in
Southern Cahfornia. -^
A croff was burned m the yard of a Black family who
bas lived m the Del Rey area for seven yean. Other cross
burnings have occurred in Redondo Beach, Lynwood and
La Mirada.
Burke called upon U.S. Attorney General Edward Levi
and FBI Director Clarence M Kelley last Friday to launch
a full investigation into the burnings
,**The intimidation of law abiding citizens in this manner
if an outrage that we must not tplerate.** Burke said. ''It is a
shock that such ignorance and hate is being demonstrated
in Southern California. However, smce these incidents ^ve
uken place, the forces behind them must be exposed and
prosecuted,."
According to Burke*s aide. Julie Mulvaney. there has^
been no response from either Hie Attorney Generala office
or the FBI
*tThc cross burningsj have apparcntf^ t>een dismissed ds
childish pranks," Mulvaney said She said Rep Burke will
continue lo insist the incidents be investigated
— Hary Beth MurrHI
In the News
(Continued from Page 2)
March 3 was reported by As-
semblyman Vic Fazio, D-
Sacramento. who is running
unopposed for re-election in
the June 8 primary.
Hearst plea
LOS ANGELES (AP) ~
Patricia Hearst, standing mute
aad solemn in the same court-
room with her sworn enemies
-- William and Emily Hams
— refused to enter a plea
Wednesday on grounds of
mental incompetency
■rf ar jaa^e, aeelarttig siie will
not sund trial with the
Harrises, granted a request by
Miss Hearst's attorney for a
special hearing May 28 on the
convicted heireta* mental state.
But attorney A I Johnson,
who wants to call doctors to
testify, said federal authorities
might not allow private psychi-
atrists inside the San Diega
isiefal prison where Mi«
Hearst is now undergoing a
court-ordered-evaluation by
government doctors.
CAT
tuderit!
nion
Movi€ Night!
n'ha Gay Deceivers**
starring Michaal Graer
TONIGHT 7:30 p m.
Ackarman 2nd floor lounge
Donations appreciated
GSU Office — 825-6063
Hotline ~ 477-7660
by StuOam
CouncH
Seniors and Graduates
Learn the principles of effective
interviewing at a
Group Interviewing Workshop
May 17, 1976 - 2-4 P.M.
S.gn up at the Ptacemant and Care^ Planning C«iter
For tradition
..•■>■- '■.:,
Elimination of spa
So Cam needs^editor on Westholme causes
more parl<ing problems
The UCLA Yearbook. Southern
Campm, aaada aa aiilor for neat year
to --^tinue the yearbook tradition,
whicn datek trom 1920.
k975'\97t SoiUkefW Campus editor
Derrick Coy applied heeaaae he feh
that he could "contribute something to
the yearbook." A graduaie iiudent in
hif first jiear at UCLA.j:i^ -got to
know the campus, people involved in
various organizations and the past
hiMry of UCLA" through hia wark aa
editor.
Ahha^gli Coy pommd niaa yean
af experience in publishing aad ad-
vertisii^ ha said that any student who
is intefanad should apply by May 21
for the position. **A goai teoae of
organization aad the ability to tasK
the aaai for a certain aspect of work
that must be done" are necessary
<H**^««» for prospective editon. Coy
aear the
Cey. So Cam
ia7B-7S. !•••# saUsflaa wltfi Hit
"Expenence,* added Coy. "can help
in the quality of the yearbook.** Past
editors have had experience varying
from work on high school jpaarhooki
to artistic backgrounds.
Coy received a **very deep satis-
faction** from his work this ymr. **1
think the )faai%aok is good,** he com-
ineniei. ""It has been a challenge to me
since, in the past few years. I have
gotten a negative taaiat from year-
books. I was chalieagid to
something that students would
interest in.*
One BMa working in the Southern^
Campus olfioe added, **And he's done a
feed job. This will be the first decent
yeaftook that UCLA has had fer a
number of yeait.** ^
Believing that mmmy students may
not see vakie of a yearl>ook. Coy feels
that the yearbook becomes **more
valuable with the pasaiag of tioK. We
tead to forget the faosa af fnends and
campus lile. Sui yearbooks can trigger
certain nieawsies.**
As scadents become more mterested
in sach aaeial activities as sororities,
fraternities and "campus life.** com-
mented Coy, they also take more
interest ia purchasing a yearbook to
**ieGall *the way life fias at UCLA **
Coy said that he encpurafsdi students
to apply for the ppsitioa of editor aad
10 work **in any capacity on the
Seuih^n CmnpusT
By Ear Carte
Dl Staff Wrter
Parking proMHas which
phigaai this can^ms have
with the restriction of parkii^
intersection of Westhohne Avenue and
JWtaard Avenue.
The curbs have been rezoned from a
miricsed parking area to **iio parking.*
The signs were planed on that block
last Friday.
Before the rezoning, parking was
limited to a two-hour period between 8
am and 6 pm MoruUy through Friday.
The changes ia the parking zone
were brought about by the actions of
that block*s lead miners who petitioned
City Hall for the no parking zone.
Or. George Vajaa^ a planning officer
here. said. **This has been a aiaading
battle for two decades We will start
aegociations with them (the land-
oaraers) soon. This is a very com-
plicated procedure.**
Vi^ alM said it takes M^o-thirds of
a block's Uindowners to retone any
parking restrictions placed on that
block
Zev Yarusiasiky. city coundhnan
from this district commented. *The
homeowaers are entitled to that (the
chaages). We*re not going to do any-
thtag about it unless another petition
reversing the dedaion ^4»niei in.**
Though the laadowacrs* petition was
received earlier, the traffic control
report for the propeaad sUeet change
was issued by the Eagiaeers* Office.
West LA district on April. 27. ac-
cording to Richard Bahl, aa eafi-
neenng aide for the city.
Mike Gahzio. external affairs o^
ordinator. said of the situation, ^I
think it*s just screwed Wem UU( to
Zev*s (Councilman Yaroskvsky), office
In a Dmily Bmin story publ
earlier this quarter. Hugh Stocks,
Communication and Transportation
Services Administrator, said long-range
plans for more parking will be made.
But whea and where these new parking
spots would sprout is still only tenta-
tive at this riaae: ~
t
•tifalnatlan of partlaa
Concerned about Korea, C.LA.,
the World?
Come to our International Affalra day
Grantf BalTroom. Ackarman. 1
ram
11«0-12M Noon
ISBIrlhof
of Angola.
;i( 'Tp-'
-« — TV
IntomiitQiiAl 1
Th^PBopto'B
African Studiaa Inatitula. Hofatra Univaraity.
Rapraaantatlva of tha African National Council
of ZImbaBaig to U.N.
(^■f
>• 'Vj: ■ '
12:00-1:00 ^Ji.
I KoTMi: Church vo Gkwrfnm#fH
•iiioti appaara In paraon to praaant
n documantary film mada in Korea, ravaaling auppiaaaion of
aaiflon arul CIA. invoh^aanaitt in South Koraa. Ha waa racantfy
forcad to laava Koraa aflar many yaara Of work ovar thara.
1 iO IJQO PM.
Roto of tha UnHod Nollora in WoiM Pmoo
Mr. Long. Rapaiaantativa from U.N.
,>..»
-■■Mg*ga~± j--^^, »
Chila Muaic A Songa
Jamaica Songa 4
^B^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^J,^^^^^k^^^^ ^L^^^^^^h^^^h^Mk
eipantan woman aaoniog
Port!
For
AdaarHura Film & Praaanlation
— John Goddard, wo fid advanturar.
7MI ojm^ OkHmm hn
Aiipaftafaie
Fnfra aiiirtant i aqislatiin Council
r
iua
I
3
dalytxi*i
UC-lran project defeated
by A. Razmandeh
(idkor'i nont Rdimsndeh it j
member o/ the Irnnt^n SlydipJU
r^ J,
•\.
The UC-IRAN Proiect wm de-
feated by the m^ority of frad-
uate studeiNi who voted on this
inue in the recent referendum.
The IranUn Studenii AMocijtion
(ISA), wMch has been actively
^MndHK ^piinM this pc ofram,
ayniders the result of the ref-
erendum a great victory.
OPINION
Tlie number of students
mpported l$A's position dearly
sho«vs tfi« knoKvlcdie vni un-
dirnawilM that moit itudfUi
hmte ac^Mlred about the (CM«e
ol the Iranian people in jiMMral
and that of the Iranian ftudenii
on this campus in particular.
The reuih of the refererukim
would at IcaM have three con-
of cnablishing a "Persian
Study Center" on this ciiiytM
by a rei^fiie dhat it well krKWvn
in the worid for its brutality and
suppPMiiorv of Iranian people's
moil basic human rights.
Secondly the result ot tfte
referendum was a tlap in the
face of the Iranian regime ^tyd
their agents in their
attempt to infiltrate this
They have failed in every pos-
sible oNoil to stop the Iranian
students from exposing the
nature of the Shah's regime.
Acts such as picture-takinf,
writing fraiiOMHMl letters (even
in the Owl^ §nik%) and uting
McCarthyite tactics (such as
branding everybody who op-
pOMi the suppreMlve v^pow ai
a "oommun«t agent*^ Hmo ai
• ailod, as the rooent referendum
Fintt it forces the Administra-
to dteposc of the idea of
HOrtiblishing ties with the mur-
derous regimt of the Shah. The
administration from now on has
to take into account that the
students on this campus will rK>c
JigMl IniiiMi Secret Poioe
(SAVAK) roaming around freely
on ih^ campus, harraHing the
Iraniiii aiudents who are ex-
posing the regime of the Shah.
The Adminittration would have
to roaiife- that, ai students on
this campus did not tolerate the
idoa of ties with the Chilean
iunta. they shall not tolerate the
The last but not the least
consequence of the recent vote
and the ISA victory is the great
moral support that it gave the
Iranian students. Now we know
that our cause, the cause of the
Iranian people for freedom, jus-
tice VK^ liberty, has been heard,
understood and is supported
by the hnaiority of students on
this campus.
Recently the regime of Iran
paiiad a law reading as follows:
"Anyone who organizes a g;roup
in any form or under any title or
anyone who has coiomunistic
aim or opposes the Mor\archy.
also 9in Iranian acting m the
same manner oulsadt die courv
try or anyor>e cogMKaUng with
Reaction to Gallo
A law smdcnf hare,. J. Peter
Fiske, has once again sailed forth
(£>• S/10/7S) to give back-
iNindid support to CaMo winai
exploiters of farm-
workers. Under the guise of
"protection of the First Amand
mant's fuarantees." Fiske be^
wioam the )ust actions of United
Farm Workers supporters in pfo>
venting Calk)'s use of campus
id^inliing to counter solidarity
with farrnworkers through the
boycott of Gailo wines.
Fake argues that UFW sup-
pantri "believe that the First
Amer>dmer«t should protect only
certain daises, groups or cauici
in our society." If Fiske were to
descend from the clouds of
Constitutional law, he might
recognize that in the real world
the First Amendmam, in fact.
piOiacis only one class, the rul-
ing class and its groups ^r^6
to Fiske what affect CaNo
tising on campuaas has on the
ability of farmworkers to amel-
iorate their condition. If such
adygrtising^ contributes jiLjLifti.
covery of CaNo's slack sales, if
One can see how much "free
speech" was granted to UFW
organizers during the recent
election campaign in the fields
by courjting 4the multitudes of
UFW worliers thrown in yail for
attempting to talk to fellow
farmworkers about why they
should vote UFW. ^ -
To Fiske, it Is '^beside the
point" whether or rKM the farnrv
wavkor's cause « just or whethai
or nat the capculist stale. p«-
with laws, throws up
to
iCrs
h
such a recovery contributes to
Calk) preventing unioruzalion.
it's all the same to Fiske. iu0 so
long as the rich ^t^d powerful
are not denied the "right" to
propagandize and mislead.
In Germany, m the Nearly
1930's, there was a group of
poftliciam of the Fiske type. Tha
Social Denxx^atic leaders told
anti-fascists that they had to
stand by v>i6 ^icm storm-
troopers to parade around. The
CoTHtitution, after all, they sani.
guaranteed the Nazis' right, for
example to advocate smashing
trade unions and commiting
genocide. Well, the road to
concentration camps was paved
with the Social Dernocratic lead-
ers' liberalism. Quite constitu-
tionally, liie Nazis shot the real
anti-fascists first Mr\6 then they
kxrked up the Social Democratic
leaders for good measure. A
high-priced lesson in why we
should combat liberalism, wasn't
it Mr. Fiske?
The students on v^ious cam-
puias who have taken action
against nawipaptrt that aid Cal-
lo'samiMim of lies shouM be
commended. They miKtanffy dis-
pljqred their commitment
thaaogh daads to the side of the
.vait mi^iofilif in the cIbm Uniogli
on In tlia Mdl At uSa.
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3. ^-n; <rao^ *•€> X, IxIm Oe4«^Ni> J^
f. 1, 4do^ooo^ooo -A
Tun
PUCE IN Monynous
TO:
Tm DiSMt IlM
Laa Viaa%, Wi.«saa
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such groups would be ser>-
tenced to life imprisonnr>ent. If
tfie group prepares for arms arnJ
explosives, they would be exe-
cuted" (fCerhan, g-30*75, oHicial
Iranian r>ewtnpar).
Seldom, if at all, has a fascist
regtftie dared to pass a. law
which IS such a disgrace to the
whole tiumafv^ race m the 20th
century.
The tkmm law is against the
declaration of human rights,
which stales:. "Everyone has the
freedom of id(^ and expres-
sion." Furthermore, it legitimizes
the imprisonment or possible
execution of Iranian students
abroad who are actively op-
paiing the fascistic repression of
the Iranian Regime, upon their
return. But even such brutal
measures cannot hinder the ef-
forts of Iranian students in their
attempt to take their cause be-
fore the world's public opinion
The ISA has been successful in
its tireless effort of exposing the
Shah and his clique and in
bringing to th#» world's attention
the struggle of Iranian peo-
ple for iree^om. iustice and
liberty.
The result of the CSA referen- ,
dum is another ISA victory and a
sign of solidarity between pro-
gressive forces and irulividual
Anr>erican and Iranian students.
There should also be a special
referendum on the UC-lran^
project for the undergraduate
students, so that the whole stu-
dent body has a chance of ex«-
pressing its opposition to estal^^
lishment of ties with the diaa-
toriai regime of Shah.
Letters to the Editor
JydjetTTT
authority are these policies al-
lowed to be applied in such an
unfair and random manner.?
Rkhard Bi
inconsistenl-
that the management of the
ASUCIA Students Store has
foiirKJ It unrwcessary to pro-
secute the case outlined in yes-
terday s article (Tuesday) corv
cerning the embezzling of funds
by a cashier tt has been the
Associations published policy to
ptosecute all cases of pilferage
in the store. This often comes
down to the actual busting of
somebody for an offense as
small as the stealing of a 2 cent
piece of caf>dy Perhaps this is
)ust another example of the
double standard which exists for
students, both empltiyeei ^ng^
cuMaaaers. and full time career
n>embefs of the Associations
staff According to the article,
the employee was not prose-
cuted because he returned the
money. But a student is not
given that aptlDn he or she
has only the optien of being
turned over to the UCPO or
recede an indeliable black mark
on their University record.
We are concerned that the
ASUCLA piHerage policy is not
consistently enforced, tf the
punishment were to frt the
crirr>e, then one would think
that It wouM be the felony cases
which wauld come uf>der the
*wihest piatinitimi. To relieve
the problem, the polkies should
be enloffcad cquaBy lor ^W par-
uas inuohitd. Under whose
J^H.. - -« J
Mark Marcus
ASUCLA
No
In the often-obfuscated realm
of University education, one
must question, from time to
time, the validity and relevance
of specific progr^rm of learning.
It is hardly appropriate to com-
pare our educational systems
.with those found elsewhere
(e.g.. many European students,
upon graduation from inter-
mediate school, are more com-
pletely educated in Latin, their
native ^^6 secondary languages,
history, geography, etc.). How-
ever, in a country of opulerKe
and opportunity, one assunr>es
that It is the intention of leading
universities such as UCIA to
piBwKa educational material in
which the stimulus for thought
and the insatiable search for
learning is manifest But my
experience (four years daap into
the psychology m^fot) has pro-
vided me with little of this. It
often seenm that "organized"
psycholofy follows a path of
<^'Wganization and unclarity
yielding little but confusion. This
is exemplified in a study by
Newcomb (1961) in which he
aimod at t>etter understanding
those conditiorH which lead to
attitude change. After consider-
menters, university-subsidized
funds and much energy, he
came to the astour>ding con-
clusion that poodle terid to like
others with attitudes similar to
their own The perspicacity of
this finding is unparalleled. The
\, pom, that I will like
with whom 1 agree has
added a new insight into my life
(actually, an insight into the
meaning of "bullshit").
I'm not against psychology
(especially behavioral psycholo-
gy)» nor experinr>ents ^nd
studies, but I do think that pri-
orities should be set in light of
the limited available time and
energy Perhaps the University
could strive to provide insights
and meaning which last longer
than the time requirad to
memorize Newcomb's study ftir
a multiple choice ^xam. Albert
Einstein recognized education as
that which remains after one
forgets everything learned if^
school. After four years, I can
identify with the eloquent Dr.
Faust, so opprebrkHisly ex-
pressed by Goethe, i have,
alaff »»lliiuplf. M^pdicine.
jurlsprudefKe, too. And to my
cost ThaolBiy, with artient la-
bour, ttudlad through. And here
I star>d, with all my
lool. no wiser than
»»
More rearrionsoa Kojelis and Fiske-^
■" 'I •-
III H II II
..»»
from
at the Com-
ng that
CaNo adi was not "ban-
ning aA^atlWiiB baton the faa
as fktkm claims. Tlia
haard from GaNo's mouthp __
Ttiay also heard from a farm-
«uaAar who has slaved many
years lor Gallo and could testify
that in Gallo country, GaMo is
4t alone can aHafd to
buy in batches the police, poli-
ticians, lodges and
newspaper ads.
If the Ku Klux Klan wanted to
put an ad in the D^ly Bruin
Slating "Wanted Carpenters for
high-risk, rapid assemblage of
parpcndicular beams in various
rasldential settings throughout
Ui Angeles," wi^dMr Fiske
condemn banning such an ad as
**insulting, impractical, imrr^oral
and unconstitutional." Probably.
The labor movemaiit, in the
words of an old song, has always
asked "Which side ve you on?"
Fiske has made dear his answer:
Working paople have ahother^.4n^
old song with the refrain "Moite^ Bo^
iitould protect only certain
groups or causas in our
society ' While the incidents
that took place at Hayward
State, Sacramento State. UC
Riverside m4 UC Irvine tem-
porarily succeeded m disrupting
the campus madia, no such
coanparafalt lactlci have oc-
curred here at UCLA.
I might add that I share Mr
Fillrr'T liaMfT ihrmr Galki s iiniaif
labor practices; at the same
ikme, I thoroughly deplore any
and every event, violent or
otherwise, designed to interfere
with the publicauon ar>d dis-
tribution of. a r>ewspaper that, by
its very nature* must remain free
from the piOiiifras of various
interest
m^ for £. A j. GaMo at the
\
ol this past February. TKare is,
hoiuavaf^ a clear-cut distinctloo
between editorial copy and ad-
vertising copy; the indliii Khin
of the former is ttia 9«aipOflllbll-
ity of a wigorotM press. Adver-
tising, however, can be con-
stitutionally refacled on any ^nd
all grounds. The Board is under
no obligation tQ
on over or we'll move on over
you!" Consider this admonition
carefully, friends of ''lioe
speech" for Gallo aanssters.
Mr. Fiske cheapens ar>d im-
pugm the nrK>tives of the AS-
UCLA Comnr>unications Board
(please ru>te that it is a func-
tioning btMiy of the Associated
Students) when he believes that
the Board's decision was "made
iji apparent acquiescence to
ssive intimidation." The
Board is comprised primtrHy of
e L
Party
In his column, "UFW ai>d the
First .Amendment," J. Peter Ftska
paraphrases a Duly Brum stflpy
of May 6 which details harass-
ment by anti-Gallo forces of
various campus newspapers. He
claims that the. "United Farm
Workers ^nd their supporters
believe that the First
students. These students felt
along with a larfe segment of
the campus population, that
Gallo should not be allowed to
advertise on the grounds that
their labor practices ware mui
are offernive to many, if rK>t
mo|l» individuals. — -
The Board first banned Gallo
ads on February 4, 1975 ^nd
again February Jg, 1976. The
claim that the First Antendment
rights of Gallo to advertise were
infringed by this prohibition oh
advertising is patent nonsense.
The First Amendment plea was
ralMd by Dan Solomon,
merciaf material of whatever
nature; in dacading not to print
Gallo's obfactionable advertisir>g
it chose to exercise this option.
The Board deliberated for a
month, both in subcommittee
arvd as a whole, before It
reached its daciiion. It listened
to testinxMiy by UfW spokes-
men, Dan Solomon of GaMo and
members of the audience, in-
cluding rnprnantiii^et xiLPlP,
CAR, la Gente. Mecha. KLA ind
the Diily Bruin. Thus, the Board
was able to formulate a policy
after listening to many indivi-
duals ind discussing it amongst
themselves.
At no time did the ASUCLA
Communications Board acqui-
esce "under durais" in the face
of "stror>g vocal pressure."
Mr Fiske feels that the Board
ecKrourafas "behavior «vhich the
UFW has clearly established in
recent monfhs" Rather, careful
deliberations of the Boaid en-
couraged reasor>ed discussion —
the banning of Galk> ads is an
entirely justified response which
IS based on the vlaws of the,
students on this campus as they'
are represented on the Com-
munications
Mirey CunM^
We wmM like to
the Oatfly BnMn and the
munication BcMrd on the
'^''vttgfth and atoMi laadanlilp
you have shown in choosing not
to run Gallo advarHsaanant. This
decision was made, we are as-
suminf^ in the face of hard
economic pfoiture to do othar"
wise. The revenues from such an
-.ad. in these acooomicaliy rouph
times, would no doubt ha<^e
been walcome around the Bruin
office.
As such. It is clear to us that
the Comm Board, quite contrary
to recem opinion in the Brum,
has in fact exercised its Constitu-
tenal rights in cftoosir^ not to
artgage in »n economic ex-
change of foods which they find
are offensive.
There is nothing in the consti-
tution, First Amendmer>t or oth-
erwiM, which states that one
party has the nhiipiiuii to en-
gage in an eoBlMmlc cfxchange
with another party Thank God
there isn't, for this principle is
the basis of any economic boy-
cott, which remains in this< lO-
dety as the last peaceable re-
course for the exertion of pres-
sure by otherwise powerless
masses, on those powerful few
whose bankrupt actions would
otherwise ptocaed unimpadad. .
To our minds, this exercise of
choice is in perfect accordance
with tf>e idea of freedom of the
Press, at guaranteed by the First
Amendment The First Amend^
ment guarantees tlie free flow of
information, makinc letters like
this and opinions Tike f Peter
flike's possible. Advertising in
no way falls under this categrw.
'oomna tna waa Haw of
information" br M mmmm obli-
gates the Coumi board to pur-
chase obiectionable material.
At far as '^masslipa intimida-
tion (Opinion, May 10| goes
massive implies manas. If
massive pressure has indimed
occured then this is as It shouM
be. The bottom line is this:
Either you stipport the UFW
right to organize* or you don't.
If you do, then a bayoatt by the
Comm Board as a branch of
Associated StudaMs. is only log-
ical Mnd laudable. If this action
"ernrourages similar effOrH by
other special interest groups/'
»nd a these "similar effofH" Mre V
being mMie in »n attempt to f
move the cornciousness of this •-
University in a direction toward ^
equality and /us^ice, then this 5
boycott has succoadad beyond ^
its wIMest expectaHom
We applaud the Comm Bo^rd
for extending the UFW boycon
to thak policies Thii kind of
exerdse of choice which favours
the humane, favours iustice. by
favourinj the struggles of a
PMple so opproMod as lo be
denied the basic right to or-
ganize, exhibits a moral vigour
not often seen at UCLA. We
thank the Comm Board for act-
ing so raiponsibly in our behalf,
and hope it will continue to be
possible in the future for them
to be sympathetic to- political
struggles We would be for-
tunate indeed to see more such
leadership on this campus.
^1
»• /*:
^^yers
y
1 ^^rnf-
.,▼
-: ^
Photos by
Glenn Seki
i»
1J
ni>fHi.t*MHrt>*Wt«fW«»t»Mi«i»
/^
4
nr
•« •
t*/
Comaim m fmntmn pen fwt
f^Mk m^, Hfidinstrucum
At MTt mmtndS^^ sf^ops
colUifc ^tf#4 5 t^o . . . #r im/
y^tst 22St.,N.Y,N.YtOOl1
Add 50 cents far (umdfmM
student films .
(CfiUliiiiii froa Psfe S)
been trained for h aad not much eiie. What
c»n he do with his life after he returM? Ife'i
poor and iMf no parlkiilar gkiUt So, the
revenfc he Meks for the death of his wife and
children is a kind of extreme excuse for him to
set up a new war ~ with hu own mind aad
airroundinga.'*
Zarindast said the violence portrayed in
Alexis Bravo is for a specific purpose and ^aot
for entertainment.
UgiBM
••If I show violence, I am also showing iu
uglincn, how bad it ar he said. -I might want
to shock the audience in a couple of scenes, but
this IS so that they wikJ be aware oi the society
in which they live*
Despite the low budfet of the fifan, Zarindast
believes that the film should be *nreated as an
individuaJ film- and not m a cUss of A' or *r
Diamond Lane
s next project is a sizeable under-
taking.
^l have a screenphiy written by an excellent
wnter, Diana Frolow. Its cailsd WoKss, and
it*s going to be shot in Iran and partly m New
York. It*s a multinnillion dollar budget, and
hopefuUy Vm going to get Jane Fonda and Jon
Voight in the leads. The slory dMH with the
oil. Fm putting Enii and West together **
Many films come out of the UCLA motion
picture department every quarter. The acoMF^
pbshmenu of Fanaka and Zarindast do not rest
hers. It IS the determination and capabihty they
haw shown in the financing, makiiTf' and
4iattibution of their films, bridpng the ^p
between tbe University and the real world of
movie making, that makes them wortlur of
note.
^y Midmd
(CwUMHd frnm Page 3)
forced people to travel on city
streets for sbort disunces.
However. Jeff Grccnwald,
standing for the single motor-
iaH. joked he could walk
downtown faster than he could
drive using the diamond lane
and insisted. **it obviously isnt
project "poorly thought out
and absurd,** questioning the
choice of requiring three peo-
ple per vehicle
Alternatives
In addition. Green wald cited
three alternatives to the prob-
lem: dropping the diamond
lane, building an extensive
rapid transit system and com-
bining other cities' current
transit systems mio tiK Los
Angeles area.
An actual Cahrans repre-
sentative. Robert Tomlinson.
told the students that the cur-
rent lane -is really part of a
larger system of projects.**
LaH( of advertising and in-
struction before the lane
opened came under (tm from
Pride House. .
-^th sides. Jean-Francois Si-
mon, a member of the dia-
mond lane supporters, said
**the amount really spent on
advertising is really nothing"
Simon urged a necessity to
'^get people concerned about
the long-range problems** of
. Iransportation
r R T D representatia ve ^4afk
Roserman said, **RTD sees the
diamond lane as crucial to the
advancement of rapid transit in
Los Angeles** He warned '•^
the plan fails, we could '
constnngem restrictions.**
trips per day, at a lower cost
than RTD and with more
available.
California Highway Patro.
studems explained the role the
department has played in en-
forcing the diamond hme. The
CHP has a ^^neutral stance" on
Santa Monica Bus Company
representatives cited strong
support, however, adding that
more buses are bemg «witcl
from other locations to
the load on the diamond
Alan Benjamin said the com-
pany does not Uke any side on
the issue but that it has an
obligation to transport people
from Santa Monica to down-
town.
Benjamin added the Santa
Monica line makes IM round
period, according to Bryan
Thomas The CHP collects
data on accidents and enforces
the lane*s rules *
Thomas said the CHP has
been encouraged by the decline
in accidents, but that it did
have to put more officers on
the freeway He added the
CHP is concerned with its
imanc in trying to enforce the
Glenn Cordes, standing for
the County Board of Suptr-
viaofi, said board members are
still divided on the diamond
bine*s success. Moreover, the
bnnsd*s newly proposed Sunset
Coast line for rapid transit is a
big concern, he said.
for tlie
physical
leg brace and had partial paralysis in a leg and an arm after a
brain operation.
Fox said he and the staff 4f¥m4 a t
client which eventually gave her more self ^
independence He said she progressed to the potm of
doning her brace, began waiting with normal
**lodked like an entirely different per%on.**
He added, however, that ManguaLdisapproved of the
treatment phui wtien he returned from vacation, aad as a result.
"She [the client] was back in a brace in a week.** Fox said.
The nnonymous ex-coMHdnr verified Fox*s story
that while Mangual was vacationing. *' everybody
kind of improvement.*
Reflecting on Pride House's emotional climate during his
employmeni there Fox .aid I he whole atmoNphere wa
punitive and cruel all day and every 6a\r and added. btcr
dsioniNhcU th««i ihcrc hjvcn't Wen an\ [clicni nr
kr>cMi««r*^ my NV
)i
•rad of yMtorday't hair?
HAIR T€»Ay
whars happening now
styling for mm\ and
J#rry RadWng'
Jhlrmack
478-61S1
prodticts
appointmant ca
tuas. thru sat
3.00 . OFF fifit hairctif
wittitliiaad
110S QIandon A¥a Waatwood VWaqa
May 13:
88 Years After
'May13, 1888:BrasN*
Abolition of Slavery
Dr. Angela Qffliam,
Universidade de Coimbra. Portugal
^pect ot Black Liberation on
Contemporanen Brazil
Dr Gerald Bender. UCLA
Portuguese Colonialism in the New World:
The Roots of BrazHtan RaCe Refations —
Dr. Timothy Harding. Cal State. LA
Labor Relations in Brazil:
Ex-Slave in Modern Society
Dr. E. Bradford Burns. UCLA
African Contribution to Brazil:
The Works of Manoel Ouirino
thursday, may 13, 2-5 pm
rolfehall 1200
afro -brazillan
cultural group ucia
t
FUN PARTY AT
^/^,
U,
1
cciun«elor| Miicide% there " Mai^aal cMid im be reached
isnci
Sunday, June 6 i^^ ^^
4 - midnight %pOi(ZD
^Admission to Disneyland, unlimited use of all
^ fldventurgt & attractions. PREE
t4t. wMte ttMy IMI
i
I
Africa Culture Experience
Film Showings
"Weif Africa: Two lifestyles"
"Benin Kingship RHuals"
discussant: James Amankulor
Friday, May 14, 1 p.m.
93t3lunchc
h^.llw AIncj ActlVtftI
By Km Garii
DB Stair WriMr
The Mth anniverMry of the Abolition of AUvcry in Bimzii
will he the luhiect of a progrmm to he heM at 2 pm today in
Rolie 1200.
ifif in South American history will
OB the cha^fM in race relations which have occurred
in Brazil lincr I8tl and how these relations can he further
improved. '
Scheduled to Wfmk are Dr. Timothy Haiding froe CaJ
"^•^^m
THERE'S STILL TtME
I
i
BROTHER! and SISTER too!
to get your flight
to Europe and Israel
WeVe got it all . .
Travel Group Charter
• Student Tours. Camping Tours
. * Eurail Pats. Student Rail Pass
*Bntrail Peas
* C#r Rental. Lease. Purchaee
* Motels — all Kinda
Eyropa Student Travel Centre
1007 Broxlon, Bulla IS (Aho^ Mario s Reataurant)
Los Afifalaa B0024
Tel: 477^SB 4BB-aB34
LA, whose ipssch is entitled ''Labor Relations in
The Ex-Slave in Modern Society.- Dr. Aagela
Gilliam from Universidade de Cotmbra, PortupU, speaking
on *The Aspect of Black Liberation of Contemporary
Brazil,*' and Dr. E. Bradford Burns, '•the African
Contributions to Brazil: The Works, of Manoel Querino **
Dr. Gerald Bender, also scheduled to speak, will not
M^ciki due to out-of-towa buiiBaij, afttrr
for Brazilian
anniversary
ji^' ,*
TYPEWRITER CITY
478-7282 WESTWOOD
I
479-7282
OLIVETTI ELECTRIC!
CHANGEABLE TYPE BALL
'/i spacing, carry caee ^
not $700, not $500 ONLY ^269^^
Adier Port w/ case
Brothers Port, w/ case
Printing Elec. Calc.
Printing Elec. Calc. w/ mem.
SALES and REPAIRS
BankAmcricard 1089 Gay iey A¥e>^-_JHa«tof Charge
...LOTS OF QUESTIONS AND NO ANSWERS???
59»«
119*5
SroOEST LD.'i ?
CAKMHe?
fOWll?
(•
J
HOSTELS?
CieuiSES?
CHARTERS?
/
DON'T JUST SIT THERE...
...call I.S.C. TOURS4TRAVELIII
473 2991, 825- 3384, or 477-4587
intcrnafioTial Student Center 1023 Hji^rd Avenue
spokesman for the Afro-Bnueiliafl Caltaral Ofoup,
izers of the program. -
Burns said his presenution will deal with the Kf e story of
MaaoeJ Querino, Brazil's first Black historian. He founded
an hiitoric institute in the sute oi Bahta. which is heavily
populated by Africans.
Quenao was also an aholitionist aad a Brazilian labor
union orfanizer. The history of slavery in Brazil is longer
thaa that of the United Slates, according to Burns
Slaves from Portugese Africa were brought to Brazil in
1539 to plant and export a large 9Ugar crop Slavery did not
start in this country until 1619. The Emancipation
^oclamation went into effect in 1863. Brazil was the last
South American country to abolish slavery, in I8it.
Burns said. "Very little is said about the role of the Black
in Brazilian abolition. There is ah»ays the coad^tRat the
white man freed the Black man. But slave revolts helped
the cause of abolition immensely Unfortunately scholars
have rejected this fact."
Burns also said his speech will cover the contributions of
Blacks in Brazilian history and how these contributions arc
reflected in modern leeiety.
French films slated
The UCLA Film Archives
will sponsor the; first Los
Angeles showings of four new
films from France on Thursday
and Friday this week at 7:30
pm in Melnitz 1409 The films
have been acquired through
the courtesy of the French
Cuhural Attache, and admis-
sion to the scrccrtings is free;
The series opens Thursday
with '•Lily Love Me," a come-
dy directed by/Maurice Du-
gowson "The /Empty Chair^
about a wpm^m_a]>atSdoned by
her husband who has to cope
with the problems of working
and trying to raise her three-
year-old son at the same time,
will be shown second. The
director of ''The Empty Chair,"
Pierre Jallaud. will he piiMnt
It ihe screening.
Fridays films are "The
Wrong Love Story," directed
by Jean-Louis Bertucoelli and
"A Man in a Dream," directed
by Gcocfcs Perec and Bernard
Queysamie..
Bradbury on
UGTVLA today
UCTVLA today presents an
informal rap with writer Rav
Bradbury, a dramatization
from Richard Wright's "Native
Son" and a presentation on an
Olympics competition for .the
handicapped. *
Also <»lhe telecast: a return
to Mardi-Gras. an interview
with former Olympic contender
Oscar Edwards and, according
to Jon Grauman. producer ol
this show, "a candid camera's
view of ptmps and whores in
^ottywood Slid students~lf~
UCLA"
txiQir
Bauer'
TOP STAR XL
For Available Light
Ust
Zoom AAovies *
2.5 powmr Momm imm
'"^--^mar.
ond vi«wm9
U 99.95
$99'
^999
5
MolraamgoahKI
*
\
you get it hetter at The Wlierebouse^
I
r
NOW ON
OUR ENTIRE
STOCK OF:
•WARNER BROTHERS 'REPRISE
•CHRYSALIS 'DEEP PURPLE
•CURTOM 'LOMA
ALE-WITHTHISAD
OUR ENTIRE
STOCK OF:
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WITH
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pnici ft.t7
AND MANY M9f^gt
K^i T*^^""^l"' 'f^HANK SINATRA *JON MITCHELL •RAMnv lypyJajAiu
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'<!
JCM4 SSASTIANl
Welcome Back
I
LMMYLOUHARRlSl*
Ekte HotcH • ^
f!^
. %
'-— rsr
t «'
i *-
vco Center
Gnema I
47Mril
■OMNAMAIUN
ta«a tJt. $:4», Hm. lOrlS
^vco Center
Cinema II
MD(T STOP, oummncH
VMlAOf
teHlr S;SS, t^O, I0:3S
Ave© Center
Cinema III
SEVmMAUTilS
t:M, 3:40, «.-M, tiM. I«:M
47*0711
Beverly
(at
THE HINDENBUR6
td.Smf A%yn 3:55, 1:00 10:05
••••»., ly—., ltH0f%., W. t:00
AJRK>tT '75
^^^^ . S«t., S«m. 2:00, «:05
K Tii— ., TKurt., ^. 4;05, 10:10
^ocih€'i
Beverly Hills
•Krd <lf
27MI2I
ONE FLEW OVEE THE
CUCKOO'S NBT ^ R
AU SCREWED W ^ Hi
S«t. 4 Sun. frem 1:00
Brentwood I
2924 WUihi,*
.ot 2&|» St.)
•••••• Monico
•2»-33i« •29-3367
■ymi aNMl
iAEEY LYNDON - 0:30
CONDUCT UNBECOMING
4:10
Brentwood II
2534VMhhife'
(o« 2ttt^ St.)
•SMIe MQfMCO
•29-3366 ^25-3367
Jivti Kelly
HOT POTATO
4:30- 10:00
ENTER THE DRAGON
•:10
Bruin
AU THE MESIDBir S MBi
I2;3b, 3:00, 5:30. t.-OO, 10:30
M AS«t.
Century
Plaza I
Ave. •!
FAMILY PLOT
• It Set-SMfi2:30, «:15, 1<
FRENZY
4:30-10:15
Sat A Sun 4:35, 3:30
Century
Plaza II
3040 A«« ol
553-4291
Cinerama
Dome^ "^
tmm Vitie
AMERICAN 6RAFRTTI
•:«5 S«t A Sufi 3:30, 7 00. 10:30
RABBIJACOBS
M-r 4:30. 1«:00
S^ 4 Sim 2:00. 5:25. 0:55
ytclieH4.>im,y,^Ke,chK>lfi>«om^
CMy LA. SJK^wiwg
PHANTOM OF THf
PARADISE — PO ^
••% 11:30. 2:30, 4:30, 430
•:30. 10:30
M 7 Set 12M
Crest
Cinema
W.C PIRDS A ME ^ PG
12*2
272-3t76
474.7t66
^■tfy 4. •. 10
2. 4. 4. i. 10
Fox Venice
«30 UnoW Slird
K.^I^J^
A^nHIISO
CMMSI.OO
•/l4fM.
1/ltlM.
ft/ 17 Mm
CJkS.A.
i/ttfvM.
ft/lf^ft/lS
Hollywood
Pacific
f)i
GRIZZLY (PG)
CAU OF THE WILD (PG)
^fMfhmm 12:30
Los Feliz
1C22 N v«
N0 4>2t49
THE MAGK AUTE
rr
The UC Movement Theatre,
performing free of chmrfc May
13. J 7 and 18 in the Ackcr-
man Gfaarf loJIroom. it
choreographed alii performed
enurety hy freshmen, sopho-
mores and juniors in the dance
department **The oiain reason
we aae doing h,- said Pro-
ducer-Director Kimbcrly Ncu-
bert, *'is that undergraduates
have aWolutely nto opportunity
to perform until their senior
year, or until they become
graduates We thought fresh-
men, sophomores and juniors
are just as competent, and we
thought, why should they be
thrown onstafe in their senior
year with no experiencer
Uttt year, the first VC
Movement Theatre was pro-
duced by Kate Rosloff, who
then receive^ credit for it in
her J 99 Special Studies class.
The program ran only two
nights, but was "an outrageous
success,- according to Neubert
'*Wc had four times the audi-
ence we expected 2600 peo-
ple — and everyone loved it."
Getting the money to fund
the dance concert ''took four
months of my life,'' said Neu-
bert. •*The dance department
said they couldn^t help us
UCMovement Theater : free and easy
• "■■- — #
because they haven't had a
budget increase in 10 years."
Neubert said that it was "not
easy- fetting the funds from
the Program Task Force and
the Cultural Affairs Commit-
tee, who are sponsoring the
concert "If they say 'no' you
keep going back until they say
yes." Neubert said '^No' al-
ways means 'maybe* because
no' is the easiest thing for
them to say."
However, Neubert added.
-What I really want to §m
•cross IS that there is so much
money laying around, and any-
one who WMiu to do some-
thing artistic can Every yesTv
•y Tony Peyicr
Bob Rafclson's Stay Hungry (at the
Regent) deals with a young man's
coming to terms with his place in life
On a level of siMs alone, it is an
admirable and optimistic achieve-
ment; however, the choppy narrative
and inconclusive relationships make
the film appetizing but unsatisfying.
Rafelson is a skAled director whoae
few efforts have been intrigumg bat
inconsistent. It has been four years
since his last film, the baffling and
poorly-received King of Marvin Gar-
<*««• In SUy Hungry, he stiU seems
to be struggling to recover the direc-
torial vision which found such elo-
Stay Hungry' : you are what you don
the Campus Programs and
Aaivities office allou SI 00,000
for programming, and it juat
tiu around if nobody uact it
I've been given $3,000 this year
for the dance concert, and I'm
tpendn^ail of it."
Aa anon as she got the
money. Neubert advertised in
the IkiUy mum for talent. She
auditioned 40 dances, being
careful to specify that any
^CLA iHideMt cotiid audition,
and picked 12 of them who
had ^'the most artistic pro-
mise." The dances have been m
rehearsal for four months, and
include modem dmHes, jazz
^•nces. comedy pieces and a
balletK dance. "We have a real
variety show." said Neubert
One problem in putting on
the program was that "it was
not easy to get a crew, because
they dop't get prntf and don't
get crtaitt," said Neubert
Another problem was the
Ackerman Grand Ballroom
••whKh has to be the wprst
place in the world to put on a
concert," she added "It's
I^alling afMut and they're not
teking cue of it. We'd hke
•ome help from the Theatre
Arts department ~ they have
iomiich money «hI a kit mL-.
their Mfm are not in laae.*'
J
quest expression in Five Easy Pieces.
on Charles Gainei* novel, the
story concerns Craig Blake (Jeff
Bridges), a wealthy young man cast
adrift from his past by the sudden
death of his parents He becomes
involved with some shady business-
men in a shady business proposition
the success of which depends on
Craig s buying a gym m downtown
Birmingham
Conflicts ensue when Craig gets
involved with the reguUr clientele of
the gym These people include Thor
(KG. Armstrong), the peculiar owner
wh^ won't sell, Joe Samo (Arnold
Schwarzenegger), a Mr. Universe
aspirant and Joe's sometime girl-
friend Mary Tate (Sallv Field), who
falls in love with Craig.
The conspiring businessmen are
iccn only briefly and even Thor and
his associates (Robert Eirglund and
'^^^fw E Mosley) remain superficial
creations. Craig's relationship with
Mary Tate is surprisingly shallow, at
it seems merely to happen and not
evolve.
Equally unsubstantiated is Craig's
past, as the luxurious Blake estate
only aitows the end result of Craig's
anawrtry. The onl> rcpresenutive of
the Blake tradition is embodied m a
brief but splendid performance by
^^l^^l^^l 1^^^ . • Pcnormance by writer Games
Globe s Cymbeline': steady, not flashy
Woodrow Parfrey as Craig's Uncle
Albert. Parfrey conveys a man grown
both weary and wise by custom, but
who still endeavors to live out hu
convictions Despite Parfrey's appav-
ance, the story still lacks needed
mformation about the life Craig is
contemplating leaving.
The spiritual center of the film is
daarty expressed Ny Joe Santo when
he tells Craig thai being comfortable
IS hard to give up and he'd rather stay
hungry This is a provocative theme,
inferring that less is more and excess
denies access.
However, lUfelson and co-scmen-
writer Gaines have failed to make the
rest of the film as clear and revealii^
aa Joe Santo's timple philosophy. The
whole idea o( buying up land in the
city is a Uttle forced as is Thorns
Midden dectston to go along with the
businessmen. It is problems such as
these in the basic construction of the
story which forces us to ncfkct
subtlety and nuance and concentrate
on discovering what the hell is going
on and why
Despite the film's uproarious final
parade of nuisclemen and a memor-
ablc hoedown. Slay Hwniry does not
emerpe a cohesive product. It is a
scries of pieces, some which work
than others, none of them ftyt
cu . ^y Howard Poencr
Shakespeare s Cymbeline is a very strange nlav mlKino
f^:iz\T::::iL^^ -^^ ^^ .ne':pE^,ero' t!
inrec-ticred roniMce. The current Hollywood Glohr ThJl.-
production (ptaying through Sunday ni.ht)^ it^?f . '
blend of bnllmnce and .nepT.tude th^t ,n thl eJ^ ll^^/t """"*
come through without (Lh ' Shakespeare
.nd?indtn'; ^f S^AuSn^RT-SHt* "*•" ^ ""^ »--"
■.y Po.thun.u. TcJ.r^^"be^:™"of Z'"™ "nllT °' ^
CymbeUne-. daughter ImogetTw iIk f,u on^m^'™*" '**
two sons, kidnapped as babi« Cymbeline s own
)c.X'':i1S'';hro'i''.;^';;^*tr' ''''"«- ^^^-
..tuauoB is outlined. The "ninLte?a!3^^ "J^!."'''^
rtirij -.,,_^ __^ T^^ " ^i^wi r^annimus. TIm is
.k ^^ ^^^ •■^ timple exposition is ^^md «»-- /
I he play picks up quickly, though. laraeJv " ,^ ^ ^
defined character, wd reUtionsh.^^ S^^ST ""^^
(Anne Potu) who i. not only the pure. iJSv^
to be. She dominatei. ihc itagt whenever she's on it. drawin.
everyone else to her by charm or by force " « -ng
Posthumus (Richard Baker) « a more reneetive character and
subdued actor. cemaMed more during aaion acmt than m his
very expansive soliloquys '
SMWhing of a surprise in characteraation is Cloten (Steve
»««^») who comes on rather more dynamically (and less
ttupidly) than one would expect, ihe resuh being that he » la.
comjc and more ev.l when be seu off ,o k,»L Powhumus and
nnrish Imogen
In one of Piatt's better conoiptions. the kiM's sow Guiderms
^tnd Avirragus (Willuim Forwarri and Grefoiy Ellioi) ^Mik in
pl«n. blunt, peasantiah but poji^rlully straightforward i^nia,
Maing them someh&m admirable m a play full of oraaie and
Ctotca. though he knows he condemns hiimelf saviM k
Sparks begin to fly only in the premee of Frank Gerad aa
laehimo. the Romaa Machia«cUi who succcatfitily dan laa^H*!
hoooriolh character aad actor are iwidious aad yet amiSiU
■y sneer wm and qiuckacH.,
SoBiepafttiw km than «ellar Instead of apMriliaw af
■J'^'J".'.' •.'.' .'' ^'"*^ *?*.^^ ^ ■*"?"«' •« »tt v.
aad aat irmbly dear ones at that. kMMd af ~
o«Mf»a^d^«ui^ing with his head Ominim kilt the vilUin.
But uken as a whole the r,iobe
Ml aifci t ihik
fn^es verv
Manns Westwood I
— UfSTKX
I :M. a:M, s ae. 7 M, * M
AAdnns Westwood II
"• ^^9^^ TMi WtTWATBI POX
IJ:JO, i:%». 7: If, le^u "" '^*
OtOOVf TUM
1
1:1$. S:4S, VrlO
hAanns Westwood III
THi FItST NUOK MUSICAL
l^HO, 4:00, «:00, grOO lOrOb
Merolta
Oiktrm City
i*»
C«N
HOT POTATO '"PO
ENTM THf MAGON '^fO
12 00 AdmlMiMi $3.00
for fliow tim«t
»0
Monica I
<332 2ndS*rMt
491
3 C>wdy HkHi
Wilder A MMsMn* K«lMi in
SMARTfl MK>THit
•Aim
OiO Dt ACUU
Monica II
1322 2nd JUMtt
451-
iAT MY OUST
KTUtN TO MACON COUNTY
»x
n»«o«r«
Music Hall
FACE TO FACE
r.
'\y^-
t» ■ <
Notional
I0f29
Dr(w«
NIWSMAtS
^ 4, 4. %. 10
ff»«4Saf
•/I3
NuArt
Theatre
S/ 14 PH. ~
Tllsy
11272 Se<
47i.437V
479-SaS9
It
S/ 14 Sim
S/1t Tmm.
•/It mmA,
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Pontages
of Vtn«
7141
AU THI MESIOINT'S
MM — PO
3:00, S:JO, 4:00. 10:30
PH A ist 12:4$
I III
Picwood
272-
GilZZlY--PG
CAU or THI WIU) —
0:30
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Plaza
477.9097
47%9077
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CTATHIINQtY
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SWORD OF VCNGiANCi
PART 5
ZATOICHI YOJIMBO
UA Oaemo
^ ^ , SANDSTONE
i^enter I 3 ss. 7.00, loros -
(Th« Originol) EMMANUEUJ
W«l(woiih A««
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2:15, 5:20, tiaS.
UA Cinema
Center II
10f9f W«Mwor«h Av«
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Jock Nickolaon
ONE FLEW OVER THE
CUKOO'S NEST
1:15, 3:30, 5:50, §05, 10:25
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WMtwood 474 4198
Awi^my Aw«rd Winn«f for
iMf F«ofui« DKum«nrary
THE MAN WHO SKIED
EVEREST
2, 3:40, 5:20, 7:00. 8c40, 10:20
UA
WESTWOOD
18887 Liruibroofi
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477.0575
TUNNEL VISION R
' Coll
n
VAGABOND
2509 WiMwrf
387-2171. o
AofO \}fi%c%tf 35mm Prtntti
KING KONG (1933)
Janmf Goynor - Ffo4ork Morcfti
A STAR IS BORN (i937)
THEATRE ***^ '^ *^ '* '^^^ ^ J^^-Morl. Strmi^
VANGUARD ^'i?£^'i^"<^
9014 M«4ro.« Av« TyM. Moy 18 8:00 pm
LP. An««l«t 276-9987 Pi|,n« ^ Gory Ad^in*
$2.00 Gfifol kdmimimn, $1 $0 Studoott witH Sdiool m.
Monnf
Village
961 Sroston
WMtwood 478 0576
END OF THE GAME
^ 4. 4, 8, 10
Coll for informofion
Aw ffin ofooli't proifM
^off«. ft Son..—
Done* Concert
THurt lodiot Ni^ht
DANCe ConlesI
- SUNDAY
SI 00 cosh
Wirrners comp«te
in the finois
S300 cash
KENTUCKY FRIED
THEATRE
1
Im Wtt ol K^J
lo*t 5y*Oft
10303 W Pko Mvd
556-2663
BEATING A DEAD
Pm 4 &•» • 00 4 10 00
Through AAay 16
EDDY ^'LOCKJAW" DAVIS
Tmm Moy 18 - Sun Moy 23
JOE HENDERSON
r.
fiif
- 30 PIER AVE
HERMOSA BEACH INFO TIL 372 b9l1
rrn
Moers' 'Literary Women
sRows feminism evolving
By Karen Brinkky Y
If you think that fcmiwim
bcfan in 1%3 with the publi-
cation of Betty Friedan*! TIk
feminine Mystique, then you
lihouid not miss reading Ellen
Moon* Literary ^ommn (Dou-
bleday A Compwiy. $10.00.
336 pages.) Mocrs' book is not
a casebook on feminism, but a
history of the development of
fflftfor women wnters since ibe
18th century Presenting a new
literary perspective, these
women writers created new
metaphors and new themes
reflecting more feminine con-
cerns, fears and desires which
we claittfy today as feminist
Almost encyclopedic in pre-
sentation, each writer's per-
tinent biographic data is given
along with selections from
some of her writings and a
brief analysis of those works as
seen today in their historical
perspective.
For anyone deeply interested
in any one of the writers, the
analysis and biographical back-
ground is far too sketchy to
satisfy his or her curiosity
However, it is precisely this
superficial examination which
is the book's strength, for this
is the kind of book that sends
you off to read unfamiliar
books and reread old books
. with a new perspective.
One of the most fascinating
chapters in the book concerns
the development of the gothic
novel and, in particular, how
Miuy Shelley might have come
to write the grandmother of all
gothic novels, Frankenstein.
Quoting extensively from Mary
Shelley's own journal, Moen
depicts the novel growing di-
rectly out of the young
author*s feehngs after the death
of 4ier first child. ^t^
In her journal she wroi^
•^Orcam that my little baby
ca'W' to life aaain . . that it
had oniy been cold and that
we rubbed it before the firtr
luid it lived Awake and find
no baby. I think about the
little tbm§ all day.** It is not
surprising that Shelley would
create a charaaer whose ob-
would be in **bestowing
ion upon lifeless aaiter**
so that he might ''in process of
time renew life where death
Brontes, she does not negiea
the significant influences (both
negative and positive) their
male colkafues bad on them
One of the most 4ai-
iMointing aspecu of Literary
WaHMB IS that fvomen
novetists, poela, esaayisCi, play-
wnghu and short story writers
are all given equal coiMiicn^
tion it) her book but scrocii-
had apparently devoted the
body to corruption.-
Even though Moers tends to
wnpiiMig the effect that many
minor women wnters had on
authors like Austin or the
^'¥
ih^eHj
^•**
TUXEDO SHOP
ffonfofs M Sal€S
formal Wmar
11919 Wftthir* ilvd.
W.L.A. 477-4)Sgt
writing is never even men-
tioned. She negk^ to even
oientioo that Lillian Hellman
and JoHi Didion also
screenpteya.
In Literary Wooms. Moers
has taken on a large subject
and has succeeded m covering,
if only briefly, most of the
major women writers. Her
analysis of the devdopawt of
the TrtK^ novel IS
dinarily ins^tful and her re-
evahiation of such wnters as
Jane Austin and Emily Oicktn-
son places them in a new revo-
lutiotiary position in literature.
Moers* book may shake up or
even be rejected by the bterary
esublishment, but it at least
offers a new feminine approach
to the major modem women
One free V2 gallon of coke
with any pizza or dinner
Pirn
Man
r-
%%
$t
Coupon good thru
ly. May 19. 1976
intion Coupon
At a recent Los Angeles
press conference, Alfred Hitch-
cock debunked a good many
cliches about his craft When
••Itcd of the possible symbolic
nature of suira in his filoM, Ik
replied, •'In my considered
opinion all tbe suirs in my
films have been wed primnrily
for going up and for mm
down " As for impiiniiing on
the SCI, he asKrted, tTeruinly
not' With all those electricms
around and everything? I'd
rather improviie in tiK attce.**
Responding to a query on
the mandMory afe for a Holly-
wood director's retirement,
Hitchcock reflected for a mo-
ment and announced. *1 would
My about Reel 12 which
would be 1— «rd tk^ wm^
I
^^ggjgjngs RecorcHng
to
This is titt album that
should finally put Nils Lofgren
in the limelight where he be-
longs For six years he has
been receiving critical acclaim
but no airptey. Now things arc
looking better He has an ip>
cpming tour fdaMci, Imd Cry
T«i^ « his best album to
" date
Cry Tamk is composed of
almost all original material
(except '♦For Your Love**) and
is jam-packed with tasty guitar
licks. The songs are all up-
tempo, but the mood varies
from bitter (in '•Incidentally
It's Over) to happy (in
M^I9m<} rfilB guiur reflects
each mood perfectly and never
overstates.
Half the album was pro-
duced by Al Kooper and half
by David Briggs. Kooper's
••op have a fuller body to
them (sometimes the sonp are
orchestrated a bit too much.
though) while Briggs' cuts are
just simple rock'n roll Lofgren
kept tptgl control over all
•«P«cte of production, and he
excels on all the sonp
If the next album \i as good
M Cry Toiigli, Nik Lo^
will have a secure position in
rock's hierarchy
Hmmebrew
S$mrwo€Hi
Homebrew seems to be an
attempt at striking a musical
balance between country melo-
dies anci disco rhythms The
result in a disappointing disco-
western flop
Country fans will have vis-
ions of hundreds of teeny bop-
pen doing the bump, hustle,
and robot, and disco freaks
will start cutting z's as they
thrill the latest addition of
never-ending Jesse James bal-
lads.
music % arranged
around the ulents ol keyboard
player Bob Carpenter The rest
of the band helps Carpenter
decorate the album cover but
they don't add anything in-
strumentally The melodies are
simple and the guitars and
percussion arc simply boring.
Homebrew is aimed at being
universally appealing More
likely it will appeal to very few
listeners. If you like disco
music, buy a disco album. If
you Hke country music, buy a
contry album But do not buy
sn album which is a mediocre
attempt at both.
— Jatry Hale
wmd m/ ike MidHJjkt
^1 OMeo^
For tboie listeners already
acquainted with Al DiMeola*s
*"T^>c and often tasteless gui-
tar work in Chick Corea's
Return to Forever. Laad of tfK
^^4ali0^ 9mm will come aa a
very pleasant surprise It is
?'«tt<OMtn«sad and beautiful
from beginning to end and
ahwurim aone of the (mm
playing heard in a long time
Superbly backed by such
notables as Lennv White. Stan-
ley Clarke. Chick Coraa (all
teanomates from Return), the
brilliant drummer Alphonse
Mouzon and others. DiMeola
deinonstrates some very unique
.* "liii|L gnitai wmn in-
aK- -roves he is easily as
interesung and thoughtful a there is not mur>k
wnter •• -yone froa. the S ITfror'
John McLaufhlyi other bland new nrcorc
— done better
EipeciaHy noteworthy are
«e utle track and -^uite -
Golden Dawn,- a series of
bree pieces which are a joy to
litten to. A special treat is
Corcas '^hort Take of the
-i*""* '■WMi,' pcrformad^^
Cores oa igmmu: piano and
DiMeola on ■maatii piitar —
|t IS terrifically intricate and
fici7. yet a piaae af pure beau-
ty from start to finish. Judging
from the high quahty of this
first solo effort from DiMeola
he might do weU to free him^
»clf from the confines of Re-
turn to Forever and keep on a
iolo course
In recent years, increasing
numbers of jaz/ pUyers have
been using a formula desired
for commercial success. Instead
of a syncopated rhythm and a
challenging, melodically in-
teresting chord structure, they
iMe a funk rhythm section and
umple. repititious chord
changes The resulting music,
for the most part, has neither
the life or funk of soul music
nor the melodic and rhythmic
interest of jazz.
Big band leader Mavnard
Ferguson, with f riaail Scream
has added his name^ to the list
of jazz-rock musicians Other
than Fergusoi|*s fine trumpet
work and a good horn section.
The Outlaws is not a record-
'■•r^up per se, but four
P»oaam of "prognnivc; coun-
try -~ aaMly Waylon Jen-
nings, his wife Jesii Coteer.
^il!!5 ^c**on and Tompall
Glaaar. Moit of the sonp are
•ung solo, except when Jen-
ninp and Nelson team up on
•tfood Hearted Woman,**
-Heaven or HelT aad when
the Jennings are paired on
**Suspicious Minds.**
^According to the hner notes.
'Omttam% is to be considered an
introduction to progressive
country for those who have
oot gotten the mrssap yet. as
it were. As a resuh. a good
many of the eleven selections
are veritable classics of the
pnre One may find annoyii^
though, the way the artisu son
oi file by in a line; they each
do a couple of numbers aad
are never heard from apna
Stagfenng the performers
could have tied the thing to-
gether more, making this aa
album rather thaa a sampler
Ahhough there is plenty of
good music on it. The Outlaws
IS not a real "album" for pro-
gressive country bi^i and its
brevity does not pyt the un-
initiated a fair picture Buy. it
anyway
— Steve
Hot tip?
Come To Our
Call 825-2638
House
and celebrate the
record-breaking 1976
UNITED JEWISH WELFARE
FUND DRIVE AT UCLA
^ Saturday, May 15
8.00 p.m.
' Buenos Aires Room
of the Sunset Recreation Center at UCLA
food, film, and fun
Call 474-1531 for reservations — Hiltel
POSITION AVAILABLE
— student Coordinator —
Foreign Student Orientation Program
Academic Year— June 1976-June 1977
RasponsiM* for implementation of OriMMtion Proonm
for newly •rriwad UCLA foreign students.
20-40 hrs/wMti during summer
Aveiafe of 10 hrs/week Fan. Winter. Spring Oira
Stfi^end
Job Description & Applications AvailaMe:
Intermeliona I StuaHit Center
1023 Hilgard
or
Office of Intemattonaf Students & Schdaia
297 Dodd Hall
for return of
DRIFTWOOD BAR
•MnrtAtrz
kTOUAaTlT
If
(i
14. IS
i-i.
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iMilaiN
rai. n
MiSTANUV
I MST mo«T A
STIVIWOOO
UIITARH aAMJIMMAMDaUMII MMMISAMOIiacaeiM
May 14, 15
16v
ALBERT
KING
Moy 17, It
MEASURE
Moy 19, 20
STREET.
WALKERS
M«-aioo
M«llyw»»d
THE STONER
2113SMM«r A«e
WMt I A f002S
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WW
Miay May 14-14 NICKCY tAaCLAY
plus Silver
Moy It Ik 19 ftYiONMnJNiA
Suwiawii plup Stfv« h-wnholi
May M-23 OKiHi* MutMlwKitv plut
M W
Ltfocli. 4innmr mhmr tH««fr« mncort
f KOtk cocktail wifh CantonoM Cwi^ii
FOt THOSE WHO APfHEClATE QUALITY
ISOO WISTWOOO BlVD - 4 tiOCU SOUTH 0» WKH
■CHAN^GARDEN
4T»yyM. 47».77— >W
GYPSY'S INDIAN
V.TJ^
fO
JUNIORS
TMi aoixs aoYCf or
47i-f7n
•oyor urn trancm a,g,db n ao, ins, sa.ja
iof54 in^iiii. Or mmmt $2 7$, $4 25. $s.n
474.aMg wf.ar. ¥mmm
jUMitSwiss
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RESTAURANT MIFUrC
a«id uta*.^it W*w
*<t4 U 474.«Mf *"*^ ■<
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%MJUA^»^ ttJt'^4^%.
$171
EAT OUT TONIGHT!
. « i • .« • » -
-If
•ot
:^
't
Students protest cutbacks in New York
Several New York campuses involved
(CFS) — U^M «ver timioa like, propmm cuu
•M licuity kyoffi, ftudentt on •everal ann-
PJJM^or tbe Sutc Univcnity of New York
2 JM --^^ ««•«« «nkcf. buiiding ukcovcrt.
Aao«g the proccMs;
^'^^Xxt '''^o^L??^*' ^ ^ '• undergraduates
«r SUNY at Buffalo called a onenlay itnke in
early April About a third of the 14,000
•tweau voted. The boycott culminated severaJ
w«ck* of rallies and demonstrauons
—About 20 students protesting ti^ propoaed
g eliminauon of the Puerto Rican studies at the
- AJbuy campus invaded the coUege president's
a office and kept him and his allies there for four
hours Disciplinary action is being considered
--About 20 members of the ^'Red Balloon"
^ •^l"" off of the old Studenu for a Deao-
CTitic Society ~ took over the gym at Stony
Brook for 12 hours after several weeks of
trying to muster a caaqNia-wide procctt.
—Studenu at the Binghamton. Purchase
rredoaia and New P^u campuses took over
■•*■ •■^ offices in administration buikliogs
for periods kstii^ from two and a half to five
^ TThc number of protestors varied from
about 200 at Binghamton to about 35 students
•t Pufdiase. At Fredonia, the administration
•MMMd a court order agamst 24 studenu on
the fifth day of their sit-in. Those studenu face
tbepossibaity of campus action against them
The protesu were triggered by the New York
«»te legislatures decision to decrease appro-
priations for the State University by $27
J
million, and its order for the school to
its income by $25 million dunng the 1976*77
fiscal yt^, which began Apnl 1.
As a reMk of the lepHMtre's new b«4pi
pkn, dorm-room rent will rite by $100. and
tuition will go up $!§• lor undergrads, $200 for
gradustaa, $400 for those in professional
schools and $600 for those in medical and
dental schools.
Tuiuon increases will be greater for students
who live outside of New York, ranging from
$125 for freshmen and sophomores to $1,200
for medical and dental studenu.
In addition, about 1.615 teachii^ adminis-
^''■^IY* ■"<* civil-service positions will be
elimi^ted. The number of graduate teaching
and .rnsBiich issiiHiiU wiU be redWid. TA's
are alsd scheduled to lose their tuition waivers.
•Strike is the word of the hour." iteys student
leader Robert Kirkpatnck.
_ Studenu on some campuses are considering a
wmmK¥t tuition strike, to begin this summer,
according to Kirkpatrick, So far, ahhough one-
day and two-day boycotts of classet hive
occurred, the numbers of studenu participating
have not been teft enough to shut down
campuses. Students going to class have been
•ble to cross picket lines, and the picketing has
generally been quiet and orderly.
Aside from picketing, studenu have also
been lobbying the sut6 legislature through the
Student Assoaation of the Sute University the
coordinating body of the campus student
(CntiBuiilonPagei»)
U.C. MOVEMENT THEATER
Advantag*: BioRhythms
J«ka advan-
of your
n^y iical. amo-
^UU^ ' lectuaf pat-
t«ms by plot-
your own Biochart
matically baaad Bio-
Rhythnna mre easily charted
<*wth t>a Ufe.>BioRhythm Kit.
which includes drawing
chart paper, calcula-
tion tiibleft and instructions
Don't ba fippad off by high
pricad computer servicas offer-
ing to plot BioRhythms for a
pre9crit)ed period or>«y (Jsa the
Life BioRhyawn Kit to your ad-
vartfage tor t^ rart of ^our »te
for
ma
'"••^•"Mr Products. Dapt CP
Rd.
Colo 80X1
ACKERMAN GRAND BALLROOM
FREE ADMISSION
MAY 15 a 17, SKW P.M. - MAY 18, NOON
tor Pro0rwn Tart Fore. « Th« CuHurrt Affafo* CommlMten •(
Itw Studmtt UgislaMw Council
71M
'"H <77.Jit*
^mm
^ f IMCATKMAl OfMrrM. ^^ Z
•ripr-r'
tmensM
SUNY protests
,.'»•
froai Page It)
foveraments. The assraatioe is explormg ways
to >npfove their stiategy** to get a supplb-
maatol bstifet approved by the legislature this
r'*L^_'"fl'r'"" ^«^%« could restore
cutt impaaad by the Ispakturt m March.
However, aa eoaciai ia the fovernor's haisM
elfioe said the chaaoes of that *Wvert very sfi^
Prerficubly. the strikes have rankled >oine
ateuaistrators who beheve they wilJ pnjy icrve
to wriUte legisUtars who remember the
tunes violent procarts oT the IMTs
It IS doubtful that the strikes will help tht
student cauaaa,- says Albert Soout, aa^Zfidal
of the Buffalo caaipus *The beat that caa be
^^op^ for is that they wtfl 4a BO harm*
Forget the prolaM,** a iaflhlo newspaper
co^umn^t tow students More public sym^iJ^
tf7k^ iI2II!_J*^ columnist advised studenu,
^ ipiBttairf fund-raising activities — such
•j^bMigo games, hake sales and lawn cami-
campus events campus ev
tour .laiiis and
— ~^^ *-1i pn, Msy 16. comtr of
— C«rrtl iMtli SIM MiB. Srifis ttn-
SpSSiS. iuncti watvr and tirt ripair kit 10
am. Msy 15 Smissi and hcMc Caast
lad for awvironmtntat
praiacts
and food
at tht Mardi
man or M
Call
MSSali bring UssMifilt. 7 ,
matt m front of Ackerman
m.
••aatlt Faaaialf
^0 SMS up or tor Sstals call
7#-aBl or 477^4mi TournaMsnt will Se
held 9 am-midnight May 22 Security
Pacific Plaza. Wsftwssd
-MvMMpi Via at ti avwa H tm
sassr Mfalrt. are now avdiiabie Visit
06CA. Karcmff 31 1 or call 825-2120
Hum \^
mM ^ !?** ^■"- '•**" from EflHdeis
?!ffii^y"?--?~* *»^» pm mm
i-H r-C: •S!?'**^ •ntwnalional Stu
•Z?!?' ^^ Hilgard
!>• shown 7 30 pm May 15 Mtlnit2
auditorium $i 50 ■••miiz
cwgen
^ UCU siHiant cor
noon today
2412
wilt discuss Con
t^ pm
todav. Actanasn 3664
pm today.
1-2 pm
of officars. 4
7-S pm avtry Thurslay.
itional Studtm
^.^wwonatrf asditorium frtt*
iMi UoHnrtSi a aararMli
win htar Or
17. Hamas 304
B fiuind 3 pm Msy
in. r««i.«"' ^^ ■ ****^ •• P^ oi
m conttmoorary Musk ftttival a »pm
tonight SchoenDtrg sniitafMim UClA
J udtms facutty staff m6 saMor ciii2an&
g othtr studants $2 gtntral ^^
^ in Washington applications art aval
at)le in Karckhoff 306 and dut tomorrow
—ASS Ctaattttf ippasaMi. are r>ow
avaUaMrat one of the tallowing mforma
tiSS assasis 3 pm. today Architecture
116? or 3 pm. tomorrow samt plaoa
-Hmm Trip apMpi, tor Castsic Ultt.
tomorrow HaapNis laach Harbor Msy 22
San Diego May 31 and Mtxico June 22 29
are avaitaftM in Karckhoff 666 atory day
and at mosHNes Of UCLA Rolling Ckib
.^ -w-^ will ^^„,
Baroque and contemporary works by
German compbsars noon tomorrow
aclioofitorg auditorium Free
""""*■ aa lai. 730 pm m
House Karckhoff
pm tomght Coflae Wist Bridga Qub
Tai^rs
Lscrooaa 3J64 pm FtaM 7 Air Ritte
PmhH 3-5 pm Mlla Rwiot. Womans Kar-
ate S^ oni Womaa aym »; Aikido 7-6
P«n MAC 6 116. Nofipo. SJ06 30 pm MAC
9 146 Kung Fu 2-5 ^. MAC 6 i4B
^mopt Lawfi. aiaa
-M ^ mu^^mS^!^ f^otogri^.,
/•6 pm. MN 460: TsMt Tanms 7 10 Nad
nek %t am. Wilp. 7 45-11 pm. WMd
Wist BridQa Qub'- MMn 1 thtd
Sfc'srir Moil.
ioadorship positions for permanom repre
sentatnas/SKfsavtsi for tar Wast, na
tional ami tii^ sdiool programs are now
Available Expo Canter Depdline is tomoc
row
-Tlo TlfBr. by Murray Schisgal will It
ppsssalo0 by the Dtpartmaa of Thtattr
mm. aosn. tomorrow. MiSlsaan Tliastre
1340 Frat - , ■
-4ICU VMap C»tp. naads now mam-
iors Call 274-2772 or 625-2620 or visit
ORA
— fta Osntt. 6^10 pm every Wtdnotday
and 8 30-1030 pm every Friday Inter
national Siiiiani Camtr 1023 Hilgard frot
^^^^^^ ^a^^^p^^^^^W ^^h I^VI ^H6v y^Nf WWO
aa «it Motional pronstmioi 1 iTipiui
itaiis on ttie rsSMOB Visit KerckhoU 96
and flit out a card an6 ia snaoors mUl ba
sam toyou
— •litoiitMps. wlormaiion and
on extramural tunaat, -
and postdoctorals art a¥ailsMt m the
Fellowships and Assistpntship Section
Murphy 1226
--6ii^Bl 6MaaaansMp GaNa. slatted by
trsmad initms wiU htip yon Had funding
for your iStas Opon daily noon-4 pm
Kerckhoff 401
an! kicai voluntaar positions are avaiiaMt
Jh EXPO Acktrman A213 or call
kiLaai
on Latm Amarca
noon and 2-4 30 ^
'featuring smmral spoBMMl aMa will dis-
cuss current and Juture Irtnas of oooula
lion policy with *^**
riod to follow
a
noon today
^■— -~-^ — *• •l»«»«ar 66A. and tha
730 ^m. lo-
^7 am.
mght Karckhoff
lonight. tosHa 3400
— I ■■■■■ . orouD
for farulty. siBlf saS Msiait women with
^iple rolos. noon, ooary Friday Murphy
district WIN ips# and aniw ^
7-6.X pm tomorrow KsMOS
~C6Mk Itnaaa. will spook on
bve reporting 7 pm. May ^6 NPI
torium Free
~ ft. a ao'
of Propostion 15 noon.
UCIA Otntal School 13^1
mJI^JH!^ • • lii ii isapa a
■pwa 6|^Ha 3-4 30 pm ftiday,
34UU '
loin OECA as a
consumor lmmsli|ala Visit Karckhoff 3ii
or call 825-2820 Volunteers are also
iVB. 3^30 pm. laday
_ ^ aKTM66
^onasys. Mada
Thursdays.
. -6ay 6aiBai' mtm. wdi .
!!*T '*' •9 •■■'•■•^ 7 30 pm. taniflit
Ackarman 2nd Soar leungt
5 pm today
(CaatiBMcd oa Pafe 2i)
hmppcn.
"It was hard to expect Ste:vc
to break into the lineup this
year with Peter Fleming. Bnaa
Tttcher. Ferdi Taygan, Bruce
Nichols, John Austin and Tony
Graham/*
Perhaps Mott*s most sue*
cessful outing this season came
at Ojai last month, when he
advanced to the championship
match of the men*s open divK
sion against former USC na-
tional singles and doubles
J?*!i!"*f!ii Ak* pimedo.
AhtT defeating ArizoaL
State's led Williams, former
USC star Tom Leonard and
Gene Kia!in in straigl^t sdi,
Mott felt to the 19^aar-ofi
Olmedo, a former Peruvian
Davis Cupper, 7-5. ^^.
Mq^t didnt let the Olmedo
t4Ma iKitJKf h|m long.
Tve played tennis for a very
long time and will continue to
play until Pm not inspired or
lacking in incentive," said
Mott
Ovwr 1 5 miiiioffi EuropMns
ridw motorbikaa, now you
can too, safoiy and
•conomicaliy ...
TAKING
OFF ^
I
.^
Co-op -
street Dance
3 to 10 p.m. Sunday, May 16
— 4
r- Refreshments
comer of Landfair & Ophir
_ Volunteer Program At
Ingleside Mental Health Center
The United Veterans Aaeociation is sponsoring a
new volunteer program available for all students to
help in a "big brother and/or big sister * service at
tngleaide Mental Health Center.
Students will be invited to visit individual patienU
on a regular basie weekdays (lete afternoons and
early eveninga) and/or weekends (ell day). The
ptograrn allows for activitiea such as football
tennis, bUebill and in some caeee en 8-hour peaa
•way from the institution on informel rap aeaalona
The program is Initiated to h^lp aaatst juvenilea at
the inatitution in a rehabilitation project There are
unlimited possibilities in the opportunities to help
theee young people — ages 10 through 18
They need the examples of individuals who %re
not involved in the staff at the institution This
enables them to interact with people other than on a
clinical beaia.
Those Interested In this program should contact
J. Martin Furtak. Benefits Chairman of the UVA by
calling S2S-1»S3 or stop by Room 325 Karckhoff
Hall.
$425
aJOaiPN
e laoai^Q
\ MOTORIZED!
is SCIENCE CATCHING UP
with MAGIC?
PARANORMAL
PHENOMENA
Py»
Thinking Amoae
in
Franc HM I17t
Wt t:a&5:30
Sim 9!3a2:30
May Ift-IS, ItTe
P. Jaaaalsa. ni.D.
Lova Maqic, Ptychadaiict. and Witchcraft
in tha Paruvien Amazon
CIMATTl MOTOWiZEO WICE>
Anthrc
lAaftatia da Mas* FI1.0.
Modam Physics. Eaaiam Mystictsm
tha
Tea«rd«
J. Fvaapa. F^.o.
PiychadaliL Inttiation Amofig eia
of MoxamMeas
OaleMeo Up with
at Wlaa fIlO.
giout
^^(MTWllaril
ft
DANIO
nen
nS33 W. Pico —
( '-
, --if
Mott
Westwood campus .
Coaches discuss changes . . .
COPIES 2
KINKO S
CHECK OUR TypiNG SERVICE
h«v« capturii a tdMol racocd
of 1 1 NCAA titles (the ta^me at
USC) with numerous i|ac€Sltf
and third fuushes. Only twice
has UCLA finished worse than
third in the 30-year history of
the event
Molt fell to North Carolina's
6ill ^frnck in three sets in the
roMid. while Teacher
ft
Sp^nd mn uniof9«ttabl9
P9ul QauoMiffi. Mm ttM Adoc, TImo Van Qogh, and
I
li
r
i
■k -• •
«
u
i ■-'
THE SHOW THArS
SHOCKiNG THg CWITiCS!
__ at
TlH Zipi^rr TlMslrs
(on thaatf row)
7456 Mairoas Ava.
iMaat Hoitywood
fully Fragmented" Daily Brum
Parformancas
Wad through Sat
S:00 P.M
Studant Rates $3 00
ft $3 25
For information ft
irvations Call
POTPOURRI
TH^ INTERNATIONAL RESTAUflANT
^1ttt3 Hilgfd, WMtwood, Ph.: 925-9994
invftet you to try ITa SPRING QUARTER MENU
fell to Northeast Loui^Maas
Terry Moor in the round of
32. In doubles, the highly tout-
ed Teacher and Mott couldn't
tmmfe the mcmkI round, los-
ing to California's team of
Proulx and Bartletl, whom the
Bruin pair had clobbered
during the regular season.
/*My shoulder had begun
grving my problems in the
latter part of the 1974 season, -
said Mott. ''It reaUy hurt my
PMK m the NCAA's, and I
think that affected both my
singles and doublet |slay. I had
three specialists check the
shoulder out and found out
that most of the muscles and
tendons in the [right] shoukkio
were in jMid shapt; i -wo t&ld
tn lay atf playing tennis
Fortunately, Bassett had one
of his best recruiting years
huiiad f retlunea Bitty
Inwe Niniiaii and Liiit Eack
to join with returnees Ferdi
Taygan and Teacher.
The rtfiih was UCLA's Ilth
NCAA championship
Wherever the Bruins trav-
eled, opposing players arrd
spectators asked, "Where is
Steve Mott?"
It wasn*t easy to forget the
well controlled, hard hitting
Mott, who stunned tennis aud-
iences by using eye mascara
and smashing pinpoint ground-
/ strokes while grunting loudly.
Mott wat a rflowman, and the
fans responded both favorably
and unfavorably.
-One thing is for certain,"
said Stanford coach Dick
Gould, "Steve is enteruiiung
to watch." Gould's statement
came moments after SunfbrdV
Jim Dehiney edged the Bruin
star before over 7000 spec-
tators at Stanford's Maples
Pavilion.
Mott was good enough to
defeat mo^t i^of the country*s
top ranking amateurs in both
1973 and 1974, bad shoulder
or not. Stanford's ace John
Whitlinger loal aaly one singln
aMch lor Staaibrd ia 1974 ^
that was to Steve Mott.
Michigan's Frett>y^ De Jetut,
USC*s Sashi Menon and Butch
Walts, among others, fell to
Mott Meanwhile, he saat
teaming with Teacher to defeat
most of the top ranking dou-
bles teams in the collegiate
ranks.
Then caoM the shoulder in-
jury and a year's absence frooa
the game.
"Steve it a great con^wtitor,**
said Bataett. "He beat many
players who were favored over
him with menul toughness and
hard work. He was one of the.
hardest workers I ever had. I
with him the best on the pro-
fessional level. 1 don't blame
Steve for making the decision
he did.
"He is in top condition right
aow. He fell short of breaking
into our top singles lineup [six
singles pla3fers compete in the
dual matches with three dou-
blet Jaam]. ^With aU of the
Itee f^myat wc have at UCLA,
one can hardly afford to mttt
an entire year, but thote things
(Continual as Page 19)
lo he like
r Td kke my
TheyTIhe
tkgy want to
M^f^ ^ ^ ^^^^ ' • ''^*<**«« ohUgation to allow the nlavcrt
?^"*.* A* •■ •ti*cking de- tTTlay for a gt^TfoouSl
fente.
On ooflliMMiB the Meattve
iaiproveteatt of latt year.
T
the
**We feel that
and a half latt
tke beet tfelcnee we've
pkyad in yeart. We're tryu^ to
ibmid oa tlM."
ToMy then
or the
^^'•^ (-M) Hughes brought
from MichMB " ^^
The afaiMt„
Hufhet wH be in
RoasttMtf
(Amsrica)
Tacot
(Mtxico)
Mvasi aaour
(China)
Ttcw
(CMfia)
ffiiiy
(CJO)
'
iHflLl^"*' »«c*«*da. Soup or aaltid. Hat entoaa. drtnk
ALto; imarnaaonal aan^wtdiat on pita btaad with aoup or salad and
Orink ti 25. haaNhy lunch. $100 Chaft aalad $i.fl0aaoraaart45
CappuccirK) lao. rtaasiits; 40 ' ' •■*'™^ • '^
UVE ENTERT AMttiENT aaary
FOLKDAMCIMQ avary Wai
FOREIGN ENTERTAaNMENT. aaary FM^ Night, %im^^i^
^_ OR FILM 7M<11Mpin
ilntesiiaRafial Oanoaa av^w ^f^^^M ^^^
WE ARE OPEN TO THE PUBUC
INTERNATIONAL MEANS AUiRICAJC TOQl
SUMMER
JOBS JOBS JOBS
Collaga trained nnan and
women wMI be rnniidaratJ to
tupplement our permanent
ttaff' m dtttrict officee
I throughout the US Theee
poeitiont are full or part-tlnne
tummer jobs We are aeerch-
{ing for tpplicantt wtio are
ambitiout. dapandaMa end
hard working Exealltut op-
portunity for advanceaMnt.
You may continue to work
on a part tlnw or full time
baeia next fall if yoa daeire.
For dittrict office addreea. or
for appointment with our
local mmnmg^r, call Robbie
after April 18th. 9 am to 3
p.m. Monday through Friday
at 213—478-6422
Assistant coaches .
(Continued from Page 21)
Pao has been impressive. Other
ca^i^i^gcs Include Steve Shoe-
maker and Bill Nunes. WiUie
Beamon is expected back in
the fall and shoukJ help.
In commeiHing on the staff.
Brooks said, "I think this is a
helluva football staff, brining
together people from different
hac^groundt. 1 think they're all
very capable persons."
Coach Donahue nuufte tev-
eral comnKsts about the ttafT
and UCLA protpecU next fall.
"I think the ttaif it going to
prove to be an ontttanding
-^V 'V
V
.*.
V
CREATING
■%jrJ*\
■" '7a'J.^r«r"^w?" "^"'"' f '^^«"'-°"» PBf^^^XmM, H.rdy. Loving, .nd wimng to
lake a risk — you may want to join us w ^^^
CERROGCTLDO
»t a comm vnity of 100fBmlli»a who are buHding a now town on 1200 acrM of
evargreon f oraat and iRMtfow — an antire valley on the north shore of Dorona Lake
about 20 miles south of Eugene. Oregbn A thousand irrni awptiiaiaijj for common
use - canyons, meadows, agricultural land rugged wild areas, a whole mounialn
on^the lakeside town greens and plazas - adjoining all private holdings laroa
and small ^ /^
one. It's an experienced staff
and 1 think it will be an effec-
tive recruitii^ staff.
Tm very phMMd with the
progress we've made at a ttaff
this spring. I think wcfH be a
very representative football
&eam"
The new football staff it
both dedicated and optimitlk.
Whether or not the optimism
it toutty justified or not won*t
he antwered until September 7
at Sun Devil Sudium, when
the whole country will tee if
UCLA can etcape the eaigBM
of being just a basketball
schooL
Women tracksters go for second straight title
This is the year for UCLA's athletic teams to defend Iheir
national ehampionship titles, and in women's athletict it*t^
certamfy no differcm. The women's track Ham holds the I97r
Al AW title and will try to keep that crowo as it begint
competition in the 1976 national championships today at the
University of ICaatat. ^ ^
The Bruins do noc have as strong a team as last year and are'
not favored to reuin the title. Two weeks ago, the team, placed
second in the SCWIAC leagnr cliampionships behind Cai Sute
Northndge.
In that meet, however. Bruin coach Pat Connolly did not have
the women run in more than their individual evenu and thus
sacrificed the championship, it was her hope, rather that the
women who had not already qualified for the nationals would
make the standard She will be uking a good squad back to
* 'Jfr*^ ! 'L " doubtful that she will come back with the title
We don t have enough depth to wm tliie nationals," remarked
Connolly earlier in the season atont the prospect of winning this
jfears title.
Several of the women do sUnd a good chance to win their
mdiv^ual sport. Kann Smith with her 187-7 best m the lavelm
should win her event, and Cindy Gilbert should wm thThigh
jump But Connolly will not be entering any of the major retev
events which are crucial in scoring enough points to take fint
Ibis IS a year for individual improvement for the women
tracksters, and Connolly considers the individual aspect to be of
far greater importance than winning the team title
Donahue speaks . .
we mr9 having a y^fwrwk
meeting in
Call Mike Morrow
390-5524
for Information
Join Ua — wa m
Santa Monica •
Sunday, May 16, 2 p.m.
Itislyn Hall, Lincoln Park
cr of Wilshire & Lincoln Blvd
(Continued frosn Page 23)
it left off after the Rote Bow!,**
laid Donahue. *M want to gear
the foothalli prograai to de-
fense, and it woukj ease my
mind if we can play that kind
ol defense going into the 1976
season "
With a schedule that in-
cludes Arizona State. Anzon^,
Ohio State California. Stan-
mtnfinn a great
team.
Donahue will have to have the
-great defense** that his team
is capahk ef pUiyina
Even though all semors ex-
cept Dank worth will not pi^
on Saturday, the iptiaB game
IS still the beginning for Terry
Donahue at head coach It it
the first chance to watch what
his 1976 team can do under
faaK cnn^iiiaiis and the o^
portunity te learn what wilt he
necessary l6 produce a foolbair
i)
n dhU oamk Donahue
wB he the hett eaacii UCLA*t
In my wtimA it*t not
to he doae. Fai aal
_ , it's juH
latth an4 coafutence in
terry Donahnr It*t jwt my
gpa isBiiag ahont Terry. For
llHt rrateo, fm looloiig for-
ward le aext ataton aMic thaa
rve ever been
UCLA's inside linebackers
Whea asked why he left the
Umversity a# Michipui to
«« to UCLA, H
mraied
ow people to a team and get theu^
We've ia- Rich Brooks it the new
hnehacker coach and he
to UCLA from the San
49*ers. Brooks said,
Tai out to make the guys I'm
of coaching better football pUiy-
najor reatoat
DofuUiue wants
^ pvt a lot more emphatit on
UCLA haiag a gaod dafentive
Recruiting it aioe (oat
htiag able to recnut ia
your own backyard. Finally,
with John McKay goat, thaie's
ers. We want to make our
defense better. They played
great * defense the kat two
If they ^a ^ that
our chaaoes of gaii^
hack to Pasadena are good tf
•ot, our chances of goii^ hack
to the Roae Bowl aren^ very
good.
"We'd like to create more
turnovers, create more fumbles
^' ^ ■ ----- •»<* interceptions than last
lora rataip of power year. We're trying to empha-
Bin
aboot the tcaai't
ymt, ht taid, *I
a food
between the two umversitiet
(USC aad UCLA)
UCLA it. It it a big- name
^*» araat people
we^rc
tize quickness more on de-
fente. We want more move-
ment. We want to get after
people a little bit more."
-,. ---. .— .— Brooks named several top
In "J'^"'* Ulking about candidates for outside line-
J.U MorgMi, you're talking backing jobs. '"We haw John
a lot of coa-
fidenoe in the SC game and the
Rate BowL The enthutiatm
things, Mc-
to
AO-
fiU tfep
WilKe Ncvalt
Jaliag Atkew are all prime
gftrtidatrt for the job. Mc-
that the po-
At tackk, Tim Tcmufkeit,
Taseeoeopo and hope-
hiUy Peu Pale wiU he back.
McPJiertoB taid, ^We aeed
ataM qiiirknett in there aad
we hape thete people will im-
prove. We ttill think we're
an^aawnaf iscvnsrMifl^BiM ^m tm^
dtfaMi»e line
^mt lave toaie nae proa-
pieect' aad tome good youi^
playcft. A good blend of ex-
pcrnoe aad youth hattHng far
P^Mtioat. We're happy with
their eathntiatm and hittiag.^
About the kryeiy new
McPherton tatd, '^oach
aB over tbe ooontry. I thiak he
^ * y^ j^- ^^ aaaekat
about a great person.**
Ia regards to the team*s
improvement this spring,
HuglHt taid, "In every area
we^re talked about improve-
■■it. a«^Ie done so. We're on
a«r way to eliminating mia-
taket. We want to be timple
Hughaa^'^aH^e have to
uaprove our dcfente and make
durtelvet more nroductive. De-
feate is at ameh in attitude as
it it in penoimel. You've got
to take pride in getting If
people to the foocbalL We^
setting high ttandardt aad in-
<t™wM the performaaoe level
ef oar fbdthall team. We want
to build on the hMt two aMHt
of 1975.-
Hafhat meptioned teveral of
hit top players at inaide Une-
backer. ** Jerry RobiMoa hat
been a pleatant surprite. He
hat the amazing ability to
aooelemte off a blocker Brad
Vattar, Tom hiarphy aad Laa
Matcola have been coming
aloag welL Ray BeU (a ttaner
hut year) hat kann heaytml
by injury." i
~ ^^ taid, *I thiak oat of
■MJH rf l>r Uam is the
ttrength of the iatide line-
aaked if there win he
chai^et ia the de-
McPhatBoa ttated, **We
Hpghet made a fiaal
meat regarding the football
ttaff "The ttaff m coaoeraed
with the football playert aot
jatt phy«cally, hot more iaiH
iicapy> Iff our
Basaballars host Tro|ana tonight .
5-30, includmg the fu*st
baae, Larry Fohbt at ,
Dopg Stokke at tlwrtttop and
Rob Hertel at third. Dave Vaa
Om^ will do the -^-"iliin
They win alternate their left
tad right fielders and their
" hitter," tays Adaav.
(Bah) Skuhe win
bit apc«dl with (Bruce) To-
■Mcia in left. Here, theyTI ga
for more power aad amybe put
(Ijm) Tofaaaa ia r^^"
AdaaM wiU aat ami» any
bMop cha^pt. USC win have
to beat the taaK dub
of lit
PUMOND DUST: If the
^ a tide by
ikt Traiaai. it wiB be
The Bruins have set nu-
racordt for
With
32 hiu and 2i
Bobby Daflas hat
dardt. Dave PennialTs' 14 tlo-
lea hatet it alae a aew record
The team hat tet ttiiaai tapK
•records for runs (I4S), hits
(215), doohies (33), kmm tav
(2S) and stolen batet (45).
Mott of the league records
were set ia 1M# when the
Bruins phqPii 21 gaBM «- iBe
tame ayaiber they have ptajiai
tonight's gaate.
USC't leading hitters arc
Hertel (.313)
(M2).
in
(32). In
UCLA Mtttfi are
Jerry Wattn
(.327) aad tecoad bateataa
^ " " ( J23). Kea Gay-
10
(»i*)
(.333),
111 that will be a "
UOLA't
bse
USC it RM.
36
Fowkr, Ray Burks mtd
Fraakie Stephens. Burks atid
Fowler are battling for the
saoie spots.** Crawford has
nmmd from tackle to outside
linebacker and Anthony Pao
(Caiahned aa Page 2t)
No Uddar CaiUfiad
Raw Milk in Caiifornia
It's Sold At
Pronto Markot
M-^A-OENA Dairy ia tha
or <y dairy in California
which ia cartlfiad to t>attle
raw nnjik — milk which hae
baan natthar paataurizad
or homoganizad.
Normally found in health
food atoraa. Pronto Mar-
Ma ia or>a of tha faw nnar-
kata whiqh aaH ALIA-
DENA raw milk - and at tha
lowaat prica in town.
Pronto Mirfctii^'"^
108S0 Natfonal gfvd.
What CouM •• Mora
ERCltlna?
thmn diacovaring that yeu are In
control of your Nfat
Tha PACE Youne Singles Con-
laiaaea providaa a tool kit ... a
practical course In **How To";
Raaliza mora ot your potantiaP
affacti¥aly« Handla pratauraal For
mora information call Shallay
2taM7<4eaa or man In tttia cou-
pon to J W. Newman Caiparation
4311 Wilahift Blvd . L.A eOOlO
• • • • •
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THE
COMEDY j
STORE
A •
CONTINUOUS SHOW •
OF COMEDIANS •
EVERY NIGHT
e2
•431 nmtrr
IBtl WESTWOOO
27S-7a41
. azi^dzii
a
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TUNE-UP, LUBE A OIL $9
A-1 AUTO service;
7?V. VAN mm tivo. .^j-
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THE BUSINESS AOVISOKY COUNCIL
of the
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT CENTER
PRESENTS ITS WEEKLY SEMINARS
Thursday, May 13
International Currency - Financing"
Rplw Rapkc, V.r. OMi^Mr IM*
Nohiwn lon« - Prw. ■■nee do traiN
"Transfer from Academia to Industrial
World of Engineering"
t*
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OinnWfatt:Jt Samlnw - 7:30-9 pm
Accredited foreign ^t\6 Amar»can Mudana imaad
Plaiite phone for re»erv«tion« - ATl-A'^IO
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Company Oivmp««.
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S>mr rhir\f(h never change
First hinted iit in 1919 with a
patent ft>r "a ux>|
with which To open mtik
and fruit canh, the slei-k
Mcef line of the ciatttic
beer hex 4c hi»d to awair
the inventii»n of the beer
can by Antericao G^n m
I93S
When employee D^wey ^
Samptum wa» detailed to invent
rhw penultinuitely functk-mal uh»I. ,
nuccccded in unifjn« V years jit thirnty
throiifs with rhi- conrcnrs . .f milli4»n> of c.i
of Oly
It ujok skill and ingenuity ai^d the renok
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thin«> neverchimiec AKrrsu ^•.'fdciciinicHani'i
pie never will '
"ITS A SEND UP AND PUT DOWN OR
EVERYTHING ARD EVERYBODY FRO!
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"... AN ASTOmSHING ASSORTMEtT OF
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". FUNNOT OF ALL THE IRREVERENT
PUTDOWNS . . . EXCRUCIAnNGLY FUNNY!"
- STEVE MVIN. KMPC
'n Ml* «
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Hair
MEN & WOMEN
We Styl# Long Hair &
Also the Latfst Full Cut.
Shampoo & Blow Dry or Dry Qut
Ma»teunng & Pedicuring. ---
We also color %x\6 give Body perm
leeiM u CMito A«e. ^^y pay more?
Wiieiuud Vliat« acroii from U.C.LJL
Stylists
47».7770
AUTO
INSURANCE
^ES — you need auto insurance
All the more reason to contact us for discounts up
to 35 to inost students — another good reason
for being in college
See or call us in Westwood
477-2548
Agents for College Student Insurance Service -
1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build-
ing) LA 90024
I
Phi Eta Sigma
Natioffial Nonorary Society
General Election
of officers
Ackerman^ Union 2408
Thurtday, May 13, 4 pm
— Refreshments —
1^
f:
Any Couple Eligible
DATING?
MARRIED?
Participate in a Special Study of Romantic Relationships
WHO CAM ^AMTICIPATr?
Dating, living-iop^thar
t\m% daiad at taast once
WHAT DO YOU DO?
ShoMT up at a tima mrni
one-hour questionnaira lo
WHAT IS IT ASOUT? "
Tha quantonQtra covara a i
tnttmata and cofifidantNil nature Your'anai
WHAT DO YOU OCT?
Each peraon will be paid Si 50 and will also receive a full aufumary ol tfie
or married couplet, tn short any couple wtto
witt> your pertner Each of you will
ly
nnge of topica This includes questions of an
wiH be liept strictly anonymous
WNM DC YOU SHOW UP. AMD WNDliT
Come With your partner to the large lecture room m Franz HeM r^rfioinsy
Room 1178 Show up any time be^eean 7pm and 10 pm or tn Jalnlnioxi
Thiirsday May 6 Monday May 10 THyniiiy May 13
For mofe infornnation. call thla number in tfw
Psychology 0©p«rtnr>ent
Its Served
Two steak
dinners
$5.99
Netter Mott turns pro
DB Shorts WrUw
Senior UCLA tennit star
Steve Uau ended the speciilft-
tio» on wKHher he wouAd re-
twii to play coUegiate teiuui
-next yesr by turning profes*
iionml last weekend during the
SI 5.000 open tournament la
Pebble Beach. Cahfomia
Moct, who was an AU-Am-
erican at UCLA in his soph-
omore year (1974), missed all
of UCLA'i 1975 perfect cham-
pionship season because of a
shoulder injury which wias
worsened by a whiplash injury
suffered in an automobile ac-
cident. Mott never could re-
cover to the extent where he
could be a factor this leasoi)
**] could have stayed a fifth
year at UCLA in order to
graduate and play a fourth
year of tennis, but I think it is
time to move on,** said Mott,
who starred on what is labeled
the greatest high school team
of all tirne in La Jolla scA^eral
years ago.
La Jolla High School had
former USC ytars Raul
Ramirez and John HoUaday,
ex-Sunford star Chico* Hagey
and Mott on the same squaii
oae season. Ironically, all four
players turned professional
prioi; to ^gn4uating from col-
lege. Ramirez, Hagey. and HoP
laday only played two yvifi in
college. '
"We were awesome at La
JoUar said Mott '^Raul
[Ramirez of Mexico] lived with
the Hageys while attending
high school. We were all to|^
ranking American junior play-
ers."
While Mott ~was starring
there, his eventual UCLA
leanimate and close friend
Brian iteachtr was tearing up
Uk competition nearby in San
Diego.
Teacher, who is oae of tiK
tallest AawTicsn leaais players
•t 6-4, bcpui playing douhta
with tlie 5-11 Mott in the top
junior toiimaaients accoM 4km
country ^.^
It u not surprising that the
two Bruins captured five aa-
tional aoiateur doubles rhaai
pionships along with numerous
Califomu tourneys. The presti-
gious National Junior Cham-
pionships at KalaoMaaa aad
National Hardcourts in Bur-
ttngame have recorded the
naoK *Mott* on their hsu of
donblts champions five tioMS
in the 14, 16 and 18 and under
age divisions. i
Last November, Mott reunit-
ed with Teacher to capture the
Japan Open doubles crown
and then last weekend swept to
the California Sute Champion-
ships at Pebble Beach, defeat-
ing Hagey and ex-CaUfornia
star Jin McMamis.
*^t ''was nice to receive my
first paycheck for playing ten-
nis after having played the
game for so long,** said Mott
He received $450 for win-
ning the doubles and advanc-
ing a few rounds in singtas -
action before losing to ex-Notre
Damer Bill Brown, 6-4, 7-5.
**There's less money, in dou-
bles than in singles, ^^t every
bit counts. I think I can make
a living on the professional
circuit. There are many options
now with World Champion-
ship Tennis (WCT), the Grand
Prix circuit, World Team Ten-
nis, et cetera.**
Mott will be watching four
of his UCLA teammates in the
aew abbreviated version of the
Pacifio-"! tennis championships
beginning tomorrow and con-
cluding Saturday on 0CLA1
Sunset Courts. Action begins
at 9 am tomorrow and II |un
Saturday and contini^es all Sky
loag baii days.
The aation's top-rankad
Bruins will be caippatiag with
second-ranked Stanford aa4
Hurd-rankad USC along wiHi
CaMoraia in the fim South-
ern Division Pac-S- Classic.
Each of tiK f o«ir CaitfonHa
schools will enter the same
four §mffm playe^rs and two
douMM taans that will travel
to Corpus Ckfitti for the
NCAA Championships May
26-31.
**I am living Monday to
play in some tournaments in
tht South,** said Mott. **1 will
try and play in as many tour-
naments as possible this sum-
mer on the Graad Prix Circuit
and then probably travel to
Asia in the fall for sone ad-
ditional touraaments.
**l called coach' [Glenn]
Bassett from Pebble Beach last
weekend and told him that I
«MU turning pro. I didn't feel
playing for the team another
year could inspire me enough.
1 coulda*! sae enough inoea-.
tive in hanging around aa-
oHmt year.**
In Mott*s freshnuui iad
sophomore years (1973 and
1974), the Bruins finished first
aa^ socoad in the Pacific-I
champibathtps respectively and
third and sixth respectively ui
the NCAA ClMHa|Nonships.
UCLA had Jeff Austin, Bob
Kreiss, Steve ICruleviu, Rayao
Seegars, Brian Teacher and
Mott at the first through sixth
singles positions in 1973, fia-
ishing with a 21-4 dual inal^
record. The saason was high-
lighted by upaeto of top-ranked
Sunford, 5-4, and USC,. 6-3,
on consecutive days, at the Pac-
• championships held at USCs
mtm. David Marks Stadium
**Coach Bassett is definitely
the best collegiate coach in the
country, in my opinion,** said
Mott. His record of dual
Etches, NCAA championship
lilts and the top players he
coached proves my bebef. 1
think most players in the coun-
try feel the same way 1 do
about coach Bassett.
OHerjIOOd only with
coupon Choicf» of
t)everaot is included
TWO $2.79 SIRLOIN STEAK DINNERS
AND TWO 49C DINNER SALADS
I
May 13«i
M)iWirN)()o<v)Oi)0
MMiurnaft HOUSE
FOR OkSlir
-In 1974, we fii
to SUfiford in the Pac-8 cham-
^■■■■iii>i (UCLA km 5-4 to
the Cardinals at Seattle in Pac-
8 finals) We had beaten Sun-
ford in one of the two dual
matches during the seasoa, aad
Sunford had one of the best
collegiate teams ever with Joha
Whitlinger (NCAA siagks aad
doubles champion in 1974),
Alex Mayer, Pat DuPre, Chico
Hagey. Jim Delaney, etc. I
think coach Bassett did s great
job with our 1974 %mm.
**We had last Bob Unm,
Jeff Austin and Sieve Kra-
levttz, our top three players in
1973, through gnduatioa, aai
iUyno Secfers turaed profes-
sional after one year. Brian
[Teacher] moved all the way to
the number one spot aa iIk
teaai, aad 1 ^vas number two,
with freihmaii Ferdi [TaypMJ
number three. [Juaior] Ton
Kreiss, [fieshaun] Dave Park-
er and [senior] Spencer Segura
were our other singles players.
"We kmi aa aa<ully young
tg^« in 1974. Brian and I
wiid up being saeiad numb^
cm or two ia tkr NCAA
championslMps as
eftcr winning the Pao4
pinashipi. Brian was the int
«eed in the NCAA silkies (he
won the Pac-g silkies title).
However, TeadHr and Mott
<l>d not haiye ousek saesm ia
the NCAA*s at USC, what the
Bruins finished sixth in the
team 'isndii^ the sdMoTs
worst finish ever. The inaas
..i-L
-.Jt
I ■
No spots secure in new Donahue regime
• -• 'A. Mft.^^ m m.^ ■"".' ^ T-lV ' " - - '^'l ■
•y WirlUil
WrHer
- Terry t>onahue is titt bhb on the spot for the
UCLA foochaU program He is aow m charae *if
asking the decisions aad is respoasible for the
On Saturday afternoon at 2 pm at Drake Stadium
Brum studeau, alumm and fans will get a sample of
•^.'^" ^^^"^ •"^ IMS ahaost completely new
coaching staff have done during the pe«t month of
pr^anng hu players. The spring game will provide
iiiiideaer as io what kind of a team can be expected
ia ge onto the field for the aatiiMllj televised
opea^on September 7 at Arizona Sute
^Daajhae had a gaad idea of what his seniors
covM do More the start of spring practice, and after
two weeks he aMde the decision to give them the rest
of practiee off. ^That oMas that tl^ freshmen aad
sophomores wiD do the pla/iag in the spring game to
let the coaching staff have the opportunity to
evateate exactly who will be ready to pky •a*^ft
Arizona Sute. *
..^y^ jMving to watch just the offensive line at
UCLA the past several yean, Donahue has now had
to view his football team from the overall per-
spective.
__S} y^^g^-llteiJQLA football pob every day *
•■ pS^wc -The longer I am here, the more I
will learn, because 1 believe that I will learn
soaKthing aew every day I am the UCLA football
coach.**
Arizona Sute is naturally on his mind, but he says
he is more worried about developing ha own team
than about the Sun Devils Spring practice is a time
J^ every position ts "^p for grabs ** according to
Donahue. "I want to have ay tenutive surting
Pncup set going into the Arisoaa State paw after
the completion of spring practice.** said Ooaahue
The biggcM change that Brum fans can expect is s
•tress on defense from Donaluie. ^l waat UCLA to
be s school noted for its defense, Ishe the Ohio
:^iates^ Michigaa*s, aad Penn Sutes,** said Don-
ahue^ -I pUn to stress defense snd I am hopeful that
III three or four years, UCLA can play the great
defense.- ^
Djoaahue. at age 31, bebeves he is ready to be the
n^^coach at a nujor university and Uhes the
cheBeage of succeeding Dick Vermeil, who produccti
• Rose Bowl winner hut year. -If 1 was 41 years old
snd just got my first head coaching job, I am not
convinced that I would be any more prepared for the
UCLA job than I am now.- said Donahue
•The players reaUze that I am not the sane as
Djck [Vermeil] and I think they will accept me for
what 1 am- added Donahue.
Offensively. Donahue has sUyed with the veer
sttack, which worked so successfully UMt aeason The
main difference in the offense will be more emphasis
on the passing game Don*t be surprised if quarter-
backs Jeff [>ank worth and Steve Bukich put tiK hall
in the air many times on Saturday.
- Ciirrently Dankworth is Ihe number one quarter-
back, but Bukich IS very close to taking over
Dankwonhs throwing and Bukich*s running have
improved in spring practice to the stage that the
spnng ganae should be s gaad gauge of the better
avcrallrtfuirterback.
,_"lf 1 had to open the seasoa tomorrow Jeff
Dankworth would be my number one quarterback,"
0>
said Donahue "loth Jeff and Steve are extremely
competitive and will continue to battle for the
quarterback pasitioa.-
Nose guard was the a^ia prehkm position going
into spring practice, and praaliBally everybody on the
delcnsjve line, soa» elisavve linemen snd even some
•■•ide hoehaekers, have been tried at the position
Currently senior Steve Tetrick is fighting off the
challenge, but Donahue will prahahiy look at four
difyereni people an Saturday. There are also a couple
ot good incoming freshmen defensive linemen %k
"Mght get s shot when fall practice begins in August
The new coaching staff has looked -exceptionaP
in spring drilk. and Doaahae could have the best
coaching ulent ever at UCLA Holdover assisunts
Dick Tomey. Bilhe Matthews aad Bill McPherson
plus new oaaehes Frsnk Gsnsz. Rich Brooks, Jed
Hughes, Don Riley snd Dwsin Painter, haee Ouny
more responsibilities than they might have at other
nujor universities. *
"^y philosophy is that I have eight rosches of
equal importance,- uid Donahue -|n dur prognun,
we cannot afford to lose any 'of our coaches
Eventually I know some of our assisunts will uke
head daaching jobs, but if other colleges were not
after our assisunts. then it would show that we did
not have a good coaching suff -
There has been a major theme to spring practice.
snd it goes back to the Rose Bowl victory over Ohio
Sute and the second half of the USC ^me On
thoee oaeasions the UCLA football team played the
-great defense- that Donahue has been looking for
**lf I had one goal for spring practice, it would be
to instill the fact that the defense will pick up where
(Continued oo Page 2t)
8
f
The UCLA Center
for Afro-American
Studies ^
fif^ r^e^Kd^lin^u.^ SttuhJ^i o -to ^jn f
12- 5
presents
rofesso
i /
iAJk,
>
enry
#^•^4^
\
*34-
■ /
f/
Topic:
\
^n
M unicipjIPrd ct i(
ot ( ,ro\\
i^"
V
•:v":v.-i-
Thursday, May IJ, l<i76
12:00 Noon
3107 Campbell Hall
W
L J
^
OPEN AND FREE TO
THE PUBLIC ! ! !
WESTWOOO VILLAGE
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THE GUIDANCE CENTER
3017
In
•••^0/IYLIY^tr»aa fr»an OyHatra jj*^
faa OM
Bruin assistants give their views on 1976 squad
ly Mr
DB Sforti
Ever tiam Ikt City of Broth-
erfty Love **ilok* fbocbftU
cooch Dick VerflMil away frooi
Westwood — a heitt com-
parmbk to tke llHft of a Rem-
brandt in the eyes of lome
Bruin football followers —
dottbci have arcuiated at to
what would happen to the
UCLA football program.
Many hchrved Vermeirt pro^
miie that UCLA would not be
juft a batketbaU school any-
more, delivered after the USC
vidory, would never
Terry
with his
staff, do not intend
the momentum that
pinnacle on January
I in Pasadena suddenly cnim-
bk next Scptcmbcf 7 in
Tempe, Arizona, where the
Bruins face ASU in their 1976
But
Donahue
coaching
to have
to a
The UCLA football schedule
tnr is poMJhh^ the toufh-
cat in the natkm, the kind that
could have dismounted the
Four HonavML Yet the
coicl^ng staff, wlucfa this year
contains five newcomers, be-
lieves strongly that th^ Bruins
will field a representative club.
This #eek the squad is wrap-
ping up spring ptactioe and
will play the annual spring
-game Satiurday afternoon jit 2
pm in Drake Stadium. —
Over the spring, all the
coaches have been working
ftogether, getting to know each
other as well at the players.
Coach Donahne suted. **We
^^anted to give every individual
jin opportumty so we could see
what he could and couldn*t do.
I believe we got a tair evalu-
ation and we*ve done what we
•et out to do this spring.*
The men krgely reapnmibk
"far deciding on who will be,
playing a lot
coach Donahue's eight
ing aaaistants. Each have a
couple of specific positions
their jurisdiction and
will try to find the best man
suiuble for each position, while
at the same time workii^ and
Meeting together to form
solid umt.
One of the three
returning from last year is
offensive backfield coach Bilhe
Matthews. Matthews singled
out several goals he woukl like
the backs to achieve. -We'll try
to improve our execution of
the veer offense over last year.
Well have to ehminate mis-
takes in execution-fumbies,
miahandled balk, missed aa-
signmenu, etc."
Matthews continued, **We*re
going to try and throw the bail
more often, as well as more
efficiently. From a rushing
point of view, we stiU have
basically the same offense."
When asked about his
thoughts on Rote Bowl star
and HeiMnan candidate Wen-
dell Tyler. Matthews said, "I
don> expect WendeD to have
snper-human performahces. I.
expect him to improve in what
faults h^ may have.
'"When he can eliminate those
faulu. he will be the super
player we want him to be and
he wants himself to he. Maybe
he hasn*t gotten the recog-
nition he deserves.**
Other top hackfield candi-
dates mentioned by Matthewi
were Jim Brown, Ernie Saenz,
Jewerl Thomas and Theotis
Brown.
In conclusion, when naked
about his thoughts on neiu
year, Matthews stated. **rm
looking forward to having a
fine footbfetl team.**
.Coaching the quarterbacks
and receivers is newcomer
Dwain Painter Painter comes
from pass-oriented BYU where
he coordinated the Cougars*
high-powerad aerial attack. His
job at UCLA will be to improve
the -Bruin pnMing game, which
has been lackhister since the
days of Dennis Dummit
Painter said. "I*m excited
about having the oppoH unity
to work here; we*re opumistic
about the future of UCLA
fantball We'd like to continue
to npgnde our recruitmg so
ive can work with the beM
athletes'*
When questioned about the
possibility of UCLA becoming
more of a pass oriented team
next year. Painter suted. "This
spring. we*ve had a strong
emphasis on improving the
throwing game We have sonK
fine lacaivcis."
Asked to comment on the
qnartarbnck lityntion. Painter
said, ''At quarterback we have
two very capable players and
both have progressed quite
wcU"
In regards to what hell be
trying to achieve. Painter said,
*'(We*ll be) applying option
phases to the dropback. We try
to iinlnie defenders and key
them as to their awareness of
wiiat we*re trying to do offen-
sively. There may be more use
of backs (in pass patterns) in
very definite, coordinated pat-
terns.
"By formation and by deaign
we'll attempt to have a more
balanced offense aixl this year
this JMMH having the capa-
bility to throw the ball with a
high degree of snooais. One of
my goals is to improve our
percentage in throwing the
ball.**
The lop quarterback candi-
dnica me Jeff Daniworth and
Steve Bukich. At wide receiver.
Wally Henry, Severn Reecc
and James Sarpy att return
from last year. Painter noted
UCLA, Riley stated, **l feh
UCLA nationally has a greet
tradition la athletics and 1
thought it would be a great
opportunity for my profes-
sional advancement **
He said that sook oi km
fonii include having players
cone more quickly on the, ball,
ehminating errOTs that impede
the icnni's progreas and quick
and proper execution of fun-
dameninla.
He anid. "'When you're
around young people, you can
observe their strengths and
wanknaaaaa. Hopefully each of
our individuals is goal-
oriented, from that comes team
unity and putting it all to-
gether-
When asked about improv-
ing the paaaiiig ganae, he said,
''We've pnaaMy spent a little
more time with the pnaaing
aU apring.
This year's new coach of
guardik and centers is Don
Riley, who coached last at
Oklahoma State in the power-
ful Big Eight conference. He
has several top players re-
turning, including center Mitch
Hahn and guards Keith Eck
Greg Taylor.
When asked whv he cane to
He said he is impraaaed with
coach Donahue and is looking
forward to next season
Another newcomer to the
staff IS Frank Gansz, hke
cnnch Riley, a conch at Okla-
homa Stale last year He was
the first new aapiirant hired by
conch Donahue and is respon-
sible for the offensive tackles
and tight ends.
When asked about his goals.
Gansz said, "We're going to try
to develop a high level of
proficiency and consistency in
our area, (which) comes from a
thorough understanding of the
system.* —
At tight end, list year's
standouts Den Pederson and
Ricky Walker both return
They're being challenged by
Butch Brisbane and Harley
Stark. At tackle. Gus Coppens
and Rob Rezirian return and
Witt by challenged by Jim
Main, Don Woolley. Max
Montoya. and Herman Parker,
among others.
Gansz suted. "We've got to
improve on both our pass-
catching and blocking ability **
Wtei ai^mi why he came
h^re, Gansz said. 'Tve re-
cruited here since Ifif . I knew
Terry (Donahue) and I uaad to
hve in tho area I hke the area
very much and I feel there m
an abundnnae of ulented play-
ers-
He continued. "I feel we
have a chance for UCLA lo
have aa fine a football program
as there is in the country **
Whan asked about tte al-
fenae next year, he ataled.
"We'd bke to have as flexJbAc
an attack as pnaasbk. A good
attack needs two solid tight
ends" With Padaiaan and
Walker back, there seems little
question about that.
On defense, secondary coach
Dick Tomey letunu and will
assume the departed Lynn
Sliaa' job as defensive conr*
dinator
When aahad about the job a(
the defensive coordinator, To-
mey downplayed its inip^r-
tance "All the guys work to-
(on the defense). It's all
jnya (the four defensive
assistants) creating ideas.
Somebody has. to be respon-
sible for putting everything
together, sort of an admin>
strative position."
When galMd about. the sec-
nndnry, Tomey said. "I think
that in our secondary we have
the best nucleus of veterans
ever. Still, there's a lot of room
for improvement and veteran
phiyers ha^e a better idea of
where they have to improve.
"We want to be more ag^
gressive if we enn« but we've
got to improve day-to-<dny,. as
well as improve the eanghing
We hope we have simplified
our defense and improved it.**
Returning in the secondary
are Pat Schmidt. Harold Har-
din. Oscar "Dr Death** Ed-
wards. Levi Armstrong and
James Owens, all of whom
started at one time or another
last year
Tomey complimented his
p layers saving, *S[>ur guys have
CContinued on fage 21)
I
I
I
naibar
four 1
CLASSIFIED AD
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1071 OAVLIY AVI.
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■**■
-f — r--
i
I
Batmen go for title against USC
•y Marc
DB
Tr
Tooi^t at 7 p«i on Sawtclk Fie&d. the Bruin
squad will aitcmpt to clinch iu firtt
tick tiacc 1969 wiien it iMilf the USC
UCLA (15-6 in California Intercollegiate
Mitall AMociation play) iMf a aw aad a half
lead eiver the Trofaai (13-7), with only
thit weekend** three gaanc nries renatning. If
the Bruins take just one of the three, they will
be league champiorvs
But the Troiani are not about to die easily
They have a lo^g history of winning, which
includes Pao4 ^tMrnpionships every year since
1970 — the year after the Bruins took their
. title. lt*s called tradition, but UCLA head
coach Gary Adams doesn*t appear to be
worrying abotlt ''history
"If they have better ulent and work harder,
then they could wm," says Adams, "but having
more tradition is only a word. Tradition
doetn*t beat anyone unless you let it.**
It win uke more than that to beat the
Bruinfc. who have been able to win the impor-
taat gaawi all season It will take three Trojan
wins to keep the Bruins from playing in the
regional tournament.
Adams if^sists his team is ready for the
Trojans and that they will not catch the Bruins
by surpnsc.
••We're ready." he says "The team is ready
and Tm ready. Tve been in important games
before and this is no different T tell them as
much about the other team as I can, i^nd I tell
them to play our game.**
Last season, Adams* first at UCLA, -the
Bruins finished third in the Pacific-8 Southern
/thvision with a 7-11 record, while the Trojans
took the title with a 12-4 log.
At the conclusion of the year, Adams said
that **next year (1976) will be much hke this
one, but the third year — ihat*s when we*ll da
it *•
His team has arnved one year ahead of his
schedule, but the head ooa^ is not Feally
aurprised. —>
**! think I said at the surt of the year that it
(the league race) wa«M go down to the last
series. 1 espedad the taaai which won two-d-
three to win,** lie sayi.
**We*re happy to be in this position, but we*re
not satisfied. We woa*t be satisfied until we win
the dara thing We're alto making them (USC)
do something their lia¥en*t been used to doi^
playing UCLA in ganet which count.**
The Brum coach expecu USC to sUrt senior
John RacanelH on the mound tonight at
Sawtelie. He ddealed the BruuM 4-1 al Saw-
telle earlier this year. -" — —
In that series, the Tro^ns beat the Bruins
twice in three tries, losing 9-0 before winning 4-
1 and 13-6. However, the Bruins were without
pitcher Ed Cowaa at that time
Cowan, AIl-PaGiTic Cifht Southern Diviston
last season when he defeated the Trojans, 6-3,
has won seven straight decisions since returning
from injury, to improve his record to 9-2.
Following Racanelli will be sophomore Ernie
Mauriuon on Friday night and either junior
Charlie Phillips or freshman Rod Boxberger on
Saturday — at least that's Adams* opinion
Phillips defeated UC Santa Barbara on
Tuesday night, throwing "^he best I've seen
him,** says Adams. **He*ll probably go Satur-
<Uyv but if he gets in trouble, I dont think he*ll
go too long.**
For his part, Adams isn*t saying who will
pitch for UCLA tonight. 0*Neill has been the
first Bruin hurler in each league series thus far.
t(Ui Adams may make a change tonight.
"1*11 go with either Steve Bianchi, Bob
Lizarraga, Ed Cowan or Tim O'Neill,** he said.
Part of the reason for that is that Bianchi has
iiot been effective in his last t^hree league starts
Another is that O'Neill threw his shutout at
Dedeaux Field, the site of Friday mght*s game.
There is also a chance he nuiy elect to throw
Curt Peterson, despite the fact that Peterson is
left-handed and the Trojans are primarily a
right-handed hitting team. In three starts at
Sawtelie Field at night, Peterson has allowed
just two runs in 22 innings of work.
The' Bruin coach doea not foresee: flMMiy
changes in the Trojan ftneup The Trojan
infield will cooMt of Mark Carpenter at first
(CoiitiBiiada«Pagc21)
/"
Qary Adams directs Brums
OB pfKMO by So<
UNDERGRADUATES
Vote at any of the foliowing
locations from 9:00 am-5:00 pm
on Thursday May 13.
Kerckhoff Plaza
Bombshelter
Bunche Hall
Pauley Pavilion
(Northern end)
Rolfe Quad
Dickson Square
(Royce-Powell)
Inverted Fountain
(Knudsen Hall)
Vote May
. i:
a-
l^O-
r ■j^.'tj:
< A
Ucia Daily Bruin
•I
J.
a ,
I
VokMiM XCVill. NumlMr 2t
UnlvsraNy of Citoinla. Lqs AngalM
WstfnMday. May 12. 1«7t
Swami X gets one fourth of GSA votes
Dt
Swanu X gatlMVid over Mt quarter of all
cast for Graduaia Slvteit Attodation
(GSA) pfoMou, according to the final tabula-
tion of wriie-m valo for the three GSA offioet
(ffCMiat, fint viee»pfciidcnt, and second vice>
Tlie three candidatei Iniad oo the balloc ->
Pauhae Brackeen for fmmdtai^ Bill Gamier
for 1st vice president, aad Ken Fatlaqiia for
2ad vice pretidaat — were all running unop>
iiowfvv. ilus 49emom emami voces for Swaau,
X Swami X, Swan X, Swamie, aad Swam 1 to
be counted separtely from those for Swami X,
reducmg his official total froaa 176 to 164.
JO voces were caft for Swami in the race for
tH Vior-Pmident, whtre he received s bttle bit
of competition from other alpiMbetic people
Swami Y got two votes, aad Malcolm X got
Swaipi's 25.3 per cent (176 voces) did not
m Jttt 62.3 per cent received by the
Poalioe Brackeen. However, Iw per-
_ total was fsacer than that of every
eandidate in the aadergraduate presidential
alKtion for Studem Legialative Council (SLC).
1^ Swami X*s
an election night
to
to be counted, it took
by the GSA Election
vote as it
Cal Worthington received one vote for each of
the vice presidential offices, presumably on
the baas that a vice president should be a ommi
ymm ooiUd buy a used car from. Worthington
was not availabk for coounent, but a spokes-
wmmn for his campaign said« **He*U be tickled
to hear it;**
CaTs dog Spot received no voces. laHead, the
canine vole was split between Bennic the Dog
aad Snoopy. Peppermint Patty also got a vote,
prahofci)^ from someow who thou^t she was
on Snoopy*s slate.
(CofithNMtf oo Faff •)
4
^^ »-«'«#W^ --»
I ><j« '•'.!; !•> St4.
EXPO offers Student summer internships
Jobs in politics and sciences
By Rom Wolpert
Intemthipt are available for
UCLA students in ouuly
including the
tlory
on pogo 4.
mg to Akx White, aseodate
dean of the Office of Exper-
iflKmal Educational PrograoM.
Students seek interoilHpe to
mt aad explore
goals and to bridte the gap
m dassrooB theory
piMlioe, White
*At tMi point, EXPO
only Aoeepi fm mtama coo-
Myelin iun staidencs with unique
qualifications, since some that
applied last December are still
without internships,** he ex-
pleined.
While it may be too hue to
get -a summer internship
through EXPO* ' flodenu can
eoospete on their own for thi^
positions, Anne Garbeff.
internship coord inaftor for Cal-
ifornia, said.
Stfi avaUaMan
She has compiled an up-
dated bulletin on summer in-
ternships that are stiH avail-
able, which should be at the
UCLA Placement Office by
Monday.
**WlMle people often think
internship means pohtics, there
are a lot of internships for
sute asMiii ia ccNMervation.
Ball fBcatls career
..L_-'
biology and chemniry,** Gar-
beff said.
The California Fish and
flooM? Commission hires about
300 seoeoflal aides each year,
said Stuar$-'i;irtt. Fish and
game pMionncl analyst ^ ,
Interested students mu^tt ap^
ply by the May 28 deadline for
positions m Fresno, i ong
Beach, Soownento, Rddding,
or Yocmtville field offices, Lett
said.
Fish and Gaiae ate hires
volunteers, but these po&itions
must be worked out with the
biologiat, Lott
No
''if there are no interniihips.
available during the school
year.
class loves Lucy
DB Staff WrlNr
Cries of **We love you*" and
the applause of 300 admirers
Mt LucUle Ball Monday night,
ihe expoeM to find a wmmM
group of advanced comedy
wnting students.
*l babysat for all of you,"
she returned. **And now Vm
babsrnttiag for your kida."
of
aod tele- it would keep my husband
vision programs of today, as a (Desi Araaz) home and we
part of a UCLA extension
daas Ray Sn^er, a veteran
writer of the Laey series and
instructor for the class, ar-
naifDd her gfMil appearance.
Beginning her career with
tlK radio comedy liMW, My
Fi irtii Hashaol BaU was
"atkad to go into television** ia
the I95(rs.
**1 4ida*t even know what it
was,** ilw said. ^'But I tl
could have a' baby. You can't
do it long daHaace, you know.**
btfby, as well as
her television series, I Love
Locy, which remained in the
top 15 ratings evea after it
weM to re-HMi.
Her pregnancy with '^Uttle
Ricky** presented wmm fpacial
since pregnancy had
with oa lele-
Alter conferring
a raBbi, a pricit, several Pro-
testant ministers and repre-
sentatives of the Screen Actor's
Guild, it was decided that she
could continue the series,
working the pr^gaaaey iato the
fnt what you caa do for the
afMcy.** Garbeff wM
She said that ^thu shows
imtiative and interest in that
particular ageacy, which may
get you a job **
For those who cannot go to
Sacramento, Garbeff said that
** regional agency offices also
use interns, but it would be
better to aofitact that agency
directly, rather than have the
main office redirect.**
Every agency has an intern
coordinator; this is the pcaoa
to conuct. Garbeff said.
She cjbplaiaed that ahhough
ly peapit aiMciate intem-
with suflBmer, there are
fliatty interships
UCLAs EXPO Center offers
many Los Angeles internships,
during which studchtJi intern in
addition to taking a fuH courae
load. White said
He added that students must
agree to work at least 10 hours
a week for a minimum of one
quarter
Ahhough UCLA does not
automatiadly grant course cre-
dit for an internship, students
may try to get iadepen^mt
study cre4il on their own.
White said
A student may recavc credit
for an acadtimc" prejeet^doae
in conjunction with the mtern-
ship, d his department allows
It and if an instructor sponsors
it. White said.
Students get more out of an
intemahip run by EXPO than
one they could find on their
own. White added
He said. **EXPO provides a
matt total experience, since
you live with other students in
apartments checked out and
rented by EXPO; this can real-
ly help in a stimnge city.** -
EXPO ako checks the cam
history of the employer to see
that he will provide a meaa-
ingful internship If the em-
ployer does not. Whtte said
EXPO acts as an oaibcidimBn.
- -t
^ rtJ
**But we coulda*t say the
word 'pregnant,^ ** she said.
**We had to say I was *haviag a
child.* "
AMMmfi ^ series faonat
changed with time aod her
sepaiatioa from Araai; BaU
said tlK would never ha^e
cka^gaig the char-
of Lacy.
**Peofile dida*t want Lucy to
le sasd *'E
(O
4
In the News
' ■'
-^w^
'■'-'Y..I
Strong earthquake reported near Greece I High bounty offered on corporate crooks
World
f
Earthquake
QOLDEN, CaAo AF - Tlic
U.S. Geological Svnrey ••
Tit^t4a> rcpoftc^ a stroag
mmiigiukt mtmr wmittkmtmum
JSrttct. about KMl ■iii«t
MMilieait of tlie w&ukm iMl
caused widespread deMmc-
Hon last week la Italy.
The Naoawi Fafi^ulLe
^aake oc<»ttad at I pa EDT
was ompwMd at ^ aa
i^e Hiditer scale af earth
■Miyfba Ji
la papaiaiiid areas,
quake of 3.5 am
scale caa cause
la die locaJ area, 4
Moderate daaiaft. 5
derable damage. 6
A 7
Le,
Assassination
PAWS
dova Cabaa
Eraetto ~Cbe- .Owv^>r« ia
\^^ was assaswaaaad as he
to las car slawg iIk
Kiver Ji— daj ai
A
said after
Fold today.
Sea. Tad Stevens, R-Alaika,
laid the Bgaing was expected
iMer in the day.
Stevens was among 1 1
mbers of Congress who
at with the -President to
tf tbe bai.
CJCtlJOIl
CommisMoa staff has tenta-
tively certified appiication t for
$2. 1 milhon in federal matching
for rdeate when the
is facoosthuted
*We asked for the meeting,**
Stevens told reporters "We
bdieve the President will sign
tlK b0 today and send to the
Coagress his nominations for
tbe sia aMmiars al the
e ci
tremor m
August IfSJ tiMI
7 J aa the
i n-ri"»T ■i.'i-t-v"r,'i
and kdtod
4n)urcd 1
In the
National
Federal Funds
WASKINGTOK
FoftI its
Cyclamate
WASHINGTON AP - The
Food aad Drug Admimstration
saanaarfri Tuesday that it will
^,^j|iat hit the l%9 federal ban on
tbe artificial sweetener cycla-
mate because of what it called
'^laresolvad safety questions.**
Hie FDA said it was send-
mg a letter to Abbott Lab-
aratanes. a atiior cyclamate
producer, sskiaglbe company
„ la amMcaw aa tfT^request to
'restore cyclamate to the
.-.r_-4i:
PM Eta Sigma
:.\.. ..
General Election
of off icers
Acfccrman Union 240S
Tliuridajf, May 13« 4 pm
If Afebdtt doc* ■« withdraw
tlK r«me«. the FDA laid it
wa* no unmediate
:
THE
MtltN^AnasAi SIUOIMT CEVTBt
PttSP€iS ITS 1»«KLY SiMIKAftS ,
13 V
• 4
/nferrtjfiofuf Carrmcf • firwf>cirig'
Transfer from Acadbnia to Industrial
1%'orid o/ Engineering^
FDA Commi $ sioner Alex-
ander M Schn^idt said he
assure American
*s tiMt cydaoMte was
use as a Yugar'
te.
The FDA's Bureau of Foods
recommended the ban on
cyclamate be parualK lifted to
as use as a tabletop
U the FDA said
W*t lf^ concerned
^s wnpniiig large
utiMiie Rugfea^
ic aad~fqpcoduc-
tive AaoMige
Cydamate had been
by miBioas af
IS Americans for years
and bad baoaMd mto a $1^
ccrous
year mdustry until the
prompted by two
baating H m can-
tumors ia laboratory
State
San Diego State
SACRAMENTO AP
A
Saa
State Lnivcrsity stu-
are illegally bamag
s firafli the
because of dis-
agamst
THERPS STILL TIME,
BROTHER! and SISTER tool
to 9« fom flight
loEurope and Israel
iiai
.tf^
whether to overrule
the niident govemment.
Teamsters
SAN DIEGO AP —
Teamsters Union threatened
today to disrupt major ban-
in San Diego ualsM the
ninth biggest aty agiaar
to contract demands by police.
A news conference was told
that picket lines will be set up
and delivery of goods would
end
Spokesmen for the San Diego
Police Officers Association,
represented by the Teamsters on
contract ta^, said they will
urge rejection of the city*s latest
offer.
The city has rsfaMa to pay
ttne and a half for overtime by
pohoe, saying it would cost up
to SI milbon, but it has offered
7.5 per cent more in pay and
pension improvements.
There are 1,100 members of
the Police Officers Association.
Pay presently ranges from SI, 054
to SI J74 monthly.
Prop 15
J5AN FRANCISCO AP — -
The California Public Utilities
Commission passed a resolution
today against the Prop. 15
niiclnr initiative saying it was
"ill-conceived^ aad could elim-
inate nuclear power as an energy
source
Leonard Ross and Robert
Batinovich. two appointees of
Gov. Edmund G Brown Jr.;
took a neutral position on' the
lasalBtion and did not vote.
The two-page resolution
drifted by commissioner Vernon
L. Sturgeon said the Juae 8
balot measure "would have far
icachmg adverse consequences
for the energv future of Cah-
formans** and the cost would be
"staggering in a penod of
scarcity and shortages of alter-
nate sources of energy.
The increased use of oil to
replace audear energy williiayr
significant adverse impacu on
air quahty in California and can
only serve to make the sUte aad ^
the nation more dependent on
unstable foreign sources of
fuel" the resoluuon warned.
Sturgeon, joined m the vote
by PUC President D W Holmes
and Wilham Symons Jr.7isid
"^AT caa*t stand silent on this
imtiative.*
Willie Brown
SAN FRANCISCO AP ^
Veteran black Assemblyman
Wilhe Brown is backing the
piTsidciwial candidacy of Gov.
Edmund irown Jr., the gover-
nor's office said Tan^v
The two Browns were
scheduled to meet reporters at a
3:15 pm news conference at the
•^^"eraor^s San Fraacasoo Hfkr
to announce Willie Browa*s
said Dsvid Jensen, the
*s aaaaciate press
D-San
from an
k Caaeas en-
oC the DemocratK
bIb Hie party^s
aommation for psaMieat
ForuKr Georgia Oov Junmy
Carter is the frontrunner m the
pnmar«s, bat Gov. Biwwa aad
CHter will be on the same ballot
■or the lint tiaM aext
in Maryfaind*s pnmarv
WiUic Browns endoi
N««« H^dea. D^Los
tor was still "Vaiting and
Porpoises
WASHINGTON AP - ^
federal judge today ordered
tuaa fisbemoi to stop using a
common method of fishiaa
which kiUs hundreds of thoih
sands of porpoises each year
along with the tima catch.
Porpoises are an endangered
The baa, effective May 31
wiU severely affect the tuna
industry. Estimates are that
between ooe-third and one-half
of the doBOTtic tuna catch a
taken by iHiag porpoi^ to
shoar the locations of lartc
scbools of fwk
Before I960, yellowfin tuaa
were caught ptiaiahly by fishing
with poles aad bve bait But
then a laore effieiem asaas was
developed based on the fact that
nich tuna in the eastern tropical
frequently swim with
(paciM of dolphin called
porpoise.
Siaoe tbe porpoises are larger
aad coaie to the surface and
breathe, fishermen ase speed
boatt to herd groups of por-
paise into large purse seme nets
The ycBawTm tuna swim
beneath the porpoise and both
are tnpped when the net is
closed or "pursed" around
thein-
Moet €^ the porpoise escape
by swimnung through an open-
ing in the top of the net but
odiers dfy€ to the bonom whc1\
they suffocate or drown as a
resuh of shock, physical injury
or the refusal to abandon other
trapped
UCLA Dafly
BRUIN
XCVttt. Numaar 2S
May 12 1976
Sr «W ASUCLA
ASUCLA
f*o«M Bomrtl
(CPS) — Is your ao« a cnm-
who would be better off
behind bars
than in corpoiaie baasdaaoms
sifiBMS the country? Is your
daddy or spouse breaking
more laws than the average
convicted criminal, but still
-^Maiuag araund scot fre^
The Peopte*s Bicentennial
Comiaiiiiii (PBQ will pay
yoa, a secretary to a corporate
executive. $25,000 in cash if
you turn your boss in aad he is
convicted and imprisoned for
ha crimes against sacicty. If
you are married to s corporate
crook, the PBC a^gss you to
disoass his illegal aaivities at
the dinner table tonight
Letters to
tanes of corporate executives
are the latest plays by tbe aali-
big business Bicentennial group
to shower pablicity on itself
while reminding Americans
that crime is not the exclusive
property of tbe streets
The tactic has been decried
by corporation executives and
arbiters of good taste who
have ■ricaiid the PIC of *nry-
ing to saad divisivencss in the
family" and involve innocent
wives in the sometimes illegal
business affairs of their hus-
Project to cost $30,000
Royce 270 renovation
iy Carol Starr
DB Staff WilMr
A project costing approxi-
ttitety $10,000 if currently
underway to transform Royce
270 into a multi-purpose re-
ception room where problems
related to the Department of
Fine Arts Production can be
alleviated, according to Vice
Chancellor Ehvin Svenson.
The refurbished room will be
designed for intimate gather-
tags, film shows, meetings and
receptions. Svenson said Sim-
ilar rooms exist in Schocnbcrg
and McGowan Halls.
Svensoti. who is responsible
for Fine Aru production^ said
that room 270 will be used to
generate interest in Rpyce Hall
performances, as well as to
develop relationships between
performers and students.
The remodeling project, to
be completed by fall, will be
funded by Maintenance and
Repair and ""resources avail-
able to Chancellor Young
There has been no fund raising
involved," commented Sven-
son, who is also in charge of
the project.
When completed, the room
might be used, he said, **to
help raise funds for remodeling
Royce Hall But primarily it is
to solve prabicms related to
the Fine Arts Department
"'It would be nonsense for us
;f a build -a Ttnnir fast i
waaHby deaats. If we wanted
and dine them, wc*d
take tbem to the Bcl-Air Hotel
We don*t have that kind of
budget, anyway,** Svenson
by Harriet GoU
of Special Projects
and her assistant ILathryn i «—»,
• Call loaaa our napr
andtachrtiquBi
• Weddinga from $60 to
$1000
• All appomtfaanta in your
^ umt'Ui 0\i *lA%t^li
Cdd added that the
whose dimcnsioas are 46
feet
a graduate student in archi- Royce HalPs Romanesque
tecture. Royce 270 will prob- architecutre as closely as pos-
ably undergo refurbishing
within a week.*
Uatil the former langai§t
Ub is demolished, which wit!
involve the removal of a wall
obscurmg the rotunda and the
acoustical tiles in the ceiling.
'*we won*t really know the
original romantic shape of the
rooai,** Gold said.
Once its true shape has been
determined, sbe said tbey will
try to restore the integrity of
long by 30 feet wide, will have
a concrete vaulted ceiling,
buih-in seating lining the ro-
tunda and burlapped wall-
paper. **The fabnc will be good
for exhibitions of performers
and artists in Royce. The
porous material won*t danmgr
when they hang up displays,**
she said
»rters of the PBC
letter- writing campaign point
to a recent Conference Board
survey which showed that half
of the nation^s executives
would commit illegal acts for
their company "We don't ex-
pact wives to be screaming at
husbands or threatening not to
sleep with them till they come
clean,** PBC codirector Ted
Howard explained "We want
them to get into a dialogue.**
Response to the letters has
been running 2 to 1 against the
campaign, but the PBC Jum^
received responses from nuijor
executives who support the
lit ion As for
the wives, 10 per cent of those
respaaiad saeau to agree with
the wonuin who wrote on ber
engraved stationary, **Screw
You ** But aae wife wrote that
she had **divorced that crook
over a year ago** and enclosed
his new wtfe*s aamc and a^
dress.
As for the cash oiler for
infonaation, response has not
been exactly overwhelming
Bui PBC founder aad codir-
ector Jeremy Rifkin said he
expects the PBC will have to
pay off one or perhaps two
reward offers. "If we have to
pay more, we*ll go bankrupt,**
Rifkin said
I
$
I
i
«
t
4
I
i
*
■i
Wrife
■■■>
Foreign student
counselors sought
Volunteer counselors are being sought to help small groups of
newly arriving foreign students next fall at the Office of
International Students and Scholafs (OISS) and the Imernational
Student Center /ISC). '
An introductory meeting for student volunteers will be held the
first week of June and applicants who are accepted will^
participate in one of tl|fee training sessions held m late August
and early September.
**We need at least 55 counselors.** Richard Chi, coordinator of
the program, said He added that the progeaai especially needs
student couaeili>rs from .management and engineering since these
schools receive much of the foreign student enrollment.
After the training session, counselors will write to ap-
proximately five or ten students to begin contact and to give
them advance information about the University
Counselors might meet their Mudents at the airport or at ISC
during Housing week (Septemk^r 6-10) since most foreign
ai I ivc during this time. The coaaseMnr^asay then help
taase new itadents to find suitable hoasing.
Orientation, at which new foreign students will receive
information about the required Fnglish placement exam, health
clearance and registiatiaa, is scheduled for September 13-15.
Orientation will finish with s weekend trip designed for
socializing
Applications for student volunteer couiuielor positions are
available at OISS m [>odd 297 aad ft ISC.
W
FOREIGN STUDENTS
Immigration Inapactor will be
on campus on May 13. 1976 at
the Office of International
Studairts and Scholars He
will ba procaaaing SUMMER
WORK PERMISSION for off
campus employment and also
Extenaiaaa of Stay. Applica-
tions must be turned in by May
12. 1976 at 297 Dodd Hall
1
ly May It, 7:30 PM.
WtHhstiop^
The Art of Making Contact
and Having Impact.
An •KCtting orm •v«ning workaDop
on making conWct crvstiw* way* of
d««l(ng wlt^ rvpction mn4 wiMt hap-
pmnu Mhm conWct To Iw Hi Sy Johr
Fargut who hat had four yaart an-
parianoa with communication avant^
fof nnp^ pvopfti
It ^
Vi
J
Summer —
Openings
for $2505
We are offering positions to students
who are: ,
1. Hardworking
2. Dependable
3; Able tajtfork out of statft
Conie to the Interview at
1:00,4:00, or 7:00
Today at the University Religious
Conference, corner of Hilgard &
LeConte or call 479-4139 ~
VETERANS
UNITED VETERANS ASSOCIATION OPUCLA
warn
MAY 12, 1976 3 PM 3175 BUNCHE
NOMINATIONS ACCEPTED
PRIOR TO VOTING FOR
ALSO
•PLUS GUEST SPEAKER
REFRESHMENTS SERVED
H.
4
I
I
i\
V
« I
4
4
4
i
♦ I
4
t
tfj
I
f;^J. ,,
■MM
— r »
rrrr^r
Students participate in
IMI Stair Writer
PaiticifMnu ifi the Model
Uaitad Natioot, which itmift-
"^an actual United Nations
IHHniMy refrain
oif their
aad poundii^ on their
aocordiilg to oac UCLA per-
■MMKnt repretentative
Mf Mayhew explained that
a Far-West Model UN con-
ference and a New York con-
ference are held each Bpring
quarter. A national orcantza-
tion, of which the UCLA
Model United Nations if a
memher, aaMgV oae UN icat
to each rtrirgatioa in the fall.
By the **luck of the draw.**
tb€ three UCLA delegations
who traveled to New York this
year raceived the USSR. Israel
and PLO. Sweden and Bul-
garia were asMfaad to the two
itioss mat to San Fran-
Studenti use the winter
All Students planning to take
Human Physiology
&/or Human Anatdmy
(Kinesiology 12 a^ 14) during
any quarter/iext year must file a course
application before May 28 in Women's
Gym 124. Kine^ology majors planning
to take Kines. 16, 108, 110, 130. 150 next
year must also file course applications
as above Questions should be directed
to WG 124, 825-4400.
-tT"
D
quarter to prepare their coun-
try's policies Meeting every
week, the participants are each
assigned a different foreign
policy to research and arc
educalid ia fHHrmJ policy.
Mayhew attended the Far-
Washington internship
Wen conference, describing it
as a ''marathon affair m many
ways.** Different blocks of
countries, he explained, cau-
cused *'to all hours. ** One of
the important pieces that **we
through as Sweden and
the Security Council," Mayhew
said, WM a reaoUnion calling
for **peaceful understanding
aad oooperation in the Middle
East.* It pMMd nine to zcm
Most peopie view de coni
(Cnntinii on Pafs 6)
Student Lobby opening
By CMs SvSSesi
DB Staff Reporter
Friday, May 14 ts the lait
day to apply for this summerS
Washington DC internship
with the National Student
Lobby. The group presses
aenators, congressmen and
federal igHHMi widi student-
oriented priorities.
Neila Garber, director of
yCLA*s annex to the National
Student Lobby said, ^'It^s an
excellent opportunity for stu-
dents to get involved with
government on a first-hand
basis and get results.**
The selected student will
leave as soon as possible and
live m Washington until Sep-
tember. A $300 stipend will be
giv^ to defray expenses.
Garber went as UCLA's in-
tern last sumn>er and said that
SUMMER
JOBS JOBS JOBS
CoHnge trained r?ien and
women will t>e considered to
supplement our permenent
staff in district o^ices
throughout the U.S l^heee
poettions are full or part-tirne
•ummeT jot>a. We are search-
ing for applicants ¥^o are
ambitious. Hependable amj
hard working Excellent op-
portunity for advancement
You may continue to worK
on a pert time or full time
basis next fall if you desire
For district office addrees. or
for appointment with our
local manager, call Robbie
after April 18th. 9 am to 3
p m Monday through Friday
at 2T3— 478-8422.
the experience was challenging
aad pleasurable.
**1 was on the hill three out
of five days of the week,** she
^^. **On the weekends 1 went
travelling and got to see the
eastern seaboard.**
Vietnam vctenwi
Currently the National Stu-
dem Lobby is fighting attempts
to end college benefits for
Vietnam veterans and cut stu-
dents off the food stamp pro-
gram for bein^ "* willfully un-
employed.**
They are also striving to
repeal laws allowing employers
to pay student workers a **sub-
minimum wage.**
Their successes include
present laws insuring increased
pnvacy for student files and
banning discrimination on the
basis of sex at schools re-
ceiving federal' funds
A one or two-page essay
describing the issues of par-
ticular importance to the ap-
plicant is required when ap-
plying The applicants will be
judged. by four people includ-
ing Garber, representing the
National Student Lobby, the
UC Student Lobby and the
president's office of ASUCLA
AMMty So wffiia
Appicants mast show an
ability to write and speak well,
an interest in student concerns
and a wilhngness to work
herd but expertise in jkjIuics
and government is not neces-
sary.
''A lot of the program is
getting educated about the
issues and the process once
you get back to Washington,**
said Garber.
Garber points out that the
stipend will probably only pay
for travelling expenses to go
back cast, leaving the intern to
meet roughly one quarter of
living expenses. She said that
her savings account enabled
her to go last year.
Garber said ''You have the
opportunity to meer directly
with 1e|LisIators and lohb> them
on student related tssiies.**
Since 1976 is the bicentennial.
Garber warns that potential
interns should *'Get ready for
lots of crowds.**
Applications are available in
Kerckhoff 306.
:r
,■-
^^■~""
it^?'
OdA
MCCNTENNIAL
EVENT
THE REVOLUTION AS A WAR OF
LIBERATION FOR WOMEN
Final Lecture in UCLA Bicentennial Series
MARY BETH NORTON
A *u ^^ ^^ssoc«a*e P'"0^essor Of History, Cornell University
Author: The Debate Over the American Revolution 1765-1776 morr.K^ ♦►.
Coordinating Committee of Women in the Histoica Profession- ?h«^ ' ^
Columbia university Seminar on Early American hTstor; I^d Cu,ture'''^?r76
Current research: Women in Revolutionary and Republican America TfeLitlO
WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 19768 P.M
No AdmiMion Charge
Pimmxwi t>v UCLA Bicenti*nn.«i r.r»r.^.
DODD HALL 147
Public Cordially Invited
CemwiMee on PuUIlt Llliurw
)
Church surpfises^Cartcr In Nebraska
Wf MlLt
Senator Frank Church, in hu first ap-
pearance in this you** primaries. lOMsi a sur-
prising upiet over former Oeorgia Governor
Jimmy Carter in ye«terday*i Nebraska Demo-
cratic pnmary.
With 79 per oeat of precincts Wffmua^
Church led with 39 per cent of the popular
vole, followed by Carter'i 37 per cent. Nine
other names ippaared on the bmUoU including
tbote of Senator Hubert Humphrey and Sena-
tor Edward Kennedy, who were alto on the
bnBm for the first time Humphrey had 7 per
cent of the vote, and Kennedy gained 4 per
cent
Neither Humphrey not Kennedy wanted to
be on the ballot in Nebraska, but sute law did
not allow them to have their names removed.
Preferenec primnry
Voters in Nebraska participated in a so-
cnllad ''preference primary," where they did not
sdKt convention dfsl^pics, but :>imply sutei
their choice of rnrfidites. In a scpnmtc Mf
gple selection, with ^75 per cent of precincts
reporting Church was leading for 14 delegates.
Carter wa* leading for eight, and one uncom-
mitted delegate was leading.
Wmi Virginia held a preference primary, but
did not hold a delegate selection With 57 per
1cent of precincts reporting, the favorite
Wmn Virginia Governor Robert Byrd,
m$ the only other candidate on the ballot, Ala-
banria Governor Geo|p Wallace, by 88 to 12
per ant.
Connectical
In the Ccmnecticut Oemocratic race, which
dacted Connecticut convention delegates. Car-
ter defeated Representative Moms U da II aad
Senator Henry Jackson, his two major r nmpc
titors over the first two months of the pri-
maries. Carter took 33 per cent of the vote to
Udnlfs y\ per cem and Jackson*t 18 per cent,
while 13 per cent went to uncommitted dele-
gate!! These results iranslaicd mto 19 prohable
delegates for Carter. 16 for IJdall. and four for
Jackson, leaving 12 uncommitted
Although Jackadn has announced his with-
drawal from the PresidenttaF race, he
briefly in
commitment to Governor EUa
previously endorsed him.
to tulfiil
Church «M reported to ha¥e spent
three times as much money campaigning
in Nebraska as Carter did. Church, however,
minimized the effect of this. "We didn't spend a
great deal of money as money has been spent,**
Church said '*We didn't have much money to
spend,** he added
Jerry Brady, Church's campnitn mmmtm in
Omaha, said Church expressed surprise at the
TOsulu "Sen Church said at the airport that It
was a minor pohticaJ mu^acle,** Brady snid. *He
*t expected to do this well. No one ex-
him to do this weU,** Inidy added
Carter was philosophical about his un-
expected losr in Nebraska. **Well, I can*t wtn
*em all. Sen. Church has done a good job," he
Ldall
The "stop Carter** movement faiaod further
rntum m Connecticut, whece Jtep. UdiA
cloae to upsetting Carter. David
Ayhvood, Regional Desk Coordinniar of the
UdaU campaign, said "The results from tonight
show that Jimmy Carter is not the monolith
people thought he wtna.**
Aylwood described UdalTs perlormance by
•oyint. **Morhs Udali deaded he didn't have
enough money andTrogh timrrs run in the
Connecticut pnmary, and he almost beat Jim-
my Carter.- Aylwood said UdalTs performance
fave hia OMBpnign a. pont ^sol of ■wwcntuui
imo next week's Michigan race.
i
A
I
i
Carter no
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
. f^ *y *^ your partooai •ff«cu hotrm ¥M« ara spaciaiitts in
ans>aaaey psaiiaolnu snd ihtpptng WtaiMialiaaotiMaaifarai
PAC(FIC-KING ins W^ M. tt. L- A»,^ 17
12
Sen. Jackson, who was one of the
early front-runners for the Democratic nomina-
tion, discontinued most active campaigning af-
ter a weak second -place showing tn Pennsyl-
vania two weeks ago. Although he did
not campaign heavily in Connecticut, he did
suffest thi|t lie might surt campaignmg again
if he were to win in Connecticut
**Connecticut is a far more important state
than Nebraska," Jackson said last week "^We'U
be in it full blown if we wm up here.**
Dr. Anthony Bass A Dr. Jon Vogel
OPTOMETRIST!
41
Reagan momentum
Slowed by GOP
Split in primaries
Eyoa Exam mod ^
Faahton Eyowoar
Contact Lonaoa A
Soft Lonaoa
Custom Work and
Enf>org Ropoira
in.
.Waatwood
^VMIaoa.
l132WaglwoodBlvd
477-3011 477-3012
Men to Frt 10-6
Sot ,10^
FariM
iogi two weeks ago, Pfcae
dent GemM Ford appeared
ready to doae the political
door on Republican challenger
Ronald Reagan. Political ex-
perts were giving Reafan clt-
actly two chances of winning
the GOP nmoination aton and
TaHof^
ma
However, with a mn m
Texas a fortnight ago and tri^
pie pnmary victories in Indi-
and
Hie^T
governor's wilting
was revitalized.
Last night, Rcofan's
mentum was stalled somewhat
with a split in the primary
douhlrhtode^ in Nebraska and
West Virginia. The Presidem
scored a victory in the West
Virginia race while Reagan
uUed off a mild upaet with his
Mm in Nebraska.
MACTFDTHE PROJECT GRANT GAME
^^^■^^ A STRATEGIC AmtOACH
Spmd Wiiliiwiii. »% aSdi «ah Dr J^mm L
and Itt Nm ihoM/ gDuhoM io "HASTER THi fOyjCT
ynr by tiiMl. one and local
Gfurrr
jj>^ ^llP!m}^M"^^^»th tiOh Dr r ■ mil »Du ^ b« mfarmad YOU VMttX
10 Kind Iha
you wldi la fsaiML
^^i--i7^Ji. i.1: x:. -r — -— • — ^-«Oonsyou «•« b« iniormad YOU Umx PO0«B» PIIOV^
TECMhiQUe TO si^E cAjfO0m^4^MCm6^^ ^^^TSSto W^
Li-JThSir •• ilJri 2^ ol a» «in»''I!^
HoM^ to Snd kmdi anrf how to ipply for
Doddlne MtHat and Mihan to prapow
MAiai to^ H you 19 tiol iSglJ ior fundi
Hoar to «Oto and ^Mhsgi fBUK MpaHl to ^
M^an and Itoar |» piiiiiiuii tfw UiOng agMwy and i«iho to
Hoar to bt inihaknon about naSitili fundi
OmmmKB tl #» iiiiOiM. fcr fundi a fba (or vihan to di tt aaH
HoHrtodMM
to da d sear fMh •» aa/Haur to
a
r
AND
-. (■
May 26dt iMNh Dr Jbniai L
tolnoupa
OCWT MBS 7H5 ONE Thg ot^
WHM THEY SAY...
of MASTER THE PROUECT (3m^>fT GAME
tht orrar and mmmmi I
ONE TIME ONLY!
THE GCKMW CENTCR
"MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME"
AN MFORMATIVE. EVE OPENING AND HARD HTniNG UVE PRESENTAIION
BY DR. JAMES L COSTANZA-BACK FROM A NATIONAL TOUB
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26th, 9H)0 ajn.-4K)0 pan.
WALK PBOM CAMKJ8 THE PLAZA 1HEATER im:
TICKET SALES AT
ADVANCE
TICKET ^^ acuMJWGi^s
SHOParmviiA
■JM».-AlJtaAT ALL
MnUAL
HALL AND TIMCL
mm
w
4-.V
I
Mpmnd an imforjttffcit mmn^ wMh Tmihnw I trtf c,
^«il Qaii9uln, Max tti« Actor, THm Van Qogh, and . . .
Wondarfuity Fragmantad
I
THE SHOW THArS
•HOCKtHQ THg CHITiCSI
■t
TtoZtplqrrTI
(on awatrt row>
745e M«lroM Av«.
WMt Hollywood
DaHy Bni^
Performances
W#d through Sat
8:00 P M
Student Rates $3 00
For information 4
itiont Ciit:
r
I
POSITION AVAILABLE
— student Coordinator -^
foreign Student Orientation Program -
Academic Year — June 1976- June 1977
Responsible for implementation of Orientation Program
for newly arrived UCLA foreign students. "
20-40 hrs/week dunng summer
Average of 10 hrs/week Pall. Wintar. Spring Qtrs.
Stipend
Job Description & Applications Available;
international Student Center
1023-Hilgard
• or
Office of International Students & Scholars
297 Dodd Hall
D«adlih« for return of Applieationa
May 14
"ITS A SEND UP AND PUT DOWfl ON
EVERYTHING AND EVERYBODY FROM
PRESIDENT TO COMMERCIALS . . . HILARIOUS."
-RUTH BWCHtLOR, LA. FREE PRESS
'...AN ASTONISHING ASSORTMENT OF i^
NOTHING sacred: HEAVY HANDED. LIGHT '
HEARTED HILARITY." -^ chuck hwlsh, kfwb
*.. FUNNIEST OF ALL THE IRREVERENT
PUTDOWNS . . . EXCRUCIATINGLY FUNNY!"
- STEVE ARVIK, KMPC
I
CHffCMicMowc a«(aKCT»Hi.
fti la im%n napi
im iM iM la 7M 423 SM ;n in vaPM
ttniiaiM
iA MM! . mmm mtmi na cuv ciatau • sj4 mi
MsnmisrcR n« ttmm • mum
tMT
Republicans split .
y
(CoBiiaiii J^OM fafc 5)
The GOP lundoff now
fhiftf the ftafr to Forcfi home
stAte of Michigan, where a
tikamdemk looma in tkt pri-
aavy tlWk next Taniay.
With 7f per oem ci ^kt vole
counted in Nebraika, HTrigin
was the apparent winner with
54 per cent of the vote to
Fords 46 pv oent. Thk added
15 dlriiiaiei to Reaaan*s toul
while Ford gained 10 delegmcs
in the Comhiiskcr state.
In West Virginia, with more
than lulf of the sute's baUou
Uilicd, Ford was declared the
winner with a 56 to 44 per cent
margin over Reagan. West
Virginia's 28 delegates arc ex-
pect^ to line up behind the
Prendent at the convention in
July, though they wilJ be of-
ficuiJIv uncommitted
The returns 'amounted to a
split Republican decision in
3^BMerday*s primaries but repre-
scmativcs in^hr ^ord camp
aie beginning to show signs of
tear. Ford's national campaign
manager, Rogers Morton, said
Ford would have to win next
week's pnmary in Michigan tc
•^prove he's viable . to get
his caadidacy turned around."
Morton blamed the Ncbrat*
ka lots oa a **domino effect**
br^mlM about by tlie Prcti-
dent's foa*^ recent primary
Tlic Prclident*i campaign
OMaaeer was asked whether
Ford wovM coaaider ^ pulling
out of the race if Reagan buih
up a strong enough delegate
loKi a qacition repeatedly
put to Reagan' after early pri-
mary losses a few months ago.
Morton replied that the deci-
sion to withdraw would have
to be made by the President
alone and woukJ not be made
until there is a point where
"somebody has a clear-cut ma-
jority of delegates and that
certainly is a long way off.**
The delegate count after the
two primaries last night shows
Reagan leading with 411 Ford
has 326 delegates with many of
the 318 uncommitted dele^tes
believed leaning toward hioL Jt
will take IJ30 delegates to
nominate a candidate at the
Republican convention.
Reagan, in Boise, Idaho,
said he had wqn a "legitimate
test in the Republican party"
with his Nebraska win, which
wai» -i-.^mpiisbed without the
crots-over voting of the last
four primaiies Reagan refused
to speculate about the p^'f^i,;
outcome in Michipui next
a«ek in a race where lie is a
decided underdog. Michigan
will alaw Democrau to regis-
ter cross-over votes in the
Republican primary, a fact
which could swmg many po-
tential George Wallace sup-
porters imo Reagan's can^
Lack of suppon for the
F/esident among Nebraska's
•cveral thousand larmcrs was
credited with _ giving the
GOP challehacr the victory
Farmers were upset with Ford
because of a three-month em-
bargo he imposed on gram
shipments to the Soviet Union
last summer.
Reagan campaigned for two
days in Nebraska, repeated Iv
punching away on his familiar
campaign theme that under
Ford, the United Slates had
slipped to a number two posi-
tion behind the Soviet Union
That strategy apparently
worked well with the mosilv
conservative Nebraska popula-
tion
Camps and tutorino also
club teacher
ly Cadiy
DB Staff WritOT
Established last year, the
Bruin Sign Language Club
gives interested students an
opportunity to learn and prac-
tice the lanmiage of the deaf.
Iiutniction Is not the club's
only purpose, however. Ac-
cording to Jon Levy, club
president, its ultimate goal is
*^o further communication be-
tween the deaf and the heanng
by involving students in such
projects at tutoring and sum^
mer camps for the deaf"
Club meetings reflect this
twofold purpose The first por-
tion of a typical meeting is
yyen over to the actual pr^^
tice of sign language; beginners
arc welcome, and a certain
amount of review is integrated
iaia each lesson Members are
often surprised, commented
Levy, to discover how soon
they are able to communwttt.^^ianning and arranging of ac-
their idea« hv Ileitis • i^MMt- t't>j.«.^.. o :i^:i:.- . ^ •
their ideas by using a conrH
bination of signing and finger-
spelling.
MeetingTiTsb Tiivolvc the
tivities Poitibihties being dis-
cussed this quarter incli^de at-
sifttance by club members at
<Coi^liMMi aa Pagt 17)
-J.;»-h'/
Model United Nations . .
1- ♦..
(€aatiaucd fraoi Paae 4)
fercnoe as learning experiences,
he commented, midw^ They
don't joke around, but they
iMwc a lot of fiin." Mayhew
•nid that many participants in
the Model UN rcahzed "the
limitations of the Umted Na-
tions."
the diverse atmo-
sphere and the absence of a
legitimate decision-making
body to enforce decisiooa, stu-
dents undersund that -there is
only so much that the United
Nations' can do under those
circumsunoca,** said Mayhew.
The other permanent repre-
sentatives for the UCLA
Model Unttad Nations are
Diana Shepherd, Ken Kauf-
man and Jon Feldman Appli-
cations for the positions of
permanent represenutives/ sec-
retariat for Far-West, national
aad high scbooi propMns for
next year are available in
EXPO aad arc due May 14
Headiat^ delegation, a per-
■aacat representative should
paaaesi the ability to **get
along with people, organize
programming and caasdinate
activities," said Mayhew. The
^ ^*~"it, however, is not ex-
pected "to know everything.**
he commented encouragingly-
UCLA also holds conven-
tions for high SfllMal Hadents
similar to the colkfiale Model
United Nations. Coordinated
by UCLA students, the con-
ventiaat are held every year at
the ead of the fall.
Altboayb 75 students are
involved in the UCLA Model
UN prafEUB, about St
travel to conventions, he
mented Whether students in-
volve themselves in the high
school or collegiate program ar
not, Ma3rllew views the txper-
*■•*• — "ntreoirty valuabk."
PATTY
Authentic replica of
FBI "wanted" flyer
— a real collector's
item. Send $3 plus
25 cents handling
to: FLYERS. PO
Box 30352 ^303 Ro-
sa rto). Santa Bar-
bara. Ca. 93105
u
Gliders hang tenaciously
tAVI
POTTERY MAKING CLASSES
THE POT FARM
I
If iMmi
May II 7-1 fM •
■iy l?aJMP«l
IMRLI
WMEELI
(Ms Pnctlcs TkM Mr fkm
CALL iia Foa coMPixn
2m SANTA MONICA BLVD.
|AT YALE)
OPEN 7 DAYS
828-
7a71
CALL
Now for
Brochura
A Info.
•y JUn Pete
Dl Stair Writer
9fHh hang giiding^ becoming one of Ameri«
ca's fastest growing sports, much of the
emphasis has been on competition But for Jim
A ronton, who flics for compeiiiion and plca-
suie, the thrill q{ hang ghding is in its aesthetic
value.
**l don't really care for the competition, ' he
said. **! just hke getting really high in the glider
by my own skill When you're up there, you
know that you're doing something that is
unique. It defines you."
Aronson flics for afour member hang ghdiv
team, sponsored by the E-Z Wider rolhM
paper company in New York which is currently
tounng southern Cahfomia He displayed one
of his kites Monday, Uking only ten minutes to
set It up,
Called a •'Kestrel," the kite has a 30-foat
wiag span and a keel of II feet Weighing 40
pounds and costing W50, it can reach an
altitude of 4000 ket and a speed of 40 miles
per hour.' .^^^ .— .
"Most accidents happen on the ukc-off,"
Aronson ciarnted, citing that most take-off
points are often filled with vegeution or rocky
landscape. But most hang gliding problems, he
added, depend on the pilot
"Whether hang gliding is dangerous depends
on the pilot's attitude," Aronson remarked
"The ideal attitude is that of total safety before
anything else and that means never really
taking chances"
Claiming one can fly forever and not get hurt
if no chanaes aar Ukcn, Aronson said the
biggest chance is foohng with the weatlKr **!
never ffy m wMys aver 25 aaks per bom^ it
— -, — _ — - — _ — , — __ — - — „ ■ — — ' — 1 — »■'■■■— — * — ■ ■ ■■ 1
Most pilou know all about the weather.
Aronson said and unfortunately learn from
other piloti misukcs Claiming he knew most
^ th€ people who Iwive died tp a*»ding
Aronson admitted, "We read^ all the accident
reporu and try loj learn from their misukes "
Demonstrating the proper way to take oft,
Aronson displayed a few running starts Once
the pilot reaches a speed of 15 miles per hour,
the glider virtually takes off by itself
Once in the air, the pilot controls the kite by
shifting his weight -I swing my body in Either
direction to change course," Aronson said, so
that "you're not moving the glider, you're
moving your body."
Sitting in a supine position. Aronson flies the
kite with his hands and Icet in front of him He
wears only regular clothing, a harness and #
helmet.
A former race car driver, Aronson became
involved with gliders twp years ago when some
friends mentioned flying some large kites Soon
he rcah/ed "they were talking about flying
them while m it," and he bought two kites on
the spot.
Wf«iL«Ml flyers
Aronson, who lives in a van while on the
road, Gftmmed he exemplifies the Ufe of most
gliders "They're weekend flyers." he said,
adding, most "are independent, don't have
much money and hve out of their vans "
Expanding along with the sport. Aronson
and his partner Douka ICaknes are now
designing kites "That's the really fascinating
part of gliding," he commented "Thai's where
th€ real pioneers of gliding are nasr.**
Moreover. Aronson refuted any ideas that he
haaf glides hrriasi of the danger involved. -|
hate being scared," he said. ''I get off on the
-•t-jnan. one machine JdteaJ*
"It's a shaase we don't have wia^** he said,
"but it*s kind of mmn we aHi4e our own."
Any Couple El igibia ' —
DATING? MARRIED?
Participata in a Spacial Study of Romantic Ralationahipa
I
5
WHO CAN PAaTtC»aTI7
Dating **v»r>g-iog«lh«r
WHAT ix> vou aat
Show up at • iMfw and
/
olan
I btlow witn your partrwf Eacho^you«iNb9f««ona
Otm hour qiMMtionnatve to MM* MparKoly
WHAT It rr AaouT?
Th« iiuatllorinaire covart • broad ranga of toptca This inrludai (^_
inttmata and conMdantiai natum Vour ana«wart «mII b« hapt atricavi
WHAT DO f ou aart ^
Each parson will ba paid Si SO wid will aiao radalMa a hiit
raaaarch raauNt
WHIM DO VOU t40m UP. AND WHMt?
Coma «Htn your f>mrxnm to tha larfa iwiyat f99tr\ m Prwm naii
aooan 1 17S Show up any t»ma
ThTjrsday May 6
ofttw
fi 7 p.m and lOp m, on Pia au:^,, ^^.^m
Mtir 10 «_„.>< ^ Thuraday. May 13
For mof* »nformat»on. call this number m tha
Psychology Oepartmant 825 2030
PtsfrsshmeiHi Served
J-
THE AFRICAN
STtfDlES CENTER
presents
JESSE N. THEURI
lecture —
Rangeland Planning
Wednesday 3:00 pm
2150Biinche HalL
•> — • ••
^1%
tWf
/;N
ii>*'
>
^€^0^ ^€y%cesl K:/es4e^
.*'•', . i!f- •
10th BIRTHDAY PICNIC
& May Merriment Meeting.
All past & present UCLA Govern-
ment Interns (Washington, Sacra-
mento, Los Angeles) are invited
to attend the tenth anniversary
bring-your-own picnic this Saturday,
2:30 PM 'til dusk at Cheviot Hills
Park (off Motor Ave just south of
Pico & Rancho Park Golf Course.
Old Friends, games, sports, lazing
in the sun, see you there.
9i
A
e/U^
mu^m^gujLi^B^^
^k
7
^■^w
•V.
t
A.
i
I
Limited NumtMr $2.50
U.C.LJL StudMit Tlck»ts Now At
Central Ticket Offle* — ,
GSAJ|n§l tabulation
A Special Tribwt* to
1
•
I
"TT*
juufin TCflnnoTiBflU"
ADMRiiM
VMtaf Booker Jtaflw Ck&vwktnd
O^ofM Oukm, Victor FeldmMi, Louis Hoyo«
ffdim HublMM'd, Sam Jonos, Roy KlcC|urdy
Efiiio Watts, Emio Androws, Akto
Flof a Puiiniv Jlmniy SfnMi
Thurs., May20 8:00 p.m.
Royce Hall, UCLA
$7.50. 6 50. 5.50
AJI Net Conom PfPPiidi M «o f/)#
pUdo by •rue* Talawntf. ceurt««v •f Famaty ~
TiCKf TS NOtlLrUCtA CENTRAL TICKET O^FlCC
^.^^Z^Sf^ Mutual |ft2Ma4a; and W«l«icti».ilWrty Agan-
•JSi <t*HH?'- ■' *»«"•?«•'' »»«^ •••^« paftawwawoa it aSg-
avw fof imarmatton, nMMt. .» •i ttctiat prnt 10
The UCLA Center
for Afro-American
(CootuiiMd fraia PH^ 1)
Democ^ratic preiidentiml
oiitpaitod Repu^
caadaiate hy a thre^-io-
marftii in write-in votes
for GSA ofTioe Jerry Brown,
Hubert Humphrey, and George
Waltoct cacli 001 M. M did
Roimld Reafui. The voting
was not a toCaJ km for the
Republicans, however Richard
M. Nuion paved the way for
another entry into politics by
vaggiving one vote for GSA
Pl^ident.
Victory Nunez^ who failad
last week in his ^d for USA
president, gained a measure of
re^OPii b^ leading all under-
graduates in write-in votes for
GSA President. His three votes
place him seventh in the raoe.
USA presidential candi-
receiving votes for GSA
t were David Brown,
rd Schreiman, Scott
Taylor, and Peg Co^mack (sic).
' Phaiii ctlor Youni rteeived a
vote for 1st vice president, but
the fact that he is not a gradu-
ate student would have pre-
vented him from accepting th^
promotion even if he had won.
Other noted personalities
receiving votes for GSA offices
were singer Lori Lieberman,
Srokely Carmichael, Gracie
Allen, Dick Gregory, Bill
Harris, Bugs Bunny, Alphonzo
Bell, Gordon Liddy, and
Mickey Mouse.
dates
Photos by Rick Bockor,
and Gionn Soki
judicial Review. Stat
Courfs. Exclusionary
^
andtheLimi.
Thursday, May 13, 1976
12:00 Noon
3107 Campbell Hall
THE SAVUIG
O' YOUB GREEN!
OBJUT
4 X ^
Guinnmn Stout or Schlitz. leg 75^
DRINKSTSc
tl 15
SUMMER PUPPETRY
AND
DRAMA WORKSHOP
FOR CHILDREN
for information: call Carol
Rusoff. fouodir^g nrwnnbef
of Educationai Puppetry
I Aaaoc. England
I 391-4314
OPEN AND FREE TO
THE PUBLIC ! ! !
Ill
Hot Hon d'o#u¥TM, bk« Swedish
■•<Jitb«llMn»d rucchini. cocktail franks
or bomanada pMato chips-frM popcorn, tool
MOMPar THBoocH nuiMnr
What Could Be Mora
Exciting?
than
control of your IHaf
Th« PACE Yoong
tsiaapa pipwiaai ji
practicai ooiifWtf in
Reaiiza mort of your
art in
•^iowTo'
oftacM¥a<yf itandla piOMiiraaf For
mora information call: aiMttty
213/ttl7-4Q8D or moM tn Oiia cou-
pon to: J WNowOlOi
4911 VMItMiO BM. Ut
Wife recalls his career
frr
LA writer wins Pulitzer
ay A^aai rtttlm
' Oa Stair WrUar
rhkl baa always
ardent civil libertarian, de^
the rights of unpopular
Md their nghts of
provided by the First
■rat,** Elizabeth Kerby
said after learnmg her husband
bad WOO the f^ilitzer Prize for
editorial writing.
_ ^/» i^crby, awe a corres-
#aa4eat for rime, U/e and
Fortume all at the same time,
Mas worked in the public infor-
action office, located in Mur-
phy Hall, iiMie March 1 as a
campus art writer
Phil lerby, who Im been
with the Los Angeles Times
since February of 1971, won
the Pulitzer for his editorials
opposing government secrecy
aaid cottft orders^ such as thoat
a*ay ai Noiraalta, banning
aMdia coverage of trial pro-
ceedings.
ICerby won the coveted
an 10 editorials
writtt^ ia IV75 which _^_
acally dealt with oppoaitioo to
tiK Nebraska
Senate Bill 1
bo. (author of ** Johnny Got
His Gun**), Mrs. Kerby said.
3efore Joining the Times,
Kerby edited Frontier nag-
azine which was publialMl in
Westwood Mrs. Kerby worked
there as an asMxruite editor.
Dunng the 50*s, the magaciae
was a sulwart defender of the
aiU of Righu in opposition to
Senator Joteph McCarthy.
^Frontier magazine was the
only non-communist magazine
in the Western United Sutes
which defended the righU of
unpopular political figures,*"
Mes iCerby said. In addition,
the Kerbys *Nl^cre both active
dunng the SO*s, to abolish the
(House) Un-Amencan Activi-
ties Committee,** she added
Frontier aiaa took firm posi-
tions agaiatt ^'biackhsting in
the entertainment industry,**
which affected the careers of
such writers as I>alton Trum-
Bicentennial lecture
la the final leaure of the UCLA Bicentennial Lecture
Sctics, -Through Six Unaci -- Rfediscovering Amenca
After Two Hundred Years,** Mary Beth Norton will discan
•The Revoluuon as a War of Liberation for Women** at I
pm todav in Dodd 147 Norton is an associate pcolessor of
history at Cornell University and is currently ^^
book about women of the Revolution.
She added, her husi
fended the rights of commu-
aiats when no one cIk wauld**
and -defended the r^rlMi of the
person to say what he wants to
say" even though her husband
awgh' itiiMWi with his powt
of^ view.
Mrs iCerby. after graduating
with honors from the Colum-
bia University School of Jour-
naham, worked a short while
with the Baittmoee E^tmrng-
Sun before joining Time mag-
azine as a national affairs
reporter.
Phil ICerby. after attending
high school in Pueblo, Color-
ado joined the Fuebh Chief-
tain, where at 18 hg success-
fully unionized the jplpar He
then worked for the Denver
Pott and Rocky Mountain Life
before coming to Los Angeles
in order to esublish Fronteir.
Mrs iCerby said Phil was a
"frequent lecturer at UCLA
and use and other southern
CaUfornia institutions and in
each case ha anaa either de-
fending the Bin of Righu or
attacking the Vietnam War (in
the eariy 60s). Mrs Kerby
added 4hese were the kinds of
principles her husband has
always been committed to.
Private housing lecture
_ Philip IClitznick. builder and land developer'^Hj the
Chicago area. Chairman of the Research and Policy
Committee of the Committee for Economic Development,
and former head oi the US, Public Housing Authority, will
lacture on the topic ''Experiences in the Private Develop-
ment of Housing and the Pubhc Sector iasues,** at 5:10 pm
today in GSM 2232 There is no admisaioa dmrfe and the
public is invited The lecture is ipaaiofad by the Housing.
Real Esute and Urban Land Studies Program, Urban
Resources Study Center of the Graduate School of
Management.
ASK meeting
for next year
Studenu interested in the
College of Letters and Sci-
ence student counselor pror
gram must^ attend one infor-
nution meeting either at 3
pm Thursday May 13 or
Friday, May 14 in Architec-
ture 1102. Applications and
requirements will be dis-
cusaod.
'.-J
Star Trek
animation
ceia
15.00
The art and hoart of tho animatod film,
— original, hand-paintod compoaittona
thaoilihml ool o»artayad a tackground
aimaing mutticoiorad viawa of Maihip
taaluring papvlar
m valua
ifitgstr*
aft/angmaaring SMppKas. a lavei. acKerman un«on. a2S-77l1
opa«« mon-thurs 6 30-7 30. fn 8 30-6 30. sat 1(M
International
HEALTH AND
ENVIRONMENT
DAY
S m Intern.itinn.Tl Hn.iith
Food Industry & Infant Fee^ding
Health or ^Hmderance in International
Health-^
V'
inlernalional Ecology Seminar
Survival ot Spaceship Earth
9 7
Africa Night
^00 pm Rolfe 1200
shanti Traditional Dances
Atro-American Jazz Film
SALAH
ICKi
jr irii>
Dir
Fnr,
(K^f-
HEALTH HUNGER •
POPULATION •FOOD •
►ECOLOGY •THE WORLD
WHAT nn Ynii nflRP?
4
f
\
I I
1
1
dciybiuin
We've carried the rich I OO long!
By Karm
I
»
I
Wl — MttomivaNiinc'cli^' street looiui^ for |d
stiff on the iob M ma^ to sAm e^eti Kvtiar. iMolt cM« on the
vvrpe ol bankruptrr Mi Mliif ip««, IMMoiMi iMWimJin, that
r;« up more ol the Me liPe K«««. ^jm lMiii« lo |My more ior
edycjcion and m tome pUces be^N^ foreed hf tlie
iMve school arid |Din the Imm* oI the mmmm^^hf^
^^^ ~" ^'^ drums beaiM^ louder ii^di mMkMt% ...—.«.
on the ro«d to «vorldwide military showdown while mihtaqf
recruiters flock to unemployment centers snd campuses like
vultures preying on our lack oi fobs wd yficsrtatn futur
OPINION
^^^^ ~ ^'^^^Ht lies oi recovery ^nd th« fire«vorks of
PKeniennijI rrltktmHm. orte thousartd outrages fUre us m the
^ /**^ .^'*^^^^[" Pgp»*« •>^g«»'t sittmg uM for all thii. At
we itfiii§li for i^rhai 11^ fii#d ifid ipii^ ol
ifttMi — whether it's €0.000 angrv workers de
Washington DC. or lOjHi New )iork students <
cuthackk iri Afham : ftomiir>g the steps of the st
out the governor Hef^ in LA thn struggle is grc^^^nf. When
Marine recruiters showed up at El Camino CoiMe recefiily
RevolutK>nary Student Brigade organind a piriiet Ime mmm
0^^pa€ hacMMiient by local offictaH. Ma^ Da% Intern
Worken Day. was cel^rated in Southgate rec^tly Thn
when the worliifig dais and its allies celebrate dicir
ments dnd look the^l to rf>e future.
There s another celebration betr%g pt^nn^ — th€ i
celebration of the Bicentennial. ThisL will take place M^^dl
HaR m Philadelphia. While the band plays
aiesi Anterica. ' the uage will iill up witfi the rich snd
xhn country All the best people from the great
»Here — the fords ^nd Rockefellers, ^^of^ wnh aff the
with their campaign smiles kissing babies srni gBiakim
^These sipeecfWs by the h^ and mtghtv wtlKbe leUp
cH^raie th« system Wi which *ViMM» d you can t fcf a |ob
yoM re free. -
- sM Of| Bie necy diHi--dl0^ they cfioote~'io c
P<«p*efrom all d«tferent struggles wiff be coming
the iliBiiiii: lobs or. income now! We won t i^ m
ZT^TTll*!? J^^i^?^ the rich for J» years, let's get
^ Mr hadis!*' Theie deMOMirations mhH the moi^emem to
'*}T^'"f'^* pn«i«rtMl fOfce m unifying aH thedifterent „.^
lit l!ie A«encan people and direcfiht them more sohdly at die
a an atiacis we face — tf^e rich mans mle
-*-'-w,f«-
I ■
Letters to the Editor
Politics
any fich
stdl has tliat l«ye
al his
m a %2M0 a day penthouse
not particularly dmmmkr
> ^''Wf' ^on^ room oc-
, id by an emaciated, wi-
thered, frail man lacking proper
attention or the
to make osit a wiH
^aiti ryditny becomes un-
brainwailind as she turns Scale's
fvidence to put away the Hmt-
-wfjile redeeming h^ finer
lies to the point *that she'll
'fit. a UgfMer sentence.
T Idgar Hoover must be smil-
■"i » oui national security "su-
P^ agencies led by the FBI.
CIA ar>d Army InteMigence keep
f^od guy» mrxrd up
m fun andtifif
is fboted^^"
taxpaverv
Muhammed Ali Makes S5 mil-
*^" cbbhiimg some foreign.
wrv-chcmd hoiiender with a
tiJi nose and beer belly in a farce
not exceeding our other super*
hero athletes demanding more
money than Catfish Hunter
Koiak, Barreta. Barnaby lones
and SWAT, plus a few private
investigators, rookie cops, lady
cops, blue cops »nd retired cops
a^^ the new rage of TV addias
wfKi enrich their existence
spending 5 fKMjIfs >a day eyes
glued to a box.
And talking dbotk cops. Chief
Davis's LAPO, bfse of the "great
police forces tn the U.S., pro-
tects our city from tf« further
rampages of crime^^nd lawless-
ness, robb^. rape ar>d murdipr.
by breaking up gay parties Mnd
booking tfiem on sex slavery
charges, wftile plamtng under-
cover officers in scfiooh to hnd
"Wit wh^^wekes por;
What next? t
Lechtick
Women's track
IF tlBCrSO, X PROMISE LESS
^^5S^^^ flUREAUCRACy, LOWER
TAXES, HIGHER EMPwayHENrT
INFtAnON GOMTROLS A»lD
_«»j^*V
In reply to Ian Bakker's edi-
torial published in the Wed
May Sih Datty Brum regarding
iilO UCLA women's track team
Whoever you are. Jan. you're
terribly mistaken about some-
thing. You daim tfiat tfie menri-
bers of this year's women's track
team are not tf>e Defending
il ChaaHHDns This is a
chiMishlv
t>y the lae of your foul Uo-
ftiage. These girh am Daiinriing
National Champions, and are
very pr€H»d to repreaent the
UCLA Bruina. f yrdieniioie. each
•nd every fm&mikm of the team
thii yeer h a diampion in her
oiam rifhc dnpiie your, degra-
Mha Bakker
" coach
Chuck
die HBdonel Chaii^ioMlMp has
remained here in the heiidi of
UCLA and fM CmM%. and our
B^ Bre eM bh tliB liack every
day. wBiliBi vBQf hm4 md very
dih tide,
hold.
IJhcfal Am
ztrt
heat
^^?;^"S- you're wrong Pi
(Editor's /9ole. IC^gy «f a Uudtnt
here )
I was struck by the appro-
priateness of Mr Pierce's cri-
ticism of ti4r, Skehon's article,
OPINION
"Cuns; tfie Shadow pf Death/'
» it ipH^ed to his own article.
Having Gun; WHI Use It" fMe
even has an error of his own,
like the one he points out in
Mr. Skehon's piece. We writes
then the maiority of
homicides are not only com-
mited by handguns but, indaed,
are not committed by firearms
ol any kind. ' Could he mean:
... the nr^iority of homicides
are not only committed . .? In
either case, it lacks seme.)
Why does Mr. Pierce make
that pointless allusion to the
American Revolution (replete
with phrases like "a little spot
called Concord Bridge;" "a
handful of farmers;" We know
our history, Mr. Pierce!) if he
» not retorting to "cheap emo-
tionalism." Is he then saying
that tfie Revolution was a strug-
gle to be allowed to keep fire-
arms? And »re tf>e gun control'
lobbyists an extension of tfie
tyrannical British of 1776?
Just as grating to a reader is
his noc-fo^ftophisticated "use of
half-truths'' in attempting to
minimize the evils of uncontrol-
led possession of handguns. Mr
fierce, why did the police, act-
ing in tf>e line of duty, find it
necessary to cause five 6ut of six
of the 30B handf^n deadis in
LA? Were they fifing at unarmed
people, gangsters, with podiet
"'^h^**^ or criminals with hand-
guns? Also what about the much
g. eater numbers of peoph» who
Kagy
were injured and perhaps maim-
ed lor life by handguns? They
cenainly shouldn't be omr-
looked in any discussion o( die
evih of handguns.
^^♦^ches tf>e preventative
•BiiBms of handgun pmrrMlgw.
to he saying that burglaries
would have been conrndited fcy
etiWgh
people who knew him
to know that he hnipi several
handgurH around the house, or
perhapi f>e has a sign over hit
front door re^din^i Beware!
Trespassers will have their brains
Wown out by my handguns?
Finally, no one is trying to ban
''all firearms " It is only the
har>dgurH which tf»ey ire trying
. to impose reasonable controls
on. Rifles are not as handy to
carry around in your pocket but
they 9rc certainly as effective for
protecting your home, or shoot-
ing animals or beer bottles
Ves/ it is true that people will
iwobably ahfvays kill people, no
maiter what controls are
imposed; human nature itself
»^ould have to be radically al-
tered to prevent all killing.
Handgun control is not tfie toul
solution but It IS a way to pos-
sibly lower the appalling statis-
tics (by all previous standards).
After all, murders have ne^er
been as frequent (per capita) in
past civilizations, nor Mre they as
frequent m other countries of
the world today. Of course
odier cuhurai and sociological
factors are at work, but I feel
that a smalf part of it. at least, is
ciue to tf>e iiKKdinate fondness
for guns on the part of many
people in tfm country Whether
tfiey Mre a majority is to be
More letters
\
Aborted
The purpose of this letter, in
response to Ms. Hale's letter of
the 15th regarding abortion, is
to criticize the way in which she
presented her views. I'm con-
fused whether Ms. Hale's objec-
tive in her letter was to state her
opinion of abortion (abortion
was the title of the letter) which ^
she didn't or to criticize past
opinions on abortion In either
case, it doesn't matter because
-'4kBPr«UB«.AIt
Nptl^Bk IB MBrlB?
she presented both rather poor-
ly-
Obviously, from Ms. Hale's
sarcastic tone, she disagrees with
anti-abortion opinions expressed
*JJP«»tissues of the Daily grum,
9M wfiere in f>er letter, may I
•sk. does sfie express why she
believes pest anti-abortion opin-
•ons to be, as she puts it. "dri-
vel."
Her letter ^entered on in-
•siting remarks aimed at pre-
vious student opinions becaiiae
of their so^alled ". . . hegathie,
talsely moral minutae and hair
splitting pompous preachings
formed from Sunday school at-
tendance." Became the tnue of
abortion h ahMhuely subjective,
how can Ms Hih say that their
r
Vf|BtlBBBVliMlB.liByi
are r?K>rally
One's opinion is not invalid
mhen dealing with subjective
topics (as long as reasom «yhy
the opinion was formed mt^
stated) or when disagreeing with
Ms Hales ideas. I fubmit that
9n anlde is worthless if it por-
sistt to jcritictze without juftify-
ItiB *he Briticism.
It Is my 9pmior\ that
Ms. Hale's letter is worthhoi not
because she disagrees with the
opinions of otf>ers but beoMie
her criticisms remain unjustified
due lo lack of expresaed m&mt^
why she criticizes in the first
pif ~
outdoor plant & pottery sale! »^» ^ rz.
ONE DAY ONLY - MAY- 12 - »:00-5:OOA ^1^
4-
special
Gr— t^ election of 6" piants diffenbachig. marblB
'"*■"'•••• hanging coleyB. — TIBHJ fpidor. ftMi(»y
'•9' ^M special 3^9
RadctoypolB^
« Va- • 1 iW • ctey Muc#rs - 2Sf -55f
Plaiza
Come to the Sludants Storo
Entrance — BliM nrnta I6r Wm
plenta b lavai. ackerman untory 825-7711
may 1? only 9 00 am to 5 00
p m
s
■Aan^k^
•»»t*im>mmmm^.m,'
I SEPI'S GIANT
SUBMARINE
15
e
discount on any
Giant Sepi
wiin this coupon
gpod through 1976
H
Miy Mil I tm nIHiM budn to ftl rM if ttg
Letters Letters Lette
Voodoo
rs
Unlike Oliver and H^rr'n in
their opinion of 5/6, members
of the Guyanese community in
Uh Angeles would be amused H
they condescended to read Mr.
Yogerst's column on our coun-
tryman James Cilkes. "Spirit
worship And voodoo/' or more
correctly, "obeah," is practiced
»n Guyana; Moreover, my gov-
ernment condones it. We will
continue to do so in lieu of
'- - ! ~,
*'■'. ■
1, ■ v
■'•
«
'V ■ * '
, .
■ . -U
• i. ; •■.
•
"Yankee spirits" such as credit
cards, Cadillacs and $300 suits.
We are 9ko quite happy with
our "jungle homeland." In that
iungle arc somft of the best high
schools in the Western hemi-
Habere where students aspiring
to be sportswriters are propWiy
taught physical and political
isography. Not all of us learned
to "run like the devii" My hum
^ime lor the 100 meter* %«ira'^
cyclone-aided 13.4. (I had to
slow down near the finish which
was at the edge of a clearing.)
Guyanese will not be oiiendM
by Yogerst's "jingoism." What
else could we expect from a
product of a grossly inferior
educational system and
generate culture?
Cofln K.
decided among the many candi-
dates in today's eleaion |
suddenly realized that an esscn-
tial and obvious student office
has been completely over-
^n^ university of over
30,000 people has a vital n«d
tor a Campus Fool.
This indispensable persM
should sit on the right hand of
the Dresidenu ki the iool W^
Lei the Fool sit on afi
commissions and attend all^ set-
sions o^ the SIC With hts frank-
ness he will brif>g campus issues
I^ r . ?^ pwiptctives let
the Fool be the conscience of
our elected officials and an om-
budsman of the students.
•< Oral Maiogy
Help Unicamp by
Fool
.. .^
u .5?-'"P'*» i-esponsibilities
«' "7." *>* >«W by our campus
otficuh came to my mind a I
trying your luck ^
Nedrlck's
Monte Carlo night
this Saturday.
UCLA STUDENT
5^
'««•« OF FAOILJL. . STAFF. AND STlCBfTS
PLUS PRirrS. MD GRAFFITI
I
LEGAL Ain PMOV!
iNCUDiNG -You're a Good rw, Charlie BRaw"
I
JOMm (X^RHOLT OF THE PRBiA StABE ThEATER
I
I^CLU)ING THE Beaux Arts Balu Tantasy Night*
♦Hours
Vlo^
«»
TICKETS PnD ^LL EVENTS MC
AVAILABLE IN GSM POTLATCH
"";»'K rukJftA*.
'V
rvtKUK
H
OFF
•
■
^■1
y \^
^^/y/^/YM
:d
«-. -.It. «d Si^tSi^^ •" «
^•Umu 200th bSJ»dir^** ***^ ^^
in* to puS^oS^ *o «,r. than try-
•tick to«th.r T^f • ^* "• *^^ i**^ to
find » <Sr^ ™** •^^ l*" «•• CM't
tlon or jUt JtJS.'*^ J:","' -J^^-
•oel«l wrt^ dl^LvT '^*^i*y o*^ * whole
coiifort In Mkilt, •upposod to Uk»
....^ !^^f »ionfy U d-i^^ .. ^^■■■■■■■■■■■M E ■■■■■■■■■■
«»• Ai»rlc« p.ople fro, SS*?^?" •oonoi^c and politl^^r7T^^^^^^""*'^^^HHBBABI
ait fictr^piS*:!^^ rr^ -t^«i*'t. -iJimS* TJ^* ^*"'«i"«. trying frciJr;Lj J^* ^'*^* '^*rAJ2u
^•■pnstratlons.
I ■ I I I • 1 1
'^1
• M jr • ^^ -^^ ' *" "wlaR the caU for the
^Y^e^njed the Rich for *„,
S^J^„I^em Off Our Backs
Ybars
, ' . >
IkTid fiomn
TM Atkins
KIIot Hgar
•Judith iM Eim
K«r»n IhoMs
Tba GhUton
Charlss Robinson
3t«Ts Duarts
^'i^tsntaa Pllura
Jolin Estrada
Robsrt MuUsr
liklJwr
Hicabssl Gslb
Toigr Alford
R«ul Gsrela
Son la ToQng
thsodors R. wmiass
Brad Tycahai
^^•^ Honros
Crsgory Hill
Indls dundher
Cynthia StsTsnson
John Fottsr
Bob BonhaA
•^••^ Uon Vatson
^Mui aoiisidt
I^nda Ball
S.L. rrj
Wohal Scholl
Monica KeGulra
Narla Rusda
^lips Garcia
fcb Lsslls
Hobsrt S. Ghlceso
vadlns F\jjlaoto
^"'•^ Bajnath
Patrick De Murphy
Stars Cain
''^''rtst Harson
niss Vaocsiaa Vast
Lsirrsnos O'Brlsn
B»b^ Hossa
■Btorlck Kltchsll
Roxanns taiii
Ellas llsgasii
I>Uns Kllndt
Jill Flshsr
Audrsy Ghanf
Wscsrio Lopss
^ fiMtsnrood
^^^•1 O'Hsam
•■•Anna Robsrtson
Kare Viidiin^rad
Jocslyn Wong
Aisanns Conaalaa
^Ujiimn L. Wlnklsa
C^uy 1^ Eusr
J'illls Johison
B. ds la Rosa
BiLnlal Gonsalss
Luis Hsmandss
Oi^ryl islson
J^ Ki^itsr
lAiV Carbajal
PmHAM THmOAY mis. 7pm
Uslls Sohaffsr
Juan y, Fernandas
Patrick Story
Btsphsn Santasarla
Albsrt Uhltaksr
Linda Vsnla
Yciio TaiULrl
M. Carl Gilford
SUjiianls E, Barbsr
Harrlst Tanoum
Jay R. Tumsr
Halga Giitisrrss
2^Uns Sadlsr
Jin QmOJi
Akin Sinclair
tttisl
Revohrtionory Student Brigade
ror more mfor miction' y^o-iau-^ j^»rc ■ .
^i' lit UU. d« fctiln .aik
Qrpvjr WfoB
EARS PIERCED FREE
with purchase of
7.95 Earrings
Birk's Jewelers of i^estwood
950 West%«ood Blvd.
Los Angeles/ CA 90024
Phone 477-9009 879-5313
■f '.
K,.
DATSUN
"Acres of Datouns'
Student, faculty, and alumni
ftiet discounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
* 684-1133*
LOYOLA MARYMOUNT SUMMER SCHOOL
prcMmts
"'?iy.^ Qj^ff^CARIBBEAN
A 19 day (July U - Aug 1) tea/aif study lour will &a<^ from Lm An«*w ««
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o« Sanu Monica College. Proiauor o< Utin Ammican HiMorv 3
conduct the Uudy The pr.ce, b»ed on double iau«,^ "j?^' tT*
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ft
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(714)
THE COUNCIL ON EDUCA-
TIONAL DEVELOPMENT
(CED) will be considering course pro-
posals for the Winter Quarter 1977, and is
prepared to sponsor innovative courses
of genuine academic quality which
would be of interest to the campus
community. Such course proposals will
be due in the CED Office no later than
Monday. May 17, 1978. If you are in-
terested in making a proposal to the
Council, please obtain the appropriate
forms in the Office of the Council on
Educational Development. 3121 Murohv
Hall. ^ ^
»v
ent/QPt/Q i nmenb indiGx
Taper's Chekhov: Three SIstere' too many
% AiImm Parfrey
Take away the teiiftc, dc-
f pairinj mood irom a per-
formance of Chekhov*!
Strtsrs, and whet you
left is a boring tnmwy of the
greet playwright's tntemions.
Such is tlie Mark Taper
Forum production, playing in
repertory with Aafeiea, Cnies
Commy aad Aad WiMre SIk
Noteiy Kbows.
Sieters, besides
Ivaaov, is Lhekhov*8 only play
dubbed a *'drama** by the
author. Judging by the Taper
production, you would never
be able to guess iTIunir'JiBlBfB
is a drama. Tht show is a
farce. The audience begins
giggling early on when Olfa
(Tyne Daly) blurts out her
lines like a pre-adolescent
surfer girl with a stuffed Mse.
Often fundamentally wrongs
director Edward Parone*t
blocking hat his actors
r
UNICEF
SEMESTER INTERNSHIP
AlifOf1(/Slutf|r.Prognm
Theater Arts' *West Side
upstaging tl __ _ ^^
other Sally Jacobs' shaky and
dyifttnctioMi set provides
more harm than help For the
«#flien, F. Mitchell Dana'i
?i^li!i"^* •re competent
UafiiiMately. Duhi*i soldier's
uniforms seem right out of
■•fcas !■ Toyiud.
The acung u what finally
the show While one
with Parone*! "no
false Bntuh accent** diaum, to
itve Tuscnbach (Oavid Ofden
Stiers) pronounce "cretin" as
"crouton- is going too far Lou
Goeecti as Vershmm speaks
with a measured Continental
•coBMti — interesting in itself,
but jarring when he converses
with the' other cast members,
each one poaaessing * decidely
nasal Southern California
twang
The characterizations run
the gamut from absurd to
obmae Janes Ray*s Kulygin is
•jatrtooo. Clwbutykm, UBoaDy
•^''^■•^ tOBie dignity in worthy
prodnctiom, is played by Berry
l^roefsr as a Skid Row sot
doing an Edmund Gwenn
imitation.
Except for Laurie Kennedy's
Mutably adiaphaaoMs Irina, the
cast lacks energy, diaiension.
latelhgence or ensemble.
Undramatic pMHCS liopsr. cues
•r« lazily picked up The cast
seem merely to speak their
lines and not "listen." an
involvement so very important
to the suooeas a( any serious
play
The fu^ two acts ground so
ttttmercilously that it became
ripe time for a aumbcr of
audience members, iacludiiig
this reviewer^ ia.^ke evasive
maneuvers and ditch the show.
If you think this action was
irresponsible, witness the
irresponsibibty ot the Taper
production.
m
Comnfiunity organizing for global awa
ona waak August training
For tnfornnation a application aaa Tina at *
Ackurwian or caN 825-oa31 . Application 0#adN
A;213
na: May 21
•y Howard Posner
"Uneven" has been in the d^ionary for centuries just waiting
for the theater arts department's production of ^est Side Story
to come along The show (in MacGowan Haill through Sunday)
combines devastating energy with grade-sdMol slapstick and
^ junior high^ «M^nai4y. 4t; 4akea^o4d^ieps^lo^^ and-Hior
undcrcuu itself with idiocy If it succeeds at all, the pathos comes
from the earnestness of the star-crossed lovers.
Director Tom Orth has apparently decided that Arthur J
Uurents' italian-gang Romeo/Puerto Rican- Juliet story cannot
be done on tiie terms that made it a success on Broadway and as
a movie^ Todsly, the cool-talking gang members sound just a bit
silly, and Orth doesn't let us ukc them too seriously — a wise
choice that gets smothered in bad ones.
'prth's idea of ensemble n to have the minor characters
cojMtartly dowmng and mugging for attention The Sharks hu
each other with pillows dunng ^ America -^ The Jets shove e«l|
!ii iV.?""^ *"^ ^•^ ""^ ^^ "^' * *^^ "^ "<>« ^n»y "n-kes them
all a little too juvenile and delinquent, but winds up eliminating
the individuality of the gang members, m that their lines and
actions arc jumbled together - half of what they say ii^
unintelligible - so nobody really cares when Bernardo and Riff
dK, simply because they aren't real enough to worry about In an
attempt to make all his cait members equal, Orth has
paradoxically struck a blow for the ster system by insuring that
his production lives or dies with iu pnncipak
^^ J]?^% intnguing departure from conventional sUging is
Mitchell Guitlieb's set; a pile of mattresses on the Idt^SU^
drug store) chain Imk fences aa>;a, the staat, and a three-t^
an unlikely *Story
structure of street pipes and beams, the top of which is a good
tiftaen or twenty feet from the floor.
All of these things arc for chmbing on.in, and over, and thev
are used constantly The Sharks do gymnastics, the Jets bounce
rov/JI*!!''^"^*' everyone climbs fences, and even petite, sheltered
lovebird Maria spertds an alarmmg amount of time swooping
oack and forth two stories above the floor
The sheer animal physicality makes the dance numbers
exciting, intriguing, oltcn huak>rous. and always eftective The
fulTl^^f^^^ <^'^h's) iflf both strong and subtk and the dancer^
_Stin, two hours of fencc-climb.ng can be a drag, and some of
iT "^'""P^ ^'?"' ^ "^'"^"^ '^^y Tony (Steven Memel) and
Maria (Terry Iten) tend to finish beautiful love ballads and
p*aaoe on each other like courting cats Couples always look as
though they arc about to jump into bed, and lor all anyone cna
tell from the set, they do ^
Be that as it may, Iten and Memel keep this ^est Side Ston
Irom falUng apart completely Memel is a superb lovcstruck
-fTmrint who can float through kilhng and death witJiout
losing his innocence, his ideahsm or his voice
Iten man^ to convmcrls Maria through sheer force of
personality, despite an accent thai advertises -* WASP" every third
or fi^Tih iime she opens her mouth (a problem shared by severaf
sharks - the only time Amu speaksto Tony, iHe corrects his
i>panish, which in this case is conspicuously better than hers)
Iten's Marui is kept at close quarters by jealous brother
Bernardo, by jealous director Onh, and by her not being a
dancer a disadvantage Orth gtrts around by using bodies to
fraane her on sugc.
On Campus
Z^". • ^"^^ '"^ carry over the orchestra m fully^ored
moments, expressive enough to carry the anuiing, and aoneous
enough to be itself an object of attention SheTs alaolhTw^
member of the cast who is always in tune " "~ '"^ ""^^
hJ^''?!^'^ Bernstein reserved the melodies, and Steven Sond-
heim the poetry, for Tony and Maria The other dMurters net
unfamiliar chromatic lines that are in many ways harder to sing
And since the secondary roles are done by actors and danceis
ngi singers, the resulu arc often painful The Jets and Sharks
intone thek parts in rough approximationsfof the intended puch
Trevor Thomas and the orchestra deal fairly effectively with
tnr problem by drowning them out mostrof the Mie Only Iten
"wk ^'"^^ ^" ^^"**"^"^*y ■***^^ themselves heard.
When it isn*t inuiiki^g sjmam, the oidttstra is produana
good, clear har^Hlriving sound But the strings tend to go very
sour in tender and tragic momems, as does the production as a
whole The kmfinp of Bernardo and Riff, for example, are
followed by Officer Krupke uking out a bottle Rke a uniformed
• Red Skelton, and situng down for the entire mtermiasion, a^ if
to tell everyone they shoakln^t worry about it
It that's odd, te casting of drug store owner Doc and tough-
talking Officer Shrank as women mnkas even less sense The
former seems to be an attempt to utilize the formidable acting
luients of Nancy Parsons, who nonetheless doesn't do wonders
with the role. Shrank is deah with and referred to juat aa tlwi^
"he" u«re a man, and lie" is particularly bniul to the pmp.:
The effect is a symptomatic "wait-a-mmute" every time Shrank *
walks on, as her incongruous presence reminds everyone that
— -....,w.«- fiction. That's called bad drama
Preview V^ncente Nfinnelli
Cyd Chnriw and Fred
Astaire are the sUrs ol
Vincentc MinnelU's highly
touted musical TW land
^••©■t ihowing tomght at
7:30 in Melnitz 1409 Min-
nelli himself will be in at-.
•fn^M«. •• a highlight of
the FOm and TV Studanii
^Mociation tribute to the
tor
Preview:
Ken FfeDer
^
. ^^ Pi'ipMB is the begin-
ning of what will hopefully
be an annnal event hnmwiBi
a filmmaker
The Coop Concert
is presenting Ken Heller
with SMaa Thomas "Sit-
^ag la** tuAasr in tiie Coop
from 5pm ~ 7pm. The dun
will be jaaytaa **$^<^ ^"^
couldn't play lor our
mothers aloiig with a
mu&icnl nndley deaiipRed^
improve d^estion." Admis-
J
New World Pictures' ^
"^J^P*«y»n« ctfywide, is an' attempt to dm^M
spoof atem IT explofUtion pictures. Des^
*>ornc intnguing nuunents, the resuh is basically
a B production.
Patrick Hobby's scnpt follows a fomifiar
formula A beautiful country girl (Candice
Kialson) arrives in Hollywood hoping to
^oroe a star. A long way from her dream, she
>nly finds work m low budget extrav^Hmas
crammed with violence and lex
For the rest of the film. Riabon struaples to
rise above this garbaae. But she still hastime to
accidcmly serve aa g^^ay driver in a bank
f^owup, fall IB love with a youi^ screenw-iter
'Jeffrey Kramer) and almost ait iMad by a
^cx-crazed pr cyaotinaiM.
These situations raar <r<Nn slnpsta^, as a
"whod-orieniad disector diaamnaa aantivation
*'<h a stunt driver, to the pathos of a surlet's
Jcath Altlioagli H^My meeivci sok credit for
crccnwriting, liaayntfud ■autunfd flows so
-^^venly that the uae of onfy one script is
oubtful
along with Amy Jones, seem to nave edited tlm
film so that a tone shift occurs juat aa lie
prevtoos one grows tedious. Jleie are §dm4
moments, however, particularly when Kramer
and Riaison are escorted by Ihair aaent (Dick
Miller) to the drive-in movie paemiere of their
effort.
drunkenly disgusted and ^^^^^
the film to be stopped The projectionist
recognizes her as tlK aexpot he*s baan wntchiM
and attempu a pass Kramer and Miller
to the fescue and the fight ends as
ungled in celluloid, tumbles info
tectofs* arms exclaiming. -| lour Hollywoodr
Miller contributes the film's best prrfarmnnii
as the agent, a cross between Yogi Bear, Sanu
ClMB and Rocky Graziano OmaM, he is a
lovnbk oaf who d«cs his best to fmd a job for
a client, whether it be a girl or the python he
keeps in his dsak.
After Hollywood BaalMaai ends its theatri-
cal run. it will undoubtedly enjoy an indtfimii
run oo the late show with miiar such alof^ «»
Hew s Angels an
^^( ^// O^hghtiutty Informal
Th^ ICE HOU3E
24 NOtTM SIfNTOa A
PASAOiNA. CAllKMNU SIISS
NCSEtVATIONS MUrroy 1-9943
ShnwftfUM. Tuas.. VV«d . Thurs a:30-10Ji
fr\ a Sat 8:30- 10:30- 12:ai .
Sunday 8:30 Show a Haotsnanny
I
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May il-ia
Mf a - jhe modem
toHi Quaytai
QEOIQC MILLER
\.^ON a MALIA
■roWHTfliaAY k BATUmaAT
CffS)
TAKING
OFF H
«££f lljay AT TNiaCMANNTNCAfiil
JJJjWSSSiaiiSlPMdVilllit VKlAfii Ctarmwni
nrsUuifiSSi*- '- iMPaSiifrminOiiw
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•NtrmcaMT l\AIS Com Um
I
t
HILLEL
WORKSHOP
on how to
GET JOBS
£specwliy for the Summer will be conducted by
JOEL COHN, Head of Project '
— .3aL.(!i.
VJettincEi
L
'etting C mployment L eads for I eenagers
Wed. May uTvidO pm
kem to interview, fill out applications,
make contacts, ask for salary etc
FREE DINNER SERVED
Htlgafd 474-1531
THE HAZARDS OF BEING MALE
Male Self Hate
Earth Mother is Dead
The Lost Art of Buddyshfp
The Gentile Goddess; Avenger of the
Jewish Princ«M, Shiksa-Guru to the
Jewish Prince
with Herb Goldberg
H»r» OaMhwig. «tO . PtoHmut «( PtycMoiegy CcMemia Swt
UrMv«r«ity. Let AmqMm: cHnical ptyctiolOBWt in prrvat* pracUc*
•wtttor of TIM MHai* ^ •■!■( IMa, (HnMM Mm MMi el Hi
MiMtolK H* w alaooe-Mthor of CtmOm AMMHtaN. »Wi Or
Bach
Sunday. May 23 7-10 p.in.
I
AlUo AktU^I;
$2.00 memtMrs non membars $2.50
UHC - SOO NUgard
('a
^ ...
I
r . 1
1
f Worki by iL
composers
^
,\
V-
3
.. JI^Ti*^* "^ 1^'" ^"■PIMll W> tomcthing trad-
"-TiBiiy M MMp SMrd on thii aunpus wiU be
Schoenbcrj H«JI. Three muMc majon. Bruce I
Rocky Dmm. aatf Jeff Mw. .re .Jl in the rin*] .
oi prepVBtMii to preMiit an hour o{ orioiiuJ
compositions as the culmination of a p«
by Brode early ImI ipring quarter.
Brade. a compoKr. arranger, and French bora
puyer, apphed for and was awarded a PwiiBM's
Underpaduaie Fellowship with the help of (acukv
member David Morton. »cuny
"Fellowships on this campus " said BMie "ate
traditionally awarded to science siudenu Thev''rc not
often won ^ students m the aru, but then wSin
they re not often applied for Part of the problemis
still that to many people the artt are nof considered
II
Ml Aad i thinlr ir^b^ioins to set
fets better" • • •"
The PtesidcMs Fellowship m awarded to out.
«undin« students in specialued araa. «f achiev^m^,
^ ^l*-* ."'Sf!^. |o carry out a .p«»l p^jea
toes with rt In Brodes case, the spedalpI^ZM
himwiopportunitv to direct the Jan Ens^bk ui
•Mart of his works. «• well at those of other
I Review
American Y
Symphony
h-f„'°^.riL*'* *•* P™»««'on for this concert has
iSLi Ji ^^-"^- "^ "^ ''n.-O'k has been
r?T*^.'V * '?'^**''1 "wber of the Jatz
•orfc l-.K^' ^_5fl "^y opportunities to
1^-11 .^^!??^**"'^-^ •«^«"' of their
t^^Sr performed by the group in
Jil*^^'u" **'"* '■"«»«i«» 'MO the noon concert
and performer, has ebminated many problems with
••"' -.rt
The Mehtas have always
liked to do things m a big way,
and occasionally they gci to do
things in a very big way — two
wccki ago, Zubin Mehu con-
ductcd the massive Mahler
Eighth at the Music Center,
m4 Sunday nigkt in Royce
Hall father Mchli conducted
the American Youth Sym-
phony and choir supphed by
Rofcr Wagner in the slightly
Jest massive Mahler Second.
The rcsuh in both cases was
very big grand, bold, strong,
and not terribly subtle.
It ukes a very good
orchestra, which the American
Youth Symphony is, to play
Mahler It tkkes a gieat or-
chestra, which the AYS doesn*t
pretend to be, to bnng Mg hier
off with clarity and precision.
The orchestra atucked the
work with fire and asatuanga,
but still managed to slip up
enough to remind everyone
that they are relative neo-
phytes. The stormy first move-
ment and colossal choral finale
came off ^cst, largely because
of big and noble sounds from
the low brass.
respect lo fpersonnel. r#ligafial ftnie, an^ ^.
■•"■^w ipMg. •^rm auniAg at directing a km^'
said Brode, -^md whiJe I'm stiU a stiMlem it's^Sy
helpful to work with people wIm> know ymmlmd
know your work Gary Gray (director) has bicTa
tr^mgniMM jgjp m that in his band students arc
actually aMawHirf to write tiuHa.-
One donent aided to the btod for this concert i.
an amplified stnng quartet. -J haven't worked with
strings much before," ewphasiird Brode, **aiid Ihev
have ^ych a unique sound; it will be interadog for
«e M • compoaer and arranger to set how their
sound aogmenU the hand ** ^^ ^ "^ ""^ ^*«^
All three coamoMis will be co«dMeli% their own
works^ In addiuon to the new tunee each hag written
lorthe oonoert, Davis will conduct his tmmmmmmL
^H^ttos,- Mar will offer -Submerged," and^Brode
willpresent two pieces - "Lost in The ShufTle" ^
Spectral Lines.
Mezzb Marvelee Caruiga
sounded ^ bit perfunctory in
the fourth movement, while
soprano Delcina Stevenson
was rather more expressive and
impressive in her short solos in
the finale.
—Howard Pi
Bess Karp
Those who doubt that good
(hiqgi still come m small pack-
eges should have gone to Bern
Karp's harpsichord reciul i"
Little Theater, Schocnbcrg
Hall, Friday night.
• Karp opened the recital with
the performance of seven
Renaissance works, notably
two delightful pieces by Wil-
ham Byrd. all played in a
refreshing md wpiriicd style. In
keeping with Baroque tradi-
tion, Ms. Karp improvised on
the basic chords of J IC Fjf
Fischer's "Urania,'' showing
imagination and cieatjvity n
addition to skillful technique
Karp obviously shaied Che
audience entluMMBai .^^Jpf
Haydn's S«hIb No. 21 kV,
for she wag smiling as she
played the Presto Unfortu-
nately, the piece was inter-
rupted twice bv the ringing of
the ckna-out bdl, which
provided thoroughly un-
pleasam counterpoint; future
performers are advised to bnng
wire cutlers.
Those who ingigt that good
music for the harpsichord has
not been written since the i8th
century wUl cha^e their minds
on hearing Henri Lazarofs
works foi* this instrumem. Ui>*
iikc so many 4x>mposerB who
•ccm to revel in bruuhzing
their instruments, Lazarof dis-
plays seagadvity and restiaint
in composing for the. relatively
de^kmtt tones of the harpai-
chord.
An impiessive performance
of Bach's Partiu No 6 in E
minor concluded the program.
Karp returns on the 21st with
the UCLA Baroque Ensemble
in a concert devoted to J S
Bach.
In iu
Thurber 11
t form,
H If gMariiig more appkioae
for James Thurber's writings
than for William Windom's
portrayal of the great Amer-
ican humorist.
As presented in Royce Hall
Saturday night, the one-naif
•how is uneven both in concept
and performance. The material
shifts from Thufher cartooiau
with captions narrated and
sometimes explained bv
Windom, to his humorous shot
stories and Fables for Oar
Ji"Mf to a pair of poignant
depictions of human
and lonelinagg.
Windom flubbed several of
the cartoon captiom but de-
Im^aed the college audience by
referring to one cartoon as
rhaaarflor Young. The actor's
repertoire of character vais
at this point ig very shm, ai
in relating the dozen or so
short stories, he Calls too easily
imo the same intonations and
inflections jigain and again.
When it does work,
the show is
Windom hiu his pnee m the
•econd act, describing
Thurber's collection of "Broad
9*«*ralities" such as: **Peach
ioe cream never tagi
as you thiiik it will;'
don't drink iMae" and
are no pianos in Japan."
Such slightly bent trutgOH
reflect the illogical logic A^f
made James Thurber laaKWB,
and if Windom works on his
performance, they could carry
Tharher II on a long and
••cahhy tour of one-jiight
J
''V
graduating seniors . .
?n?.*i!l ^ S^^«"«»' Stor» GraduaUon Center
for all kinds of useful information and things!
graduation giftg
Jj^a faw of tha many, many gm
L»CLA wrrttwatch - ta Jg \
UCLA clock (not shown) - gSja
^>CLA AnnataJa aand-moldad muga,
P*alaa, aahaays - can tm
UCLA paaasr.mugs. engravaMa - f1_
UCLA glisinare highball old fashioned
tankard, wina. wine dacantar. ashtray -
individually. 75a-i jg; giMaes (sat of 8) -
UCLA iawalry: tavaiisii from SJa; tia ham
from 4.75; pinkia ringa. 740
» ' ■ '»'i»'t^^i^<rtr. '
1 -
for information
All necoaagry knowMoa on one shoot -
where to get your graduation announce-
ments, where to get your official portrait f^
where grggnation cerenrtoniM are and
what time, pick up your chM:k list now
b ^avel. acdarman umkm.
7711
ttnifs 7 45-7 30; fri 7:46-6 30. tat 1(M
UCLA walnut daak itama.'
twokends from 14.71; mamo t)ox 3.7g;
Mihtray 7 Ja; plaqua ZTM; all can have an-
*^^ P^aaua for 1^ extra plus awgia^inu.
10 Mara/2 00. 15( aach additional latter
^PP^^ciation cartificata putting aon
c*;ughtar. hyiiand. wita or friand thiwugh
UCLA - ^ •* ^^^
1000
Hay den to travel state
SACRAMENTO -i- United
Sutes Denaocratic Senate can-
rtiditr Tom Hayden will hegin
a fiOO flMk rampaiga lour of
Cahforma this wmk, with one-
third being done on foot.
Hayden, in an interview yes-
terday, said thousands of sup-
poffiars wiy join hhB hi a 21-
day joomey of 10 Califomia
dliM. BcpMMig Thursday from
the State Capitol grounds,
HajidiB will move down the
stale and end his walk June 1
at Saa Ysidro anr the Mexi-
can border.
Saa Hnnt, Hayden*s piOM
aide, said the former anti-war
activist hopes to -shoekaihcr-
300 or 400 miles of his tour
The trip is designed to have
Tom show his dedication lo
the people of Califomia and
his commitment to gnHifWOls
political action,** he said.
The walk is Hayden*s latest
cafl^paign effort in an uphill
battle to unseat Democratic.
iiKumbent John Tunnay.
In a Mervin Field California
preference poll in mid-Apnl,
Hayden was unable to rise
above the 15 per cent figure
where he has rrinaiMi il from
the beginning of his auniiiaign
Tunney, hosaracr. has risen in
Novel form a success
"i»Oft from 51 per cent to 51 15) and particuhuiy Tunacy*!
^^ ^"^ ypostioa 10 a national hcakb
Hayden anal fruasaity ten
cnuoMtdd Taaney for a lack of
adipandent tWkw^kit^
FasMaMlds tfdi^
'Tunney is a caricature of
*Jerry* Brown. He thinks this
year's fsshianabis ikmg m to
be agamst government spend-
ing. So rather than pick the B-
I hanibir« he picks national
healdi insurance and says *let*i
cut that/
"Rather than just throwing
up your hands and saying Tm
against government interven-;
Uon, you could say kt*i have
l^vernnMnt it woukl then be
all right to have a government
health program.**
As lenator, Hayden said he
would work "arm in arm- with
consumer advocate Ralph
Nader, in exposing corruption
in government and *big buai-
ness* Hayden said he would
open field offices throughout
California staffed day and
night with nhe besl Nader's
Raiders and conrmunity or-
ganizers I could find "
The Democratic candidate
mid he is iindrcidad whathar, if
he loses, he would support
Tunney in the general election
Tu^iney has also been en-
dorsed by ami aT the stale's
well known Democrau. Hay-
<^^ has laomed scattered sup-
port from the r^anmiiitii kh.
His enrlniaanwnu indnde the
Cahfomia Democratic Canli-
tion, the Uhilad Farm Workers
•ad politicians such as As-
semblymen Kan Mend nnd
Congressman Ron Delluns
both of Berkeley
Hayden, however, has
that much of Tunney's _
is "soft** and that "nMiat voim
•re undMdadr Haydens suc-
cess rests heavily on his appeal
to young voters in the June 8
primary.
H* ndtfaC ^Young people
don't rsgiMii to vote as much
•• older people who own pro-
perty. Young people are more
on the loose.**
AggnMnlve ilanat
Haydca hfs taken a more
h0RSBfve sianee against Tun-
ney on the isanes than earlier
in the campaign. Now Hayden
IS, quick to point to Tunney's
campaign contributions from
big business, Tunney*s support
for deregulation of nature 1 gM
prices, his opposition to the
Nuclear Initiative (Proposition
Universgl on top for 77
LOS ANGELES (AF> - The
networks have announced their
television schedules for the
1976^77 scaaon and the winner
and still champion of the
studios i% Universal Television.
It's no surprise. The only
surprising aspect to the new
schedule is how far Universal
scores ahead of its competttors.
The studio will have 14 hours
of weekly programming in
prime time, plus another hour
and a half that has already
been ordered for mid-i
Next in line is Columbia
television with five hours,
followed by norman Lear's
Sign talk ...
ICantenadfi
Irleinentary
Pate 4)
company with three and a half
hours. MTM Enterprises and
Quinn Martin Productions
with three apiaoe.
How docs Universal do it?
**lt boik down to providii^
the best product," says Univer-
sal TV president Fraiik Price
with understandable pride
"We've had interesting prem-
ises that have intrignad the net-
works and in the past two or
three years have done things
that havjc set new patterns.
"For Jnaanoir^ich Man,
Poor Man." ft was a new form
for commercial television in
the United Sutes — drama-
tizing g novel The networks
; had never presented a
that was sclf-canaelling
"But hacauK of its
the show led to two others:
**Rich Man. Poor Man. Book
\r and "Best Sellers."
"We've aho had s
our approach to snows that
would ftt into the family hour
"The Six Million Dollar Man,"
"Bionic Woman" and "Emer-
gency" And in the area of cop
-Annn, we have come up with
the best quality series. I'm
ulking about "Kojak," "Baret-
ta," "Columbo" and "Rockford
Files."
Most \:ritics Would agree
that Umversal has iifprovad ha
product from the bland, fac-
tory-style series of lU earlier
yaws. Not that it doesn't still
have its losers witness this
seasons ''Ellery Queen," "City
of Angels" and "Sara." But
Umversal has attracted top^
flight producers aad writers
with promises of the chance to I
make quality shows. ^
-41
AiNIVEItSITY mSCOPAL
~ COMMUNITY
fudiavhi: Sundays «p^.
Thursdays^ 12.-ii
Tha Chipal: StO Hdgard (at W<
Chaplain: Tarry I]
llTfS NalioMl Blvd. Lm
Prime Rib S4.95 from 5 to 7
Ed HoUinfsworth and Carolyn Coy
Fri A Sat Nighti
ttrtd of yMtorday'a hair?
HAIR T€i)Ay
For whafs happaning now
atyling for man and woman
Jarry Raddlng't Jfiirmacfc products
For appotntmant call 478-6151
^IM. ttiru sat
3.00 - OFF first haircut
wHh this ad
1105 Olandon Ava Wastwood vuuo*
t ♦
lates
AMERi-CAL
1494
Call Day or Nl«lit - (11 9) 47B«B7t1
and
summer camps for the deaf.
The club is currently making
irrangements to t^mmm a day
camp at UCLA on Sunday.
June 6 Deaf children ages 7-12
Will be invited Members plan
to hold a bake sale Wednes-
day, May 19. on Brum Walk.
in order to raise money for the
c^nip, the gaals of which are-
to provide children with a day
of '*fun and self-awareness."
Levy taad.
The dub co-ipoasorcd a sign
language production of the
N«y GothpeiL which was pre
■ealad haat ort May 7 by the
theater department of Cal
Sute, Northridge
The top phonty of the club.
•tiip; Levy feels that "the
tke hatlar the possibilities for
nmunication between the
aad the hearing"
In ofdar to alow for scha-
daoflkls, the Bruin Sign
Language Club is roeetiog
twice a week this qiMrter
Mondays at 3-5 pas in Bum
?7I8 and Thiiiadan .ii ft ,1Q 1 1
Engineering Graduate Student A
NEEDS NEW LEADERS TO CONTINUE:
i — COFFEE HOUR —
— GRAD LOUNGE —
— PIZZA PARTIES
NO OFFICERS MEANS NO SERVICES
AND NO REPRESENTATION
EGSA needs engineering graduate students to fill the posts of President Admin-
istrative V.P.. AcadenDic V.P.. Treasurer/Secretary, and Departmental Representa-
tives. Continuation of current services and tfie providirf^of new se/vices is essential
INTERESTED?
Visit us in 4405 Boelter Hall (open 8am-5pm) and sign up on the Mackbomni
(Name, Phone Number, and :D!Spartnr)ent)
ELECTIONS WILL BE HELD I
am in Ackerman
■ ^^
*m
r-
jGunman kills three
f
ILNOXVILLE^lcnn Af
A MM iMk a rilr froai a tex
aad began fihtg at TMmimm
isle a lunchimie crowd on die
city*t MMia bufinett street
^Miiiy Tbrae panoiu were
killed and !«• others were
woyjad bcfoit tbr guumm
wtnmiimwi^ authorities said.
*Tbe man was just sunding
tbc[f Jurning around with the
CB . . It souadad like a
mb was going off. We ran
back m a store. Everybody was
Mraaining,'* said Mrs. Roaco
Vaadergriff. one of the injured.
Patrolman James Lewis said
the gunman, identified by
police as Robert Daniel Patty,
43, Knoxvilk, surrendered to
No
filed ummim^,
"I was waikiag beat acrq«
Cay Street and heard the
shots.** Lewis said. **Tharc
were five or six of them. I ran
across the street and the aMW
MtFrendefed to me.**
The daad includad two wo-
men and a man, pnlioe taad.
Tne dead were not identified.
Mrs. Vandargriff, who was
nicked on the right iag by a 30>
30 nfle bullet, said
with her hualHMd whan the
_ihooting began. Mxa^
derghfr was treated for her
wound at the scaae. The fourth
person wounded in the incident
was hit m the arm.
Louis RuamlL mnaagv of a
stofc where lOBe of the crowd
sought refuge, said he was
inside the store when the
shooting bi(pm.
**! baaed one ilMt — at least
it sounded like a thoc,"
said **When 1 hMfd the second
^j
the floor."
rU said a man stumbled
the front door and
shouted, **rve been ihot. Call
an
I
IT'S NOT TOO LATE!
MAKE UP TWO YEARS
THIS SUMMER
AND EARN ABOUT $500 WHILE DOING IT!!
START THE ARMY ROTO ADVANCED COURSE
NEXTEALL
Lucille Ball...
The victim fell to the floor
wijth a bullet wound to the
c^eat. He was dead on arrival
at a hoepital.
>,i
- AND MAS STUKNTS
SEE RCPtESENTATIVE ON CAMPUS
lOOM 131
MEN'S 6VM
': CALL t25- ns4
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD
. tSlZii
(Continued from Fnfe 1)
they'd had enough c\ _
As proof af the character's
continuing popularity, she said
that the Lney series is tele-
vised in 79 countries today.
Ball defined her technique in
making people hmgh as **be-
hcf-
"I beUeve what I do. You
believe. That's what I beheve,"
she exphiined, receiving more
applause from her audience.
"But the word comes firsts-
she continued, crediting the
writers with the snccaas of her
shows and all comedy shows.
**What would we do without a
writerT*
, FergcC whnrs fnpynisd
To break in, according to
Ball, a writer should forget
anyone who tells you what's
already happened (on tele-
vision).
-It's your world. You come
up with the new ideas, the new
twists." she said. ''You can
learn from our mistake and
our sMocesses, but make your
own world. It*» hard to be
«iiinal with ail the repeats
and spin-offs.
*Their whole hfe is a spin-
off.- she added, turning to
^■•cr. And remember, there's
no such thing as *gtve up/ **
Commenting on the tele-
VMion of todav Ball said that
the long prograau. auch as
movies are taking over.
*The few half-hour shows
left are on theu^ death-beda."
she said. ''We saw it comii^
years a^o."
''Television is goii^ for re-
ality now, and you're buyii^
It," she continued "It used to
be dreams, entertainment, to
forget ranhty.'*
''f was shocked by AB hi the
Fanrfly and Mniide at first.
Now I'm sorry I'm not doii^
it," she said, adding, "But Lucy
couldn't do it."
Responding to the question
of whether the popular series,
Mary HartnMn, Mary Harl-
■Hw is the "Lucy of the 70s,"
Ball said, "I hope not "
Tl think the Mary Hartman
character is a cop-out. It's very
strange. I thought they were all
drunk I didn't know what it
was," she said
Ball recounted some of her
unusual experiencef in doing
the Lney series and identified
her current comedy favorites as
Woody Allen ("he's got sttch a
kinky little jnind") and Carol
Burnett.
Ball sponsors a comedy writ-
ing ootn petition through UC-
LA, which awards $2600 each
y^^ to sele<;tcd new writers
who submit manuscnpts.
U N DERG R AD U ATES
at any of the following
ions from 9:00 am-5:00 pm
Wednesday, May 12 and
Thursday May 13. * "
*»^Vr I
Kerckhoff Plaza
Bombshelter
Bunche Hall
Pauley Pavilion
(Northern end)
(
Rolfe Quad
Dickson Square
(Royce-Powell)
Inverted Fountain
(Knudsen Hall)
Vote May 12. 13
"V.l>
>
\
.(',
■i>
I )
- Tha %nm ml Via
i .-l"^V/^
AN INVITATION TO GIVE A DAMN
ABOUT YOUR STUDENT ASSOCIATION
Doaa anybody gtva a d£^*> Or. with all dua
fvapact to Chancellor Young and apoloQiaa to Rhett
Butlar. why, should thay?
Did you aver wondar atoot how the Coffaa Houaa
came into being'' Vou probably thought the Admin-
iatration Oecided we needed 31 flavors on campus
Oo you raaseiiiber the Students Store before the
barricades went up'' Chanoaa are you can t
remaNlbai when ASUCLA didn't do Lecture r>k>lea
Or, if you've waited in the Gypsy Wagon lines lately,
you've probably noticed tbe conatruction of the
North Campua Studer>t Facility tHJiiding which wiH
fvpiaoe n.
Have you ever cor>aidePad who is responsible for
all thoae textbooks thet usually are. but sometimes
arant. in the Bookstore virhen you r>eed them? Do
you ever wonder about your Burrlto In the Coop
(who wouldn't wonder) or the piice of Xgroxing in
PAD? «
The
la Us
ASUCLA
do all of that
The activities of the Board of^ Control can only be
godd^as those who partic^pale \r^ lis decision
making We wr% constantly in need of reaponsible.
creative, and outgoing people fo work wrth the
Bdard. its committees, and its prefects
I wonder if. before you make the final decision to
go to busineaa school (or maybe its law or social
welfare), you shouldn't gel irtvolved m the expen-
•ntial education that goes on right before your
•^^•s'' If you ve already made your choice, what
better way to develop your expertise than by serving
^•member of the Board of Directors of one of Xhm
iMgoat student aaaociations in the country''
H^e are /oo^mg for p^opf^ who are wiHing to
m^d th€ unrn and •rmrgy to mmk9 UCLA a beffOf
ApQftcattong for student po^ttorjs on thm Board of
Control and ita committ—a ara availabia at tha 3fd
floor Information Daak in Karckhoff Hall If you wtah
an application Will ba mailad to you — call 625-901 2
ASUCLA. provided under the direction of the
ASUCLA Booad of Control
The Board Is a group of ten people (of oBoot the
majority are atudenta), who drtapaiMiio ioaic poNey
tor ttie Aaoociation ol over 30,000 alodMii that
noofly evoryorte whoaBiBtoa. «ort». or viaHs
i^ioriior tfioy givo a damn or not
ASUCLA la a giant coaipoa aorvice with a
bii%at next year of $15 million, ft
rWilm Xjm poopia. Ovor 1,000 are sti
I will review ttieee applications poraonaily and
forward them to the new Graduate and UrnJor*
praduata Praaidenta who make the appointments iw
next yoor'a Board aod its committees
The opportunity is hofo. if you ara mterwiad. I
sir>cerely hope you
Yours.
Lynn Kaufman
Chair. ASUCLA
Of Conbxrt
->
\ ■
r
I
r
I
• L.
•v^m^r^'i
MP
/ - •'
-V
Tuna
Land Action
) •
\
GRAOUATT
DANCE
ETHNOLOGISTS
is SCIENCE CATCHING UP
with MAGIC? '
PARANORMAL
PHENOMENA
I
frmnt Hall 1 1 79
Ut 9:30-6 30
^t 0 30-2Ji
Saturday and
May 1S-16. 1976
Saturday:
Anthropology and tha Paranofmal
Manafia da Rtoa* Fti.O.
Modarn Physics. Eaatarn Mysticism and
Hia Paranormal
Frf^ Capra, Ph.D.
Magic Thinking Among IM^MW in
tha Pyrenaaa
Aogia Arrlan, MJL
Shaman istic Ecstaay among Alaskan Eskimos
inwnas F. «lotinalofi. Pti.O.
Lova Magic. Piychedalict. and Witchcraft
In tha Paruvian Amazon
Mafiana da Rloa
Toward a Biology of Magico-Religious
Exparianca ^^
Jamas J. Funaro, Pti.O.
Psychadelic Initiation Among tha Tsonga
of Mozambiqua
TiMmas F. Johnalon, Pti.O.
Is Scianca Catching Up with Magic?
Marlafia da RIos Pti.O.
B
t
Don't waft another minute to get your Winter
Quarter text books! Starting today, these texts
will be sent beck to their publishers in order to
make room for incoming Summer Session tex^
After this week. Spring Quarter books will be
available only by special order, and ¥^o
that hassle?
n texts will be svsiiable around
Summer
June 10.
taiits. b lawki. ackerman u
oion.
711
opan mon-thuri 7 45-7:30. fri 7 45-6 30; tat 10-4
students^ store
SANDIEOOAF— A .
wmm for the American Ti
boat AMeaiaiion lauJ a court
rulina ^odmy ^anfead to protect
porpniiM "couki kUJ tkt titaa
"If we can't fiili en parpoi^es,
we*re in trouble,*** said Au^t
Felando, ^necaJ manafrr aitkt
boat ewean' group beaad tn
San Diego.
Felando said as much as SS
per cent of the t4iiia taken by
boats out of San Dtego is
caugbt by following porpoises
to tkt schools of tuna.
^tt k» said *^5 per cent of the
porpoises gst out of the net
tbaiMeivcs aad another 3 per
cent escape after the net is
closed or ftshermen jump in and
help them out.**
There was -a 2 per cent
**ty rate- among trapped
porpoises last year and that has
been reduced steoe then,
Felando said.
**lt couki mean an end to the
industry/* he said of Judge
Charles R. Ibchey's ruling.
Olympics .
SANTA BARBARA AP -
A large strip of coastal land
once envisioned as a $60 milhon
rasidentiai development will be
auctioned off here May 28
under a federal bankruptcy
court order
The land, oil a chff over-
looking the oceafi near the
Hope Ranch north of Sanu
Barbara, was involved in a
bnbery scandal that ultiaMiafy
•em former actor-singer Phil
Regan to prison. It is owned by
Tyrolian Villages, Inc., which
filed for bankruptcy in U.S.
Disthct Court in Reno, Nev.«
last November.
Regan, the former New York
City pohceman and Brooklyn
tenor who made good m the
movies during the 1930s, was
convicted in 1 974 and sentenced
to one to 14 years for his
involvement in an attempt to
bnbe a county supervisor to
change the zoning on the prop-
erty. He was relrsssd last
December after serving eight
months.
• •
(Continued horn Page 22)
^mcs are unlikely to be this close to ihe United Sutes until the
lyw^s if ever.
Tickets available include track and fieW, volleyball soccer
equestrian, basketball, and other imporum sporu The lodging
ranges from deluxe youth hostels to private homes in downtown
Montreal to complete service motels
JPrices surt at $193 per person for eight days of tickets and
cjlht nights of lodging ma youth hostel to $384 per person for
tne motel package. *- r
«. -*!!!!h' M ° w"""''-'if «"^ "* •" **»" «"»• ^ 'hi. » not
»o. laid Mr Wiener. "We are pleated that because of our accew
totickeu and lodging, lots of people from this aica will now be
awe to «ee the moit imporum sporting event of our time, in a
city as cloic and as attractive as Montreal" '
with'h?™ f!*?-**"' '"'"'"^ *''•*' '* '•««'«»'«<' »houkl get in touch
Campus events
-TspMp LdM ses 4V^ laiiss r/t
ok bring nashligm 7 pm May H
in trout of Ackerman
^ -SsiWiHf SfttrssHf iMMitt fttstoll
TNnHSMM. to sign up or tsr-iMii call
74M4f1 tr 477^00 Tsumaissal wtH be
HelS t sm-mKl night. May 22. Socunty
Pacific Plaza. Mfattvvood
mi iiiiii tm fti u sviM d Cm-
MMMf Aflslrt. are now available Visit
OECA. Kerci(hoft 311 or calf 82S-2B20
WasiiMton appMcationt are avai4-
MsrskSta » and tfus May 14
SMttar Asflleaau, are now
sue ot ttte following mforma-
p 3 pm. tomorrsw. ArclM-
or 3 pm May 14. same plaoa
^ "i^lij Trip tUMIpi. for Castaic Lsks.
May 14 Redondo Baach Harbor. May 22
San Diaoo May 31 and Mskico. J\m 22<2i
srt svsNsMt m KMMHg SBO evwy day
MS St SMSHiiSi of UCLA PislMii Club
santatrves/sacrslwiBi fsr tar itast. na-
tional and high ssSsal roorams are Raw
by Murray f rtdspl wSi >p
._ ^ ^ ■■Ssrasssi pf IHsitar
Arj Pssn. May 14. Mscfiawsa Theatre
134L Frsa
or^caU S»SM Volunteers are afso npsd
fpr emr«ri/iimtfntai and food, protects
' mm
pm today Melnrtz •140P ftm
■•"»■• ■■ tSMS. fMm hwn ftfiinpis
y" bo^ K^owm at ttiit waak's ISC Friday
JJM Pirapram Otmisr S:SS430 pm fiini
7jD-t1 pm May 14 International SAidem
Csal|r. 1023 Hagard
WIMS
—WCIA J§a immitk. will perform on-
•MSl works by uaA student campoaers
hPSn. Umofjom. Schoenbera
Free •
-^~_ — will prasam a concert as part of
MoCantamporary Mysic Fastival 8 30 pm
•••orrow. ScfioaiiSsif anSllpriwm UCLA
Jtaiiji. faculty staff ssd ssnisr crtizoas
SV other stuaMM. 6 psasral Mm^^t
S3 "-—
'■•■ *d"P*a SrfnM. will perform
Baroque and contemporary works by
Gorman compotars. noon. May 14. Schoen-
berg auditorium frm
• laplundi
A 163
3-5 ^m. today.
MPis sp Sipissass. Visa
tM sat s ssrd asi SM
8-tO pm
IS. csaM^ysptPi
wMbe
FelHaililpi aad Assii
1221
MsHHllp Caiv. ttaftai by
«M MsysataMfMia
. let will
Am press 74J9 pm May 14
lorium Frae
Track A Field: The Inside Lane
Predicting the unpredictable
III track, no events are so unpredictable as the
throws: the shot-put, iha discus thro%v and fh«
^velin throw. Hf, more than in any olhar
group of events (except maybe the horizontal
jumps) is the possibility of the one bif per-
formance. A perforrviance that can win it all for
Mn athlete — whether it be an alt-comers meet or
the Olympic firuil.
In each of these events this yev, there appear
to be well-defined dasset of competitors: those
with a shot at a nr>edal tnd those who haven't the
slightest charure
In the shot-^ptft, #>e world's leading putter for
the season past was a 300-plus pound English cd^.
Geoff Capes. He took the stuHinfs out of most of
the top Americans while he was here tnd pUns
on doing the same In Montreal. His best heive of
6S-10 is well off the world marks of Terry
Albritton and professional Brian Oldfield. but
they're solid and it's who you beat, not how far
you throw, that brings honr>e the medals. Anyway.
Capes is the European champ and has the best
foreign shot at gold.
Other foreign possibilities are W-10 putter
Heinz-J. Rothenburg, one of four top East
German throwers, the others being Harmut
Briesenick, Udo Beyer and Norlaert Jahl. Swede
Hans Hoglund is also in the thick of things,
having thrown 70-0 last year at the NCAAs.
All of whichr brings us back to America And
three U.S. competitors seem to have a lock on
the Trials.
The three are world record-holder Terry
Albritton (Tl-SVi), former world record- l^older Al
Feuerbach (71-7) Mrni 1972 Olympic silver medalist
George Woods. All have had brilliant moments so
far this season arni would seem to be the logicsl
choices to go to the. Games this summer But
there are others waiting for a shot.
Especially prominent are M*^ putter lessee
Stuart ar>d Pete Schmock; ageless vet Sam Walker
from Taaas; current Longhorn Dana leOuc as
well as N4ac Wilkins, who'll probably concentrate
on the discus.
Speaking of the platter, where thincs have
really heated up of late, it seems thai t.^
Americarw are really coming on strong. Mac
Wilkins broke the world record twice and pushed
it all the way out to 232^, beating ex-recordman
John Powell in doing it . . . twice. Powell now
appears locked in a struggle with Wifkins that
coold well be settled only in the Olympic final.
But that isn't to say that they won't have com-
petition.
Foreigners abound everywhere with challenges
for the top American duo. Fiheen of the 17 nwn
Rich Perelman
210-0 last Y^MT Mre from abroad 9nd
will give Powell ^nd Wilkins all they can handle.
Best bets amona ttie Europeans v^ East Ger-
mans Wolfgang Schmidt, ranked first in the worW
last year along with countryman Siegfried
Pachale. West German Hein-Dtreck Neu; Finrn
Permi Kahma and Markka Tuokko; Czech star
ludvik D*nek, who has won gold, bronze and
siWer in the last three Olympics, respectively
Swede Ricky Bruch and. if he is allowed to
compete. South Africa's |ohn Van Reenen.
Americans in the chase for a plane UdMt Mre
former world record holder Jay Silvester. Tim
Vollmer. Dick Dresciier. Ken Stadel, Jim McGold-
rick Mnd Art Swarts.
iTithe lavelin. an event that has been European
dominated for years. 1976 figures to be the same,
perhaps not for wiho wins the gold medal, but for
who II be in there trying Finland and Hungary
dominate this event ^nd had seven of the top
nine marks in the world last year The other two
belonged to Soviet athletes. Anyway, it's likely
that these two countries will fight for most of the
medals.
Tops in finUnd is Seppo Hovir>en. the most
consistent of the bunch, closely followed by
Hannu Siitonen, who had the number two throw
in the wor4d last year ^nd Ainio Aho. Hungarian
Miklos Nemeth bombed 299-10 for the best
throw last season and figures as the best for his
country.
Others that will surely challenge will include
world record-holder Klaus Wolfermann, who set
the record in 1973 at JOB-S but did little in '75
Soviet Nikolay Grebnyev and teammate Anatoly
Zherebslov, who are both looking to replace all-
time lav great lanis Lusis.
•est American bets rest with Anthony Hall, who
threw a big M4-1 last weekend; Sam Colion, ex
of Kansas and Drake Stadium record-holder at
2BB-S: rtchMfd Ceorya, Rod Ewakko, Bob Wallis,
fr^ Luke and 1972 Olympic bronae medalist Bill
Schmidt.
U$A TEAM PRIDICTIONS: Shot-put: George
Woods, Al Feuerbach. Terry Albritton DiscMS
throw: fcijac Wilkins, John Powell, Ken Stadel
Javelin Throw: Anthony Hall, Sam Colson.
Richard George.
OlYMflC MiOAl rtiDICTIONS: Shot-Put
Coy, GeoTfe Woods (USA); Siver, Geoff Cap4s
(UK); troiiae, Terry Albritton (USA) Dlsciis
Thmm CeM, Mac Wilkins (USA); Sipetv John
Powell, (USA); Brofiae, Ricky Bruch (Sweden)
lavettn TWo«: ^CoW. Seppo Hovir>en (Finland);
Hhier. Hannu Siitor>en {f inland)^ If own. Miklos
Nemeth (Hur^ry)
^^irlntramurals
The men's swunimof fmals wiU be bald tlus aftemooti betw^m
3 and 5 pm at tkc Rac Center Pooi TW finals will be held in
co^iuaction wttk tiK women's swin meet md emi ickya.
Th€ women's swim sMet wtU be beM this ahemoon bcti>ecB 3
A 5 at the Rec Center Sign ups will be uken there at 2 this
afternoon.
The cbed swim relays will be bekl this afternoon between 3 4 5
at the Rec Center There will be 2 men aad 2 women o« adch
team and the papi ups will be uken at 2 this afternoon at the Rec
Center.
BBQ
This IS the place for Rib Lovers i
By for the Best Ribs wm ve fried in L A
Herald £ »*mirer
COMPLETE DINNERS
$2.75
from
Csua/ Dining
HARRY'S PPWm RIT Ri
1434 N CtlSCCNT HflCHTS ot SUNSET STKlf
I 0 Vmutes L>c wn Sunset Blvd to
lourel ( an^^OA Tu»n Wight And Vqo t r f he>(
May 13:
88 Years After
*May13, 1888:Brasil*
Abolition of Slavery
Dr. Angela Gilliam.
Unrversidade de Coimbra, Portugal
Aspect of Black Liberation on
Contemporanen Brazil
Dr. Gerakj Bender. UCLA
PortuguaM Colonialism m the New World:
The Roots of Brazilian Race Relations
Or, Timothy Harding. Cal State. LA -
Labor Relations in Brazil:
Ex-Slave in Modern Society
Dr E. Bradford Burns. UCLA
African Contribution to Brazil:
The Works of Manoel Outrino
thursday, may 13, 2-5 pm
rolfe hall 1200
afro -brazilian
2-^6-8.
Why the hell maAriculate?
Why, indeed, asks the
current issue of oui
magazine. Even if you over-
look the fact that youre not
being prepared for a job,
how can you stomach not
being prepared for hfe? For
four long years! At your
own expense ! We could go
OTi, but then there'd be no
need tix read The Case
Against College in the June
oui, and you d miss such
titillating addenda as a
Conversation with Pele,
wherein the aoocer ace
explains why fans kill each
other in the grip of their enthmliwi for the game. Or you'd
mitt Timothy Leary s examination of the technique of
Brainmmhing, must-reading for you potential newspaper-
heiress kidnapers out there. Viont yet, you'd miss Letitia in
the QUI center qxnead, which would aorely disappoint our
photographer, who 9ent mucho bucks and some of his best
lines getting her to difflx)be
t
i
■^
You can get guaranteed top quality
Xerox copies fast— RIGHT HERE ON CAMPUS!
I.
Loose copies, M each; legal
size and bound copies, 6$ each
Don't monkey around — come to ut.
121 k«rckhoff
825-6011 m262
open monday-fnday 7 45-8:30
Mrturday 10-3
I printing it duplicating
i.
Some Pac-8 teams loaded
-f'
Footballers face uphill Uattle
iy Marc
UiukJly the champion of a
confercfioe is favored to repeat
the following year. However,
that is not ahvays the case and
it appears it may not hold true
in regard to the 1976 Fwafk-S
foottmll race.
UCLA, the defending Rose
Bowl champion, should have
another fmc team, but it may
not be ^ood enough to repeat.
Gone 18 quarterback John
Sciarra, the key to the offeaac.
Wendell Tyler, the Bruins* stflr
glc season record holder for
yards gained in a season is
back, as is flanker Wally
'Hollywood" Henry, but it
may not be enough if Terry
Donahue can*t settle on one
quarterback.
In contrast, every other
school in the P]|cific-8 has iu
1975 quarterback coming back
for another year. Included in
that group is CAlifomia^s Joe
Roth, who led the entire hk
tion in averafe fain per com-
pletion.
In addition, five of the other
seven conference sdiools have
more starters returning that the
10 the Bruins can count upon.
Only Washington (10) and
Washington State inine) are on
par with UCLA, Stanford
leads with 15, foHowed by
California, USC and Oregon
State with 14. Oregon has 13
starters back for another try.
Five of the. top six running
hacMs of 1975 (ranked by yards
per game) will sIm return in
1976. They are led by USCs
Ricky Bell, who led the hation
in rushing by averagiag 170
yards per game. Tyler ra^nks
second among returning iim-
ni^g backs with 1 10.5 ypg (not
including the Rose Bowl), fol-
lowed by Washington Sute*s
Dan Doornink (75.9), Orefoo's
George Bennett (73.2) aad
Washington's Robin Earl
(71.6).
One advantage the Bruins
have is that Donahue is not
the only new coach in the
conference this MMon. Tutie
•Cher idwaii ) USC, Oregon
Sute and Waalm^on State —
have ftrst year head coaches.
John Robinson, (USQ,
Craig Fertig (OSU) and Jackie
SlMriU (WSU) are in the saoK
position as Donahue ~ fifht-
ing off tke challei^es of ex-
pericacad coaches such as Cal-
iforata's Mike Wteie.
White retaioB most of the
olfcnsive unit which led the
nation in toul offense m 1975.
Rejoining Roth are runniai^
back Tom Newton (54.4 yards
per game), super-fast receiver
Wesley Walker (led the nation
hy avrmging over 23 yards per
reception) and tigkl end
George Freitas
Lost in all the celebraung by
UCLA football fans is the fact
that the Bears tied UCLA for
the conference title, both teams
finishing with 6-1 records.
With 14 starters returning, the
Bears could be the early choice
to spend New Year's Day in
the Rose Bowl.
Eight of those 14 are on
defense and include linebacker
Phil Heck, who was picked to
UPTs sacoaid team AU-Amer-
ican unit and graolad an extra
year of eligibhty.
Washington, which finished
tn a tie for third last season
with a 5-2 record, will be hard
pressed to repeat lU perfor-
nruinoe of laat aaaaMt The
Huskies have only two startcn
returning on defense and just
nine total. j^_
One of those is Robin Earl,
the hufi running bark who
always gives the Bruins trou-
ble. Wairen Moon, the surtii^
quarterback for the first half of
the 1975 saaaan, is back to try
it; again.
One break the Huskies do
have is the schedule. They will
get to play both UCLA and
Cal up north and this will be
to their advantage, especially
where the Bruins are con-
cerned. UCLA has not won in
Seattle since the late ]950*s
Sunford, with those 15 re^
tumees, could be the squad to
knock the Bruins from the top.
The* returnees are in all thf
right positio|is and include
quarterbacks Mike Cordova
(131.1 yar4i pasaing par aaae)
aad Guy Benjamin (130.8).
running back Don Stevenson
(59 yaiiii raahiag per game)
and Oanker Taay HiU (55 re-
ceptioM for 916 yards).
On the other aide of the ball,
Stanford has eight 1975 start-
ers returning, lad by defensive
end Duncan McCoU, a second
team A 11- American who made
139 tackles.
Oregon, Oregon Sute and
Washington State should be
competitive but do not, on
paper leem to compare to the
other schools.
That leaves one team —
USC. On paper, the Trojans
appear to have a fCrosig team.
No Ins than t4 starters return,
but no one seems sure if that's
good or bad. This is a team
which won its first seven
games, turned aroad
its last four conference
reversed agains aad |yon the
Liberty Bowl
Bell is certainly the big man
on this team but whether or
not the Trojans can return to
the top might depend on the
qnarterback spot. Vince Evans
returns, but may be reptaoai
% j uniof cottefrinnsrer Wall
Ransom.
Two All-Americans lead the
Trojans lines — tackle Marvin
Powell on offense aaid tndde
Gary Jeter on defense, but in
the end the Tro>ians nay get
only as Car as Bell can carry
them.
Four teams have already
concluded their spring practice
and three more will wrap il^mp
on Saturday Only Washington
State will be practicing by next
week and wi^h iia itrst three
fMaas on the road» ^ Coa-
gars might be better off prac-
ticing until September 11.
Olympic trips offered
. - TickeU to the Summer Olympics in Montreal^ plus lodging, are
tow available through, the Association for Intercollegiate
AthMisi for wonwn, of which UCLA is a member.
**We ate very proud to offer gnat Olympic package tr^ with
excellent tickets to major evenu, plus a wide range of
accoounodations,"* aaid Sandy Wiener, the overall coordinator of
the Olympic project.
The Summer Olympics run from July 16 through August I and
promise to be one of the best ever Furthennore, the Olympic
(ConthMsai an rage 2t)
NATIVE AI\/IERICAN
STUDENTS ASSOCIATION
Meeting and Pptluck Dinner
Friday, May 14, 1976
7:00 P.M.
at: Indian Center West
4836 Sepulveda Blvd.
Culver City, Ca.
If you need a ride or for more information, call
825-3729 and leave your name and phone
number. '
ri
differencefH
Kr Hymn
of fwpffwmt
nSMcctM
CVMftMlllf
MCAT
OAT
LSAT
6RE
ATGSB
OCAT
CPAT
REX
NATL MEO BOS
SAT-VAT
Tapt •arititietltr
ftytt^wi of CMC
of
2124 So S#pMi¥aoa Mvd
LA CA90Ot5
(213) 477.39ia
I
Balls-inetsj^hampionship
MSmmm Wrto» .? water pain hnd been an NCAA
^
Give Laateaio da Vmci a canvas and a
pamtbrush and you get the Mona Lisa. Give
H TL'.,^ -f jOff and a chisel and
you have thb Slatne of David Give UCLA a
balland a net and the masterpiece is probably
a nmional championship
Siaee Ifi4. wktn UCLA startad its domina-
tion of ooBage basketball the iniim have won
23 national titles in sports involving a ball and
a Mt. And it doesn't seem to matter what kind
of hall and net IS used -^ basketball, vollevball
tennis, water polo oi soccer.
There has been an assortment of craftsmen
who have been the architects of these cham-
pionship teams Names Ukc Wooden, Scales
Hw iassett and Storer aren't likciy to be
fevnd in many art books, but all arc recognized
as at or near the top in their sport
Basketball and John Wooden put UCLA 6n
the map. In his 27 years here, the Wizard of
Westwood took the Bruins to 10 nntiansi
crowns and 19 league ia\^ One astonishing
record of Coach Woodens that will probably
never be broken is for NCAA tournament play
3« straight post-saasoo wins and an overall
record of 44-1.
^ Coach Wooden has evidently haaiad his
magic wand over to volleyball coach Al Scates.
Smce voOeyball was instituted as an NCAA
sport in 1970, Scates has coached UCLA to six
o( the seven jtiiJcs. The only time UCLA didn't
wm was whin San Diego Sute won in 1973
Scates is also on his way to catching the
Wizard*s tounlament mark. In seven
Scates* record IS 20-1.
If water pain had been an NCAA sport
before 1969, Coach Boh Horn would psohnhly
have more than three national championships
Since 1964. Horn's Polobrums have ha# a
share m the laagae tisle every year except 1973
In the seven years ol aaai isason ptey, UCLA
has am the titk in IM9: 1971 and 1972
never haen any worse than fourth
The Bruin tennis team has also htt^ its share
of championainpa. &nae 1967. Glenn Basaact's
octters have never come in Inwar than third in
the national finals. Under Bnnect, UCLA Ims
won the title in 1970, 1971 and 1973 Bassett*s
predecessor, J.D. Morgan (current athletic
director) coached national title teams in 1952
1953, 1954, 1956, I960, 1961 and 1965. Bafare
Morgan, William Ackerman coached the 1950
utle
BaaabatI ,
is the only net and ball sport where a
championship has eluded UCLA But
the Bruins have come pretty close. Under
former coach Dennis Storer, the present nigby
coach. UCLA has been in the Far-West
Regionals every year since 1967 in 1970, 1972,
1973 ana 1974. the Bruins made it to the fmai
four only to be knocked out each time by St.
Louis Umversity In 1970, 1972 aad 1973 the
Bihkens beat UCLA in the championship game
1975-76 has been yet another hnnaar yanr for
UCLA in ball-net spans. The Brnins finished
third in basketball and water palo, first in
volleyball the soccer s^fnad apun made the
reginnah, and currently, the tenm^ >^amd is
tops in the country Now, if there ware only a
way to add neu to faathall and
Volunteer Program At
Ingleside Mental Health Center
Tha Unitad VgiBrana Aaaociation ia tponaoring a
nmt/ voluntaar program avnilnbia for nil atudanta to
halp In n "big brothar nnd/or b«g aiater" tarvica at
Inglatida ManUI Haalth Centar.
Stufianta will ba invitad to visit irKJividual patianta
on a ^^ular basis iMakdaya (lata nftamoona and
aar»y|evanic|0a) and/or ^aaaHandi (all day) Tha
program allows for activitias $uch at footbnil.
tannis. baseball and in aoma caaas an B-hour pass
-away from tha inatitution on informal rap naaaions
The program ia initiated to help aaaiat juvanilan at
the institution m a rehabilitation project. There are
unlimited possibilities in the opportunities to help
theae young people — ages 10 through 18 -
They need tha examples of individuala who are
not involved in the staff at the institution. This
enables them to internet with people other than on a
clinical basis. ^
Those interested In this program should contact
J Martin Furtak. Benefits Chairman of the UVA by
calling B2S-1B63 or stop by Room 325 Karckhoff
Hall
.... M
(CfNitinued from Page 27)
It had to because Gaylord
faced a stiff challenge from
Brian Viselli for the first base
job But he has come out on
lop.
Baker came to UCLA last
season from Granada Hills
High School and hit .300 in 90
at-hau, despite being only a
fipcshman Tlie Bruin left field-
er was a shortstop in high
schcNM snd spent part of 1975
at second hMe t^ore moving
to the outfield
''He's a hard worker ,** says
Adams in reference to the
sophomore who has hit six
home runs and driven in 35
runs. ''He has asnde himself a
goad hitter He is self-taught "
He has also improved in the
outfield, thanks to more hard
work and help from Adanu
till take credit for Dave Bak-
er's defense, but not for his
offense. I try to stay away
from him as much as possible
because he*s one of those guys
who dees it himself."
Henderson has been the
most consistent Brum hutcr
throughout the aanaen and
that's just the word A^ams
tMes to daMfihe his numher-
fiyft hitter — consistent
"He can hit from either the
left or the right side, he can
plaif shortstop if he has to and
St third base, he is a au^
issa^ prospect.-
The same goes for Hender-
son at the plate He has hit
nine home runs this year, six
in CIBA games. He has driven
HI 36 nms. 16 in leagoe play
snd has made some outstand-
ing phiyi at the hat eomer
In fact, since he moved to
third base aad Raymend
Tewnaend took over at short-
stop, the Bruins have won six
of seven league games to move
within one §ud€ of the title
Pan of the reason has baea the
left side er the infield.
""None of them arc a liability
St the poMtion they currently
play on drfinn," says Adams.
"They do the job and they caa
give you the outstandina pisy."
The only tinw Bnker. Gay-
lord or Henderson are Ita-
htlities IS when they coms to
the aiasa with men on
U.C. MOVEMENT THEATER I
-^
ACKERMAN GRAND BALLROOM
FREE ADMISSION
MAY 15 a 17. 8:00 P.M. - MAY IS. NOON
br-Pmrnma Tack Fom* « Tli»
~>
^^
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J--* -
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Th* ASUCLA Cofiwnuni'
fully •upp»fU tl)« Univc
Advertising tpac* will not hi
•waMaM* mi Wm OaMy BrMin le
wlio tfiftcrimlfislat on lh« basU of
aNC««lry. G«l*r, national ortfln. rac«
or ••■ NaMHr Itoa DaMy •mm
ASUCLA ClwiliMWtcattow
any al Itw aar-
vtcat a#««rtt»«d or advartlaar* rmpf-
•antad in t»«i» itsua Any par»on ba-
Itaving that an advartiaamant in ttiia
''•policy an
glasrtnrinall^ii
•PMWIUf
ma B*M»inm9» Mmnm^^r. UCLA Daily
Brum 1 1 2 Karckhoft Kai. 90t WaalMfood
Pta<a. Lot Angala*. California 90024.
Far iftilalafiea wfOi houamg diacriwil
nation problams. call: UCLA Housing
Offici (213) •ilS-44t1: Waatsida fmkr
Houaing (21 J) 473-
announcamwits
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%mPflipmM going lo
RumUi!
UCLa students, faculty and
staff are eligible to travel
to Leningrad. Moscow. Kiov.
Yalta Tbilisi A Viadimar,
July 14 - Aug 5 for $749 00
all-inclusive frorr) London
Call 825-1221 or come to
A lowal Ackermar^ Mondays-
Ihmmys 6 00-4 00 ^^
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0«««a. Loa >maln. 00031. or call (21 9»
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mt&m Wt 10. 1070 . eel 242-3101.'
(1 M 14)
PORTRAITS z^A
taken now |
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'50 ItffKHhuf IOC b ^ :: uo
nutti
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copying
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Veu te gjjjwet "i isf i ul
10 1112)
MU.PMMk Vau-va aaan tMa. ypu
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MR. MeeM. O J.. D J.. A O J.. KeRiy K
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17 1112)
tIJOOURUCATI
T"
aii». ion
HOW DOES A BRUIN
BEAR DECORATE HIS
ROOM?
With UCLA blankets, pen-
nants, clock, helmet lamp
and radio, gtaaaowafe. muga.
beaf^-and aleeps in a UCLA
mt99
Bearwear.
ASUCLA Students" Store
Ackerman Union
10.0:30
21-30. 00.00.
bpv. Celeniel Heeee. 4010 Wtilleett
•til
by tnM«
ItHMI
for rout
forsalo
oppofttiiiitioo
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MANGO
1014
tm tela AO
010.00
ItiO)
AaaOWNIAO cabin In fulaf mr—
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207-1447 ^
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fttaoo aoiBMaa Blad.. % ndle weel ei
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ballport. aacaptlonal parking, city 0
ioT rofit
[•RUIN T.V a aTtnCO HINTALa
COLOR T V -S
07 ja/
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Ceo 270-1002
W UCLA
TMa 11-alery mbaHtr OMp. la
•chadulad for eeeiplation fall 1071
lor cOmcel 0
rant. OuNa
Partman or Chuck Wright. Coldwall
f Co . (213) 274-0011
»#
WkNSSNi
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Only $2.50 eBch?
MICPAAC FOII aUaNMfR MOWV
I CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
100 s pi Up QMoaii pppNipi
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ful location Olaap • Firapleca. 000
1100 week 000-0004.
(•MX)
9 A.M.- 5 P.m.
Hay 17-21
Tuaahouae North Patio
Ackerman Union
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If You're Going lo Bo
AoMlora Next Otiorler-
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ring now!
You'll get summer delivery and^
you can wear your officiQl cloao
ring for iFall Quarlor.^ ^
ASUCtA Studpnts' Store
Corne to Bearwppr. B IpvpI
Ackerman Union
ELCCTRKi ^lano - Uniaea OT 110.
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toe aerrtngton Plaaa. W.L.A 11744
WMablra 477-0020. 070-2207. «Nb
mora ttian 30 yra. •mpmrimncm Help
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300-0310
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FMimj^^pyr 11^ |_
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(14 0lr)
PROPEOOtONAL Dei
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(10 OR)
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200-1111.
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weekly Irana Oerate. Diatlnigwtahad
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CaO RNI 400-1013 er
(10 OR)
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MOVERS
and HauHng
A1»ilMAL ALTERNATIVE m LOO AM-
OELEl FEELING TRAWitSIO CENTER.
0000 COIiEY AVI. 00004. 002-0701
(10 OR)
MOVING Rtttdanttal apartmants.
olRcaa Larga/ ameM )eRa Lecel A leng
' Rich 0S4-2000
NewpN 0S1-3027
ELECTROLrOlO: Uf
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(10 M 12)
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(10 OR)
EARI4O200aa
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(IS M 17)
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PART-TORE
i^nchtpa teking
122S
(10M17)
UCLA
(IS M 14)
Autp-Llle-
Ineurenca. VRtega Offlca
117 M 101
477.
07».gi01.
472-1401.
(10 MOO)
-PARTr- pp a
Del Rey 022-1101
(10 M 10)
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474-0104.
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CHARTERO and
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a
Loa Ajootna
PBO^BSSIOOIAL Cms
^400 PMoRMPdBNd L A Ca 0IX»4
(213> 07O-012V (213)477 1102
TOC CHARTER FLIGHTS
TOEUROPf
(Ulo ef OSiera)
TOC
L4StS3 415 7 12
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Junp 21 1 1
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15C75
junpaa a
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17C75
Junp 2a a
$420
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Jur>e 20 10
$420
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July 5 1
$42$
tacTo
Julys 0
$420
27C7e
July 12 4
$4ao
3DC70
July 10 '4
$4ao
LAX-Loti#on LAX
01001
June 19 11
$425
Lfla220
June 22 0
$415
L5a222
Junp 22 2
$070
I
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ISC
I
TOURS A TRAVEL
Spring Summar 4 Fail Cr»af1art"
HAWAII
'LA-HONOt-'^i ' ' i1« on*
LA WpROUJtU
Pari!
Madrid
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PUCE TRAVIL COUOiaCLISfOf
AaK Ua PON ANYTHING YOU
OKMOW
TRAVCU .
,. 5,.,
1^ WANT TO KNOW AROUT
o a #
A-212 (WRR aXPOf
• 07 FeRwey
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AUTO INSURANCE
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Profaa
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IRAN
Art you going to Iron mii summer'*
OaHy 747 FItghta
Contoct
Arrir four 4 Tr«w»^l S4>rvtc«
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Iranian ■tud«nt« $843 00 round trip
it.7f . 4t7-1tai. 211i ».
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(»4 0lr)
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lo UCLA
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
3017 Santa Mtoftica Blvd
In
Sdnia Moffitea
LAW SCHOOL AOMHSStON
TEST PREPAHATION
ao Hf
If lor July M
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-GMAT couroo boflwdl Juno • for
July 10 loot
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f?^? - TodMUcol Typbif Eorvloo. WLA.
IEf.J4)
477-4545
KAT Typing, adiling Engllah grod.
" Opoclolty Tarm poport,
tatt*rs ISM §24-7472
(25 QTR)
EdN
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^ LIGHTNIMG TYPING CO
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FnOfCttlOMAL COLLEGE TVPHMT
SPECIALIST
Tarm popbrt. Thoolo. Oiaaortollona
Modi. ToMoa. Olofromf, Mualc Editing;
Counaaling. Xaroalng. PrtnMng. Sending
Sludont Woioa
•^fftOV. occuroto ISM lyplof • roa-
Soi^
ijX
(2SOlr)
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STATISTICAL. FAST.
StVtN DAYS A WCCK
STVLCS. S3S-S4S8.
THCSCS.
4-
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oducotlonal, aclontlfic, otfior. Oenf
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125 M ia>
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474-
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Spociouo Bochotora. Sif^laa
1 S 2 Bodroom ApM
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10S41 Strathmora Pool
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(ClALSmiMOl
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47S-4S3-510^16 Landfoir 477
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E0310 Thonk you.
(33M12)
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473-
ONE bodroom ovoltoblo in apocloui
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flOO monPily Cod ovonlnga 277-1140
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(as M 12)
HERfWOSA BEACH VACATION SPA-.
ClOUS COMFORTABLE FAMILY
HOME AVAILABLE MID- JUNE TO
MIO-AUOUST $23S0 TERMS NCGO-
TIABLE CALL 37S.134S.
IBSMiai
room and board
halp
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house for sale
2 s>y
$14S^
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(37M13)
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MINUT8S
UCLAt
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(32M17)
SUBLET 2 b* - f
Bfonlwaad. $325 m«iBi. S-IS -O-IS
472-77aS.allorS.
4-#r..t375 Coff
(41 M 1BI
.iL
>»■•
—Mi HMndorson
Trio packs punch in Bru
.1
-IT-
lineup
By Marc
K.Ba Gsylord
sad Robbie HendsiMNi have
¥ery bttk in common. One is s
soplMMre, one u s senior sad
.OMS as s junior. One has red
hair, one is Moad aad oae has
dark hair.
Baker coines from North-
ridse, Gaylord from Lakewood
aad Henderson from San Die-
go. Off the field, they are
different peopk. On the field,
they are the heart ai the bat-
ting order for the UCLA base-
ball team.
Tb^ are the three men who
have produced the runt which
have made the 1976 UCLA
11 squad the higbstt
unit in schobl history.
They are the power men.
Baker and Gaylord swing
the bat from the left side while
Henderson is ^a switch hitter.
As a unit, they have accounted
for 25 home runs and 109 runs
baltsd m mm the 57 game
scMule.
In teague play, the sututics
are even better. They have hit
13 homer$ and dnven in 51
in the 21 CIBA
They will be looking to in-
crease those stau later thi$
week when the Bruin$ face
^SC m a thrBB-.iaae series.
"They are three powerful
loat-ball threats who are able
to make comact," Gary Ad-
sms, the UCLA head ^'^^^Hi^
says of hM middle men ** Most
teams' lonf-ball hitters strike
out 1 lot and that's what
makes these guys even better
Gaylord, who leads the team
with 10 home runs and whose
36 RBI tied him for the team
IcBd with Henderson, strikes
out the least of the three. In
15lat-bats, the senior first
^McaMMi has failBd to make
contact just five times.
Henderson has struck out
just 23 times in 180 at-bms
while Baker's figures are 30 ia
192 at-bau. But both also walk
a lot Henderson has been
I
improves
in CIBA
currently
while Baker has received 2S
The fsct that they are long-
.Ml hitters has not hurt their
batting averages. Hentesaa,
one of the team's steadiest
players, has a 306 averafe.
Baker is at .2S6 while Gaylord
it hitting .27S.
Every
it
play He
batting .333 in
wlMle Gaykwd is at .32S and
Baker at .304
Gaylord has been the biggBSt
surprise of the trio. Last osa-
$OB, after transferring from
Cemtos Jumor Collcfe, he hit
no home runs la 141 at bats.
This year be has 10, mcluding
thnec gssMd liMBS.
**f think it dates back to
when he was at Cemtos," says
Adams. **He played in a huge
ballpark where, if be thsd to
hit home runs, he wovldn't do
it or have BMsch o( an averafi.
He did the somui thing a$id
decided to hit the ball iJieiT M
wa5 pitched
''WImn be obbk bsfe, 1 don't
think be saaU^ed how much
power he rtally bad. . I em-
phasized in our last player
eifmhiations last ymr that be
would have to bit more bnaw
mas to play on Our dub. I
think I said he'd have to ^k'
the ball more. Onee be be-
heved be covld do it, it started
to
.L_-
■19
^^
CLASSIFIED >ID
L-
W VW BUG,
("^^ SEE). dSI-1141
1073 BUICK Bogol. Vinyl top folly
a43BS
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74 VW VAN.
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74%.
Tom I
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(41 M 14)
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(41 M 17)
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■•j^' > — —
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m
i Former Bruin coacTi Bodgers visits protege Donatiue
I
a
QuefCMm: What does UCLA
foQikai Mid the aotc? Aa-
twer: **a Cuhios coordinator **
What does it uke to
i tuccessful coach?
Amwer: ^'ym^ kuotmT All
quhe faoetiouily, but yet
rely by oomt ml^m than
former head football coach
Ptpper Rodfert.
To the UCLA campui Mon-
4§y rmme the man who in-
Haled the Withboae at UCLA
and who recruited the taJenu
oT John Scianm, Mark Har>
Bon and Wendell Tyler to
run it RodfBn, aocomi
by hit wife and child, leemcid
right at home on
Field at he watched pi _
Terry Donahue for tit fint
time as a head coech aad only
had words of pimite for him
Terry Denahue will he a
fucoetsful coach. I an very
fond of Terry aad I know that
hif players will rripead to
him."
•*! am very happy for Terry
but he hat a toii^ job ahead
of him. UCLA*i schedule is
bard this year but 1 don*t feel
sorry for him; he deserves it
all."
Throughout the afternoon
Rodfers -^^-1^
for former governor Jimmy
Carter, haodiiig oai hattOH and
preaching platfeimt. ""Jimmy
Carter it a pertoa who is
teMlMMe,'* he taad. **! really
adnure how much he is^ in-
terested in people and his ap-
peal to the Macks, the poor
aad the farmers. He*s jutt a
Icrf uJ person,-
Going mto his third season
MM head coach at Georgia Tech,
Rodgers expecu a gaad learn
but faces a tough srhedah
Such noubles as Notre Dame,
4^
I «
Piu (with Tony Dorsett, the
man many say will win the
Heuman), Tennessee, Auburn
and Georgia appear on the
calendar for the conung sea-
son.
To get ready for the new
season, spring practice ran
until two weeks ago at Georgia
Tech. For some, at least. Pep-
per surted a new tradition by
giving his senior footballers the
entire spring off. Why''
**lf those boys don*t know
what they're doing by now
they'll never learn. For some of
Che, Ukmg the spring off will
do them more good than if
they were out there practicing
all year long.*"
One aspect of Georgia Tech
stands out more than any
other for the affable coach
tpirit. '"Georgia Tech has only
tome %M0 people. It has an
on-campus tfadium which is
convenient for the studenu and
the alums just keep the trad-
ition going.**
Rodgers stressed the im-
portance of the campus stad-
itta.
•*Look at it this way. If you
wanted to run around the
track and the only one aeni^
able was the Coliseum, how
often Would you get down
these to use itr Tte rampus ~:
stadium adds to the conven-
ience, sure, but it means more
to the student body You just
come on down to Tech and
heart. **J had a great time here
at UCLA. It*s a dass organ-
ization and the football it
Soase say that tune changes
people and their habiu, but the
saymg doesn*t hng tme with
Pepper He still passes out
candy and gum hke ninnii^
water and his hiufh it ever
present.
At this point in his career,
Rodgers feels that he most
likely pould not turn to a
profesijional head
position.
*^Vm too fun-loving for
something like that. I enjoy the
freedom that cofleye ^^^^fng
allows me. I am not respon-
sible to any one persan.**
**How could I, as a pro
coach, do what I do now?
Prior to games I get up in the
stands with the studentt and
have a gand time. The nice
thing about coUept is that the
students arc a1w^yi~the same
age. They don*i change.-
Latt tenton Georgia Tech's
"Ramblin* Wreck" was down
42-zip at half-time to arch-rival
Georgui During the halftime
break, the TV viewer was
talcen msade Tech*s locker
room.
**I few ABC permission bcr
TNs pv<Mant and tfia
Taffy
•avs he aiaiet LA
only becanee he left some very
food friends behind, but fedp
^kat the same would be true if
he decided to leave Atlanu at
this time. UCLA ahirays will
hold a place in the oandi^s
asuai for us at Tech. Every
week on my show t show a
tape of the half-time talk
Parents and fans want to see
just what football is I try to
tell the boys that winning has
to d^p. with ability and you play
to wm and even if you sec that
you are going to lose you don*t
quit It's like you have to
Wievc in today, not yester-
day.-
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Ucla
VoliMM XCVttl. Numter 17
n
May 11. Ityt
Record of earlier
'Independent' status tightened
■ t
f
■^V'..
embezzlement found Panel would limjlfinanclal aid
for fired cashier
By Linda Repalt— i
DB SUIT Writer
A main cakhicr. fired lait Apnl trom the Studcnu* Store here
after he was caught e^lbe^7hng ASUCLA funds, had a paM
record of enibe77lement before he was hired by ASUCLA. the
§tym has learned
The cashier if also on the stores bad ^rlicck hit fdr having
bounced a check.
Student.s* Store Director Tim Bayiey said thai no legal action
would he taken againse the lormer cashier by ASUCLA because
all of the stolen monc> has been returned by the Uiicf.
Bayley hai requested the RAine oi the caalMcr remain
undisclofed, > „ ^
The Student^ Store management -discovered the embezzlement
in a random audit o< the cashier's reserve change lund. The funtf
was found to be short
Although Bftiley would not disclose the exact amount of the
money involved, he said rt im|s a "sjgnificaiiL mmoum . . . . aot
twcr SLOOO.** bin "•rveral ^Tfliidfed - "^
According to Bayley. when the cashier was confronted with the
discovery, he "immediately admitted to taking the money.**
explainihg that because he did not get off work until after the
banks closed, he was simply "borrowing the money for a short
time, until he could give it back.**
Bayley said the cashier promptly retufned tlic s(ok«
With money from his savings, after bcmg qiertkmed.
Bayley said that ASUCLA had received three recbin-
mcndations for the cashier one from his most recent employer^
and- two from Los Angeles City Parks and Recreation — before
he was hired in February
According to Sandy MacLeod, employee of the Students* St 6re
and an employee of LA Parks and Recreatiofi. the cashier had
been caught embezzling from the Parks and Recreation
department before he came to wcwk for ASUCLA.
Jerry Cimmaruttt. att employee of LA Parks and Recreation^
Department, confirmed the previous embezzlement. Cimmarusti,
who said he was the cashier*s supervisor for a short term, said he
had given a positive recojnmendation to Bayley when he was
contacted as a reference.
Cimmarusti explained that at the time he was contacted he
only knew that the cashier had been with the department for fiVc
years tind had resigned He gave Bayley the recommendation
assuming that the cashier would not be working with money But
he said he told Bay lev that since he did not know the cashier
very welL Bayley should talk to the cashier's immediate
Bailey said he did contact the cashier^ supervisor amd received
a positive recommendation
Cimmarusti claims that there was a mix-up and that the facts
would have come through had the Parks and Recreation received
a written request from ASUCLA for the recommendation.
Bayley said that ASUCLA had gone through their usiml
channels in investigating the cashier's bnchfround He added that
because the cashier had originally applied for a position in
ASUCLA accounting, he was imerviewed by six ASUCLA
employees, including himself and ASUCLA executive director
Donald Findley. . . _.
**He (cashier) had no suspicious activhies the whole limc^he
had been here." loiid Bayley f he cashier had been working only
eight weeks before the cml>e//lemeni was discovered
By CMi
(SACRAMENTO) Univer-
sity rules defining student fin-
ancial independence would be
tightened for purposes of award-
ing financial aid grant money
under legislation which cleafed
the Assembly Education Com-
^mitlee last week
The hill, which was intro-
duced by Assemhiyman Willie
Brown (D-San Francisco).
Msacd out of committee Inat
ThvrMlay; with AsKmbtyman
John Vasconcellos (D-San
3ose) casting the lone *'nay**
vote.
University financtaf aids .pol-
icics currently- jermtt students^
who meet the federal defimtton
of financial independence to
receive grant aid based only on
their personal' resources. _
Independence ^
Federal law allows a stiideitt
lo declare fiiuncial indepen-
dence by living away from
home and accepting no more
than S600 iii family support for
one year Also, the parents
may not claim the student as
gn incoine tax deduction for
the ssme period of time.
Brown*! Riitasure extends the
lime period needed to prove
independeiice from one year to
three ^consecutive years. It
would apply only to need-
based grant awards and on
adMhirshifM, loans and work-
study programs.
The UC student lobby, the
bilfs chief sponsor, said the
change in the time requirement
is aimed at discouraging stu-
dems from well-to-do families
imm declaring independence
and then applying for scarce
grant dollars He believes this
wtH put ihcm in competition
with students with **legitimate
needs "
** First priority of need-l
grant dollars should be
awarded to students from low-
income families,** said Jeff
Hamerling, lobby co-director.
Hamerling told i^ Assem-
bly permanent sub-committee
on post secondary education
last Wednesday that present
financial aids guidelines are
too permissive. He said they
allow a **iconsiderable number**
of students from upper-inceme
families to declare indepen-
dence - ' and "poverty" as a
matter of choice, rather than
necessity Vasconcellos, sub-
committee chairman, said he
opposed the Brown bill be-
^•mt in wowld prevent the 17-
and IS- year-old student from
receiving gram imiaiiui for at
lenit three years.
Student mpport
One financially independent.
student testifying in support of
the bin said present financial
policies have prevented more
minorities from entering UC.
**We are moving toward a sit-
uation where rich white stu-
dents are filling a large per-
nrlngr of the student body,**
she said.
The Brown bill would not
apply to students who are
determined to be self-support-
ing prior to January I, 1*977.
The measure also contains a
provision which prohibits ex-
amination of family income of
student-grant applicants who
COOK from "an aatremely ad-
verse home situation whi^h
leads to estrangement from the
family."
lingg more restrictive than
those in the Brown 'bill
"Only under the most un-
usually adverse home circum-
itancri would the student be
considered independent.** inid
Sumner Ciambec, CSUC at-i
sociate dean of finnncini ni^.
UC presidefit David Saxon
and his vice presidents have
not yet expressed an offigml
position on the issue. But Stu-
dent Lobbyist Hamerling said
he believes the high-ranking
official win lake a more len-
ient stance on independent
students than their financial
directorSi,
I
#
r
If
^ am relatively convinced
that those who will make the
teal decisions are pretty far
.nyby' from the thinking of the
idhvelors, at least for graduate
students," Hamerling said.
Jie said he hopes the Innm
bill will act as leverage to
persuade the University and
the sute Student Aid Com^
mission to adapt ^t he guidelines
in the Brown biU.
The number of students who
have declared themselves in-
dependent and have oblnined
grant nesistancc hni riMn
sharply over the pMl nHye
years.
p
~ State a
The bill has forced financial
aid directors of UC Mid State
Universities m»i CoUegn to
take a stand on the issue. The
officials have proposed guide-
About 40 per cem of all
undergraduates and gg per cent
of all graduates have declared
financial independence. Uni-
versity menedt show.
In 1974-1975, roughly half of
all UCs grant dollars more
than $12 million — went to
self-supporting students.
On the Los Angeles campus,
half of the 7.900 receiving
grants this year are indep-
endent. ^
fNew employees aid recruitment
By Fnmh WIdder
DB SCnir WriSer
As pnrt of UCLA*s Student Affirmative
Action (SAA) program, officials here have
hired three ex-UCLA gmdimte students to
assist in the University*s two major minority
student recruitment prograoM, Enhnnced
Recruitment and Early Outreach.
Funds for the personnel augmentation
resuhed from a $35,000 allocntion to^ench
UC campus for SAA. Matching funds of
SI. I million allocated by the state legislature
for financial aidsk last September and $1.1
million from the UC Board of Regents are
being used to finance the recruitment effort
statewide
The three suff members Carlos Tra-
conis. Clemmie Trotter, and Arlene West
are cur(;ently being trained in college coun-
seling fiddi including financial aids, ad-
mission evaluation and school relations.
The new employaM increase the current
staff to nine. They wiU work with ''f 1 1 dm"'
high schools and Community colleges locally
as part of UClA*s Enbanoed Recruitment
effort to increase the amount of eligible
minority students.
According to Juan Lara, director of
Fall 1976, are already up in compafigan
with last year.
Of the over 1,100 minority students
admitted for tiext Fall, approximauly 800
have filed Statements of Intent to Register at
UCLA
As the iaaeand pbaae of SAA. the re-
cruitment staff will begin an Early Outreach
prapram in the smmaer. Lara said.
Winston Ooby, ekecutive office of aca-
demic progranu said, **SAA suff will work
directly with jtmiof high schooto and high
school during the summer leisioni to iaas-
iliarire and educate students as to the
requirrmrti of UCLA and the UC caas-
puses in general.**
Aaeaaiing to Doby. approximately
$516,000 of the SAA allocated funds will be
used oi^r aii IS month period for the
As a result of the thi
Lara said. **Our response to Academic
Advancement Program (AAF) appliaaflli far
Fall 76 as weN as for Sprh^ *7» have
tripled in oaoipatiMn with last year.**
"In addition.** Lara added. *^he total
ippMMis ate being gm^en a
figures of
-;- f
tn the News
: - i
-i
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~i J.
World News
British 'witch hunt'
LONDON (AP) — Jeremy
Thorpe quit Monday as leader
of Bntain'i Liberal party after
what he called a ''tuttained
g witch hunt** connected with
2 allegatioot ha had a homo-
^ sexual relationship with a auk
•■ model
f
TOILET
TRAINING
your
1 '^-3-year-old child??
Fr»e Help Available
Call 479-178?
for further informatiort
Jl_i_
MATTRESS
cncA
1976
"^No aaa cmi effectively lead
a party if the ficatcr pan of
Ma tisK bat to be dcvoiad to
aatweniif allegations as tbev
arUe and countenng co^uia-
ttiag plou and imrtgiin,''
Thorpe wrou in a letter to
David SteeL acting chief whip
of the party.
The Liberals have 13 wmm-
hers in the ^S-member Home
oi Commons, which is domi-
nated by the Labor and Con-
servative parties.
The 46-year-old lawmaker
afain denied the charges re-
lating to his association with
model Norman Scott.
Thorpe had also baen me-
cuaad officially of an error of
judgment in taking a non-
executive directorship in a
secondary banking xoncern
that crashed.
But it was his rektionship
with Scott that caused the big
uproar, not only in the party
but in the country.
In his letter to Slael, Thorpe
recattlri. that the parUaaaentary
Libermk passed a unanimous
vote of confidehce in him
March 17 and agreed that the
party would hold an election
for party leader in the fall, as
Thorpe himself had s
National News
State News
IMMit payoffs toid R#fug««s gtt warning
Thorpe will stay on as a
member of Parliament and
was expected to attend a meet-
ing with his colleagues at West-
minster Tuesday to elect a new
iff" nt •«• aAi3.>t«*3j»t4jii
STATE OF THE ART
I
t
Aia Lirr
2217 a
vacHMcy, i«aiwv
Tal. U15» S4a-1
Events began moving against
Thorpe January 29 when a
Department of Trade report
criticized his ignorance of the
affairs of the failed London
and County Bank Group, m
which ha nna a director.
As Thorpe prepared a state-
JHnl admitting **an error of
judgment,** a second Mow fell.
In a court at BamglBfrie,
Devonshifc, Norman Scott, 33,
stood aecused of two chsurges
of social secunty frauds.
LOYOLA MAiRYMOUNT SUMMOl SCHOOL
CARIBBEAN
I
Sdlla
A 19 day (July 14 - Aug 1) tea/air study tour will sail from Lot Angeles on
the American PtUDENTIAL LINER "Santa Maria." The Sludy Tour will
place emphasis on the areas that the lour has vtsrted and will utilize
selected readiagi relevant to the History o4 the Caribbean Or Art Verge
of Santa N4onica College. Processor of Latin Awrican History, will
conduct the study The price, hvad on double occupancy, is $1,715 This
includes all meals on the 12 darship voyage and most meaK on the various
city stop overs and return flights. For more information call ian at Paladin
Travel 98^-1177 or 476-3444.
UCLA SAILING CLUB
DOCK PARTY
Tuesday, May 11 4:00 pm - ?
At UCLA Dock, Marina del Rey
Races: 4 pm
BBQ Afterwards
$1.00 donation for food
Sign up KH 501, 825-3171 or 825-3703
1 5% Off
WMlThtoC
If eUaalila
$10* or mora
I
I
I
CHAN'S GARDEN
Cantenaaa A Mandarin Cidalna
^McmUfti Chinata Food. Bmf A WIna,
Good Sarvkra. frm^ Parking at
Wastwood Canlar. Bank of Amarica
lOaSS Lindbroolt Or W»stwocd, L.A
47f-77t5, 47»-77i6
L, ,
T
I
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I
I
I
I
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4
THIS IS A <Ot>flN I I 7
WASHINGTON — (AP) Pre-
sent and former inspectors
today acknowledged receiving
payoffs in what Senate inves-
tigators call a multimfllioa
doMar miliury meat fraud. One
forn^r inspectator said he was
provided with caU girls
Spec. 4 Nadja Hoyer-Booth,
20, to(d 4 Government Opera-
tioni subcommittee she re-
ceived football tickets, per-
fume, clothing, weekend trips
and food from packing plant
executives.
They never asked me to
look the other way," she tes-
tified ^But I knew I waio*t
doing proper inspections.**
Charles Reidinger, a former
military inspector, lasd^he was
gvven $200 in cash monthly and
call girls on two occasions
while he was a supervisor in
charge of the Army*s meat
inspection service in Boston.
Reidinger said he got the
money for **no nitpicking** in
. meat inspecutions. He did not
say whether the call girls were
for himself or for others.
Spec. 4 Hoyer-Booth said
she received the payoffs from
executives of the GAG Pack-
ing Co. of Boston. Reidinger
said his payments were ar-.
ranged by Frank Goldberg and
Harry Goldberg, owners of
GAG and Blue Ribbon Friozen
Foods Co. of Hanxlen, Conn.
Meat company officiiUs were
to testify later in the hearingL
Subcommittee Chairman
Lawton Chiles, D-Florida, has
alleged that Army inspectors
received *^thousands of dol-
lars** in bribes and other fa-
vors, including the services of
inferior meat destined for mili-
tary consumption.
The substandard meat —
usually cheap, tough or fatty
cuts — was being sold to the
Pentagon by some commercial
meat packing houses for as
much as $4 a pound. Chiles
said. He called it "a mw of
conspiracies to defraud the
government of milhons of
doUnn.**
Spec. 4 Hoyer-Booth, still an
iMpactor for the military, said
she went to work as an inspec-
tor at the GAG plant in 1974
when she was 18 years old. She
said she had received only one
day's worth of instruction.
Early in her service at the
plant, she said, a fellow in-
spector taught her how to steal
roasts by wrapping them in
samples of hamburger. On oc-
casion, lupii ^ting sergeants
tArould ask her to uke meat,
she testified.
She told the suhcommittee
that some hanas of meat were
inspected by **X-ray vision**
and samples to be tested al-
ways were uken from the top
most boxes
She said she once rejected a
beef shipment baonne it con-
tained loo much fat and
then had to' remain at the plant
until after 9 pm while cm-
plopna UMHie changes
**Tliat wns the last time I
ever rejected anything,** she
said.
* She testified that she never
•Merved any spoiled meat in
any shipment but that some
ronits were too fat and that
SOtte cuts were too snuill or
too fail iiiihiyh Bhu. wO ifg
SAN t>lEGO AP — Indo-
china refugees are being
warned against sending money
home to friends and relatives
because of the Trading With
The Enemy Act.
The information has been
passed along to Southern Cal-
ifornia refugee groups, includ-
ing the Onm§t County Forum
and the San Diego Refugee
Coahtion. Earlier, local Viet-
namese language newspapers
published a warning that the
federal law forbids the money
gifts.
A maximum fine of $10,000
and 10 years in prison could be
involved, the newspapers said.
An unidentified U.S. official
said sending money to Vietnam
or Cambodia "is against the
law and refugees should be
advised of that."
There was no indication how
much money has been sent
hock or how frequently it may
have been done.
The foreign langnoge papers
speculated that the now-Com-
munist governments in Indo-
china might open the mail and
keep the money When the law
was enacted some 20 years
ago, Chinese livihg in the Uni-
ted States were receiving letters
from the mainland demanding
money to protect their rein- '
tives. but no such letters have
been reported from Indochina,
say refugee spokesmen.
The Trading With The En-
emy Act forbids sending cash
in such foreign mail without a
license fsom the US Treasury
Depanment, which has issued
licenses to US citizens to send
money to dependents in Indo-
china countries But a gov-
ernment spokesman said no
such licenses have been issued
to refugees.
Local News
1 1
SI u J considered ''IrMlc^ thinjis *
Cross burnings
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
rash of cross burnings and
other incidents aimed at Blacks
and Jews in Southern Cali-
fornia appears to be generated
mainly by publicity, police and
the FBI said Monday
Police Chief Edward M
Davis said media reporting of
the incidents "could result in a
major occurrence of violence
Davis Mid, There ii no
evidence to indicate that a con-
spiracy exisu to link the
cross burnings or other inci-
dents to any individual or
group of people •'
Ten sepnsnie cross burnings
have occurred in the county in
recent weeks, the FBI says. "It
almost looks like a bandwagon
sort of thing," said Special
Agitnt -Ralph Rampton. who
heads the FBI's Los Angeles
intelligence division and is in
charge of the bureau's inves-
tigation of the croM burnings.
Rampton said the incidents
"teem to be more unrelated
and sporadic" than organized
He pniniid out ilHit the inci-
dems have uken place m areas
that are £ar apart.
When asked aboM Davis*
***ili>^*oo that violence would
rwuH from publicity u.^^..^
UCLA
BRUIN
Volume XCVtll. mmm^r 27
TuMO^ a^ 11. it7e
^^onsumerisi^aHs^an^abeling decept
90094
A5UCLA
a^ M9
tetttona Bo^rg
Marc OeMfit
stuft SIX imiin
Qkmnty Sciu
Tony
Howir^ Pomm — On
Laura Klamar —
Mary Arvna CfWIno
Brandy AlaiianaBr
Cunnir>ghai!n
Bratf MoNar
Aftoaaelar
MtchaaiUa
^PaMd WhUway ^^
D«o«i Kraui
OOuM
Halty Kum
Ricfi
Paul M
Tam Moon
It
Chriatia Quia
Randy OMia
Paula Oibaon
Ma/fa La«*na
Otck Kraui
news
3 You've got to report the
Seventh Step
correction
In an article Fridav we
said the UCLA Chapter of
Seventh Step received funds
from Action The UCLA
C hapter ha^ instead received
funds fmm the C^^mmunit)
Serv K. ComtOissiaa of
SLC so that students may
run community "lervice pro-
jects at the I ompoc Prison
Iha I r I
pan
^Ch|i|Wti 1^ mM ■
Program. Grow
Sf
DS Staff Wrllar
Labeling
riving, aooording to a Mr-
vey eooductad by Ruth Yan-
natta, assistant 'to director.
Department of ConMmer Af-
fairs.
In an effort ''to call atten-
tion to the Federal Food and
Drug Administration's heahogi
on weight determinations/*
Yannatta, with help fron
PMnbers of the National
Council of Jewish Women and
from George Hall, division
chief for quality control, Los
AnfTlcs County Weighu and
Measures facilities in
determined the net drained
weight (solid minut h^iiid) of
several brands of cannad fruits
and vcgauhles.
Using a sample from each
brand, Yannatta's survey
measured, on the average, **33
per cent liquid in cani^ wImAk
com, 35.5 per cent m green
pans, 34.4 per cent hquid m
pMoppk chunks and 43.6 per
cent tn canned pear halves.**
this year, as
mbly IS waiting
by the Federal
Presently, it is impaeeiblc to
calculate the price per pound
of canned foods with the in-
formation provided on the
labels, Yannatta said.
She said that **name brands**
in most cases do not have
noticeably more "solid** than
'*house brands." Ahhough the
products were not tasted, Yan-
natu said many times there
was po difference in appear-
ance between the "name** and
••house- brands.
Refusing to wait for the
FDA, the Department of Con-
SlHaervAffiBifs is sponsoring AB
4219 authored by Assembly-
man Alfred Seigler of the ftth
district If passed, the bill
would require net ,df4^ped
weight on the rebels of all
canned and frozen foods.
WaiCiBg
Seigler said the bill probably
would not
the State
for a
Government
Ed Panons, clerk for S Ik W
Fine Foods Incorpoanlad, said
net drained wcigliS ^SJIfmlri be
on the cans,- but added, "its
an expensive operation**
Conversely, ^ill Spam, MaO-
sgw of Consumer Protection,
Dei Monte Foods Corpora-
tion, said, *^We see a lot of
problems with putting drained
weight iniormation on cans "
Spam said, that the
tion would iaioe' the ;^oet of
products by n^oessitating the
change ol lahles several tioMs
during the year This chaise,
Spain explained, would be
necessary because pro^nae
weight does not remain con-
stant throughout the year
Holding period
addition, said Spain,
warehouses would have
to be built to accommodate the
holding penod specified
(Co«CinuedonPagcl3)
I
r
in
more
i
K
Phi Eta Sigma
National Honorary gocloty
"1
General Election
of officers
I
I
t\
Ackerman Union 2408
Thursday, May 13, 4 pm
— Refreshments —
is issue to DA
Sy Mike
DB Staff Wrier
The accessibility of the Dis-
trict Attorney's office to public
view has led to a campaign
where **honesty and integrity**
are the nuin issues, according
to John Van de Kamp. incum-
bent candidate for Los Angeles
County District Attorney
Van de ICamp is running for
his first full four-year term as
District Attorney He was ap-
pointed to the office last Octo-
ber upon the death of Joseph
Van de Kamp said during a
press conference last Saturday
that the. District Attorney*s
office is constantly in the pub-
lic eye. "The District Attorney
has almost as much identifi-
cation with the people of the
city as a U.S. Senator,** Van de
Kamp said.
The high visibility of 4he
office plays^relein the
paign, according to Van de
Kamp. **l have to think that in
this race the main issue is
honesty and integrity,- he said.
The iiaMS of the campaign
GSA board rejects
election complaint
*^udeMS« never have a direct say in studenf govern-
ment,** sail graduate student Geoife Burhard after his
complaints of the handhng of GSA alaeiions this year were
dismissed by GSA election haonisr - ^^'
Submitting a list of specific complaints to the GSA
Election Board last Thursday. Birchard claimed the
elections were bartered Birchard said GSA advertjsemenu
for the recent elections had been suhMuidnrd. Uc added tiK
undergraduate eleaions advertisemcm campaign had been
conducted in a much more open, informative manner.
Birchard said that in his interpretation, the recent GSA
elections were wrong in naming Pauleen Braclceen as
picndent Brackeen received 432 votes out of 697 cast for
that position The GSA election code/ constitution calls for
the winning candidate to receive at leaM half of ail the votes
cast
Birchard said he thought the percentage of vosm caat
Aottld be determined from the gicatest amoum caaC of any
of the issues coniitosi. Inicrpwssd in this way, •nwkcen
would have needed half oi 976 voses (the number cast for
GSA referendum #1) or^48l votes.
The GSA elections board, which has the power lo
determine exactly how the code wUl be uiterpreted, decided
tlM the code menm to my tfmi a caadidate needs oidy half
of the voles cast for his/her indtvidanl paailiun SMmrd^
complaints were dssMswd.
*— Ckfis Paioier
will decide the election more
than candidate image. Van de
ILamp said. *'l would gues^
that issues are important; it%
not going to be a race that will
be resolved by a flashy face,**
he said.
Van de Kamp spoke of two
main functions of the District
Attorney's office. One function
^cution. "Hinder lBw;*^hr
District Attorney is prosecutor
for the people,** he said The
other function, enforcement of
child support laws, became an
important function of the of-
fice at the ur^ng of the federal
government, according to the
District Attorney
Van de Kamp txp\a*ne6 cur-
rent child support enforcement
by saying. "The whole thrust
of our program is strictly to
gain voluntary compliance **
He added, "The agreement to
pay and the amoum involved
will depend on his [the father's]
ability**
Van de Kamp said that be-
fore he took over, the District
Attorney's office was not func-
tioning as well as tit should
have in the role of prosaeaior.
**When 1 came in, I fch the
conviction rate was too low,
and we were losing too many
cases** He attributed this, in
part, to a freqaam failure of
witnesses to li|)fMnr aad to the
amount of time prosecuting
lawyers tended to spend in
preparing their cneaa.
The plea-bargaining system
was placed under fire by Van
de Kamp **l said at the outset,
when I was sworn in, that we
wanted to eliminate the ills of
The UCLA Center for
Afro-American Studies
presents
Dr. Claudia
Mitciiell-Kernan
^>'j
ack AmcnLdii
TiHsd.iv. M.,v n. i'>7f, 12:00 \oc>n
n07 Cimpboll H.ill
* • •
Professor Henry McCee
mmg.
Van de Ki
ovesghn^gi^g. the practice
filing more chargss than
sary to **extort a pies out of
fmr«** ahaald he elimiaasad aa
a way of improving pla^ bar
gaming.
riAHDARiN i N N
11829 Wito
1 CHIINhSh UUNNtHS ■■■ZZT^m:;^!."^^',^^^
i-ourts, Exclusionary
Municifjcil Prc^rtices
dfiihhn iinvts at Lrowth
Ihuf ■ .V, M.IV II IM7f) 12 Soon
1107 t.»ni{)holl Hdll
OPEN AND FREt TO
^'9 9r r\9 tw^m • ^-- » •"•
I ric r LJDLiv
ji.
mtm
Ford, Supreme Court both
took hard line on drugs
lately; tougher law sought
(CFS) ^ Thinfi aren't going
to get any mmu fog 4n% pen
in the near future,
ol aU the toft ulk
■nrijuana by p^pMlca-
tial candidates Both the Su-
preme Comrt nsd President
Fard took hard-line poaitioaf
on the enioroeinent of anti-
drug laws laoeotly. and Ford
vomud to hnad **nerchanu oi
death who profit from the
airffen^g af others**
**f«ll mammt of national
Student candidates to debate
Ford called growing drug
^a clear and present
t to the health mad future
€i mm aacaaa* in asking Con-
tor tougher penalties for
dmf traffickers. He asked for
ai at least three yean
lory for a first oflaaae of
or other hard
^that drug
■Mke hufe
go unreported oii
'A
r
I
i
\
ma returaa. Fotd declared that
to the Secretary
aad the Com-
af Internal Revenue
to tniuate a tax-
ftagram aimed at
dttt asaay of the
do aot pay
profitt
e on this crimiaai
Ford^ said
Ntxon
m wr\ that tjie f aaiaiy
OB the
v)
to
_ Chan 5.000
9car dK from the
^ of drugs, and
that perhaps
"^street cnmci" are
terms, drug
up to $17
the criminal penakiaa.
Government studies show
that It ooau ahout SI. 400 to
paaaaaute a pot smoker
whether he is teat torjaii or
not. Last year, more thaa
muOOO paapit wan arrnted for
personal use of nianjuaaa, at a
cost to the uxpaycrs of about
S600 miUion.
Bttt enforcement apuait
^aakrs will continue in camcai
with the Meastag of the Su-
preme Court, which recently
ruled that it is coaatitutionai to
convict a person for selling
drags even when undercover
agents initially supplied the
seller with the drugs and took
him to other govemmeat
who purchaaad it.
Two of the five judges who
taok the miLKHity ppaition said
that where tiK 4a(fea4aat was
^'predisposed" to comoMt a
crime, ^police over-involve-
ment ii^ rhnHE awld have to
reach a demonstrahk level of
but^ifMnHMs befete it couW
bar ooaviction.** But they went
on to m^ that cases m which
police "^r^TT inrillTiTBM iii" wouki
be vMifficiently **outrafa(Mis** to
bar a conviction would be
"rate,** d in fact there woukJ be
any at all
Three other jaalioes dissent-
ed from tiK daaiaiaa, aaytng
that the gni'iiamtni is doing
nothing leas than buying
contribaart from itself through
an lulci lUcUiary and jailing the
intermediary.
"There is little, if any, law
enforcement praanaiad by such
conduct.** the dissenting judges
rules. -Rather, such condu0-
deliberately entices an indi*
vidual to commit a cnmc.
"So one would sufpeat that
the police coukl round up and
jatl aU ^'predia^aaar* indivi
duals, yet that is preciscK what
setups like the instant one are
intcatfai to accomplish **
hard-drag ^eakrf. Ford
aa b^ kariitig taward
of marijuana.
to his son Jack. The
Fotd proaaaed the pot
th that his father
anifializa-
of pot for paaMiaal mt m
eliminate
VETERANS
i^
MAY 12. 1976
NOMlNATiONS ACCEP^ET
- TO VO'
-S^OCIATION OP
CLUB OFFICERS
PM 3175 BUNCHE
Beat
-*scr
Also —
GUEST SPEAKER
Hot tip?
CaU
825-2638
Mr/ENTS SERVED
^
nod
Forum \^i8ws learning blocis
nm^aSi XT .^^^ Profcaaar of n^ekt- department of psychiatry Tl
ri^"" —f: u.™.. .:. !i7..'^*' "r?^"* "•«^in«l n^ chnical feature of hype
OY«r IS mllliofi EuropMMs
-rid* motorblkM, nvm yoti
can toe, safely and
•conofwiically . • •
■y
DB Sayi Writer
Qttidren with learning dm-
may be helped througfi
:ription drugs, pareals
who use hehavior RKKlirication
aad psychoiogisu* exanunation
of rau.
Held hMt weekend on cam-
gtt. the UCLA Extensioa pro-
pan presented varying sohi-
tKMis for '^Learning Disorders
ia Children -
Judith Margohs, adjunct
aasiitant professor at the
UCLA School oi Education,
diMaased **Attemional and
Cagnitive Dysfunctions in
Laaming Disahled Children**
AttaaHaa -rlif
Although over 300 different
diofinitions of attention ejiist,
Margolis deaded to develop a
n^w model of attention for her
research. *Xoming to atten-
tion** is the first aspect, in-
cluding the motor aspect and
"organizing the perceptual
field-
The lacond aapact involves
dadsion-makn^. Mai^ hyper-
active children; expkined Mar-
falis« may' exhibit impulsive
tendencies, These children can-
aot select correct stimuli **but
look around at the variety of
stimuli that are ci
around them and bombarding
them,** she said.
Margolis defined the third
of attention as the
**ability to sustain attention to
the task ** To last this aspect,
Margolis created an examina-
tion similar to those exper-
iaaaad ia achool situatioaa
Examining the **Eflaets of
Drugs on Cognitive Perfor-
maaaer Richard Scham ex-
plained that nhe discovery that
amphetamines improved claaa-
roam behavior of children with
papchotic problems** aeeanad
40 years ago Head of the
Division of Pediatric Neuro-
logy at the UCLA School of
Medicine, Schain added that
the ' repeated confirmation of
this discovery is responsible for
the continuing use of medica-
tion.
Hyperactivity
Developmental hypanctivity
is the -most frequent diagnosis
at the UCLA pcdmtric clinics,
Schain explained. However, he
said, mental retardation, sei-
nire disorders, hraia ^— trgr'
syndiromes. childhood psy-
choses and environmental fac-
tors can also resuh m hyper-
active behavior
The problem arises, said
Schain. when the physician
aaaat daci^ to stop the drug.
*'lt is easier to surt than stop."
he added. "Physicians need ip
pay more attenyon. to lias la
the future "
Robert Sprague. jueft
speaker from the Univef^ity of '
Illinois and director of the
Children's Research Center
there, discaiaed **ReoeBt Re^
search with Hyperactive Child-
roa.** Estimate that as much
a^ 20 per eeat of school child-
ren are takii^ drms k **oat-
right naaaeaaa,** he said.
The heat estimate, according
to Spiafae, is that 'Sve aiay
have aaa-lHdf miOion children
ila any oae year** taking pai»^
laibed dn^p. i
UCLA rnfiai of ___
auy Ivar Lovaas examined
ivior Modification Ap»
to Learning Diaahi-
** Working with f^^ychotic
retarded children. Lovaas
discovered various problems in
the use of behavior modifica-
tion. The time factor con-
him, since it *^ook a
to produce chai^Ba.
We worked a 16-hour day,
iacluding Saturdays, for two
3«ars.-
The *' reversible** problem,
said Lovaas, involved children
who did "well in the program
but would regress. *Thfae
years later,** he explained, *thc
child might loae 80 per cent of
atet he was taught.**
One solution, Lovaas aMad,
IS to involve pareals in the
behavior awdtfrntion pro-
gram. Som^ parents may aaad
to learn to display affection, he
said.
^^Experimental Models of
Hyperactivity- were examined
by Jaime Diaz, a research
psychologist for the UCLA
department of psychuitry The
a^iar chnical feature of hyper-
.fctivity m the iaahility of the
child to iaHain attention, Diaz
$425
II lo
The laaaaiskar must
**whai a hyperactive animal is,'
he expbuned Medication has
produced. Diaz added, the
biggest mystery
**To help a child that is
ilMywiag hyperactivity wt have
to give the central nervous
syatem stimub. This basic para-
dox," aaid Diaz, ''is what has
helped the researchcr.-
After a deacription of the
hsaaa iyitcnls affected by am-
pheumines aad awthylpheni-
4taia« Diaz examined three ani-
mal models of hyperactivity —
a damaged Dopamine syaten
iBodel, a daanjgad Norepiae*
phrine system model and a
lead-induced hyperkinesis
• MaLI
• ISO
• Ma ShlfliiiC
MOTORIZED
CIMATTI MOXPRIZEO BIKES 828-1030
1207 8. BERKELEY. 8.M. .
AMitional speakers at tke
two-day seminar were Jack
Wetter, Howard Adelman,
Elena Boder. Florence Binder
aad Leon Oettinger
/
U.C. MOVEMENT THEATER I
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i
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IT'S NOT TOO LATE!
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Photos by Allan Fensten
i\
THIS SUMMER
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'J
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD
Secret CIA-college ties
persist. Senate panel finds
Tht CIA cturenUy
with
mi nil
dilate _«^
fottndatMMM, aocording to the
neently-releaied report of the
ScBMe Select Cominittee on
InteBifeaoe.
Tlir conmiitiK, chaired hy
Frank Church (D-ldaho), hai
^^^mkffbta the OA hM loiif
^mtmmamd mtimate tiet with
academidafli at hundreds of
universities, usinf them on a
''naMtve*' scale. The mmm of
specific individtials and institu-
tions were deleted from the
-.-■•,-.-1
All covert connections he>
tween universities and the CIJK^
wlttch were esuhhshed aft^
t%7 arc in direct violation o(
a presidential order handed
down by Lyndon Johnson.
Most of the contacts are
limited to asking professors
about th^ travels But pro-
hmon aftr also used to consuh
o« *reat of expertise, to pro-
vide dau while travehng
abroad and to write books
peed for propafaada in foreign
coumhci. Since 1969. said the
Senate report, the CIA has
produced about 250 books
abroad, dealing with every-
thing from wildlife to T.S.
Eliot to capitalism.
In at least one ease, at
^ Uttiversrty in Sl
■i, a faculty member was
t«t, but to head oil a fuH-tcale
congressional iavestigation.
The real intentian, said ILal-
zenbach, was to shield the
CIA. All covert relattoaships
were to be excluded from the
committee's report. ILatzen-
bach also testified that he
wa^d his iavestigation to
ipacifically exchide all reUition-
ships between tJie CIA awl
Ei«n before the tf(7 rasjik
tions, CIA covert activities
through student and cultural
groups were being curtailed
The CIA feh, said the maaM
report, that the student and
cultural organizations used by
the CIA were still too
, p"»dant and therefore
not he fully rehed
*The clandestine operator "
«nid Richard Helms, CIA di-
rector from 1966 to 1973, in
Senate testimony, "is trained to
beheve that you really can't
count on the hanatty of your
aaem to do cnctiy what you
want or to ipfHSI accurately
unlets you own him body and
soul.**
After Johnson's 1967 kiiao^
live, the CIA continued tia
covert relations and contracts
with university sources. In
n ■
. ^ y cases, aohady but the
individual pr
trator or UniaM it infor
Bnt at some inttitutioat, at
Icatt one university official it
aware of the CIA r^w.,>^,^i^y||,
9^id the Church conmitlaa.
Attaiighthe Senate con-
■"•••• ^"MBad academics that
covert activitiet with the CIA
■■? **Midi I iiune * public con-
fidence- in nhoie who train
our youth.** the committee did
not urge Cn^poit to prohibit
the CIA-university ^ coiMBctions.
In fact, the committee em-
phatittd how impoitant aca-
demic resouraai wut to CIA
activities, arguing that the CIA
'"must have unfettered acoett**
to university expertise The
committee stipulated only that
the assistance ''should be
openly taught and openly
iiven.-
The committee also recom-
mended that high university
officials be made aware of any
CIA connectioat with anyone
attached to the school (Preti-
deirt Ford aheady ordered this
in his own intelligence direc-
tive), and that scholars sent to
••dy abroad on a government
fellowship not be used bv t^
CIA. ^
by the CIA to provide
information on his co
The CIA also exerted heavy
inntienoe in fundi i^ acadanic
projccu, funnelling money
through philanthropic organi-
zations Between 1963 and
1966, the CIA helped fund
nearly half of 164 granu in the
field of mternational affairs.
Only the three biggest fom^-
tions — Rockefeller. Camtfie
a Ford -> did not participate.
The CIA hat connected itself
to universities almost since the
agency's inception in the late
Forties. In 1951, for example,
the CIA helped establish a
ataaaaoh institute at a major
American university. The intli-
tute was set up to study world-
wide political, economic and
West German school
standards are killers
^^^^* - ^^P«" »dmissions are no more at West German
unrversities and the tight emrance requtremeiits air killing
the students - literally. *
German authoritie« attribute 4wo recent suicides to
abnormal pressure m classrooms across that country where
most studcms who graduate are uaabk to get into college
because there just isn*t room. This year, only 35,000
students will be admitted to West German universities, out
of over 80,000 applicanu. OfficuUs predict more of the same
for the future.
-For those who doa't make it, the future seems either
waiti^ four five yean until a place opens up, giving up the
Idea of a university education and a profetiiotMl career 9€
going imo the army." explains one German ^ucator "Girls
cant do anything at all but wait or pyc up- he adds
f
f
I
-write for mora informatiof^
UNIVERSITY STUDENTS'
COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION
2424RH^Qf ROAO. BERKELEY. CAMTQB
TELEPHONE <Araa„j:>»dt 415) adt-IBSB
I
the Fifties and
Sixties, the CIA turned in-
rrratingiy to covert action in
student, cultural and labor
matters, according to the
Senate loport. The CIA*s view
ow, taid the report, that *the
ttmggfe with communitm was
taan to be, at center, a ttrngHe
between our insututions and
Covert links between the
CIA and the American
daak community Hiat
Ihe public eye in IWT,
the ^
to the Naiiaaai Stu-
(NSA)
the NSA
the OA
IS SCIENCE CATCHING UP
with MAGIC?
PARANORMAL
PHENOMENA
Socictafy of Sute at the lime
Katzenbach, however, re-
cently admitted that hit
to inifitigaif CIA imivwiity
May 15-1S, 1971
Saturday:
Anthropology and the Paranormal
Msrtsus ds Rica, Ph^o.
Mcxisrn Physics, Eastern Mysticism and
the Paranormal
Thinking Ampng Baaquea In
thePyreiiMs
Afrtsfi, M JL
CcHMnf •••ng AlMkan Eakifnos
Love Mafic. Psychedeiica, and Witchcraft
in the Rsnivien AnfMizon
igioua
J. FuMra, Pia>. ^
Psychedelic Initiation Among the
of Mozambique
Thomas F. Johneloii, PhJD.
Is Science Catchlno Up with Mngir?
Marlene de Rios Ph.D.
Toward a BMogy of
'- »t ,*imt*«mww^m
I
1
I
5
ddhrbfuh
The Supreme Court's role
'.-J
by Joel Ish
»■'■ jtTuu.
I
(idHor's nam: Ish is 9 haurer in the potHk^l
science department here.)
justke Byron White once asked a prospective
Um derk what the Uniteii States would look like
today ii the Supreo^e Caurt had never exercised
the power o^ judicial review — a rK>t wholly
inappropriate question as the nation approaches
its 200lh birthday
No doubt to some observers, fhe Court has
played a central role in American history. Oliver
Wendell Holmes speculated that if the Court had
not possessed the power of judicial rn^iem over
the states, a strong central government would not
have been possible »nd that the young nation
might have been torn apart before it was well
OPINION
Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal. Nor would a
nation's hysteria allow the Court to proiMlin
time of war the civil liberties of American citizens
who happened to be of JapancM ancestory.
Even some of tt»e Court's notable successes —
integration, for example — have been achieved
only when other political actors have found it
poliucally possible to support the Court. And
today, as busing undermines Northern iOd
Western support for a Court policy once ac-
ceptable because it was iimned to the South we
know how hollow ring the words of the political
4.cientist who claimed, "If Linle Rock had not
been in Arkansas. Atlanta not in Georgia. Miami
not in Florida. New Orleans not in Louisiana
schools would have been desegregated
within a year or two after the Supimie Court's
ision."_T^
under way. Those who see the Court as a bulwark
Igiinst the erosion of individual liberties, as a
^moral leader, assign to the Court much ol, the
credit for a number of more political and social
changes. After all. it was at the bar of the
_$uprenr>e Court that Blacks won the first victories
of the civil rights movements. It was the Court
that ended .malapportioned legislatures^ that ex-
tended the rights of the accused, that in a
mimber of instances broadened the protections
of the First Amendment, that allowed the Penta-
gon Papers to be published and that reminded a
president that no man is above the law.
But before we heap praise (or blame) on the
Court for such decisions, we should remember
that the Court, like the law itself is a creature of
politics. As Mr Dooley remarked, "The Supreme
Court follows the election returns." For the most
part, the Court can do no more than the country
will allow it to do.
The country would not allow the Supreme
Court to resolve the issue of slavery^ and so the
Ored Scott decision pirdBably did mbre to bring
on rather than to avoid a civil war The Court was
not permitted to question the constitutionality of
the harsh Reconstruction policy which followed
the North's victory. Political reality would not
tolerate a Supreme Court which frustrated
Throughout their history, Americans have had a
love.affair with the law {ii not with lawyers) They
respect it. they rey^ere it. they almost worship it —
so^long as it does not prevent them from
achievihg important goals. Consequently the
Court has achieved its greatest success on the
periphery. Rarely has the Court been the signifi-
cant decision- maker at decisive moments m our
history
This docs not mean the Court is unimponant.
When other political forces are divided, when the
o^ntry has not yet decided where it wants to go.
a Supreme Court decision may tip the balance
But when the country has made u0 its mind, the
Court has most often adopted the philosophy of
Holnnes: "When the people want to do
something that I can't find anything in the
Constitution «tpreMly forbidding ^hem to ^^ f
«ay, whether I Me it or i>ot. Coddamit. let 'em
do It. ... If my coimtry wannio jo to hell, I am
here to help." ' —
The judiciary is part of government. With
courts, as with governments, the people generally
g« wha^ they deserve So for those who wonder
what the country would look like without a
Supreme Court exercising the power of judicial
review, for the most part, they need orHy look
around them.
Steven L. Fleiner's account of
lack and Judy Carter's visit to
the UCLA Mardi Cras on Satur-
day evening, April 24, is yet
another example of the unwar-
ranted, unjust and inaccurate
attacks which have been
launched on the Carter cam-
paign in recent weeks. As one of
the four UCLA "cronies" who
was with the Carters that night
during their 15-20 minute stop
Here. I would like to correct Mr.
Fleiner s distorted discourse of
the (events of that night.
There was no "rude pushing,
shoving, hawking or hand grab-
bing " jack Carter and his wife
specifically stated that it was late
at nifht* they were tired and
that all they wanted to do was
look around for a few minutes.
They introduced themselves to
practically no one and walked
around relatively quietly, as few
people at the Mardi Cras. the
bulk of those being involved in
other things, recognized them.
There were no secret service
agents nor press people present.
The only people with the Car-
ters were two aids, an indepen-
dent photographer and four
UCLA studjents, the latter were
there for the purpose of weir
coming jack and Judy Carter
ana showing them around. The
only press photograph was taken
out in the open, out of every-
one's way, by a Daily Bruin
photographer who approached
us offering to do a write-up on
the visit. (The picture and artide
appeared in the Tueidiy, April
27 issue of the Bruin.)
The Frisbee booth visited by
the Carters was chosen because:
jack Carter enjoys playing Fris-
bee. and a UCLA Carter volun-
^^eloed to set up the booth;
letters, letters.
the Democratic Darts was sel-
ected as a joke and beckuse it
was close to the Friahee hooth
There were hardly any lines at
either booth because it was late
in the evening and the pho-
tographer, acting as an inde-
pendent worker and not for the
campaign, took a few pictures
quietly and unobtrusively.
Lastly, I might add that anyone
who would choose how to vote
on the basis of the choice of
m^es to visit on the part of the
cindidates son should perhaps
re-examine his priorities. In the
time 1 was with the Carters I
never saw Mr Fleiner come up
to them and introduce himself,
ask any questions on the cam-
paign or on issues, in fact I
never saw him at all' And. isn't
?*>?*"*"' ^^^ ^*^^ ^om
mlUT^ *^^ Various other im-
po»t**t penonalities also came
to the Mardi Cras, without be-
ing aisail^ by such criticisms?
For my part. I mw jack 'and Judy
Carter's visit not as "hardcorf.
politicking" as Mr Fleiner puts
It. but rather, ior what it was. an
•*PNp«on ol genuine inter«t
Of* the part o* the Carters to
«^ i Itttle about UCLA and
t what is happening on
public apology for yotir mali-
cious misspelling of my name, as
signed to my letter, in your 5-7
Oaihy Brum.
Furthermore, I demand an
identical retraction and apology
for the misspelling of Sally Bea-
mish s name m the 5-5 Daily
Brutn.
Additionally, I demand that
you hire at least one proof-
reader who has a high school
education.
If these demarnh are not met,
I shall have no choice but to
carnrel my subscription to your
poorly written, slovenly edited,
illiterate excuse for a college
newspaper.
Don Barlwr
Checks
BARKER
1
I den^and a retraction and
I would like to take this time
to comment on an article writ-
ten in the March 8th edition of
the Daily Brum by Robin Blt^*.
Stockton In the article. Robih
described experiences encMm-
tered while trying 10 cash a
[^>«^ at three Wrmiood Village
banks without having an ac-
count at any o« the thcec
I symphathi/e with Robin s
•f««t'vity to bemg told "I'm 100
mmy to talk with you * although
« Student Relatiom Rep at B of
^•* -westwood f heven't heard
««ny officer eapresi this sent*-
(CMdniedMraicf)
-V
Somenn conventional
by Gary Lee Moore
-T-
fldrtor's note. Moore is a funtor $n the
potHical scierKe department hmnt^
This artide is not to fet you to aa, R is
•••t to make you believe, redier it is to
try. and make you think about the isaiies
which I win ratae. Fnofii die information I
liMhaen able to gather, the common
QDRininis of opinion, from both the
9^^^ and the left of the American poli-
tlc^spectrum, is that the American
•ooety, as we now know it, will not iM
beytKid that infamous yoar of 19S4. All I
am asking of you, the reader, is that you
think about the things I will point out
and if you think that thete is something
wrong, then act upon thoae convKrtions
Cpnsider the following
— the most recently .^ceieased book
blasting Nixon is full of confidential
conversations These conversations make
Niimn look like a loul fool. Now, if
Nixon did not release dieie conversa-
tions to the authors, which seems highly
unlikely, then where did they get these
accurate conversational texts?
—following the billion dollar gram
Ml with the Soviets (this was on credit,
deipile the fact that the Soviets have
rotten credit, ar>d when was the lett time
ts
exten^d r?^H?^****'^ voluntarily ^ • during the Paris Peace talks there is
r^tL^^tj.^ tomeone with a evidence that Kr^n^m threatened to use
^II^TSL Till? ^' /^ "^ ^Jr*^ -•'^^ '-••^ H^*' "^ Vietnamese
naturally rose. Thtt m turn led to the riK 12 different times.
— I
!- jy*' f^^«^ ^^'^ich m turn led to the
ini-rMrad lae of the so caBed pooi^
man s food (beMH and rice). As a result,
!!y.f!^ ?Li??^ and rice has risen,
imccxpely pridng the poor xifht out of
the supermarket The likely result of this
trend will be food dots. In light of th^
Cham of events, consider the iiMommg
two facte: two years ago the rint^iit
ordered the Army to be |iii|ignif |
ujppress food hon; Ust year the LAfO
admitted that the pnlke force was being
trained to tiiiMen food ri
el the U.S.). needs to t^ iryemmmB. May
I mk who c^res how meny times the
world will be ililnii \ J aHier the fint
tinr>e?
— ^n the explosive Middle East ,„im-
tion. where the UnHed States is npnoaed
to be negotiating a lasting peace afree--
;t>ent, we eantinue to sell weapons to
?y ••^•* •« this to insure that both
••des can peacefully kill each other off?
— in an effOft to enforce the law, the
ifencies entrusted with that duty feel
that they must break the law How can
•^tif eftncies teach respect for tf>e law
If they do not respect it?
^ in a statenr>ent which was ^^,j,^^m%B
to justify the CIA intervention in Chile,
m an attempt to prevent the election of
Allende, Kissnifar said: "I don't see why
we r\eed to star>d by and watch a country
go Communist due to the irreipnnsibility
of rt% own people. "
^ a country such as ours, founded on
the doctrines of freedom to dissent,
eqjJ*J*^y oi all. majority rule and minority
Nfhai, it mppeiting such "free" govern-
ments as those in South Korea, Iran.
Brazil. Columbia. Chile, South Africa, just
to nanr>e a few Need I remind you of
that wonderfully liberal, free government
which we established and maintained
under Thieu in South Vietnam?
^ everyone agrees In thii election
y^ar that our ."tiny* defense budget,
which IS approxinwtely 10% of the entire
federal budget ar\d which encompasses a
rujclear arsenal which (using conservative
estimates) could destroy the world FIVE
times over (and this is just the capability
cmnmunity, to
I ask you. the
carefully think about ^
iMues because, no matxer how much you
dislike tfiat hackneyed expamleii, we are
the leaders pf tomorrow We dn not live
in a society with a paepnndatwice of
Horatio Alger's, indeed they afe nery few
and far between. This country is run |w
coUefe graduates, and hopefully we vyiB
soon be |ust that Furtfiermore, we &re
required to look at the pioblenn of
yesterday and today; to look at the
solution which have been tried, and to
suggest our own. and we are required to
critically evaluate them We are the
people who must be listened to and
therefore, we are the penple who will
determine whether or not we will live in
a free society Granted the. society «ye
now live in has its problems, but it is
most likely the best place around I ask
that you remember the words of William
Shakespeare: "It hath been taught us
from the primal sute that he which is
was wished umil he were."
r
'More letters to the
•)
ment.
I wish, however, that when
Robin experienced this, she
would have cpme over to talk to
iohn Peratis or myself John ar^
I are at the bank for the sole
purpose of helping students
with any problems that they
-BifHt run into here. '"ipgfuBi,,
the (act that we are both stu-
derHs wiM increase our abilitv lb
help. ■
I can assure you that we jdo all
in pur power to solve these
problemsi. whicb might even
include cashing a check without
an account with our bank We
nHist. however, be aware of a
problem hniore we can help.
I feel vi^ry strongly, though,
that there Wiust be tome sensi-
tivity on Robm s part to the f aa
that an account would expedite
the cashing of checks at any
bank. The precautiom taken by
banks these days are in dxrecx
ftlpoiise to the losses they have
experienced. I remember how
wrpriitid l-was to see just how
many losses are taken due to
dishonesty, etc. As in many oth-
er areas ipvol^ving trust in fellow
9nan, it see his tf>at the many are
maide to suffer for the actior>s of
a few people who abuse trust
and honeaty.
r would like to thank Robin
fcK all of her observations, as we
can all use a suggestion to im-
prove ourselves. In B of As
behalf 1 feel I must comment on
the effort bein* ma<^ toward ar\
increased awarer>ess of the spe-
cial needs of students As a stu-
dent mysolfr 4 ^iMk appfeci^^
having tivo pe^pti at the bank
who are open and sensitive to
my situation as a student, be-
cause they are students them-
lelves Hopefully, sensitivity on
both sides will promote a road
back to trust.
t of A
Good hands
I am so happy to see the
inclusion of a column (or advc»f»
trsement) in The Bruin which has
come to mean so much to me,
that it is the only reason that I
now' even pick up this ne%vs-
papers It is' the trerfiendous
"Wby-Xlp The Heathen Rage?'
After rfidin^ weeks of endless
detMie on abortion, coverage of
candidates, the never-ending
and ever 'enlarging iporte sec*
tion, and all the other nbnsen-'
sical gibberish. or>e only has to
read the "Heathen Rage ' to
know that there is a solution,
that this earth is still, ii
good hands." Let's
one top tMf
KH 112
Jewish Studies Colloquium
The Poetry of
NATAN ZAGH
A Lecture in Hebrew by
MERI BARUCH,
Phd candidate in
Near Eastern Languages
Tuesday Noon ^^
May 11 2412 Ackerman Union
ri
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Waltons' Hamner : family, yes - Family Hour, no
Earl Hamner. creator of the Emmy-wtniung television series,
Tht WaaoM, iHi*l satisfied with the way television produces
family programming.
''People,*' he said, referring to the television industry, "ought to
be applying themselves not to family enteruinment. but quality
entertainment.*
Hamner, 52, spoke in an interview at his simple Burbank
Studios ' office, where memorabilia from TIk WalMM series
covered the walls. The uU, ruddy<omplexioned Hamner, whose
childhood experiences were the basis for TIm WaHaas, believes
that **everyt>ody*s confused as to what family programming really
is.
"^At the moment, I think that they are guided not by categories
of programs ... but that any liiow up until nine o'clock, they
simply treat a ceruin way. They will iry not to have sex or
violence or offensive wQrds . . and I believe that their
reasoning is, after that, then they can ... lift tiK lid and
anything g^s. This teems to be based generally on the fechng
that children all automatkally go to bed at nine o'clock, which
certainly isn*t true." ^
Hamner says he believes that this policy of programming,
known as the **^amily Hour,*' has had a **watf ring-down" effect
on program quality. And, he pointed out, ^ has also led several
producers, such as Norman Lear and Mary Tyler Moore, to sue
the networks, charging censorship. Hamner said he agrees with
these producers and explmaed that his idea of quality family
programming would be great original plays or biographies
occupying a whole evening, much like the recent television
production, **EleaBor and Franklin." In programs of this kind, he
said, he would want the emphasis placed on quality, not just on
the appropriateness for family viewing.
As for sex on television, Hamner said that he had never seen
any sex on television and couldn't understand what people mean^
by it, unless they meant suggestive phrases or situations
"1 am offended by vulgarity Tm not offended by sex if they
mean two people loving each other. And this to me seenas
beautiful, rather than the obscenity th4|t people' seem to feel.**
Ap area of television that Hamner sees a healthy upsurge in is
the new mini-senes format, such as the retxnt, "Rich Man, Poor
_Man," which showed "people relating to one another in
meaningful ways. They were not just stick figures with no
dimension."
He said that his same concept of people interrelating with one
another is a major guiding force on Tbc Waltons. He pointed out
that, despite some people's claims that Tlie WaHons were "too
good to be true," every character on the show had at least one
nuijor failing. The grandmother, he said, was virtually a "bigot"
in her religious attitutes.
Hamner believes that The WallcMi's success can be traced to
several other sources, besides the relationships between the
characters.
For one thing, he believes that the roie of the Depression as
the villain gives an air of reabsm to TIm WaltoM lacking in his
other television series, **Apple*s Way" (cancelled after one
season).
Secondly, Hamner feels that the time and the settnia give a
quajntness to The Waltons that might attract viewers familiar
with the era.
"Knowing that we came out of those difficult
Hamner: *^e never lef"^ to say» ^ey, this k a
good flory: we can confimi Mom's apple pie,
and the flag and the Baptist n
f 99
Vff
WaHnmi* central theme is tiK interrelatK ^
between the members of an AppaUchian mounuin family,
Hajaner has certain ideas about the state of the American family
**I think the pendulum is coming back to people
admitting that they need ^ach ptl«r in a family relationship,**
Hamner said.
Hamner also said he has nntiDai mnny people migraung from
the aties to the countsy m hopes of getting back to the basic
values of life Hf said he doubted that television shows such as
TiM WatooM or LMe Hmm me IIm Prarie had any effect on tins
drift, but said people are just being sman.
Hamner himislf fits well into this back-to-nature mold, in
contrast to the whirlwind world of typical Hollywood denizen
He is the proud owner of a small house nestled in the hiUs of
Studio City, where he Uves in a rural setting with his wife, Jane,
of 22 years and their two children
Hamner has been associated with television on and off for over
2S years and TW Waltons for the last four years. He is probably
best known as the voice who introduces Tlie WnltoM each
Thursday night And, that down-to-earth, Virginia drawl might
haeoaK even more famihar in the near future.
Hanwer said that he has recently been persuaded by friends to
audition for the role of a Ulk show host. This step into the
spotlight was not an eaiy deasion for Hamner to reach.
•*! have friends who arc cekbnties .1 know what their lives
are like and I sort of treasure my own anonymity " Then,
iie said, he went soul-searching, and decided that it would be
cowardly not to do the show. "Rather than posing as Vm
so shy, and Tm so reserved, and Fm above all that,* I decided it
was really more honest and really more inteUiaent la say, *Yeah,
that sounds hke something I would enjoy/ and so I will do it.**
The show is still in the planning staaes.
Despite all the work that Hamner has done in television (TIm
Today Slk>w. TwiMght Zone and many dihers), he stiU considers
himself a novelist who*s temporarily working in television His
five novels have been written over of a span of 23 years, and they
include: FMy Rondi to Towa. SpMcar-s fountain, which^was
made imo a popular motion picture: TIm HonMenrndas* tiM
popular television special tht was the basis for Tht Waltatm; Yon
Can*t Gtt TlMve Front Here; and his newm novel. Fcsiwlclt's
times ^ strengthens us spiritually in a way that gives us the
feehns 1^1^^ ^^ *<^ strong and resiliem peof k."
Because it takes place in the past. Hamner adds, Tht Wtltons
are not to be looked upon "as a problem to be solved, but simply
as entertainment "
To entertain. Hamner concludes, is the prinmry goal of TW
WaHons, and a show is never created specifically to tell a moral
ule. "We never set out to say Hey. this is a ^m^ story: we can
confirm Mom*s apple pie. and thi f-lag and the Baptist religion.*
Hamner's memory is filled with anecdotes ateut the hfe of a
young wnter, and he has advice for those hopeful of any kind of
literary career He says that probably the most imporunt trait a
young, unknown writer should have is arragsnce.
"First." Hamner said, "it surpnses people, aiHl secondly that
kind of arrogance also implies that that person might be quite
good at what he says he can do."
Hamper added that this kind of arroanaae naaicooq^ktely out
of dMKacter for him But. he said, quoting aa old Spanish
proverb, "When you run with the wolves, you learn how to
howl."
Yet, even though he has been running with the woKes for over
20 years. Hamner still rrtaitM sonic of the values of his youth in
Virginia.
"I think . . . tlmt there are more affirmative qualities to
HMinkind that negative ones, and tlmt we arc God-like creatures
in a way and have more capability for good
than for evil But then, Pm more just an old Bn^ist
preacher, to I say things like that "
On Campus
'Seeing Castaneda'
Review:
Composers
If the faculty, friends and
student performers in the mu-
sic department did nothing else
Saturday night, at Imsi they
enjoyed themselves. As part of
the continuing Henri Lazarof-
engineered Bicentennial Con-
temporary Music Festival, the
instrumental concen pfctented
in Schoenberg Hall featured
works by UCLA faculty --
and with an abundance of
talent and a rwponsive aud-
ience, little effort was spnind in
showmanship
Henri Lararofs *'Third
Chamber ConMifo** (con-
^ LazaroO made full
oC a wide range of timbres
in the horns, strinp, wood^
winds, harp, piano and per-
cnwion by arranging and re-
arranging varintn groupings of
^nnfieis. trios and duos.
Pia rwiilbcrt uisd 'dancs
Suite, scored
^ Wr "-Interrupted
for two piarm<;
prepnsnd piano and clarmet.
The eight short sections of the
piece were held together most
effectively . by a difficult but
well-executed clarinet part,
meant for facujlty member
Gary Gray, but performed by a
different, unannounced player.
"Switched on Ashantiv (Roy
Travis) was a three-movement
work for pre-recorded drums.
synthesizer and live flute.
based on different Ashanti
dnne». Although flutist Gretel
ShnnlQf playc;d articulately, the
whole piaet could have been
just as effective if it had all
bean on tape.
Elaine Barkings "Inward* and
Outward BaMHT was an en-
semble work Concerned with
mulliphonics. as was ex-facuhy
member Lucas Foes* "The
Cave of the WiodiL^ The hnrih
tonality in the piece faded in
and out abruptly, as did the
attempted humor of the work
"The Wah/ King." Paul Re-
ale\ overlv-romantic tongue-
mawcal diawiitg }\nm\
sagi feflectivety directed and
narrated »^v i^hn Hall) closed
the program on a light and
comic note.
— Mary Anne Cartaino
Putting us Juan?
Preview:
Melnitz movie
The Film Speakers
will present a tribute to direc-
tor Vincente Minnelli, May II
(tonight) and 12 in Melnit/
1409 Sotoe Caaw Baaninr ^
color and Ciniiinnarnpr star-
ring Frank Sinatra, Dean Mar-
tin and Shirley MncLaine, will
be shown tonight at 7:30. TIm
JNadnnasa, a color musical
starring Fred Astaire and Cyd
Charistc, will be tomorrow
night at 7:30.
Vincente Minnelli is equally
at orams aon bmi^^*"
and is a aMSter oi
color, decor and composition.
His other films include An
Antericns in Paris, Meet Me in
St. Loali, TiM Bod and file
By Jonn Moriey
Man create his own reaUty? Are there
other realities beyond the one we have been
taught to believe in? Is it possible to learn new
ways of '•teeing'* — to discard one's hfetime of
socialization to a particular culture and in so
doing *^ilof tiK worldT*
Tknee niko are familiar with Carlos Cas-
tMadi^s maglBil tetralogy, Tke TancMnfi n#
Dno Amit, A Scp^mt BanBly. Jannw y to
laami and Tnlm nl Power, will reoo^iit these
M questioitt which are oemral to the works but
which rcoMia unanewTrrd in any final
An exploration of these Unukzing qi
well as of tlie validity and appiicibUity of the
entire tctmlogy has ham nadertilrrn b^ editor
E>nniel Noel in fait SadlH CM>in i ii (G.P.
Noel hns included a number of
letters which highlight this
ahhough the argumenu are dnslj
favor of Ciiteiitiili at a rhrnaitrlrr of true
events rather than as a novelist. Ronald
Sukenick, experimental fictioneer, ties the
argument up nantly with his staimBent that the
I>on Juan hodlu are *HNMts of an . . .hot
works of an don*t hnvc to be
AdmiMion it free and all the
pnnls are 35 mm.
Putnm*s Sons, $7.95, 250 pnget), a fn«aaatiM
collection of reviews, esaayi and lectufct wlnn
f<>«as on remniidi'i toots.
Cnitaneda aniid qnile a furor with the
publication of the first book of the Don Juaa
scries m the hMe f9a0's under the nggit of
amhropoli^. While a numtor of authoritici
(ined up oa Camnaadn's ntfc 10 eaacnm theil^
igiier w lag"—— w ai iig wam,' miitu
<lor example. Joyce Carol Dates) unequi-
vocaWt fircl.ircd them to hr fictional
Daniel NoeTt Baiina CafaaMda it not ^ My
niennt '^Hgln rending;** the etHiyt, like the Don
Juan telralogy, deal with concepts which
extend fex «beyood otir fiaile telvet and reality
as we know it (or tow toen tai^^ to
it) to be. They are wotth rwiding.
only tocause they provide one with ii
intellectnal stimulation, biic ato became of
their pcnoapl jihilfMnphiwI apptoihtlity, being
loul nitli etmt paitlcnlnr-tonqrT
we tove ecmie to attociate with Don
OAKLEY'S*
Men'a Haircotting
at ita beet
Long & Short Stytee
on
1 on 34240
leai Oayloy
Woatwood Thaatar)
DATSUN
"^ Acres of Datsuns
Student, faculty, and alumni
fleet diacounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway-
* 684-1133*
-'tV!
I
Juan and Carlo* Castaneda
THE LSAT REVIEW COURSE
tolh*
ONLY LSAT REVIEW COURSE
taught by practicing lawyers Who ars •xp«n«noad instroctors for ths
last four years to over 2 000 pra-taw students ^iXts conetantty updalea
materials, attanitnad techniques arKl SKtensive testing giving 20 hours
of inHryOcin In 5. 4 hour issslons.
THE LSAT REIVEW COURSE CAN HELP YOU
MAXIMIZE YOUR SCORE. ^,
COST $05
For complece July. October and December Information
Call Collect today (213) 87t- 1020
;l
Gandhi vs Gandhi
Non-violence in india
a film, just smuggled out of India, dealing with
last year's non-violent struggle in the Indian
state of Bihar
Anand Patwarahan. the film's maker, will be
king.
Tuesday, IMay lltfi at 1:06
Acl(emian Rm. 3517
by Campus Committee to Bridge the Qap
(affiliattd w^ Community Services Commission of the
Legislative Council)
POSITION AVAILABLE
— student Coordinator —
Foreign Student Orientation Program
Academic Year — June 1976- June 1977
for implemantation of Onootation
for nowfy arrived UCLA foroien atudofitn.
20-40 hfg/woek during aummof
Avaiaea of 10 hra/wook ^eHk, WMar. Spfing OM
Job Doacrlption S Applicationa Available
imomational Student Coniar
1023 Hilgard
or
Offico of International Studonta S Scholars
297 Oodd Han
for return of
:i"''
I
f
J
1
I
'U/. •
SUMMER JOBS
Earn $2,500
must be
hard worker
Independent
able to leave California
Interviews held today
1:00, 4:00, & 7:00
at the Holiday Inn
(corner of Wilshire & Selby)
please be on time
or
call 479-4139
,.4;
\~
P
0
S
T
E
R
$4
-^$.50 shpg
T-SHIRT AVAILABLE $5.00
specify size (s,m, l,xl)
SEND CHECK OR MONEY OtOER TO:
WINNING SHOTS, INC
P.O. BOX 302
1175 LINCOLN PL.
BIBERQN,N.J. 07740
=Z
t ' •
Justice present at
UCLA moot court
Bf Sera Gee^iMa
X>B Sleir WfflMr
The U.S. Supreme Coiijt nikd in Civor of the respoe-
dcnu Fridey during the Re«ee PouBd Ceeipetitioo of the
UCLA Moot Court Honon hegpun.
Moot Court is mn offMuxetJoe ef wfomd eai third-yeer
hiw studenu who appear before vahou» paneb and argue
appellate casei bypothetically. The best iecoe4-year
students and the previous yeei^ wmners then pMHtt a case
before a umuiated U.S. Supreme Court compiled of im-
portant U.S. judges.
l>e winning team« this year the second-year ilaints, will
go on to a regional competition aad, if they win there, to
the eetiOMiii held in S^ York.
The case, an anti-trust suit, conemed National Banking
Machines, Incorporated, the petitioners, against First
Pacific Banking and Trust Company. Northwest Fisher-
nuins Bank, Farmers Western Bank and Commercial Bank,
the respondents.
Gwrna^ boyceH
The petitioners argued that the respondents formed a
^oup boycott efHBSt their product, in violation of the
^^h^iaen Anti-Trust Act. The icspondentt argued that the
legality o( their clients* actioos, saying there was no group
boycott aad no Act violation.
Counsel for the petitioner were third year law students
Linda ^Horner and Duaae Musfeh. Counsel for the re-
spondent were Annette Keller asd Michael Sandberg.
Sandberg received Besi Advocate award. The petitioners
presented their case first after Musfeh, representing both
teams, waived the right to a quorum of judges.
On the bench were Harry A. Blarkmim, ■asoriate joiliee
of the United States Supreme Coort, Ben E. Dumway,
Ninth Circuit ifnited Sutes Court of Appeals and John
Minor Wisdom, Fifth Qrcuit United Sutes Court of
Appeals.
After the court session eatfed the three judges gave advice
and comments to the studems.
Sympathy
Duniway expressed his sympathy to the students because
they were asked questions about a record when there was
(CepHwai ee Pe«i 13)
.1
Next time you need help
ififorination.
or juat eomcoiK lo talk to.
give us a call. '
825-7646
— : — ^ (ml lAJKU)
r-"
>.>•
,=«.
Moot Court
12)
lie eempaMU lawyer with a corn-
judge GCNpId easily heedk thu case, he
He ihae advised them to mmanber an
f«ie iMdi they followed ~ to
all quertioos ti» eeiirt asks This was
he said, it is the job of
counsel to sierm the court. *-! wish aU
well-argued as this otte * he
after noting the imbalance of the case,
favonag respon^nts. He said complainu
should be drawn Very carefully because if the
alkflsd.
Ifth
Wisdom continued by remarkii^ that the
" eieeiad a gieet soe^e for the imagimn
tion beaeeae of the lacking record.
BUckmun than gave more technical advice
If the winning team makes it to the
nationals in New York, he advised the Isem
to use a suu case even if it is not as geed as
their argWBents with intensity and conviction
of the validity of theu- cause, he said He
also regretted that the case would be decided
by the ^guments pwicimed, not the case's
merits.
iPM
mmmtm
1 hii east el UGU
■••■fcip. com
rM«C«M474.aH
• • •
Camp
tor psfimmnt rtfr«>
flt/stcnnariat for tar West na
sroQramt are now
fta ■ lili ■ I
immNit
« May 14
— TSt Tls» by Murray ScHitoal will be
pnstntad by me Oapartmant of Thtatar
Artsl noon. May M.
1340 Froe
lan T
bars Call 274-2277 m
OECA
— fMk iHHi. S-IO pm tvwy Wm
and S 30- 10 30 SM. tvwy MSey
national SluHant Center 1Q23 HMQ^rd Free
'fnlMl kmmmm 7S can hefp you find
am Me Mationai praaMawue canSitfaMs
fltsniB an me issaas Visit KareMieM m
and fill out a card and ma answart wW be
sent to you
-'FaNnMSIpB. information anS
on extramural foAdtng for grasue
and postdoctorals 9t% svaNsHa in me
Feliowsfiips and Asslstantship Section
Murplty 1SS
rasMRBBsMp CaaMr staffed by
rns wiM bslp you fmd tunmns
tor your iiaBS Opan daily noon-4 $m.
Kercktioff 401
and local vohiniar positiaiii are avaMaSM
now mrough EXPO AdHnmn A123 or c^l
82S-4M31
fom OECA as a
itigator Visit fCarcabsg 311
Vokmiaars are sisi ..
for anvironmentai and food pr^issM.
—Tie Saps
e Pas ia«l wMl be sfiown 5
Mainitz 1400 Free
ITS
Cans
(Continued from Pags i)
by the DCS bill —
The cans are not going to
be fuller. Spain said the
containers are initially filled
with as much solid as possible,
then liquid is added to keep
the product from rtrrnrnpeiii^
Spam said a better substi-
tute for net drained weight
would be ''filled weight." Sim-
ply suted, ** Till weight* is the
weight of the ingoing, un-
cooked, solid food." explained
Spain. This would reduce the
cost, according to Spam, by
alleviating the need te eddi-
tional warehouses.
In general, Spain said, the
higher the net drained weight
per can, the lower the quality.
An akereative to both plans
IS the FDA*s proposal, which
would make necessary, in addi-
tion to net weight, the listing
of net drained weight, ex-
plaihled Larry Stevens, con-
sumer affair^ officer of the
FDA. Net drained weight. Ste-
vens defined, n the amount of
product in the cen after the
faduiig madia is poured off.
Stevens said if the proposal
becomes a requirement, the
measurements oeeld he dome in
the inenii&icturer*& plants, al-
leviating the iiiimmiiy for ad-
ditional warehoMn^
All ceaead fruits and icp
tehies of which the entire coe-
tents are norinaBy eaten would
be exempt from net drained
weight labeling. Stevens ex
Yannatu', said that ie tlie
FDA propOnl Ibe omnufac-
turgf - ny gill ii UK m ii I
the Sc net drained weight
of Ifle C4ins. hut (tnh an cs-
m:fienun.
itoSsm campooei as esl ss smsr M
century Amarican eaaic noon Itisy
Scbpaoberg audifonum ft^
Mn laaonMB. will perform on-
wortcs by UCLA
May 13
t %mm ue ai
-Ta
Ff
■i«5ktbss
ee. •weaa A-103
Mpm
or wait May 13
$1
S3
Sctioemais
faculty staff and aamor dliiam
imrtol
•:30 pm
ium [KU
today Boalter 2444
Ibsny e
2-3 pm
Orios. 3430 pm. today
rx'
Buncfe 21S0
— HpoeSaa la LaSa Aeartaa. parspactn^
on Latm America sMoa lycliofoat. • am-
aoon and 2-4 30 pm May 13. Faculty
\f9tn9r rosaMiis aouore aaasaais ems
wiU dioosss CMfONt ani Mwa Meiis.sf
poNcy. wfin
e follow
e
noon. May 13 Bundle
iatleer SiA. and tfte
ol maooasse MIA. 4 pm May
13. CMS 33 106
13. KercktMilf upoaars lounge
J
I
^
MASTER "^^ PROJECT GRANT GAME
^^^^ ~^ A STRATEGIC APPROACH^
Spimd Wednesday. May 26th with Chr Jemes L Coatanza. arxl let him show you how to **MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT
GAME Here is an exciting, once only opportunity to learn first hand from this iofmer UG iacuhy membar end Fufcright lecturer
how you can shsse iri the biftons. yes Isillona. o^ dotteis 0Man eMy each yarn by federal, state and local gouemment aga
well as private foundatjons and oritpMieiunst These goMemnnent aganc^m and privetc sources went to fund the
research. d€nK)nstratioii»^ pra^eds, MMng arxi community action proyeim you wish to conduct
After pending Wednesdav. May 26th with Dr Castanaa ymj will be infomied. YOU WILL POSSESS PROVEN METHODS
TECHNIQUES TO SNARE CATEGORICAL FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES. You wiU |eam how to spot eliciting appoAyneies
how to turn good ideas into fully funded pao^fcts Here is the stotegic approach to grantsmanshtp in a captivating iweaaiiiiilliiii
Lialed bcbw are )ust a few of the things you will leam
,• How to find furids arui how to appiy kx tyrants
• Deciding what and when to propoae
•What to do if you're not eligible for funds ^
• How to write and padiage your proposal to jpin attention
• When arxJ hoU/ to promoia the furxilng agency and who to pronrKMe on
• hlow to be tn the know about available funds
•Determining if the competition for furnis is fair (or. when to stt it out)
• How to determir^e what your proyect sAtOMid coat
• What to do if your funds are cut/How to RKxMy pro^ soofw
• Deiending your proposal and r\mnrmmmnn m fjwiiM^ t 1
Plan on spgnding WedrMBd^^ May 26th with Dr James L Coatanza and you too will mHler the pcoiect 9ML gamt. Here Is an
ideal opporturiity for faculty, staff andstudents to line up a summer pra^ect, do aomeslydfcant reaeercK support worthwhile com
munity action, start a consulting practice.
DONT MISS THIS ONE. Tim «nV Southern CaBfomia prugntatton of MASTER THE PROJECT CRAST GAME
WHAT THEY SAY... MsWmL eadsrV oaamte MM aoorth #ie amt and emnsy / mumisd
The nKMi con^^ and con^^relmmue I -^ WBtay, J. Sufti-n. SJ. Je-Jl. -M^ R.Cmn^,^^D^mM^, Con
-M.V Waliar. Pacific U
Aim 15 yeovs of grwflmtkiinhip. the beat
dMMMe ftofft oi^f toutce
-Marvin E Tong. Jr. Ralph Foslar Muoaum
Exotffitanail^ weil pkmned and pre§ented
-Dale I Van Buskirk, Globe Poke
m^ mind
fym m I fmmuia$e Min .Most pmfamiuiitil and mfpmumm
Library
GHKiy
Wvy ha^^ md of sujgkAcni daiaH to be of
bmmM to jn i^imluniih lartangMpei.
--Craig A Ramcy. PhD . Aost CWaf el Staff .
M% HamMil NanMi^an. CT
ofStu
AAd. UmuanMyof
ExceiienL
M
F. Collin*.
ONE TIME ONLY!
THE ECKMAN CENTER PRESENTS
"MASTER THE PROJECT GRANT GAME**
AN INFORMATIVE. EYE OTCNING AND HARD HITTING LIVE PRESENTATION
BY DR. JAMES L COSTANZA-BACK FROM A NATIONAL TOUR
WEDNESDAY. MAY 26th, 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.in.
WALK FROM CAMPUS THE PLAZA THEATER iostglb
ADVANCE ^ TICKET SALES AT ALL MUTUAL AGBICIES
TII^KFT ^ INCLUDING 140 KERCKHOFF HALL ANI
IIV^IVCI W^ SHOP INTERNATIONAL. 1355 WESTl
BLVD. -ALSO AT ALL UBERTy AND TICKETRON
•:• I
TCJJT
tjpen^toS'
AT SKK) a. I A.
s I
UVE
'ATION
ONE TIME ONLY
M&^
teC(^
Hair Styiis/s
MEN & WOMEN -^
I
We Style Long Hair &
Also the Latest Full Cut
Shampoo & Blow Dry or Dry Cut
Manicuring & Pedicuring.
We also color and give Body perm
lesesvk u cems Ave. ^^y pay more?
VMae« acroM lieei U
teirt
Captains spark Bruin offense -. .
47S-nTf
47S-7770
bdQir
Ibchnics
SL-1300
$299*'
(rontlnued horn Psee If)
wanted to know* **
Obviously, both have im-
proved m thctr two yean in
Wcflwood. especially since last
•eeson. Penniail, for insunoe,
•tok jvat 12 bates in 1975.
Two years afa, 1 toid him
the same thing I told Veaoy
Garrison — that they should
biiak the school record (for
would lead km year, bet I
expected them both to do it.
There is a big difference
between last aaaaen and
Last year, he was slidii^
first. He was aieertna down
before his slide and (le had to
slide earlier. «
**He fees feet first now and
he can run longer; and he
doesn*t slow down at all before
his slide.**
Pennialfs batting averaae is
^wtt about nine points from
left year, but he ii now a bet-
ter hitter m the eyes of his
codch
**He*i very consistent, aad
he's better than last season
My opinion is that last year he
wm too easily intimideled. He
really believes in hioHstf mam
— he has 50 per cent more
confidMpe this season Last
year Ik would expect an oppo-
aset to be m good as his press
ciippingt and bow down to
that. This year, the better they
arc, the more confident he is."
Dallas, who hit 261 last
year, iries to plan his game
around Penniail If the center
fielder is oe base, he ouiy take
a strike or protect the runner
while Penniail steals second.
Then he will try to move him
to third by hitting to the right
side. Many umes, the two will
hit-and-run.
''He^s a gitat number two
hitter,** siiys Adaaa^ of Dallas,
''if he had real feed irhwh,
he'd be the best a coach coeld
want But he*s gnel, ead he is
as responsible for Dave's ttr
cord as Davr^ik. The BM>re you
see bias play, the more im-
pressed you are by all the
thiMS he
**ln the field, he has im-
proved on the double play —
he really hangs in there aow.
He IS gening the oMist out of
his arm, and he leads the team
in bhie balls (awarded for an
oiitstiBdiag or clutch defen-
sive pby). He is a clutch
player.-
Together, they hope to lead
the Bruins to the CIBA title
this week by defeating USC at
least oaoe. if it happens,
chances are the two men at the
top will have something fo do
with It.
B«l Air Camera t Hi-FI wonts you to onjoy th« un»urposs«d
quality of tb« Tochnict SI- 1 300 turn tobU from Pono»onic J^m
St 1300* direct driv« system •ItmioetM noi— producing^
bo»t» and idl#rt It achi*vos a r»nnorkabl« ,04% wow ond flut
t«r and has a rumbl* of l«ss thon 70 db
SL-1360
$349*
r
I
I.
r
I
I
I
I
I
L,
» you w^ Tachnic « quality in on outomotic chon9»f ••!
Air Comcra < Hi-Fi Kos the lurntobi* fdr you Th« SLiaSO
ochiav** th« torn* p«rfortnanc» stondords at lh« SI- 1 300 but
Uotur** th« ability to ploy outomaticolly up to 6 diH«r*nt
r*cordt $•• and hoor thit qmazmg chaa«*r at th« horn* ol
th« T*chnic ( S^ocialiitt. Bal Air Camaro • Hi-Fi
beiQir
u jcntsto & hi f I
FREE
PICKERING
Magnetic CarMdBa
Wttb thn coupon mn4 t*i» pwrch— o* 9ithmr m T»ch«*c» St t
T«cHn<* U I3S0 Ohm OKptr** S««ur^ May 22 1 97*
B txkircGinaQahHr
«27 W««*wood Siv4 Lot Ang»W« Cy^ 90024 (2 13) 477 •549 or §79 •* 1 4
•loch South of UCLA tn W— t%i4o^ Hm»r% Mow^y
Sati
9 4
Engineering Graduate Student A
NEEDS NEW LEADERS TO CONTINUE:
— COFFEE HOUR —
• — GRAD LOUNGE —
— PIZZA PARTIES —
NO OFFICERS MEANS NO SERVICES .
AND NO REPRESENTATION
EGSA HMds engineering graduate students to fiM the posts of President Admin-
istrative V.P.. Academic V.P.. Treasurer/Secretary, and Departmental Representa-
tives. Continuation of current services and the providing of new services is essfiotial.
INTERESTED?
Visit us in 4405 Boelter Hall (open 8am-5pm) and sign up on the blackboard
(Name, Phone Number, and Department)
ELECTIONS WILL BE HELD IN 6730 BH ON MAY 17TH
Special UCLA
Student Rate
8.50
B) a|>|NMii1ui«-iii
Alec or Arnold
T7S«44
WILSHIRE WEST PLAZA
mn WILSHIRE BLVD
WESTWOOD. CAUF WOW
Golf stiars finisti onNwD . . .
the best goir of her Mfe, but
Hill f9tk that h«F fMM it fmr
^ kawt tiM if I bad been
tinking a few more putu that I
should be wiMirffig^ i couki be
ihootinf m the lixtiea,** |be
Men crews ccmpete
amongst themselves
Perhaps the laoai relaxing day of racing action trantptred
Saturday for the UCLA men's crews
TUa Friday the UCLA oafMea will travel to San Fah
Califomu for the Western Spnnu but over the Bwliind the
competition was friendly. ^
On an oveiCMl day at Manna del Rcy. the Bruins competed in
the Grand Interclaas Oar Eight members from each of the
freshman, sophomore and jumor claMCi, plus a boat of combined
seniors and non-semors went through a short workout befan
competing amongft themiclvci. ]
The freshman shell wmt thetr cfant tkuu bfbt blue T-tharu
with UCLA Crew 79 and a picture of a rower on it. The
sophomores wore gold and brown Long Beach Sute racing
jerseys, while the junior cla« had ahcmating white and blue
shuts. ^The **senior- boat featured everyone with a different
schooTs shirt, past prizes from victories.
The" overflow from thoac iiaabk to compete Saturday lined the
eourte along with a scant number of specutors
LaaYmg eight perfect rings bf water with each stroke, the shells
rowed by the crowd at the midway point ( 1 ,000 meters) with the
fourth phioe boat withm a len|^ of the leader
The fmish line saw the sophomores winning in a tune of 6:07.
The other claaaes were pretty close behind, the times being quite
excellent for the high tide which was present at the K4arina.
Stroking the winning boat was lightweight Denis Raymond
The lightweights had juit finished one of their harder workouts
pnor to the race. The winning eight had a st?eabk lead in
coastiag to the victory, despite the fact that they wert using
probably the worst boat UCLA owns.
>4u — Mike Fincgold
»-»♦■
Intramural Spart9
Maa't
The finals for the men*s
swun meet will be held tomor-
row afternoon at 3 pm at the
Rec Center.
^'' W«a«i*s
Play lor volleyball doubles
begiat tonight. Check to tee
when you are scheduled to
play. The women's swim meet
will be held tomorrow at the
1
Rec Center pool. You may
sign up at 2 pm tomorrow at
the Rec Center
Coed
The coed swim relays will be
held tomorrow between 3-5 pm
at the Rec Center. There will
be 2 men and 2 women on
each team and you may sign
up at 2 pm tomorrow
noon at the Rec Center.
-./■■
Vote
Student government slecUoiMi Wednesday and
^ Thurtdsy
I
r
r
I
.n
)■
Don't wait another minute to get your Winter
Quarter tixt books* Startrng today, theae texts
will be aant back to their publrshers in order to
iMlie room for incoming Summer Session texts
Allar this weak. Spring Ougrter books will be
available only by special order, and whb needs
that hassle''
■I
Summer Session texts wtll be available around
June 10
.j—i^
\
' r..
Wxtt. b la«al. ack«rman union 825-7711
n mon-thuri 7 45-7 30. fri 7 45-« 30 sat 10-4
T
(ICIA
MCCNTEmflAL
EVENT
THE REVOLUTION AS A WAR OF
LIBERATION FOR WOMEN
Final Lecture in UCLA Bicentennial Series
MARY BETH NORTON
Associate Professor of History, Cornell University.
Author The Debate Over the American Revolution, 1765-1776; member, the
Coordinating Committee of Women in the Historical Profession; Chairwoman,
Columbia University Seminar on Early American History and Culture, 1975-76
Current research: Women in Revolutionary and Republican America, 1760-1810
WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 19768 P.M
No Admission Charge
DODD HALL 147
Pubiic Cordially Invited
Pyaaanted by UCLA Bic#nianniai Conrmvitlae and Commitlse on Public Lecturas
f
i
i
\
I
^LASSIFIEI^D
MAOLlMf lO:JtAM.
itlOfW
tfi« Unl««r»lty •! CaM-
41 •• H)
Atfwtl«lnf t^ftc* will not b«
m «w IMIy BrUii I»
#lscrliiitnat*t on tli« li#»lt of
ilry. color, iiollonol erif In. roco.
p<r»onai
Mar Nm ASUCLA CaoMwaicatlvo*
vico* •tfvvrllsotf or o^vorfloors ro|KO-
•ontod in IM» (••mo. Amy por— w IM-
H«vl«if MMt OA a^MfilMinoitt In
tfnyt P.S.
a Clown tout
feo.
(•M 11)
#locrliiilnotlon •lolo^ horoin ohouM
m wHMnt !•
»r. UCLA Dolly
i.11ir
Mom. Loo Awpoloi. ColNoniio MOai
•ccrrr - %m o
your Kolr ciif
• Mr- Oft
(• M 11)
notion pro^lomo. eoM: UCLA Hoyo>m
Otfleo. (211) •2f-4491; Wo«ui0« Foir
tlol fcirtfc^yf ITS
«n tlMliooMy Mo
AM an^ tofook out tlio l»ooao Loiro
'^"'"'' (• m 11)
T.IL mm iMiT
to Sot. ni^^t. D-K.
(• M 11)
Tlionli you for
MwroMry tctiool for
<tll11)
12-2.WI
W VOU NCtO SOMCONl
TO TALK TO.
CAUUS.
HELRUM£
•7Mt
111
ASUCLA Travvl
S«nrlc« it Qoing to
RumW
UCLA ttud^ntt facuHy and
staff mm aligibie to travai
ta Laningrad. Moscow. Ki«v.>
Yalta. Tbilisi 4 Vladimor.
Uufy 14 - Aug 5 for $749 00
alMnclusive from I ondon
Call 625-1221 or coma to
A lawal. Ackarman Monbays-
ffi^^ SIXM 00 T
J.H.
11)
L-
Vom
a'
ri
I.
(•Mil)
0#
LJt
It mi)
TWtia
Ma
#1111)
If
£fio
(•mi)
aOMO TO LAW SCNOOIT Lawn la
STUDY tmCTIVtLY. Writo: Lofsl
iratlon. Inc.. 471 Somiii O«aon
Las Iwgilis. Mnt; or eat: (M21
YUMf - Wanooaanaellaraio)
a aonnio ana tot H m
#«11)
OM14I
of lan .Ro-
iaiy It. ia9l . oaa 242^01.
n M 14)
passpoxi
identification
resume photos
f^9mpussfudl
SO hf-rchhotf hah 825 061 » jr27/
opifn mon tn 8 30 4 30
^■T-.-^-
In t#.;
toorof Good Luekf tut.
<a«iit)
■JjtY- Vofy aool otJiM^at tia t|
L« (taill)
I
••raa. OAT. T.tA.
1 Low. Mwl a Man
y«
(4 m 11)
THAMKt to Somi _ ^
Matron taint of EHomlnatlono. AHaf
•twaylna. aarnootly Involio lilo Inlor-
It nil)
Mvterteifimeffit
tAVl
laLOA^a.O.taatTTl
CA
(7 1111)
LOOSE SHtETS - 5C
BOUND REDUCTION
LEGAL SHEETS ~ 6c
1 ?i h,.rrWHnf* halt
EXCELLOrr MkrCortnoy MelMta (4 ot
INon»?) WM •■Chang* for Chicago can-
(7 Mil)
n Jt DUPLICATI ^ .__
Wotnooaoy aftornoona. Wild Wlilat
fi^fSClMt. IttS Woatwoaa tlva
WHAT DOCS A BRUIN
■CAR WEAR FOR ACTIVE
SRORTt?
UCLA twoatshirtt. tweat-
pantt. joggert outfit, t-
fy^» thortt. racing trunks.
MM! socks, and carries a
UCLA gym bag and baach
21-
It, t4t.
lor
wanted
■Jv.
WCtT LOa AMOaLIS
PRIME M£DICAL SPACE
^ . % mta waat at
[^•f*aort. •■coatlanol poming, city
aSBM. rnM 11'Mory
aulod for cornel
!•
laN it7f
tor cNnlcal t
to OMtt CaM
Porlman or Chuck Wright. CoMwoll
SonlMr Co.. (212) 274-at11.
tLICTtlC Plana • UnluiL CP lit.
Eac«ll*At conaition t27f /hoot oftor
CaM f 33-4443 a^aat^ ar wiiliiiiai
(It M 12)
47t^tf1 aioaaaga
nt. toloct Caltfnmlo WInoa
tt12W.
(taaiiai
aiOMT
baclia«clitng. t«nn»« woolionas AM
fItOir)
r
7541
I--
••0-4S14
tItJt
(• ja»
ful locotlon tlooa • ^Iroplooo. Itt
flat wooa. ggg tmt.
(tMtS)
stytont
47t'at7t
Dolhrory to
lor
tOtfYTC-m
PlMfft « POTS tALEl
Wednesday May 12 only --
9:00-5:00 Front of ASUCLA
Siudents' Store. B level.
Ackerman Union.
NAMT akio (ifff)
•MM (tomato)
S731 (tao)
tAXAPHOm.
nlcliol hoya, ftch
Daya
(It M 11)
(It M 14)
CALC M.P.
lar f 126/aaat oflar. 477-2gt3 ofl»r It pni
Tony.
(It M 14)
MATTMeaaas all niw
up la
•1
TMt MATTacaS STQflE
11714
■laoi
477-«iai
GOLD TNtony haart and 15 Inch
aorp«nttn« chain for ftal* tacrlllaa
lor $85 00 020-0077 ovonlngs ond
(10 M .2)
MCCAPTMCY
k«tt EicolUnt •••tt for 4un^ 2tna
•t a«a FooMO. 003-7004.
(10 M 12)
Instrviiieiif'
TISMM
Tisati
300
MHk 'tl
NCVIX
Ti|0Bii-ii1t
•It
tor.
Mouao. 4010 WMtoott
ty Imot
^■iiCU
It M14)
cau.4is-rTai in a>wi««fnnmiru..
FNCAO aattn In niiAat
t. ttt/2 tava. tlttTr
ASUCLA Students Store
Ackerman Union
ijt
Ti aa M A sa 1 1 A sa it. sa Ii. aiB .
T<
11
/13 M lai
Hai^ttany
to-tae aiawat tar
mn aLacTaomca
47i.tMilnr
STiatO ea«ia«<»dfita: Stytoai tlo-
HYLANO OOf0Oa
laoi Gaylay Aoa.
VaHoy. tt1-tt4t. tt1-2ttt.
ntoti
.1
>.ar7
(It
tSLL oar
Wflla
IST
171
Par
P O aoi
(10 M 17)
naoai
aSAUTIPUL. ai
ilaa 10. MiMt oaa. il7S.00. Cat
MfLwantod
iiaM tn
tr ,;,
coai
m faratgn
J. Iltit
IT14)
mmfm
Inaataa: Pr.
Nivoraita.
(It M 17)
VAtMHA Ta-7tt
KA-1
UOXLC-ti
(10 « 11) ply
opportMniti—
^aanooon#ooyooon^
nxsom
it
♦o»^ two 3 act piayg
(folas opan to all agat)
iimif^ ■r^iHaaaips afaavaMatia
in th0 fotlumi$t§
ACTING
DIRECTING
PLAYWRITING
DANCE
JuSrSiaESnt
fttviai
CALL US AT
•97-3011
LOat, tay ooaip. laa paf .
t^n wogon or win tan van
473.71t4 or tlt-tnt.
fMMItl
^5
rttMiit
na. af
UC
SANTA ^
^^^* immowolaty avaitiaia tar uctiA
ar 1 iwa. Man. thm Pa. aoniaatea %-tm.
rtttitt)
Pd. aagMMMig t-ti
f^ Positions will la^l thru and of
••> 4 eonMnlsalo
Vad UC •maan
liajO par Mr. N yoM oiv
I lot
r
oa
113 M at)
MCPAaE poa
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
lOroaittp aai
la aaalwaaia. Tacti
tc Maawy Is
m. jaafcs
1 V.
a.
4. "
0
4.
7
4.
ItTSW.
isar.
•tssna.
Ttf JOB
ECTORY
PtaT taio MCAT ona DAT
a at laast Tit ^ r . tit par hmtm,
SL Oiaftaa • 477.Jt1t
Mibjads
(It M 17)
Ottoa Holp. t la t. t
(It m 12)
tor lAaNtltaNywi
ntMfn
470-7070
(14 M It)
tUaJICTtwtti
fh on^f ana ays
(14 Mil)
ara Ml
•!<• tod Antiquo t17S tt Evonlnns
Iff tsti ■-
(14 M 12)
CLASSi Fi E Dil D
offomd
t2t-0243.
(10M17)
PatMATuat t|ncMlatl*n7 fou aaa
ttt-t243 S:tt-
lit M 17)
ntMui
t Copy
^ LJL. CA
inmn^
aAUXT: Pan war la assaiy. Ittt
IMS. YiPCA tra Ns-
t ar
fltOW)
Ottirt)
LtAT.
if.
iT. Tt
47S-t1tt, Ittti
(It M 11)
lit ft 11
WX.A. 11744
tLICTaOLYSIS:
(10 M It)
SiTa
'"HI
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURAMCS
TaaNIi^
•TuotnrroiacouNTa
(It
mom
(^
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE M
.TaaTt
CaaWal Cantor of
MCX/lflC?
•It.
niaafiatnai
Our ati yoar- 7 daya a
CAaiyua aaavtcta
ItOVttta: aaaldontlol. aportntonla.
ttjsas
" """ rta oii«
FOUNO tOMETHINQ? ~j
0 Nila ttia Daily aniini
Dapaiaatat aai tot atl
wtal It aUtt aa ta m aial
A Paaaa bbIm— l At t pyaaaj
TMa JOa PACTOIIV I
aaaatlltywiil
\
WW* ^v www flap mmm 4hip ^sbs 4hsw a^w ^^m ^hp mi^ wbb ^^m m^m
MAaicins tSPy
aatvato ta wow yi ^
12. WoMld life* •oitooono to
474>t104.
ntoai
MISI
(ItQirl
-1111.
(ItCHr)
(tin 11)
'k-JOH EXPRESS
MOVERS
(a^ATwA.) 47t-
(itow)
LA.-*!
M vM^Mt^fl Stir a
Lav TO
nt«i7)
Offloo. W«
T* r-
477-
ti.7t. 4t7-ittt nn w.
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CMAaTtas
aaPsa Awytria
a
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ASUCLA Tfswai
• iSfhla Id El
ani fi
<ys-1t11 taaoaL Wa
MOW)
• ai
1C754
Juna7
7
urn
Iters
JunaM
11
Map
1tC76
JunaM
12
m3
Iters
Juna 2t
S
$42S
17C7S
Juntas
t
Mas
lacTs
Juvtaas
10
t4ai
ac7t
Julys
s
Ital
tacTs
Julys
t
$42t
ITCTt
July 12
4
itat
aocTt
July It
4
$4at
titai Juna It 11 $425
LSaaae Juna22 S MIS.
LSa222 Juna 22 2 $379
Kf
•n S
for
HAWAII
'UM10NOUA.U SISS WW
•LA.MOMOciJLU StSS Mm
PUia Car
raH/atarall
llafia...aATA fllt...NHarffiatlonal
iJD
TfUVSL
ASK Ua PCS AMYTNINO YOU
ar ART TO KMOm asout
TMAVBLJ
r
NOUSISITTIP AvaMaMa
(It H 11)
AUTO
•sssssas
•A.N>t.A.
4swaM^
SlMWIO
•aaaaaa^aaa
X ta 7/17-S/M S 44S
O LAA- ij 7/01.a(Ol s ^v*
aiai u 7/a0.iw00 n' <*•
HAWAII 10 2«a^a« ftomSWS
NYCva.stM^iM fwnstss
ORIENT SWnyOMM fromSSS
Contact ASTrA tor ovof 300 otltor tl««nt«
w{th asiMrturot from L A 0on
Chtoafo Oimuii. Now Vorti.
'Chonor r«f foqutf* se Osr
pno* •uStact !• IPa MwoMO
SURER AiUPAilCS
BICENTENNIAL
YOUTH, §mom ^-r
APEX .22-^6 SOdayia»
TAHITI SUPER DEAL tars*
OfiDsa ttow
TiiAiN a PBWiY nocrra. cams.
inTSA-tusopSAn STuoairr
CMAirrafia
SPECIAL CRIME OFFER
piua fte-charg* 2-i«ti Wr wawwian. .tram 3710
TOURS
t^M^iCA, S 4By» SMS
rfALT, IS aMO SSBS
LOSL Paa. AMI. IS aay* IBM
Mtttoo. saM* tws
OOSTTOaLATT
Tta OWSPI (IMH ttaT^ SSST^
^Wtirv
M^
t
!:•
I *■
4
I
v« I.
CLASSIFIED >ID
trwl
at Mill
Cai 47t-1ity.
(21 M 141
477
WLA.
J 41
H.Y.C. fiflt.
<t13)
IRAN
Are you going to Iran this summr'
Oatly 74 7 Fhghtt
Contaf •
Hollywood C A 9002b
Tel 466 S259
KAY: Typing, •ditinf
i9mn mm. tm-r^n.
(SfOTII)
^
-lent*
d trip
tutoring
OfOlr)
ThMte Spaetallst
FrM EstlmalM
P«Of€StlOMAL COLLCOE TVMMC
t^CClALItT
Tvrm p«p«rt. Thesis. Ols««rtatlons
FMturM--For»4fn LangusfM. tclsncM
, T«Mm. Dimqrmmn Mustc. EdHtng.
Xsroalng. Prtnlliif.
•iMdint Wat—
MKIOY. aeeifrsla tSM typist
MS MiMiO/AU. mrLIS. Uani ipy «4
IMOir)
lar >— I pf p<— atoiMii
47»-Jf7i
•M. LBAT,
1ii4lv1dual. small froup Instructlofi.
HUTH C.
tTATimCAL. MtT. DC^eNOAaLt.
•CVm DAYS A WUK. MAMY TYPt
STYLO. U^^ ^ ^
mom
a4ucatl«iMl, aelaninie. tfthar. Don't
wan,
TSIi.
CNineSE Man4aftffi. Faliliif nafWa
laacliar. wall-aiparlancad witti Call
fomis Cra4anllal. Individual, small
mom
TYPiNa/iDrnwo. imi.
(2SOlr)
27»-nif ar ITV-MTI.
la.
VldaHy. S9447M.
(24Qlr)
TYPmO. Lat Caaay doH. Tana
Niaaaa. diasartatlons. ale. CaM M4-
jwQT woi' «vaa aaBMMla. ' ^m^ — - -
^ gL2P
HMTM:
#»« r>w%.
BNTH
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
J»t7 Mnto Monica Mvd.
In
- Santa Monica
Ifons, rasumaa, laWaia. Mit
nS-1747
LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION
TEST PREPARATION
aO hr. class ba^kw iuina 14 for July 34
Tast
•GMAT coursa bsglns Juns S tor
July 10 taat
•SPEED HEADING courss baglns
- Juna 24
•1 -CARUII QUIDAMCE
PWOPtSSIONAL wrilar wltH S.A. In
(UCLA) «M tvpa ana aM IBMI
a«e. Ovar n yaoca aa-
THESEt. larm papars, raports. Paal *
and accurals typing by ai
ssacudva sacratary
f9ftM 141
TYPtNQ dona at
larm papars, assays, tliasas. dissar-
tallons. Call: Raba timoff 3tt-3t43
or Jtt Jtl4. (2S M 12)
TYPINO Eipoflancad
aacaras wafa at lio^sa.
dant. Eapart wotIl 47
iSLZnZ •Pt^ fmini>tied
at mil)
tYPIWO by UZ . Ti
Manuscripts. Flald ttudlas. Editing.
tCPEENPLAY tPECIALItT (naof
Qftmrn Pmtkl M2-10at.
(2t J 2)
w**"'w«««fd forauhliaai
I27M17> Mk
2Mr. lannmn, 1
It.
•ptSa toshar#
itti bi
i2UL!f»
tltt/ma.
I^t^lt.
(2t m it)
Monica
litiJt
wtatiit. iltt.ta Inaludlng utilltlaa.
(StMIt)
Camury CMy.
(St M IS)
ti
kinda. Fi
7S4/pg. iMf tvi^etrlc. MId-WllahIra
14< itot.
(29 M 13)
(StMIt)
LNOe. 1
Mks, UCLA. 1
212/4
Aaa. Ma.
2
1
Tip
(2tM121
lifeOto)
WALK la UCLA
(St Mil)
MINUTtt from UCLAt Slnglas. far-
47t>212t.
(StQilr)
PUftNISHCD/Unfumlaliod
tl4t. Smtlas list. Paal. Naart a«
~ y 0* AT Liy ^acraaa tram Oykatra
ana •^Tt ATTS Pum. ia««a
(2S M 12)
Lapnary faclNltaa
14)
In t Mr/t fea
•
11>
(stMin
(2tM12)
TWtL)^ room auplax. Living ,
Mning, kMenan, man roam, 477>32tt. ttt
Vatoran f ltt.00 la t17S Jt. ^ ^ ,^
._ IB M IT*
'" ' ■— — -— i^ — ^
2 MALE Jawlsh undargrads naad 2
raamaipias tor apt nait laM - watMna
UCLA. 473-17tt
(2t M 12)
OAYmanihaa
apt adSi 2 gay
t140. Aflar t.
flilMli)
18L Ja^ 472-4771.
(SSM11)
PtMALt, 2tiplMa la maia lavaly
— waad apt. Oam room, fumlahai.
^m PM 274-2t12.
. lilt/
(St mil)
VtMICE apartmant 4 blocks boaeh.
tilt
«4%
mo»i ioraubiaaaa
tXTMA
It. IITtJt.
OMo
(StMIT)
NCiO
la aaMM 1
1 batb apartmant. comar
, //WaaPaaaa for aw. ol
JanatpaaaMly July, ttttaio. *ulMllaa.
ParaMHaa. Ona mo. rant bi aavanea. 47t-
TTSt t-t waabdaya. 473-7711 onset pjN
^ (at M 14)
UCLA PflOPESSOII aaMal ^999 Haaw
In Mar Vlata. Jana St tapl. 14. 3
2 battle. 2 larga studloa. laapa
t47Waia.
(2tM14)
^^^^^^> OTVVW ft^^^C»f f
tUSLET: 2 Mr . 2 telfi turn apt.
Srantarood. tSSt man«i. t-lt -t-lt.
472.77at.allart.
MS MIS)
HoTlnjf^t^^
277-11tt.
(St M 13)
ti^
171
tn:
271
(StH14)
na
It)
room A board
►. 1
^^_ amitlas. pool.
tArdon ttSt/mo. Jaaa. tt7.t444.
(StM 14)
SOOM
titt
mom
abyUgMa. faM bl
„4„...
OKchonoofor
(SSM17)
2 m^ 2 ta..
• yr gM.
(S7M1S)
t BKMITNS.
(StM 21)
(StM 21)
SSCMAIiOE room arltti kltchan far
's balpar Man-smabar. Los Fati
-,-r
CHARMmO 3
bottMbiSanb
Haaaa Sal-Spa 2-t PM. tSSt SSndl
(SO Mil)
room for font
ttt/mo. CaN Sui
(2P M 12)
plus dan. tiraplaca. carpols. drapas.
lata 0t doaats vara ^^m^^^^^^^^^ ^^^6 '
pat a.k. t. Saflalr. LM,
ttS4. 477.7744
QUIET Privala raom/batli Kllchan
WNaMrs
Anar 3:33 pm
4r4.7«2. ^^,^
11)
SSVCPLV HMs
Ip/F. Poni
Call ar laaaa
(3tM11)
^VOOf fffvOfV wl*
2^battia. ocaan
t/St • t^lt. Pumlanaa.
'^^ (St M 11)
oirtooforoalo
SHISTAMO 7t. rod. ttM. 282 V^t. aula.
noar point, taat-aseallant oand. 47t-
HCPMCtA SCACM VACATION. tPA-
ClOUt COMFOPTABLE FAMILY
HOME AVAILASLE MID- JUMS TO
MID-AUOUST t23t0 TEPMS MC(»0-
TIASLE. CALL 37t-1340.
(StHl2)
(41 M 17)
TOYOTA iBiBwa t7. aaM
condition. $t7t/of1or Call ManelM.
waa 477-«741^^ ^ ^^
Van - 1
CaM El
(41 M17)
DVNAMfTttaa
TIFOflOISttVan.1
IptlttW)
(41 m 17)
-17t1.
r I 4r.
(41 Mil)
(SIM 14)
<ai M «ii
W MOWTE CAMLO. parfact
TtttmL.MiMaHMpad tt4-
tpua.
(41 M1^
'^ ^^ tOOAPCSACK. Partact cand^
•on t22t0 or boat mllm Lai •— ^^
or aarty momlnga. tSt-47tt.
(41 M 14)
(t2M17)
ll»oa. Lowi
Truck aoapanslon AuiomatlcManv
■ai. tn-t211.
(41 M 14)
VMS FuNy tumlahad
474.iat4.
m ^t\
WOMAN Jan
WAKTE.0
YOUR
(22 m 12)
titt/aio. 4S4-9t11
11)
hoiioifKi noodod
nasi yarn?
(SS mlS) JUJJ"
sltlar? Call Sarnia Vrona. 434 3970
(ttay). n pill liH.
(33 M 14)
2 STUbCMTS «M MIM cam af yaar
bouaa Nils summorto aaclianaa for
a plaaa la alw. Matfipnas
WrNa Sara, nt Iflcliols,
tttti. Tlionk you.
(StM 12)
ir.
(HMtl)
^
-Coles and
away to stardom^
By Dm T
Bretton, Uie two
«Ni that yesr'i iiCLA
*t fotf tcmm, mtt
the buiSsM pro golf
ia the country todsy.
Tbsv sssHtly pteyed in the
CahfonHS Cotegiste Ail-Star
Inyitstional Toiirnsment ia
Solvang, where Iksy led the
South 16MB to s victory over
th^ North in the teven-on-
teven Icmd competition
in conoemi now are
hi the SoiMhsni
CaMfofaia Wooaea't Interoa^-
leg iate Athletic Confereacc
ikNig with four other tohaait
is the area. Each tchool hosts
QMS BMUch, wilh the aoatpotite
teopst of the five toorsaoaentt
heing utcd to dctemtse the
tis, hot a tfantsMic par
ol 72 ia the wiMi|r woodHr a#
the Hiitii^nB Sea Chfti Golf
Coortc SMMPSd tkM tick for
SrettoQ,
into
in prepahi^ for the Associa-
tion o( IntcfooSegiate Athletict
for Wooien (AIAW) nationak
to he held in Michigan, where
the two Brtiini are expected to
fare very well agauMC the
toughest competition ia the
country.
CoMftrenec chanps
The UCLA women*! golf
Althottgh UCLA did not
fare excepciMally well in the
overall team eompetition.
Colei end Bretton captured the
SCWIAC two-phiyer inm
title, with Bretton winning the
individual championship and
Colei finithmg third
The road to the uidividuai
title was not an easy one for
Bretton, sj she had to hoM ail
challcQget from her teamaale,
•1 wen as from 1975 AIAW
champion Barhara Barrow in
the final league toiiranaMML
Going into the match, Bretton
nnd Coles were in s firM-
the tretnendout
Mmt these two
putting on
ft M no
that their dedication to the
of golf hegan at an early
on lo
there is aearly
20 yean of expenrnM^ assi al
it in competition and a huge
numher of individual honors to
show for their many hours of
hard work.
Janet Coiss htpm playing
golf at the age of 12 hecause
her family home in Aptos was
to a golf course and
figured it wat ^'JMtt the
to do.** She uted to patt
hy having pick
halt at the driving
then, for her reward, the was
nhk to hit noir haBt for free —
for as long as eight
h did not take laMS fos ta*
talent to he disosMSSSd at the
pro hegan working with
entered Cqiss in her
first tonnMMSMt al ths ngc of
13.
From there
national high
tion and a hnrngr of indivi-
^nal honon hefore goii^ to
Arizona Sute University,
where the earned AU-Amehcan
aoclaim in her frethman yaar.
However, detpite her na-
tional raaking of fourth in
1973, Janet trantferred to
UCLA in her tapiK>more year
for pnontiss other than golf
As result, whils participating m
haskethall and track, Janet
Seniors out off Spriiig Game
By Mkhael
OB Sport Writer
S^f^ng fooihaU prMtice b now m its final week, with the
anmiai mtratquad scnnunagt trhsdaiscl for Setorday at 2
pm ai Drake Stadium
TTmi. mtrstgysd icnflUBMB will not ha^ tfto gfaimor of
past years hecaate coaeh Tierry j>nnahiif w9!
teniors other than quarterhack Jcif Dankwoith.
In t move designed to avoid ii^tmet and to give the
coaches a better opportumty to evaluate the younger
pUiyera. the semors have not practiced for the past waek
and will just he tpecutors on Saturday.
Dankworth could haw aHSsed practice if he desiiai, hut
tinoe he M ia a doss hattle with Steve Biakich for the
ttartii^ tignal^aBBi^ position, he has elected to work-out
with the Isaai. Apparently Dankworth and Bukich wifl
quarterhack **haiancad** laaats ia the game fonnhi on
Saturday.
tOMK 15 sfiBiuii win not pky in the iprii^
are ttH nmay outttanding Rote Bowl p^ffor-
mers wHo wiU he in action. Dae to knee im^ ^^^
dcfcntive tackkt Menu Tuiasosopo and Tub TeailgtKit wil
sargsry. Badi are expected to he^ai Ml stia^lh hy the ttart
of hU practice ia A^gast
rsihspi the aMst iaifSBBiiie atf Hm ffogHs in tpri^
practice has hsen Brvemde Jnaior Cefl^B^ SHnrftr Frank
Conrall Recruited to UCLA
piMSkicker and John
heen '"amariMB*
Corral] hat the sMMtgest leg that aMst eT the plapers and
oaaches haw ewr teen^ He has aARsady kicked a iO-yaid
field goal in practice and a IBiyasd kick is caaiparabk to
aa extra poiat. with hit leg strength. Further, he is
consuntty outpunting the aaMirage (he sveraged over 45
yards a punt last year at Rivertide to Itad the nation)
With BO goal poets in Drake Stadium. Brum fans will not
get a chance to tee him piaas-kkk, hut they ahaald get an
[unity to watch him punt.
'active leave** fi
golf scene and reduced her
aatoasA of play drastically,
uatil the hafinning of this
*1 feh 1 had had enough far
n whik,** said the senior kJas>
**! j«M feh it
to try
thingi hasidH
Alter the brief laydT, Jaast*t
hfe took another turn
iar what
he a sMsasstfui pro-
Bstf cataar The
AIWA nationak in June will
be her last formal compctitioa
beloie she attempts to qualify
for the tour m January
**Right now my entire game
is going pretty good.** she taid
when atked what the feh the
had to work on BMSt between
now and then. **Dnvtng hat
always been my itrong point
to lil probably concentrau on
unproving my thort
more than anything.**
Champ at It
Like Coles. Mananne
ton did not get where she m
today hy learning how to sink
a 3B-loot putt or hit a long,
towering drive or
tand wedge in
course of the UCLA Summer
Extension Program.
Her number-oMS SCWIAC
ranking M just oim ci sevehU
honori that have been be-
stowed npon her at a resuh^of
hard work on the golf coune
since the tenisr age of nine.
With her Isthet at her main
guide. Bretton entered and
won her first tournamem when
she was only 10 years okl. ^
She has had professional
inttniction for the past fiive
3MBfs, whkh led her through a *
very tuccettful high tahaalt^^
caraer thit inrhided Golfer af
the Year ha— fs for ths
Southern Califofnia Junior
Golf Associntion la 1974 aad
75.
^ow Bretton, whc t« only a
fiaslimBB, sees the many yanrs
of doAoBtion payiag olT with
the possihiiity of s pro
**I definitely want to
golf as a career." she taid. '^Fm
out OB the courie or ths
every day to practics.**
In the five kagne
ntento this year, the fii
tecond three timet, first
la her victory at Huntington,
which secured her the indivi-
dual utk. she pkyed perhaps
(Caotfnued oa fagt IS)
f
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Senior co-captains spark tha offffansa
..-.» _ . ^-,j
i Penniall and Dallas: The men at the top
-JX
1
DP
Whca it coam to UCLA
hsirtwH. they are the in^ at
the top — literally. Dave Pen-
aiall the medium liind blond
center fielder sad Bahhy
Dallsft, the short, stocky dark-
ihaired second bsseman. are the
two who make the Bruins go.
Together they serve as the
team captains and together
they combine to generate of-
fense for the squad. Penniall, a
senior from Glendale, serves as
the Bruin*s loMMf nan while
Dallas, a senior, is the all-
important second hitter.
Together, they have helped
Penniall write hilt name in the
UCLA record book. This year,
tRe center fielder has stolen 36
hsiCi and has scored 57 runs.
Both are new school marks,
but he couldn't have accom-
plished It without Dallas.
**^Hc (Dallas) is as respon-
sible ioT Dave's record (stolen
bases) as Dave is,** says head
coach Gar> Adams.
^ In ^a^ditioh to his base run-
aiag exploits, Penniall is
batting 292 with nine doubles,
frve home runs aild 28 runs
batted in. He hat stolen 36
times in 41 tries, but only once
has he been thrown out by the
catcher He has been picked
off four times.
I ''That's a surprising statis-
tic.** said Adams **lt's a great
percentage It really makes the
caach look good Penniall has
made me look good.**
Dallas has done ITkewise.
Despite sacrificing his average
to hit behind the runner, he is
swinging the bat at a 323 clip
— Jlpato la pan to
Last weekend agpiast the
Bears, he collected eight hks in
1 1 at-hau to jump his avemfe
Despite hitting second, he
has driven in 30 runs with his
64 hits (BKMt on the team) aad
has scores 41 taaKs, secoad
only to Penniall He has
walked 40 times, stolen 16
aad h« acvsa home mas.
But things wercn*t ahiays
that good for the two captaias.
Adaaw wasn't sare wiMt he
had when he held his first
practice in Octohw 1974 He
had just moved from VC
Irvine, Pennmll had transferai
from Glendak Junior College
and Dallas w$s ; aew from
Merced JC.
Speaking about Dnlks,
AdaoH lacaMs the
had a real bumaier oa my
ptf ai all oor recniits. But as
the pradaoes went along,
thought iaayhe thu gay
pky.-
'As for Penniall, Adaois says
the center fielder was already
coming to school when he
(A rtaaw) took over as the head
The first watd I ever
to Feaainl] was 'no.* He
been recruited aa a
scholarship and ashad aw if he
could §» out for football siase
he played at Gleadale JC. I
said ao. He said, t>kay, I jast
Bobby Dallaa: Graat mflnbar two tMar
INTERNATIONAL
ARTS DAY
TODAY
Grand Ball Room 11 30 - 1 00 .
International Concert
Don A Juna Kuramoto — KOTO -
ODESSA BALALAIKAS - BALALAIKAS
Amelia Chow Group — PCI-PA
Grand Ball Room 11:30-1 00 ^ * .
International Arts Exhibition
Oil Paintings
Costume designs
Picture & Posters
Other Art Works . ' • c^
Slide Show
Rolfe Hall #1200 1:00 - 2 30
International Arts Film
Why Man Creates
Avery Brundage Collection of Asian Art
Arts and Crafts m West Africa
OiPlental Brushwork
t
EUROPE NIGHT
TONIGHT
Dickton Art Cantor. 7:00 - 10:00 pm
Hungarian & Rumanian Music
— RIma Rodina and Group
Spanish instrumental Ramenco
Turkish Folk Dance & Film
— UCLA Turkish Studanta Aaaociation
Irish/Scottish/English Ballat
— Nancy Thym
Russian Music
— Trio da da Bus
Classical Greek Guitar and Music
,— Sotos Kappas
FREE - advance tickets at
Ackerman Info. Desk,
FSA, ISC, OISS.
All part of AWARENESS, 76
by the Foraign Student Association
INTERNATIONAL WEEK, UCLA
Alao sponsored by Cour>c»l on Programmrng ISC Prograrri Task Force Advisory Board. Studanf Legislative Courx:il
Tickets still available for
International Dinner
at International Student Center 1023 Hilgaro Ave..
Saturday 6 - 1030 ^ $3 00 ($2.50 - students) Sold m advfm^a at F.S.A /I S C.
i^oviat YouHi Dsispmon. BaNr Paricara: AV8HA ALI TROU^C,
n: SHIMAOA, GOLBOLBOL A SITAR
INFO: 825-4940
■'*.*..
I I
*
I-
President *very coordinated'
says campaigner Jack Ford
By Mary
DB Staff Wrilw
"I'm not interc^icd jb notoriety for Jack
Ford, Vm interested in conveying the met-
sa«c of Geiaid Ford," Jack Ford, ton of the
President, said in a [kuiy Bmm interview
yesterday.
As an unpaid volunteer. Jack Ford has
traveOed to over 3(X) campy^et campaignii^
for his father.
TU be happy la get this over with and be
an my way.** Ford said in regard to what he
will do after the election, and added that he
would '^ry and figure out a way to g^ hack
out Wcst.-
He said he objected to the national press*
depiction of his father as being cluaisy. "I*m
a little bit sensitive to jokes about my
father," Ford commented **He*s very athletic
and very coordinated We*re Ulkmg about a
guy who caa ilD an day loag at a 14,000-foot
ekvatioB.**
Ford refered to Press Secretary Ron
Nes8en*s appearance on NBCs '^Saturday
Night" as havioa qm»e<< **httle reaction*^ in
the White House, except from Nciseti, who
Ford laid **would prahahiy not make the
saaie dedsion (to appMr on the show) if
given another chaaoe"
Jack gaiaed some notoriety of l|is own last
year when he admitted he snoked mari-
jaaaa. He said yesterday that his father does
aac favor federal l^gisiation decriminalizii^
narijuana, but he thinks real progress is
being made on state and local levels through
initiatives placed on the ballot
Rockcfettcr
Asked what he thought the future hokls
for Vice-President Nelson Rockefeller, Ford
laughed and said. "I dont think Rockifelkr
will be the vtce-presidential nominee,"
though a cabinet position lor him wouki be
a realistic consideration
Ford said he did not know who the
jPresident was considcrmg as a vice-
presidential nominee. "He hasn*t ande his
aund up yet I think he*U wait and see
what ticket the Oemcxrrats put up first." he
wad
(CairtiMwd on Page li|
of aw
to aw
clumsy
•I ills
Ucla Daily
Volunw XCVIII. Number St
UnlvwiNy of CaiHomla, Lot Angatas
Thursday. May 27, 1976
\
Regents' strategy questioned in Bakke case
DB Staff R(
The ooastitutionaiity of the
..jmectal admissions program at
the UC Davis Medical School
will soon be decided by the
Califoraia Supreme Court.
Uaier that program, 16 per
oeat of the spaaas in the first-
year class are reserved for
4isadvanUgBd students, aocord-
iag to spokesflses for UC
Davis.
F Leslie Maaker, the sapcri-
or court judfc who heard the
case, ruled in March of 1975
the special adasisBiaas program
at Davis violates the Four-
teenth Amendment of the U.S.
Constitution, the Privileges
aad Immunities clause of tiK
Cahfornia Constitution and the
Federal Civil Righu Act of
1M4.
Umversity of CaMfsaiia
more than just da-
itself against AUan
Bakke, who is saiag. k has
also filed a cross complaint
According to the Uaiversity*s
brief, the effect of the cross-
complaint was to force the
issue of the special admissions
pragraBi*s (poastiiutionality, re-
gardless of lakke*s qualifica-
tions.
If the croas-complaint had
aai-haen filed by the Univer-
sity, Bakke^s record might have
pi evented his adnussion. The
Gaastitutionahty of the Davis
program would have therefore
been irrelevant to the case,
according to David Feler, psa-
fasaor of law a| Berkeley's
Bbalt Hall
MaaiDBT rated Bakke *Hvoaki
pot have heea accepted for
a
they feel and what they've
dlttae in the past," said UCLA,
assistant chancellor Alan F.
Charles.
**They tamed down a mil-
lion dollars worth of aid from
the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation (three years ago)
it was only for minor-
he said.
Charles sidsd, **I dao*t feel
that the strategy at Davis was
to win that particalar casr, it
a«s to 4adile an important
**The program at Davis sort
of grew up on its aara, aad we
felt that we had to defend
Davis."
**! can*t rcaiy sae that the
are! insufficient and get-
tiag worse.
This case [Bakke} is closely
reialad to^oair recent demon-
strations. The Regents wouki
have preferred that the deci-
sion go against there, they
rt like the programs.
Regents are reactionary
very caaservativc. Their
general attitude is that special'
admissions programs shouldn't
exiil and shmild be done away
^ilh, but they use arguments
' ' rmance and efficiency
of
to say this,** Mitchell
This view was shared by
Justo Feraaaiet. administra-
tive coordinator of MEChA.
who said. ''The Regents are
very unreceptive to .fninontv
needs, so that UC is not on
our side "
He said the Reitrnts dislike
special admission programs
because '^they are elitists; they
What the cream of the crop,
regardless ol what yo\kr back-
ground IS -
jCnntinasd oa Page 19^
Will Jerry be buried under
a Church in June 8 pHmary?
if. they were for the program,**
s^ Bill Davis, a member of
UCLA law schoors special
task imtot aad the
AiBii'kan Law Students
ition
"^ you're supportive of the
program, you woukln't do this.
In taking that action, they are
shawiag a lack of commitmeat,
which is clearly negative in
effect," he commented
He said, "The University*!
arguments in the case weren't
very convincing; they might
have done a better )ob."
Davis spacalated the Univer-
sity ought be conoeraed about
who threateaed to sae if they
were not adaattad.
He added, ^'The prograai
does take a lot of heat; a cross
fa^plaint has the effect of
shnwiag Uaivcfsity
hut they
Rocky BHBMB, aaai yaar s
BSA Chsinaaa. sisd siaoe the
UaiversitT is a
it
af
DB Staff Wrissr
Idaho Senator Frank Church, riding the
crest of a crucial Oregon primary victory over
former Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter, spoke
to 3,000 studenu yesterday at the steps of the
Men's Gynv.
Church touched
upon the Democratic
raoe, saying he did
aot come to Califor-
nia '*to bury Jerry."
aad then elaborated
his views on foreign
aad domestic issues.
'*rm tired of old
men in politics who
are ready and willing
to saad youag paapic
to war.** said Charch,
referring both to
Vietnam and the con-
tinuing tendeacy of
U.S. policy-makers to
haooaK involved in
covert wars. He
proBiiaad to appoint
mfmhan who
not part af the
**fralemity af
The questioner persisted and C hurch replied,
saying "The UC has probably not been over-
looked** in CIA tecruaawnt ol campus coo-
tacts
Church, who chairs the Senate Subcommittee
oa Multinational Corporations, critici/ed the
tax breaks and gov-
ernment insurance old
foretga invest nvrnt
that have led to trx-
tensive investment
abroad by U.S. cor-
porations
"Ihe hemorrhage
ul investments in lor-
eign lands awtr
S200 billion has
cost the United Staica
over one million
jobs." %aid the Sen-
ator, adding "Presi-
dent Ford wents to
end unempl9Vf»)ent
but suppasis ihe taa
haaslMs of the muki-
natioaals.**
Church also crai-
ting a bad example
to the aaiioa by
daaiag Mtaaa **
>-—»«»>
are uking andt
He nasad this aia aat occur
at mo5t IK.^!,. saying "At
that
with UC
ciMirad the Sepate Select
aa taaeUigea^e Activitios wflidi
ae CIA aad FBI actlvkiaa.
for the
aatil Match It, wbca he
Ratios aa chairman of the la
at, he
be mini Mi^ If ia
in
initely contrary to what ent. special admissida p
9 la 17
I
tree s lavrst^gotioQ had aot res^yested
pedfic names of CIA campus
Church waa agaif^ m Qfbgao Faasday.
# ■ •
<
3
9
»
I
ii-"^
f
9 .
•; >■ •--^- — -,
On Jufw 3. |n«pfesrB of m« UnctorgraduW Stu^t AMOCiation wilt
on th9 foMovNng constitutional iwndwwni.
r
Th« position of National Studant Aaaociation Rapiaaantativa was aMad
aa a voting maH^ar of tha Studant Lagislativa Council m tha 1960 s
¥vhan the US National Studant 4aaociation was tha only studant
organization wofking for studants rights and othar social cortcarns on
national laval
Studant LafMMw Council haa affiliatad with USNSA only
onca sinca it was diacoKOWd tftat tha CIA had fundad mfiitratad and
diradad tf>a US National Student Aaaociation for a maiority of yi
from tha aarly 1960's to tha mid iMOt Tha ralationship batwat
CIA and USNSA waa tarminatad appnoaiwalafy nina yaart ago
Maanwhile two other organ izationa — tha National Studant Lohhy and
theuc ^'^^-tl ntrti) ha i ■rlian truiinWl iiiiilini isiailiilMn
national and state levels Though Studant Lagialative Council has
consistently affiliated with thaaa two organizations, they hmy^ not t>aan
granted voting represantahvas on Student Legislative Council
Russell Means rally
Additionally over the past three years, the Student Body
assumed the final and ultimata authority in off-campua goaarnmentai
iizattonal relations, asavidancad by his/f>er supervision of the
tionai and UC StuderU Lobbies The current National Studant
:iation Representative has abdicated any claim to control owar
student government s external affairs .' and has expressed a
aaMingness to raaign should this amendment pass Under the current
NSA Constitution an By-Laws, elimination of the NSA Ra|pf«oaalBliaa
Mtion from SLC will not precluda affiliation with US National Student
:iation by tha'Studfnt Lagialativ^ Council of UCLA
The following amendment would delete the position of National
Student ROpfViOfilBlMa from the Studant Legislative Council The
following changes would take place in the Constitution
■1 Delate all items m th* Constitution referring to the functions and
duties of the NSA Representative.
2 This Amendment shall take effect as soon as a vacancy occurs in
the office of NSA Representative either through laaipnatiGii or normal
expiration of term
ProiestiQg the treatment of
Native American leader Rus-
scH Means, the Native Amer-
ican Student Aisociatjon will
conduct a rally at mms to-
morrow in Meyerhoff Park
It is not yet known whether
Mains will be able to atteiuJ
the rally because he has been
experienciag internal bleeding
while recuperating from a bul-
Javanese dance
onUCTVLA .
UCTVLA today will pre-
sent a Javanese court dance
by dance department in-
structor Judy Susilo; a
martial arts demonstrat^lon
by kung fu master Yun
Xhun Chiang; and an inter-
view with CBS casting exec-
utive. Lea Stalmaster.
Also on the program: a
I930*s Betty Boop cartoon
and hufnorous outtakes
from the Johnny Carson
Show, Star Trek and
Hogan*s Heroes.
UCTVLA telecasts be-
tween 11:30 am and 12:30
pm over monitors in the
Gypsy Wigon area, pn the
Royce Hall porch, in the
Coop and la the Melnil?
Hall lobby
let wound mcuriM on May 4.
1976. This was the fourth at-
tempt on Means* life
"This IS to bring to light
what has actatHy happened to
Russell Means because the
news niedia hasn't relisted what
has really happened The
American government haa shut
them up Only by Russef! ap-
pearing in public will we hear
the actual facts," Susan La
Fromboisc^Hacting president of
NASA, said
Means was the Native Amer-
ican leader at the Wounded
Knee occupation, which took
place in 1973. He and Native
American students believe the
FBt, CIA, the army and var-
ious police departments have
taken part in a concerted effort
to assassinate him.
According to a NASA
pamphlet. Means said, "^Since
Wounded Knee, I have been
arrested 15 times — an averafe
of once every two months. It*s
ironic that I moved to North
Dakota to get away from con-
frontations and danger Right
away. Pm arrested twice, shot
in the back lt*s like the old
days when they called Indians,
instead of militants, rei
—Adam PfefTer
^■»'-
THE UNIVERSITY CATHOLIC CENTER
f£^ ANNOUNCES
ASCENSION THURSDAY
MASSES
^ ' MAY 27
;^ Noon - on Dickson Plaza
- (just north of Schoenberg Hall)
Bishop Juan Arzube presiding
5pm at the University Catholic Center
840 Hilgard
7pm at the University Lutheran Chapel
Strathmore, just West of Gayley
WOMEN'S WEEK 1976
MAY 24-28
bpomored bv PTi Womvnt Mtoufo CwMW. OfiT. MtiaatM L«fnl««iv^ Council
THURSDAY MAY 27
10 - 12 AU Women's Lounge Slide on US
women's history Sherna Cluck
Grand Ballroom Women and Media
— Sandy Hill, KNXT News
AU Women's Lounge Feminist Studio
Workshop
FRIDAY MAY 28
12 -' 2
2 - 4
10 - 12
12 - 1
1 -
1 -
3
3
AU Women s Lounge the Double Op-
pression of Minority Women
Grand Ballroom YVONNE B. BURKE
(ASSP sponsored)
Kinsey 190 Lesbians
AU Women's Lounge Feminism and
Socialism — Willie Mae Reed
w-
FOR MORE INFO
LL 825 3945
UQLA Daily
BRUIN
Volume XCVIIi. Numbsr M
Thunday. Uay 27. im
IK auring thm
Khoot fmr. Moapr tfunoy hoiKfyt
amfimti09k m^iu^. tf Wm ASUCla
Communtomttont §omn/ 30f Wmt-
wood Pimgm, Urn An§9im, Cmilfornm
90024 CopyhgM 197$ tf fh»
ASUCLA Communicmtiont Board
Btcond cl9m poelM* pmtd at ma Loi
KMm
li
QMlf Ouinfi. Mttttam
Mlch#M« Duwal. aaamimnt
V
FfMik
jl
I*
Adam Parfrsy
Howard Poanar — Oft
' Laura K
Brandy Alaxandar
Luain CuniMngDafn
ATI
Mtctiaal Lm
uaMo ^wvwRay
tVMHi
Jana Wigod
Mary B«lh Murrlll
•Hff
Linaa
CaVty rlatwnwi
MMia Kurtz
Joyca DalaM
Nancy Liiianthal
WIra
Richard
Bob Habar
Jaqua Kampachroar
Huntar Kaplan
I
Patti SulN«an
Joa YoQarat
>!X .-♦
LSAT?
Those students in our
last class who had
taken a prior LSAT
showed an ave rage
impfx>vement of 110
points after taking our
course. This means
power to get into the
law school of your
choice. (Documenta-
tion of these results
is available in our
office.)
Cel I or wfffle:
C. Levtoi, Dlrvdor
LSAT PfBp. Ceiitor
1007 Broxton Ave.
Phono: 470-2400
ASK FOR AN INVITA-
TION TO A FREE LSAT
SEMIIIAHL
,>'
Completion delayed a year
■iWu
Family pool
> .
y^
Oy Rum Wol^crt
open
After one and one-half ycara of construction,
the family pool area at the Rcc Center will
reopen this Thursday, according to Steve
Miukis. campus director of aquatics
Built at a cost of $250,000 and financed by
student registration fee funds, the pool area\
main purpose is to serve families. Miukis said
Located at the upper section of the Rec
Center near the amphitheater, the pool area
was onginaliy scheduled to reopen last May.
Mitakis commented But construction was
pioatpoocd for a number of reasons, such as the
•lioiTihk raina" last May and a three-month
•teel stnke the month after.
Oue to the "inability or unwillingness** of the
contractor to fmish on time, thev were finad
$100 a day by UCLA under a "liquidated
damafes** clause. Miukis said
Two pook
The new area consists of two pools separated
hy a five foot bridge that hold a toul of
200.000 gallons of water The old pool held
iOjOOO gallons and the main pool holds 636.000
fafloni.
The larger of the two family pools u three
and one-half feet deep over the entirety of the
MOl, except for a wing of it which is only two
rieet deep The twor sections will be separated by
ropes. Miukis said.
Miukis believes the shallow pool is very safe
for children, iiMr there is no deep water foi
them to acoidenuliy dnfi into He added that it
IS alao excellent for warm-up and lap sum
ming It hnt sia Imms.
The tmttller. separate pool is. 10 feet deep ail-
around and has two diving boards
While the deep pool has a hfeguard lookout
station, the shallow pool does not Mitakis
explained that since the pool is lo shallow,
standard lifeguard sUtions cannot be used.
bacauic they are too high to allow the lifeguard
to dive into the pool without crashing into the
bottom.
Benches will be used by the lifeguards until
the campus physical plant manufactures a
smaller, custom-built platform.
-—-■ Eight years,
The new poob, which took eight years of
negotiations to build, were badly needed
because the old pool ^as jiist too small for all
the families that wanted to use it. Miukis said
He said that the old pool used a "backyard
iUtmioo ayilcm** that was barely adequate lor
a large family pool.
"We were closed as often as we were open
with that system The water was so cloudy that
yott couldn*t see the bottom and the health
department didn't like it.** he commented
Although the pool may be finished, the
surrounding area is still undeveloped The grass
(Continued on Page It)
For UCLA Studonti
to holp with
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Offor good Jti Juno 15
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On videotape The best method
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make all die decisions
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4-
VOTE May 26 & 27 ^
ELECT your 25 representatives to
the EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE of
the FOREIGN STUDENT
ASSOCIATION, Write-ins possible.
VOTE at
* FSA Office 325 Kerckhoff
* OISS (Foreign Students
Office) 297 Dodd Hall
* In front of Rm 5401 Boelter
Hall
VOTE between: 9 am and 5 pm
■ •^^'.■•'.•^
Spontored by Student [.•q^ilativc Council
■\y
f«\
i Candidate cites^his'grassmots^ampaign^
d^:— >■♦'
i
Spent little, weilked much of district
By Mike Di
DB SUIT Writer
Jack Shaffer. Democratic
candidate for ConfrcH in the
27th District, cited Ills **grasa*
rm^H campaign" as being the
type of campaign 'most voters
believe in" in an interview here
Shaffer, who is attempting
to fill the vacated congres-
sional seat of A I Bell. said.
"We've carried on a real pco-
pit f lented. •grasftroots cam-
paign"
He contrasted his type of
campaign wKh those bated mi
wealth and organizational
power He felt the public
would prefer his campaign
style, saying *M think most
voters believe in that kind of
thing*'
Shaffer said the grassroots
I
Acres of Datsuns
Student, faculty, and alumni
fleet discounts
101 S, Arroyo Parkway
* 684-1133 *
Students' Unior
Meeting Tonight
AU2408
7:30 ?M
TONIGHT: SEXISM IN POLITICS AND SOCIETY
Office
411 K'vckhoff
825-8U53
24 Mr Hotlim*
477-766.
COME SQUARE DANCE!
with
Phi Eta Sigma — Alpha Lambda Delta
..*►.
■v^
Fri. May 28 7:30-10:30
Women's Gym 200
Members Free
Guests $1, Couples $1.50
Refreshments
POTPOURRI
THE INTEflNATtOMAL RESTAURANT
1023 HNqm^ WMiwood, Pit: taS-SSM
InvRM you lo try irt SPRING QUARTER MENU
Lunch A Otnn«r includa. S6im
Ini^matiooai sandwichai on t
ALSO
Onnk $1 25 haaWhy kmch. $1 00 Chaft
Cappuccino 1 60. (Juaina; 40
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
FOLKDANCINQ vv^
FOREIGN ENTERTAINMENT.
OR mm 7:3S-11:
(IvHamailonMl Danoaa mmrf Pvm&f NlgM, r.ao-10:30piii)
WE ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
I, TOO!
nature of his campaign is
evideAced ^ his all-volunteer
ttalf. hit tnull campaign cx-
pendilurcf and the door-to-
door cuwsasinf techmques he
Uacs
PrccMKt walking
By the time Election Day
(June 8) arrives, Shaffer esti-
mates thnt he wtM have per-
sonally walked 15 per cent of
the 27th District, which spans
an area from Pacific Palisades
to Palos Verdes. He also esti-
mated that his precinct work-
ers will have covered 70 per
cent of the area.
""If the election were held
now. we might very well
get 50 per cent of the vole
just by virtue of the fact that
we*ve walked about 45 per cent
of the precincts,** Shaffer said
He added that anyone who
receives 30 per cent of the vole
is hkely to win the primary.
Shaffer also expressed a de-
sire to keep campaign spending
to a minimum, "Both of my
m%or appemcms have ulked
ab&tit . spending in excess of
$ 100,0)00 in the campaign.
We'll spend closer to $25,000.**
Shaffer said.
Experience
Shaffer said many people
feel that although he has never
gcliaflaf , wtio riopati to win 9i#
t diatrtet, contrasta Ms
served in pubic office, his lack
of-Txperience will not hurt
htm. **Tliere*s a great sen^e of
unrest right now that has yet
to be focused, and it tends to
Fair offers job info
Exposing students to various career planning opportuni-
ties is the goal of the second annual Vocational Fair
sponsored by the geography department from 2-4 pm this
Thursday afternoon in the Palm Court of Bimehe Hall.
Students inte/es^ted in learning of -futiiie research
programs and cmpioyment possibilities will be able to meet
prolcssionals in their afea of interest
There are several government agencies and private firms
participating. They include the National Park Service, the
department of housing and urban development, the Bureau
of Land Management, the Environmental Protection
Agency, the Army Corps of Engineers and IBM Corpora-
tion
There will also be representatives from Denoyer-Geppert,
a company producing maps, atlases and visual aids, the
California Water Quality Board, the Auto Club, the
Department of Water Resources and the Southern Pacific
land Companv. which has extensive land holdings in the
Western United States
These diverse employers will discuss vocational informa-
tion with students in an informal setting Coordinators of
the Vocational Fair stress this is not an interview-
recruiimeni situation, but an educational exchange.
Prior to the fair itself, representatives will meet for lunch
and be exposed to a presentation explaining the geography
curriculum as it has developed at UCLA. This year, the fair
has been largely coordinated bv student efforts headed by
Michael Aguilar and Avis Webster with faculty support
from Professor Christopher Salter
All undergraduates, graduates and facuhv are invited
Kefreshi^nts will be served
— Alexk Strauta
be an anti-incumbeht feeling.-
he said.
According to Shaffer, the
27th District has traditionally
been a Republican stronghold
However, Republican domina-
^p^ion may end, as the majority
of the district is now Demo-
cratic **For the first time,
there*! a realistic possibility
that a Democrat can win,**
Shaffer laid.
Shaffer said one of his main
areas of concern is the job
market. Shaffer advocated ex-
perimenting with programs
such as the ptcgative income
ux plan and said be would
prefer to see the federal gov-
ernment used only as an em-
ployer of last resort.
He expressed a preference,
however, for finding jobs for
people rather than keeping
them on welfare **! personal!)
thi'nk work is an important
ingredient of people defining
their own sense of impor-
tance,** Shaffer said.-
Taxation was another area
over which Shaffer voiced con-
cern. Shaffer expressed his
desire for a straight gross in-:
come tax system with no
deductions. He advocated a
complete revamping of the ux
structure, saying. -The mood
of the country is such that
many feel they are being
screwed over by the- weahhier
portion of society.**
(Continued m Page 6>
SUMMER INTERNSHIPS
INTERNSHIPS IN PUBLIC AFFAIRS
- LOS ANGELES GOVERNMENT -
Internships are now MMiabie through the EXPO
CENTER in the Los Angeles offies of US Senators,
Congressmen California State Senators and Assembly-
men: Ctty Councilmen. and other elected officials
and public interest groups — For applications & infor-
nnationsee TINA at EXPO A.213 or CALL 826-0631
Work and Study in Israel
Join young graduates from around the world in
unique one-year wdrk-study program sponsored
by the World Union of Jewish Students (WUJS).
Qiscover yourself and get to know Israel. Meet
people, learn Hebrew, explore Judaism and
Jewish history Work for pay in your own
profession. S^n^ for free brochure: WUjS.
^hdler Lane. CambridKe. M^^«; 02138.
PUBLIC WORKS
IMnMBATaUL THEAM
HHarious and touching'
tmmm lomu. la nms
A perfset utawpli of the
creative pfMltt in motion
MVF amMM sMiu mmcA mmtm
Friday^ and Saturdays at 9 pm
The (Jhiirch in Ocean Park
235 Hill St (Santa Mdiiica)
prion*
TOT
.)
^StMiear Prop ISrifebated
issue said not techmcar
ATTENTION FRESHMEN
"^ji
ancct
dnylMip.
•ifl tkmr. Participdtc m a tiud^ on tocMi
45 mmulM. pays S2 50 Conw to frmnz Hal
or cal t3M661 ahar SrOO pm
My K4mm Pfeffcr
DB Stair WrUar
The oppoiiDf factiofii of
Proposition 15, the nuclear
taitiativt, delved into the var-
ious aspecu of the aHiaufe
before a crowd of about 350
people in Ackerman Union on
of tkt cont rover
sial proposition were repre-
sented by Dt Lynn Dn^^.
head of the University of Tex-
ai Wnaiaar fai^and Dt Paul
Lorenzini, co-chairman of "^No
on 15" Those favoring the
tnitialive were represented by
Dilvid Pesonen, chairman of
CaUforniank for Nuclear Safe-
guards and co-author of the
aHasure, who was accompa-
nied by Dale Bndcnbaugh, a
former General Electric nuclear
engineer.
The measore. which will ap-
pear on the June 8 ballot,
outlaws the building and usage
of nuclear ^wer plants at
rapf ify until the CaMornia
legislature has a chance to
evaluate their safety.
**It seems entirely 4angeroai
aad unreasonable at this point
of time to build nuclear reac-
tors and not have the asiur-
x/
I
i
ance that they will work.**
Bridcnbaugh i^aid m opening
the debate.
**lt (Proposition 15) is not a
technical iwiie. It is a social
and a aMral and a political
iMtte,* lie added BnJirtiugfa
went on to explain that in
1975 there were more than 20
nuclear reactors shut down
CEC director Hits
Prop 15 in law talk
**! think that it is unwise to cut down on the ni
plants now operating,** explained Richard Tuttle. com-
nussioner of the California Energy Commission.
Tuttle, speaking to a crowded room in the law school,
elaborated on his opposition to Proposition 15, ating a
number of problems the initiative would cause. **l don't like
people from above telling me how to run my life^'atid how
much energy I can use,** Jie explained This initiative would
force people to cut down on energy consumption by gut ting
down on nuclear plants, according to futtle
Proposition 15, an iimtiative appearing on June's ballot,
(CoirtiniMd GO Page U)
**due to suspected pipe cracks,**
while the causes arc still not
known.
Bridcnbaugh. one of the
many defectors fron^ General
Electric who hive spoken out
for Proposition 15, said that
while the containment systems
of nuclear p^nts are "'designed
to catch radioactive tmiterial in
case off an accident^ they have
never really been tested. He
added that the reactors cannot
withstand *^internal vibrations**
such as minor earthquakes
**We are 50 years into the
military program and we have
yet to decide how to store the
. wastes (of nuclear reactors),?
Bridcnbaugh exclaimed.
Draper followed Briden-
baugh*s opening remarks and
mid Proposition 15 would
neiean the ''removal of one oi
the vital options of generating
electricity** in the years ahcacT
No i^|yriat
Draper suted that we have
been operating 60 power plants
(ConttfHied on Page 19)
Pre-Meds
*Fmn advice and counanl-
ing by mad students and a
former admiaaion com-
mittee rep
*Pmctice exams under
•knulated test conditions
^Tutoring, make up see-
aions and audio tapes at no
coat.
*ln depth prepvmtion for
the separate perta of the
teet ty experts in eech
topic.
* Optional eeesions for spe-
cialization.
'Documented PMiilta of
our forn>er pr<
medical students.
Call (213) 473^714
Mi^
1007 Broxton A««.
Suite 20
LA, Ca 90024
can ui im an Hifuaiiuii Hn ■
m
Casual Dining
rh<s /s the place for Rib LovBr%f
By far the Best Ribs wc we fried m L A
'U-'
*iimirer
COMPLETE DINNERS
>lr«..$2.75
NARRY'a OPSN PIT BBQ
1434 N CitSCENT HflGMTS of SUNSiT STaif
10 Minutes L><- wo S»>r»«»etBlvd to
loureK onyon lurn Right
And Vqu to IK^re
Five weel(s of study, travel
and fun
in Mexico
For tsadwrnigh school, and conega ataasnla Accredited
classes in Spanish. Mealcsn culture, music, art. alcat baautiful
Monterrey Tec^ College MSO includes tuition. 't>oard. room.,
laundry and trips Earn 2 seonfalars high school or 6 collega
credits
For details and catalogue^ contact group leader Dr Richard
MBtXiry bet^MSen 8 and 9 30 any evening at 47S-3SS7.
I
LET'S GO TO
THE HOP!
Come to the Co-op
for a fifties dance
Music by:
tHE BUSY SIGNALS
Friday May 28 9:00-1 :00
500 Landfair Ave.
Dress fifties style
sot donation requested
i
DATSUN
VOLNSIMAGEN
BMW
I
iKVClf
3f0SS.AaiaSf.
397
FARTS
a
# 4 tlwki %m 9* yt9*>H9 NaWW Cm
WEEK DAYS
a am - S pm
SAT.
9 am - 5 pm
liMCOLN &L\yQ
MAIN %f
'mxT
*"i
ii
i i
We Invite All UCLA ttudenta A Staff to take
advantage of our apecial discount prices on foreign
car parts and most acoeeaories. Just show your ID
Card & we will give you or^ of our diacount carda —
FREE of course*
} i i iftrruLr^rt
PtOreSSIONAL GRADi TOOLS
only ST*" p«r Mt
Rear Deck Lu^jHiage Rack
the vei7 finetl
Aviilaais Ust
MERCEDES
VOLVO
OPEL
m
f
ll 1 \
ESB^V.
Rally S€t for tomorrow
Ufii
35
OVftNAUi
Diamond Lane vital to group
A-1 AUTO SERVICE."!
'MiOttM* on ^^j [^ ^^j pV4*/U/ J
f
^
tir#d of yMterday s hair?
rAIC TCDAT
Fof whats happening now
styling for m%f\ and woman
Jarry Redding's Jhirmack products
For appointmant call 478-6151
tuas. thru sat.
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with this ti
1105 Glandon Ava Wastwood Villaga
Sy Ktr Gmhm M
DS Slafr Hhtcr
Traffic problems in Los
Angeles will not be tolveil
unlns the S«nu Hpoica free-
wav **diamond Uine** OMitinue^
operatiom. ttocm4m§ !• Jim
Ortner. a fraduate student in
urbMi pknning.
Onncr a tpim/ing a group
OB caflipttt rn tavor of the
special traffic lane and, has
urged studeou or anyone elae
«k he tmpponi the Uine to make
themselves heard
One wax to do thii, he sug-
gmt. atieni a rally of
diamond lane peoaonents to he
heid wmorram at S am at the
Santa Monica Park-N>Ride
near the cmtrnm of Oocoa Park
Boulevard ^nd Ccntineia Ave
He sav^ that the diamv
anc aione cannot ^jukc the
mtiiotioor af MMT oolliitioo oa4
$A^ ^vuig Ortner explained
tiiot m ftl4, tlie Calif omu
Stale 1 If Iff r ovaered the
CiMmrmm JraoijiaruuioB
to arvtte
dK Mimber
or
";:^'
TIE STEiti Bisctnrrcis
SOuaO STEKCO «• fMOfMM^ ^ ^^«o
One o' the «or^ s tarMi mactiom .n
Caltrant olfered five pro-
poaals tor the probleoi. all of
which are being realized one
wa> or another The diamond
lane is one method.
VWITM PI
in
SPEAKERS
■■*- »
WITHl»iONEER SPEAKERS
.«f
^^n
CAMOGA P»AIIK *Mg Tf
afESTCOVNiAS^ie^
MOaTEaCLLO a2? ¥W
AtlAHClM:'^- A ^
arESTL A .M;'5v»nta
IW
Fun Spot InThe Valk^y
ti-i
pa 11-5
sssAS lim^m^
WoHd-s Most
•ce Cream Parlor
12502 RIVRSlOe DRIVE
M>. HOUYWOOO. CA.
HoMTtoget
paid vacation bet ween
school and
Call
it s a way to pay ttia
you a chanoa to gat
Hwaars Fi
talptoavahalyof
world Evan if you pAan to mova
^t^ Wte>p# got oflwaa aM around.
,-.r-
siat working as a
•ntoa«analvoltaain<
ai around tt)a
to
I on «»
The oMiert were the building
of a new traffic lane on the
San Diego freeway (opening m
August,) a '*contra-flow'' lane
that would have traffic headed
in the opposite direction of the
nor-mai traffic flow Construc-
tion of the lane on the Holly-
wood freeway has been delayed
due to a lack of funds.
Also, a spodia loae running
down the middle of the free-
way IS intended torbe another
solution for energy-saving
wdet. The San Bernardino and
Artetia freeways already have
^his feature.
- ii!!altrans* fifth idea is a
priority on-ramp for buses and
carpools that is in effect on the
Saou Monica and Oolden-
Sahe freeways.
Tht Southern California As-
sociation of Govern menu
(SCAG) ia 1974 approved all
"live plaat. That paved the way
for Cahraas to do ia afork on
the freeway system of the lA
hiaia. But Ortner daims that
the chaagss anae on the free-
ways are quite difficult for
some people to adjaa to.
He said. "The diamond lane
has had aa effect on the num-
ber of cars aa the freeway But
It means chaagiag peoples*^
behavior As long as there are
people oppaaad to dinging
their lifestyles, the plans of
Caltrans will not be totally
cffecuve"
Other groups sponsoring
Friday*s rally are the Los
Anfeles Luag Association aad
the Siena Quh.
Schaffer. .
Shaffer aiiad thai the race
n aoi hkely to he eJEtremely
have not
diffcr-
rratic
^ the
the type of Mppart tlK can-
didates are receiving. Shaffer
said oac af hu Bajor op-
ponents is a wmUk^ haaasst-
^aa; wWe saotlar m a psy-
saciaa
j^ons^
— !r^
^
. -^
a celebration of the arts
Friday Jiine 4 thru Sunday June
UCLA Architecture Quad
Free for all
Friday starting at 6 pm-midnight
Saturday starting at 12 noon-midnight
Sunday starting at 12 noon-midnight
>'»
•^ ■ 1 1,-f
t '
WHAT IS IT:
The Garden Festival is a celebration of the arts,
providing a wide variety of cultural events and
entertainment, informal festival atmosphere
with free orange juice and coffee to enhance
the idea of sharing. It is a festival which shows
the large spectrum of artistic talents of the
campus and the L^A. community.
WHAT WILL YOU SEE:
Each day you will see a mixture of presen-
tations ranging from cUwic to contemporary^
from serious to silly, from presllpe to pretend;
Theater, musk, cbnce, mime and much more.
The Garden Festival c^ only be free with your
help. We need bodies to help build stages,
pick oranges from beautiful trees, set up
chairs, Md more. Helping is half the fun . . .
so if you have some time that you can
volunteer, please call 825-2262. Thanks.
Booklets containing the schedule events of
the festival can be picked up at Ackerman
Union Public Information Desl^ The Central
Tickets Office, KerckhoH Ticket Office and
the Department of Fine Arts Productions.
DO JOIN US IN THIS SPECIAL EVENT AND
SPEND THE WEEKEND WITH US. Bring pic-
nics, pillows, blankets and more.
In a continuing free spirit
JAMES DEAN 1st American Teenager to be
premiered at UCLA's Royce Hall on June t,
8:30 pm — FREE TO THE CAMPUS COM-
MUNITY.
SoasHored b¥ tha
affairf and a
It committee lor the arts, adkiral affairs
FETAtHON in a
culhiral A recre^
on Hue
Nt wiU he
3Paa*fr
'^"^m
■^H
i .. ..
I
f
daNy bruin
SB. 1 legislation
By Steve Rose
{iduor'% note: Hose n s member of A Humsnut Movement here).
The Hiftory o^ the Senate Bill 1 contains an election year type of
politics. In 1%6, Congress recognized the need for consolidation of
our Federal Criminal Code. The need for this comolidation had long
been felt by lawyers, jujifCf and law enforcement officials, who
krtew that criminal sututes were scattered among virtually all of the
50 volunf>es of the U.y Code. It was logical to collect and organize
these statutes into a single volume. ConffMi, at the request of then
President Lyndon B. lohnson, established an independent com-
mission to study the problem and draft the needed revision.
"Pat" Brown was appointed chairman of that commission Three
members were appointed by .the President, three by the Chiet
justice »nd six members came from the Congress, on the basis of
the seniority system. Frbm the Senate cannie conservative Democrats
OPINION
lohn McCtellan of Arkansas and Sam Ervin of North Carolina and
conservative Republican Roman Hruska of Nebraska. The House
provided conservative Republican Richard Poff of Virginia »ryd two
liberal Democrats, Robert Kastenmeier of Wisconsin and Abner
Mikva of Illinois.
While the task of Brown's commi^ion was straightforward,
being essentially a iimludical collection of the statutes, it offered
an opportunity for broad changes in the Code in the ry^me of
expediting justice. Under Brown's aegis and with help of a
competent legal staff »r)d the slightly liberal bias of the commission^
such swMping changes did not uke place. Although the com-
mission's meetings were marreii by the conspicuous, rep>eated
abience of the conservative senators, concessions were made to
Important conservative positions and the commission's draft was
issued unanimously in January of 1971.
McClellan and Hruska, who had been so conspicuously absent
while the liberals were about, now gained custody of the
commission's report. As chairman of the Senate subcommittee on
criminal laws and procedures, McClellan began hearings im-
mediately. In January of 1973, having fully revised the Brown
commission report to reflect his own view, McClellan introduced
the first version of SB 1 in the Senate
January, 1973 — the month of Richard Nixon's Second In-
auguration. If you were Nixon would you Uke ro ^
—Broaden the government's right to tap phones without a court
ordei^ when "an emergency situation exists with respect to
conspiratorial activities threatening the national security . "
(Sec. 3104)
—Make "voluntary" cortfessions admissable even if obtained by
secret police interrogation iri the absence of advice of your
rights as prescribed in the Miranda case. (Sees. 3713-14)
— Immunize public officals from the prosecution for illegal
acts authorized by superiors. (Sees. S42, 544. SS2)
—Facilitate conviction in cases of police entrapment (Sec 551)
—Sharply curtail all types of public denfKKistrations (Sees. 1112.
1115, 1116. 1117, 1302, 1308, 1328, 1334. 1361. 1863)
—Reinstate the death penalty and make it applicable to a wide
variety of crimes, including publication of the "Pentagon
Papers" by Daniel Ellsberg (Chapter 24 and Sees. 1121 and 1128.)
(Continued on Page 9)
"No, we haven't changed our motto — the Marines still build men . . it's
just that we run short of spare parts every once in a while, so we have to take
OQe of the new recruits, and a hatchet and . . .
■ ■ r
Letters to the Editor
Work
idkor:
Have you seen an add like
this: Part time, $4.00/hr, college
students welcome, call xxx-xxxx,
a subsidiary of ABC Compariy?
Our office check,ed out a job
opportunity like this when the
relatively high pay and unmen-
ttoned type of work arousled our
suspicion. We arranged for in-
terviews, which the company
conducted in groups. After a
slick demonstration of very sale-
able tkitchenware, our prospec-
tive employer (the counselor)
told the group that we, too,
could rnake big money in sales.
We viewed fancy portfolios list-
ing the fantastic commissions of
local collcfe students. So what s
the catch?
To start, you first pay for and
attend a trainir>g seminar We're
told our money goes toward
bor>ding and literature, not
toward the seminar, but sinjce
when doesn't the employer pay
for bonding?
V You buy or (oh deposit) bor-
•fow, your sarnple salesware; this
could cost you a flat fee (about
$130) or 'much more, if financed
by their own finance company.
Finally, you beigin to sell, ar^d
can contract to work for com-
mission (about 20 per dent of
sales, to stall) or by the hour —
you're actually paid for each
demonstration — so no where
has the company guaranteed
KOO/hr.
So is this such a bad deal? No.
not if you're motivated and tal-
ented enough to hard sell
housewifes and househusbands,
door to door.
But we're alarmed because
most people aren't top sales-
persons and before they n
it, they've invested more monev
in the job than they'll ^er get
back! The employer counselor
admitted ^hat they experienced
a high attrition rate.
Now, is this fraudulent^ W»
can't say but we warn you
when yoO look for a ^ob:
1) Is the employer hiding
something when he doesn t
mention the specific job in- his
advert isl»ment?
2) Does it make sehse that voa
should pay the employer so that
you can start wotk?
3) If you aren't offered th«
same fob for which you applied,
maybe you had better question
your choice in accepting it.
If you have faced this prob-
lem, or have any other con-
sumer complaint, contact us in
Kerckhoff 311
Gary fficdwMii
Director,
CcMiMMMr fvolectioffi Protect
Airs well that ends well in Student Government
(Editor's note: Conner i^ the past
president of the Undergraduate Student
:iation here).
By Lindsay Conner
-♦
As I ended my term as Undergraduate
Student Body President last night, I
began to think back over the last year —
probably the nrK>st memorable, enjoyable
and fulfilling year of my life to date. The
Presidency offers an opportunity both to
serve and to grow, in an environment
made challenging by the processes, the
ir>stitutions and the people who fIliM
imdent University government in the
state of California.
It's nam at easy Job (there are many
when the temptation to refreaf
into the pleasant obscurity of U15760 706
is almost irresistible), but the pflpnal
and group development and the MflM of
achievement that comes with solving
difficult problems is so rewarding that I
would happily do it over again
In closing out 833 days of service as i
member _of the Student legislative Coun-
cil, I look back fonder on the many
fascinating people I have worked with m
this highly productive government.
TcMCher we have done much to pro-
vide better services to students and
members of the University community.
Together we have increased the sophisti-
cation and influence of the student voice
that reaches University, local, state and
national government. Together we have
learned how best to use our often
limited resources to achieve the maxi-
mum results for students as a group
In cleaning out my desk, I've come
across a number of things which bring
back many happy memories.
The menrKjries ao back to February 13.
1974 — the nigra 1 was sworn in as
SLC Facilities Comrpissioner . when I told
my collegues that my top priority was to
get an ice cream parlor on campus in
Kerckhoff Hall. It took a lot of pushing
and prodding, a great deal of hard work
by tons of people — and a few wild
moments on the Board of Control — but
there it stands today.
There are, of course, many other
satisfactions in retrospect. We have
completed the external affairs side of the
Prtiidcnt's office by aclding the Metro-
politan Student lobby (known as Metro-
lobby), which is off to a great start in
representing student needs before the
City Council and County Board of Super-
viKirs. Many intMB concerning parking,
transportation and housing are ultimately
decided on this level; it was here that we
worked to secure better rapid transit
service to the Valley and opimd the way
for a Park and Ride service
On. other levels of government, we
worked vigorously for a student housing
bill that came within an eyelash of
passing — and has an outstanding
chance of becoming law next year
Securing off-campus parking areas — like
the VA lots — was another priority item.
We bdii^ that student participation
in the national political process was
crucial for both students and American
society as a whole — so we initiated
Project Awareness '76, which is educating
and encouraging student voters, dele-
gates and campaign workers.
On the home front, we secured ap-
proval for two very important prograrm
which will commence (Or continue)
operations this fall initiation of Com-
munity Service officers (a student patrol
service which will reduce campus safety
hazards) and the full-time return of the
Cafnpus Tram (possibly m much more
developed services)
We also started the Student Body
President's Campus Safety Task Force, a
body of students and administrators
which can cut across decision channels
to find solutions to these critical prob-
lems. We also revived the Financial Aids
Task Force, which will hopefully become
an important forum for student input in
the days ahead and worked with the
Office of Undergraduate Affairs to help
provide educational innovation and in-
structional improvement at UCLA
There is much nrK>re which canrKJt be
told here, but the pMple who worked m
my office will have the piPiOflBl ~ if not
public — satisfaction of having seen
those "isiucs through to successful com-
pletion
As you read this brief reminiscence, of
course,. sohneof>e elie is starting to fill up
that old desk that has served so many
presidents. Our new president, Meg
McCormack. will rtow begin to learn
what a tough but rewarding job she ha*^
won. It is my hope that many of you will
join her in the coming year's quest for
new solutions and a still sti^nfer student
voice — so that one year from now. yoiJ"
too will have shared in the ioys. thr
excitement and the growth that comev
from successfully meeting the challenges
that UCIA government provi
Ikm Otih Brutn
Poor Bruins
tournaments for die chance to
play in somewhat sunny Ne-
the Editor Continued
The hMi^ill Bruins exclbsion
from this year's NCAA cham-
pionships is merely a sign of the
tinncft.
The Bruins had five people in
their car. but ne^ed six to
efMef the diamond express lane
*o the national xrhampionships.
N4^0^ "fihind that the car was a
Porshe which each of five teams
wanted very badly to be in
charge of Never mind the fact
that the Bruins ended up in the
drivers seat If USC hed stopped
UCIA for the conference cham-
pionship, would they have been
left out of the championships?
UCIA mm not considered
t^Ofthy of a spot among 33 other
•••ms, because their 35-25 rec-
ord "waan't good enough.' I
would like to see the schedule
that some teams (which were
unranked and got into the play-
offs) had. It's too bad UCLA
didn't get a ponvderpuff sche-
dule that a few of the playoff-
k&und teams enjoyed.
A sign in the park reads
"Don't feed the Bears — es-
pecially the Brui^ns." They were
definitely left out during feeding
time. ,
So, while the srhaller animals
were being pened and called
cute nanfiea, die Bruins had to
bear with being left out in the
cold Speaking of cold, it ap>
pears that now the Ud^m are
headed to Alaska to play bate-
ball this iumttter — to "warm
up" for the trip up north tf»ey
should be playing in post-season
With all of the talk of an or>-
campus baseball stadtum, sttM
'wiMinf it the friendly sound of
crackling huebalis and the sight
of lights surrounding a park
Why doesn't anybody recognize
coMefiate baseball as a sport of
'»ome importance? It has been
the springboard for some of
major league s hottest stars for
USC and can become such for
UCIA if given a chance.
What IS badly needed is more
student interest, but first the
event must be held on campus
— not on the Wadsworth Hos-
pital grounds (The situation is
anemic.) ^
UCLA's bmtkaii team Ktd a
*«cord MMpig year, — it's too
bad nobody did hear or will
hear about it.
thetic qualities of Meet. A das»
P' two m modem archiiecture
wiM open their eyes to advance-
r^^ents of this JOlh century,
whme iiHkiflrial materials have
played such a crueial role in our
development. Conner claims
better sales appeal in a wood
store This is ludicrous. It is
childishly cute for him to be so
expensively woodsy, organic.
etc., but this IS entirely incon-
liMent with the structure of the
Student Store and its expansion.
I would like to see a nioie
mtelligent approach taken
Meanwhile, as this slips into
obscurity, I suggest we immor-
talize this as "Conner's Folly/'
with all ipninpw due Seward
and Alaska.
Alcaii Siraytt
luck. iney were all out of M
, As game time approached. I
§m frantic and taxed .my mind
to disclose any other source
of the invaluable synthetic,
rhe emergency Health CIiihc
in Pauleyf I rtished over there
and explained my plight The
answer I received was an ad-
amant "No!'' The reasoning
was that Student Health is on
an extremely tifhi budget and
that It would be an unbearable
financial setback if a few ieet
of athletic tape were given to
an individual in r\emd dl H. I
bared my ankle and explained
that i had already been to
Student Health for tre<»ment
ankle, it would cost Student
Health much more money (not
to mention the pain and tack of
n>obility I would suffer) Finally
he foienied
I am not bitter about that
incident Thf attendant, who
happened to be a personal
friend of mine, was undoubtedly
acting on orders from higher up
tbe Uddet ol the bureaucratK
hierarchy I fault him not. What
does puzzle me. however, is the
fact that when I tried to return
the crutches issued to me. no-
where would they be accepted
Vou tee, I am a policy holder of
Student Health insurance and
apparently it paid for the crut-
ches I am not a medical sup-
plier arni am not familiar with
the cost of medical material, but
my suspicion it that a pair of
crutches is several times the cost
of a few feet of tape
1?
f
r
BOC
Student Health More on SB: i
I
f
i
I am astonished to read of
•OC's approval of $190,000 for
wood fixtures in the Student
Store expansion (Oi, $/25/?6)
looking beyond the incompe-
tent coat overruns by the de-
signer,' how can such an extra-
vagance be sanctioned? $1«.000
for wood fixtures? When func-
tional steel fixtures can be used
for lets than half tfie costM The
naive decision to install wood
fixtures is incompf ebu isible and
unforgivable. Obviously, lirvdsay
Conner and Brian Mudd are
eompleteh' oblivious to the aes-
Two months ago. I severely
sprairsed my ankle and received
attention from Student Health
As part of the treatment. I was
given a pair of crutches and was
instructed to sign a form pro-
mising to return them or else
pay for them. My agony was so
immense. I would have sifned
away my first born child to
alleviate the pain.
Recently my ankle felt strong
erK>ugh to partake in intramural
Softball. Although still swollen
and tender, some supportive
athletic tape Would have made it
possible to plav. so T travelled to
all conceivable sources of such
tape in Westwood no such
(Continued from Page 8)
Apparently Nixon like these ideas |ust fine, for the provisions
above are cited from the version of Senate Bill One now pending in
the judiciary Committee Nixon became a supporter of the
McClellan bill in 1973 and in addition had his justice Depanmfnt.
under the direction of Mitchell and Kleindienst, write rheir own
version No more court defeats for Nixon No more travesties like
the Daniel Elltberg, Washington f^ost. New York Times Berrigan
brothers ChicafO .Seven. Black Panthers or Angela Davis cases
Make way for real law and order \ The present version of Senate Bill
Or>e is a consolidation of McClellan s and Nixon's efforts
The sad fact is this the bill will probably be passed in the Senate,
partially amended, before the fall elections »t will definitely be
passed unless each of us expresses his or her opinion soon Such
bills are n>osr ^sily stopped in committee. usuaNy but the Judiciary
Committee is- overwhelmingly conservative ar^ fiey liberals like
Kennedy are waHling. Wrue to Kennedy now and write to Tunney
who IS Kennedy's friend Even a postcard is enough to let them
know that you oppose Senate Bill One in its entirety It is time to
make your opinion kfu>wn before it is too late
nANOAftlN INN EST
1 CHINESE VEGETARIAN>|EALS °^" ' ^jr"""
TWO AT ONdE
come meet:
District Attorney
Congresswoman
John Van de Kamp Yvonne Brathwaite
Burke
I
Friday May 28 12 Noon
Janss Steps
b iMi
W Jilt OaMy Brwr.
I
<
JaiJcForfLu^
jz_
t'
t-'~ —
I
The Staff of
Westwood Chiropractic Office
Invites You To An
OPEN HOUSE
Monday through Friday, May 3 - 28
12 Noon 'til 2 PM & 5 PM til 7 PM
1429 Westwood Boulevard ^
Westwood, California
.(213)477-2984
Your Host -
Howard Malby, D.C
Refreshments^ Facility Tour
(Conff nucd from Pafe 1 >
Pmidcnt Ford faces Ronald
Reagan in Reagan*t home ttala
in the June 8 primary, but
Jack Ford fceh his father hat
*a very good ciwindb lo win in
Cahfomia *" Acbordini; to Jack,
whether the president wins or
loftes the primary here,
**Reagan rtatin't have a chance
to mm tkft nomination **
Ford laid the President
Imtm to his iamiiv '1 think
he listeai -fXery well" he said
"We spend a lot of time
talking; whether it*f at the
dinner table or somewhere else.
he tries to get my perspective.
It makes me feiB|l opfiMent that
the Pretiient is getllnf another
point of view.*
Travelling the campus under
heavy Secret Service f«artf,
Ford said the escort was not
an unaaon of his privacy. **I
don*t think anyone womkA want
to shoot me becaiaae u
wouldn't serve any purMta,**
he laid •'I think the Secret
Service is here more to prevent
Ackerman panel.
:-t .
KLA/83
■WPT
(C ontinurd from Page 5)
for 20 years without an injury
to the public or to a worker
due* to radiation
Lorcn/ini emphasized that
••over 35 me^ia editorials in the
Slate** about the proposition
eafied tt a'shut-down^atHnr.
He added that support for •'No
on 15" has come from a di-
verse group of people, includ-
ing former California governor
Ldmund (Pat) Brown, Pres-
ident Ford, Republican pres-
idential candidate Ronald Rea-
gan, the Black and Chicano
caucuses, the Young Demo-
crats and the Young Repub-
licans.
I oren/ini said Proposition
15 was a "proposar to ban
nuclear power in Cahfornia."
He went on to say the measure
*'sets up standards that are
impdWhIe to meet " This has
been a common claim by those
opposed to Proposition 15
Lorenzini pointed out the mea-
sure stipulates that the Price-
Anderson Act, a bill just
passed by the United Sutes
Congress for the next 10 years,
must be repealed in one year
or the ^'shutdown measures
would become operable."
I ■
The Pnce-Andmon Act sets
a ceihng of S5M million on
damages .that can be paid out
if a nuclear plant accident
occurs.
Proposition 15 would elim-
inate this ceiling and would
(Create an unlimited liability
policy Opponents of the mea-
sure say there is no need for
this policy since an amendment
(Continued oo Page 1 1 )
TYPEWRITER CITY
f ^;
-4
478-7282
Royal MC Std.— ^
Adier Port.
Smith-Corona Elec.
Lloyds Printing Caic.
WESTWOOD
r'M
479-7282
799s
169**
ggOP
•«*.
■M
and REPAIRS
BankAmericard~ 1089 Gayley Ave.
MasterCharge
.i£fc ... ,
TWO BUCKS BACK!
CLIP THIS AD and bring it in to our Sizzler! When
you buy two steak and langostino platters at $6.98
well give you two great meals and a crisp, new two
dollar bill, too! Unbeatable!
GOOD ONLY AT:
Sizzier
Westwood
at Gayley & Le Conte
Last Day: June 3rd
a V
Senator Church.
(Continued from Pace 1 )
defeating Carter and Brown and givmj his campaign vital
momentum and legitimacy. _..— ^^
Church once again raised the issue of his opponcnu' lack of
cjCperience, saying "The Presidency is not a place for on-the-iob
training."* ^
The senator also referred to Governor Brown's policy of
lowering expectations, commenting. "I believe in lowering
expectations and I'm doing my part to lower his."
In discussing American policy hi Africa, Church called the
proposal to sell a nuclear reactor to South Africa '*an act of
folly •- and said the United States must support "self-determina-
tion and efforts for majority rule."
Church said he supported detente if it meant an increase in
US Soviet trade and a decrease in nuclear proliferation but
opposed detente if it resulted m Soviet development at our
expense
Senator Church followed his speech with a brief press
conference and then Icff for Cincinnati, where be will address a
state AFU-CIG convention. He will return to California late next
wcelc^to campaign for the June 8 primary.
Pool area
(Continued from Page 3)
of a couple years ago is either gone or turned yellow, repiaced bv
dirt and debris r j
''The construction people ripped it up pretty badly." Miukis
said, adding that "there was no way to avoid some damage/ but
these peoffle were not particularly careful."
New grass is now being planted, but the area will remain roped
•«f until It grows in. Mitakis estimates the period to be about
two mdnths
The food trailer will be open on June 15 The old vending
machines, in the shower area of the pool complex, were also
[h^m -'^^' ^"^ Mitakis said "I hope they uke their time sending
^ He said that he was relucunt to order them, keonise they seem
to insure a lot of Utter arrfund the pool; a real mess, but families
really hke them "
"Familes have first priority at these pools," Miukis said "Of
course, students can come up here if they want to and if it's not
too crowded, he added ^
\.!L^ L^^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^"^^ P""^** ^^'^^ "^•'rt to «*ke some of the
littk kids away from the large, dowjRsuirs pool. ""If too many
students come up from that pool, weflfind a my to cordon it
oil, he said
But he added that -this wont be a problem, because the
no»e of the kids will cither drive you away or drive you deaf "
Human Sexualify
Seminar
with
Liz Canfieid on
"Varitics o^ Scxuai
Ed Wiesmeier, M.D. &
Werxiy Barbw. R.N
**Students' Sexual
Marty Bragg of the
l^C.LA. Sexual C^ysfurKtion CImic
Saturday, June 5th 9:30-5^00
Ackerman 3517
OPEN TO ALL MEN ANn
^
(Continued trom Page !•)
included in the Pnce-Andenon'
Act inftures prompt action on
the part of Congress if the
damages involved in the nu-
clear accident exceeds SSM
milhon
''Proposition 15 was sold as
a safety measure and it is not,"
Lorenzini laid He added that
the proposition would also be
subject to a two-thirds vole in
the Cahfomia legislature after
three years and agam two
years later. If it did not pass,
the nuclear pAaata* operating
capacity wottid have le be cut
back 60 per cent.
The opponents of the prop-
omiflfi lay the safety measures
neeettary for the legislature's
approval arc impossible to
meet They point to the pas-
sage in Proposition 15 which
sutes radioactive wastes must
not be found to leak due to
"imperfect storage technolo-
gies, earthquakes or other acts
ol God, theft, sabotage, acts of
war, governmenul mstabifities,
or whatever other sources the
legislature may deem to be
rcaabnably possible "
Increase In coat
Lorenzini stressed there
would be a "4*3 to 25 per cent
Finch article
i¥as incorrect
- >■
The Daiii Brum article
Tuesday on U.S. Senate
candidate Roben Finch in-
correctly stated Finch left
his position as the head of
the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare in
November, 1972 Finch re- .
signed his post as Secretary
of HEW in 1970 to become
Special Counsel to the Pres-
dcni and resigned from that
posr in November. 1972
Reactor safety
topic of speech
^Huc^mm RmcUk Sale-
tr will be dtocutaed at
the physics colloquium
today at 4 pm In Knudsen
1220B. The speaker Is
H.W. Lewis, chairman of
•m American Physical
Solely Study Group *on
A0M water reactor safety**
and physics proJesaor at
UCSB.
I mwii I !!■<■ I ^ iiiuMfa
tlie coit of etec
tricity" if the proposit
**! agree with the etpKtives.
but I strongly duiagree with the
approach," Loren/mi said ^
David PcMmen. co-author ol
the bill, exclaimed, "The old
industry does not want 15
because it wants tbr old con-
flict of intcrcfti,** refcmng to
the fact that if the proposition
fails it will mean the nuclear
plants will be supervised by the
California Energy Commission
This vk a precarious situation,
as Bob^ Moretti, California
energy commissioner, has ap-
peared in paid media adver-
tisemems for the *'No on 15"
committee.
Pesonen ate said, **The iwo-
thirds thing is a sm
He added this is true be
"Every budget act in the ^_
lature requires a two-thirds
vote" He* told the audience
that all the legislature must
find IS that nuclear plants are
as sale as his opponents claim
It IS.
Pesonen said S2 3 milhon
bM been contributed by the
nation*s large corporations,
including "30 Eastern utilities
and 13 international oil com-
panies,*' in order to defeat
Proposition f5
Pesonen declared if the mea-
sure pas.ses It will prove that
"the corporations can't buy an
election from the people of this
state"
A/e%v
' Auto Insurance
il, yoo don t have ii«btiity insurance ^hm fwm *tnanctal
respbnsrtjrttty tew cDuid attact you in
Modified r#«M lor Qualityifig Stu0iwM
Call Today For Vour Froc
245-727S Hove Rotes — Will Trovel 9t4-0a44
filercury Insurance Agency
'Miii.
SATURDAY NITE
ENCOUNTER GROUPS
bi The Topanga Center for Human Development
'^.*^_y" •** ^ dfop-in oncoumv e^^aupt as a way of mooting
noy poopio and oxploring now CfioStlwo woys of rolating to thorn
DfepHn (no nood to call first) any Saturday nito S 00 PM at otttior
ol Ihoaa locationa
iTsa wooaoaee aiv«.. tuot as. wootwood
iJiaN
(4 oaia 0001 of F
Momt>ort $4 00
Non-mom bof $5 00 .
ihipa $6 00
Avo.
)
For brochuros call
466-1342
SUMMER
JOBS JOBS JOBS
College trained
wonrten will be
supplement our
staff . >n district
througf>out tf>e US
positions are full or part-time
summer jobs We are aearch-
ing for applic
ambitious, dependeble and
hard workir^g Excellent op-
portunity for adwenoemeiit
You may continue to work
on a part tinte or full time
basis next fall if jaw dsslrs
For district office address, or
for. eppointnr>eot with our
local meweysi call Robbie
eMsr April 18th. 9 am to 3
p.m Monday through Friday
at 213-^78-6422
CE TO ALL SIUDENIS
dents V. ^ will
i V^f^
Mir
to the
xk>
UCLA Student Identification Card
A current Reaistr^'
must ^' a or
- FOOTPRIN
/ SHOES
Ot^(
riuor L
'PV
■^Zi
Programs Activities: Intramurals. admission to athiet
c t
''••■W* CounwlS^
Lo0flBitit^ iJaOnpti
10912 LeConte
(By UCLA
Mam Entrance)
Westwood
4//-/3/1
mmm^
m
'^v'^tsr
■?. J^-
■| ■"•1
_:-2
f ■ w
vco Center
Cinema I
Wtttkitrm
'11
•tvd
SEVEN MAUTIES
1:20. 3:40, «:00, 1:20. lOtJO
^BfW WtOOOf AvCO
Avco Center
Cinema II
Wibhir* nmar |
475 0711
^r^fc Indoor Awco Gorogo
BIRCH INTERVAL . PG
4:00. SilS, 10:25
Avco Center
Cinema III the SAaot who feu from
Wilthir* noor
W«ttwood Wvd.
475-07 n
Pork tndoor Avco
GRACE FROM THE SEA -(R)
» 35, 3 40. 5 45, •00. lO 10
Beverly
kovorly Onv«
(Ol Wil«hir«|
275^4484
FOLLOW ME BOYS
2:30. S:09. 7:45, 10:15
BEN AND AAE
2:00, 4:35. 7:15. 9:45
Beverly Hills
Wilthir* Bivd of Cannon
'■ blk East of lovoHy Or
271 1121
^ EMBRYO . FG
MAN WHO WOULD NOT
DIE- PG
M-l^ opmn 6:00 -
Sot A %^mmpmn 12:30
Brentwood I
2524 Wilfthiro
(o» 2«(»i St.)
Sonfo A^fHco
•29-3366 829>33«7
LIPSTICK
#4:45, 10:15. Sat A Sun 2:50, 10:15
THE LONGEST YARD
M-f 4:15 Sot 4 Sun 4:30 4 •:55
Brentwood
2524 Wtlthii^
(Of 26ft) St ) _^ y^
Sonto Morticd! "'.
829-3366 825 3367
I THE MAN IN THE
THE GLASS BOOTH
M-f 4:15. •:15, 10; 15
Sot 4 Svn 2:00 4:00, 6: 1 5, •: 1 5, 10: 15
r
Monn'f
Bruin
Woftwood Viltogo
477.09S^
All THE PRESIDENT'S MEN
12;30, 3:00, 5:30, SrOO, 10:30
Midnight tkmwt fri 4 Sot.
Ptttf
Century
Plaza I
^040 Av« of Start
553-4291
' BLUE BIRD
TwM-^ 4, %, 10
Sirt, Sun, Mofi2, 4. 4, %. 10
Century
Plozo II
2040 Avo of Slon
553-4291
HAWMPS
r
BENJrS LAST STORY
Sot Smh Mm 2:20, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00
••••I 4 Fri 5:00, 7:30, 10:00
OiKMmf THkoH A^I«Mo of KordiHolt M, OHico
In 70iiNii mm ond
Cinerama thats entertainment
Dome MiTTM — s
Swn»o» noor Vino
AN-SHir Ca«t
12:30. 3:00. 5:30. 4:00, 10:30
Crest
Cinema
1262 Wosfwood Wvd
272 M76
474.7S64
m
TRAIN RIDE
TO HOUYWOOD
Fox Venice
620 brKoid Mvd
396-4215
AduH Si 50
CMd SI 00
S/ 37 TKor* - rTfaimii— fP—tm^tmn •! Jbb( i
S M Pm ■ Coll TKm«o« ^ ^njj.ii.i„r,. _
^ ^ ^^ • i«'*V AmmotMNi m Amovwo S(
•/SI mam • Ifcimpii/Cotwol Nrt^wiodv*
4/ I Too* - ioMM Om«t \upmf%%m tvoHt^r Son
* 3 Wod lomofitM
Acctdont
Hollywood WON ton ton - PC
Pacific
Hollywood Mvd
^^•Or CoHuoOQo
466-5211
lily tft 12:30, 2:30, 4:30, 6 30
• 30, 10:30
plu« fvoturett*
K>P GOES THE WEASEL
4 loommlo fhooffo
Los Feliz
'•22 N Vormont
MO 4.2169
N#w IBrvnch Film Httivoi 1976
VINCENT, FRANCOIS, PAUL
AND THE OTHERS
GntGP ba i
indGx
'Birch Interval
period piecemeal
Albert: surrounded by bof d»iii
■^,
R> Adam Pirfre%
Dcibcn Mann* ftircb Inter v. j while
not as insipid as a maudi n Disney
creation, is a reientlc«»J> dull film, just
like those home movies Uncle Irvma used
to make ^
Now playing at the Avc« || Birch
Interval is a IWs period p,c.e about a
young girl named Jesse (Susar VI c< lung)
who leaves her mother perr .„entlv to
visit her UiKTle (Rip Torn). Vunt (Ann
Wedgewood) and Grandpa (F : lu Albert)
at a slcep> pastoral lunction , j Birch
Interval.
All IS not well m Birchvilk however.
Uncle Thomas enjoys cutt n^ down
advertisements off the town's Krandlather
clock and perching up m a tree in his
\f
backyard Grandpt bat t» defead the
Amish Dutch m an argumem. and Auntie
M having a nervous breakdown m her
inability to converse with her watch-
mBkxng liutband
Later. Uncle Thomas runs otl to live in
his son's treehouse He is committed^ to an
insaar aiylum by Grandpa and dies soon
after The picture ends 15 confused
minutes later I
How all these pieces fit together, one
Mi aoc. and cannot, know One can
easily surmise that scenarist Joanna
Crawford and director Mann (IMan>)
hadn't the foggiest either Bi/arre char-
acters are indiscrimmatelv thrown in for
some color, like a wiichy old woman
(Ann Revere) and an IS year old village
ll'JJL *^ I*^^ curiosities only leem to
t>ai!ie in their incongruitv
trs Furrers beautilull> grainy cinema-
tography is a big plus, „ „ Torn'i
neurotic Uncle, but these highlights are
unfortunately, small oases in' an en-
compassing desen of boredom. The tor-
pidity IS achieved by Mann's inclui^ion of
draggy episodes of weeping and talking by
McC'lung and Albert and accompanving
them with Leonard Rosenmans turgid
Hvrupy televiftion style^score"
We have come to expect quality family
pictures (Wbe?e tbe I illles Bloom,
^ounder) from producer Robert. Radmt/
but here he has blundered m his decision
to film ( rawfords Birch Interval It is
hard to be aattalgic lor boredom
rlett, it's a lot of detail
I Bv John JB Wibon
- Readers interested only in the juicy details .of how a motion nu -
lure classic was made will fmd a satisfying experience m Roland
Flaminis Scarlett, Rhet and a Cast of thousands (MacMillan
344 pages, $13.95). But those who look beyond the scope ol thc^
^^ual making of Gone With tbe Wind to the feorc encompassing ^
question of why it has achieved such massive success will find the
book ultimately unsatisfactory.
From casting calls for Scarlet to curtain calls at the Atlanta
premiere, Flamini covers in minutest detail every aspect of the
production. It is all Qeshed out be extensive and sometimes
excessive research on his subject If anyihifig. Flammi has a
tendency to provide too much deuil
The author brioflv summarizes t(ic backgrotrnd of ncarlv
everyone he mentions, right down to the studio publicists Ihe^s'e
mini-biographies. some only paragraphs, others running to
several pages jn length, interrupt the flow of the- narrative and
leave the distinct impression of being thmlv disguised padding
I be narrative here almost takes second rank to the ac-
companying illustrations Gracing every third page are lavishlv
reproduced black and white stills from the film, as well as photos
taken on the set of the cast and crew at work. Each picture calls
to mind some favorite moment in a motion picture full of
favorite moments.
-n
*Uses ol Enchantment*
V \
When coverage of the nuK.ng of the film begins, the book
becomes more compelling riding Problems with directors
screen-writers and casi mcn.hcrs were rampant on this pro-
duction I iteraUy thousands ol ..sp.ring and established actresses
tried for the coveted role of Scarlett. whKh went.uncast umil
hlming had actually commenced At one point, producer David
O. Sel/nick had three different teams hacking out versions of the
screenplay, with 1. none Oj them aware o{ the others and all
subiect to Selznick's pench.mi lor rrwnting everything himself
ruTL"^^'*'v''^ ^"«?«^^ *' ^'^^""'^ ^>«"ts to direct portions of
OWTH and Victor Fleming uh<. cceiCcfd sole credit and the
tiscar for dn-ecting it. was acfuall> responsible for on!\ half of the
final product W hen compleied. it had cost $3,957,000 to produce
and has sincx gone on to e.'^r several hundred million in box
office grosses world wide
^ The book. unfortu^ieK. ends wnh the Atlanta premiere"'and a
brief account of th/lTlm's success, never addressing the reasons
lor It. FUmini suggests onh -.ts stirring message of victorv m
defeat as a clue to this all important question For as manv
questions as it does answer Scarlett, Rbett and a Cast 0i '
Thousands is a delectahly engrossing boo|t But for the true film
fanatic. Hamini's failure to deal with that uUimate question,
keeps II from being loiallv satisfving .
V
^mi
Leifb: catt from
...I
Unfair to fairy tales?
By Jonn Morley
What would childhood be
without fairy ules of wicked
stepmothers, enchanted frogs
and magic bauistalks'
In Tbe Uact of Encbantment
(Alfred A Knopf, $12.50, 310
pages), Bruno Bettelheim dis-
cusses how "Snow White,*'
**Sleeping Beauty.'' "Little Red
Riding Hood" and many other
stories can subtly guide
children townrd resolution of
such pressing problems as
sibling rivalry. Oedipal con-
flicu and the attainment of
personality integration and
autonomy Bettelheim argues
that if we rob a child of this
^^"taiy heritage, he loses an
impovtani opportunity to deal
with threatening problems on
the pre-conscious level Be
cause the endings of fairy ules
are invariably happy, tie child
IS rtilMired that his own p
blems are soluble
Tbe I'sei of Fnchantment is
written in a clear, easily-
retdabic style, but Bcitelheiip
finalh ders his theory life-
less hv const^ptly. htMflhOfinti
It
fMUbh
b«it beiibcfed
The Freudian analyses of the
lairy ules themselves are, how-
ever, fascinating "Cinderella "
becomes a tale of sibling ri-
valry, while ''Snow White" is
explained as the story of an
adolescent girl, caught in the
throes of Oedipal conflict.
*hose loss ol innocence is
signified by '^eating the red
(erotic) part of the apple "
Bettettieim presents a con-
vincing case for the uncon-
^lous svmholism of the ules.
At times, however, hke the
MepsiMn ,n Tinderella" who
<>ut off heel and; toe %m mmke
^^^' tiny sboe fit. Bettelheim is
Kuiltv of mutilating the ules
until the\ fit neatly into the
glsis slipper of his theory.
^n the wh. Bettelheim
^^«» itten a book of social
a nee and charm, but it is
'^iCMisnablc whether his de-
' » '^'ng of the sexual svmbolism
■n fairy ules will rnfOMip
parents to icnd them to their
^♦I'ldren Sadly. Bettelheim
^ay be contributing to the
the annih n of tbe fatr\
•n American culture
On Campus:
Guaranteed Chicken
Guarantee Chicken, a (olk^rock-bliiM group,
will peiifurin in the Kerdthoff Coffee Hmmm lonigtit
at <t pm. Slick, Linda and Wfich formerly played in
the Coop. Admission is free.
Manns Westwood I
UPSTICK
a. to. 7:B0, I0:4S
THE LONOtST YAtD
1
4:so. aao
Manns Westwood II
END OF THf GAMC
3:00, 4:00, 4:00. • 00, 10 00
Manns Westwood
BUZING SAOOiiS
3 00, 4 OS. f 20
GtOOVE TUB!
1:30, 4 40. 7 SO 1
An Aftko Thmatrm
Merolta
9632 Culv«r Itvd
CuW«r City
359 43t1
^»g»Amr Adm(M«on 13 00 r^
ColltH#otr# ♦©» show timvt
KMKT • JO Mrfy ikdm fj
{i
3M
4 Lammmim Thootrm
Monica I
1 332 2nd Sli««f
Sonio MofMco
4^ia4t«
FAMILY PLOT
THE Git AT WAUX) KPPH
A Lommmtm n»«o^*
Monica II
1 322 2nd SlvMl
Sonto MonKo
4si-aaa6
THE PHANTOM OF THE
P AtAOtSE
^^^■^WBWwP0
BABY BLUE MARINE
4 Lammmh Thmatrm
Music Hall
9036 WiUKirw Mwtf^
loworly HiNft
• • •
FACE TO FACE
HAonnt
Notional
t09?5 Lindbfooli Driv«
479 2t66
iAO NEWS BEAtS
2. 4. 4. a, 10
^^4mk^U SKowt M A Set
-«
NuArt
Theatre
j/arnHMtrtNiMi
• /2f S«f . A Sftol V«««fio,,/AMd Now
l}2T2%m
<7t.437V
479 SM9
»/l
»/1
r/1
Dwcfin
Pantaaes ^ t"* "»«J«^t s men - k>
""""^^ -^'~ FtEEBIE AND THE BiAN
7161
12:
PO€lfK 'l
Picwood
Pito noor
772 MJt
EMBRYO - PG
MAN WHO WOULD NOT DIE
-PG
IKM«^«fi4:00
.„i!^.A..IhM..4p4il...l2:JQ
Thmo*rm
Plaza
477-409f
479 9077
THE MISSOUtI BtEAKS
An Artkm ^mm HIm
A Lommtmtm
Regent
1045
772^1901
STAY HUNGRY
Royal
; 1
JttAAL^ikJka^olofci
477 5941
$¥«PT AWAY. . .
TK* Qtmkm Mm: 3 Apy^edi- »# '
r9Wt ^HIB
u.*
Toho
Lq Brea
Lo Af«o Of NinMi
WE 4 2342
SWORD Of VENGEANCE Port 6
ZATOICHI CONSPIRACY
im Th*at»r Om— Moy 31
UA Cinema
Center I
10M9 W«llworfh Av«
W««twMd
474-4154
Stem Pndmf^
TAXI DRIVER
2, 4, «, a. 10
UA Cinema
Center II
10099 W*IUortt) Av«
Wmtwood
474-4165
TH« Funn iMf Rim •! 19t5
TUNNEL VISION
Storring CH«vy Omm«
1:30, 3:00, 4:30, 6 00, 7:30, trOO, 10:30
Midnight Shown fri, Sot, Sun
UA Cinema ^ .
^ ^ ,., SANDSTONE
Center III (The Original) EMMANUELLE
^^^J^'"**"^ ^"* 2:00, 3:30, 5:00, 6:30, trOO, 9:30, 1 1 :00
474 3663
UA CINEMA
CENTER IV
10M9 WcHworrh Av*
WMtowood 474 4198
Wmmm •! 5 Academy Aword*
Jock Nickelsen
ONE FLEW OVER THE
CUKOO S NEST
MS, 3:30, 5:50, tOS, 10:25
MA R<K9w«l \M«lch till Cosby
MOTHER, JUGS AND SPEED
WESTWOOD ^^ ♦^o. §30 10 30
10M7 L.ndbroofc *•♦ * **"» 12:30, 2 30, 4:30.
Wvitwood 630 8 30, 10:30
477 0573 Midnight Shows Fri A Sot
VAGABOND
2309 Wtifthir*
387 2 17 J
35mm! IFuli Uncut VirfUn,
Fffod Afttoiro Gmgor K»g<fm
TOP HAT (1935)
;~ THo Morx trw.
ROOM SERVICE t^93t)
THEATRE
THf NtSTOtV OP THf AMMNCAN AVANfl
ANIMATIO fliMS tV OiOtGf OfflFHN
$3 00 f »»«r«| S t SO atw^nH
9014 M«lro»9 Av«
Lot An9«<oi 276-9987
Monni
Village
961 SroMton
Wvttwood 478 0576
WON TO^ TON THE DOG
WHO SAVED HOUYWOOD
1:15, 3:00, 4:45, 6:35, 1:20, 10:10
Midnight Shows ^. Sat. Sun.
Thufs thru Sun
THf WHIZZ KIDS
* \
fAWN TUNES ^
A
TRAIN
JANC i Contet
SUNDA :
S I (;0 f uvh
tft' th«r finals
S300 iosh
KENTUCKY FRIED
THEATRE
th« bo«t ol KFT «
l««t 5 y«or«
10303 W ^o 8lvd
556-2663
BEATING A DEAD HORSE
f«« 4 Sot • 00 A 10 00 ^
SUNNYLANO SUM AND HIS BLUES BAND
M«v 29.30
CHARLES MINGUS
iUAD JOHN SAHEY
Li^thous^
^^ in Dim Awr ■
30 PIER AVE
Cl««*d
««(COlMf
HERMOSA BEACH INFO-TEL. 372 6911
'Mother^ Jugs and Speed':
ambulatory humor
By A4siii Parlrey
Peter Yatc'& Mother, Jugi
Speed, opening citywidc
today, hsLi the ambition of a
drugged tortoise, the surefoot-
ed neiui of a novice ice-skater
and the brains of a 50-year-9W
punch-drunk boxer yet h
managed to provide a few
amusing moments.
Mother (Bill Coaby), Jup
(Raquel Welch) and Speed
(Harvey Keitel) are employees
of FAB Ambulance, an itiner-
ant outfit operating m an un-
incorporated section of Los
Angeles. Mother, F&Bs lop
driver, enjoys honking at nuns,
gu/zling beer and habitating
massage parlors. Speed, a new-
ly-hired driver, is conscien-
tious, but not above coaxiaf
the normally reticent Jugs for
a roll |n the ambulance bay
lugS' ti/^a secretary who keeps
abreast of all h&.B\ new de-
velopments and goes to driving
school in order %» become a
driver.
Through mischance, the un-
likely trio end up working
together in the same ambu-
lance MoHmt, Jugs and Speed
traces theu bizai^rc experiences
on and off the field.
Director Yates paces epi-.
sodcs of questionable taste
(lik^ a lat woman whizzmg,
down hills m a gurney) quick-
ly and without much ado
about nothing. Tom Mankie-
wicz's script is fairly routine
stuff - the gurney sequence is
lifted whole from. Billy Wilder*s
tile Front Page - with bank-
able, moronic laugh-getters:
Paramedics dropping fat wo-
men, the shoeiaif of a tmggfti^
harndan (Valerie Curtin) and a
perverted paramedic (Larry
Hagman) performing necro-
philia on a coed.
Still, Cosby*p portrayal is
'mingly sympathetic, aad
Keilel exudes professionalism
in his perfomuMtfe ms a sus-
pended police officer jaded by
the misery he's seen.
The commercialism of this
picture, though, is painfully
apparent. Put together the
director who shot Bullitt, the
scripter of aoflK equally
cessful James Bond films,
buxom
lance funny-cars out of Eat
My Dust, hlaed mti sex, and
what you have is the at3^pical
studio manufactured B.O.
SflMsh. This lowbrow mentality
should make most moviegoers
reel with nausea.
Though the hiianty is osainiy
humbug and the heartbreak
merely heartburn. Mother,
Jugs and SfMotf may stiU be
worth a viewing — a year from
now on,
twdcli* RdSei! para'^O'vefs
Attention Couples!
Casually of tenousiy dating, co-
habiting, engaged and marrted
couples Eam $l 50/ person plus
feedt>ack by taking a confidential
questionnaire Come anytime t>e-
tween 7-10 pm on
Ti
1178 F
n,ZT
\i
* JUST OPENED *
EDDIE CARROLL'S
Le Ch^mata
Women's European Clothes
at Good did American Prices
r '
9056 Santa Monica Blvd.
(Directly across from the Troubadour)
Los Angeles, California 9(X)69
276-490S ( r
Open from 11:00 a.m. to 7 p.m. every day
riospd Simdgys
cia! admissions
i i ofitinucd Irons Page I )
"it ought be that the Regents wanted to lose
the case; they sure don't like the special
admission programs.*" according to Susan La
Kiomboise, head of the Native American
Srodems Asaociation.
She added that at least one third of those
admission programs should be onl\ tor minori-
ties, not poor whrtes. whites have gotten
enough of their people in **
"h might be that the Regents, who are not
necessarily enamored of the special admissions
progrant, wanted the case to go against iherri **
saui Befliamin Aaron, a UCLA law proicasor.
Aaron added, however, ^ this was jttH aiK
possibility He said that it could very well be
that the Regents leit confident of victory and
wanted a final dectston so they could pr\)cecd
without the threat of continual lawsuits and the
controversies that come With them
As far as winning the case for Davis, the
Regents probably did not do the wusest thing in
tiling a cross-conrplaint. Feller said
He added, however. "I assunre that VC
thought that they could win on.r^the issues"
'*li IS certainly possible that the Regents have
doubts about the program and want to get it
ruled against themselves," UCLA law profc
Melville Nimmer said, adding that this vfca>
purely speculation.
Positive side
Nimmer also said To take the positive side,
you could say that they're convinced of the
constitutionality of what they're doing they
donll want to leave it questionable in the
future/*
Gary Morrison, a DC attorney connected
with the case, said there is "absoluteK no
truth*' in the assertion that the UC defense
strategy is an attempt to lose.
"Special admissions programs have operated
in a limbo ever since fieFunis (a similar case]."
he said. ^.
'•Since none of our professional schools knew
where they stood, it was vital to determine the
constitutionality of their programs"
Donald Reidhaar. the UC General Counsel, ^
said. "This IS an issue of great public concern
. J
that must be resolved Many people were upset
when Dehunts was not deadad.
There is nothing to feal^ m a liiriM— even
4i it goes against us. which I don*t expect to
happen That [the constitMtionalitv of the
program) is something that we need to know "
he adiatf.
Legblati%r analyst
Speaking on special programs for minoruies
in law school, A Alan Post, California's
legisUtive analyst, said "A lot of people in
them drop out. or even after they have taken
the bar two or three times, there's still 30 per
cent of them that don't make ii \ u that isn*t
good business for anybtxiy
"I he special admissions people came here
and they admitted that it's a pretty sorry
record." he said
"Here is money available Thev tmght to
decide whether thev need more money lor more
grants or more supplemental help, then come
and tell us what the problem li," Post said
He blamed some ot thij* faiJure on the
administrators of the specuil admfsatoos pro-
grams themselves
Post added. "In general, there are student
funds for these purposes that don't get used
Money is available in student aid at the
University of Californui that ju.st doesn't get
picked up"
VirtMs
Speaking on special program diredors such
as UCLA's Michael D Rappapqrt, Post said
"They've lectured us on the virtues of admitting
minority students. They put up a straw man
and ki^ of beat it to death in ordpr to not
really} look hard at the i^gues " Rappaport was
uhavailable to comment
Post's statements are disputed by some at^the
University "In the past couple of years, the
University has requested funds from the
Legislature, and we have been turned down."
according to Kati Haycock, staff cooidinator in
VC Vice-President Roben Johnson's office
"This year, there wa* no request for state
funds, but that's only because, after you're
turned down year after yfear. aiftjr i^ while vou
give up." she said
, THE i
COMEDY j
STORE i
A •
CONTINUOUS SHOW:
OF COMEDIANS •
EVERY NIGHT •
e2 Locations e !
8431 SUNSET
1621 WESTWOOD
275-7641 656-6225
477-4751
->«wic«n C apr^^^* •ami Amsrt
•••••••••
• •••••
r
FOREIGN
STUDENTS
Foreign students wishing per-
mission for off-campus summer
work and Extension of Stay should
submit applications to DISS, 297
Dodd Hall by June 8, 1976. These
applications will be taken to the
Immigration Service by a member
of the DISS staff. ' ' "
Medical Symposium
Featuring Dr. Peter Saik
Dale: Tuesday, June 1 ^
Time: 8:00 PM
Place: Neuropsychiatnc Institute Auditorium. UCLA Medical Center
i: free
lers: Dr. Peter Salk
Research Associate
Autoimrhune and Neoplastic Disease Laboratory
Salk Institute for Biological Studies
La jolla, California
Topic: "The Relationship Between Illness and Stress —
A Possible Therapeutic Role for Transcendental Meditation
Dr Elliott Abravanel
Anociate Prototor of M^dic me t,
Director of Health Services
Maharishi International University
Fairfield. Iowa
TO|i<C: "The Prim^^ry ni Cnn^riousness in the
fit nf
H^hh
Sponsor f Hi hv ^TW^^^?*
■^FTSnTfrr iw Health Slud<»nr
1
f
5
DRIFTWOOD BAR
GAIV lAtTS QUINTET
May 7«-7«
MAtY MCCAHIN
JIM RINOM
tuff 4-S-*
JOHN STEWART
(tidiaH an Sate iww)
Stttilntu
laiHr
♦ .« I I AMS HAMOS M Af^IMM l%S H4H»KS A!^|l N»( ONUS
COKE ESCOVIDO
and
VIDA
w .\
Amw 4-S.«
LONNIE LISTON
SMITH
plus
VICKI SUE
ROBINSON
6}«-210e
=nri
Holiyxvt
THE STONER
2113 Siofwr A^«
WMt I A f002S
477 7339
Mer 4 Win*
Pood, Gomo« 4 ofHof
I / a Ma. M9ffn Or Of)ffVl^iC
I ilfc Wo0# mt ierrfngfoe
JOHN KLEMMER
ond
DAVID tATTIAU
t-3
DON WIUIAMS
tOD STIAOAU AND THf
COiiMAN COUNTy
COWtOYS
•Ml SAffTA MONICA 9Un!!!LJr279^t9m
i
tie
In *• Wmattmcm^ Cmtmr
^tmm Pmrtunt 4rt-etTf
MO'S
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FOR THOSE WHO APPRECJATE OUALITY
IJOO wfS^WOOO ilvD 4 ilOCKS SOUTH Of WIlSHItE
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lOaSS iiwdhmii Or WMwd, fOOM
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YFSY'S EAST INDIAN RESTAURANT
JUNIORS
THf noLLf aovcE Of ofucATf aaf Mf
079 m*
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.e Foyer De France Lymh $200. $225. $2so
foast U0^^,9mk Or Dmoor $3 75, $4.25. $3 25
jUPrtttSmse
MM - T«) 41
RESTAURANT MIFUNE
1 1*«7 Iwto Ml !!■ ■ mxJk.
>o.i
WW lA 474'eMt
h» intomAtionerllmftifovii
Th»
1023
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$175
EAT OUT TONIGHT!
mn
1
ATTENTION pRE-HgALTH r apc cti inc^Te I ' For doriti resldeiits
MEDICUS
Su^Hlay May 30
Chatsworth
W«lcom«l Frw FoMi TrMMporMion ProvldMl
•l9n Up In A-e39
FraiuHafl
PSYCH
STUDENTS
Jog down to the Undergrad
Psych Assn. Office and ask
about summer & fall jobs
and 199's 1531B Franz Hall
Spanish Speaking Mental Health
Research Center Colloquium Series
presents
JOHN SERRANO
Chief of Social Services
Eastern Los Angeles Regional Center
for the Developmentally Disabled
The Development of Culturally
Relevant Social Services
Date: Tuesday, June 1, Y976
Time: 2:00 pm
Place: 313 Kinaey Hall
-L-i
riw-
Next tiTTK vou nerd help,
mfornuition.
or just scniKont- to talk to,
^-i
^ivtusara
H25-7040
(ucl-po^o)
■piMisnriM} hv »»T^ UWC *n0 iLC
UCLA STUDENT
W:
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REGISTERED UCLA STUDENTS IN AREAS OF
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•ContrarTs . 3^^ others
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9 a m - 4 p
9am- 3 p
(no appointment needed )«||
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pMone 825 2596 or BifS 2643
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By Fnmk WM4«
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iMlCAd of pmyukg a. phone
bill to General Telephone, for-
mer and present dorm rcsi-
denu are now entitled to re-
ceive a SIO payment from the
phone company for every full-
year phone subscription pnor
to this year, according to Steve
Brower. a student here
The Inter-Residential Hall
Council is currently setting up
tables during various lunches
and dinners af, the dorms for
residents to file claims to col-
lect the $10 payment, ahutk
forms for a 50 cent service
claim will be suppiaad at the
tablet. — ^
Next week, former dorm
residcnu may obtain the blank
ilntm form at a table set up in
from of the Studenu* Store
entraaee.
To collect the money, the
phone subscriptions must be m
the resident*! own name for a
December-June penod and
must have been purchased
within the tast six years, not
including this year
The General Telephone pay-
ment IS the result of a Supenor
Court decision last year, that,
under tiie Public ijiilitics Com-
Tuttle speech
-jr-
%■*
(Coartnnad fron Paft 5)
propo!»es certain procedures for the operations of nuclear
plants. These would include heanngs by the Legislature on
safety issues and the development of adequate waste
disposal by 1981
Tuttle elaborated on a number of legal probiaaw that
Proposition 15 might gmmb. The legality of the initiative
might be challenged in the Supreme Court. That could take
years and by tiMt time all the nuclear plants nught be
closed," he explained.
Many questions were raised by the audience about the
safety and reliability of the nucleac pianu. Tuttle answered
by saymg that San Onoirc km **very high rejiabilitv —
better than coal planu.**
Tuttle emphasised that if the initiative paaaed it Would
mean that nuclear plants would be cut down by 40 per cent
in the first year and 10 per cent every year after that! ly
1987 there would be no nuclear plants operating,, according
to Tuttlc^__-=-.
^ -
"I can't see cutting out an important source of energy
before we do all we can to make it safe," Tuttle concluded.
— Marilyn R(
Tu€>sddy, May 25 1976 12 00 noon
\AS
ns o
dXKi i .,,,-4
'H T-nrr*, ( i,fj,
Ori^ijiiizauunb A R-
Thursday, May 27, 1976 12 00
Dr Claudid M'tcheJI Kf man. Associdie Dv
•'--i Pro* r of Anthr
'•s in bidck Amern an b ^"
^ an . (•»
noon
. lAAS,
ectures Being Presented
in 3107 Campbell
miaaxNi regulations, the pboae
companies had no right to
treat the dorm residents dif-
ferently from anyone elK. Pre-
viously. General Telephone
had not been listing dorm
residents m the directory.
This year and from now oa,
studems will be listed in tlie
directory.
Brower brought General Tel-
ephone to small claims court
last August and won a $3
claim. General Telephone ap-
pnalnd m Superior Court and
loat their case^ resulting in the
existing payment.
**The phone book says ^at
every person is entitled to a
free listing, and if the phone
company doesn't give a littti^
free, they are entitled to pay a
foe."
According to Brower, Gen-
eral Telephone owci around
$60,000 to dorm residents;
however, he expects ^hat only
S5,000 in daama will be filed.
IRHC will collect all the
•Mbicription claims this weak
and next week and wHl deliver
the claims in person to General
Telephone
So Cam
winners "
Prizes aind winners in this
year's UCLA yearbook. South-
ern Campus 1976 sweepstakes
are as follows:
From the AS UCLA Student
Store: a Texas Instruments
electronic calculator — Janet
K. Andrews.
Twenty-five percent dis-
counts on cljBss nng^ e- Max
Pena, Michael Connolly, Alei-
ta Pnce, Jane Obedowski and
Alma Valenzuela
A pre-paid Student Heahh
Policy.-- Cheryl ZaragOMT =-
A lunch with the Dean of
Students at the Faculty Center
— Diane Kawashima.
Ten dollars worth of
quarters for use in the billiards
room Ronnie Hibe
Four passes to any Pacific
Drive-ln or Walk-In Theater
— Stacy Kelheher. Bambi
Drisko, Omer Sozutek, Pamela
Quimby and Charles Berry.
Free subscriptions to Lecture
Notes Olfa Maldonado,
Karen O'Brien, Jeanette Woo,
Frances Harvey, Daniel Haley,
Felicia Grays. Robin Rhine-
hart, Mark Kraner, Hazel
Sanders. Maria Siegel. Vivian
Hoi man. Dana Loy, Randy
Hill. Vicki iakenchi Beatrice
Aronal. Andrew Epplc. Cheryl
Bascom, R^bin Billcr, Lois
Sheridan. Ann Svenson, James
Dowda. Thomas Sapien, Mark
Yo«iag, Marriot Uhl and Bar-
bera Thunen.
All winners will be notified
by mail.
Wbv NV
FUN PARTY AT
jiisncijland
Sunday, June 6
4:00 - Midnight
$5.25
Admission to Disneyland, unlimited use of all
adventures & attractions. FREE PARKING.
rvAca Canl#r. Karckhoff 140, whUa ttiay ftaat
Pro net tours lure collegiate stars
By Hunicr Km^km
DB Sports Writer
UCLA tennis star Peter Fleming tnmt
proleaaional nfcxt week, it will be no surprise to
UCLA coach Glenn Bassett or any other tennis
coach Or player.
Fleming wiU be joining a list of collegiate
Stars that baa been frowmg each year si^gg
1971 when NCAA iiafks champion Jimmy
Connors, a UCLA freshman, announced that
he was leaving for the professional ranks.
UCLA's Haroon Rahim, a top collegiate
player from Pakistan, turned to the pro-
fessional ranks the next year after winning the
NCAA doubles championship with Jeff ftoro-
wiak. Then NCAA utlist Billy Martin left
school last year after his freshman teaaoa.
There is not much that collegiate coaches
Bassett. George Toiey of USC or Dick Gould
of Stanford can do when their star collegians
turn pro. If a player feels he is good enough for I
the pro circuits, he will usually turn pro
regardless of his year in college
But it does concern the coaches of the
perennial collegiate tennis powers that the top
players who they spend a great deal of time
recruiting leave school so soon.
As a result, BiMttt, Toley and Gould and
icp'eral other coadHt across the country have
to quickly replenisJi rosters more regular-
ly
-There's only eo many top amateur players,"
said Gould. ''But what can we do? If a Roseoe
Tanner, Alex Mayer or John Whitlinger thinks
he can make a great deal of money in the pros.
It IS hard to convince him to stay m school.
*^ome of the players will come back to
ichaai aad take a few courses here and a few
^courses there and eventually iraduate. In the
case of Alex Mayer, he had graduated a
quarter ahead of his class.**
Gpttid, in his tenth year at Stanford, added
there are about 500 players around the^
world who are good enough to make money in
the ioaia of profanonal tournaments taking
place all year round.
''There is the World Championship of Tennis
XWCT) circuit each winter, the Grand Prix
tournaments going on during most of the year
and now the World Team Tennis leagae,** laid
Goukl. "There is a lot of money out there td be
OMde and all oi the cream of the crop players
can only play in one tournament at a time."
Goukl has a great deal of experience in
loaing top collegiates and then baking an effort .
to replace them with , players of similar ability
Since 1972. when Stanford began placing
among the top three or four teams in the
nation, Gould has loat NCAA champions
Mayer, Taaner. Whitlingtr and AH-Amenc-ins
Chico Hagev and Nick Savmno
Mayer wai a threr-time All-Amencan (IM^i
73) before quitting the Stanford team a month
before the conduaion of Hk 1974 ^•fptign
Mayer had won the NCAA SH^Im title in 1973
and doubles championship in both 1972 and
1973 with Tanner and Jim Dclanev wmmatiu^^-
ly — P~-^
Whitlinger won the NCAA singles and
doubles titles in 1974, teaming with Delaney in
doubles The Stanford junior was upset in
early-round action laat year m the NCAA
championships
Afterwards he decided to leave the collegiate
ranks for the pros
Hagey left Stanford after advancing to the
NCAA singles finals in 1974 He also had a
year remaining of eligibility
Saviano turned pro after laat saaaon with
only two years of collegiate action ^
"With all those players turning pro we still
won NCAA team, championships in 1973 and
1974, which IS indicative of the team depth wc
had,** said Gould "But, it is rare when a team
can have depth like we had those two yean, 1
think UCLA*s team of 1971. which won the
NCAA*s with Connors, Rahim and Borowiak
has to rank among the best collegiate teams.**
USC coach George Toley has his own list of
tennis stars to leave for the pros.
Toley, who has won nine of USCs 1 1 NCAA
team championships in his 22-year coaching
career, lost Mexican Davis Cup star Raul
Ramirez and U.S. Davis Cupper Erik Van
Dillen after only two years in college.
Van DiUen fled to the pros after the 1972
seaaf>n, while Ramirez left the neat year
Then, earlier this season. Toley lost number-
one singlep star Butch Walts to the Phoenix
4l^aeM Team Tennis fraaaliiae after it was
determined tlM Walts did not have enough
course credit to be eligible for the 1976 season
Walts, who would have been a junior this
season, won the $12,000 first prize check in the
Boca Raton, riorioa professional iburnamem
earlier this year, which h<; had to" turn down
becaiiae it wasn*t determined that he wouki be
if ligihli at the time of the tourney Walts of
iBakersfield had teamed with USC*s Bruce
Manson to defeat UCLA's Billy Martin and
Brian TcKller to win the NCAA doubles title
last year Walts later won gold nriedals in the
smg'loi and doubles evenu at the Pan American
Games in Mexico City last fall.
More letters to the Editor
the better
!
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IMESTWOOD VILLAGE,
1067 Broxton Ai
Trojans tabbed for title
' A
Tracksters picked sixth
ly^Marc [>c«h
Dl Sports HrHcr
The UCLA track and fiekl icam will finiih sixth in next
month's NCAA finaJi, according to the latest issue of Track and
Field News.
The nufazine picks USC to win its firit national championship
since 1969 by picking up 63 point^s Jennessec. which won the
title in 1974, is picked for second with 49, followed by Oregon
(35), defending champion tinivcrsity of Texas. El Pa»o (34),
Arizona Sute (29) and the Bruins (26).
Washington Sute is picked to finish ninth, giving the Pacific-S
conference l#ur of the top nine schools in the country.
Triple jumper Willie Banks is the only Bruin picked to win his
event, and the sophqmore is taMad to collect 16 of UCLA*s 26
points (NCAA toontig awards points for the first six placet in
the following way IO-8<6*4-2-l).
In addition to his win in the triple jump, the talented Banks is
also figured lo finish third Ml IIr long jump.
Sophomore pole vaulter >i1ike Tully is picked for a mo&mi
place finish in his event, while sophomore high hurdler Jamet
Owens IS picked to score UCLA's final two points by finishing
fifth
Among the notable missing are UCLA's 4M»4ncter relay team
(picked for a non-scoring eigth place), intermediate hurdlers
Grant Niederhaus (scvepth) and Phil Mills (not among top eight),
800-meter man Conrad Suhr (not among top eight) and 400-
meter runner Bennie Mvles (not among top eight).
For the record, USC was picked to win just three events —
the 400- meter relay, the 200 meters (James Gilkes) and the 400
meters (Kenny Randle) However, the Tropans' depth earns
another 33 points in second through sixth place finishes and the
title.
Gilkcs IS picked for fourth in the 100, Rayfield Beaton for fifth
in the 800, Mike Johnson sixth in tiK high hurdles. Tom
Andrews third in the intermediates, Russ Rofers third in the p<:M
vault, Tom Cochce for fourth in the tnple jump and Darrell
Elder for fifth in the discus
In addition, the Trojan 1600-metcr relay unit is tabbed for
second place behind Arizona Sute.
■,:..-..,^
\NW-
x»
Tiiir iMMl lor
jj^-oi-.^
there i
UCLA rifle team
-^
iy Fred
DB Sports Writer
■Mially is synonymous with
UCLA athletic teams However, the
chanocf are slim that it would ever be
identified with the Bruin rifling team In
iact, the chances are shm that a rifling
team would ever be identified with the
Bruins.
OtoKure to say the least, the riflers have
survived in the shadow of UCLA's more
celebrated sports programs With fan
support lacking and publicity non^
existent, the marksmen' have quietly
etubhshcd tlKaselves as a national power
several times in the past nine years under
the gMtdance of coach Gary Olson.
Since Olson's reign began in lf67. the
Brum riflers have frequently atuined high
natidniit rankings, going at high as second
in 1972. Individually, the Bruins have a
long list of outstanding accomplishments,
which include an Olympic silver medal by
Vic Auer, two consecutive national cham-
pioMthips by John Jones, and 10 AU-
American honors.
Success It obviously nothing new to the
rifling team, but newsprint i« Even
when Jones captured his second national
crown, he did not receive publicity. **ln
Southern California, rifling itn't too
popMlv and thei^ aren't enough facihties
Up north the programs are much more
developed," said Olson, a UCLA grad-
uate.
Northern Calilornia. specifically the
Bay Area, is the center of rifling compe-
tition in the sute Locally there areni
enough teams to make up a league
Consequently, the Bruins must travel long
distanoil to compete on an inviutional
basM.
••It's a one-shot deal, if you'U fciffive
the pun Our *quad has to wait for
mvitations because of the lack of local
competition," said Olson
The rifling squad is a group of seven
marksmen, four joining in team compe-
tition and three who compete individually
f hey practice daily and compete oc-
caaionally at the rifle range in the men's
gym Their season lasts approximately
three months, beginning in January and
ending with regional competition m the
*pn»g
"Our season ends with the regional
tournament because there is no direct
competition to decide naiumal honors
The scores m the regionah are simply
compared nationwide and the champions
arc arrived at in this way," explained
Olson
"On the national level rifling is very
active Hundreds of schools across the
country have rifling teams. Those schools
frequently compete in national *shoot-
offs,' " he added
Annually. UCLA compete^ in a similar
"shootofr at the University of Nevada
where leaoM from all over the country
come to offer strong opposition Unlor-
tunately tor the Bru4^ns. the opposition is
progrewkivelv getting tougher according to
Olson
"Our budget doesn't allow us ip
scholarships to prospects like ot'her
schools can There is a lot of local talent
in our backyard, but big schools like
Tennessee. Kentucli^y and the militarv
schools are luring them away."
The -local talent* is being generated bv
a well-developed system ol lunior pro-
grams. In the past. UCLA had the pick ot
the crop, but not now
"At UCLA, the number of expcucuccu
shooters has dwindled greatly smct I
becarTjte coach because ol t>K — other
schools' attraction When I started
condiing. we had plenty of established
marksmen, but now we hiave to do a little
advertising to attract people with some
talent and a lot of lime." sa|d Olson
In attracting new talent. Olson does not
discriminate against sex There is already
one woman on the Bruin team and "the
opportunity IS wide open for them." in
Olson's eyes. .
**lt is a tact that women can compete
on an equal level in rifling A lot of
universities encourage woihen to par-
ticipate We've even competed against an
all-women team." said the Brum cpach
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Wh«n school It over ...
tell your professors and fellow students
where to go!
Caerses NMt art •
t
>tj«
(2131 477.JStt
Pre-Dents
Our last class aver-
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and 6.0 on the Aca-
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school's aniaring class
averagad 6.0 on the
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Call (213) 475-DATS
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That's beaaMSt these mrm affinity flighu which
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OCAM H T . Happy 21ol MrOiday to lan-
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RON - Birthday wisho* Bf always
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(0 M 27)
WEEVIL and Smith, aro wo glad wo'ro
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L.M.C. - Happy 21 at SIfMdayt r«a
Looa lo you 0 only
hatp ifoni w.v.Q.)
f¥HAT DOES A BRUIN
BEAR WEAR FOR ACTIVE
_.. SPORTS?
UCLA sweatshirts, sweat-
pants, joggers outfit, t-
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R.Si.. (!
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Mitortainment
PIANOS ■uiiHli lor foM tram 016.00
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000-4014.
(• J 4)
ANHOWHEAO cabin In golol mrHm.
•Mapa 0. $00/2 doyo. $100/7 4oya.
••^"^^*' It OOr)
MCCARTNEY Tldwla 0-22. 23 aic
logo oooli, ram
7 pm. 440-0700
(7Jt)
NBNTtA-TV. OIOJO
sludant dlacouols. Dollvory lo 0:00.
(•ON)
MCCARTNEY
7 pm. 440-0796
r7 J3)
,. u
$1.00 DUPLICATE SrMgo
Wodnosday aftornoono. Wild Whiat
•rldgo Club 1069 Woatwood Blvd.
17 Girt
Bearwear.
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
P#raonal
BRUIN T.V 4 STENEO RENTALS
COLOR TVS
; xiL. Woolily/ monthly
OOCa doy
Storoot $7.90/month
I
VwMlB T.V.'a • $7J0/monPi
Can: 276-1SS
MOTf Our orlCM MO dtaaouRlaa lo UCLA
CMHont Pot cords only
. OwO Wlw
E aid and an»oy a fc
> PUCE LmOwOb 4vvm aot HMioi t
Zl|. eyoMaN - BOdi oandMon. $900.00
• **•_ (tt J S)
yoo MM liosa a oanaa af
*»«<mor. don't dNpaIr Bda biiMiI M ba a
(0 M 27)
hour. hoN or l«« Boy. For $4.00/hr..
i ^^w I ^wanga moMig ot^^
IS: in OMTapooBd Con-
17 J 4)
.|l«aoB>7S<
o-ir-
DannNM07B»
(10M27)
good d— Is
TIBRS0ASR01AaRli.8R0S.
NP • C««M - Cofoua - NaoMo
rOM37)
>^^ (M*^) Oood Moo M JMoiLoaa
••SO DIM E-X-P-E-IM-E-NCS.
(QD J 4)
MM 171
141
R l|MR I W.Y
■lb MOO. Mf, Bo tor rant
r» Ma MfM rm
STAR
Bay a
MM27)
POR SALE- Handc RuM
Pfo K modal. LMa t%mw tl7S 3BI-0B12.
(10 J 3)
I
MMS7>
«% W.T
^ODY I. grMog .BR. aa N Ma
SeoRy Chango la ol Ms bod aMo
$70 Proo IntormaNoo. IBSom KNBISSL MC 1000. NaaoBa
r^o J A\ ^HWHo ^THi winowiwa« ooon aomoao-!
. oat BMOM oRar. 401-4S00.
Hi Calltornla. All branda. Mall 9r4mf '■•• ^ •>
(10 44I MBii
^— r^n t d%"
i^^n
foroolo
30 GALLON
0»ant POOM.
• coMrtuI fish -boat oRor-musi soM-mov-
(10 J 2)
10 FT HoBlo eat Good condition
Marina slip svallabia alao $1379.00.
/10 J3)
«— ••• ••»
Walar SKIIS. ai
IbiPacincNorlhwaat.
not found In moas-proBuood «kla. $1]
$100. 477-2730. NovaawaaMM-
(ISJl)
•lATTRESSES ALL H€W
up la
TwtN ovto tM aa
F«Nt«ta taaae
K»»»9 •••• iiTaoo
THE MATTRESS STORE
woscnyl
■as-4ioi|
477^101
LETRAPPEUR EgMpo sbl boota. slaa
1?:;:^ '^ •^ •^-« -^ —
(10 J 2)
HUNDERTWASSER-Framod original
aMkscroon stomp numborod and tin nod
**L??r^ ••■■ ilBU high quoNty o«Mary
prtnta. Rldi oaaa. 274-3137
(10 J a)
MOVING SMa"
r OoMah sola $160.
sat $300. 473-
(10 m 20)
17
Escollont
%. 470-7013.
(10
ExclusJvRiy Ourst
ASUCLA Trader
thong sandals in a
burlap signature
bag
Just $6.89
Sandals are black witfi bluo and
gold stripes m the soles, and
blue thongs You con use the
striped bag for o bOBCh corryall
KTOOLA Studonte' Store
SRORTSWEAR
• level . Ackormon UnlBR
m-m 7:4S-7:3S; f 7:4S-S:30; s 10^
S2S-7711
WOOOCN _^
holeheovora. netting 6 ropl. ZHk^
cralas 6 boaae. old bornwood. ooi.
t%m
•ibdlnf nlgbta. Alao. went
SFttabeM,Mo
(10M27)
MO¥NIOSala-0
aoMM
061-2371
(10 MSB)
^ ►nt. Select Calltornla Wli
The Qaipa Nui 0312 W 02nd St. Weet-
Ca. 00S46. 040 M30
(lOOtp)
•ts. 473-2aaS
MilED. Coal $100.
$10 aot
iMyma$1-2.
sso.
(lOMSM
STRREO eomponanta: StoBont die-
bronBa. Valley 001-0046. 001-SBSS.
••I-SSTO. •SO-0SS1.
(IS ON)
Texas Insfrvmonf
nan Si -sarjs tiopi
no M SOI
1/3
$29. ceo
Rdgsiami
(to MSB)
for sulo
ij
(iBuai
REFRIGERATOR: 1% ytm. eM.11Seo.R..
^^g. ^^^^^ ^^^Oi. 01B0
$20. rough end
170
$10.
(10
^
A 3 or
-by mor. eoB
s Fi
and torms
laoy •62-1000 today
r-ti I ai
HELPf Moving, canool beep 10
a coctiapoo d^ WW pay
*^'^^** (11 MSB)
FREE
old
call
half sla
Nb
Very loving.
(11 MSB)
FREE: 0 mo. port German shapard
poppy A4lOiBBlpf Needs loving home.
Call 27l-38Bt.
V*«N .Cf I .HOB. (11M27)
opportonitioo
FREE denial
soma oslra H you euaMy aa a peMant
•or Dental Boord. lor biformoBon caO
(13N27>
SANTA Monica Corp hos several
Oens tmmiOlstsli evoUoble lor UCLA
stoBanU lo woHi In our otfHre lor s mbi.
el 3 Ma. Men. Bifu Fh. begMmrtg 9:10
am Positions- win last thru end of
summer and arm on a commlaeion boela.
Presently employed UC students aver-
aging $13 SO per hr N you mrm mcomo
modvaled end wMIMRtoerorti. caO Barry
Starr. 020-9033
' 113 M 20)
ooooooooooeoooeo^
^ PmOHH ^-
it
mnimm trnt
for two 3 act plays
(roMo open to all aoBB) '
hmifd scholmr9htp§ f9 mftmpf
m thm foiiowing wot^ahopg
ACTING
DIRECTING
PLAYWRITING
DANCE
CALL US AT
•37-3011
raooarch subjoctai
PSYCHOLOGY
Poy $2.90
O/II/TS.
114 J 11
CASUALLY OR SERIOUSLY DATBOQ.
COHARITING. ENGAGED. AND MAR-
RMO COUPLES needed lor special
OMiiBoniiMis study EARN $1 00/PSR-
SON PLUS FEEDRACK. d
THER anyttoia 1B-0
PRANZ.
(14 MSB)
I
''•^ SoR by HotpOuR ORlBtro
$S- SSO/ month tor
I
HYLAND DONOR CENTER
1S01 Qoyloy Ave.. WooNsooB
47S-00S1
(It J 9
11B10
).07T
a^
ntoN)
nsM
ILYHRNMana
*»«• RolratyRnB. Por
171-SSSO Tuee - SoL
nSQbl
C0l\^l\Uf2l^
.. 4.
♦•
—1 /
help wonted
Help
offered
teoeoffb*^ trovol
imm^
7-10 am ^
uiiot$ni
(10 J 4)
mont. ClertcM A
A
T.R EMPLOYMENT
(FooAFmo)
Rl.
S.M IBS4107
LA *ORANQC-CRATES-
STUDENT SUNNMER
STORAQE
S biourod.
S RpRlffi.
FOR INFO CALL
tMOlNCIRNOO
NOVICE MltniriUM rROOUCBR
PROGRAMMED TO IMPART BRILLS
YOU NRW TO WORK IN THE
-3142
(IS J 4)
NOURSPAINTING
art ef
RooB money-part time aolary plus
benua 021-0041 f r »>
^ (1^J4)
aS M^lS^tl^* "••^ "• •IBbJST
RCC
(1«ON)
BROADCASTING
BASIC ADVANCED IN STuDiO
W L.€CTiiRES
GOLD 6 GRAMMY AWARD WiNNf N
BILL LAXBRUS. INST
LIMITED ENROLLM8NT 4
INFO 700-7404 OR 702-3022
. (10 M mi
BaOy-$1JOM.
CALL 736-0071 Mr
(16 J 4)
(16 J 4)
Oolng people Youthful otmoephere.
' (16 M 27) ^^ S benoa WoolUy Stove CmioB.
WANTED MMr M moM A angHMi pmp *«^««l.*^ mMOn
MrQMAT.oMloRBrrweekdeyaMaSoZ ■ (>*«g7)
(16 M 20)
STUDENTS —fn up to $BBO« /wb
Co.
A perl Moo beM M aeO
$4/br Dmw i^lwst M
No eaporlence nocoaaary Call Mr.
m. OSO 0BS1. S-2. ^^^^^
UMMER
JOBS
(16M27|
-Electronles Out-
Koephere.
f 10 MET)
) M.aa/iir
m a wrosiMne
WANT $ $ $ ?
^e can give you money variety and
He-ibiittv during the summer months
by taking our lampoiory aaawnmenta
Ihroughoui me WLA area If you are
9 TYPIST SECRETARY ACCTING
CLERR. PBX OPERATOR. KEYPUNCH
OPERATOR. WAREHOUSEMAN, or
anfMing elaa. We need YOUl Come
in 6 register today No loos' Name your
days' Paid holidays' We r>oed you now'
r
ARROW INSURANCE
SB7.aB44
Auto-Llle-HoeMownocs 9^4 Renlel
^••fynca VIlloBa OHIce ^mmt
^g^fpy- II* RMnBon OuHe 1131
4TT IBBT. 070-^01.
(ISONt
LAX-AmstRrdRR\-LAX
f
M
^^ L.A. 11744
WBebIre 477-BBM. 070-3307 . With
more then 30 yra. oaperlonee, Help
le atoBy- re lain- rota B-aleop See our
NIephane Yellow Ppgee ed- Speelel
no Ob)
MEDICAL SCHOOLS ARROAD
Hoytng admiaaiona probiema lor
medical schooP
^N€ CAN HELP VOU»
For tnformetioo write to
MoBlcpl ShiRenta Abrood
S43 Dewey Ave.
B7010
11C75
12C75
15C75
1SC7S
22C76
23076
27C7S
Juno 21
June 21
Juno 2R
JuRB»
Julys
Julys
July 8
July 19
12
S
10
s
s
4
$42*
$42t
M2S
S42S
S42#
Loweel spMe lor
AUTO Insur
or
-7270. 07O-O7Bt Ofl4S7-7m
UCLA EUROPE
CHARTER
SPECIALS
(10 Ob)
Kfirl US
m.
M01 EOE
VW MAINTCNANCE SERVICE $30.M
PART TRIE
(16 J 2)
STUDENTS &
TEACHERS
WELCOME AT
KELLY GIRL!
novnic'>
Tile original
dn a
coon. Alee aoort rentol.
aioe. 472-
FuBy SMiMped - RaoaonoMa ra
Ow OM year- 7 doya a week
CARIRUR SERVICES
Aok lor
'10 Obi
LA-LOSI-LA 0/1
LA-BRUBBBLO O^IO-0/OO
LA-PARIS-LA
PLUS...PRAORMHIT. ZURICH
HAWAII . . .
A HONOLULU
A-»«)IIIOLl
)
ULU
RALLET: F
Mn wey to Reooty 13BS
M4 UMv. YWCA. 074 ftm
YWCA. 674 NB-
Worti In your
ir virtually unlimited
youMdyour-
4S1-1B01
(16 J 3)
Meri Rod Women Earjx
extra money during summer
break while enjoying a
variety of temporary assign-
ments We provide tempo-
rary jobs for alt clerical
and/or industrial skills
MtarmoBlofea. oBveneeB 6
gl SpsBMl mtaa. 2 ar men. ,
••eOly Irene Sorala. Dietlngulehod
(IS Ob)
MOVING ReslBentlal. apartments.
efhces Large/ small tobs Local A
distance CaN Barney 300-0700
^R M0VM*
__^_ /td 0«n
MOVING? Apartment apoclallat to
students end huge truck $ 10.00/ hV
3 paam oaponenoe 074:4000.
»*• t •»>
MEXICO...
MAZATLAN air A loBg U 0100 JO
NEW YORK...
1.2.3 wlis roundtrip on TWA fr OlOO.R
PLUS CRT RonMM I iOOJRa ■••R
roM/EurBH ^oeoo ..AccomoRo-
tlona...aiuBonl Fllghla within
Europo/AoM...lftlorwRonBl RNi
RmH I.D. CbfBo....
AVE.
•19-0701
(16 Ob)
(16 J 3)
rtSJ3)
personal accounting In
Cor. 271-1
(IS J •)
(near 11).
(16 M 27)
*WORK WHEN YOU
WANT, AS OFTEN AS
YOU WANT. *YOU
DONT PAY US - WE
PAY YOU!
Call us 8-5:30 p m daily or
9 a.m. - X p.m Saturdays
KELLY SERVICES INC
NOW OPEN?
CNWRTRSIRKAW
FACIAL RALOM
tvm
2^ ^WK TRAVEL COUNRCLJMI
^•*«sr*fi/2? AMYTHIWO YOL
WANT TO^KMORr AMOUT
VCU
(I6 0b>
•16B4
A-213 fbRh EXPO)
May 1i
-1211
Sorry ■« 0r» et
U)r th9 trmtning achmmt
(16 0tr)
(16M27)
Fullerton
Long BRRCh
Los AngelRS
Beverly Blvd
Wilohiro Blvd
MontBbRllo
21^-432-6791
213-
iM-e750
3B1-7961
213-724-6910
Newport BRRCh 714-633-1441
OrRngB 714-547-9535
PasadRns 213-792-4176
TofTRncR 213-542-1569
Van Nuys 213-783-2530
213-645-0750
213-477-3961
WhittiRT 213-696-0447
equal opportunity employer
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCt
.TooTi
ouaa RiauRAMCE service I
SS4-11B1 I
^MrOmi^rRor [
aURMBCR CHARTERS
__ 2 TO 12 WIIKR
ONE-WAY PLIOHTR M EURORC
AVARJIMLE
iS!l!?iLr2!2" • call mooity
DAYS aaR-7»1 IVIR
tui nm
(IS J 2)
VTON EXPREM
MOVERS
NeopoB SS1-aS27
ELECTROLYSIS:
Center of NoRyweed. 0331
K RMB. SMM 613. NiB| iiB.
/tOOin
• ••••••RR •••«
RIDING LESSONS
Free eeoaoltatlon. Ma.
RLOTT-tlSS.
(tSOtr)
-lltl.
lis Ob) Bay 40fr-iiio
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCTCLI INSUflANCE
TooHlih?
^oo ^or MOn
A-213 habb fiXPOl
CNARTERS
en Ran Am 747 m
S.
S NaiBMB Ldfea S
1B13erPmB
mom
no J 4)
WtlMnm
•76/00
ORIVCR-COUNSELOR
10
no J 91
$12S/wti
OiiZ)
opa aa
NEW STUOCNT TOUM
JAPAN
SWMka
no J 3)
(PM a Nbor). SOS MM»!liJr!lS
JWj^
JuM 2S-Jiity 16, if7«
'Mf IT-AuguRt S, 1S7i
S»^ y A.yiLAir>-^
SNiRofH UftloffT
x>J:
<^1>
^•V-^^J^
I
I
!
I
I
I
I
X
I
I
I
*
i
{
ii^^iUi
-I. fririrftaaKsafc
Ksme
m^
-.- •
travel
travel
I
4
t
o^^iJlJ^
I ^o<
ocv^ivo^
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
t 1 *^
iSC
LOS ANOELEt
PftOFESSIONAL CLUB
1406 \Metlwood Bivd L A C« 90024
(213) 87t-9l2l (213) 477 1 162
Toc (Jmahter flights
TO EUROPE
(Lou of Others)
Min PnotTQC
'M:^:^^.^
LOW Cost olMrltr MfMi: Tokyo. MoMf
Konfi, ,Talp«. MofiNa. and oMior Ovionli.
Londdh. ^srla, Madrid. Zurich. Now
Vofli. Ofid HowoM For dol^ coM 474-
rit (doyo). 47S-1tl1 (o«oo). Wo Hoo
1
EUffOPC frofo $3M
and NYC lift Mofor
bondod Cot Jock (213) 273-7S2t
(23 0lr)
eUKOFf-iorM«-Sou» AiNovloo. Ma.
^^ MfMa yoor round. ISC A. llffT
ten Vlooimi jMvd. #4. LJL ItOdt. 9M-
MBTANT -^■■pon PHoloo. In
fyi 487.1«M. 2132 W OiywipH Blod.
Loo Angto. ^^ ^
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charter Flight Service
Over 1000 flights to Europe this
Summer • Discounted Student
flights to Europe • Charters to
Hawaii and Meiico • Student A
Faculty discounts on car purchas-
es rentals and leasot • Study
tours • Camping Tours • Unregi-
mented Student Tours • Rail
Passes • fly drive European ar-
rangements • Mini Tours • Hotel
Accomodation • Hostel Informa-
l»on • International Student ID
^'ds • fr99 travel counaeling •
^O Travel Library
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING'
/IS0CL4/
:>n A 213 w^EX'
TOURS A TRAVEL
Sprtng Surttmm, A Fall ChorWrs'
to
Londofi
Shannon
Pan*
Madrid '
Ffarhfurl
6ru»s«t«
Zurich
Roundtrtp from $299.00
Hawaii and Naw York
ISC also runs locai mrva rouri
by car arHl but at minimum cod
Cat* Ui for Informaiion
9-6 Dally
L
ASOCLAT
TRA/EL SERVICE
Acliaroion Un<on A-213 (wMh CX^O)
PfMoy 10:00-4:00
■•-1221
LONDON from LA Moaorvod abot Hciiot
Ona way 1200.00 Penny Ringwood At
S74 7760 days/656-407p avos
(23 J 3)
CHCA^C Holldoya by UnltroH ChoopM
Holidays from England - Includoa round-
trip airlBf « hoi«l-Samp4o one wooli
holidays (2 wks about 12S higher)
Coota Brava $b4: Noploa $133; Mo^Kca
tllO: Vanica $102; Tunis $130; Boool
$00; Oubrovnili $133 Canory lalonda
$173. Munich $133. Athons $150; Corfu
$1S3: Crete $2ia. Rhodoa $210 - knd
many mora Coll Unttrav 001-3700 for
reaervations and tor all ol yow« tmvol
(23 M 30)
HAWAII 142
NYC ' ? 3«MMNii
ORIENT Many daiM
Contact ASTfA for ovar 200 olhar flights
with d«pariur*s from L A San Francisco
Chicaoo Boston Naw Vof«i Waahington DC
ChartfM rag roquir* 66 day aOWNica booking
P'<r;#» 5irt)H»ct to 7Vk incraaia
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL. LasicfMst t>d»nS2S2
^OUTH. e.iiop.. 1 yr fromsao?
APFX / 4!> aOday aOv book Eur fro(n$44a
TAHITI SUPER PEAL U75
ORDER NQW
TRAIN « FERRY TIO)«€TS
CAMPER RENTALS. RAILPASSCS
INTRA EUROPEAN STUDENT
CHARTERS
SPECIAL RIVER OFFER
•' 2a LAS
ifVG
(,ANV(JN inci S f).l»»s
()irtrt*>f
1341
<iaf 3 <iays (oNmo w/
'"mr 4ii transponatMm
TOURS
■ AMAICA S days
ALV IS days
1 cjai. PAA AMS tS days
MenCO 8 days
HAWAII e days
BiCENTENNiAl 8 doyo
NE¥lf yonw CITY S dayt
Many €0Hmt%. long 0
0«w Kaysanwcs tor
PSA ffWC COUMttLMO.
■wows Tictiat
N M F 10-a ALL Vf AO
tlOi
bMdgat ft oaiuaa
AaiBriCBB SIb^bbI TrsBBl ABSBciBliMi
SM24.
47t-4444
travel
LOWEST FARES
Wo mBBo on^
holt tore Fly to
NiBBi tor BimoBi
Curopo
Abib
MI0dlo
AtrtCB
BOOK NOW T G C FLIGHTS
CALL
EURASIA TOURS N TRAVELS
274-63S1
Op«n Silurdoyt
ISC
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT
CENTER
tCnvING THE UCLA COMaHJN" •
a IT t fNIENOS
1023 Hltgartl A»«nua
• -• Dolly
TOUR*) TOURS! TOURS!
JOIN US FOR
^Hont^fTk California Eipartanca
S 28 5 31 $90 00
^ Siudvni rata non siudani ralat avanah -
All lours tr«ciud« "ansporiatlor stgni
Ing antrarwa \m*% Brtackt and lodging
'jn ovamight inp«
Our goal Is to crvata an Inforculturai
•fichanga ir a raiaiad friandu
atmoaphara mr\<i to do ^Hi« at a
' rnlnlmum coat to you
^ • •
NUCUROPt
RCNTOR SUY
SPECIAL RCQUCnONS TO
TEACHiRS A STUOCNTS
FRCC CATALOG
EUROCAfU
•UNSET BLVO . L^. BBBI
271.
ALSO ANNOUNCING OUR NEW
ACADEMIC YEAR FLIGHT8II
Vf7S-77 •Galliano ft LJAJRaMa,
Oapan/Rofum
'8/20/7ft-ft/21/77 to.
»/aB^7B-ft/2l/77 to
»/22/7B-«/2l/77 g
Prtca fina' Doadlina
14 IS
$419
$419
17 '
Juna 2S >
July ry
IXping,
■^TM^ulorBig^U A OroB
'^ ^ " " o«9«bra
ORE
^•B
(24 <|lr) I
PBfNCM TMUBm.
IB UCLA
47i 3373
•« 0«f}
CI E E -STUDENT TRAVEL (477
kwt A found
?LJ
LOST: Dlomowd rtiif in
lot FoBorol BofMi. OroBt aontrmantol
DIono. 474-BB74. ^ -
(it J SI
rider offered
dHvlng piua oapBBBBS
Monoom 7t4-7(HSi
0 IBVi shoro
(30 J 4)
FEMALE r«Bor«oniodlOi»
Woah DC. 1— Wm JiMO
lofo dflwliipio
12. APlor •-
(MJ2)
ABoo.7B^»B3 |»J4)
NCEDS Bi«aof for m^ cm
Will pay tIBB Looalofl
r to SooWft.
Juno 14tli
(20 M 2B)
tutorina
WRITINO NBLP^ TCRBI RACERS. THE-
SES. DISSERTATIONS ALL SU»>-
JCCTS WRITING. EDITBUG RE-
SEARCHING. TUTORING BY ^RO
WRITER 3BS S471
»»FXV
RECORDER clooa tor
Mon Juna 21 7 pm naaaonowu rowi
CiB CAortoa Plocliof 3Bft 2204 tor into
__, , ^14 J 4>
CHINESE Mon#ortn Boliinf noNro
toochor wall-oaporloncod with Coll
Idmlo Crodanflol Individual amoll
B<«MB^ B13-1B4ft
^ U4 0« !
GUITAR laaaoRB - loorn lundomantola
toik/rooB muatc Your bomo/oMno/oul-
Booro Summar laaaont 2nB ftoroon
— ' — I m indopandoni ft inoopOfWNo
-3210
(24 J 4>
TVRINC ISM Cori
JTar ivi popora. B>oo
coaaolto Ironacribinf Sifporioncod
VoBoyBBft T070 _ , .^
^ I f28 J 41
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Netters in fourth place
I Teacher fusBSTn firstrourrd
s
■y Hunter Kmpkm
DB Sports WriMr
LiCLA's chahces for a •econd
consecutive NCAA tennis
dMinpionship dwindled con-
fiderably in yesterday's open-
tag round of singles action in
Corpus Chnsti. Texas.
All-American Brian Teacher,
who was seeded second in the
« 128-player singkt bracket be-
5 hind teammate Peter Fleming,
fj- was unable to advance through
*^ the first round, losing to a
3 relatively unknown player from
^ Louisiana State University
named Gary AJbertinc. 6-3, 7-
5
Teacher, who has ownpilcd a
phenomenal dual- match record
dunng four years at UCLA,
continued his trend of lack-
luster performances in NCAA
cluunpionship singles play.
Teacher easily defeated Albcr-
tine 6-4, 6-2 three years ago at
the NCAA championships in
Princeton, New Jersey when
the two players were freshmen
It had been doubtful whether
Teacher would be able to play
singles or doubles after strain-
ing muscles in his right shoul-
-t-
■■«-'\
der :n practice at I C! A a
week ago.
However. Teacher ami » ' I A
coach Glenn Baaactt a^ : to
enter the UCLA senior with
the hope that he could win at
least one or two. matches and
pick up some valuable points
Prior to his injury, tennis
coaches figured on the Brum
team captain being a challeng-
er for the singles champion-
ship, along with teamntiolcs
Fleming and Ferdi Taygan.
Fleming «id Taygan ad-
vanced through yesterday's
first two rounds of singles
along with fourth man Bruce
Nichols^.
. Fleming defeated Ali Kahn
of Oklahoma State, 7-5, 6-0
and San Jose State's hard-
hitting Tim McNeil, 6-1. 6-2
Meanwhile, Taygan had
to come from behind after
a miserable first set to upend
Florida's John Kunnen, 0-6, 6-
3, 6-1 while Nichols outlasted
Kansas' left-handed Tim Hedt-
ke of Long Beach, 6-4, 4-6, 6-
L Nichols came back later in
the day to easily defeat Ar-
kansas* Bud Bowman while
Taygan a,lso breezed through
the second round with a 6-1,6-
4 triumph over Yale's Cary
Leeds.
UCLA is currently in fourth
place with nine points behind
team leading Stanford with 12
and use and Trinity with 1 1
points each.
Stanford advanced all four
of its singles players through
the first two rounds while
Trinity and USC lost their
fourth-singles men in the sec-
ond'round.
goes
-.iTf
Quarterback John Sciarra, who gkM^ the UCLA toofb^ll
team to an upset win over Ohio State in the 1976 Rose Bowl,
has signed to play pfalamonal football in the Canadian
Football League.
Sciarra will spend the next three years (his contract is for
that amount oi time, including option year) with the British
Columbia Lions.
The signing, which actually took place last week, was
announced yesterday at a noon press conference in Van-
couver by Lion general manager Bob Ackles.
While terms of the contract were not released, Ackles did
say that the contract's overall value ts substantial ^nd that it
ranks up there with any contract offered by the B.C Lions in
our 21 year history" " ^
Sciarra was drafted on the fourth round of the National
Football League dnh by the Chicago Bears, who origmaliy
chose him as a defensive back The Bears tried hard to sign
the four year letterman, going as far as letting three other NFL
teams negotiate for his services, according to Sciarra's agent.
Marvin Dimoff
Dimoff said only that the contract is for, "super money" and
that Sciarra was more coricerned about the overall package
"If money meant everything, he would have signed a biMbafI
contract four years agp/' said Dimoff
A shortstop at Bishop Amai >4fgh School, Sciarra was drafted
after graduating and again after his sophomore year here. He
did not play baseball m his four years at UCLA.
Sciarra is expected to be the Lions' startirrg quarterback and.
as a Tunne^^ should benefit from the fact that the fiel<^ in the
CFL is about 10 yards wid^r than those in the NFL and college
u •*.-•»-
> » > • I
GSA Senate ResoJutlon Passed
on May 24, 1976
We move that the fallowing
G.S.A. Cabinet members be cen-
sured:
Martin Nlshl^
Bill Cormier— 7
Alex Spataru
These officers have willfully mis-
used their executive power and In
doing so have committed serious
crimes against the Graduate Stu-
dent Body.
Martin Nishi has chosen, as
President, to by-pass the Senate
and thereby undermine our de-
legated authority and responsi-
bility to the Graduate Student
Body, and, therefore, is not fit to
serve anothier hour over those
whom he has betrayed.
Submitted by the Grad(
Bill Cormier, a Commission of
Research and Planning who as-
sisted in an attempt to rob the
Graduate Student Body of their
autonomy by sneaking In a move
to alter our constitution, thereby
opening up our flanks to attack, is
a traitor and should be tried for
his crime by those to whom he Is
responsible.
Alex Spataru — Any Budget
Commissioner who would attack
the solidarity of the Graduate
Students Association in his feeble
attempts to create chaos in that
body (for example, the "Calcula-
tor Scandal," SwamI X, his attack
on a fellow Catwnet memt>er be-
cause of race) Is not fit to serve.
/T"—
~\
Vu..
»-« I
V'
/-
■^fr
•tom^
■»■*■ .,.-
!
Ucla
Bruin
•^-
VolUfM XCVIIL Number #0
Uhiwrsity of Caffffomla, Lm Aoggfag
Friday, May 2S: 1976
-*r
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4"^ .
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Means decries government
% Adam Pfeffer
Dl Stair Writer
Native American leader Kus^eil Meant
blasted the treatment of American Irulians fi^y
the American government yesterday before a
crowd of 400 pcqpic ai Meyerhoff Park
Mcan& set the stafr for his harsh speech on
the American government in his opening
remark. **Today we*re going to talk about Na/i
America,**, he said
/Means has been suffering from internal
bleeding while recuperating fxpm a bullet
wound he received on May 4. 1976 It was the
fourth attempt pn Means' life
He explained that^injiis home sutc of South
Dakota, six per cent ol the population consists
ol Indian people while 35 per cent of the state
prison population comes from these same
Indian people.
Means said the "concentrated effort of the
American government has almost crippled the
American Indian Movement" because Amcri-.
can Indians are torced to spend so much time
on trial He also .tiaimed there is an untair
disparity between bonds imposed on Indians
and those on white people
He declared^ the American government t\
waging tactics **reminisccnt ol the hau cam-
paign run in the 1930V l»y the Nazi GermaiM.'*
Means said he is presently diarged with
murder by the South Dakota police However.
there is a tape recording made bv the victim
bet ore he died udmitting that Means was not
involved
Means declaicd that even with the recording
and after several changes of venues the judge
has said Means still cannot receive a fair trial.
He then said. Tm going to get hte "
Regarding the nuamrous treaties the Ameri-
can government has broken. Means said. "But
who caret, we're out of tight, out of mind "
Referring to Americans bicentennial. Means
declared. "Has anything changed'^ We still got
corruption, we still got trouble with the Blacks,
we ttill got Indian wart. .
** We proved to the workf^ tliat John Wayne
can*t kill us *all off and we*re aal ai
Tofttot.** Meant aMed bitterly
He went on to say the federal government
has orgaiN^d a special tatk^ force called
"Operation: Cable Sphce" whote **toie purpose
is to destroy the American Indian Movement "
He added. "We've lost three of our national
leaders because of being shot "
ISC sources disclose financiaf problems
By Adam Pfeffer
DB Staff \%ri1er
Due to misspent funds and
limited resobrces. the Inter-
national Student Center (ISC)
IS presently thrashing in the
throes of bankruptcy, accord-
ia§ to anonymous tourcei
close to tile ISC -operations
They don't anticipate any
income coming in until Sep-
tember." one source disclosed
Thus, this puts the ISC injhe
same situation as it was la4t
summer, with its services dras-
tically <limmishcd. sources said
Informed sources claim.
-The (ISC) Board is not -even
trying to raise money (from
private donors.) It is wauiag
for the Fall to do this**
Saxon proposes reg fee
hike to begin fall 1977
- Sy CMi Bowman ^
Sacramento Correspondent ^
SACRAMENTO UC President David
Saxon IS proposing an increase in student
registration fees of S48 to S87 a year sUrUng
fall 1977.
The University administration yesterday
confirmed Saxon has developed a reg fee
plan which he will present to tKe DC Bdard
of Regents for final approval at the June 18
rtieeting in Los Atifeles.
AT Bruggar. an aide to UC Vice-Presi-
dent Rbbert Johnson, declined to spell out
the details of the proposal but said copies of
the pUin were mailed yesterday to d^mmatV
lors ^nd student representatives on all nine
Jeff Hamerling. co-director of the \}Q
Student Lobby, yesterday disclosed Saxon's
proposal calls for charjring all fulltime UC
students an additional $16 in reginmion
fees each quarter and a $13 differential fee
increase on those campuses where fee
sources are inadequate.
Stich an increase would rniae the total
annual rcfiatration fee from the current $300
to as mucli as a $3i7, depending on the
campus Berkeley officials have not yet
reviewed the plan to determine whether the
campus will need fl differential fee ma&mt.
Registration fees were hM increased in
1969 from $73 to $100 a quarter The fees
subsidize intercollegiate sports, student
heahh care, counaehng. financial aid and
other student semnw.
Student services, however, currently have
a S2.4 million deficit, and $2 million of
educational fee money is. earmarked to give
mporary release to services normally
supported by registoMMi fees, Bnagiar said
Saxon*s propowd fee nicrenae is expected
to generate roughly $5 million to help
bnlnnoe the student servien hudg^^
Stiirlrnt »— ' ^ -' '^- '^--
deficits in these services CMned by inflation
jMonpever. they disagree with Saxon*s ap-
proach.
- •To arbitrarily decide (to chniye) another
$48 from every studegt is unfair.'* Hamerhng
snid. ''I^et the students decide whether they
wnnt to impose a higher reg fee of cut back
on student services.**
Hnmerling said the Student Body Presid-
dent*s Council u also opposed to the $13 per
qnnrter differential fee. though, he added.
•*lhey can live with it.**
AsaooMed Students of the University oi
Cabfomia ( AS UC) co-president Bevan Dusty
said he would rather have the studenu and
administrators 'make some ^'hard choices** on
which student services are most deserving of
fiiMUMinl support rather than increasing the
reg fee on that camfMs to bnlMMe the deficit.
Student leaders, knowing of a strong
chance for a rag fee increnae in the naar
future, have pressed \}Q nficinli to an-
nounce their decision before the end of the
school ynnr so tknl students can have a
chance to influence the decision-making
Although Saxo
dents* deadline,
de rtigid his
rntly met the stu-
Haroerling said Saxon
prnpnaal without consiahi[)^
m
ust he done to Address ever-i^reasiag
At iHt Friday's Rnpents nsaeting. student
members of Reg Fee Committees from seven
cnflipvaes met wiHi Saxon*s aide to discnss
The studenu learned nothing new from
the Administration, Hamerling said, al-
though '*we told them what we were
thinkn^**
BnHpnr snid, hewcvii. there have been
*'exlMMue consulution** with studentt on the
reg lee issne He said the University soli-
cfled student advice last quarter on a
proposal to tie reg f^e increases to an
tffctt ail autiniuitit
annual reg fee ii
In answer to charges of in-
solvency, a wntten sutement
was rccefvcd' by the /^i/v
Brum from AJan J Bloch,
treasurer of the ISC Board of
Directors. It said in pnrt:
**ln raipoose to your inquiry
ar to whether or not the cen-
ter is bankrtipt. the answer
unequivocally is no . . In our
case, fixed and financial asseu
exceed our current and long-
term liabilities by extremely
comfortable margins It is in
this case, though, that at this^
time the Center has a cash
flow problem By this we
mean, the monies available to
pay current obligations are leas
than these ohhgations.**
One question arising from
this letter is what the difference
is between '^bankruptcy'* and
**cash flow problems."
Maxwell Epstein. 6mm af
UCLA*s Office of International
Studenu and Schoters (OiSS)
and chairman of the Executive
Committee for the ISC Board
of Directors, explained the
distinction He said in the case
of "cash flow proMems,** the
Center caa either **close its
da aw** or attempt *no raise
short-term laami** while '*cut-
tmg expenses and carrying on."
Anonymous sources dis-
cloaed that the shart-term loan
uken out by ISC is 35JHI
dollars and Epstein confirmed
this figure He added the loan^ ^
^ill be **arranged comawfCMd-
ly** and not with the university.
The ISC IS a private cor-
poration located op Hiigard
Avenue It is .tied to UCLA
through a 54.000 dollar serviae
contract and through the Uni-
versity employees who work at
ISC
Subsidized by registratioah-
fees, the contract covers sto-
dem services only and com-
prised part of ISCs toul bud-
fet of 140.000 dollars The raat
of the money oooms from the
snrroundiqg community in the
faHU af donations
Anonymous sources have
told the DaUy Wnmn that al-
though the ISC raised 30.000
dollars from the community
last year, this year they were
only able to muster 11,000
Due to priorities, iIk
cil on Prngiamniing (COP)*
which IS an affiliate of ISC,
can no longer afford to pro-
duce any more evenu related
to International studeals. **Fl^
orities have always put pro-
gramming on the bottom,** ISC
sources said.
All other similar orpaniaa-
tions, which are on campus,
are eligible to ssceive funds
from the Campus Activities
imming Office fpr their
•««
^a^rm
i
f
mi
i
•
Spanish Speaking Mental Health
Research Center Colloquium Series
presents
JOHN SERRANO
Chief of Social Services
Eastern Los Angeles Regional Center
for the Developmentally Disabled
The Development of Culturally
Relevant Social Services
Date: Tuesday, June 1, 1976
I'Ime: 2:00 pm
Place: 313 Kinsey Hall
J
T
m
istes
AMEIM-CAL
1434 Wc^ood •oulevard • Sylte • • U* Aiit<(<i. CdMomia MM
Call Dir Of Night — (n 3) 475-5721
^ Tie^
CO
Compart our sU'Wukntas jvr Fud
'©onus
BOUBLE $283.00
SIMGIE 373.00
$136 to $166
165 to 180
UCI^ it offering 2 six week suHMr
sessions. Ve are offering super- low-cost
coed housing, owned and run by and for the
students. Residents work 4 hours a week.
^09mm sre singles, doubles and triples.
Food is good and the people friendly. Stop
on hy and lie '11 give you the grand tour.
Rifbt wmtt to campus.
Write or call;
tivc
A teoc l^^lon .
Conner, Kojelis, Sciarra. and Wong
■^ v.,
Gutstanding seniors selecleff
Wf Fatty Croat
Da Stair Hritcr
During the lait four yean, a
president reiigned. an antt-
opitslist basketball center
signed a multi-million dollar
contract and a former semi-
nary student became governor.
During the last four years,
four students here have also
OHMle noteworthy accomplish-
ments, each of them winnihjg:
the honor of "outstanding se-
nior "
Lindsay Conner, Linas ICo-
jehs, John Sciarra and Victor
Wong were named by the Al-
umni Association's Outstand-
ing Senior Award Committee
as providing service to the
community and campus while
achieving academic excellence.
The outgomg undergraduate
student body president, Conner
began his political career at an
early age as the three-time
president of his elementary
schoofs council.
In his sophomore year at
UCLA, he was appointed to
fill the vacated Student Facil-
ities Commissioner spot on the
Student Legislative Council
(SLC). He was re-elected that
May
He was also appointed to
the Reg Fee Committee and to
the statewide L'niversity of
California Academic Planning
and Program Review Board
Accomplishments of his
presidential administration in-
cluded the establishment of the
Metrolobby^ Project Aware-
nsM, the Campus Safety Task
Force and additional parkin^c
iOKQandon/We \MKtwood Vi
"fc^ephonc 477 2355
Moors 9 30 am to 6 00 pm
j ' Charge accounts invited ,
BanHAmericard/Mastef ChMfi
WMiaMad Rirktng m Buiidtr^
.\c;K\rii.\iA\Nsii<)P
on Veteran Administration lots
Another highlight is Assembly
Bill 744. which would prohibit
student housing discrimixiation
He also wrote sports for the
DatJ} Brum for two and a half
years
Elected to Phi Beta Kappa,
Conner deferred his acceptance
to Harvard Law School to fall
1977. Next year he will serve
«a a CORO Foundation Fel-
low, a public affairs mternship
program
Linas ICojehs. whose parents
were born in Lithuania, was
not realty interested in the
activities his family partic-
ipated in until he attended
camps on the East Coast.
Kojehs, who learned to
speak Lithuanian before Eng-
lisli, became involved in Lith-
uanian activities. He repre-
sented the cities of Santa Mon-
ica and San Francisco at the
Third Lithuanian World Youth
Congress last December in
South America.
Last summer, he interned in
Washington, EXT for rm^nn
man Alfonso Bell.
Since his freshman year
here, he has drawn cartoons
for the Datli Bruin. "The pa-
per was very liberal then
I was still conservative," he
said
Facades he designed for the
Rally Committee booth at
Mardi Gras the last three years
have won 1 1 trophies.
Having completed a double
major in history and econ-
omics. ICcjeiis intends to, coh-
tmue cartooning while attending
graduate school Princeton has
offered hin a full tuition schol-
arship, hut he IS considering
attending New York Univer-
sity He plans a career in in*
tecnational relations.
Sciarra^ .
John Sciarra*s interest in
organized sports grew from
playing catch with his father
when he was little
In his lunior year here, he
became the starting quarterback
for the football team, directing
th| newly installed vecr-T of-
fense. This year, as a candidate
for the Heisman Trophy, he
was selected to the National
Football Foundation Hall of
Fame and the NCAA's list of
top five "student-athletcf- in
• the country, was a consensus
All-American and was also a
Scholastic All-American.
Another interest of Sciarra*s
while at UCLA has been stu-
dent government In spring.
1974, the sociology nujor ran
for a general representative
spot on SLC because he
thought It would be interesting
About his position, he said, "It
was a lot different from what 1
thought it*d be, initiaHy."
Sciarra plans to play pmltt.
sional football for a few yean,
either for the Chicago Bears or
the British Columbia Lions
Ne*t year he plans to apply lo
busmeis school and attend in
the off-season for his Master
of Business Administration
Victor Wong was nominated
by professors in two fields
saence and humanities.
A biochemistry major who
plans to become a doctor be-
cause he '*hke$ working with
sick people," he was a volun-
teer at the use Medical Cen-
ter while in high school At
UCLA ht has pnrtiri|WiiiJ m
research projects in cardio-
logy, but "my orientation is
more community-oriented "
His other academic field of
interest is Chinese history.
Wong said that by looking at
recent Chinese history he can
sec how his practice of med-
icine could do something sig-
nificant
His first choice of a medical
school is^ UC San Francisco.
but if he is not accepted he
plans to attend UC San Dicgo.
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
(Volume XCVIir. Number 40
Friday May 28 1976
PuttiBh0d •v^ry mm9kdmy during fh#- .
•C/IOO/ KMr 9xcmpt during hohdMyt
•nd dmyt fotlowing holtd*yt. mnd 9g
aminrntion pmnod* by thm ASUCLA
CommontcaUonB Board 3Qi ¥¥9$t
wood Plt9. Lot Angola. Caittorma
90024 CotfyrtgHt 1976 by tfta
ASUCLA Communtc0tion» Board
Socond cimm aoaupa tm^d at ma Los
Angoioa Poat Ofttca
Jim
Patrictl HMly
Anna Young
nt
Susan Kmna
Ere Mandai
Alk» Short
Paul S^onorwlli
Ouirm.
t
nt
-SUMMER
JOBS JOBS JOBS
Collage traioad man and
women will be considarad to
supplement our permanent
staff in district offices
throughout tf>e U.S Thaaa
positions are full or part-time
summer lobs We are saarch-
(ng for applicants who are
ambitious dapandabia and
hard working ExcfUant op-
portunrty for advi
You may oootinue to
on m part time or full
iMipa naKi fan it
For iimiLl offioa anni las, or
^ sippomtmefit
April lam. 9
^p.m. Monday Pifoagh
JOB OPENING
Daily Bruin Display Advertising
Student needed for office work or for
advertising sales solicitation applications
available 112 Kerckhoff
deadline 12 noon Thursday. June 3
job to begin early September or Summer
Student staff works around class hours
para •
V"ir2. • "»*^w« • tm^mrn . MH par
^HTE tumiMiiiTY
m
I
ATTENTION
IHMEN
' ^r
sT^ --^wpais m a m
' ^"^1 -alter 5K)0 p.m
on
4
leads
Election Board resignations
ly Sa«y G
DB Stair V^rilcr
Three memben of the frve-maai^r Election
Board (EB) res^faad from their posts Waiaas-
day evening at a retuh of a Student Legislative
Council (SLC) decision to hold a referendum
next Thursday. June 3rd
Jay Cole, this year's EB chairman, told the
council that '*it is a physical impoisibility to
hold an election on a week's notice " A motion
was passed directing the EB to carry out the
special referendum election Cole and two other
OKtaben of the board then resigned
The decision to hold the referendum this
spring was made "m concept" at an SLC
meeting two weeks ago. A motion was made at
this Wednesday's meeting to postpone the
clectm until the third week of the upcoming
tail quaner bui was dclcatcd by a 4-6 vote after
"beaiad dcliate r-
The referendum will offer three lisass to
undergraduate students here One will decide
whether or not to abolish the position of
NatiomU Siudcm Asso* n repieNcntatrvc
present!) held b> Brian fcisbcrg wvho v^as
reelected on the platform that he would. work
to remove the position
Tuo issues that were voted on by the
CJraduatc Studenjs Association three weeks ago
will aifo be on the ballot One concerns
cutbacks in the enrollment of minority students
which was brought to the council by the
Committee Against Racisoi; the other laaue was
presented by the Iranian • StadaMs
aad concerns the U CI ran project.
During a recess called shortly allcr Cok's
resignation and the ensuing confusion among
council members, several people associated wnh
ftudem government offered to take the job ol
EB chairoHM. Upon reassembling. SLC Chair-
man Lindsay Conner called for executive
•wsion -no disciisi the matter of a new Election
Mird chairman " According to several people
present during the executive session there was
'"bidding going on for the posit ion r
After 10 or 15 minutes it was announced that
Kenn Heller, presently the director of the
Experimenul College, had been ippomtcd hB
chairman for two weeks and had volunteered to
work without receiving a stipend Conner feh
Heller "has the abiliij^ to pull it (the election)
off
Heller felt if he hadn't Uken the job, "li
would have cost SLC a whole lot more " Heller
Sisa ifeid he didn't think ^ihc ler turn oui
win be good** and that he ""would have been a
hell of a lot happier if thrv'd ruled not to have
the elaclian now V
SI C else tBseussed several by-law amend-
ments and changes and finally concluded their
last meeting of the year at midnight The 1976-
77 SLC was then formally seated and held their
first aweting
•lEDICAL OPPORTUMin
^ mi
tm
AH«I
MARTYN
OF LONDON
offers you a precision and
geometric.hair cut. shampoo,
conditioner arid blow dry for $12.00
with "Ian Wolfe."
By appointuienl only.
in
Westwood Hyatt House
F^pIZr' 1^30 Hilgard Ave (2nd floor)
475-^4477
Meditation to be presented
There is a definite correla-
tion between transcendental
meditation and a. cure for
many diseases, according to
Don Reeks, a member of the
Public Student Health Asso-
ciation here
She has announced that a
:h entitled "Xhe Relation-
thtp Between Illness and Strws
— A Possible Therapeutic
Role for Transcendental Medi-
tation" will be given Tuesday
night by Dr Peter LSalk
Salk IS the son of Jonas Salk,
craator of the polio vaccine.
. The younger' Salk has said
that meditation ts the vaccine
against stress The body can
only heal itself while at rest,
and TM gives a higher quality
of rest, he said
Also on the same program
will be Dr Flliot Abravanel.
who is the Director of Heahh
Services at Maharishi Inter-
national University in Iowa.
Abravanel has worked with
over 8,000 meditators The
lecture begins at 8pm at the
Neuropsychiatric Institute Au-
ditorium Admission is free
—Iter Garin
txzlQlr
CGimCfD d hi-fi
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SALE ENDS SATURDAY fMAY 29
CLOSED MAY 31.
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Ed Hollingswonh and Carohn C6\
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Ofywio** S
June 4 last day for ID cards
omr tliin0 nrvrr chai^
with which to imn mdk
*fid truitxany iiii:*fk
bcrr lvv>«k ru^ •• ^-
thr
10
dm
iNrmo with iKt vv
atOI\
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|Ufr can i bt tmpro%«d ufvr, Tnr iiMnr ii«» fc* OK
thing* nr\ierchan<8r A ^:?ir ii tvr- ^^sr
Bt Rhm Uolpert
DB Slafr Ripgrttf
vil be tiK iMt diy for cqo^
i» 0rt tbeir i— dunry itudent
cards, Accordiiif to Dean of
mliich wiU be required for ail
•Urtiiif fail quarter of next
free of clMTfe at the
Hi Acktrmmm Unkm.
cuidi are olfiaaily iMignfil by
AtkuMon laid **We*ll
in, itaiting
^^ added tiiai if students do not fet their ID
b> next Fndav. thev will have to wait until fail
quarter.
At that time, MioMi wiiJ be tutyect to a
punitive fim of S5. They wiU ako te^ to wait
m hhe with t«K 6.000 oe« mmAnu who will
' hr card
etef^e was made Beoeanr> because only
quarlttr to ooe third of the eligible students
are fetting their cards, Atiuaaoa aaid.
The iiy card will have to be shown in
comuactKMi with the registration card for all
student services. This includes athletic eventi,
SHS and the borrowing of books at UCLA
libraricK. he commented
•^hc Student Health Center loses about
S50.00e a^war because of fake identification^
Atkinson said, adding *This money comes out
of the students* pockeu, such losses will he
prevented by the new ID."
-Thu (the card) will save the average student
12-15 hours each quarter. This is the average
amount of time spent signing your name on
various documents, which often have to be
re-signed because of illegibility,** Atkinacw mid.
Since the card will be •'abaolutely necefttry,**^
Atkinson hopes that all studenu will get it
soon
"If they don't wc*n have a terhbie backlog
neiit year This will generate lasting bad
feehngs toward the card, and they will say thaf
UCLA is a big bureaucracy in which students
are just numbers,** Atkins^Mi said.
Any problems regarding the ID card should
be directed to the office of Vice Chancellor
Lyle Timmerman, who is coordinating the
effort
^jT
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-49S4
Members ol the Iranian Student Aeeoclatlon on
strike to prolMC «W MMuaofi ol St
In lian. They aPt aiailwd la
^ Vw SHah't
Iranians protest executions
Twenty six members of the Iranian Students
Aiiociation began an unlimited hunger strike
Wednesday to protest the execution of 26
political prisoners in Iran last week.
**We will go on as long as we last,** taid
RazniMlieh, one of the strikers. The purpose of
the strike is to make the public aware of the
political repression occuring in Iran, she
commented The strikers demand that ''a
committee of legal ohaervers and a team of
fsporters be allowed to go to Iran to investigate
the conditions of over 40,000 pohtical pri-
soners,** Razmindrh said.
The protesting Iranians are Uving^in the
Campus Baptist Chapel at 668 Levenng Av-
enue for the duration of the protest They paaa
the time by ulking and singing. They sip water
and laa. None of the strikers will leave the
church until the strike is over
Accordii^ tp RaiTihandeh, two of the 26
IS killed were the 1 1 and 13 year old
children of Fatemah Saidi Shayegan. a political
prisoner who is pseaantly half-paralvzed from
severe torture by the Shah's police force. The
children were m a home that was rocketed^
police
"•The struggle of the Iranian people is really
reaching a popular dimension.** Ra/mandeh
iSid She added that the persons tortured and
nhirdered are not terrorists, they are citizens
protesting the existence of a fascist government.
Ra/mandeh is not the Iranian striker's real
name Because of a new law pngaed in Iran
which makes any person protesting the Shah's
rqpme m any way subfect to life imprisonment
the protesters chose to remain anonymous and
wiU not be photographed except while weanng
masks
<^Alnn Michael Karbehiig
Senate may raise requirements
The Umvcrsity of California
Academic Senate voted this
week to return to committee a
resolution which would have
tightened graduate admissions
requirements across the UC
system.
The Coordinating Commit-
tee on Graduate Affairs wijl
give further study to the reso-
lution, which sought to raise
mimmuin grade point require-^
ments and require students tO
take the Graduate Record
Examinatidn (ORE) as a con-
dition for admission
The resolution, if imple-
mented, would have raised the
neceswry GPA for graduate
admittance from 3.0 to 3.3
The GPA requirements would
have applied io work **carnsd
out nuinly in the junior and
senior undergraduate years.**
The Coordinating Commit-
tee on . Graduate Affair*
(CCGA) made the recom-
mendation to stem the trdnd of
grade infimtirMi **it Mtmm. wi%t\^
dent froih a review of grading
practices at the University oi
California and at other insti-
tutions that a **B** grade has
replaced the *"C* grade m
standard for satisfactory per-
formance,** the recommenda-
tion said
The ORE requirepfient was
also included in the recom-
mendation bccautr ft wm laid
to be an accurate indicator of
success in graduate schools at
many other institutions.
Professor David Vol man of
UC Davis, a Senate member,
criticized the proposal, sayihg
"It IS a tragedy to exclude
students on an arbitrary basis. **
He added. '*lf there is a neces-
sity to reduce the number of
graduate students, it should be
done with the selected pro-
grams involved.** ~^'^
The Academic Senate also
pted a fecomi
the University Committee of
Education Policy calling for
abolition of ,ihe $45 fee for
Subject A University-wise. It
also called for academic credit
to he given for Subject A
courses. .
-Mike bi
MANOAftlN (NN
11829 Wilbhire Blv/d
Near Westgatc
West Los Angeles
CHINESE DINNERS & LUNCHES ^^^'J^/Jj;^"^"'^^'
I
f
It
3
Pre-Dents
MIIVCEDCS
VOLVO
OPCI
Our last class aver-
aged 7.4 on the PMAT
and 6.0 on the Aca-
demic. UCLA dental
•choors •nt^ftng class
averaged 6.0 on the
PMAT and 6.0 on the
academic
Call (213) 475-DATS
or write
DATS
1007 Broxton
Sun* 20
LA, Ca 90024
n
^--4
WOMEN'S WEEK 1^6
MAY 24-28
—Sponsored by PTF, Wonien's Retource Center, 0£EP, Student Legislative Counci
FRIDAY MAY 28
10-12
12-1
Call us fof an invitation for a
£QR
AU Women's Lounge the Double Oppression of
Minority Women
Grand Ballroom - YVONNE B. BURKE (ASSP
sponsored)
Kinsey 190 - Lesbians
AU Women's Lounge - Feminism and Socialism —
Willie Mae Reed
CALL 825-39'15
^^
m
1
i
-*-w
'«
t
./»•
hfiie ?5 ?S 27 21
SAMMY DAVIS, JR.
WITH SPECIAL GUCST STAMS
BLOOD, SWEAT I TEARS
Ittfie 30 July 1 2 3 4
THE SPINNERS
WITH SPECIAL GI7CST STAR
DONNA SUMMER
Ittly 9 throofti 18 No Pert July I?^
THE DOYLY CARTE
OPERA COMPANY
OF LONDON
PCR^OfVMING
GILBERT A SULUVAN
■r
I«ly9 to. 11 13 •
THE MIKADO
July 14, 15 _
THE PIRATES Of
PENZANCE
luly TS. 17- II
H.ILS. PINAFORE
- Additional rerl July 17 «t 11:M UN
I
AH «v«ning performances ¥»nll tiegin promptly at 6 30
W^tfe Groyp T»cli«fa. The New GfMk ThMtre.
2700 N Vermont Los Angeles Cm 90027
available to groups tor enteruining before
or after pertormance
'#.
Ample FR^ parking ts available for patrons of
The New Greek Theatre
A4|M:ent ^icfiAc «v«Mii#ii wMli taM«e antf tertos^M^A.
rBcMUea Fer ipangHeapf^Ml Special aeettng arrangements are
avail«bie tor wheelcr>air patrons
I
r
? W I fH f
I 10
■6/ 30, 7 1 f'2l r,'2 7 4
y/n
T/-I4 7'»S
v*jf4tp/»i
7^ F/10 7/11
'lar/ii
r 7/ii
1S00 1290 • 1500 1290
00 800 1000 too
• SO 7io e&o 7 90
• 00
nao oso
7«e AM
11 ». tsa
7». SM
11 90 9 90
7 la. sao
•/«!•/• a/o •/7
«/t»
7'31 •/!
I |a/ia|a/i4i/it
t ia/»|a/77|a^M^
11 at. •»
7«. ftOO
-• 00 S 00.4 00
rm •»
500
10 90 9 90 12 90 10 00
_2J0_f»^ top • 90
7J0. SIO
• 90 7 90
•JO
• 90 7«0
790 ^90
• I 900
9M. •.» ' * 0 90 0 90
74i. too . ^90 0 90
90
*^
>00
90 600
•/•I
• 00
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• 90 OM torn •»
''IV '<; • an ■■■ tQwrn. «:
11 ^^ •JO Tm SJ
jsff X Tjo •» I 7m •!
I2 90l0ja
• 00 •••
9 90 400 Mi. 400
July 19 20.71
SEALS & CROFTS
July 26
THREE DOG NIGHT
J«ly27. 28. 29, 30. 31.Aufustr
BURT ANTHONY
BACHARACH NEWLEY
IN CONCERT
Avfust 2. 3
DAN FOGELBERG
Aafttst 4. 5. 1. 7. 1
O'JAYS
WITM SPECIAL GUCST ST All
MaSA MOORE
tofintlO. n, 12
DAVID \ GRAHAM
CROSBY \NASH
Itiftisttl. 14. 15
THE BAND
Attfust 17 18. IS 20 21. 22
BELAFONTE
AND ttJlERWATKHJAl COMPAiiY
Aufust 28. 27. 28 29
OUVU NEVKTONJOHN
Attfttft 31 Stptawbtf 1. 2. 3. 4. 9
RICH LITTLE
AND SPECIAL fiUEST STAR
RUFUS
CHAKA KHAN
I "^
7.8.9.19.11.12
GEORGE BURNS
CAROL CHANNING
Stptombor 21 22, 23. 24. 25, 29
THE CHINESE
ACROBATS
OF TAIWAN
Si9lM*ir]i.letiitr1.2
SHIRLEY BASSEY
IN COHCERT
I
FOR ALL
EVENTS
The New
Greek Theatre
in the heart of
Griffith Park!
Under the
direction of the
Nedertander
Organization. \
r^.-'lf
For comptete program
information, call:
660-8400
r%f mmjr^t wtvy. tr tfwwvie ■! V no longe'
available at price you have indicated.
ticHets at the nmn lower price will tm
substituted and you wiM be sent a
refund for the balance
Ove to the nolMro of
TMl NSW OaUK TNCATna, 2700 18.
Doy • Oai» Omo*
Avo^ Loa
PNovOoce
Ibtol
Addr
Cny.
StalB-
Oey p^of>•.
••• ■••»■ ihew %im t»cii«t« may e«
C Enclosed m ctieck or money order
L Pieoea cherge m indicated
-Night phon«.
ter M«y om
inkAmencard # _^
if dHlw
. Expiration I
EKpirattee
Signature m it
on credit card
your
•^ i^°^ guaranteed preferential seating, ploo
Numdof with your order and return promptly. ^
\m
.■i
Free book on elections ready
DB Staff Writer
bifornuition on the CMRipoign platf; atid
grticral biographical kockfrooaif ot the 1976
national presidential candidiilB9 will be avail-
Burke speaks today
Conorcsvwoman Yvo.nnc Braihwaite Burke (D-27th
District, new 28ih Distnct. Caltfornia) will speak on *-A
Woman in Politics" at noon lodav at Janss Steps
Burke was elected to the House of Rcprc^ntaiives in
November oi 1972 Shc^ the first woman to be dected to
Congress from California in 20 years and the first Black
woman ever elected to the House from this suic.
A native of Los Angeles. Burke received her Bachelor of
Arts degree in political science from UCLA and Juris
Doctor from the USC School of Law m 1956 She was
admitted to the California Bar the satne year.
Burke served as vice-chairman of the 1972 r>emocratic
National Convention in Miami Beach. Florida She is also
the first copgresswonDian ever to give birth while holding
office.
The congresswoman b speech is sponsored by the
Associated Students Speakers program and highlights the
la« doy of Women s Week
— J. Nathan Jone%
able to UCLA students beginnii^ June 2
The 24-pofe booklet wm ooMeived bv Mike
Galizio. external affairs commiiiloiier, as port ot
a Project Awareness pfQgrim. "I came up wtth
the idea last summer.- said Gah/io He laid he
wanted to find a .mains to inlorm students
about natipnal electtofli.
With the great number of candidates running
lor office, one could easHv become contutoi as
to what campaign platform each candidate is
running on. Galizio said
Short biographies
The booklet, which has jusi gone to press.
wtU contain short biographies of each of the
candidates bated on the upcoming California
Sute Ballot, according to Gali/io It will alao
include their individual stands on issues
•^ranging from ERA to income uxei."
There will be 10.000 booklets distributed
Jurie 2-8 10 vgrious locations over the campus
Galizio ioid. It will be free of charge
In oddilion to the booklet, a Project Aware-
**hotHne'' at 825-4847 is now in operation
during the day to ao9wer any q uesti otn on the
politicoi races.
Program Taak Force
Gah/io said he received $50 from Student
tegislativc Counal (SLC) earlier in the year to
begin research on the idea Along with Lori
Greene as the director of the orogram, Galizio
went to the Program Task Force (PTF) to »sk^
lor funding of the protect from student rcgis-
tratioo fees.
PTF rejected tlie request for two
Galizo soad First. PTF said it believed the
Project Aworencat program could not present
the condidolr!s views and ideas in an unbiased
■omorr Socood, PTF lelt the Natioaol Student
Lobby was in a better position to cooduct any
such progkom.
"I diMgr^ with both reaaooo," aoW Gahzio
But without the funiioi, interest m the idea
faded,
lUiiindled rnthuMMsm
Then. Craig Fhrlich. newly appointed exec-
utive asaortam. looked at the project and in
supporting u. rekindled enthuiiasm tor it,
GalizK) said They went to John Schroodsr,
undergraduate first vice-president and he
appropnated $2J00 to fiiunce the propom
The Graduate Students Association gave an
additioaal SKX) to rinafk:e a graduate worker
on the project.
Out of 5t opplicoals for oo^dMC9or, which
Gali/io said was a **plieoooMaol foepooae,** two
were chosen They were Phil Kramer, a soph-
omore and Steve Smith, a senior
Research a^lrtoala
Galizio said he, along with Erlich, Kramer
and Smith screened the ren^mog applicants
and picked 10 to act as raMorch asaitunu.
The remainder were lavited to work aS
interns The group worked to make the booklet
a **non-partisan, unbtoetd** informational
device. Galizio Mid.
The program will be expanded to other
national and state elections if student response
oo^^li current effort Ja^poaiUvc^ aecording to
Gali/io.
m
••41
1
Fiesta Theatre
2131 W Pico Bi
L A CA
Contor of India Movioo
irua mmuk^n Sot A Sgn
two super ^ movies
Madhumati
and
Gaat
color and wrth
Whmi achool is over ...
tell your professors and fellow students
wtiere to go!
English subtitles)
for further information
coll 388-6691
anytime
JOIN TEACHER
CORPS
We need more Blacks.
CI>icanos. and Indians
to train to teacfn low
income kids!
If you have a Bachelors'
Degree did not major
or minor in education,
have no certification
or teaching experience
and have no Masters'
Degree, you qualify.
You Get
•- 2 YBars of college - ^
tuition froo
A Masters Degree in
Education
A Teacher Certification
' $125 00each«vfOi(
* $i5 00fofeachclopoadont
* Vote aioo got Q.I Boneftts
Programs are locotod in
most states, the District of
Columbia. Guam, and
Puerto Rico
ImtlmCmpt
h
3t1
PARIS
LA-Parto-LA
Xkt Trans Intomattonil AJftkiM
June 26-Au8. 9
Jun« 6-S«pt. 12
Aug. 3-S*pt. 22
$429.00
•v.. . .,^-
I
lm tafriM. CA gni3
(213) 625 7204
Applications must be
suiiiiiHiBU Oy May 30. »t76
\.
If you ore m UCLA student, staff, or faculty
. you're special to the Civil Aeronau-
tics Boord. You re eligible to book on flights
nobody oioo con!
LONDON
LA-Brusaelo-London-LA
June 19-Sept 5 on ONA
$425.00
Thot's bocouoo tf^ooo Mre offmity flights wfiich
moorts you don't hove to book two full months
in advance.
I
i I
li
I
• I«v0l fwlth EXP&) mckmmmn union. 825-122^
op«n mon-fr»day i0-4
■*db
1
t
J
1
f
<
u
<fc*y briiin
poinr
Letters to the Editor
nioe
. >, was most interested in your
article regarding the phase-out
a4 NPI'i Drug Treatment Pro-
gram Having worked with the
Adolescent Program (now known
^ a5 Pride House) from its incep-
J tion until October of 1974; I
" watched both the wholesale
S firings ind the en masic rctig-
g. nations that characterized that
5 first year 4nd a half of the
r^ growth of the program . . a
S most interesting experience.
£ During most of that time, we
mtre seriously uf»d€>r«C«Hed for
the )ob we were supposed to be
doing; Central Intake, the Ad-
olescent Program (outpatient
then) and methador>e treatment
all being operated in one build-
ing Chaotic would be a pale
description — it s^^med many
employees wefen t required to
do tf^eir]db4 and many of the
others weren t permitted to
(Three MS\A — Master of Social
Work — students beginning
their internship wMl im reported
for work to find their office
vacant on ^rtd^^ (aod) fitted with
Uddett. paint and spare ♦wrni-.
ture Monday morning Thev
^ Were interviewing clients in the
V^tttife Dc4i for week^i Its
inHHiiil to me. since a grant
M)pM • UfgeU-ltken up wfch
saia ind. buildiiig '^ent thji
^♦^-•^foffem^ .^lid^ t>or ttjtvtp gfi»i«
» »» Ql titfidnhit fcm^iey
V^f ireated a k>w perce'^rage ol
Tt>e c«*ems we were tuinJed -tor
a* we had neidm the tapiifie^
•^o' *ne twmpoMti to <k> so Vet
Hy tome reiiKxi bmiiteiMc ^^^ t
■ ^. -
Ci^^n Ge«^'v DeAngelts s
c^rge* o^Vncompetence i«s
qutMtC tr «Qur tnac^f leveled
against peopie w»th n^hom i
^MjfUsii ctosc^ ( T LijitJt that
voy ch9ck to see what these
peop** at rodav and what kind
o* coiTTpetent jobs their
Present employefs feel thev ^r^
doing To have functioned at all
during that maniacal period is a
red badge of coor^ige Human
services is a di^Kult tnd taxing
tield under the best of condi-
tions and. as tf>e figures show.
the lack of support from admin-
istratofs And supervisors is 6^-
vastating to those dtrectly re-
I fepaaled toy story to the
next women who told me to talk
to a nurse in the Clinic. At the
Clink: I was unable to see a
nurse, but instead talked ^o
/nother >oung woman who said
it was neentary to go to a CCEC
meetina before I could see the
gynecologist for a ppeKription,
but that I could get a two
months refill on the pill After
^n hour's wait I saw the nurse
who said that I must attend this
CCEC nrieeting and that the refill
IS given to me with the under-
standing that I will attend -a
meeting I asked. "If I attend
th» meetir>c can I then see the
gynecologist and get a pre-
scription which will last me til I
return in fall?" She said that I
could not see the ^necologist
before the fall as his appoint-
ments were all fified The mdze^
was becoming c\e^m. Even if I
attended this meeting I -itrll
couldn't see the gynecologist
Irritated I said. '*ln other words I
^»«ve to ice a private doctor if I
want a prescription Her advice
was for nye to get the sumnief
Health Insurance for $32 Then I
could see the gynecologist after
1 went to a CCEC meeting I was
about to sav What's the point
in going to the meetmg for %U^
r might as well go to a private
doctor but tfien it had been
sa»d that I would get no refills
iMiless I pim^mtd to anend a
«^ 7mm^n§:
My complaints ^e. 1\ Bemg
un*b*e to see a doctor ^Uer
havmg paid $96 in Student
Meahh- fees this v«ar. 2) Forcmg
**M^t«tt» to attend a meeting
The reason of content of the
■" _^^tP ^^ ^ r 1 1*. * c I lO'O
Whtifiii ffs purpose is to count
heads lor Student Health fund-
wig or fof pureK irtstructional
piirpoicj. I feel it is unconsti-
ti^iowal to bribe stude'^' ^ *his
Money
ing the'lssue ivllli absurd dnd
mtsleading red tape The student
should be clearly mtormed at
the Mam Desk that it is
necessary to pay $32 for sun1nr>ef
irnurance and to attend a CCEC
meeting before tf>ey can see the
doctor
V.
Barfa'
sponsible for client care Even
now that lack of suppon is evi-
dent both in the figures them-
selves and in the language of
those still in charge.
Perhaps voull be interested in
the anecdotes I've presented
here and the implications to be
drawn from them III be looking
forward to your follow-up Per-
haps you could demystify the
circunrystances for me
» .'
Student Health
Iditor:
On Tuesday of thU week I
went to the Health Service to
get a prescription for the birth
control pill The young woman
a> the mam desk said it was
necessary to attend a Concep-
tion Counseling and Education
Clinic (CCEC) before I could see
« RynecplofiW. but she, added all
the appointments were filled
She said there are "Refill Hours
and to follow the red line and
ask the woman there
As this year draws to an end. I
thought to myself "What have
I learned?' Not academically, of
course, as that would be hereti-
cal, for as we all know, college is
Hipposed to be an experience in
living with other people What
have I iearned^ You don't give a
shit? Then stop reading this
letter. I've learned that because
I'm not into socialism, organic
food, an Eastern religion or puka
shells that there is no place for
me in society Big business
doesn't pressure me to conform
half as much as my "fellow
students" do.
Fin^. I'm told that "you're at
where you're at. and I am where
I am, this is beautifuK-^CM^I
that where you ve at is shit."
That is a most comforting at-
titude I'm not a belligerent
mother fucker, but hopefully
M>m^y peqple can accept
people who don't look like Ken
and Barbie doHs.
Editor:
I share the concern and frus-
tration of the young pre-nursing
student (Name Withheld, Daily
Brum. May 25) regarding the
financial priorities of this uni-
versfty I find it outrageous that
during this period of academic
cutbacks at all levels the 4JCLA
administration still considers
spending millions of dollars on a
recreation center and additional
parking structures. J believe that
the f»rsl duty of the unrversrty is
to serve the intellectual ^nd
career needs of the students. If
It cannot do ihis^ because ot
allegetf^ lack of funds and yet
squanders . large amounts of
money t>n superfluous structures
then something is seriously
wrong within the administration
and changes are in order
We simply cannot afford a
recreation, center jiq» and the
suggested registration fee in-
crease could be put to better
use such as funding student aid
programs or hiring additional
teachers for some of the crit-
ically overloaded arei in the
basic sciences Furthermore,
ther should be an immediate
moratorium on the construction
of parking structures Not only
^re they expensive, but we are
running out of room for them,
and I strongly suspect that most
students who use them could
easily commute to UCLA by bus
or at least form car pools """
Since I believe that education
is central to life I once reacted
strongly to Governor Borwn s
proposal of cutting the UC bud-
get. I even went so far as to
consider him a "Recycled Rea-
gan" Now. however. 1 am com-
ing around to his side. If the
University insists on pushing the
construction of unnecessary fa-
cilities, while academic programs
are being truncated, then it
deserves to suffer cutbacks and 1
hope such cutbacks begin with
the administrators who favor the
continued financing of non-
academic facilities.
David R. terry
tions simply because they too
are entitled to exercise such
rights I think Mr. Clark has
entirely missed the point No
one IS actually calling for a one-
sided application of human
(constitutional) rights. What is
being asked for is the correction
of inequalities within the system.
Any truly free society would be
a chaos. Obviously there must
be "boundaries" on freedom,
which implies a balance n^st be
attained between the freedom
q1 ihg indiyidual and that of 4he
Berghe is a professor of soci-
ology, and it would seem that
he should know kafter, but he
advocates the old social arrange-
ments of "racial benign neglect"
and colonial status for minor-
ities What Berghe wants is an
irresponsible do nothing pojicy
Bruce M. Tyler
Invaluable
Freedom of expression can be
a weapon of potential destruc-
tion It would be a very twisted
mind that Would accept the
recent cross burnings in front of
the homes of Black Americans as
1 justified freedom oF expres-
sion. It is unfortunate t)Ot more
or less true that the inequalities
within a society are often main-
tained by the laws of the socittv
Yet should such blatant wrongs
be any more tolerable in one
system than m another? The
Gallo controversy is such^an
example.
Frustration in trying to bring
awareness ^nd implement change
can result in outbreaks of sense-
less violence However, the
irony does not reside in the fact
that our free society fosters such
frustratjon; but the tact that
after such outbreaks have taken
place there are always individ-
uals (Mr. Clark?) who cannot
understand why they* occur eci in
the first place.
Xnita Alvarez
Edkor:
*^ » always easy to crnicize
Mnd find fault but once in a
^hile It IS a good idea to take
stock* and pay compliments
where due I am a graduating
senior and at the risk of sound
ing corny I would like to say „
.that X appreciate UCIA. >4e, it'i'^^.
not perfect (but what is any-
how?) but I did get a lot out of
it and the price is certainly a
bargain compared to other col-
leges and u^n ^ *• ' m t i t es Aside *
from the edu<u..v.n and degrpp
which were my main reasons lor
being here and may or may not
be of value in the future. I have
really befieihed from the health
and legal services provided to
students They both Kiave been
most helpful The letters of rec-
omrhendation and gerieral aid of
the honors program has also
been invaluable.
Thank you UCLA
L Lewis
UC-kan^
Affitmalive Action
graduate.
Frustration
--^ ......
n.
It would appear that Mr.
Clark's conception of a free
•ociety includes a skewed form
o4 human rights, i.e. in ordeir'to
exist as a truly free socicfy we
must permit the oppretah^ be-
havior of GMppcate organiaa-
Pierre van den Berghe's com-
ments in "Affirmative Action
programs ternr>ed internal colon-
ialism" in the Dai7y Brum only
demonstrated his anger that he
says is arosed in whites because
minorities are acquiring un-
earned positions in the uni-
versity system Then he goes on
to label by strong implication
that anyone who takes such a
position IS "dehumani2ing. de-
meaning and accepting pater-
nalistic arrange mim'* He only
labels Affirmative Action pro-
grams with such derogatory
terms so that he wil feel justi-
fied in displaying his outward
contempt for such persons. He
conveniently labels the Affirm-
*''^* ^^'^" program as racial
in<* negNiLli to itidude women
•n them so as to isolate ethnic
minorities and enrage whites
•«*»nst aiding minorities
The Ford ad'^mistration's pro-
posal to transfer reactor tech-
nology to South Africa places its
new. "liberal" attitude toward
Africa in a more realistic light.
Ktssinger's new-found liberalism
has r^ey^et led him to go so far as
to give material aid to liberation
movements in the remaining
African colonies, but when rt
comes to the government of ex-
Nazi lohn Vorster. such aid h
forthcoming on a nuclear scale.
India and probably Israel ac-
quired nuclear weapons through
osterHibly peaceful reactor tech-
nology Not long after India's
atomic explosion, the Shah of
Iran (who has generally hostile
r^le^ioiis with India) signed a
t«cord $40 billion trgde agree-
ment with Kiaainpir, In which
the U.S. agreed to provide a
great deal of nuclear lechr>ology
to the Sfiah and to tram Iranian
nudear engineers. The UC-lran
exchange program was a part of
this d»il. It should be empha-
sized that if any country in tf>e
M Page 9)
fer pftalaA fW OW^ 9ntm
<■ Bmif null.
More letters ."TT
not nm^ nuclear
power for peaceful piirpom, it
ift Iran In the past, the Shah has
used his plentiful foreign eft-
change largely for military pur-
chases.
The Shah is menully unstable:
lie Wkm to talk about his visions
from Allah prophesizing the
future of his projected 1000-year
Aryan empire. Kissir>ger's will-
iiifiiMi to give a nudear capa-
bWcy to such a man. or to Vor-
ster who would undoubtedly
like to see his fortress itate go
down with a bang, indicates the
lengths to which the U.S.^ gov-
ernnr>ent is pf«piared to go now
that they can no longer rely on
their own troops to defend their
colonies around the world Kiss-
inger who already in tf>e 1950's
expressed a likmg for small,
"tactical" nuclear strikes, is set-
ting the stage for nuclear war by
proxy.
Students with an interest in
their own survival should op-
pose these developments by
moving to er>d the UC-lran pro-
ject and UC investments in
South Africa. The Third World
Coalition has gone to Chan-
cellor Young's oiVice with these
demands, in addition to op-
posir^g cutbacks of minority pro-
grams in the UC system All
students have a stake in at-
tending their next demonstra^^
tion, which will be June 2
Daniel O'Hearn
rights stand regarding C^allo ad-
vertising The letter wrHiers mj^
ported the Callo advertising
Galo
Several letters to the editor,
appearing in the Oa//y Brum on
May 13, attacked law student |.P.
Fiske for his"" First Amendment
Let's set the record straight.
None of the writers care to
bring up the fact that ASUCLA
Communications Board appoint-
ed a speoal subcommittee to
consider the Gallo adMRising
ban The subcommittee recom-
mended that Gallo adi be al-
lowed on the bails of First
Anr^endment rights. At the Com-
munications Board meeting, at
which the subcommittee was to
report, the UFW staged a highly
theatrical demonstration. The
ASUCLA Communicalions Board,
m the face of the opposition,
chose ncji to consider the rec-
ommendations of its own^iui^
committee
A nrenpapLr may, wtthm the
letter of the law, legally ban
advertising. However, this issue
transcends advertising an<^
strikes at the heart o? the First
Anr^ndment of the UCLA cam-
pus -
The issue is that of ceoaor-
ship, in this case political ceiv
sorship of advert isir^. Morally,
this prestigious university and its
newspaper should be a model of
freedom of mformation. But a
Pfttcadent has been set. Ham
every politically active campyt
group can expeo to censor ads
or groups they don^t favor Ban-
ning an ad on political grounds
is but a short step from r^ews
censorship. Unfortunately, this is
the direction the Communica-
tions Board has taiten.
Certainly it is better to pennit
full expression of ideas than lo
lire silerue.
I.
i A I
f
T
I
i
5
I
**H«y. OBd can i borrow g couple of hundred bucks to go to Ptiltodolphle and
domonstrBte agalnat the rich capitalist leachos «vho wont got oft our baduT*
Church
lust a quick but important
correction here When Senator
Church responded to my ques-
tion Wednesday about UC-CIA
connections- by saying that "die
University of California has not
been overlooked (by the CIA),"
he was not referring to recruit-
ment only The Senate Intel-
ligence Committee Report
noted that hundreds otf "aca-
demics"* in over TOO Ainerican
colleges and umversities were
linked to or used by the CIA for
various covet piarposes, includ-
ing "providing the CIA with,
leads, rhaking introductions for
intelligence purposes, ar\d oc-
casionally writing books and
other material for propoganda
purposes." 1 asked about UC m
light of this report.
As chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee, there
are probably few outside the
CIA ar>d the White House that
are more in the know on this
matter than Senator Church
^^•^•» bit fi^P^ys^owld be viewed,
as a definitive confirmation' of
long' kept syapicions tfiat the
CIA has infiltrated the Universi-
ty of California. Thf^hext ques^
tion is who ar^ they ar\d how do
we deal with thaiii?
Naflian Gardeb
V'
come meet:
XWOAlU)NCE
ra '-i
istnct Attorney
Congresswoman
John Van de Kamp Yvonne Brathwaite
Burke
1
Friday May 28 12 Noon
Janss Steps
■
- «»---■»■ HI 1 11 1 > , 1 11, L,.IM 1
1
*
•E
.It".
1
^ • /' ■ ■ ■ ' ■
Neidhart suspenjetr from
_ ly Jot \i_^
DS SpwtB Wrilcr
Shot puller Jim Ncidhjm has been tnt-
pendcd from ihc UCLA track and field leam
for diicipiiiiary reasom and wiiJ m^m neat
week f NCAA (UiampioQihips m Phila-
delphia.
Bniin head coadi Jin Bush wwW not
elaborate on the reasom uiying, -It* not
ngbt for a coach to talk about an athlete I
don I think it lervet my purpose. You're
wasting your ume if you're trying to find
anything more. Til lay diKriphnary and that*
all.
But Bush did say that the action rttuitiri
from Neidhart's conduct over the cdurse of
the season and at the Pai:-« championships
two weeks ago in Berkeley.
"It's an accumulation of a lot of thlngiT
•aid Bush -He knows he vioUted some riiles
and he d been warned several times I don^t
care what he tells you."
Neidhart had no quafiixT
.. _ T — ^» discussing
the situation. "The reason Bush gave me*
said Neidhart. **was that 1 was found
smoking tobacco and drinking beer in my
room. But that was after the event was over
on Friday night."
The ^1 and 270 pouiiif Ifeliiart finished
second in the Pac^ ihot put ea Fndav
afternoon. Ai Neidhart expMiM, Ik iMd a
^^. TJ^ '''*^"* ^^^ cvenu^ There were
about 100 people there," hTZd, ^including
•IJ the shot putters from the other schookT
«s been happening after every meet since I
was m high school"
Neidhan said he didnt know anvth.ng
•bout rules that prevented cigarette sni .. ,g
and the consumption of alcohol Team
captam Rich Ganther said there are no
specific team rulej^ against smoking and
dnnking, but that ifs a geKral pobcv of the
v>^LA athletic department to disallow them
during the MaeiNi.
./i^ti^!?!"^ "P ^"^ ^^ individual coach,"
^taid UCLA men's athletic director J D
Morgan when asked about the conduct rules
Overall I will not toleratr drinking, but its
. lip lo the individual oeach Some coaches
^ve certain disciphnes that they want to
xu ' ^"'* ^^ *o »^« rules on a whole '
I he Brum shot putter also expUincd Ihat
Bush accused him of charging $6.50 worth of
tobacco and alcohol to his room which
would in turn be picked u^ bv the athletic
department.
^ "Bush says he has the uAa,- said Neidhart
But I don't remember singing any There
were a hundred people in my room that
jught and any of them could have done u.
wmki can't pin that rap on me"
(Continued on Page 14)
A
\
Bruins havi
trouble at championships
ty HuMter Kaphin
DB Sports Uriter
The Sianfwd Cardinah moved closer to
winning their third NCAA tennis championship
in the last four years by advancing all four of
their singles players and one of two doubles
teams into today's round of l6 yesterday at
Corpuji Christi, Texas
Stanford, which fell to UCLA in two dual
matches earlier this if ason^ was 1^ by semora
Pat DuPrc and Mark MitcheH« sophomore Bill
Maxe and freshman Matt Mitchell, who all
won their third round singles matches yesterday
in straight sets.
Stanford now leads the te«a soorint with It
poitili afend ol USC with 16 and UCLA with
13 Tnnity is in fourth place with 12
The Bruins, hurt badly in Wednesday's
opening round of singles when second seeded
^™«J[f^»»r was upset in the first round,
advwMed stars Peter Fleming and Fcrdi 7ay-
ghn iafk> t<fday*s round of 16 m st^^les The
p^wer-hitting Fleming defeated Georgia's
Charles Elhs, 6-4, 6-4 while Tayfin outlasted
Southern MethoduM's Mark Vines, 5-7. 6-1.6-3.
Fleming and Taygaa later teansed in doubles
for the first time ever and advaaaed through
yesterday's initial two rounds with victories
over West Texas Suie'i Brett Hall and Steve
Johnson, 6-0. 6-0 and Pepperdine's Steve
Morns and Maunce Hunter. 6-3, 4-^ 6^^^
However, yesterday mmm\ a day of only
triumphs for the Brum players UCLA fourth
singles man Bruce Nichols was routed in singiea
by Sunford'f number one star Pat DuPre, 6-0.
6-2. Sophomore Nichole eauld not get his first
service in and aMnd nunterous approach shdi
and volleys against Stanford's hard-hittiag
senior
Nichols' defeat left tiK Bruins with only first
tied Fleming and seventh leaied Taygan in
the singles bracket If the Bmiat ate to have
any chance at all to catch the leading Cardi-
••*■ Fleming and Taygan have to continue
winning as expected M cither Fleming m
Taygan can win the SM^ks championship with
the other player reaching the semi hnals, the
Bruins could give Stanford a challenge pro-
viding the Flcnunt^Jaygan doubles combina-
tion advances tar in its bracket
However UCLA will need %omc outside
help The majority of Stanford's tour singles
players and one surviving doublet team have to
^cjinotkcd off lor the Bruins to catch up
^^Wrt-A** leeoad doubles team of NichoU and
freshman John Austin brought UCLA's come-
»hack^bid to a temporary halt hite yesierdav
afternoon by losing in the first round to Texas
Christian University's Tut Bart/en and Randy
Crawford. 6>7. ^, 7-5 m a teaie^eonfroma
tion.
Auetin had been substituted for inan
Teacher in UCLA's doubles lineup by Brum
coach Glenn Bassett yeMeeday morning alter
Teacher had trouble hitting balb on the court
during an early mormi^ practice session Thgs
Teacher had ended his UCLA pUying career
when losing in Wedaaiiay's opening round of
siai|^.
The Bruins were listed as heavy favorites to
win their second consecutive NCAA lenms
crown until Teacher injured his right shovMer
last week.
Without Teacher available in doubles, both
of UCLA's last-minute doubles teams went un-
•eedad baeause the NCAA coaches seejing
committee had iKtle fvaard of Flemmg-Taygan
or Aastin-Nichols playing together during 1976
UCLA could .help its own cauae considerably
this morning at Fleming faces Sunlord's Bill
Maze while Taygan meets Cardinal Mark
Mitchell in siagln action
Sunford's Matt Mitchell faces Pepperdine's
Brazilian performer >aao Soares while DuPre
contesu Oklahoma City's upeet-minded Steve
WeMerburn
Fleming and Taygan meet Wedderbum and
doubles partner Dennis Morgan w this after-
^'^^^'s doubles play.
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Los Angeles 6423 Wilshire BlvO, #105
LaKewood 5203 Lakewood Blvd
Huntington Beach 8101 Newman St Ste C
655-6533
531-7420
(7U) 540-6806
Peter Flem i ng — latest in the I ineofBruin net superstars
By Hunter kapiM -
DB Spwt% Wrilc#
Prior to 1973, UCLA teunis star Pcicr Fleming had not ever
;n ranked amon^ the top 20 I'nited States tumor plavers in
any of the age divisions
At best, Fleming was just another straggler on the junior circuit
who. along with hundreds of other young tennis players, had
aspirations of becoming a superstar some day. like a Jimmy
C6naors. Bjorn Borg. I he Nastase. Arthur Ashe or Rod Laver
Suddenly, in 1973 while Fleming was playing his firuil year of
the junior 18 and under division, the talK power-hitting youngster
•began challenging with the big^ Tiames at tournaments on the
junior circuit, including the National Junior Championships at
ICalamazoo, Michigan. National Clay Courts Championships at
Louisville. National Hardcourts at Burlingame. California along
with other traditional stops at St Louis. Springfield. San Jose
and Dallas.
Fleming was nearing his present height of 6-5 when h< began
competing with more confidence and motivation against such top
rivals as Pat DuPre. John Whitlinger, Victor Amaya. Fred De
Jesus. George Hardie. Ironically, Fleming enrolled at the
University of Michigan in the fall of 1974, along with top-
ranking juniors Amaya and De Jesus and eventually continued
his rivalry with DuPrc this ye^-
Fleming transferred here from the University of Michigan last
fall in order to compete all-year long against, what he calls "the
best competition in the nation.
•^Although Michigan fmisrhed fourth in the NCAA's in 1973
with players like Victor Amaya. Fred De Jesus. Eric Fricdlcr and
myself, I work up one day anfi decided I would be transferring to
UCLA," said Fleming.
**Coach Eisner called me in his office and tried to prevent me
from transferring, using every means of persuasion possible." said
Fleming.
Michigan s director of athletics. Don Canham .ntorming his
colleague that UCLA didn't encourage, persuade or advise
Fleming in any way. shape or form. Canham gave Firming
permission to leave Michigan.
A year after Fleming left Michigan. Amava turned pro-
fessional, with one year of eligibility remaining and l>e Jesus quit
tennis le eoncemrate more on academics for acceptance to Uw
school
"It was my^ dcoMon emirely to transfer." said Fleming "My
owch at M ichigan gave permission lor me to transfer, along with
the athletic director I wanted to transfer hAdly enought that' I
pa^d my own way to attend UCLA last year
"Since the NCAA has the transfer rule forcing an athlete to sit
out the year after transferring from one school to another, I
played in as many college and open tournaments as I could while
going to school at UCLA I practiced a lot with UCLA's pUyers
I wasn t on scholarship Ust y^r. as UCLA doesn't give athletes
athletic scholarships until they are eligible to compete. •'
It IS no secret that many top collegiate tennis pUyers find it
difficult to attend a majority of their classes If a colkgiau player
IS good enough to compete against professionaU. he or she wit!
often by flying across the country or world to play larvarious
open tournaments.
Taking classes is often just a nagging requirement for
eligibility All athletes must pass 36 quarter units or 24 semester
units in a Mile academic vear to be ehgibk for the following
year.
Many players, including Fleming, who was born and raised in
Chatham. New Jersey, are as concerned with accumulating
Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) points than grade
points hccami the ATP will determine their world ranking,
which IS the mam criterui for getting placed in professional events
without having to go through huge qualifying rounds
(( ontinued on Page 15)
"Actually, t llegan To think about transferring when wc
traveled to Los Angeles during' the 19^4 regular season lo face
LCI A ih a dual match ^
"One of m\ teammates named lei! Miller, wht) was a junior at
the time, told me Vuu ought to tr^insfer to l^CLA look at
this beautiful campus with sunshine cseryday. Look at the-^^irk
on this campuk." f • - —
Fleming only played in two -.les matches for Michigan in
1974 (hfs freshman year) because o\ strained muscles in his hack,
i/icurred during a practiG^^ match
"I played in the NC AA\ after missing the entire season." laid
^lerning "I did terrible, losnn^ m >nd round m vm^k-s and
09 pMotM kv A**^ ^
/
in the round of 32 m doubles, unn pe Jesus Ccuich Eisner felt
that with Amaya. De Jesus and me coming hack .for at least two
more years. Michigan could ver\ conceivably win a national
championship
"He was probably rijiht Hw I hit4 made my mind up
"Other than the competition uith my teammates such as
Amaya. De Jesus and Eric Friedlcr uho I had played against for
several years in the juniors, thee \fcasn't much else lo offer
compared to UCLA.
"At UCLA there are numerous t(»p^anking collegiate players
every year with additional collegi.itc and pr-.tcssional players bv
the do/ens competing throughout the West Coast And liCLA
plays use. Stanford and man> top collegiate teams in dual
matches every year."
After UCLA's athletic dr I f) Morgan conferred with
t-r
Contemporary Art Survey
presents
ROBERT BARRY
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Lecture/Discussion
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v<N m 4 HAMii iMiv<. n» M>M» my
riN%ll <»* M> MNK^ V4N a» IM»H^ « «N T*
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STAtf
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track team
i
(CMUMMi froa Pagir 1 1 >
"Ite tfiitttet mer WcidhirTconni
**bccAttie I haven*t been performing to
exftolaijuiii thu yeju^. I\e had a tough year
rm tryittg to key on the Olympic Trials
Bush sayi he doesn*t care about pertermancc
but that*s 1 bunch of bullshit. There's been «
lo( of athletes who have violated rules m the
|NUt and nothing's b«en said about them.
He s just being nit picky and wanu me off
the team.** ,
"I have nothing panooai afMMC Jim,^
said Bush. "But^ every coach has his rules
He knows exactly what he's done and the
team kacMM what he*^s done**
"it was not only drinking that he was
suspended for,** said Morgan. "^It was also
his general conduct at the Pac-8 champion-
ships. Coach Bush told me he thought it was
detrimental to the team and detrimental to
the department.** Morgan said he expected
Ncidhart to discuss the situation with him
but that ihc athlete hasn't been in yet.*'
Morgan would not elaborate on the
■•^^^^ •! Wniiiart's conduct at Berkaky, but
lie did lay ttiat be was sending away for a
fuU report from the Mamot Hotel in Bay
Area city where the Bruins suved
Ncidhart is particula^rly worried about
losing his scholarship to UCLA, a move that
would farce him to transfer schools m order
to regain his colle^ate eligibiiity.
'"He (Busn> wouldD*t want me on scholar-
ship if I wasn't on the team He'd want to
oae il for someone else He can kick me off
the team but he can*t take away my sdMlar-
ship without going throufk a board.**
But as Bush explains it. "When you fet
kicked off the team, you loae your scholai--
ship There's no such thing as a four-yaar
scholarship The NCAA has never allowed
that. They're renewable every year and after
this year he's through at UCLA He's gone
forever **
A native of Southern California (Newport
Beach). Ncidhart has already transferred
schools twice.
By Mike Tevcrbaugh
DB Sports Writer
Every once m a while, some-
one complains that intramuril
athletics have gotten out of
hand the participants have
adopted a "win at all coats**
attitude, which has displaced
the idea of ihtramurals being a
chance to have a little fun.
But there was no such at-
titude present Wednesday af-
ternoon, when Stroh*s defeated
UC-Law 14-tl to win the
men's **A*^ division softball
championship Things didn't
get out of hand and no one
took the game for anything
more than t^ was meant to be
**This IS what intramurals is
all about,** said Gerry Perkcl,
UC-Uw*s coach ^We had a
lot of fun. They (Stroh*s) are
by far the best 'sports' we've
defeats i)6-law in "fun" IM championship
played all year,** he said
The game itself was a hitting
--showcase as the teams col-
lected a combined total of 33
hiU. Stroh's threatened to rim
away with the game early, as
they scored five times in the
first on consecutive hits by
pitcher Jlick Wilson, Gregg
Killoran, Larry Hayes, Tom
Turner and Denms Werner.
There was an abrupt change
in the second, however, when
Stroh's outfield lound it dif-
ficuh to make the plays, and
UC-Law took advantage of the
errors to score eight times in
the inning, four of the runs
being unearned
UC4.aw had the game under
control for the next four inn-
ings, putting Stroh's down in
order in both the fourth and
fifth innings Stroh's, however.
came back to uke the laid in
the sixth with three runs and
added two insurance runs in
the seventh on a homer by
Killoran.
Killoran was the team*s
leading hitter Wednesday,
going three-for-f our "With four
RBI's. Left centerfieWer Tom
Turner also had a good day,
driving m three nm» with two
doubfet.
**For moit of us, this ends
our intramural career," said
captain Bill Canning "But
wc*re on top, we had a good
season and we played smart
Softball,** he addad.
-UC-Uw, ZBT (tiK team
Stroh's beat in the semi-finals)
and our team arc ^11 reallv
teams,** said Manning
MiaM Ftven — tapHomort WHto Banks, shown In natural
UCLA • big ho^ m aia NCAA Trmek and FMd finalt, whieh
fma Thurtday In ugh galur^ay Jn PhiadaMila. Banks u,
d by Track and f iatd NmwM la win th« NCAA Mp^ fump
In ftm long Jump, accounMiig for It o( UCLA's pricMotad
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1
Frankhn^5audjngjviiLlM volleyball tournament
By MkiMMl
DB SpoHi Writer
The team of Mike Franklin
ind Mary Gaudino won the
tntmural Coad Doubles Vol-
leyball tournament over Singin
mith and Sherry Norman. 5-
11 I. 12-10. 11-9 Wednesday
light in Pauley Pavilion
The match lasted a record
two hours and 15 minutes and
/as the mott competitive of
the three day tournament As
ixpected the UCLA men and
^omen's volleyball players
lominated the play.
In the double elimination
tournament. Franklin, a semor
^ackcourt specialist for the
[CAA championship taen's
team and Gaudino, a fine set-
ter for the women's AIAW
rhampionship squad, did not
lost a match and dropped only
the one game m the finals.
Smith and Norman were the
(urprise team of the tourna-
lent They were not expected
to get past the first round, but
miy lost two matches to the
ranklm-Gaudino team Smith
)roved why most experts con-
lidered him to be the best
freshman on the UCLA team
this year. What was so sur-
prising about the team was
lorman. She is a senior at
larymount High School, but
ras ehgible to compete since
(he was taking ciaases at
fCLA.
Norman did a fine job of
supporting Smith ' and played
IS well as ^he other women in
the event. Unfortunately for
CLA women's coach Andy
lanachow^i, Norman plans to
It tend S^ptford on an aca-
Icmic scholarship.
The Frankhn-Gaudino team
id va need through the wihner*s
►racket into the finals After a
loss to the FranklindCiaudino
(quad, the Smith-Norman
;ntry had to beat the favored
ihird place team of David
iichols and Colleen McFaul in
the losers bracket to reach the
finals
In the finals, the serving
ibihty of Frankhn and Gau-
no proved to be decisive^
hey were able ta serve Nor-
»an. forcing Smith to have to
ftct the ball instead of ^ing
ihle to use his hitting strength.
The intramural tournament
PATTY HEARST
Authentic replica of
FBI •'wanted*' flyer
— a real collectors
Item. Send $3 plus
25 cents handling
to: FLYERS> P O.
Box 30352 (303 Ro-
sario). Santa Bar-
bara, Ca. 93105
ADVENTURE
STARTS AT
2500 FEET
^mi
Mill
THI
I
Ijfes EMnn. Cs
did mark a defeat tor WCAA
MVP Joe Mica Ihc team ot
Mica and Chris Batrel was
eliminated early, but Mica was
playing under the handicap of
a cold picked up last weekend
at the USVBA championships
Spiker Notes: The NCAA v6l-
leytaitt finals will be ^own at
5 1MB CMMorfww by ABC*s
Wide World of SfOfIs Don't
be surpnaed if UCLA beats
Pepperdine in three games to>
morrou. but time will tcfl
Flem
(C onlinurd from fuff 13) ^^
ScIa t ■** *"rP"*« ••»•« Hemmg is turmnj pro after the
n*t AA championships in Corpus Chnsii. Tcxms this week All
l-teining hM d.>ne .s lead the Bru.iu to a 17-1 dual match record
I ri a".- J"*' *!* '" "* '"*^"* """'' '° I'Sf (5-41 ending
!i .J: c "«"^*' *"'»'""8 streak ) Fleming then led the Brums
^J^JT^I" ^T""" '*'"^''-* '""" C hampionships Ust
weenenu. imshing the regular season »nth a 19-1 singles record
Us? wSenT) *'* '" '"""»•'« *■"«*' '•>!••« '" the semifinak
JOB OPENING
Daily Bruin Display Advertising
Student needed for office work or for
. advertising sales solicitation
Appffcations available 112 Kerckhoff Deadline
12 noon Thurs.. June 3. Job to begin early
September or Rummer Student staff works
around class hours
J
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How to get
a paid vacation between
school and career:
CaH Tasic Force.
It s a way to pay the bills But. more than that, working as a temp"
gives you a chance to get practical insights into a variety of business and
' professional careers. From the inside We furnish temporary
and vacation help to a variety of companies all arouruj the
world Even if you plan to move around for a while talk to
us We've got offices all arourxJ. too.
1 4»r« «*
Gat into tamporary work. Ibniporaily:
tM AnfslM STO-TIM tlif ix„ H i , . ftf tWt
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ANNOUNCE OPENINGS FOUf:
nffmcEi
(213)
Women netters face Stanford
•51-€131
DROP-IN ENCOUNTER GROUPS
AN EASY WAY TO MEET THE OPPOSITE SEX
AND START MEANINQPUL RELATIONSHIP
£¥«ry Sunday and \MsgPMaday Ntta — tiOO PM
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4 blks aaat of Fairlax. Naar Sunaat Blvd
Donation
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OUTRAGEOUS -rva.rd
Lampoon irreverence
',ompletely off the w
ctto tataiwi
HOttr«Mfi«(fO«l(l
SMASH WEEK!
wrSIWin. ti CHmaa CMtir 213* 475 M41
TfeMtrt #2 Ewytiy tt 1 ». 3« 4 31. IH ; » !«. « »
iMiitt Urn hmi mt taiwiif
TiMtrt #J Hwyi^r at lA 1 a. iM. •«. !«. • » llr«
CmVCR CITY.
Stiiit Dr li
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COSTA MCSA. li Ciatm • MMSN MMM. MX CitfCiMM • 134.3111
WESTMIMSTER Ui Ciifffia • U3 0Mi
ttOMI
By Graff L.
DB Sports Writer
Tlie UCLA womcn^ teniuft
team will attempt to aveiife its
poly one-aided defeat of the
BHMon (8-1) when it oppotek
the Stanford Cardinals to-
morrow at Palo Alto
The match will showcase
two of the top three feiaak
coUefiate laams in the nation,
with at least four of the
players assured of a top-20
iced at the Nationals
The highlight of the contest
will be the rematch between
UCLA*s Paula Smith and
Sunford*s Lele Forood
Forood. who it tabbed at
the top female collegian in the
country, was upset by Smith in
three sets, 5-7, 6-4, 6-3 It was
a stunning victory for the
Bruin freshman and gave legi-
timacy to hc^r claim to be one
of the foremost female players
on the West Coast today.
Cindy Thomas will play Bar-
bara Jordan in the No. Two
match. Their first contest was
a dogfight in which Thomas
led most of the way before
dropping both sets, 7-6, 7-5
her letting up late in both sets
cost her the match, and she*!)
be trying to redeem hersell
against Jordan
Susan Zaro will not nuike
the trip since she is still re-
covering from a slight case of
mononucleosis. The Bruins will
travel with only five women, as
Kim Nilsspn will play No.
Three singles. Gay lee Folia koff
Four and Jenny Geddes Five.
It will give Poliakoff one latt
tough match before the year is
out, since Zaro will travel with
the^^am to Salt Lake City for
the Nationals June 14-20.
The Stanford match is key
to Bruin hopes _m^ the Na-
fii>nalB __,_„_______„_______
iible National opponents
linft each other Thje match
will be important psycholo-
gically for the women since a
wis here will give them con-
into the Nationals. In fact.
there is a possibility that Smith
and Forood could meet in the
UmIs at Salt Lake
The seedings have not been
released, and the outcome of
Smith's match, along with
Thomas*, should have a dis-
tinct bearing on their plnee-
ment in the Nationals.
**lf Paula jeats Forood
afain, she could very well be
pMieed in the top four seeds at
the Nationals,** commented
Zaima. '^As it stands now shc*ll
be in the top eight.
'Cindy (Thomas) will be~
seeded in the top 20. However,
if she defeats Jordan, the could
be up in the top 16.**
But possibly the most crucial
match will be the No One
doubles contest Smith and
Thomas will oppose Forood
and Jordan A victory for
Smith and Thomas couid mean
a No. Gne seed at the Na-
tionals. The Cardinal laiidem
soundly defeated the Bruin
duo, 6-3, 6-4. and Snuth
and Thomas will have their
work cut out for them.
Today, the Bruins will meet
the UC David Aggies in a
match termed strictly a warm-
up by Zainu.
"They have a couple of girb
that will go to the Nationals,
but the match will just be a
warm-up for Stanford **
The match win pit many
AC
NOW SHOWING
AT THEATRES AND DRIVE-INS THROUGHOUT SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
H»t,U^lhw4W?i«4 MMMTI In Sky Onn^m JM-^M
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979 4141 niMMAMACtTV
fenv CtfM«r IM im Amviuna Cmanw 113 ftM
«tMI AMr< W7 MM
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ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
Lt ut ship your personal effects home We are spM:iali8t8 m
international packaging and shipping We also sell appliaiiaaa for 220 volts
PACIFIC-KING 1215 West Sth St.. Loe Afi«elee 17
4«2Mt2
TUNE.UP, LUBE t OIL i^AK
fiiOS
JOB
?35
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Now comes Miller time
Rogo» Diwon / Fufnttuf Graphict Envifonm»nt1 "
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This IS fhm p/oce f of Rib Lovmr%i
By far the Beit Rib% we v« fri#c< in I A
Herald E«^
♦rom
COMPLETE DINNERS
Casual Dining
NARKY'S O^IN PIT BBQ
1434 N CffSSCENT HflGHTS ot SUNSfT STIIT
to Minutes uc wn ^u#)sef Bivd to
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I
i
University of
San Fernando Valley
COLLEGE OF LAW
Announcing:
FALL SEMESTER 197S
• Fut-tkiM 3-y«ar day program
* Part-tiffna day'arul avening programs
The school rs
— -~ FUllY ACCREDITED
Forum on pfijsoners
in Iran, Chile set
Speakers repre)»entmf
both Chileaa iind iranuin
concerns will ditcuts the
plight oi pohtical prisoners
in those two iiatioi](s at a
conlcrenoe Irom noon to 2
pm, Tueaiay. June 1st, in
the Grand Ballroom
A short film.^ The Iraniaa
People's Strucgk, wiU be
featured. -
MA, MFA candidates show art
Artwork submitted by candidates for the MA and MFA
degrees is on dispUy at the Frederick S. Wight An GaUery now
throi^gh June 4.
Each artist submits a group oi works in one medium as a
thesis Media represented in the showing range from the
traditional (in form if not in content) oil on canvas painting to a
nude figure ititchcd into a white quilt and draped over a satin-
sheeted bed
Nine students are exhibiting works jjj the show Another
exhibit, consisting of the works of 23 masters candidates, is
scheduled for June 20- July 4
Campus events
MMOUNCEMEITS
bv the Commiflet* cit B.ir Examin»T^
Sidle Bdf ol ( .ililofni.i
Tel: (213) 8^-5711
8353 Sepulveda Bivd Sepulveda Ca 91343
LETS GO TO
THE HOP!
Come to the Co-op
for a fifties dance
Music by:
THE BUSY SIGNALS
Friday May 28 9:00-1:00
- 500 Landfair Ave.
L^,^ Dress fifties style
— *.— 50C cton«tk>n requested
11 am-? pm. now June 11 9fum
Walk ^^^^ starts art donating over M) ptr
ctm of tht salts to Muscular OystropDy
la fnUm Itatly. vote this
during office hours Bunche 4?79
-fr« BtMt. laantoftd by tUt Sooal
ice Club will to litid I pm-mMfHoM
tomorrow Vista Room. Rec Center Free
ftlrtsiiments will be provided.
— Uis^airtwi MlH featuring music
tnd ptMlry will be held S-10 pm. May ao.
International Student Center Studtnls II '
others $150
tpsrs iaiiir 7:3t>-10 30 pm tonight.
Womtn's Gym 200 sponsored by Alpha
iamMi Bttta and phi Eta Sigma Members
frtt. non-mtmbtrt II, couples $1 SO
-TM« ittdm. Mm. Te liitlMlL ftr iar
ipMMd Ihiii It at itali NtM will be
**^y*^ ^.^/" totfii^ht. MaoGowan Hall.
CaMMMH. picfc up a Proftct Awartnttt
voter information boofcMt avaHlilt on
campus btginning June 2
— IMaMp Cattaaitr •aanMatM. pick up
applications for this summer at the mardi
Gras office. Ackerman A-levtl or on Brum
Walk^
— ^npat toiwii field work exptritnet
through community stfvice and learning
Academic credit available student de-
velops own )o6 dtscription with attit-
tance Visit Kintty 3B4 or call 825-J730
—fta ItMi; 1-10 pm every Wednesday
at 8 30-1030 pm. every Friday Inter-
national Student Center 1023 Hilgard Free
—FsNawaMpt. information and itadlint
on extramural funding for graduate stu-
dents and postdoctorals are available in
the Fellowships and Assistantship Section
Murphy 1228
itcis
lor tfivtronmaiiiii and taad pro-
FCMi
—IMS a film from Senegal by Ousman
Sembene will be shown 7 30-11 pm African
dinner 5 30-8 30 pm (12 SO) tonight Inter
national Student Center
'iMi'iii if la itiv laMaars and Nmi
If ttrtHwest. will be shown 7 30 pm
tomorrow Mtlnitz 1400 1150
aiM Inee el CMm art Karaa. wilt
be presented 8 X pm. Miy 21. Scnotnbtrg
auditorium $1 for UCLA studtnts tacutty
staft and senior citizens 12 for other
studenu. S3 gtntral admission
-Mesic sad Baaee tf Japaa. will be
performed 8:30 pm tomorrow, lirtmiitipig
auditorium $1 for UCLA studtfUi. faculty
staff and ttmor cittztns. S2 for other
students S3 gtatral admittion
taan. Junt 1 Scboentitrg wa$-i-
itorium Fret.
— OCU CMMnparary Owiiar EatanMai
will perform works by U€LA student
composers. 4 30 pm. June 1 Schoenbero
1343 Ffte_ ' ^
faculty recital 830 pm June 2 Schota-
^g Little Thtiter
lion group
for faculty, staff and HniBal women with
multiple roles noon every Friday Murphy
3334
on tf)e relationship between stress
•fNl dittatt and transcendental rneditation
as a pottlbfe therapeutic tool 8 pm June
\. NM auditorium
, CtatpaaMaR atd Caa( Iran
1-2 30 pm June 1- Boelter
for ntat yaar. UCLAs |MmMI „.^^ .
your^twptft. jioon Junt ^Jttrckhoff 117
May X International Student Center con^
ference room
— CIMBS ClaS. 8 10 pm tvtry Saturday
Inttrnational Student Cenir
-AainpMaii IfaiiipaiiMi AaaatMlaB.
Or Hilda kuptr will sptak. 4 pm |une 1
Haines 3IM
— tftlt BamralB. will hold endorsement
meetings noon-i pm June 1 Ackerman
3664
— Jtrtt MMiar. Oemocralic candidate for
ttit 27th Cdngressionai district will sptak
noon. June 1 Meyerhoft Park
f— aptiBil Aft lad IM CaMT, Caire
Spark of KPfK's the Sour Apple Tree will
sptak 8 pm June 1 Dickson 2168E
— ^almB aiM BkBH af Brtg Abiaa. 11
JiMt 1. Mtn's Gym 133
-Tit liMHy if Tftttaaadlai >■ MivaiaM
7 pm Junt 2. Buncbt 3116
-Vim VaMay InMMt a study of the
prehistoric cultuni toology of Peru 8 pm
June 2. Hamts 220
,, IKCTIBii j^: >
— Inli llpa LatftaiaCli*. mttts 3-5 pm
Mondays, funche 2178 and t30-11 am
THuPidaKi, Ackerman 24n
—^mtm Ipat CaanMI^, tf^ amnoon
today Murphy 1312
—•tart af Caalral. open to the public. 1-3
pm today Ackerman 3514
— Hiiiwii Mr Jtany CarMr.. 7 30 pm
tvery Wednesday Ackerman 2412
— Frtatli Ctavtrsatlta Irttp. 7 30 pm
•vtry Wtdntsday International Student
Center
featuring wine, cf
cing. 7 pm June 2 Buenos Ayrts raam.
Rec Center
and local volumeer positions are available
now through EXPO Ackerman A213 or call
825-0631
^-Cttaa«ir PrlMMIta |om OEGA as a
consumer mvestigator Visit kerckhoff 3t1
or call 825 2820 Volunteers dre also
e i"^ VMtMMm. OS isotropic and Taday'i AMMMMa
stiffened cylindrical shells. 34 30 pm. June Kaiha Yoga noon2 pm Women s Gym 200
^' ^r!y?!!Lyi . ^^^^ ^ Mrste: S-7 pm. Women s Smjh 2D0 Tennis
fod-w irLt.r 5? ^"■'■"" ^^ f^Smgles Tournament. 24 pm South
^5L.?w!l ^_ ^~'^5 Social Oance 2-3 pm WomenS
— «aa» Half and nmm people inttresttd Gym 200 .
1
ATTENTION PRE-HEALTH CARE STUDENTS
MAY 29 •*"'"•*'■'«— •-^rrril"-'^ 35MW PRIhlTS
2W Smfd'^ m
MEDICUS
Spring Picnic
Sunday May 30
Chatsworth Park
I
AM W«lcom«i Frw FoodI Transportation Prdvldad
Up In A-nt Now frmtz Hall
.^'
g^lJLPo
'^.
A natural choker
handcrafted to appeal
to your primitive instirnrts
Leather wood and bone
on a rawhide thong
For men or women.
S3.95
PPd.
U4 7R I-,
P O. Box 6734 Cdofado Springs. Colo 80934
Colorado^ra»id#nti add 3% a«tt» ^k Cpkj Spgt i»ti«»nta add
i ^ daf«¥afy Haiialauliyii guarantddd^full refund if
5%
I ratuf nad wtttiin 5 days O Omtk
J n BankAm^rtcard u Maalai
J Acct No,
I Signature
\ Umm^^^i^i^
\
Of monaygrdar
•
.Expires.
[
I
/
/
Z.P
ei ASSIFI E D
'if I
•nnounceffTMffits
LAST
Siii
Ser
(S4M dieceunt on both) Cell Tony
(Ann. Jfl
campus
announcements
f...
End thf„J3lMafier right on time!
Get your ASUCLA Lectute
Notee NOW Complete eete ol
notes are still avaHable at tt>e
Lecture Nolee Counter In the
ASUCLA Students Store, B
level. Ackerman Union.
complete
copying
service xerox
kerckhoff ]2\
82 50611
SPRING Ficnic. Sunday. May M et
Chelsworlb ^rk fr— foodtl For dlroc-
^ion« com* to A-639 Freni Moll Trons-
portollon provldod if nocosoory Spon
ee«ed by Itodlcus. AM wetcomot
11 M M»
r
PORTRAITS
tqken rtow
for Gmduafion
^al9 for oppo«nfrf»#nt
osuiia
mpws studio
ISO hffckhoh hai! b25 WTT »^7
open monffi 8 30 4 30
COMITATUS: MedlovelHene«eeenc*
ioumel ofters $60 priz* for best iretMele
i2S-1f70 Doodllno Doc 31.
(1 J 4)
HOW DOES A BRUIN
BEAfUDECORATE HIS
ROOM?
:With UCLA blankets, pen-
nants, clock, fielmet lamp
and radio, glassware, mugs.
bears— and sleeps in a UCLA
niteeL
Bearwear.
ASUCLA Students Store
Ackerman Union
church
tUMOAY
MAM: a:M. f%rm, 11:M
mm Cliapel (OsiNi ^Hi— i
iMO^e).
IChMT. Ser. M-^
wnrwa
972 . Nil
OPIrtiwaiiaesMwt (Oueliore)
«M^. Syn. - laMi. CMIv VWCA.
paid. tWillBH ■eleems. 472-
n
paraonal
mar-Lm
weiei e«fpeele Pmuii eew-
ISLlTo!:
• NieNea el da. eaa TrMcb- ,
P^reonel
rf^S?***** *•' •'ewn' Baiio telo
uJTf?. !!L?T* '••*** »l>on.orod by
UCl^ tludonte for Brown
«t MMt
DLJBlf end IIH-Meppy iw^ ,rom
aie roowwwiot m 202*'
-..I-— tfM2i)
■JE^HISTO^Hf Lf 8 Which •iiclT;,
Meraoroi? Sho . « walk on th« wii<|
r- 1 - ^•M2a>
JlJ^Jlij*^** •»• »««PPl«»t «up*r colo«-
••• lenmmn slupondous mo«t tanto««ic
end rum ftllod (-») 2l.l on Monday
wet brtng back torn* ftah lor wou OIC
Leiw. UCLA aunch
KABCM BoeuMlul birihdoy tor ono e«
»»• awooloal OG • Hi Carolina ftorbi
DaniM. tova WiNu
(•
•it Sharloch Hoiniea - Cortgraiuiafiona
t:ova Fraulain RP M« Joitrmi Ofhciol
ia Italtar^a «i C.nabret. Pufonta Faton
pnrvMl'
. s.u: (ON 20)
DEAR Brufn Im for Cl¥ll Mlglile.
Amartca and Bru.n Oaaliettiail Vole
Jackson for Praaident.
(• J 4)
IF VOU NEED SOaifcONE
TO TALK TO.
CAU US
HELPLINE
825- 7M6
JONf Of couraa weH taNi to you' Theniit
lor the congrada aruf soa you in Mia
hoimot neat aeeaon FftA • .. ^ «.
' <• M 88)
W 8 Neva a happy MHhdey en May 301h
Leva always Haniian. Hemjeii • ttalar
and Hartoia PS. Don't tenpil •^11"
-MM 28)
T.O.I.F.~8halia-a-lotf at iha Phi Eta
•l|i»»b - Alpha Lambda DoMe Squofa
Dence Woman* Gym •200. 7:30 10:80
pm.. Frtday May 2i Adm 81 00. $1.88
coupiee. Praa ratraahmanls ,^ ^ «..
18 M 38)
nCBECCA. Sura gled you ra hoia wNh
ma Not much longar to 90 9i—q> Seopt
I leva you. honay* Grag^ m m m\
LESLIE— Happy ItMf I'm leito
Nothing new. huh? Anyway fell Iha boat!
:' MM 184
aiAMTO. Themia fdr v, yoar of Hvbig and
lo»Mf. coring and ahering Leva ehaeye,
' <8M38)
DEAM raS: Geod luck on ftnela and
talia cava of your bodi Much io«a. Mee.
CUBCAKE— teen boo long, loving ,
ainea Kant Hen Happy Annlvaraaryff
Leva. Vour Beeleat BiMMy. May
(• M 38)
a.F MEMTZ:
. Tarry.'
yB-OeyleapMelMir
MM 28)
PAOOY MMfph> has peaaad away Pu-
neral aamteee. May 28«i at Koytua Lawn
MawwIalPit (8 M 38)
OAflYf
aey Sm
dnvara. Lowe, yoyr
(8M38)
va^^^M 10
WOMEN'S Waab 1878 Mlay 24-38 C«B
Woman a Meaeurca Cantor for mere
I)
LM.C.
2lataMaiaeytl'ae
Leae M yen 8 only yee • liax.M<
rv.o.) 18 M H)
hour. beH or full day For 84 SO hr
call T
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yenPd
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good deals
•EST ptxiaa any what a fr90 fiot daW-
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atudant discounta Oallvary lo 8:00.
478^8»». 2353 Waatwood
MOlit
fiRUIN TV A STEREO RENTALS
COLOR TVS
80< a day
$7.88/
BlaciL whHa T V • $7 50/ month
Can 275 1832
Nore Our
Itudvns «MM«
ancM arc aif Mwwa 10 UCLA I
curwwt W»f cards aoty J
for sale
Hundrads of Indoor 8 oul-
plants gro!wn by horticultural
Aaa^al Sundey^^O^ 2115 Lanmnglon
(1 Mock waat Bavarty Qlan A OlympiCl
(10 M 28)
WOMEN'S CI
It alull,
fN> M 28)
OOUBLB bod. 888 Meaaer iMrror. 838.
coffaa Mbla. and tables. couch-ABB.
racllwer. 8B8 8815 awtmnfi.
^<f W»|
MOVING SALE-Sofa and anncholr
and virtualhr unuaad UCLA pro-
aiuat sail Boai oHor 883-1088
(10 J 4)
CAAiP SITE
EQUIPMENT
It
AT OiaCOUNT PI«ICES
Tame Sleeping Bbge Baoiipacks
4489 VAN NUVS BLVO
BMEfHMN OAKS. CA. 81488
784-
POUR uaed 13 Inch
Urea (Great for Pintos and Vagas)
(10 J 2)
LAEATETTE
(10 1
I)
PIONEERfL-taO
III
Slaa t''i
$20 EacaMant
>M-838 Wry
SAMPa V-H
I Mhlne
472
(10 M 28)
iarsala
01,' »ng<a34 1883
(10 J 1)
18 PT Hobia cat. %mm4 epnatflpe
Marina slip availeMe pieo $13118.88
824 e024 or 545-4830
.Of -LI)
•KNB.
in
8188 477-3738.
produced ak IS $130-
(10 J 2)
MATTREtaaS ALL H€^
Siiva iip la 40S
PUN
NlAf ••«§ ft IS 00
THE MATTRESS STORE
m! i-*-?^*****' "' ' l!^ ****** •••*
LETAAPPEUR Equlpa akt boots alia
13''<fbrahd new No ImirMi $50 RK;k a«es
274-3137
(18 J 2)
HUMOfRTWASSER Preniod original
?^*^^^ ^Mmp numberad and signad
In acraan fliBb i ^ i^g^ quality gallary
174-3137
(10 J 2)
MOVING 8ela 8 Oanlah eeM $180.
•rnichair $36, bedroom sat $300 473-
(10 m 28J
17 BUNBIRO Oaaar Eaoeaeni a
loWy 478-7812
(10 M 28)
ExeHiahrely Ourai
ASUCLA Trader
thong sandals in a
burlap signature
bag
just $6.89
black with blue and
goltT-airipaa in the eoies. and
blua thof^gs You can uta the
stpipad bag for e baach carryall
ASUCLA aiudenM S^pre
aPORTBWEAR
a Meat, Acberiyian Union
7:4S-7:30; f 7:4S^:30 e 10-4
•25-7711
WOOQEN BerreN Ke«e. A
hatchcovars notling A rope, ftmby
cralaa A Aeaee. eld bernwood 831
#^M r%^%
«K>VtNQ
aofa in good
481-3371
(10M38)
WNeCMAKINO. brewbif iMppbli 8
agulpmant Select California WInea
Tha Orapa NiA. 8811 W 8Snd St. Weel-
^^ai» i^^^^^^^p» ^^^^w^'^^9 ^^9
(lOOlr)
MOVMM SALE-Oerrard 8L72B. baaa 8
SAypa MStBO Coot $188.
Taaia Meiea 810 each
MBMieSl-a.
830 SttngraybMe
* 815 473-anB. ^
(IBM IB)
STEREO ceMpenenIa: Bludenldla-
bri
VeNey 881-8848. 881-2083
(lOOlr)
as ImttrymmnT
Tifbee «eji nensi
MKXUJkM
coBVws sod aa
H^ 45 05ffl|^
for sala
OirMPUS OM 1 a» 88 nwi ia
tn4m
LAST Manee be4eM eeRoare.avt $188
Mecaunl en Bnionnica 3 or yeat beeba
(8488 Meceunt on both) Cell Te«f.i
*■*** (10 J 4)
coun
Muot eel
(10 J 4)
73HONDACB ~
aitrss Super c<
t'y ;1788 80 avanlnga or
45Mr
M0J^»
ATTENTION Mo«tamaliars For ae»e
Nagra III and Mifcas Call mornings
Can Lindar (213) 442-0085
(18 J 41
Tl 8P 50 A. SR $1 A. 811 52 SR 88. ale
HP Creig Corvus Noauo
Seny. Panaaonic. Senye
TslapbewB anawaring Mscblwas
11888 Santa Monica Bivd . W.L.A.
Rf ES ELECTRONICS
Cea 473-2880 for best pncas
TWO asceaant OnatMel rugs (alMMi.
maur) cheep Brought psraeneati freni
Alghanislan 474-0743
(10 J 4)
LARQE Baab wHh 7 d
$18 bergain Can Todd
al477
1 lor aela
1882
(18 M 28) .
POR SALE Henrtc RyM bei
Pre K model LOm new $175
•d Mped.
383-8812
(18 J 3)
188cm KNEISSL MC
Orend Pni ttndinBe
attm 481-4344.
1800
Navada
n. 875 ««»/
MA .t'%\
3 RliCE LmMMb dryp
ZH cynMaN - god^ M
828-4340. 8 pm.
n eel
rw^nei, M
«. 8888J8.
CIS J 3)
DRESBER 838. db«big
M gal aquanum m/ ad
lai.
kera $388
Can 381-8718 a
(1« J I)
ffraa
BRITANNICA 8 pr gvei
"By mer opN leiiy 888-
N beebb. Piee
ie end Mnwa
Ml 1 Al
madium ebw c oclMppp
geed heme. 388-3188.
lidep 18 year
Bes WM pey
(11 M 38)
^wt w^^aer nea etemos
bdd. aN weobe
• Vary lovbiB.
niM38)
opportunitiaa
SANTA Mewlei Corp hea
meMaMly availabia for UCLA
lo arorb b« eer eRIUi ler a mtm.
of 3 hm ftton. Biru fri beginning $;18
»m Poaltlofta wHI last thru and ef
9umm»r and era en a C4
PieeenBy mipleiiil UC
egbig 813 JB per hr if yeu ase
(18
r.
e
e-
e
e
a
^aeeaeeaaeeeeeee
Cuttf 9f Pmttfk Artt
k
mmofm imi
for tBM 3 act plays
(roMaopafiioaii
hmttmd »chotmr9htp9 arm mifmtlmbtm
m me toHtmtftg moekahop*
ACTING
OIRECTINQ
PLAYWRITING
DANCa
CAU. US AT
•37. jail
(18 MSB)
cotiijinm>
I
I
I
i.
f
i
I
I
I'.
/'"W*
CL ASSI Fl ED A D
h subjects hipwfitod
MewMrted
JJIJ. Plf U.M ^poiniwKnt call t2f-
r*JA*"*" ••«•••< 1 ^ Monday
••rw Fhtfay. ■■pimg i/ti/yt.
(14 J 2)
UAGCNTI
lora« lypM •«
!^«off«r«d
iCMOfforMl
ilr««l. Mafi«9«fn«nl. CI«HmI A
CAaUALLV (M ttmOUtLV DATIiia
COHAjmNO. eWGAOCD. AMD MAM-
T^ EM^OVMC»rr AOCNCY
, aHMhr iAMN $1 M/Pf n.
•Oy «.Ut FEEDBACK Com* TOOI-
TNIR mnynmm 10-f WMlMaM, Mooiii
FRAMz Azs-aoat.
(14 M 2t)
• M. 3M-4197
1M1
J =
*^* Ji'^^ ^«ni-«i. CUM. your
(If J 3)
gf!^**^ •«co»MM»^4i, Ham* 6n«
Cm 271. 7SM
(If ^9)
f
•Ut drl««f
(If J 4)
•ALES
*;;^ommmmbmmm^l„0tt^omo9Sm
-$1J0llr..ff2.ll
■PpaiturWfy tor ■Pwm •nmmUm
(If J 4)
ni^ ■■■■- iMT your ^
i^ Wm purchM* (chMB) mn^ (
•••-•iti.iao-aiu. "•^'■^'
»<^ • 0%
■Mr. I'm 31
•Tt-TSil
(12 J 2)
ti^^ilS ^^ ^Helping omor,
f5-$A0/ month for Blood Platma
HYLAND DONOR CENTER
lOai Gayloy Awm, WwtwoocJ
47i-0051
|ito4-f21« a «
iani* lor tio
WANT$$$?
We can gtwa yoo monay variety, and
flexibility durmg the summer montht
by taking our tamporary aMignments
throughout the WLA area If yoo are
i. Iir**! »«CRETARY. ACCTIMO
SK^^!!V ^>^"ATOR. KEYPUNCH
OPERATOR. WAREHOUSEMAN* m
•«y«tW«f alae...We nood YOU! Come
• n A register today* No teas' Name your
days* Paid holidays' We naod you now'
^^^ v\r Mudanis IntaroolBd In ^^^i^^^
lS00-f4O0 par wIl. part ttme Plpi
fcoiir.no*. A a4M laad lo partoct (
loft. For appl.
fUS. i2t-327t.
Mf CONOfftG CNGINHIIINQ
CLASSCS
NOVICE-MUSICIAN PRODUCER
PROGRAMMED TO .MPART SKILLS
YOU NEED TO WORK IN THE
RECORDING INDUSTRIES
RECORDS-VIDEO-FILM-
BROAOCASTING
BASIC ADVANCED IN STUDIO
LECTURES
OOLO A GRAMMY AWARD WINNER
BILL LAZBRUt. INST.
LIMITED ENROLLMENT 4 MORE
IMP0..7it.74M OR 7t2-Jt22 '
MOST Amp aZ
(
Wwt L A •
THE BOOYMCM
OuaMty Aula
Rappir A ~
47
• A ter«if n ca#*
i^ap •»««•• Heal. I
W— t LA I
1111.
(IfOir)
(If M 99\
4f1-1Bt1.
(If J 2)
^•A^Pf Of
lltlOWNiMfoi
) 477-M
(12 0lrt
(11 M 2B)
MEVCRLY NMa 1^mi'» fcA^i— «.^««— » -^
(12 Qm
EARN ff<B^pipiiii and c<
(ColumMp CoMpfp. Mo.) M you(
Calif for ttia anMio. lumimi
only. Underclaaaman walcoma. Call
479-090%.
(If J 4)
WBI lo run summar camp. Pool
l7i/«* plus roomaitf '
AuloLlfe-Homeowners and Rontol
InaMrance Village Office Wornor
RaPlneeii iioo "^Tnii.. BoMa lASi
2_ mom
MCDICAL SCHOOLS AWIOAO
Having admissions probloms for
medical school'^
WE CAN HELP YOU?
For information, wrtia ta
Miilcil SiMddim AfciwX
§43 Domoy Avd.
CWtfMdo Park, Npw Jdrppy QTtIB
HYPNOSIS and ,, _^
Indlvlduala. In-oNlca'or mall orda7
MJPM^ pNaaa. JoRn (SJL, MA.) 47S-
(IBONr)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
LIGHTHOUSE NWUIUNCE 8BRVICE
-^--lltl
AUTO liia«ifi
H rataa fpr
7270. •70-f 7t3 pc 4S7-7S7S. \
dSOlr)
loot
'If .1 9\
ORtVER-COUNSELOR mtmam doy
e«wip It yr«. piua laHli owit aMMon
rS?.!L*l ^•••••••' ••" Mon-FfI
f 12f/wli. Cal 24A-1S4A pep.
(If J 2)
help wanted
1WO Such IP, Mb MpyBia Con^ your
M-rtShm7day Wp nam. caK Joe Bock.
73f-0B71.
nfM2tl
ARGENTINE student couple naeda
molHof halpar. May aaofionoa for room
•«* board mmmTmrntoi
wing pool/lannla. Callt-10
4A7.214a.
(If J 4)
I^ARN die art af aaMnf Itom Bia aMrl
Good money-part time salary plus
bonua. A21-tS41.
.-_ (If J 4)
•^frvicas offarad
!!?yg/Apl iMIar madL Ipr 2^
Wsalwopd fOp. for 29 yi». Mr. FNp
t127.
fprpvor. T«M^ _____
', 23.00 hr Good driving mcord
' 472-7751
(If J 4)
RREONANCY ippt
pdMRHBnB MiB MrBi control
47».
(If M 20)
^bd.. Amy
/tT «•
LOST
let
»rplSpnk Graat aantlmentpl
(17 J f
tniv#l
•ini Spturdayi Pico-
. 119 J 41
APARTMENT mpnagar couple, eaporl-
*y**^ Rd*<V. mfarancoa. 32 unNa, Aw^
"HR^ loMfc UCLA 1 bwlroom and •Ma-
ry 471-0203 7 10 am.
(If J 4)
LEPHAN
Moving
•S7.2146
jApartments Offices
iProfasaionoi Sarvicat for Pppnutt
EARN oalm lilonoyB OfMca
Worli en Inl
a low days, a
Call for appolnt-
WBalilre Blvd..
(If J 2)
WANTED AHor m modi A angNali prop
tor QMAT call after 7«aaiidayrm2044
- , (If m m
ili!?*^^* ••"* "R •• woo* /wA
J^J^J««Omw Supply Co needs fuN
Spdrt ttme help lo aaO Heme. Evprypne
2? "^'^ islephone. We puprpiUpa
f4/hr Draw sgalnal M caaiiidaalafia
J[®"R«»'*«»»ce neceaaary Call Mr
nofara 000-0001. 0-2.
(If J 4)
UMMER
JOBS
Here s a partial Mat of summer |obs
IVJ'f^** "o* Camp counaolors.
iTJlirr **•*•?• •••^'^ ■wlmmln^moj;
I furniture, inetructors. porA cars, as
^O BBS COMPLSTI LIST.
STUDENTS &
TEACHERS
WELCOME AT
KELLY GIRL!
Men and Women: Earn
extra money during summer
break while enjoying a
variety of temporary assign-
ments We provide tempo-
rary jobs for all clerical
and/Of industrial skills.
^WORK WHEN YOU
WANT, AS OFTEN AS
YOU WANT. *YOU
DONT PAY US - WE
PAY YOU!
Control Cantor of Hollywood. f231
t^fywood BNd. Sidla f13. "nfipaij
401-4021 ■■■■■-
— ^tfOBI
LA *ORANQE.CRATES*
STUDENT SUMMER
STORAGE
EjipdrlMKrpd a Inaufdd.
FfPdPlck:i«SRdtum.
FOR INFO CALL
474-4S0S
JOVING^.IP.^,,., ,p.,,^.„„
••'••••• Ldrva/smoll loAs Local a «
'14 Olrl
MOVING? Apartment apoelpllpt to
•tudents and huge truck f If.OB/hr
2 yoorp eapertonop. 074-0001.
____^^ (1iJ2)
VW REPAIRS
"r^ • "••fl. S40 BidRp foBnp. fl2f
•oNe lob. Wrr ^^* ' *
cftamca. only
NEW STUDENT TOURS
JAPAN
SWeelcB
June 2e>Jiify 16, 1976
July 17-AuguBt 6, 1676
at EXPO
S2S-0S31 or A-219
(IS J 4)
J^JTER- Raaaarcl^. p^o. oRara halp
-^ -dof-bonavloraf ' ^
Jay 4f 0-4007
ZiirlpA. No«
»11^(diya»r47iriSlT (^ ^ SI
(If J 4)
•••ng Rlppad Off OR
Aulo iwoufwoo?
i«
-L
ARROW INSURANCE
NATIONAL ..,, _ „^ ^
the Barrlnoton Plata. W.L.A 11744
Wllahlre - 477-0020. 070-2207 WNIi
•nore than 20 yrs eaporlonca. Holp
to •tudy-rpioln-rolas-sloop. Boo dJr
lalophone VaNow Pofos ad Spoclal
(10OA1
RREOROASiMCT
rafo«y have
<«a t 9%
(22 0lr|
t
(IS J 2)
VTON EXPRESS
MOVERS^
HduttM
BLBCTROLYSIS: Unwanlod faolal A
Bodv hair both^h^h^ih t^^m^^^^ a^^^^
•••• "••JRo^- 'roe conaultallon. Ma.
asocla/^
A^t Mm EXPOi
-tan
THE JOB
Call us 8-5:30 p.m. daily or
9 a.m. - 1 p m. Saturdays
KELLY SERVICES INC I ^
M your
Illy unlimited
(IS J t)
SSACH ORIBNTEU DAY
RABBEMQIR VAN. fMf BNiSWU LL.i.,
CHILDREN AND OUTDOORS 472-
nSMSB)
Fullerton 714-879-9762
Long Beach 213-432^791
l-os AngeiBB 213-
BevBrty Blvd 686-6750
Wilohrre Blvd 381-7951
MontBbello 213-724-6910 /
Newport BBBCh 714^633-1441
Orange 714-547-9535
Pm9m69nB 213-792^176
TorrsncB 213-542-1569
Van Nuys 213-763-2530
WsstrhealBi 213-645-0750
Westwood 213-477-3661
Whittier 213-666-0447
•puBl opportunity employer
(10 Olr)
AUTO INSURANCE
••OTORCYCLI INSURANCE
Rofyooit . . . Tbb M%h?
LOdrllOReMjf ^Byyiipfiii
STUOENT 0I6COUMT6
I »— ■«» . . . AdHipr iUw
(312»
B*««l LA Ca S0Q24
»?1/ (212) 477-1 1S2
TOC CHARTER FUOHTS
TO EUROPE
(l-oii of Omere)
TOC
L4Pia3 ^1A-7/ia ^m
ttff 0^104«t 7
BOlM AOA-BlOr S
Olitn A^tt4^0i 2
1 MM. m^ ,— ^^
OP«n Alao court rontol. Brentwood
»« 472-7BSS. ^^
f10Olr«
Cif Qir)
-ti
SALLBTrPiM way to Boaiity. 12SS
W«4SiWd|i^a»d UMv. rWCA. f74 NB-
ftl.
2 or
^•^ Borata. Olatlnttfiahad
■oahar. SB1-SBBB.
(IS
altbunatrw m lob an.
(1SOA1
■S-1B12 ar Prod 4SB.144S.
(ISOAI
RIDING LESSOM
7/OA^IO
7/IO-A^IO
7/11.7/2i
y/1A-WSS
'^17^10
ITt
(If Olr)
CnalB. 7BS-01f1 ar 4
CH ^ 2) B •
-ttIA
J>«Pd4<t repulrod par
la
i ►,
•v.ri
,f^.
etASSIFIEDTiD
trav#l
travel
travsl
ASUCLA Travel Service
die OMLVaMalM
UCLA Charter PWfht Sarvlaa
Ifo Rel IBR iRlo 10 book a Oionor
In
for
up to Bid dola ol
LAX-Amslefdam-LAX
• OopBrtURA 0^
11C75
12C75
1SC75
1SC7S
22C76
23C76
27C7S
30C7^
Juno 21
Jur>d 21
Juno 26
Juno 29
Julys
July 5
Julys
July 19
11
12
5
10
8
9
4
4
uS
$429
$466
$496
$4^
$426
UCLA EUROPE
CHARTER
SPECIALS
0/10-0/00
LA-BRUSSELS 0/10-S/Of
LA-PARIS-LA 9/i
RLUS...PRANICFURT. ZURICH
HAWAII . . .
LA.HOMOLU.U lies on*
LA-HOI)IOLULU SMt Mw «
Kfu( and Maui aiM
ilEXICO...
MAZATLAN air A todg fr ftSSJO
NEW YORK...
1.2.3 wM roundtrip on TWA fr flOO.Or
PLUS Car RorHola LadoRie...Si1t
ratl/Eurall pRAadt.Accomoda-
tlona. ..Studdnt FUghts within
Europd/Aald...lnldrndtiooal Stu
dant 1.0. Cdfdo....
H.V MO o«w 1000 m^m to ehoow lof Kufopi
,umm«f of 70 • aempMtf louf* • mn&f uxth*
tra««4 PMtiagM • Onant antf Mdtfi* Eaat iMctiaowf
lEf TRAVEL. COUNSELING!
ASK US FOR ANYTHINQ YOC
want to know about
AVEU
<-TRA/a SEF?VICE
Utdon A-21S (wtth EXPO)
••onday - Friday 10:00-4:00
1221
LONDON tram LA. Reeerved eaat McAot
One woy 1200.00 Penny RIngwood At
074-7700 daya/05A-4070 evet
(22 J 2)
CHARTERS and vacation packagoa
on Pan Am 747 la
-S.
(22QNI
ASUCLA
Travel Servic
ONLY OFFICIAL UC
Charter Flight Service
Over 1000 flights to Europe thts
rnmer • Discounted Studeni
•^ 's to Europe • Charters tc
on car ;,_
and leases •
'•1 • Campjng Tours • Unreg»
• d Student Tours • Rail
•. • Ply dnve European ar-
'^ - ■ • M>r>i Tours • Hotel
- on • Hostel Informa-
-1 • (nte'- ir — n.r ^♦..'if.nt ID
arijs • Fff nq
EXPO Trav.
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING
ASOCIA^
! I CHARTERS
I I Over 300 flight* i tf«i«« »«
I
FSCAPE SEE THE WORLD
2 ie2i
I
c*
«S
ti
4« |B?n?^
4 410
04 r/OMria T 0m
t dC. I
ISC
A a ♦
TOURS A TRAVEL
Spring Summer A Fall Charter*
>.ur>don
Shannor^
Pant
Mad'ir
-Frenii ,
Bruaaeit
Zurich
Roundtrip trom S209 00
MaM«ii -r,rt N»w York
. »'om 11 _
07
CN 7/14-0^14
iJ
JK 7^17-0/12
OR 7/17.^20
ffOi-Of^
T^mitmtm
41t
^^ LAI- tU
HAWAIfTAjtLi."
NYC ^ 2 3 weeks
Contact ASTrA te« e«Or
■Nth dapariura* from L A
4ewveni.
>*e«n|iat
ISC also 'una locai mrm% lourt
t>y car and bus at minimum coa!
•n»o'mallor>
9 6 Daily
• •••_• mm m §
l^''
(^C*^.\»'
\^
e^r^
r*^
0*^v«2
10 Otner thghit
Sen Franctaco
^m 9\M\ D c
I '•outfe as day a#«nee tooohMtg
:t to 20% incfoeaa
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL. bMicaaat traa^oOi
VOUTH. Eufopa 1-yr tromOOtr
APEX V2-46 aOdavadv Oeok Euf tromOMO
TAHITI SUPER DEAL ur*.
OMOCM NOW
TMAIN A FCMNV TICKCTS. CAHS.
CAMPCM MENTALft, MAILPAtSCSl
mrm A -etmo^c Air rruocirr
CHAMTmS
SPECIAL RIVER OFFER
•/?iA/at LAO VCQA8 COLOMAOO PHVCM
HAFTING Of«AMO CANYON inci 3 fulaa
3 day* rafting w/gaar A maela dtnnar
all rranapoftation Mg^^vaMBA tMi
ITOURS
jAMAtCA 0 deya not
ITALY IS day* toot
LON PAA AMO IS days «00|
Mexico • aava my
HAMAii • aaya lat?
OICCNTfNNiAi S days f^OO
NOW. VOAK CITY t day* -OOOi
Many fOiers log A short kMapei A Oaluaa
helBls. ears
KtA FAtE
Instant aasatoaNows. T«cka« OaMvary
0«*fN M-F ttf-« ALL YEAM
AomHcmi Itiiioat Trvool AoooclatiM
•0024.
\v^<^
>**:o*^
LOWEST FARES
la andt
Fly to
for almoat
v^V
i
Eaat
•OOK NOW T.G.C FLIGHTS
'CALL
EURASIA TOUNS N TRAVELS
274-t9i1
ISC
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT
I
I
I
INC Tt-
)WMUN»T
A««nua
CHCAFft
12% M^laF):
list;
SIM: TwNiB tiai
tm. Canary
I17S; MMHlali tiOO; AMana $100; CaKa
rtsa; Ciala 0210(
,i% rrifl
,'^^'tnj.rn uaiiiornia t*; m
ii ... , .t too 00
dsni rata rvon studant ratos a*aiiar>ir
•ranapo nation ttghr
s snacks mnH lodging
Ou' goal It to create tin ir^ferculturai
- "" a '•ta«a4 triantji^
•_ -a and lo do thia •: a
>mum coat to you
esjua.
N.TX!. StOS.
ooi^Mifrai
LAST Chance to book'
ALSO ANNOUMCtNO OUM NEW
ACAOCMIC VCAA FLIOHTSU
tOTO-FT.'OaaiBMa A LAyPeMi
IMoniOM ■!•■■■■ §^^t^^
1^^ «©• • 0410 Jurw 17
'^^^ to 14 tf JunaJB
•<a2/7a-a/ti/T7 § latt jmyja
C I E E STUDENT TRAVEL (477-2000)
J^'Mo^ss^ lui w.
OSOOD
#»!• ««Srt
•UMMCN CHAMTCilS
^.^^^ 2 TO 12 WEEKS
ONE-WAY FLIOMTS IN EUROPE
. AVAILABLE
OAV^ SSS.7SS1 EVES Sas^72S
rid— offffd
RIOEfIS
June lOItt
F««« virpanaaa Co« lOHhy
704-7iia.,
(20 J 4)
W^JD C leavtnf June 12 AFlar 0-
(Sf J 2)
wanlatf aM or part way Sliare
<StJ4)
*Heaf for aiy car la
y^'J' Ffl >^00 Laatring J«Nia loW;
I)
(SO M 2S)
tutoring^
HATN
A. OraO.
r94CHr)
FRENCH TirtcfUit.
CHINESE Masi^na Raiii»t nmH^
•••ofcar, a>att-aaparlgaaiS wtfli CaM
••rnia Cra#efitlal. In«vl#ual. aaMN
-""^^ — !???: ^(24oih
•■■i/raali aiaala. Vowr ^imamliu. i
Ooore. SumiMr leaaa«M Im^ pmt—n
s prtaa. fm liwIaaaiitfaMl A ^^^^^^^^
J 4)
IS-1740
fS4 J4)
LSAT out MCAT
all auiftfecia Rea
0474.
T
ralaa A.
1720 Waal-
470-0102. fSSIO Venice 027
«*4 r>Sr%
0
In^Hrl^wal. email Ofu^ lnatnsctl«ii.
(24 0ir)
STYLES Imm Jay
Itnl
124 oin
JECTS WRtTlNQ iOfTMa ■■
*yp«n9
1t«»-1SE|
2SS-«ytt«r
• a«
MM SELECTRIC Typlnf. Ba«SoilMS.
' ' -m Mnda. iiiifaii^ - »>— ■
Mpfl..«rLA201
I4|
Term
caeaelta IranacrlMnf . Saparlanaa^.
VaOay OSS- 7970.
ISO J 41
27S-I
(20 J 4)
meoi 7io
&»
XEROX 2'^C
niian kinkos ryzr^r/
'Mf ' « 'Ml
FROFESSfONAL arrflar mm „..
Bn«Oa»i lUCiA) aOO tope aM a«l
aN. Oaac 20 vaan
(SSOlf)
!L^^ 7y.F*nt. edHInf tfi«|iah fra4
~ apaclaHy Term papafa
ISM 0207472'
(20 OTR)
Lafal Sacratory. iSaar ao
Nnpva. 47S-
mm
aaayraN/pNii ap. SaMvai
rf/fH^mmm
OSJOI
Tarai
Tor
, ale SlMJiiit
(EJL Bii«SNi).
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
SOITSMMa
In
LAW SCHOOL
TEST MIPARATION
lOlar JMly 24
Taal.
-OMAT caMraa
iiOy lOiaai
•SFttO Rf ADiNQ cewraa Oaflna
FROFSSSIONAL COLLSQt TVRtMO
SFSCIALIST
Term paR^ra. TIseele. Oleaerfatlena
• lar
3BMaa. oi^P' rmf
271-2tl4 Tim
I
!l-;
'
CLASSIFIED >ID
typh»9
OIW 47t-1747(tfcy«) or 0I7-St2«
7M/pg i»M t«l#ctrlc M»#
WHahtr* P«Hitng Jotvnm IM
(2f Olr.)
mULV Vourv Typing
Fast, accurst* typing
latlars. L«w raiss
1712
m J4)
KNFeCT PAOES by Pr<
Uah grail, w/ 12 yrt. aapcflMisa II
et aiboaa lypt styi* SS»-
fM J4t
JOt Applicanis: AMtawatlc laMart aw
efiaapsr. qu«cli«r. mnd •liminat* typot.
Pauley T»chn»cal Typmg tarvtca. WLA.
477.6M6 _
^ (28 J. 41
PMOFEStlOMAL WRITING. EOITINQ.
INDEXING RESEARCH BOOKS
JOURNAL ARTICLES DISSERTA-
TIONS PROPOSALS JAMES WINTER-
FIELD WEST HOLLYWOOD 321-MOt
OS •f 3)
- ' ' ..
TYPING Raporta. lanm papart, thaaat.
or whalavar Fast and accurala. tSi-
37i0ori2>-1200. ,,5 , ,^
lOITH - IBM. Tana papaf*, Upaaaa,
distartationt. raaumaa. latfara Edit
•palling/ grammar Moat conadantkHM,
Mat. accurala 933-1747
(2S otrl
' tPCEpy ., accurpta IBM typlat - r—.
ionaMa rata* Alao Profaaatonal Script
and^Thaala Typing. Call Donna 392-
' ./LASH Fingart Sacratarial Sarvica
Eicailant work. Prompt attantlon,
pick-up S dal. If naadad 822-3ttS/
474.figS.
(25 J4>
EXPERIENCED, typlat Papara. thasaa.
diaaartatlont Accurala Oapandabia.
Call Cynlhia tSt-OSM r2« J 4»
PWOFESSIONAL Typing. IBM SalacWe.
aducatlonal. aclantlflc. olhar Don't
wait, call bafora 10am. aftar 4pm. JSS-
"^ <»o.o
FMCE adittng grammar/ ipaWng. EngSah
graduate with maatara. Elactric Raa-
aertabla Papar*. thaaaa. manuachpto.
Allca5«»-f717 ,« ^ .
^ ;^ (25 Qtr>
HHITH C DtMCRTATlONS, THESES^
STATISTICAL. FAST. DEPENDABLE.
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK MANY TYPE
•TYLlt. M.443S. ,„ ^,
27S-03iS or 27S-S471
Jt2&i)IO
TVMNO at homa. IBM Ea
rMton. Naai and accurala
1S05.
(29 0tr)
TYPING by LIZ - IBM SELECTRIC II.
CHOICE TYPE FACE Tarm Papars.
Thaaaa. Manuscripts. Flald Biyilaa,
Editing. SCREENPLAY SPECIALIST
(naar Grimib Park) 962 1049
(25 J 2)
TVPMQ. La« Caaay da N Tarm papara.
thaaaa, diaaartatlona. ale. Call 394-
7SS7 lor fraa ■■MwaM. ,-. ,^,
(29 Otr)
TYPING/adMng-Siaaa. tarm psB*^. •te
Low NMaa. Naar campua. H-A. Jouma-
HiRi. Can 47S-1137. ,^ . ^.
;_ (25 J 4)
RUTH:
-is
^iK Otr>
apte furnished
ONE badroom aparlmant (kltchanatla).
S210i» and up Includas gas. walar.
M adulla. 477 3797
(29M29t
QUEST iMuaa tumlahad TV.,
utartalls. MM Jurta to and Auguat. $145
Including utlHtlas 5 min UCLA 5 mm
la baach 475-5332, 475-9119 anyllma.
SUBLET appclouB singia, Juna. Sapl.
9200 includas pool. utNNIaa. walk UCLA
BVQL/Wllahirs 27t- 9238. iSS- 1391
(MJ4)
Ratas Furnlattad ilmli wall
^to UCLA $200 tncludaa pod. uttMMaa.
BVGLyWIIaMra 279-9298. 8iS-1391
(as J 4)
FUBNUMED I
UCLA. QaiMa
15. SaS. 377
2b«Bi
C
4)
LUXURIOUS 3 badroom _.
•aaks Chrtsllan roommatas for
SS7 00 929-4340
(3SJ3)
909 QAYLEY. across from Dykslra.
473.
11
(asj4)
fit» ftimished
SSaBnanw.i
laundry ■ Ona cfWId N
Fraaway andLa
WALK TO UCLA
BpRBioua Bachdiors Singlaa
1 A 2 BadroBm Apts
Towar Apartmania 477-99S3
niB41 Sirathmora Pod. alavators
;urity garaoa Alao w^th
;iAL BUMMB NATES
^alrTarvBe* 479-7
540 Olanrook • 649 Undfair
47S-4BS-610-516 LdnBl9lr 477
FUBNISHED/Unfurnlabad bacbalor
$140 SInglas $195. Pool. Haart of
Waalwood 10924 LliidfcilQuli 475<9SS4
(29 <^>
B^NWMER Ralas Spacious singlaa.
15 2 badrooms Larga courtyard
952 Vataran Ava. No WllaMra. 479-
Avallabia 9 1 ,^ ^
(29 Otr.)
MINUTES from UCLAt SInglas. fur
niahad ona badraom, luaury -conva
nianca - raasonabia prica 2901 So
Sapulvada 479-2120
(29 Olr,
unfurnished
'• •
LOWER Duplav 3 larga badrooms •
2 balfts. $375 Avallabia July 1 931-2119.
(27 J 4)
WALK TO UCLAI Bant pMaaant . ^
S200 Indd. uWHIas. Avallabia Juna 19
C...47>-7M« ^,,,
1 BEDROOM, stova, raf old Vanica
cfiorm. No pals, nawly paintad nmmr
baoeh $196 479-9902
SANTA Monica, tlw^i - $175 2 bad-
room - $310-4ip. Pool, naar baocb. 3*
iMdroom lownliouaa $3S0. Waat Loa
Angalas. SIngIa $175. Two badroom
(huga) $350. 474-7477.
(27 J 4)
$350 PROFESSIONAL Prafarrad Col-
Mgs Ilka 1 l>adroom aparlmant. Wood-
burning firaplaca. Saavlaw sundack
charm. Slova and rafrlgarator Utmtloa.
Oulol. 393-9979. S.M.
(27 J 4)
lwnKi>.<.**>Mi
aptSa to share
2 MALE Jowlab studants naad rdommola
for aummar. Apt. WLA Araa. 473-1 7SS.
(2SJ4)
OWN foofii,
•lati.
I)
FEMALE roonwnala for
tumlahad: own room
$100/ mo; 473-9015.
lo campua;
(2SM2S)
FEMALE ahara 2 badroom apt
Oaks. Laundry facll naar busllna.
$97.50 avas. 70S-4972 Days 799-7311.
(as J 2)
FEMALE roommolas naadad to
3 badroom apt. w/flraplaca. H9mr
marliat/ac»K>ol $97.50. 929-4002.
(29 J 2)
JEWISH famala looking for
aummar apt Prtvala room/bL
474-1531. Evanlnga 479-1910.
for
(29 J 2)
LARGE faatHonabla duplai Flraplaoa.
living, dining, kllchan. own room, 477-
3255. 930 Valaran $155.00 to $225.00
(29 J 2)
NEED 2 lo afuira own boBroom In luxury
apt furnlahad. waatwood momlnfM'
waakanda 477-4990 M-F aftar 9 pm
272-9523 Jon.
MALE roofMMMa ahara luaury
loom apt. WLA $1S9.00:Pralar grad atu-
dant. Bruca 9'M B91S. 79S-BB44.
(3SM28)
FEMALE Boommola naadad for baautl-
ful Brantwood apartmant-own
pool. 2 atory. caN Judy 472-4771
(29 J 4)
FEMALE lo
niahad apt $12230 Non-amokar pro-
torrad. Call Karla. 279-9924
(2SJ3)
for
Fully
19 ddRiiiM. $150/nw. ♦
Juna 30. 41
J»)
^WVATl hir«« rm lo aarloua atuBant
Buplas/own phona/Bdcli Booi^
»r buaaa. itS-1539. 199 iWi
. <ISM38)
FEMALE
boRBh S.
Sb.ni.
tn nm $130 inci udl
'., S/19
J 4)
■hora 2 bsBroom 2 both hir>
Wlishira S BunBy. SlSt^
(aSMSS)
apts, to share
unfurnlahad $97 90/mo Santa
10 pm
yOUmO prolaaalunal
ahara apt./houM
prolafobia S.M./
wanta lo
Unda 939-
(2SJ4)
BOOMMATE wanloB 1
rooht larga 2 BaBroa
apt. tumlahad. utNHloa Inc 92S-9012
(29 J 4)
FEMALE, o«Mi loom $125 BranI
naor buaaa, mmrkmt» non amokar
pro1|arrad 925-1725. 279-1901 Days
(29 J 4)
MALE roOBIRiala for tunlahad 2 br/:
apt with mad studant Dtahwaahar.
patio, parking $150. mo 929-9747
(29 J 4)
SUMMER 2 badraam. 2 bath Atr con-
ditioning Walk to UCLA Vataran 5
Qaylay $150/mo 473 1353 -^
/9a .J A\
STUDENT mothar w/\
wamm to ahara apt./raaponaltHllty Lucy,
(29 J 3)
for sublease
FUBNIBHeO
badroom flat In b^Mi
biSJI. $179.
(29 J 41
FUBNIBHED 2 badroom oportmont.
Wodhvood. f9mml9 Own ream. Wmtt.
%/m ^ 9/15 $110 Evanlnga 474-30B4.
«|J4)
1 BEDROOM pool, $210/mo Gas, walar,
parking lrM:ludad. avail, Juff«a 15th -
/97M>a» Sopt. 7. 477-2113
iaSJ4)
LARGE furrvlshad 2 bdrm. dining room.
12th 5 Montana Juna 25-Sapt. 20.
$290 451-3179 .-.*.**.
(2t^2t>
OCEAN Park
room ruNy tumlahad Irnrludlng kitchan,
RBBop wlaw, aavan blocks baach.
(ssMas)
Brantwood Avail S-19 $200/month
82S-7S42 altar 4. (29 M 2S)
SUBLET room bi
Baach tor August
avanlogs 451-96S0.
6
29 J 2)
BUMMER SUBLET • Juna 15-Bapl. 1.
Bonia Monica. 3 bdrm. patio, tumlahad.
^^aufmmwn. «o« arao. ^^ j ^^
HOUSE. 3
room. $275/
baach 2
20 • SapL 20.
-(2tJ»)
.Ak.
1-hadroom. IB
^us. Pool, ^atlo $206 plus utIIHIos.
9/25-0/30. 477-9S4i.
JULY, Aug. Brantwood 3
$490 mo Small chlldran
fumHura $lbO. 472
auMai 3
Fanoad yard. 2 fi
iBIa Juna 1. 937-9790. 926-llfl
(29 J 4)
(29 J 4)
CtTTE furnlahad bachalor on
5/21 -A/ 13, fi130.004fiasl^la) ulUttloo^
(29 J 4)
LOVBLY hoMoa M BM. 2
Ban 450-2229.
19. Big gar-
(29 J 4)
house for rent
COZY 1 BCOROOAfl HOUSE
$175- udimas.. Tha houaa la cewiplslaly
furnlahad and locatad 4 Modin from
Vanica Baach Good naighborhood.
cloaa lo bua and ihapplm aroa^.Fanca
yard, acraanad poagll. oavpoM, jiapii
Chlldran. do«a. cola, OK. To ronl or
lot (or Juna 15) la opproal-
Conlacl Ma (Doaa Eogia) NOW at
1-714-797-9791 (Burtnf Bh
CaN aaiact If you naod to)
213 399 7310 - or - 213-271-91
HOUSE on SM Baach lor rant. CoH
mjt)
house for recrt
Aflar 7:39
Mala aludanU or family
1.474 2390. <1SJ4>
MANHATTAN Baach. 2
vecv atf^HsA
5 - 19. S48S or July 10
U. $1900 UHNUaa. pool
mcludad 372-2720
gar
J 3)
WBSTWOOO. 4 badrooma 2 boBia.
loaoly dock, furnlahad July to April
9990.00 479^1. ^^ ^ ,^
t
. IS BoBi. SaSB/iWdRBi. 15-25
la UCLA Cattiryn 749-7714
Hurry' Muat rant l>y Juna 10
(30 J 4!
Jidy
Auguat Fur-
Qulat. cloaa
to UCLA $375 Raf«
475-1:
(30 M 28)
. (S275)
(SB80). Pool labia, othar amanitias
371-1340 _
(30 J 41
— house for sale
2 BEAUTIFUL badrooma cond by
ownor 3 mlnutas walk to campus shuttla.
477-BB71. 57191 s90
(31 J 4)
COZY Sponlah Maoltorooupioor
landty Good location bi high
elation araa ol Sunsal Park Santa
Monlcd Two badrooma - dOiworBBIa
don- larfo lot with 5 fruH boaring
1321 Pktm St $94300 385-7011
(31 M 28)
COMOOMIMIUM. 2 1
loB, BiipllBi. 20 ft
skylights, privata sundack. Block lo
Wllahlra. naar Fadaral $98,500 ownar
*^^-"^» (31 J 3)
houootoaha
wm
•
MALE grad abidant - alio
boddli, ■idpliri. bor-b-q. «
tl9B bwi ip. 548-0888.
ra fieuaa off
^^W J 4)
CO-OBIRATIVE BtdRf bi
RIO. piua uBIa. QdiBiw. 1
Sopt 1,970/
HOUSE to ahara. Own room. $180^010
C^ Don 488-8800
(32 J 2)
MALE to ahoro canyon hom
w. Bdo«BM>
BoROd. $180 moNBi Blua u
SM pm 278-1888.
(«J«)
ATHLETIC fuy wonlad lo
nouaa, pool. Bawar»y uian,
Cd8 Bud 784-1329.
■homSM.
rS9M38)
TOPANOA
•BBtSO moivth
1718.
(32MSBI (
housing needled
TULLY
I for vlaltlf>g Oarmon {
wNa Juna 19 • July 31.
PMand
t%% .1 4)
MOUBBilTTINO
ratal ancas. Contact via: Scott 964-7002
(33 J 4)
HAVE A HOUSE?
For huaband/wlla rasaarch phyalcl
In Loa Angalaa on Iwo-yoor lallowdMps
to UCLA-^ wm pay up to $488 tor OINBT
W<
Dr
-7128, 382-2171
HOUBBia
1888. 382-1
bi
pot OK $198
FULLY hmdahad
r siaNIng Gaiman
■Juna 13 - July 31 939-8723
^JS)
room A board
CULATE
ttrffiy ttttrrmo Jbid j>O0il ond board for $189 monttt
21
ns Jd)
mosi
EKCNAMOE B.ft. tBpBon furnlahad
hoaaa. 4 baBraem. stydlo,
Corwaniant to achoola and
London, to Nortti or Norlhaaat ^dO
5 a mindRf pooi Odd 388-8813.'
(34 J 31
room and board
exchange for help
SUttNMBB room, boord, aac
child cara 10 Mocka Harmoaa R
Call 379-5122
mj^}
FEMALE atudant (or summar Eich
room 5 board »mmH sal lor wasksnd
babyalttlng. or guaat houaa avaH lor
coupta. Swim, driva prafarrad Sunaat
BNd - Bov Hills Call m^. 271 5130
(37 J 4)
TRAVEL TNG 18. BMB r^d f'TI «ntf fid8
lodging in lamBy WIU giva fraa ingiah
and frar>ch laaaons ki aschanga 478-
5383
' (37 J 4)
FE8ULE iBidiwI 8va-bi Prlvala
board, aschanga. child-sitting, light
cftoras 1% blocks Sunsat bus Aflar
3:30. 451-0328
-.*# «i-w*c». (37 J 4)
■m-mi.
ROOM/Board tor housa/
In
(37 J 4)
FE8UU.E. Boom^^oard ai
light houaawork/babyailtlng. Privata
room/bath/TV Hmmr UCLA 474-0338.
(27 J 8)
FEMJU.E atudant Room/board Branl>
929-2124 ava
(37 J 4)
PRIVATE
gin. 9. wtian not m school, canip.
driving. Wf99
FEMALE studant
Enclnoliouaa.Vh
YouH gat your •
TV 8 kllchon prhdasie. ale. Oraot N
loot flha dorm, lollary. Cd8 Frad 981--
1188 allar 9 pm. . larr M »8i
room for rent
UCLA
BUtWRiER houamB'
only« ctaan momi
$65 par month. 915 N
477-8351
(38 J 4)
FREE
bt
18
(28 J 4)
IJ8 472-7751
(38 J 4)
BOOM ai
$138 par
at tha Unlvaralty Cooporothra. Right
m Mm VMaga RiiKmli work 4 hours
a waak. Tlia food la good and m
•rtondty. UnNarslty Co-op. 980
LJ^. 478-1838. ^^ . ^
bi Bat
Ak homa. Prhrala antranca. both. 81a
cooking. Rafrlg. pool, utilltlaa. Mm
■mabbig. $150. 472-1838.
--p8 m 28)
QUIET, oool. comfortoblo room for
ant KB-
(38 J 2)
WALK to UCLA
• ^w^t
473-
(38 M 28)
MALE Studant. aniy $78.80. IS m$n
campua.Jlgfit kitchan privllagas, no
1%^ I at
OUirr prNola room/both kllelian
ilagas Laundry Waatwood-Wllahira
Mala faculty atudant 474-7122 aflor
5:36 pm.
8MJ4)
autos for
fy» i4> 2lf
(48jai
-<". '
■^■i
CLASSIFIED ilD
*-^
-r-
autos for sale
1B78 CpyOim. VS, raBuBI angina. AB.
po««r aMdlBlB^brakas. $1290 274-3818
38 J88 mBao. 383.'l841 or 838-1228
(41 J 4)
B8 DATBU9I. fMB fMnnBif aoRBKImi.
nooBi BBM boBy amRL SOfSJS. tn-
^*** (41 J 4)
BOOM Dart 1888. Now brMMa, mtm
8pm. ttood 1 uiidBiun ffHWSO KomBn
8M-1488. Day 477-8882 avas.
(41 J 4)
1878 VW BdBfOOO -BBaor 4 ipd. AM/PM
K tmt 1 3888/ offr . Call avanln«s or
fdlMJB)
1873 PINTO, Runabout radto/haotar.
(81 ««i|
74 MA20A «M Wfn., ak. AM-PM.
8-trk, loB liRMBoii. S3 JSS. 47a|f38B.
Lvmag. ^^^^
* ■ ■ - — #
1887 TBIUBIPH 880 TIIS. Faal. oMdn,
iMlSIl S789/Baat offar 477<88B8 or
NBW SSvar 1978 Honda CB 388. Orlaon
only 85 mlloa. Baat oHor 825-5581.
474-4883 (aaoa).
brakaa runa fvool 474-8831
(41 M 28)
^^^o^^^^p 9%^V ^PBB^^V
cyclesg scooters
1511
18T1 PUT tU
A 8m
TOYOTA -71
M.
I
r
(41 J 3)
(41 J 8)
aconomtcal, orlg mmnmr
91198/allar 278-7439
mMas. 925-9721. m 9089
aaafMnoa.
(41 J 4)
W VW. 1980 ang.
bi town Mon. 8 Wad. CaN Osnord. (B8BI
888-1348 <- 988-1B88. ^^
(41 J 3)
^OB SALE 1888 V
aacallant condition with po
f^^Ob-.;
NEW/UBBO
at
Cd8 841.7»44.
187tNOMI>A70
(43M38)
(43 J 4)
fCamar nuNaf* ikaai)
«14l
(saaiaM oamiagmii
^ li^f 0 olpii
f tCanwr Ovariana I Jaflir««r
N09I0A 1874 KL
pipa. low mllos
1718 834-1383
-7079
(43 J 3)
(41 J 4)
fdi JM\
73 VBOA OT.
•WTAHO '98. V8 388-A»f. 9 Irook
51
•35-3471, 938-3414, Paul
*W4«|
(81 J 8)
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TO
There wiD be a special Classified Page June 4.
80 MAIL/BRING YOUR "GOOD-BYE, BON VOYAGE, CIAO, ADIOS, ETC." TO
1 12 , KERCKHOFF HALL, 308 WCSTWOOD PLAZA BY JUNE 2.
15 WORDS OR LESS FOR $1.75 ,
... J
More Entertainment Index Gilendar
^ r
Music
Much lo do With popular
music all over the city this
weekend, starting with **A
aiKJ a Woman*' concert with
Isaac Hayes and Dionne War-
wick at the Schuhert
John Klemmer is featured at
the Troubadour, while Coke
Escovida IS at the Starwood
Louden Wainwright III war-
Mes at the Roxy, and Bonnie
Raiti sings at the Coconut
Grove.
The Tttbcs are in concert
tonight at the Raincross
S<fuare in Riverside, and the
Cllftrlie Daniels Band perform
Saturday evening at tbe SanU
Monica Civic Auditoraum.
Theater
<v
There are no major openings
this weekend Upcoming cam-
pus theater includes the stu-
dent one-acts June 3-4 in Mac-
gowan Hail 1330 and June 8-9
in the Macgowan Little Thea-
ter, and TiM CrweMs June 3-
12 in the MacGew«n Freud
Playhouse.
Continuing are Neil Simon's
CnHfomia S«l8t at the Ahman-
son, Topol inthe musical Tbe
r*5 Wife at the Dorothy
pavilion. WiMMT
Take All, i musical dealing
with the lives of 19th century
feminists Victoria WoodhuU
and Tennessee Claflin. at the
Huntington Hartford, and the
Mark Taper Forum has four
pla3r5 in repertory.
A reconNnandai small tinn-
ier production M cIk Coapnay
of Angers Tkt
M«Kni^M8«l
a comical look at a
fratermty.
I J ■■' " ^ . ;i
h
^1
1
Campus
^ -^ ata
t"
4.
Tonight at 8:30 in the
Schocnbcrg Hall Auditorium,
the ethnomusicology depart-
ment'! Tsun Yuen Lui and
pong Youp Lee will present a
concert of music and dance of
China and Korea. Tomorrow
# night, same time and place,
S music and dance of Japan will
j^ be presented by Suenobi Togi,
^"Miisuru YufC and iku Yufc.
jl Admission to both is a doilar
^ for UCLA students, $2 for
jj other students and S3 general
? Tuesday at noon, the Sym-
phonic Wind Ensemble, di-
rected by Kenneth Snapp, will
play music by Stravinsky,
Thomson. Schoenberg, Graia-
fer and Wilham BergMna
Free
^ i^ianist Robert Stevenson
: _^til give a facuhy recital 8:30
^m Wednesday in 4hc Schoen-
berg Little Theater The pro-
gram consists of American
music, including two works by
Edward MacDowell
Jeff Silverman, a student
composer, arranger and pianist,
_ gives a noon concert Thurs-
day consisting of music from
the swing era through the
present
Two one-act plays occupy
MacGowan 1330 next week,
Thursday at 4:15 and Friday at
8 pm: "Homefrec." directed bv
Bob Wolf, and "The Love of
Don Perlimplin and Belisa in
the Garden," directed by
Robert Secrest.
I
I
\
<l:
TT
Young asked to prevent SHS
from requiring fees next year
ol the Body Snalchers' in M<»lnitz S^urci^y
And the UCLA Work-
shop will wrap up tJK year
with two one-acts by Puccini;
"Gianni Schicchi" will be sung
in plain English, while *'Sister
Angelica" will be siing m plain
Italian The performances, in
the Schoenberg Little Theater
with piano accompaniment,
will be given 8 pm next Thurs-
day, Friday, Saturday and
Sunday.
The sole filmic fare on cam-
pus this weekend is an enter-
taining double bilf in Melnit/
Hall, 7:30 pm, Saturday Ac-
knowledged as one of the best
horror movies with one of the
worst utles. Don SiegePs In-
vasion of the B<>d> Snatchers
will screen with Alfred Hitch-
cock's North By Northwest
Admission is $1.50
Movies
The William Wyler film fes^-
tival continues at ^hc UM An-
geles County Museum of Art
tonight at 8 with These Three
featuring Merle ObercM and
Joel McC rca and Mrs. Mini-
ver, starring. Greer Garson and
Walter Pidgeon Saturday, the
hill continues with Tlie Mem-
pfcii Belle, a documentary
about WWII and The Best
Years Of Our Lives, with
Frederic March. Hoagy Car
■Mchael and .Slim Summerville
At' the Nuart. Ken Russelfs
phantasmagoric TcNiuny and
Bob Rafeison's first flick.
'Head, will show this evening
Vittono Dc Sica*s ABrief Va-
cation ruru.vMth Claude l.e-
louche\ much-touted And
Now My I^ve Saturday, and
Rberi Altman\ kaleidoscopic
Robert .Altmans kalcidosc4*pic
work. Nashville will run with
aboOl a Junior Miss beauty
pageant. Sunday
I he Fiix Venice has F.a^t of
fcden and Rebel Hiihout a
Cmmc. two .James l>can films
tonight In a benefit Itn Rus-
sell Mear>s Saturday, silent-
animated films wiil screen ac-
companied by Chauncey l+aincs
at the organ
By Laura Junes
DB Staff Writer
The Student Health Advisory Committee
(SHAC) has asked. Chancellor Charles F
Young to prevent the Student Heahh ServKt
(SHS) from charging for visits in the comma
school year
SHAC made its rrquest after the SHS Lofifr
Range Planning Committee (LRPC) met with
the Chancellor to recommend that cash fees be
charged beginning July I. 1976
SHS IS currently pa^SJJ out of every Hint
registration fee to pravi^ health tetvice for
students In addition, students can buy student
heahh insurance for $67 per quarter to cover
services not provided free by SHS
According to Maurice Osborne. SHS direc-
tor ^nd phairman of the LRPC. students would
pay an ^veragt ol $19 per SHS visit under the
proposed system Some services (primary chnic^
€mmme^puon and mental health) would con^
tin^ie to be paid lor out of reg fee money and
would therefore be exempt from fees
Policies
Osborne pointed out that about 20.000
students are covered by medical insurance
policies Those students would not have to pay
"^ for health care.
Refer ring to the remaming lO.UOU \kt\o don i
have instirafice (including law it— w studenii
who caa*l afford it), UaborUt mid -Why do we
owe ipncthing to students who don't have
SHAC feari'l student needs \»i1l not be
adequately considered it the propi>%cd plan is
approved Janet Seeley. SHAC member, point
ed out that of the lour commMMw appointed
by the Chancellor to siudv SHS onl\ the
L RPC ImmI an\ student rcpwsatatum.
Iii«^ i-RPC WAS disbanded nftrr ii wnic Hf
fqjort, and there now is no student reptvaenCa-
tton on any committee. Seelev
Task Force
Because ol this, SHAC has advi»cd the
Chancellor to set up a Student Health Service
^ask Force wHi» a voting marttrttv of students
The Task Force would begin imme4»atefv 4«^
•tlidy the Student Health Service and would
make its recommendations to the Chancellor b\
the end of Wini(;r Quarter 1977
SHAC sMd ^he July 1976 implementation
date recommended by the I RP( was "re-
markaWy premature." since the committee as
vet has no coherent lee schedule ol policy
(CtHittnued on Pagr .23)
STUDENTS
is UCLA meeting your sports
recreation needs?
Below is a list pf activities now offered by UCLA for
student sports and recreation.
Is your interest represented?
Would you like to see anything added, augmented
or changed?
Do you participate?
CULTURAL & RECREATIONAL
AFFAIRS ^
Would you like to participate''
You are invited to write in or come m to discuss your
interests and UCLAs programs Please address you
°T/n M '°J'! ""'^'^ '^ ^^^'^^'^ Study Task Force
^25 7%^"^'^^ ^*"- 2248 Murphy Hall, o. call
■* *
intramural Spof1a^
..us.'
Recreation Club
Aikido
Air Rifle-Pistol
Amatiur Radio
Bowling ^
Bridge
Cheet
Crtckm
Cor>t#rvation
Field Hockey
Fishing
Qatexy
Go
Hatha Yoga
Activities:
Horaeback Riding
Hunting
Ic© Hockay
Indoor
Judo
Karate
Kendo
Kenpo
Kurtg Fu
Lacroaaa
Mou
Organic Garden
>hy
Sailing
3ciil>a
Shooting
Skeet A Trap
Ski
Soccer
Social Dance
Tennis
Handball
k *
Ski
Wraatling
Flag Foott>ali
VolleybaH
Tennis
Cross Country
Bathtbali
'SOGOar
Flag Rugby
Weightlifting
Softball
Walir Polo
Table Tennis
Golf
Wraatltng
Track & Field
ling
Badminton
Turkey Trot
Friabaa
Racquetbaii
Squash
Bowling
MEN'S INTERCOLLEGIATE
ATHLETICS
Non-Credit Instruction:
Baseball
Crew
Cricket
Croaa-Country
Fencing
Golf
Gymnastics
Riflery
Rugtoy
Soccer
Swimming
Tennis
Track
VoNaybaii
lA^rastling
Tennis
Ski
Body Conditioning
Slim A Trim
VoMaybali
SaH-
Golf
Badminton
Drill A
Swimnaatics
T<
Social uance
Sofiglaadtfi
Offieiating
Somof LMnairtng
^ftttm Salaty instruction
lea Skating
Jogging
Sanmming
WOMEN'S INTERCOLLEGIATE
ATHLETICS
imton
lU
Cfoaa-Country
Craw
Gyrt)i
Swimmmg/Diving
Tarmis
Track/fiald
VollaybaN
An sports and recreational activitias at UCLA
arc opan to participants ol both M»a«
Ucla Daily
"T"
Volume XCVIil, Number 41
University of Ceiifomie, Lm Angeiei
Wednesday, June 2. 1976
*Professional army not appropriate
Beilenson says draft needed
Wf JothiM 'Alpcr
DB Stair Writer
State Senator Anthoay
Beilensofi, candidate for Con-
mis in the 23rd CongressioiMi
District, ciahfied his position
this week on remstitution of
the draft, telling the Datiy
Bruin, "A professional army is
not appropriate for our form
of democratic government."
Beilenson tied his preference
for a draft system to the recent
tendency of US policy-makers
to involve thb country in
-dirty little wars -
"It's too easy to ignore U.S.
actions, usually in Third World
count nes, if we spend a well-
paid profesiiQwU army lar do
the job," observed Betlenton.
**The Vietnam war, tupc and
prolonged as it was, would
Inve lasted even loiifer if the
of the middle and upper
IS had not been drafted," he
added
[ Noel Horwin, also a candi-
date for Congress in the 23rd
district, had called for Beilen-
son to clarify his position on
the draft issue after one of the
Senator's represenutives told a
local Democratic club that
Beilenson was **disposed
towards the draft."
Horwin oppottt frMMfitution
of the draft, explaining that
military personnel must be
p^d fair W9^in for the "life of
disapline and occasional dan-
ger" which they expenei|oe in
the service.
The compulsory draft was
»hshed in 1973, pertly in
to anti- Vietnam War
protest, and replaced with a
voltintecr army. In anticipation
of the change, wages for all
classes of servicemen, especial-
ly enlisted classes, were in-
in 1971
•a incrcaic of UM^ per cent, ie^
November, 1971, according to
Xr.ST^Army Information Officer
Lt. Col. John Markanton To-
day the wage is S360
Beilenson was also critical of
the added expense of the vol-
unteer army.
"Fifty seven per cent of the
defense budget goes lor map-
power, aind pension cpsts have
chmbed from SI bii1i<tn in 1964
to $8 4 billion in 1976," rioted
Beilenson "Too much is brii^
spent on public relations
Tecniitmem," j>c charged '~^
Asked if he thought his pre-
ference for a draft system
wpuld hurt his campaign for
Congress, Beilenson said. "I
have held many controversial
views before I'm not worried"
As a State Senator. Beilen-
son authored California's 1967
Abortion Reform Law. as well
aslegislation implementing
c^en dating^ on dairy product.s
and repeal of unwarranted
income tax exemptions granted
to church-owned businesses
Monthly salary for a Private
E-l, the lowest enlisted level,
rd from SI 34 to S269.
Third World Coalition raps
Youngs refusal to meet
^ B> AdamTfellbr
D» Staff Writ«r%
The condemnation of Chancellor Charles Young for
refusing to meet with Third World represenutives and iht-
voiced support of Congrcsswoman Yvonne Hrathwaitc
Burke (D-27th District) highlighied the Ihird World
Coalition meeting Friday m Ackerman I'mon
Burke assured the students that "It'v important what
you're doing " Shi- added it is rverv ncccsiMiry we have
Affirmative Action programs - As she exited the rcwm. she
was accompanied by enthusia^K cheering and responded tt»
a Third World Coalition request answering. **Wc would
certainly write a letter (to the C hanccllor svmnathetic to
fhird World needs)'*
The students then resolved not to «tagc u Jcmcmstraiion
next week One member commented "If we get less than
MM) students (the number which parucipated m last week s
demonstration) we might lose credibility
Merced Martin, next vear's MhC hA pr-'f-mial counsel
said last Wednesday the Ihird W«m.u coalition had
received a call from Vice-chancellor Mum Svenson who
told them they had scheduled a meeting vMih ( hancelln
Young (or June 2
I ast Tuesday, the students had met with W:fision l>obv
Executive Officer to Vice C ha nee I lor C Z Wilson. wh<» told
them he wanted "to gather information on minontv
admissions**
While meeting with l>oby. Svenson appeared to tell the
students the Chancellor had decided not lu meet with them
as planned He said the Chancellor had made this daosMii
because:
— the students had insulted Vice-C hancellor James
Hobson in Murphy Hall during last weciii rally,
~ the students, held the demonstration a^iMt Adminis
tration wishes; and
— the Third World Coalition s demands were too
general.
In respoase to the Chancellor s refusal to meet with them
Martin authored the following suhoohm to be repreaaaM»>
live of the Third World Coalition's views
**We toully condemn Chaaoellor Young foe refusing to
meet with the Third World Coaliiioo This refusal sh^ws
the pettiness and lack of responsibility of the UCLA
administration and CiMaoBttnr Young in pMligMlnr.
_ .^y '^ '""•^ ^ "**^ ^^^ ^® ^^ powen that be,
mrliiii^ the UCLA administration and the UC HfKi m
that we will continue as Third World people to slnHgle for
just nghu and demands, and this refosal and postpoMnrnt
<>f the meeting will not hindM* us in organi/ing future
demonstrations. "
The Chancellor was not avaiUMe for comment
The Third World Coalition demands iodoik Hk elimina-
tion of ttanisrdi/ed tests and GPA as entrance criteria for
Third World students, and more financial mki
" wnjiM -^ *
J*
I
I
g
lates
students
Burke sees integration signs
Congresswoman applauds
decisions on jobs, housing
V
AMCR-I-CAL
1434 W
J
I
e
1
ioule% «rd • Suite •• Lot AnM4M, CdMovnia 9tia4
Call Day or lii«iit - (219) 47S-S721
GOING TO LAW SCHOOL?
If M, you t
a if^lqut 3-day works!?
ih« Los Angolat
Tha obiactlva ol tfito pr
batwaan collaga and I
first ymr is often the
of future employment,
to study mesiii^y ^<
law school career. F
931-7786, or Write
Legal Pr^
471 Sout
Los An
I
T enrolling in
seminar t)eing offered at
Anfnat 2-4, 1976.
iram it to bridge the gap
school study. Since the
important for purposes
essential to know how
^•ry^lrtin^ihg of your
nformation call (213)
iti<
_ Inc.
gdaniPrive
riia 9003^
"TiSfTir
•4 ■
THE AFRICAN STUDIES CENTER
presents
BENJAMIN N. AKPATI
lecture — ObservatJops on En-
-wronmental Problems in West
Africa and an Approach to their
Solutions
Wednesday 3:00 pm
2150Bunche Hall
SuMMEfi, Housing
<% 'Tfic-
CO
Comfort our su-M^rmxs ftrr Fud
^Dorm5
DOUBLE
SINGLE
$283.00
373.00
$136 to $166
165 to 180
UCLA if offering 2 six week siapKr
•eetlons. We are offering super- low-co.t
coed houfing, oirned and run by and for the
ttudents. Residents work 4 hours a week
Rooms are tingles, doubles and triples '
Food is good and the people friendly. Stop
on by and ife'U give you the grand tour.
Right next to campus.
Write or call;
University Cooperative
Housing Association.
500 Landfair Ave.
L.A. Calif. 90024
213 479-1835
By J. Nathan Jooci
DB Staff Writer
The needs of the unrepre-
sented mutt be add resumed, ac-
cording to Congreiswoman
Yvonne Braithwaite Burke (D-
37th Dwtrict, new 28th Dii-
trict, Cahfornia) in a speech at
noon Friday on Janss Steps
••The atmosphere m 1976,'
said Burke, •'is better for indi-
viduals, and individual oppor-
tunities now exist. The needs
of those unrepresented in lo-
ciety must be. addressed **
Burke spoke during the
second half of the hour after
district Attorney John Van de
Kamp had occupied the first,
both speaking to a crowd of
4 bout 300 fxaplc
Burke said she supported thc^
right-io-work bill now in C on-
grcss by commenting on two
recent Supreme Court deci-
sions which she said were of
''far reaching importance "
••The Court took the first
step on the question of seniori-
ty, the last hired first fired
rule," she said ''The Court's
decision was a first step and a
very important one
**The other was the housing
decision, in which the court
ruled that suburbs cannot say
they will not take their share
of iow-interest housing.**
FUgbl
Burke said there is no longer
simply a "(i*'hilc fiigiu^ but
flight period, because the sub-
urbs refused to take govern-
ment programs for low and
moderate income people" _
The growmg number of peo-
ple leaving Los Angeles. Burke
ssKj ^ ca Uses a gTcaief potaflCB*
Hon iieUKeen people, "because
we are caught in a recession
Peopk ar5_0ot sure they are
going to survive *'
She added that the polariza-
tion causes greater difficulty in
seKing problenM.
"We tove got to say a p^.
tee hes the nght tcj survive
and have a job. and full cm-
ployment is a right," said
Burke -What we say m the
Black Caucus is tllet we lup
port legislation for full em-
ployment."
Turning to the presideniua
race, Burke said she hopes the
convention is bft^kered
-A brokered convention
means we cen get fpsaipr com
mitments from the ceadidates
for deiegates," she said •X^ur
job IS to make sure every can-
didate is covered so if that
particular candidate gets iheie
fWH le«f input"
Comniittnient
Burke, who is on the
drafting committee for the
C><^"iocratic convention (the
committee which drafts ijic
party's TJIifillli) «ko said thai
the needs of women must be
addressed in the platform and
that the party must come up
with an issues platform based
on basic concerns "Wc must
have a committment (to the
isHWs) before we go i«io the
election
"Back in 1972, both panics
were trying to get the 18-vcar
old vote, but that vote wa>
unregistered The only way to
get people concerned for' the
issues IS if they get to the
poles," she said
After speaking for about 2^
minutes, Burke fielded qucs
tions irom the thinning crowd
She said the use by the FDA
of poor women in experiments
with drugs must be monitored
and despite the uproar over
busing, she still supported the
Brown vs: Topeka Board o\
Education Supreme Court dc- -
cision
^^I^ question IS not com-
,W« h««« got to say a person h«t the rtghl to turviv* and haw* • k>«> ^h
pufsory busing, but" equal
schools," she said **l was
bused because I lived in the
ghetto; I had to go to another
school for a better education
To me, busing is a false issue
"The issue is integrated
schools. I will stand by the
Brown vs. Topeka drcision
They bused us out. then they
can bus us in "
SCHOOLS OF LAW
CAUFORIIIA^EQE OF UW
uyawiy :^ .„-,. vJahfornia Bar •xam
• SO ^riits ^A Degree or tali* miMm •'
• Fruhaiijn Advanced Students .
tew ACCtrrMQ APPLCATIOMS POU
Summof Ouartor - June 7
Fai Quartof - Sopt 13
V A Approved - Both CaJitorma
CollaQe of Law CampuMs
477^H07 •t2-3414
H WieMr. mt^ 0S2 8 Suneet Ave
WeMLoe
WMt Covina
COUEBE EQQIVALEIICY WORKSNOT
AVIWBU^CAU FOR INFOBMATlii
SSaSptothe Sanl^aiidsco
$20MckiM9L $I7iUiidbjL 727)cU
When the ame CBMM HA PS A faitt go 4
Birds nigV
fftm LA. to Saa famiten, CkJuimd
(>r San joK Or Hslirwoid BurbMk to
«anr the m m fat. Brady Hodgt 478-1818
UCl-A Daily
BRUIN
Volume XCVIII. Numbar 41
WedoMday Juna 2 YfW
PutfhMh0d every w99kdmy durtng ttf
9chooi yw&r. 0Mcmpt during hoitdar*
•nd dmyt foMowtrtg hoitdmyt. a-d •k
•mtnmtion pmrtodB. by thm ASUCLA
ConimunKMt0om Bomrd 306 ¥¥mt-
mood Htm. Lob AngmiBB. Cmntonm
90024 Cogfnghi 1976 ^ me
AS UCLA Cotnmunicmtiont Bomrd
Second ctmm aesjifi pmtd mt mm lm
Jim
Peifch Heeiy
> —1
V
_¥o uiLn umber s^up
By Lmdm KafNittoiii
DB Staff Hrtler
Beginmn|( tall quarter, i^tu
4mt reip^tration (reg> numbcu
^ill be removed trom public
access, thus enabling all de-
partmentk to pojki <»tudent
grades hv rcg number
Executive VitT Chancellor'
W ilium \* Cicrbeidiiig ^aid
last week that the practice of
po^tmg grades ***seemft reatM-
abkr** as * njj ^^ there i% no
^ooaas ti» Niudcntsi reg num-
bers However, he added,
"tven here I can imagine dil-
ficultics I can see the pm
^^•''*> <>< a student's rcg mim-
bm being lev ea led by bcmg in
OKed
two small dasies " Geiterdtfii
explained that a student could
compare the reg numbers on
the two grade listv ,>f the
Cai may restore
semester system
By BM Vmi AMtarg
BERKELEY Changes are
on the way for UC Berkeley
that will affect this campus'
term set-up and could shitt its
present quarter »ysitem to a
^X'liiVBtei »y»iem Oy titt Vfrt'-ns
school >caf in addition, ihc
tTASf formation could very well
a0BCt the rest oi the DC cam-
puses
Moit Univeriiiy ol Calif-
ornia campuses are presently
on a quarter system oi classes
with a normal load of three
quarter* a year and 15 units
per quarter This system was
estabhshed towards the end of
the Sixties in order to give
fewer classes per term and
therefore more concentration,
a shorter, taster period o< class
time and fuil-year usage of the
I niversity's facilities
However, at UC Berkeley.
the quarter system has
under fire lately, and two
months ago. Berkeley Vice-
Chancellor Ira Heyman for-
mally put the quarter system
under study by the Berkeley
Fdncational Policy Committee
KALX, the Berkeley campus
• M««iv •««tt«Mi. 'S|7ttitc wrtn com-
mittee member Jeff Koon. who
said the committee has almost
completed its study comparing
the quarter with the semester
system mnd is now set to rec-
ommend that Berkeley oiftjie
the shift back to the semester
system They are expected to
make this recommendation at
the next meeting of the Ber-
keley division in June
Why the troublesome
change.'^ Koon said the com-
mittee's mam thoughts were in
(Cantinued on Page 21 )
While the practice of posting
grailcs has been common
among the science departments
on campy*, h Wim banned I:'
quarter by Gerberding
Gerberding said he sent a
letter to all deans and depart^:,
ment chairs telling them that
the legal coordinator tor the
University. Alan t Charles,
found the practice illegal
Charles had Mid the practice
was a violation of studmi
rights, since reg numbers cur-
rently are available to the
public through the student
locator file in Ackerman
Union
Ihr locator file listi personal
4ata that is filed by the student
at the lime oi registration ^ich
quarter A sfudent may refuse
to have this information dis-
closed
Charles said he was referring
to the family Education
/Rights and Privacy Act. which
"prohibits disclosing facts
about a <itudent*s gradaa.**
Russell CummiQfs, research-
er for the Student Educational
Policies C ommission. had been
urging the dean of the College
of Letters and Science last
quarter to have departments
post grades.
The Dean. John G Burke
said he received the Uritei Irom
Gepberding alter seeding a
letter to aU de^rtminu chair-
men in the College, urging
them to post grades lor the
students' yonveniettce.
^ uimiM^ps. after disiussii^
the problem ol reg ni
^ith Charles and Ri
trar Stanley Chin, fouhd a
solution excluding the num-
s Irom the locator file
last week. Chin made ar-
rangements to have the rcg
numbers rcmmmi from the file
in lall quarter
( hin qimHagtad the iinpiici
ol pogHiig grades within the
departments, since so ^fw
b<»ihcr to pick up their tran-
scripts at the Registrar's
**C>fie-lHilf tu twiKihirds (of
students) doa*t pick up the
grade trawtcnpts." md Chuu
The tniviisitv does MM flMil
transcripts to the studcoU.
Chin i^id. ^rreim it coets too
much
"If the students are willing
to post a seU-addreskcd enve-
lope to mail the grades, weMI
lend them.** added Chin
I
Relaxation Training
OfvMonday. |une 7, a rel*|xaiion training work-
shop will be offered for students who find them-
selves under a great deal of pressure, have
difficulty concentrating when studying, tend to
panic or block on exams, or just have difficulty
being able to relax. The workshop will begin at 3
p.m. Attendance is limited. Please sign up in
advance by contacting:
f
:•• TherelSa
difference!!!
Math
4222
fiychologkal i. Coiimeliig Sorvkot
•cKavioralDivJMofi
^*^8 Telephone
825-4207
) S««ii ( ^&i\i>\
: MCAT
: OAT
• CBC '•^^ "•••••<«>« ?
: ATGSB
I OCAT
: CPAT
: ECFM6 ^"^ .
iNATlMEOBOS:
! SAT-VAT
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IC^VMH
iw
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m '» n
FOOD
jUORMING
- YOU ARE
ONE da/
JCLOSER
TO THE END
OF THE
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NUUT
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Hoc hort d oauvras. liita Swedish
iDMtbaUs, fnad rucchuu. cocktail franks
or hoinemada potato hipi %mm yopcorp, tool
NOmUir THMNIOH rBQMir
4lo7
Caaay'iBar 1109GWndon
1213) 477 3996. Ppanii<
Wiitwiaad ViUaga
11 awry day
free cap and gown, big discount on
perma-plaquing your diploma, priority
young alumni football seating, alumni
vacation centers, continuing educa-
tion, regional and professional groups.
the UCLA alumni assoc-'^^"^'^
juin now and save'
kerckhoff 226 (just o^* ♦^e patio
oetween moore and KercKhoff i
■Mam
1
s
L
Alpha Lambda Delta new members
Please pfck up your certificates and
pins at
Murphy Hall 2224
pj I MM
X, WFDICAL OPPORTUNITY
Lva
m.ut2)Zfi
(213)477
Afrvi
878^255
Lunch • Dinner • cocktaili
Banquet Kacilitiet
475-2525
1 1 705 Natiofial Blvd. Los Angeleis
Prime Rib $4.95 from 5 to 7
Ed Hollmgs worth and Carolyn Coy
Tri A Sat Nights
/ ^ ijtun^v Otiies
Student Summer Storage
• experienced
• fully insured '
• door to door pick-up & de-
livery
• a greal deal
• lowest rates in the are^^
Call 474-4809
.; K.f
ATTENTION STUDENTS^
No summer job yet? Register now for
temporary work. Set your own rates, work
at your own convenience.
Tutors Gardeners . . . Recreation
Specialists. . Party Helpers. . .Babysitters
. . . Entertainers . . General Laborers .
Painters . . .Chauffeurs * . . Temporary
Office Workers Typists . . . Etc.. Etc.
Drop by the PLACEMENT & CAREEe PLANNING
CENifER today. (Third building east of Ackerman
Union at the top of Bruin Walk.)
•\ »
Dtrt pMad In Kerckholf Hall 129 actually haipa
building.
Earthquake standards
(Continued from Pafc 5)
Puchi said that "permanent
service displacements" were
discussed as another top prior-
ity. "Permanent service dis-
placement determines what
factors are assigned, based on
permanency of service and
hardship of displacement
(movement to another loQi-
tion)," he explained.
The nature of the building's
use IS what determines whether
it will be displaced, the amoi^nt
of rime it wiH be displaced ahtf
what inconvenience will occur,
Puchi added Certain uses of
the building would necessarily
be terminated during the re-
habilitation.
Prior id uing*
Puchi continued. "They (the
committee) arc trying to deter-
mine a way of prioritizing the
buildings rather than just going
in from' a structural point of
vi«w They are taking into
account earthquake needs and
other needs.
"After the final methodology
is determined. df7 runs will be
made m less critical faalities.
it is a long, involved process,"
he said
The next meeting of the
committee is set for June 9 at
VC Berkeley Their final report
is no^ due until next January
The pre- 1933 buildings will
have to remain in their present
condition for the time being
"The earliest we could get
anything done would be in the
'77-'78 budget." commented
Rose.
"We feel that we can't sit
around and wait for. a nebu-
lous decision It is not likely
that the SSC will'-svyi go ahead
so we have developed a fall-
back position. If something
.happens or nothing happens^
we could say, *don't blame
IH;* " Rose said
Alternatives
The Campus Planning Office
has the following alternatives,
according to Rose;
— try to find out which
[buildings would be in ' the
worst shape, and prioritize
them in a different way
develop an alternative
program to remedy the code
problems, which are life-safety
and Fire Code-related Tljiis
would cost less money than
•eismic rehabilitation.
— try to convince the sute
that they should rehabilitate
the buildings, citing the impact
on programs. \
Although the Planning Of-
fice is only developing these
alternatives now, they will be
the first in line when the
money ia rekaaed. Rose con-
cl^ided.
UCLA officials are aware of
the potential danfen of the
original campus feeiWings
Steps arc being uken to al-
leviate the problem. But even if
the money were allocated to-
morrow, structural rehabilita-
tion takes time The only
choice the "inhabitants" of
UCLA have is to be aware of
what could happen Aware.
and prepared
"Concours" will benefit
Blind Children's Center
ELECT A RESPONSIBLE. EXPERIEHCEO TRIAL AnORNFY
ROSALIE HANNIG
R AKOFF
FOR
JUDGE
TO
Lm Ang^lM Municipal Court
Judicial District #1
UCLA Claaa of 12 aA
UCLA Claaa oir 1M LLB. JO
Lading tht Otmand to incrtast Sniill Claims Cayrt Haximum to tZJOOH
i
\
The largest car evf r made, a
Bugatti Royale, is among the
100 vintafe motocars to be
displayed at the tenth annual
"Ambassador Concours,**
June 20, from 10 am to 4 pm
on the lawn of the Amtea-
»ador Hotel.
The "Concours." whose pro-
ceeds benefit the Blind Chil-
dren's Center, features autos
that will compete for trophies
«n nine categories: Horseleu
Carnages. Antique Cars
American Clastic Cars, Euro^
pcan Classic Cars, RolU-
S'S^' c^P^"^* ^•^ over
>».bOO. Special Interest Cars
and Competition Cars that
Mve raced in the past year
The Bugatti Royale, one of
onlv six known to be in exis-
tence is -the size of a small
freight engine." said Judith
Noyes of Visionaries, the auxil-
?nr to the Bhnd Childrens
Center. It ,* exhibited by
Correction
th7 R J"?* •*""" ''»'ter •«
on June 19. not June 15 ^
waa m^ia«i ' ■•
^eie Spencer of tk*
tenno ^*^. ^*
Briggi Cunningham, who owns
an automotive museum m Co»-
u Mesa.
Other notable entriei are
Dap Ward*s $30,000 Ferrari,
which raced at Le Mans lait
year, a 1909 Jouvin^Desrossien
Buick Tourabout, which par-
ticipated in the Pans-to-New
York "Great Race," and a 1975
top-fuel dragster sponsored by
Revell, which can reach a
speed of 250 miles per hour
within six seconds. There will
also be an assortment of Oue-
senbergs, Stutzes, Cadillacs.
Jaguars and Triumphs.
The "AnikHHidor Con-
coon" m co-aponaored by Vi-
sionsfm ami Le Cercle Con-
cours d^Elegance, an auto-
aoMle cittb for **people who
own and admire antique cars,"
according to Noyct. She ci-
timated that the show will raiie
about $17,000 for the Blind
Children's Center, a non-profit
nursery for visually handi-
capped children
Admission to the **Coo-
cours" it $2.50, which coven
entertainment sad refresh-
inemt. Pre tsir tickets art
available at the BUnkOH'
dren's Center, 4120 Marathon
St., Lot Aa^pln, sr by phon-
ing iM-2153 weekdays before
4 Trkrti ran ilm hr PW^-
cfeatai at tlie event.
~ Llft^y Slai«
4TS-8S66
An».t , concption of tutur. NofSi Campu. Cn^r now undor constructton n«>t lo Gyp.y
Million dollar food facility
^MLStim^ WEST PLAZA
lOteOWII SHIRE BlVD
WfSTWOOD. CAUF 90024
By Joanne Lgiaali
Da Staff Writer
Benefiting everyone but diet-
ers, the North Campus Student
Facility will offer food varying
from freshly-baked donuts to
Cornish game hens to yoghurt
And even non-eaters can
utili/e the small convenienoe
store, meeting rooms, loungc
and four patios of the area
that wil open in July
At prcseni. however, ad-
mitted ASUCLA Projects
Manager Dan Sidler as he
stepped a^er a. rope, leaped
across a ditch and walked
around wet cement to a tafe
patch of dirt. "The area is
messy."
Although the facility now is
cluttered with wires, workmen
and wood. Sadler, superin-
tendent Dale Hausmann, con-
tractors Willens and Bertisch
Co. and architects Smith and
Williams know exactly which^
mud spots are reierved for
certain creations
Viewing the facility from
behind the Gypsy Wagon. Sad-
ler explained that a lawn area
with a "trim of bushes" will
frame the area La r^ stepping
stones will form a path, and
"the rest will be filled in with
bricks on sand," he added
The bricks lead inside the
building to an information
counter A small dining room,
a stained glass window created
by a student and a sliding
window will be installed in this
part of the facility.
Scramble area
With its 18-foot square sky-
light, the main dining room
will mclude benches, tables,
chairs, a firepit with a hood
and glass windows Referred lo
at the "scramble area." five
cagh registers and many dif
ferent shops will form a "mar-
ket scene like a ReasMsaES
faire," explained Sadler, ad
ding, "They will alt have a
different spirit and product
and will be separated ^y walls
with tiles."
In the center will be a horae-
nbid bar: A deli
on the side will conuin
lurt and ice cream pro-
Bocb tadct of the scram-
ble aiea will offer a beverage
•ervioe. Dn the nght wall, the
Pie in the Sky counter wiU sell
donuts, patlry sad drtfit pro-
ducts.
"In hmrk " <;aHUr .>.,H *>^^|
iMve a donut-makii
from midnight to 7 am. when
the facility is closed to the
public Hopefully, this wiill
result in lower prices, better
producis and good smells "
Steak products
The Broiler will produce
hamburgers, hot dogs, steak
4iandwiches and **any kind of
steak product," commented
Sadler, with grills directly be-
hind the shop creating an "in-
timate" atmosphere. French
fries and onion rings will also
be available.
A "huge soup kettle" will be
a feature of Pot au Feu, which
will sdl soups and stewt Of-
ferirtg "basic cafeteria food"
such as C Ornish game hens and
sole, another area will give the
illusion of a "classy cooking
station," Sadler said, explain-
ing the food will he in "real
brass pans."
With two carving stations,
the roast beef area has been
dubbed Au Jus Right And a
'^woody area" in the comer.
Walter Wheatbunny's Fabu-
lous Sandwich Things, will sell
unknown varieties of sand-
wiches "that arc going to be
good." promised Sadler.
Except for the two main
dining areas, the facility will be
airconditioned The ceiling,
explained Sadler, will look
"like a rolltop desk " The two
meeting rooms arc designed to
accomodate all kinds of mcet-
irig situations and include the
"world's best view of the ex-
Bel Air fire." he commented.
Eucalyptus trees will be plant-
ed to hopefully result in a
eucalyptus grove
"The design took a long tihrfe:
he commented "But it's a very
unique situation I thi^k it*s
worth H."
Smaller than tri
The lounge wiH feature its
own fireplace and "riicc. com-
fortable, soft" furmture. Seat-
ing will be available outdoors
as w^ell "Even with all the
conveniences," commented
Salder. "the building is smaller
than the Treehousc:"
The "little convenience stu-
dent store" will sell film, can-
dy, cigarettes and paper
"things you end up without on
North Campus • Sadler ex-
plained Textbooks and cloth-
ing items will not be sold
there
The toul cost of the North
Campus Student FMlicy will
be $1,200,000, said Sadler
SHAVUOT AT HILLEL*
Wod. htn^ 2 S'hdrvuot workshop with Rabbi Chatm Setdier f «»llf»r Free
' P^ dinrwpf follows Student Lounge
TiKUN LEVI SHAVUOT
3 All nighf study session, breakfast* and Shachant smvtcm
UiMpm
TIKUN WORKSHOPS
11:<$-1:1$
1:;
a) "Study of Biblical Terr with ComrT>entaries
^atlbi YoMj CofiHr ^
b) 'Revelation, dtd it Really Happen? ImpI cations for
a Contemporary Theology of Obtervance"
Rabbi thaim Seidler-feNer
a) "Convenant Thernes A Poltticai- Theological AnaiyMt"
Or Bob Gerstein
b| "Tan Commandments m Midrash 4 History"
"^ *)i David ~
J:fS-«:Jg
"FulneM and in^ptmmn in the Book of Ruth
Rabbi Gary Gre«wicbsum
*lbaMMt i^emt of Weeks) celebrates the early wheat harvest tp lsf•#^
and commemorates the covenant at Stn^
HILLEi
9itHllaard 474-1531
~^.*«
JiTEAK & LOBSTER
<■
Tiwy will produce donuts
'«.-»
V
'•^--n
^.r^^;
i**f*
^m^
<71f
Our dynomiccfcia
What 1 tcruniptioiit pair! }\m^
freth from the grill and lutcioui
ready for dipping. They Aan a platter
potato or mofA fries and bol
aizzLcn taia
rrtfj
mv9=
■\--
N
FREE FREE FREE FREETrIE FREE FREE FREE Ff^EE FREE
-•
Last SCA & CFAP Sponsored Freebee of the year
Wishing You A Great Summer
It has been 20 years since
James Dean was killed
In a road accident . . .
The social significance of Dean's appeal
is still relevant In contemporary terms
iNTERNATIONAL
'i
presents
"James Dean -
The First American Teenager"
A special preview showing for UCLA students*
Tuesday Night --June 8 — 8:30
Royce Hall — UCLA
Appearances By . . .
..MitY^
Corey Allen i
Carroll Baker
Leslie Charon
Sammy Davis, Jr
Dennis Hopper
Kenneth Kendall
Jack Larson
Sal Mineo
Adeline Nell
Maila Nurmi
Gene Owen '
Ha^ Owen
Nicholas flay
Leonard Rosenman
Captain E. Trlpke
Christine White
Peter Witt
Natalie Wood
■"i^
Songs Featured . .
i — .
Funeral for a Friend ".. EltonJohn
I.^^y'^^ Bells MikeOldfleld
The Immigrant ^NeilSedaka
.,f V.^ • • • • • ^erek and the Dominoes
Walk on the Wild Side .LouReed
Jl^r^n BadCompany
I ft It D H '" ^~^"^' Leonard Rosenman
olu\ot ', Bachman Turner Overdrive
nebelRebe .. n-,..:^D
lomn. n • •" •• David Bowie
James Deart tu i- .
The Eagles
The film includes sections of East of Eden Rebel
Without A Cause, and Giant- Dfean-^ fir!rL
test for Elia Kazan; comme cPals and Xs fmm
nnt«n°".PH"^^ '" "^^^^ ^^ well as newIeS
footage of him racing cars. "ewsreei
ADMISSION IS FREE!
^•i«UCLA
««» •- Art. .nd m. UCLA Com..^ on n„. Art.
'""■'"•' '*'** » •• U.A. Chwm. C«»to,
■^.-
Dance dept teaches more than
Breadth of program one reason why
It has reputation as best m country
- ^L'4t
>
i
•wy^ir. Bfclwioinii •! Mm UCLA ,
M.« J ♦ A '*••' "^ ■^°'^*' »n ««™s of com-
Many students may be sur- mitmcnt. .
^i J dn ^ * ^"" «t M an cAiy m^or; but not .r
I lie breadth of the program, of wiiat af» about " she
which includes several spepiali- "
zations. IS one of the reasons
why the UCLA dance depart-
ment hat a reputation for be-
AOg the tatt in the country.
aocording to Allegra Snyder.
chairwoman of the department
Having moved out of the
rcahn of physical education ia
1962, the dance department
km» advanced in leaps and
bounds to produce such a suc-
otMful progmm:
Snyder also attributes the
**change in the educational
•tract u re of dance" to the
"MiWtting quality in appi.
to tiK ^aduate program
**We pioneered it.- she said,
adding that many universities
have based their dance dcpart-
menu on UCLA's model, so
that their graduates are more
prepared to eater the graduate
program here.
Snyder, who has been with
the department since 1967,
Course credit
in Extension
from dean
UCLA students enrolled w
rcfular session, including those
on leave, must sacure written
approval from the appropnate
dean or study-list officer pnor
to enrollment in Extension.
Provided such approval is
secured for each course taken
in Extension, credit toward the
Bachelor's degree may be
earned through Extension. Stu-
dents planning to transfer Ex-
tension credit to UCLA regular
WMB itennid confer with the
Extension information and
profFan advisory serviae — in
the CxtHHiaa Registrar's Of-
fice. 10995 Le Conte Avenue,
at the southwest comer of the
mfor
■Min ro^ii> of ihTmh
dergraduatc program is on
performance and choreography
However, in their senior year.
Students may choose to specuil-
ize in dance therapy pr ethnol-
ogy (ethnic dance).
These undergraduate special-
izations are designed simply to
give the student a general
knowlaige d the fidd, which
they may choose to pursue ta
nore deuiii as a graduate stu-
dent.
Geaduate studenu are en-
couraged to "^an out- and get
other perspectives, no matter
what their main focus may be,
according to Snyer The spe^
ciahzations for graduate daaca
studenu include performance
and choreography, dance ther-
apy, ethnology, dance history,
criticum and education. The
department is also buiklii^ a
new program in "p**^!
the neurosis and the
psychosis we sec Working
with the mind and body as one
puts the two hack in balance "
Students of dance therapy
spend six quarters of intensive
study on the relation of move-
ment to the mind, the con-
'^ction of body and mind
They have the opportunity to
work m clinical settings and
also enroll in related psycholo-
gy courses
Dance therapy is conctmed
with all age groups, including^
physical therapy work ^ith
older people.
-Ethnology ~H~tlie^ study of
dance within a cultural
matrix," Snyder said. "On a
worldwide basis, dance has
tended to be very functional in
the center of the culture. It is
only our cuhurc that looks at
^Wice as outside of the main-
sireaqi Dance »s a very potent
tool for understanding other
cultures,**
UMcrstandtnf
Basically, the curriculum is
focused on the under;itanding
of all cuhurxs through dance.
Most students, however, even-
tually select one culture to
study in detail The program
allows for both the study of
other countnes* cuhures and
ethnic cuhures within thc'Unit-
ed Sutes.
Students are encouraged to
get field work experience for
4heir final theais through travel
to the country or area of
specialization, if at all possible
Dance students from the
department are currently doing
work la Greece, Iran, Indui,
Koreav Turkey and GuateoHrfa.
Courses in other depart-
ments, such as folklore and
mythology, languagsi, and an-
thropology, are used to sap-
plement their learhing
Specialization
Students interested in pur-
suing dance history as a spe-
cialization ma> take broad
survey courses as undergrad-
uates and choose a specific
pgriod fo study asa grartaMrr
Ahhough manv of the spe-
cializations locus more on in-
formation than performance,
Snyder stressed that "anyone
concerned with movement
should be a proficient mover **
According to Snvder, the
rOO graduate students thif faar
are equally divided between the
specializations with about one
quariar of the total in each of
the four categories €x( dance
therapy, ethnology and history,
pertormance and chorero-
graphy and education
The careers danct depart-
ment graduates choose arc also
equally divided betwceti danc-"
mg. writing and researching.
teaching and therap>. Snvder
said
C;oud >ob marhcf
Commenting on the job
market tor dance graduates,
Snyder sdni. *l believe dance
has a reasonably good |oh
■larket and a broaiier potential
than other majors, lacavae the
field IS still emerging, as a
pioneer field. ihe\ stdl have the
ability to create their nun
lobh "
According fo Snyd»r Mmv Tafd
City ilHl •••mt to b« th« p|«c« tm
••paring dancvrt to go ay I m«r«
tt a irontf w«0tw«rd •!!• nftf
••ort !• happening on th« Woft
campus
T
or
^Snyder described H«,nf
therapy as a -whoHstic** theory.
'X>ur cuhure seems to sepa-
rate the mtad from the body."
she said. This serration oftea
SUMMER TRAINING PROGRAM IN
INTERCULTURAL GROUP LEADERSHIP
INCLUDES:
t. Off-campus Residential Program
July 23 to July 25
2. Three (3) Evening Programs
in July and August
The training is free of charge. In exchange for tram-
•ng participants will be asked to lead four 3-hour
sessions in Fall or Winter Quarters.
Further informaUo^ and appi
•I Milan
2«7l>9ddHaa
eipt.li lu .liiwmafi ii^J mmiii atiid^Ms and theif
Two
companies, '•pyes Wide Open"
and ''Dance I A." ^^vr been
created in I os Angeles hv
graduates ni the department
According to Snyder. Nch
Vork ( it> still seems to be the
place lor aspiring dancers fi>
-i"**" there is a trend west-
ward," she said -More is hap-
pening on the West Coast.-
One oi the most important '
aspects ot the dance depart
ment. Snvder noted, iv the
special rapport between the
students and the facUltv
Equally important is the siu
dents' "very special kind oi
energy and commitment.
Ansioyft
**! always hnd tt verv ea-
citing,- Snyder said **Thev are
very anxious to reach out "
rhiis "energy and commit-
•ent" can be seen m the large
number of performances in-
stigated and organi/ed,hy the
^Wice student themselves On-
ly the annual UCLA Dance
Company Concert is widely
publici/ed. but maoy students
become involved with small
^oductions on campus in the
^nce lab theater and withia
the community They newly
organized VC Movement The-
ater IS also an example of
undergraduate interest in per* •
forming what they have
learned.
One of the department's
largest problems will be re-
solved lyith the opening of tne
pr opoaad sports corner ShavM
the itvteM referendum paia,
all of the space m the Womens
Gym. with the exception of
lockers, showers, haiy condi-
tioning rooms and swimming
pool, will he assigned to the
dance department. Snyder said
oa Page 21)
llr#d of yMtordayt hair?
Forw>ttt'i hapfwnin^ now
styflnf fDr mwt and vvomMi
<f*rry Rijany'» JMnMck produdi
For appolntmont caS 47S-S1S1
tuM. thru SOL
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with thiaaa
•M.l.
I
I
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f*
iiuawodonAoo W— Iwood VHIaga
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J
►r. Anthony Bast & Dr. Jon VogeJ
OPTOMETRISTS
LOW PRICE AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE FOR STUDENTS
Single Female
witttt
^9»
ia 236
19 216
20-23 til
24 166
232
-^ — — ^^. * t K — . : — ^^H
Single Male
Averaoi
Without 8
Average
303
N«w«cMl«r Saody HMi maoag^r MarMyfi Solomon,
Carolyn ftaii«r of CBS, and UCLA graduat* ttudont Oho
Sl>arman lad diacuaalon on Woman In Madia.
TypK:*! anmiBl mat tor bodily iniufy tnd proparty
'^•••t baaad ws Waatwood araa
ARROW INSURANCE SERVICE, INC.
l434WaatwoodBivd no 10
Waatwood
1SS45 Sharman Way no 107
(lability
475
345-4565
9S7.2S44
Women advise
determination for media work
■ — .. ifcTM:
original
Star Trek
animation eels
15.00
I r"
«3e4:*-
Il Klaln. 'nv_i>roducer and repre-
ssntative of Ftlmation STudios He li tell you about
Sit mfking of these eels (celluloids) which are the
■ft and hesrt of animations Vpu can buy these
Ofi^nals t>9if^ now - five ditlerent paintings wffh
Star Trek backgrounds Mai Klem will be \\%Te
from 11 00 to 2 00 - to aniwer^your questions
Today! June 2
Ait/Engkieeflng Su^pNet, A Lewi
ASUCLA Sn>dants Stora
By .Maria ievinc
DB Suit Hntcr
Aiiscrtiveness and determina-
tion arc the keys to a woman -i
success in the media, according
to last Thursday's panel discus-
sion on •"Women and Media "
Featuring Sandy Hill. K-
NXT newscaster reporter
Marilyn Solomon, manager ol
public affairs, at KCOP. Caro-
lyn Bakrr; uiem coordinator
for -The Dinah Show*'* on
CBS: and One Sherman, a
I CLA graduate student, the
psnel was . part of Women's
t I>on't make a {
career Of looking
job.
Week activities sponsored by
the Women's Resource Center.
Agreeing on the importance
of perseverance, the women
cited examples of the diffi
culties they have faced in the
media industry
Working at a television sta-
tion in Seattle. Washington.
Hill had been '"frustrated" by
being assigned primarily the
fashion stones rather than
hard news stories Upon be-
coming a newscaster at Chan-
r^cij. the biggest problem she
faced was "a credibilitv gap
could people at home watching
television believe the news
coming troh) a woman."" .she
explained. **You jusi push lor
the things you want to do." she
added •^-- —
*<9w9rfiaing
"•titing £«•*> vital d
_^-- — — • • ^roouciiprt
•AecoMrti
o' Jun* u
^ - ' ■■■■ ■■■ I »••■ wi jun* '• - H
: teJff I
A flMiiHi town
-• «aker said she reali/ed thenj;
i was a Black problem when she
lived in Boston, but she 'didn't
reali/e there was a woman's
problem until I got to Los
Angeles, which is a man's
town "
Working for the production
company of the "Easter Seal
Telethon, Baker offered to
coordinate the talent for the
show and was handed a list of
names. -Not being sman
enough to know 1 couldn't get
these people, I got them," she
said
"I'm interested in power "
Slated Solomon, adding that
she would like to become the
first Black woman manager of
a television station
Claiming her title is a mis-
nomer of her position. Solo-
mon explained her responsibili-
ties at Channel 13. She handles
seven hours of programmmg.
three types of shows and edi-
tonal activities She is also the
only woman with any pro-
gramming or budgeting power
on the supon There are only
two other women with that
much power on any television
station in the country. Solo-
mon added
^Novices beginning in the
industry should start at a sta-
tion in a small market. Hill
recommended Solomon. ht)u
ever, said she did not want to
^work in a small market *-be-
causc that's not power *
Free as a person
Questioned about the role
the feminist movement has
played in her succeia, Solom*»n
strongly stated her "negative
fcelingis about the feminism
impact on the media " She said
that she "owes her entr\ in|».
television to, the Black move
mem. and the feminist move-
ment owes Its success, to the
Black movement She's "not
mui icmmisTn, but tnto bemp
Irec as a person." she added
Agreeing with Solomon
Baker added that the ''leminisj
movement rtxJe on our backs
and I'm not too happv ^ahoui
It"
"I really look forward to a
point where nobtxly hak an\
hassles about color, sex or
anythifig." commented Hill
Discussing entrance into the
media industrv. Hill said cer-
tain opening arc created b\
awareness But. she added.
'*The most important thing is
the perseverance Sometimes it
takes a heck ot a lot mk)rc
courage and strength to be m
the same shop (station) and
move up in it," rather than
trying lo surt off at a top
position.
Nipped off
"Polities'* has a great deal
to do with one's success. Hill
«»id "learning to work with
people w%ho all have goals and
amibitions for a very few
spots" IS very important, she
added "People with a lot of
Ulf nt can be nipped off at the
bud if thev have the wrong
politics," Hill said
(Cowtiwed on Page 20^
Wiere 6r£at Anericais yi^^^
FOREIGN
STUDENTS
Foreign students wishing per
tbfat!
T** ALL AMERICAN mumOMM.
ifM WMt wMa mtr^ «
irCC -'^►^ ""SCOo^ONONt 10 m Cup C3f COCA COLA
mission for off-campus summer
work and Extension of Stay sfiould
submit applications to OISS, 297
Dodd Hall by June 8. 1976, These
applications will be taken to the
'mmigration Service by a member
of the OIS<^ <.t;»ff
M^
"•"fifjif
V ,
» '
/, J».
*> ■ .,*•
e
I
r
I
r
PERSON! IN LOS ANGELES
AT THE ROX Y!
JUNE 1«-I6. lo^ft
'y^srv-*-
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ON SALE!
AT TOWER
RECORDS!
•caw ANN CAT. ytn %j^
xxz
INCLUDES HIT SINGLE «*SARA SMILE^
THE LARGEST RECORD STORES IN THE KNOWN WORLD
OPEN
EVERY NITE
OF THE YEAR
TIL MIDNITE!
VIUA6E ^ 1028 WESTWMI
fEEl UNCOU A KMOTTS KR
MASTER CHARGE
BANKAMERICARD
CASH
^^^ ■ - — . ...^ . « ^ ^^*o«« V V W'%W%WW%^ ■
f
rv \
'
■»,./.
^
■..4IM
s
poinr
-Three who fIew-ovet4he Cuckoo
^ Letters to the Editor
Decision
IS
I
1
•^-JT^
Editor:
On June 8, each o^ us will be
called on to make a moftt im-
portant decision. On that date
the final ind most inHuencial
political primary will be con-
ducted. California will be send-
ing the largest group of dele-
gates to each of the fall con-
ventions With so much at stake,
the choice of any candidate
f «nnor be taken lightly.
To aid tarh student in making
*,. ri' . n'ormed decision, Pro-
K-v-t \vv s 76 has pr^p^red
2- -nphlet' which w ill
J .If a at various loca-
tiuns ofi i.ampus today We have
studied a number of national,
international, ^nd student re-
lated issues We have attempted
to ascertain the stand on each of
these issues from each candidate
of every party. Thrs booklet is
not interided to serve as the
"final word" on the campaign,
but rather to serve as a firm
basis for anyone attempting to
compare the ciandidates.
In addition to providing stan-
ces on all the issues, our booklet
also includes biographies of all
the candidates. You wi^l also
find an explanation of the nomi-
nation process and an attempt
to mak« sense out qi the new
campaign financing law.
Because our printing deadline
was so early, there ^re some
areas where we could not obtain
t^ required information Since
that lime we have continued to
accumulate data and plan to
issue a supplement shortly Past"
elections have indicated that the
student turnout on election day
has been quite meager. This
year the range of candidates
within each party teeen to pre-
sent a clear choice regarding the
issues. Only by voting can stu-
dents make clear their desires
to the government. No candi-
date of any party has the
nomination wrapf^pd up and,
coupled with the size of^ the
California delegaffbh, tTiis malies
our vote that rtiuch more vital.
Our booklet is free. We en-
courage everyone to pick up a
copy and read through it beiorg
the election. The booklet wlfl be
available starting today at var-
ious locations on campus: 1) the
Student Store, 2) Ackerman In-
formation desk, 3) Murphy rHafI
Information Desk, 4) all the
dorms, 5) Kerckhoff Information
Desk, 6) 306 Kerckhoff Hall, and
7) the Cooperative Housing.
Further questions can be di-
rected to our office or to the
individual campaign headquar-
ters. Students can make a differ-
ence! Study the issues, compare
the candidates, and vote intel-
ligently Most irnportant, VOTE!
Dean ZifMuer
Prefect Awareneif
Rifle
In reply, yes. ?red Sc^iwartz,
there ARE UCLA rifle teams The
most prominant of which are
the UCLA Wonrien's Rifle Team
and the Army ROTC Rifle Team.
Both participated in the Uni-
versity of Nevada, Reno, tourna-
ment this past N/iarch and took
first place plus high individual
and third place in their divi-
sions, respectively the members
of these two teams, coached by
SfC Terry Lee. are dedicated,
hard working individuals who
practice long hours for both
their personal satisfaction and so
as to be ready to represent
UCLA Besides the match at
Reno, these two teams also
traveled to a tournament at San
lose State last November where
we took fourth place and high
individual overall we also shot
postal matches throughout the
year
Both teams cooperated With
the Military Science Department
in supervising, planning and
conducting the Shribbs MenwKi-
al Rifle Competition held here
annually for 32 area high school
teams The members of the two
teams do all the necessary main-
tenance on the UCIA shooting
range (basement of Men s
Gym) they also schedule alt of
the practice times and fulfil
other administrative require-
ments The Navy ROTC has" a
pistol and rifle team and the
URA has .an Air Rifle-Pistol Club
both of which also use the facili-
ty. Gary Olson has stored some
(Continued on Page JU)
Coastal Conservation act SB1579: to save our coast
{Editor's note: ^ficUir h a law
student here^
For those of u' who have an
interest in th^ conservation of
California's uniquely beautiful
OPINION
coastline (and 84 per cent of
Californians live within 30 miles
of the ocean), an important
legislative hurdle looms today
for a bill that would protect that
coastline the measure is the
California Coastal Conservation
Act of 1976. SB 1579. sponsored
by Senator Anthony Beilenson
of West Los Angeles.
You may recall that after rriany
attempts to enact a coastal
conservation biH in the legis-
lature w^ere defeated by special
interest groups, ordinary citizens
qualified an initiative in 1972
which was resoundingly ap-
proved by the voters. The 1972
Act mandated the formation of^
the e-atJIornia CoasfaT'Zone
Conservation Conri^ission and
SIX regional commissions, which
were to collect data from all
sources concerning the coastal
area and create a plan for the
future of the coast, balancing all
By Rick SirLclair
interests involved, sue4» as
recreation, development,
transportation, agriculture and
other uses.
In addition to preparatiun ut
the Coastal Plan, the Com-
mision administered a temporary
permit system under which
proposed coastal development
had to be appr^ve^ by the
regional afid ^tewide bodies
In Decernber l975 th^ Coastal
Commission submitted the
Coastal Plan to the governor and
legislature. The Plan contained
input from all segments of the
public, having been thoroughly
aired at public hearings in the
spring ot 1975 VVifh various
modiht ations. the substance ot
that Plan has been emlKMlied in
the present coastal bill.. Sft t579
The b.! rirovisions of the 81-
page bill »jr«^ to
— prescribe state policies with
resped to the marine environ-
ment land resources, ap-
pearance and design, publu
access, recreation and develop-
ment.
— continue the California
Coastal Conservation Com-
mission and s HI ' regional
commissions.
—have all coastal cities and
counties prepare local coastal
programs, to be approved and
certified by the regional
commis^ioHi as conforming to
the slate policies;
— terminate the regional
commissions after local coastal
programs ha^ been approved,
leaving the State Commission to
carry out the overall planning
required
As might be apparent from
the scope of the bill, the Coastal
Plan has to provicie for carefully
diesigned inter-relationships with
various other state agencies
dealing with water resources,
forestry, fish and game and
energy This is a delicate
buMocss, since in any bureau-
cracy, power once delegated is
not readily given up.
For example, one of the sensi-
tive areas of shared concerns is
the Coastal Commission s
proposed relationship with the
Energy Commission, which
would be concurrent |urisdict»on
•n the coastal area oyer the
siting and development of
power plants Without this
shared responsibility, one
senator said. It's just like
cutting off yo^r head arid
hoping vou can liye without it
Happily, an ameociment to
delete the Coaxal Commifii^'s
role in this process was defeat-
ed tn the f^n^tm^ -Gomrmtte*-
las^ week
In addition to the d*
specific areas which stilt toiaiU
the general concept ot
siaieyvide ..coaUal planning on
which the coastal bill is based
The code word cry of these
groups is "local control." which
in actuality means the kind of
ineffectual piece-meal planning
which has existed until now For
example. Senator De n n i s
Carpenter of Orange County,
long an opponent of state coastal
planning, recently introduced
his own bill, which would leave
planning dominat-ed by local
governments.
In conti^t. bB 1579 carefully
balances all elements that go to
make the Caltfornia* coastline
The magnificent and irre-
placeable resource it^s Local
governments are specifically
mandated to write coastal
elements into their general
plans, but the State Coastal
Commission provides the
overally comprehensive review
necessary to ensure protection
of the coast for all potential
users.
SB 1579 is now tn the Finance
Committee facing a crucial vote
today, needing seven votes from
the 13*membcr committee to
send the bill to the full Senate
To remain strong the bill needs
your support. Today, ci^ the
office of Sen. David Robert i to
urge a yes vote in committee
Tomorrow, assuming the bill
makes it out of the Finance
Committee, call or write your
Senator and Assemblyman
^B^ Mippori for SB 1579 in its
P^^te'^t fOfin , or
B\ Bill Cornier
More letters
(€ditor's note Cormier t$ « gnduate itudent
hert.) ^
Last week, a snwN faction of the G5 A Senate. ^
a sordid and debased attempt to quiet the
criticism of three of its cabir^et members, mani-
pulated enough votes to support a censure
mdutioo. The prcx:fedir>gs had all the appeal of
a Sakm wttch hunt: no facts aUned. no evidence
pUMiHtid. no defense attc>¥^ no truth, no
lofk. and no beer No or>e even tried to fake it
The tapes_of_thaL_meeting have preserved for
OPINION
those of us who were not there a priceless record
of tf>e dfiperatc« but futile efforts of a few to
effect a totalitarian takeover of the Graduate
Students Association. Heavy! I know I promise
no more of that!
The [charges" against the three are. of course,
ridiculous, rather childish, and absolutely false ^
that is. if someor^e can figure out what it is they
were trying to say. It is satisfyir>g to note that
mcjsT of the Graduate senators were not a pair of
this nrKxrkery. Of the 34 actual "seated" senators
only nine voted in favor of the censure resolution
(with an uncanrvy degree of foresight, two of the
nine produced four proxy votes and they let a
couple '(>f janitcKS who walked in vote)
1 would like to suggest that in the future when
Ihc Senate chooses to go public, it do so with a
IMe more aplomb. True, some of you senators
have I— med that it is much r^ater to censure
sonr>^K>r>e if you do not let anyone (but your
gar>g) know ahead of time there is a good
chance the guest qi honor will not show and that
always avoids rw^Stm contusion. Anyway, fair-
nM ^ something losers always bitch about.
But allow me to add to your "Guerrilla's Guide
to Parliamentary Procedure" the Dick Tracy
Censure Suggestion of the Month; take the
censure vote first — before discussion and before
you draw up the charges — that way you will
have plenty of time to find aomjone who can
write English for drafting a readable resolution.
Yours was a bit tacky. I do not like to be a part of
such hastily dOr>e. sloppy iobs That resolution
was only marginally intelligible. Sorr>ebody has
got a lermtnat case of oral ^nfiea over ifitat
^'mon loan arni Winston, we want super efforts
on these censures We have had eruMigh of them
this year you both ought to be improving If rwt.
we are going to have to set you back a year
What prompted all this footithneis. you ask?
Well, a scandal within the Community Services
Review Board was discovered by Alex Spataru.
GSA Budget Commissioner As reported in the
Daily Brum of May 24, one of the program
directors of CSRB is alleged to have "misap-
propriated" a signifKant amount of GSA and
registration fee money that was to fund his
program That program diiWtor is a friend of the
graduate Commissioner of CSI^B. Keyth Reece. m
well as J. C. Ephraim. a senator who is also on the
CSRB (the GSA President never appointed him.
he just "kirni'a shmwsd up"), Winston BrcxAs, a
senator, and Pauline Brackeen, who chaired the
lenate meeting the night the censure resolution
was passed (it seems that the" First Vice-President
of GSA, who would have chaired the meeting,
had bMn "politely" asked not to attend)
This gang had attempted to prevent the hf^
vestigatrorr of this alleged miappropnat ion of
student funds. The more incriminating the
evidence uncovered by Alex and Martin Nishi,
GSA President (and we note that even UC
Berkeley is into the investigation now), the more
frenzied and intimidating were the efforts of the
gang to "cover-up'' the scandal in the CSRjB.
(Doesn't this scenario sound familiar?) Well,
throughout this time members of the OB were
not treated too cordially by the GSA Cerrttal
command but alas, the "cover-up" failed and
Alex's findings were reported in the DB on
Monday, May 24 That night a coyple of GSA
senators, in a rare burst of creative energy;
produced the censure charges as a last gasping
effort to harass the three vvho had suppoMd the
investigation of these irregularities Unfortunately,
in the^ liMle with the r€*solution (last minute
surprise IS the key on these things) the verbs and
nouns, a few adjectives, and some things I cion't
know what they call all got scran>bled together. It
was a real mess. Seriously, now, tomorrow I will
try to tell you what I think they thought they
were saying with the kind of dignity a resolution
of the GSA Senate de«rrves.
(COntinya^ fromVagt 12)
O^uipment on iHe rar>ge but he
and his mystery team are rarely
seen. Also, #ie team which
Otmm iiiKid at Mm was NOT
a UCLA team It had students
from both UCLA and Victor
Valley CoNofe. UCLA sent two
teams — the Won>en's and the
Army ROTC teams Oten «wily
acknowMged shooting against
an all women's team, he did not
mention that it was the UCl A
team or that we beat him! We're
lcx>king forward to another win-
ning year in 7^77
Tlie UCLA Women's RMe Team
Petty — Captain
ViffflWa Ntkon
H al
Health Services
fdRlor:
I would like to inform stu*
^fentv about studant insuranrer
In a May 27 letter critical of the
Student Health Service, a stu-
dent wrote that "apparently
the student insurance paid tor
his crutches This is not true:
The student insurance becomes
'' helpful to the student when he
or *he has in< urred expenses
outMcie ot Student Health. S4nc«*
Student Health usage is tree to
those who pay registration fees,
the insurance should be applied
to medical attention referred
trom Stucient Health to a
hospital or outpatient clini< or
for nr>edical emergencies or
necessities away from campus
(thus, -cuja necessarily UCLA--
Hospital a^d Clinics). For pay-
ment to be made, a student
must file a claim OfiVn.
hospitals will take care of this
for the student M not. the stu-
dent should obtain a claim form
trom the Student Health
Information Desk of Cashier tnd
submit the bill with the
completed form to. the
insurance company Crutches
are provided without charges by
the Sftt^ent Health Service, i r>
less sn e«ponte is mcuffetl by
ilie si«i^ent the msur^me does
not come mto effect.
On Mav 26 a woman com-
plair>ed in the Daily Brum that
shf was advised to get the
summer Health lnsurarM~e to»
%M There IS no such thing
What we otter tor summer is ll
"OrriONAl TTF Al TR COV ER AGF
and 2) SUMMfR STUDfNT
INSURANCE The purchase ft*
OfTlONAl HiAlTH beneMs
entitles the ttinjent to Sty^nt
Health tacilities during the sum
fner Since Stu^em Heatth IS not
finjnceci l> .^istfiitKjn fees in
the summer < ontinuinK studems
wishing lit make fise •! thr
Tacilities as they a* j during ih»'
reg fe«' tinanc ed i^uarier { i.e
no ( harge tcK dcx tor visits) m«iv
want to buV this (overage Tht
cost IS S)f> tor the entire summer
Of $18 per summer session
OPIIONAI Hf Al TH hjs nothinn
to do with the SIUDINI
INS' P^N(t The SUMMER
SH iii ,f tNSltRANttotfere<* ■
the same polu y that we h.i.<
sold throughout the year prior
to eac h quarter Students ncjt
already (overed by this
insurant e ma\ purchase it for
the summer «it a tost of $17 ta
students $K) .MfHiiional lor
dependents M iynv buys th*-
SUMMER SU'LMNf INSl K
ANCE. he or she must fbsl
purchase the OfMIONAl
HEALTH benetits lor the sum
mer Mi<hael Dully
■ Insurance Assistant
ll Health Service
Mhaft your bank doing
for you after sdiooll
-:=->< .f'lM^f
-i
When you 9cwlu2rf£, your bank becomst fviOM bnp^
more financial diyrtmii, more mad for fiexibikly. and more need for
cradil. You vwant a bank thai can maat all ihate new needs and stiil k^
r'tenking ifenpie.
Thal*s vuhaw wt oent in.
. VMi QMf iMiioe ai many kxaiom as any other
e'le usuaHy doee byi if youre mowig, ttsaaiy la
your acxount to vk^iichever ollkx is fTKMt conMenleiit f^
MoffC cowwaatence. Our AD in-One* Checking Plan simpftftes
banking. When your appkcatioii Is Rpproued you get unbmlted check
y^itmnayMi no minimum halanrr, km personafaed checks, our ban
card, BankAmerlcard? * overdraft prolectionr and
BankAmericaTrawiiaa Cheques - aO for juit
$2 a morni.
fl In "■ ' -" '■'- -- 1 -^
anipgs pim and can hdp you feid (he one #iaf» f|^ lor you.
Man hdp. Niii (tone you'vt m. aat fcir a copy of "The Cdb0r
Gukk toiwlhwiit ki> In ttii WnVT rr Ifi pijri rrf hmtr nn finrling
nri^ ak>«iMt to picfc up our '>Wh|iK to Smk Menair and 'tloMT to Ert
Qiar'n>awndniMiCwwiMili*anialiiiiiBaportiawfcae«tyoiarlocal
So uihy not stop by
any otfter bank.
, BANKOF AMERICA
iMTaaA
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■5*?!srt
A^^^ita
■A^
• - • »«
Undergraduate
Student Association
Referendum Balloting
f-v
M.
-t,'
Thursday June 3 9 AM - 5 PM
^■•
( \
The following initiative items
will appear on the Referendum
Ballot:
'• . ■ ' . ■ • I
NSA Represenative Amend-
ment to the Undergraduate Stu-
dents Association Constitution.
• I-
2) Iranian Students Association
Initiative
Committee Agaihst Racism
Initiative
Polling Booths will be located as
follows:
Royce Quad
Bunche Hall
Kerckhoff Patio
Bombshelter
V
Undergraduate Stu^tJlssociatioii
Referendum Balloting
Tomorrow
R«pr«t«ntatlv« Am«ndm«nl to th« Und«rgrsduat«
y«t
Th# ppAition of National Siydant Attocwtton Reprvsantativa
•*■• •^^•<1 •• a voting m«mb*r of Studant Laotsiattva Council
in tha IMO't \^hen the US National Student Asaociation was
tha only student orQanization working tor ttyOanU rights and
other social concerns on tfie national level
However Student Legislative Council has aftitiated with
USNSA only once since it waa diacovered that the CiA had
funded infiltrated and directed the US National Student
AasttCiation for a maionty of years from the ear^ 1950's to the
mid USD's The reletionship bet¥irei»^lheCrATrrd USNSA wi»
terminated approxtiwlily nine years ago
Meanwhile two other organizations the National Student
Lobby and the UC Student Lobby have arisen to protect
tliMlpnt interests at the national and al^le tevals Thoufh
Student Legtslative Council hea consistently affiliated with
these two organizations they f\myi% not been yented voting
representativm on Student Legieietiwa Council
^ Additionally over the peat three yeece. Hit Studsnt Body
President has assumed tt>e Imai and ultimate authority m oft-
campus governmental and organizational relations as
evidenced by his her supervision of the National and UC
Student Lot)bies The currerit National Student Aeaociation
Representative har~abdicated any claim to control over
student governments external affairs and has owpreased a
willingness to resign should this amendment peas Under the
current NSA Constitution and By-Laws elimination of the
NSA Representative position from SLC would not preclude
affiliatjon with US Natioal Student Aaaociation by tt>e Student
Legieletive Council of -UCLA.
The following amendment would delete the position of hletinel
Student Representative from the Student Legislative Council
The following changes «yould take place in !f»e Constitution
1 Delete all items in the Constitution referring to the
funcations and duties of the NSA napreafiltiua
- 2 This Amendment shjsil take effect as soon as a vacancy
occurs in the office of NSA Representative either through
feaignation or normal expiration of term
^Should the Position of NSA Representative be removed from
the Student Legislative CounciP
Iranian Student
The U C -Iran Protect allows the Iraniar Regime, one of tfie moat
rapfaaaive dictatorships to set up a so-caNed "P^ir%mr\ Study
Center' on this campus The Iranian Students Association at
UCLA believes that such ties with a regime that holds over 40.000
political prisoners mostly students, and which has executed over
300 petriots in less than three yeers is to say the leeat. an insult
to the students of this University We furttier bei*<^ve that the
UCLA facilities should not be put at th^ diapoaai of the fmojil
of the Shah Do you approve of tf>e U C -Iran Profecf « ^ «,«
[NOUM ITEMS
no
D D
D
Commltte* Against Racism Ir^ltlalNw
Do you endorse the following
1 ) We daMiand annua) mmonty, recruitment beginning Fall 76 of
1^1^ urYdasfiddualas and 421 gMdanlM. including freshmen
and tranater sludaMlt. tRa same as ttte peak yeer of minority
adRHMidna m 1973. until minorities mt^ represented at laaat
according to their percentage of the population of Los Angeles
County
/.
spectaf adrnissjonji for mindrlty bttinguai and-
, V. .^»» white studantaaf the previous rate of 1 2%
^'\ V^*-* rl^rrtiaciL^
We daMand that the University m coc^>eration with private
foundalions and government agencies. ahCMJld pain and institute
a five yeer program of undergraduate schotaiihips and gradaute
fellowships lor minority and working class white students
admitted to the University
3) We damand that the Unieaiaity of California implaaiaot4lia
recoMMMndatiOfit of tf>e Chicano Taak Force Report which
called for proportijgnal Chicano enrollmawt. increaaed financial
aid affirmative action in faculty and staff h*fm^ and a recommit-
mant by tfie UC to community services
^4) In view of the complete inadaguacy of Affirmafive AcMdii in
UCLA hiring to this date and the lack of employment for
Of UCLA
We demand an end to the faculty hiring fi
faculty hiring to be implamantad aa follows
and men
in
In tt>e departrhents which hawa experienced a sharp increeae
in undergraduate enrollment, such as Political Science.
Chemistry and Biology mcr9m%9 tenure-track teaching
(acuity positions to meet the Standard 15/1 student/faculty
ratio >
' Dacraaae by a campus-wida dapartmentel average of 50%
the Student-TA ratio,, without restricting enroUoMCil, put by
. doubling tRa mtmtmr of TAships m eccordafica wrth the
davnands of the TA's union
All hiring, whetttar into new positions created under the
aboee or into existing positions must be allocated according
to population proportions of Los Angeles CouW^of ethnicity
and sex
I •
5) To rectify existing instances of raciat. sexist, and elitist
practicaa at UCLA, we damand tt>at the following professors.
students and staff be reinstated immediately
1 Dr HumtMrto Bracho
2 Ms RocK) Comacho
3 WINia Norton
6) We demand a I
il of the cutbacks in Student Health
7) We damand an end to all forms of police harraaamant of
studef>t8 at UCLA, particularty of minority students, workers and
leftists and to help achieye this end. we demand the dis-
armament of the campus police
8) Rescind the $405 00 tuition hike for out of state foreign
students
Polls Open 9 AM-5 PM
v^
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Bunche Hall
Kerckhoff Patio
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Vote Tomorrow
SpuiisuieU by Elucituiis BoaruyStuqeni Legislative Council
VOTE JUNE 3
Sponsored by Elections Board/Student Legislative Council
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c
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unique one-year work-study program sponsored
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Bag the Trojans"
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•t*^.
0nb0rt/aihm0nt:7
;
Mort Sahl: still angry after all these years
<.:->-:*i
im HUi
M/mMMT MMI
S»tci«i
Cutft
St«(
FRIDAY. JUNE 4 7 30PMShow
STARLIGHT AMPHITHEATRE
SttHfS Park BttrS«ft«i. I24f L*clUM«tf 9mm Srivt. SwrSank
1% IS M«n KffS0ry«i ftJt (iailsast P»tk,nw
/. I iMitt at All TKMtfwi OvIttfY
pfihtcmii to^ laou 4 atfiflMLua concam
^ Howsfd Posacr
Mort Sahl thought a moment about his prolession of satiritt
before a movie title &ug^ted a motto
**Stay angr> That's what you have to do.**
He said it with a smile, which is fitting Sahl has been angry
since the 193U*s. not because he's tcmpermentally suited to anger.
but because somebody has to be angry The critical things he
says about nearly everybody should be uken seriously, but not
personally "^~
Sahfs anger makes him many things to many«people Usually
he IS the comic with the rolled-up newspaper who extcmpon/cs a
routine based on whatever happens lo be in the news That*
what he'll be Saturday in Schoenberg hall, when he will do shows
at K and 10 pm.
Bui he IS also oiie of the tffciginai criucn QlibeWarPcn Report
and d longtime advocate ot the conspiracy theory of John
Kennedy's death. A lifelong supporter of liberal causes and
candidates, he is a recipient of an Emmy award for a TV series
he did with George Putnam last year
Sahl has spoken publicly for years about illicit activities by the
FBI and CIA. and notes that one of the effects of Watergate and
disclosures by Frank Church's Senate Intelligence Committee is
to prove that he and others like him aren't totally cra/y
"When I talked about the CIA to a campus cdrlor fyur or five
years ago. he said "paranoia** and laughed in my face But tcxJay.
they're all using the same terminology they're talking about
The Company ' Robert Rcdford makes a film like Three Days of
tlic Coiulor where the agency is shooting people in the streets oi
New york. Chnt Eastwood puts it in The Eifjer Sanction, and
Eastwood's a"^ Reagan Republican Nobody's doubting ii any
more,"
What people are doubting, says Sahl. is the Warren Report,
which said thai Lee Harvev Oswald acted alone in assassinating
Kennedy. *
"When (then New Orlean.s District Attorney Jim) Garrison and
I started pounding, 58 per cent of Americans believed the report
Now, according to the recent polls, only nine per cent believe it "
Umiiiestronably, Sahl. the onl\ critic of the Warren report with
a national platform, played a key role m eroding its credibility A
special edition of his television show "Both Sides Nbw** in which
the original film of the assassination was shown in ils original
frame se^^uence (which hid been ahcrcd by the EBf to show the
president's head moving forward, as if hit from behind, instead of
backward), got a very wide response last year and has since won
a New York Film Critics Award
Though Sahl is gratified by the shift \t\ p.viblic opinion, he isn't
too quick to claim victory
"The problem isir't in believing: it's in definitive action Once-^
you agree that the killers arc still out there, you have to decide
what to do about it. That's what scares people." ,
It also accounts for the caution with which the public and the
p^ress have approached topics that Sahl has been most outspoken
about.
"They could never have sold the Warren Report if the press
had said it was a lie But the guys in the press are very careful
Ihey wait to see if it's practical to be a dissident. When it's safe,
they jump on the bandwagon.
**The FBI now admits to having files on Justice Douglas and
Eleanor Rooseveh. and J Edgar Hoover is a dirty woxd It
becomes the cheapest shot wTieti its easiest
"Look at the way they're treating Nixon and Agnew They all
used to play tennis with Agnew, and now they don't want him on
**ll you're in thk racket, you can't haiie any
friends . . . You have to %kork like hell for your guy
to get in, then afflack him. U you're going to be one
of them, who needs youf'
the air plugging his book^ '^mihinK worse than being powerless in
America. I guess "
Mort Sahl in person acts and talks |ust hke Mort Sahl on
stage or on camera which is to sa> he does on sUge just v^hat
he would do in his living room Hi<i stage acts has always been
spontaneous, conversational and .mything but shck Sahi in the
living room speaks with convict umi and enthusiasm, but so softly
that an innocent observer mighi think him shy He isn't
Sahl- IS playing colleges again alter two years spent largefy in
Las Vegas and finds that the prcilommant tcehng most places is
shell-shock
•'Perception is stilled People as just numbed by everything
"Watergate worked ver> well for the purposes of the
intelligence communitv. as thc\ hke to call themselves
Everybody walked away saving ksus. what's the use: Jeflerson
had seven children by a Black m stress. West Point Cadets are
getting thrown out of school and everybody cheated.' There's
.^J!*'
'Something's There'
Greenburg turns ghost writer
By Catli> Scipp
"What the heFdo you say to dead people
on a tape recorder, besides asking them
what are they doing in your bathroom in
the first place*^ ask*; Dan Greenburg in
his new book, Soaietliing*s There (Dou-
Meday A Co.. S8.95. 320 pages). He has
heard that if yoy ask questions of the
dead on a upe recorder, leave space for
answers, and then play back the tape over
and over again, you will eventually hear
faint voices answering the questions "The
strange thing," he continues, "is that I
have done this idiocic experiment a^out a
half dozen times . . and almost every
lime ... I have heard something"
That is just one example of Greenburg's
adventures in the occuh Some others
include meeting a Ouija board spirit
nasied Jelly who spells out things like "I
am sexy*' and "I like boys, woo-woo;"
visiting a coven of teen-age witches in
New York who wait until **Kung Fu" is
over lo begin their mtctiags and a
l!ll HAm^d Sam
UlllllMMLjl!
to his owner, *^Open the door, you jcrk.^
If all this sounds like its made up, it
isn't. Greenburg has done extensive re-
search for this book and has the footnotes
to prove It Which is good, becau.se his
self-admitted "perverse" and "lurid**
descriptions tend to give his book an
anything-for-a-laugh feeling that does not
do much for us credibility It does do a
lot for Its quality Something's There is
possibK the most readable book written
on the occult it is certainly the iMMtt.
Greenburg is careful not to venture into
the world of the occult without uking
along a good supply of wisecracks. W hen
he deechtes the experiments of Dr. Lyall
Watson, who ground up mice and
Maader embryos to watch them
according to his theory of the controlling
astral body, Greenburg cannot resist
nnmmrMiiig, "When I had dinner with
^^ ^ J will be relieved to hmi
th^t he did not furnish the canapes.**
His funniest chanter is ahonT ( Icvc
iittHic
witr
d former loi
i\ wh(^
knoun lo hini>cir hooked up
cacta plam to a lie detector and "
his hrains for the one form of torture that
couk make a hard boiled dracaena crack
and spill the beans" (E>ipping the pUnts
leavtv in hot coffee didn't work thinking
ahot setting it on fire did)
S< netimes, Greenburg*s characters are
funn rnough by themselves He waKHes
Mar I us l>ykshoom. a practical clair-
voytni who mys, "I don't make hocus-
p«'<^ read tkt mind of a woman in the
audic Kc - »Yoyr father* he savs, *Is this
the Aay he walks*- 'Yes,' lays the
^""^ He spends much time in the
loiic reading magazinesT ^Y says the
^«^ He has hemmorrhoids * 'Yes.'
' ^ woman
^*»wethin|\ There hat a laugh an
altn4 ,v pugc ()y| ^jii stjii niake you
ni ^^ it yoy lead it late at night It is a
skill '>mbination "If my taiK teems as
^^ I'm still wearing m\ patroni/il|g
n't he foolrH - wr.tr^ C\r
ii-
list
ill *
'J^ IS still the most e^
^"^•F d 1 know for" dealing with
disgusi but not much outrage"
Sahl finds that talking to an audience about their own
numbness it often the best material he has
"There's a dormant senne of humor out there You've just got
tojwike It up I have a feeling that if you were a deakr on
jCaaipiis, you could do a great business selling downers, but you
couidn*t sell anybody any dexies They're not looking to make
the day any longer, as Car as I can tell "
Sahl has revcntU finished a book about himself and America
in the last 10 years
"It's an uncluttered view I Write with a sort of abandon, and I
saw no reason to hold anything hack
nhe book hits the stands in Septcaber. I think ft*8 a pretty
merciless look at liberals. I don't thinli anvone has rcaUy Uken
the hbcrals on 1>eforf — ^-^ _^
Sahl himself stands politically and ide(»l()gicaU\ with liberals
but dislikes fheir inactivitv He also sees a different sort oi
reahty. I ^^
•*lf you look carefully, you'll see the country's been governed
by people who weren't elected . and I don't mean Ford and
Rockefeller It's been governed by people who arc in power
lorever I he liberals are saying "Isn't it great Nixon's gone.' as if
It made a difference in the way the couimy is run. Liberals are
great that way " '
Nonethekas, Sahl sees liberal politicians like Adlai Stevenson
and the Kennedys as great apport unities that were never reab/ed
He IS an avid believer in the Kennedv legac\ though Kennedy
himsejf was not immune to Sahl's barbs while in office
"Ihev let the Kennedv legacy he interred with the bones' The
Kennedv legacy is m the American I'm versity kpeech where he
puts the Pentagon on notice It's in his instructions to Larry
O'Brien and MacNamara. which they verify, that we will not
escalate in Vicinam jl^
"The Kennedv Legacy mostiv is 4»ptimism I h^ was hope in
this countrv People had a bdief that they could still be masters
of their oh4i fate, and being an American wa,s not a dirty word
Ajter that it was straight downhill really a hundred miles a
triinute
"They thought they could do away wuh that by forgetting him
*But It didn't work the case is still unsettled Afid the guvs that
got him are still around, the ideas that goi him are stiU around "
' "" Sahl ~^
Is there hope left'' NaM iees some in anger
"1 pok at Bertrand Russell in there punching tOr 94
You have to have that kind ot spirit
"Spirit IS sitting up on f>caih,Row, getting law books in your
cell and writing appeals, mostly because it makes you feel better
and makes the world a little less cra/y Your hberal friends will
cocne by «ndraay you'll wmd up in the gas chamber anyway: *But
•^c'U give you a gaod funeral";
For himscU. Sahl prescribes tile same sort n^f impartial, acidic
ftatire he's always done
"If yoii're going to get into this racket, you can't have any
friends. You have to go our own way You've got to work like
hell Jor your guy to get ihto the White house, then the minute
he's sworn in you have to attack him It's your job If you're
going to be one of them, who needs you'' We have enough of
them You have to be a little subversive
**Make it truthful and make it funny.** Sahl said, both of his
hook and of his stage act "That's what memorable satinsu like
Swift and Mark Twain had going for them, and that*s why
people remember them Make it truthful and funny funny is
what makes a bearable.** ^--^
',^*LktfUK
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Thursday a/3 3 30-4 30 AU a40a
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profession. Send for free brochure: WUJS, 25A
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o
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FRIDAY. JUNE 4j30PMShow
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Thunday 6/3 3 30-4 30 AU 240a
MortSqhl: still dngry after all these years
By Howard PoMier
Mort Sahl thought a moment about his prolcssion of MBUrm
before a movie title suggnted a motto
'•Suy angry ( That's what you have to do."
He said it with a smile, which is fitting Sahl has been angry
since the I950's, not because he s tcmpermcnlalK suited •• a«fW,
but because somebody has to be angry Ihe . al things he
says about nearly everybody should be taken seriously, but not
personally
Sahrs anger makes him manv things to m4ny people Usually
he IS the cojmic with the rollcd-up newspaper who extcmpori/es a
routine based on whatever happens to be in the news. That's
what he'll be Saturday in Schocnberg hall whr-n hr will do shows"
at 8 and JO pm.
Biit he Hi aiso one^ the original-criiio ^ the Warren Acpmi
and a longtime advocate of the conspiracy theory of John
Kennedy's death A htciong supporter of liberal causes and
candidates, he is a recipient of an fcmmy auard tor a IV series
be did with George Putnam last year
Sahl has spoken publicly for years about illicit activities b> the
FBI and CIA, and notes that one ot the effects of Watergate and
disclosures by Frank Church.'s Senate Intelligence Committee is
to prove that he and others like him aren't totally cra/y
**Whcn I talked about the CIA to a campus editor four or five
years ago, he said "paranoia" and laughed in mv face But today,
they're all using the same lerminoiogy they're talking about
The Company ' Robert RcdfoFd makes a film like Three Days of
the Condor where the agency is shooting people in the streets of
New york. Chnt Eastwood puts it in The Eiger Sanction, and
Eastwood's a Reagan Republican Nobody's doubting it any
more" . -
What people arc doubting, savs SahL is the Warren Report,
which said that Lee Harve> Oswald acted alone in atH^assinating
Kennedy
"When (then New Orleans District Aiiorncv Jtm) Oarrison and
I started poundmg, 58^per cent of Americans believed the report
Now, according to the recent poljs^. only nine per cent believe it "
UnqUestiofiably. 5iahl. the onlv critic of the Warren report with
a national platform, played a key role in eroding its credibility. A
special edition of his television show "Both Sides Nou" in which,
the original film of the assassination was shown in its original
frame se()ue nee (which had been altered by the FBf to show the
president's head m^>vmg forward, as if hit from behind, instead of
backward), got a very wide response last year and has since won
a New York Film Critics Awird
Though Sahl is gratified by the shift in public opinion, he isn't
too quick to claim victory
"The problem isn't in believing, it's in definitive action Once
you agree that the killers are still out there, you have to decide
what to do about it. That's what scares peopic."
It also accounts for the caution with which the public and the
press have approached topics that Sahl has been most outspoken
about
"Ihey could never have sold the Warren Report if the press
had said it was a lie But ihe guys in the press are very careful.
They wait to see if it's practical to be a dissident Wheii it's safe.
they jump on the bandwagon.
"The FBI now admits to having files on Justice Douglas and
Eleanor Rooseveh, and J Edgar Hoover is a dirty word It
becomes the cheapiest shot when its easusi
"Look at the wav they're treating Nixon and Agnew They all
used to play tennis with Agnew, and now they don't want him on
'Ml you're in this racket, you can't have any
frieiKk . . . You have lo i^ork Bke hell for your guy
to get in, then attack him. H you're going to be one
oi them, who needs you?"
the air plugging his book Nothing v^orse than being powerless in
America, I guess "
Mort Sahl in pcrsoa.^ acts and talks |ust hke Mort Sahl on
stage or on camera which iv to sa\ he does on stage lust what
he would do in his living roorr. flis stage acts has always been
spontaneous conversational and >tn\ thing but slick Sahj m the
living room speaks with con\K'i(»f and enthusiasm, but so -softly
that an innocent observer mik.'hi think him shy He isn't
Sahl IS playing coUcgn again alter two years spent largely in
Las Vegas and finds that the prc< ommant feeling most places is
>}iell-shock
"Perception is suflcd Peopn as jusi numbed by everything
"Watergate worked verv >^c!l lor the piirposes of the
intelligence community.-^ as iKtv hke to call themselves
Everybody walked away saMf^i *Jcm*s, what's the use; Jefferson
had seven children by a Black rrt stress, 1^est Point Cadets are
fttting thrown out of school and everybody cheated.' There's
,).....
;/
'Something's There'
"■*- •- — 1
Greenburg turns ghostwriter
By Catky Seipp
••What the hell do you say to dead people
on a upe recorder, bciiict asking them
what are they doing in your bathroom in
the first placer asks Dan Greenburg in
his new book, SeoKthing's There (Dou-
bleday k Co., M.95, 320 pages) He has
heard that if you ask questions of the
dead on a tape recorder, leave space for
answers, and then play back the tape over
and over again, you will eventually hear
taint voices answering the questions. "The
stiMlgr thing." he continues, ^'is that I
have done this idiotic experiment about a
half do/en times and almost every
time I have heard something."
That is lusi one example of Cireenburg's
mtures m the occult borne others
include: meeting a Ouija board spirit
named Jelly who spells out things like "I
am sexy" and "I like boys, woo-woo; "
visiting a coven of teen-age witches in
New York who wait until "Kung Fu" is
over I/) hcgm their meetrnps and a
lOtliuiiiculU
who huin:^ '*JLi
'' f I lUllllilJ
.1 .T
to his owner. "Open the door, you jerk *'
If all this sounds hke its made up, it
isn't Greenburg has done extensive re-
search for this book and has the footnotes
to prove It Which is good, because his
self-admitted "perverse" and **lurid''
descriptions tend to give his book an
anvthmg-for-a-laugh feeling that does not
do much for its crcdibihty It does do a
lot for its quality Somettiinf's There is
possibly the most readable book written
on the occult; it is ceruinfy^ the 'sanest.
preenburg is cilreful not to venture into
the world of the occult without taking
along a good supply of wisecracks W hen
he describes the experiments of Dr. Lyall
Watson, who ground up mice and lala-
nmder embryos to watch them reform
according to his theojry of the oontrolhng
astral body <' ^cenburg cannot r
commenting. When I had dinner with
Dr Wa you will be relieved to hear
that he oid not furnish the canapes"
His funniest chapter is about (
;im1
and annouAi
Haks?
w+t+» tnc
kncmn to himseir hooked up his dra-
^eaa plant to a lie detector and "racked
lvi<>h:.ni»s for thei one form of torture that
w -' make a hard boiled dracaena crack
P<ll the beans." (Dipping the plants
n hot coffee didn't work, thinking
tiing It on fire did.)
-imcs, Greenburg*s characterli are
(^noegh t^ themieivei. He watches
Marinus Dykshoorn. a practical clair-
vovt f x,ho says. "I don't make hocus-
P»Hi h:j^^ i^^ mind of a woman in the
auc:. - Your fatin// he says, 'Is this
the ..> he walksT 'Yes.' says the
^om.in He spends much time in the
\oi\c^ reading rnagKine " Yes.' says the
>*««**'i He has hemmorrhoids ' 'Yes,'
^v» he woman
Si>methieg*ft There has a laugh on
jimr every pm^ but will still make you
if you read it late at night It is a
ombination "If my tone leenM as
J'm still wearing my pstroni/ing
'^'t be fooled." writes Greenburg.
nerv.
ui iheir own ^
dis|ust but not much outrage**
Sahl finds that talking to an audience
numbness is often the best material he hit
••There's a dormant sense of humor out there You ve just got
to wake it up I have a feeling that d you were a dciikr on
campus, you could do a great business selling downers, but you
couldn't sell anybody any dexies I hey re not looking to make
the day any longer, as fer as 1 can tell"
Sahl has recently finished a book about himself and America
in the last 10 years
"It's an uncluttered vies* I wtiic wun a sort of abandon, and I
"w no reason to hold anything back
"Ihe book hits the stands in September, I think It's a prettv
merciless look at libt • ' i Jon't think anyone has reallv taken
the liberals on beloit
Sahl himself stands puiuically and ideologKally with liberals,
but dislikes their inactivity He also sees a different tort of
leality
"If you look carefully, you 11 see the country's been governed
by people who weren't elected, and I don't mean Ford and
RtKkefeller It's been governed by people who are in power
forever The liberals are saying '*lsn't it great Nixon's gone ' as if
It made a difference in the wav thejciiuntrv is run I iberais are
great that way "
Nonethr ' Sahl sees liberal politicians like Adlai Stevenson
and the Kennedys as great opportunities that were never reali/ed
He IS an avid believer in the Kennedy legacy, though Kennedy
himself was not immune to Sahl's barbs while in office
"I hey let the Kennedy legacy be interred with the bones The
Kennedy legacy is in the American University speech where he
puts the Pentagon on notice It's in his instructions to Larry
O'Brien and MacNamara, which thi\ verify. t^Htt we will not
escalate in Vietnam ' ,
"Ihe Kennedy Legacy mostly is optimism Thei^e was hope in
this country People had a belief that they could still be masters
of their own fate, and being an American was not a dirty woei.
After that it was straight downhill really a hundred miles a
minute
"I hey thi)ught they could do away with that by forgetting him
Bui It didn't work the case is still unsettled And the guvs that
got him are still around, the ideas tliat got him are still around "
Is there hope left'* Sahl seCs some in anprr.
"Look at Bertrand Russell m there punching for 94 years
You have to have that kind of spirit
"Spirit IS sitting up on Death Row, (getting law books in your
cell and writing appeals, mostly because it makes you feel better
and makes the world a little less crajy Your liberal friends will
come by and say you'll wind up in the gas chamber anyway: ^ftiit
we'll give you a good funeral.**
For himself, Sahl prescribes the same sort of impartuil acidic
satire he's always done
"If you're going to get into this racket, you can't have any
friends You have to go our own way You've got to work like
hell for your guy to get into the White house, tlien the minute
he's sworn in you have to attack him It's your job. If you're
going to he one of them, who needs you' We have enough of
them You have to be a little subversive
"Make it truthful and make it funny," Sahl said.' both of his
book and of his stage act. "That's what memorable satirists like
Swift and Mark Iwain had going for them, and that's why
people remember them Make it truthful and funny funny is
what makes it bearable.**
'rsi L\reaUJL
SOIREE FRANCAISE
come and have fun
Wed.. June 2. 7 00 PM
^Tine • Cheesed Music
by fr<»n(h C iub
DATSUN
u
Acres of Datsuns
Student, faculty, and alumni
fleet discounts
101 S Arroyo Parkway
ff
684-1133
BBQ
This IS the place for Rib lovers/
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on dry cloaning only
Expires June 4, 1976
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on dry cloanir«g only
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1126 Westwood Blvd.
478-6310
next to McDonalds
Complete Dry Cleaning and Laundry
Parking in Rear
ncr mi(
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Htill the most live
-^itnow for dcahnp with in^*^
^m-^^m^mtm
Worried
About Finals?
Why' cram? The PLACEMENT &
CAREER PLANNING CENTER
has a file of qualified UCLA
student tutors, who are available
to help you get through those
subjects you feel apprehensive
about.
Don't delay . . . call the CENTER
today, 825-2981. — —
-w-%
^/
\ -M-
J
I
Gals $2
FOX HUNT
Dfsco Party
Food - Entertainment - Dancing - Pri
Dance CorHtfl - First Prize
f dtys for 2 inlm Vcg«
Sat. June 5, 8 pm
URC — 900 Hilgard
by CHI Young Jewt^h Adult^
Guys -S3
Chabrofs latest film
* A Piece of Pleasure'
i
' m
I
e
HILARIOUS... It s a bendui; tnju pui aowfi
on everything and everybody from
President to commercial , , *»•!,«,'.
CNtCiSa IMMM
LUDICROUS LUNACY -ntly more
tunny than GROOVE TUBE . -..*,,.««,«.
"CRAZY... a cross between MONTY PYTHON
and NBC SATURDAY NIGHT c-.cM.,M.t
"LUNACY. . . m the satirical vein of /
V*)ody Aliens SLEEPER ^,. /
OUTRAGEOUS Harvard ^
Lampoon irreverence i
completely off the wall
ly RoWrt
A bourgeois
in a world fulJ of luxury and
comion amid the plmcidity of
the French provinces, slowly
destroy each other out of jeal-
ousy This IS Claude Chabrolfc
master tetnmno for his film
career it seems, and its rep-
etition has often (once too
often for most) reminded one
of a broken needle playing the
tame two or three notes over
and over again.
The Naila Gang (about a
NtiimtMaiNffTft
mriRMAtlOtMl HARMONT
SMASH WEEKi
I
_..„.,|-,,
•Ht, il**iw| THAI
'.t
r
WEST^OOO U A Cineinj Center 2 I 3 • 475 9441
Thejtre #7 Everyday at 1 3fl 3 M 4 30 6 N 7 3fl IN tl 31
Midniiht Show Fniay ani Sattrjay
Tfctatre #3^Everyiay at 2 N 3 311 5 fU). § 30 in. I 3| 11 N
MOLiywOOO Paramount
463 3263
Ewyiay at 2 M,
^ ._ 4 00 6 00 8 00 !0 00
fmm
1
CULVER CITY.
StatfitOrla 391 1251
CO- MIT
PAKKm MY ILOOfft
Roots
Hiniom A«« (2
. bi w o<
MIM n olWilahiff
- .^ — ^^. . »L80 IN ONAMOI COUtlTV «f ^
WCSTMMSUI tit Cmma • M3 IMI wo ^aims W
MofWtfMlg*
..ftMiOu Country Man '-- -"^
-7^-
Omt Amw fmhton'
Soufh CoMi Piua
(714)
r-r
r
TT
-f
r-i-
itonnlal TmmI, ij
You can wMr li if you want to/-
and "ts yours to k«i»p
<^^H«f tha hacli — maf« ,»un t oa
anothar graduating class who
can wm»r one for a lor»g tim««
150 karckhoff hall. 825-0611 x 271
open mooday-friday 6 30-4:
campus studio
mocky hmnd of terroristi) was
a welcome, if unsuccessful,
change from the refttkr. but it
took last year's Ls Rupture
(very much affixed in the oid
hunting grounds) to tipiusoff
that something new was going
on in Chabrol's provinces.
The tip-off has paid off with
his newest work. A Place of
Pleasure (at the Los Fcliz).
Chabrol appears in this film to
have perfected everything that
he has been trying to peHect
lor the past 13 years. So fault-
lessly realized is^A Pkce of
Pleasure that everything C'hab-
rol does in the future will have
to be judged against u^
TTie master scenario outlined
above is faithfully followed.
The. variation * IS that the jeal-
ousy IS spewed out by the man
(not husband, since they're
living together) and the wo-
man, Esther (Danielle GcgaufO
IS punished by him lor taking
him up OB his suggestion that
she fool around. *"Bui just a
Ijttle.*'
All the middle class tricks
and tomfoolery arc old stuff to
Chabrol His steady^ fltmera-
man (Jean R a bier) and screen-
writer (Paul GegaufO arc still
by his side It isn't the major
things that make A Piece of
Pleasure great, but Imle things
hkc casting Gcgauff in the lead
role, his real-life ex-wife in the
role? of Esther and his real-life
daughter in the role oi — you
figMfd It — his daughter.
lut it also may be due to
something as simple as the
process of age. The older Rob-
pn Altman, Ingmar Bergman,
is ta nJey K u brick , F rancois
Truffaut and Enc Rohmer be-
cone, the better their fifms get
Ditto, Chabral. All these men
have travelled their own land-
tcapcs and contemplated theu-
own ideas on human nature
more than once, but they en-
rich upon It on each repeated
journey Chabrofs people
haven't just become nastier,
they've become more human.
VICIOUS, more peiceful.
more loving, more jealous
The older Chabrol has seen
fnmt of Me, and more t ha n
ever his films seem like a re-
portage of what happened to
^thc Joneses just last week The
three Gegaufts have never
acted before, and that is the
most likely reason why their
performances are the best
Chabrol has ever filmed They
may or may not be playing
themselves, but they and Chab-
ro] know the people instinc-
tfvely.
Two weeks for an engage-
ment isn't long, but it may be
just enough time to find but
that sharp, new masterpieces
still do piay m Los An
V,
and that older men still do
make good.
Student films
screen in Royce
"Image 74," an evening of films produced by Hvdtaii hi
the Motion Picture/ Television Division of the UCLA
Department of Theater Arts will screen in MdniU 14t9
rriday, Saturday and Sunday, June 44 and 11-13 at I'M
pni.-
.u?V!^ '*' ' ''■■ •• "^- »*•»*»« t^^mti aw Mcak hi
the bMk or p.; $1^. TJcketi are avaiteMe at the door
C «rtr. Ticket Olllc. i.^ Uh Metoiu ho> offiA tL^
*qP"»^i«« of Theater Art. and the Comiinee « FhM
Art* Producti< —
'•i^\\*iVii>ni^fc»i T I ■ >ti>i,ii ■ >iM^^— ^^^,
Also plays, poema, speeches on tapa
_ Pop records heard in Powell
>•>
Sit down, plug in and listen
to your favorite recording
artists.
The audio room in Powell
Library has a collection of
spoken langiiagr and popubu*
music recordings, according to
Skipp Mcmmer, the audio
room public service supervisor
Spoken language recordings
include poetry, plays, literar>
criticisms, historical documents
and speeches. Ahhough there
are a few exceptions, most of
the recoi dings are in English,
Mcmmcr explained.
In addition, the audio room
has a Collect ton of rock and
roll, jazz, American and ethnic
folk and bfaadway show
music.
The audio room tt "not so
current on popvlar music as
some people would like us to
he," Memmer commented,
"but we try to keep as current
as poaaible"
To use the audio room, stu-
dents need only a library card,
Memmer explained U^on
entenng the room, the student
finds the recordings he or she
desires listed in the card cata-
logue and fills out a call slip
The student m then issued a
Bet of headphones and assigned
to one of 32 listening station<(
Having been given a channel
number, the student sits down
at the station, plugs in the
headphones and dials the
recorded program. Memmer
said
People may listen to records
for as ''long as they want,"
Memmer explained A call slip
must be filled out for each
recording, he added
"Wc arc pretty busy most of
the day," Memnacr said. The
best times to use the audio
room are on weekends and
after 3 pm on week days, he
added _
—Jeffrey Srown
»onfterW by NV
.<f
Five weeks of atudy^ travel
and fun
hi Mexico
For taachecB. high scrtool arKJ colJaga atudanta Accradtlad
claaaaa In Spanish. Maxican cultura. music, art. ale 9A baautifui
Montarray Tac Collaoa $660 mcludaa tuition, board, foom.
laundry ar>d trips Earn 2 aamaalara hig^ achoai or • oallBoa
credits
For rialada and catalogue contact group leader Dr Rk:r^ara ^
Martin bet^aeaii 8 and 9:30 any evening at 47e MM7.
I
I
fi ■ iiorr
@V.W."
TUNE.UP, LUBE 1 Oil $0i«5
A-1 AUTO service;..
7957 VAN NUYS SLVO. 5-.- ^g.^^
f
.
I
FUN PARTY AT
. \
U.
isnc
Sunday, June 6
4:00 - Midnight
$5.25
Th« au^o room In Po«»»« L*ftK»ft fMtur*s d«v«rM musk:al and
l«r>guaga rvcofdingt. accMsltoto to all with a library card
Admission to Disneyland, unlimited use of all
adventures & attractions, FREE PARKING
(icuis io salt Service Center, Kerckhotf 140, wtille they laat
.J
STUDENTS
is UCLA meeting youi' sports
arid recreation needs? ~
1
T
Below is a list of activities now offered by UCLA for
student sports and recreation
Is your interest represented? ^
Would you like to see anything added, augmented
or changed?
Do you participate?
CULTURAL & RECREATIONAL
AFFAIRS
Would ydu like to participate?
You are invited to write in or come in to discuss your
interests and UCLA's programs. Please address your
comments to the Title IX Athletic Study Task Force
c/o Ms. Andrea Hill, 2248 Murphy Hall, or call
" 825-7777.
Intnmural Sports:
Recreation Club Activitiog:
Attifda
Air Rifta-Pistol
Amateur Radio
Bowling
Brtdga
Chata
Cridiet
Conaar^aaon
Fiaid Hediey
Flailing
QaiBxy
Go
Hatha Yoga "
Ridiee
Huntir>g
Ice Hockey
Indoor Soccer
Jyeo
Karala
Kendo.
Kanpo
Kung fu
Lacroaaa
II
Oieanic
Photography
Hi
Samng
Flag FootbaN
Sofmali
Badminton
VoHeybali
Water Pok)
Turkey Trot
Tennit
Table Tennis
FriatMe
Cross Country
Oea
HandbaM
aeaMaan
Wrestling
Racquetball
Soccer
Track a Field
aeuait)
Flag Rugby
Swimming
Doiiline
VVetghtlifling
tir>g
Skeet 4 Trap
Ski
Soccer
Social Dar>ce
TaataTi
Teaei
Ski
Wieatling
MEN'S INTERCOLLEGIATE
ATHLETICS
III
III
Crew
Cncket
Croas-Country
Swimmir>g
Tennis
Track
Water Po«e
Wrestling
Non^Credlt Instruction:
Fencing
SHm a Trim
Gymnastics
Judo
Officiating
water saieiy tneeucrton
latSkatifie
WOMEN'S INTERCOLLEGIATE
ATHLETICS
Badminton
Baalwtbeii
Croes-Country
Gymnastics
II
iming/Divi
Track/Field
AH aporta mnd rmcrmi
ILUCLA.
i .
f
<
^INIVERSITY EPISCO^Ai
COMMUNITY
Eucharist Sufi^ayi 6 p.m Mi0per. program
Thursdays 12:05
The Chapel: StO Hilgard (at )Nmakoktnm)
Chaplain: Terry Lynberg, 47S-18J0
Camp
xampus
«i M M fMirai COT9M. ^ p« mmmm
if
and facutty wMMa It ttnif tn Viff Com-
imflM tar VPI-77 InttrMtad appltcaato
shouii submit nama aiii uNPtali at toan
la ma Cofiimtffaa c/a Mia ClMa-
f% anea, Marpiiy ?i47
-4
I
I
SUMMER INTERNSHIPS
INTERNSHIPS IN PUBLIC AFFAIRS
- LOS ANGELES GOVERNMENT -
Internships are now available through the EXPO
CENTER in the Los Angeles offies of US Senators.
Congressmen. California State Senators and Asaenibly-
men. City Councilmen. and other elected officials
and public interest groups — For applications & infor-
mation tee TINA at EXPO A-213 or CALL 825-0631
•
the more
letters to
the Editor
the better
^ aHM bt partariaad
4 1ft pM lamorrow and 8 p«n Juaa 4 Mac
Hall
mutic and taafi by taacraa
5 30^ X pm (dtnnr S2 50|. JMt 4.
itional Studant Canttr
-41: iMBMii llMiaiv mm. <N».jjpiiy
Graoa of Junk Food Junkit tama and ofiara.
9 pan tomorrow Hadrick Hall Firatidi
lounge Free tor Madrick Halt ratidents
Witt) aMal cards otnars donatioris
rtquastad
I witr J
by saalan m tiM MCtA
I pm tomorrow aad
and • p«. Jmm ft WasMas
tor facility, suft and aiMiant woman wl*
multipla ralas. naon. tvary Fnday Murphy
Sportswear
at
Student
Prices
f
--' t-
/
plaase pick up your certilicatas and
pint m the Dean of Students afllat Murphy
2224
-ftaaabsai fMpMa LaapM ialiL lumpia it
a Filipino cultural dMH Maaft with ttw saM
IS featured Filipino dances and tasttvibas.
11 am 1 pm tomorraw. Sruin MlaMt
Isass. sponsorad by (tts Soeiat
Glut) will t>e held 6 pm midnighi
Juna 4. Woman s Gym 2Cn Ballroom and
discs daaaag vpHI ba featured ri
mants provtdad 6rtu is semi-formbi
—lay a
i|Sb;spb| 11 am 2 pm now June 11.
^um WfaNi 7/11 stores are donating over
80 par cent pf iha sales to Muscular Oys
trophy
-TIa iMaiV M Tf
. 7 pm todar. ^iKtche ^m^ —
-Vlre Vsllay ftasMMi. a study of the pra-
r>isionc cultural ecology of ^ru 8 pm to
day Hainas 220
Paar Haalttt Ciaaailors is opan to all man
and woman m ttia UCLA community 930
am 5 30 pm. June 5 Ackerman 36.17
— laMa AaHhssa Lars will be discussed by
aifht different pralBaaors. 9 am - noon and
2 5 pm tomorrow BundM 8275
— lav EspsrlaMMI Agprassbss Is Ma Stady
si Uaiils tysMai MasMsas. 4 pm tomorrow.
Franz 12^
-TbaagbM sa tbe PaysbipMMBMr el AgMs
3 30 pm tomorrow Fran; 1280.
-ilaas 8MHasa. candidate tar Jwifa Su-
perior Court office no 1 wdf apaafc noon - 1
tomorrow Mayartioff Park
pick up a Protect Awarenaas
voter intofmation booklet available on cam-
pus now
Pregreei ftraiatb. field work experience
through community service and learning
Academic craiM available studaal tfa-
veiops own jaib daacnption with assiatanu
Visit Kinsay m or call 825-3730
— faWt Imss. ft- 10 pm every Wednesday
and 8 30- to 30 pm every Friday Internation-
al SUidant Canter 1023 Hilgard Free
— fsNSMMps. information and deadline
on exframural funding for graduate stu-
dents and postdoctorals are available in the
FeMowshipi and Aasistantships ftacHan.
Murphy 1228
-Havasaips. NasvaBBeaei appenamnei ano
local volunteer positions are available now
through EXPO. Ackerman A213 or call 82S-
0831.
PrsMsiBa. |om OECA as a con-
invesfigator Visit Kerckhoff 311 or
call 825-2820 Voluntaars are also
tor anvironmentai and food protects
starring Oakar
5 pm. today
^ S
prn Mondays Bunche 2178. and 1:30-11 am
Thursdays. Ackerman 2408
— Ma Aai 8MIL and naw people interested
for next year UCLA s JaadMi d#ar aaada
your input noon today Karekfioff 117
^Cfeass Clab. 6 10 pm every Saturday
International Studant Center
-SMdMM Mr JMaay Csnsr 7 30 pm every
Wadnaadty^aliarman 2412
y Wadnasday international Student Center
Ukm frsasMsi adM Ms.frsasfe Caasdl
ftsasrsl. featuring wine chaaaa aad dancing
7 pm today Buenos Ayres room. Use Canter
—Society of Automotive Engmaars 3 pm
Jone 4 Boaltar 5284 __^^^^
PM CM. will meet to plan fall activities,
noon June 4 Franz 2258A
— AlplM Laaiidi isNs. wilt noid eicctiooe.
3 30-4 30 pm tomorrow Ackerman 24Q6
rridw MgM HIM iMdy. Saapal of John
7 30 pm June 4 Ackerman 3504 "
issiissa Mr PrsaMMd. 7 pm tomorrow.
Ackerman 2412
7 - 8 pai every Taarsday.
our SDortsweiir lives for fun in the sun!
jls from 1 00 t-snrrta. 2 SO and up ~ nnen s shorts frum 3 75 and women's shorts 6 00 and
up — man a Swimauits fronr> 6 SO and women s (you can buy each piece aeperately for perfect fit),
from 6 00 eacir This is but a sampling of all the clothes you can find right here on cannpua We
alao have Cp— dn swimwear Hang-Ten t-ahirts. Bob Wolf sport shoes and tevia Come look
around — you'M like it'
Mid ftichard
Melnitz tdOft Free
COiCEITS
— JbR lllesiSHa UCLA student eompesar
arranger and pianist will present a concert
w.ith orchestra nooo tomorrow Schoen-
barg auditorium frm
.^-MCU Opera MsrHsbsp. will perform two
ana-act operas by Puccim 6 pm tomorrow
- June 6 SchaawOarg Little Theater Si for
UCLA students faculty staff and sehior
citizens 12 tor other students S3
admission
row. Ackerman 3517
and famMy planning. 12 15 pm Juna 4 and
7 CHS 32-002
-KaadMIM yags. 4^5 » pm today aad 2-
3 3p>m tomorrow Ackerman 2408 Sug-
gested donation SI
-PrsOMd/PrsisM Opsa CsaasMM^ 2-3 pm
today and 2 30-3 30 pm June 4 Murphy
t3l2'' " ;
CMI. pre-eMcbon meet-
noon-2 pm today. Acker-
Min 3604
Ten t-8hirt, 5.00
Stretch-bacic halter, 7.00
Trader sandals, 6.89
sportswear b level ackerman union 825-7711
jn mon-thurs 7 45-7 30 fn 7 45-6 30 sat 10-4
students' store
Women, media . . .
(Continued from Pafc !•)
Baker*s i^commcndation was to "fct through the door any way
you can, and then work your way up.**
Commitment is the key to success m the media, according to
Solomon "If you are gomg into a profesision such as broad-
casting, you need to commit yourself to the time involved,** she
said. You should **set aside your opinion of yourself as women
and be able to define yourself As long as you know who you are
as a core, you can switch gears quickly and handle any
situation.** she added "If you are going to get in, be prepared to
survive once you get in."
SPECIALS
Week
UCLA
VENDING HACHII
■ . •••
yuH
;Tmr\iey
Swiss
tM
TOOfiY'
Egg 01),
Kaiser Hell
Dance department
ft
^
froiB Page ^)
(' y (Uowinc 4€pmnmmi
According to Snyder, this
ipAce IS very badly needed to
accomodate the growing de-
partment
Snyder, who began her ca-
reer in dance with the New
^ork City Ballet, is etpecially
interested in the filming of
"Bailee. She believes it T* a ''vital
tool for the documentary of
dance and the exchange af
ideas
''Film if the literature of
dance.** she said "It has
changed a lot of ideas
dance**
Snyder believes that the
dance department uses film
more than any other depart-
ment, aside from the medical
and motion picture programs
**Wc use films in class to
suppon what we're trying to
say in lectures.** she said. **1
diaccvcrcd film is a deer opern
er to tbe world, especally in
tlie field of dance ethnology **
Snyder has ma^ four or
five dance filrhi and is cur-
rently working on one with
Marion Scott, aaaociate pro-
of dance
Music for ftiiio acKf string orchestra^
KEITH IRRRETT
'■h-
.IAN CiAHt
». HA
yr &
I
r
HADtN t).
Friday June 11, 8:30 p m.
RoyceHait UCLA
Semester idea . . .
KEITH JARRET — WORKSHOP — FREE
JUNE 9, 1-3 P.M.
BACKSTAGE ROYCE HALL
It commtttM for Um arte —
i
(Continued from Page 3)
terms of the economic savings,
which he said would be sub-
suntial. and the better junch-
ing situation that the tenietter
system would allegedly give.
They .feh that teaching was
mOVe~ effective in the lonfer
penod of time that the semct-
ter system gave than during the
quaitei*t slower one.
According to the figures, the
semester system wiM save some
money in certain areas, notably
student administration and the
libraries, because of the need
for processing registration
twice a year instead of three
times per year. Many are say-
ing the savings would be sub-
stantial, although eiiact figures
are not available oa this.
Also, the committee feels
that personnel could devote
time to things other than ad-
ministration duties Counseling
is one araa at Berkeley where
benefits are anticipated.
Kopn hopes that the mone-
tary savinp could be put, into
better student services, but he
says that remains to be seen
One of the biggest pushes
foi; the semester system has
come from the Berkeley facul-
ty, wht^h is greatly in favor of
the system. The committee sent
out a memo to all campus
dei^rtments and found they
were basically in favor of goii^
back to the semester system.
An earlier survey showed that
approximately 80 per cent of
the faculty wanted the semester
system
Student response, though, is
quite a different story On the
graduate level, it is split about
50-50, and the further down
one goes into the undergrad-
uates, the stronger nTibe sup-
port for the quarter system
the committee has found that
the students almost favor the
quarter system to the extent
that facuhy favor the semester.
In light of strong student,
disfavor, the Educational Poli-
cy Committee has devised
(C ontimif^ on Page 23)
Dr. Norman Abrams A.B., j.D.
Prof., U.C.L.A. School of Law
''Law and the State of Israel"
Rabbi Yerachmiel Stillman
"The International Dateline and Jewish Holidays"
Rabbi Shiomo Schwartz
Contributions and Parallels of Mickey Mouse
Judaism to Christianity"
€t
Preceded by FuJI Course Holiday Banquet!
Thursday June 3, 8:00 p.m.
FREE
ii'ii"i
f
U-.
.L" »
r
Official Notice to Students
Continuing in the
Fall Quarter 1 976
All students who will be continuing in the Fall
Quarter 1976 MUST pick up their UCLA Student
Identification Card on, or before, June 4 in the
Ackerman Union Second Floor tounge between
8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. If you do not pick up your
Identification Card this Quarter you will be as-
sessed a $5.00 late fee when it is issued next Fall.
If your Fall Quarter Registration Card carries a "C" continuing
status code — indicating you were enrolled this (Spring) Quarter —
you will also be required to have a UCLA Student Identification
Card, BEGINNING THE FIRST DAY OF REGISTRATION, in orderto
transact official business, receive University services or participate
in institutionally sponsored programs and activities. As examples,
this will include, enrollment and changing study lists, receiving
financial aid or Student Health Services or particiption in intra-
murals. The UCLA Student Identification Card will also be required
for admission to football games played prior to instruction in the
FalL
NOTE A current Registration Card and acceptable supportive identification — which must include a photograph (e.g. . drtver's
passport) — will be required prior to the issuarnre of the Identificanon C ard
f
I
\
t
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,IA
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^' ^"T"""^
Af) Jiw^ JSreure
:1mwmM^^
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'^
/ __
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:.// ^■
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As I was iying on the grass daydreaming and wondering whether
the pleasure of. a daisy-chain was quite worth the effort of pickrng
daisies a white rabbit with pink eyes scurried by Now there war
nothing so very unusual m that, nor did I think it rather remarkable at
the time to hear the Rabbit say to himself, "Oh^dear' I shall be too
late!" But vsmen the Rabbit actually took a watch out of his waistcoat
pocket and looked at it; I suddenly realized that ne^i^x before had I
seen a rabbit with either a waistcoat pocket or a watch to take out of
Well ._betng as adventurous as I am and (as we all know) rather
curious. I had to find out what this creature seamed to be so late
about So I gave chase
After running hither and yon. I caught up with him rushing toward
the Lecture Notes Counter, muttering under his breath all the while,
"Oh, my ears and whiskers. I must be too late already '"He was quite
beside himself, you know But. to his relief and surprise he found out
(and you will too) it isn't too late . . to purchase a Subscription to
Lecture Notes, that is You can buy Notes even on ttte last day of
Finals until 2 P^ Youil even be hom^ by teatime. so don't
worry yourse It silly like the-Rabbit -^lit ASUCLA Lecture Notes
NOW dir\6^'^t\(^ the quarter right on time'
OM^'
The staff at ASUCLA Lecture Notes would like to thank all those
involved in the Lecture Notes process, and extend a special thanks
to the many students who have supported us by purchasing the
notes and providing us with feedback whether positive ox^ negative
, We appreciate your comnlents and suggestions, they are vital to
our continued growth and enhance our efforts to provide a more
efficient student service
Have a pleasant summer and we II see you next Fall in Lecture-
land!
— LECTURE NOTES
S
.czr
LECTURE NOTES CLASS LIST
Spring 76
600
6 00
AnmrgpotOgy 1 1
Anthropology 22
Anthropology 143
7 50,
Art 54
7 00
Astronomy 3
7 00
7W
7 00
Bacteriology 6
Bacteriology 101
■•cterioiogy 103
Sevor
QokAchmttft
Edgefton
Clarh
' Jura
Eiserling Romig
LaaoaiiM
V
00
Biology 1 A
00
Btology IB
50
Biology 2
00
Biology 1 10
00
Biology 119
00
Biology Ml 32
00
Biology 1M
00
B*ologri44
00
Chemistry IB
on
Chamistry 1C
00
Chemistry 1C
00
Chemistry 2 .
00
Chemistry 1 1 A
00
Chemistiv2i
00
Chemistry 22
00
Ch«mistry 24
00
Chamistry 133B
00
Chemistry 133C
»
Chemistry 153
00
Economics 1
so
Bflmoinics2
00
twmwilLS 100
00
Economics 101 A
Staff
Staff
Harrison
Qrunstein. Orevi
Tobin
Way.
7 90 Economics 101 A
7 50 Ecof«Omicsi0iB
7 00 Economics 101B
7 50 Economics 102
7 00 Economics 121
7 SO Econoimci 160
7 50 Economics 1 7 1
7 50 Economics 102
I
6 00 English 90
7 JO English Ml 11A
6 90 English ii s
750
700
750
700
.^
7 00
TOO
750
690
600
00
Word
600
I'Wtoeophy 3
JKoPa
Eilickson
Dart)y
7 00
Physics 3C
Fiaih
7 00
Physics 6B
Allen
im
PftyaK:s6C
'
780
^t«yiics6C
Phillips
700
Physics 10
Sherman
700
Physics 10
Thome
Hill
Frampton
Geiieiman
Heiaerman
ly 1A
Geography 1A
IB
Qeographv lOO
Qeoiogirl
GedooV'T
|yi5
Teriung
Clarti
Fofler
Keiffer
090
650
600
600
690
0.90
History 1B
HwtOfyOA
History 106A
History 1000
History 130C
History 142C
HlttOfyl7lD
Mietory174B
Home
Hemphill
Weatman
La^oroe
Alitn
Jofineon
Eilidison
700
790
Italian
7,00 Kineatioio9yi2
7 90 KiwwHloafc 130
Hagberg
Lingbisttoal
Lif^gutatica 100
6 00 Poll Sci 101
6 00 Poll Sci 147
4 00 Psychology 10
7 00 Psychology 10,
7 00 Paycltology 15'
7 90 ^■ycfie«ogy4i
7 00 PtycboiogyilO
700 Piychology ii5
7 JO ^ycftoiogy 120
7 90 PiydkologylJO
7 90 Waycttokigy t|S
7 90 Psychology 127
7 00 Psychology 127
7 50 Psychology If?
790 Paychokigy ISO
7 00 Wtyefidoiy 196
7 90 PaycholOfy 140
7 00 Psychology 106
6 00 Sociology 114
6 00 Sociology 131
6 m ianmogi 146
6 00 Sociology 147
%m Sociology ISO
157
Chester
Ashcraff
Rocco
uth
Phys Staff
Jon«s
KauatwH
Heirich
MBmuln
Jeffrey
JS!!k!l
I 1
» •-»» »v
(Continued frcHn Page 1)
guidclincf.
SHAG contends the Long-
Kange Planning Committee
did not adequately consider
alternativet to the fee system it
tavoiOi. did not wait for the
report of the Chftadellor's nruin-
dgement BBBJyiii team (on
SHS interiuJ management
problems) aad did not consult
an> outside authorities in
drafting its report
The Task Force would be
charged ,with making a more
thorough stud> of ftudent
health needs, present services
and alternative funding meth-
ods, including those aspects
neglected m the LRPC report
The Task Force would also
establish a Board of Governors
which would provide perma-
nent student representation In
the interim before the Board of
Governors it established, the
Task Force would niake rec-
ommendirtieM on any fee in>
creases or changes m services
Semester , . .
K ohtinurd friun Pae^ 21)
some new ideas to chMlge the
traditional semester set-up The
main proposal was to have
four clasiet per semester, rath-
er than the usual five, for a
class load like that of the
quarter system A student
would take four (bur-unit
classes rather than five three-
unit classes.
However, there arc prob-
lems The proposal would
mean fewer classes taken over-
aii an^ ihereWt \css diversity
Whatever the syMem adopted,
(he change will mean initial
pri>blems with major require-
ments, class schedules, and a
20 per cent drop in course
titles
However," ^^ change could
eventually mean mor,c research
time, better teaching situations
and counseling and moie stu-
dent services
So far. the committee has
worked without much publici-
ty, and this year, little if any
student response
But with (he possible excep-
tion of UC Riverside, all of the
other campuses have expressed
an interest in leaving the quar-
ter system Depending on the
Regents' approval, the Ber-
keley decision may be to bring
the whole California system in
on the change.
t~^ J
LSAT?
Those students in our
last class who had
taken a prior LSAT
shbwed a medium
improvement of 110
points after taking our
course. This means
power to get into the
law school of your
choice (Documenta-
tion of these results is
available in our office.)
CaN or nrrtlK
C. Levtn, Dtrsctor
LSAT Prap. Cwitor
1007 BroaUm A«w.
SuH«20
LJl.. Ca. 90024
Phon*: 47t-24M
ASK FOR AN IN-
VITATION TO A
AT-
SEMINAR!
INFORMATION
RESOURCES
& LIBRARIES
I
r
i€
You need GS LIS HOT
GSIIS One-Ten Fall Quarter I
It develop?! techniques ot fctemrch and introduces
library resuurces in your field of interest P NP
grade 4 units. Enrollment limited
Sect I Social Sciences A Humanities M on- Wed
III '
Sect. 2 Socuil Sciences A Hununities Mon-Wed
N3
Sact "^ Social Sciences id Humantiics lye-fhurs
Sect 4 Science A lechnolog> Tue^-Thun 12-2
t'
for further information consult the Ciraduate
School of Library and Information Science. Room
120. Powell Library Building (ext 54151) or nee the
Fall Schedule of Classes.
9>
\
i
.V
P«rapactiv« vmiw of Scramble Food Service arva
>.
job
V
ft
We need 200 persons to
work in the new North
Campus Student Facility
k-
I -
"^k
You can work in the new North Campus Facility — there's a variety of jobs — and a job It
guaranteed for you contingent upon a succeasful interview and reMOnable coordination
of your scheduling needs with ours As in all ASUCLA departnnervtt. we'll make every
effort to make working hours available that are compatible with your ch
We need aervers. preparation people, bus people, kitchen help, carvers, taters. griN
cooks, cashiers, maintenance and information daak people We'll tram you — we*ff
provide uniforms — we'll get all the red tape taken care of now so you'll tm mn0ii to work
when you come back to school in the Fall.
So — if you're in
come see^ us
in working on campus, getting your
and good pay —
Come to the ASUCLA Personnel Office
205 Kerckhoff Hall - 8:00-5:00 Monday-Friday
-mtm
<
u
i
m
1
He™, - T»gan . . .
Sal* Prict Good
Through June 1Q, 197S
WESTWOOD DRUG
951 WMtwood Boulevard
Los Ang«lM, 90024
477-2027 or 272-9994
<C ontinurd from Pifc 32^
By SaturcUy'i qusiter-tiiuiif.
the bruins trailed Stanford by
k)ur points (20-f6) while USC
wat in iccond place with 18
UCLA needed a win by
Trinity*! ace Bill Scanlon over
Stanford*s top player Pat
DuPrc It happened, followed
by an unexpected upset of
Scaaford*t top doubles team of
senior DuPre and sophomore
Bill Maze Brigham Young's
Mike Nissley and Bruce Kleege
stunned ilic Cardinals' doubles
tandem in straight sets, 7-6, 6-
4
By Sunday s semifinali, the
team standings were Stanford
(with no players remaining) 20,
USC 19, and UCLA. 18
Fleming and Taygan contin-
ued to win in dou bles .
defeating Wedderburn and
Morgan ol Oklahoma City, 3-
6, 6-3, 6-3 in the third round,
and San Jose State's Meyers
and McNeil, 7-5. 6-3 in the
quarters.
It was on Sunday when
UCLA's Fleming put UCl A
over the hump He came from
behind and then held otl
USCN thtrd-tiecdcd Manson, 5-
7, 6-4, 7-5, 6-7 ( 5-3 in nine-
point tie-breaker K 7-6 (5-2 in
tie breaker) to win what many
players and coaches at C orpus
Christ! called ''the greatest
tennis match in NCAA tennis
history.**
Fleming could rest for oaiy
an hour after the Manson
match before coming back for
the doubles semi's with Taygan
against Miami's top doubles
team of John Eaglcton of
South Africa an^ Tavo
Martinez of Mexico, The
Bruin doubles squad lost the
first set 6-4 and trailed in the
second set 4-1. Then. Fleming
and Taygan rattled off five
straight games in desperation
The set eventually went into a
nine point tie-breaker which
the Bruins won 5-4 That gave
the Bruins tremendous mo-
mentum In spite of an
exhausted hleming. swept the
next two sets bv 6-3 scores
The Fleming-Taygan victory
over Miami put the' Bruins in
the doubles champii)nship
against Manson apd Lewis
The rest is historv Fleming
and Taygan routed the Trojans
and brought the Brums a share
of the championship
It was UCl A coach (ilcnn
Hassett's fourth championship
in his ten year coaching career
at West wood I fie Bruins have
mm amazingly finrshed — m
third place or better in 25 of
the 27 NCAA team champion-
ships they have entered under
coaches William Ackerman.
J.D. Morgan and Hassett
KLA/83
.C.4
GRADUATE STUDENTS
r
The Graduate Students Association articulates
graduates students interests through representation
on scores pf university-wide and campus com-
mittees.
We urge every interested graduate student to apply
for appointment to a committee whether it is in
academic, campus or community affairs.
Among the positions open are: ASUCLA Board of
Control, sub-committees of the BOC, GSA commis-
sionerships, and academic affairs appointments.
Graduate student interests are best represented with
conscientious representatives contributing their time
and talents to the conerns of all graduate students.
Please drop by the GSA Office. 301 Kerckhoff Hall,
pick ijp an application form and we will Schedule an
appointment for you to discuss the position in which
you are interested. Interviews will be scheduled to
begin at the end of spring quarter.
t ' ' -
Get Involved!!!
i
V 1
n
^
UCL4Jb one of the mo^t famous
centers for the siudv of Atrica in
the v\url(j. Its extensive libraries
and ciibiinuuishecj scholars attract a
%erieb oi important Afric an visitors
resence remtorce the
rln^o rc^lalionsfiifiv (jr\(>|()|n(l be-
tween I CLA .md the African con-
tinf^nt. Durint^ this utek we are
sharing tlu^ exjiitiHL; i i^sourc (^s,
including fihiis l)y Alruan film-
makers with th(» community
%
TiM'sddy, jun
ainr«;
rHt IHIRD PHAst C>} !MI \\(.()1 W R! \ ( )| l
Anuoian Anibj^s.idoi t^ fh«> i njtcfi \.iti(Hi>
IK )\
Wednesday, june^
ISO Bunrhomil
•'OBStRV ATlONM^RPWlkoWUM -\| I'KOKI I MS |\ Wfsj
AFRICA cK W \P[>RC)\CH I() KIFIR SOU flONs
Rcnjdniiii \. AkfhUi. ( .ilitorni.i Sr.!fr> I fii\f>rsit\. Xorihud-jc
I
'A rf)nfiniimL'^^>rnuu.t m th. ( <-iiici shiK-rdist iplin.irv ( ()ll()(|uiun)
t nvirunnTeiUal PiijLiL'mii..()t \tri(,, , Sprjnv^, T'-^i
nJV'"^ "'
7:M) P.M.
DocJd Mcill 147
Color film m V\oloi with Liii'iisfi sul.tii!
■::.-''• >.
/ ///,
i«m^iJ¥fi
\
Thursday, June 1
3:00 P A^
DofJd Hall 1f>1
MILIi •
Mrs I\ rO\TEMP0R.\liV AIRICA
r»^- /
A Adti K
. .^^.^i..^.
lUiv*":
• < 7
I \( ( r)\ip.\\vi\(; ^1 II )( s
'' 'vn
If)1f1
! 'n (\('n\( f I
Friclciv, June 4
7: ^0 P \1
ficiifv -iM
S*iturda>, June 5
Hofh iln
P^.*-- „ ■-;_■ ^
v-cs*'-*-- Ci.-
■;Si:^:
' ■< - -1' ,-.. "
safer
^JSr - trr- — , ;
1:00 P.M
MO P SI
I. <() P.M
^''>* MIDI .
^\\ \MI , A\f IIJ "^
iiaa HM uliil L^l M iMX^mTS
PHONF R?^-^Rf,n nr ft7i;-^Aftr.
■'^
>.'
c
i
nf THE TKAOlflON OF THE BEST
nuuvESEiir moralists of ajmeiuca
e
3
jjnm^ ^!iiisp>
SATm JUNE S
•:M U 10.00 1MB-
•clioeiibcrg Hall
S !• 0«
Women's cibw
;-r:n'*,-'i
for natNNials
The Bruin women's crew wiU
compete in rfie Nationals m'
Long Beach Marine Stadium,
June 17-^,
Last year, m the olMcurity of
summer, jhe women won the
national championship in the
lightweight eight division This
year, the Bruins will compete
at Long Beach, the kite of the
water spoils for the 1932
Olympics.
However, this yoar UCLA
will not compete in the light-
weight eight, instead sending
its varsity eight and lightweight
four shells. The Bruin varsity
eight scored an upset win in
the Western Sprints, held May
13-15 in San Pahi> Lalifornia
The lightweight four will
also journe> south biCiit of
the limited efpMie neoBMBry
for an additional boat UCLA
could do well in this event,
even though it had a dit-
^pointing showing in the
Western Sprints Four of
UCLA^s top lightweights will
be in one shell, producing an
"all-sur four boat "
UCLA*s west coast collegiate
champion heavyweight eight
will have something to prove
when they meet the tough
competition at the Nationals
The strong rowing associations
(Long Beach is the strongest,)
to compete m
will be allowed
t|ie nationals.
Whatever the Nationals hold
for UCLA's women rowers,
their future looks bright Most
of the squad slmuld be back
next year, aa only a few are
seniors. Next year, the Brum
women will have their own
facing shell, especially designed
Id give them bencr xitntw The
new shell will replace a men's
boat that they are consuntly
borrowing. The new shell
shouid give nse to other ex-
cIlMh^ly "women" shells m the
near future and possibly their
own boalhouse
— Mike f-inegold
if
All Tickets $S.SO
ATAILABLE NOW AT UCLA
CEMTRAL nCKKT OFFICE,
^SO WMtwood FUza, LJk. fMad
•r at box office 1 hoor before
Fcrtormaace M aTOiUMe.
For iBformatioti, 125.29 S).
URA tennis finals on Friday
The mushrooming interest in
tennis throughout the nation
was reflected in this year's
annual URA Tennis Club liii-
gles tournament.
More than 60 participated in
intermeduite and advanced di-
visions, with two brackets in
each division. Play began early
this quarter and Continued
each Friday afternoon This
Friday, the finals will take
place beginning at 2 ptn on the
South Tennis Courts.
Despite some defaults by
player» m early rounds, the
tournament has produced some
excellent' matched.
In last week's action. Bruce
Bennett defeated Marilyn
Yardley, 6-2. 7-6; and will meet
William Yeh. winner over Jim
Cbrdell (6-3, 6-0) in Friday's
finale.
Larry Cretan won the lower
division intermediate crown,
edging Steve Jacobsen, 1-5. ^
6. 6-3.
The advanced upper division
final will pit Vinav Goel
agaimt Mike Dozier. Newhcr
has Ibif a set in the tour^a-
1.
Bearwear's sun-n-fun goodies!
Get out and get under, m all kinds of things that will proclaim you re a Uclan
Shown here, just a few things from a huge selection
Ladies nylon one-piece racing swimsuits. royal, navy. 9.50
Women's crop top. while cotton. 4.50.
Women's long hooded coverup, powder cotton/ poly. 15.50
Men'i nylon opm) wMve tank top. 4.50 others from 3.25
Man's nylon racing trunks, royal, navy. 0.00
Man's nylon boxer trunks, royal, navy.
:h t>ags, 4.75 to nM
UCLA bear baach towal. 5.50
r r ■
b level, ackerman union. S25-7711
mon-thurs 7 4afl^30: fn 7 4S-6 30 sat 10-4
-*—
™HW
ment. so it should be a tigfit
match Goel won his semi-final
match 6-0. 6-3 over Vmcc
Corso. Dozicr also coasted to
an easy semi-final win, beating
Eric Down 6-1, 6^2
In the advanced lower divi-
sion. Bart Vee beat Joyce
Konishi 6-0^6-3 for the title
The Tennis Club invites all
interested spectators to the
match Fridav Awards will be
presented at the conclusion of
play
A//
Americans
Three Bruins have been
picked to the 24-man 1976
All- American squad. Peter
Fleming. Brian Teacher and
Ferdi Taygan were the three
UCLA players honored
For Fleming, who ad-
vanced to the NCAA singles
finals and paired with Tay-
gan to win the doubles title.
It was the first time he has
bcdfi honored in this man-
ner
laygan. who helped the
Bruins tie USC for the
•NCAA team title by team-
ing with Fleming to win the
doubles, was picked to the
team for the third year
Teacher, injured in prac-
tice and unable to ^in a
single match in the NCAA
finals, was nevertheless hon-
ored for the fouKh consecu-
tive season.
35MM CAMERA
OWNERS
Stn UP TO 50% OM VOUP
M PUPfwi^r^ K PPOCnSlUG
^....J^,
-- -t-'mI.'
-SSA.
LJ
Ti*-
T
*
CLASSIFIED >4D
AOVCNTISIMG OFFICf S
iMtta
n Miai St yse»». s
-ISj
Ifi
Of AOL INC 10 30
fully •Mpp^rH tt«« Univ«f»My of Cali-
fornia* poScy Ofi non-atocfiniMMllan.
AdvorlfolMf •#«€% wtll not So wa«
OvoMflSio Mn Sm OaSy Srwin le onyon*
who dittrifliinol** on fit* basic of
•ncottry. color, national orifin rac«
rvUgfO**- ^ *** Naiawi tho DaMy Snjtn
nor tha ASUCLA Communlcatlorvt
aoard has Inwasagalad any of tha tar
vica* advarllsaa or m^vr<i—r% rapra
•antad In thia laaua Any parson ba-
Ma«4nf Niat mn advarllsamani in this
Isaua 1 1 dials* W»a Soard s policy on non
discrlminalton slalad harain shou4d
camuMMiicala cewplainls In writing to
tna Buslnass Managar UCLA Dally
Srum. 1 13 KarckHolf Hmlk. 300 Waaiwood
Plaxa. Los Angalas. California tS0a4
For asaldlMida adSi housing dtacrWni-
natton pfdStawil.call UCLA Housing
Offlca. (213) SaftOf 1 . Waslstda Fair
HOMIWO (213) 473-3040
!!!5-y ^^' Offlcars Congraiuiationat
••••wg fmti 0«a boat of kck tn Oia
Mpdomlng yoor^ Vou h^^^ , larrific
•ntadf Loaa. Tha Of ^tas
_^__^ IS J a)
OfSSif ^«ppy tOMi This yaar I'tp
"'" * *sa#ng ttia laai
Is s MMa lata
IS Jl)
Lisa
DAM L
Id Oia as
ORG
To AUMTIC Shariocli. UMda MS. Sypar-
MiS. Sasy Scott Frawn. OdMHodlM Tha
Rapp and our rtissiljsdsn. ymtfrn
tl«^^S«^taal - mm Ma court anil aft
" . liJ2)
5^*'***" ' ' "* *®' ^••" Sights
Amarlca. an^ Sm*n Sas«ia«»all Vpla
•'•cteaon for Frasidant
^ (• J 4)
LAST eUanea Sdtofa soSmTs piil. f ISO
OIbpoimM on SfMsntiica 3 or graat Soolu.
(S4SS aiacount on b«th) Call Tony
(Ami. J 4)
wedding
announcements
kerckhoff l2, *
82506|l
UOLA SSMrs Ckaas. Two
■lidiK Jmmi SS-AiM. 0 Mid
Ayf . 7 ^Sa#|. %7. If Inioraalod call
passport
identification
resume photos
asuc/o
mp US sfucfi
'50 kerckhoff hall 625 06'
opf.f. ^c" '- *8 30 4 30
COSNTATUS:
IS-1S7S.
WHAT DOES A muiN
B£AH WEAH TO CLASS?
UCLA t-shirts (hundnitfi of
styles in the ASUCLA Stu-
dents* Store), custom-im-
pnmed t-shirts. football
laraeyt. eweatshirts. hooded
ttweetshirts. jackets, hats,
•scks. and carries a UCLA
9ym t>ag or bike bag
Bearwear
ASUCLA Students' Store
Ackerman Union
ISJ2)
(S Jf)
COACH JOM
PdV fot •«■
. iOKO. Tlia T4
haatMll
^•CK up ana d« tS JiO pva^act
naas volar Inlpin
mm arrtiw Juna 2.
IS4SI
annomicfnente Jijit
SILL-Thanlis tor Sat n«fht. I
• VISI
WINOMILLS-Vow ya Saan an
kmm NifM pplwli la Oia Cf
ping alaaa «dO tmmr bm thm soma Hm^B
you an^y Ft SwMI It you naad ua. )mpI
la Op N an
In Africa. Vomt
fS4S|
TO OUS
our liMffi.apd
Aeo Wf
I'fs asclladi Ha
(Si
CHaiSTlAN SoroHty planning
rtMh. Thoaa tnlsraslad.
Jyna 11 477-03S7/470-;
CINOV-Thani for ro
po) Shalom Oava, U
flMsac, HMianis
If HI CMSa. (Wl«-
frpfp Tafry Laa'a-
IS J 2)
SHOSHAWNAH Oamarla-Wa
ypy and your isaOt-Tha
(SJ2I
HtS ^roducL on pappr Sm I
by mod Vlaar Aunt Mis Las
(Juna)
»4m
CHASLmiA.
your dayf (a day lals) Srtdjst 0 CaSiy.
fSJS)
<SJ-S>
"" ^^ ^^f ^^n^BSdc wiavMM. Twdnp^i vpv
a groat yaat. Sda ypu In '77. Wrfia ^
HM m laiMl. Yaw SMiSy. CSofSt
» J 2)
miIm tsiiMiMnf
tial. nm4 PI Unrldlcul
H
lit.
(7 J 4)
s-st,a9<
(7Jt)
S1JSDUPUCAT8
»y aflamppns WNd WlHaf
CItfS. 1SSS WaatwMd Slad.
17
aid and swipy a
hmu9,i^9tl PC tMll day FprSd.SS/Hr.
caM Ti
If: 121 OM
f7 J4I
ooodctoals
Pf99 hm 4
s!so Dipri-s>^ a i s wci.
jd*
STUDENT INSURANCE
Vof^ rant
AMSOWHtAO caSIa In gulat arpo.
Slaapa • ttO/2 days tlM/7 dpyp.
2071447 1
(OOlr)
MNT.ATV flOSO
•tu4ant diaaounis Dallvary ip 0 00
47t-3ft7t 2303 YrsatWDOd
ISOir)
TV 4 STEaCO
aauiN TV 4 sTEaco at ntals
COLOR TVS
WaaaiyaiogSS^
004 a day
Sliraas t7.IO/monlh
Lantiad supply s«a«latols
It whfls TVs $7 SO/i
CaM 27ft-l0a2
"•on Our pnsM M« pMSMiiisa Is UCLA I
♦»• mtWi currmnf
foraalp
ATTENTION Waaian's sportsaraar
IS. Skkls $10 Cos Spa
(10 J 41
«ah 4 ir s.
gwllar paid $900 00 Sail $10S.SS pr
top«a aO ftpr D-12-10 Stoffln 12 aMng
472-7470. 472-S3JS.
HSM>
MONUa rt-l20 lunrtpSla. SSMia V-1S.
iypa HI. rirWSji . $00 iarSi SNpp
Mkkig boots, slaa 0% Si • $20 Frya Sooia.
•isa 0 D - $20 Bseallant condition.
UCLA
ad 1002 Navoi
$100 341.0003
no J 4)
SOUND Studia Samodallng Sals
A 121 araan. Mm S-3 sdSi
Ironic
la A#p
$1SS;
no.
(IS J 2)
^m.
272-
cpnSWon, $00 or pflo#. S2S-
'••^ <1S J 4)
ACA C^ArdS-*»
(1SJ4>
Ca*s Whalssals Ca« tor
In California All brands Mall ardor
nSJ4)
NONnaPi-i2D
Ivpallt
OTT-
OS ^2)
S1SS. 4TT-2STS.
nSJ2)
MPdlSSM
llraa. (Oraal fpr
SST-S22S.
Stss
(IS J 4)
risjo)
BLACK S PSIla TV.
$4S. 2T2.4S1:
(IS J 41
SS21
OPf
$TS. Wf— Infarmallon.
m CplHnmlp. All bri
(IS J 4)
T.V.. «pfy
rtp ,1 at
iMSStss
laoSSlSS^I
nsjo>
(IS J 4)
inl
bsolo
IT.
MsMlori
^w^S. rWf I
fforppla
for ppIp
aoAuoM t»
^^^^^^^ ^Wi^^^^^» ^^^H^S^Vf ^w
SI9-0S4-1003
TI sa io A. sa $1 A. sa u. sa 2S
i1SJ2)
IS rr hpsip ppi. a«pd c<
•Up avallabia alao $137$ SS
,0« J.I)
Ti
aiES iLBCTaONicS
Can 473-2000 Ipr
fi&
aiATTRESaCS ALL NtW
FutI
KtapPMi •114 it
THE MU^TTima 8T09E
11714 aiMPivo^ Msrvan
FatEKINansI
(11 J 2)
47/^1S1
—i-4iaif
aaiTANNlCA 3 or gradi
brochura.
by tnmtf
F
farms
/11 14)
IMG SALE-Sola and am«hdlr. OfiPOrtUniti—
and wlrSidSi iiniwsd. UCLA pvp. ^"^
w NMial saS. Saai aNar. SS3-1000.
UCLA
■as Saal aNar. 0S3-10OS
(1$ J A)
HUNOESTWASSBR-Framad original
"nwciaan slamp WMiSafvd am
>«* wroon aasw^HP mon pmpOI'
inli. aioli avaa. 274-3137
(IS J 21
Exclusively Ours!
ASUCLA Trader
thong sandals in a
burlap signature
bag
just $6.89
Sandpis are btpcti a^tth blu« and
gold stnpps in the soles, and
blue thongs You con uso tho
strippd bog for a booch corryoll
ASUCLA SmUdiiii^tisipo
SroaTSWEAff ^ ^
9 IPPPI, ACnOfWNNI UfNNfl
m-ai T:45-T:SS; f T:4S-S:36; s 1S-4
S2S-r7t1
JOMI m bi sadlng pmt OT T
batelicpaara natting S rppa. lunSy
oralaf S Sosas. old bamwood. 021
/tn o*»«
agulpmant Saloct Cdllfornia Wtnod.
TUP aippa Mm. SSt2 W SSnd St. Waal.
f.CA --'
STESEO camponanta: Sta^ontdla-
eoMnlB. SarsBiiaSddd oafalpa. 2t o^tar
bran«a Vallay SSI-SSOS. SSt^SSA.
(IS ON}
Texos iRSfrsisssent'
WnEEsnM
SipnNa4t D9<^
LM. IT s' • Tdf iSbi. ess. Tan.
j^%.Mt*<
Mai can 47ftftOS4 ,
(12 J 4;
a^OOd»4dddeppaaa a
it
mnimm mwi
tor two 3 Oct ploys
(rolpt opon-to oil ogoo)
hmifd BchotarahipB arm avB^mbia
Iff wa roripaxrtg worwa^ypps
■ ACTING
f>tlȣCTlNG
PLAYWRITING
DANCE
CALL US AT
.1
rWTch siibi»ct»
1
tpNal-NplPinf mammt^^ pra|ap« CaM
47%17SS Ipr SalMs.
(IS J 01
!• •». »-
ti:
ilCUS
04 IVLA
Sn 22J0. Ifnliiiimii aoS mT
0 dPi and 1 ppi Monaor
S/11/TS.
(14^2)
CA4.L 47P-77t1 IM
ftSJtl
474
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(IS J 4)
nus
Pfp|r.
LSm tm^. 1171 20S-SSt2.
nsisi
#44 • •«
■MatasL SK 14
ns J SI
(12 J 2)
(1Si2)
US.
(IS J 2)
HYLANO
ISai Qpylpy Avp.
PMLS1SS
(IS J 4)
Mvoopv.iiSiai
4TT.
Its
(S J2)
if4t)
^/tS44»
ATTEMTIOM Maaianialiars. Ppr opia
12 ■■ rm Monite
|21S»SS2-SSS0
(1Si4)
Spr
m^
1 II I ' ^P^ST"** ^*
i -
r<
4
m-
I
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CLASSIFIED ilD
h»lp wanted
L or EOUCAT
ASSitTAnrrs
flnAOUATE
0«iiilifie«tl«i»« %m09nm4 %tm4umtm •tmmmn%
an UCLA.
•r 9mm-Hmli Umtrn (M Hour*) A^|M*c«lli
i.
C»
■ANIiiiMllwc
UCLA <••*! E^iMi
WOMEN «Hlh l«fg* f«*t And nt««y i
iUMis ar* n«t<l«d to w««r larg* tpKwg
A tMNMiior aiioot for advvnisvfiwffit C«li
•'•*'*'• (IS J 4)
^OrCMlONAL •ing*r MoUt ffuHar
ptoyvr or k«yboord for summor tmpioy-
m«rvt/ Gloft^TT -21 S3
(If J 3)
•AMTA Monica Corp ho« Miwfol
•tud*nit lo wmik tfi our oMor-for • min
of 3 hrt Mm. Miru Frt. OOfllNHng 5:1f
om Poolllons wNf loot Oiru oftd ol mmo-
m*r and ara on a coiwwiiaaton boaia
Praaanlly amptoyad UC aludanta avar-
aoing t13.S0 par hr H you ara tncoma
WiOOoalad and wflMng lo wOrt. coN Borry
tlorr tM-fftaa.
^ClfALC
Toppoyin
fm .1 At
' J.W
TELEPHONE SALES
3 SELF-MOTIVATED PEOPLE TO
"SELL. OFFICE & SCHOOL SUP-
PLIES
fc ■ •
HlQflOOi COfVMINOOlOnO
* Hoopllallzatlon « Hoirtth ^Imi
* Wookly BomMM
* Short Hours
W
. MAK€ $300 $500 WEEKLY
CALL JACK OBHIEN. •80-4422
Krone 12 PM.
SMILE t DIAL Arftculata atudania
naadad for immadlata op^rHngtin pMbna
salaa UnNmttod aaminga. polantlal
Cantrax. •St-3770.
; (iftJiO)
WILLED Machiniali «l«l oaparianea
tn building aclonca raaaorch Inatru-
manla Plaaaa aand Inqulraa or raaumoa
Attn: Oaorga Laach. Sclanca Sorvicoa,
Hoom 1 . Sctanoa 1. Untvara«ty of Oragon.
E««90f«a. Oragow 07403 S03 fff Mft.
(If J 4)
ATTHACTIVE
f graaf paopla bi
WaNfioM. •224131
•d anawar
to*in4a pro oftra. Jbn
(If J 4)
TELEVISION Producar wania
taoleh 7 yoor old daugbtar
during July Muat ba good «Hfh hida oa
wall aa babif mn involvad paraon Con-
tact Alpn Sock* Day* tAS-fOOO. Eat
2834: Cvamnga: ffS-tf 10
f '3 J ^1
QMADUATE SCHOOL Of EDUCATION
TEACHING ASSISTANTS
Raaoorcfi MaWicda ar>d Evaluattona
Mm !•«•< of coufw to a*
(U
•ntf
Ed
fl*»
(Ea
•fUl
Vic*
TaacMng ■■■imnn for
(I (ta Of^A. 14. ailC);
210A. Ea 210O Ed 2iaA Ed 21tC).
turv«y f—mrch m«thod« (Ed 2000
200C) critical analytis o< Empirical
»arch (id ^21). Raaaarch Laboratory
21 f) Application* will bo accaptad
fit Jun* I PtooM luamii ippMeaban
«tt« to rh« oftic* ol Pia Oopartmant
UCLA !• an
FEMALE, pofi or Mi Sow
t3/hr Cornocaaoory
(If J 4)
DAILY •fvbi
alolf
arorb
12
aoNcraaoon or <
a 112 KarckhoM.
ThwraOay Juna S.
(If J 2)
Mirr
(IS J tl
QMADUATE tCNOOt OT tOUCATIOM
(tant in spccial
:atk>n
h#lp wfitod
lialp wfitod
MIoloium waga Coll Oona
(If J 41
CUCKOO'S NCST N you can coOMMt
por a* T^ erosy woy LoM ol
73S-S071
(If J 2)
OMAOLiATE SCHOOL Of EDUCATION
TEACNINO AMirr AMT
aanrlcoa (tchaoi couftaoling on
aiUMaa: Aoolal tn inotrucllort of Education
I Wi CauaaaSng. OppOaaOanaaaaaplid
Juno • ~
and vita lo itM oNico of mm DopartawiH
■Irmon. Moofo HaM 230
UCLA Is on
AeOan
NON— argophobic SM raaldant Sd%
yordworb 2 bra any tmmmkhg awobly
|l^„N(0« Wnia noma, odOraaa, phoiia
lo Mbngrkiga. 927 Sorbolay St.
SS403 f2S/monlh
(If J 4)
tXPERIENCEO corneal
hbuatta cuMar to mmik/
park Oraofi
•Ot7
amuaamant
(2<13)3S4-
(1f J4)
TUTOM naadad lor poalab convaraobon
call • to 5 wookdaya-277-7511 a«k lor
Joa f ipiiH
^^^ (If J SI
RESEARCH/Edltortal aaalalant Wanlad
by traval/food mmgmxtnm pubJiahar Ma
biaala or aqulvalanl raqulrad Tal. SSS-
"" '" """"^ (» .4,
MOVIE ravtoapar/crlllc wanlad by notp
waat maga<lr«a. SooO raauma and writing
aamplaa to poal oMIca boi §0430 Lof
Angla. CA 90000 ,„ ^ ^^
LYRJCIST
• • •
WRITER
fPlsioii A Comody)
9M-7312
WAMTEO:
477-142t
(If J 4)
POtmCAL
(213)
URGED^
Paraonnol naadad for all lypoa ol^oba:
Ewfbiatiliig. Madlcl. Lagol. Tacfmlcal.
induatrlal Managamanl. Clarical A
Oomaabc Gradualoa A UfMlargroduataa
Walcoma
T.R EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
{W— S Fraa)
SSS Sonia Monica SL (M0S
S.M. 9S3-4107
•US drlvor c
bua 19 yra. plua
Can 34f-104S ova
day camp
fri 1100/ark.
(If J 4)
■Mlar for boo boya-flva lo i
doMy-f 1 JO br -Sf 2-1f 20 (
(If J 4)
iUMMM lofeo-1210 a i
oMo to ralMiJOti for Sio
47f-048S
Con
(If J 4)
^^~ EARN anlfo monaytf Oftica
and Ml olSca abMa. Wo«b on In
doym.0
or
7.
(18 J S)
ARGENTINE atudoni
THE JOB
AOtMCV
mt': L¥M'a.
ton Norooa Ragialry. Sonia Monlco. 4Sf-
tsti.
(If J 3)
ENCED liiMiiipii lo
poraonal accounttng In bomo. ona
altamoon aoml-mondily ff br. WLJL
««.c«2rt.mt ,,,_,,,
■taMa
•ALIS.W'
EacoManl lal
manogoNiant. BUL roqulrad 479-1700.
>AL Poraonndi lor dooior'a of-
Tacfmlclona, mOopdonialB
cribarm, boobkaapari. Roiogoii Nuf
Agancy. Sonta Monica. 4f1-1Si1.
(If J 3)
EARN StAO/moiMli ond coSapa crodH
(Columtoia Codafa. Mo.) N you con laova
Com. for dia ttltf aummor Shidanla
only. Undarclaaaman walqoma Call
*^-'*» (15 J 4,
■
JOd Opportondy Work tot yoifr apoio
llnia. $ par hour virtually unllmllad.
"Tlioaa la nothing
aoN. CaU nom
DIablliuuii. Evanlngs and
(If J 3)
DRIVER-COUNSELOR aummor doy
camp. 19 pw. plM pdfh oam alMlon
(If J 2)
wagon or ppaaongor vmn Mon-PrI
f 12f/wk CoN 34f-1S4i a««
STUDENTS &
TEACHERS
WELCOME AT
KELLY GIRL!
Men and Women Earn
extra money during summer
break while enjoying a
variety of temporary assign-
ments We provide tempo-
rary jobs for all Clerical
and/or industrial skills.
(If J 4)
WANT $ $ $ 7
dM can gtva you monoy wortoCy. ond
doaibility durir>g tfta aummor mondlo
bytaking our lampomry aaaignmoiiM
Swompbout fha WLA OfOO If you ara
• IWIST. SECflffTAflY. ACCTIMO
CLMK, P9n OdiRATOII. KtVrUMCM
OdCfUTOd. WAUCNOUtnUMI. or
o*piRlng alaa....dto nood YOUf Coma
in t rag«atar today' No laoa* Noma your
days' Paid holidoya' Wa nood you now'
t
(,
12311
WLA oas-iMi coc
^WORK WHEN YOU
WANT, AS OFTEN AS
YOU WANT. *YOU
DONT PAY US - WE
PAY YOU!
Call us 8-5:30 p m. daily or
9 am - 1 p.m. Saturdays
KELLY SERVICES INC
Fulldrton 714-879-0782
Long Bddch 213-432-8791
Los An galas 213-
Bevdrly Btvd 868-8750
Wllshire Bl vd 381 -795 1
Momaballo 213-724-8910
N^wipod Baach 714-833-1441
Oranga 714-547-9535
PasadMi 21 3-792-4 1 76
Torrancd 213-542-11
Van Nuys 21 3-:
Westchaalar 213-645-0750
Westwood 21^77-3961
Whittidf 213-898-0447
•<^lal opportunity dmployer
WSI lo run aumi
l7S/«b
349 1940
(If J ai
ily. 93.90 bf Good
Cddl Naanaa- 472-7791.
Two
(If J 4)
Lf AMM Iha on ol aoNmg tiwn mm
Good monoy-part lima Miory olus
domia 921-9041
(If J 4)
^MALE.
3:39 • 9:30
R<
dim
y Rico-
flf J 4)
aapofi-
hondy. raforancoa. H ynda. Il»r-
niafiod. woNi UCLA 1 bodMomondaolo-
ry 473-0393 7 10 am.
(If J 4)
ELEPMAN^"
Moving |
J^|M 857-2148
iProfsgoionaJ Servicdt for Poonuts
STUDENTS oom up to 9900' /wk
•lodonrt OINea Supply Co
A port Nma balp to aoN Mama. E«ory«
con uaa tria Nlipiiuiii Wa
94/hr Drow ipil m Hi cm.
Mo aaparlonca nocaaaary Call Mr.
"■ 11, 9^.
(IS J 4)
—rvic— gffwd
■-, ' . i--'-i^ ^p'^
cown. Alao oourt ronlol. drantwood
oroo.472.7Sd3.
flOtHrl
Aiilo-Llfa-Homaownars and Ronlol
IndOVbnca Vlllaga Of Ilea Wmrnmr
R^b>aOn. 1109 tirTiniiii SyMa tM»
477.3tS7. 979-0191.
(19 Olr)
MEDICAL aCHOOLS A9IIOAO
Hovmg odmiaaiona problams for
— _! ,:madicai achoof^
W€ CAN HELP YOU'
For information wnto/lo;
AUTO Inauranca: Lowoat roloa for
7270. 970-9703 or 4S7-7S73
(lOOlr)
f
Tba original
FifOy
OurOdi
.
CAMPUS SERVICES
Stasis
MOVING Raaldanlial apartmantt
officaa Larga amall |obt Local ft long
dialanca CoN domoy 390-9759 anytima
no OH\
MOVfNG'> Apartmant apaclallaf lo
aludanta and huga truck $19.e0/br
3 yoora aapartanca. 974-5903. •
(IS J 3)
VW RCPANIS Ol
(pona 1 Iddor).
(IS J 4)
t%m I «%
dSJl)
'/^-TON EXPRESS
MOVERS
offtdHoudfia
nidi
nsooi
LA *ORAMOC-CflATEa*
STUDENT SUMMER
STORAGE
EwpirlsdogdaiNii i<
Froo Wd9 dp a Rdldill.
FOR INFO CALL
MASSAGE dy
waalam larbwiipiaa. I ci
body aiportanoa-coll E
9-9 am or 9-7 pm
a
396
(19 J 4)
MOVING in or out Wa
turnilum
Li
roiaaf ft— Eabmaiaa 4794197
(19 J 4)
THE BOOyMEN ^^
\
Quality Auto Sody
r A
1
Rapa«r ft Palndop
L^
.1
479-0040
V^^
^J
(Oava or Gary)
Vi^
y^
Caaiatan'^ W« pfo««a« r«oi
•arviam
lar yoM
iaparl rmpmit a< a«m«»lic
ft taMiga cart |
Wm( la t i«rp«rt pawkig
•bop 9^
• •baal
J 2324 tmmmlh ONO
WaatLA
•1111
(lOOir)
l<«700
nm
NTPMOaia ond Sod-Hypnooio.
IwdloidllOio, tn-oHIca or moil ordor—
MWMl pdoao. John (aJL, MJL) 47S-
71S7.
(IdOd)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTOf^CYCLE fNSURANCt
I UOHTHOUSE INSUWANCf SERVICE
I 304-1101
I - Aab tor Don or Hoy
HOUSSRAINTINO - Orada RrolmT
m
A RHIMAL ALTHRNATIVf dd LOS
OELCS. FULN«G TRAd«IMO
Cdlfihr AVE. 9SS34. SSS-fTT
0t
■■u-J
ARROW IMSURANCE
345-
NATIONAL HypnoaN ln^jMali. Mow at
tba aorrlngton Riosa. W.L.A. 11744
Wllabira - 477-9929. 070-3397 With
mora Idon 30 yra. oaporlonca Holp
lo tludy-rololn-ralai-aloop Soa our
lolopbona Yalloar^ Rofoa ad Spoclal
(lOOlr)
P
VW MAINTENANCE SERVICE 929.99
mU CLUrCMWtTM
3101
dALLET Pun tOoy lo doovty. 1309
^ ' ond Unbr. VWCA. 974 Hd-
Inlprmadlataa. advancad. 9
S21 Spaaol rolaa. 2 or mon „
woobly. Irona Sorolo, Dftollngwialiod
(tdOd)
^ l90Vd9Q a M
^ CoMBMOSS-
IdlSorPmd
mom
NOW OPEN!
CNRI9TME8HAW
FACIAL SALON
f^iOHttpH^ >
-CtA$SinEI>^D
r-
■1SS4
(19 Od)
WniTBR-
(1S J 4)
Joy
RHO oNarabalp
■oianoa raaaorch
RIDING LESSONS
FocMHy-Fomaioo EloW
•A.N. 9. A Apprevaa riaiiif ••la5ll«hiM«(i|
•droop laaaona and prtwatoa. abiiarvn a
Day 49ft-11l4
Cmlg. 7934121 or 470-0004
(IS J 3)
ELECTROLYSIS Unwanlad toclol ft
body bod pafmonawdr ramyad. OonRa
aofo maldod. Froo conauHotton Ma,
Loelo. 1S3S WaodaauN dl 477-2103.
_-.: i}l^\
HAIRCUTS 93 by
SS74SS1. (19 Od)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
WdfUOdtTr . . . TOd rlkf^f
L^v MsiMliltf PoMiMiite
rrUDENT DI9COUNT9
• • • MBK ad* KOVw
l.i
ASUCLA Tf»v9l S9rv«c«
Oia ONLY udlalftl
UCLA Cdortar Wlfdl Sandof
Ifb ddl Idd Idio to dddd o Chorlpr
dt Juno. Mdpidooiiiont
for cdwcolidd oodto nidy
MP to dio ddto ol
IrcMvi hundfoido of
LAX-Amat#rdam-LAJ(
FNgtMN nd|1tMP9 #df
-11C75 Juno 21 11 I
12C75 Juno 21 12 i
15C75 Jund 28 5 |
iaC76 Juno 29 10 $
22C7a JuiyS 1 I
23C76 Julys 9 I
27C76 Julys 4 |
aOC76 July 19 4 |
UCLA EUROPE
CHARTER
SPECIALS
HAWAII
I)
umomolului
LA-MOMOUAU
» -^. Ai^
MEXICO...
MAZATLAN air ft lodp h
NEW YORK...
1.2.3 wka roundtrip on TWA fr 91
FUI8 Cdr^
rdll/8 uro I r pddddd. . . Act
tldR0...8twddnt Fliflito wItlilR
kold...li
n.Yy9i
a( 19 •
A9IC U8 FOR ANYTNIffO YOL
WANT TO KNOW AMHTT
>4S0CL4^
A-ais
ASQCm/^
TRA/aS^MCt
UolooA-213 (odd fiWO)
■S-191
L09 ANGELES
FROFEaaiONAL CLUB
1409 \Maatwood ENd . L A Ca 90024
(213) 97S-0.121/ (213) 477-1102
TGC CHARTER FLIGHTS
TO EUROPE
CLoto of Olh«n)
M^n
TGC
61S3 ft/1ft-9/3«
0923 3 ft/lft-»OT
091911 ft^ift-dW
LA9B99 •^22-7m
0992-13 •/32-9/21
99999 ft«9t-t/23
d9P9-ii 9/39^14
CL^07a99
LTToaa
0709-6
iLR)7lQt
Lft7lW
7tjf
0717ft
L 190913 9/31-9/20
09D49 9«4-10/it
Lf9999ff 9/39-10/11
379
379
379
9129 Dopoall raoolrod^or poraon
aooco. doob now dl^^wa Irv I
li 90 doya prior lo
trawol
CHARTERS _
^"^ f99 bigtits ft aaiM «itii Oapanur**
*tQm ApM airw 0 a^ 2 la 2> tiaaiit
LQM
JM
97
7t>4 10/08
' 13^0^34
''19^19
ft/3ft^i2
7'0ft-^12
7/94-9/39
^12
^SCA
J : ■' k . r
WORl
4-
aoA
CM 7/14-9/14 t 499
jK 7/17-0/13
OR 7/17-9/29
kJ 7/01-9^1
U 7/99-tO«
trornflftt
tromfiaa
from I
HAWAI1 192
NYC < d 3«Ma«ii
I ORIENT Man, .__
ConUct ASTfA lot Owar 200 Otnar flighlt
with OrnQmrtuf* from t A 9an franctaco
I piwpQo Ooaion Naw >fotk Odahiiigiuii D C
!.9*yLTy; *■••*•• N day adiiawca boornno
pnaa aubiaet lo 39% tfw:f«4Ma
I8UKR AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL M.icoasi tr
^OUTH fcuropa 1 yr fr
APEX.22-46 iOosy •<}« iHXJii tur HomU*0
TAHITI SUPER DEAL tjTs
OMDEB NOW
TBAIN a FERRY TiCKETB. CARS.
CAiSrEB BENT ALE. BAILFAB9E8
INTBA-f UBOPEAN STUDENT
CHAflTEfIS
SPECIAL RIVER OFFER
9/21 4/31 LAS VfOAS r ruORACX) blVfff
RAfTNUG OdANO CAHfUN inci 3 miaa
I'lcoai 3 day* rmhmg w/gaar ft m^alr dprwiar
•now all iranac
TOURS
JAMAICA ft daya
ITALY 15 <]aya
LON PAft AM9 iftdayf
MCMCp 9 dava .
HAWAII • day*
eiCENTENNiAL 9 days
NOW vodH CITY • day*
Mar*y aOtara 'any ft snort
Om MapMirtm lar
^9A. PROS C(
LAST CHANCF TO BOOK'
ALSO ANNOUNCING OU9 NEW
f CAOEMIC YEAM FLIGMTSIf
lOld>n.-OaMand ft LJuPmm,
Oaaart/bMiMft aiaiian ane» i
•ft/30/7ft..ft/2l/T7 to* • Ml* Juna ir
•'TM^^9~ft^1^77 to |4t9 Juna3ft
S/aa/79-0/21'77 § 14 1ft July 2:1
C I E.E STUOEftIT TRAVEL (477-
loota found
•
tal ^odorol Sogft 9aooi
■sarft.
(17 J 31
fMMI OfPMWtf
Kofwadt 70ft- TOSS
I iddi ataaa
Coo Kodiy
(SSJ9
FEMALE ddor aMMod lo ad
Woab 0 C laayiof Jima
700-3003
ofoddMnato
12 AFtar S-
(19 J 2)
OfdVdOO lo MMldaoo odd
I,. ASftR. Tss-asds
(81 j\
tiilorififl
•or now -TOO
LSAT 9 ala-boor
»
171-2214 Tl
For
1S.7S. 4S7.ta81. tim w
orPd.
1117. 9o-
ISft J4I
tUMMCR CHARTERS
2 TO 12 WEEKS
ONE-WAY FLIGHTS IN EUROFE
,...__, AVAILASLE
LOWEST PRICES - CALL MONTY
DAYS aas-79at eves aas^rsi
TletMi DaOiiarif
10-9 ALL y9AA
FLY Europa tbia voootlon Ona woy
ffodnd dip Mo wodbif O/W 9200.00
■nrr
WftrHNO NELR- tBMd
jECts. wniTiMa. EoiTiMO. as-
TIITOMM9 SY PnOFia-
ddllTBR. 309 997t.
CMiOl
oai. 4as-i74s.
(14J4I
LSAT.. OltE. MCAT. OMAT TiMordif
oil sudlocia Rooaonobia roloa A.
MoodoO Edvoodon Coolar 173S Wool-
w—^. 479-9103. 10019 Vanica 93f-
S«7ft.
(24 Od)- >^
EEL
(13 J ft)
a
'•4 14
LSAT. odior IBOI
froyp loolroddoo.
(••Chr)
ETYLSa. LoonTjop
»11
a Noof Koof In aomi
^ :;^ NEW STUOCNT TOURS
JAPAN
3W99«ia
«H»I9 S8-Jyiy 18. 1979
July 17-Ali9ust 8, 1979
TICKET lo
0^
id|
drA^EIl
diEXRO
WmTMIO HELR^ TEMM FAdEKS. THt~
SE8. OISSERTATIOMS ALL SUS^
jacT% wnrrmo. Borrd90. aa*
SEARCNIMO. TUTOdlMO 9Y dHO-
MATNTi
11 7
LOWEST Fi
hoM laro. Fly to:
900K MOW T.O.C. FUGHTS
EUNASIA TOURS N TRAdlLS
274-a3ai
»9J«
9LYX.
fnsi
CMOd)
Jl)
I CNAKTEfia ond
: onPgn Am Id? to
cnOd)
T9
a ETUOaHTS
.a.
OLASSIFIEEMD
tyMi
unfurnished
MLL't
M3-J721 or im^nn
•pts.
)l rmi—
f^ I 0%
VrrnHQ •! hem* ^■■pwifcH rmw. nmmt
and accuraia C«M HvImi m 2t1-t2I1
(*• J »
TVnNO F— t accM^lf ff^l— >t I—-
•OfMitol* ral«« IMI t«l«clr»c T«rm
LOW Ouptoi 3 Iar9«
StaMM I37S A<«||aM«July1 t»1-21tf
(27 J 4)
(29 J 4)
tXMLmi -imetmicmt t^prng-mmm. wefn
lie m«ft«« dit»«rt«tionft. books-day •
•aft-34S2 •««fNn9s 2tt-20M Chortotto
rrr " ?ft J #
TYMMO-ThoM. tflMMttHlMIS. MM.^
-•crtpto. dlcttiMon. rnmiftiigmi.,. ^^
Phono 47t-2747(doy«) or •97392f
(.^.Ho-on.^...^ (2.^4)
•ii^Honcod oil kwm. Quomnlo^l bLu.
Iliy« WW*, iti/pg.. WLA Mm^lM
<»■ *^\
TyPmQ. mm CorroeMng tioctric -
Torm popors, Viotos. roaMmos, olc. Aloe
coooolto trsnocrlbing Eaporloncod
Vdlloy •M-7070
(29 J 4)
^ 1179 2
•*t«Hip Popi, floor booch. 3
bodroom lownhouoo I2t0 Wool Loo
»mdlM. S«n9lo 1179 Two "ijm..
(iMlfO) $3M 474 7477
C27 J4)
for lorgo.
apt FuNy tumiahod. poo<.
walk to campus Si 90/ mo • yMMM
Avoiiabio Juno 30 479-0U9 f^ . .,
r2t ^ 9)
MMT A MOMtCA • boouWully h
J ijo^2 bmm. tfon Amtk. Jm l9.0oe 19
9790/montti. SM-aSM
for subl
9BEOROOM. furntohod houoo. atr
cioao bus. aooMaMo Juno 17 - top«.l2
929-2290 ovontngs OOS-MM
(St J 4)
•Ic. TYPINQ aofvtoo lor roporla. poporo and
Call
S2M PWOfEMlOMAL Pro«Offod C««.
•■••-**•»• 1 botlPpoM apartmoni Woo#^
burning firoplaco toaviow aundocii
charm. Sloiw and lofrtgarator UIIHtloa.
(27 J 4)
•AMTA MONICA
^^"b Mock Irom baecli 3 bodi
M29 uMMoa Includod 491-2394
(29 J 4]
HOUM on %m Soaeh for fonl. CaM
11.
(ItJt)
FUHNISHCO
TYPtNC-AII kinds Faat ^-
Cursto 79</pg IBM toloctric Mld-
WMahlro Parking Joonno: 3i4<9909
■ (29 Olr.)
JWJLY Yours Typing tonrleo 969-1712
faai accurato typing Roporto. Ihoss.
mlMrs Low ralsa.
(29 J 4)
PCnFECTPAQCt^
Ush gratfi. w/ If yta.
(29 J 4)
TYPIMO.|ha««,. manuscript, and loch>
•NCM 794 pof pogo lor studont or ptw-
<■■■'■ im Can 390-2994
- (29 J 4)
_"*" |y^^> ••• typo and 9dH torm
PdPd*b. oiaoos, olc. O«or 29 yoors *a-
[••*••« IBM tilaclrtt. IVootwood VH-
Jy Easy parking. CompoMllwo ra«ao.
Ono day sorvlco. MM Oolonoy 473.40ia.
(29 Oir)
apU,
17 927&/mOnPi 473-3043
(20 J 4)
CaMa«lar9pMi C
Your shorn SlOS/me
Ololrtct
(30 J 9)
129 J 4)
I
I ■ •■
XEROX 2^C
HAY Typing aditing English grad
Olssonallons spocialty Tarm papors
»ho*^«. rmMumm: tottors. IMfl 429-7472 ^
(29 QTR)
MOOMIjlATE (m/f) to shara 2 br
2 tea. apt, Wrsploco; doso to ca*
9197.90 plus utM Days 929-$»40f,
tHAWE a ba<rioMi tJt duptiij
pdHi.TacoBoll; 902.90.
— — ^^^— •*'*'
Owe b4<rbomapaf<iawtlortho.
AaaMaMo Juno lOm. 9112.90 por
Can 473-0024.
Pimm - wlah lo ,
(•M mm loft bank for 2/3 bodroom
■portiiioiit noor booch In L.A. 29 Jimp-
10 August 277-0290
(20 J 4)
my studio wMh Aflar 7:90 pm «74-2300
WEtTWOOO. 4
lovaly dock furni
iiOO.OO 479-0041
or famMy
(20 J 41
July lb AprI
lao J t)
SIMOLE sotolot: July/Augual: $140/
~ Ml. In Waotwood VNIo«a. CaM 474-
(aflar 10 p.m.)
(20J4I
'•" only rontal-fumioliari Imnio, 2
s. I- both SaMMMnMt 19-29
la UCLA. Cathryw 740-7714
ys Hurryf Must rant by Juno 10.
(30 J 4)
MOO. 400-2340
(20 J 4)
^^^> house
Ho minimum
9m, __ „^. ,
Lofol Oocrotory. Noar
7009
4?0-
(MOirt
mjM
FUWMfHED 2 too«ro«ni apartmant
0/30 - 0/19. 9110. Evonlnns 474-
(20J4)
JOB Applicants Automotic loMora oro
chaopar qulckar. and iOwliiiL typos
^^1 /•cHnlcal Typing tanrlca. WLA.
!0r7-9949.
■'■^ ' (39 J 4)
PMOFESOIONAL WfllTINQ. EDITING
INOEXINO. KEOEAMCH OOOftt.
JOURNAL ARTICLE9. OitSBIITA-
TIONO. PROPO0AL9 JAME9 WINTER-
FfCLO. WEST HOLLYWOOD 321-9000.
'29 J 3)
accurala/pleli-up. do4l«ory/rlfltloo«a
raloo/tondy/499-2400. ,^ , ^^
lib J 4|
TYPING Tarm papors. ale Studont
ralos. Top OuaOty. Ju#y (MJi. EngOoH).
(29 0tr)
Pi MALE shdro 2 bodroom apt
Oaks. Laundry facll naar buslino
107.90 ovos. 700-4072 Days 700-7311.
(20 J 2)
lOOM
7 477-2113.
9210/nie. Qaa,
i
(20 J 41
PEMALE rabmmalas nsiinl to
3 bodroom apt «/:iraplaco. Noar
morhot/achool. 907 90. OSO-OOM.
(20 J 3)
COZY ipamah. Kadi My (
tM^ Good liDHIwi M *^
elation a#oa of ftunool Pork Oanta
Monkra Tw##pgroonia-con«orMMo<
Largo lot oiMi 9 fruit boaring lr«
1321 Pbio OL 304 JOO lOO-TOir
C31J4)
for Auguot Aflomoon A oarly
491-0000. _
(30 J 2)
furnished
JEWISH
iymmar apt. Prhrala room/both Doy
474-1031; Evonlnga 470-1010.'
(30 J 2)
Monica, 3
19 Syt. I.
(20 J 3)
477-2210.
(31 J 4)
3
$27t/i
^^^ Faat and accurate 020-
3700 or 929.1200
:29 J 4)
EDfTN . INH t: p^y^ IhsHT
diosorlatlons. rasumos, lotlors. EdM
^___ fumlohad T.V.. wwmwwv,
[•••««Jto, MMJuno to artd Auguot 9140
JoiMilili MMHao. 9 min UCLA. 9 mbi.
M feM0k49t-S332, 4794110 anyOma.
iM 141
•ccurats. 033-1747
SPEEDY, accurata IBM typlat - roo-
•onabla ratos Also Profoso^l Sc^
;jJ^/»»^ Typing. cJTIZmS'
Jif^.H *;"»••'• »^rotarlal Sor^i^
Cicaiiant »ork Prompt atlontlon
?75iilM* "**' " "••*^*** 422-3009/
■ «9 J4I
EXPERIENCED typiot. Papors
dissartatlons
Call Cynthia
3UJLET apocieus sbifM. Juno. SopI
255. ?2J5?* »•*** — ■■. ■'•Ml liCLA.
•VQL/WNaliIra 279- MM. 000-1M1
(33 J 4)
/2» J4»
PWOPESSIONAL Typing IBMSalaeMc
•^ucotlonol sciantlfic. olhor Don't
•Mt call bofora lOom. aflar 4pm. 300-
' ' r- (MOOT)
PKEEadlMng
to UCLA. 92M mcludos pool utNHIos
■VOL/Wllshira 279-0239. MO- ImT^
. (30 J 4)
PUflNtSHCD2
UCLA. Garago ...
IS. 3SM. 277-0400
w (M M 4)
UntURfOUS 3 bodroom ap4rtmont
•••ks Christian roommalos for summor
iVMnths 907.00! 029-4340.
(20 J 3)
2 MALE Jowlah stu^snts naod n
for ■ymmai. Apt WLA Araa. 473-17M.
(23 ^4)
WAMTlb raanwnals shart ^ ttsilraiat
•fling lala Juno Apt., hunt Ip-
030-1030 alMrt.
C»,J4>
ROOMMATt - Pamalo, non-sfhokor
•irough August 15 2 barroom apt
WLA. 9l07JO/mo. 477^119 CaOila.
(MJ4
2
(MJ3)
2 •CAUTIPUL bodrooms cond. toy
3 mmmao woOi loriw^yniiMlM.
0. 4n-0071. 97l01aM.
1(31 J 4>
JUtY.Aug.Bi^wNi0ld3
f««'«*«two. SMS. 473-3W3.
(»i4>
house is Share
- II — 1» III II lu.. .
SUMMER suMot. 3
TO^
■><»buns 1 037-0700. 030- 11M
1 bdrm bi 4 bdnn
I. Cffook. Avon Juno 14.
(39 J 4)
(33 J 2)
SHARE 2 bdrm unf 9 bOu from booch
JlOOilO uOOtlps. Juna 15 Chuck 303
'' (20 J 4
NEED mala/famala to hunt for one
Jj2» 2bodroom apt by booch 7M
(20£0)
SPACIOUS apailiiisiii naar fiaOonai;
Robortson: own largo unfurnlshod
badroom avallabla. 0/19. 9110 plus
CUTI _. ^_
0/21 -O^ia^tl 30 O0(flo«lbki) uTuiiloo
(30J4)
TWO
•no PvpHaMoS/M
LOVELY houoo b« SM. 2 .
^ond Juno-Aug. 19. Mg ^r-
(30 J 4)
WX.A. 91S2.M Couple mC
' ' - 477-2142
(32 J 4)
1MCH. Frig.. iPMMb bod.
3lM/n». MM JMnTtTtaM
Om MM. MM.
off
7» J4I
*09^OAYLEY. across from Dykstra.
"- - ■ 473-
» '
utUMaa. m npat
EnMtah
B. Raa-
^25 QW\
;i"X C OttWflTATIOMt. THCSCS
STATISTICAL FAST. bmNoSLE
SEVEN DAYS A WECK IMfV TYI^
STYLES 010 Odi ^^ ^^
(MObi
^4)
FEMALE own rom 91M bMi mM.
bdpoli S.M. avail., 0/10
0 p.m.
(33 J 4)
or2?9-0471
PEMALE
room unlurnlohod 997.90/mo. Santa
" ■ 10
. (30 J 4)
SPACIOUS fumNHdg milu. TZl
^^^^ ''•^ ? \^^^ ». S1SS/f Sa^
^ mj^
tUSLrr room bi 2 _
tn Woof LJi. for July
— -27S1
CO-OPCRATIVE IMng bi
Own f« ' ' '
TYPiNOat
r
1
QtO
WALK TO UCLA
Spacious Bachalors. Singlas
1 A 2 Bodroom ApM
Toamr ^paHnisim 4TT SMJ
10041 Strathmora Pool, alovatoft
curity garage Also with
ECIAL SUMMER RATCS
_ TariMa 47S-7MO
540 Olar>rock 543 Landfblr
► 10-516 Londfair 477
WOOM M
(20 J 4)
YOUNG
(3SJj4)
lo
Ovy. SM-4770
•pi SSI/mp.
(MJ4I
SIM _
9:M pm 270-1000
(38J4)
S.M7
POR S
In
HOUSE lo shorn m
f2J^??^»*»*p^«o« «ioo
ISM. 3M-1^-
ROOMMATE wanlod (
room lorga 2
i^^^}
19.470-3037
(30Jy4)
r^.i4»
t Rgnarv^s«« >..,«> Tinfi'iii.Q
- (29 Q»)
^^^•^^ ^ tlZ - IBM SSLCCTRlFu
CHOICE TYPE FACE TtH^TL'^
»"••••. Manuscripts. Flold SlMllaa '
idlting. SCREENPLAY SRECIALIST
(^••r Qrmith Park) 902 1049
^ (MJ 2)
TYRING Laf Caaoy do It T«nn papars
(29 Ob*)
PURNISHEO/Unfurnlsho^ SMhalor
f140. SInglat 91M. Rpol Hoari of
" 10024 LlwMiuuk. 479-9004
(MOtr)
2.
(20 J 4)
(SSJ4)
SUMMER Rotos Spoclous slnglos
lA Z ^•<''»o*"« Largo courtyard
992 Votoran Avo No Wllshira 470
OSM. Avallabla 0/1.
(M Olr.)
MINUTES from UCLAf Slnglos. fur
ntsnod ono bodranoi. te^^wM ^
FEMALE, own room 91M.
noor buass. markols. non-o. ^,
P>i*in»U. 03S-17M. 270-1001 Days
(30 J 4)
(30 J 4)
I^B raommata lor hmlshod 2 br/L^
apt. wNR aiod studant Dishwathor
^^ "*~ Sl90/mo. OaS-0747
(MJ4)
SUMMER sharp 2 tuiroat 2 bath
fumlahod nicaly Wllshira A Sundv
9l2S/nion. 020-30M.
(20 J 4)
raosofwibla prtca 2001 Oo
470-2120.
ISO Obi
SUMMER 2 bodroom. 2 bPRi Ak con
dltlomng Walk to UCLA Vataran 9
Gaylay. 9tSS»ia> 473-13M.
houajna naadod
pMMly fumlMiad. $240 Ca« MpiIImi ^^^^^^■"■MMMMMM^
'**" '^^^ wT^ HAVE A HOUSE?
OMt^droom apt Subf«t now thru
20. Naar Contury City
unffurnishpd
IP ypy mm
2
UUMTNING TjrPlNCCO
ThosN Spac»al*si
^^_ ''•a Esttmaias
P«OF£»OIONAL COLLEOC TYPtNG
SPECIALIST
:"."' P»P»'t Th#.,. O....rtat.o«t
IJTV '^"'•*0" '■•'t-no^t. »cwnc„
M*tt, T.b»..» O^gr.m* Nu».c Ed.f.n-
*>nq I*f»,M»q P„nt,ng Bmttmo
VaMran 2
pRMdan. 9419 and ^.
HOUSE 9 adn UCLA. Sav Olon 2
bodr turntshad RustK. Quiot Lata
' - 2-3 maa. SOM mo 474-1340.
(30J4I
house for rent
SSAOYfpr
Old V
«37J4)
FCMALE
OSS Volaran 91M JS lo SSM JS.
(29 J 2)
MANHATTAN
boths. vary
JWM 9 - 10
14. 91000
or JmIv 10
19 July 31. 030-0713
t%% .1 41
(MJ3)
SIM 470
(27 J 4)
t alary. ea« Judy 47t-4771
ACULATE
^j'r^^^.
(30 J4>
t
472-4442
^m*
WALK TO OCUM Root
lWTy\
2J^« •» ••-^ tli» fcb<i»PII. unh.r
T*^** "f^ S122.M Mm^^nmliar pr»
fa^r^d CaW Waria 77i.M34
21
(30 J 4)
(S3 JO)
•r July CM
(29 J 3)
ir-» r7ii-.',-^,V - -
HERMOSA
(OOMI PWW WW *i^Vli
370^ 13M
(*JJ3)
Has
rM J4\
FULLY
13 ^ July 31 030-9723.
(33 J 3)
-*
-,f.
Summer Recreation Instruction Schedule
A K
iafr«otiaa I oa true t tonal
tall. s4Si*M
y tulg .'7 -SSI
po, in port fi . 1%
I fV 1*1 r»rttm n
t '•-^^•^er ^SfUloy
86 T ■ t^aaOoy. *vn* ?** ''^ -
9Sfl- Tliufsdav. Au|f it -
^rill'm
AT OMOLliMrr: "urr^nr riepy i in pr wi l«^ rmrAm «r« r«f|uM^d for all stjtenU. OS
•ail a« Ntoatty'atArr asoSvrs. •nUsa tostrotatf as JWI ^mly. rlaaaaa
alU fea '*rT0r9^ rxjih agsawr ••satonc. Sisa 6f clasMa U 11
anrollnartt ta on a flrat-coiM. first-aarWb^i*. '
mt:
Ufa Oavlnr
•ul
' IV • -^ pn
tlca MTWTh pa • ^ pa
1 AdultAHiiaron 6 . L? /rs sola toaaofM -
IIT
W
irfatar 9afbty Instnartioa
rtaclimlAf Swla
•lafbfoal 4diat/biildran 6
9 •
10
11
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I - 11
I - 1?
U
jfTt. awia l^aao^ - ■— t>»iow
nan's Qyo
■Ipn'.a ftJS PiPPi
halou
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a Oyn ^doJ
Ubto
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9 an • 2 pa
9 !■ - 7 IB
1 rk^ pa. Clarity
oill aiob ao f«r an*
9Wia«ta m^ fneul ty /Staff
PlM»l%y/i«arr aaly
OarolUaant for all 9 ao - < i» ^ *«»..««: 1:'
^atribut«4 at U:l^,
It for aU ^ pa - 7 pa claaaaa ( Farui tWatafr) i 9
flrat •♦r»a4. fcaj^awt faa ta ^ 00 layobla at anr
MO tare ol or
Uandacapa ^latlag
CMlApon'a Art
T
Hi.
7 pa - 10 pa
7 pi . 10 pa
1 pa - ii po N^
tloa r«nt«r
tinn Pontar
tiaa
rvr
oIlJMOt
.^•_fiL
TTrrr.v, u-^'. cMft
JSLi
10 aa - 11 as Rao
i^^ • i ■
tlan Tanlar
iia»D'4 cm 100? myy
aallat - 381 lym 3 p. . ^.30 p. i*j«»n'» r,ya ?oo
WaOam Qaoca - for ehlldran and aduita , ca.ll Doria 'urran at tha Racrvatloa Caator.
ant. ^jb7J-
n oaly '^'^ '
9actlaa 1 TuTh U « - i ^ Atm#tif ri#i<|
aoctioa ^ Iff LT n - 1 la AtMgti. »iel4 smfF
1 .
Ugin Jaaa !»V
5t3<> • ^!l' po "^unaat Vyqn Macraailaa
Cantar Fool thrrmf»< 9a|>». ^ __^
3Ciff!aBrT^L* yr. ^ *m !/HIW -r^ aoaaooal V V)7« for anr^i-^nt iau. rail aai . fHTl.
. rirat aaaalon: Juij .'fa Flrat aaaalon anrallJWKit ; July ^V 2i X)
TBimr "'■ - and .rUniatiga.Wr> >.^ "''ff'. ^uraAa 'uoTh > pr ?
rirat aaaalon : Ju
r an.i
.9e 1 " .JtaTh ^ pa - 7 p». mi- Pool
CLASSIFIED
.^KCHANGC 3.1 London turntahaO
homm. 4 bodroom. aludlo. and battia.
Conaonioni lo adioola and downlown
London, to North or Norlh«aa( Loa
Afifoloa araa turnial>ad homa of
4 feMdroom or 3 9 conaorOMa dan. toaMa
0 aailmnting pooi CaM 9*9'M12
'34 J SI
fOiiiii Jk boerd
room for rent
eutos for sale
autos for sale
bicycles for sale
9190 DO ATTMACTIVC room privata
balh naw homa. priwaa MM aaaa Moof
•toras tranap laundry. iiHchan. parliing
avallabla 274 M2i
WALK 2 UCLA from boouMut prlvoto
room A OasH. 9190. Mytfanl OaMdiM
473-1033.
(39J4>
71 CAMII
Aulomalic
930-2039
Lo
radiala. vinyf lop $1
141 J 4)
VW 73 FA9T0ACK 4 a^aod AM/FM
A C Mtch9i«nt. 1 owrtor. aicallvnl
929-2 708 '455 -1704
(41 J 4)
"00 PLYIdOUTH OATELLlTf CONVCH
TWLE. 30.000 EXCELLENT MECHA-
NICALLY NEW TIPIE9. BIIAAE9 SlOOO
380-3403 AFTER 6
(41 J 2)
VO 0^1 RaHya 8 track, air caiiMMIon
Inf. now ttroa 29 mpg. 9000 Muat aoN.
■ 1771.
<41 I "tt
nCMMLT Maeli
crank aaa> upa.
oNor 920 2791
33*
170?
(42 J 4)
DATOUN 97 mt Nroa. rodM cluldi.
AM FIf runs oood 9090 Muat aatl 838
2393
(42 J 4)
ROOM
927
toaord lof 9199 month
faoMaMca lor woman.
Waatwood 479-3945
(30Otr)
OUirr prhrala room bath kltdian p^
•lagat Laundry Waatwood-Wtlahlr*
Malo faculty studant 474-7122 altar
9:30 pm
(30 J 4)
YW T1 lug. allck.
condHlon 91400 or
455 1704
94,000 mi aacalloni
boft oflor 929-2709/
*^ (41 J 4)
ROOM
doys
Wofli 3
477-2211.
ROUTO. a
dmnar LlgM
130 J 41
99 00 WEEK lighr airy room
quia I surroundinga Cloo
Froawa^ai LaSraa 930-f300 ^ y
ROMCm % tin yadow »14- 1 7
condMon CaO OMaa Day 029-0071.
avanlng. waakaiid 092-9223
1414 4)
FIRCMIIO. 1973.
tn«a«lor. powar. air. mag whaols 33.000
mOaa. 3M-0721. 479-0000 aaaffMnfa
. (41 J 3)
MCW/UttO
at
(41 Olr)
rooffti and board
exchange for help
RRIVATE roooT. both, board Cam lor
OIH. 0. adion not in achool. camp toma
dHvIng FfoaaaorMnga. wookonda 099-
houolf«. mala UCLA aludania
aa. iMonan prhmaoaa,
-flO «. UiidMli Ava
(39 J4-
FREE prtwoM room. bOdi In
Wmmntti Eachanfa 10 hours h<
IDEAL car fo» atudawl 03 Mareury
Comol. Eaoadanl oondNlon, good
9990 Cad 040 8040. 477-2171.
I41J
99 MU9TANG Calif Opacial ilnt
cond.. whita wtth black vinyl top. 3
34 mpf. 9300 479-5145 aao.
(41 J 9)
ali«f CaM94l-7»84.
"OO VW 1000 ang aicallant.
In town Mon 9 Wad Call Oinard, (009)
909-1249 - 905 1249 ^^^
111
Wilshtre West f .p^m •«••«,»
Bicycles '••'•^•«»
*0^ OitcoMnU •*• mmmt
0^t» and ««.! •••oil**
, to UCLA miummn\%
"y 477 Jllif
11 Wllshira Blvd ' L.A §0025
NIOHNCI IntamaUonal Nona 11 " fa-.
eoMonl condHion 9t39/onar 909-9042
(42 J 3)
iiuoiorn^M
T3 MAZDA RX.2 RobuNt onglna
warranty A/C Aula 33000 offor ^Hm
9 333-4113. HaiMa
(41 J 9)
dioa aaart $110 00 CaN 920-0771
|d2J3)
priaaM balh-
lODATtUN. good running
Rpod8 MSa body vNwk 9dl
900.00 472-7751
(30 J 4)
xhNdooaa. 10
CaN 370-9133
lor
r^T I 0\
#tMALE aludanl lor summor Eacb.
iMHR * board « amaH aal lor
9130 por
at tha UnlvorsNy Cooporatlva Right
In Oia YMaga ■iilOiwIi «ro«k 4 hours
a amali. Tha load Is
tnand^. iMNvofaity Co-€ip. 900 !
LM 470-1030 , ^^
"OORLV
SBdIo. haalar. air Michalms. 9290;-441-
1102 ovos
HI J 4)
TOYOTA 71 Mo«k II. good condition,
aconomlcai. orig ownor. muat aoN.
9400.00 270-
(41 J 4)
ITALIAN 10 apood EicoNoai
Qmcfc ralaaas huba High proaaura tlma
9100 JO 470-9402 0-10pm
(42 J 4)
1007 VW OOUARrOACK Rabullt an-
gina Muat Mil Boat otior 277-10M
allar 9 p.m waakdaya. Anyllma waak-
(41 J 1)
. *••> -MJ^i^f^T*
CaM 9m. 371-0133.
(37 J 4)
1071 MAT 139
029-7004 "^
MU3TAN0 00. VO 33». AlTo
a. auiamaOc, aaoolloRt gi
030-3471 929-9414. ^aid
•• ^yiUiU. LwST^ uuk.Tns;
NfWUtfl C«V
•**f 1
Of W U9f 9 jQpii ^,„,r„,, H,v
MMT (>,mbM
5179
Ob fCamar Oiiatia88
m
HI J 4)
(41 J 4)
OUICT. cool, comlorlabia room tor
TRAVELIMG to
looglng In li
and franch
0/71
T2 DATOUN 1200 Radte/i
cHy 40 rood 91790 caM
(33 J 2)
HI J 4)
470-
137 J 4)
FC99ALE a
board, aac
choaaa. 1W
3:30 491
eblld-aittlng. Nfbl
Aflar
r07 J4I
9120 ROOM
Ing apartmant.
UCLA. Kllchan prl«lla«oa Fomolo
473-9004
(30 i 4)
OALS: 1003 ¥B0iiR8guii bug b»
OBCOIIoni condition wHb poraonallly
3000.00 Can Ffod
tm^ f%tm %
73 O^tL OT 92.000.
30J00 adMa. 309-1041 ar 030-1330
(41 J 01
III ... Ill
1071 VW Ouparbuo Oabullt angina. -
Clutch, brakas. ascallani condition.
S1090 or boat otiar Evenings 472-
^^ (41 M 20)
cycles, sccMters
for sale
OUZUKI T
bi 1079. IIOMl
f77f ar
(49 J 9)
91490/offor
Sign abiOant OK Mr
aiALC wuwom. onry 8rv,^w, to lOin
cdm^s. light kitchan privllooos no
190 J 3)
A«l/m alarao Radial
AnyOma 474-7000
(41 J 4)
DOOQi Dart 1000
039-1400. Day 477
79 KAWAOAKI KZ
naw With aatraa 9079/1
479-4000
(49 J 3)
1071 FOND
air,,' aula. rNitwoa.
91300 Al
(41 J 4)
HI 4 3)
1070 COUOAII. VO. rabuOl
autaefor
FEOMU.E. Noom/boord ai
light houaowork/babyallling Rrlvald ,
room/boOi/TV Noor UCLA. 474-0930
(37J4I
MUOTANO 70 - 302 V-0 auto, now
paint. 19 mpg. aacaU cond loot.
11300 374-3010
(41 J 4)
107S Honda CO 200 Dvlaaii
•sMy 09 mllaa Oast oflor 929-9901.
(aaaa).
(43 J 4)
1007 TWIUOPli
477.
WAOrrtO: Ta
lar Juna July and
007-2138.
HO J 2)
(43J0I
474-0130. aaonlRiB/dMOlMnOb. ^^ . j.
1911
• a_ •
M ascfiantd lar bdOyolftIng two
Ml J 91
bicycles for sale
YAMAHA 1070 HO
M. 8MIWIWI
-TOOtUCLA
(43 J 4)
(37 J 4)
autos for
SwTif
Intorlor vory
UCLA
3770. 479-0011
HI J 4)
bfoboa Mka now
(41 J 91
1007 FOND
mochanlcai
Hi J 4)
37^00 AUOTM Haaiv
HI J 3)
HI J 4)
74 OM^ZOA WU «
0-trb, tap tsiidWIai
LVOH9:
1. 03J9I 472-0380
rji 1 9\
rru 071 031-0007.
(81 J 8)
STUOCNT DltCOUMT
•iOST nMPAm w¥mM vou wait
10% OFF ON PAUTt AND
ACCEMOHat WTTH I.O.
HAHS OHRT
UQNTWeiQNT MCVCLES. MC.
biOia VMifo
a OLOCKO OHOU CAMFUO)
1071 OAYLffV AVI.
HOMOA 1074 KL-
plpa. low mllaa. aacollont co«»dltlon.
9700 034-1203. WiibiaOi 940-7070
(43 J SI
1071 "KAWA*
1149
3079.
f4!l I 4»
79NOMOACO3B0i09
oabaa. Otipi
try. 9700.00
id|
iifo^.'iooo
siiaias ff e^saes* s > v^v
1477.1
■td.
(43 J 4)
There will be a special Classified Page Jum
90 MAIL/ORING YOUR "GOOD-BYE, BON VOYAGE, CIAO, AOIOS, ETC." TO
15 WORDS OR LESS FOR $1.75
u
liii 12lli IHCAA
r
heroics give UCLA tennis title tie
^t*r
■ m
F*rdl Taygafi
09
UCU NCAA tennis title
There have been 31
NCAA team titles awardeif
m the 92-ycar NCAA
Championship event UCLA
has captured 12 ieltm titles,
in 1950 under coach
WiHiam Ackerman, in 1952-
53-54. 56-60; 61-65 under
J.D. Morgan and iti 1970-
71; 75-76 imidcp ^lenn Bas-
»ett
Nine Bruins have cap-
ture 1VCAA singles crowns
while eight UCLA doubles
teams have won titles.
UCLA singles titlists include
Jack Tidball, 1933; Herb
Ram, 1950, Larry Nagler,
1960; Alien Fox. 1961^^
Arthur Ashe, 1965; Charles
Pasarell, 1966; Jeff Boro-
wiak, 1970; Jimmy Connors,
1971 and Billy Martin last
year
■<' ' '■
By linRlef Kaplan .
DB Spdfti Hriter
The heroics o< UCLA tcnim luri Peter
Klcming>«fid''Ferdi Tayf^n overcame a slow
surt and led Glenn BtMett's Bruins to their
consecutive NCAA tennis champioashin
12th all-time title
Fleming finished a champion yesterday
morning along with teammate Taygan in
Corpus Chrili, Texas by overwhelming USCs
number one seeded doubles team of
sophomores Bnioe Mansbn and Chris Lewifh.
6-0, 6-2, 6-4 to capture the national collegiate
championship. The win gave the Bruins a share
of the 92iid annual NCAA team title with
use
Fleming and Taygan, who had never played
doubles together prior to the NCAA
tpurnament. hugged each other after match
point and threw their rackets in the air in
jubilation.
Fleming was given a standing ovation from
the Tuesday morning crowd which numbered
about 1000 Over 3000 fans had filled the HE.
Butt tennis stadium since Saturday*s
quarterfinals The majority of fans had rooted
for Fleming's underdog opponents all week
long, but not yesterday morning. The fans
realized that a Manson- Lewis victory would
give use the championship outright Fleming
deserved to be on a championship team,
according to former tennis great Jack Kramer.
Both UCLA and USC finished the tightest
championship with 21 points, while Stanford
finished third with 20
The UCLA doubles triumph concluded
perhaps the greatest conicback in NCAA tcnniv
history.
UCLA trailed Stanford by a seemingly
insurmounuble five points (18-13) after last
Thursday's third round of singles and doubles
action.
Stanford had advanced all four of its singles
players (Pat DuPrc. Bill Maze. Mark Mitchell
and Matt Vichell) and one of its two doubles
teams into Friday's round of 16. USC had
advanced ace Bruce Manson in botK singles
and in doubles
However, UCLA stili had their ace and
luurnamcnt's top-seeded Fleming along with
seventh-seeded Taygan i n the. singles
competitioyn entering Saturday's quarter-Hnab.
Taygan lost to Manson. 6-2. 7-5 in the
quarter, whik Fleming advanced to the semis
with a 6-4. 6-3' victory over Joe Edies of
Southern Methodist
In addition. UCLA's makeshift doubles team
of Fleming and Taygan had remarkably
advanced into the quarters, teaming together
for the first time ever.
Fleming and Brian Teacher would have most
probably been seeded first in doubles, having
compiled an 11-2 record during the regular
season including the winning of two of three
matches against USCs Manson -Lew is
combina^on Fleming and Teacher had
captured the Paafic Coast Ootibles title in La
Jolla for the second straight year in addition to
the Southern Division Pacific 8 championship,
defeating Manson and Lewis m the finals
The tenacious Fleming had predicted a ten
l^int Bruin victory prior to Teacher's injury
last week When Teacher was upset in the first
round the Bruins- chances oPf defending their
championship looked- grim
Time and time again, Fleming and Taygan
fought off challenges to win Stanford*s four
singles players had begun to dwindle on Friday,
largely because ol the efforts of Fleming and
Taygan. ~
Stanford^ number two singles player Bill
Maze fell to Fleming. 6-1, 7-5 while its fourth,,
man Mark Mitchell was outlasted by the late
staning Taygan. 4-6. 6-3. 6-1
. Pepperdine's superb Brazilian plav;^ loan
Soares helped UCLA's comeback bid greatly by
downing Stanford's freshman Matt Michell m a
tense three-setter. 6-7, 6-2. 6-4 Mitchell had
advanced into Friday's round of |6 with three
consecutive easy straight-set victories
use had lost Its second and third «;mgles
players Lewis and Andy Lucchesi in Thursday's
third rbund In addition, the Trojans* second
doubles team of Lucchesi and Mike Newberry
was upset in the third round by San Jose
State's Joe Meyers and Tim McNeil, leaving
hope for the Bruins in their comet)ack bid
(Continued on Page 24)
t\d ucIb
*
a celebration of the arts
Friday June 4 thru Sunday June 6
UCLA Architecture Quad
♦r
^i^'
^fheaW^
Free for all
Friday starting at 6 pm - midnight
Saturday starting at 12 noon - midnight
Sunday starting at 12 noon - midnight
WHAT IS IT:
The Garden Festival b a ceMKation of the arts, providing a wide
variety of cultural events\and entertainment^ informal festival
atnuMphere with free orange fuice and coffee to enliance the idea of
'sharinf. It is a festival which shoiM tlie Urge spectrum ai arfiaiic talents
ol the campus nni the LA. ccMiiiiunity.
WHAT WILL YOU SK:
Each day you wW see a mbture of presentations ranging from daaaic lo
% fromigrJotatoiWy, frcHn pretlige to pretend. Theaicf,
, mime ano mtfcn mote*
Tlie Garden Festival can oaly he free with your lieipw We n^^ hodtes
to help h«dM stages, pick oranges from beautiful trees, set up chain.
and more. Helping is luif die fun ... so if you have
you can volunteer, pl«Me caM 125-22(2.
that
•ooklets containing tlie schedule events of the festhrat'ran W pldiod
up at Aclterman Union fuhic Information Desk, The Central Tickets
Office, Kerckhoff Ticket Office m^ the Department ol Fine Arts
Productions.
DO )OIN US IN THIS SPECIAL EVENT ANO SPEND THE WHKENO
WITH US. tring picnics, pMnws, blankeU and mmm.
in a conthndng free spirit
JAMES DEAN lit American Teenager to be premiered at UCLA's
Koyce Hai on |une S, tiJOpm - FREE TO THE CAM PUS COMMUNITY.
i^Hwi
.PrfAfNONin
V.
4-.J:
■h-r.ti'
■J':.irr^^.-i£.: -^ .
1
f
<
i
Sing
WithB
. IS 238
IS 216
* 20-23 1«
•1 1«
"...
Typitai ann
Rasasbaaac
i
1434Waatw
Waatwood
18645 Sherr
>
„ , . . 1 — = — .
i$1.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
^ WITH
COUP'
1
■t
f
■i.:
Rkk
«
.->-..JU
U-
■-^ — -s-
i
f
u
3
1 ;j
Children 30-50 Mo. Old
^
MMd>d for Learning/Percaplioci ftcicarch
$2/vtsit (Max. 21 visits) 4 $20 for completidn
(f red f rankel. Ph.D.) A2S-05S4 for inittjl Mrrcening. UCLA approved
t
a
-»
•>
»^
m
\
3
H
MOST
TUNE-UP, LUBE & OIL $04*1
RaKF
1
MflSnnni
»35
A-l AUTO SERVICED.
7957 VAN NUYS BLVD. oaj mg^mm
»ANQtVif CTY^ Mil I Ml ^^^''^'^
ft
LOW PRICE AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE FOR STUDENTS
,„.!
Single Female
With B
It
19 216
20-23 196
24 1«
Without B
Average
Single Male
With 8
18 303
19 303
20-23 274
24 203
Without a
Average
303
27B
203
Typical annual rataa for bodily m|ury and property damage liability
RaSaa baaed on Waatwood area
ARROW IN8URAMCE SERVICE, INC.
1434 WettwoqdBlvd.no. 10 ~ 475-6461
Waatwood "" \
18645 Sherman Way no 107 . "^ 346-4fi66-^
■• ■'• '^•■■■.■: 867-2644
.1 .
BRING THIS COUPON WITH YOU
I
I
ff
Vi lb. Super burger
|$1.19
Served 11:30 AM -4 00 PM
f
•
I
I
B
I
I
I
M '
WITH THIS
COUPON
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
922 GAYLEY AVENUE
(at LaConts)
WESTWOOD VILLAGi
I
I
I
I
I
Good June 3 thru June 10 1
In the news
Pound plunges
LONDON (AF) — In one of
the sKarpett plunges ever, the
sickly Bntifh pound tank to
new record lowi yeiterday,
threatening to wreck the Labor
government's ccononiic strate-
^ and perhaps to bring down
government itself.
The pound dropped nearly 4
cents to an all-time low of
$ I 7160. Later it recovered
shghtly to close at $1.7213. still
well below the previous record
low of $1.7543 at Tuesday*s
closing.
Dealers said the dive was
one of the steepest ever in a
single day*s trading. Nornuily
the pound*s rate changes by
only a fraction of a cent in any
one day. *
At its low, the pound had
lost some 15 per cent of its
value since Jan I, when it
stood at $2.02 and nearly 30
per cent of its value since Apnl
1975 when it traded at $2 40
Financial sources have
blamed the year-long decline
largely on Bntain^s inflation,
the highest in the industrialized
world.
National
Gold auction
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Hundreds of bids were received
for the International Monetary
LSAT?
Those stuctents in our
last class who had
taken a prior LSAT
showed a medium
improvement of 110
points after taking our
course. This means
power to get into the
law school of your
choice. (Documenta-
tion of these results is
available in our office.)
Call or wrilo:
C. Lovin, Director
LSAT Pr6p. Cantor
1007 Broxton Avo.
Suite 20
L.A., Ca. 90024
Ptiona: 47S-2496
ASK FOR AN IN-
VITATION TO A
FREE LSAT
SEM INAR!
ELECT A RESPONSIBLE. EXPERIENCED TRIAL AHORNFY
ROSALIE HANNIG
RAKOFF
FOR
-"■T
(
JL«^~
JUDGE
UCLA Class of '92 BA
UCLA CMps of '66 LLB. JO.
TO
Los AngBiM Municipal Court
Judicial District #1
f
Leading the Demand to increase Small Claims Court Maximum to S2.0Q0.
Pun U\f h^ f^mmmittaw in ^ia>i H il in ii ,, r „,i
Fund*s auction of 780.000
oaaoet of gold being tali for
the benefit of ^he workfs poor-
est nations, a spokesman said
yesterday.
The aadion of IMF gold
worth almost $100 nriilhon was
conducted with considerable
secrecy The IMF said it would
not disclose the names of suc-
cessful bidders or release de-
tails of individual affejrs. Sev-
eral people who hand -carried
bids to the IMF today refused
to talk with reporters.
The auction is the first of
many such sales planned over
the next four years. Proceeds
will go to a special fund foY
low-intercst loans to the
world's poorest nations.
Airline suit
LOS ANGELES (AP) ^ A
class action suit has been filed
in federal court against West-
ern Airlines accusing the car-
rier of discriminating against
women and blacks.
-^^The ^it filed Tuesday by
two former Western employes
and Johneen Jackson, who is a
~ travel sales audit supervisor for
the airline, contended blacks
number only 7.1 per cent and
H'omen only tt.8 per cenf of
the carrier*s 593 managerial
positions.-
The plaintiffs alleged these
percentages were far below the
proportioB of women and
b|bu:ks among Western's 9,25*6
employes
Coplaintiffs with Miss Jack-
son are fornaer Western em^
ployes Penelope Fostci and
Herbert Lyotis.
Robberies
ENSEnAda, Mexico TAP)
— Authorities say there may
be many unreported cases of
Americans getting robbed be-
cause they camp at isolated
parts of aaja Cahfomia.
"I don't understand why
people go there and expose
themselves to such robberies,"
a state judicial police officer
said this week after three
groups of US campers were
robbed by a gang posing as
federal police.
In excess of $1,000 worth of
cash and goods was taken in
those holdups at Punta Banda,
an isolated beach 20 miles
south of Ensenada. In Ense-
nada, a police spokesman said
the robberies were too far
away to prevent
.Management
jobs at KLA
KLA, the campus radio sta-
tion, is urging all interested
students to apply for its
stipcnded management posi-
tions for the 1976-77 academic
year These positions inchide
program director, music di-
rector, news director, sports
director and sales represema-
tivcs.
Applications may be picked
up between 7 am and 1 pm
Monday. June 8 and tucsday
June 9, at the KLA studios'
located in the rear of the
Ackerman Union Grand Ball-
room Applications will be
■CCrntrH no jg^g^ 11^^^ ,^^ ^^
TT
I.
I rv«>
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
Volums XCVIIl. Humtm"42
Thursasy. Juns 3. 1676
PubM9hm/ 0¥9ff W99kdmy dunng th9
achoot f9mr. mMompt during hoiioayi
•nd Oty totkming hottam^t anc •«
•mMsasn psriotft. by th9 ASUCLA
Commufncmtion§ &omnt 30§ Wfmt
wooa Pimzm. Lo9 An^ti—. CmhH>rn,%
90024 Copyright 1979 by tHm
ASUCLA Communicationt Bosra
••wj^ojisi pssiip* pmid 9t th0 Lot
••W— dli©f
Jkrt
Psthcli HmIv
Anrw Young
aiMsn Kan*
fC
Sluan . S«>»Trtiiii
0lsf>fi Scfci
JMV Lspin sMit^ant
Cue Mandsl
Alic« Short
Paul Signof««li
Qootf Ouinn. aMittant
Mtch«1l« Duval, astiatant
Tofiy
Aavn Parfray
NtasH aaNofs
— On Campus
Lmurm KImmm — Tl
aivndy Atexandar
Luaan Cunningham
Bratt Holtar
David Whimay
Campus i
Jsna WIgod
Mary Anna Carislno
Karao Qi
Cathy Fiahman
MMia KufU
Joyca DaHH<
Nancy Lilianthai
Wirt Editor
Rtchard Nalaon
WfHSfS
MNis FinagoM
Bob Htbor
Jaqua Kampachroar
Hufaar Kaplan
itdl Lalar
Michaal Soodhaimar
Pstti Sultovan
Milia Bigga
Shirlay Dulkmmcz
Oaniai O'Haarn
Jaff McLaod
Cama Ptckman
Joanna Ratkovich
Alavts Stri
Kan aarg
J^ Brar>dt
Kathy Bff^nM^
ComaH Chulay
aWns f^iior
Orag Jsiiwaon
aarry Kana
aooa McGaiiiavd
Tad dhapifo
Vlckt VahOt
EmSy Waingrow
Nancy Harada
Qay Hafsaa
Jmri Kanameto
Allyaoo Knoth
Qiann Nafcagth
PiP«i
Anna Schwartz
Holly Kurtz
Ubrwiafi
Mary Bath Mumli
ilanaL
Rosa Zoaa Ho«»ev
■.J
Director's leadership ddabted
Lr
Pride House grant shaky
By Alaa Mld^d Kartiefaiif
wmd Barry Grey
DB Stair WiHot
Editor's note this is the
fourth mrticle in a contirtuing
Daily Brum investigation into
the UCLA Drug Treatment
Program.
Uncertainty and instability
characterize the fate of a $1.5
million federal grant which the
University is giving up this fall
when It transfers its Drug
Treatment progran to a still
undecided recipient, according
to representatives of the Na-
tional Institute on Drug Abuse
(NIDA).
Presently, the grant from the
NIDA is given to the Neuro-
psychiatric Institute (NPI),
which in turn supports the
various units in the ceai
munity Approximately 700
people with histories of drug
addiction utilize the program.
which oomIm of offrcampus
and rehabilitation centers, and
administrative unks to super-
vise operations On Octa^r 1
NIDA will need to find
another organization to accept
their g^aal to keep the pro-
gram running
A few weeks ago it was
projected that the program
would split Halt ot the pro-
(Continued on Pagr 24)
MENTAL HEALTH AND REHAB. AGENCY
— — NEEDS VOLUNTEERS --^~~ —
to lasd rscrsattonsl mtaraat and tm^ group Studantt wanting
siipsfiaaos wofamg *n s mantai h— Wh sgancy 9hook6 call Portal t
Mantat Haalth ianricst at 166 6163 Training and tuparviaton is
prov«dad
>
m
9
?
i
Jack Shaffer shares views
By Adam Pfeffcr and
Mike KinegoM
DB Staff Writers
Stating his support for such
measures as a graduated in-
come tax. a national health
care program and the Humph-
rey-Hawkins bill. Jack Shafter.
Democratic candidate for Con-
gress in the 27th District,
DA Van de Kamp
campaigns at Janss
By Mary Belli MiirriU
DB Staff Wrttsr
Van de ICamp, appointed district attorney last October
and now campaigning for election to the office, addressed a
sparse crowd at Janss Steps last ^Friday.
Van de K.amp told the audience the position of district
iittorney^is not a job for someone without administrative
experience. It's not going on ulk shows and making personal
appearances.** Vah de K.amp. was referring to his oppoiKnt
Vincent Bugliosi*s affinity for talk show appearances, dunng
which he usually discusses the Charles Manson case he
prosecuted.
When he took office reiflii months ago, the district attorney's
Office was. $600,000 in the red. Van de Kamp said, but through
his administrative, efforts the budget would be in the black by the
end of this yearr —
, The district attorney created a special rape umt .in Febriiary,
which allows one trained deputy district attorney to handle a
rape case from the beginning ^of, prosecution t'o the triafs eiKf."
Since the program started, there has been a 100 per cent mcrcase
^ (Caatinued on Pafe 6)
V- W'
Summer Bruin
will start
June 25
We will need writers,
cartoonists and columnists,
Pl«a«« come to Karckhoff 110
afternoons starting June 21
825-2312 or 825-2493
Y There IS a *^
difference!!!
Ovtf JSyaart
ol taaar itacc
m*4 utcttt
: INCAT
: OAT
: LSAT
: GRE
: AT6SB
: OCAT
: CPAT
: FUEX
iECFMG
: NATL MED BDS:
• SAT-VAT :
a. •
• a
:
Taae'aciiitfM V ^
ttmmn ai cmi ^
lNiaa%inif#r m* %
of
mstr^iafi
•MftSH leSMMt
Pre-Dents
9 •'•«• V ctf
2124 So S«puivada Bivd
L A €A 90025
(213) 477-3919
Our last class aver-
aged 7.4 on the PMAT
and 6.0 on the Aca-
demic UCLA dental
school's entering class
averaged 6.0 on the
PMAT and 6.0 on the
academic.
Call (213) 475-DATS
or write
DATS/?
1007 Brovton
8uIIb20
LA, Cb 90024
Call us for an invita-
tion for a Free Semi
nar.
spoke before a cro%¥d ot akaut
70 people in Meyerhoff Park
yesterda>
Citing what he called **a very
viable grassroots campaign.**
Shaffer said his opponents in
the election (there arc seven of
them) have spent great
amounts of money on the rani
pargn He commented that
because of this, the campaign
symbolized "a classical con-
frontation of people and
money.
Shaffer said in regards to
employment that "It is no
longer realistic to expect that
the private sector has the capa-
bility of providing jobs" He
added we "either have to come
Up with a new system of tran|^>(
ferring funds or pass legislation
like the Humphrey-Hawkins
bill " Shaffer said, '*if I were in
Congress. I would be sup-
porting the Humphrey-Hawk-
ins bill**
The H umphrey- Hawkins
bill, first introduced in Januarv
1975 by Hubert H. Humphrey
(D-Mmn.) la 4te Senate and
AatMStai Hawkins f D-Calff )
in the Hou«c. sets up a coor-
dinated federal economic plan
which includes a jobs program
The aim of the bill is to
achieve a three per cent un-
employtnent rate bv I9H0
The bill includes government
as an employer if the private
sector fails to provide the ade-
quate amount of jobs needed
to reach the desired unemploy-
ment rate. In April 1975, the
unemployment rate was 7.5 per
cent, while the rate Ims not
been below three per cent since
I94«
Those opposing the bill say
it contains socialistic over-
tones They also attack the bill
(Caatinued on Page 24)
4S
Acres of Datsuns
Student, faculty, and alumni
fleet discounts
101 S. Arroyo Parkway
* 684-1133 *
ff
'.-.t
SEMESTER AT SEA
sailins again in February
^%
Tha S.SitJniverip
Campus sets sail
February 25, 1977,
on a new series of
Sames/er at Sea
voyages for under
graduate students Tt^
1977 voyage IS
around the -uorld
from Los Angeles.
For \r\format\on write
INSTITUTE FOR SHIPBOARD EDUCATION
Suite 303B. 23521 Paseo de VWencia
Box 2726. Laguna Hills. CA 92653
4
Frank l\/iankiewicz
- campaign manager for George McGovern
— press secretary for Robert Kerinedy
speaking on behalf of
Jimmy Carter
Thursday, June 4, 1975 1:00 PM
In the Law School
Faculty Conference Room
^>
I
f
1
rmm
t
%
I
-a.*
4
1
I
a
-j DB Stair Hrtcir
^ Prter L ^Mlk
Tucftday that phyiioil ill
may be related to ttrctf from
previous changes in one's life
and that transcendental medi-
tation (TM) acts at food
tlierapy for the reduction ot
that stress
*Wc have some evidence
that personahtN tacioiB may be
S related to the onset of illness.**
iL Sa|k said "Transcendcaul
««r meditation is doing something
% that IS uhcoupUng that situa-
M tioa."
Satk. son of Jonas Salk.
fwho invented the sugar cube
vaccine tor polio, is current Iv a
2' retearch j Jtc at the Salk
H Institute tor ^lologtcal Scienflci
at La Jolla
Speaking to an overflow
audience at the Neuropsvchia-
tric Institute Auditorium. Saik
said medical studies ** noted lU-
wruci seem to take place a
year or two tolloumg the lite
In one studv. ^3 per
ceni oi the illnesses took ptaoe
within a two-veaf period of a
severe lite crisis
C lusterv
Salk \<iid il)e studies* also
shovk •'lllnesNes tended to fol-
low'clusters of chaafes ot iilc
the patient ua> having tromWe
handling or adapting to Vtilife.
crisis) seems to he an impor
tant^tactor in the appearance
ot illne<»s. not— ;^t a -minor
one *' '
in add It ion a relationship'
,: Jbais _^heen lound hetvunrn the
dcjirce oi lit(. vha!i^e> and the
trequenrcv oi illness Stress
result inji if on .stani changes
on one's lite is also more liable
lu pfecccd uA illness. expeciaUv
heart attacks, bone fractures,
pregnancv attd childhood leu-~
kcmia
hour vcars ago. ho-wever^'^^
Jesse I ahr a graduate student
at Ohio htale t nivi
found that people who had
practised IM tor at least two
\eafs -reacted jn a better way to
stress aruJ lilc crises"
C rnis-strn^s
Although the first serious
research on TM v^as done here
Evidenceiound linking stress^aodillness
Between artist, viewer
gocxi therapy for
hv R(»bert K Wallace seven
years ago. I ahr's study related
It to the life crisis-stress pat-
tern, finding that TM patients
^ith life changes^ of a high
degree still experienced a re-
duced amount of stress.
I sing slides. >alk dcM:ri
the phvsical effects of IM.
including a drop in oxygen
hav« %on\9 •vld»nc# that
ba ralatod to ttia onaat ok
consumption and metabolic rate
and changes in skin resistance
He added that the more a
meditator improved over his
illness, the more he would
meditate
Salk also suggested that TM
br something similar would be
¥Hy helpful to employees of
the health profession or anv
othe work where stress and
anxiety levels are hrgh-
The relationship of stress to
illness caught Salk's attention
during his medical internship
While making rounds he no-
ticed patient^\ symptoms
looked like "something more
than an arbitrary, random dis-
ease
••ft seemed to smell like
something was common with
these pateints,** he said Many
with the same diseases mani-
fested strange occurances as a
group and seemed to be sup-
pressing their ^ feelings, espe-
cialiy anger.
Figuring a relationship of
stress to illness, Salk went to
scientific and medical studies
but found no absolute answers
The stnditi did "^not seem to
have the firmness about them
to show a clear cut relation-
ship.*" he said.
However, a study of 51
women who were admitted for
biopsies for cervical cancer
revealed that psychological
tests predicted whether 39 out
of the 51 did or did not have
cancer. The tests **did demon-
strate the relationship of the
pernalities of the patients and
whether they had cancer." Salk
said.
Salk received his Bachelor of
Arts degree from Harvard and
his Medical £>egree from Jphn
Hopkins University in 1969
Total health care
Abo speaking Tuesday Was
Dr. Elliot Abravanel, an asso-
ciate profesMT of medicine at
the Maharishi International
University. Abravanel con-
tended that total health care
can be obtained through pri-
vate practice, especially trans- -
ccndental meditation.
**TM allows the person to
live in a state that is essentiallv
disease-free," he said, adding.
"It IS a state of beyond
thought, a state of awareness
like a vacuum.*^
According to Abravanel.
TM lowers the human phy-
siology and consciousness
down to a quantum level. ^
which he said **is the most
subtle level of physical mani-
festation" At this point the
human body is least susceptible
to disease, he added
The symposium was spon-
sored by the Students' Inter-
national Meditation Societv
the UCLA Medicus. the
Neuropsychiatric Institute and
the UCLA Public Health Stu-
dent Association.
i .
, ' „ ,.a
m. DEMENTO
tiiK * i:
Larry Croce of ^Mkmk Food Juitkic** tame
Roto the Wender Band
SuLa DoTid Wurd
Latighing Ltoda
BedlaM A C - InqwoMtv Plajrers
mA the rest off tlw Div Deiiiito Gaitc
HEmiCK HALL'UCLA
9PM Thursday June 3
T UE£ Im -LU»,ci, T<Mj,.n Jf-i. «^ ^^^
4-
MM^
Rites planned for Kerans,
theater arts prof essor
Private family services are
being planned for James
Kerans. tormer vice chair-
man and aaaadate professor
of the theal^ arts depart-
ment here
Kerans died Tuesday of
an apparent heart attack at
his home in Brentwood
The 54-year-old professor
had directed a number of
productions tor the depart-
ment, mcluding v^orks by
Brecht. Shakespeare and Pi-
randello.
Kerans was educated at
Harvard College and Uni-
versity and earned his AB,
MA and PhD degrees there!
the latter in 1936. He
studied at the University of
Loflion in 1949-50 under a
Fulbright grant Kerans was
a member of Phi Beta
Kappa and the American
EdiKftienal Theater Asso-
ciation
He began his teaching
career at Harvard and had
taught at Wclleslev College.
Stanford University and UC
Berkeley before joining the
I CI S (BLUtll
o
Kerans is survived by his
wife and six children ^
Funeral arrangements are
being made by Cunningham
and OXonnor Mortuaries
in |%5
Vn
11^
Art critic deplores gap
<" ^
In imagralad Arta:
a rotlan afg and a liMh on* doM
By Sara G
Di Stair Writer
As civilization becomes in-
creasingly modern, 'nhe gap
between creation and concep-
tion of art** also grows, ac-
cording to Stephen Kayser,
lecturer in Integrated Aru.
Kayser discuiaed visual arts
and his related role as art criti^
or interpreter at the final ses-
sion of Riebcr HalJ*s Last
Lectupe senes Ifie said this role
does not require him to be an
artist. "The closest Tve come
Co one is my wife,** he aaid
Kayser once told an^artist
while in Berhm, **Because I can
distinguish between a rotten
egg and a fresh one does not
Mean I have to lay one.**
■ntcrpreten — ^
At the present, interpreters
are needed to enable viewers to
understand art, Kayaer laid.
He pleaded with the audience
to learn "just a little bit of the
language of art.**
People should learn the pur-
pose of an artist and what he
IS trying to achieve, aocordu^
to Kayser With the knowledge
of one medium or one artist, a
viewer is half way to tota^
appreciation oi art, he coo-
Kayter hopes that with
knowledge, the average art
viewer's attitude ai "I don't
know about art but I know
what I like** will end He said
such people are only interest-
ed in enjoying their react^>n to
the art rather than the work
lo lay one.**
Once a person b familiar
with a few works, Kayser said,
(he knowledge should be shared
with others, "otherwise you are
shutting off a profound exper-
ience."
Until the 19th century, art
was integrated into society, he
said. A lady's dress, a teacup
JUKI a painting in the home
were in q/ut style, he said
Style, according to Kayser,
IS something natural; it cannot
be uught Being without style
i% like being without money, it
can only be atuined by steal-
ing, borrowing or earning, he
said. ^ "
Revival ^
Beginning m the 19th cen-
tury there was a revival of paat
ftylet,_such as Greek, 9$9mAr
and Gothic Kayser calls this
artificial form manner.
He five the example of Yak,
which was built in the Gothic
manner. In front of one of the
bttildinp there is a modernized
Gothic figure in the position of
a baseball player.
As art developed in the 20th
century, many new techniques
were uaed forcefully and ar-
bitrarily, he said. This explains
the growth of many art move-
ments and the production of
art that it "new today, aid
tomorrow." This it confusing
to a viewer, he said, because
there is no firm standpoint
from which to judge the art.^ A
viewer, therefore, should be as
flexible and open-minded as
possible, he said.
K^yier further explained his
n that a closed mind
will mitt much, with an ex-
ample about blondes "If I
only liked blondes, and all are
not true ones, look what Td
he said
Kajfter ooacluded by explain-
g his views on the value of
Whara PartiCiMtf ^aopia C jngr«Qi» .
THE BLIND PIG ,
A MM aaung and dnniiioQ aataoiifrimafif^
No Age Limit
•631 Sanf Monica BM) in HoMywood
The main judgment of value
should be based on quahty. he
said Kayier explained. "If the
work produced agrees with the
intention expected by the art-
ist,** quality it satisfied
The artitt alone determines
whether he has adequately ex-
pressed a true image, because
only he knows his conception
of it.
Concermng moneury value,
Kayser does not feel a work is
of less value if it can be repro-
duced In keeping with this
idea, he considers piMlography
to be an art form.
ChiMcae art
Kayser also discussed his
method of interpretation of his
favorite art the art of 1 3th
century China It gives him
**panoe of mittid greater than
any Western art "
He does not have a favonte
artist He would not dare teach
this art because he doc% not
know the language, Kayser \
added. L
SliGflVTIJlt
HOTLINE 477-7M0 4P-2A ^
Thurs. 7:30p 6SU Mteting Upstiirs Loungt Ktrcfchofr
Sat 8PM Disco Oanca Buenos Arits Room Roc Contor
•Veniorad by SLC
Phi Eta Sigma
National Hanormr^ Sociaty
Meeting forvmembefs
interested in
Catalina Trip
Ackerman Union 2408
Tuesday, June 8, 4 p.m.
ft-
MOTHLR,JUGS & SPLl D tNTLRTAINS
Ann ( .u«rlrii> >i V |)«tlv %••<*■
Roots
irj
.RAOUEL
WELCH
MAKVEY
*|R
I
AMtfM «IITtt|TOM
aaR«wt«y« LO
T«0»
^'^ A'N'',
EgMiMi 467^167
UATlMMra 477-0675
GttTAIKSA
UASeal
FVLLOniH TilBii
•71 »t5
OrMt tf> 323 40S6'
Onvt-laOMTTO
^: '
t-
Official Student Legislative Council
NOTICE
I
Any group desiring funding from
STUDENT LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL
Proposals due June 28
Submit to 304 KH before 4:00 pm
(Instructions for proposal format available
in 304 Kerckhoff Hall)
1
y
%
%
%
\
1
Budget Hearings
July 6- July 14
(Presidents Office will publicize agenda)
Sponaorad by Student Legislative Council/Pf[e*klents 0<«ioe
1
T
m
Jk^
I
» »•
I
e
9^
I
3
University of
San Fernando Valley
COLLEGE OF LAW
Announcing:
FALL SCMESTER \%1%
• f^M-ftmm Z-fmm day progtmrn
IHM day and avanifig progr
Th^ <i(Hbof is
fUilY ACCRfDtlED
\y\ the CommifftH* «♦ Bar tx.iminffs
StJlt* Bar ()t ( .iliUicnia
TH: (211) »S4 .711
B3S3 Sepuiveda Bivd Sepulveda Ca 91343
iSorority given suspension
Delta Phi Epsilon cited
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Kotolat
(Iran)
Tacoi
(Maxicoi
Mormandia
' Chckan
(Franca)
Swaa(4Sour
(CMllt»
Ff laar IpMiai
(C.50)
Lunch 4 Dinner includ*. Soup or aalad. hot •ntr«9. drink.
ALao tnternationai aandwichM on ptta br— d with aoup or artad and
Df*i>«i $1 25 hMitny lunch. $1 00 Ch«fa
Cappuccino 1*60. datiarta. 40
LIVE ENTERTAIMIENT
FOLKOANCINQ avar
FOREIGN ENTERTAINMBNT
OR FlUf 7:3S-11
$1.00.
I
WE ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
INTERNATIONAL MEANS AMERICAN. TOOl
ATTENTION STUDENTS!
1
No summer job yet? Register now for
temporary work. Set your own rates, work
1^ YOU'' own convenience.
Tutors . . . Gardeners . . . Recreatiorv-
SpecfiTists. .. Party Helpers . . Babysitters
. . . Entertamers . . . Geiitrial Laborers . . .
Painters . . . Chauffeurs ^ . . Temporary
Office Workers ... Typists . . . Etc., Etc.
Drop by the PLACEMENT & CAREER PLANNING
CENTER today. (Third building east of Ackerman
Union at the top of Brum Walk.) . ::
PARTY! PARTY!
For Good Times
at the Deh House
Live, Six Man Band
**Harlequin**
• • • ___
DeH Daiq's & Dancin' Sc Wyskey Sour\
Friday June 4 t pm • ?
649 Gayley Ave.
Finals Blow-Out!
By Kar Garte^
DB Stair Writer
A wriai of accuaationi and mitunder-
ttandififi bfts lad to the luspeniion of a
lorohty't cluuter from tlic UCLA campua
amil April of next year ^'
Deha Phi Eptilon (DPhiE) will not be
recognized by the UCLA PanheUenic Coun-
cil thii yea.r. The action was taken by
Aiaistant Dean of Studenu Chrii Fishbum.
Fiahbum taid the deciaioo to tuapend the
sorority was hers alone.
The group, however, is registered with the
Campus Programs and Activities Office
(CPAO) and may function bke any other
organization
Fishburn cited several reasons for the
suspension. In a letter sent to DPhiE officers
on April 22, Fishbum levelled nine charges
at the sorority, including **wildcat** recoloni-
zation. the giving of jewelry to interested
women and the promising of housmg for the
fall
Carrie Berger, California Area Coordina-
tor of the sorority, answered all nine charges
saying, ^'We were not wildcatting. We sent
several letters-of-intent to Mrs. Fishbum and
she acknowledged them. Where she got the
idea we didn't send a letter of mtent. I don't
know.-
Not M^pri
Berger explained the giving' of lavaliercs
(necklaces) is not illegal under National
PanheUenic regulations and that bousing for
this fall waa not promised to anyone.
Accordiag to a young woman who hns
some interest in the group, ^'We weren't
forced to commit ourselves to anything. We
weren't pronused housing and Carrie told m ■
specifically that tkr lavalieres did not mean
we had to join **
Fishbum said that one of the reasons she
took away the sorority's charter was that she
feared DPhiE would not be successful.
**When I attended school here," Fishbum
recalled, *They weren't 4i very strong group.
This was in terms of wh^tr the sorority
planned j^ achieve and wh|i actually hap-
pened ••
Berper, in reply to the sutement. com-
mented. "When has a group left in strength?
Sure, we left campus in 1971, but every
other Greek organization at UCLA was
weak as well The times were not right for
fratemities and sororities because of the
campus unrest back tlMk Zela Tau Alpha
left in 1^66 and Sigma Kappa left before wc
did We stayed longer than both those
sororities and they're back on campus, but
we're not. I ask whyT*
The conflicts between the PanheUenic
Office here and Delu Phi Epailon began last
September 18 when the national president of
the sorority, Riu Roasner, sent a letter-of-
intent to Fishbum's office. Fishbum ac-
knowledged the letter and nothing transpired
between the two parties until Apnl. Fish-
bum later denied that it was a letter-of-
mtent
According to Berger, several women here
had ''a natural interest** in the sorority. She
said. '"The girls whose mothers, aunts and
friends were DPhiE's wondered if the climate
was nght for recolonization. They felt that it
was and they started a petition. Before long,
I was called to help and girls were ringing
my phone off the hook eafer to sign the
petition to regroup.**
BergBff said that on April 13, she and
Western Area Coordinator Helen Schultz
met in person with Fishbum to notify her of
the movement on campus to regroup DPhiE.
On April, 20, a copy of the petition was
received by the sorority's national office in
Florida. On Apnl 21. Bergar |uid Schultz
met again with fishburn to present the
petition.
The next di^f, Fishbum denied the peti-
tion's request, charged the sorority with
rushing violationa apd suspended the charter
of the sorority for one year from that date.
On April 27 the national office of DPhiE
refuted all of Fishbum's all^pMaoas made ^n
the April 22 letter.
Fishbum's reply to the sorority's refuta-
tions arrived on the national president's desk
May 10. She answered only four of the
original nine charges whife restating her
claip ihat there was no iettcr-of-intrnt:
Appeals "to fFish bum's decision were sent to
her on May 14 and 24 by Berger and
Roasner, respectively.
Fishbum said the decision will not be
reversed, ahhough she said, "We will be
happy to welcome DPhiE haCi iifter the
snapawion'^ji lifted " Berger maintains that
the petitioners, numbering near 70, will
continue to meet this fall.
System to aid heart victims
A system consisting of a
nrintature pump and a catheter
may help prevent damage to
the heart following a **coro-
nary** attack, according to Dr
Eliot Corday of the School of
Medicine here. r
Jj.
retroperfusKm, the
system developed by Corday.
Drs Samuel Meerbaum, T^u-
Wailg, Keichi Hashimoto and
Jean Farcot of the Cedars-
Siaai Medical ReaMSCh Insti-
tute and by Caltech's Jet Pro-
pulsion Laboratory, attempts
IM rrttinf flu iMp^iiuiimn
nutncms to
kcgmeni of 4lle
heart, a condition which other-
wiae may lead to ventricular
fibrillation, cardmc shock and
death.
Utilizing coronary veins
which normally serve to dram
off products of metabolism,
cardiologists and cardiac
surgeons hope to reverse the
no^ of blood, thus delivering
oxygenated blood from the
brachial artery m an arm to
the damaged and starved heart
muscle.
Synchronized with the heart
ocai, tnc nuniaturc pump sends
a fkm of Mood to the hean
during the diastolic or rest
pinae. Tkt pumping stops
while the iKart enters the
systolic phase which drains the
'*uaed*' blood.
In experiments with l»boc»-
tory animate at Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center, in which coro^
nary occlusions (obstructed
coronary arteries) wete created,
diastolic retroperfusion im-
proved heart function and cor-
rected disturbance of rhythm.
Although advising caution,
Corday commented that the
syiffm — apprin In — he YC<T
Skills centerr
(C ontinued from Page 14)
and see if we're meeting their
needs." Levinson explained
Previously, dau colkction was
done only ipnrniiiiHy
Levinsos also pointed out
Iknt both divisions now handle
aU levels of skitts, from the
very haak levels to the thesis
uad disseruuon ranks.
Ske said that some <if the
^mm§BB being made **!• beef
up LSC are stiU in the de-
wlopmental stage and will
iMipefully be implemented by
fall
More emphaaia, for instanoe,
will be placed on tkt area of
speech awareness through a
program of anxiety reduction
which, using videotape, will
offer a dmnoe to develop ease
m talking in and before groups
"One of the btg r^eeds is the
student who graduates and
never raised a hand in dia-
cuasion section, or who is para-
lysed at the thought of having
to ufk in front of more than
12 people There is a common
blocking of not being able to
ask that questioa or walk into
a prolcssor's fliffioc,'* Levinaofi.
commented
Levinson estinuted that be-
tween 7.000 and MKX) students
uae LSC throtighovt the year.
Many are freshmen and jumors,
the latter otten transler stu-
dents or four-year students
who find difficult the transi-
tion between large survey
courses and smaller, in-depth
classes for their najors.
The Study and Reading £>iv-
ision IS located at Dodd 271,
the Writing and Speech Divi-
sion at Murphy 3235, a separa-
tion aeoesaiu ted by lack of
''It would be so much better
to have everything together."
Levinson commented
••We've got good strong
hunches, and we've been out
talking. We don't want to put
the bandaid on studentr' —
what we're really interested in
is making students independent
learners, and we're working
now to find the best ways to
do It,** she concluded
Sexuality
(Continued from Page 16)
the sexuality workshops they have attended which they,
hope others will find^ in the upcoming seimnar.
They ate also hopdful that UCLA will create a course
specifically on human sexuality that would be open to a
Inrfc number of students
"This kind of thing should be available," ^my said "By
having workshops such as this one, we hope to fulfill this
need that we sep an4 generate momentum to-get^j^ich a
They went on to add that a large turnout for the seminar
would demonstrate the desire and need for the class.
Anyone desinng further information can call or come to
the peer health office, Kerckhoff 312B, x57586.
STRONG FAIR IMPARTIAL COMPETENT
MEET ELANA SULLIVAN FOR
JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT
OFFICE #1
Moon - Ipm TtmndBy, June 3 M#yrhofl Pmrk
TTT7TJu3IcIarKp5?Sno5 '
Workers Compensation Judge. Admtnittrattve Law Judge; Juria
Doctor of Law; t taatlngs CoMeoa of Law
Admrttad to pfaoMaa U.S Tiiains Court
TIME FOR A CHANGE
PRESENT JUDGE IS 81 YEARS OLD
JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT OFFICE #1
LOS ANGELES COINTY
Vote
promising because it might
restore the vital heart muscle
Elana Sullivan
Worhers' Compensation Judge
X
?
I
.Ca\>
Bo?
the
>ts
ol
MaV
Tom ^^^^ ,
''"' to U'«V °"
I
\0t
vice
P^'"rt^ oi mass «-^^!' aJveWP-
'o«; A Vat ener«^V
■v
m<
len^-
VOTE JUNE 8
Tom Hayden for U. S. Senate
%i^r*
dii
i
■mmam
n
ANNOUNCES
DANCE AUDITIONS
{•
9^
tor admission to the BFA and MFA programs begin-
ning Fall. 1976-77 Held by Christyne Lawson. newly
dppomted Director.of Dance Studies.
Saturday, Juna 19 from 10:00 am to 1:00 p.m. at
California Institute of the ArU in Valencia.
1
3
Appomtmentf ara naoaiiary. Please call the Office of
Admissions (805) 255-1030. ext 185 before 500 p.m
June 18 foi^ appointment Appl4€awtR must have bari
ground in modern dance or ballet no beginners accep
ted. Applications vA/itl be ible at th^udition.
J-
It's Time For A Change
'The incumbent is over 80 years old
He IS seeking another 6 year term
sua
Attorney at. Law
S.S. Schwartz
Judge
Superior Court
Office#1
l.hcrMlf p M M HFRSOFI.OS ANCEItS have said
M , ut, , ,„„ ,„.,,/ inui «i, .*•■ i„», „/ \.\<.S<h»ari: „ „ulJh,„l ugmluuni
,m/.,.na,u. ,„,m.x ulmii //« l,a,l,r^l„r >Hv,h.li„ ,m,<n,u- //»• ;«.«,,/,„„,«, ,vu«,/
S.S. Scftwartz
/
Van de Kamp on campus^^
3)
(Continued fr<
in the nLiraber of rapes re-
ported. Van dc Kamp laid
Such a dramatic inrritc in the
number ^ reported ra|Mi
OHMM, aooofdiag to Van de
i^amp, thai women have
funed a tittle more confidence
in the judicml system
Workmg with AssemblyiSMi
Julian Dixon. Van de Kamp
helped design a new Juvenile
Justice Bill which would give
the District Attorney discretion
in prosecuting 16 and 17-year-
olds who commit violent
crimes, as adults.
Van de Kamp criticized Bug-
liosi*! campaign advertise-
ments, which advise Lot An-
gelenos to **buy an atuck dog.
put bars in your windows, buy
a gun.**
The ads are an attempt to
mislead people and to scare
them to death.- Van de Kamp
said.
Asked how he got along
with Police Chief Ed Davis,
Van de Kamp said he **works
fairly weir with the chief '*!
think in many ways he is a
foiod police chief.** •*For all the
rhetoric, he's administrated
(the Police Department) well.
by and larpe." Im said.
!■ a Daily BnUn interview
following hii aidim. Van de
Kjunp said be did not approve
of the Board of Supervisors*
recent decision to buiid a large
juvenile detention center near
Saupvt. He feh the Board "had
panicked** wlKn they gave the
§o-ahead to the project. **I
think it's a mistake.** Van de
Kamp said. They should work
to build smaller, more oooa-
munity-onented units."
Asked if be approved ^f the
way in which the recent gay
community slave auction was
luindled by police. Van de
Kamp asserted he did not'
know oi the auction until after
port ici pants had been arrested.
**rin certainly not going to
criticize the police department
on that They had good legal
advice (prior to the auction)
and had reason to believe
something serious was going
on there,** he said.
Prior to his appointment as
District Attorney. Van de
Kamp served as a U.S. at-
torney and prosecutor, director
of the Complaint Unit and
later chief of the Criminal
Division of the U.S. Attorney's
Johfi Van Os
not aiob lor
ITS not ooing on taOi
-^
Office in Washington DC. He
was then named. the US at-
torney for Los Angeles and
later heoded the first Federal
Public Defender's Office for
the Central District of Catifor-
nia.
Mankienitzto
talk for Carter -
Frank Mankiewitz, former
press i^creury for Rotal Ken-
nedy, campaign manager for
George McGovern and former
Dail\ Bruin editor, will speak
on behalf of Jimmy Carter
ipday in the facuhy conference
room oi the law school (Room -
242v^). His appc^raoce is spon-
sored by the Legal Speakers
Forum.
S.S. Schwartz offers you a choice
Ju. IS Doctor University of So Califorr)ia
30 ypars experience as trial lawyer
Arbitrator — Annencan Arbitration Assn
Member — The National Panel of Labor Arbitrators
Judge pro tem
Adjunct Professor of Law ^
Commissioner of Adoptions
L. ,-_
Filipino cultural
program today
Lumpia. a Filipino dish of
vegeubles in a fried wrap-
ping, will be sold today on
Brum Walk by the Sama-
hang Pilipino of UCLA, an
organization of students of
Philippine background.
Filipino cultural dances
are planned dunng the sale.
The purpose of the sale is to
raise money for the group
and promote cultural aware-
ness between Pihpinos and
other races on campus.
PECjALS ef the WeeknffiS
•Ham.
P as^r an)_i ,
Swiss
rrqrkey
TRY
TODfY/
1
Marilyn
Stationary and Card
Til June 19
U£J!£
1
I
n\'-\>
Stock up now .._ . ,^
- ^ iiew aai ta Aai-11 pu
tor the wammmf I ^^ ,^ ^^
asM» a^ ^H
10884 Weybum Aw*., L.A. 90024 479-7742
By UCLA Alumni Association
SUMMER RENTALS
AVAILABLE!
••Luxurious Singles, 1 bedroom* *
Walk to Westwood Village & U.C.L.A
Close to Century City
- heated pooi -
625-41 LANDFAIR 479-5404
Moss & Co Management
J
^
; •••■ -A.:
Five teachers honored
v»
By Louis Wataiuibe
DB SUIT Writer
Distinguished teaching awards were an-
nounced for five faculty/ members by the UCLA
Alumni Association.
The teachers are MariJyn Kourilsky. as-
sociate professor of education, Marianne Cclce-
Murcia/ assistant professor of English, J esse J
Dukeminier. professor of law; George Guffey,
professor of English and Chand R Vis-
war^than. assistant dean and professor at the
schtJcTT of Engmeerii^ ind Applied Science
The honors and $50() checks will be pre-
sented June 19 during the Alumni Assocuih
lion's annual awards program at the current
Alumni Center in Kerckhoff
Kourilsky will receive the Harvey "L E by
Award for the Art of Teaching She was
described as * a dynamic lecturer who
captures and holds the attention of students."
according tp^^a-mcs Collins of the alumni
association
Cclcc-Murcia specializes in teaching English
a second language 44 er "exceptional rappon
with her students" as welJ as time spent with
students was cited by the alumni association as
the basis of her selectionir
r>ukeminier was selected by the association
for his "Renaissance Man" approach for
stimulating students to put forth their best
efforu According to the alumni association,
one of his students said, "The respect and trust
he shows for his students as intelligent human
beings allows for a free flow of discussion from
which we can learn most effectively"
Guffey was one of several awardees to whom
the description "enthusiastic" was apphed "No
student of his is neglected or ignored." Collins
said. -—*■_ - ^- ,
Viswanathan was cited as "genuinely con-^
cerncd ivith the student " His lectures were
described as "a monument to organization" by
a student '
Selection is made by the Academic Senate
Committee on Teaching after consideration of
department nominations.
Chand R. Viswanathan
QMHay
I- ■■
graduating seniors and grad students
free cap and gown, big discount on
perma-plaquing your diploma, priority
young alumni football seating, alumni
vacation centers, continuing educa-
tion, regional and professional groups.
thr UCLA alumni assocation
^w and save'
t ;jat^G
f
41
s
»
I
i
4
w>Cl vv •
.- ^ zt
I
•r*'-v
I
4
-Jj
4
I*
1
I
xJaiy bruin
s DB Editorial
Let's get back to basics
Letters to the Editor
e
Wh«n p«opU graduate from high
school not knowing how to writa, road
or do basic arithmatic, lass amphasis
should ba placad on highar aducation
mnd rasaarch mf%d mora on dissamina-
tlon of basic laarning. Wa ballava that
Govarnor Brown was right in saying
tha Univarslty can surviva on a raducad
budgat as long as tha monay savad is
usad for improvamants in mora basic
aducation.
Amarfcan unlvarsitlas tif too con-
carnad with rasaarch. Wa ara awara
that tha stata supports vary llttia f-
saarch; howavar thera is a tramandous
amount of fadaral monay involvad.
Wa quastion whathar monay should
ba givan to English profassors to deter-
mina whathar Shakaspaara wrota
Shakaspaara whan so Inany paopla In
tha Unltad Statas cannot raad or writa.
Or whathar monay should go to phy-
sics dapartmants chasing tha wild
quark whan quita a faw high school
graduatas cannot do simpla arithmatic.
Wa mre awara that rasaarch can hava
banaflts for avaryona, but a balanca
has to t>a struck batwaan tha r—mrch
and its dissaminatlon. Tha balanca Is
too Jmr toward rmtmmrch.
Wa fmUz^ that stata unlvarsitlas,
such as UCLA, ara tha only placas
whara basic rasaarch is financially
faasibla.
UCLA, howavar, Is ona of tha schools
which is particularly guilty of "over-
rasaarching.' This is tha result of a
prastiga-consclous administration
which baliavas In more rasaarch, more
building and good athletic teams.
Wa w not saying the administration
is solely concerned with these three
areas. We are saying, however, the
attitude exists among tome administra-
tors that, to a certain extent, whatever
enhances the prestige of UCLA solves
all the rest of this schoors problems.
Prestige does solve some problems
because research attracts well-known
professors; including Nobel laureates.
These professors In turn attract better
teachers to UCLA who are forced to do
raaaarch rather than teach in order to
survive.
Lucy
IdHor;
This rs a reipanic to P^uU
Lauren Gtbfton's letter regarding
the picture oi Lucille Ball in the
May 12th Dsily Bruin Unfor-
tunately, Paula Lauren Gibfton
made several, gross misinterpre-
tations oi our letter To begin
with, in our letter we stated that
"we were surprised to see how
pleasant and very attractive she
(Lucille Ball) is. " Our surprise
was due to various rumors we
had heard about her disposition,
not her physicjal appeannc^.
Next, as to Paula Lauren Gibr
son's redundant statements con-
cerning age and unattractive-
, ness, we never implied or stated
that people "automatically grow
unattractive" with age I dm
unable to fathom how anyone
(ould misconstrue the meaniflng
ot our letter to such extremes
In our letter we wrote, * The
photographer displays negli-
gence as well as a great lack of
concern for hei ^^MJbfect. An-
other misinterpretation made by
Paula Lauren Gibson is her in-
ference that by our cornment.
we were attacking her emotions
toward Lucille Ball In actualifv
we were criticizing her 4|titucle
toward her |ob The purpme of
our first letter was to pome out
the poor quality, of the photo-
graph, Paula Lauren Gibson
chose to disregard this purpose
It was not our intention to state
biased opinions on age, beauty
and Paula Lauren Gibson's emo-
tions Paula Lauren Gibson. I do
not understand why you tried to
play with the semantics of our
letter and ignored the entire
issue, which was your failing as a
photographer.
Kathleen Anne Krepp
iir
I.I I ;•
Center
Editor:
I wish to reply to Name
VVifhheld's - REG FEE' letter
condemnin^the proposed John
Wooden Recreation C enter (Dfi
5/25)
In her fir,i paragraph, vis
Withheld wfffev. I dm once
again amazed at the la( k of
concern for the w«'lfdre of' the
students this University so often
displays Apparency . she has
not forrsidereTi who is to benefit
(Continued on Pace 1 2)
To Lina: a victim
by Salma H. Jayyusi
^(iditor's nofe. fayyusi is a graduate in the school of education
here Una Nabulsi. layyusi's cousin, was killed in Nablus on the
West Bank, last month)
They killed you, in cold blood and with sheer brutality The
"beiiign" occupation, the "humane" military annexation, was a
myth after all, wasn't it? Your blood testifies to that. They fed the
world the myth that you were living in harmony with them. You
destroyed the myth; you showed the world the true face of Zionism.
For how ^^uld occupation be 'benign? " Or since when has
usurpation been "humane?" Isn't occupation by and of itself a
violation of every human right, of every concepfion of human
dignity, and of the regulations of the international community? Only
a hypocrite can bracket "humaneness" with "occupation " or a
racist.
Tell me, Lina. did you scare them, defenseless as you were, facing
them with all their sophisticated tanks and weapons of death? They
SLC referendum may be illegal
by jdrCole and Arthur FlieKelmdn
(Editor's note, Coie and Fliegel-
man are former members of rhe
Undergraduate Elections Board)
As former members of the
Undergraduate Student Associa-
tion Elections Board, we would
like to explain to the UCLA
OPINION
OPINION
gave themselves the right to be armed to the teeth, and they denied
you the human right of self defense And still they felt insecure It
sounds incredible, doesn't it? Yet. aren't they the usurpers, the
oppressors, the illegal occupants of the country? And. as such, how
could they ever feel secure or safe? Your blood will ding to their
hands as much as the blood of Duncan clung to the hands o1 Ladv
Macbeth. - .-^. .__. _ - _.,,,,i_^_^ '
student body the masons for our
recent resignations On Wed-
nesday. May 26, 1976, Stiident
Legislative touncil (SLC) man-*
dated a re^ferendum 4o take
place on Thursday. |une'J7l976
With only four legal school days
in which to prepare and pub-
licize the referendum, we felt
that it was impossible to carry
on a "free, open, and honest"
elections tn addition, there were
jdyCole and Arthur Fliege
only three (3) Daily Brum pub-
lication dates remaining before
the referendum The Elections
-Board jeel^ that any referendum
put on in this manner could not
be a true or accurate represen-
tation of the student body opin-
ion Even he new € lections
Board Chairman feels that the
turnout will be much lower than
usual.
The validity of the election is
further questioned by the con-
stitutionality of a one-day refer-
endum instead of a full two-day
referifndum The Elections Code
indicates that all valid referenda
should extend for two full days
In order to satisfy the tight time
limitations, the Student Legisla-
tive Council even considered
the suspension of all Elections
Code rules and by-laws Cer-
v' )
Lina, let me confess foydu.Xousin of mine, of my own blood and
km, when 1 saw you upheld on the arms of your countrymen and
women, I brushed away my burning tears and rejoiced. Your coffin
was adorned by the nriost valuable thing to your people the
Palestinian flag on the land of Palestine You have become a symbol
to all Palestinians, a symbol of the struggle for freedom. They swore
again they will never rel«nt until they liberate the country from
foreign occupation It is innocent blood like yours which keeps the
torch on the path to freedom aflame You are not the first victim of
Zionism, Lina. nor will you be the last Nor are you the only 17.year-
old girl that has been a target of Zionist bullets and napalms Our
victims have been of all ages, for since when can racism spare any
on tb^ basis of age. or sex, or humanity? Nay, Lina, you know and I
know that those who killed you in cold blood will never put down
their arms until they have exterminated our people That's their
plan, for m the words of Moshe Dayan (July, 1968), "This is not the
end, for after the present cease-fire lines, there will be^ new lines
but they will eMend beyond the River Jordan, maybe to Lebanon
and perhaps to Central Syria as well Meanwhile, they try to
minimize the atrocities they commit on the West Bank and in the
rest of Palestine by pomnng their blood-smeared fingers at Lebanon
and the persecution of the Palestinians there. Yet they never
attempt to answer in a direct way a very basic question: Why are the
^•httinians in Lebanon/ Who drove them out of their country^
Who has denied them the right to return to their homeland for the
UU 2B years^ Who exposed them to all kinds of conspiracies and
plots of extermination^ Yes. Lina. you know and I know as well as
every other Palestinian knows that ours is a bitter strufpk for
survival, for the right to a honr>eland of our own, for t^e right to be
free to live on our land, in the way we want, and r>ot as some
(Continued on Page 14)
timly, an election that is earned
out in such an ad hoc manner r
questionable ^ the least
In order to carry on a consti
tutional. and fair referendum tf
was the professional opinion ot
. ihir Elections Board that this
referendurr. should ha^e been
postponed until the fall quarter
We feel that it is highly probable
that the referendum election
was designed in such a manner
so ts to minimile the voter
turnout and to insure the pas
sage of the resolutions Cer-
tainly, the limits time remain
'^ing before the referendum does
not allow for a full or even
adequate presentation of the
issues involved The Elections
Board, in full conscience, could
not participate in a referendum
election so lacking in integrity
r~^ ^„-
OK.
/ ^ 200 YEARS
Ax+rallenge to^el^rfW
bry Vic Caldwell -^ -'
A commun««ion vacuum exiM» on thn c-mpm with wiMcf lo
OPINION
I syrnpathize with the plight o^ (arm workers
UfW has a„,cl^. he- :;—--■■ "^^i^' ^1!:^^^^
model To 1 ?. 5*^ ?'^ ^r "^"^ ^'•''P^ "»* '»^ G»"° f »"" « a
m«del^.o be Mud^d tor ,he,r eMicency and p,o«fam» for the,,
1 HTny',!^ !^u"**^ emotional comment* to gain their.support and
"7 tL '^*'*"«'»«* »*»*'" on specific facts:
1 Tf»e Callo farm workers are among the highest paid m the
benefits The mm.mum wage « $3.26 an hour and last vSrs averse
Callo farm worker earned over S9000 Their fringe benefits inctX
^ert.^ "^^'" pa.d vacation, pa„J holidays, premium paid
overtime, paid major medical insurance for the entire family and
paid life insurance. ' - "
2^ Working and sanitation cpndrtwn. on the Callo farms exceed
urw and Teamster contract r«quir«fn«rus
3 Insofar as worker safety is concerned, Calk) farm workers are
proieoed by the California Occupatranal and Health Act These
provisions for M«Hy are the most stringent in the world In faa
there has never been a cat* of illness or death due to aKricultur^l
chemicals at any Call© farm uue lo agricultural
,Jr, ?!ll° .k"" "^l^'u" '*"".'•** ''*• '" ' <^o^'""n"v of moderfv«f»,
two and three-bedroom homes, some of which are even air
conditioned They are charfcd no nH>re than $91 a month, which
'". ^Hi *^°?'"""J'*' P^'rVOimd^ and busing for their children
5. Callo also oHers their workers Englith classes for those who
ipuk Spanish. Por»ugu«e and Hindu. They have initiated safety,
programs which cover pesiticides and farming safety in general
They even have programs for teaching the workers proper
technique* in tractor operations and safely.
. Here are a few questions for the UFW
In the UFW union contracts with Coca Cola and Almaden, 5 cents
per hour shall be deducted per worker and dipnited into an
i ^ Vu^'""' •*^'*^ account for the Juan De La Cfog Pension
Fund. That IS a nice gesture, but to this day no )uan De U Cru«
Pension plan hat kttn Mtabiished for their union:
(Continued on Page 13)
Agree to d
(Editor's Note: HmMuwr k a Sen-
ior in Communication Studies, a
iommr editor of Ha' Am and a
"•••••^ oi U^ NMtOfial Board
^ ^f^^'^"^*^^ of the fewish Stw
<*•** ^^•f* Service)
- I am a Zionist. I believe m the
future of the Jewish people I
believe th«t after generations
of wandering, alien people in
•Hen landft, we must return to
OPINION
isagree on tcnaiii i
b\ Neil Knsiiri , -
our land and. from there, inter
*ct equally with the ren of the
world
a
But I believe the arguments I
"•« •• MpfKNI my own claims to
national leH-determination and
definition can be used as well
by any other people It is the
tragMly of the Middle East that
there are two peoples simul-
taneously expcriofliang a rebirth
of national contciousf>ess. each
inexorably tied up in the same
piece of land.
Words flow Uke water "lews
*fe 4mpm ^ the Vifeuetm im-
pertalim. adopting the mcfhodi
of their Hszi murderers. " '^Arabs
4re bloodthirsty rantgiik, of
the desert, hate the ^ew\. and
•t* only out to slaughter us/'
But for every mtsconcai»od
statement of the early Zionist
leader Herzl that we must "try
tor spirit the penniless pppuh
tion acroM the botdar." I can
return with a quote from the
early Palestinian leader Haj Am-
in al-HuMeini. the grandsN^uffi
(Continued on f agr 12)
n
>
u
•f
r
{
Vouf tofdaMpi JIaimy Cmrtm to on 1h« Mn« _ h« wanto to know If
' " "nnai**. ■■tfap^ing hit c«n(Mdacy7 -";- -'-
Jpu mm
1^4,.,^-
Off icial liotice to Students
Continuing in the
Fall Quarter 1976
All students who will be continuing in the Fall
Quarter 1976 MUST pick up their UCLA Student
Identification Card on, or before, June 4 in the
Ackerman Union Second Floor Loupge between
8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. If you do not pick up your
Identification Card this Quarter you will be as-
sessed a $5.00 late fee when it is issued next Fall.
If your Fall Quarter Registration Card carries a "C" continuing
status code — indicating you were enrolled this (Spring) Quarter —
you will also be required to have a UCLA Student Identification
Card, BEGINNING THE FIRST DAY OF REGISTRATION, In order to
transact official business, receive University services or participate
m institutionally sponsored programs and activities. As examples,
this will include, enrollment and changing study lists, receiving
financial aid or Student Health Services or particiption in intra-
murals. The UCLA Student Identification Card will also be required
for admission to football games played prior to instruction in the
FalL
I
»
4
NOT£: A current Registration Card and acceptable
piiipoft) — will b» rnntjiPffH p^mf
»ve idMMmion — which must include a
p tUgfuifii jtion trarfl '
(e.g., drn^er's licemf .
andCi
AHaiii
^■■BKmaB
mitm
H
-I
■ \
PSYCH STUDENTS i MOFC lettCFS .
1
o<:
Come to the Meeting
Friday, June 4. 12 Noon
Room 2258A Franz Hall
Joint Meeting
Undergrad. Psych Assn.
& Psi Chi
9
i
Five weeks of study, travel j
and fun
in Mexico
Forteachers high schooi and cofiege students Accredited
deaaes m Spanish Maaiean culture mumc art etc at t)eautifui
Monterrey Tec' Col lege $650 includes tijition board, room
laundry and tnpi Earn 2 aamaalaii high school or 6 college
credits
for details and rataJogua contact group Isadar Or Richard
Manm between S ar>d 9 30 any evening at 47e-3ee7.
Work and Study in Israel
Jo*'i young graduates from around the world in
unique one-year work-study program sponsored
by the World Union of Jewish Students (WUJS).
Discover vourseif and get to know Israel. Meet
people, le^n Hebrew, explore Judaism amd
lewish hfstorv. Work for pay in ypur^own
profession Send for free brochure WU)S. 25A
Shatertane. Cambridge Mass. 02138.
Pef*W
irom the propased naoreation
center Obviously the kludenis
would be the maior kmmtiki-
ariet of the proiect. I would say
that It takes some coficern for
the welfare of the students to
pUn t^ic center in the hrsi place,
^nd to five tKe'students such a
large voice in how it would be
financed and used. The SIC,
BOC ind CSA all have a say in
the planning of. *nd the condi-
tions in, the referendum that the
studeivi vi'ill be asked to vote
on {DB 4/14 p.3)
She says. "SS.OOO.OOO could
certainly hire many teach-
ers " The five million dollars
she refers to would be raised
over J 40-year period, which
imounts to about $150,000 a
year You certainly can not hire
very many teachers on $150,000
4 year "^
The quarterly use of money
that we pay, and call the "reg
fee." IS made up of several
parts the ASUCLA fee. the Edu-
cation fee ^nd the Mfistr^tion
f^e According to the Intra-
duang UCLA bc»oklef« the r^gr
istration fee is used to'^^<over a
host of services not directly
conr>ected with teaching
In the lCi.A Genera/ Cst^iog
under "Fees Assessed All Reg-
ular Students, a itates: "The
reiiitration fee covers certain
expenses of students : ^ ." lior
athletic tmd gymnasium faciltties
if%d equipment " It is this
registration fee that would be
raised $5 From this it is c^esr
that the $5 increase could not
be used to hire any rtcw leach-
She mentions a loss of parking
because of the center. There
would be no Joss of parking,
which was explained m the Duly
Brum (4/14 p.3)
I believe that the Wooden
Center n a worthwhile ind
vteeded project that would aug-
ment the presently sparse cam-
pus recreation facilities. I feel
that a University should be r»K>re
than |ust a "school" to the
students. Ms. Withheld seems to
have a valid problem m ob-
taining needed classes How-
ever, I do not think it fair for
her to criticize Mn unrelated
project, especially wheri she has
not bothered to research the
facts to back her arguments
Mi Fuko
Sopb MaHi/Comp. Scl
Moron
i ,
I have compoted what I con-
Mder to be the typical radical
leftist editorial It took me about
two minutes:
"K>bn Q Moron's latest slan-
der against the mmm mm^m^nt
on cimptfl mm] be diH>elled.
He claims m fbouM think be-
fore w ipeak/ ObiiteMii^ ^lii
racist, sexist, elitist, faicist. phys-
icist, capiulist doesn't ur\d^r.
iUnd socialism. The revolution-
we are building in the very near
future will put an end to all
oppression by giving anybody-
earning more than $50,000 a
year a menul enema
Mr. Moron alio claims that
there is no fascism in this coun-
try If Mr. Moron would get his
head out of his anus he would
see that sexism is inherent under
elitism, which can be proved
directly from racism by the use
of fascism, which is inherent m
major league baseball Yes. ev-
erything boils down to prole-
tariat vs. bourgeoisie (the winner
to face George Forenwn) and
the world must be proteaed
from capitalist roaders like Mae
Tse-Tuof^ rascfst propaganda
from the Zionist propaganda
machine, Inc. and the ravages of
Klingon imperialism.
look around you and you can
seethe decay of a dying society:
Tbore's racism in the Biology
departmem (last week alert left-
ist guerrillas seized the depart-
ment »r^d wrestled it to the
ground.) elitism in the Bomb-
shelter {ii you are a UCLA itu-
(Continued on Page I3|
Let
us speak with each other
(
II)
.
ATTENTION: SCIENCE MAJORS
and PRE-MED STUDENTS!
IS THERE ANOTHER OPINION ABOUT
THE WAR ON CANCER?
Hear. ALBERT SCHAT2. PhD. FRSH Doctor
Honoris Causa of TEMPLE UNIVERSITY The
co-developf of STREPTOMYCIN an0 CHAIR^
tional Association of CANCER VICTIMS AND
FRIENDS ^
CANC£R, FROM THE GROUND UP: A critical
look at current cancer therapies and research.
DrSchatz •ras formerly erjesearcher at SioarrKette- ~-
MeWionai Canter Centef'forrr*^' -'^ ei of tf>e tSivtSK
microoioiogy on the medtcai Umt of «-T^f lada^ie Hoepitti
Extra Attraction The first show^ung m over 13'y90rs of t^e
CBS-TV film KREBI02EN 13 YEARS Of •BOHfUCT
LAt Roxbury Park Auditonom 471 S ^^irbury Qr DeujilL
Hills Saturday Jiioe 5 at 7 46 pm ,
Admission * a n\itr ^^^^^- |^ ^^ ^^^^ ^. ' ^^ ^^
students (w(t^ cardvfi
Hunger
is your
business!!!
Come participate - see film and
hear speaker from C.R.O.P.
(Community Hunger appeal
for Church World Service).
Film title: Beyond the Next Harvest
Speaker Karen Reed
Thurtday June 3
AckMNMrn Rm. 3517
•t 1:30
oi lerusalem. declaring piad —
holy }M^r — upon the lews,
reminding the world of tt>e
vears the Mufti spent in Berlin.
t^ Hooored guest of Adolph
HN|tier.
For everv ma&sacre cbmmmed
bs Zionrsti, it ri equalK easv to
rpmam^k.! an atroclfV commit-
ted bv Arabs
• ■ •
Aitd,Jef ever>. mfidem quot-
ation from Golda Meir. faoliilil
denyrm^ the eftisience oi the
Palf^ in people 1. can rati
torttr the words o^. Ahn>ed Shu-
la-^. *our\deT of ifie-^eiWne
I iber ation Ofamzation vowl^i
to throw the lews into #ie sea
He'z( Mi9k lite fifureliiiKad
Tour>oe; of the fipniit ihq),4
. his phitdi'ophies were
iMplueuind b^,the §ef»-
eral Ttoni^ leadership The
C^f^nd Mufi,, dt^ kwr year an
otmom^^ cm^eeft ^ Lebar>ofr.
j^^ ^efg »f mnMl m^dingrace
♦•WT* h^ pofiiion as Israefi
f^tme SiirMster Afid Ahmed
ShugainF s current whereabouts
are ur^nown
^nv person with time and
•cress to a library can uncover
quotations that wtlf suppon his
or her position
for the reality m that bofh icw
aad Palestinian have laid daims
to a smalt piece of Middle East-
ern real estate, wish to preserve
tf>eir cultures and let them flow-
er, have deep-felt emotions and
fears of each other; both stand
to lose as much li the current
"your gain is my loss" attitude
prevails
Mahmood Ibrahim C'A Diary
on Palestine. DB May 21) is my
, frier>d He is a Palestinian. I ^m a
Zionist We are both politically
active m our respective com-
.V mnniti^t Ant rwimr ■■■ ■ m .i ia-i « ■■
* •**i»»n^». ^»«n- uv^r iiuiiir lOfw
hours "of conversation we realize
before anything else we are
both human beings And after
our initial susoi^ion of one an-
other passed, after we aban-
doned emotion-laden rhetoric
*f> <a<Kir.jLjfll rational discussion,
we ri^aiized we »re both mo-
tivated b> slmiUr drives
We find commonality in a
fierce lovaltv to people and
*<i^*hj ^ftd — perhaps most
surprrwig — we find that we
?**. ••'•• o*^ many issues
Through our shared experierv""
ces. -perceptions ind conver-
sation {Mnd these include much
more than a concern for the
Middle East) we have both
gw>wn Most imporunt of all,
Mahmood ^nd 1 could not hurt
each otf>ef
But for all that we share and
all upon which we can 9^e^,
thereis far more upon which we
cannot agree — tactics, strat-
egies, and ultimate goals all
remain points of apgument be-
tween us We can. however,
Continue to talk, and through
talk, better urnierstand one an-
other
There itrc two peoples in con-
flia. Each denies the legitimacy
of the other. As either ^ide
scores some small victory, the
other adopts more repressive or
VICIOUS tactics. The onl^ indh
caiidfi is thaf7 i^ven Ihese para-
meters, both ^ides will lose.
A more productive rqad to
travel is to leave rhetoric be-
hind. We can confront one an-
other as equals who share in ir\
agonizing problem ir\d arrive at
a solution As students we can •
make an invaluable contribution
to this process, for cooperation^
and possible compromise wilf
not emanate from on KighT"^
will only come out of tf>e masses.
Governments do not change
unjes6 they ^rt pushed
Worried
About Finals?
Why crani? The PLACEMENT &
CAREER PLANNING CENTER
has a file of qualified UCLA
student tutors, who are available
to help you get through those
subjects you feel apprehensive
about.
Don't delay . call the CENTER
today. 825-2981
To an extent, this has alri^ady
occurred. There is a vocal con-
tingerM of lews in this country
ar>d in Israel who are speikini^
up for Palestinian rights and
criticizing certain Israeli policies
without for or>e mament deny-
ing their support for the ided of
the Jewish State They are repre-
sented nationalfy hy such groups
as Yozma and Breira. and in
Isriel by the newly-fornr>ed Israel
Committee for Israeli-Palestinian
Peace.
Many — anK>ng them General
(Res.) Matityahu Peled af>d
Knesset member Arie Lova Eliav
~ have called for recognition of
the Palestine liberation move-
ment, contingent only upon
reciprocal recognition of Israel
The latest person to foin tf>ese
ranks IS Yehc^haiat Harkabi.
t^rael's leadSng Arabtst and a
former hardliner
I am certain that within tf>e
Arab and Palestinian commun-
ities and leadership tf>ere are
indhriduaK who feel thermel^^es
^le to reipotid to these over-
tures. We must ^ree to diuiree
on certain issues and devote
oursehies lo a search ior some
cowMOfielify, some ground up~
on which «ve both can stand.
I ^ve pfVpoMd no solutions
'" this anide. Whm h impor-
tam is this: iliai we tail, that we
share* #Hi wm aken^Dn in
flUesVP
'■■• 'Mgii lo OD omer^vfic
And more
^
(CmHlmmd froai Pafr 12)
dent, they won i serve cyanide,)
constant war preparations (In
Sproul two opposing heads of
lettuce are arming themselves
with croutons) and physics in
the Physics department (how
fascist can you get?)
Where there is capitalism, m^
i»^ is safe The lanuary fiHf^
of Or^ April Ground from the
mathematics department is a
beautiful example. The reason
fer this fieiit aid ^as that the
d^^rtmetH claimed 'Dr Ground
has a command of the English
iiyiy comparable to that of
Charo, which is ridicMlous as
Dr Ground is a superior pro-
fesior. And they had the chutz-
pah to hire a degenerate
white mutation in her place.
Eight Racism, hire Ground!
We invite all studenu to the
Coliseum where there will be a
slide show, refreshments, in-
termaiive ulks, and a tomato
o»fy."
No offense agair^t any d^
partment on campus is intend-
ed, only against radk^l leftists I
have come to understand that
•Viere is little to gain in editorial
combat with narrow-minded
«•«. for he who argues with a
fool becomes a fool. Instead I
have dKMen to do battle with
toMfhter because I believe it wiM
expose tfie unworthiness of an
idea or of the nr>en who ex-
pound H far more effectively
than any amount of reason or
logic. I shall let the chuckles I
have attempted to induce do my
work for me.
I am aliiB el tf>e opinion that
those who cannot laugh at
themseh^es are not fit to be the
fovernors of a free sckriety, or of
any society for that matter Even
Meo once iokingly spoke of his
father as the ruling class and
His family as the oppressed
people' in describing his child-
^^ood Those who cannot
fun at, and thus accept their
own imperfectiorr- as hunvan be-
ings deserve to have their in.
perfection exposed in detai hy
others.
To those who have become
disfusted with reading the edi-
lofiais of men who suffer intel-
lectual tunnel viskhi. I hope I
have brightened your morning
Oh, and by the way, the rea-
son I'm not signing my name is
becawie I do not consider tf>e
people I directed this letter
towards to be safe, sane, or
bey Olid the cfuldish f>otton of
violent revenge against those
who say something they don't
like.
Conmincation
i read with pleasure Anita
Alvarez s reply to my lefler. At
least 1 4m being 4 ak en seriously
and thaf^the concept of free and
•^en debate is still alive and
wetfaf UCLA However, I would
lil^e to point out that Ms Al-
varez has misinterpreted my
letter and has herself ^entirely
missed the point " l| is not my
' contention that oppression of
any kind should be permitted 1
simply ^ee no difference be
tween oppresuon ir^^m the-ew-
porations and oppression from
the proletariat Neither is ac
cepiable I shall, therefore, at
tempt to answer each of Ms.
Alvarez's points in turn
First, she contends that "no
one IS actually calling tor a one-
sided application of human
(constitutional) rights " In his
letter. Roberto Rodriguez calls
for the "suppressing and cen-
soring of the minority wherever
(C ontinued on Page 14)
More from Gallo
freaPegf 11)
In December of 1975, the San Franciico Chronicle reported "The
State assesses Cesar Chavez United Farm Workers Union $1,000 000
tor deficiencies in its unemploy mem insurance account
^^ >** *f** ^^^^ ^ California suing the UFW union for a million
doHarsJ Why was the state ralHMd permission to inspect the Union s
books?
It tf^ farm workers of California really support the UFW. why did
^,!L :"* '"ve the UFW to sign with the Teamsters?
Why has the UFW for the past 3 years spem million of dollars and
expended countless man-hours in an etiort to merely change the
union of 500 of the nation's highest paid and best-treated unionized
tarm workers?
If the goal of UFW h to bring the benefits of unionization to farm
workers, they should stop attacking Gallo Their 500 farm workers'
wages and benefits are far superior to any farm workers in the
country I think it is time the UFW nx>ved away from the blindins
emotional battles and try to come to a factual peace in this
'i''^'^^'^^' /" ^'^ *^' ~y^ ^^y c*" ^«^"* O" t^ other
Zjm,aao farm workers in this coumry who have no union at all and
are not protected by the n^ of law
Attacking Gallo merely to gam publicity leaves them with litde
^edibihty with people who really know the situation I have talked
to the Gallo Farm workers and seen ff>e Gallo Farms and I am leliinc
It like it is. (, ^
Attention Nursing & Pre-Nursing
Students
The NurM Practitioner
c
OHS 32-682
•t12l5
Fri. 6/4 In Public Health
Mon 6/7 in Family Planning
int Nu
UCLA
MEDICUS
I
i
1.
Wanted:
Person with deep commitment to
Social Change
as Assistant Director for Campus Com-
mrttee to Bridge the Gap (a project of
the Community Services Commission of
SLC). Paid position to start in fall Call
479-7472 (afternoons) to set up an
interview.
I
9
Mlta
Phi Eta Sigma
National Honorary Sooioty
1^-'
I
iv^ceting for members
intef^sj6d in
Catalina Trip
Ackerman Union 240t
TiiMday, Jun« t, 4 p m.
■%■
STATE
-^1— ^P~!!-
WTHOIirC
-, «
DEMOCRAT
TO CONGRESS
Because of his Outstanding Record
•
• Tony Beilenson has been a forceful and effective environmentalist and
conservationist in ttie California Senate, leading the fight to adopt the Califor-
nia Coastal Protection Measure, working for the protection of endangered
animal species and establishing strict pesticide and noise control programs
• Tony Beilenson has been an outstanding consumer advocate authoring
legislation relating to auto repair fraud, funeral reform, drinking water health
standards and open dating of dairy products • Tony Beilenson has been a
longtime supporter of higher education, and, as chairman of the State Senate
Finance Committee, fought against university budget cuts. • Tony Beilenson
has b00n a leading reformer, responsible for the first modernization of
the States abortion laws in over a century, the repeal of income tax
exemptions for church-owned busineeeet, greater public financing
of political campaigns and tf»e curbing of lobbyist influence. '
V • Tony Beilenson has been named "Baal Ail-Around Senator"
(by the Capitol Frees Corps) ar>d "Most Effective Senator"
(in a poll of his colleagues of both parties)
•J
■^
:^^
i
f
f
f
I
t>y B#ilanaon lor
V
«■
I
i
C
<
z
Dr. Norman Abrams A.B., J.D.
Prof., UCLA School of Law— "--
t,
'law and the State of Israel"
3
Rabbi Yerachmiel Stillman
'The International Dateline and Jewish Holidays'*
More from Jayyusi
~*-^ — —Rabbi Shlomo Schwartz
Contributions and Parrallels of Mickey Mouse
Judaism to Christianity^'
Chabad House
741 Cayley
Preceded bv FufI Course Holiday Banquet!
Thursday June 3. 8:00 p.m.
FREE
•mpcralists have 6eM%nmd m to be thouMndi of mtie% away from y*
N*Of hat our urygglc b*cn a new con^r on the scene It has been
going on ever ^nce Itl? when the Balfour Declaration started the
tragic events — a dKbration in which, as Arthur Koestler described
It. one nation solemnly promised to a second nation the country of
a third." Ar»d you know, Lina. as well as I do. that notwithstanding
all kinds of imperialist desiffH^ foreign rule, »nd oppressive reaiMM
the struggle ha^ been gathering momentum It will nev^r abate until
justice IS toiler lustice as all mankind's ideals define it and human
dignity dictates it With your innocent blood. Lina. you have told the
Anr>erican people, better than any words can do. that we uphold
Xhetr principles, drawn in 1775. ^nd declare that, "m our native land
in defense of the freedom which is our birthright, ^nd which we
enioyed fill the violation of it . for the protection of our
property, acquired solely by the honest industry of our forefathers
and ourseKies against violence actually bffered. we have taken ud
arms We shall lay iheip down when hostilities shall cease on the
part of the amrcMors. and not before/' (Annerican Declaration on
the Causes and Necessity of Taking up Arms. 1775|.
And even more letters
(Contiiiued frooi Pege 13)
and whenever possible." Fer-
hapi Mr Rodriguez is ioking
and doesn't really mean this, or
possibly my command of the
English language is so poor that
I have simply misunderstood
him If SQ^ I would certainly
Campus Events Film Commission of
the Student Legislative Council presents
RIDIN' ROPIN'
andalllihat
WESTERN BULLSHIT
piilled together bg
^j
~n
/
Ackerman Grand Ballroom
Friday, June 4
7 & 9:15 pm Ad m. $1.00
appreciate enlightenment. How-
ever, it seems to me that "a
one-sided application of human
(constitutional) rights " is pre-
cisely what Mr. Rodriguez is
calling for. This, not the struggle
against Gallo, is what I take
exception to, ^—
Second, Ms. AWartf contends
that in order to avoid chaos
"boundaries on freedom" must
be established to provide a bal-
ance "between the freedom of
the individual and that of the
society." I could not agree with
you more. However, who will
you have strike that balance?
Perhaps Mr. Rodriguez who
views such idealistic and roman-
tic ideas as freedom are totally
out of place in the real-world? I
would be interested in who you
have m mind, Ms Alvarez, but
please keep in mind that it is the
less powerful minority, if) this
case you, that will lose their
rights first if the balance striker
,^^iiot xhosen wisely.
finally, her contention that
'freedom 6rexpression can be a
weapon of potential destruc-
tion" IS irrefutable. It is doubtful
that the recent croM^ burmngs
would have occured in a dic-
tatorial society. However, as
potentially destructive as it may
be, J cherish my freedom of
expression much more than my
safety I also recognize that my
freedom of expression is mean-
ingless without yours.
I do not support oppression.
Ms. Alvarez, but I do believe
that Gallo has a righjf to give its
side of the farm workers ques-
tion, whether It be truth or
blatant lie. The farmworkers too
haye a right to express their
arguments, propaganda or no
More than anything else,
though. I have a right to hear
both sides of the issue so that I
can make an intelligent decision
as 'to who, ii any, is in the right.
Perhaps this is unacceptable to
you, but it is the only method of
-communication acceptable to ~
me.
S. Clark
Science
■- \
To
err
is
Bruin
to
retract,
divine
'T
KNOWTHE FACTS FOR
THE JUNE 8 PRIMARY
<
fr
ky
The Ignorance of one voter in
a democracy impairs the
security of all. "
— tohn / ICf^nnedy
<.J
y
•n
Prefect AwMnnem ^6
California Presidential FTinx^ry
June 6, 1976 _.,
Information Booklet ^ ,
Booklets Available
Bruin Walk
Ackerman Info Desk
Kerckhoff Hall Info Desk
All Living Groups
'fi, '\
j
•
1
T
1
A 1
1
bat
i -
*
'
•
Sun
Sun
Sun
Sufi
Sun
Sun
;
Phorx
> Ufa ««"-f.^J
Mmmmm
1
n
>
a
c
i
i
I
--ir
Today Is the last ^aj^
for the
n
free Student ID Card
Get a in Acker man
by 5M pm
l-earningLxentei^j^vampe
^.r^ ,. -'"- *■■• WMre to AD became th^i* »/#>r*> H/^r xk-« ^\^^^ ...
dS ^!^«-^ ■*« «• •>> *«auie there were
c. "* ^™ ■•IWlw toe numy overlaps - the
MMnts who tur|i to the Leamiag Center haa^kd rnai
Learning Skiilt Center ftSC) ing, wntiog aad nMck' hwL
for academic aid will now fi«d obviou. we were Tonf^mf the
a more efficient, ttreamiined iUideott. to we daodiri «r had
•ervice. the reiult of a reor- to come up withTbetter &xyY-
IN THE TBADITlOlf OF TMI! reav
nwEyERENr NoiiiuJsn Sf^aSIeSca
1
e
3
t
9
lBC«
llaa
]fiiii^'^ ^im&t.
in tivo perforfnonces mi VCLM
SAT^JUNSs
•:aa y ie:ao pjm.
Sehoenberg Hall
fmri^
rc« lo *«
^^S^ft" '•OW AT UCLA
ceiitraL ticket office,
or at box office 1 hour bMorT
f*'*?™?«««o if OTOIIOMO.
or iiiiomatioii, a2S-29S3.
4
?717 PICO aLVD AT 27TH ST
Telephone 399 d405
•=0« TH£ BEST FISH AW CHIPS THIS SIDE
Of THE ATLANTIC
HOME MADE PȣS ENGLISH STVLE
• Watnevs poinn,, - M.cH.loto Of, Tap •
H^ '^^o. S.l.c,.on of Irnporfd .od Dom«,.c W.n«
(;:om« And Jomt Yourself By Our F»r,
"^dk* Out Alto T
sj
i
tJ/TH THIS TlDD^
ExTRrt Piece Op Fish
The
International Student Center
Officially Endorsed Contribution to th«
Los Angeles City Bicentennial
The International World of Amertcan Cooking"
A monthly presentation of dinner, music and entertrtn-
ment teafunng different countries whose d.shesTIve
become pan of the American menu
■~"*^ To Be Held At
((
Potpourri"
The International Restaurant of tha
International Student Center
1023 Hilgard. MtaMwood
Always on Sunday"
, 1
7' I
y. Jufw •
Sunday. Julv 1 1 * -^
s!lLJy nliiij^n ^^ T''*'^ ^'""•' '"^^ Entefta.nment
S^ ?^.^ rr ''"'^^ '"^ Ente n..nm.nt
Sailing rSrZr^ I ' ^'""^^ '"^ Entertainment
'^— f . i^Niaj 5 imw^national Dinner apd Entartaimviant
Dinner and Entertainment $5 00
^^one for Reservations 47/^4587
■ Wll ■<■
Ik.'
gaiiization and expansion pro-
fram currentiy in pro§mi.
^^C had previously eooMt-
cd of three centeri: the Read-
'"« *"^ ^'"^y Center, the
Writing Center and the Learn-
ing Center (the latter created in
1%9 to help special entry stu-
dents adjust to UCLA and
develop basic leamii^ skills).
Last March, m accordance
with phinnmg begun the pre-
vious summer, the Learning
Center was closed and the
other two centers restructured
Reading and Study became the
Study and Reading Division
counseling students having aca-
demic difficulties and teaching
such skil^ as reading improve-
ment, noteiaking and exam
preparation The Writing Cen-
tej became the Writtng and
Speech Division, covering such
areas as basic grammar skills
writing papers ainl exams, crit-
ical and literary analysis, crea-
tive writing and speaking skills
According to Betty Levmson
co-ordinator o| the Study and
Reading Division, the reorgan-
ization evolved when ^we be-
gan to look at our student
traffic and the number of inter-
office referrals we were making
because students didn't know
which of our divisions had
what they needed. Students
had to more or less chagnose
themselves and figure out
Jack Ford on
U*JTVLA today
sion.
A caiai^ Ml the daciskm to
restructure LSC was a sute-
Rient of goals and objectives
which the LSC staff formu-
lated ktt summer
**First we had to decide,
*What are we? What do we
think we can do and shouM
dor Then, when thu was done
we asked, 'Are wc doing it aad
how can we do it beiterT- ea-
plained Levmsoa.
Also figuring ia the dadnoa
was the tTHpniion of LSCs
director -We figured. Okay
were going to gtt a new di-*
r«or. tol-i h«« a new thing in
it *-^*"*«>n commented.
Besides re-orgamzing, LSC
personnel have begun to gather
demographic data on those
who come to LSC. to "uke a
food look at who's using LSC
(f9^tkmm4 aa Page 7)
Human
^f seminar
•y Denlse Dorotheir
DB Staff Writer
In response to what they feci is a real need amoni?
students for developing a personal definition of their
»exuaJitv. the Peer lUaiti* r%w***^*i«^ „.i+. ...^^^^
J»c k Ford, son of President
Oerald R Ford, will discuss
everything from his sex hit to
Watergate and the upcoming
primary elections on UCTVLA
today at 11:30 am.
Ford, who visited UCLA
»«t week in support of his
lather's prcsidentml campaign
pre-taped the 30-minutc inter-
view with UCTVLA student
producer Harriet Uhl
The interview will be foj-
lowed by an enactment of
^^ Chekhov'j^ ^ne-man
Play^ "brooking Is Bad For
You by David Roundtrce and
comedy routines from the
Menage a' Trois, a trio of
theater arts department stu-
denu and alumni who do an
*^. ."X^ Comedy Store West
UCTVLA broadcasts from
the Coop, the Royce Hall
porch, the Gypsy Wagon area
*nd the Melnitz Hall lobby
— «.^^...^ . pvisi/iMij uciiniiion Of tnar amm
^xuaiity. tbt Peer Health Counselors will hold aHu^
Sexualrty Seminar on Saturday, June 5 ""™n
Tlie program, to be held in Ackerman 3317 from 9 30 am
to 5 pm, IS open lo both men and women Several exoens
who are currently involved in «udent health and sexuL
coupling will speak, answer question. •«! lead exe!^
Liz Canfield, member of the American AMOoatmr^f
Sex Education Counselors and USC StudetuH«lth
counselor, w.ll open the program with a lee ure anj
d.«:u.«on on -Var«ies of Sexual Expression " Sh^ ".J
cover the general aspecu of «:xual expression a,^ di^
I^r' li^'uT^"* people may hav? about sexual variat^'
Dr Ed WeuBwer and Wendy Barlow. RN, w*o are
UCLA^!"h"'"",?"?u ^°"'^''"« »'«^ education^,? fte
UCLA Student Health Center, will ateo tseak in the
^ts* of^^x irr " *\" Ji!^'"''' "" X.olog.S
^2^. ,L L ^* Pe^onal body image aod student
^J!^ B '' ^'r '"^"""'«^«1 'n the health center
wtircontmu^h. „"^ ^'^'"^ ^""^ Dysfunction Clinic
will continue the program after the lunch break with a
lecture op the ideology of sex His oortion nf t h- „
will also include ^ia^cipatTon "xeS^liiS ".o "^i"
erderly masturbation and sex »n«S the
Jjtl ^TK *"** >-"* '^'^°- P«f he^counselors who
organized the seminar, described the program ^vZtlri^^^
for education during the morning, giving in op^nT^y 'o
xperinc«'m t"h^"af." °' ""!' •'«'^»-«'V" "Tfor
experwnccs in the afternoon, with a greater chance to •»•
how these po.«bilitie. can carry ov^ into Tile ^.^..""o:;^
on^? tevST^of'*"' '"? *""'"•' *'" •>«"' ^""- ^^ people
•rn „,w J*'""*' "P"-'e"« and attitudes.
Through this work, they hate -^fSStiT!!i need i„
-Mlk°. 'rr r"!!' "^^ .boutlSjry*^"^ '"'
«Kl. stressmgThe l^lJ •"education progranu.- Rivo
En» and R.vo said that they hat^o^S^ value m
(CaaHMMtf onPaff 7)
ondMpTORCYCLE
AUTO INSURANCE
-nso^onc. rotes that co^n'^so.^U: up t'o^lo"**'
your outo msuronc. Coll u. for'o free% °otV_ "
I072GayleySu,fe6 LA. Calif 90024
Tel. 477 2548
KINKOS
CHECK OUR TYPING SFRVICE
18% Wfsrw.-,'! f-
Tel 4'
Mock election to
pol stulent views
Studenu will have the op-
portunity to participate in a
tnock election for the Usui
Sutes Senate from 8-2 today
on Bruin Walk.
Spaaaaiad by the Bruin
Young RepubhcaM aad irum
Democrats, the election will
f^Ho]*' ^^ ^■'"^ selection pro-
oWMi at the Cahfomia pri-
™ncs. (The slatfaM will be
restncted to voting withm iheu-
P*rty nipniation).
T^e election is daapttd to
«»vc people outside the Univer-
sity an idea of where the poli-
J*ca' trend on the campus is
headed, according to Shari
M«,w„. co-prc;sident of the
*f***« Young Repuhhcarrs
'*'5£Sl'«aj!ns of Buddhism- Exhibition
DB Si.ff u».^ ^«««e « Zen monk f,.r .k- - . -— •^^«fc«^^ma
•y Kcr Carin
Di Slafr Uriier
««r«I."""J^ T** '""" ■ •«■■» 'cmur. a
^I^-**«/^"^ '*""''* •*^" '" '•«' Ar, JJ
Rlcrn?" .r " '"*^ '•* ^" °f Moiorcvic
uKitrR'iLih'JX" '"" '" •''
dhl™ t***"*"* """* '■^^''* Stream* ol Bud-
dhism From Asia to Caliloraia," represent iZ
.hn« methods by which .he religiCnT^rL!?!
RuHhI "^''""^•<*«" school IS tha. division o(
Buddhism seen ,„ Burma and Thailand Tho^
• h » V" '*^ '''"*'> rcprcseming Iheravadr
.he Hindu word lor ciders, were iLned bv .he
.^«^ 1^^'"'"' '" "^""h Hollywood These
..em. include an .ilustra.ed Burmese man"
I he -Mahavana- school, also known as Zen
has many lollowers m .he Western Hemisphere'
according to S.even V^ung. Me of |^ oT
ganizers o. ,hc exh.bi. Fh.s TTanch has";
'^'\"\ "' '"""^ '■••^ »'• *" M^ >
^"""^ " f^»"»" Victoria, who has studied to
a Zen monk f6r .he past U veark /,«
Wn'rid"v '" ""- •"<' »P-a/.ri^"
<Aapan dn<l Vietnam '
or'n.ra'--S:; '•^J^-," '-e esoteric,
'""udc a .rumpeTLfc ft^ u "" ""* '""
^f«««^ - domTnJT^-^ Tew Where
Some of (he other ideas of ■M^i.H...-.
through the disnlav^ J^^ ■addhism seen
.ions n« .k ""'P'*'' ■« '"e meditative ttadi-
eJlancc o^.h *'?" *"" "" -^o-emporary
UAA^ *" fcl'gion. as well as th/wav
•Zen 'T k'". •"^ •*» '"•"-'^*-" AopTe?
^en^-nd .he Art f Motoreyle Racing-^sh^o:,
•ni'drc hVCK A ^r;" '•*' '''•"^"
■raohcr hL r^ Asian-American biblio-
irapher lames Davis, special assistant to.the
librarian and > oung. who is a member ,.| AsJ
Snr^^ I. :^1J *L-*»"- "'*° sponsored the
Spring Buddha, festival in" which poet Alla^
C.insherg participated ^
Fhe display has been at the URI since Anril
-nd w.ll stav .here through the r^ ol £
1
S
a
SUMMER TRAINING PROGRAM IN
INTERCUITURAL GROUP LEADERSHIP
INCLUDES:
1 QH-campus Residential Pio^am
July 23 to Jufy 25
2. Three (3) Evening Programs
in July and August
The training is free of charge. In exchange for train-
ing participants will be asked to lead four 3-hour
sessions in Fall or Winter Quarters.
Furth^ information »fy(i ^ppliralions 4v<iiUbie
Offire •< liMcrrMCiofMl Studenli mmi Scholm
a^O^ddHal
to American and foreign Students and their spouses
m
L...
HOT SUMMER VALUES
— V
-r
Suirmwr's
Eve I
f 'J
f7J0
^
11:45 - 1:15
SHAVUOT AT HILLEL*
TIKUN LEYL SHAVUOT
Thuri. June 3 ah night study SMaion. break-
faat. and Shacl^arit service
TIKUN WORKSHOPS
a) "Study of Biblical Text with Ck)fn-
menatariea" Habbi Yoaai Qordon
b) "Revelation, did »t Really Happen?
Implications for a Contemporary The-
ology of Hhaarawce"
Rabbi Cf\B\n\ Seidler-Feller
a) Covenant Themes A Political-
Theological Analysis"
Of Bob Gerstein
b) Ten CommandmefMs in Midrash &
History"
Bmbb\ David Burner
"fu^fwn and Emptiness in the Book of
Ruth
Rebbi Gary Greenhai im
nMtodaiiii
ISMQ
Tbiaclin
r^
itIJT
9\M
Neo-Synephrine Earth
1:30 - 3.-00
Bom
•j «.
3:1 S - 4:30
•?ih*w..^. r««.. of W«#lui) celebrates the epr ly whe«
•iwtfie covenent at S#nei
_, ^■'tssrijMiiTi nil _
WESTWOOD DRUG
< t. V *.
Loa Angelea. 00024
477-2027 or 272-3
OMMMMl
w
r" I.
^vco Center
Cinema I
475^71 1
^rk Indoor A»co Gofoy
^vco Center
Cinema II
SEViN WAUTIES
1:30/9:40. 4:00, J 20, 10 30
BWCM INTEtVAi - PC
*:00, $:}$, 10:25
noor
^•••wood tlvd
475-0711
Avco Center
w-twosd »^ , ^ ^^^ T"^ 5EA -(t)
4.73-0711 ' 35. 3:^, 5:45, S:00, 10:10
Pork indoor Avco GoroM
r:
Beverly
i^vorty Dr»v«
(ot Wi^hir*)
275-44§4
PocitK I
Beverly Hills
Wll.h,r, Wvd "at Conoon
1 bifc Eost of lovoHy Or
271 1121
KHIOW ME BOYS
't:00. 5:05. 7:45, 10:15
BEN AND ME
3:00,4:35. 7:15.945
ROBIN AND MARIAN
SHAMPOO . R
A^' op^n 4:00
Sot.Swffi. ep«n 12:30
Brentwood
2324 Wilth.r«
(Of 2M) $f.)
Sonio Monico
3367
vm.
Brentwood
2324 Wihh*rm
(•t 2ai»i St.) '
Sonto Monica
«2^3346 82^3367
Mann't
Bruin
Ptitf
Century
Plaza I
553^29)
fMitt
Century
3040 A«« of SNirt
Goldi« Hown 4 G^ry* S«f«i
THE DUCHESS AND
THE DIRTWATER FOX
llDCTi^.. *30. 10:05 M^i
UrilICK with M«rtiBu« M«m»«tw«y
>;35 Coin,, ,,0^4^ ,..^
II THE MAN IN THE
THE GLASS BOOTH
*»-'»I5, •:«, TO.JS
Waalwnd J:00. 4:05, 4:15, « 15
AU THE niESIOENT'S MEN
•♦ «>ww« M « Sat.
BLUE BIRD
M^ *, •, to
Sst.Swn a, 4, ♦, i, !•
HAWMPS
BENJfS UST STORY
10
333-4291
Cinerama
Dome
HoUywo^i 444-3401
Crest
Cinema
1262 Wottwood Wvd
272 3876
474.7166
$^ Smu. 2. 5. 7:30. 10 ^'
»* TkhoH A^JM. t Koccirfiolf to. 0»fi„
i« 70mfffi mm end
THAT'S ENTERTAINA«NT
PART II _ G
AILStor Cast
13:30, 3:00. 5:30. too. 10 30
NEXT STOP,
GREENWICH VILUGE
LIES MY FATHER TOLD ME
Fox Venice * '
620 br>co«d M«d.
394-42'3
Aduh SI 50
Child SI 00
•/4 Pf TK« Oimfcii,/ KNMm •«
*/'S^ *««<V»Md8»«d/|MMf«
6/7
»* ^«*io»*tc
Hollywood
Pacific
ni
n»oorro
Los Feliz
'•« N Vom»«nf
NO 4-2169
^^«>N TON TON - PG
©•ilyt 12 30, 2 30, 4 30. 4:30
•:30. 10:30
K)r GOES THE WEASfL
N«w Pfwidi Rim ^vtfivol
A PIECE OF PLEASURE
^1^°^ Lev^^ Mitestone^ Hollywood pioneer
Manns Westwood I
TlHN*.
Miu!..,- '^1'" *"* ^'^•''' •i""'*'" tock in 1925- Lr*«
Milestone remrm^r^H -.^«^ \iy — »"* m it^j. i^CwlS
timir^ t "* "•'' ^'"' »<*"«• »»e inierrupied me ievcr.l
Lewis MjJcftonc Ijves in Hollywood and
■mong Miieftoaes most memorabic movies
Bchrman. Clifford Ode.rsRl'n HinL'n '"'"f * ^.''■
Steinbeck and nerforn;/,/ w . "'""""n. novelist John
Cooper Adonh^M .^""^ '^•*'". ^'"'' Jannings. Gary
Marlon B«ndo "' ^"°^ "''""• ^''^*«''' S'*'"^«=k and
M.lcMone was bom e.ghty-one year, uo in Ruhm and *a.
•em «o an engineering school in GermSv at thT?„rf ^f J**
formal education Instead «r ,-.. ^'"""y "' "»< end of his
school term, the .mt^ouf J ."'"* "•""' ^''" °"« <" "is
photographic assistant befoTe ?o.ni^rThe IJ K a"'" V^ '
Corps ,n 1917 Shortly thereift^l* J . 7^'^ '^^>' ^'«"*'
Hollywood. , •'"""•y thereafter. Mficstone emigrated to
■ I
Through a friend. Mile«MK aot work a. . r i
»oon developed some notori«7a * h^ *ra J n w.il.^ 'h"*' '"*'
a reputation.- Milestone recalled Whl! 7 ^ ?" ''''"°' "'"*'
reputatioir. he smiled "I th^^k rh, Jl*''" "^^ed what kind of a
and not sound egoS.cal 'iTaui'', ^:\l^\T.'r^'" " "''*
competition w.th other editors I musi^/i^l ^ ""^ "°* '"
punk but I knew there w!« Inm Jk , T' ***" » ^^O' fresh
cd^t film. 1 buih up co'fid „"e Su LT ' '*' T" •"** " •«
good job - - ""oence tKcause I knew I wa* doing a
Milestone*! irif Mau^,,^ •tow his work »„h
studio protocol got hitii out of the cuttm^ r. if^^nce of
some editing for W.l|«m Se.ter around 5^ ^r, k. •^L'"'"'
hin, on, „on„„g ,„^ ^^^^^ he would likr^n 1 ^ '"'^
of his picture *ouia lue to sec a first cut
dir^Jir. icv'irL'fim c'ms'^Vr V'r' "'«'i'"« «»"•• done;
del.gh«d 10 b^ wled TndTshoJi himX n"^*i^- ^*"" *«
he Mw and invited me to work ^h L ^ '^'."' "' '"'«* *hat
picture That w« .^ ^g*"!*-' *'"" °" •*«' »«' ^^ "is next
Milestone worked for the ne« few years w..h «^ .
■MHUnt direaor and Mnn>writi.r V! ,? ^'^" ** «n
no wwnwriier. as well as working in the
K wen an^TT ****'• **• *o™**in« I could
^nWence because I knew I wa, doing » good
Mil^toTderelo'l'd' hlTr '''"*'"" " •" around this time that
^ -He (Seiter, wn'beX7c:;,'"k;^ t' **'-« '"'•-■^•"' '"<* '""J^
<»»dni want to hun he L ,^« T^ ^ ! S^*"*'' because he
to be on the picture forivea^d K " ^'f*^' ''^ •"»« fomg
nght the rirst^ime SL^"ei^' *' ^ tZ"" »" "^ «="P?
movie to make and thaT wL m^, ••* "^ ** «'" had a
Eventually word .1 T '""^'^'" "-" **'"« "« "
Brotl.n-p.eLdemjlcfVrllir'cirJIlH'^'''"''^ "** ^—
•S«t«fr, Milestone had tuTnL h '*"«' »>im about directing 5^wn
reply to Warner waTJoi^c^f^^V'^^^f" '*» direct 'and ^^
and told him. I, depends Th^,T ' «^"»ed to m excited
i';- •'-" on wc wrre"'« e^l telmT" ""^ " """ "" «'<'
- an Academy .ward fo^-^e;^?; I^wo^:?.^^ ^Sr" ^n'
'«»d showed his singWr "ndim«„H !i" '^'^ '^''^ " '»»«•
-I had decided Ji^ ""dersunding of human behav
was also a veterVTstagc nro^u.^ t" ""' °^ ""^ *"«'« and
.young actors He askei f ew ^1^ "ul^ H ''.'^™*' '° "ndersUnd
he could Abbott then asIL h»l 1 **° »^' P« •«m1 lew said
Lew said ., was the «sie« tcrin^"' "* "*"-»'<»'« «^ne and
"^ an^. saul. -get nd o ^^^ •" ^ P«:iuTe Abbott turned to
H Wk« a CMe «f o„° f T '^' J"" a fresh punk' -
-I said LT.^. "'' """'' '*"*^'"« anotto
'" .he Ust'^w mmST ^wIL^'L"' """ >« ^ "^ i«« 'his
up*ct h.m Look at him Your wird^.,?^.'!^'.''"".^"* "°" <^'<1"''
duck IH „ke the guy that s a:rtor'^'';;'''';ja'er ofl a
de»«.ered a staggering performan^ ^*^*^ •** '*' ^" •"«'
-'Jir:;:: :- fhat uiSon 'dV^-- -•-- '"-
schools as an alternative -l"smv.^ he speculwed on film
■enter film school w«b the ma«„." .1"^"?'"* ""' ^yO" dont
fme - .fx months, a vear tC^'^ If'^V »et i,eriod of
industry It seems to me 'hat it «m.. T-''**", T'" «^' " J««» '" 'he
have along the way toTni«i ou" C,^Th, 1i^ experiences you
get surted." *,"*•**•* hell you are going to
.po'ietraifs :^:rrj:^ --'-' — -^^ -^
-I told this guy my pro^ltmsVnd "heTsk'.::,* ^'^or'^^i^L""
new setr I told him 1 did and he sa^ -tk. u ^°" "^ '*"
to me- From then on. I neveVa^kld InJlZ^ "!" ^*"' '•'k'"*
that wa.. a n^GiiSt; I jus, wem ", ?"''''**y •'>°«" anything
Ui. n ~'^™'y ' J"" went out and got whatever I neeri.^ *
His films were conceived with great c4 .n^ - ^^
end rcHiits sho» his enormous ..Sttr!.? ""d precision and the
of nuiking movies An^^ow Tr^H^t""^ °' '"' """^ '•««»
famous -^u- Llll" U.L ■_ "^ ?*" •»'h*J««-«««
ail .s reUt.ver^r.,:?'t;rn"fron; '" ""''^'^ '"<^
WITHOUT A CAUSf
» IS. ♦IS. to 15
Manns Westwood II
»*»"« TMi lOMOflST r Am
EAST Of EOm
4:IS. CIS
, ^'D Of TMf GAME
»:00 4 00 • 00. • 00, 10 00
Manns Westwood III
TlHH. UAZmO $A00l« OTOOVf rUM
OUCK SOUP HOtSE fEATHERS
»»0.*I0, ^48 aiS, 4 so 7 as. 10 00
AAerofto^^
9632 CuK^ llvd
Culvvr City
539-4381
Aagulor Admiuwi t2 00
CoN Htmatrm fmr ihttm Hhm
Monica I
'332 2nd Str^mi
Same
45 \m
Monica II
1322 2r«d &•,•«,
Scmio
431 «
A Lu^mmim Thmatrm
Music Holl
9036 Wtithtrm ilvd
^•''•fly NiHt
274.6869
Moon g
^^aflonal
i^ns
Drtv«
^OHTAMAWAM
7:00. IO:M
tOVAlfUSH
«:00
W C. WEiOS A ME
Tk* Mori Itm
ANIMAl CRACKERS
ROBIN AND MARIAN
THE fORTUNi
l[ACE TO f ACE
Stall iiif liv iHlfnonn
l'!?^^*y powerful •fi^ aNictif^
• SSBieMi«fii 1^ ^1
BAD NEWS BiAtS
2. 4, 4, 8, 10 *
Midniylit $h#w« ^ 4 Sof
«^
4/3 riM«r« I Awewf,,^/
kit OM 49
NuArt
^rortlMBig Orange' : a city with appeal
leotre
n272Se«*««
47^437*
479-3249
An«el<n; a < — 1.1^ jH^
By Adam Paifrey
Jack Smith it, ftrtmp%, our
»olc Angchno columnist who
continues to carry on an in-
nocent, even reverent love af-
iair with his enigmatic roosting
ground. His daily View section
column in the Times often
devotet ji full day's wnting to
the oKiitt miniscule aspects of
suburban living. ^
??mith'5 previous book, God
a«d Mr. Gomci, was a poig-
nant account of the trials and
tribulations of vacationing in
■M Now, in TW lig Orasge
(Ward Ritchie Press. $7 95,
^^2 pages,) Smith pent his im-
pressi^ont of Lot Aufcto fwm
his viaitt to touritt tn^, ttn-
t>q"c cyctoret and tights fa-
mous and obscure — all char-
•ctcrittically Southern CaUfor-
nian. The title does not allude
to a freak Luther Burbank
creation, but to a city with a
pockmarked exterior and a
9Wtet and tour heart. It's very
much Uke Smith not to vitit
the title-roled citrus grovet, but
^rite an epitode about the
^irmcn Marlrrt. wfhart gum
kali ^ . ". •='
*>all oranges stacked in toy
crates may be purchased.
rL'^m'^''^ o^ 31 sections.
-"•e Big Orange runs through
^ost of the variegations Lit
J^f Hollywood Boulevard
CuTrLl^'"'' Wax Museum,'
Chinatown, Eljaia. Park,
^atts Towers, Disneyland, Li-
Par^T^"^ ^•"' MacArthur
Paul ' r"^^"" ^"^^ •'^ the J.
f'aul Getty Art Mutcum
Each visit it a private chroo-
w.fK Z ^^"^* ^'^'^y *>"rsting
.t!l-J*^^- sights and sounds
if^ JUS^ Southern Cal-
^„?^*^.» (formerly GrTu-
•^n s) Chmeae Theater it the
' lt"U5' '<l^"t,fiable land-
™'"Kj Smith IS decidedly be-
n^volent ,n his assessments.
J!^ Smith exudes wonder
jjnd affectM>n whK:h retemblct
^^'nter^ of Occidetital Ci.}y^^
-^■nn I6r LA'S 'kittdgi^.
^^ ■"■■II ^"^ teems to
■e that history should be uted
for variety, for spice, because it
II so different. That's what
•■kei it good.**
Smith loves Lot Angekt for
the same, reason he loves Dis-
neyland (a forgivable sin) -
because it's so unreal. He calls
the numerous sights the vtsthte
Lot Angelet: ••the vitibie en-
tertainmenu . which Will
Rogers affectionately called
cuckooiand." The columnist
dittirtguithes the vitible Las
Angeles from the remi one.
which he thinks is invisible: **lt
»• to be found in such abstract
qualities as newnett, tpace
openneM, freedom, variety and
tbe weather- There need not
J?f differentiation Smith
nwrrofi the raal through hit
and others, raactiom to the'
visible; Los Angelet.
In tl^ Big Otmm. Smith
PJ^ovetthat minor imprettiont
•ndotarvationt can be more
!**^^WPI •«<« telling than one
huge^tweeping examination
Buy te ta»k
^9C$tk'%
Pontages
•7141
— aaaMteiM ik*.^
a/> ift. fli» Pmmmm^m/ 9k^ |My
*/7 mmm *mmm%
AU THI PRESIOCNT' S M04 - PO
FREEBIE AND THE BEAN
CMttinuM* rfaily liM 12:30 ~
Picwood
272-823f
wtwrnt
THE EXORQST
«** •:»•, 0:45. I0:4S
«•»-«-" ia:»«, 2 4$, »:M. r:4J. 10 OO
ctually, it's Melnltz
Jutt in ca.« you d.dni read p„, ,he headline ,„
*", ""^ .IJi' ^"^' S«««lay and Sunday nlS^ i?
Melnm 1409. not Royee Hall. ^^ ^^^ '"
■ ••'"•'• tf you didnt read oMt tli« k^wi....
?^r.^f?*! ■* ^*'**"- •♦ "* '^""'«' «>ox office a^TS
Central Ticket Offu* <;« .^u ..- ^^ ;__^ ....f
Plaza
477-0097,
479.9077'
THE MISSOURI MEAKS
Regent
IO«S
STAY HUNOtY
SWIPT AWAY
477 5til
JIB I
•I Hie
r
'**»M«M1
MOVIES CONTrNUED
UA Cinema
Center I
10M9 Wallwofth A««
WF#ttwOOO
474.4154
TAXI MIVER
2, 4, 4. t, 10
Mtdnit« SK«w Ni A Sot
/i
4
r
UA Cinema
Center II
I0t99 W•<lwo«1^ Av«
WMfMfOOd
474-4165
Wio ^nni««t nim •# 19t5
TUNNEL VISION
Sforrinf Olovy Ch«a«
1:30, 3:00. 4:3a ^-OO, 7:30. 9:00, 10 30
Mi^inigKf SHowt fh, Sirt, Sun
UA Cinema
Center III
10689 W»<lworth A^
Westwood
474.3it3
PHANTOM OF PAtAOISE
2 00, 3 40. 5 20, 7 00. • 40, 10 20
— ^ Mifimt* fn 4 Sot
UA CINEMA
CENTER IV
10ii9 W«ltworrh Av«
Wvttwood 474-4)98
Winner ol S Academy Awordt
Jock Nickolfton
ONE FLEW OVER THE
CUKOO S NEST
1:15, 3 30, 550, 8:05, 10:25
UA
WE ST WOOD
10887 Lmdbrook
w«>twood-
477 0575
*v
to9u#l Welch Kll Cotby
MOTHER, JUGS, ANCTSPEED
M-f 6 30, 8 30, 10 30
midnight show en Fridoy
Sot A Sun 12 30, 2:30, 4 30
4:30, 8:30, 10 30, midnight
VAGABOND
2509 Wilfh.r*
3872)71
35 mm! Vond New Frintt
Ff«d Attoire Ginfor ■oyer*
ROBERTA (1935)
Kofhorine Hmphutn
UTTLE WOMEN (1933)
THEATRE J«« ivn. 8 8 00pm
1^^2\L^^^ ^ TENDrES^E'^SVoiNAIR
Lot ^ ngele, 276 9987 ^^ ♦•oture f»1m from Conodo
$2 50 generol $1 50 %fud*nfi
mannt
Village
961 8roK(on
W««»wood 4780576
WON TON TON THE DOG
WHO SAVED HOLLYWOOD
1:15. 3:00. 4:45, 6:35, 8:20. 10:10
Midnight Shows FH. Sot. Sun.
HAMMMHIAO
Vtorf iiMw f
NAiMM8»NtA0
«M. lot. %m.
4-»^
TtAM
UANCt Contest
SUNDA
SlOG covh
W»n^ef^ compete
m tt>e hnoK
S300 cosh
KENTUCKY FRIED
THEATRE
10303 W #ico m^
the best of tcn t
lost 5 yoors
^^BEATING A DEAD HORSE
556>24*3
Pr< A Set • 00 A 10
GLORIA LYNN
'^^'^ ' tlooofli looo 13
PHINEAS NEWBOtN
ruts
CloMd
S'uoftn
— 30PIER AVE
HERMOSA BEACH INFO-TEL 37275l1
T^N
paMMBIK^...
— 'ft
Garden Theater Festival
at Dickson Plaza
.^ — r<Mti tfiintraT GArden Theater
hcitjvaJ which plays from May 28 to JuJy 25
all over town wiU make a temporary 8l^over
at UCLA thu weekend, befmning Friday at 6
pm and^«nding Sunday at 8:30 pm
The evfcn>-llri the Dickson Plaza Architecture
Quad, If sponsored by the UCLA Student
Committee For the ArU and is •^tupported" by
W.ll Gccr Tom lf»tfky, Dan Sullivan, Andy
Onffith and Yolandc Treuscorr. among others
hnday, a Bicentennial play. Finding the Real
America, will show at 6 pm, while Jim Mandcll
A ^n^^ songwriter will warble his ditties at 7
At 7:30. the Rene Blues Quartet will play the
-History of the Blues," and at 8 30, the Garden
Theater will preseht Ice Cream Alley an
original musical Later in the evemng. Ballet
Folkrorico and Chris Blias will perform
Saturday's festivities will begin at 12 noon
with the Troubadour Puppets. Childrens'
progrartis will, run until the evening when
Trevor,- a one-act play, will show at 8:3Q pm
Musicians and comedians arc the ^her
featured evena.
On Sunday features Marco the Magician at
noon and will continue with muaic, puppet
theater and mimes
Connolly 's 'James Dean * :
•y Michael Pattenon
Ray Connolly's Jame» Dean
— the Fir»t American Teen-
ager, which shows lor free at
Roycc on June 8 at 8:30 pm
*"^opens June 9 at the UA
^Tncma Center; mi^^^^ciT
biography that honestly and
effectively creates a portrait of
Dean as a multi-faceted indi-
VKJual who still touches the
l»ves of many.
His former good friend.
Sammy Davis, Jr., wiilsiy spec-
ulated that if four or five
people who knew Dean gath-
ered to discuss him, an out-
sider-^t^ould think they were
discussing four or five different
people Narrated), hy Stacy
^each, this film docis not form
a definite image of Dean.
Instead, director-writer Con-
nolly wisely opts for the ap-
proach Bob Fosse employed
for Lenqry building his film
around a series of interviews
with people who knew Dean
Interspersed with these inter-
views are countless still photo-
graphs, clips from his TV and
^'Ol work.'newsrecl footage of
him in racing garb and an
ironic road safety commercial
he made prior to his fatal car
crash.
Ocan himself admitted that ^
he was a unique actor: a com-
bination of Marlon Brando
and Montgomery Clift Jimmy
Dean was somewhere in be-
»/
I>ean: without a c
tween He was the leader of
the post-war movement of kids
seeking self-expression.
As the late Sal Minco re-
minisces on film. **Before Jim-
my ,Dean you were either a
baby or you were a man In
between wal just "one of those
terrible stages you had to get
out of quickly And he didn't
He pve the teenager a status -
The film isn't a Fifties nos-
talgia movie, but a view of
Dea as a contemporary cul-
tural symbol comparable to
our comemporary rock surs
In order to underiinc the sim-
•wnty, the score is composed
^y, David Bowie and Elton
John, among others.
Yet no positive reasons for
Dean's prominence are offered
and here lies the clue to the
film's success Composed of
many different viewpoints, it
leaves the viewer wondering
why E>ean has remained such
an immortal figure.
Even though James Dean
was not the first American
teenager to make a terrific
'mpact. he created one by
simply asking questions And
this screen biography succeeds
very well m doing the same
thing. -~-*v
<P«t«l Adtcriiv rtMrii I
/■=-.
^KNOW THE FACTS...
a* a nuci«or pommr plant pmw'k m ?n« commmrt»at op*rot«ofi
—Dt »Oa€8T HOFSTA0TC»
Nob«l,tour»at«, FHyitio
Stanford Uniwrtity
"It w.ll b« at l#ott onotH«r 23 yart hm*f telor png.
All th.og. con..d»r.d. tK« Nycl^ S».wtdo^ in^^JHHT' '* •^•**^ "» -••»»*• q»Kittit<^
^nc. mo.t o4 our •n.,or„^„,ol probi* JZl 7 1* '''"^ ^'^"^ ** '^^^ »•••<
«ucl.<,r u>vrc« • P^ob»#mi ,».„, from ».| o,H< cool MNirCO. wf
— KEKMIT SMITH
formor ttot* poht.eol cHo.rmon
Slf»llACLUa
>f raihmr Hiofi
Uwompleymont m Hi,» „oto .»
'.All fHot Propocttion 15
oir pollution "
H CLAUDE HUDSON
•»»
U» A«i9olot NAAC^
9 5%, W
it
it n
Utility htfh.
NO ON PROPOSITION 15
STOP THE NUCLEAR SHUTDOWN
Westwind goes
for next issue, June 7-8
media
--♦>
ly htm Garin
DB Stair Writer
i*^*""*^* m!?^^?^ creativity-' on this campus,
HesiHind UCLAs quarterly publication of the
•rtt^jwij seek wmmmput contnbuters whik
cmp^mmmg a "multi-mcdia" concept in iktu
next Mine, according to Charles Cohean
editor-in-chief - ,
Cobeaa, a graduate student in Kreenwruin*^
here. W appointed full-time editor-in-chiefof
the publication on May 20 by the AS UCLA
Communidlions Board
He says his objectives as editor are to -create
an awareness to H^esUind Since 1955 ^>j/
H,W has been a low-profile operation, being
upstaged by the Daih Brum. Somhem CampZ
and other publications. As a matter of fact
^estwmd had been inactive from 1970 to 1975*
I want people to submit their works to
Though the deadline for su^aiiis.ons for the
upcoming issue has passed. WesTwmds editors
have made it a poim to always, answer all
contributors, whether their contribution is
published or not "Thais something Tvc always
itrived for.- Cobcaa said
•People^ MiUiy fael wanted and ihev art
V!^'^!^ ^^ ^''^ "* •"^^^^^ '^ ^^^" ^hen
wcve lOM them their contribution would not
Jie printed- He continued, -If theres some-
hing wrong with a story. l\\ icll a person why
" • ■••Tf m Mi written. Til abo say whv -
added.
^•fcawi announced thMTnU^i/Hw^fi up-
coming edition, an interview with WC Mer-
win. Pulitzer Prize-wmning writer, will be
featured along with an excerpt from a Goldwvn
Award-winning pUy He did not disclose the
name of the pUy.
The quality of the photography and improve-
ment of the proK and poetry will help upgrade
he total output of the publication according
to Cobean ^
v^^?." M^''^*'^'* '^'^ ^^ '" English at
vanderbili I niversity, where he was editor of
their literary magazine There he won an award
irom the American Academy ol Poets and a
citation of merit from an an society in Norfolk
Virginia
(Continue^ on Page 25)
'^ ~ __ ■» ~ — »— ■■— ^'y •»•■ ■ m\
UCLA (o grant 8,246 decrees
By C.A. Connelly
DB Staff Whter
Twenty-six students will re=
ctivt bachefor of arts degrets
in education' during June
graduation ceremonies Pro-
feuor John Adams, from the
University of London will pre-
^^' — commencement an-
nouncement 1923.
The year 1923 saw the first
batch of graduating studenu
fD out into the 'real world"
from the University of Cali-
fornia at Lot Angcfles, Since
then, the food on campus must
liave improved or professors
have fallen down m their
ability to scare off entering
freshmen, because this year
UCLA will present the largest
number of degrees in UCLA*s
history: 8.246
The degrees will be confer-
red in commencement cere-
monies at 3 pm Sunday June
20 in the Drake Track and
Field Stadium ^
Instead of John Adams of
London, our own ChaaccUor
Charles E. Young will preside
at the University's 57th annual
-^^mmencemem and will de-
liver the traditional Farewell to
~lbe graduates
In fact, most of the cere-
mony will be the traditional
program format, with no real
change from vear^ past, ac-
cording to Chandler Harris, of
the UCLA public information
service The University Com-
mencement exercises have be-
come almost standardized,
Harris said
The tone of the ceremonies
will be different, however The
students' speech content has
leaned "more inward with a
personal, more philosophical
approach.- rather than one of
political advocacy of any kind
Harris said.
Brian R. Budenholzer. a
political science mafor. will be
one of the student speakers
representing the 4,838 bachelor
degree recipients. The other
student speaker will he Darlene
Walsh, from the law school
representing the 2.143 master's
and 1 .283 other advanced de-
gree recipients.
Bishop Joha X Ward of the
Los Angeles Archdi^«MC will
offer the invocation and hene-
dictton
Lindsay A Conner, presi-
dent of the undergraduate stu
dent body, will present the
class gift, which will be a
hanging sculpture for the new
Career-Placement Cemer The
sculpture will be designed by
the UCLA student who wins k
conteafl to be held next year
Mu.sic for the academic pro-
cQsiion opening the ceremonies
will be furnishfcd by the UCLA
Concert Band, conducted b\
Pr Kenneth Snapp Student
»ong Iridari, leading those in
atteniliaur m the national
anthem and in the University
hymn, wilt be James R
Hopfenbeck. music and Judith
D Dubin, psychology.
James A Collins, president
of the UCLA Alumni Associa-
tron and member of the BiMd
of Regents, will Wlcorae the
graduates into alumni status.
The ceremonies are open to
the public and no tickets are
required
HEY,VET!«
^Tinzi-
* ■• ' . *.
Casb in on your military experience.
ClMck out the Army ROTC Prc^ram.
^ ^ You can receive credit for tiiBc spent on active duty.
^ ^ ^ou can receive HOO a aMMKb, tax-ftec, during yonr
y"^ funior and senior years...in mitiktmm io your veterM
A bnefits.
^ Y ^ou can prepare iof two caicers ac ooce-civtliaa
^^ flHiscary.
^^^V You can compete for a hiil Araiy ROTC sdwiarship
^^^ whitk pays tuition, books, Itk Iks. plus $100 a
plus longevity.
yy month.
^ ^ Army ROTC in gradujits sian at
^ T^ Army ROTC has Ofooos for graduate school
^T^ ^ For aMar information,
^ Mil
UnUllMEM or MILIIAIV SCIUMf
-) 1 MCI*
DRIFTWOOD BAR
.y
'fS33
THf SHf D QUARTET
•)
•!**•»• 4, 5,
JOHN STEWART
plu«
iccurs
Ml Pin Dfi
Suti Imiu
iJi«r
<.riTAHS HAIM.HM MANIM>I I MS B<M (HS A \ I) B» c .>Bn^
LONNIE USTON
SMITH
plus
VICKI SUE
ROBINSON
Jun« ID thru 1<J
ATLANTA
RHYTHM
SECTION
«5a-2200
Jt\
(i/D]|>
\
- — •■^ Hollywood
THE STONBR
2\ \ 3 Stpn«j. Av« .
w»«»i A sooas
477 7339
•Mr a Wino
^••d, Gomot 4 oth«r
I'K^OOr Sports
f/2 ilk. N^rfh^ Olympn
I M mm%f W §mrnngf9n
/"
Utnm 3
DON WILLIAMS
too SriAGAU ANO
VNi COiiMAN
COUMTY COWBOrS
Jwn« • I)
Jwf»« 4 6
*™ «*^««55 FUSION
UllsiuiA Di^OZlAK
OCHMWCSTCMTS
^^nM^wM
•oeitAWTA momcA bivo.,i^a. 27«.«iaa
-*•" »^j
FONO'S
C«f»«rr
Iwnch dinnof mhmf tKootr* •wcotm
l«o«t< cocktoih CowtowoM Cw«Mn«
FOa THOSE WHO APPRECIATE OUALITY ^
1500 WfsV WOOD SI VD 4 SICXKS SOUTH Of WHSHmf
CHAN S GARDEN
lOaSS Um^^mk Or IIMwd, f0034
CKi
Cmimmo
l# 099^ WtV ^Vfff%9 I
*n.T7t%. 47»y7t4 fmm PmMmi, m, W*»^ Cow., tmmk tl tkm„,
YPSY'S lAST INDIAN lESTAUtANT
*l»4tlit» ^
10
JUNIORS
THf aOLLS MOVCf OT DCLICATCtSCNa
A7S-S771
• roymr urn. trancm i^^k $200, $22$ irso
»0a3i ii««darwA Or 0»nnf $3 75 $4 25 15 25
474.0»4S W W Wmmwm ' ^ *^
U JMnSunsM
■■a — T«i 47s-iaa
RESTAURANT MlFUNt
— A ^^^ 4>M4krtaaMaib •>«•
!»«« WMiIMm m^ LA tlA-^IO W *^
is»sa wwio m^ u 4749)49 *«»«^ »•
i2UI
or •31-74«3
LOTfOURRI
^ tnlffijtonoi F
I Th« imamaiionol Rostaurani
Intornotional Otudwil Conlar
SI 7S
tmrntu
, l.x.
'*mmmam
»■ ■ 1 1 I
iindergraduate
Student Association
•■■ ' \ -• ■
^^ Referendum Balloting
Thursday June 3 9 AM - 5 PM
I
■i
The following initiative ite
ms
appear on the Referendum
Ballot:
NSA Represenative Amend
ment to the Undergraduate Stu
dents Association Constitutlnn
J--*
2) Iranian
Initiative
jttwmW**
Association
.Committee Against Racism
Initiative
Polling Booths will be located as
follows:
Royce Quad
Bunche Hall
Kerckhoff Patio
Bombshelter
Vote Today
Sponsored by Elections Board/Student Legislat
ive Council
Undergraduate Student Association
Referendum Balioting
/
•***j^
A«Oc«K>n for . rrm^ntyZ^ ^1 ^ '"!'°"'' ^•"*^«
^^" '"•^■■■i « m« national and state » — '- tk^ ^
My^ant L^^^^i%tm r>^ -^ . .- ^^^ ••^'••t Though
.tufll^mi "MictM any cl..m to control o»„
curranT fmsa Constitution and Rw i ^i __
MCA a-.,.^.-^ * •uiiun ana By-Lawt. alimination of tha
Lagistat.ve Counca of UCLA ^ ^*^*
Tha tolloJ^nTrlZlZ! ^^"""^"^ L«i4tl«iva Council
T S^ lif^T^ ^"^'^ '•"• ''••^ '^ "^ Con.t,tutK>n:
/I J^^ '^'^* '" '^* Constitution i»%frino ,o tha
funcar.ons.nd dutia, of the >.SA Rapr-antativ^ ^
2 This Amandmanr shall \9kmwn9Ci aa soon at a vacancy
r'^'onat': '"^ '^"* "^^^^ Repr^-ntativ. e.tJL^ S^,^'
ras.gnat.on or normal aitp.rat.oo of tarm \
Should tha Position of NSA ^ _ ^
»K^ c. -i ' . . ^""" "' '^^^ Nappaaantativa be ramovad from
tha Studam I •gijUtt v^Couneil^
D
Do Vo4j andoraa tha following
JVr!!!^]!!!"'!!!.'"'''''"'' r.cruitm.n, bag,nnmgFa«76.of
^^ iranaiar siudants. tha sama aa Iha e^mk ^ ^
-m.~.on. ,„ ,973 u«.l mZZT^r^Z.Z^Z'Zl
jccorjn, to ,^., p,^,^ „, ,^ p,^,.,.^ „. ^^ ^^
2) W<. oamand tpMial «»miM,oni (or minority b.liouu-l «w.
•ork-no C.. wn,t. .tudanu .t th, p,.v.ou. r.t. o. 1?^ Q
J*^drn«.d th., ,„• un,v,„rty. ,n ooop.r.„o„ «„^ ^,^
»rttow.h.p, (or minority and working claaa whita iludlnw ~
■«*»madtotf.aUni»ar«ity ■•• •'"'ta atudani.
3) Wa d«nand that MM Uni^^ oi LJUiforma ,mi,iwiL..i th.
c-*d (or proport«,n« Ch.cano anroMnwo,. «Kmm^1^^
m^i Dy ina OC to community
a
UCLA*t'„n'a*^ J'^'Tl' '"•*^"^y °» Af(,rm«». AC«o m
ihd an and to tha faculty h.r.'ng fraaza and
faculty h.ring to ba ifnpumantad as follows
in
• •••-•»•»••...
D D
. ti^~i._
irmnimn Studant Association Initiativt
Thau C -Iran Projact allows the iran.ar Rag,ma one of tt>a moat
J^sive dictatorship, to sat up a so-called Persian. Study
ii^?TwJ*" ^^'^ «^P"» T^ •^•n'*n Students Association at
UCLA believes that such ties with a regime that holds over 40 000
JftMtical pr.soners mostly students and which haaaaaculadoiiaf
-300 patriots .n less thar. thraa yaars. is to say tha laaat an .nsult
to the students of this University We further bel.-'^ that tha
UCLA fac.r.tias should not be put at the diipoMiof fhe fascist
regime of the Shah Do you approve of tf.e U C -Iran Pro|«ct'>
»n the departments which have axperiancad a iHm incraaae
in undergraduate enrollment, such as Polit^ScTa^
f.^r'^;:n' y^"' •"'^••- '—- ^-c. teaching
f^lty poaitbns to mat the itindiW, 15/1 studant/f acuity
^1^^.^ 1 '^•*'^"' r-tricting anrollmant but by
prcSr^jTrinr^'^- ■ " -— --^
Allhiring. whether ^nto new positions cradMd ufidar tha
^^"LT ''y^.^"^'0^« ---t be ailocatad acco^ « "
to population prapoittons of Los Angla. County of ethnic!!?
JraL'cTl^uCLr'l ^' ^•"••^ -'^••^ •"<* •••^•t
P^^ctuc^i at UCLA, wa demand that the following pn
.tludants and staff be reinst^i^j tmnmUmtmf^
^ Or Humbarto Bracho
2 Ms Rocio Com^llt
3 Willie Morton <
i
o
6) We demand a reversal of thai
imStMdantHaalth
7) Wa demand an end to all forms if police harraaamant of
teitl-H. f y^*"^. Particularly of minority atudents. wprkars and
Mtlata and to help achieve this end. m. demand the d^
armament of Iha c»npus police
D D
8)
««|Ci«d ^ S406 00 tuition hike for out of state fori
a
Polls Open 9 AM-5 PM
Polling Locations:
Royce Quad
Bunche Hall
Kerckhoff Patio
Bombshelter
'.1
Vote Today
^
Snnn»nP|§^ ^y f |^
rr
TV7TT> ^^
n Legislative Council
VOUCANBl/Y
STEAM BEER FROM
'FRANCISCO
1
AT PROMTO MARKEtS
SiMm Brnmrwrn born of the
C»v»l War and California 8 gold
nmh ThouaaodaoThtrdirwrk-
^Q thiraty man ruahad to
California aMking har gold
Sinca ica Mraa not availabia
from trgi oastem^ part of our
country San Franciaco's
tfnpf&lm clinr>ati ianf itaeif
««ll to making baar without
»ca One brewery remains to-
day which still makes this rich
pheasant beer in the old world
manner Anchor Stem bear is
I^MaUabla at
Pronto Market
10850 National Blvd.
Open 7am-Midnight
Jack Shaffer
PUBLIC WORKS
WPROWSATIQMl TH£AIR£
"Hilarious and touchina'
«««« L(mu LA rmss
"A perfect example of xt\t
creative process m motion
fl^w utRHAN sAmA mmu ounoon
Fridays and Saturdays at 9 pm
The Church in Ocean Park
235 Hill St {Santa Monica) ,
Telephone 399-1631
Meeting
Alpha Lambda Delta Elections
and
discussion of future activities
Thursday 6/3 0 30-4 30 AU 2408
( CcMiUiMic<l frofli ^m§B 3)
jovernment that can only mamp out un-
employmem by u..n, nie.hods mtl.! ?
t ommunist nations. ', ^
in *iiu.;2?'***^"'* **^ '^'■"^ "»' •>"" will I«^
^r,^^ ..not ,f the government pUy.Ihe
uxei. and increaie spemta^ in order to pay <W
the tederal jobt progranT '^'^
sifeT^IcVrtd' -"i"TJ *•""" '^'^ P'"*'-"-
»«Mier declared. Health care should be in the
M«e category „ our public «:hoolr- He the^
added everyone should have .X^ i« J.I2
"on of health care ^^ "* ***"*
Shaffer denounced the practice of Driv.ti.
viding money for CMdidates in order to -bUv
•n the political proem - He «id^ k-ve teS^
convinced; the only answer i. to move to „ut^
financing of (those, camp«g„,.- """'"
uated income tax which would lax the rich^H
Urge -por^ons more heav.ly"hl'%ry "."re
^K a s?.^ **" •"'''•^ corporations paid
«»ly • SIX per cent Ux rate whereas the lax ™te
on corporated profit, u 48 per cent
w«lthv"l'nVTj'''*"' *•" 'y""" "•'^•^d* 'he
.^! '^u ** '** corporations- while "it on,.
Jhe^^burden on the backs of the middle inco'!:^*
li
^/A2r^^^^^
Drug.
u
>- y..,^::^
• uaisy cnatn Mfas quite worth the •ffort of oickmn
th« tim« to hMf the Rai>iv« ill "^''^^'^ ' ^"^ '» '•■»»>»f r»m«rk«b«« at
lata' But wr>an the Rabbit actually too* a w.trh « r . L *^
Pocjat ^ .ookao at .t. . .udclanlVr^.V^'^^^^^^ST^!
i;^ . r.bb.t ..,. ..^ . ....,,^, ^,^ o?:ir:to't:ro;
«»•~<»•»»♦m••rt.youk^ow But toh,rr«L«rj^^ •^•«'~9M«#
<4WI« you »MI loint ian 1 1«5 . ! T •"''^•■* '^ ^''-^•Mt
^ • * '*^ •■'• »o Purchnaa a Subacr ipLor to
Lecture Notw that « Vou can buy Nam aii^ o« m. .
•^of ry youfioif tfUlv iiJM itt. a-mm. ^^ ^ "«»ma. ao -,ao«t
NOW ::,, and Clili^Tr^?^ JiJ^T ''''' '•*^"'' ^^
Yxi^
T»»a ataff at ASUCLA Lactuf«
tnvolvad in tt>a Lactura Notaa 9n
»o tha mmhy atudantt who h«««
f^oim antf providing us wi^
Mia — Mi^ ■! 1 1
^^v *w^acHHa vouf
our continued fiMMfi .
•Wiciant studant aarvto*
*■*•*• • P«««Mnt aummar and
LICTURE NOTES CLASS LIST
Spring 76
^'^^^^ to »*»«nk all tfmaa
^ iMlMid a •p«:iai tfiHiiM
^^ purchaaing tf^
ornagatiVa
-^ *'»*y •»» vital to
our affona to provida a mora
II Ma you noMt Fan m Lactura-
— LECTURE NOTES
1
• OB ARUM,
«Mair««i
rw AMM
'« AMiWt
•■hrJ
'M aSMWi
•"ifr*
'« tpMan
•Suriet
'on ifcoto.^
1*
no
'* * 11.
• ta
wtar
'• OMiM«l
ry la
'« Okothm
rytC
rylC
^m n-ii ._.
'M OwMw
>yfiA
•|W«
■H"
iHwkii
(ConttiNMd frea Fsf c 3)
frmm would go to the com-
munity to leek funding on iu
own while the other half would
be incorporated and continue
to recave NIDA fundi direct-
Gerald DeAngclis. project
director, formed such a cor-
poration from half of the pnyr-
r»m. Health Care Delivery
Services, Incorporated, in anti-
cipatioj* of receiving direct
funding from HlDA.
However, according to
Glenn Smuta, Chieif of Region
-E- for NIDA, the laibeit
development it that the gram
money will probably not he
i»vcB to DeAngelif* corpora-
tion but witf inatcad be tran».
fcrrcd to the Sute of Califor-
nia, which will subcontract out
^Jic funds much hk^ UCLA
4oai now
"If everything is oUy, well
^c It. said Stewart Snyder
director of the Suie Agency of
Narcotics and Drug Abuse.
When asked if funds would be
given to DeAngehi* corpora-
tion through the sUte, Snyder
»*k!, "no comment.**
I>eAnfBlis also refuMil !•
eomment.
Terence Feuerbom, director
of the Office of Contracu and
Grants here, told of the con-
troversy surrounding poMhif
r*nt recipicntt "There was a
lot of footwork behind the
«»««,- he said According to
Feuerbom, there was a dinire
within NPI to get DeAngriS
out of the picture They had
quesnons about his leader-
ship, Feuerbom said.
As reported in an earlier
i>mi} midin article, during the
)«r that DeAngdi. took over
••director the program's em-
ployee turnover rate was SO
per cent It has now heen
reduced to between 4(M5 per
cent. The regular employee
turnover rate at NPI it ip.
proximately 10-12 per cart
The direaor of the metha-
done program of the Los
Angelei Suicide Prevention
if ^ that the Univcnity
T^ MMtaat to give DeAi^slit
tiie gram They tried to find a
|^**^ement for DeAagehs, b«t
he stn^i^ with the Univer-
wty. and until recently, it
^IIUM wouU dtiwly get the
WIUA grant.
Campns^vents camtons
/
wiM bt mrtmmi noon tomorrow mC
Qowoo t3<0 Ffti
--fji Mip lUrvT wiH is spso Ml
fc*in durmg tMils M tis pi»^
•ook THo fmtkm rmm ail lo
Qpon until 2 §m. circiilotion and riitomcs
••« M if loNsws 1:46 aw wiiniqm Juna
fNOmpiR. JIHW J^ a'4v~0HHtMaRllllt JlMF
tundtd studtnt wntttn publication it
availoMs frot^at Itit Acliarman information
dtsfc m Sdioil of NMc HoaNb iSZ
and StyiSfit Nsami Sorvico ^
should iu6mit
to
Saoa If Voan. is sooking itudont start
and laMNy memm toasrvs on ait Com-
Mio and inu
ttta Comoiiaoo. c/o tht
Murphy 2147
Tar. sho«^ing points of inter
wt on the contral campus ? pm today m
ScfNMtnOofQ lobby
—TsMid MM MMai. wtll be ptrlormiO
4 15 pm today and 8 pm. tomorrow Mac
gowan Hall
-wm ilfftl music and sooqs by^Soa
cran Sidhe. 5 30-S30 pm idinner S2S0)
tomorrow International Saolonl Canter
— ar naMa Vahi^ Has. wHh Larry
Groce of Junk Food Junkie fame and
ottars. 9 pm. tontght Hednck Hall FirMMt
lounge frm tor NoiriGli Hall naMaHs
with meal cards: oltars /donations n-
quastod
pcfc up your cortifiGMss
and pms^ the Doon of SluiaMs office
Mufphy 2224
'"v'WOf PRipia Laapii Ssli. lumpio is
a Filipino cultural disl) Along with the sale
.s foaiurod f itpmo imoos mi lostivities.
^^ y-l.pw. laaiy. gpMio Wail
n ""^J!'? *"?* Sfomaad by itte Social
Oance Club. wHI be hold 8 pnwn.dmght
tomorrow. Womens Gym 200 BaMrorMn
and disco dancing will be featured re-
frosiments provided dress is semi formal
—iiiy • Wmm ms ioip aaia MMaiar
Oystrspil. 11 am-2 pm now-June 11. Bruin
Mialk 7/11 stofos are donating over a) per
cent of Ifa salos to Muscular Dystrooiv
■d ASM la PrMMMlBl
~PkA up a Proiact Awafwass
voter mlormatiQP ieaMst available on
campus now
^~^J*"" *""*k. field work oxperience
mrough community service and looming
Academic credit available student de
veiops own )ob description with asa«-
»nce Vjsu Kinoor SN or call 825-3730
Summer lote and sflponds now available
. /•*— fMHaai 8-10 pm every Wedfiiliay ''
and 8 30-10 30 pm every Friday Inter
national Student Center 1023 Hitoard Froe
— WMaiilpi. information and diadins
on extramural funding for gradaaW stu-
cJ«nts and aootioctorafs are available In
me Fellowships and Assistantshipl Sec
««on Murphy 122i
-laernsliipe. iaareiMiMi ipportaeitiet
.ind local volunteer positions are available •
m-(m°^^ WPO Ackerman A213 or call '
Of
|0in OECA as a
'"sumer investiaator Visit Kerckhoft 31 1
o^cajl §25-2820 Volunteers are also
'^••iod for environm^tai and lood oro^
lects
-Til lovia
fium
slarrino Laolie
Howard and Merle Oberon will be
pm June 7 Melnitz 1408 ^ree
CMCEI7I
-Jii SMeeraaa UCLA student ct,
arrany and pianist will present a „.„«w,
•••th nrciooai. noon, today Schooniorg
auditofiuni Froo _^
^^^ jjM^ •srtaies. will perform two
one-act oporas by Puccim. 8 pm tonight
Juh« 8. Sdioonborg Little Thoater $1 for
UCLA stygswtt. faculty suiff and senior
citizens C for siior students. $3 oonerai
Admission
;-:i
(Coattna«d from Page 21)
Previously, Cobean attended
Kandolph-Macon College m
^irginuu where he was music
and drama critic for the cam-
pus newspaper. It was through
this post that he received aa
offer to be equipment numaftr
lor the Allman Brothers Band
He mlaiad
lor-in-chief of Weuwind in
February when Larry Oakner
graduated The other members
of Wesiwinds, suff are Audrey
Csendes, poetry editor. Braoe
^«yne, theatre aru editor,
Karea Rnhhiaa, art editor and
David Crrovet, fiction editor
^estwtnd can be obuined
on June 7 and 8 at all campus
libraries. Brum Walk, the Pub-
licatiom Office (Kerckhoff 1 12)
Qffiae. la
_ j^^— > miMrt with on
3^ by soniofs m ia UCLA
•••Til aiMag 810.mi t:30'pi'
Hoyce auditorium Fri
^ riaia ar ^
m taculty ttaff and _ •—— , .-i
• poi
Isctiifi. WIN be
CM- mooto 3-5 pm
TNiriiiys."issii;ijr **" •"
-CisM QiiL 8 10 pm oeory
international Ttiidoirt CaalBr
wowier 9c04
^ ^•^ ^^^m I oMooeiors IS spSR to m
1" »e UCLA COOMMiW.
^ 5 AckeramiiJ
. __^ Laie will be dMaaoM
by tyit differem protsssofs. • am-nooo
•f u2k i!22Tl2?*" * ■» ^^
FranTlao •^ *"*** ^ ^ ^^^
-Tboigii m ae PsvaapaMM a ^im.
3» pm today Franz 1280 " ^^^
Q.Z:'*"V**'"***" candidate for Judge
Superior Court office no 1 will — -•
'*°^l*^'^o^y Meyerhoff Park
lis AM Plar lo • Ti
Ni CM, wM Haa to pim loi aeiMios
"—'V^ tomorrow Fron^ 22SiA
a-in^ZT ••^^^* ^^w. wm nolo
> rr Pg? tooay Ackeniaa
^«^piw. tomorrow Ackerman 3614
7-0 Ml every Thursdoy
"^ Cenr
Internaboiltl
Haa
3617
^enter
Ackerman
-Tie
3 pm today
and family piannmn 1^15 pm tomorrow
« 32*082
f^ June 7 CHS
« 1^1 ' ■ " ■■'■' opee GaHOHNi
iX pm tomorrovt Muiphy 1312
2 30
Th,s ,s the place for R,b LoverM
By for the Best «,bs we v tried m L A
Hl*»'4iid E iiAmir<
COMPLETE DINNERS
Casual Dming ♦'<>'"$2.75|
HARRY'S O^IN PIT RRO
M34 N ctisciNT HjicHTi irt simrr i^^^
>0 W.nuies U(...vn ixf.sei Blvd ft, ,
International Student Center's ■
CourKil on Programming
presents
Life and Play in a Traditional
African Society
Slide Lecture on African Festival Drarna
by 'vk:^)
J. Ndukaku Amankulor
Lecturer University ot Nigeria
Doctorate Candidate in Theatre Art UCLA
Thursday, June 3rd
8 9 pm
Admission Free
At: International Student Center
1023 Hilgard Ave., Westwood 825 3384
6 30 f?v»«» Jewry Shabbat
e 30 Service mcorportmg readings from
Soviet Jews
7:30 Russian Dinner
8 30 Music. Slides of the Soviet Union, and an
opportunity for American and Soviet Jews
to share their experiences in the United
States and in the Soviet Union
Friday. Jun« 4 900 Hilgard
For .»>^KK»J74^»^^^^ ^^ HhJcouoc.. .. iir. .
FOREIGN
STUDENTS
Foreign students wishing per-
mission for off-campus summer
work and Extension of Stay should
submit applications to OISS. 297
Dodd Hall by June 8. 1976. These
applications will be taken to the
Immigration Seivtce by a member
of the OISS staff
r
■■\
WANTED
Directors for the SLC Freshperson
Internship
eie
ram
1-2 students are needed to direct this important program that olaces fre«;hn*»r««r.c
in the Offices of SLC commissioners and staff. Requirements for t'h J obf^^^^^^^^^
good organizational, administrative, and communication skills Also the aoo^ cant
Should have a general knowledge of student government and m^st poses^fh^^^
willingness to accept responsibility u inusi posess tne
Inoiv^f *°"^ ^'^ stipended and will require soiDe summer commitment
Prt^Slr^lnVr? TT'^ r^ '* *^^ information desk and the sTudTnt Body
Presidents Office which are located on the third floor of Kerckhoff Hall
Deadline is June 7tli at 5:00 p.m.
iiif«li'
S^aiBuL
cited in Rolfc 430-" There is
no charfe for the puolication
9
i
'i
Tennis love af^ir .
TIk avenge work week for
myielf it 60 hr» and if wc
travel to a tournament it gets
much greater Along with
coacteng Tin alio the Atiiiunt
Recreation Director and that's
a full time job. I just don't
have eaoufh time"
^~Taiina graduated from UQ
LA and received hit Mafirn at
LUNCH COCKTAILS DINNER
For a delightful change of pace and a
unique experience in gourmet dining visit
AKBAR Cuisine of India
Specializing in the most authentic curries,
kababs, biryanis and tandoori preparations
(Cooked in a special Indian Clay ov^n)
Relax in the exotic atmosphere of our beautifully
decorated cocktail lounge
Special party room for your convenience
?n Daily from 11:00am to 11:00pm,
All major credit cards accepted
Reservations (213) 822-4116
SgOVVashrngtan Street in Marina Del Rey
(C unlinued from Page 21)
The program, in the begin-
ning, was different than today
Practice was held only iwict a
week. whK a hmtted schedule
and a small budget. As a com-
parison, when Zaima first
AUcted, hit team ||Aayed fiwjo
•IX oMildiet a you- fhii §immi
they played in 2J.
lut with the mcreaaiag ^*' State LA in recreation
»opiiiftication came greater Mlministration. As an undcr-
denMHids on Zaima^s time and fraduate at UCLA he was a
the burden has become upe ^>^ athlete,
roue** -I was the big I M athlete on
camiMii and I played ail the
^VvS-^ •. •P**^ My teams WMsUy did
I I— fP • very weU. In fact, I used to
X I IL^ • work out with a lot of the
collegiate teams, but I didn*t
want to devote all my time to
practicing. My one big regret is
that I didn't go out for the
frosh basketball team (ICarcem
CONTINUOUS show: iJ?r ^^^^^'' freshman
getting more rckpcct from the
other women. It took away the
onus of being a omb coAch for
a female team.**
i*f tenure has been full
of memoraMc evenu, but hit
moat cherished memory u of
Jil^lf73 tdun. whjch finished
ninncr-up in the Nationals.
"It was something you*ll
probably never see again,**
remarked Zaima **We led the
towf— ifnt WL of the seven
days it was played before
COMEDY
STORE
A
»
OF COMEDIANS
EVERY NIGHT
• 2 Locations •
8431 SUNSET
1621 WESTWOOO
275-7641 656-6225
477-4751
Ain»ric»n t«p»— ♦•BamiAww»m»i<|
The transition from athlete
I to coach was not completely
• smooth as Zaima was a male
• coach teaching female athletes
• •'Back when I sUrted. the
• other women coached were
• against men ooaduag women^s
^•^Jlcams. But m the simsms ^
I ©ur program grew. I sUrted
When school is over . . .
tell your professors and fellow studento
wRere to go!
_f-.
.-»
.■Hgr j
1
T
PARIS
LA-Parls-LA
Iniing to Trinity on the last
day. But the amazing thing
was the Trinity's and Arizona
State's (who finished third)
teams had all been recruited,
while our girls were playing
just as a sidelight to going to
school. That year the tcam*s
ayerafB GPA was 3.5 as the
girls were the traditional classic
student athletes."
Although Zaima has been
instrumental in the advances of
the women's program, he has
definite opinions for its con-
tinued growth
-We need to get adequate
facilities on campus," said
Zaima **The biggest shortage
OB the campus is the tennis
courts. It's really tough 'to
share court time with the men.
You begin to lose your iden-
tity.
Mixed matches
"I also hope that there will
soon be mixed matches. It
would take a lot of cooper-
ation with the men's depart-
ment and I think there's a little
fear over doing something with
the women." ' -
Zaima will continue to work
on campus with the rec depart-
ment an<j| also wah the teaa m ■
aasittaiit coadh. "^
As former' player Godwin
said **Bitl*s biggest asset is that
he really cares. He wants peo-
ple to do well genuinely for
themselves. I've learned a lot
^rom
On Trans International Alrtines
June S6-Aug. 9
June 6-8ept. 12
Aug. 3-Sept. 22
$429.00
tf you are a UCLA student, staff, or faculty
mmfibm, you're special to the Civil Aeroneu-
tice BMrd You're eligible to book on flights
.rH)body else cenf
That's because these are affinity flights which
maens you don't have to book two full months
in advance
• Imrml (w*th EXPO) sclcarman union. 825-122i
10-4
«•
FnM lamly iffv'
Making UCLA football a
*^family affair^ is one of the
foeli for Jerry Long, Bruin
athletic promotion manager.
The family aspect of foot-
ball is bemg emphasized for
the parents and relatives of
Bruin students.
Season tickets are being
offered for $31.30 for the «|^
Bruin home football gaoMl
in the family section. Youths
18 and under can get seasoa
tickets for only $13.00 in
adjoining scau to the adults
The regular scaaoo ticket
{Mice is $46.50 for all inii.
vidvals. The family section
IS located in the west end
zone. The scats are im-
proved over past yeais mmot
the Cohseum football field
tiAs been moved 20 yards
closer to the weal end.
The *tamily affair^ in the
west end zone is set for the
(Sept. II), Air Force (Sept
25), Stanford (Oct. 9, the
Pai>* opeaer), Washington
Sute (Oct. 16) and Oivgon
(Nov. 6). By pirrJMMiug ttit
•family affair" package.
Ik -
1 1 III— a^miiiu,..
• ••••• •••«••••,«
* •*•
>■* > •'•♦f#. Tt^s
the use game on Nl
ber JO, bet tke tickeu fer
Hm fune are in the
eoi.
For further infoi
about the family
ticket plan and other ticket
metteq, wmt the UCLA
Ainietie licket Offke at
8
J
Coadi to resign
Zaima has farewell at Nationals
By Gregg L. Raaaee
DB Sports Write,
When the UCLA women's
tennis team travels to Salt
Lake City neat week to com-
pete in the Nationals, it wUl be
the fuial time Bili Zaima ac-
Gom^amm the team as head
coach.
?*!!? '^** wmounced hu
fWfe«tion and aiaiatant coach
Gail Godwin wiU ukc over the
reins beginning next season
In his five years as head
mentor, Zaima has led his
teams to a 51-12 record, won
four of five Southern Cahfor-
nia leafue championships and
had a second-place finish at the
JHationals in 1973. He tutored
such outstanding players as
Linda Lewu, Karen Dawson
Godwin and present perform-
ers Cindy Thomas and Paula
Smith.
ZaiMM pioneer
More imporuntly, he was a
pioneer in women sports,
uking the tennis program from
Its "embryonic" sugc to the
hig%jMicces5fuJ program 4t 4*
today.
**! always wanted to suy m
recreation," reflected Z!aima
"The position at the (UCLA)
Rec Center opened up and I
grabbed Hrr At that time, the
position also included coaching
the women^s tennis tceoi So
you might say I almoal m-
herited the job "
(Continued on Page 26)
O
[05
Ui
ttr»d of yMterday't hair?
tiAIR) TCDAT
For whats happening now
ityling for m^f% and woman
Jarry Radding's Jhirmacit products
For appointmant call 478-6151
tuas. thru sat.
3.00 . OFF first hmkrcuX
with this ad
1105 Glcndon Ave Wvstwood Village
yCLASTUDENT
em Zmkmm
McTear
« I sX^ i I
headed to UCLA
"»««-'■•
ly Paul Farhi
DB Sports Writer ..4^
The announcement that high
school sprinter Houston Mc-
Tear will enroll at Santa Moni-
ca College this summer could
mean the Florida track sur
might be able to attend UCLA
within two years
According to sources at San-
ta Monica College. McTear
and Sanu Momca track coach
Carl Merritt agreed on the
sprinter's enrollmem at SMC
several weeks ago The official
announcement of his enroll-
mcnt came yesterday.
McTear will hve at an apart-
ment near the school and will
receive financial assistance
from Phillip Fairchild, a weal-
thy Pasadena horse owner
Fairchitd reportedly is a big
supporter of UCLA athletics
No official plans for McTear
to attend UCLA presently
exist.
The 1 9>y ear-old senior and
his high school coach at Baker.
Florida Will WiUoughby. visit-
ed UCLA briefly at approxi-
mately the same time Merritt
and McTear first agreed on his
enrollment at SMC At the
time, a spokesman in the ath-
letic news bureau said that
McTear's UCLA visit was only
a stopover on his way to a
track meet on the West Coast
That report proved erroneous
when McTear participated in
the Florida 1 sUte high school
championships in Winter Park,
Florida, the same weekend
McTear fcpaiiedly will ukc
only a mathematics course
when he begins school at
^W^» nopad summer session
in August Merntt is a math
teacher at the ichool as well as
track coach Merritt also will
reportedly retire from teaching
•f^Cr Ihf nrit full trhool yasr.
T he schoolboy sprinter, who
ran a world record 9.0 m the
) 00-yard dash last year, will
""»»ot pjcieve a diploma from h iy
hi|h school in Florida He 1$!^
JfTigible to enter a i^alifornia
Community College such as
SMC — ^caysc he is over l»
years of age
To enter a four-year Uni-
versity McTear must finish 56
semester credits and mainuin a
20 grade point average
McTear will attempt to
make the American team at
100 meters for this summer's
Olympic Games in J^ionlreal
G A CnWfr PROVIDED TO CU«RFNTtt^
REGISTERED UC ( A STUDENTS INARFAS
■Lanrtlord Ten,»rw m^.,..r.n{
•Contracts
-Hr^SiJI he j.^)mjgj:t]ng in the
lis trials m fcugcne. Oregon
from June 19-27
Earlier this year. McTear
signed a letter of intent to
attend the University of Flor
dia He later decided to relin-
quish his track and football
scholarship at Ftonda in order
to attend school somewhere in
CaJilornia Since he signed the
intent letter, no four-year Uni-
versity IS allowed to recrun
him under NCAA rules
and ()•»,.
«Hours:
i
MOM Tupq wrrf
THMRS ^ . Hi
P f T I
9 *i a* - J p
'n' » appi wrtfriit'nt nf*#
408 KERCKHOFF
^t> Of H^s 2hA^
OATSUN
VOLNSMACCN
397 4577
PARTS
SU^^MEK KOUS/NQ
^ THe^
lit s s.
WEEK DAYS
6 am - 6 pni
SAT
9 afT) - 5 pni
UU •fWvMM
limcoln Riva
Maiw ir
CO
Wa InvHa AM UCLA. ttu0«nts A StaH to take
advantage of our apaciat discount prices on foreign
car parts and most acoaaaorksa Just show your ID
Card & we will give you one of our discount cards —
FREE of coursaf
i ^ i ? « f W 9 W9^9^ 9'9^m
PIOFESSIONAL GtADE TOOLS
only I/* per Mt
Compart our sit-HmHrrnxs fcrr FuSi
^DormS
DOUBLE $283.00
SINGLE 373,00
$134 ta $166
165 to 180
Rear Deck Luggage Rack
the^fy fin— t
MERCCOCS
AvailaMa Uat
VOIVO
UCLA ia offering 2 alx week auwier
seaalona. We are offering super- low-coat
coed houail^g, oimed and run by and for th«^
students. Residents work 4 hours a week.
Room are ainglea, doubles and trip lea/
Food Is fo^ and the people friendly. Stop
on by and we'll give you the grand tour.
Right neiKt to canpus .
Write pr call;
University Coa^siative
Housing Association.
300 Landfair Ave.
L>Aj Calif. ^0024
2n 47^1^33
OPCL
Q^
^ t'
WAKITED
i
%0
m
Director for SLC
Administrative In-
ternsiiip Program
An extremely talented individual is needed to
direct this program that places many students
m the offices of administrators where student
input can be insured through the interns
participation. Those who apply should posess
good communication, organizational and
administrative skills.
The position is stipended and will require
some summer commitment Applications are
available at the information desk and in the
student body presidents office which are
located on the third floor of Kerchoff Hall
Applications should be submitted by 5 00 on
June 7th in the Student Body Presidents Office.
By m« Studani Lcgitlai.M Council/ Admini.ir.irve Vic»-Pr«
use favored at Philly— ^
:/:
lets you see
■ yoiir dates before
I you choose them.
I
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I
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On videotape The best method
yet invented to meet people
Great Expectations
removes the awkward
juid threatening aj^pects
of the blind date' You
make all the decisions
yourself Not us Come
in for a free viewing and
we'U prove it
Vgreat
EXPECIAnONS
The way to meet people in LA
' 475-8797 OpenTdays.'
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(Continue froMi Page 34)
P4C-«'». failing to clear 16-10
Tuliy's primary opponent ts
Earl Btll of Arkansas Stale,
the defending NCAA champ
Mid the world record holder
(IH-7'/^) Bell broke the global
standarfl last weekend at the
US Track and Field Federa-
tion Championships in Wichi-
ta
Further challenges are of-
fered by Don Baird of Aus-
tralia and Long Beach State,
another 18 fool leaper. and the
Trojan duo of Russ Roger^i
and Tom DiStanislao.
Two late season bloomers
could also score for the Bruins
Philhp Mills ran a personal
best of 50.0 in the SPAAU 400
meter intermediate hurdles last
week, a clocking which rates as
the sixth-fastest in the nation
this year. His times have been
dropping steadily for the past
month.
Half-miler Conrad Suhr, a
freshman from Los^ Altos, has
run a best of 1:47.8 in the 800
meters to place him in the
national spotlight. Suhr was
slowed by a hip injury early in
the spring, but he seems 100
per cent now ,
Other UCLA performers at
Philadelphia arc Jeff Haynes
(8001, Jason Meisler (the 1976
Pac-8 champ in the high
jump), Bennie Myles (400),
Grant Niedcrhaus (400 meter
hurdles). Rich Bunthcr (dis-
cus), Steve Alexander (the
1976 Pac-8 decathlon cham-
pion) and the 400 meter relay
squad of Owens, Myles, Dot-
son Wilson and Orlando John-
son.
use IS the favorite at Philly,
picked to win its first team
championship since 1970 The
l^rqjans (winners, of 25 NCAJi
track titles) are enjoymg their
finest season ever. They cap-
tured the Pac-8 crown by col-
lecting a record 180 points and
won the national dual meet
title by going undefeated^
thinng j^he regular season * 7
Trojan Pac-8 winners James
Gilkes (100 and ^00 meter
trashes). Ken Randle (400) and
Tom Andrews (400 meter hur-
dles) lead use on the track
Conference champs Darrel
Elder (discus) and Tom Cochee
(triple jump) top the field men.
Gilkes and Randle are fa-
vorites at Philly as is the Tro-
jans 400 meter relay team of
Gilkes, Randle, Joel Andrews
(Tom's brother) and Mike
Simmons.
USCs main competition will
come from three other well-
rounded squads — Tennessee,
Oregon and Texas-El Paso.
The Volunteers took the title
in 1974 while UTEP captured
It last year.
Tennessee is strong m the
sprints, boasting junior Reggie
Jones arid freshman Lamar
Preyor Jones is a good bet to
take both the .100 and 200
meter sprints with his bests of
10.0 ahd 21 3 and both of Vol
relay teams could win.
Other top Tennessee per-
formers are Canadian Phil
Olsen, who is favored to take
the javelin and Ronnie Hams,
the freshman quarter-mile spe-
^Ust who had the top prep
times in the nation last year.
Oregon, as usual, is satu-
rated with distance runners.
This year they will send Matt
Centrdwiu (l500),^'Peter Spir
0500). j^arry Berfer (steeple-
chase) and Don Clary (5000)
into the long distance battles
Discusman Dave Vorhee^ is
the top Duck field performer
Others include Rich Perkins in
the hammer and Jeff Carter in
the javelin.
•RUN TRACK NOTES:
Three Bruins were standout
performers at liie Southern
pacific AAU championships in
Drake Stadium last week.
James Owcm captured the
high hurdles in 13.6, his
second-fastest clocking pf the
season Intermediate hurdler
Phaiip Mills fimshed third in
his specialty with a life-time
best of 50.0.
In the field, senior Rich
Al«iand#r
Gunthcr won the discus throw
with a best heave of 188-6 in
his final competition at Drake
Stadium. Gunther is picked to
place high in the NCAA cham-
pionships this week
Bruins alums are still doing
well in their efforts to gaia
trips to Montreal. Triple jump-
ers Caleb Abdul Rahman (for-
fnerfy Milan TifO and James
Butts have both soared over
54-7 this spring, performances
which rank them m the top
five nationally.
Former UCLAquarter miles
Bennic Brown has run 45.3 in
the 400, the fifth fastest m the
U.S. in 76 Maxie Parks has
registered a"45.6, the seventh
fastest national clockmg
High jumper Mmy Kotenik
has cleared a 7-1 m hit spe-
ciahy He now though, wears a
cast, on his arm, the resuh of
a javelin throwing a<;cident (he
was throwing, not receiving).
He had been picked to land
o«e of the thrc* U.S. team
positions, but his injury makes
him doubtful
In the professional ranks,
former Bruin John Smith ran a
44.7 440, a new pro record at
El Paso last week Smith set a
world record of 44 5 as a se-
nior at UCLA in 1972
Warren Edmonson ran se-
cond in that race in 45 2.
Earlier he had captured the
100 meter dash in 10.3 Ed-
comson also graduated in 72
;-u.^->z-:
free cap and gown, big discount on
_ ■ •
young alumni football seating, alumni
...LA alumni ass
•V and sa\.<^^
e a-^'O K
--^OOi
■i.^ I
mn
•
Summer Recreation Instructin&heduli
iL -^yuMBi
rfW^tlOB lMtv«cU4
ftit. •u»^^
!•!
ITT
>9. 12 fMM . 1
^^ ^*»t 6 IP ttMB -
••ii •• fruity /«t*rr
la en A flr«t-«<
in
tn
JUi^ 7T.aiT
mlmr
9mc%.im 1'
tlm»— orTmr94 fW
■■lOM. BiM Of cUmm It liaii«4 ^^
rirM.Mr^ to*.!,.
•mtt #.2^
kiu SArlnf
9 m
7:19 M - 8 M
I Ilea
A«uj.t/C]il tdrvn
t^Wr ^i^&tj^ IwtructioB
•Infc
■Hm
9m . 10«
Lav^s
•tuiMU Mi Pteuit^/stATf
*»«U««nt for All 9 M . 2 M cImms
f^WlhMt«d At U:l^.
» •U 5 ■ - 7 pB elMSM {f»cu»tF/__
»ni f»» i> 1^ 00
- 2
leap* ^intlqg
!*• Art
8i»rr
lai
CMtcr
10 M • 11 M
liii^ •m-12'l^ ya
aumxi
- for eklldrvn and aduiu . c»U Dorll
>'• Qm 200
I iU
1 1:
Denny Chne, Fred Sturm
and David Olbright, All
Americans on UCLA*5
NCAA championship vol
leyball team, left at the surt
of the week on a trip to
Europe with the United
States Nation4LJiAiiL
The threesome is currently
on a 10-day tour of the
Soviet Union A^ter the sta>
in Russia, the threesome will
either go to Belgium or Ger-
many for the completion of
the European tour
"Half of the team will go
lo Germany and the other
half will fo lo Belgium,''
Wild Sturm before he de-
parted -*! think It will be
-based on ^vhere particular
individuals want to go and
secondly on the fact that the
coaches want a balanced
team in each location"
Seniors Cline and Sturm
dropped out of UCLA for
the spring quarter ta_ga to
Europe and both will be
back m the fall to complete
graduation rtquirements
Olbright also withdrew fpr
the spring quarter, but ^
phomore still has two
years of playing left for the
Bruins.
*- Michael Sondheimer
PreMeds
*free advice and counsel-
ing by HDed students and a
former admission com-
mittee rep
'Practice exams under
simulated test conditions
'Tutoring, make up ses-
sions and audio tapes at no
cost
*ln depth preptMtion for
the Ajeile parts of the
test by experts in eech
topic.
'Optional eeMions for spe>
cializatfon
'Documented results of
our fornr>er premeds — Hpw
medical students
CeH (213) 479-8724
mi
1007 Broxton Av*.
Suite 20
LA, C« 90024
Tall yi lor an inMitatian tmt a
first •— i.^ rwi] I— nt J^jy H - —^^ •?**«» '^^
^^^ »i^ ?lt mU2^ :Jt!f
L
^ ^•^ %9r^ir>tf
OFFICIAL
NOTICES
FALL 1976
Of UCLA Registration IVIaterial
location listed below. ^auiy rnc Ktu cord from the prcv.ous quortcr, of
DISTRlBUnON PERIOD
7-Ai4ftasi 31
LOCATION
41 114 iAurphY
June S-August 31
Jttfie 9- August 31
June 10- August 31
ll-August 31
August 9
Sept 20-24
Sept 27-Oct 8
LEn£lCGSdu?/MAJOR
UiMleriMriiMtM, l«f mm%e% A to J
A to Z: Pre-bacteriology (;(5717) and
Boclerioiogy (25108)
A to J; Engineering (80273)
A to X- Engineering (00273) ond
Computer Science (00201)
A to Z; School of Low (84501)
Undergrodtfotcs, lost names A to O
A to O; Engineering (80273)
A to Z: Chemistry (25153) ond Bio-
chemistry (25111)
Undergroduotes. lost names A to S
A to S: Engineering (80273)
UndergroduotiDs, lost names A to Z
A to Z; Engineering (80273)
A to Z; Architecture & Urbon Plonninq
(00084, 00088. 00911)
A to Z; School of Dentistry (75219)
A to Z; Monogement (00534)
A fo Z; School of Medicine (85558)
Al not listed obove; A to Z
Registrar^ AILS packet to eHgible New, Ro-oirtoriiig studenT
Regtstrotion In person Dodd Hoi (
Late registratioa In person 1134
5304 Life Science
M26 loeiter
6730 Boelter
1224 Law
1134 Murphy
6426 Boelter
4016 WG Young
1134 Murphy
6426 Boelter
1134 Murphy-
6426 Boelter -^"
1118 Arch
10.137 Hit Sci
3371 GSM
12.109 Hit ScJ
1134 Murphy
-isr-^.
-^■-■■ag-.'.
I
STUDENT MAIL IH DATES FOR REGISTRATION/ENROUMENT:
Rnt stag*: CONTINUING ttwlMts Mil b«twMii NOON. July U Md " jji. riamun 31
SmomI Stage: NEW. REENTERING ttmimn mmll betwMn NOON. August 18 ond midafgbt
UCLA IS NOT RESPONSIBU FOR MATERIALS LOST OR DELAYED IN THE MAILS
StcMlsy CUii. R«,bti
7«-49«/IM/ Cl/14-l«/ll| ' *~
Tlw
10.««toi
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,r
^LASSIFJEDvtb
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oppoftiinHI^
wantod
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(IS J 4)
TELEPHONE SALES
3S£Lf -MOTIVATED PEOPLE TO
SEU OFFICE 4 SCHOOL SUP~~
PLIES
— 9 fVSBIVl
* tHorlHoun
MAKE $300 - $500 WEEKLY
tor UCLA
WtoyrofMMlorciiMn.
flf 1 teM ^. — ■: — ^ www* lor • mm.
mJ ^3^? •• *^ tinj •«* o# aMm-
rMourcn •ubjecto •StTS-Si'^^ •• — ^i. c^m ••rry
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(14 J 4)
wanted
MISH M«rp», ,^
fffot 11/ao/7S) and/or
CM«fiain«~
•ALf Day ^ _ ,, I, ^
y*T??! jjinlmmii w««« Call Qmnm
i (U J «t
(1i J 4)
^
tXPfMlCNCEO carlcatufv •Hist sit
jJJJ *■''■■••• County Qary (213p94-
. (tSJ4)
TUTOH
ICMOffM^d
CLASSICAL . KmH
TM toaai mi 99m{
rack A
la camaiMlfif thom to croala »*.
fy!^>: Alaa |aaa. aiuaa. A ffo«^|
JJ55*' ***** ■ Cafcaa. €r%.4m%. Mft.
LA -dUMOC-CfUTCr
STUDENT SUMMER
STOIUQE
rvpiflaiiLaa A IfMuftd.
Ffiaa ^lc«i.up A Raluni.
FOR INFO CALL
474-4a09
cxpcnicMCf o -iiiiiiiix^_ |0
poraoHol accountinv »" Hamo. ono
Car 271-7IM.
(IS J S)
SALCA. W(
wHH aaportunlty for
mofM9»monl B a
47t-t101
lal
•arago-apartaiont or baMmont or
••porato accomodation. If po«alblo
half pay. h«if .Mchong. cloanlno
•■" ' 47»-M25 Earty
„,,^ iaaAapifo. MUMCAL
I or ZZZZ— — -^ LiL'' ** (ioaa. Tod
47t.l7W.
(If J 4)
UCLA t ImifooMtTnT
nr.47S.03t3 7-10 om.
(H4.#l
•TWPCWTS oorn up to $SSS^ /j^i.
*^f"M ■"• ^4(p la taO NMni
Wo
boar •>^nonco-«oM i«o Jtf-ssss.
— I21ii>
MOVIMO In or out. Wo
»9»rtmmftH, liawaoo L
Ffoo istimoios. 4744 If 7
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Jylravol/lood mooasln* pubHtht Ms
»2J^« or oquhrolant ro<|ulrod Tol tSf.
■aa* tor mtonrlow.
(19 J 4)
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afSoa work. $2/hr. Car
27S-4S13.
Call Mr
(If J 4)
THE BOOVMEN
[OaaHty AutoSody
Aapok f aalntlng
47Ml04t
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CbWIdiiT w« pn. „.^ _
Wsat LA
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(12 J 4)
(12 J 4y
$S-^0/monthJor Blood Plaam.
Htlano PONOfi C£NTill
1001 Giyjpy AiraT Woalwood
<78-0BSl
];;2'*J50^ oM Sam Caalw Ito^^
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■•OVIt f»inoi»o#/crttle wonlMl by iww
|a|H»tmo9o,lo» Sontf rosumo sod i^ttng
XIJS^ CA. mSsT*** ***" ****^ ^""^
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iABN $S4i/iMofilte ani C4
(CaiMMMa CoNaga. Mo.) H you eani
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(12 0ir)
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for a« lypM of loba:
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T^S. EM^OYMBMT AQCMCT
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Sanica SI.
S.M.2S2.4107
■«CBf TABY/Totephono work . pp'rt
■*• parmawant. Thru tummsj aj^
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ABQCNTIMt studont coupio »»oods
ItHtTt' iT*? ^••••^•^ta of plonts to
miil !!Lff!J •••* »«4lallotlons Ei-
campany. Blaiitl^MatST^
(If J 4)
(If J 4)
477-21S3
(If J 2)
WANT $ $ $ ?
Wo can gi¥0 yoo monay. wanaty and
flaxtbility during ffto tummar months
by tailing our lamponiry aaatfnmantb
mrougbowt tha MfLA aroa If you 9m
a TYPIST. SECNETABY. ACCTIMO
CUBK. PBX OPEBATOB. KEYPUNCH
OBWUTOB, WABCHOUSCSUN. m
anyMnf alBa....Wa naad YOUf Como
•n t raMar today* No laas< Mama your
dayai Faid Hobdays' Wa ^
9.
STUDENTS &
TEACHERS
WELCOME AT
KELLY GIRL!
Men and Women Earn
extra money during summer
break while enjoying a
variety of temporary assign-
ments We provide tempo-
rary jobs for all clerical
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, WORK WHEN YOU
WANT, AS OFTEN AS
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pONT PAY US - WE
PAY YOUl
Call us 8-5 30 p.m daily or
9 am - 1 p.m Saturdays.
KELLY SERVICES INC
(If Olrl
AUTO INSURANCE ' l
MOTORCrCLE INSURANCt I
LIOHTlSuMjSuiSSsWVICt I
•^ 11S1 I
i.
Au«o.LMa-Hoa»oo«nocs 9n4 Bontol
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*T7.SiS7. t7t-t1f 1. ***** ^
(If Qin
MCCNCAL SCHOOLS AftBOAO
Hav«ng admissions probloms for
modical school''
WE CAN HELP VOU'
for information, wrila to:
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S43 Daway Aaa.
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AUTO InaurpMpo:
-yiyf. fTS-tysj m
woi/ir»c?
ralaa for
7S72.
(ISOir)
ARROW INSURANCE
ISL?.*''*'^'*" ^" • L.A. 11744
wllab*ro - 477 ••t2f. t7S.2SS7. WBB
;o .^y-roipN,' ra.aV.S;;;rSia^
•alapliooo YoNow ^-' - ^^
&v ift poor- 7 doya p npJST*
CAMPUS aCBVICCS
Fullerton
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Los Angeles
Beverty Blvd
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714-879-9762
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(1SJ>)
'h-rOH EXPRESS
MOVERS
BALHTr Pm lajr la Sopuiy. V
2 m
Of^Bf
-1t12 ar Pf«d
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Blch
H-:
■ojitajusj'
mom
^CtASSIFIE D^ D
— rvic— gfter^
kay#i
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Mairiaad Btod. SuMa f 12. ^— ohlj
4t1-4St1 •
Hf Olr)
ESCAPE SFF TMF
BECOBDING CNOINEEBtNG
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GOLD A OBAMNMY AWABO WINNER
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LIMITED ENBOLLMENT 4 MORE
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If M 20
A^2 («Mb f KPO)
WORl P
travol
A ^M « I
LAST CHANCF TQ BOOK
ASUCLA Travel Servk:e
HaOMLV iiTfUlil
UCLA CAanor ftt^m
•ri net tee Mt IS
til iUflt.
lor cancawag iMfi may
bo acca^lad up lo Iha daia of
A Chartar
CHABTtBS and
an Pan Am 747 !•
a
from hundrada of avaMabla
thaaa aai
^ LO« ANOCLIS
BBorasaiONAL CLua
^213) 879-9121/(213) 477-1142
TOC CHARTER FLIGHTS
TO EUROPE
(Lou of Othecsl
LAX-Amsterdam-LAX
l^l%^t a OapMiuio • of
(If Olr)
Mm Pries TOC
WRITES- Roaoarchor PhD oftors holn
taNh aaeial-bohovlorol scloncs rosoarch
papava. Jdy 4t9-40f7
(If J 4) JZZi^^
• • • • • • • • • • • • e • €
RIDiNG LESSONS
BBiilanli-Fpctdty f tmlStt Slall
•A.M.t A A»afo,,d r»a»i»ts«t«fcll.hm««i
- snO artvalas. clill«fMi 4
f MfMng 4a4-a7t1
Ooy
-1114
CLASSICAL OuBar
0lnnlng thru adaanu
CaM Craig. 7S3-5121 or IH ttOt
(If J 2)
ELECTBOLYSIS: Unwantad facial «
ELPordat
B7Qa-$
EL^TiOi
L17132
7112
0717a
LtttSt2
• 15-7 12
S * * "4
6
4^12 7 'OS
•/m^9n4
7/ti-7'tf
■ 'nn 10
M
^ U-a.24
A'oa-a/or
BOH ia 16
9 aa 10/tr
ALSO ANNOUNCtfS^UIMSEwl
ACADENIC YEAB FLIOMTSII
taia-77 'ntniBiia a L.A./aans.
»rt/l|»iuf>. Momrik P«.c« ^msi
11C75
12C75
15C75
1SC7S
22C76
23C76
27C76
30C76
Juno 21 11
Jun«2l 12
Juno2S 5
Juno 29 10
July 5 B
Julys 9
July 8 4
July 19 4
$429
$42^
$429
$429
$429
$429
$429
$426
37f
•8/aO/Ts.^2vr7 10.
• »7t.-a?, 77 to
» 22 70 .«/2l/r7 f
Mint 17
Juns»
July 2:1
C I E E STUDENT TRAVEL (477-
UCLA EUROPE
CHARTER
SPECIALS
LOWEST FARES
t12S Osposit roautrsd par parson
Llmltsd spoca. Sooli no« Ptaaaa try!
and book to days prior to dapariura
•afa aiathod. Froa consultation Ms
Lucia. 1422 Waatwoad SI. 477-2193
(14 Otr)
HAIRCUTS t3 by
>aamlngour
ff7-4Sf1
halrcuttara
Baul McOaafPf^
(14 Olr)
ISC
SUtMNER
yauraam „ .
4« 4-S. iSS-lttt
la O
il
at
tli J 4)
J^UTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
Rafuaod? Too Hi9ii7
Low Monthly Paymanta
6TUDENT DISCOUNTS
•or Kan
TOURS A TRAVEL
Spring Summa« A Fall Chanvrs*
London
-Shannon
-Parts
Madrtd
-^fsnhfufl
-A^saais —
-Zurich
Roundtrip from 1299 OG
Mswati snd Na«^ Vorti
" " p from $169 00
Wo fnpfco ands maal for
half fora Fly to.
Aala
Middia Eaat
AlrlcA
BOOK NOW T G C FLIGHTS
CALL
lUBASlA TOUBS N TBAVELS
274-S3S1
Opan Saturdaya
ing fhm >rt M CnrnmufM^ lo' If
LA-LON-LA
LA-BBUSSELt
LA-PABIS-LA
ASUCl.m
Travel Service
nNLYQFFlCl/iL UCLA
i Charier Flight Service
I '000 fl.ght. ,o furopa th..
■ummer • O.»couni,.d Sludanf
' 'Qhlt lo Europr . Chaft^M to
and M^iico •
»' fJ' t» or> car pufcf^m^
;*' "■"';f'^ ''-^ • Slud,
'our* . C;.mr.,...>T , . ^
^-"••« Tour* . «;„
Castas • Fly dnv- Eurapaan mf
••mi.nti • Mini Tours • Hot*
•Tiodat.on • Mortal Informa
• »nternaf.onal Sludanl ip
..-^^ * ^'^ *'•"*' counsHing
tXPO TravH Library
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING'
f/lt-t/Oft
4/1f-t/M
t/2t-4/0f
|42f
t42f
t42f
RLUS PBANKPURT. ZURICH
HAWAII . . .
(psrSdl NaSfie)
LA HONOLULU ISM ons VMM an
I A «..v-- . ., I . tiaa two MNM^. •
4'i>i M«u< atto avail
MEXICO...
MAZATLAN air A lodf fr ftttJt
NEW YORK...
^•^ «a*«tjrauPdlnp on TWA »r Iltt.tr
FLU8 Car Bonlalt Laaalng. Brtf
rall/Eurall paaaoa.Accomoda
tlont Studant Fllghta withlft
Europa/Aala. IntoriiatloiWM Sid
>1S0CL4/*
If l-ONOOW from LAltnJimSi
•♦ Ona way t200 00 P^nrty
A74-77t0 daya/
At
f22JSl
found
xy \m Om, low
^Mr low fSfMi to etwow fbr «
ir TV • campmo loun • tiuOy
E^paekag*'
• Orwmana
LOST Otamaad rlof m __ _^
lat Fadaral Sank Oroat aantlmantal
474-tt74
(17/2
travol
rSC also runa locat arva lourt
by CM and Owa al minimurrt cosf
BfTBBMATIONAL SWEDISH
UNIVEBSITY
•"•amaaaofi Swadtsn Uniwafsity/umwarany
Of Lund •■ offar.ng Summar and Spnnfl
Couraas i97e-77 if you ara ti iiijj ,„
aiaodish L.t. and Lan94M9a Architactura
Ci^'Sr..^^***^ Lrtaratufa and Drama
aocianaalfara or Family Poimca contact
9 6 Dally
• • • t
(23 J 4)
•^CIAL lara lor group laur lo Talpal
* Hong Kbnt In sufnmar lima For
JUlit^"*®''^"**' P»oaaa call 212-
(22 J 4)
lar sala. youthlara
I. t7t-3M1
(22 J 4)
NEW STUDENT TOURS
JAPAN
3 WB«ks
f^t^ SS-July IS, 1976
July 1 /-Augusts, 197i
II or A-213
•ftXPO
Ta ..A
LAI- AH 7/tf«^
LON tR 7/tS.tO/OB
JX 7/13.a/24
■R ^/ 11-4/28
LAJi- "^ •/aa-s/12
wia •> ^^a4-a^i2
42 7/tM«^
•3 TTSMiSI
64 7/IIM/12
97 •/oa.a^
M •i1»-a/24
LAI- Wr/oa.a^3o
A«t CN liyAJkl\%
LAI- CJ
nu Ej 7
JX 7'17t/t3
•a M7a/2*
uu- iLi 7/ot-a«i
JNR EJ y^y^^nk
[HAWAII 14 2 «a^.
NYC 1 2 3 waam
ORIENT Many daias . . , . . .
ICorttaLi ASTrA^for ovar Itt 0(
w'tr> dapariuraa from L A tan Franciico
?*i!!i*** ^y?"- **^ ^"^ Waah.noion 0 C
Chanar rsf laauHa 46 day advanca booii<ng
prica auOfMrt to 20% inciaaaa
I SUPER AM?FARES
I NEW YORK. n»ghtcoach lrom$lM
VOUIH. fcuropa 1 yr lfondli7
|APEX.??-4S aodayadv hook far l»oa#Mt
TAHITI SUPER DEAL %xn
ORDEB NOW-
TBAIN A FEBBY TICKETS. CABS.
CAMBEB BENTALS. BAILPASSES
INTBA-EUBOPCAN STUDENT
CHABTEBS
^ tfCCIAL RIVER OFFER
4/2l5/» LAS \«OAt COLORADO RIVER
RATTINO OaAND CANYON incl 3 nii««
''Old 3 days rafting w/gaar 4 aiaais dmn»r
aa tranaaanatimi %\mu usi
14 sat
• 449
19 4»
4i9
11 4ii
14 419
• 419
• 419
r 499
»* 419
• 4»
9 4ib
• ^
9 4^1
449
499
9 449
9 *»»
19 •'t
''omt199
from 1199
from 499
r flighlt.
TRAiiL COUMSELINOI
^••LaS/S? ANYTHING YOL
WANT TO KNOW ABOUT
"HAVELf
^ffarad
BIOEBS-
CaP Radiy
(2SJ4)
TF^Aa. SERVICE
OBIVN4Q lo
HI or port way Sharaasi
(3f J4)
tutoritm
WRteo A.212 (adBl EXPO)
"" ■-'^ 1
lati
tSAT BBSS CnitBBS
LSAT t ala-hour
Ttaaaaia.
d lar Sio
pivoa ao
fyf 4S7-1S12 2122 W Olyoiplt BWd.' j»f Baal
la
(22 Olr)
271.S214 Tuaa.. Thura.. m M
la Law Saa>di. Baa 1S27
(24 J 4)
i'»\ ry^gs
SUMMEB CHARTERS
rv^. _ ^ ^O 12 WEEKS
ONE-WAY FLIGHTS IN EUROPE
AVAILABU
DAYS S3S-7SS1 EVES S2S4728
WBfTN4Q ¥mU^ TBBM P^.^. .
SfiS. DISSERTATIONS ALL SUB-
JECTS. WRITING CDITINO RS—
SEABCHINQ. TUTOBWK2 SY PBOPBS-
SIONAL WRITES. 2Sf-f471
(24 J 4|
^foftch Dapt 4M-174t j
1*4 J 4)
TOURS
tOWCaal
Parla. Madrid, Zurldi. Maw
d Haaaf. ^m d9lBl aal 474-
Stll (days). 47S.1Sn (oaaa) Wa Hao
l22Qin
CARS Hi
BENT OB BUY
TO
SSTUOENTS
EI CATALOG
^^^ n
JAMAICA s dayn
ITALY 15 dayt
LON aAa AMS 15 days.
MEXICO 9 days
HAWAII 4 day*
aiOCNTENNIAL 9 days
NEW roRic crrv 9 day*
*ont i shorf. budpi
far «aaaa«4da taws. sfMsas
1 4 MlBmaaaaal aaaaant.
PLY iuropa Mila vacation Ona wav
B^S4t0.tt IfiWSl^ aiaaiw
(22 4 4)
BUBOPE
aad NYC fltt Ma|er
(212)272-
LSAT. ORf. liCAT. GMAT
alt suaiacts Raasonabia raioa A.
Maodat Idueadan Canlar I73t Siaol-
wood 475 S1t3. lOtTi Vanica 427
t474
«S4 0tr)
• ^VW#R9
Of Olr)
•om %m\
OaCN M# 19-4 ALL TiAa
•AVt Monoy m Porta - July - it nda
camoHrtor-Aodroaai f|^«|^ 47f-7SMi
•♦Wr 4 pm. "-^ — .
(23 i 4)
LSAT. oSiar laat
M 4. Mr MU mi 479-4444I
ITHANK YOU UCLA FOR
rOUR SUPPORT DURING
TNI YEAR. HAVE A GREAT
HMmAatU^MBk^lBQl
•jABCHINa^ n^TOBHUOSY BiS
04441
<JOntin«€<t-^
i
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I* UCLA
Waiklfig
(a4 0ir)
•tens
»
PtCCOMOEPI cl«M for
•ion Junm 21 7 pm ■ rm»m,
ClI Ch^l- F,,<^ it^SCZ iX
-~* .— (24 J 4)
HMk roofc iWMic. Vour Horn./ m»n«/ out -
t94 .1 4»
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
3017 Santa Monk:* Bfvd
Santa Monica
KaltiV
yw ta^CTWlC Typist, f nfM trad
tttm woriL att/pt.. WLA 3t1^M
■ ">• »4)
jy^lWO. IBM Car,«rtlnt tai^cfrlc --
T«rm P^fS. ^MM*. f*MMIIM. Vic AIM
9hmrm
fofMibl
UCUL -
11
LUXUjnoUf 3 b.^,.^ .partm^M
M7 00 •20-4340
i^M. 47j4!S?*** ** ba^aaiwa. 4/1-
i9m r>«ri
LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION
TEST PREPAWATIOM
r2tJ4>
"nrWWO aarvlca for roports aflasra m.^
•••^. Cail BobtM inlo^'TT
m^4)
fMslonai Cam 9i0-2904
ii,:r- (as j 4>
UtJ4)
L
WALK TO UCLA
Spactout Bachaion. Smglaa
1 A 2 Badroom Aptt
'^omf Apartmanta 477-Oiti
I0d4l Strathmora Pool alavatort
•acurity 04rag« Also wim
t^f ClAL tUMMOl RATCt
^^••••-^alr Tamwa 47i-70M
540 Olanrock 543 Landfair
"^ ^10-510 Landfair 477
'•PJ- '«*y tuwAhad. paai.'
AvaMaMa Juna 30 47t.0Uf. '^"^
WAMTfO
f»«»ar no^limaS!^
at J 4
Oirough Auguat IS 2 ttartrooiw aoi
WLA $107 SO/iao 477-0110 Calh«a
(20 J 4.
»«A«C 2adfm. y.H 0 Mka from iMacft
JIOO^ iiMNlM. Juna 15 Cbuch 302
fOm %utmmmr 1
apt m Wvstwood taat/aia.. pM. i
»ncl Pool AvaM Juaa 11 471-0027
'^4'
•»n»f»g room C»o^ campus Jutm 23
Auouat 17 t27S/inon«i 473.3043
<» J 4)
^Am% wimh to tiada my aiudla ««•
loft on l«ft bartti for 2 3 badroom
aparirftont rtaar baach in L A 25 Juna-
10 Aufuot. 277-0250
(2V«J
(»J4?
Nlf D maia/fawaia to hunt for aad
2 fca<riini apt. by baach
Ona day aon^. A
» fr claaa bagms Juna 10 for July 24
Taat.
'?!*^,I ^*»"'»» bagint Juna 5 for
Jufy 10 lost
-tPEf D MCAOING court* bagins
•CAMCER QUIOAMCE
•2S-4429
^^ (25 0tD
KAV iypmg. odltlng Engltth grad
Dfaartatlon. .pocialiy TsTm paVT,,
•teaat. r—AMn—, ionmn IBM 020-7472
(25 OTR)
L*AT PWe^ COUBBE thofougH bMan^
whm raoar-^ — *— ' -^
PrognMii
LBAT 0
campua tmaM gr<
at
-■ "*■■■
_^ S*at pfaparatton
•••y prtoa. iOO. For mora
call 271 2214 Taaa. Tbura. or PrI
•^•nlnys or wrtta to Law Boarda. Bom
1027. Bavarty Hllla, Ca. 00213.
(24 J 3)
LJBPI taeralary N^.r camJSTaTr
;^;;~:;::;:____ mo^
•^tiOV. accurata IBM lyplat - roo-
^^ . ."HP 'ypMB* CaO OaaMa 3t2-
^Qtr]
LIOMTNING TYP||J?CO
ThoMt Spscialiai
PROFEOOlOtKAL COLLEGE TYPING
»^ECIALIOT
Math Tibls. 0,.fl,.m. Muaic Edll.r*g
Coun^Hmg Xsrcrng Pnnting Oindj;:
%H.M^nt ««ta« 300.319T "
r.Ji^?.***'^^^'"""'***^ bachalor
•140 Slngloa $105 Pool Hoart ol
•'— *--^ 10024 LbiBBrMli. 4
(iiObr)
MINUTES from UCLAf Slngloa. tur-
"[•"■■ •^ badroom. luxury -convo-
nkone* - rooaonabia pries 2001 So
Bapufvada 470-2120.
(20 Ob-)
SUMMBB Bataa Spacloua atnglaa.
1* 2 badrooma Larga courtyard.
S?LVV.*"^»« ••• WHahtra. 470-
SPACIOUS _, „.^
Bobartaon own iargs'unturnlah^
^TJ/*'**?_*^*"4fc»» i/li 1110 plya
(is J 4)
WOMAN noadad - aingia room In
•pacioua Brsntwood apt Avallabia
^^*mo 1-Sapt. 020-5310 tlOO/mondi.
• (2SJd>
]M_J4) , BUBLET J«dy - Aiiguat Urga fumiahad
"""" naar baacti. $171.
(20 J 4j
S.M.
470-0004. • ^"^
1130 Incl. u«.
S/IO
^^^NIOHED 2 badroom ap<.rtmontr
WaaMmod. Pimali. Own room Pool.
S/aS . S/1S 1110 Esaninga 474-JS04
(20 J4)
(20 J 4)
«MALE _^ ,^ .^
room unfurnlabad t07 50/mo Santa
Monica, naar baacti. aboiM ^ter to pm
(3tJ4)
S.M./I
1 BCOBOOM pool. t210/me Qaa. ^,mwm,
parbing Indudad avail .Utna 150« -
Sapl 7 477-2113
(20 J 41
SINGLE aublat: July/ Auguat: $140/
22* •^ Waabaoad VMago CaN 474-
NiO(allar 10 p.m.)
(tSJ4)
T.
FLASH FlnS^rs Sacratarlal Sarvica
Eicallant worit Prompt attantlon,
474!o002* ***' " "••^•^ §22-3000/
— (25J4>
Ta* OyMBy Jm^^ (BJt
i
' (MOir)
lygBIENCED typlat. Papara. ttiaaaa.
'i'artatlona. Aooiiraia. naiMnri^ya
Can Cynthia 030-0000 "^
^ (20 J4t
TVPtNQ: Faat accusala aarvlea at raa-
•ortjbla rataa IBM Salactric Tarm
SSS.) •^^•M««» •23-4210
(20 J 4»
alc^rj* ^''••••^»«»'<»"« books-days
•25-3452 avamngs 200-2004 Crtartott*
WptNQ^ 2^^
TV^tNG/odlbng/i .■^■■■■.»»,,wj,Mw
'• 120 J 4)
TYPINO Tsrm papara. ate Studant
jMjTop OuaUty Judy (B.A. EngNsbK
— (20 Olr>
TYPING at homa.
and accurals. Call
QUEST houas fumlihad. T.V..
miiMlla. MM Juna to and Augyot 5140
MMudlng utINtlaa 5 min UCLA5 aiT
•a baach. 475-0332. 475-0110 anyilT
/7a 141
•UBLET aaael>u« «i.w^ i.^ >-^
155.*???'**^ P*^ utmboa, waNi UCUL
BVOL/WllahIro 270- 0230. 0BS-11S1
- . m J 4)
SUMMER Baiaa. FumMhad ii^i^l^
?wof^iiL2? i?^'*«^ pool. utMBaa.
BVOL/WNiMaa 270-0230. 000-1301
<3«J4)
)
Hyga 3
(20 J 4)
Inc. 020-0012.
(20 J 4)
FEMALE.
•120.
LOVELY houaa In SM. 2 bdna. pbM
and Juna-Aug. 10. Btg gar-
- (20 J 4)
•20-1720. 270-1001 Oa^.
(20 J 4)
m.^^.^-z—i} *^^ P*^ tumlahod.
•2Ba/iWwBl. 304-5705
PO J 3)
Ufifumishad
MALE roommala tor tunlMiod 2 br/2ba
apt with mad atudant. Diahwaahar
IMdo. parking, t ISO/mo. 020-0747
SUMMBB 2 badraom. 2 balirAir^
dltlonlog Walk to UCLA Vataran 0
GoiNay. SlflO/mo. 472.tSU.
^ /aa 14*
HOUSE. 3 blodia Vantoa baach 2 oow-
ISTLfP?!???** •*•»«• 2S - Sapi 20.
(33 J 3)
STUOBNT
la
ai/youngohNd
BUSMBCB ayBlat 3 ^
l»OMaa. Fanoad yafd. 2
-"^ * 1 •37-0700. 021^1100'! 7
(20 J 4)
at 201-0231
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Tracksters end lougTyear at PhibdelphH
^
i
iy Joe Yogent
DB Sports Writer
"Ift been a tough year." Miid
UCLA track ittui field coach
Jim Bush iasa week, lamenting
the twists and turn& of this
bicentennial season It has
been tough indeed
Bush no kMign- smiled in the
hospitable fashion that was so
characteristic earlier in the
vcar UCLA had lost a dual
meet for the first time since
1971 and the Bryms had fin-
ished third in the Pac-8 charii-
pionships with 95 points, their
poorest showing since l%g.
But the worst is yet to come
^lor Bush and his squad They
travel (o Philadelphia on Tues-
day for the NCAA champion-
ships, at Franklin Kield (June
_ 3r5). an event thcv have won
(out times in the last decade
This year, however, UCLA is
picked to finish a dismal sixth
"Let's lace it," Bush con-
tinued, "we're not that loaded
this vcar We'll be lucky to
finish sixth " The words came
wearily from a man usually
fighting for the top spot in
-caikgiate track
Unlike past seasons, the
Bruins lacked depth in almost
every event this year UCLA
will take a squad of only 13
athletes to Philly to compete in
nwie individual events and one
feUy. Past Brum NCAA
squads have carried vas many a
twenty men
Depression, lack of spirit
and internal disorders have
also plagued the Bruins m '76
The team's best outing came
agaipst Ari/ona State in the
first meet of the ytar. But since
then, the attitudes and per-
formanoat km¥9 cr«#0d, reach-
ing an agonizing climax in
Berkeley where UCLA took
only two of the Pac-«
championship events
"There itt¥e been a lot of
problems on the team this
year," said Bush "There was
no spirit The team was trying,
but it just wasn't there. One of
the reasons was the large num-
ber of new athletes we have qn
the team They didn't know
what It meant to be a Bruin
and there wasn't enough
leadership"
Bush held a team meeting
last Wcdnesda> night, where
athletes were allowed to speak
their mind Bush fejt a lot of
the problems I were solved at
that conference "At least I'm
hoping they -were.- he added
acutiously "They spoke up last
night and I think we accom-
plished something. Everyone
should go to Philadelphia with
one thing in mind that
they're in it for individual
awards now "
ii^tding the Brum contin-
gent in the NCAA's are triple
jumper Wilhe Banks, high
hurdler James Owens and pole
vaulter Mike Tully.
Banks usually performs in
both the triple and the
long jumps, but has decided to
skip the latter event at Philly
to concentrate on his speciahy
The Brum sophomore feels he
has a better chance of making
the U.S Olympic Team in the
triple jump In last vcar's
NCAA's, Banks fioished fifth
.ip the long jump but wound up
tenth in the triple as he was
force to leap into a strong
headwind.
Banks has been the top col-
legiate triple jumper in the
nation the past two seasons^
tettmg a pMMial best of 55-r
against USC last year But
Banks seems to have had bad
luck at the end of the year
He coiilficted mononucle-
osis latt year, which nearly
kept him out of the Nationals
and then faced strong winds
when he finally got there ^
This spring. Banks lost to
Tom Cochce in the USC-
UCLA dual meet and had his
worst collefiate performance
with a best jump of only 51-4
at the Pac-8's
His main competition at
Franklin Held wilJ come from
Cochee. Ed Lemiex of Si Jo-
sephs. Phil Robbins of South-
ern Illinois and Arnold Grimes
of UTEF -
Also a sophomore, Owens
raced to a life-time best of 13.4
in the 1975 NCAA semi-finals,
but couldn't pull out a win in
the finals against Larry Shipp
of LSU Those two will battle
for the title again, but thifs year
they are joined by three
"super-freshmen" — Dcdy
Cooper of San Jose State,
James Walker of Auburn and
Kobert Qaines of Washington.
Owens has had an up and
down season, but the past few
weeks he has come on strong
He placed second to Pac-8
champ Games in the CaUfor-
nia Relays (both 13.5) and won
the SPAAU high's in 13.6
Ow€tm leems to have cured the
cadence (rhythm) problems
that nagged him earlier in the
year-
A leap of 17-10 against USC
netted Tuily the number four
ranking in the Umted States
last year His vaulting haap't
slacked off much thu ■fainii.
(he has a best of 17-9'/^) but he
finished tied for fourth in the
(ComiMMd iM Ptfe IM)
UNDERGRADUATES
-J
STIPENDEDAND
)
NON-STIPENDED
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
FOR 1976-1977
«-r
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
Applications available in President's off ice
Kerckhoff 304. INFO/Student Legislative Council
Uc la Daily
Volume XCVIIi, NumlMr 43
Ang«iM
Frtd^,
Funding reviewed amid charges of racism
African exchange target of investigation
»_
Crossroad* Atrtca is currently und*r the mwst'lgation of Vftc«
ChancoN^r g«*nson.
15 Drug Treatment
Program employees
hit administrators
By Barry C.rey and Alan MicliacI Karbelnif
DB Staff V^nitts
(Editor's noie: ihtA is The fifih ariule m a nmfimdrnf^ series mm
the three- year-old UCLA Drug Treatment Prtpgram, a $1.3
tfiilhon federal/ \ -funded rehahiiitattun program administered
through the Seuropsvchiatric institute (SFI). The Program
leaves S PI funsdiction on September 30. as its funding
relationship with the Vniversitv ends hy mutual consent Half the
program's treatment units will he controlled hy the present
direct f>r. who anticipates continued federal funding )
Fifteen former employees oi a UCLA drug program have
disputed a claim made by the program*s director that its large
mff turnover was due to incompetence, and countered with
charges that the program^ atmosphere was stifling and its
admmistrators vindictive towards staff and unconcerned about its
clients 'f '
Tht itroversy arote after program director Gerald De-
Attfdis attributed the high employee turnover to the fact "they
(the employees) couldnt do their job" (printed m the r>ailv Bruiii
on May 3, 1976) The staff turnover, 80 per cent in the first year,
was reduced to 40-45 per cent in succeeding years The usual
annual NP! turnover rate is 10-12 per cent. DeAngclis has itnce
refused to speak to the Dmi^ Bruin
"The fact that there is (an) 80 per cent turnover indicates ade
of two things,*' said Willmm Fox. iormtr ammimtc director of the
program*s adolescent treatment unit, **either. first, the 80 per cent
were people who had some legitimate reasons for quitting, or
md, he*s (DeAngclis) a roClcn administrator for humg to
ly duds. It*s highly unlikely as large a percenuge at SB per
would be incompetent. It*s stupid for him to e:
to Mieve that,* Fox said
iT former employees dismiMed DeAngeljs* expluMition as
•*■ jolDC,- ''astfiiner *'simpluitic,'' "^erroneous** and -a lie" Many
feh the statement was skuiierous and Joseph Shannon, a fonner
director of three of the prognMi^s unks aad now director of the
methadone pragmv at the Los Angeks Suacaik PreventioB
Center, said, **l thiak we could sue bim fcK it.**
DeAngehs was hired to head the program in 1973 by J.
Timaas Ui^erleider. an NPI adanairtiator. DeAi^ehs holds a
PIlD in biochemistry, and previoasty worked oa a White House
dr^g abuse commission in Wsiiaagtaa, D.C.
Tht 15 former eaiplayecs tiK Dmdy Bruin spoke to worked at
IIk program at various MBS during its three-year eaisteacc.
same having been on the job as recently as last month Maay
pbimed out that those who have left tiK pragram have gone on
la better poalioas in the drug treatmeat BT rctand therapy fields.
The araanMa*s lap administralati hsid no reaard iox either
itH
mtm
By Linda Ri
DB Staff M^nter
A S9,000 student cultural exchaagr program
funded by Program Task Force (PTF) earlier
this year is currently under the investigation oi
Vice Chancellors Miller and Svenson
Miller, who is Vice Chjancellor o( Student
aad Campus Atlairs, saiJ he is looking into the
fundmg of Operation C rossraaBi AfHca. which
he had approved earlier t^is year.
Sue Mehon. SLC First Vice President, 1975-
76 and Armen D Ross, participants i>l the
program, believe there are no valid grounds tcrr
the investigation
Operation Crossroads Africa is a national
program that sends Ameflean university stu-
dents to Africa to work and live with Atricaa
university students Its aim is to exchange
trtrffufal e*pefteiiccs while contributing to
Africa's needs
The students live in a workcamp lor ap-
proximately niae weeks where they involve
themselves in such projects as, building school-
houses, youth centers or ^nedical dispensaries
The Crossroad participants requested $9.(K)0
earlier this year in f undine from PTF, whiic
raiSittg $4.^ on their own
Miller began his investigation of Crossroads
iiftcr receiving a Jetter from ex-Ciihural Affairs
Commissioner John Withers
In his leiter. dated May 25th, Withers
pointed out certain aspects of the Crossro^dy
program which he bclieyes conflict with the
funding guidelifidr oT PI F
The PTF gAJidelines for 1975-76. under the
heading of funding eligibi in y, state, "The task
force will not fgnd community service pro>
grams or publications**
Nag to Withers. Crossroads violates
this restriction by involving students in work-
camp projects which build community facihties
Melton said she believes the issue is a matter
ol interpretation There's nothing there, added
Melton commenting on Withers' complaint..
The PIF guidelines also state: "As a general
rule, the PTF will not consider allocating funds
to inyentonable capital items such as
out-of-state travel"
Withers pointed to the Crossroads program
that sends students to Afnca
Melton said the PIT rule m only a general
one, not specific
Withers said he also questions the qualifica-
tions ol the students who were selected for the
program
Luther Olman. campus chaplain, who par-
ticipated »i the selection prurru iiid iipcn
meetings were held for the selection of the
jipplicants Only nine students applied for the
nine positions offered as participants, he said.
In addition to these. Olman said, there were
foiiir applicants for leadership positions (to be
subMdi4ed ' by the national organi/aiion of
Crossroads). Of these four, one dropped «)iit to
become 4. paLf;ticipam. wh^k the othey three
were refected bv the Operation's headquarteri^
in New York Of the rejected three oru-
switched over to become a partuipani
Withers said he believes t*his raises the
question of qualifications ^
Melton questioned, "Could it be thai all the
applicants from UCLA were so good thai 4 hey
were all 'acceptable'^
"^Everyone 1 knrm that was asked to re
commend me were contacted by Crossroads In
other words, there was a follow-up," siid^
Melton
iCoitthiued on Pegs 39)
On the Waterfr&nt "—
Club battles crew for doctcs
■y Alaa MiilaMi KarWMg
DB Staff Wrfters
The Sailing Club is waging
aa emotiona IK -charged battle
with the crew team over usage
of the UCLA dock facilities,
according to sailing club pres-
ident [>oug Anglin
**We demand equal space
down there.** said sailing club
member Jack Seinfold He
described the relatNHiship with
the crew team as being humili-
ating for ^ofh instructors and
students
**llere we are stuck in the
corner yard of the facility and
we get hassled for that." Ang-
lia
When Duvall Hccht, coach
of the crew team was asked
how he perceived the conflicts,
he sa4d. *"! was under the im-
pression that things wpre going
along pretty amiably.**
Members of the sailing club
claim that they have a second-
place position at the docks,
which they say can no longer
be tolerated The club offers its
services to aU University stu*
deau. staff and faculty, while
the crew team serves only
those that can try out for or
make the team However, the
crew hat priority, and they
have been pushing for more,
said Anghn.
Originally the UCLA docks
were buih as facilities for the"
training and operation of the
crew team in IM6. The Sailing
Club moved into the facihties a
year hiter with only two boats.
"The yard belongs to the
crew,** Hechi said, adding that
the sailing cjub was originally
allowed on the premises as a
friendly gesture The depart-
ment of athletic funds pays the
rent on the dock and the
(Continued aa Page 2B)
I
<i .
li
J
»1
by Reg Fee's
* *• f
MilleiLcesignsXhJkl^are dtrectorsMp
■p^.
Sigma
tor me^oari
•nterested m
Una Tno ^ —
fttAdtitf at their
sberg
. f m
Jt fOVC]
^ MbAbbi fovcmmeat,
i|mt wbea W icU i^-
" floor of Kcrckhoff '^
•ivMy oner
Md feU
UCLA H«i|RMaJ Md
u^nncs.
tkc Mitiiil Student
a pam for ncwK-
ofTiciah IB the Alumni
^ • »**» ■■' ^ ' -^Hdi could lead to
- Eric MaaM
NSA, cutback
referenda
approved
««'<*ay, aadiigiaduaies v<
to reaiovc tlie positon of
NalioaaJ Student Asftooatioa
(NSA) ReprcMmauvt fioin tae
Stadent I pitoi CoaaoJ >
a 619 to 249 aarpa aad ex-
pressed disapproval of ex-
<^^Mi9e pf^paas haianea the
VC aad Hi mil I » Iran
The N'SA alRee wouid aoc
he ahohiiKd aaicH a vacaac\
oocun However. cAected NSA
represeatative §riaa Eisharg
Had said in his caaipaifn tlatt
he would rcsiga hs post if the
iSCt
on Programming praaaiil
^•ntomimas
%f ar iM
Carios Thiel
t023
As part of a Comminee
Afainst Raasm (CAR) initia-
tive, a demaad to reverse cut-
backs m Student Health was
also appiuiad. 724 to 248
Narrowly defeated h\ a two-
vote margin (249 to 246) was
another CA^ initiative itetn to
ci¥i the facuh\ hini^ freeze
and increase faculty hiring,
particularly for teaching as-
sntaats
Six other initiative iteais.
including denaadi lo ead all
ionm af
tnr Hm
LA
PO
H3ca a»tf
rate at 12 per
AM fWHid a S4tS tuniaa hike
for out»of-stau foretga sta-
^Mli* ap«e alK> defeated
'N
— Fi
Surmnaf
CaN W1-47V7
* tffH*IJiiii4AA^*« « »»w *9tt*
CIA askedlo disclosc-^UlXIC^ontaets-
Letter endorsed by SLC
•y Frank Widdcr
DS Stair Hrltef ,
A letter endorsed b> venous
statewide student bodv organi
zations deaMadtng disdnniffe
of ccn^ert Central Iniclligcnce
Afeacy operations on all VC
campuses was filed earlier here
and was sent yesterday to CIA
director George Bush
Drafted by Natlum Gardels.
a UCLA poitical science
major, the letter calls for "all
past and present contractual
arrangements or agreements
and personnel relationships
between the CIA and the Unjrr'r'
versity of California (to) he
auMle^ public under the statutes
of the Freedom of tnf6rmation
Act.''
Among the student groups
who endorsed the letter were
the nine UC campuses Student
Body Presidents Council, UC-
LA's Student Legislative Coun-
cil the Graduate Students' As-
sociation and the Associated
Students of UC Santa Barhara.
According to Gardels. the
letter ufM drafted aa a direct
resuh of the Senate Intelligence
Committee di sures that
**lHMidrcds ol ■cadeaiiLS in over
too American oatt^pes and uni-
versitiei are covertly linked to
rd by the CIA/"
The letter also comes in the
wake of Senator Fraak
Church's recent campus state-
ments mending to whether
there were CIA agents or in-
formants on the UC campuses
Church, chairman of Senate
Inteiligrnrr Committee, said«
"I dtNi'l think that the UC has
been overlooked, by the CIA."
. According to workers at
Church's headquarters in Lot
Angeles. Cht;rch indicted that
there has been CIA involve-
ment at the I'C campuses.
Jim Ward, public intorma-
tion officer here, commenting
on the implications of the
letter, said, **There must be
some CIA involved with intel-
ligence and security on projects
like Los Alamos (a UC oper<
ated laboratory which designs
nuclear weapons), hut I do
not kaauF of anv sneh activuv
at UCLA
r
^^
Iranian Students'
hunger strike ends
after goal readied
By Unas Wotpeii
DB Stair Writer
Anthony Russo, a Co-<Jefendcnt with C^niel EHsberg in the
famous Penugon Pa|iers case. >oined a large crowd oi Iranian
students Wednesday to celebrate the end of their eight-day
hunger strike
The protest, which was held at the Campus Baptist Church,
was one in a series of demonstrations in the U.S and Europe.
Other sites included New York, Chicago, Washington DC and
Houston, as well as Paris, Germany and Sweden, ndiere two
Drotests were staaed
"The purpose of the hunger strike was to call attention to the
repressive tonditions in Iran and to protest the recent murder of
26 Iranian patnots by the Shah*s police force," according to a
knar laad at the meeting.
Among the 26 killed were two children aged 11 and 13, wha
died when a police helicopter fired a rocket into their house,
aianruig it up. Their mother is in pruKMU partailly paralyzed by
torture, accordif\g to the letter.
The hunger strike ended yesterday because the group^s geal of
forming inipection teams has been realized, according to Iranian
Students Association (ISA) spokespennn Razmandeh ISA
members use false names and wear osasks when being photo-
(Continucd on Page 2i)
•*Even it the CIA v^as here if
they had a front organuatu>n
there would he no wav to
know." he added
According to GardeK. the
purpose of the letter is to find
out whether such CIA opera-
tions exist **How do we knov^
that our professors are not
working for the CIA' Hovk arc
they (the students) going ti)
trust a professor when he may
well be working with the CIA
through a research grant"
Gardels asked
Responding to^ Gardels'
statements, assistant director ot
contracts and grants for all
UCLA research. Dr Dick
Seligman said. **\ definitely
do not know of any grants or
contracts that the CIA is
linked with directly. 1 am sure
beyond any doubt we do not
fund directly for the CIA"
Sehgman. however, was noi
sure whether any covert
funding exists.
According to UC policy
Seligman said, there is no
specific guideline that would
deny the CIA from offering a
research gram "t nder the-
present policy, we could not
accept a contract that vkould
require a project that could , he
termed classified* Ihis would
tend to eliminate the ¥^ofk
done by the CIA '
•^Personally I think that sort
of^actrvity is not appropriate
for the UnivcrsiiN " he added
According to (gardels Mmi
lar letters are being circulated
at the other UC campuNes
CIA officials have ten davs to
(i) Ciardch Ictici as
CIA pohch dkiaics, homt\>ct
extemums are often retme^tcd
because ol a backlog of letters
they receive.
In addition t^^-ihc- !»uiacjii
groups statewide ( cmgre^ismnn
Ronald l>ellums of the House
Select Committee 4>n 1
he 1 1 <
on
gencc b«ft been a»kc-d to
Hith expeditiag actum
(lardeU letter,
Depending on the 11 A re-
spa|nflt. Gardeh hopes that the
i^atianal Amagtcaa Civd Lita*-
lies Union .may start a hiwsuii
dem^radtng the mtase ot the
CIA inlor
n
I
Df THE TRADinOM OF THE BEST-
mREVERENT MORALISTS OF AMERICA
^rf ormanccs « VCUk
SAT., JUNE §
•choeiiberg Hall
^mW'X
rwnl irlUnkn •€ Wa
All TIckefB %%.%%
AVAILABLE NOW AT UCLA
CENTKAL TICKET OFFICE,
4f« Wnstwood Ftuxn, LJk. 9M24
or •€ toox t^fflcc 1 linar kniorc
rnrtormancc If nvnllnMc.
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ti
EUCT A RESPONSIBLE. EXPERIENCED TRIAL ATTORNFY
ROSALIE HANNIG
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RAKOFF
FOR
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UCLA Clana of %2 BA
UCLA Claaa af « LLB. JO.
JUDGE
TO
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Judicial Diatrict #1
Leading the Demand to increase Small Claims Court Maximum to USUI.
Paid tor by Committae to Elect Ratinff Arnold Robunton. Chairman
d
LSAT?
Those students in our
last class who had
taken a prior LSAT
showed a nfiadium
improvamant of 110
points after tai(ing our
course. This means
power ib get into the
taw school of your
choice. (Documenta-
tion of these results is
available in our off ice )
K^9ik Of wrWo:
C. Laatn, Dtiaclui
LSAT Pmp. Cnnlnr
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ASK FOR AN IN-
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tunitycrf
a lifetime..
Sportswriting
at the Summer
'I
Olympics
Only four plaoatare ieft m this exciting
UCLA Extension travel -study program, with
on thespot coverage of the 1976 Summer Games
at Montreal. Vou attend 12 events, including
gymnastics, tmsketbMll, boxtng, ¥oih^(bm^/, soccer,
rowing, and semi final and final events of trm:k and
fiaid. You learn hovv to cover tportf events,
interview athletes and vvrite news iloriea, an^ focus
on international aipacts of the Games.
rfvdirr
and nor^fournaiists ma^ amtoil on a
SEM INARf
Fee includes roundtnp airfare from Los Angsles to
Montreal via A»r Canaia, ream fmrnm/Hm/m for
16 nights, tMats to 12 Olympic esOfUs, ground
transportation to and from the airport in Montreal,
and enrollment fee for 4 units of Journalism credit
(meals not included^, ^niwt package $875.
Group leaves Los Angeles July 16 and Iretums August 2.
For iiifuimggoii€atl«>aigQn HoMaal ai3l e2S^lMw
\
mtfi^mimt^
ATtENTION FbREIGN STUDENTS
^^Jj»ajHP pom pvrsonai •tt«cib nomt a« «f« sp«ci«iitu m
PACIFIC-KING 121S W»«f •#! At Lo« Aii9«lM 17
4«2
#
SUMMER RENTALS
AVAILABLE!
• •
Luxurious Singles, 1 Bedroom*'
Walk to Westwood Village & UCLA
Close to Century City
- heated pool -
625-41 LANDFAIR 479-5404
Moss & Co Management
Spotmom6 ty W^ Qmmrm
Summer Pre-SLC Internship
Program
Are you going to be around
this summer?
— Want to get an early start on Student Govern-
ment involvement
~ Af% ydtTfi^rer ested fn tactcfing & researching
inio some of the major student issues like;
Parking
Housing
Baseball Field on Campus
Beer Pub On Campus
— Are you interested in picking up a stipend
for your courageous efforts
If so. get an application for the tumnief investigative
^tern task force Applications will be available at the
President's Office 304 Kerckhoff HaJI For further mfo
cail 825-2339. or drop by the office of the General
Repreaentative 31 2F Kerckhoff
The First Play to Win
All Major Critical Awards
^&Mcj^i
m Peter Shaffer
Brian Bedford
-| Dai Bradley
John Dexter
•la-Weel
AUaUSTi
?7jfJ[^ i«7 '« 4 W * • JO P»* CK^ ftM»« LOMttM Amc MM AM « M "k ,
•^i UMftOO t*^ MOO tM %0i ^•••■••^ •^ »'• ••» 4W toi OIM ai/lO 0«^ «
Oversees SLC financial matters
^^CommJtee called^atchdog^
f.
iy Patt;
DS Slair Writer
week M>me ncu
iippeiircd in the ttudent
eminent offioef of Kerckhoff
Hail. However, eat committee
considered **the itaal watchdog
of councii** by its duiirmaa,
will sx\\\ officially 1^ in session
until June 30
The five-member Finapce
Commiiicc (Fi Comm) over-
stt% the Student Legislative
Council (SLC) budget and
budgetary considerations, ad-
vtief council in fiscal planning
and insures there are no fiscal
irregularities, Fi Comm chair-
man Mike Loiey said
Responsibilities
Losey's responsibilities in-
clude sitting on SLC as an ex-
officio menttMrr and communi-
cating decisions and recom-
mendations between SLC and
Fi Comm
According to Losey. the Fi
Comm chairman can tempo-
rariK hold up funding for a
program However, Ifcr presi-
dent as the head focal aaal)rst
for SLC has final veto powers
Losey't five years of ex-
perience in student government
fo hack to 1972, when his
brother was Campus Evcmi
Commissioner Loscy directed
some of his brother^s pro-
grams, such as Bruin Week, so
when he vKas elected to the
position the next vear.
Faber not rehired
for the next year
Carl Faher, who had been a
lecturer in the psychology de-
partment, has not been rehired
lor next year
Faced with budget trims.
Harland S Lewis, dean of the
College of Letters and Science,
said "The content and struc-
ture of the class did not meet
the requirements of the uni-
versity and were not sufficient
to merit It*, continuation. **
Official ^^^m^ity Notices
To all applicants for Financial Aid for Summer Seaaion
June 8th is the deadtlrve to file your 'Intent to Register" for
the first Summer Session in order to obtain your regia-
tratlofi |>acheC June 21.
Financial Aid checks will only he
aentation of the Registration Packet.
upon pt^-
To all graduating Financial Aid Loan recipienta
TMa la to notify you to wpp^mt for mrs eilt Interview H you
wW not return to UCLA in Fall 1976 to establiih a
repayment achedule, or to determine if you qualify for
cai^allatlon or deferment of your loan.
>leoae phone 62S-4S31. extenalon 21(|. 21i. or 227 for an
appointment for your exH interview, or stop by our office
■*^lt7J*"n>hy Hall anytime between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. to
aet upiin appointment.
Phi Eta Sigma
NatioiMil Honorary Society
Meeting for members
interested in
Catalina Trip
Ackerman Union 2408
TuMday, June 8. 4 p.m.
ATTENTION STUDENTS!
No summer job yet? Register now for
temporary work. Set your own rates, work
at yoUf own convenience.
Tutors Gardeners . Recreation
Specialists. Party Helpers . . Babysitters
Entertainers . Ge!i«;i«: Laborers
Painters Chauffeurs Temporary
Office Worliers . Typists . Etc., Etc.
I
Drop by the PLACEMENT & CAREER PLANNING
CENTER today. (Third building east of Ackerman
Union at the top of Brum W^.)
In respon!^ lo the tinng
studcnis here have siartrd a
letter wilting campaij^n to
protest Lewis's action
habcr attributed his dismis
sal to "a general atmosphere ot
*>*w*frt ^ ckange They feel that
what I'm doing is not as es-
sential as other things."
Lewis was out oi town and
there was no one in his olticc
to comment
Faber agreed that -| arti an
easy grader I don't grade on a
curve. I respond to the value
of the individual's work " Steve
Scherr. a student and friend ot
Kabcr. noted that "Faber's
student evaluations are amon^
the lHghe?»t reported far artv
professor at UCLA " '
•» Rmm Holpcrt
UCPD officer
files charges
of racism
A rep^ort alleging racist
statements by University police
officers has been filed by an
officer on the deparimeni.
according to Lieutenant
Thomas Kueha of the U( PI)
Kuehn confirmed he had
seen the report and was taking
appropriate action after being
confronted with a copy of the
report obtained b> the Hrmn
The officer who filed t he-
report, a Black, stated thai he
overhcitrda conversation v^hilc
in the locker room at the sta-
tion. According to the report,
a UCPD sergeant mentioned
that three cars recently stolen
from campus had been located
in predominantly Black sec-
tions of the city The sergeant
then told an officer that t he-
way to cut crime on campus
was to stop all the "jungle
bunnies."
When the officer who later
filed the report asked the ser-
peam to repeat his remarks,
.another officer in the locker
room sjiid. -You heard him.
stop alt the niggers on cam-
pus," the report states
Kuebn declined to comment
specifically on the action being
taken and said that in his
opinion, the matter was an
internal affair, not suitable for
publication. He questioned the
motives of the officer filing the
report and suggested other
Black officers in the depart-
ment would not have com-
plained.
However, another loafor re-
ported that the sergeant in-
volved quite often spoke in
similar terms
After ditCHfainf the matter
Kuehn refaaai to return the
Brum\ photocopy of the
report He laid tiMM "as a
matter of principle" he would
not allow even a copy af '
police report to leave the sta-
t
Acod#mic S#nof cif— f^ochinq #xc*IImi€«
Five named distinguished TA's
•y Rm Waiptrt
DB Suit Wrkar
The AcaicflMc Senate
•elected five itudents as. re-
cipients of the $200 UCLA
faculty pnze for Distinguished
Teaching AaaaUnu. They are
Chris Cagan. Hsi Chao Chow.
Michele LaRusch. Larry Loe-
her and Gloria Switzer.
The senate considered. 30
^•■linations sugpMlad by var-
i<NM departments "Nomina-
tions are treated as a depart-
ment responsibility,** according
to George E. Mount, Chair-
BMUi of the Academic Senate's
Committee on Teaching
"The department has auto-
nomy as to whom they nomi-
nate, how many they nominate
aad how the nomination pro-
cedure IS set up." he said.
aMiag that nominees could be
selected by the department
chairman, by a democratic
vote of professors and TAs or
anything in between
Since there are 1100 TAs
working on caqipus through-
out the year, the award is a big
honor. Mount said. The award
is given for excellence in
teaching; research plays no
part in the selection procedure
"We look for those things
that indicate that this person is
really someone special There
is a special feel about a really
great recommendation." he
said. Letters are considered
from professors, fellow TAs
and students, In addition.
Mount said the studcnu' TA
evaluations, filled but ' at the
of each quarter, play a
Ouii Cagaa, a TA in the
HMChematics department, tays
"Pm really super into research
but I love teachiilg. 1 coiHider
every student my fncnd.*
Cagan has taken AS UCLA
lecture notes for 17 clataes and
he wmes all of the ASUCLA
•'Problem Solving Guides" for
mathematics. He alio wrote
the instructors* manual for
"Realm of the Universe," the
standard Astronomy 3 text-
book at tiCLA
A student of his says, "He's
both brilliant and a great
teacher He got his BA here in
two and one half years, an^ he
only foc one "r* — all the reft
"As** She addMl **ai least 20
or 30 people who are not in his
qui/ taetion always sit m on
his lectures, and you have to
ftt to hit review sessions a half
hour early to get a icat."
"Teaching is fun. it*i recrea-
tion,'* he said, "but it*s also
vital When freshmen get here,
they need guidance and the TA
IS the one who can give it.
since there is a friendship re-
lationship rather than a pupil-
taaicher relationship."
Cagan says one of his most
satisfying experiences is seeing
(Continued on Page 2$)
Alpha Lambda Dslta naw wnibari
Please pick up your certificates and
pins at
Murphy Hall 2224
I
.-» ».
Begin to
PARTY
The Last Great
student Health
Service corrections
,^l^^^^ Osborne, director of the Staient HeaHh Service
(SHS), has asked the DaUy Brum to cUrify several poinu ia
recent news articles atom SHS.
The cost of student heahh inswMKe is actually $67 65 ner
^rear, not $67.00 per quarter.
The SHS budgal mn a deficit of approximately $220 000
cu?*^* ^^^^^^ ^ Osborne, Mt $500,000
SHS was not obligated to return savings from a
Rqpstration Fee fund subsidy, aa implied by the Bruin
Osborne u only a member of the Student Health Long
Range Planning Committee and not the rhaifan
Fiaany. Osborne said it will be impossible to accurately
project the charge for climc visits until a deuiled study a
made The^^^i^m pnnied an csUnute of $19, which was
conuined in a supplement to the Student Health Long-
Rangp Planning Committee Report
The ^tiin apologizes for any inconvenience it has caused
students or the Student Health Service
DELI BLOW OUT
, Featuring
HARLEQUIN
Six Piece Rock & Roll Band
< • «
Happy Hour
Bring this Ad Between 8:00-9:00
For Free Admission and 2 for 1
Refreshments
^
«•.'- , M
'-:v^'-
Finance Committee
(Continued from Page 4)
hr **knew the commission in-
^'^- Good program
Lotcy suggested that to run
* food paafpnun one must con-
sider all aspecu and not "leave
anything untouched."
With his experience in pro-
gramming, he knows what can
be achieved within the bud-
geted amount. Losey said "A
lot of people are amazed at
how I hack it (a program) up.*^
According to Losey. the Fi
Comm chair has no influence
over SLC. The chair can give
advice at the meetings, but
SLC members already have
preconceived notions on how
to vote, Losey said, adding -ff
you can't vote, you don't in-
fluence."
ry believes the progi
should not have to wait tor the
weekly jneetiUfs for a bud^
realignment He believes the
* Chairman should make deci-
sions on the requests while the
other members of Finance
C ommittce come in daily to
approve.
"•When you have rules that
inhibit, you got to bend the
rules. Kulcs aren't necessarily
made to follow but are made
to guide you.** Losey added
By-tew ehtu^m
Loicy said he made some
by-law changes coacermng the
request-approval process which
would help allevuite this prob-
lem.
A new chairman will be fee-
tected by Meg McCormack, ^
the undergraduate president,
before Losey leaves office
McCormack said she is look-
Delta Tau Delta
649Gayley
Fri June 4
8 00-1:00
~^»
ifig for a chairman with reli-
ability, diligence and the ini-
tiative to seek other sources of
funding She would like some-
one who will give perspective
on the financial matters of
council as ^U's the students-
money; that check is not only
valuable, it's essentia!.'* she
said
Admission $1.00
UC Students Only
Member IfC
• -i
YOU'RE ON BOTH EN4)S
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L_tIlY fiOVeRWMf NT I
*T
PTY COUMJU
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.«r4«'
OS^AfiTI
rCOOWTY
VVl»F
*/
?'
V
•USINCM CONSULTANTS
ANNOUNCE OPENINGS FOR:
AM
EXCEUEHT lAUUHES - UFEMBKB
iMt wmmm m.. in ria. u h« «|mv
(213) 477-30SS t7t^2SS
t
1
EptaTFial
UhfTMOLOBeYi
a'j*ii.:j
AMER-I-CAL
M94W
<;i"Pll II W^S~I«<«>*T»-ST«<
In thM« days of complicated government, it is often difficult to gei
through the bureaucratic maze of red tape. The UCLA MetroLobby wa*
established to help you. the student-al*ctorate, voice your opinions on
public matters. The MetroLobby also provides information on alMlad
officials and local programs that influence student livM. A fre«
pamphtet will soon be available that will help familiarize you with the
workings of local government arwJ the official you put in office So if
you're intaraated in isauaaaffacting you -sparking, housing, orsummar
jobs — or just have a questions on WestWood government, drop by tfia
MetroLobby. Were at 314 Kerckhoff. and the phone la 825-2726. You are
ft both ends of your government.
>red by tha Stiirlpnt I wnMattwa Council
I
tJ
,
J
VOTE FO R
■•^
Cc
i
JIMMY CARTER
Tuesday, June 8
Drug
(
-'^
1)
■t •»-
Sponsored by:
Eric Carlson
Rick Rodgers
Richard Ward
Tim Warren
Lynn Criefinger
Linda Blake
Mark DeCastro
Roger Frazier
Ian MacKintosh
Mike Falatico
Scott Xedmon
4*im€s Bacon
Robert S. Crala
Max Z.C. Pena
''-■-, ' ■
- UXA 9i|i0»pii For C«n^ :
•
1
•
•
•• *
^^^B * ^^^^^^P^^^^^ ^H ^B ^H H ^^H H H ^^B ^B ^^i , — < #
Effective Fa!
Quarter 1976
>e required
to have an official UCLA
Student Identification Card
in order to transact official
< — • . ■
or participateyo. ^ivecsity
)pnsoT?d ^ograms and
ac^vities.
Today is the last day for
■\'
3 '^ ^' . ^
-^ Cz,
»uff or client!, tile former
employees charfBd and added
they were more interested m
maintainiiif a high client coi.
MM in order to keep their grmt
money, rather than hclp,n.
clieoti^. •
"Ifi funny, staff turnad ove,
but none of the chcnick No-
body ever got off the pro.
BBMi,- said Liaia Webb, an
administrauve najaiani At ^^
— •* one
Ruth Caper
Jerry Hale
Elizabeth Ullmer
Bob Howells
Renee Kohler
Vera Cluck
Kim Elcano
Sieve Martin
Call Clark '
lose Lopez
John Suderson
Dean Hammond
jim Beofer^ Jr.
joKnTffirTger
Sylvia Mendoza
Margret Nichols
of the progffagA nu^
clinics who left ^in 1974
.r
Rachel Campbell, cjmical
director for the program',
central intake unit for five
months in 1974, said staff
members worked very hard
iiad wanted to help p.tienu
but DcAngehs was ^'insensitive
to patients* needs" and refused
to listen to staff opinions
about how to improve the
program.
ICay %own, an NPI a^sini.
strative aiauunt who has
handled the drug program*i
personnel files for three years
told the Daily Brum many
employees feared loaing their
jobs if they spoke up about
things they witnrwd. although
•*a few brave loob spoke up oo
pay phones.**
Brown uud employees tokl
ber that cliems were not
treated for their problems m a
helpful owner aad that -inter^
Ml strife and paranoia** cir-
cumvented the program's ef-
fectiveneaa. Employees were
dttcouraged to contact her for
any reason. Brown said, even
though her job function i^ to .
teMDinate informaUon to em-
ployees about benefits, griev-
aaoe procedures and other em-
ployee services.
(ComimMi m FagcZi^^
Students continuing in the^
their cards. The cards will
be issued in the Ackerman
Union Second Floor Lounge
until 5:00 p.m. A nurrpnt
JPgistrationCard and sup-
portive identification —
which must include a
photograph (driver's li-
cense, passport, etc.) — will
be required to issuance.
^ A. 11 be req^jired
; -J prior to
5 Affairs
FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE
Wish
the
It has been 20 years since
James Dean was killed
In a road accident ...
The social significance of Dean's appeal
Is still relevant in contemporary terms
ZIV INTERNATIONAL
presents
"James Dean -
The First American Teenager"
A special preview sliowing for UCLA students*
\
Tuesday Night — June 8 -
Royce Hall — UCLA
8c30
1
Appearances By . . .
Cdrey Allen
Carroll Baker
Leslie Caron
Sammy Davis. Jr
Dennis Hopper
Kenneth Kendall
Jack Larson
Sal Mineo
Adeline Nell
Malta Nurmi
Gene Owen
Hal Owen
Nicholas Ray
Leonard Rosenman
Captain E. Tripke
Christine White
Peter Witt
Natalie Wood
<:
Songs Featured . , .
. " ■ ■ . .r -
Funeral for a Friend Elton John
TirfHJiar Bells MikeOldfield
The Immigrant Neil Sedaka
Layla Derek and the Dominoes
Walk on the Wild Side Lou Reed
Movln'On BadCompany
East of Eden Theme Leonard Rosenman
Let It Ride Bachman Turner Overdrive
RebelRebel DavidBowie
James Dean The Eagles'
<\
The film includes sections of East of Eden, Rebel
WithoutnA Cause, and Giant; Dean's first screen
test for Elia Kazan; commercials and clips from
television plays he made as well as newsreel
footage of him racing cars.
r~\'
ADMISSION IS FREE!
byVieUCLA
IheuuLA
SalUJLClMfM
Ofi Fine Arts
rp
1
I
^^-
ckaiybfuin
^ DB Editorials
Good-bye
Th»« to^M^ iMt iMu* of Ih* 197S-76 Daily Brum Our
Bruin vartod mort In qiMNty thMt w imniM hw* Mud.
W« iMd* our than o< Iho mtotaicM ai staffs s«»Mr to
Ws
poinf
The most educational and productive
AI In •■, how«r«r, ft wm a
M '^ m m, nowvr, ft wm a v»ry good y^f
jC MUM than bafora. Wa flilad aach of thoaa laauM by
I •JwP^oylng mora and mora naw writars from all
i^ ^ffarant backgrounda. Tha Ad ataff and Iha PiMI-
budgat Tha pmp^r looks battar m a iMuM of
•qidpmant bought this summar. In aiza wa ara in
top fiva of tha nation and at tImM, wa broka rta ^
^U.' P»ck*<< up by commarclal nawa OMrations
Our aiza caniM raaponalbHItiM m wa« m baMflla
*^VV^^ '•^Hh Ha currant aditor, but mMi not ba
miatekan for ona parsons piayground. Any auccoM
M hmm had this yMr hM involvad waM omt om
hundrad paopia. aH of whom daaarva thanks Our
wcom would ba unthinkabia without Via afforts of
uL^^.J^?^^ •^••^ ^^'^ R*chardaon and Pat
HMly; tha buainaaa mmnmQm. Anna Young; Janica
rK!!!!^..*^ ^ Atkinson from th« shop: and avary
•lagla staff mambar ilstad tn today s staff box
--^^nMy, 9p9eml thanks must ba aeeoitfad to W
Communications Board and Its chairman, Winston
Handarson and Dick Krauz, tha publications maoagar
Tha Brum m an Institution dapands on tha taam-
work of a larga numbar of individuals Wa hopa Wm
^"^ "^^ ^ incorporation ot mota paoia Into tha
staff and that that inclusion wii raauH in naxt yMr s
fy trongar wHh a mora sansllhra and flajtibia
sMwpomt than ours.
by Fred
(Edftor'i nait: McKinney n tht p^si pffM&m of
the BSA^
Thin last weekend, May 2S-31. the BUck Student
Alliance embariied on a very unique trip to {he
Bav Area The purpose of the trip was three fold:
there was the monrhly Blacli Statewide Steering
Commmee IBKCUC) matins «« ^C Berkeley;
iecondK there was the Berlieley jazz Festival ind
last but MMHt interesting, was a tour of the
facilities of San Quentin Prison and a rap session
i%ith the inmates This was the first tinr>e in the 5S-
¥tbm history of San Quentin that an organizaci
Wwr* «udent group from UCLA was let inside the
»alk.
OPINION
at
the
anv
hen croiiing rhe Richmond-San Rafael
''- vou can see the light brown facility
l*e a mn baawecn slave castles on the
^ Vl!^ *^ strangeK enough. Kerciihoff
Kerckfio^ Hall there is an aura
that IS lek at the first gfimpw of
■isAjaehr oh the bridge you go
4 <^f^ «hort andifiarrpw rqmd ^ on each
a houses laokina ¥9ty much like the
o^ the KrkMHM Wmdf or for rhaf maner
sm*4J tntnaam imiim At Hnt its hard to
vou re irt Caktkitfua Vie parkm^ our cars
McKinney
\n the visitors' parking lot and the 15 of us waU*^
lo the main gate »^«ifced
After an hour and a half deUy, our mqub Mr*,
processed first at the mam gate and th^J^i^^
the irnide gate. At the ins.de gate w^^were
forwarned of the no hostage policy. That means
prison guards are instructed to recognize no
hostages. Thif immcdbtely brought back flash
backs of the Mann County Courthouse shoot-out
where the prison guards o^anod fire even with a
judge in jeopardy and he was kilied: So we're
escorted by a guard and the oHicer of the dav
Mr. Merkle, through the inr>er gate. The first
thing to hit me was the smell of the old prison
Next I noticed a prisoner, shackled hand and
feet apparently just being pracawad for his stav
at Quentin. Next, we walked through a court
yard under the imposing watchful eye of several
armed guards near the tower Surprisingly there
were 9 or 10 prisoners |ust sitting around shoot-
mg the breeze inspecting us. wpacialty the sisters
that were on the lour. Past the courthouse we '
moved into an o«ice-like buiRling where' we
proceeded to a meeting room to meet wrfh some
Black prisoners. After a couple of minutes ,n
walked A tall hanrfaomg brother around 6'2'' 210
lbs He introduced him^if as Dawud Rahmdn
Bismillah and welcomed us warmly First he
wished to express his appreciation for the
(Continued on Page |2)
GSA
•*•*«& K-V<»-
?*y***^ "»* G«*»fc StudMit AModatkMi Smsi*
•oted to CMMir* Umtm NMii, fh» eutnnt r urj. t
B«Conni«r. n«xt yMr's lint v«c« pfildwil and Atex
SiMtoni. iMt yMr's budget ccMnmlMienw.
It it unlortunat* Wm Mnai* M( lorcad to mutonmu
■o«»cwng its oMesrs. E««n mor* unforliinato. GSA
msMbais found oth*r mtwbfs guMy of "trMson'' far
5|^5[7^«»»9J«»«i»» th«n or l««ng
^••••tibara. In a
ttia charga ol
■SL*** *••»»•*"' <***'• •»•• prosldonl. Paulin*
■r^2^«». can rostora to GSA a -n- of unity.
i«»«»tttyand purpoaa. Wa furthar hopa -*— — '—^
"•••♦•••I* an organization raducad to
dato alactions and laifa
cannot sarva If atoctod.
W« hopa naxt year's
toft by tha canaura ana nmcutous diaroas of
Wa ara «>aitlng «»■'«» oi
and attadiad its o«vn
The sphere of ratfonahty
ff dftor's aore. yem#fW h a grad-
t«re uudem m Computer Sci-
SLC
ahara Of diaagraMiaflila witfi mambarf of StiMlafit
PJJ^JJt^^ li Mriiiiy iff olfca. Wa
«ap« Mcconnacfc and tia iiaar coiHifil can oat
!!!1.!!^^^ ^"^^^^c^o^ «^ popular niamlilii
^own lo Iha iiiiiMi taiataaaa ol atlabialiiiiy pofcy.
»t is time to eievate the discus-
^•^. ^ *** Arab-lsrafI conflict
o^ this campus to the sphere of
ffQ*^» Currently the dtscus-
^»o^ nm been reduced by El
Noufy't disciples to a boring
OPINION
^^^^Bement One should dear
-2 iSSL"^ '^"^ ^relevances
and faWlicaMin*. The core of the
Arab^lsraeli coofHa is the Arab
demand and daiwrnmation to
ertermrfiafe the State of Israel
The very defmibdn caFihe Pio
» The libe^ition action « rnit
onhr the r^^^ual ^
. r^WBi^ai , of an
w^WwniJMt baie. but more
"JP^'^i^t — ic « the desrruaion
o# a society. Our armed
b> Vechiam Vemini
«»^< be expr«ii«| in many
ways ... If must seek to destroy
the military, political, economic,
hnancial and ideoiogical insti-
tutions of the Zionist State The
ajm of the Palestine Liberation
^y IS not only to jnflict a
?*^ <*e*eat but also to
^^^y the Israeli charaaer
whether it is human or social
(Pamphlet «8. Fatah Safiat —
Revolutionary Studies and Ex-
periments. >
The Arab press is hilly
">o6a.zed to feed th« sacred
^f^^ With virulent anti-
beiTWism. school children are
»*<-•»« to believe that the
perieiution of lews in Eurooe n
lustified The Jews were
persecuted and despised
because o* thetr corruption. .
■y their nature they are wild.
and enemies of mankind What
• ^ solution? I have heard it
many times — At Bach AI Yahud
(slaughter the Jews)" ^From a
Syrian textbook quoted by the
British author J. Laffin in
"Fedayeem")
The international arena is but
ar>other instrument to this end.
Over 30 p^ cent of UN activities
have be^ ainned at the
MfaalaaicaJ ^^d political elimina-
tion of Israel. Activities such a§
UNESCO. International Wo-
"'^en's Year and the World
^^*<%e Championihip are pfo-
stituted to serve at instruments
o^ o* liia 'imair (Holy
War). Words are redefined, truth
is twisted, hitlary powrinen — ad
abMirdum. This has baen best
<j|«cnM by j/ Sartre as an
•^'aaiBafcal a^nocidt to preceed
tbe ph^^iorf one" (in a laoer to
the director general of
UN£SCO|.
(CamiMMtf oe Pafc 1 n
The Main Purpose
.l^c
-*' ' "■-
by Eric Mandel
Pbaie ikfi in Remhranrft p^ab
u ^
For me the Daily Brusn gave
rny time here at UCLA conti^
erably more meaning than ,usi
going to classes and taking tM|.
In fact. It eventually became the
mam purpose ot my §am§ to
^^•* school The more formal
OPINION
f ♦
<
.by Peter B Berson
**de of education at UCLA has
become secondary to my news-
paper work.
The paper has provided some
imnrtediate practical applications
for my scholastic activities at
UCLA Best of all it has made
going to school here fun. I do
not know how long I couU h««
Wimn it, trying to stay awake
durina bori«a lectures and
studying alone in the library
^•^^■a* |4ist did not 4^fer me
mough lo ba iwarthwhile m atMi
of itself
My grades have even gone up
since I fomed the Brum, which is
a switch on what usually hap-
pens Howevar, m my case if
they had gofie ifiych iowet I
would have been thrown out of
•^aoi. The paper also gave me
more coiiifi^dence in my ability to
do my acadomic work and made
the whole cbore more palatable.
Until my sophomore year at
Santa Monica junior College I
had gone to school every year
sir»ce kirniergarten. For me •
school had become very insular
and I did not know where it was
taking nf>e I decided to quit and
then return after gaining some
direction and figuring out what
(C ontinued on Pagcja)
t wbuid file to %^y I tike
UCIA. but I can't Principally the
ibiag I hale about this city the
suae tries to ciass ott as a sc hcx)l
IS the size. Same people like a
and I have no qualms about
their opinion but for me it was
hell
There is nothing to bring peo-
ple together People must make
the effort to try to find their
place in this school " I found
that spot and it was the Daily
Bruin The people are not all
alike, nor can they agree most
of the time on a place to eat,
but these things give it per-
sonality Without the Brum I
would have gone mad
Isolated from fBm paegJi With
a place to call baaie. H txi^^my
time at LCI A pjiitabit. I don't
give a damr> about the classes I
look or the instructors that
would never let me get to know
them. I cannot think of a way to
change this »chool^_<aMBpi to
make it mych tiiiaile7, but even
then there wouW be problems
I feel there is a naod for
smaller. seriOMS uhools rather
than a playgroyad Iqr athletes
or a |ob for former student
government officers
The Brum did provide two
very close friends Mart , you
know how important , the
lunches at Macho's wer^ Alice
I fed like I have a mtcr
'he a^aaien comphmem f c^n
gtve to both of you is that you
^e true friends
^^t0kef true friend ff Rem-
brarxit Thanks Um Usterwng to
me through rough Hmes both m
and out of the ofhte. thanks for
your eyes that lan see through
me. thanks for vour smile that
brightened miny a day. and
most of all thanks from comitia
from a small town
I will not miss UC LA, the
Brum, the people here or any
thing else about the scho<>l The
thing I will miss the most is
seeing the people I mentt i
I would like
z
I
^7
c
i
True Understanding
by Joshua Alf^er
An ongoing discussion among
my male friends and myself, ort
the playing field and over our
cups, had reaffirmed in my mind
what long ago bcaan to become
evident — that true understand-
ing between men and women is
extremely rare, if it exists at all
OPINION
A few furtive conversations with
such relatively neutral women as
mothers, sisters, and co-workers
confirms that women, too, dii?-"
pair of ever reaching true hori-
esty in their relationships with
men.
However, it was bnly recemly.
after a particularly inspiring
round of suds, I realized that the
male/female enigma which all
along I had been considering a
cruel joke of fate» a perversity
of nature, was actually divine
normalcy; ther* was method,
after all, to the madness.
The failure of most men and
women to truly communicate
and understand each other, like
so many tribes at Babel, is ac-
tually the manifestation of Cod's
Natural Plan for Population Con-
trol (CNPPC).
Ideally the CNPPC would op-
erate as follows Since only a
small percentage of men and
women can relate^ well enough
to kindle tht deep trust, under-
standing and oneness that is a
prerequisite to sexual intimacy
only a rebtive few would find a
mate and procreate. This in turn
would guarantee that the spec-
ies didn't breed wildly and ran-
domly. Those with that elusive /e*
(CoptimMd on Page It)
J ?^ J^/? ■'^ *® ••* financial aid or atudant haalth cara bacauaa of lack of funds
Dui at laast I can cry Inmv wfioatbunnw AanHMfi^H in m%« m^^ ^mr^^ ^^i<^. mu ^ ^.
put food facility.
cry In my wfiaatbunny sandwich In tha new mlliron dollar North Cam-
'••-\
SENATOR
ANTHONY C
T^f
DEMOCRAT
TO CONGRESS
Because of his Outstanding Record
• Tony Beilenson huas been a forceful and effective environmentalist a'-d
conservationist in the California Senate, leading the fight to adopt the Califor-
nia Coastal Protection Measure, working for the protraction of endangered
animal species and establishing strict pesticide and noise control programs
• Tony Beilenson has been^an outstanding consumer advocate, authoring
legislation re.lating to auto repair fraud, funeral reform, drinking water health
standards and open dating of dairy products • Tony Beilenson has been a
longtime supporter of higher education, and, as chairman of the State Senate
Finance Committee, fought against university budget cuts. • Tony Beilenson
has been a leading reformer, responsible for the first modernization of
the State's abortion laws in over a century, the repeal of income tax
exemptions for church-owned businesses, greater public financing
\of political campaligns and the curbing of lobbyist mfiuencav
• Tony Beilenson has been named Best Ail-Around Senator
(by the Capitol Press Corps) and "Most Effective Senator"
' (in a poll of his colleagues of both parties).
^1
\
VOTE TUESDAY. JUNE 8th
Authorized and OAid lor by Be iiana^ for f^-rrQrm CommitUM --
i^m^
■::3
More from Mandel . . .
tc
friMH
school I
ould «
yc^i.
lervr,. tor
me.
Sunday Worship 10:30 am
V^nOp©! Sunday Seminar 9:30
Cornei; Strathmore & Gayley
During my t«vo years out of
college I pdtnttd jckiitHgi on
curbi. drove a school bus ^nd
was on McOitarn's C0k>rma
Primary staff in tfq^
Working on the McCovern
campaign was especially exciting
in that I saw him come from
obscurity to the Democratic
nomination. While f was there I
spent some time in the press
room and became acQMainied
with some of the reporters
covering the campaign it
seenr>ed to me their |ob was the
most exciting of all.
When I entered UCLA in fall.
1973, I was not sure if I had the
writing ability to work for a
newspaper I took a journalism
class ind received my first A in
ii siiO took a couple~^
bakire 1 could work up
the. courife to start out at the
Daily Brum
In a commuter school the size
of UCLA I felt I could ha¥e
become lost in the shuffle i1 I
had not worked for the p^pet
There is less of a sense of com-
munity here because we are not
located in a small ccllefg lo«vn,
but rather m B large city with
students living over a widely
scattered area
It IS necessary to have sorrie
sort of personal identity with
something or somebody at
UCLA in order to grow emo-
tionally 9nd acadtfiikaliy as a
result of attending the school It
is difficult to develop a personal
identity with an institution of
50,000 peo^ existing in a ttty
which IS also not closely iden-
fhe Unfvenity
Hi\fm§ com^ UCLA
^siration «or «fer a y^ , ^^^
hmn m a unique pm^fin to
learn of many of thi .qqi^
€ther problcnis, particularly ,f
relation to the instruction ot
undMraduate studMUt. How-
ever, this IS neither the time nor
the place to discuss these prob
lems in detail
Although I would rxM neces*
sarily recommend it to most
underfraduates. UCLA has been
a Happy and rewarding exp^r
lence for n^ And what was mosr
responsible for making it such ^
gratifying experience is |^
Daily Brum.
In the words of P j Shdk-
relli, the Bard of Bundy, ,i
been real."
Happy trails until we mer
again.
SHIZEN
BENEFIT
or«d by
asianofro funk
MISHKON TEMPLE
206 MAIN SI. , VENICE
JUNE 12,1976
S:30pjn.
$ 2J50 per person
$4jOO per couple
e.m&mi7&x
^£t Ou
umme.% O^Cacs!
The school year is drawing to a close and the
respite of summertime is upon you.
Now you can really enjoy the village its
uniqueness, its quaint shops, its grand array of
theaters and restaurants.
Come sit on our patio and watch the world
wander by Enjoy our pizzas, pastas, veal and
seafood dinners, salads, sandwiches, wine and
beer
And. in gratitude of your continuing pa-
tronage $1.00 off on any large pizza or
dinner, now through June 30th, simply by^
mentioning that you saw this ad m the Bruin'
Sincerely
Ron Nardizzi
Owner - host ,
czNuxdi
ZZL 1
[juTo <^ui^i from l7taCi
y
IM4 Ct tendon
Val. Plmg. HeMwd C ir BMk-
►77-2^1
Oh those crazy letters
by Peyton Mason
The saUent characteristic shared by virtually all pressure groups is
a co^fnic and almost paranoid lack of humor It is re^tf^hmg then to
ica^ through Tof^ether. the UCLA b'-quarterly special interest paper
dealing with issues related to women, li only to be amused by the
engaging acronyms found on its pages Common words and
expressions have been, transmuted by feminist alchemy to become
the defianr, yet humorous titles for mainstream artd fringe women's
organizations Predictably, the fringe groups produce the most
« «Jorful appellations for th«»mselves
OPINION
Question VVhen is a coyote not a coyote^ Answer: When a
C e.Y.O.T.t (Cast Off your Old Tired Ethic^^ r S«Na3riricisco-^
b|«*ed organization seeking the legahzatiori of prostitution
llrnfoftunately, the plight of this COVOTE. seems distressingly
parallel to n^me^ counterpart — on d bleak desert of night s
reality, they are reduced to baying at d full moon of mgrained
prejudice.
CAT (California Advotdty tor [rollppsi i!» an unashamedly
bawdy. Fieldmuesque acronyhi fronting tor another demimonde of
working girls. CAT, if it can escape the noc;turnal and puerile
connotations of. its ojme. may have the best"chance of achieving
genuine reforms. A few trollops in high places, summonmg all their
feminine allure, could effectively var^p favorable" legislation As ot
at.e (and certainly long before. i prumment and influential
lawrriakers m the U.S. have ^hown a marked susceptibility to this
method of lobbying. Fanne FoKe ^d Susan B Anthony mav vet
make strange bedfellows in the feminist pantheon. ^
LA lA LA (Los Angeles Leage for the Advancemextt of Lesbians ^fl
the Arts) IS easily the most euphonious and vibrant acronym of the
lot^ Although the lilting meter ot the name is undeniably gav the
• task of advancing anyone in the arts of Los Angeles may be too
dreary to contemplate JH^.^ench of urban sprawl ^nd urrholy
artifice Cemb.ne powerfully to anesthetize good taste whenever it
l*>r««tens to manifest itself in the art of Los Angeles How else does
one explain Forest Lawn s art replicas. Bank of Americas Akron oils
Hugf^ Hefner s Holmby Hills Garden of Eden cum Disneyland or^he
simulated antique decor in all our chic eateries Advance. LA LA LA
but beware. I art pour lart if lack y m Los Angeles
feTof ?hi' ^ ^^ /^^ ^^ ^ • ^ T^ R , and wTtc H are but a
from th« austere sobr«.y of the workaday pressure group
Last tidbits from Joshua
Prelude
by Tony Peyser
I saw the rriovie
I read the book
I bought the scnpr
I went to the play
I aw it on television
I heard it in |ohnny'% monolf>vuf
I missed it on "Z"
I caughr^ on Cronkiie
I read It in Nmrntweek but lost .r
in fiffne
I lived at horT>e
I made my bed
I took out the trash
I doted the door lo sfranifer^
I fed the dog
I shaved every morning
I used zipcodp»
"aiv"
(Continued from Pife9)
ne san quoi would meet, cop-
ulate and send their special
character traits hurtling through
the futile generations of human
evolutiorV^The rest of us would
take pleasure in art music stu-
dy, warfare or other sublima-
tions of the proirremive desire
ind not clutter up the world
with our misfit progeny
But humankind has subverted
the divine plan with its ignor-
ance and lust with our blind-
ness and pomposity we have
throwns a wrench into the div-
ine works, let fall a fly mto the
divine* ointment
Beginning with the break-
downs of divine authority which
we so proudly celebrate as the
Renaissance, the tnliehtenment
and the Age of f ,n and
accelerated by the invention of
the cotton gm dnd pneumatK
pump*, we raised our selt-right
eous dMOf in praise o| our
own short-sighted thinking and
'In PMJiT.tT vN^T) f)f (ji,,rV,. |.,J^
wm trjmpled under the parade
of fat-headed humankind mar-
ching towards .ts own vile de-
struction
It was only a matter of cen-
turies before divorce, contra-
ception abortion, smut group-
ies, nudity lewdity and the pur-
suit of empty pleasure left the
dtvine plan buried •''under sweat
and moaning. The beautifully
conceived GNPPC was forgotten
amidst the short vehemence of
the carnal act
Ptopie no longer maintained
the sanctity of rheir bodrty tem-
pie Strangers rame dnd went to
t7.rifn 'r! '^ '^-"V ants to
their h.ll The endless ranks of
humankind swelled, and cop-
uMi^. and grew again, until
'XJ*^. the era of the Bicentennial
to the prof^^ ^^ Kave created
with our own unwise desires
Though „s quite.prohably too
late ,o reverse our fall, we miHl
iifl ittiimyii „ ,p,,j,„ y^, ^^^^1
I kept arcour^s of my dt louru
I bought gas and paid (ash
I dialled long distant pdir«>rr
I used dental floss
I got my eyes checked
I saw my doctor every sir monihv
I looked between rhp Imes
.1 picked up hit( hhikers and tpli
old
I pu Med over for dmbMl.4'" -
I ttopped ai r^
I wrent or). green
I locked ^ my .doors but m\
car* was stolen
I fell in love on Suridav
I saw the man about the <U>y
I grew my hair lor>g ^hep >bort
I talked the-ialk ^ ' / -
I said the lines
I got nff cues
I look direction dnd got k>sf
I piedped' my allegianrr
I saluted the flag even di hdit
mast
I bought the books
I took the notes
I didn't want to share if with rhe
rest of the class
I didn't work out but lite went on
I HMed in the blanks . t
I gave short answers to muffiple
choices
1 marked all of the above
1 rnarked none ^ the dbove
1 gucMed ' C>
1 passed
I worked in the summer
I met my deadlines ^^
I met my cousim
I went out to lunch
I read m to things
I got in to things
I pve at the office
I h«ped for the best
I expected the worst
I looked for prosperity
around the corr>er
I got tired of waiting tor th(>
teatles to get back togefh^pr
I watted for Prime Tinie
I waiced for the movie to <.ijrf
I iOt tired of wditmii
I made plans.
yield to our traiioroiis passions
nor heed the ptifvevors of sm
and liberalism Those who (an
reach a deep and honest under-
standing with a prospective mate
must devote their life to pro< te-
ation and filling the world with
offspring that will du likrvsi »
Those others ot us must turn
elsewhere, to th#» .irfiinsitton ot
knowledge, lo pc - - ^^^
learning meduine. or writmu tor
the .flri/in' Onl> then whef' ^'
Uve harmoniousl> with Cod •>
Natural Ijw p« Popula"*'" ^""
tfol. will we find peatv a<>V
\.f
.1 I
'•A
V\r rnuu m* If-tn^^t^-
t finii'nfment m 'hr
( ,1 .n
I
More
^••plte everything, the
pwwiems of the Arabs are much
more numerous and difficult
•♦^en the destruction of Israel. It
is efKHifh to mention that the
touJ CNP of Ervpc ii |«i then
that of Israel This is hardly
abstract economics for the
Egyptian fellah (peasant), who »
marched to the Holy War
Corrupt political systems,
autocratic social structures, a
tiny elite that rip off the
JJJ«iofity. eflMwidcs, illiteracy —
these are the maior problems of
•» Arabs. It is time for the
Arabs to question "Whose
interest does the continuation of
^Mr serve? Which class
benefits r'
It IS tinte for die Arabs to
question war itself They cannot
fail to see the determination of
all Israelis to defend toeir
eiistence This will has .^^^^
*^*m^M the ^ra^rjaomi^
umm. Our mt0tmn and fathers
carry utooed numbers on their
arms as a remtrn^ that **r9^^i^
t^onary experiments" of the type
«*crtbtd by the PIO are oftcfi
carried beyond the domain of
words
H it lime for the Arabs tc
unite rather then exhibit verbal
^P^]y **ther than masking their
"'••wty by producing a ^^j^g
common satanic enemy, which
•s billed as the source and end
of all Arab strife, they should
consicier facing their prokkam
and unifying in its solution
Rather than oiling the war
machine (whereby Saudia Arabia
contributes one billion dollan
annually to support the Egyptian
nwliUry apparatus, but refuses
one nickel to improve the Ihfcs
of the fellahim), they should
unite in utilizing and improving
their stagnant econoeidcs for the
welfare of all.
father then ipendioe 4h««#
•'••'•*•' ^'^ ludicrout atiempci
to verbalize thew annihilation
proiec-t nicitly, as in secular
democratic/', or m rewriting
-illl?"V*** ("racism."
ilQtmm ). or trying to involve
themseh/es in fyfile^giiiMDr#i~
mythological and immaterial
distinction between a Zionist
•nd a lew. it it unrte for the
Arabs to come to grips with iHe
fl issues Not one Arab stale
recognizes thf (^itimacy and
'^ o^ Israel.
Rather iNen making war their
destiny and revolutionary
wperiments" their
* try a new
— PEACE! I
earn To nfahe
n
I
r
Your Own
Stoneware Pots
on a wheel this
Letters to the Editor
The UCLA Chapter of the
ACLU would like to suppon the
continuing e«ort of the Uni-
versity to help in the provision
of child care for the campus
community as recomrrtended in
the Spririg Review of the Cam-
pus Child Care Advisory Com-
mittee On the basis of discus-
sion arismg in and out of our
lanuary 20 forum on Campus
Child Care, we feel it irnpor*
tant also to support requests for
the restoration and future ex-
pansion of full-time catf^s
child care for the children of
staff and students It is the posi-
tion of the Women s Rights
Committee of Southern Califor-
*nia ACLU that, at present, be-
cause of the nature of our so-
ciety there cannot be efftective
progress m implenr>enting equal
rights for women without the ^
ayatlability of satisfactory child
care. We must mention here
that the Outreach Progi'am or
Family Day Care has been found
to be unsatisfactory or even
unacceptable! by ^ sizable frac-
tion of campjULi, faiTiilies who
American Youth Hogtels
Bicycle
AYH\ ^''*"*
Everything you need to know
about buying fixing 1. ndmg
your bike EquipfT>ent g Accet-
soriaa^
child care faciMiies (This is
docur7>ented in the aforemen-
tioned Spring Review which
(Continued on Page IS)
The Pot Farm
2909 Smnta Monicm BtyL SM 828 7071
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YASHICA
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PHOE PHOTO
ALnUM OPPKWI
Mofr comciQ & hw
V. Blocfc South oTUCIA in yy^. . ^- - V„^.; j,; ^ ^ \
•- -i jrf«;»._
24-Hour
nOtlOCOlOt'
Processint
/
Colloquium on Asians in America! ^^^^ ^" the visit tO Soledad . . .
I (C nartami horn Pm> tl —'rhm^r.mU «,
ij
TODAY
X PM 3232 Campbefl Hdl
BONC-YOUN CHOY
Author and lecturer on
The History of (he Koreans in America"
Public Invited
I Good Luck on Finals
I Take SEP! to AAU
£ Meet
^ June 10-12
froaiP»fc»^
rn thai we had in comtng to the facility and
he stresfted the n^ed to maintain thar outside
contact with Blaci students. Then he asked ior
some darrfication of the letter I had sent tlw
warden re^uaiiiii| permission to visit the prison
He wanted to know our purpose I repited we ^re
^^ ^ ^«*P you in any way we can All of the
fleeting was in the prtttrntt of a guard and the
CX)
From here we got into specifics He firsi told us
he represented SATE (self idy^ancement through
education!, a predominate Muslim nation of
Islam orgiimxation He explained their needs
educational^ first Since it is a self-help educa-
tional organization they need books In this area
we Mre requesting from Black students, especially
if you have any books in the irei of the Black
family. Black sociology or Black English Please
bring those books to the BSA office so we can
send them to San Quenim But even more than
the above mentioned books, they need law
books, A law book to prisoners is like the Bible
Many of these inmates represent themselves in
filing for appeals and so forth So we are
'^1?"*"'"* ^^^ books from anyone who can spare
what it, in effea, a prisoner s life line.
The public relations officer at SATE. Bro. Ko/o,
went into other areas in which students can be of
service to Black prisoners at San Quentin There
»s a shonage of caisette tapes which are used to
record music with. The inmates aren t allowed '
anything with a taping device, so tapes could be
recorded before being sent up.
"Tlie^ngle. most important fHtttf niit~i^t
-^g^MMiBd from Black studems from UCLA wat
me ne^ to communicate These Black men nmml
companions They need that contact and onk
you cm% help Most of the inmates we sooke i
were from the LA area and eventually willretur^
to the LA area. What we agreed to ^ wTs "
have everyone irHflllid in wrrt.ng inmates draw
up a short personal biography less than a Da.e
telling what you like and what you don't like
This will be do^ so that the prisoners will fcl
•We to choose the most compatible pen pal W»
»re requesting for the Brothers behind the bars ai
San puentin that once eggin especially Black
people come up to the BSA office and get further
information on how to get involved in this orison
program. ^ ^'^
We closed our rap session and Brothers gave us
a more extensive tour of the prison wrwem
past the adjustment center, a eupham.sm for
solitary confinement, where Brother Elmer Gero-
nomo Pratt is being held and the San Quentin su
are also housed We viewed the exercise yard fo
the inmates on death row (also given some vm
inappropriate misnomer). We were then taken to
the inner gate where we bade an emotional
goodbye to men some of us will ney^er see acam
but wiH certainly forever feel A note written by
one of the inmates to one of the sisters was taken
from him because nothing is allowed to read
Please sister write me " Some of the sisters left
with tears in their eyes. This ended the most
educational, productive 2 hours I ve spent m my
rr* '' "iS!^' ^"^ '' ** ^^> ' begmnini and
with your help . A Luta Cont.nua
discount on any
Giant Sepi with this
Coupon —
Good thru" June. 1976
UCLA
Tedrow
r
—— ^^^^nterhationaTStudent Center
^ Officially Endorsed Contribution to ihe
Los Angeles City Bicentenniaf
The International World of American Cooking
A monthly presentation of Oipr^, music and entertain-
ment featuring different country wfK>»e
become part of the American m#mi
To Be HekJ At
Editor:
I do have to say my four years
at the Oa//y ^ruin have been the
most en/ovable. intellectually
stimulating arjd monetarily pro-
TTtairre vear^' of my life But
thank god therrer^o^er!
everything differently. Besides, if
♦* probably one of the most
interesting ways to meet people
on this campus, not just those
on the p^)er, but some of the
most interesting who are not:
'ay there have
Here Goto
441
\f9
Th# im^mational
of the
Cen.ter
Httgard Wesrwooo
Always pQ Sunday"
Im glad the Oiily iruin e%-
rited so f'd have ^^somethmf to
i»rite for CNno tor the LCTO 5o
I d have soiatlimg to write
about^^v^rto for tliete '^ w#io
aided an>^ihtnni mv stint here
It teas nice, but li«e goes on The
7-^«t or vou can jo to hell
t2 «^
t^ ar^c E
»^c Enttftammam
Bhnwer
>t
Phone to*- g^eservatione 477^4567
'f^^enx
Friday. Saturday & Sunday Only
Art Liquidation
Warehouse Sale '-^
Graphics
w/ ffwies & glass
Posters
Prints
Lithographs - signed & numbered
from
Sis*
Original Oils
EdMor
It appears that this 4s-not the
^nd ot my time at (jCLA since I
^ave the chance of returning for
*** school But after four years
^ *" u^^Wgraduate three of
Jjj*^ ipent woHmig full-time for
the Brum. I want to take this
opportunitv to put down a few
thoughts.
Afiyoiie who wants to ^n liie
^^ify should do It At a mmi^
••**•". the epportunity is there
to gam a new perspective on the
operation of a politKal bureau-
a|ap». And ti you .mecialize m a
Jifki vou will I^Bwin to see
been many outstanding mem-
ories Primarily there was excite-
ment ride-along with police
around the state. 450 hours' with
the Los Angeles City ' Fire De-
partment (for which I gained a
real, nipt n.) the SLA shnxjtout
«rt IS well known that normal
tear gas danrsters will sonr>etimes
start a fire — perhaps a reason
to continue firing .canisters after
»t was obvious the gas was ir>ef
tective/). two presidents mak I nR
nowerous speeches (Ford is pro-
babh the'nx>st boring speaker I
ever covered,) the landing of
ihe Concorde SSI at LAX. the
opening of BART, numerous
eleaions, meetings.- demonstra-
tions, and memdries ilong bst
There were bad tinr»e» also. Suz
Rosen denying a statement con-
firmed by three other people at
the meeting, continual corrflicts
"^nh loe Ares of the UCPD, an
editor telling me to hold a story
on a candidate who forged court
records, an editor ordering a
photographer to turn film over
to someone who barged into
the office, sloppy factual re-
porting overlooked by editors.
Communications Board makir>g
the umpteenth poor decision
and an on-going battle with
LAPO over whether the Brum is
entitled to press credentials
(Dan Cooke — I intend to pur-
sue this in law. schooT.) ^
There were aKo good times
Sitting and talking in the office
rJ'!: ^?^'' ^''^^ parties at
McNarys, friends like Mark
Rubin (turkeys), TH. Irwin. Goto
McNary Dodger g^mes. the
shop. BOC, UPC and making a
looi of Oet. Zweifel
I am afraid I don't leave as
much of a legacy as I would like
My goal is a Brum which hasv
reporters who understand what
they are covering, news editors
wfK) care more about ace ufd
than deadlines and an editor-in-
Chief who can make decisions
which have nothing to do with
bein^^ jgood writer, but instead
display an understafnding of
policy and principle I hope to
see it before I leave in three
years.
Sieve Bro«»er
CriBt
whowr I IquidBUon
2310 Cotner W LA.
2 blocks wwt of Sepulveda
Olympic A Pico
478-3828
SUMMER POSITIONS
Pos.t.on, opwMng up «». for summer programs
■ f
international Student Center
825-3384
^^9^t9m Cooroirtator
rnimtaiuii (3-4 poaitions)
^'^o^rmm Coordioator
^^""^ Program ol Engiw, La„B»„„
1. Which of the following
describes the Dath Brum culture
as stated on pagCL54 of your $35
text?
a. unreturned calH. unattend-
ed classes, unrequited love and
unenplamable urges for mint
chocolate chip ice cream
b. Two January l/s and April
'iT's which Cod krK>ws we alwavs
need.
c. The croisword puzzle and
the cartoom that used to make
lectures pleasant
d. covering IBoard nr>eetings
*vhile I'm supposed to be at
work.
2- What IS the Udan method
oi cognitive retnforceable psy-
choanalytic conditioning?
a. the wait m line for three
hours to get enrolled m an
English class you'll hate
b tbe trip to the athletic
ticket office every two weeks
(while the lottery winners attend
only four game$)
c. aher BO pepet €4 lecture
••oies. the discovery that your
professor didn't say anything
worth pulling an aJI-nighter for
d those loudmouth knmm it
«IK in each djM who mA those
inar>e questions iust to BS the
prof
« the administration's beliet
that a rec center is more m^
portant theik hMiiM and park-
Inf. ^^
'• *r^ acdpttnot from your
first choice §t9d achosl b«t you
stiM worry over your second
** ■ %1****'^f^ < 1 ■H'l
( Continued from Page 1 2 >
g the general insanity that
90m with being a brum
h pro^eiiors who care more
ttT'o'^u"*'^** '^ *^'
"je publish-or-perish phiioso-
pny
Sprool Lbfary (which re*lly de-
^'"V^ to b« funded *g«„,
Kerckho« iw ^ other t^^:
aw ay -from- home.
3 Shor4 answer essay Explain
the reasons for the lack of choc-
olate milk, hall docks and hot
water m the dorm (5000 words
'▼maximum).
4. What IS the value of A
when: n-yz/{de '^2x)f
a 2X the DB staffers who
helped me get accustomed to
this place when I joined in Au-
gust 1974
b. 2y/z the DB staffers who
ompne the platomc and imper-
sonal air of the typewnteTs.
deadlines and copy p^per, be-
can»e my friends
C de: those friends on the
^a^'lt^ '^l'^ encouraged me
(CPAO and the student relations
commission of the Alumni As-
sociation) who smiled when ne-
cessary
5. True or False It is elitest to
t)e pica
6. What IS the answer to life?
a. Fridays
b. a diploma (Hint jf you
Delieve this fs the answer, you re
« bigger schlemiel than i
thought you werei.
c. ^/ewsweek
d. SA and SA cahdies
e. not a Rose Bowl victory or a
Pauley loss (you re right. Randy
n wasn t important)
t people who find time to
appreciate rec-center-type wea-
ther or an interesting novel; to
lauih at.-Saturday Night" with
any guest host, or a dumb sit-
com; to enioy the view from fhe
top of ijRL or lust a simple bar-
oque, to answer strangers
questions concerning the loca-
tion of the housing office or the
nearest bathroom. Will Missouri
or San Diego be the same?
g Hey, I'll miss you. kid. Bet-
ter watch it for me. huh/
Patty Croat
MorelaTa's
C. 1
Kutz
For four years, friends and
relatives have posed the
question, "Are you really glad
you went to UCLA? " So here's
f^y answer :
Yes I'm glad I went to UCLA
• m glad jt has a campus news-
paper where I could build a
Pre-Oents
Our last class aver-
aged 7 4 on the PMAT
and 6.0 on the Aca-
demic UCLA dental
school's entering class
averaged 6.0 on the
PMAT and 6.0 on the
academic.
Call (213) 475-DATS
or write
1907 Bfoxton
Suttp20
LA, Ca 90024
Call us for an invita-
tion for a Frae Semi-
sound ftMM ior a lutiire camm
' ve met friends and had a food
t'me in the dormitory In cUm
I ve worked with a fe«^ nroiai
»ors who deh«f#the rule that
P^ewife instituttons like^UCLA
miHt oiiiy be co-^m^ J;^
graduate students ^d re-
tearchers. One instructor that
^J**** to mind IS lim Howard
wno has gone out on a limb
^ore than once to help students
»" career preparation, to write
dozens of letters of recom^
'^ndation and to lend encour-
agement and advice
I've enjoyed the landscape of
^^Vlt^ '^ Sculpture Garden.
the hills around janss Steps and
the Recreation Center
I ve seen the advantage a stu-
dent gams by attending a re-
search-oriented institution
^here pro<eiK>rs hm^ j wealth
of mformation to olfar. And it's
il»o an instnution that's rich
^nough and accountable
^^$^^ to oHer valuable s.u
oant lanvkn^
•«* P*«oty poes on r„^ ,p^
makes me think ¥ would have
h^ lucky to get that scholar
»hip four years afo to Ck
cidantal CoMege
There is no doybt. ,udging
from cenain professors and
condescending administrators
that undergraduaiei are some-
times considered a nuisance
Yes, you are a number here and
't » a re^ fight to meet people
and get involved. HafUes about
parking, housing and enrollment
are as prevalent as bees in front
of Powell Library each spring
It IS ,ust too easy to spend
four years here and never think
what that bachelor s degree will
get you If a student does not
f Continued on Page 14)
ANNOUNCFS
DANCE AUD4TION8
•PPawHtd Orerfnr of Dance Studies ^
Saturday, Jui^ 19 from 10 00 am tr» i rsn
C-l.fom.. .„.t.tut. of th;°Am rvllc^ ^ " "
Children's Sailing Class
.|H)ns,,r..<J bv ih,^ UCtA S4,l,nK ctub'
Sdbot Sailing Classes offered tor children (ages
10-15) of students, faculty and staff. If interested,
Jeave name and phone number with 825-3703
Sailing club will contact you by June 15th. Classes
begin about June 26th.,
Appointments are w^cmmy. R^ase call rh. ru
Alrr>Lss4ons > I0')0 lacf
June 18 for _ Mntment Appi,.^nis - •
^' ;und m modern dance Of hdllet r. l...
'"'^ Apphratfnns Will h»
•n
of J RcdW Ct^
^cuxriuaJi
1
' I-
I
"^^«^ 16, 1976
1 0 curv - 5 prrv
ncy
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1218 ProapKt Strmt
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Class of '76 says 'bye
/ r
4£ unlinMcd from Pm|c U)
walk halfway, no o«>e is going I*
help him or her make the f9m
y«ar» nvorthwhile. At UCLA,
more thar) alrnsH #fiy Xfil^mr
ampui, U%tdmm have to take
the initiative, thumb their noMS
at ••me people and explore
every opportunity (plenty of
them) on campus tnd around
the city.
Ho«y Kufti
Dorosheff
At long last, I am given 4 he
opportunity to indulge m an
overwhelming urge I have had
all yar, as a Daily brum writer
and an English ma|or, to write
the sentence of my dreams, with
more than 28 words and lots of
n«at clauses, misplaced and
otherwise and see it printed,
untouched by editorial hands
and, since this will certainly be
the first, last and only tirr>e I am
permitted to do so, I can hon-
estly say that I am thoroughly
enjoying myself and feel much
belter already and aJI I really
have left to say is that it's been a
challenging, fun and insane ex-
perience.
Pekz
The time tiere is a capricious
and evolving experience, really,
creating a series of changes in
one's life which measure as vast
as the Univerisity itself Yet for
whatever changes have taken
place during my two year visit,
only K am accountable The dis-
tance between the person who
entered thts. school and the or>e
who will leave is imfiMWH UHJ
to •Mly be tiiiffi dearly m |he
to cocnc.
There's an old adag9 net lao
na$tnd which reads.
"Eduation teaches jtou the rules,.
cxpcricr|ce leachcf the excep-
tiom/^ Neither works in4ap99h
dentfy here, however, but simul-
taneously in a chorus which
sings out life high irHo the raf-
ters of one's mtr>d. In the midst
of hope, anticipation and il-
lusion lurk doubt, indecision
afKi diiappointment, ibrming a
struggle which transcends the
blue book and final grade. One
only fails in the absence of the
other.
To look back and ponder
what I have done or what once
took plac^ proves to be non-
sense, yet should I ever be given
the opportunity to live those
years over again I would seize it.
But friends, act carefully in anti-
cipation of future bliss and place
your trust in the hope of today,
because you may wake up or>e
day and find tomorrow's bliss
has slipped away.
Thanks to the Daily Bruin and
its staff for offering me refuge '
when I was lost and to Tim for
sharing the throes of the English
defwrtment with me. And thanks
to a friend who happened to
like strawberries and without
whom there lies little chance I
would stili be here today.
4urtHk>r%
nt tor thr«e Mr«ifh« Koun Mootf\
Th« rinfmg in tnf hm&6
A««aMy cissrid out iMt momNig, f^. ^
ihouf hi I vvould vwrilc you » \mtf «»
while i CM.
So, kmtr% mimytk»n§ i aowot io4d you
iteut m« h «N sunod lour yoort ^o \m
NowoM^or. m^^m • Wand, *crafg^.H»„^
guy i\§mm4 Mc»*aty Mid to m«, "So yoM
W4ni lo work for ilio BnMn'
Like all th« ctkm puyt from our btock i
«v«rMod to and dM.
And lor tho iiMt four yowt. I wm tht
Brum S««r — oovcrtng dw
PaHy Ho«r«i. )«rry gruww
«. (not to montion all
Godd
_ War *% hell and bem^ out here in thi*
foxhole eating ASUCLA K-ratiom it not
hjn. With I Mra» back in the Statei My
hitch is up soon, but WIHie aitd |oc
rese^
■:-rf
Radcliffe Institute
arvird University
Fear of Success iAmong Blacks
12:00 noon
,3107 Campbell Hall
FnddV. Junf 4 1Q76
Open and Free to the Public
ELECT
FLORENCE BERNSTEIN
JUDGE
LOS ANGELES MUNICIPAL COURT
OFFICE #12
Elect a qualified woman.
Elect experience, integrity, fairness.
Vote for Florence Bernstein, June 8.
Running for •ditar-in-chief wm hm
even (hough it Cfidad twice rather trau
matically I should have boon editor thn
year — dM pa^m would have bmt\ 4
helluva tot better ~ bui it wasn 1 meant
to be.
ThiMii Htnrnd out a Joe botter - now
I m at th« Tim«, but still looking for a
lull-time |ob Are you iHiening out there?
Laat year ondM on a rajther ominous'
note with two Sob Hoy's at Sindee Levm s
Political advertiaement paid for by Florenc* Bernstein for Judge Committee. Jack Hannig.
IKjt this yoar. 11 h« endod m Paim
Springs {and m Hadleys) MHi I must say
that the xMndtm wm a whole lot boiior
than tho liidior
Anyway: now you know everything
^•ri — my contributiom to thn damn
place are recorded in the bluo-bound
wolum»^n Kerckhoff Hall 112 Some day.
whon I m old ar«d have grandchildren that
aik mm. "What did you do m tfie great
newspaper busineu Grandpa^' I'll proud-
ly vay that I fought on the front and was
hot uationed at sonrM* chickemhif rhrow-
"aiway in Aruona. _^^^.^
The sergeant juat toM me that we d be
moving out soon, so I'lf continue this
Ictiar a. knh \mm
' Wa're in Paris now and they say we'll
be marching through Icflin m |ust two
weeks
lack to the letter, I want to tell you
ateil tonrte paopla I met
Mojt imporunr is a guy named |im
Howard Probably the greatest influence
on my career (told n>e to get into it m the
hrtt place. I Mr Howard stuck with me
through the touffiott of times and put up
with all my prpcrasiinantion , lateness 4nd
incompletes
He taugfn me one thing. That's how to
be a good newsrvian Something which
thare ac^n't too nrtany of anymore
I'm not too surprised He's probably
one of the best that ever lived It would
be nice if all the ink-stained wretches i
know tooli tome ieaaows from him- The
busir>ess would be a lot bafiar off than it
IS rK>w
You'd like him. SltafT. OsHHte hn cigars.
Pick up a iMM, would you, and sortd it to
him Tc4l him thar>ks a lot, too I'll always
r^nmmbmf him. Tali him thanks again lor
Then thora was this guy nammd Chuck
Young Didn't Mie him at first And I still
haven't made ap my nitmd. I rMaamber
when I ftm mm- him. Ha laid I miMiMoied
him Didn't. Had a Mpa racording to
prove It
lesus. the whole sky )uai iKooll. Wotild
you gat a load of that — sorrtafhtng thay
call a fat airplane
The guys from a couple of years a§D
were okay, too. I hoard some of them
aren't arxtund anymore Thai's ioo bad.
McNary, Ward, Burgart. PaWrfon. 'Ain»-
worth. Pautlar, todman andC^Iohen. I
think that's their names
We have some kookey guys Hanofwd
with us here There s a guy named DeNim
who,4l||C«ps statistics on how many buUets
art shot per hour A guy nmmmd Silver-
stem is probably the craziest of them all
His mother keeps landing him iHamis
from Chicago He's a square guy
Kaaps talking about cheerlaadars We'll
have to fia him up here in Paris with a
"hometown gal"
Going out with a bunch of WACS
tonite I know one of them from back
home in Whittier Name is Wetsberg. Said
she wanted to see Europe — I coultin't
think of a worse way to do it
Last night. I met some guys in another
comparyy Soma cute tfciughnut ar>d co^
fee girk were with tf«em. Shapwo. lohn-
Mft. McGalhard Kane. Slugs and CruJ (I
t^nk that might be spelled wrong)
Vidtta, X>onna. Ann. Sue and ComaN
preny cute But their sargaant was a
jh old brodd — wouldn't let iiMaii tttk
wnile thay were on duty
Moyifig on again — wIN pick it up later
I got sick laH rHfht. Drank too much at
* little bar caMed the Red Log N4et an
Italian cf>rporal named Farsucrhi He was
«ome character. Told am the difference
between a codNaN taaim afid an ala-
phant with gas Ha said one is a
*nd the otfyer a •ARROOfWi
As to my prwam dutiei^A^
ID train ipma «l the younpa
Couldn't aa II - they^ w%re moitly m-
compateiii and had no biMina» being
here In the first place Thay're sure
drafting them young these days Of
course, the older guys are pwMing up «rith
«t They say to give t»»em time I sa^ gh»a
'hem anoUiai migar
WeN, I cant iliMi of anything alw to
»«y Hi f*ie laM ttWif.l'H aroWMy ^»ar
.«vrite for rhit r^ - ani Vm glad of R.
Time to nyove on. I guan. But aM
nights will be long
By the way, navt
m mm Mks
lime fmtt go 10 tha fh«
potMr of Betty CrdMl-
.BaMd.
\
^t^i
(CeaalMMi fraa Page 1 1 )
ihows tK«t 52% of famllief wtie
Have Hied the campus child care
facility would find Family Day
Care unaccepubl^ and 33% of
the waiting ittt families would
find it lluctplilili even if cam-
pus group care were not avail-
able.) In conclusion, we wish to
ijateour opinion that full-tirT>e
MMianti as well as suff should
have available to them accep-
table full-time campus child
NkM iyers
ACIU
I have been following your
series of articles on Pride House
and have generally been quite
pleased with them My only
complaint would be thai the
articles didn't really convey how
miserable the situation was and
IS at Pride House That is why I
was quite astounded when I
read Dr Wellisch's letter in
which he disagreed with the
articles and stood up for Pride
Housr Speaking as a former
resident of Pride House, I can
state that during the entire 12
months when I was at Pride-
House there w^ere always m<ir^
people living there than it Wa»
licemed for
Df Wellisch states that he has
been a consultant kj Pride
House since July 1975 I was
there at that time and as staled
above, there were always nr>ore
than the facility was licensed for
Or, Wellisch states in his letter
that the manner in which
benching was presented was
"diBfurbinf." The truth is that
bernrhing was olien used simply
to make the stalf s |ob easier.
Very rarely was there a legit-
imate reason for a person's be-
ing bei^ched The betich itself
consisted of two bricks set upon
the fkxK with a small nMrom
board over them. The person be-
ing benched was not allowed to
commur>tcaie with anyofte. If
he/she desired to leave the
benfeh for any reason, he/she
had to wait until a counselor
**hap^ned" to walk by.
Dr Welltsch slates that He was
and is intimately acquainted
with the staff and residents I
find this very' curious, because
during my entire length of stay
of one year, I not only ne^er
heard of him, but most certain-
ly never saw him in any of the
groups of family therapies.
1 wonder what political in-
fluences prompted the writing
of Df Welltsch's letter .
^ianie WMwcW
ftojectA
r^.V
Politics, especially in an ele(
tion year, is very confusing
There are many candyMti. t^ch
with their own stand on the
issues. The rules of politics are
iust' as confusing, indeed some
may say they do not exist at all
Ssit. now as our own slate pri-
mary draws near, I am pkmimd
to f«nd thal^ our student §p¥frn
ment is a pulrfuctive one. Pro-
lect AwWiUM 76 should be
cofigratulateil on its information
Profect Awareness '76 has giv-
en us a convenient. nr>eanin^ii|
booklet describing all the can-
dMiits on all the issues of mafor
concern. It also contains a sec-
tion describing electoral laws
and practices vni even has an
inlorfWe^ conunentary on the
primary stratifies of the can-
Hiaat»<. Th^ saZn «f thk hook I
will enaMe fhe ^ipier lo maki- ^
•ore informed cMce at the
Thank you. ProfOCt Awareness
'76
Thank you. student govern-
ment.
GSA
The ad submmed by GSA aod
ran last Thursday is confused
and confusing In a half page it
fails to tell the reader anything
concrete. The validity of the
accusations listed is question-
able. How did Nishi undermir>e
the Senate's Mogated author-
ity? When did he do it? Has this
heinous crime k^een committed
recently? I hope that it has
nothing to do with the investi-
gation of the alleged misuse of
Community Services funds^ if it
does, Allah save GSA.
The accusation addressed to
Cormier is confusing If he as-
sisted someone 'in an attempt
to rob the Graduate Student
Body of the autonomy
who are the people th^i he s
assisting? Why doesn t G.SA ar\d
the Senate concentrate their
efforts on deaftng with r*^
peopiet Or maybr -.omeofit- i>
trying to undermine all the
hard work Bill has done this
year
The examples given m the
^^ay 24 resolution acusing
Spataru of "bringing chaos to
GSA and "attacking the
solidarity of GSA" are even
more confused and misleading.
Spataru was not involved with
GSA when the calcMtator dispifie
came up. As a mmtmr of fact, he
'■ • ■ .\ V .
had nothini to do with the
dkuiator raffle idoa. I feel that
any patt calculator dispute did
not attack the solidaHly 9l
GSA ' Alex's association with
Swami started more tfian a year
ago. Why hasn't anyor^e broMfht
the idea to censure him for his
MBDciation with Swami before?
Truly this is chaotic behaviour
that makes him unfit to serve
^wami got more than 25 per
cent of the votes cati in the last
GSA election on a write-in
campaign Could it be that
certain people that manipulated
to run unopposed obiected to
this amazingly strong write-in
vote? I wonder what would hap-
pen if another election were to
take place in fall?
The third accusation has t^do
with an attack on a feWv
cabinet member "because of
race?" I hope that the Senate
clarifies the identity and raiie of
the attacked individual and how
Alex went about to attack him
As there are more than two
races in the GSA cabinet. I want
to make sure that my race is not
being attacked
All this leads to one big
qu«Blion: VWhy have all these
accusations suddenly popped
up?' .f iugpect it has a lot to do
with their invobgpioni in the
•nvesfigation of atteped misuse
of GSA fund^ It's rather ironic
to give them this nice far««iwell
gift as they complete a year of ^
considerable accomplishments.
Perhaps this is a note of warn-
ing saying "Watch out for the
new GSA regime. If you don't
please those special interests
groups that now control GSA
and the GSA Senate, you will be
cenBMfcd, regardless of what you
have done in the pait"
rroOT* »^i>«iwa (Umam
CWMiv. an «MiaiaaaNig o^i^iian ^ va^^K
•rl tp««in»Mf MB aeti
tmn m liaaa mmm m
nmea - Ooya Omumtmt Citrner a i^—
m neitoir C«i««« itwoarea* mot* Prtcmi
mem Staooo
in
— t
mttn U a^HK^JO ^1 10 4
HOURS 1 1 00AM • 2 00AM SUN 4-MIONiOHT
^^ IBftWra Particular
t^'
THC BUNDPVQ
Rustic At
eating and drmHing — tabiighmeet
Md Apa timit
<B>1 Santa Monica Plvd In tinllyweei
Dart
fSArt6AlmAkee
13l4«lvii«,ooclSlvd
West wood, CaMf f0024
^•••w* (21 3) 473 954^
Co»i*e' ot Roctie%ref en^
i^:!tUL^.':.:-t 5 « :^f.!i^sTjjMCT IONS
This IS the place for Rib Lovers i
By for the Besf Rib% we v# fried m L A
Heraid E ■arrnrer
COMPLETE DINNERS
tCasuat Dintng "«»«S2.75
I HARRY'S OPiN PIT BRQ
I 1434 N CRISCINT HCICHTS of SUNS fT (Tfflf
a
-10 Minutes Uc wn Sunset Blvd to
Lai^(el»Canyon ^uinKioht Artd '^ou tc T.h#re
PSYCH STUDENTS
Stay Cool This Summer ,
Check in at 1 531 B Franz
Hall for news of Under-
grad. Psych. Assn. and
Psi Chi programs and
plans.
■ (i
II
wnteRNSOF
pftoeusM-soLViue
UiV
11
fouMC^ioH a<ip
T^ciiriooes OF
PMoeiCM-SOLVl
NO
FRCaWOiSi'
irbtRucnoKiaL
OaiLt Po8s
ufWuaL'scssi
C3LL 82S-26II , OR
Ktf)K Mli-C, FROM 10 TD 3.
HW 0-10, lula BiD,i
Kfvmi It,
Hm3-5,1uTH
Concerned about Cardiac Disease?
UCLA Cardiographies Lab offers
Tests of:
Cardiac Rhythm
Exercise Capacity
Valve Function;
Painless and Free
We need normal men and women subjects age 18-70
Call 82S-3024Jor information and appointment.
T^
MHMfa
flap
m
BW«
\
Last letters of the year
.V.
mASK
rhe Native American stu-
4ints enrolled at the Untversity
of Californai at lot Angeles,
Since American Indians com-
pnae only 1^ of 1 pec cent of ttie
entire po^latiQn throughoiit
the United States and were
forced from their honr>eland ter-
ritoriet. we see no valid reason
why we should be ^rced to pay
endorse rt>e following 4&rn^ndi for nonresident ^tuition fees
as unanimously agrood upon by wkm W9 were neyer monetarily
the organization of Native Anv compensated for the land on
erican Slydonis Association. whicfh UCLA was constructed,
As American Indians we have nor for the entire state of Cal-
historically been oppressed, ifornia The American Indians
Since this is your bicentennial,, should have an opportunity to
one would hope for corrective attend the UC system without
chance in your archaic educa- paying fees in lieu of what has
tionaT system. been taken by the federal and
Bureau of Indian Affairs stale governments,
boarding schools ire located If UCLA should keep its pre-
throughout the United States sent policy of charging Amer-
»nd operate ur>der the policies ican Indians the present ei-
formulated by the Department orbitant fees for tuition, then
of Interior. They were originally they should provide adequate
65
established by the Federal Gov
ernnr>ent to act as a catalyst in
the assimilation of the American
Indians. The instructors hired to
teach in these institutions acted
more in the capacity of police-
men. These conditions still exist
to this very day. with primary
emphasis placed on discipline
and assimilation instead of edu-
cation. For this reason, we feel
that students filing their appli-
cations for UCLA from high
schools operated by the BIA be
given special consideration with
regard to subject requirements
and grade point average.
financial aid funding, excluding
loans, so that the American In-
dians won't er\d up owing the
state and federal government,
when the situation should ac-
tually be the opposite
Dennis Sandov^
N.A.S.A.
Rebate
Edttor:
The annual spring rebate on
books IS much worse than an
innocent public relations gim-
mick A "non-profit" institution
can divert attention away from its
Campus Events Film Commission of the Student Legislative Council
presents: ~~.j-
<xs<^-
«*!?■'■'
ify
n
*4>^-^
'4m
:f*-.
MK^
i^L^poKsr
1
'\:
/ /
SIIUHIII»>
"^A^NBmBJjji^gillON LITTLE GENE WILDER SLiPICKB6 OUBHUDOIESION CUUOE EHNB STJWflETT JR
itoSMnMEL BROOKS fURVLyKOfiMIIN«iMADELmEKAfll San^n^ntEL BROOKS NOmSiSTEMKHG AWMFW
tISTIKTIi
Ackerman Grand Ballroom
, June 4
7 & 9: 1 5 pm Adm. $1.00
''••I flhan*"
cigt lotMt by publicizing its4eke
profits (i.e. overcharges on
books). But no one gains fpom
this dscapiion except for three
gfttu^- (t) rich students who
with their pmmixs BankAmen-
cards are able to make huge
purchases in a short period of
time; (2) book store employees
who are ctever enough to get
access to book receipts for
themselves ar\d their friends ax\d
(3) management who can pre-
tend to be cilioent (look at all
their profits) and ger>erous (tee
how they give it all back). whBe
at tf>e same tinfie sitting on its
slush fund (profits from^ over-
priced books and unclaimed
rebates). This business <maU)
practice allows the management
to i-ndulge in unneed«d ex-
penses often indirectly padding
their own salaries and in gene-
ral, It encourages undetected
waste.
But the whole rebate idea is a
hoax anyway. (Remember how
the car dealers did it?) The
rebate is a way of increasing
book sales and unloading over-
ordered books that students
don't r>eed or want We ail
know the bookstore can never
seem to order the right number
of books. I remember one quar-
ter when the books never came
(unless it was after the fmals)
Students are expected to waste
their time calculating receipts
and figuring ouf a purposely
complicated rebate system de-
signed to discourage most peo-
ple from getting bac4 what was
theirs to begin with. Why r.ot
simply have a publicized sale on
overstocked books? Why not
also simply lower all book
prices? Because the bookstore is *
basically a rip-off ar\d most stu-
dents are too rich to care
Ray Beck
Zionism
Editor:
It has been claimed by seve'cat
anti-Zionists in the Oai/y Brutt\
that the policy of the Israeli
government which allows any
lew to become a citizen of Israel
without naturalization is racist.
This policy is known as the Law
of Return because it allows ev-
ery few to return to his home-
land. It is policies such as these
which justify the allegation that
Zionism is racism, or so if is
argued
Is such a policy racist? The
question is not a difficult one Is
It racist that children born of
British parents on foreign soi1h>e
granted British citizenship? Of
course not. For it is a commonly
accepted principle of interna-
tional law that or>e's parentage
determines one's nationality.
Why. then, is it so odd that
children born of Jewish parents
on foreign soil be granted cit-
izenship in the Jewish state? ,
It is not odd at all. The reason,
however, that our Arab brothers
think it odd is because they
refuse to accept the Jewish nght
of self-definition. It is their de-
cree that Judaism is a religion or
even further from the truth. ,a
race. But it is not an ethnicity,
not a nationality whose mem-
bership hoWi all the rights and
privileges of a nationality
Whereas lews everywhere will
agree that Judaism is certainly
r>ot a race and far iT>ore than a
religion, our brothers refuse the
Jewish definition of Judaism as a
religto-nationaltty, ethnicity or
civilization and replace it with
their own
If the law of Return is racist,
then so are the naturalization
poltcicf^of nearly every other
nation on earth including, of
course, S/ria. Jordan ar\d everv
other Arab land
• ■ ^^^. . \. -♦
^••
As ^ result of the White ^
lution. Iran has beconrte a coun-
try growing dynamically in every
dimmiigii. ,Lar>d reform, indus-
triaHzation and education i\a>te
been the moat important areas
of concern in tf>e Revolution of
• the Shah and the People
Over one-third of Iran s cur-
rent population has benefited
from the pr ofect of land reforms
(lands purchased and distributed
by tf>e government), which was
foHoMed by a maior effort to
naodernize agriculture Modern
irrigation projects, which were
first initiated by the founder of
modern Iran. Reza Shah the
Great, largely expanded, the
number of ma^or hvdroelearic
dams increased (14 completed
ar\d 10 more under construc-
tion); farm corporations and
cooperative societies were
founded; the use of tractors,
combines and fertilizers, now
Good-5yes...
My Cod, it seems such a short
while ago that the timid, appre-
' hensive freshman from Santa
Ana walked into the imposing
UCLA dorm with a sense of
lmper>dirtg doom, ready to take
the next bus back to Orange
County. And she could swear rt
was only yesterday that she hesi-
tantly walked into the DaHy
Bruin office, mustering up all
Xhe courage she had to ask for a
job a& copy reader Four years
C>^^latef, Orange- County couldn t
be further from her mind and
copyreading three nights a week
has long since beconne a
memory. --r^'-.:^
Corny and trite as it may
I deeply cherish my four
years at UCLA, battling with
HAL; agonizing over poJi sci
I" the coumry, wa.
encouraged by the Develop-
ment aT\d AaricuHural Extension
Corps mambeis and a special
committee was eaublished to
administer a plan which will
eventually paonlie health, re-
tirement ar>d insurarKe for rot*.
<^^nts of 64,000 vill^n. Iliia,
"aInKM overnight a new class of
small freeboyors was created in
rural Iran, directly alteciing the
Itves ar>6 living standard of 12
million people." {Jtme. Septem-
ber 6. 1971)
Today, there are 44,000 ele-
'T>entary and high schools and
more than 100 universities af\d
institutes of higher learning m
Iran The Imperial Decree on
Education issued \r\ February
1974 provides free lunch, milk
and education for every child in
school; furthermore, free sec-
ondary school and university
education are provided m return
papers, endless reading lists and
impossible' multiple-multiple
choice tests; waiting in lir>e after
impossible line; cramming for
midterms only to find that the
week after next I had to start
studying everything I forgot aher
I took my midterms in prepara-
tion for my finals, learning to
cope with sorority life, endliM
Monday night m— tings v\d
living with 40 other oonplaining
girls just like myself. And
through It all. I kept reminding
myselif of the wise words of
soime r^^pra>^ed college student
"These are the best years of
your life."
Memories of my D§ days,
though, are exceptionally fond.
Who could ever forget 3:00
deadlines ^hat were r\eN^ met;
the biggest story ever to., hit the
front pai^. perhaps finding its
way to page 1^; Dave Gould, the
Jrarton the Move
by Qholwn ^ All NMliimabadl
■Znduc/^
for government upon gradu
•tKHvA budiet of ^,1 bMion
has been mifnid for education
alone in the current (fitth) ^an,
of which 30 p^ cent will be for
rural areas A prxi%rarr\ has been
set up for the use of educational
w«*"»tes, television and other
visual aids in the classroom.
According to the agreemem of
March 4. 1975 with the U.S., 150
mobil vocational centers. 10
sjpecialized vocationa^ceniers
•tto 10 technical institutions are
«o be eitablifbed to train 40XX)0
skilled workers ar\d technicians
each yfear Illiteracy, which has
be cut in half since the creation
of tf>e Education Corps, is ex-
pected to be virtually eradicated
by 1983
Iran s drive toward industrial-
ization has kept pace with other
developmental measures. Arya
Mehr Steel Complex in Isfahan,
.which was inaugurated by the
Magnificent, making his daily
announcements of a forth-
coming ,)ob ebber with the New
York Tin>es. Washington Post or
perhaps the Palisadian Post and
those famous muckraking jour-
nalists (who shall remain name-
less) whose infamous eMpoies
lent the Itirfn nationwide
ly
The Imbi has been nf>ore to
nr>e than simply some 20-odd
pages of newsprint The people
who have filled those pages are
what have rT%a0ife it all worth-
while — not only the old-timers
going back to the days of Peter-
son, Ward, McNary. Knell and
Bart but also those who are ^ust
beginning as well as those who
are ending their days at the
■nibi ~ I think you're all the
greatest
I would be remiss if, within
this brief memoir, I failed to
Iranian leader on March 14.
19ii. has been ommNfOmd with
Cooperenofi fer the e«-
_ of naturaf gas delivered
to the^ USSR through ^ gtant
1.300 km lone pipeline. Steel
produoion will be given a fur-
ther boost by the comtruition
of five new steel mills, thus
brining ^Iran's steel production
up to 15 million tons within the
next five years. By the com
tion of the second pipeline,
world's largest gas trunkli...,
across the \ran\an plateau (all
the pipes will be produced lo-
cally), which will supply natural
gas to West Germany. France
arid Austria through the Soviet
Union. Iran is expected to earn
almost $500 million annually
Iran's advanced auto industry,
which encompasses 12 com-
panies and manufactures most
components in Jran. currently
produces cars, buses, tractors.
mention one very important
influence in my college journa-
lism career, a professor whose
interest in and concern for his
students is rare indeed. I thank
you. Mr HoWard. for your ex-
pert guidance, kind words of
encouragemeiii and the inspira-
tion you've given me to aggres-
•h^ pursue my dreams of be-
coming a newspaper iournalist
Thanks for listening — you'll
always be remembeted
Most of all. UCLA has given
me the chance to rry^ke some of
the best and dearest friends one
could ever hope to find. Party-
ing and studing, getting drunk
and eating ourselves into obli-
vion — those times were de*
finitefy the best of. times, timet^
I'll never forget.
To capsulize what I have
learned here at the "Big U"
would seem to be a not too
trucks and tanken.
Otl arvi petrochemical industriei
with numerous plants and refin-
eries (including Abedon's. the
worlds largest) contribute the
most to turn tf>e country into a
rrsod^rn industrialized state.
Using ITS vast oil revenues, the
country is well into a bold iTH
billion. SIM and half year devel-
opn>ent pMti%rarr\ New induf*»
'les. notably steel. autcH and
ynthetic fibers., helped Iran to
I national product to
a f%cotd $54 billion last year
(bom %Xk billion m 1973) and
raised per capita in coma to a
healthy $1,570 (from $Mg); ,u»t
about any aduM in the pop-
ulation of 36 miHion can find a
fob ' . ffime. May 10. 1976)
Workers in these industries now
receive as much ^s 20 per cent
of the profits and are allowed to
buy up to 4Sr per cent ownership
in their companies.
difficult task, for I
think that the little knowledge
that may have pernf>eated my
mind IS probably of very tittle
consequence And after all is
said and done, only one very
minor question continues 4^
bagder me, anxiously waiting for
an answer "Will I ever find a
lob?'
Vet in the final analysis, I must
"ciiliias that my days at UCLA
have been 'more than worth-
while, for they've matured me,
educated me, offered me lasting
friendships, good times, an oc-
casional ulcer, mononucleosis
and a B.A And for ajl that. I
wouldn't give up these past four
fears for anything rt^he world
Hey, UCLA, thanks ^ the
memories!
e
I
\
I
i
5
I
celebration of
arts
begins today at 6 pm
%
SO bring your pillows, blankets and
join us.
\
li
l„
UCLA ARCHITECTURE QUAD
FREE FOR ALL
Friday, 6 pm - midnight
Saturday, 12 noon - midnight
Sunday, 12 noon - midnight
continuous
music, theater, dance, mime & more
..■ I
-\
x^ by the Student Committee for the Ans, Cultural Affairs
CoffMMiion. Cultural & Recreation Affairs, Canrtpliis Events. Fcialbon
in rfKiprrannn w\Vt\ rnmmittee on fine art* n9rkA\immm%
K^i— —
. . . LJ-^J. 1 " . ■ P. 1 '_J.
"^
^
W^baV-ri
f .»-i
hl'f.
Australia WelcomerJ^ tirWestwooiil
I
-rf^ <r-
-<fr-
;' J'
iP8 Denims are up from downunder
nt its one thing Westwood
village and all fashion
minded Americans don't
need; It's more jeans.
We've had them all ways;
studded, patched, painted!
embroidered and we've
worn them with everything
from flour sacking to silks.
,. Yet Australian based JAG
specializing in denim has
rocketed to the top of the
charts along with Olivia
Newton John.
The doors of Jag opened
in Beverly Hills one year ago
and with them opened a
whole new concept in
fashion.
J-.:
Since then their success
has spread to New York and
noviT Westwood.
• .',-•-'■
Jags secret to success is
quite simple: sophisticated,
yet still groovy enough to
keep it from being too seri-
ous; changing their styles
constantly to keep abreast
of fashion; and selling them
at reasonable prices.
r)
Come by the store and
check-out the turned on
look of Jag Gear for Women,
Men and children.
Jag Westwood
10925 Weybum
LA 90024
(213) 477-9081
••* «~r *i
Jag B«v«r1y HHIt
9912 Brighton Way
B*vMly HMIa, CalH.
(213) 550-9151
Jag Naw York
21 East 57th St
New Yorl(, New Yorti
(gig) 751-05aa
/
i»-T«
1
■-A i.>
»•>'
I
^w
£
i
Kv
,• 'X
^-.ii^
t^ttm
^■^
■fVV^
1
DUtinguished TA awards.
^ ((Toiittnued from ^ifef)
J iiudenu using \\\^ guides and
' saying. "That really cjeared
^ thingi up lt*s a nice fee4ing to
^ know that people are helped
^ ^ the guides.*' he said.
V Hsi-Chao didn't speak
- - English when he came to
America four years ago from
Taiwan Now he it lent than
one ytaa awa> from earning
his PfiD in chemistry
Chow graduajt^d' from col-
lege in Taiwan anj then served
his oblifilory one year in the
mihtary He decided to come
to America because "America
has the best technology m the
iworld*
He has been a TA at UCLA
(ft.
/
#
1 Hunger strike. .
S^ (Contimicd from Pttfr J)
^ graphed in order to avoid recognition by the
"^"^ Shah's police force. Savak.
I Recognition would be. a disaster, Razmandeh
-» said, because Iran imposes a life sentance on
anyone who joins a group of two or more
people which opposes the government in any
way Punishment is moie severe for those who
oppose the Shah in a public or violent way, she
said
The two inspeaion teams, which are now
being formed in Europe, are composed of
reporters, lejgai observers and medical per-
sonnel **The teams are ready and in the process
of going to Iran," according to the letter.
However, it has not been determined if Iran
will allow the teams to enter the country, ISA
member Sam Giv said. For this reason, Raz-
mandeh said, **Wc're not going to puhlici/e the
identities of the people that arc going We did
that last year Leonard Weinglass, who already
had his visa, had it revoked when the Shah
Jound out why he was going"
'"Wtien thcv get there, they will probably not
for four years and gives much
of his credit to his students.
**When I first started teaching.
I had to write down what I
wanted to say My students
really helped me out. they
would talk slowly and help me
along."
Since Chow i^ not yet an
American citi/en, he has had
be able to sec any of the prisoners," Giv said
"We are hopeful that the hunger strike will put
pressure on the Shah, and we have the support
of groups such as the National Lawyers Guild
and Amnesty International. Still, past groups
have had no success; in Iran, you just tenp*
pear, and you generally stay in jail until they
see fit to reknse you."
Russo, who ptaised the strength and courage
of the students, said "the Shah is a fascist
puppetV just as the leaders of South Vietwnn
were.
He added, "Right now, Iran is just hkc
Vietnam in 1961 There is a large resisuncc
movement, both in Iran and in Oman, where
the Shah needs 30,000 troops to supress the
people."
Russo said Rockwell International built a
muKi-million dollar electr^^nic intciligencc
complex m Iran, which is used intensively for
domestic surveillance The purpose of this
complex ji^ to "automate the baitlclicld." he
said.
to tench in order to ctM hb
expenses '^Foreign ji»tudents
must pay the out-of-state tui-
tion fee. even if they have lived
in California for more than
one year The Univirrsitv
waives this fee if you become a
1 A. but not tf you apply for a
• research fellowship. " he ex-
plained
Michele LaRusch is a philo-
sophy student taking her oral
qualdying tests for the PhD.
next Week. She attributed her
success as a TA to her profes-
sors and to a conference on
effective teaching methods
given by UCLA during the
summer
"II I didn't have a good
processor, then I couldn*t be a
food TA. so It is the depart-
ment and the professor that
should share the pri/e." she
said. 'r-,
Larry loeher. a geography
J A. said. "Il'«) quite obvious
that there are many incompe-
tent 7 As. which is really too
bad. since ihcy are the ones
that have the initial contact
with the students Improving
7 As IS the best wav to improve
teaching."
The main problem, he >avs
IS nuiny TAs air not jprepared
to teach I he> have had q^
training in teaching they are
just thrown into class, i^ink or
swim."
^JHce "YAs musi look out-
side most departments for e<-.
lective teaching techniques '
Loeher strongly recommends
the annual T A orientation The
orientation uses such devices as
videotape systems, SO thnt T><U
can watch themselves actually
.teaching and make the neces-
sary improvements before they
get into an acUial classroom
situation
Gloria Swiizer. a Ta in the
French department, gave a lot
of credit to her department's
system of observational in-
struction for TAs.
New LAs must observe a
class taught by a senior TA for
one hour eacv day^during their
first year She is now tlfacHing
one of these observation
classes
In addition, to this, the\
must lake a course in mcthod-
olog\ \*hich shows them hou
to teach more effect IV elv Ln-
like most departments, the
hrench I As instruct regular
classes, not fust qui/ sectums
S$jUAhJL^\o-io fiy^ f
1
J
On the docks ...
f C ontinued from Page I )
facilities were built for the creu Hecht added.
Since the sailing club was allowed to share the .dock area. '^I he
sailing club )usi grew and grew and grew." according to Semfold
I he club now wons 6 Coronailds (15 foot). 5 Catamarans. .6
Sabots and -2 Flying Juniors (for the sarfrng racing team) ^
Although the dock was designed for the crew team. Anglin
said. "I hat mav have been .true at one time, but there i> no
reason that given growth there shouid be no changes'*
The sailing dub members told the l)ad\ Brum oi two major
CQmplamts that inflame the situation. I he first and foremost,
according to sailing club membej-s. is that the crew tekm moved
two 40-by-6-toot training barges into their storage space Anglin
said that last hebfuary. the two barges were laid flat inside the
fcnced-m. compound for repairs They were supposed to be there
temporarily, tnit AhgJin said they have neither been worked on
nor moved since February "They could be stored inside the
buildings. Anglin said, referring to the crew's storage buildings
When Hecht was asked if the boats could be stored inside, he
said. "I don't sec how T The training barges weigh several
thousands pounds and must be stored flat, he added According
to Hecht, the barges are not m the Sailing Club's way
SeinfoW said the moving of the barges was an "open
provocation T
The Culutral and Recreational Affairs (CRA) office her«
oversees the operations of the Sailing Club I3ean Pete Dallas
/from C^A commented on the dock troubles. "I ean't tell vou
anything right now "
7 he other complaint that the members of the Sailing Club
have IS that they have to move their boats out of the water everv
night because there is no room to store them at the dock during
the night ^
Hecht saw the maf or conflict between club and crew is being-
the risk of boat collisions when the club and crew launch their
crafts at the same time
One solution that both crew and club agree on to all problems"^
cr^wwCr '^^^^ " ^"^ ^^^^""^ *^^ facilities Although approximatelv
5*60.000 wa^ allocated to purchase a new dock last summer, a
new dock has never materialized
Conflicts are expected to cease ovir the summer because the
crew team does not use the facilities. As for the fall. Hecht
sunrimed up the battle's future when he said. "We warn to live
with those guvs."
Drug program
WESTWOOO VILLAGE,
1067 Broxton Avenue
(C ontinued from Page 6)
••It took months before peo-
ple (would) even open up to
me." Brown explained *Tve
seen people come in, happy,
new and enthusiastic Six to
eight months later, they were
tired. exhausted and just
wanted to leave"
Many former employees said
that DeAngelts often went into
tirades during staff meetings
and could not work with
others.
"He was an individual who
couldn't get along with any-
body." »id Forrest Tennant.
former director of the pro-
gram's methadone operatioin
and now medical director for
the Community Health Pro-
|g#M ill Wm Vm\ni\
Panie Schoen. administra-
tive ataisunt at the program's
Methadone Clinic I for a year
until October. 1975, sakJ De-
Angehs would "shoot down
P^jplc and humiliate them" at
*•«" meetings.
Many also were angry about
the alleged lack of effective-
ness in treating patients in view
of the Si. 5 million annual
gram for the program. **That's
a helluva lot of money to be
cxpeaded for a jpragram that
doesnt help people,* said one
ex-staffer Another com-
mented, "I don't care what
program it m It (the program's
ineffectiveness) is a direct
amplificMoa of what is
pcning OS ' aa admini
iPVei" .
-; —
U.S. Senate
Democratic
Tyner Iodic from Chu-
te Vista IS running on a plat-
form of '*back to basics to
keep our future tree"
Priorities demanding the na-
tiea*s attention, says Botfle, are
excessive borrowing, unequal
taxes, inflation, unemploy-
rnent, crime, welfare and a
demoralized citizenry.
lodle would attack the
country's economic ills by cur-
tailing the interest-bearing
bottd market, ending borrow-
ing and by investigating the
Federal Reserve Board, placing
it under close Congressional
control. She would also in-
crease communication an'd
work to make income tax a
flat-rate, free of loopholes on
gross incomes.
Currently a teacher of US
history and American govern-
ment. Bodle has worked as a
librarian at Princeton Univer-
sity and has taught at a num-
ber of private and public
ichools.
Let Craven is a corrcwtumal
program developer in the Los
Angel«» C ountv Jail system
He cites fuU employment as
ibe answer to the country's
economic dilemma 4nd submits
that programs in underseas
exf^loration.. a catastr(>{>h^c dis-
ease center, environmental
conservation and oil substitu-
tion, arc examples of areas in
which thc^ federal government
could become involved
He would have such pro-
grams designed along the lines
oi NASA's aerospace program
He has also proposed a "fed-
ewl medical school" to educate
fwore doctors,
' Craven has been highly cri-
tical of Senator Tunney's stand
against U:S. involvement in the
Angola civil war. implying that
Tunney is an i^-olaiionist.
saying I unnev has "given the
green light (to communist na-
tions) to do whatever they
hke"
Howard L. Gifford it ^Mi-
centratmg much of his cam-
paign on California's electoral
politics
"Politics IS a dung heap",
says Gilford. • "-
Gifford IS filing suit against
the Secretary of State and the
Registrar of Stanislaus Ct)unty
for omitting his name, as well
as the names of 4 other Sen-
atorial candidates from the
Stant^iaus^CotuMy sample bal-
lot. — -.
"This was an intentional
action, done with Senator Tun-
ney's knowledge" charged Gil-
ford
Giflord. who has § Mthored a
book on American Indians
opposes the use of coal as an
energy sovrce becasue of the
effect of strip mining on Indian
Reservations, where many coal
deposits are located
Giflord favors returning sov-
ereignty over the Panama
Canal to Panama, saying.
"We've ripped them off long
enough" Gifford favors con-
centrating US foreign policy
on building friendship among
the North A South American
countries
Tom Hay4ea. journalist,
author an^ teacher views full
cmploynient as the key to the
nation's economic recovery
program, saying "a planned,
fully productive economy is the
only possible way to insure
jobs for a4l and at the same
time control inflation "
Hayden feels health care is a
basic need thai must be guar-
anteed as a right for afl Amer-
icans
Havden favors federallv-
lunded housing construction,
rehabilitation and reclamation
in rural and urbaiv dnas He
wants redlining abolished and
^a tenants' Bill ol Rights en-
acted
Millard Mllmore Mover is
apparcntiv a fictitious can-
didate, a ting to .the Cal-
ifornia democratic Central*
Committee
Frank Thomas, an electri-
cian, believes crime, energy
and employment arc threy oij
the main problems facings
America^ todav He is a ''com-
mon man"* who is seeking to
solve the problems of the com-
mon man
To solve the employment
problem. Thomas believes the
govern me nL-.sho4i Id estabhsh a
work program to build park-
ing structures, roads, small
dams and the like. Employ-
ment would be of top priority
Th said he wished to
seek out means to prevent
crime and he believes the
present patrol car system to be
inadequate He believes energy
IS all around and someone
willing to take the lead in
government is needed to ex-
ploit It.
John V. Tunney. incumbent
U.S. Senator, considers rejuve-
nation of the longrangc health
of the economy the top na-
tional prioritv He includes
Daily Bruin
T*rimary
1
1
m
•
*«-
1
^
r
*
4
Election
Guide
1
/— '
... i
-
1
•
.The Ooi/v Brum is betting that you've had it up to
heae with the tired stonas about Jtmmy Carter the
peanut larmer. Jerry Bpowr tht Jaauit. Gerald Ford
Ibe fooiball player, RomU Re^ the actor
That's why we're skipping Ihesakiit and concen
tratmg on the races most relevant to UCLA
stiKients Democratoc and Repubkcan primaries lor
US Senate, and State Senate and Conipfas m the
23rd. 24th, and 27th districts There are no
Aaaeeibly aaMs up m these districts on June 8 The
Brum tried to contact all of the canMates on the
ballot m these races; a few did not reapond
This spaoaf section mm ^mUtitd by Mary Beth
Murrill, and written with Joehua Alper /vf.ke
Daahnan. Lon Weitberg. and Russell Wolpert
^1
f
jruensdicd feiepil ^ob creation
programs, enforcement of anti-
trust laws and continuation of
cfl^nts io -provide a national
<^"<^'^Ky policy as methods
' rhrotigh which the economy
might be improved
Senator Tunney authored ari^
amendment to the Diefense
Appropriations Acl last year.
which prevented funds #ieil
subsidiiinf American military;
and CIA involvement in the
Angola civil war He authored
the Competition m Energy
Act. which, if pMMd. would
break up major oil companies
into smaller units and prevent
oil companies from owning
alternate energy sources Tun-
ney introduced the Solar
Energy Incentive Act, which
encourages use of solar energy
systems by creating incentives
for homeowners^o install such
systems -.
He has introduced legtttlation
to create one miUion jobs
dtrrin^ the next 18 months
through a combination ot tax
incentives for job creation
funding for labor-inteiisivc
public works projects and
backing for federally-funded
public jobs.
Bob WaMaeb, a professor of
law at Hastings College, ctm-
siders himself one o( ''tbou-
<«.
sands^^f individuals more
qualified to be a IS, Senator
than cither the incumbent or
those of both parties who have
announced their iritention to
'run 'I
"vl am no longer wtlhng to
gamble on the inexperience of
well-intentioned persoris who
have not demonstrated the
capacity for rhe tedious ener-
gies of accomplishment which
%irt the true mefhods by which
fundamental change is accom-
plished." Wallach said
Wallach said he sets primary
importance on maximum em-
ployment, jiafional health care,
pasMige ol |hf nuclear initia-
tive, maximli'hi: penalties for
drug dealers and giving prior-
ity to the rights of older Amer-
icans, children and the men-
uUy and physically disabled
He said he believes the
people's demands should be
pressed ~ upon the gu.vcixmi£nt.
and that the government
should be responsive to theac
demands.
Republican
Alplioiieo BeM, a member of
the U.S. Congress for nearly
16 years, has charged that
Tunney docs not deserve to be
reelected, claiming Tunney
4ocs not represent California*!
voters and has been "one of
tbe Senate's most extri
spenders T
Maintaining that inflation
increased laet year at the same
time tbat tbe economy began
to rebound. Bell criticized hb-
erali in tl^ House for con>
tinuing to press for more
Meral spen^i^. Policies such
as tbM, says BeM,. could bring
aboiit_a return of teuble-digit
inflation, hurt economic re-
covery and 4PMaibly l«ii- to
further job |ost.
Belfs employment objectives
m¥mhft three Heps, beginning
with reduciag. present unem-
ployment quickly Once this is
accoflnplished. Bell would work
%ommr4 . ■uuntaining full and
stable employment and guaran-
teeing sufficient economic ex-
pOMMl to supply employment
for future labor fi
Pen «s oppaaii to the I nited
StatCK— opcratui^jae~:jL:
force for the world, holding
the view that "we should re-
soKc never again to permit
American soldiers to engage in
wars we do not intend to win "
However. Bell believes that the
country shpuld be maintained
i/l a posture of military
strength
Robert Hneh. lormer Lieu-
tenant Governor of California.
, Secretary of Health, Education
and Welfare and Cotffiselor lo
the President, jitaccs highest
priority on solving the prob-
lems of rising cfime rates, a
weakened national defense,
rampant government spending
and the economv
Finch adv<K:ates maintaining
a national defense which would
preserve American military
superiority Not to do this,
according to Finch, would be
**tp dangerously undereMHBOte
tbe price of freedom " Hebc-
lieves^ the United Sutes can
faoly maintain a position of
.__-«tori4 --leaderTh^rp^ through
strength
Government interference is
hampering economic growth,
according to Finch He would
like to see the Eederal govern-
ment bring federal spending
under control, incorporate ex-
pansion incentives into the
business tax rate and ease
regulatory practices "^which last
year cost businesses 40 billion
4ollarsr
To control federal spending.
Finch would prefer to see the
executive branch of tbe Fed-
eral government reorganized.
AftOOHa asd programs should
have to justify their existence
at regular intervals in order to
keep the expansion of the Fed-
eril bureaucracy in dHCk.
In order to lessen a soaring
crime rate. Finch advocates
mandatory prison sentences
without the possibility of
parok for repeat offenders,
attcBoel JL» Hirt, ^OMnboa
_bimself as a •*right to l!fe*
candidate He favors an
amendment to the consitution
forbiMag abortion **unless the
mocber would die without it.**
Hirt feels that religion
should be taught in public
schools, and that parents
siKNild have the absolute right
to hire and fire teachers and
'"cxpe^ 0 gteident for any
simple majority
T]
<t <
bv a
He would prohibit contri
(C onliMMtf oo Page 22)
y^
•Atfita
-v-»*^
I
MARTYN
oHers you a precision and geometric hair cut. shampoo
cond.tioner and blow dry for $12 00 with "Ian Wolfe ' By
intment only
m
Wettwood Hyatt HouM
930 Hilgard Ave (2nd floor)
Pm» p0iMif 475-4477
A reception in honor of
i^lRVING HOWE
(0
author of the no. 1 best-seher
World of Our Fathers
is being held at
,8 pm on Sunday, June S
*■
I '^ *^
International Student Centei^
1023 Hilgard
Admission $2 00 for non-students. $1 00 for students
Refreshments will be sefved
For more information call
HILLEL. 474-1531
Sponsored by Democratic Socialist Orgamztng Commission in
cooperation with Yozma/Brieraand^JCLA Hillel CouncM
Wanted:
■O..W
Person withde^p commitment to
Social Change
as Assistant Director for Campus Com-
mittee to Bridge the Gap (a project of
the Community Services Commission of
SLC). Paid position to start in fall. Call
479-747^2 (afternoons) to set up an
interview ^
MOTHER.JUGS & SPttD ENTtRTAINS?
Ann (tuartno. N Y l>ailv ^••ws
llAK%nET
RAQUEL
WELCH
IgMivi 467-6167
JAThtttf
UA ThtStrt 477-0575 Vtrmont Onvt in 323 4096
MA South Gout Ptaza ^40-0694
feUBTOIHilwt Cmwnt 6;>'b5f6
m Drive- ir. 639-8770
((untiqurd from Fafclli
bet w ceil government <ind la box
unions, iind oppoNCs compul*
iory unionization and the com-
nMm-tite picliet
j€>hn L. Harmcr. it former
California State Senator and
Lieutenant Governor under
R pagan
Formerly chair ol the C'al-
liornia State Senate Repub-
lican delegation. Harmer says
he would vote to limit growth
in the federal budget and op-
pose new spending programs
as senator
Harmer believe^ thai the
government is serving special
interests, depleting the econ-
omy with overtaxation and
borrowing and has largely con-
tributed to inHation through
spending and the creation lyi
deficits Harmer hopes to
remedy such ills by reducing
government intervention and
working toward greater repre-
sentation of workers and small
business, persons
Henry Hill of Los Angeles:
artist and practicing chiro-
practor, believes the country's
top priority is a sane energy
poUcy.
Hill hopes to xommunicatc
to the electorate that "Sex is
fun and good therapy and that
gambling and taking dope is
not something to prohibit un-
less we want to end up with a
cop in our bedrooms and an-
other one ih~ the bathroom
monitoring our soap and toilet
tissue.
Hannibal Cae%ar Burchctte
V. a real estate broker t.^oin
Corppttin, says '*prcscnt U.S
government Rhodcsian-Soufh
African trade restrictions
create l S «inemplovment and
should be repealed b\ Con-
••Militar) aircraft and tankv_
alon^ cannot defend Commu-
nist ideolofical wars of na-
tional liberation Therefore,
expansion of the Green Berets
and Armv Psvchoiogicai Oper-
atifiu Vm^ Ui 400 000 troops
is imperative" he said
Dr. S.i. Hayakawa Pres-
ident of San hranciaco State
CoNife during the turbulent
student demonstrations of
f96H-69. was a registered
Democrale until 1973.
Hay^kawa supports a strong
U.S. military position, saying.
**It is irresponsible and short-
sighted for a senator to refuse
to support the appropriation*
necessary for adequate military
investment "
Havakawa has accused in-
cumbent Senator John Tunney
of '•handcuffing the President
and his administration in
dealing with the crisis in
Angola" by his support of the
amendment curtailing funds
for US, operations in Angola
Jamei^ A. Ware
Ware proposes a Constitu-
tional amendment limiting Su-
preme Court Judges to 6-ycar
terms, renewable b\ public
mandate Ware urged a re-
examination ol the JPK as-
sasination. which he believes
was . a conspiracv involving
Fidel Casird.
Walter HolUwood owns
several farms and ranches
He proposes to es^biish
a tuit'on-free federal medical
academy, whose graduates
would serve at low pa> tor
eight vears in a national health
si^rcening program
Election
Guide
Congress
23th District
Democratic
Robert Brown, businessm^m
and California Secretary of
State liaison officer, **b^beves a
man should have the courage
to vote his conviction and his
party line."
Brown's campaign platform
tl primarily concerned with
economic issues, calling for full
employment through the crea-
tion of jobs in public employ-
ment programs.
Other issues Brown feels arc
of national importance are
financial relief for lower in-
come groups and for fixed
income citizens, equal avail-
ability of medical services for
all citizens through national
health insurance, elimination
of bureaucratic spending in
government agencies and an
investigation of monopolies
which he believes arc control-
Itaf the country's economy
Noel S. Horwin served as
general assistant- io Cofigpe3»>^
man James Roosevelt in Wash-
tfigton and as a staff member
of Senator Robert Kennedy*!
Presidential campaign His
father. Leonard Horwin. was
mayor of Beverly Hills 1964-
65. Horwin currently is active
in public relations and busi-
ness development
Horwm desires ''reabflic
programs to find alternative
sources of energy** and "realis-
tic approaches to protecting^
the en vrr on ment against abuse
On foreign policy, Horwin
favors '*far more selectivity in
supporting foreign
fitf Hf^
investments, he still collects his
full check from Social Securi-
ty, and that's not fair"
Wallace Albertson was
wamed chair of the Demacratic
National Committee as a dele-
gate for Georpe McGovcrn m
1972. and has held the post
since She is presently presi-
dent of the California Demo-
cratic Council
A teaching fellow and doc-
toral candidate at UCLA, she
favors a national health pro-
gram an(i supports the
Humphrey-Hawkins full-em-
ployment bill Albertson also
supports Proposition 13, and
favnr^ hrraking up tha oil
Senator Anthony Beilenson
she oppoMi a fMaicetime draft!
and supports the extension of
workman's compensation u>
domestic workers and garden
ers
AntlKMi' BeilcnMNi current
sute seiutor from the 22nd
dutrict, IS making his first bid
for national office
One of Beilenson's primary
concerns is tax reform He
supports the elimination of
certain tax shelters anc) an
increase on the minimum ilk
otk large income sources
Beikaton advocates relying on
tax credits rather than dedu^
tions. and also favors requiring
tax loopholes to be approved
by Congress every year to
remain in existence
In foreign po|icy. Beileri
is interested in detente, though
only on a two-way basis He
wishes to see the United States
renew alliances with sQme of
Soviet cxparMvionism and as a
stimulus to the economy
Charonne Wall of Sherman
Oaks considers herself a mav
enck of the Republican party,
calling for peace, progress and
prosperity "a belief m God,
our country and ourselves "
Wall, an author of chiidren*s
books, claims Congress has
been delinquent in impletncnt-
ing lax reform "This amounts
not so much to party pohtics
hut to Congressmen having too
many pcrson.il interests." she
told the Oath Brum "They
haven't done a
40 years."
An effective
damn thing in
integration of
government, business and la-
bor It Me of Wall's principle
campaign objectives and she
has met with union and busi-
nevi 4ea4af% in thc^ommumty,
advocating that such a bond be
lormed
Rick NeKon edits two Los
Conference that would be care-
fully organized to insure r«!^)re-
sentation of diverse^ occiipa-
tional. age. social status, re-
ligious and racial groups They,
would meet in an encountci
format to discuss issues deter-
mined through a district ques-
tionnaire and report to the
"congressman. ~
JuHus Shalman. a Los
Angeles meat purveyor, says
that "politics has always been
in me; being a meat purveyor
IS no drawback, since it has
taught me about many things
important to average people,
such as the health standards in
the meal industry/*
**Senior citizens of mcxlerate
means should not be penalized
by a ceiling of about $2,600
earned income bv Social Se-
curity." Shulman said "If I
make over 52,600, 1 don't get
the Social Secunty benefits I
have earned, but if a banker
. makiu^a. ionuiKL in -his^
^^
-A-i^7**%"
their traditional allies, as wttl
Is estabhsli cToSfr relationships
with the developing nation^
Beilenson wishes to develop
a . coherent energy policy
saying that since the 1973 oil
emargo the United States ha^
had ho national sense of what
our policy is Beilenson would
attempt to restore cornpetiiion
in the oil industrv and attempt
to prevent monopoly wontrol
of all facets of the energ
industry Along with a neu ^
energy policy. Beilenson wishes
to see a. coordinated policy on
conservation
Among his accomplishment^
Beilenson cites his authorship
of over 200 state laws, m
-" eluding a^v4ubjorUaii,.iuJfelg—
law He was named "Best ^
Around Senator" by the Cap
tol Press Corps and 'Mosi
Effective Senator" by a poll of
state senators
Republican
- Patricia GaUucci. running
under the slogan "Spendmk
more and enjoying it i'
ar^es cutting the "fnlls" out ot
the federal budget She "«vm
pafhizes with those on vm
fare," but feeU that •nhe fcH»o
sump program has been fla
ggantly abused**
h ihi
Horwin has proposed a
model Congressional District
companies
She saio
•im*
Ui^i. 44niike Mate
liAUUttl !(Uprnii ^^
B-1 aad Lfum Bomhc
feme Sytlemt at deterrent
Angcles-based engineering
magazines Nelson Miid he
would grve himself a 10 per
cent cut in pay if he were
elected to Congress and use the
money for a scholarship fund
tor local schools He favors
withdrawal from the United
Nations, calling it ''morally
.bankrupt*
"the right to keep and bear
arms IS high on NelsonV^st of
priorities if he is elated to
Congress. As a campaign gim-
mick. Nelson says he will post
51X $1,000 bonds to be
awarded to constituents able to
prove he has broken any cam-
paign promises
Thomas Bartman, a tax and
b u s 1 ness attorney, ha s jc§n\ -_
pa igned 'for tuch Republican
notables as Ronald Reagan
and Barry Goldwaler. In 1968,
Bartman led a task force on
aalional security policy, mili-
tary affairs and foreign policy
for the Nixon White H
aad the defense
Bartman said he has the
proper backgrpund "to combat
the increasing influeiKe of the
new left and to help reverse the
damage done to this nation by
twenty years of control of
Congress by the liberal Demo-
crats " He favors U.S. with-
drawal from the United Na-
tions, oppoacs any form of gun
' 'MMful and eluf m fiw»ii#i
Congress—
24th District
MEDICUS
Guadalaiara Madicaf
ar>d
Dantal Schooia
Democratic
Henry Waxman. incumbent
congressman, worked during
Him ill f UK tHiii
California's strict auto emis-
sion controls were maintained
in the face of more lenient
federal standards and that auto
companies be compelled to
comply with stricter s irds
Waxman helped force Sec-
retary of Commerce Rogers
Morton to reveal details of
Arab boycott demands on-
American companies, including
demands for discrimination
aga^^st Jews in hiring
Waxman favors the Humph-
rey-Hawkins Full fcmplovment
Bill, which he is co-sponsoring
and the kennedy-Corman na-
tional Health Insurance Bill
He opposes the B-1 bt>mber
and aid to Angola
As California Assemblvman.
196^-74. Waxman co-authored
the Waxman-Dymally Fair
Campaign Practices Act. which
mandated disclofkure ot cam
paign contributions over $100
and also authored the Fair
Credit for Women Act. which
outlawed denial of credit to
women solelv on the basis of
sex
Republican
Albert kar%a. a private. in-
vestigator, has had over 35
years of business experience m
various industries He con-
siders himself "a hard worker"
wh.o "strives fOT" the highest
achievement m everything I
do "
karsa advocates reinstating
the death penalty for murder,
giving mandatorv .prist>n sen-
tences to repeal offenders,
stringent prist)n terms for drug
dealers and an end to plea
bargaining .
He opposes nuclear power
"because of the (^angerous and
unpredictable ramifications of
radiation and waste dispo^l,"
and advocates searching for
alternative means of prixiucing
energy i-
^ karsa tavi>rs a complete re-
varhping of the i > vstem to
alleviate the burden on middle
and lower wage earners. He
w-ouid- plug corporate — -tax-
loopholes and reduce "deficit
spt' ^ bv reducing loreign
rqiiiiaiy programs, accounting
lor all expenditures and ef-
fecting more stringent cost
controls
David I. Simmoas, who calls
himself "a dollars-and-centsi
decMioa-aiaker." Meets that "the
protection of the law abiding
citizen IS the first priority of
government at all levels "
According to Simmons.
C ongress is headed for finan-
cial disaster " Congress causes
inflation because of a deficit
budget caused by loo much
spending on ^ welfare pro-
grams," he said
Simmons is satisfied with the
current structure of the oil
companies and he is against
Proposition 15 According to
Simmons. "Nuclear p<>wer is
safe enough, we must develop
our own. independent s
of energy, and nuclear power is
the best."
Jerrv Fogel. an actor, said
he decided to seek elective
office in order to motivate
more people to become in-
volved I ri government
Apathy is the mam target of
Fogel's campaign, and he is
curreritly working on what he
calls two "actioji programs'*
aimed at coordinating com-
munity mvolvement in the
areas ot senior citizens and
small businesses
A gradua' t Weslevah
Universitv and the United
S-tates Militarv Academv at
Wesipoint and television and
motion picture act en. Fogel is
m favor of complete ConfmiK
tonal reform He advocates a
limited Presidential term of six
years, three 4-year terms for
senators and five 2-ycar terms
ft>r the House
Fogel also called for total
reform of the Coni^ressutfml
Retard, claiming it does not
accurately reflect the daily
actions of Congress
Thursday, Jun« 10
3:00-5:00 p.m. CHS 13-105
5.
?
TUNE-UP, LUBE t oil iOA^i
iiB3
Sk
iHomi
OVItNAUi^ M95
w/^aan
.W.'i
A-1 AUTO SERVICE.^
7957 VAN NUYS SIVO. oa. -a-.
Lunch • Dinner • cocktails
Bamfuet FaciMaat
^^i
tlltHtnsburg
3nn
475-2525
11705 National Blvd. Lm Angeles
Prime RibS4.95 from 5 to 7
Ed Hollingsworth and Carolyn Coy
Fri irSat Nights
^-
27th District
■»
E.B. Franli*!, M.D. Medical Group
Hair Transplantation
Acn«-Complexion
Plastic Surgery
Derniitoiogy
Allergy
Phon« tor F>»rtonal Appotntm«nt • Medical Ltlefalurt? uf^ HcQuMt
All Medical and Health Plans • Credit Cards/ Credit Ti^rmt Available
— 4.08 AnQoles
Lakawood
WrtsrifTir ETvd a 105
5203 Lakewood Bivd
nS55-6533
531-7420
Huntington Beach gioi Newman St Sta C (714)
Democratic
Jack Shaffer was the Di-
raeter of the Los Angeles
County Head Start program,
the second laffMI such' pro-
gram in America Prior to this,
he directed the evaluation di-
vision of VISTA and wm the
director of the Peace Corps in
._ SMkL , J^'OUW J*yor_,jhe„
"^Svntet Bill.** which would
laquire every government pro-
gram to jiisttfy Its existence
every five years. He altoi fivor^
guaranteed full employment
and says that congressional
terms should be limited to 12
years. ^ "
He cippotct tax subsidies for
large corporate farms, wants to
end the senionty system on
congresMoaal committees and
feels that bminmi should **pay
tiK cost of a ckan environ-
ment **
Robyn Hkky supports Pro-
position 15 anid advocates in-
centives for uac of renewable
laapaasi ■aah aa taa
A teacher and former con-
gressional liaison in Washing-
ton for the American Counal
on Education, Hicky urges
creation of a cabinet level
position to adequately deal
with education.
For the 27th district, Hicky
uges the development of a
second-stage sewage treatment
plant at the Hyperion sewage
treatment plant in El Segimdo.
The current single-ftage prpr
xess. as - igiawinf wiually ^nm-
sewage into the Santa Monica
Bay. according to Hicky
Hicky supports the Hum-
phrey-Hawkins Full Employ-
ment Bill, though urging more
prticipation of the pnvate sac-
tor, and supports the Kennedy-
Corman National Health f^n
and Time Dated I rgnlatinn^
which stipulates mandatory
periodic renewal of l^alation
to prevent the growth of
bureaucracy
George Soen is campaigning
for a "Family Bill of Rights,"
the components of which are a
decent income; a clean en-
•vtronment; safe foods, pro-
THEODORAKIS'
WKW^^'i^^ Of rcm»^ 7'-
AHl>
^N<i5^0FFk.t<:tX>M >^Mt> KA«-
fir
wrrH'H^ V0Kt5> O^
^l/V\!-n^l5 VAMVA^A$ - N'-''' *- TAN<:^".
4N^ <:vi^!^"^i^A>c.iR!D><-y
4*<r- ><*ro'. ^.K»\'> ANp
<.' » A
HAAv H(N
!i V*'
Ur\ strength, iccsi a. nc»J ' '
increised military spending
credit for homeowners
solar energy heating
uH„i^
Otitic am) St f I'm. gtwM Hhw>H
bealih
(rontinued on Page 29)
JUNE 7
MONDAY 8 30 P M
WESTWOOD PLAYHOUSF
/
\
ftJTffttf*.
I
I
;#*«m*iti!|
ITS [3WI3ACK
r
COLLEGE BOOK CO.
MOMDAY-SAIURDAY 10-10 aJNDAY 12-S
I002 WEST\vOOD BLVD M77-80SI 879-1838
i.
7th
unliiMird from Page 23)
cicn, currently project num-
[gcr at the Univeriity of
Southern California, would
|kc to implement an effective
/crsight program. Specifical-
hii Aim would be to more
monitor lawt p^iitcd by
"onfiTCH.
Suen believes the country*!
itemational focus should be
develop a wirantnfful
lorcign policy instead of a
Vncs of reactions to situa-
iions, actions of expediency
ind short-run probes that «re
>ticn contradictory T
DavM P. Helfevold is a
[proponent of ''responsive and
responsible government," citing
the economy as the most im-
portant and complex subject in
ressional. . .
rv.
Summer Sailing Classes
tkt United Sutes.
A believer in a full-
employment economy. Hel-
gtvoid does not favor simply
the creation of short-term >otot
but would instead promote the
creation of government pro-
grams aiined at solving some
ol the nation's problems, such
*s mass tmnsportation. and
channel the funds appropriated
to the unemployed through
such programs
Helgevold advocates a
strong national health in-
surance program and envisions
a program that would train all
medical personnel, set their
salaries, incorpaoMr all medi-
cal facilities and provide a
consumer advocate office to
regulate the standard of health
service
Gary Fjiaiilian a
nMMi, hm served in campaigns
for Robert Kenned>. Alan
Cranston. Tom Bradley and
•un Pines He is currently a
member of the Democratic
Slala Central Committee and
the United Democratic Finance
Committee
**The mam issue in thr cam-
paign IS the abihty of an indi-
vidual to make a difference,
tlie abihty to get things done,
to transform an idea into
reality.** according to a
Familian campaign worker He
cited Familian's effort in
fighting a proposed hotel
development in Marina Del
Rey, his testimony before the
Public I'tilitics Commission to
oppose a S32« milhon Pacific/
(( ontinued on Page 24)
IXTLA
ClHfc
Two Summef
June 26 ftirocigh Aug i
Md Aug 7 through Sept 17
If inter«il0d call 02S- 3703. leave vour m^me 4nii phone
number. Sailing club will contact yuu by June lOfh
LEARNING SKILLS CENTER ^<
^o
9tudy-Roadlng DhHslon
MULTIPLE CHOICE EXAM WORKSHOP
Monday June 7 1:15-3 30
A&mnc9 SIgnupa N«c«ssary
271 DoM Hail 82S-7744
This IS a tervio* of Studsnt A Campus Affairs
FREE to r»gutarly enrolled sti
(preferably alive)
By the Student Educational
Policies Commission
/'
^ Director, Liaison
i^ Director, Academic Research
&- Development
:Director,Experirnental College
^Assistant Director
Experimental College
If "
-flE WARD^aTOonthly stipen(luand the satisfaction of
--'■•-^apps-i-: T«8WpKr?swfc
assisting the students' interests in the academic arena.
APPLY: 3rd floor Kerckhoff I nf ormation Desk,
or call SEPC at 825-2759
,..../
> ' ' ' » •
T
mmm
I 27th Congressional
<
nit
e
1
\
It
J^ (Co«linurd from P«f€ 25) tAilmcnt of furtds for U Si*
2 Telephone rale hike and hi* action in Angola He believes
testimony at heanaii in favor the non-intervcniion !»tanGe of
of a ttoiae atelement plan for post-Vietnam policy will be
Let Aflfrkf International. Air- regretted in the l^KCTs if the
port. Soviets have a foothold in
FUnultan supports a com- Africa iind eaay acccas to the
prehenaive national health care Western hemisphere
prngrna> ipdcnl oeoperation Robtrt A. Wdbourn believes
with private iadiiiCry to ioaure his tenure in office as city
full eiyioyiint )uid inenmtd councilman of Palos Verdct
fedcrmFaid to education He Estates maK^ him the most
streiset the acpatiitv of qualified of the candidates to
honesty and opennc t all know about the problems
levels of government
Ton Pczzuti said he has
"more guts** than the other
candidates, noting that he
authored the book **You Can
Fight City Hall and Win **
He laid he is concerned with
issues of local, not national,
impact Pe^zuti opposes off-
shore oil dnllmg in his district,
which contains a stretch of
beach land running from To-
pfti^ Canyon to San Pedro.
While he dishkes some cur-
rent oil company practices, he
does not favor breaking up the
oil companies, saying this will
not lower oil prices. '*Lct them
compete against other alterna-
pve energy sources rather than
against more oil coxnpaiues,**
he laid. — ^
Republican
Gary Symonds, an attorney,
described his political views as
libertarian Symonds supports
decriminalization of marijua-na.
abortion on demand and aboli-
tion of censorship laws. With
the intent of limiting govern-
ment control over the indi-
vidual, Symonds also, opposes
federal gun control legisfation
Symonds supports the B-1
bomber and opposes the cur-
facing the 27th district.
Welbourn is in favor of con-
tinuing revenue sharing and
increasing accessibility in gov-
ernment, opposed to offshore
drilling in the Santa Monica
Bay, and is concerned about
balancing the federal budget.
Former deputy district at-
torney "and now m private
practice. Welbourn says he
'•detests the by-products of the
problem overcrowding, indis-
criminate social welfare pol-
icies, environmental ignorance
and wasteful federal programs
that lead to 'creeping federal-
ism
Dennis 0*Block, an airline
pilot, believes the 155 combat
missions he flew in Vietnam
have made him^^r^ proven
fighter'' and that this qual-
ification will be valuable in
office He cited his status as
"one of two conservative can-
didate^y^ in this race, which is
important to him because "A
liberal Democratic congress
poses a serious threat to our
way of life and our free enter-
prise "
Michael C . Donaldson, a
former student body president
of UC Berkeley, was a deputy
district attorney in Los Angeles
and IS now in private law
practice He hii heaJM several
local Republican candidates*
campaigns and is* treasurer of
the ReptiMican Party of Cal-
ifornia
Donaldson's first concern is
the need to cut down the aise
■Ml «ost of government and he
supports the ''Sunset Bill."
which would require govern-
ment agBBOitf to justify their
operations before the Hou
every five years. He opposes
offshore oil drilling in the
Santa Monica Bay and pro-
poiei the government employ
what he calls **eco-eco experts"
(persons trained in both eco-
logy and ecohomics) who
knows environmentail exigen-
cies and the economic impact
invoved in dealing with them
He would like to lee stiffer
penalties enacted for crimes
committed with firearms and
favors increased military ex-
penditures.
Robert K. Dornan has
hailatf several local television
and radio talk shows, including
"The Robert K Dornan
Show" on K T LA and ''Tempo"
on KHJ-TV He was the origi-
nator of POW MIA bracelets
during the Viet Warn war
A siaunch anti-commuoiit.
Dornan lists defense concerm
as a top priority, saying the
'*Free world cannot encottrage
the malignant growth of copa-
munism and terrorism by be-
coming 'second' militarily **
Dornan is especially con-
cerned about a conspicuous
absence of '^conservatives" in
network television new^ broad-
casting and says the FC C faK-
ness doctrine must be applied
and enforced m this regard.
Joe Blatchford. former di-
rector of the Peace Corpsd.
(1968-71), now a." international
management consultant, ran
unsucLcssfullv for Congreis in
the 32nd Congressional Dia-
irict in 1968
If elected. Blatchford would
propose a task- force to design
methods for reducing the sue
of federal bureaucracv He
woyld like to see the federal
welfare system redesigned to
eliminate fraud, waste and
mismanngmrnt and says he
would encourage l(x:al com-
munities to form volunteer
organizations to develop local
"self-help" weltare programs
State Senate
27th District
Democratic
Stephen A. Nordeck is a past
mayor of Manhattan Beach
and is currently a city council-
man there. He said the major
issue in his area should be the
protection of the coastal area
Nordeck said he feels "single
area dwellings should be al-
lowed along certain areas of
the coastline, buf J|iiigh-rises
and certainly commercial siru£
tures should not" He opposes
offshore oi.) 'drilling, hut he
said "if the situation changes
so that we real I v need that
encrg>. I would have to recon-
sider the situation "
JaflKft Q. Hedworth. incum-
hmt Senator in the 27th Dia-
trict since 1966. was elected to
Thai office ifter serving at
mttHfOt of Hawthorne from
If5t to 1966
He co-aiithorcd the Wed-
worth-Townsend Paramedic
Act. which created the Lot
Angeles pilot program for
emergency medical services
iMing pa^ra medics.
He chairs the' Senate Com-
mittee on Public Fmplovmcnt
and Retirement, the Senate
Sub-^Tommittec on Fmerfeiicy
Medical Services, and is a
mcmllw^ uf the Senate Com-
mittee on Insurance and
Financial Institutions and
Governmental Organi/aiions
Repiiblican
Robert Beverly has served
since 1967 in the State Assem-
bly He co-authored the Song-
Beverly Consumer Warranty
Act, which requires any com-
pany that sells a product with
a warranty in California to
provide facilities in Cahfornui
to meet the warranty terms
Beverly also authored the
nation's first bill controlling
airport traffic on the basis of
' pollution control.
An a,lumnus 6( UCLA, Bev-
erly has consistently received a
100 per cent rating by the
alumni association tor htf> leg-
islative suppcTTt oi the univer-
sity
Beverly opposes Proposition
15. saying. "We must develop
all methoH- »f energy."
As chaiiiM.iii ol the Finance
and Ijisurance Committee,
Beverly authored legislation
banning arbitrary cancellation
of insurance policies ^ind re-
quiring substantial assets tor
insurance companies to do
business in California
STUDENTS
is UCLA rneeting your sports
- andl^creatlon needs?
Below IS a list of activities now offered by UCLA for
student sports and recreation
Is your interest represented?
Would you like to see anything added, augmented
or changed'!^
Do you paiiicipate? "^
CULTURAL *^flECR£ATIOHAL
AFFAIRS
A.
Would you like to participate'^
You are invited to write in or come in to discuss your
interests and UCLA's programs Please address your
comments to the Title IX Athletic Study Task Force
c/o Ms Andrea Hill. 2248' Murphy Hall or call
825-7777,
Intramural Sports:
-»"*»^^=» "^^ ■■
Recreation Club Activities:
Air Rifle-Pistol
Amataur Radio
BowlinQ
Bridge
Chats
Crickat
Conaervation
Field Hockey
Fishing
daiaxy
Go
HsthaVoga
Horsebadf Ridirrg
Hunting
Ice Hockey
Indoor Soccer
JU0O
Sailing
Scuba
Shooting
Skmm 4 Trap
i
Y-t
Flag Football
Volleyball
■ Tennta -
Grots Country
Batketbaii
•'««'* '99ccef
. Flag Rugby
Waightlifting
SIOfttMrtI
Water Polo
T ^ ^ i ■ '^ - -- -
I ■DfV f enriTS
QoM
Wrestling
.di«a«k.'4 fm^'
Badminton
Turkey Trot
Frisbee
Handball
Raoauolteii
Bowling
Kando '^
Kenpo
Kung Fu
Lacrotte
Mountaineers
Organic Garden
Photography
Social Dance
Table Tennis
Team Handball
Tennis
Water Skt
Wrestling
MEN'S INTERCOLLEGIATE
ATHLETICS
I
Cricket
Crots-Country
Fencing
Football
Golf
Gymnastics
Riflery
Rugby
Soccer
Non-Credit Instruction:
Swimming
Tennis
TrSok
Volteybail
Water Polo
Wrestling
ing,
Siim a Trim
Gymnattics
Judo
VolleybaH
Self-
Drill A
Swimnattics
Total Fit
Social Dance
Song»eading-Ct
Officiating
Senior Liletaving
Walor telafy Inttructlon
Ice Skating
Jsfiing
Swimming
WOMEN'S INTERCOLLEGIATE
ATHLETICS
ttadminton
Golf
Tenhis
SMkitball
Gymr^astics
Track/ Field
Croaa-Country
Softball
VoM»yte*<
Cww
Swimming/D«wing
All sports and recreational activities et UCU^ mn open to participfints of t>otti eexn.
\ I'
i ndG'xl
I
Campus
NotHk>-grand opera biifU jet
their last chance of the yemr
tontght. tomorrow and Sunday
It 8 pm when the UCLA Opera
orkshop presents ttudio pro-
tactions of two one-act operas
i\ Puccini in the Schoenberg
iall Little Theater. Gianni
ichicchi, Puccinrs only com-
ch will be sung in English,
ind features the redoubtable
amcron MacDonald (winner
i)\ the S2.0U0 first prize in the
classical vocal category 4«t ihe
Franii Sinatra Muaic Awards)
in the title role. SlUar Angelica
will be done in the orifHMil
lulian Tickets arc $3 ftneral.
SI tor UCLA students and
senior citizens, and $2 for
other students
**lmafe 76^ a show of stu-
dent films, will screen tonight
tomorrow and Sunday at 7 30
pm. and next weekend at the
^mc times, in Melnit? 1409
(no, not Royce) Student tickets
cost $1 50
The theater arts department's
production of The Crticibk by
Arthur Miller runs in the Raipil
Freud Playhouse of MacGoaaia
Hall through June 12. Curtain
times are 7:30 pm Sunday
nights and 8 30 other nights
Ihe UCLA iBsullment a;!
this summer's Garden Theater
Festival begins at 6 today in
Dickson Plaza (a.k.a. the lawn
between Schoenberg Hall and
the architecture building)
The Finical, presented free
to the public, includes just
about everything tonight
there will be an original muai-
cal. a ja// quintet, several
folksingers. a Mexican folk-
u
\
\:
p \
Salirttt, social critic, i^t^d proiet«ional gMifly Mort S^hl is km
Sdiombefff HiM icNnorrow rMght, doing j show at I ind * show at
10. Tickets swe availabir «l the bo« oHice and tl%e r#ntral Tirket
Olfice.
The Tyburm were on campus 4 few weeks a^o, perlofming ''The Srute** and **Tlie Smfmtt Song,
6ne-act plays by Chekhov, in the KerckhoH Coliee House. They and ieNow trayeSer FIcKerKr White
will be back next Thursday night at g. doing the same program in the same place. Admiision h hec.
dance troupe, and a rock and
roll leggier Over the weekend
magicians, comedians. pupp|?ts,
actors and hlucgra^ bands will
be among the atii actions The
festivities open at no<in to-
morrow and S.unday
Tomorrow and Sunday, "Ea-
tensions** will be offered by th<:
dan^e departiftcnt senjor class
Ihe conoeff i« tree, but the
room (Women's Gym 208) is
in
vmajf. and re^rved scats
be picked before ^ tenia v
Wt)mcn\ Ciym 205
Ihe muNic department >»ows
out for the year with the presti-
gious, somewhat glittery, but
above all, free.- hrarrk Sinatra
Awards concert next Monday
at K pm ih koyce Hall In
addition to redoubtable (am.
the- first pri/r winners includr
(C'cNitinued on Page 28)
Student Legislative Council
NOTICE
I. «•
Any group desiring funding from
STUDENTtEGISlATIVECeUNCH.
R*^ *
Mf'mfm^y'^
/*
■■r*^»
C^*v "■*■
''."O^'i'-::'* -tii^s
•'^^^^■^w'i:4;iiaiCiC.r -. .;
«'»:.;•■ ,J .
■:>"n''rTr,^»5-
Proposals due June 28
Submit to 304 KH;
before 4:00 pm
H nstfuottons-^of proposal
format available in 304
Kerckhoff Hall)
• *t %l. «k^ v*--.^.
Budget Hearings
July 6-July 14
(i?i:esidents Office will pub-
*••--. »— ^i» „ftmm.»r-m «— . ... ... I ■i»i > •» 1 Mm »■■■■ ,1,,.
licize agenda)
,.,j
■' ■ "1 ij*-,.'
sponsored by Stucient Legislative Council Presidents Office
, t •
■J-!I.J-l-LgT
SE
5&S5E
. <^w'
1
•J
I
I
it
;u«f(
•••• Prtc«t Good
Through J%m9 10, 1976
WESTWOOD DRUG
951 W«9twood Boulevard
Los AngalM, 90024
477-2027 orJ72-9994
t— -.* . ■- . V,
MAIOR STUDIO PREVIEW
SUNDAY JUNE 6TH 830 PM
I NDAY MGHl \\T 1N\ ITE ^( )L' TO FEEL SI SPE NSE FEAR
\\l ) \hSTlK^ AT A I E\ EI Y H I IA\T NLAER I XPERIENC EP
;■ rORFlN A \!( )\ir Tl IE ATRf .
II IS XSI'FCIAI ADWNCFSCKEEMNCOFAMAIOR
M( ri K )\ PKTI RF VVHK H VVII I nF'PV+i\ n \F :5TH.
IE
U USI OI IHI 1\TF\S| SUJILCTMAUER OF IHJS
I II M \VF RFC( )\l\If \l) I M \T V X I SF DISC RETK )\ IN ^
UKIXCINC. C Hll.DRI \ U ) II lis SC KM \I\G
m
n»fH '^ -H Lltr J»T KJI •»T»^#nu
GKEGOK^ PEC k LEE REMICK
THE OMEN
V. li^^i; ..
i„«.i ;- i\i\
(X««<«««»
K'K fl-\l<^^'^ ^\
uA»»AViV''^«» D. ......,- r»» ,,w»
PREVIEW AT THESE THEATRES
HOLLYWOOO Egyptian 467-6167 PASADENA United Artists 681 5l 71
WESTWOOD Village 478-0576 TORRANCE U^iited Artists 325-4232
CANOGA PARK Fallbrook 883 4212 WESTMINSTER HALL
LAKEWOOD LaKewood Center 531 -9580 UA Twift 'il"^93- 130^
-» — :~=^
More Index
(ContAiucd from Pag€ 27)
puinist Dean hriu (c)auical
instrumental), percussionist
Scott Shepherd (popular in-
strumental), and Deborah Lud-
wig (popular vocal).
The lecond prize winners,
who collect $500 apiece lor the
night*s work, include oboist
Barbara Goorevjtch in classical
instrumental, trumpeter Rick
Page in popular instrumental,
Janelle Price in popular vocal
and Terry Iten in classical
vocal.
Fans of Frank Sinatra will
be interested to know that
Sinatra himself plans to be
there to give the awards Non-
fans should consider that he
might not show z>r^
And speaking of ja/z (as if
anybody was), next \iH^kend
features not only the return to
2ampus of Keith Jarrett (Roycc
Hail 8:30 next Friday night),
but also the sequel to the
Guitar Summit (yes, foUnt, it*s
Guitar Summit II) featuring
Laurindo Almeida, Sandv Bull,
and Barney Kttiei and' Herb
Ellis Tickets are available at
the Central Ticket Office
Movies
Veteran Hollywood film
editor William Hornbeck will
be honored by the UCLA Film
Archives with a series of
screemng^ held in Mclnit/ 1409
Herb
(in
ENm) ioMW Laurindo
Mtd Sandy %ull at
Guitar Summit II next Salur^Uy
night in Royce HaM.
is
from J line 7-9. Admission
free.
The series opens with two
films Hornbeck cut for
Alexander Korda during the
30's; The Scar lei Pimpernel
turnng Leshe Howard, show-
ing Monday, June 7, at 5 pM
and The four Feathers in
glorious technicolor. Tuesdav
June 8. at 7:30 pm
The' tribute concludes
Wednesday. June 9, at 5 pm
with Prelude io War, one of
the famous "Why We Fight"
documentaries that Hornbeck
and director Frank Capra
made for the Army during
World War II, followed by
The Extra Girl, a #tlent
comedy starring Mable Nor^
mand that Hornbeck edited at
the beginning of his career m
1923
/
• m 0
Min Stewart appears at
McCabe's Guitar Shop in SanU
Monica tonight, tomorrow and
Sunday ai t_aiid Vt:3t pm.
Biazing Saddles, a Mel
Brooks Jewish fantasy, will •
screen in Ackerman Grand
Ballroom tonight at 7 and
9 15 Admission is Si
At the Fox Venice tonight.
Karel keic/'s The Gambler and
John Cassevette*s moribund
The killing of a Chinese
Bookte will play and Saturday,
two of Lina Wertmuller's prc-
Swept 4v\a\- classics. The
Seduction of Vlimi and love
and Ananhv.
The Nuart duplicates the
(( ontinued on Page 29)
N .
fJlont make a^
career of looking
forajob.
Thf* Advertising Center s ^
onfy'plfrj5hse rs te^'^fve
and working understanding of advertising
Every vital aspect of it
• Account NAanagement • Creative Concept
• Photo Introduction •TV Production
• Graphic Design • Illustration Workshop
• Public Relations • Advanced Concept
• Creative Execution • Photo Workshop
rnpYViTiting Wnrknhnp " Pockny rv>c,igp
• Classes start week of June 14
More Index Calendar^r^
Music
(C ontinued from Page 2S)
Fox's Saturday bill tonight and
Saliurday, Antonionrs The
Passenger and Bob Rafelson's
Five Essy Pieces will screen.
At the Lot Anfeks County
Museum of Art at a part of
the William Wyler Film
Festival, The Heiress with
Olivia de Havilland, Mont-
gomery Clift and Ralph
Richardton and Detective
Story with Kirk Douglu and
Lee Grant will screen this
evening. The Desperate Hours
with Humphrey Bogart and
Frederic March and Carrie
with Laurence Olivier and Ed-
die Albert.
Music action this week is
profuse and varied Leon Rus-
sell will play at the Forum
theatre.
Nightclub action is high-
lighted by Smokey Robinson'^
appearance at the Roxy this
weekend, while the L.A Ex-
prett will play at the Trouba-
dour Lonnie Liston Smith will
warble at the Starwood to-
night, Saturday and Sunday
Theater
Arthur Millcr't The Crucible
IS the final play of the theater
arts department season. Deal-
ing with the Salem witch
hunts, the play will run now
through June 12 m the Mac-
Gowan Hall Freud Playhouse
Students tickets are $1, others
.S3.
Off-campus openings include
Zero Motlel once again star-
ring as Tevye in Fiddler on the
Roof at the Shubert Theatre
and .ShAkcrspear's Comedy uf
h.rrors at the Globe Playhouse
Peter Shaffer's Tony (and
i>ther) award winning drama
Equus will open at the Hunt-
inglMI Hartford June 20, but^
special student tickets are now
an sale. These tickets will be
for approximately 60 on-tta§B
tests which will make students
an actually part of the produc-
-EQXHlihll
Disco Party
Food - Em<»rtainment - Dancing - Prizes ^~~^
Dance Contest - First Prize
3 days for 2 in Ljs Vcgjs
Sat. June 5, 8 pm
LIRC — SOOHilgard
Qtk^'M ^Cuvv-Sa
hpomor«mr CHI Vo«tfnf i"¥»>^K ^^ytiv ^^
■v
and the
has to treat
stars Brian
tion Students with current
l.D pay $5 for all per-
formances except Friday and
Satufday evenings which are
S^ Ftfuu.s ts abdn^t **a hair-
raising cnme committed by a
17-year-old boy in a riding
stable in England
psychiatrist who
him " The play
Bedford
Anolf)^j Jpighin*: opening is
The >* // J Jihe popular new
musical version of The Wizard
of Oz. It surts June 15 at the
Ahmanson Theatre
Meanwhile, back to the pre-
tent. Neil Simon's lemfic
comedy California- Suite
finishes up this weekend at the
Ahmanson and the Mark
Taper Forum continues its
four plays in repertory Two
musicals are being offered The
Baker's Wife, starring Topol at
the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion
and Winner Take All, about
two 19th century feminists at
the Huntington Hartford
>
1" •
Great Expectations
lets you see and near
your dates before ■
you choose mem.
On videotdpe The best method
yet invented to meet people
Great Expectations
removw tfae awkward
and threatening aspects
of thebhnd date You
YrtSBtB^ the decisions
yourself. Not us Come
in for a free viewing and
well prove it.
▼ GREAH-
EXPECTATIONS
The way fo meet people in LA
475-8797 Open7davs
M2C^
T)\sncg'
^"^ff^nole ojihe do''-; Sue ""^V^^ -
"onrffrfbl lime D" P
12 th
June
^aturda)f n»^<, "-pyio"*
btarring
t -^
£A£ADMftUII
54 Exciting adventures and attractions.
Paii
cfAMAOj
6t^^
Disneyland
rY^r.Q>^ 1 jifTx lung t?
mm
i
!
CampusEventsCampus EventsCampusEvents
•ftyoot tnrnnmm m
hfllptng with tht Muscular O)fftrophy
call Marian Haoptf at
win IM partormad 4 15 pen Junt 8 and 3 15
Exchange
will partorm
10 Karclilioff Coftaa Haiiaa
iwfcwr Tav. af Ma \imnam
(tuttriai RalaHaiia. 2 PM. Juaa It
the Vtnebrata Palaaiilaiaii
pm Juna 17. aiaal in Sck
.2
1M0 Fraa
will
j
i
T-> , I .•#'.
(CoiitiMMrf from Page 1)
**The individual who is now a student participant applied for a
leadership position He was rejected, but requeste<^ to be allowed
a student participant.** she explained.
Roti said the selection process involved several interviews and
that of the 15-30 students were interviewed. "Most people
drafppcd out either from the expense involved or a change of
plans,** he said
Withers also questioned the contribution of the Crossroaders
to the UCLA community.
According to the prerequisite of the Crossroads* proposal, the
returning participants must present a program to the UCLA
community which would include slide presentations and panel
discussions on their experiences.
In the letter to Miller. Withers said he talked with the
Registrar's Office and discovered that fiv« participants are
seniors, one is a graduate student and the third is a baiiarline
senior.
Withers said he fears the students will not be in the UCLA
area lo pr<;scnt their findings to the UCLA community.
Ross admitted. **l know one person for sure who won't be in.
the area They may not be here in their physical presence, but
they will have contributed through slides and evaluations " Ross
added the returnmj; participants will presennntormauon to \how
that Crossr should be re^ularK funded through FXPO
6unn% HmM wi iia pra-
Tba riigkii rtiM wM tot
laMN 2 9m, circulation aaA ralari
•arvicaa until midmgM
tagfc raom will doaa at ^Mjm
aw Bv aa lOHoaM* a'4o ai^'flMaMipM. jiim
7-11. -• am-mldniaht juna 12 1 pm
midnight Juna 13. k46 am-midnight. Jyna
14-17 and 8:46 am-6 pm Juna 18
-TIa WMliMt MaMMaaBM %mk. a 66A
funded itudant-writtan publication, is
availaMa #w at iM AcKerman informati«
^ Pu^^c i^Maa ^^^^
Haaiih Safvtca ^
• Malawi CaHMMa m Wm
d WaMB. it Making student tlaft
and tacuMy woman to larve on ttia CaiR-
mittae for 197i-77.
aiiouid submit mm
aa poaalbla to ttie Committaa. c/o ttia
Cnancellor s office Murphy 2147
— IrMi m^/L. music and MMga bv Sat-
cran Sldha. 5:3D4:» pm (dkmar 1290)
laiMgbt. International Student Cantar
pick up your certificatat
and pins in the Oaan of Students office.
Murphy 2224
. — Reunlaa Imm. sponsored by the Social
Dance Club will be bald 8 pm-midnignt
tonight Women s Gym 200 Ballroom ami
disco dancing will ba faatured. rafraah-
provided dress is sami-formal
• Harpat aad Help Oelaei Maacalar
tl am-2 pm now-June 11. Brum
Walk 7/11 stores are donating over 80 per
cent of the sales to Muscular Dystrophy
latriNd AbiMi He Pnilinllil
pick up a Profact Awaranaas
volaf information booklet available on
now
community
Academic credit available student da-
aam lob daacnption wtai aaiii'
MlM lUaaay W ar can 8047S)
mtmofum^Pmr
mi ma raaarva an aatramaral funding tor graduate alu- by
bi
Sac
ttaa, Mufi
amllkal
ttvougb EXPO.
Ackarmaif A213 or call
OECA I
or
|Oin
invaatioator Visit
call 825-2820 Volunteers
tor anvironmanlal and
I a
HI
are also
food |K0-
HM
^Tbe SavM WapaiMl ttarnng
Howard and Marie Obaron wMI be ihoam 5
pm Juna 7. Makiitz 1400 frm
— TbrH •MaanaMrMi will be shown 8-10
pm, June 8. International Studant Cantar
Free
— Tbi Fair FailHn 7 30 pm Juna 8
Free
I War and Tbe Extra 8lrl will
pm^ June 9 Melnitz 1400
CliCHTI
-ttCLA Opera Wwlubip. will perform two
ona-act operas by Puccint 8 pm tonight-
June 6, Schoenbarg little Theater $1 for
UCLA students faculty staff and samor
cttizans. S2 tor ottter students S3 ganarai
admission
'^— €AnalaaB a dance concert with ori-
ginal choreography by seniors m the UCLA
Dance Department 8 pm today 2 30 and 6
pm. June 6 Women s Gym 206 Free
'— fraak SMati Musical FertwaMaas
Awards concert win present the 1976
Ainn«r^ of awards totaling S10.000. 630
staff tad aaiiant woman wS
•apryFnday Murphy
red
Nar NaiMti Cawiaalira. la apan to Ml
I and aiMiaii M Wm UCLA community.
fM am^JO pm. tomorrow Acbarmaa
3617
-Jarar OMnaai to la Jam UMi Trta 4
pm. Jima 8. frma 1200
Wli^ CM^aa Ian Lava why taocbars
don't taach. 9 am. June 8. Mani Gym 133
iJMaai Taa NMM M Mas 9 am. Juna
8. Franz A279
maats 3-5 pm
luMeaa 2178. aad OJO-li am
Thursdays IMmrman Hti
—Ohm na. 8-10 pm, avary Saturday.
International Student Center
—laMMy a Aaaaaaee Eagbavt 3 pm
today ioaltar S264
1400
nil a
ba sHown 5
pa CM will moat to plan fall activitias
noon today Franz 22MA
-Friday llfbt Olbia ttaiy Gospal of
John, 7:30 pm. tonight Ackarman
and family planning. 12 15 pm today and
June 7 CHS 32-06
and
3 30 pm today
Murphy 13t2
-irala Yami
pm June 10 Acker man 3617
230-
1 30 2 30 June 10
pm
Mr Jbaay Cariar. 7X
every Wednaaiay Adwrman 2412
— Freadi Cenversatlaa Oreap 7 30 pm
every Wadaaaday International Student
Cantar
TOM
HAYDEN
^TT
WANT
TOM
JIMDEN
•V
A SENATOR for the people, not the corporations;
— whose first task will be developing ways to break up
corporate power; ^^.^-■-^•^-■-~^-.-
— T who believes that we need to move toward democratic
control of our economy:
— who believes in ECONOMIC DEMOCRACY which aeeks to
transform government so that people can act in direct and
decentraHzed ways to shape their destiny-the only genuir>e
alternative to corporate control and government bureaucracy;
— who proposes that we need an ECONOMIC BILL OF
j_^ RIGHTS to guarantee every citizen AiliGent job. decent
wages, freedom from monopoly power, a deeent honne tor all.
adiaquate medical care, good education, and protection from
the econo'Tiic fears of old age. sickness, accident and
unemployment.
A SENATOR who will vote for progressive legislation,
— who supports the Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment Act
as a first step in reducing unemployment;
— who supports the Kennedy-Corman Health Act as a first
Step toward the guarantee of health care as a right.
A SENATOR who will fight against the oil and utility monopolies for
a public energy policy;
— who opposes the de-regulation of natural gaa;
— who supports Proposition 15, the Nuclear Power Plants
Safeguard Initiative:
— who believes that California should beconr>e the SOLAR
ENERGY capital of the nation and be a leader in developing
_safe. alternative forms of energy
— who supports the right of Israel to exist and supports self-
determination for l^uerto Rico;
— who believes that the Cold War should be ended by
extending diplomatic recognition to China. Cuba, North
Korea. Altania, and moat importantly, to the new govemmenta
ot^ndochina.
— who believes that the US should end aH ak) to dictatorships
around the world and cut the military budget in half, to atx^ut
$56 biHim.
A PERSON who has b^en fighttr>g for democracy and social justice
fbr 15 yeera and isn't going to stop now;
\
A SENATOR who believes that US Foreign Policy should be in the
interest of the people of the world, not the multinational cor-
porations;
— who believes that U.S. Foreign Policy should be: humanist.
f iiori-lnterventionist. peace- seeking, to the economic and
social benefit of all. baaed on the right of self-determination,
and. above all, democratic — carried out with the consent of
the Amef>c*n peopie alter full rnnQraftf'iaiiii. debate rather
than by Executive action:
— who believes that the CIA is a threat to democracy and
should be abolished.
zXr.
VOTE FOR TOM HAYDEN
Democrat for U.S. Senate — Tuesday, June 8 Primary Election
Partial list of endorsements
CaMtomia Democratic Council (CDC)
Sheriff Richard Hongisto of San Francisco
Congraeaman Ron Dellums
Cesar Chavez and the United fmrm Workers
Aaaembty man Richard Aiatorre
Alameda County Supenrtaor Tom Bales
Dick Gregory Gloria Steinem Julian Bond
RabtM Leonard Beerman Rabbi EaH Kaplan
San Diego Ctty Councilman Jess Haro
aiHl Floyd Morrow
Fresno CHy Coyncttapoman Linda Mack
Cam omia raiairtuii of Ti
ASi^VMi
»*•*%
Thanks to those wJio made it al worthwhile (like Psycho and Fat Pete)
After four long years, th» ts
finally the last thing of mine
people wifl have to read in this
paper. Actually, the four years
hdven't been all that long and
Ive had some pretty good
rhmgs happen during that span
Not too many people can say
they covered a Rose tow! and
Three NCAA basketball tourna-
ments during their years at
school And only one other
person in the past 30 years, ran
s«iv he covered a leagcie baseball
(hampion.
But It was more than just
vovering the winning teams dnd
the big events. It was getting to
kndw the people People like
lohr^ Wooden, who always
seemed to be winning a basket-
ball title while I was growing up
Perhaps it's childish, but the first
nme he called me by m^ first
name, I guess I was pretty ex-
cited.
It was trying to get a daily
section together and trying to
rl^ure out how to fill that btg
hole on page 10. It was looking
at a blank page and wondering
what the hell I was going to do
with it.
it was wofkmg with the sperH^
writers on the staff, most of
whom will be colhing back for
another fling next year It was
heartache and frustration ^n^,
once in a while, satisfaction, and
I guess I .really am going to m»ss
It all -next year.
In four years. I've met a lot of
people, rriOst of whom made the
)ob a lot easier, jM>me who made
If a bH harder.. In four years I've
taken a lot of roa^ trips, maybe
more than anyone else who ever
worked on this staff
Ther^ have been trips to such
garden spots as Pullman and
Iowa City and Greensboro and
Corvallis and Fresrto. Who will
ever forget having spent his 18th
birthday in such an exerting
place as Holtville. California?
It was late nights sitting by the
typewriter, trying to figure out
something to write by the 9:30
ifn Sunday deadline It was air-
plane flights at midnight that get
into St LoM»s at 5 am to save the
piaper some travel money
It was really a lot of fun
Covering sports for the Daily
Brum has long since superceded
the acaci^mic side of this school
in my mind I will never have to
know that the adret side of the
moumain is the dr^ side or who
the Jewish portfolio was durinj^
the Truman adnnmiscraiion once
I leave this campus
But the things I \edrned cover
ing sports — like hqw to be a
good Winner how to deal with
losing and how to get along
with people — will be a part of
me for the rest of my life
because those things are life
Class room teaming is one thing
but experience is quite another
Anyway, there ^re j^eople I
must mention at ^asi in passing
as i write this last piece frtr th^
D6
Saul Shapiro, who hired nr>e
and let me write my first story
Clark Conrad for advice and £d
Burgart for giving me reipOfW-
bility as a sophomore Anne
Pautlerfor taking a chance on
co-edrtors last year and |im
Stebinger for keeping it going
this year •
To Richardson and Healy,
thanks for the travel money I
guess Rodman 4ih in here also
To Short and P j and the others
in the city room who were able
to amuse me when things
seemd unbearable To Berson.
lUSt for being Berson You j^ill
probably ney/er know how much
those lunches at Machos kepT
me from going absolutely cra/y.
You re a good person to talk to
To the people who make this
paper go but dre never seen,
thanks a whole buncfi That
means Anne and Sue and Vicki
and Greg and Tad and all the
others in advertising whctput all
those super ads in our pipm. To
Kate, ^nov more having to tell me
how much clarss there is for
tomorrow
MvclMhi
To the typists and the pasties
thanks for those intertMiJig
evenings i spend as nifhf MKtor '
To Mark, you gotta type faster
To Clen^. more rouside^ cor-
ners To W1lM»n — rHe best —
isn't fhere a fourth way you ran
make mor>ev from thofce horses'
And how Id I forget Art I
don't know what I'm gonna do
without your asking me to»
cop> but I'M fry to survive I
tfsink we did alright this year
but I'm not sure May your pool
be built while you dft still abie "
to swim in It
To this vfdf s sports st.jf I
gU€SS we covered more sports,
both mer)"s and women s, than
ever befbre Most of you will be
b,i\- and will (ontinue to im-
pruve in what you do This
especially goes for first year
writers like Gregg arid Bob and
Mike and left' and M^ke and
Rich To laque and Patti, good
luck in what ever vou will be
doing
To Hunter. I guess I won't
mention about all the missed
doMMiilts and arguments and
excuses dnd pr»oblems Good
luck somewhere (like maybe
Hawaii)
To j • keep doing it your
way ^nd eventually you'll be
running the show You re too
good to be denied ancf It's only
a matter of lime.
To Mike, good luck One day
you may find out why I was So
touchy at limes, but I hope you
don't just remember not to try
|o do all of the work, yourself
and to use people you trust It's
your |ob so do it your way (with
a little tact). .^
Finally, to Stu. It was strange
in the beginning but ior the
most part you worked out pmtt^
well If only you di(in t want to
go to ^rkeleyOn the PSA pass
or wn^ a Rapper each week.
you might' have been perfect
To the people across the
street, thanks in general and
some in particular To )D, Jor
being straight and trusting
To Vk and fran> tcjr giving me a
chance to work with the base-
ball team To Tr^- good lu« i
and to Ger>e. ktrt-p that innt*f
peace.
I guess that s )ust about it -
exijepl for utm peruM and a
grcMip a4 gmi^. The first one <w
lamie Krug, who wav my iu
editor last year t guevs that
worked out )ust about as w
anything (ouid and t will ,i
think about you in the sdme wav
I (hink about my o«im brotl^ier
Finally. I have to mention
Gars Adams dnd his baseball
players and including Mick
ive had a lot ol gcx>d times at
UCLA and covered a Ros** Bowl
champion and an NCAA basket
ball champ but I ve never been
associated with a gr«fll«r bunch
of guvs.
lo falcon and Midget snd
Hafpoie snd Pear dnd Psycho
ancf Radish t9%d Bear dnd Mon-
•' '*' dd dnd Hood dnd Snedd
«ii.vi »/ dnd Hake and Tuna dnd
fat Pttp .#mA aaiMMK- mim i might
h#ve U^^mtn # dHin t torget
ysMJ WoHahead) I will tt^trntrntt^t
.voUi C tBA 4fh,inii*4-,fi^ip long
att«i I hjvi Uitv^ iw others
No SI' ^ -■-.: in my tour yitm^
given me greater pfeauire
than May 15. wh« ■■■• \ r lit
siflfied h()rT»»' Dallas to co'
The Mir.i i SuwH'lle hr ;
That mc)m«*nt arid all tht* p«*opU'
who mad*' it possihU- wH h«
with me lof«*vf
bascblM that t>eJfx; jl!
signatures which now sits on nu
desk to u letter Irom John
Woocffn
I hanks t^o«v ^UdL^^^i^m*
I
c
IT
Tracksters try for quaffication
UCLA's women's track team has all hut vsound up if iCMon
as far as team competition goes, hut .Hcvcral women still hope to
qualifv tor the Olympic tnals, held June 19-27 at Fugcne,
Oregon.
ICann Smith and Fvelyn Ashf»»rd have already qualified m the
javehn and T()0 meter dash, respectively, hut coach Pat Connolly
IS hopeful that some of the other wotnen will he able to achieve
good marks ncJit weekend at the AAl' nationals] held here
"Diane Summer might make it in the lon^ lump and davlr
Butler has t chance." commented the coaci,
Once in Eugene, however. Smith and Ashford will lace stiff
competition to qualify for the Olympic-team There are three
women who have better marks than Smith in the favchn Among
them IS Kathy Schniidt. a former Brum
Ashford will compete in international competition this summer
even if she docs not qualify for. the team Next weeketuj she will
compcmn the AAl' lunior nationals lo win a berth- on the
junior t/cam which will compete on one m«nth to fcumfir :if\d
Skho travel to Russia and (iermany
Last weeketid some members of liC'IA's track team trayelled
to San r>iego to compete in the C'al Slate championships hut
according to Connolly the team didn*t do tcK> well " Many of
the women have quit the team for the season and have decid^
not to compe'e anymore until fall
Next fall, the team should have 1norc strength and depth.
C onnolly has begun to recruit several outstanding prospects
Among them are Kathv Weston and Donna Machado Both
women are disunce runners. Wcs|on the HOO and mile relay, ^od
.i4ju;ba4o the 800 and 1500
-^^ 1^ . — Ja<pie Mai!ip?»ihroer
The Rapper
or hello, I must be going . .
Stuart Silverstein
So now it's over. Aifter 1000
days, several hangovers, in-
numerable felonious acts (since
January 1st, misdemeanors), a
Coke in the face, several screw
jobs, and sorrte of the greatest
moments in my life, it's over-
And this IS my swan song, ^
please bear with nr>e.
Writing for the Daily Brum is a
very special experience for all
of you who think the thing is a
rag, you should remember that
we »Tt an amiiteur (very) opera-
tion, run dnd staffed by stu-
dents wha«.'
courseloads, psycfK>logical pro-
blems, and other limitations as
other students like you. for
instance. So, at times, it is a real
struggle to cut that class to write
up some obscure women's
waterpolo story
So Pautler put hmt in Vlew-
)peinl. so tnose bozos could gun
for me every day Working with
Gary Knell and Neil Steinberg
was anotf>er strange experience.
Knell came every day with new
Terry Harper iokcs, wbiia Neil
relived scenes from t938 Clark
Gable movies, doir>g all parts.
And then, >im Stebinger. the
new EdUor-in-Chtef, put his arm
around mm (he loves 6mnn
rhmgs Nke that) and sa*d,
"Stuey, how would you like to
try sportsr
And suddenly I was sports
editor, and the whole sports
staff hated me. Mike Sond-
heimer w« particularly brutal It
has been said that Sondheimer
exhibits less tact than anyone in
the history of the world, but I
diiaRree. I think Lizzie Borden
JlipSiltd less tact, tHoygN #ie
difference is marginal. Then I
tdmixted to Mike that he knew
nH>re than I about Denny C line's
sets, and ifKipient revolt was
averted.
But being sports ecMlor
great. The wpertim
Jamie Krug, told me I was get-
Hag the befl potHion on t^
besr |ob in the friggin school
reebies to all the games, and
travel^ travel, travel* Colorado
Springs, South Bend, Berkeley
four times, and Philly
Philadelphia was the betl.
Open bar for the press, plus a
rented car courtesy the DB
Driving a Gremlin down to
Washington D.C., with two
screaming cheerleaders, Ray-
mond Townsend's mother, and
two others was ^ highlight. ("Let
me sit in the dongressman's
chair. Now — while he's not
looking!")
And aitcr the Inciiandi g<im«',
which omtrred on my birthday,
unfortunately, going with one of
the songgirk ar>d a friend to see
Cuckoo's NesI, getting d j>srkmf^
ticket because the songgirl
didn't see ' the hydrant we
parked in front of, and then
finding a food Eastern delicaies-
san at two in the morning. It
would have even been nicer Hmd
we won the game. But I guess
you can't have everything
So r>ow, the years with the
Bfolo are over, and I am sud-
denly feeling the dislocation
which must inevitably kMtm.
Moving on can be very de-
pressing.
So now Uti
Remember — you're the forking
boss
}oe\. Tou got a raw deal this
year, but 1977-78 is all yours.
Keep warm ^t night, and you
hava place to play in Berkeley if
you ne^d n. ^
leff, Mike, Paul. Gregg, Bob.
Fred, and the other Mike
Thanks for helping make this
such a rewarding, if not artistic,
year t'H be hitting you guys up
for icom^ before you know it.
Patti: If Sondheinr>er boliiari
vou, belt him We had a fun
time, though, didn't we? Even if
you did feel like stabbing me on
several occasions
fCmiliootiOiiPagf 32)
!■»■
tions
Mike S.: Who says sports edi-
tors have to be six feet tall? fOr
even five feet, for that matter.)
Good bjck, and don't take any
ap ^ut your head lookM
lu Ptd
like iTt ef!f**gw'^ii BfiMo p\
McTear
story
In regard to yesterday's
Dmiv Brum w$9rj' on
Mouston Mel ear. athlcttc
director J. D; Morgan deM8i<
that Phillip Fairchiid, Mc-
Tear*! bcnefador. it H big
supporter of UCLA athlet-
^'Phil Fairchild ii acting
completely on bit own mm
hm never beta oammtttti
with UCLA athktict," Mor-
gan laid. "He may attend
our foocbaB mmi baakctbail
garnet btit no one bare (Uk
athletic department) it
•"y*^— ~^
f
f
i
«ViUki
J
I
^
. \
;o
i^^
-y^ ■'
- m f"**^
T-BONE STEAK $2.99
M.R 0(:
Gel a great deoL
The Sizzler's dealing out rich, juicy T-bone steaks, broiled
to order. Along with a hot baked potato or golden french
fries and Sizzler cheese toast. All at a bargain price Can
your house beat our deal?
mi
-^2 Gayl«y Av«nu«
(rMsr L* Conte)
W— twood VHIag»
V
Frog lifting «v eights
Rapper is going . .
'.-rr^-.^. -
\
%
w
AND FLYING DUTCHMAN RECORDS
PRESENT
YOUR VERY OWN
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STARRING ^
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^OLIVER NELSON
(Continued from Pace 31)
Hunter: Co get 'em, Ac^. bit
up air the dirt.
Mary Beth: We had it good
for a while, and I'll always re-
member . . . Sorry. Btte''*^your
eyes.
D.W*. Gould: Say hi to jimmy
Lennon for me.
Mike Lee: Get ready to do a
lot of volleyball drawings next
year for sports
Frank and Peter: To the thifd
bew editorial seaton in the last
two yeacs. Frank — you'll- be thi?
first black President Peter —
next time in Pasade"na, tie a
string to your glasses
Sally, Frank. Alan, Barry, Carol,
iodi, and Adam from Index: Try
to do something very few soph-
•Ofhores manage to do stay
bn the Bruin and off proba-tion
at the sanr>e tinr^e. Hi, Sally. Hi.
Carol.
Alice: Your first decision was
screwed, but I still love you
Steb Get H^ly drunk.
Healy: See above
Paul. Glenn. Maria. Jeff. Rick,
Sd, and Neal: I need a pic-
ture ... Hi. Maria. —
2 RECOHO Uf
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»TAI
Marc: Boy. if they ev^ knew
what means we used to fill some
of those pages. But. even if we
did spend most of the year
yelling at each other. Ace. ind
the other situations, we were a
Bood team, and I have really
•njoyed our friendship. Some
admissions are in order, though.
I wasn't drunk at the Rose Bowl,
but I will grant you were right in
blasting me for bringing a hip
flask to the Spons Arena press
table for the U5C gwne. How-
ever. I still think "The Rapper"
was the moil interesting part of
the sports section this year.
Here's to statittia.
Tad. Berry, Vicki. Emily. Kathy.
Sue, Anne. Cornell. Elaine. Greg,
ScoBt, Kate. Ken. Oonna, Pat,
Mrs. Wood, etc No. I didf>'t
torpM advertising.
And to all the other peopW
around here who might feel Ml
out. (though not necessarily
intentionally), e.g. Eric. Garcia
(Gomez?). Robert. Harlan,
Marcta. Mike. Bonnie, Beth, Jeff,
Howard, Nancy McNoodle. jay,
Kim, lohn. Lbu. Suzan. Gary, the
rest of the DT's (the Kerrkhoff
Hall Gentlemen's Fraternity, of
rourvei and the Zeb« ^ ^
" ' ' r^^ii ^ —
■^^
Smith leads netters into Nationais
By Grtfg L. Renesy ^
OB S^ont Hrilcr
For fcmak collegiate tennis players, ii i* ihe
only touriiainent that counts The league
championships, the regional triumphs and all
the individual accomplishments art forfotten
7 he USTA Nationals are what collegiate tenmt
IS all about.
Thi* year tlM^ proceedings will be held June
13-20 at Salt Lake City and although the
UCLA women's tennis teAm will be solid
underdogs, they are very optimistic about their
chances
The Bruins will go in with the psychological
motivation that this will be their Ust match
Under coach Bill Zaima the team would like
nothing better than to send Zaiitia out a
winner:
In addition, this could well be Paula Sfrliih's
last tournament for the Brum blue and gold as
she IS very much considering turning pro-
fessional in the near future Her decision will
rely hcavjiy on her performance in Salt Lake
Senior Cindy Thomas will be wrapping up an
outstanding career at UCLA and she has
vowed to "give it her all"
hinally, the Bruins will be playing m a
tournament in which previous performances are
usually no indication of what will happen
As evidenced ^n the men's tournament last
week, the Nationals are more a contest ol
stamina than skill. For example, to win the
MRgles championship, one must wm eight
matches in five days, a grueling schedule that
makes the lop players liable to stunning upsets
'Ecjually important is the draw, m which the
players are seeded according to previous
performances Although a team may be fav-
ored, receiving a bad draw forces them to play
tough matches early in the tournament. As the,
tournament progresses, this can result in
concentration faltering and, combined with the
physical strain, a sub-par performanee^ i
The Brums will lake five women with them
Smith. Thomas. Susan Zaro. Kim Nilsson and
knny Geddes Here ii. a rundown of the
netters; ^
Paula Smith Smith is coming oft a second
stnght victory dvcr Stanford's I. ele Forood
Ihe score was a surpnsingK easy 6-(). 6^
sweep and this will give her added momentum
and confidence going into the lournameni
"One of the top four seeds will go either to
Paula or Barbara (Halquist of t SC)." said
/aima "Paula's beaten Forood twice and hv all
jights she should be seeded higher Ktmever. a
lot of what IS taken into account in seeding the
players is their junior performance and l.ele's
lunior record is better than Paula's "
Smith has seemd to play well in the big
matches and if she can maintain her concen-
tration through the tournament she could
surprise a lot of people.
"When Paula concentlates she's just about
unbeatable," remarked Zaima "Bui i.f her
#
concentration falters she can be beaten hv anv
•r***
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phone 284-3277 or
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food player**
Cindy 1 homas: Thomas has decidc^^ to §o
back to her oid style of play in order to put out
one last great effort Her experiment with
hitting the ball barder and playing a more
power game has ended at least icmpurarilv and
she will go back to hitting **junk**. a style with
which she had been enormousK successful
Thomas tees no one woman as dominant in
this year*s Nationals.
"anyone can win." said Thomas "The
competition will be tougher than last year, but
1 think the team will do much better than last
year (UCLA finished a disappointing 15ih) I'm
going to play my own game and play to win.**
Susan Zaro: Zaro is the big question mark as
she hat not ^yed in a tournament in the last
three weeks Although she has been hittir.g the
ball extremely well in practice, nothing takes
the place of competition She is feeling much
better, after her bout with a viral infection, but
the Nationals ar^ taxing on the healthv women,
much less one coming of! an illness
Zaima rs confident that Zaro will play
strongly but he has pulled her from the second
doubles team to (;;paeefiiraie her strength in the
singles piav
Kim Nilsson Mavbe more than any other
Brum. Kim has to come ih;^ough with a top
effort for ICLA to be in positioa for the top
Zaima has ^^t rested that Nilnson is going to
have to beat some women ranked ahead of her
in the tournament Aince each match contnbutcs
points m the overall scoring
Jenny Geddes. Geddes will play^ second,
doubles with Nilsson and although ,t+ie two
have been paired IdL^vonly a ft^eek, Zaima is
happy with their play/ the No 2 tandem will
have their work cut out for them as doubles
play relics heavilv on each partner knowing the
other's court habits
Although the , No 1 double of Smith and
Thomas -were soundly defeated last week
against Stanford, they should be seeded m the
top three The two will be concluding, a
fabulous season as they won the league cham'-
purnship. the Wildcat Invitational and the Ojai
Women's doubles T his could be UC l.A's best
opportunity for a first place finish
The singles tournament favorite will be
Stephanie Tolleson of I rinity She won the
championship la*^t year and has played tough
all season She was defeated by SC's Halquist
earlier in the year, however, and it*s always
harder to stay up at the top than to get there
I rinity is the favoritr-i«r tfie ovcrajH ch«m«
pionship. although thev will have their hands
full with Stanford Ihe Cardinals have decided
to leave Barbara Jordan at home, a move
Zaimn feels will hurt Stanford
For the Bruins to triumph, they will'tevelo"
rely on help from the other teams Ihe women
are not strong enough to compete with I rinity
or S,tanford head to head. Ikit if either of the
two should falter* the netters could step right
m,
^i
X
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Looking back at my first day
and first aftfti|nment I can oniy
envision the look of bewilder-
ment on lamie Kruf 's face Well
James, I stuck it oat and look
where it got me. I must admit
that I really did miss you this
past year.
jaque I can only wish you the
very bett forever and many
years of happir>ess with Lloyd. I
think that you'll always be the
"First Lady of Daily Bruin
Sports".
Its a long hard road ahead of
you Alice, but with a linle Q€e'
serverence you'll get by. I'm
sorry I can't stay on as pro-
mis^ Things don't always work
out the way that you would
expect.
Hunter . . . what can 1 say?
It might just be my latent
brain, but Peter 4've nev^ b^n
abie to understand you com-
pletely. You still look like a
puppy to me.
Jeff and Mike; hang in thfre
you two, you're the future here
in sports. Don't give up and
sports will ^ good to you.
Paul — keep on running and
Rich don't Cut the "Inside Lane "
to close.
Bob don't let thmgs get you
down. Where's that ole' Crespi
spirirf Good luck with your
press guides ar>d^ don't get too
wet. Remember that I'll afways
listen if you want to talk.
Ml
Music for Piano and string orchestra
KEITH JRRReTT
with soloists
JAN'GARBAREK tenor &
\na saxophones
^-niMAHLlE HADEN bass
Friday, June 11, 8:30 p.m.
RoyceHall UCLA
KErTH JARRET — WC^y^HOP — FREE
J june;:^^p.m.
BACKSTJj^y ROYCE HALL
— ttti^> C^*Mnkn— for th« arts ^
■*;
u
t '
( >
JASON MLER-i-^J^ft^^ »--*«liJAMP0ERBLArTVb«.<«„NaLMAI5HAU.
IMUW tVtMYWntMt
^ By PattI SuMvan
loc, I can't rif htly think of the
words to say except, I'm sorry.
H^^e faith in the next regime
Mnd you'll go far. Despite Gilkes
I think that you're a fine writer
and your potential is unlimited.
If you don't get it next year, well
— we'll go to Comm 9oard!
Rick, Paul, Sol. Maria, Jeff and
Glenn thanks for all your help
Marla-^don't forget Pepper and
Sol please don't tickle me wf>en
I come to visit and Paul
force a smile,
Laura, my mascot buddy, take
care of yourself »nd give my
best to Brad. You're the kind of
friend everyor>e needs.
i^nte, my favorite campus
events person, when you find
that millionaire s^ if he has a
brother for me.
Frank and Sally, the 'BobMy
Twins" of city side, I'm going to
miss you two a whole bunch.
Take care and be good, you've
both got a lot ahead of you.
Michael, I'm sorry it had to
end this way. Your tact, finesse
and diplomacy had nothing to
do with this decision. I wish you
the best of luck for the coming
year and yes, I guess we %re still
friends.
Patrick Healy, I must admit
that you're my favorite city per-
son. Why? Well anyone born on
St. Patricks Day can't be all bad!
Aura, Cindy. Kim, Tpni, Staci
and' Pieps — thanks for your
friendship. You all mean so
much to me. Patti I guess ydu
n«v«r thought you'd «•• your
name in the D6. juM «^«<t. John
will ask
Richardson thanks for ^1^
summer ind your appeal to
Barney for me. You'll ne>ftr
know hew much I appreciated
that help. Dick Krucz, your help
certainly didn't hurt my cause.
Thank you so much and how
about i game -of tennis?
Stuart, Its been some year.
Despite all the bickering I think
that way deep damn we ve
friends. Its been fun and I'm
sorry that you can't take the
tofif girls with you but that's the
breaks.
Marc, 1 don't quite know what
lo say. You've always been there
when I nmmdmi someone to talk
out my problems with and stood
by me when I cause problems
myself. To say the least, the past
two years have been .unique
from Sports in American Life to
my defenses of certain basket-
ball and football player and the
WFL This year can never be
compared to any other; too
much has happened both good
and bad. You have put up with a
lot and 'people apprec^iate it.
Thank you for being around and
for just being you.
a heart is not judged by
how much you love but by how
much you are loved by
others "I'm going to miss all
of you and r love you all very
much.
Good luck to us all
By Jaque Kampschroer
what make'i four ycert of interviews, sports events studying
(sometimes), md writing up th^ story in short order worthwh,ile? I
guess it's the anticipation of being able to write whatever you.want
without being red pencilled in the last edition oi the Bruin.
Now that the opportunity has been afforded me, the bits of
wisdom I had wanted to exclaim to those remaining fafis to come
forth. So then, I suppose what I will say is goodbye and thanks to .all
those who have made my tenure at UCLA so interesting
pleasuceable.
First of all I want to thank Marc Dellins and Stuart Silversfein for
putting up with me When first working city-side one thinks people
back in sports arc, well, a little strange. Whether my first impression
were wrong of J've been converted, is not entirely dear.
Marc and Stuart, you Weren't strange, but I wish you had pushed
me a little more, who knows, maybe I could have been in the
running for the SOC by lines pcf quarter couht.
I don't know how to bring you into this, jamie, but i guets it
would suffice to say that this year wasn't quite the same without you
in sports.
Mike Sondheimcx. my,.friend and/or enemy depending on what
critical comments you have for me, I will miss your "suggest ions ' on
my volleyball, basketball, track stories Sports is left in good
hands, but I find it a little sad to hear you talk of all the great
improvements you have in mind for my old domain. What was
wrong these last two years? Don't answer that
>oe Yogerst-stick it out. you'll make it next year And Patti
Sullivan. I hope you change your mind and return to sports next
year. Hunter, Shirbc^y was never the same after you finished with
hef. And to the DWIA. coaches and athletes, thanks for all your
cooperation. Good luck next year!
Dave Gould. Peter Berson and Holly Kurtz, you're my only,,
remaining friends up in the front oMke» food luck
LeflVTHj^The D.B side there are a lew otfier people*believe it or rwl
Mt^m a^e*^also important to four years of coMofe. Although there is
rto Journalism major here, much to the agony of grade points of the
DB. there is Mr Howard who has hol^od many of us -in different
ways.
It may seem crazy to some, relative to others, but it will be hard
to leave this Westwood campus. Remember the people you "smile"
at ^working up to this after two years of passing on campus). Robert,
whether Philosophy 6 gave us any wisdom or not, it did give us^
someone else to ^hare our ups and downs with. 1 guess I'll have to
drive to USC next year 9nd hope I can run into you once a
tOfomer. Matt, I'll be calling on your lawful skill to aid me dowm
the mountains. Sigma Chi's, what is, the correct etiquette for ei-
Sweethearts? I'm sorry I haven't been around much this last quarter-
call it the senior i|ch, but thanks for a great year ne^er to be
forgotten especially Phil, Bob^ pean» Tom, Tony, Pete, Paul, Jim .
(in no particular order).
Saving the best for last, Karen. Kathleen, Jennifer. Marian PC74:
friends who are so appn
Now for the big adjustment from coMtft into career. Back into
the ofd world and ahead to a new one. Lloyd, you eipockaMy
understand what this nr>eans. Last and above all thanks to my parents
anfl nrwi imy worw frrritti
Reming leaves UCLA h style
my H
OB Sport!i Hritcr
One siBiUi acp lur UCLA\ icnnift stars Petci
Kkming and Fcpdi Tayf»n - one giant step lu
I CLA's second coHM^cutive NCAA team cham-
pionahip (with dtic respect to American astro-
naut Neil Armstrong)
Fleming and Taygan overcame what ap-
peared to be. an insurmountable five-point
deficu (18-13) after last ThurMiay*s second day
of the NCAA championships at Corpus Chriati,
v^ here the iieat was intense, the winds blew at
over 25 miles per hour and the humidit\ uas
high.
By this Tuesday*s concluding dav. the Brums
had sufiNuaed the Stanford Cardinals, who had
surprisingly led the tburnament since opening
day and lied the USC Irojans lor the NCAA
team championship.
USC had moved into a one-point lead h>
vk inning a doubles semi-final match on Mondav
over Bngham Young's Mike Nisslev and Bruce
Kleege. 6-2. 6-4, 7-6. i.
But that was shon-lived as Fleming and
laygan routed USC's top-Mrcded doubles team
of Bruce Manson and Chris Lewis. 6-0, 6-2, 6-
4, to end the 92nd annual NCAA tennis
championships with a share of the coveted
NCAA team title and 21 points each
L'CLA's doubles triumph was one ot the
most lopsided wins in NCAA doubles history
tor a championship match
UCLA's doubles victory was more imprfaiivr
even than the score indicated because Fleming
and Taygan had never played doubles together
prior to the NCAA tournament In add rttMl^'
Manson had won the NCAA doubles crown
the previous year when only a freshman uith
former teammate Butch , Walts, dcleating
I ( I A's freshman star Billv Martin and Brian
leacher^ v
hevv. i^afiyrexpcctedU C I A to wm the team
championship after losing four-time All- Amer-
ican Brian Teacher in the tournament's first
round of singles 4£44<i«>^ Teacher, v^ho had
vtrained muscles in his right shoulder in
practice a week prior to the tivurnev. lo*i to
firuisiana State's Ciarv Alhertme in the initial
rou-nd. costing the Bruins several piJints
A new scoring format im^iated tor onlv the
■first round gave each school two, points instead
of the cusiomarv one pomt eacah iimcone of its
players won a first round singles match^ T he
scoring system was instilled because an ad-
ditional eijtht players Were allowed to compete
in the tourncN from NCAA TXivisions II. and
III ' -
When Stanford and USC advanced all lour
'I then slngle^ entries past the tirsi round, Ihcy
received eight points to llCLA's six Brums
f Icming. Taygan and Nichols advanced past
the first round, but leacher lost
I CI A's title chances slipped even further
vkhen Its second doubles team of Bfuce Nichols
and John Austin blew a 5-2 lead in the third
and final set of a first-round doubles match
\Mth Texas Christian University's Tut Bart/en
and Randy Crawford and lost 6-7. 6-4. 7-5
This defeat cost UCLA additional points and
was especially frustrating to the Bruins because
Teacher had held a 5-1 lead and was serving
tor the second set when he lost 6 games in
vuccettMa !• lose his singles match the div
bf !'.»re
When s * Bru4:e Nichob \% as routed
bv Stanfoiu ^ senior star Pal DuPre. 6-0. 6-2.
in the third round last fhursdav. fcieming and
^avgan \»c: onlv Bruins remaining in the
128-player singles draw whik .the hleming-
Taygan doubles combination had also ad-
vanced
Stanford rctaintd all lour of its single pbvcrs
- DuPre Matt and Mark Mitchell and Bill
Maze in addition to its top doubles team oi
DuPre and Maze.
Meanwhile. USC sfill had singlet ace Bruce
Manson and the top-ieaded doubles team of
Manson and Lewis The team score was
Sunford 18, USC 15aiidUClA 13
UCLA then began the greatest comeback in
NCAA history Never has a school made up a
five-point deficit m the 13-yw history ol the
NCAA team championship
The 6-5 Fleming aad 5-i Taygan went on to
win the NCAA doublet crown while advancing
into the quarter-finals and finals of the singles
bracket, respectively. Fleming uiad his pul-
verizing serve volley game to rout Southern
Methodist's Joe Edics 6-3. 6-4. m the quarters
on Saturdav while Manson outlasted laygan,
6-2. 7-5.
Then Fleming came back on Sunday to face
the aggressive control-playing Bill Scanlon of
Trinity for t^he natior^al collegiate singles
championship Scanlon outlasted a physically
and mentally fatigued Fleming. 5-7. 7-6 (5-4 ini
the nine-point tie-breaker). 6-3, ^2, in a match
televised nationally over the Public Broad-
casting (PBS)
1 was dead tired." said Fleming **l had
played over six and one-hail^luHirs of tennis the
day bet ore (Sunday; to advance past the semi-
finals in both singles and doubles
**Whcn r warmed up for the match against
Scanlon 1 could tell my feet were dead I
couldn't move "
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SEMESTER AT SEA
sailing again in February
"Peter was so guts\ and competitive/
Basctt "".'r
id
"Never, has onr <>t my players had more
pressure on him than Peter had last week „.La8t
year when Billy (Martin) won the NCAA
singlev title and advanced to tk>e doubles
championship match with Brian (Teacher), he
didn't have the pressure of winning with the
team title at stake.
"Peter and Ferdi had to Win and win and
win. or It. was all over tor us at far as the team
'championship was concerned The fact that
Rctcr mad? it (o the smgtrr fnuii and won the,,
doubles championship proves how tough iic
was last week under the conditions
"I thought Bruce (Man»on) had Peter beaten
in the semis, but Peter came roaring back "
Fleming was Xie only UCLA player that
Manson couldn't beat in the 1976 season
loMng MX times to the Brum ace.
■^'"^Taygan, the three-time AIl-American from
hramingham, Massac hu»ctts«_ was stunned by
Fleming's lots to Scanlon
(Continual om Page 36)
The S S Universe
Campus sets sat|j
February 25. 1977,
on a new series of
Semester at Sea
vdyagest lor under
graduate students The
Spring 1^77 voyage is
arouixi the^world
fromi Los Angeles.
yy
For information wnte
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Suit«^ 303B 2aS21 Paseo de Vyencii^
Box 2726. Lagund HiDs, CA 92663
•te
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l^ • "^ »» -^Bl
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Qualifiers for Ali-U
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i
If
V
If
a
1 Mike Mahler
2 loni Duranti
3 Henry Ortega
4 John Rupp
5 Jim rivcfttad
6 Todd Hallcnbeck
^ Gar> Doaahoo
8 Fred Budif
V John Ufake
10 Tom Choi
11 Bob
1 2 K.en
Altemiitc S. Schncidcrman W Farrcr
SHOT PIT - 3:«i
Co-op
Co-df
Co-op
Sifiiia Pi
Pbi K^ppu
York \iu>
AlO
Kodrick
Psi
Winery
1 Brad Rut ledge
2 Saul DrMartini^
} Bob Ocfift
4 Jeff Muro
5 Andy Mastb
6 Jack Lansford
7 Allan Fawcett
tl Brian Burgen
9. Jeff Townsend
10. RjLndy Gossett
11. Dan Grigsby ;
12. Mike iCappa
ATO
SAE
Sproui
Hcdrick
SAE
fiietas
ATO
Bundy
Striders
Alternate Daryl Steen
LONG JIMP - 3:«t
I Jim Spillane
2. Mike Henton
3 Jim Pauer
4 Don White
5. Ben Parkinson
6 Jeff Pelton
-7 E)ave Doebendorfcr
8. Brad Rutlfl^ft
9 Dudley Wctncr
Ait Bob 5jrtS^n5bwry,
449 JIELAY - 3:M
1. Sigma Nu
2. Sigma Chi
3'^Riebcr
4 High Steppers
5. Beu Theia Pi
23-8 '/6
Sigma Chi
ATO
Sigma N u
SAP
AGO
Hedrick
ATO
Sigma Nu
Sigma Chi
" /
43.8
44.1
44 6
446
44.8
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10 30 0^
10:31 0
10.375
10.43.1
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10:52.6
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45'3
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44*9"
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23-8'/i
22*9 H
2nH
2ri'/^
20'11
20'5 %
20'3 /,
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Alteraate
SAE
^,-^Hh;h Jl MP - 3:ii
1
Jim
Arnold
^^y^ 2.
Bob
Mardui
2
Chuck PMua
4.
Bill
V -Ian
5
Mike
• vjkxtra
6
Brad
Rut ledge
7
John
Mai»on
8
Jay <
Gam
9
Steve
Alford
10
Bnar
l.enert/
11
Dave
Garibaldi
12
Chuc
k Kirk
Alternate
B Williams
12t
YARD HLRDLES
1
Bob
Mardis
2.
Pete
Getsert
3
Jamei
) Roberson
4
Jamie
Barber
.5.
Bob
Boog
6
John
Beacom
Alternate
John Bow
MILE RUN - 3:48
1.
Henry Ortega
2
Lorenz Fish
3.
Tom
Duranti
4
Dan
McQuoid
5.
Paul
French
6
Peter
Dinno
7.
Mark
Minich
8
John
Rupp
9
David
DeMou
10
Scott
Zierman
il
Jon KarroU
. 12.
Don
Williams
4S.2
45 6
Co-op
Rieber 5
Phi Kapp
Sigma Pi
ATO
Co-op
C o-op
6 Ruat WaNcer
Xh. — ij^ Sunkbury Sigma f hj
Pfti
\.
Sigma Pi
Riebcr
- 3:29
Rieber 5
Beu Theu Pi
High Steppers
Sigma Pi
Sigma
Riebcr
SAE
4:37.1
Co-op
Co-op
Pi
6
V
Hedrick
York Mtn
Winery
Chi
,.i.
rAiternatc
G. Stand
199^ YARD DASH
1. Don Whi^c..
2, Xen Stoc'kstili
2. Chuck Kirk
4. John Horn
4 Rob Duncanson
Co-op ""
LainMa
Sigma
4:54,7
3:40
Sigma Nu
Beta Iheta
Sigma Pi
Sproui
Sigma Nu
Pi
67-
6tr
6*0-
6'0"
6'0-
5' 10"
510"
SMT
r«r
5*8"
5*8-
5'8-
5'8"
14.3
144
146
147
15 I
15.3
157
4:37.1
4:385
441 I
4434
4:440
4448
4 46 8
4:47.8
4:50 3
4 51 5
4:530
4:54.2
4:547
9.8
100
10 0
10 I
10 I
YARD - 4:15
Arnie Hvndman
Mike Flayes
Gary Fiercr
Jim RicliArds
John HobtoQ
Dave
1
2.
3
4
5
6
Alternate DnD S^
High Steppers
Rieber 6
Co-op
Riebci
I >v ksira
Hedrick
52.5
YARD RIN - 4J4I
I Art Beckert
2 Dudfcy Werner
3 Pete C«es»ert
4 Arnie Hyndman
5 Henry Ortega
6 Fred Doubell
7 Dave Mokrob
8 K.lrk McConckie
9 Dan McQuoid
10 Chris Stoehr
I I Scott Schneiderman
12 Dave Gibbn
2:01.8
Sigma Nu
Beta Tlieta Pi
High Steppers
Co-op
Sigma
Chi
Alternate J Forgrivr
i-f-.
Delta Sigma
ATO
Z^T
Pi
l«.2
M25
51 1
51 6
^52.0
52 2
1? y
..4
52.5
2:01 8
2:020
2:038
2:044
2:046
2:05 3
2:06.7"
2:075
2:98.4
2:085
2095
2:13.5
2:13.6
229 YARD DASH - 4:49
I Rob Duncanson
2 Chuck Kirk
3. Tim Grant
4 Brad Ruf ledge
5. Arnie Hyndman
6 Scott Morrovk
Alternate B Robinson
Larry Sharp
MILE RELAY
I ATO
2. Phi Kappa
' y Riebcr
4 Sigma
5 Sigma
6 Sigma
— ^:9«
'M
Alternate
Nu
Chi
Pi
ZBl
Sigmi Nu
Sigma Pi
Sigma Nu
A TO
High Steppers
AlO
SAL
Phi Kapp Psi
,3 41 I
^^1 5
V4I 7
3 49 6
1:55.5
4 01 0
4:03 7
225
23 4
23.6
24 0
243
24 4
Fleming leaving Vyestwood . . .
(Continued from Page 35)
**I knew how tired Peter was.
but still thought he could han-
dle Scanlon," said Tavjtan.
Sophomore Scanlon, who
had lost, twice to UCLAs
freshnian John Austin
(UCLA!s fifth-ranking player)
last year pn the junior circint,
aced Fleming ten times while
breaking Fleming's serve on
ten occaMon.s
Fleming an(| Taygan had
pulled out a tc'n&c Jour-set
doubles match against Miami's
Java Martinez and John Eag-*
Ic^on, 5-7, 7-6, 6-3, 6-3, in the
semi-finals on Sunday after
Fleming had won one of the
greatest and most dramatic;
tennis matches in NCAA ten-
nis history over USCs Manson
in the singles semi-final, 5-7, 6-
4, 7-5, 6-7 (50), 7^6 (5-2).
The Fleming- Manson nuttch
lasted three and a ha'lf hours in
the heat, winds and humidity
**Pe^r was just incredible all
week," said UCLA coach
Glenn Bassett He ju.st didn't
give up and neither did Ferdi
(Taygan). They were constantly
figuring out the possible point
possibilities we had in order to
win the championship Most
everyone had given up" hope
After the second day. 1 Mrad
Brian (Teacher) and (John
Austin) fly back "tir Los An-
getes "We all thought wc were
beaten in the race for the team
title
."t^Vhcn Peter was war-mmg
up on Tuesday morning, he
was extremely exhausted and
irritable He was yelling at
himself and cranking He was
hitting balls all over the place .
^1/VHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
##
t?-rt
^XMth^n" arv thoM who do not **bollo«« In thf'Qod of th« BIblo."
This ••cond Ptalm ldontlfl«« thorn at poopio "who Imagln* • vain
thing" and tupport kings and rulort who aot thorn— twot to brook tho
•on^ and caat mmm>i tha Cords of rostralnts of tf>a Laws of tho Com-
iwndmonts of God Almighty and His Anolnlod, Joaua ChMI
Consldor tho brolion Bands and cast away Cords of roatratni ragardh-
Ing God • Commandmanls for His poopla to "REMEMBER THE SAB-
BATH DAY TO KEEP IT HOLY " THE GREAT DESIDERATUM IM
THE COUNCIL CHAMBER OF THE IMEERNAL KING HAS ALWAYS
BEEN HOW MAN'S INNATE RELIGIOUS FEELING SHOULD BE
^SATISFIED. AND YET GOD BE NOT SERVED. HOW COULD THE
HEART BE KEPT FROM GOO AND THE CLAMORS OF
CONSCIENCE BE SILENCED, AND YET THE DEMANDS OF AN
INSTINCTIVE RELIGIOUS FEELING BE ANSWERED? THE ARCH
ENEMY OF MAN'S IMMORTAL HOPES SOLVED THE PROBLEM
THE SOLUTION APPEARS IN THE CUNNING DEVICES HE HAS
SOUGHT OUT BY WHICH TO Bf GUILE Ul^fWARY SOULS HE HAS
VARIED HIS PLANS TO SUIT TlilES AND CIRCUMSTANCES. THE
CONDITION OF MAN. THE PROGRESS OF SOCIETY. THE
CHARACTER OF HUMAN GOVERNMENTS. AND THE CONDITION
OF THE HUMAN MINOt" For our g*noralibn and sueh a ttmo as this
ona of his biggost davtcos to accomplish hit dastgn is to mrs-
'chMTch going" for a llttta whUa on SyRday In ordar that ona
might faol fraa lo spond Iha rast of God's Day In pursuit of "tt>a luats of
Iha Waah." Instoad of uaing N to find and toad tha soul wNh Tha Broad
of LNa." Joaua Chrlaf said: "I AM THE BREAD OF LIFE: >^ THAT
EATETH OF THIS BREAD SHALL LIVE FOREVER NEVER DIEt" M la
■dgMif ooaBy la Braak Iha Bands and cut tha Corda that bind tha soul
le God and His Comi
of Iha 5fh
CoiWMlldRiant ''HONOR THY FATHER AND MOTHER THAT THY
DAYS MAY BE LONG UPON THE LAND WHICH THE LORD THY
GOD GIVETH THEE.** Nolo, 'That thy days may ba long. You who to-
day ara oMMOflRB ^ Mid daalrtng -nong Ufa" for
H you spond your
who for olhof raaaons tha Craator
(aaaEccliilailii7:17)ioi
^ you woidd pfWMOw ipngavfty much baflar
and snargm and "cruol pity' In practicing
and taaching God's Sth Commandmant Instaad of trying to cut Its
cords." for It canias tt>a promlaa of long Ufa to tha obadiont who honor
fathar and mothar Kings and rulars ara r\%rnm^ aspaclally as ragars
against God's Laws It not our Govammant and thosa in authority ovar
us saaklr>g to rallava chlldran of thair duty and prtvllaga to honor mr^
ta^« cara of thoir parants and aldarsl And wa tha paopla "Imaglna a
vain thing." and loya It that wayt
Thosa who ra|act iha Word of God and Jasus Christ ought to hava
Iha fxmipm Chrishon strlppad off thorn H thay hava not honasty and
Intagrtty to rasl^n and gat out of His ChurchI Tha Aposlla ^m\m^ had
|uat had a ravr'.iion from tha \Am9Mmry\^ Fathar aa to who Chrlat waa.
had t>aan blassad tor his faithful and trua tastlmony and told by Chrlat
that Truth would stand foravar. But shortly aftar this ^m\%f rabukad
Chrlat for saying Hm muat dia at Jarusalam for tha sins of mankind. Did
Chrlat f\\mf Into a dialogua with ^m\mf to siralghtan him out? No.
IndaadI i\% quickly cut tha convarsatlon off by turning upon Patar and
aayliig. "GET THEE BEHIND ME. SATAN: THOU ART AN OFFENSE
UNTO ME: FOR THOU SAVOREST NOT THE THfffGS THAT BE OF
GOD. BUT THOSE OF MENf Malthaw 1S:23 and Mark 0:33 In Mal-
Ihaw 15:3-9. and In Mark 7:S-13, Christ gava His approval of tt>a daath
panalty for broach of tha SIh Commandmant. and lalar took that daafh
panalty upon HImaalf In ordar that thosa guNty might not dIa atamally!
Wa hava anothar suggaatlon for Ihoaa to spared thaIr concam mn^
anarglas ki a mora profttabia way than In Xtm aff on to tava tf>a taw^oral
Ufa of criminals, and that Is lo tastify agalnat and fight k>irth control Wa
giva a raaaon or two That's God Almighty s buslnass. and not talllbia
maMt Thank God such folks did not hava control of John Waslay s
parants — John was about Iha 17lh chMdl Multltudas of othor wmf\ and
woman who hava baan a Maaaing to manliind hava had many slstars or
broBiarsoldarlhanthamsalvas. InthaJBBicHaplarolGawsiliwahava
Iha account of God tlaylr>g two man who daNbaralaly waalad tha "saad
of fimtxmfs llfa" Ona of thaaa man might hava boon txunm^ among thoaa
Christ cama altar Biaflaah ThladMplarMaeravaBliBMta
T mmmi . racalvad that honor bocauaa of hor daaira lor Bio tndl
dtBMfBiiib." a chMd Hor ftghM lb warrlagi aoodfdbiBtoB<#cu1SBM
of Iha lima had baon naglaclad by har lattwr-HvlMi, Jydah. who MM of
I: baaauas that I
har not to Shaiah my aonf
Tiafwawd Wliat wNl ba Iha
Ihoaa so prasumptuous as to dadda
rM>t conta to trulllonf
laofi Mo Brat
racocd M *^OBd%Book
oflhoNow
ofLtfa'MWOOfmng
of human Ufa"
P 0 BO
■ 30031
1 thought It Vva.> all over
"But. I had forgotten that
Peter docs this to psyche him-
self up He wanted the team
championship so. hadiv When
the match started, nearly ev-
erything Peter hit was a win-
ner.
**Both Peter and ^crdi were
helting service aces and re-
turning serves lorwmners I've
never seen Ferdi serve harder
He was^crving ^^ hard j^
Peter Every ball we hit had
gold on it." concluded Bassett
The Bruins were ecstatic
after tying the Trojans
**I wanted the team cham-
pionship more than anything."
said Fleming 'Winning the
doubles was nice, but the team
ikk IS much better."
Intramurals
TKNNIS ENTRIES ARE
«^ lune Il-IA and Pt-AY
BEGINS JUNE 28
SOFTBALL entires are due
June 25 at noon and play
begins on Ji^nc 29
BASKETBALL entries are due
at hooB OQ June 25 and play
begins June 2H
I he above activities are open
to 4iU^XLA students and
staff, with rc&rcation pnvflegc
cards good tor the surrlmer
Contiflumg students in the tall
with a spring reg card ma\
purchase summer rec cards tor
S4 (K) beginning June 21. Stu-
dents who did not attend
school in the spring but are
attending summer school at
t'CI A may purchase the re-
creation car(^ for $5 00 with a
tumrticr reg card, befmning
June 21 ThoK applying
the continuing student card
must show their spring reg
card and photo ID
THE WOMFVS I RACK
nneet will be held this after-
noon and sign ups will be
taken at Drake Stadium ft
2.^1 pm
CLASSIFIED^D
•nnounconMnts
AUCTION or tXCCSa MIOPtaTY
»mMIc wMIm to Hw«ay flaw
Mrtaly •( Callfornt* at L««
««»4a. •!•«••. mm4m. antf unct«lm«« \%mmm
will to«flln at 1t:aa a m Tha aMCllon wilt
•tart at ivaa a.M. rt? %^rmmf iMUrmatlofi
cami>-»<yi.
tUMMCa UCLA taNkit Ommm. Twa
umm%f mm\nm Juna M-A^. t. aai
Atff . 7 -aapt 17 If lnt«rMt«a oaH
S2S-a7at. Laaaa aama and phana no.
tslNng Ctua «MI cawfct yo«i by Jyna
'"""^ (1 J 4)
COIilTATUt: liadla¥al-HiwHniiiica
Journal oMafS $M a«tM lor b««l apatfuali
•2»-1t70. Dgaailm Doc. 31.
(1 J 4)
NOW OPEN!
Tha
CHRISTINE SHAW
FACIAL SALON
«clal tludont liiBni
Courw of •: I2B
Appla.: 27ft.7ta4
Chdollna Wismm, 430 N Cam#OTt Dv^mT
tuM» 210. a«v«rty HHi«
"^ijf'y m9 arm compMUVy bo&kmd or>
U)i ft*9 trmtntng achOtH
Hf a pmf»tet9 on papar buf Taat* hor
by maN. Vlow Aunt Kola Lo« Aivgvloa
Magaxino Clotalfiod (Juno)
( Ann J 4)
fitANl to |otn a trotornMy noat yoar?
Gat atartod aarly AEPI Muafi Day.
Saturday. Juno %. laHfctK gamo Parly
that nkg/ht. for mora Ma. call •2f-2i44
rAnnJ4)
LAST ehonca bal^ro aobool't out I1M
dlo^^tfnt on Brttonnica 3 or groat boolia.
(S4S0 dlftcount on bolti) Call Tony
SS2 1000 iaday. ^^^ j ^^
SWIMMING
Swimming with or without on
our baautlful Sunday Hika.
Hour driva. Hour HIka. Bring
friands. Maat naw onat. Fraa.
Jacqua
397-7203
xampus
announcMYients
Graduates
PERMA PLAGUE
your diploma
asu<lo
Campus sfudio
^SOk^rckhoff had 8?S 0611 m771
^HAT DOES A BRUIN
BEAR WEAR FOR ACTIVE
•PORTS?
UCLA swoatshirts. swost-
pants, jogger's outfit, t-
shirts, shorts, racing trunks.
sweat socks, and carries a
UCLA gym bag and beach
towel.
Bear wear,
ASUCLA Students' Store
Aclseniien Union .
church
^STWOOO
SMant Worahtp. tun. Io'om, Uafv.
472-7100 '''^ ""
(4 )
SUMOAY Maoa:
Ualvafallv Caa^M
MO LuOioran O
aiofo)
0:00, li:Oi. 11:00
cCowtar(040HMtara);
Napat (Qaytoy/oaaai-
(4 Oir f rt)
^MTECOST
«Mh Itoa UwNaiitiy "-iTtiilH CoMOMRNy
•Mnaair. Jtfna •
J^rflAl
\r
PTtonal
OCAa i>9»y. liwla you. Uncotaly.
li)
OWA Thonka tor toolnjO ao u«»aor-
Wtmndinq thia yoar Looklaif lorwora-tj
Octobor Lova, KA
MOM. atlll raading poraonala? Ono
ffot amco laat on* mnd i atM lovo you
" IS)
ANOaCA . i atawlaa la MMMnt 0mm
typ«ca<) •na all I can cofiw up wHh la
Happy airaiday. Laaa. J. ^,
|ai
MAOAM mna Humbor 1 Lady Vow Iwa
If* o****' H you know wf^at I maan
■ - lO)
JUOV Noaaay B portacl.
partoct. Otardoin ta ofM
Ouool-aurpriaad'' H*ppy BfrttNlay 94ik^
THETA Ml • Wa dora you to alroali
aorortty tow Eyoa Poolad
).--
OENAOOLl Hava a Happy B»rtt«doy
but than you navar taka my advloaf
Lotta AhMaya. Mar
<0J4)
aaEDSNTO and Docai Find out about
tdioala In Oaadalalaia.
10. 9:00-0.-00 pm CMS
ThMfaaay. Juna
fO-iaO ^Moit to
aipiMo^ LUKary ). Spaaai
»«ad by ModMaa
(•J4)
AMOaY? Tha Anoor
Progrodi - a ivaa,
training tor womon with difficulty
manaflng tt»oir angor Information
020^ tlM <aflafnoona) Claalwg aoan
|tJ4)
DfAa aruln t'ai tar Civil aigbta.
Amartea. mn^ Brvtn SaakaMall VpM
Jockaon tfif Praaldant _ ,
(• • •!
aaCMOA Saa. Forgot tha paat. far
wo'va only |uat bofun. Loaa ya. Jay.
m
MitwtainiiMnt
SAMD lar Mfa
pafHfig a
40 a»«d
(T)
aim avallabla. Tbaraday. Juno 24lb.
Can nab 470-040S. 470-0100.
(7J«)
MCCAMTNEY Tl
21at. 22nd at Unrtdlculoua pricoa.
(Mnbifa or dayOaia )
*** (TJ4I
haar. hmtl o* full day For 04. 00/ br
aO T
li: 121 Old
(7 J 01
17 it)
01 JO BUruCATt
Wadnaadar aWaraaaaa. WNd Whiat
Srldfa Club 1000 Woatwa«d Slvd
If
>
SarrAMMICA S or flaM
^^^. Tj^^^fc^"":
m J 4)
Miai baa> OTI T
047
GODSPELL .^»r
Sunday, June 6
7:30 P.M.
•t AJtam's Episcopal
Church .
Hllgard at Westholme
(10 J 4)
110 J 41
SLACK a vIlNa T V
040 272-401»^000-Oa07
(10 J 4)
MATTRESSf i ALL MCW
TwOi
p«a
up lo
Presented by the young
singers and Instrumentalists
of Qlendale Presbyterian
Church, Thomas Somervllle*^
Director.
iiia.aa
THE MATTRESS STOMS
Inriaaiaaaiva. 8t97 va(« MMy« ai«a
aiaamnaian aawariwia CHy
<y7-«ioi aaa-aiai
UCLA
ad 1002
tlOO 341
(10 J 4)
anywiiora ^rao hat
mpf fjrtra larga. OUCH. wNb any la*-
X -
(OO J4)
STUDENT INSURANCE
Ca a Whalaaala Caa tor
In CalMornIa All branda Mall brdor
aporallen 070-0402
(10 J 4)
■< ••• ao<aa/
MOVIMQ SALE-Oofa and aiwichalr.
i^euk p«a-
•03 1000.
(to J 4)
EnaoMMam for
Studanl AccMant
^Stckwaaa Inauranca
at bargain ralaa for
youraaN A quallflad
tfapandanto will cloaa
oaan. aroad covaraga
tmorir^ hoapUai. accMantal daafh.
•urgical. ambulanca, A OiJt-f>attafit
bonafits on a world wide batis
In 1 conaawlant policy Enrollma«it
anil cloaa July 2nd (or covaraga Ihru
SapC. .17. 1S7S. For Information A
appaaaSon. contact Iha Inauranca
Offlear at ma Sludant Haaltfi Oftlca
or call 025-1050
-.-J-
-
for rent
• ■ '
CaeSTLNilt Cablh: Tiaaa to aO TV
rbaplBLa. Wk-Mo Oo«o Ad Moaorw
naw Cvoa 340-4013
^pw^ Bv«a smv «« 14. ^^^
^tANOO awaOabli tor rant trom US 00
tron* tunor Ooma tor aola All robuHt
000-4014, (0 J 4)
APPOWMEAO cabin
Sloopa 0. 000/2 apfa
107-1447
In qulot aroa
. t1iO/7 daya
(to^)
Exclusively Ours!
ASUCLA Trader
thong sandals in a
burlap signature
bag
lust $6.89
Sandala Ofa- Mack with blua and
gold a4rlpat in tha tolat. and
blue thongs You can 0»a tha
stnpad bag for a baach carryall
ASUCLA Studonta Stora
. SPORTSWEAR
a laval, Acbarman Union
m-lb 7:45-7:30; f 7:45 0:30; a 10-4
025-7711
WOOOEN Sarrala Kaga. 0 apoola.
ttatchcovors. netting 0 rope funky
cratoa 0 boaoa old barnwood 091-
^^at^^acaiAKi^vBt araaang auppaaa a
aaulpmont. Soioct Oallforala Wli
TIM Orapa Hui, OOI^'W OOnd Oi. Woo«-
choalar. Ca. 00040. 040-4000.
nsoe>
aCNT-A TV $10 00 monPi
atadant dtacounta Oottvory to 0:
2303
(OOlr)
MOVIMQ Sala Rylrigofotor f 3S. r (
0SS:C4ina*na ttt MSH windowa tlO.
aftar too
(10 J 4)
counta PavaonaOaod aor^daa. 30 aio|ar
branda Valley 001-0040.001-3013.
HoOywood 031-0073. 000-0001
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TWO eaoaOani OrlaaWI ryga (afgban.
aauiN TV. a stereo rentals
COLOR T,y S
Otaraaa t7.00/monai
^AjrtMWO auppiy oav^ev^
b/wfiHa TV a • t7.S0/inanai
CaN 275 1032
Our
la UCLA
474-0743.
(to J 4)
'Tttxos iRSfriHn^iif
>4»i
for
(It J 4)
MiU CQ!
MP 40 W^<
4 Lav • PPN TelBla Olaak • Lea
LM. ir e • Tda (Om. Cea. Tan.
NMf) •OOC-DOC
ioraala
arei
4f%
12 t)' ONfcV in
foi lu'trt*' <t«iait« ceti
<tO J4)
^LAMT Sale Hundreda of Indaor 0
planla grown by
lundoy lO-ft 2nft
(1 blaeli Wool Soaorly Oion 0 Oty«np«a|.
(10 J 4)
OiaaONac
477
Mr gaad lana and
or 400-2002
(10 J 41
PAUL McCartnay and Wlnga at tfie
rorum June 23rd John Denver at
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477-3333
(10 J 4)
eu^^ 13 • Man yaelH C4
MNMM fl9#f. MOtOf, IfMWf B9ll9f
(10J4I
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Joft 277-4031.
10
(10 J 4)
Tl OR SO A OR 91 A. OR 12. OR M, a(
^ Crwkfi Canrua - Ma««ia
Sany. Panaeomc. Oanyo
TaMplMHW ana«vertr«g Mactikiaa
11900 OaAla Montca aied.. W.L.A.
aces CLtCTRONICS
. Can 473 2000 tor beat prtcea
1 - - •
SOMV 90 waM AM/m alMiaa riaf^ar/
baa apaakera< new 0239). muet aott0l49
Caeeotte Dock, ponoeonlc. 0 monttta aM
(new tlOO) muet aell t lOOdoaelng coun-
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(10 J 4|
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no J 4)
130 cAserm
gmipi CtaaoMal ar oaiaPry 01 JO
ar 704 If you buy aH leaving dw 0 tola a
Muat aoN aaawtnga/weekenda 304-4023
CRAIO 3031 Srand now AM/f
car coaaette 370 Wf Informollon '
rO J 4)
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houaowore. cablnota. big b
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ATTIMTIOW: Waa»on-'a apartaaraar
(IS J 4)
wtPt 4 12" 0 0400 00 Capycat Laa Raid
guitar paid 1300 00 Oell 1100 00 or
baPa aO for D-12-10 MarPn 12 atrtng
473-7470 473-OSn.
/ICUS oPPortunltlaa
NCAWOmy
10' K ir Oa-Ola-CJ
aaaallant eandlPon 002 aftar
utntm
mm
a 01 WiA
■jwiiiioin
•#wy
gg
PSST TALL
^
00
Faat dMai
■Mr-
¥«
ma. 11100. oaor
lurar(Horvard-0«tard) Sraadi
m on HMIaf I Ran ibna
SMUaS VA
Mlaar. 00'
OLIVITTI alacinc lypowrllar Lalaat
(10 J 4) J
r I or Housf Ti
(10 J 41
ACA.CRAfag.
(13 J 4|
I CAMPSITE
CAMPIMO EQUIPMENT
nu
LAST
(0400 diocaunt
OSiO)
.ciojji
M'TINTION MaaMaiaaara. Rat aala
Magra III or%4 Mlboa CaS aiarnlnga
(13 J il
no J 4t
J\
^
I
n
CLASSIFIED AD
OPPOrtMniU—
«•«««>»««>>««»»».
nRSOHAB
it
f
for two 3 act ptayt
(rQl«i op«n to all aoMK
^^H*-
iimiimd »cholMr%hips arm »¥aiiiitMt>
in th0 following work sloops
ACTING
DIRECTING
PLAVWRlTfNG
DANCE
CALL US AT
•2S-1333
rm
irch subjects
needed
CHILDREN ag^d 1'> - Z y— f rnii#«dlof
toll«l-tr«ining r«s««rch pro^vct Call
47f-17t2 tor d«tali«
(14 J 4)
wanted
f OMEONC with Ig ««n wtlling to 6ti^
to D«nv«r Cotorado approi and of Juna
Financial banafit Call aflar • p.m Joyca
M1-02S2
nr .1 A\
IRISH Harpar Oulaida Chiaftains
(Royoa U720/75) artd/or Ulllaann PIpar
Plaaaa contact Marti O Conoall 4ft4'
(12 J 4)
STRAfOHT trada two ftrat night Wings
idiata tor any two tttird night Donrta
"*-^***- (12J«,
f^ MODCLS naadad No aipartanca n»-
ommmry Good laata amployad. Contact
473.Ma> Laiif.. ^^^ ^ ^^
Halp S«lf by Helping Othart
$5-$6t>/ month for Blood Plasma
HYLAND DONOR CENTER
1001< Gaylay Ave.. Westwood
I 478-0051
WANTED Any old Sam Caoka Racofdt
and Claranca Cmrit facqifiAa CaN taS-
2273/ Laava maaaaga or your rHimtoar.
(12 J 4)
FILM Studanto naad your ^mlwd car
body Will purchaaa (chaap) and
■ 11t1.t20-31\S.
#4<» t 0%
CAtM or tra^a y•yr^ i«ad raeatda i*
Mualc Odyaaay. 1 1tIO WHahIra (batwaaw
■aitaiiHuii . Bundy). 477-3S23.
(12 0lr)
■CVIRLY Hlia liana i^aiiaiySal oWara
if— halratyllng. For mora Info call
271.t29t Tuaa - Sal.
(12 Olr)
help wanted
PART TIME Waltratt avaning* for
amaN aaadc Maliurant In «Mii«a. Muat
ba aaparlaaoad. Can 47S^saS. ,«.,
OIRL for f>ouaa«*rli 3 Houra'4tlmoa
waaaiy t2.80 hour plus cmrtmrm Pttmm
27«-2333 aaantnoa. ^.^^^
- tifl
HERE'S Your Summar Jotol Laat aumwiai
3 alMlanls niwda ovar $2000 aach
only Slwa/day Will tram CaN
■«.> m-0071. ,„^^,
SUMMER wofli collaga man. alff*
languaga. baach, volunlaar summar
camp caunaalor t27S for summar •
I lor Ola aMinior
n»j«)
•a laam
Ham. Tal 5S3-SM0.
(tiJ4)
SECRETARY/Talaphona worli - pari
lima pmrfnmn^nt Thru •umtn^r and
nait yoar. S3.S0/hr Waatwoad 47t-
ii t-
nn J 4)
Nma by Engllah Profassor Famala
w aiiioant or aanlac aaalarfad.
14
«tS J 4)
Help wanted
TELEPHONE SALES
3 SELF-MOTIVATED PEOPLE TO
SELL OFFICE A SCHOOL SUP-
PLIES
tCi
allzatlofi A Hoalth Plan
Wooiily Sonuaaa
* Short Houra
MAKE $300 $500 WEEKLY
CALL JACK O BRIEN. MO-4422
BEFORE 12 Py.
SANTA Monica Corp has aa«arai post
Hons immadlalaly awailaMa for UCLA
■iMdants to worti m our off lea tor a min
of 3 hr» Mon thru Fn bagtnntng 5 15
am Positions will last thru snd of sum
mar artd an on a commission basis
Prasanlly amployad. UC studanis mvr
aging S13 5d par hr If you mrm Income
motivalad ar>d willirtg to worti. call Barry
Starr •2t-S«33
fift J 4)
MALE Day Ctm^ Cinwaalar naadad mH
summar Minimum waga Call Cana
Haln300-3S04
(18 J 4)
MON— argophobic SM raalOant
yardworfc 2 ttrs any inuiiiOll
Oiru Nov Writa nrnnm, addraaa. phono
nt»mbmr to Longrtdga. 027 Barkalay SL.
Soma Monica 90403. $25/monOt
(IS J 4)
EXPERIENCED carlcatura artist, sll-
houalta cutlar to work/ naw amusamant
parli Oranga County Gary (213)304-
•007
._ ri$ J '41
RESEARCH/Edltortol iaalalant Waniad
by traval/food rviagaxlna ^ubUshar Ms
Siasis or aquivalant rmi^irmii Tal 839
SS02 for intarviaw ^, , ,
^__ ft< J 4)
MOVIE ravia war/critic waniad by naw
wast magaiina. Sand rasuma and writing
sampias to poal otfica boi 90430 Los
Angolas C A. tOSOO.
^^ n5J4^
LYRICIST
• •'•
WRITER
(fiction 4 Comady)
5S9-7312
WANTED Eaporlancad lalophona soll-
cators— maltirvg appolntmants raal aa-
lala firm, hours flailbla. fun/part. CaN
Sara 477-1421
POLITICAL Actlvlata Two-yaar old
multl-teaua organization saaklitg hard-
working, talantod paoplp. Job Involaaa
canvaaalng. paHtlonlng. fundraiaing for
-roots changa $400-$800. mgml
Clflxans AcUon Loagua (213) 403-
■ fl^.lil
URGENT!
Parsonnaf fiaaOtd for mtt typaa of
Enginaartng. Madical. Lagal. Tachnlcal.
Industrial, Managamant. Clarical A
Domaatic Gradualas A Urnlargradualas
Walcoma
T.R. EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
(Faa A ff)
aOO Sania Monica Bl. tOOt
S.M. 300-4107
M\M ^laai counaaloi Oikia day camp
bus 19 yrs plus, mon-frl. $100/wk
CaN 340-104a a««
*^ (IS i 4)
•u^^^Kw aRlar for two Ooya'flva to nina
Houra daNy-$1 .60 hr..isa-1ias aaanlnga.
(If J 4)
SUMMER )oOa-$210 a wook. muat ba
to rolocala for tha auasmar Call
(H 4 4)
ARGENTINE studant coupla noada
mod^ar n^f^^r . Haay aacliaftga lor room
and board. MaMbu. mm* to I
■dng pool/lannla. Call 0- 10 or i
**^"'^*^ (15 J 4)
SALE Bright,
naadad to halp aapand
Off CaN
anyttma
-(19 J 4)
WOailEN with larga taat and nialy shapad
naNa aia naadad la *^Jyi» >P»<RS
i2S-7f2t
(IS J 4)
WANT $ $ $ ?
We can give you monoy variety and
flaxibility during tf>a iummar months
by taking our lamporary aaaignmanli
througf»out fh# WtA arwa It ydu a«a
a TYPIST SECRETARY ACCTIMO
CLERK. PSX OPERATOR. KEYPUNCH
OPERATOR. WAREHOUSEMAN, f'
anyttung alaa... Wa naod YOUf Coma
•n A ragistar today' No foot' Ham9 your
days' Paid holidays' Wa naad you now*
T GIRL T -MAN
12321 Santa
W 1 A 930-9001
fOC
ttolpwowtad
halpwoirtad
FD Machinists with asj^..^,..^
In Oallding scianca rasaarch tnstru
mants Plaaaa sartd in<|uiras or r—itm—
Attn: Oaapga Laach. Sctanca Sarvioas
1 Scianca 1 Unlvars^ty of Oragon,
Oragon 97403 S03-990-4004.
(IS J 4)
♦a W*f*hou»« S2.»0/hr
11 9unwva.9i.79/hr
12 Pm-aakaai aia* »3>hr
Can «73-aa2i tm
Ci
« lo
THE JOB
MCTORY
ATTRACTIVE Paraon lb a ,
A graat paopla m lannit pro
Walthall 922-0131.
(IS J 4)
TELEVISION Producar wanta sh<dant to
watch 7 yoar eld daughiar waakdays
during July Muat ba good with kida aa
wall as baing an involvad paraon. Con-
tact Alan Sacks Days 9<3 SQOQ. Eat
2034. Evamnga 990-9510
(IS J 4)
MALE drtvar 2S ar aaar Two aftarnoons
waakly S3 00 lir Oood driving racord
CoULUcansa 472-77S1
:.^ (15 J 4)
i.l«IMi4 L*» Am
C«<.<«
T i-^fnnnr
^Mmumm
LEARN Itta art of saNing from Ola
Good monay-part tima salary plus
boruM 921-9841
(IS J 4)
i"
iALES Washwood Eicallant lit yoar
incaflM aiMi Oonafiia. Inatda ofOca solas
adMi appavtynlly tor aOaaneamant into
manmg^mmnt. %.A. raqulrod 479-17iS
4794101..
-^— AU^44)
FEMALE, ^
9:30 Monday thru Saturday Pico-
EARN $040/ month and coNaga cradH
(Columbia Collaga. Mo.) M you can laava
Callt for tha mnitf ^iMmmmr Studanta
only Undarclasaman walcoma CaN
f19 J 4)
SMILE A DIAL Articutata studants
naadad for immadiata opanings in phona
■alaa. Unlimitad aarrungs. polantial
Cantras. 999-3770
- (15 J 4)
STUDENTS &
TEACHERS
WELCOME AT
KELLY GIRL!
_ OOMiWa. aapofl-
tiandy rmiamnc—. 32 unlU. tur-
nlahad. walk UCLA ' "idraaaisiiiimi'
ry 473-0303 7 10 am
. nS4.9)
STUDENTS mmrn up to SSM-^ /wk.
MoOoMOl OfNaa Supply Co naads full
S part tIma ttalp to aoN itama ^vtyonm
can uaa via lalophorw Wa guarantaa
$4/hr Draw against hi doaMnMaipRa.
Ma aaporlonca nacaaaary Call Mr
W..m.«W^l.t-2 ,„^^,
FEMALE, port or full tIma Inlarastlrtg
Off lea work $3/hr Car naoaaaary. Phona
270-4913
(19 J 4)
FEltULE phologamc medala n—da^ Ipr
popular ^wropmn magaiina Top pay in
flold. Call 540-0002
/t« I 41
Men and Women; Earn
extra money during summer
break while enjoying a
variety of temporary assign-
ments We provide tempo-
rary jobs for all Clerical
and/or irKJustnal skills
*WORK WHEN YOU
WANT, AS OFTEN AS
YOU WANT. ♦YOU
DONT PAY US - WE
PAY YOU!
Call us 8-5 30 p m daily or
9 a.m. - 1 p m Saturdays
KELLY SERVICES INC
i
fMTEPHOH plant bualnaaa r^aada indi-
vidual with knowladga of plants to
aaalat In cara and Installations Ei-
eaOant appartunlty for fwtura In young
aapanding company Plantlgua 997-
S577
(19^4)
* —
oftairsd
LEPH A N
Moving
Fulleilon
Long Beacft
Los Ang«les
Beverly Blvd
Wilshire Blvd
Montebelio
Newport Beach 714-833-1441
714-879-9762
213-432-8791
213-
668-8750
381-7951
213-724-6910
1^ "'""
I p]§#9 Apartments Offtcas
IProfoooional Sorvico9 for Paonuts
HEPHESENTING local aniats with
paintings, atchings. a|c. sailing for
loaa titan $100 Takan on conatgnmant
baala. Anna/Oaloras 401-1310.
t10/4)
MOVING Sandaaa - 14'
long diatanaa. Maaaonal
Wandy 479-0971 or 550-2133
(It J 4)
inatructMn on a
aoMft. Alao court rontal. Bron
472-700S.
flO
Orange
Torrance
Van Nuys
Westchester
Westwood
Whittier
714-547-9535
213-792-4176
213-542-1589
213-783-2530
213-645-0750
213-477-3951
213-898-0447
Auta-tlfa-Homoawnora and Nantal
Inauranca. Wlllaga Oftica Warnor
"■>l • lltO QIandan S«dla ISSI'.
4TT ISS7. 979-0191.
rts oin
equal opportunity employer
MEDICAL SCHOOLS ABROAD
Having admissions prob>am« for
madicai achooP
¥lfE QAN HELP YOU' ,
Fpr information. wfHa to
Abroad
S43 Dpway Atpa.
07010
to claan
PH momlnfa. ToMl 9 Houra
472-0007
(1i)
AUTO Inauranea: Lawaat ratoa for
t^^tm or imploiiaa WuSiil Of.
090-7110. 070-0703 t 4S7.7S7S.
nOQlr)
CHILO aMOng for 9 and 9 yoar aM •
(II J 4)
Mouinc ?
mSEARCM ASSISTANT
jj«ay1,197«
al.A. ar
•twdanl lamlMarlty with LA City ichoolt
a««irabi« T«achnf •■p«n«nc« and graup
• Rp«rl«nc* with fun^ chlldrsn
mam a« aarnaaia Sana appiicstians ana
rat am s la Pralassor Marma |F*shb«ch.
CA 99994
UCLA Is sn 9oual
CAMPUS tEMVICES
» » •
wk
MOVfftG Raaldantlal apartments
offlcas Largo/ amoN |oPa Local A long
distanca Can Sarnay JOO-0790 any Hma
N
it....
CLASSICAL • Hock Plana Laaaana.
Ttio Oaat at cantamporary rock 0
lo combining tt»om to croata nodi
sounds Alao Imti bluas. 9 goapal
Oavid II Cafcaw. 479-0391.
(It J 4)
LA 'ORANGE-CRATES*
STUDENT SUMMER
STORAGE
C4|Mn#ff>cad 4 Inaurad.
ff— Pldi-up 4 Ratum.
FOR INFO CALL
474-4809
MASSAGE ey amploytng ortantal 0
waatam tachnlquaa, I craala a umqua
body aipananca-call Eva 395-9959
MOVING in or out %a maaa furnitura
■ppllarKas apartmanis Hd«iaas. Lowaal
lalaaf fr— Estimatas 479-4197
.I'm J 4)
THE BODYMEN
Quality Auto Sody
Mapair 9 Painting
479-0049
(Oava or Oaryf
*f W« prsitdi Ksat sanNea* «•« you
|f>p«ri rapalr at aamaallc A taraifn car«
Waal L A • lerosst-arovunt ahap fivaa a itooi
at*a Waal L A
PREONAMTT Wa
1111
(tOOir)
MB. ^Hnd irainiftg, momory rotatipon,
lotdng Loaajpalg^it. ate TfiawMa
CFHA, ai^-0709 PftsMid aaa-
_\ mm <Vv«
NYP9IOSIS and Sdlf-HypwuH. Itrfupi
Indtvlduala, In-alfica or mall ordor-
lowoat pdoae. Jatm (B.A.. M.A.) 47S-
^JS37'
(19 Otr)
' AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCt
.Too Young
Law Monthly Paymanta
LIGHTHOUSE INSUPANCE SERVICE
304-1101
Aak for Don or Roy
>-lf979
HOUSEPAINTIMG Grada Profoa-
ar noat lang-laating;
faculty rataranoaa;
(19 Olr)
VW REPAIRS aaclualvaly 915 tuna up
(parta A labor). 949 bralM mUnm flJS
)ab Proa dliswii
Gorman
CaM Pia
(10 J 4)
A PRIMAL ALTERNATIVE IN LOS A9I-
OCLES PEELING TRANMNG CENTER.
9009 CCMEY AVE 90034 933-9701
(19 Olr)
-L
ARROW INSURANCE
ttia Rarrlngton PMad. W.L.A. 11744
WllafHra - 477-0019, 070-3997 WNIi
mora tfian SO yra. aaparlonca. Holp
la atudy-rataln-ralaa-aloap Saa a«f
lalopttona Yallow Pagaa aO. Spaclal
Roducad Studant Roiaa ,.^ ,^^
fi9 oin
VW MAINTENANCE SERVICE: 910.99
RALLET; Pwn way lo Roauty. i:
"""^ ^ and UnN YWCA, 974
Intarmadlatoa. advancad. 9
ttl Spaclal rMaa. 2 or
••JJJ** J»ana Sarata. Dialing wtaRaO
mom
CaM MS 4M.1013 or Prod 400-1440^'
(10O9rt
ELECTROLYSIS Unwantad facial 0
Mei"w ^^^^^^^^^^^^p ■ ^^^^^^w
Lucia 1033
Rl. 477-21SS.
(to
^o«fcrinsc|
.4-
CLASSlFIEb
ic— ttflOTd
•ASV WAMTEOH ]
Raflnad, loving, middia agad lady
•spoftanaad pfa. wauid Mha infant to
cara tar 9 tui Oaya par adi * Vicinity
Wastwood. W.L.A Oaat ratarancas Call
altar 9 477-7175
'With praaant ctiaiga 4 yra ainca
infancy sha la now rdady for nuraary
TWO
ship wItM a band Evonings Charyf
733 1994 Llaa 735-4006
(19)
PREGNANCY laat
ig^imoplMg and birOi aanlfol c(
by uPtfBfBlanOIng aioman counaaiors
complalaly conhdantiai LIncanaad
jiiidlCil ptnr • Pragnancy Bnii Otrth
CeAlral Cantar of Hollywood 4331
HoOywaad Olvd SuHa 513. Hollywood
^'^^' (19 Olr)
r
RECORDtNG ENGINEERING
CLASSES
NOVICE-MUSICIAN PROOUCER
'WuGRAMf^ED TO IMPART SKILLS
VQU NEED TO \WORK IN THE
RECORDING iND' ctdicc
RECORDS-VlDt
BROADCASTING
BASIC ADVANCED )N STUDIO
LECTURES
GOLt) A GRAI9MY AWARD WINNER
•ILL LAZE RUS INST
LIMITED ENROLLMENT 4 MORE
MUfO .7S0-7494 OR 7|2-|S22
: • "^ (16 M 20)
^*ir^-
WRITER Raaaarchar PttO, oNars
with social-t»a«Mv«oral scia naa raaaarch
papars Jay 459-4057
(19 J 4)
RIDING LESSONS
StiidpnM-Fpcully -FamlNaa-Staft
»^A HO. A Appfovaa riding atlaailshmaftl
>Ora«ia laaaons mnO privalaa. ehiiaran A
fvaning 4ft4-«7S1
•CaHlar
Day 496-1114
HAIRCUTS 93 Oy Maanaad ftalfvutlara
laamlng our laoRiilmia Paul McGrapar's
957-4091 .. _
J ' (19 Olr)
'2-TON EKPRESS
MOVERS
Mpving and Haubng
* Rtcfi SS4-26S9
Nawail 051-3S27
SU9999ER Couroa In Gragg Laam at
yaur own poca. Spaclal prtcas in groups
of 4-9 3SS-1909 ^,^ ^ ^,
PROPfSOIONAL Documantation Sar
4»lcas Writing, adittng. r—orch study
daaign A praducMon to yaUr raqulra-
manta Call 490-1504 anytlma
(19 Otr)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
Rafuaod? Too H«9h?
Caocallo47
Low Monthly Paymante
STUDENT DISCOUNTS
. . . Aak for Kan
trav#l
LOW Coat
Kong. Tripo, ManRa. and
London. Pa«|a. Madrid. Zurich. Maw
Yorti. and Hawal Par daMM caO 474-
3211 (iMya). 479-1011 (avaa) Wa alaa
atlon.
1739
(23 Olr)
INTERNATtONAL SWEDIRH
tnt*.rnatiooai* Swadwa Ua«va«a»«y'Univa»wty
of Lund It oMa'ing Summaf and Sp^'^Q
ruiaaas 1979-77 it yow am misiasiad !•"
Saaaiah Lrta and Languaga Afcntmc*ufa
artd uman Ptamwng LHaratuft and Drama
Social ^0tonofo or f ami»v »»oMI»es contact
Los Angalas Ca
(29 J 4)
TlCtCST lo
SM. raaaonabia RIM. 970-3501
(23 J 4)
NEW STUDENT TOURS
JAPAN
JufwSi'July 16. 197S
July 17-Atiguot 6. 1976
COfWoct ChnaUa at EXPO
II or A-213
Studant Ur^on
PROFESSIONAL CLU9
1408 \MastwooC Blvd L A ca iouj4
(213)9790121 i2l3) 477-1102
TGC CHARTER FLIGHTS
TO EUROPE
(Loto of Otharo),
- Ui^ Pnca top
6 '*.
A 1ft-4.24«
' 'VO«T
9.a/gi
490
379
, *«-v i«
M)
<»
•0
'0
;r
4'0a-»07
LHM913 9^31 -a/so
099M 9^04
L taaim? %>9t ..
>*■ .
El
LB/ 'J*
371'f'
4a»
379
499
379
379
449
1T«
9125 Oaposttraqulrad par parson
Ltmrtad spaca Sooli now Plaaaa try
and book 90 dayf prior to dapanura
AlSO ANNOUNCING OUR NEW
ACADEMIC YEAR FLIGHTStf
lartfT •Qsaiawa a l a^
n«fi>d'f fU>t,,tf Wonms Pne» *->i^> L)Mi<f.' 'w
« db ft
JufW 1/
Juna 29
July XV
C ; It STUPfefMT TRAVEL ♦477-2080'
ISC
LOWEST FARES
Wa mmko ar>da moot tor almoat
hall lara Fly to
Europa
Aala
Middia Eaat
Africa ^_ -
BOOK NOW TGC FLIGHTS
CALL
EURASIA TOURS N TRAVELS
274-6301
Opan Saturdays
TOURS S TRAVEL
Spring. Summar A ^ali Chariars*
to
-i.or>don
Snartnon
Paris
Madrid
FrartAtun
-Sruaaals
Zurk:h
Ooundinp from 9209.00
Hawat* and Naw Vor*
Roundtrip from $199 00
«f) (in* advarKad oorjmr^ mQutr^O Land
<trrar>9amanTs avaitat
nt and WoftO'VV'da ^f9»*
ISC alao runs tocat ar^* lours
by car on6 bus at mtnimum coat
Ca|t Us tor Information
9-6 OaHy
„ , .; '<lt
«> . 4
1 >|/nr»
'S^P^
155^^
CHARTERS
-
0»#' 'm)C.
fiignta
A '. .« . ^
*
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Uom April
mru OctoOar atSy /
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From/ Mo Oa«a«
artea*
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4144
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THANK YOU UCLA FOR
YOUR SUPPORT DURING
YEAR. HAVE A GREAT
travel
ASUCLA TrRV9« S#rvicR
aia ONLY otnctai
UCLA Cbarlar PligM Oandaa
It 9 not loo low lo ^ooO a Ct%anar
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troffi huntP9<9 o( aaoRoRM fUghM.
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•uOt lo ua to
Juna 29 tO
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$429
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Sf H
UCLA EUROPE
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Friday 1000-4:09
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(23 Otr)
EUROPE
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Ov<»r 10O0 litghla to Europa this
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ABOUT TRAVELING'
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m^r^adtm
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J.
la
laaving
plua ai
794-7000
J«ma tOlti atiara
Call Kathy
(20 J 4)
ORtVtWO to 9MelUga}i
waniad aH ar pan way
AMon 7M
(20 J4|
tutoring
LSAT PRES COURSE tttrouglt IfvMa-
alva. racantly ravNad tor omm 79 ai
Program apaclfically yaaly
LSAT. 9 all -Hour aaaalona givan on
Individual attan-
ppalaaaloAal malruc
laallalMa a«
prioa 900 For mora Intormatiaa
271-2214 Tyaa . Ttiura . or FrI
or wrUa lo Laar Roarda, Boa 1927.
vorty HOIa. Ca 91013.
194 J
^
WRITING HELP TERM PAPtRO
SES. DISSERTATIONS ALL OUO- '
JECTS WRITING EDITING. RE-
SEARCHING TUTORNWG 9Y PROPES-
tlONAi WVtiTER 310-9471
(04 J 4)
EYPERIENCED
Pack from Porta
Rocommandad franco Dopt
1745
•AI aub|ae4a< RPannaiU ralaa A
MaAdaM Education Canlar 1739 Waal
wood 479-9193. 4BOt9 Vonica 937
••'* (24 Olr)
(14 Olr)
MZZ PIANO/ ALL ITYLES Laora ioy
^^m^^^^m^ M^a^ <^^Mi aia^B ^^Biaid t^^
C94J0I
1
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(JO/ltiH^tfidL— %
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CLASSIFIED AD
tutorinfl
l»«ch«r. w«ll-«Mp*rl«fM:«tf vHtti C«ll
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VIclMMy St4-0TM
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teHi/rocli wmic Your homa/mlrw/out
..tfaora tumm«r l«««ont 2nd p«raon
s pi«M. i'lr. mdapandant A ln«Bp«nsiv«
(34 J 4)
WniTINO HCtr TCRM ^AKMt. THf-
set. DltteNTATIONt ALL tU»-
JCCTt WPIiTIMG. EDITING. ME-
tEAflCHINa. TUTORIMG BY PRO-
WRITEPI 3t>^71 ^^^^^
(24 Otr)
THE GUIDANCE CENTER
3017 Santa Monlcd Blvd.
tante Monica
typing
0«Li • Sdef««M«.l atiM
IMS 121ft tlr««t tMito M«
Jt2-3721 or lit-ian.
idni fMJka *
TvriNO of TiMft mmmi
vwfi papvcB. naaoaaaHs
KafHy oHvf • p.m MS'^ilS
Mist. Can
(»J4)
IMI MELlCTNit TnM««. EnflMi frad.
•Hpartawedd aM kinds, fufniaad bMu-
IHul work. tOa/ps.. WLA 2t1-a4a4
TYPING WM Corrvctlng Saiaclrtc •
T*fm papart. tiaaat. r—um—, aic AHa
caasalla Iranscrlbing Eiparlancatf.
Vaa.,M..7O70
TYPING aarvlca for r«perta.
MUM. Can Bobbl 27S-S054
P«|Mr*afid
(28 J 4)
TYPING -Ihaala. manuaerlpt. and lach-
nical 7S4 par paga lor •ludant or pro-
laMlonaL Call Ma-2f64 ^. . ^^
(2S J4)
PPOPCStlONAL wrilor wIMi B.A In
Cngaoh (UCLA) «« typa and adN lami
"^••aaa. ale Owar 29 yaara aa-
IMI •alaclrk:. Waa<wood Vll-
Ona day aardoa. MM
LAW SCHOOL AOMI^ION
TEST PREPARATION
(2iOtr)
M hr claaa baglnt Juna 19 tor July 24
Tast
-GMAT c'ouraa baglns Juna 5 lor
July 10 laat
-9PEED READING coursa bofflna
Juna 29
•CAREER GUIDANCE
•29-4429
KAY Typjng adiflng English grad
Disaartaliont tpacialty Tarm papar*.
thaaat. f%umm: iaitars IBM 829-7472
(28 OTR)
I
typing
EdN
kagal tacratary Hmmr campus 479~
(a9 0lr)
i^EDY. accurala IBM typist - rmm-
•onabls rataa. Alao Pro<aaalunal 9cnpt
•nd Thaala Typtng. CaM Donna 392-
r(29<Hr)
TYPWia • ffip4r»anrad la^ sacralary
ddlsrst work at homa Wastwood f-
■Mint Export work. 474-9390.
(»)
Tarm papars, Iftaaaa,
and TV scripts,
adltlng . mimaographing - accurala
«vork - 494-0199
FLASH FIngars tacratarlal Sarvica
Excallant work Prompt attantlon
pick-up 9 dal if naadad 822-3995/
UGHTNINC TYPING CO
Thasis Spaciaiist
frmm Estimalai
PROFE98IONAL COLLEGE TYPiNG
SPECIALIST
Tarm papars. Thaals. OlSsartationt
Faalurat Foratgn Languagat. Sciancas,
Mattt TaMat Diagrams. Music Editing.
Counsaling. Xaroaing. Printing. Binding
Studani Ralas 398 3191
/( ^
accurala/ pich -"up. dallvary/ rlgntpoua'
TYPING Tarm papars. ate Studant
T»ty Top Quality Judy {UJk. EngUalt).
(29 Otr)
TYPMQ. Jt
Top Quamy Judy (B.A EnfNah)
(29 oar)
EXPERIENCED typist Papars
disaartatlons Accurala
Call Cynthia 839-9909 .^ . ^.
129 J ai
TYPING Faal. accurala sarvica at raa-
sonabia ratas IBM Salactric Tarm
papars tttaaaa. ale 992-9900. 823-4318
(nlinil). riS J 41
TYPING/Raports. larm papars.
or wttatavar Faat artd accurala 829-
3790 or 929-1200.
J 4)
FREE aditing grammar/ spalMng. EngNah
with mastars Elaclrlc Raa-
^•psrs. ttiaaaa. monuacrlpts.
17
r2S Otr)
EXPERT tachnical typlnf-math. scian-
fic-tbasas. dissariations. books-days
82S-3452 avanings 299-2094, ChartoMa.
2a J4
TYPING/adlling Piaaa. larm papdrs. ale
Low ralaa Hmmr campua. M.A. Jouma-
i-. C* «7«-,1,7 ^^^^^
TYPM90/EDITINQ. IMI. Tl *
TYPING
dcrlpis, dIclBllon. corraa^
Pbona 479-2747(days) or 937-3929
{•^.) Rsasonaais rlaa. ^^ ^ ^^
TYPING Lat Caaay do H Tarm papsn.
thaaas. diaaertatlona. ate. Call 394-
TvptNO— All kinds Faat naat - ac-
curata 79«/pg IBM Salactric Mld-
WMahka. ParklnB. Joanna: 394-9909
(25 Otr.)
TRULY Yours Typkif Sarvica 899-1 TU
Low rolaa.
^^ (29 J 4)
Long
a7S«399 or 279-9471.
r9« OSr%
RUTH
Mrm I
929-2792
Ex
(39 otn
474-
(29 08r)
TYPING at
1
IBM Eaaeulhra- c
i accurals. Call
(29 QUI
ftlrniahad
(»J4|
ucu.
2BaBi
OEM 4)
SBS OAYLEY. across from Oykttra.
■■aHalors. ibtfln. ona fciimiwa. 47S-
17B9. 4734SS9.
(St J 4)
WALK TO UCLA
Spactout Bachoiors. Singlm
1 A 2 Badroom Apts
10941 Strgthmora Pool a^vdlora
;urtty garaga Also with
;iAL SUBNMCR RATtS -
Tarraca 479-
540 Qianrock - S4Siandfdir
478-483-510-519 Landflir 477
FURNISHffO/Unlurnlihad bachalo/
9140. Singlas 8198 Pool Haart of
Woabaood 10924 ItnMlmlL 479-9994
__^ CMQ»)
Ml NUTrt from UCL A! Singiia. tar-
nlaliod ona badroom, luxury -aaaaa-
nianea - raaaonabia prica 2991 9o.
tapMlsada 479-?120
m (Mr)
9UMMER Ralas 9paclaua ainglas
19 2 badrooms Larga courtyard
992 Vataran Ava No Wllahira 479-
. nsailaais (29 Qtr.r
SUBLET spacious sihgla. Juna. Sapi.
9300 inciudas pool. uMHIas. walk UCLA.
9VGL/Wllanira 279- 9298. 999-ll91
(29 J 4)
9U88M9R Raioa Fumlanod ingia waBi
to UCLA 8290 includw pool, utlNtlas
BVOL/WMamra 279-9239.
1391
(39 J 4)
apt unfurnished
LARGE 1 BR 8190 2nd noor Sanny
18 min from UCLA Doug
2 BCDROOM. 9940.00 Oulat daluia
aacurlty building Woshaood. firaplaca
bulltlna pralai pralaooar or §m
n—f 9mm asaniea Mad 1790
477-2199. 393-4449
'' ■ (27)
FACULTY Charming homa-ataa 2 br/
2 ba • loft-dan < Adult bulkMng Buin-
Ins, firaplaca. muiak. axtra cloaata.
prtvala drfvaway OpMonol omca/HMdd
apt avallabia Ad)acant Branlwood.
S990 937-9992
aomi »i/-aaa2. (37 J 4)
8199 - 1
Oaka. 10 mm /CLA. paai
air, aduNa 794-5749
(27)4)
ATtRACTlVE Ocaanslda apt. OMar
buNdlng Unfumlanad 1 ba9 * aMy.
8295 Nawly docoratad 392-3419.
392-7911.
27 J 4)
2 BCDROOM. dining
nawly paintad On Barrlngton Waat
Loa Angalaa. 8239. 477-9389.
■^ (37 J 4)
•jHs fjimtohed '^ «^»^«»
IF f9tt aia aaakbig a gulat,
aiihiongst m>alura
saa 449 Valaran 2
2 badrooai alas dan. 9415 and ap.
PeRPfCTPAOC9by
w/ 12 yrs
ang
I
r29 J4)
XEROX 2. C
No mitumani
KINKO S itlZlw
CMfCK OUn Tvpiwc SEBVICE
SA9etB0rr Socnalor Apt himlahad
Inciudas utilltlas W block to UCLA
8190/mo CaN 479-4799 .__.
(39)
8290 ATTRACTIVC 1
^ikwa araa. Hmm HaN
all built ins. parking avallabia 929
2949.
(39)
8199 WtU P'
9t. 9afi
"* (39 J 4)
(37 J 4)
READY f«r iMwaiai 1 bdrm. alava, trig
No pats Old Vomoa dNPm 8199 479-
(37J4)
LOWER DupiaB. 3
2 balRa. 9379. AaaBiWIa July 1 931 -21 19
(t7J4)
9ANTA Monica 9lnBlP • 9178 2 bad-
ir baaeli. 8
laundry
Saigia 9179 Two
474-7477
(37 J 4).
Poulay • Tachnical Typing
477.8949
ars
typos
.WLA.
(29 J 4)
J 4)
S.M.
atlonol, aclantlllc. othar Don't
n
S.M PLAT lor sanC. 3
SNia to UCLA Oaraga 8198.90 fur
(27 J 4)
7S1S.
'S909r)
Tofm
lions, rosumas. latlors. idit
(S9alh
ATTRACTIVE tiirnlshad s-fflclancy
bachalor apt. Ocaan «law 8199 mo
lar singia paraan. 393-3419. 318-7911
(ati4)
apts, to share
■pts, to share
miTH C DISBCRTATI08I8. THUCS,
STATISTICAI. FAST. DCPCNOABLI.
OATS A WEEK MANY TYPt
f29 Qin
OWN bdrm In 8 bdrpi /2 ba Palma
apt. 8100/mo lurnlal»ad Days 748-
204-9SS9.
(39 J 4)
MALE roomala naaBbd le
turnistiad 2-badroam apt with mala
grad studant For summar, starting
39. 9138 laa. 479- 1999
(39 J 4)
ROOMATf la
9149 p/
(39)
GARDEN p#m-apt fbr aafiB«t>«'
room both 8118 939 9199 - VIeaia
(29)
TV.
Aaguat 8149
9 adn UCLA S mM.
4T9-9119 SnyBaw.
*mk 4 ai
FnSALE
f—m anfumHR99 997.99/aia. 9anta
10 pm
•J^«l-
I8ALE to shara apt 1 aiosk Iram
473-<
(39)
FEMALE - own
aparlmant - nica aacurlty
baach Vanica AnyHma m Juna
oom
rrmmr
(39)
RE9PONS|BLE roomala tor lumlanad 2
badrm apt. Palms - Util pd Pool.
8149/nio. Ca9 939-2921 ,^ .
(29)
9HARE furnlanad 2 badroom apt own
room 9anla ISonlca. Ik19 la 9/1.
9l39^mo. 929-3399. —
(Ml
FEMALE ndbdad sliara badroam m
apartmanf • starting Juna 19. Only
978.00 a month 473-0925 W.L.A.
(29)
NEED iBmaM la aKara room wl9t
Larga spiibiiiiii 8102.80 month 9um-
mar WaBi UCLA 479-5470
FEMALE nenamokar ahars 2
WLA apartmant. iv, bath. guMt
|. park 8107 90 9andy 825-2337.
(28)
MALE roomala
apt WLA 8199.99
Sruea. 929-0429
aham quia! 2
(29 J 4)
'ACE In kao alary
2 tamalas 8112.90
473-4740 .
4S9J4)
Juna 19lh 8112.56 par
^tm 479:-9924
r9a .1 at
FEMALE to shara furnishad apt In
9.M for summar Own room, bath.'
8 120/ mo 829-8099
(39)
MALE/PEMALE
9137.99.
9397
(39)
WANTED
apt. alarllng
gaPiar. 920-1
Juna. Apt. hunt |^
aflar 8
(S9J4)
ROOMMATE - fommko
PirVigh Auguat 19. 2
WLA. 9197 JO/dw. 477-9119
r.
L--
— (39 J 4)
9HARE 2 btfna. uRf . 9 bSia fram
919999 uBBBas Juna 19 Chuck 392-
(39 J 4)
NEED mala famala to hunt for and
2 badroom apt by baach.
(29 J 4)
SPACIOUS apartmant naar
Robartson own larga unfurnishad
badroom avallabia. 9/15 8110 plus
(39 J 4)
FEMALE own rom 8130 inci uM.
baach S.M. aaaN., 9/19
9 p.m.
YOUNG prot«
apt./hi
S.M7Branl
939-1739. 279-1991 Days
(39 J 4)
MALE MH tar taRMRad 3 brr3Ba
apt wNR mm4. atudani Diahwaahar.
pb«o. parkbig. 81S0/mo 839-9747
- (39 J 4;
«..>^ma«> * tiiriim. 3 L-U. JL. ^
dilloning Walk to UCLA Vataran 9
Oaylay. 8l80/aw. 473.1SU.
#9a .1 a
210
'S-
apts to share
ROOMMATE (m/f) ta aRara 2 br. «
3 ba apt
8137 J9 plua a«.
J 41
273
477-4990 M-F aftaf 8 p,^
Jon.
J4»
»r. Apt WLA
473-1799.
(39J4I
9HAMS 3 bidraawi SJI
J 41
fforaubl
I badroom apt firaplaca markat/
school. 997.99. 9394992.
(39 J 4)
m
9/1/
(39 J 4)
SUSLET Aug 1-Oct 1 3
lully furnishod. boach walk. Sanid
Mswlea. Ca9 3B2-3S39 or 399-2799 EMa<
TaBIa
a9J4
SANTA •90NICA
Ona Mock from
9429
491
(29 J 4)
FOR
apt in
kid Po€^
. 1
Wastwood 9299/mo . gas.
Avail Juna 15. 479-9927
(29 J 4)
PARt9 - wlah to trada my
loft on loft bank for 2/3 badroom
apartmant noar baach In L.A. 29 Juwa
10 Auguat 277-9399.
(39 J 4)
#OMAN naadad - sIngIa roam In
ipacious Branlwood apt Avallabki
(39 J 4)
SUBLET July
8179.
(39 J 4)
FURNISHED 2 badroom apartmanl.
Waalwood Fsmala. Own room Pool.
9/3P - 9/15 8110 Evonkagt 474-3094.
(39J4)
1 BIDilOOM pool. 9210/ mo (iaa.
paiklng kicludad avaM. Juna I99i -
>l,tT.«7T.»1l3. , a.^4,
SINGLE sublat July/ Auguat; 9149/"^
In WidPaeod V9iaB» CdM 474-
(aflar 19 p.m.)
(39J9I
9U9NBER sublat Huga 3
houaa. 9anla Monica All
9490. 490-2340
(29 J 4)
LOVELY hauaa toi 9M. 2 bdrm pkia
guasthouaa and Juno-Aug. 19. Big gor-
dan 490-3239. ^ j ^j
Fancod yard. 2 firaplocas
Juna 1 937-9790. 930-1109
(29J4i
CUTE fumlahad bachalor on
9/21-9/13 8l30.00(tlaxlMa^ utilltlaa
>.ipludid 479-93M. ' I19 J 4>
SUMMER shara 3 badroom 3 batli
turnlahad nicaly Wllahira 9 Bundy
9139/aian. 939-3990
(39 4 4)
ONE badroam apt EaBlot now thru
Auguat 29. Naar Cantury CNy.
plHaly lumlanad 9340. OMI
(days) 9994911 (» J 4)
MOUSt 9 mm. UCLA Bav. Qtan. 3
h%^. fvrnlahod. Ruatlc. gulat. Lata
Juna. 2-3 maa. 9999 mo. 474-1999.
m J 9)
(«9J9)
•ACH Fflg.. dMiBta Bad. tar«a dtaoat
9119/mo MM Juna ta tata 9apl. 939-
^^ SiJ4>
^^'^mStLJSU^
9199/1 9aB>
|i9J9)
SI 11 11 room In 2 badpaai
M Wddl L^ tar July. Aftaf
alRBk. S89-S7S1.
■ apaiiR9Ni
<»V4)
J 4)
til J 91
c'o^fjnMC d
CLASSIFIED AD
for sublease
JULY. Aug Branaaaud 3
lumMura 8199 473
(29 J 4)
9t49
29 473-3199
bi ata
2 Btaeka to
t
(29 J 4)
FURNtBI«D 1
tor 1 or 2 poi
9/31-9/91 8229/
474-
09)4)
1 BSDIIOOM 1
7.9apL9. WLA.
1799
TV Aug
9199. 399-
(39 J 4)
1200 MO 2 bdrm turnlahad p««l.
tor summar months July Bwu
131 ahmf 7 p.m
(39)
1 br.,
baautltully turnlahad. slarao. watar-
bad ale., mt baach. parking pratar
lacvraap atadant. 9490 par mon9i.
Av 7/1-9/15 399-7079.
(39)
BRENTWOOO
poal 9310/monBi
-3729 days. 939-9399
3
7/1-9/1.
(39)
houses for rent
3 BEDROOM, lurnlanod houaa. air.
cloaa bua. aaoUPMa Juna 17 - 9apC.12.
925-2399 ■siMPBi 993 9999
9AlirrA M08ilCA - isBuBiidli fumtahid
3 bad/3 baBi, Ban. A«a9. Juna 15-Doc 15
8780/mdaBi. 394-2399.
^ |99|4)
t UCLA
Murryt
2
19-39
T49-7714
by Juna 19.
(39 J 4)
(9379)
(8990) PodI tabta. othor amanltloa
379^1940 rjo J 41
THREE
p*9a, ]
Aftor'7:30 pm 474
er aSfVHfy.,
(39 J 4)
IMMACULATE Brantwaad homa i^w-
ntahad Juty-Labor Day 9990/mo. 2 bad-
raam. 2 baBi. mn, pallo Faculty only
«7J.44« ^_,,,
for ruatlc gardan Eicaltont grada
■chaaL 19 minutaa souBt a^ aampus
by but. 9939. 939-9903 477-0399.
(39 J 4)
house tor
COZY
toadRf. Qopd laaaBan In Mglt
elation araa 9l Sunaal Park Santa
Larga lot with 5 fruit boartng H—.
1331 Ptaa Si fS4J90. 399-7911.
(3t J 4)
BEDUCEOf
Slock to Wllahira. noar Barrlngton.
477-3219.
(31 J 4)
8 SEAUTIFUL badroom
9 477-9971. 97191
a cand. by
(31 J 4)
397 jgg BEVENLYWOOD 3 bdrav iVb
katfia. Dining room BItIn kUcNpn.
191)
house toshare
HOUSE to ahom In Vanloa wNb
S^ad. Fanaad yard, pal OK. 9199 939
1999. 3B3-1SS9
t99 4 41
911
(S3 J 4)
477-2143
(3SJ4)
hou«a to Share
9179 mei. iiBi
(38 J 4)
to
9178
270-4979 ar 920-
«aP4ai
2 BEDROOMS 8117
7 minutoa Vonica
7/t
V Y (33 J 4)
to shars 3 ___
room houaa naar baach wiith 2 gay
•tuPants 8140 Aflar 8 TBI 99BI
(32 J 4)
housinQ nssded
924 1299
(33)
WILL shara part of rant to slaap at your
pad waakands only Contact Kalth
477-0099/473-3949 MonThurs 900-
9:39 p.m. or aftor i
9:99 -13:00 p.m
am
FULLY
lor vtatUng Oarman I
19 - July 31 939-9733
199 J S\
9y
mfarancas Contact vta Scott 994-7903
(33 J 4)
HAVE A HOUSE?
For huaband/
biLoaAngata
to UCLA? WW pay upta
E
Dr.
1-713
2171
room and board
exchyge tor help
FEMALE Room/boord asctianga tor
light housawork/babysitting Prlva4a
room/bodvTV H—i UCLA 474-0339
(37 J 4)
FENULE sbidant 9va-to Prkiato loom.
board, aschanga chlld-sltting, light
cttoras. 1*6 blacks Eunsat
3:30 491-0339
FEMALE sludant
939-2124 avarwngs
t37J4)
ROOM/Bgard
Board tapJiauaa/'
taratudytal Mato
OK Mr
For-
1799
(37 J 4)
TRAVELING to
In
f/21 and
479-
(37 J 41
>. 19
CaM 379-9132
rsT t0\
PEMALE atudant for »umm»f Eseh
9a4m. dflwa paafarrad.
Bav HNta Cd9 aaa 271 5130
(37 J4)
Y HNN c
9
rST J41
PRIVATE
evvWa^. Pfes
4933/979
(37 J 4)
1
room tor fent
8189 PRIVATE aulto Or s
viow. noar univarslty Privacy Oldar
OL2-8279 PHI
nonamokor. no kllchon privltogaa.
walking dtotonca 991 Btolcolai Aaa.
474-9147. I" .
(99)
BdgoB. Lmyn4ry WoaHidaO Wllahira
Mata faculty studant 474-7133 aftar
(39 J 4)
autos for sale
autos for sale
V
9PACIOU9
J
8114
18
1/9
(a^)
(39 J 4)
^OMBCME 1973 ycBpw 914- 1 7 ml«M
CiildMaii C«« MMtaa Day 925-9971
•vanPig. waaSand 953 8223
♦41 J 4)
IDEAL
Ex
.477-2171
(41 J 4)
OUIET ^rtvota roam /bath Kilchon
Py»9*» Laundry Wastwood- Wllahira
Mala. tacuNy. sludant CaM altar 8:39Bm
474 7122 ^^
(39)
99 V^
Ira
condition 9990 mht
(41 J 4)
WEEK Hght airy room
surroundings Clooa Santa
y at LaOras 939-9349
(39 J 4)
SAAB 1973 - stick ablft. good gaa
Elaclronkr lual in|actton. 39 JOS
91790 939^309 ^^, ^ ^^
bicycles for sale
1979
4'
RBO V W
999 par
477-9391
UCLAstudants
kMchan privdagas
515 N Landlair Ava
J4».
(41 J 9)
ALFA R
radio. 5
943M
9
FREE privala room, boat in
paol Famala Eschanga 10 hours houaa-
waakly 279-0943 _
(39 J 4)
OTV 73 now 73 Ak
tual in| only 33 K ml
EsN cond 475-9915 aflar
(41 J 4)
71 0Ar9UN 1391
197 DU9 999-9197
91399
(41 J 4)
(39 J 4)
9PACIOU9. suporgood Branlwood
Maataa apt 9139 plua 1/3
»«Saadb 9 UCLA
99 FIAT 990 Bodan slnt Muat aalll
91SM ZWT 915 999-0107
(41 J 4)
FOR 9ALE 1999 Vobiswagon bug In
ascallant condition with parsonallty
79 yw BUG EsaaEsnt bady/anglna
(39 J 4)
WALK 2 UCLA Irom
raam 9 bach 8189
479-1930
(39 J 4)
9139 ROOM toncy gwdan Big charm
laa saa^tatftitt L-aasm^m Sa^M ^^^^^^m
'■■■ ^^^mw "^m^www^ . k^MOT^Vrw. ^VMv - SIDCS8
UCLA Kitchan privtiagas Famala
(39 J 4)
BTUDENT-prtvoN >dam. prtvoto
paol, snort driwa '
Now taelory palni AMTPtTslarao Radlisi
9^ 81490/onar Anyttrrt* 474-7999
(41 J 4)
VW 71 Bug. sack. 94.000 ml ascallant
cundlduM f 1400 m bast ollor 939-270O
499-1704
(41 J 4)
1991 BUOEYE Sprtta. laBuM angtaa.
ndBtan 9779 473-9011
•■*• (41J|4t
^97-99 AU9TNII Haaly 9pf«ta. Baad aan-
ORIon. wasds minor
sak 8490 397-4939
(41 J 4)
t^^^^si ■ o^u aaaad spr
9139 par
at tha Unlvaralty Cooporatlva Right
m^ha VNtaga RiildswN work 4 hours
swoak Tha food la good and »«a poapto
frtondly UnNoraMy Co-op. 990 Lawdtali.
LJ^. 479-1939.
, -\ .f... , t^ .• 41
— :=l: 1 .
room A board
PNPoty
Ingram
rapidly 93990 PTU 971 921-9997
(91J4)
1999 PLYMOUTH. Fury III. V9. air
992-2319
(41)
1999 ROVEP 2999 TC
AM/FI8. Etaat 409
IIOOM
937
board for 9199 mdnta
(41)
479-3949
. 139 Oir)
IBTIMAZOA 919 Naw potat. topa
otapn Intoflui'
479-2494
HI)
r37 J 4» choraa 477-2211
3 haars. 9
LlgM
199 J 41
ra^ autoe torsale
CaN 941-7394
141 Oirt
99 FIAT 999
Low
397-9914
%M
MU9TANO
JO or boat oMar
(91)
99. V9 399. Air. 9 track
condition.
>3414. Paul
(41 J 4)
1972 PMHTO
479- 19U.
fl ^^w t
1900 or baat
I (41)
99 PLY
11
• ^^^^•t
I ^^m I
941-
H1J4)
VW BUG '94 RabuIN angina
tmL 9999/oflor 473-4990 aftar 8
(91)
1499. Day 477
K4
(91 J 9)
74 CAMURO - 19 J99 ad ABI/PM
aa L9to nawf Ca9 479-9149 m
(41)
73 OPEL OT. 93J99
-1941 or 9B9-1
1B72OATSUN810
19 J99 adtaa. AM/FM
(41 J 4)
99 DA.TSUN. good
Cd9 SNaiMyn 474-9191 or 474-9139
(41)
1973 VW BUG
Oltar 477-3234
(41)
VW 73 FA9T9ACK. 4
A/C MIchalana. 1
939-2799/499-1794.
(41 J 4)
Aa9/PM.
r. aaealloni
(41 J 4)
1971 TOYOTA
(41)
1971 PIAT 134
ABI-PMI A 9aa
99 MLAM. 8379 R
air-caaBNt Baaa
477
awM. nu
Call
(41 J 4)
(91)
78 0AT9UN 13B
eBy. 49 road 91799
(41 J 4)
914 1.7 1973 79
Juat ovorbaulad Mint Est with ap-
Itay* 939-7192 N 993-
(41 J 4)
PIAT 73 134 9pon
79 m
(213) 998<9739
aanrool. a/c.
m^mm
(41 J 4)
419 PIW
(41 J 4)
73
9M.
•9174
(41 J4)
191 J 4)
71 PBiTO
Ooys 491-9044
1970 COUOAII. VS.
479-3179
(41 J4^
91399. 374-3919
(41 J 9)
%i CaMH»rn>a« >mt^m»t
SfVIUifi
wi mv iiMia •* m^ifc^^iB.
IMS M
-^ "S»7f
WOMEN 9 bicycia 1975
ipood. 19' lNmt
dHor 934-1370
rclor 19
aaa 9149/
(43 J 4)
33 LEJEUNE Rayaolda 931. C
EiioaNant
473-4107
(43 J 4)
STUDENT DISCOUNT
•90ST REPAm WHILE YOU WAIT
10^ OPF ON PAMTS AND
ACCCSS09IIES WITH ).D
HANS OHRT
LIOHTWEIOHT VICYCLES. INC.
(3 BLOCKS PIiOM CABIPUSI ^
1071 OAVLtV A¥t. '
4TS-:
2791
(42 J 4)
OATSUN 97 ou
AM-FM. runs
(43 J 41
ITALIAN 19
9199 JO 479-3493 9-1
(42 J 4>
WilshireWest t»^,n,^,^
Bicycles '-••^'-*«
y^y
tS^••Ol•••wfll• on mo»t
111
477-313$
H WHahtra t¥d LA 90025
cycleSg scooters
torsale -
79 TWMiPlI Vrtdant. Elac alarf a'a-
eallanf eandlllon. only 1,400 mlloa
MalMsat Nicludad 81999 ar baal aNar.
CaM Frank at 979-0191.
CIAO
474-1301
Vaapa 1979 Partact
(431
1974 HONDA. ENIaaPi MT
477-3177.
(99)
1992
and
tiros 9 condition 8383-
(43)
1979
paly 99 arttaa. •aaf
«ii», 477.«gg9 or
491
VAMAHA 1979
a
7998 UCLA
(49 J4)
J 4)
jm
9 §9.
SfTi
91199 Ca9
(9SJ9I
(
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I
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I
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vr
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# SWCrr ZMwy« l wlili l mmM ••■• your
JL lrav*lMf»g Ihlt •umttmrnt only to •lay
•• aain isa. LpOwa yaiit Pucfcy .^ . ^»
«
MICKV. fmu'm baan
yaai'ia MSt naMfMyf) A
•ana mtf la ywi M who
ta ay DIpo. AS
%^t^^^fw% u>, I aay
1.0
ir It
W J4)
Id fftandt muat not alwayi
— — ^ It w Vw taaNnfi o4 onatwM
^ whon distant. That provos • lasting
5 GAU.
W ha
COLA Nut. A whola yaar-who«d B*H I
aan Mdnli of no ^atlar raowHs lo hovs
fona thni H with Horr FloM,
In Mm nils. iwaWhn «■
M trtsndshlp Happy Binhday III •rpt J!! iJ 1" ?'*^f *•• '•^ •»••
5 LoM Lartv •"^ liooeasf Good luck always Ba
^ i.oi«. uarry ^^ ^^ aaahif y« (aakC Iha hhnd a^n) aMiyha
# -^ •» aarthquahaa a«a a«ar? Tal»
# OAMV. Happy ^^m MrVidayf Tlma lo
# Stan pstting your shaving crsom |p^
tgathar lor finals and no it
A tnmn47
cass sla. L4
i»^^) CQUNIC and
da iMa. Vou asa
# MAMCUt. Did you Ihlnli I waald lorfat *"■>
^ your BlrlhdayTt Hmftmr^ Your sM aiy P«* -
Jl odiar haN of "at"! *m Qrads of Tt.
mdn
luck In your now
condnQ. Laro and
••J4)
MAim - Ma mnn
I aalnn lo do «MIimi( m« this
I
Vou Ad:
•ioM, JofI, Jadi's
slud. Randy. MaHi's lofs. Blil •III |^
u AiNMhHldni m diass. f
•MCNtOCIC. Thank you lor dia food
ttniaa lafadiar. I'l ndaa you vary rvmch
this sumaiar. Lova and kissoa. All
ijp ur Id J 4t
o cnampa^na. ^safo^Mn. «Miaa. s^
Dava s aiM svandNvg, von. non. a^
%y 4 tha anllfa staff offlcs. ft Vic
m.oiiA • N004
In Zoirs? CaM
1-t1>-
THlflD NOIITH HEOflICK:
ft J*)
JL MOM Happy aight mandi annlSB
#^ What grsal tun. Lafs da It apahi.
a tanlaaMc sunMwar Mal-Tal.
*
JL DEAR Bruin - I'm tor Civil Rights.
1^ Amorlca. and Rruln ilaskslall Vols
S Jdchson lor Praaldant
* f^
♦ = ^ ^
*^ CONOR AOULATIOMS Rhonda Vl-
Ghana Rro^vn on your graduadan liani
# UCLA. Lova Hot Datora. Miss Conslslant
# •^ Jamais 1% j 4)
mtWW Juda. Carol. John. Mardn. NdiM.
Bob. Oava. Lisa. Parsons, Crunchy.
Charyl. Jon. and Manny: Thani tor
didMng' my dapoftur«
yon wn dia parly lraN?~Zao
gjM)
nmO. Kavin: Thani forancouraging
sMBPda'Whan 1 naadad tham iho
odior Bdngal I'M ndas you bod) and alliha
•rad out of mm.
(•J 4)
!
Mfd
rt j4 )
OLIVE ON: You mrm
^ Good luck* I lovs you
*
J^ SMi.V WBy Boon baautlfut 3
' w loading forward to sn sismlty of
# ^oss with yOuf MjAx
S longor can
^* agar roomia
«
THTTA XI Broa.-Thanda far Iwo
unforgatlaMa yaars. TX la
Yours In ttia Bond^, AZ 0d4
'i
<«J4)
MYRt. Mart. Bnuggiar.
madarrt: Bast of Irlonda. mmt port....
Thanks tor ■MsryBdngi Lova. flUWr.
^•J4)
KEVIN
H
you no
a
.«*.-- fg J 4\.
I's; B's; CNon: B.L.O.
Zlffy: Wllshira « Bory; Chom: 914
Crunch; BpoghalU; braaadaa
Manf 7); ooni; Idy Lv.
JaMoa. Mm and '■niffln , Dab and Jodi,
•Id and Jay. "Big AT and "tdng" Kong.
'■Boan Jaan and KdMy KJl., Jarry and
ffiowafit anwy siw Ann, muvwra^MW mnu
Jbn "•Mfayo'', "Big BW Aahby and **•!§
Big BW Aahby and
«nvn nvfuvt, Mfiunv Bmi ^^my
"HI Quy" Ouak
and ^am, dnr
KoBiy and ^*Can Dog". Judy and
Warn Bam". Doug and Oava; Juna and
Tha Ona and Only Bruoa B.
Cirol and Yuho. Ron and Jon, Chris
"Vou Noodn't Rliulapipli My Faoa" and
Lang Jann- Borlch, Bharon and Vlclu,
FdMh and Dibili. '*Baby OlrT Qonahua
and "Baby Boy Boyd". Don and mmifk
(Q.I. Joo). Brian and ChoHIa, and Mpl
b«ft not loaat, Bonnla^ and THmrmiam^
^ LAURA thomas to dia si
J iBlanlsd trsshinaii I can only say: Try
4 hafdar Barky
Thot as
tor sural
KITTON
t
«
«
J VWtm Lovs Alwoys
i
♦ KATHV ..
# EVER dioa
7): donkay
2 yaars - Tinhay
(•J 4)
!• J4)
»yf!! vwim
fl J4)
BTCVf - thanks so much for
Hops Mil
aaMBis
ft J 4)
t
VOUMIOMT
vou JUST MIOHT
KM.
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RATMCK - Dpnl lorgaf Id
at R. Lawta. Oh my
Tf75-lf7t a IdlaMy waekad aut
aaparlarioa. AMD SOCIAL THAMKB la
JadNanna Haian Di damat t imowty Jo*
aafih Voung, CipHMP Ann KyrOt and
Lflwranaa Joaaoh WMaon who wora dia
toi
dl
of you has louottod
my Ma In a spaolal way, and In rahim.
lat mm laavs you with a
Bo aiM aal on, wivi
bi W
but Id
MBid
10 dud
tid
ofdio
d^Bngv 10 nnwHng
s shrdi crlos to dia
^n Wv
diasnaaaaof
fiJ4)
^ RICK - Our 3rd
JL 5T J*^* ^••^ • <»hpw. Loaa you mucho
t
ALISON F • ni aaa you In potlary
at tha Rot ^mrm dds summar Lova, B«.
(•J 4)
ISJ4I
KEVIN Ws
LC
I
you
Boffb
mm at Zuma on dia
Is graat.
Bia baby, tha ahnafc of dio Or^^hon,
laM know) to tha confuaod
Lorl.
(•J4)
(•J 4)
'^ ILCNC. A« my
^w long
# |tJ4)
«^ DCBBIE Tha QsBPiMt gift bi dia wortd.
Radava ma. dia Mg O; Tn» lova Ma«k
W (• J4)
»
ISJdl
# RON and
Ip-aaayou
l»J4)
,
ra
(tJ4)
fC— Thanks for ;
bi STB. II adaa
al grant
OCAR RM U. YoM'ra ao omM. C
dt cm. Lm. DW
IS J 4)
ROBMI Mliibui MuriaMd n
la IRa aMaa aat of \Aa M.
(•J4)
paapM but a Irog N a tiland In
PddplalB
(•J 4)
vviih ^sa^maai ai
V^^BB^^ Nd^^^^V^ ^^dP^^W 9 ^^^V^^VB>^^^^^*Wf ^%a^p*
R.C.
(•J 4)
^ UNQBNT-^mMi elidnga naa^
^ •••"•VP^'Ri aR adBioMt you
^ MMnadbNahr "^my alppa^^ ahiolil
(•J 4)
Oant
If J 4)
tiat la you noad
|iJ4)
BAWOV: Congrats on gra<
Tlmnka lor a graat yaar. Oo^tf
M^. m^^
L.I
laRwIBimy
'8 a bad af
fFAITHBRMiA Wa "aa lonT M MCIA.
bid ndPdN Id d» Big Mound ^Aly Odiy.
„.^« * (•J4)
gMbi
«tJ4)
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1^ TOSTAOA Twbi
tm dna. dPhy not
•• Bvo
«
Oora am |hb(
Ii^4)
»Y Hud: Tha
your trovols thru Euro^o. 09I
L
a iddft Id MM on
M dud
IIJ4)
OOUMN Boy- Our fiva
bMBRd S lovttul (hals dia
tdT). LpTs condnua. Lova your
for rum. no slaap. tea craam A camala. tt
lar a baautltui yaar Karon |L
s
THf Rpwdlas— Murdlth. Cayro Sua ?
Loony Ltdaki to dw baat saniar yaar ^
Loaa, Wacky Wongovlch
IS J 4)
<ij4);
T. COOK - N's
lH mMa Tab. A
f) asarddng. youNw
mmr dflM kaap hi
Shrold
CONOR ATULATIOfiS
Slaptian AjMlroda, Mam ••mvrwt. mrwu ^
•aat of hick alwaysl f
and*
Ron
Judy
(•J 4)
(SJ4)
■pfePTI and F
t
you lor your
lot brlghlar and happlir Hops you alt
hava a graat aummar. Lova. R.T.'s
Id J 41
and^Fdanda Quit niddnirTih ^
I fa J 4) ••
.» ^ .- . A
LLT E bafom I or waa N I bafora E ^
a than thanks tor a _.
try not lo disappaar dda summar. 6.K.T.
^mmmm\im^ what I said about baing
Lovo. your somi sserat adndmr.
<iJ4)
Slowart and p^aaa Qod sova tha
L JL and liigMnil la iuNs grsot
(•J 4)
Hm
Ubty<
f Lo
<4^4)
DCAR Bruin • I'm lor Civil Rights.
VoM
N I bofora KM
(I forgot)? ERhor way. dds ^mmn waa ^
graat I hala la aaa R coma la an and W
Good luck nost yaar aflar I'm k»ng gona. ^
Id J 4)^
TO aN my IHanda. W% a adnor mbocia ^
Ihot I'm gottbig oud f-m/rmm BatmonlMn. jl
(•J4)#
•♦
y^m, yaa A
n-BmiT m
(• J 4) ••
— ^TT»
•••Oa mora holdB sl
yaa. you want la S
Karan m
(• J 4) K
: . t
CATHY— This yaar has baan an aaparl- %
Wa want Ihraagb a lot tu^iltisi ^
Vour look adiw *
Of AR Hnrt I'm
t wdr. Ldtr. r-7-7S inb
JOHN:
immortoNty InhlbftlonaT Raol oml
W/Lovo. Ranaa
w/uosu, nmtaa. _ ^ j ^^
BNAlfN I tola's la V
NdRORTANT. H you mamsd In
Hadclck. Spring If 73 or aartlar, caU
••7-74f1 »
-"-- ____^m
1^. SCU2 Faca- Rlpa-cloonor Fl^wor #
^ ddya ara o«or.....but only at UCLAt On #
^ la JD and mors ^*»**** Ihnaa ^^^^w JL
F Jl. S hnby. Traa-
a
Lardo and avon tha King of
l>. I loaa you. XXOO
ft
my Idaal" (
I
ft
•f J 4) y,^" * ViL*TT***^* ••*• f '•••••• ft
MNOC: Up dm
S/4
<iJ4)
LINCOand
, Bmugli. vou
my bodrl Tha
(•J4)
CATHY-Lara gat togadia^ dds
Cant wad tor
In Cham 22. Loiw.
An aarty
a
LRBa
<f J4)
-.-^..
Vo-
(f J4)
TO ALL MY
-THANKS FOR
m YEARS AT UCLA
TNI IIARfUBT.. MOST FAR OUT
YEARS OF MY LITE YOU ALL MEAN A
aMUT DEAL TO ME. HAVE A ORSAT
UPV IE I OOMT Bn YOU. THANKS
AOANH. YOU OUVS CAND BBRECtALL V
YOU LADIES) ARE AUUOHT JAY
If <I4)
■*^'**^^'" ^-^iBii mil lm TUdiiii i
N aaayf Iddlar Bwmy. |SJd|f
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I
t»iit»i»<iiitiiwi>»iMini<i<mi<t<t<M»<i<i
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♦ THANKS lo
#Rloh.DobR
JLior dHMng UO
j> aiy RHadi. and .ipip..., .i— i— i— i mana you ammni
W am. I \mm you oN. and wM adaa you Bdi Baa you ad naat MB.
Iraai Vahdv, Mdvc L. ^ .^
CATHERINE
DS Class boaa. your "plaass and
(ijd>
Ta-A
'UN
PHI KAPPA SIGMA
BIG BROTHERS
YOU ARE THE BEST' '^ Jl^If J?
nm. ooa you nus
dRiot Is ao>
to tha sya Yam
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of IMS hoort
This Is dm
Toull hava to
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out for yoursoH
M
^m
to Mrs Butlsr
Rats
If E)
DEAR B.W -You'm
you'ra taarlng It af
Loaa B td
•hyhddrt.
irt. so tuck you.
(f)
2 JOE Lung.
#TZr^Joa
ft
go to tommy s?
m\
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trash man yaar
IS)
LINOA Ho. Tuahla. I'm
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RJL
THE Coapar Famdy-Ogra Mom. Rn.
Big fhortla. Joaaphkus. Tig Billy. Mr.
CImng. Alan, Jans. Bisctt Mt Jonoi.
Judy, ad dm DQ's. Alloa Coopaf and dm
rast of tha lamtly What* tha soup
lodayf Juana arnl Shortia
^at
TO Da4ir * WInalon Thla won i ba your
loot parsonal Lova, Madlum foclol
(f)
MARC. Stuart. Hunlar. Jaqua RdMI
Wa'm gaing ta adaa you. Oood LudiL
Michaal af»d f toff _
TERESA Mm, Shut up Tomaal MKRA-
lOiiOLR FORNHflLSS-
rs
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mars.
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laneas) wha k
blanks 4 my i
Find
If)
WOODLAfM) dRmtwooli
Diva. Slova. Rolm Springs. KH
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RwRbma
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In Oklohowm. Walch aiH lor aoo
liangars OTA
odiuck
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TR<A. Hava a good
iddmmrandl
IwMaaa
you lotar Tha Trul
MdlOna
LMJ-My lova for
aaaryday May ad
laraiai Lova. WJL
you growa i
dmt wa hoa
sgaan
ffi
-You'm
'^
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PUtB.HOL0ON TMCTlTf CORHMO k
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ROADRUNNER -Tl
coMs. aaams
laba. tunaaf Pmr^.
CHRif TINE~1 yaarlanti
worry bwdasr If sdf b
TF.
21 I
DBSME S.
tIM on f/11 Inlay
If)
THANKS la Lyn. ?a*fy« •Tbn A. Ti
dr a
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yoor
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VIVIAN. EHoa. Bart—Rlabar— Noaa
by la dMMiMn. 0.K.7 T ^.
' " ^ mi
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sdi you fm dS dia ba^
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for a
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TOMyi
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■■'■ "■■ -
ma>mmi0mmtl^i^i0fn
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DB graduating seniors: Yes, but can they type?
wu
06 Photo t>v Asndv Giim
n
. .) '
■ I
Editor-ln-CIW»(
J»m Stebinger
•tenagifftg Editor
Pmrtck HmIv
Anne Young
Aftftlttant Buskt»M M«n«9#f
buMin Kane
EdttOTMl Director*
f^^T B Beraon
Frank Stallwort^
Htw Cdltort
Eric Mandei
*»ica bhort
Paul
Q»off Oumn
MietiaUe OimM^
Tony
IndsH CdHort
Ho«Mr0 Poaner - On Campua
Laura Kia«viar
Marc OaNina
Siuan Siivmaiii
rt
Qlonn Saiii
Jaff Laptn
Anp
Michaai Laa
itoiwyp EdItoVB
Branrty Atenander
Luaan CunnwighAm
C
OmW Whitrwy
Evwvta EdMor
0»c*i Krati/
Ubranon
Mary Smth Murrill
AdMi«niatrallv« AMittant
Rote Zoas Hotaey
Mary Anr>« CmrTmno
KMfty Qraan ^
Camy Satpp
Staff Arltali
Lirtaa Kofaitt
Ca(^y Ftahman
Mika Kurtz
Joy< 0 Oaiaii
Nancy LrttandMi
Jaqua Kampachroar
Huniaf ' Kaplan
Mfchaai
Patti Sullivan
Joa Yogawi
WfHaci
• tony ICyrtr
Alpar
Cathy ConnaHy
Laalf* G«t>«*'
Paul far-
Fiachmann
Kar Qmrm
Joa Nathan
Alan
This IS the «4iM mentioned in
our •diton^l They ^re the Daily
Bruin At the risk ol repetition it
must be ., si»d their eHorts
created any ;^uccess.
Next Year's slaH yyiH be
headed by Alice Short. Editor-m-
Chief. Frank Staltyyorth. Maa-
aging Editor, dnd CeoH Quinn.
Executive Editor. Alice and fr^nk
spent this year as editors, neyys
and editorial rf^pectiveiy Quiinn
spent time on^.the city desk
Alice and tvi^ siaH will r>eed
help to put out that first Sum-
mer Brum June 2S Drop bv
Kerckhoff 110 if vou yyant to
help
UCLA Daily
BRUIN
voijntm ACviii NufRftar 43
Friday Junt 4 Yt76
P^Ma Lot
CoQfn§hf rtTi ay aia
^%UCL A CommyntcmttOffB
Chns Pamlir
DobMa Parvtah
Paitz
Slotar
Tadi Smith
Oarol StaT
Su2ukaiaa
Lon
Kan
Frank
Wumil Wdoart
Jodi Zachbwy
Rick Backar
Paul iwanagi
Tarn
Many
Mart Rubtn
Chnaaa Oitia
Cornall Chulay
Eiaina fmmr
QiaQ Johnaon
* Sarry Kana
Scott McOalliard
' Tad Shapiro
Vicki Vanca
Emtly Wain9fow
Qay HarMa
Jan Kanarviat^
AHyaon Knath
Thomaa Yi
athy Y
lla
Karrn Aikirtaon
play Onyla
Linda Enfii
Qary PlA
La'^h KMii^p'*y
Taai
^nwr
I ■! I » — f»f— <I»<—»M
Mi«wrngn't:~y-xs»..
cMTaiiiBaaa..
,-<#MaiF**"^
-i-^^-L^
(
t
..i
^r
rJ - '■
-r-
UCLA
Summer
.x.
i
m
»
Conffacfs stir UC/government dispute
•j^
v
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^ f
ij-
-4
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-'-"■11 *
m
By Bob Wakfi
!>• Staff \%rit«r
A dit|Nilc between (he rni-
%«ftily 94 California (UC) and
the federal government may
coat the IJnivdrftity an etti-
mated $19.5 miHion and force
a Bubatantial registration fee
increase for the fall of 1977...'
For the last two years th#
University and the Department
of Health. Education and Wel-
§mm (HFW) have been nego-
tiating ihc talc o\ S45 milium
worth o( federal" contract
M|»nK*s received by the linivcr-
aity each year
- Contracts •ftd irairung
-^rant!k from vanoUs federal
age ^ aiich a^ the l>epart
mcnt ^'1 Delcnsc and HF>^
MMke up 25 per c^ent of the \ i
budget cacjh year Over $9()
million was appropriated lof
UCLA last year j
Part of 4he money received
from federal contracts 1!» in the
..form of *'overhead *' Ihc Uni-
vei^ity charges federal *»g$rncio
"overhead" as an estimair tor
- Wch ind I rect serv ices as ac^
couniing and payroll, heating
and elcctrtciiy. rent, library
access and mailroom service.
Ihf^harging qI overhead u>n
federal coniracV?^ ft Iffulatcd
bv a set of Hi ^^' guidelines
which appK to all universities
and college^ contracted by
federal agencies fhesc regula-
tions can be interpreted ir> an>
number of wavs
An nkW regulation con-
cerning student participation in
research projects could be in-
terpreted to include, or ex-
clude, ttmf spent by students
related to the project but spent
outside the laboratory
interpretation** according to
Gary Logsdon. Ht-W nrgo
tiator. who has been one of the
two negotiators handling the
UC case
For the laat three years the
UC has utcd a rate of 34.2
'_ !-i"f'
■t
uvLtLhat gi;U iciicial a|
by 5 2 per cent I he
ment between HLW and tbc
University allows tor retro-
active adjustments,
would mean a rate ci
ably less than the 29 per cent
. i
n
D OC Pf«sk*«nt David S Sa»o« - -H th« St«t« doaa fHrt provlga tba
•lat mof« subsUintlai tlu4aiil laa incr— as wHl
"Its part of tbe lame that- cent i(. isin the com of
overhead charges Lacjfi per
centage point equals Si 25
TiiMu^n However, a H5 month
audit c<)mpleled m April by
HLW indicates the U( bat
part of tbe game that
v^hen there's a shadow of
douhi (over the interpretation
of a particular regulation) tl
college n[ university will, na-
turafh use The nfioit iainerabrc
oa
it imMon dollafs H la olaa»
ba nac^aaary
clai^ncd bv HLW for the next
two years- (f977t7H ^nd I97H
79)
I hree days vt laog-to face
negotiations were, conducted
this April ma futile attempt to
the University dnd
htv» While several minor
taaiiet were settled, ao agree
ment could be reached on tbe
overbaad ^4lettlOll. - ^~^
On May 6 the Uiilvenity of
Cablornia filed a (ormml t^
peal with the HLW Appeals
^Board in Waabiiifton L>C\ cte-
tending tbat HLW had in
accurately droMed the over
rale to 29 per cent
to rtiiibk lomcii.
tbe apftal prcicett could easily
\m\U u|s to two )nnw in exe-
cutive aetaion latl Friday, the
Regents aut) cd the tower
tng of the iv/t) ""' haad
rate from U 2 pet ccni u> 29
pel cent to 'ja I low an orderly
fiscal appeal " I his adigs it^
seen bv kfrnrwlcdgeahlr voufwi
at ah indicatKin that the !)iC
does not t (<t wii^^itt
appeal
f he first .public megugn of
the UC/HLW dispute was
in connectii>n wi(h the
tees Miiifiaae pro-
posal tKOiigbt bet ore the Re
gents laai ftaek
f^rebte Stt^. assistant to t-he
govjernor ftrr p^)it( trut MM*
' te sDiikeJo' ^ V-
etii.K I'rr. HfMWfi 4i if<e Re-
gents meeting ' 1 his is a 14-15
mjilion d/)llar solution to a
$4 5 miJ|j(')n problem." he satd.
reterring to .the proposal
Hendit suggetting the mr-
ol Jhe propcMted reg fee
(C ontinufd on Page 9)
V
Johnson not a Nugget but a Bruin this fall
ly IV1icha4*l Sondhrimer
DB Sports Writrr
iiMM H. tV76 will be re-
corded as a banner day in
UCLA basketball history
not tor what happened, but
rather tor what did not
occur«
In the final hour^before
the NBA prgil»»
Marques iohnson ollu
withdrew his name from the
"Hardship List** and will
reiurn m September tor his
lanior year of a«lk^ bas-
ketball
Johnson and teammate
Richard Washington, who
signed a five year c >ct
at tbe first round pick of the
Kaant City Kings, tiled tor
bMHibip iS last April
Neither withdrew their
namflt at the NBA deadline
of 24 hours baftie Hm diaft
This nuaani tbat both
expeftanii ' to fotfeit
taaiar yaar of coN^ga eligi-
bility but a
t Cancer center and
dorm sites okayed
Bv Frank Hidder
l>B Staff Writer
two pn»pc»sed dorm .it< s h<i< dUtS the proposed UCLA
Cancer Center, SchiMil of Nursing facilU) were iipproved last
w#ek by tbe IK hnard of Regents
I he U( RegentN approved %hl million lor the new residential
suites. whi< h would house an additional TBB students and would
be Uicat*'^ n tbe present parkniig lots it and 1^ T hr profect
weiitd Ht .mpftelad by Lall '7K
Accuiding to Steve Salm, reaidcncc hall iidminntrator. the
buildings would include Mi, ^ni afid three b* »m %uites to
house two to SIX ttudefm mi/ cacb.
**fhe rates will be S;ignificanfty higher than tboae of the
dormt.** %9Am taid. ''probablV \i tbe area of $250 higher per
^-1
ich Bartow and ^ I
It Marques was
lie didn t with-
Atn, Wtimm 24 «|Mr
IPfiar 10 tbt dggH, bBi I gat
a ggB laii in tiM aftamggg
bafore tlw draft and
Maufggt igid be iMMNi't
tf fci
student per
$1,395 lor a
11.630 per year
Cafelerm facilities in H
tor es pension to acco
As part of tbe appro
nrnve oul of tbe d<if m§ a
leet in be iitcd at the st
ly. tbe dormitory rates aie
would wean approaiawtilf
ed
I
mm >-> Hi
Cut
wbi
to
icb ai|Ml Btaber Hall are alto slated
tbtf additional studtnttl '
pUfV. a separate residence hall
al*o be coneiniciM **We pbM to
leave tbe approaimat'* ^ HgO t^BBW
diacfeuoa
"We are ottering market qtialify b«kM|g.** SiiHn said, ^with
wood frame and wallbeard instead of eement and steel " Because
of tbe eapaatad bigb dasMMid. Salm said aa aHocatwn system it
being coatamplttrd ' ^
In addiMa to tbe Board of Regents' pro^ apprc^t of tiM
S2I millian Cancer otgtar, ibe Stale AttipiMy in Sacramento
voted laat week to ap|Kove approximately |4 3 miUion lor tbe
NtiraMM fialMol tegment of the proiect from tbe Heatth Sdcimet
Boad Ttmd Jf approved after tbe legislaiure^s reeet* by tbe
Fiinfml grain for a Mial of S6 f mtlbaa
Proiaet design will continue deapBe tbe dday by tbe legislature.
■■Hiding to CbaagiBor Cbarles E Young as tbe S6 7 mdlioa
cnnmiluim *^ pail of tbe profam.
Incorporated imo tbe S2I million HoMMrc will be soaoe for a
ril
ai Medtcinr piugram
I
1
t
3
Blinkets page employees
),' ,
Winging yourway. .t~
the outrageous new novel
by the author of
Another Roadside Attraction
Worke rs see the 'ligh t '
I
Tom Robb(r>« has a grasp on thingt that 6mi
9im% tha bcMa. «od ha $ aiso a M^oriociaas
^mtimmf 1 hopa iha booli a«Ms and aaiia m¥i
«nnds up changing tha bramici^a of Amanca
Tht bast Uttkon fto tar to coma out of tha
Amancan counterruttura
.^^ ' Oortf 8o«M A '
cvcNCQiacims
Gcrififiuifs
by Tom Robbins
V^ *' . >4i»«»' S ' •.<■«; ^o«# 'MiMaM'9
Houghton Mifflin Company
The bhnking lighti
in OMMiy buildiofi around
campu* arc Dot marijuana dc-
tectort flath bulbs or even
misplao0d Christfluf daeora-
tlOflf
The iifhti are part of a
UMWtnity-wide page syiieA,
•ccordtng to Norb SdMrWr.
asftiktant chief enfinecr m the
Phv!iic4il PUmt [>epartmeni
" I he pAgc tyitem is used by
the Steairi PUnt to contact
cnginers «nd laborers The
bhnking lights iignal the em-
ploy ee» to call the Plant office
The paging system ha^ been
in operation "since the stan of
time/' Scherber said They
were imtalled when tiie build-
ingi were built, he added
The lights are not located in
aU the campus building be-
cause the university has gone
to a *'bc^>er" type of page
fvttem tfi some buildings, usu-
aUy the newer ones The other
lystem is also utilized when the
flashing Ughi go on the blink
In the alternate ivstem. an
'**'''""^"' Mmiiar to a walkte
«.«..v wfl ,cd a ***'^-*''^'* u
p » ;■*•
U!
-. *
.1 i
i taiu.
^yd
1 :iE tcuatt
>*'*»-»ra
v$wm
\
— Reme
Powmr R^adiffifi
- .4 - -
The CuidUirKe Center
Xn* SantiMof)
Sanu Mon#ca
*.
igcs but cannot respoad.
They must ute a phone to qill
back.*^ %h€ ripkiaiil.
**Only two cralUawtt. cufio-
diaiis aad engineers, ase the
system The beepers are more
effective because they are car-
ried around.** Scherber said
Many students are confused
about the purpose of the biiok
ing lights One soph oai ore
cooinMrntcd. **l saw those lights
every day last quarter m
Bunche Hail. Sometimes I
thought 1 was going MMaae.
because I tb—ght the light
wasn't there**
**! always thought tiKy told
'when the building w^ moving.
like some sort of seismic
thing." another studer^t said
— Jotfl Zcchow>
(
TAX£ IT EA6y THIS SVtAHBf^. COKE TD C6C.
W^VE GOT EVER/THINe YOU Utlt> R>R. SCMd
COLlfGE BOOK CO.
1002 wEsrwooD BiVD w-8051 mm
MON- '
SAT 10-10 SUN IZ-g-
CUttCD S«M 27
Summer Bruin
PuDiishad twiea a waak during tha
'days (oiiowino holidays, and axamination panods t>y tha ASUCLA
Communtcations Board 306 Waalwood Plaza Los Aogaias Califorr>ia
90024 Copyright 1976 by tha ASUCLA Comm.uotcationt Board
at tha Los AngaldB ^oat Offica
•»,-
EdHof
A»»ca Shon
frmnk Stailworth
Gaoff Quihf^i
Susan Kar>e
Tad Shapiro
Fran« MTioaar Sally Qarnar
Kim WHdman MichaNa Ouvai
David WhiYnay Joanna igiash
Michaai Sowdhaimar
Stava Firiliy- -
Jaft Lmpjr
Maria Lavio«
Howard Poa^ l-*Hr? •^^•'^•r
Adam Pari ray Cathy Saipp
Jaff MUcUsi
M»«ia].aa
Rojaitrta Kaye
Joa Jonas Paiti Crost
Joanne Rafko^^ch, Jaff™McLaod
Jodt Zachowy
j'+r 'Jana W»90d
Dicli Krauz
MiAe Dashftfo- Barry Gray Alan Michaai .Kar^atoig
Adam Pfaffa^ Carol Starr Rot)art Walsh Louis Watanaba Laurs
Aaaiatant
Maws EdNofS
Edllorial Olfactoft
>r!« Editor
MSUnt Sports EdMor
PHolo EdHor
AMisian^ Photo Editor
aa«ana«nma««r Indai Editors
ii« tndei Editors
HS^ Editof
An OiM'vclor
Copy EdMor
Evanis EdHor
WfMars Miha FinaQOM Jaff Latar Boo >lisbar Cihdy Luis
Gvagg Raoaau Paul Factii
fMagrapMars Gifnn SalM^Soi Otasaa Paula Gibaon Aar>dy Gilic
Ofiity G«Ma Naai Nataomd^
Ad Matt: Vicai'Vanca
FIZZA
GR 8 0123
MS
KKA 'OGO
. Op«n 7 D»yi
'^ '" ^iiSBiaMastta > t am to s am
BctwMn Barrington and Bundy
11S13Wilthir«Blvd. 478-0123
iNVSlODiy
\
Crossroads Africa cleared
■) ■ )
\U%4 of yesterday s hair?
of charges of PTF violations
•y Ems Wolpen
Dl SUIT ^rhar <
The Crosaroaat AInca pro-
gram, aaoaaai d> ^^MJlMf rr^
fraflB Taik Force' (PTF) guide-
lines, has been exonerated by
Vice Chancellor Nonnin Mil-
ler, aocordmg to his special
assistam. Bob Wcllman.
The program was charged
with paying travel expenses
and including students who
would not return to UCLA to
explain their expenenoat. TiMt
would violate PTF guidelines.
The investigation taaa
prompted by a letter from ex-
Cuhurat Affairs Commissioner
John Withers. Weliman laid
the $8,400 grant went for **fees
and living eftpdMat,** not
travel
Some of those in t1ie pro-
gram are seniors and will not
return to UCLA as students.
but Weliman said this is irrele-
vant to PTF guidelines The
gliideiines require grant re-
ctptent5 to return to the UCLA
community to share their ex-
periences with students
Miher called this a "logistic-
al problem.'" saying PTF daat
not require grant recipients lo
PsycF^ 70
and Faber
both cut
iy Paul Farhl
Dl Staff Writer
Psychology 70. a course
taught here for 1 1 years by
Carl Faber. has been dropped
became of a lack of iicademic
content and a failure of en-
rolled students to attend Ice -
tMres« according to Harlan
Lewis, dean of the College of
Letters and Sciences
In addition, Faber has not
been rehired for next fall and
his salary discontinued as a
resuh of the decision to drop
the CQiine.^
Lewis said he had received
complaints from students aad
teaching assistants about the
content of Faber's course
**They said it had n >n
tent basically V as far as spe-
cifics Were concerned." Lewis
said **rhey said simpl> that he
(Faber) doesn't teach anything
and that they haven's bcea
learning anything."
According to Lewis, there
(Continued on Page 4)
STUDENT RUSH
THE BEST
AMERICAN PLAY
IN THE LAST FIVE
YEARS'
' Dan Sullivan,
L A Timm
Tlia LmI NaaMngCr Tba
Ki>i4hts
Cfffbc
^fel4t>olia
tgmt^ 7 pmS 9 30 pm
a^aaiBr r30pm
MHu^tntftr. Citif«n ^^ph
t% minutM to curfMn
ntf.
rttf MsssnpsttaRs Fiasw csii
85&0125
Groum, -t**^ Abbott 345-7170
GMioirr Theatre
Jig rv LaCtSfw«S Mvd.,
I II ilHHil fAttOQsa
be students at the termination
of their profact.
Miller said that although not
policies or procedures were
violated, this would be the last
year of PTF funds for Croaa-
roadi Africa
''There are a limited number
of students involved in this
program roaiyared to ether
programs funded by PTF. and
there are probably more ap-
propriate funding methods
than PTF WeUoMa iMd.
Miller was upset because
UCLA seemed to be loosing its
autonomy in this program.
C rossroads Africa m under the
auspices of the State [>epart
ment in Washington which,
accordmg to Miller, is trying
to eafMld Its influence on the
program
This IS contrary to PTF
policy, he said PTF is in-
tended to fund student ini-
tiated program.s helping them
get off the ground Crotaroads
Africa is a national program
that has now been funded for<
ia¥cral years Miller said "my
preference is to work with
those mvolved to find a more
appropriate funding source **
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t-i,
Psychology 70 . . .
(Continuad-froM Pis* ^)
WM **a diacrcpancy between the number of students that
up for the dsM and the number that actoally tkmmd up lo
lectures Only about 10 per cent were showing up.** Lewis taid he
attended osc isaaaofi of the class himself.
Faber, who will now devote his attention to his fuU-time
private practice, isid he felt "hurt and betrayed** by the dismittal
He said he may continue to teach the oottne in the Expenmeniai
Coiieie if student efforts are uaMMSSMful in reinstating him
**The biggest issue here is the lack of appreciation for what Km
doing,** Faber said **I feel that the course I was offering wa*
invaluable**
Students who enrolled in Faber's class had only one graded
assignment during the quarter a term paper on various themes
iiss^ed by Faber
^rom the beginning 1 tried to separate the lectures from the
assignments. The only reason we had them was to learn
soflKthing about living. I never gave exams on anything wc
covered duririg lectures,** he i»aid
**Students were taking advantage of the cIms in a wholesale
way Seventy-five per cent of those who took the class did so
never interuiing to come to lectures I admit the class has been
used but 1 haven*t been willing to force attendance as a way of
working out my hurt or bludgeoning the subject mto the student
Sieve Scheer. a sophonfiorc who took tht^ class during thr
spring quarter, is head of an informal **committce which
attempting to gam Faber's reinstatemcni
''1 feel what Faber taught was the mof»t relevant and importam
'iuhiect on campus." Schcer said "It'v vnmcthing that vou jus(
.1 get trom a degree "
'There have been abu^bes in terms ol attendance but J thinf
i^ the structure of the ( l>n»v^rsity) system whicli facilitates ii
class like this comes up and there are bound to he abuses becau>
of the eunapctitive nature Oi this school. '
z
I.
save 20%
men s
work shirts
6.00
elsewhere 7.50
All cotton blue chambray — tho
classic, the winner' S-M-L-XL
'■ -^^
Men's Levis
Button-up Jeans
here, 11.50
elMwhere 12.25 and higher
•poftawfaf b laval.
ackarman union 825-(!^7ll
mon-fri 8 30-5 30
lat Hk4
MT in the
would be
'■'^^
Fund debate . . .
(C oniiiiurd from Page 1)
I ncfCMC^ starting in the fall ol
19T7. Universit) President
David S Saxo.n's proposal
.would set policy tor the use of
both the reg and educational
tees $IUO and $110 respcctiveiv
Of the $210 per quarter tota^l as
well as the J as
overhead on ie^htrai is,.
Presenily. /liniversiiv I tnan-
cuil""* Aid (separate troai stale
and federal aid) is paid for out
i>f the ed )nal fet and the
UnivcrsitN Opportunitv l-und
(derived from lead funds)
An estimated $10 4 million
has alreadv been budgeted
from the Opportunity Fund lor
hnancial aid to.. \jC students
starting JuK I
According lo knowledgeable
sources, the rolll^ack of the
overhead rate tor this next fiscal
year, ordered by the Regents
' laai Friday, could lead to un-
expected cuts in University
financial aid There alto exists
a possihilitv that during the
1977-78 year an i
educati'orul fee
ryi '
It the Kegehts approve the
reg fee increase at their July
meeting in San Francisco, the
Dniyersity financial aid bucket
would be filled entirely by the
educational lee
** I his seems to me a rea-
saaably solution to the prob-
lem sen ling on a permanent
policy for, the educational fee
^n^ continuing to look at the
Opportunity Fund lor support
'fnr a cad oniic programs, even
though the lund may v^ell be
substantia IK reduced." Sa.xon
said
Saxon's proposal wt>uld in-
clude* the* shifting of mm-
student programs curre.ntly
funded out ot t^e ed tee to
either the reg fee, the State or
lo miscellaneous funding
sources.
According to Saxon, the
current p racial is based en
he assumption that the state
v^ill allocate an additional $^
millii)n for the 1977-78 lj(
budget
"If the Slate does not pr«»
tide the $9 million dollars
It is clear that more substantial
student fee increases (more
than the proposed maximum
increase ol $31 per quarter)
vfcill he neceisary.**
Vet. according to Stol/. the
I niversity of- California can-
not make this assumption
TI
— EnglttH CttvtrwaHL fret intofmal prac
tice lor U0tt^ siuisais ati viaaors. lOaat
r^onn WawaayssaaWaainidaifi Acfcarmtn
-UCLA Vilip Fat ChIL ^ts oeamnos for
new memtwPS vlio wiN coattfiat ttlroug^ the
ftft Staff ftctHty taesMsaliarf mvitetfto
join For )n(ormat»on caS 1-3 pai. Tuesday
ittf MMfitSdJy
ITl
mN praitnt a
concart noaf« Juae 29 SchaswDsn audi
torium Free
M€£T1NSS
Psia«.'YOJi«rT!ne30 Frtnz I2i0
Photographers
needed for
Summer Bruin 1
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Kerckhoff 110
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Jh9 UCLA Committ#€ on finm Artt Production^ in cpoptratiOD Mvith UCLA Sumnl«r S#M»Of^
y-i'
\
FOR UCLA STUDENTS AT fSTTJiP PRICES!
SHAKESPEARE FILM SERIES
.r~
artistry 6fWr Lauranca Olivlaf — six allarnata Friday avaninga at 7:00 p.m. - Royca Hall
Friday, Jujly^^
RH HARD In • Directed by Laurence Olivier (1866, England. Tectinl-
color. 138 minutes) Cast Laurence Olivier. Claire Bloom Cedric
Hardwicke, Ralph Richardson. John Gielgud
THE TAMIN(; OF THE 8HREW • Directed by Sam~ Taylor (1929
U.S.A.. 71 minutes) Cast Mary Pickford, Douatas Fairbanks Note
this is a ra//r/e
Friday, July 16 .• >
^ROMEO AND/IXIET • Directed by Franco Zeffirelli (1968 Eng-
land, color 138 minutes) Cait: Olivia Hiita«y. Laonard Whiting. Milo
O'Shea. Michael York
THETAMIX.OFTHKSHKKH • Directed tey Franco Zeffifelll
(1»67. Italy, color, 122 minutes) Cast: Richard Burton Elizabeth
Taylor
Friday, Jiily 30
A MIDSlBfMl^R NIGHT'S DREAM • Directed by Peter Hall (1968
England, color, 124 minutes) Cast Diana Rigg, David Warner Ian
Richardson
rtAMLET • Directed by Laurence Olivier (1948. England. 152 min- '
utat) Cast: Laurence Olivier, Jaan Simmons. Anthony Quayle ,
Friday, Auguat 13 ^
HENRY V • Directed by Laurence Olivier (1946. England, Techni-
color. 137 miriutes) Cast: Laurence Olivier. Robert Newton
FALHTAFF • Directed by Orson We<les (1967. Spain. 115 minutes)
Cast: Orson Welles. Jeanne Moreau, Margaret Rutherford, John
GMMia
Friday, Auguat 27
OTHELro • Directed by Laurence Olivier (1966. England, color.
166 minutes) Cast: Laurence Olivier. Maggie Smith. Frank Findlay
Joyce Redman
■ - '—-■ ^
MA<:beth • Directed by George Schaefer (1961. Eooland. 107 min>
utes, color) Cast Maurice Evans. Judith Anderson. Michael Hnrdesm
Jan Banrien , ^ T^
Friday, Saptambar 10
KINC; LEAR • Directed by Peter Brook (1971. England. 134 minutes)
Cast: Paoi Scofield. Irene Worth. Jack MacGowran, Cyril Cusack
-Patrick Meae^
AS YOl LIKE IT • Directed by Paul Czrnner (1936. England. 97
minutes) Cast Laurence Olivier, Elitabath Bergner
>
[
r
&
I
»
UCLA loses its class
(of 76)
■—■1 .,.7'~.-:7
Students $1.50
''The Gentle Art of Makinii
Enemies**
tuasday, Thuraday, Saturday,
July 20, 22, U 8:30 p.m. Royca Hall
Far more than historical or courtroom drama is
this theatrical recollection of the famotts trial
which took place on November 25. 1878 when
James McNeill Whistler, controversial Ameri-
can painter, brought suit against John
Ruskin, foreoiost English critic of the age for.
among other things, calling him "a coxcomb
asking 200 guineas for flinging a pot of paint in
the public s face." ft is the rapier wit of Whistler
SUMMER THEATER
''TEDDY, in Thai Splendid Little
; War"*
Wadffiaaday, Friday/Sunday,
July 21, 23, 2S 8.30 p.m. Royca Hall
This latest work of Jon Phillip Palmer was com-
; missioned by the Cartipus Bicentennial Com-
mittee at U.C. Berkeley, where it recently had
Its world premiere. Epic in scale, with a cast of
^ 40, It has been compared to "Oh. What a
Lovely War. "The Charge of the Light
Brigade, and "How I Won the War ' A much '
misunderstood but legendary part of Ameri-
can history. Roosevelt s splendid little" Spanish-
American War is ripe for satire
-K
FREE
DRESS REHEARSAL
FOR UCLA
SUMMER STUDENTS '
Currant Reg. Card admits you
at tha door. Both rahaa#aala at
8:30 p.m., Royca Hall
'Gantia Art . . .' Sat., July 17
"Taddy...*; Sun., July 18
Phot oa by
Glenn SeUi
Neal Narsumt'dci
THE FROMT PAGE, by Ben
Hecht and Charles MacArthur • Ralph
Freud Playhouse. Macgowan Hall • July
B-1 1 . The newsroom of a criminal courts
building becomes a cauldron of comedy
and excitement for reporters, criminals,
politicians, wives and sweethearts in
what has proven, to be an ageless
cJaas»c of the American theater
STUDENT TICKETS: $1.00 available
UCLA DEPARTMElVr OF THEATER ARTS
■-•"Pl^A, by Luigi Pjrandello • The
Little Theater. Macgowan Hall • July
1 5-25. This pastoral tale of happy pagan-
ism is set in an atmosphere of everyday
vrllage life. Yet. even as Pirandello cele-
brates the simple pleasures, underlying
see the darker passions breeding love,
hate and destruction.
. 1 (
TAKE WE ALOMG . Music and
lyrics by Rot)ert Merrill, book by Joseph
Stein and Robert Russell, based on the
play. "Ah Wilderness by Eugene O'Neill.
Ralph Freud Playhouse. Macgowan Hall •
July 29-Augu8t 1 • The genial satire of
O'Neill takes on the musical theater form,
in a sunny comedy of adolescence and
middle age m Centerville. Conn., U.S.A.
^'
f RencB cbocBins
—J ,
••tiS
10912 Lc Contf
(By UCLA Main Lniranoe)
477-7571
¥
at Thaatar Arts Box Office, Macgowan Hall (no limit on numbar of tickata availabia)
P'^ '^?-.®*^ ^*'*' COLDEX W t ST. an antartainmant t>y *'Tha Mothar Loda
^^C'WP*' Sunday Auguat 8 8KX) p.m. Schoanbarg Hall
On Ma^ch 22 1852. a coloraturs of extraordinary chmrm presented her first concert m San Fran-
?^!^n ^? T'"'«^^ ^''?^^^J'' benarmg tie social aapects of a crude and unpolished frontier
town Elisa B.scacc.anti The American Thrush. ' Waa the embodiment of grace domestic joys
"^oTo ?'^"'®'L -qualities long since at>andonad by the thousands who had come to the town ^
m 1848 to seek their foriunes m gold Following her concert, the diva wm^f^red^i^h
bouquets, and her carnage drawn thfeygh the atiaata by her av.d fans. Eight months after
Hayw^TheSwan^^^^^ '""^ '''^'^ ^"^^^ ^^ '^^ American diva, came Kate
STUDENT TICKETS: $2.00
(2 tickets par I.D., limitad
numt>ar availabia)
PRESERVATION HALi^AZZ BAND
Friday, Saturday, Julys. 10 Royca Hall 8:30 p.m.
JOHN KLEM MER
Saturday, August 28 8:30 p.m. Royca
SLMMER alAZZ
STUDENT TICKETS: %2M
(2 tickets par I.D., limHad
mimbar ayaMabli)
«ERAE» WIC^ON ORCHESTRA
Saturday, July 31 8:30 p.m. Royca Hall
AWITA O'DAY m4 Trl^
<My17 aatMMkMHall
ihhll^J^^^ ?^ ^'^^^ J^Oil AT I €LA CENTRAL TICKET OFFICE. «54» Weirtw.^ Pl>» riiMRVWT
SCM.VIKB SESSIO^ Rf;C^ card REOUREU. 82.S« >(TI jnrvr Ri'KU nril^rtw^trf ^I^^Sl,*''^***^'^^
^f7i^£^ '"^ AVAILARLE, FO^ ^Zik^^i SEXC^ "i/SiJ^SSlI ™Sr*S5l.F« T2S;
THEATER ART$» DEPT. PLAYS. '^'"- » »n mikK^ri^AKft. FILM SERIES Al^R
1
Closing
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~N
^Commencement Creates Complaints
by Phyllis Erdahl Manger
Letters to the Editor
V
(tditor i ^ote Msng^ received her MA in
It was J glorious day th^i i&, the wedither sunny
and clear thf^ fniisic moving, the atmosphere
^ smiling . but §omcihing was missing Speeches
5 ^ere made i>nd diplomas awards H ^- • thing
^wii^riousty wrong. Wf werelhe.r i*^. niuic ihan
«*« just pomp, this day was more than just a circum-
I stance One ot the landmarks o( a litetime, gradua-
^ tion day symb<il»sf»H for me a real step forward.
j' So what did ^ ,,'*nM little humor in the form of
2 « red umbrella presented to Darlene Walsh by
i«i Chancellor Young was light and friendly Bishop
Ward tcipp^d that with his benediction, closing the
eremonies bv a*'k in^ to be allowed to drop d name;
(iOd' Thisse* ^h and fairly original. Hunrwr
las its > fortunately.
The I jal'and ethical KI|tlpOint of the day
was without a doubt fhe speech by Brian Robert
Budenholzer At l^^^t one speaker recognized that
there was such a ihmg^ human values dr^^ that tktif
somehow take precedence over selfish or c ommer-
cial, one%. "Being before doing" was the crux of hiC
argupwnt. and that delivered in a dynamic style. His
defense of excehence included not only the
teaching of a certain worthy professor that his
human compassion as well: noticing the sadncfs on
the face of one of his" class members and Inter-
rupting his lecture to encourage her. The highpoint
then was a personal message of a rather philo-
sophical nature, one which C;Ould wisely be
extrapolated to social, economic, and politica' '*" ^'^
on a national or international sc ale
What was the second highest point of the day
) among the speeches we heard^ Perhaps there was
one that I missed. Where was any mention of the
foreign students present? Do they or their counPKn?^
exist? What about the minorities in our own
country? They were at least acknowledged in
pasting, but they certainly were not represented on
the podium. What about the urgent needs of our
land and of the wider world, problems which this
^aduatjon class faces and hr^pgfuHy m pfpymf <o-
meet? Why weren't tK^y at least addrwted?
Although what was not saM was bacf •--. ugh, what
wat %sid was embarrassing or even ui>^acelul. If
mir>orities were not represented. wquMfi were —
theoretically. That is, there was one woman speaker
She did not represent women however. What
Darlene Walsh did represent m fact is q.ujte
puz/ling, to say the very least. With no atfemrif to
d^Hne her language she cheerfully armounc t . jt
2nd, 3rd, and 4th rate people were OK too Soft
groans and discouraged counururK ts amonj^ the
graduates sitting around nne clearly demonstrated
that my dismay at this blatant condescension was
neither mi n nor unique 2nri, 3rd. and'4th rate
people seenrto be the basis tor a fiew kind of class
system that is 'Ok , . presumably as long as its
mtmi^vn rememb€nr''to which rate they belong
Is anything we have learn€»d hereat UCIA valid if
we go ^wav thinking that some of us are superior'
people — or that some of u^ are first-rate'^ Rather
we uni\ graduates arf very fortunate people ,
With cKJf euucation come responsibilities that thev
did not mmmtpn af the ceremonies Hopefully we
are not unaware ot that tac t and are asking ourselves
.)^hat are ihese responsibilities and how do we it
discharge them^
Hgmankind is linked at a h^gh^Jevel than Ms
Walsh s language »^ould ln'^^ ^'e Until we learn to
elirninate ratings on the vaiu.t v>i human beings, we
hay^e a long hard climb ahead to reach person-
hood' arid human dignity.
Pisces Pal
Editor:
Three* cheers to our agronomy
departments' Dr. Harland W
Epps! Dr. Epps fcmciy got pro-
— moted from an associate professor
to a full professor, and we stu-
. dttflU lael that Or Epps' promo-
tion was certainly well deserved,
yet long overdue
We consider ourselves ex-
tremely fortunate to have,, been
able to be class members, of an
Astronomy course conducted by
Dr Epps. and feel overwhelmed
and delighted to know that Dr
^pp^ >^^^ recognized tor his out-
standing work Wed like to thank
everyone who took part in pro-
moting Or. Epps, since we^do
re^ie and appreciate tfiis fine
kind, considerate brilliant, under-
standing, sincere, and unique
teacher, who is truly a pal to all —
a "Pisces pal." Our heartiest con-
gratulations to you, Dr Epps'
Names Witheld
or scrub
paying a
Spain
h-
Editor:
You can live a pampered life for
)ust forty dollars a week in the
Spanish Pyrenees. You'll never
make a bed.cook^a meal, sweep
a floor, worry about
doctor's bill or even
wonder what you'll do for the
evening Whole enjoy spending?
their summers there Where? A4
I a Re>idencia in Jaca, the summer
school of the University 6i Zara
goza You swim in rh*»ir p6ol, pidv
tennri on then _urts, learn
Spanish dancing, play the casta-
nets and sing their songs, if you so
choose And, incidently. you'll
«|Mik Spanish like a native when
summer is over. One month or
two. that's up to you
Our mcjrnings were spe
classes of various levels. The prof-
essors were so kind and ^ .rt-
ive towards us that we felt an
incentive to learn and to
Spanish. Our afternoons were tor
sports, socializing exploring the
village iwd study And our even
ings were filled by visiting, live-in
performers,, one week of cbssical
guitar concerts, another of piancj
recitals, performances of Luis
BunueJ rhovies and folklorico
dancers. Or». for those who pre-
ferred sometliing ebe, jaca t of
fered two discotheques and »
skating rink
To live and be part o» so. dfK tent
and still unspoiled an area as Los
Pirineos. nestled among rru)um>
ains ten thousand feet high, was a
unique part of it. There was r>ever
a waft of srriog nor even r.3rs on
fCn^ntinued un V»^t H)
7w
vdtloTMk reprngwl a m^fority opitikm of tHr Swnirn. > Hrmn i^rtrud loard AN o«*irr
coImmi«, kllcit. Jfid .«rtiwor4i reprMrnI thr opinion ol ihr author tnd do not ne<r%wirily rrllcK-| Hie ¥irw%
ot Hie EdMorul loafd M«^nbm o4 the loard J»r Mk9 Short. edilor-in-diir<: Franli SuUworlh. managM^
Kim WiMRMn, frank WU4«r. and SaNy Cam«r. nr«v« rdMon: Joanne Eglath and David WKitney.
rwi dirrckm: M»r«tael SonStmwr. tpovlk editor; Howard PoMicr. anlvrtainment inde« cdilor; ju^
~j^ Alan Mirfturi ftarbrlniK. Uatf rrprrM'niativ*.
Written material m^mimtd mu»l be typed and Iriplr-«p4< ed. ining 10-45 mdrgm%. THe length limit k M
line% nvMMAum. AR KMlertal nuMl bear file name and phswe fMimber ol 4he author; Mm9>t mm be
withheld Irom publication on re^uc»t. Mo telephone 'nuadbtw drfibcjirtnled. The Sun»n/.r «m//' re«erye«
the right to edit «ubmitted material and tb determirte itk pla< emettf on the Viewpoint mge». Material ir
Aje at noon Iwo day% betorr desired publication date, though pubTKation i* not guaranteed under any
cirrunMlame%. ^N mMrrisi submitted become* the property ol tiie Sunyuer brum
'
.. i
5.00
and up
LAST DAY!
Indian Jewelry at Wholesale Prices!
Kningo works — signaturv pi#CM
HMklacM, rings, brac«tets
-t_i. . ...
■■■ '! I|
a/^ammlmmm^t^maammitm
■ ' •¥•
f - II II
iCKemian union 825-7711
OQ9n monday-ffiday 6 30-5 30, Saturday io-4
More letters
K ontinurd frooi Page S)
fhe roads It was anotktr world
fpom what most of us there were
Uted to )aca an elenth century
Roman vrllage on the Aragon
Siver , had its own charm But we
also covered all ot northern Spam
in our twice weekly excursions
the running ol llir bulls at
Pampiona, San ScbMtiafi's fiifie-
teenth century elegance aod a
swim in the Atlanttc. a ipodk ol a
village iMclied high m the nx>unt-
ains celebrating its Sair^t's Day and
dancing with the natives m the
vtUafe %quare, shepherds roasting
lamb on spits ^Of our leasts in yet
higher mountains, snow still in
their crevices, and on it went.
And forty dollars a week ts
incredible If this for you, |u$t
write to the Secretary of Summer
Courses, University of Zaragoza.
Zaragoza, Spain
Cobean yea
I don't mind being misquoted
in the lur^ 3, 1976 issue of the
Daily Brum One who is wiser said,
"You haven't bei»h baptised until
you have been misqiMsd in the
Brum '' What I do mind is the fact
that the quotes which vvere attri-
buted to me were exactly the
opposite of what 1 said at ihetirrte
of the interview. On. the very first
line of the article, ne less, there tt
was, in daming, tiefamatory
quotes, "Citing a lack of crea-
tivity' on this cannpus, Weitwmd,
UCLA's quarterly publication of
the Arts, will seek off-campus
contrrbutors. " I would like to have
this space to offic^lly deny that I
ever so much as mumbled the
above quote
It IS a polK V -< fhe UCIA Soard
of Communiva;rons. a policy with
which I wholeheartedly afree, lor
Wesfwind to contain at Ipatt ti%
studer^t work tt is. ^Hef. aN. a
campus publication Further-
more,' \|ualified outside sub-
oMMions are sclccfd only So that
the UCLA community wiM not
create in a vacuum, ar\d not be
ca^se there 'is a 'tack of creativity
on this campiJs^ Iw^td. it might
ity^mmH the Brum clan that there
were so many good submissions
to the Spring issue of We§iwind
from this rawipMs. that my^ staff
and I had an ewiriwiy dtfficmt
time deciding what would be
accepted and what would be
returned. In fact, over 85% of the
Spri^ issue is entirely home
grown.
Therefore, I would like to a-
pologize to the UCLA community
9nd to the Communrtations
Sbard. whose generous support
makes Westwijid possible, on
behalf of the Daily Brum The
rightful outrage caused by tf»e
aforementioned sloppy, unpro-
iffiiional journalism must be ap-
pmmmd. I sifKerely hope that this
small complaint, small only rela-
tive tp the size of the miury^ will
help
Charles S. Cobean
Weslwind
Cobean nay
As an aspiriijg poet it was very
distressing to read the article
about 4^^estwind in yesterday's
Brum Having read quite a few
publications of similar nature and
previous editions of Westwind, 4
believe that edit6r Charles
Cobean deserves some serious
evaluation.
He cites a 'lack of creativity "on
this campus. 4 believe he ts mis-
taken; the volumes of or igir^
Pre-lnventory
BOOK SALE
20%
0
OFF ENTIRE
STOCK!
•■tended through July 3rd
■'.■•'
.' ■ «
Westwood Book Store
UCLA since 1935)
N tfOM much mor* man g«« books .. .
This bookstore is typtcal of the many to be found in those
American communities where reading is a genuine and
vital force It exists for the sale of beeto. But it also exists
fc*' services whose profits are rendered only to you ~ not
to Its owners It is for instance, a browsing place where
you can spend minutes or hours picking up books,
glancing through them. t>eing captured by a sentence
and reading a pige It is an information center where
iacts about books and the people who — over the
centuries — have written them are more readily available
than in any place other ttian your public library They are
.centers of advice, too Advice about what would best
cheer a sick friend, most appropriately remewber a
bifihday. or enchant you on the rainy evening ahead
Here, however little is your intent to buy. you are
welcon>e This — and its fellow bookstorea— are unique
among American
■, nf m t
.::.^
J
1021 Bfoxton Ave.
Westwood VHtoQe
IAofi.-Tliiiirs. e a.|M. - tt p.Ri.
Fd. A tat e aju, -
9p.M.
B of A and Maatercharge accepted
Ym ImII Hi lust caM Into tht tffict to rtst for a low mimilii — i» industry'^ fH
1 bad Miegli raputation alraafiy wNtaM tiilali
materia) submitted could fill many
editions of any literary magazir>e.
But ^ he finds it necessary lo
seek pff-campus contributors
This action is unfair as^he students
are the ones who pay for the
pMblication of Westwind. and
they are the or>es %er\ed by it I
Ijtunk that his "lack of creativity"
excuse is a manifestation of his
editoriaiego He \ir«ints to create a
multi- media approach ludgm^
by last quarter's edition he totally
failed at integrating the verbal
(poetry) an<^ visual aspect of multi
mmdia concepts Finally he wants
to welcome all contributors, the
tone of the article and his attitude
seem to contradict this desire
Maybe Cobean should beconr>e
an English One TA or accept the
iob with the Allman Bros
- ■ V nlaflie Mr itMielfl
i_„...alSSf^
Bring your letters,
columns, and cartoons
to Kerckhoff 110.
*
I I -iiirti-
■r
I
PANTS
SKIRTS.
T SHIRTS
DRESSES
PRE-WASH
JEANS
I
•miat. a ft|. 'ia f •«H»M aooa to s
laita
Bi^'^WWi^Wfl^^pM
I jt
..J---^-^
I*"
vco Center;^
Cinema I
479-0711
SCVfN KAUTIES (t)
1 30 3 40, «:00, tiM. 10:30
Avco Center
inema II
BIRCH INTERVAL - PG
6:00, %A^, 1C:35
475-0711
Avco Center
Cinema
Wikh«r« n«or
475-071 1
PoHl Indoor Avco Gorog*
THE SAILOt WHO FEU FROM
GRACE FROM THE SEA -(R)
1:35. 3 40. 5:43. • 00, 10:10
^OCt^K 1
DUCHESS AND OIRTWATER
Beverly Hills ^^jf®'
) bik io.t of tevHy Or E<;H0ES of a summer (PG)
2711121
6:00 pm
Sol A Sun. sp^n 12:30
Brentwood I
2524 Wilshir*
lot"28»#» $».)
829 3366 829 3367
Audr«y H«pbum S«oh C«nn«ry
ROBIN AND MARIAN
pl«M
S»r«iMind ond Radford in
THE WAY WE WERE
Brentwood
2524 Wiithir*
(of 76lh St ; ,-•
Sonto MooKO
829 3366 825 3367
^ca«K4
FOOD OF THE GODS
ond
W.C. FIELDS AND ME
Monn's
Bruin
477-09i8
MURDER BY DEATH (PG)
1:IS, 3:30 4:45, 4:30. 3:15 10:d0
-Mtt
Century
Plaza I
TC40 Av« of S»ar«
553^4291
BLUE BIRD
DMly«tX4/4, t, 10
^* T^ Jt> M &
Mtff
Century
Plozo II
2040 Av« of S»on
553-4291
^ HAWMPS
plus th^rt
BENJrS LAST STORY
Doily at 7, 5, 7:30/10 pm
Dfcmunt TickoH AvoilobW ot K«rdrl««IV leii Offk*
Cinerama
Dome -.^_
■Swnft«t nmar Viiw
Hoiywood 466-3401
In 70 mm Sfarwplunk
LOGAI!^ S RUN (PG)
Doily 13:30. 3:00, 5:30, 8:00, 10:30
Crest
Cinema
1262 WMiwood B»vd
272 5876
\' 474-7366
NEXT STOP,
GREENWICH VILUGE
UES MY FATHER TOLD ME
Fox Venice
620LmkoM Mvd.
3«*>4215
Adult SI 50
Chitd SI 00
\
6/2S Gfm^ T(
4 3*-2t turfy
* 29 Tlw Wlf«d
6/80 Hvlpl
7/1 mmmt
>/Pri*i fkmCmfmnd ithimtk
tdmn
•t SKm
Hollywood
Pacific
Ho6y*^ood 8^d
466^5211
FOOD OF GODS (PG)
plus
JACKSON COUNTY JAIL (R)
Daily fpMfi 13:30
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Los Feliz
1822 N Vomioftt
N0 4-216f
Now Fioncli Rim Ptosfivol
A PIECE OF PLEASURE
^^^B^ww ^voonos0oy
ICY BREASTS
Dolon A MhoIMoOsw^ ^
Manns
THE TENANT
12:45, 3:05, 5:30, 7:50, 10:15
—
•
k^~ ' ^ .^
• S ': ■
- .J....
w ^ ^
^
; •
*««
*iV
«
An 'Omen' with a Revelation
JolM JB
Had soMonc fed aJJ of the
ingredients for a tucoHlM motion picture
into a computer, they could not hve come
up with a more commercial product than
The Omen. While David Seltzer's original
screenplay provides enough intellectual
i content to attract those who deliberately
avoided films like Tlie Exordrt, John
Richor^on's often breathukingly stim-
ning special effects give the film the kind
o# shock value which brought many
people back to see Cxorciat again and
again
Yet despite its seemingly calculated
qualities. Omen is an engrossing, chilling
and ultimately disturbing motion picture,
hitting with ten times the impact of
Exorciit. ' '
It centers on the prophesied coming of
a Demon Child, predicted m the Book of
ReVelation, whose birth shortly predates
the end of the world. The film postulates
that with the Jews having returned to
Israel and the Common Market of
Europe representing the nse.of the Holy
Roman Empire, all of the Bible's clues for
^ coming of an anti-Chriit have been
fulfilled
The sign of Satan*8 son is a series of
three sixes — and the adopted sen of a
miHionaire diplomat Robert Thorn was
born ''at 6 am on the sixth day of June,
the sixth month.
AB lor yoml
At the child's fifth^ birthday party, his
loyal young nursemaid hangs herself in
front of all the guests, exclaiming before
jumping to her death, **Look at me,
Damcn ; it's all for you!" At the zoo.
animals flee m panic from the cold-eyed
stare of the boy, and as the family
Mercedes heads through their reserve a
pack of frenzied babboons attacks the car,
appairently bent on dismembering the
child
The continued proliferation of simitar
bizarre incidents leads Thorn eventually "
lo Israel and the ancieni cttv of Maggedo.
where he is convinced that he must indeed
destroy the child to prevent the coming of
Armaggedon By the film's end, the
audience has been driven into such an
cxicted state t%gn the final moment ellicits
*n aiudibie ^p of surpnscd awe.
Proper 8»4entatement
^Direaor kidurd Doner has supervised
^ith^j careful attention ,to nearly
^cry deuil and a beautiful looking film
h« resulted - The performances of
Orcgoi> Peek at Thorn, Lee Remick as
hw Ill-fated v^ifc and David Warner as a
photographer wboM discovery of clues
teads to tht noM aUrtlmg deatb m the
nlm, are a" properly understanted to
contrast v^.ir the unease created m the
audience Gill)ert Taylor's Panavision
cinematography superbly frames every
scene trom the lush greenery of the
Thorn's F h country estate' to the
howling cow t>arrenness of a sacrificial
cemetar> outside *ome.
^Most imp rtantly of all. Stuart Baird's
editing IS Paced perfectly to create a
heart-poundi ,g tension in the audience
The Omen is the type of well crafted
horror tilm ii^hich both terrifies and
delights audit nces On its own, it is a fine
film, with ,r audience, it becomes
experienct 'v-T
m^
an
X
Stephem as iMMiem anti-ChriM
Shaffer's 'Equus' offers msights of insanity
By Howard PoMicr
"Explorations of sanity and insanity are nothing new ip rheaier
for centuries, the stage's most potent moments have dealt with
inner agonies of the mind. Peter Shaher's Equus at the
Huntington Hartford Theatre, is a particularly intense, unsettling
psychodrama that moves with the verve of a nurder-mystery
The enormous power of Equus* power is rooted in its verv
situation a teenage boy (Dai Bradley) .^*^ brought, to a mental
hospital after bhnding six horses with a metal spike The act is so
senselessly savage that the play seems at first to be a>out what
drove a sensitive fand horse-loving) vouth to do it"'
We do indeed learn the reas6n ' a bi/arre hut rather
contrived set of psychological factors that lead the bo\ into awed
horse-worship but it becomes secondary to the psvchologisfs
(Brian Bedford) realization that hni-ch^rge has found a pa^ion
and zeal stronger than anything the formal" world can offer
Bedford reflects midway that while normal ,s the smie on a
child s face. It IS also the vacant stare on the face of most adults
Ull^tely, Equus is about the psychiatrists outlook.
This IS the place for Rib Lovers
By far the Best Ribs we Ve tried in L A
. COMPLETE DINNERS
\Casual Dining „„ $2.75
HARRY'S OPEN PIT BBO
1432 CRESCENT HEIGHTS at SUNSET STRIP
10 Minues Down Sunset Blvd to
Laural Canyon Turn Right And You r» Th9f%
ambitions, frustrations, f runic s marriage.- "protess.onat meno-
pause, and doubts By the pui.'s end. the act of blinding the
horses is sigmficantly unimporiant and anliclimactic m.siead of
k""!"*^ "'.!i.f"^ revolting The final question lies somewhere
between What s the meaning f life'" and "WTiat's the use*^'
Ihe Huntington Hartford production, directed bv John
Dexter, is auvtere and maik: i-fact. eschewing histrionics or
theshian, pyrotechnics for alarfli.ng (directness. For all its subtletv
It moves like a steamroller It 'is aided grealelv bv the princpalw
Bedford as the psychiatrist amt Bradlev as the boy
Bedford handles his part. c^pt..jailv the frequent soliloquys in
lukewarm, discursive sort ol ^ay befitting a man jicho 4* lust-i
discovering his own lack of li;. His professional earnestness
serves to bring across the wealth of ideas in his lines Bedford
rarely heats up on stage, the moments of fire being all the more
brilliant for it
Bradley counters with an electrifying iciness that melts into
Bo&mo F&K MmBMBirri
MOVEMENT AWARENESS
•ndCREATIvny
Lea Banal and Nira Na aman
Introduction by Moshe Peidenkrais
Innovative, challenging exercises that
increase sensory perception, body/mmd
awareness, and mner harmony A door
way to heightened creativity
fordancers. actors artists and
everyone interested m the human
potential 70 photographs charts
diagrams $7 95
AWARENESS THROUGH
MOVEMENT
^•^ ^•himnkraia
'One of the most exciting and
penetrating of the new body/
mind malhodj a towenng
^ndmark '-V\/iii Schutz
16 95
A4 bookstores
Harper e^ Row
I
•^p*^
abject yulnerabilitv His frail features and probing stare fit the
role as pcrfecth can be hoped
The rest of the cast is every bit as strikingly apt Humbert
Allen Astredo as the boy's old-line socialist and "relenOesUv self-
improving" father and Bettv Miller as his deeply religious mother
represent a home life gone suddenly awry without bemii
maudlin about it
Penelope Willis ,s homily reassuring as the homilv reassurinit
girl at the stables * *
John Napier's scmery and cbi^umes arc both marvels of
economy Horses are created with men. elevator hoefc- and
masks Motion is evoked by a routing sta§e.
• The Huntington Hartford offers special on4Ugc tealing to
students f-or people who didn't mind the rwtrictions on grade-
school field trips, the ushers and seating arrangements should be
no problem Even so, tiK view from stage is quite good and
since nothing is hidden anyway (characters sit with the students
instead of waiting % the wings) there are verv few technical
details to distract from the overall effect of the play
Irsaneulmakee
tti4 Westwood Blvd.
Wescwood. Calif 90024
»^hone (213) 473 9S49
J
^♦" '>A,.MiO
JM . o.r.HM SANIMlb t^elTS MOIH Hl.S PUHSCS MA' .s
Dai Bradlry worsMps Nugget (quus (David Xamtey) in Equus
-u-;^
On Campus
The 1 1 th ilnternational
Toumee of Animation con-
clude! tonight and tomor-
n>w at 8:30 pm in Roycc
Hall The program, pre-
sented by the UCLA Com-
aatRn^^ ^fi T^tiie Arts Pi odw^
tioos and Film Archive in
•aaptiation with the Inter-
wttional Animated Film
Aiiociation (ASIFA). Costs.
$2 !m for the public and $2
>"r mgfftB^rs ol th^ LOS
Angales County Miim«mr^
UCLA Art Council, and
students. Tickets may be
purchased at the UCLA
Central Ticket Office or at
the door.
Mehh Mehu's band ~fif~
renown, the American
Youth Symphony, will per*
form Sunday evening at 8:30^
'n toyce Hall Fiani^tt
Mona Goiabeck is the fea-
PERSONAL
EXPLORATION
GROUPS
/or UaoMe inieresied in exploring
iMr comcems
Im m gmmp w&Mng:
Onct a week for 2
3334 Murphy HmH
luicil lUlOISl Admission
fr«*.
Counseling Division:
Psychological Hl
Counseling Service
fm urformaiion and rign-ups
m or phone (82) 5^4071
Vt
Manns Westwood II
LIFEGUAtO
t:IS. 9:00. 4:4S, « JO IIS 10 00
Manns Westwood III
AUd IN WONOEIUNO
1:00, a 30, 400. SM. 7:00, OiM, 10 00. MM
An Arika Thmafrm
Meralta
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Culy«f City
J.
MOTHER, JUGS AMD SMEO
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35943i1
S«9wl«r Admmton $2.00
CoH tK«otr« for «how ^mmi •••#•#•••$ •nly ••«
A Lommmtm TH0atr9
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1333 j«d s,,^ THAT'S ENTEtTAINMENT PAtT II
A Lammtnim Thmairm
Monica II
1 323 2nd Sfr««*
Sonio AHa^tco
451 taad'
>*► . ^«
4 S«« Blhmff in
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plu«
Tho Endl^ta Sumfn^r
A lo«mm/« Tftmafrm
Music Hall
9036 Wiiohir* Slvd
774>4aa9
In^mor aef§m»n't
FACE TO FACE
Starring iiv UNffiiiiw
itly f^swmiUl vnd mHmcUn§
] • ftttt«m«i«t t« hm h««r«i" ~
Ck«rl» OMimpltn LA. 1km—
Monn'i
National
10925 Lindbrool^ Dr»
4792M6
T^E BIG BUS (FG)
MS, 3:00, 4 4S,a:30.t:1S, 10:00
NuArt
Theatre
1 1273 Sonto
47S.637V
479 5269
6/)S Stf«f
6/MI«wy •!
Mtdii^att 1
6/17 Kli^ •! H
6/26 TH* YOUi
iK^ 6/29 Hoy H M^min
*/ 20 Jmm iMflMi
7/1
^acHtct
Pontages
Hollywood at Vino
4697161
AU THE PRESIDmT'S MEN (PG)
Doily at 12:30, 3 00. S:30, SiOo! 10:30
»
PbciAc'f
Picwood
Wootwood
MIDWAY (PG)
Doily et 12:30, 3:00, S:30. 0:00, 10:30
A Lammmim Thmatrm
Ptaza
Woifwood ViUogm
477^097
479 9077
THE MISSOUII MEAKS
vrvrfB WvWivMMy
BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS ..
SITTING BUU S HISTOKY LESSON
wilti Pawl
A io«n*mJ* Thmatrm
Regent
1045
273-0901
J«ff
•" Boa HiifMBM) S
STAY HUNGRY
A LO^MIltlfO
Royol
WottlM
477 JMt
WAMENDALE
f^mmDmmmttm
MOVIES CONTINUED .
mm
/ — ^
rr
-■ '■••■ (•' -"1- - I--.. -..' -'HI III IWI I I • ' ' III) iJ-ty—ii^i^' < I, m'' ' I . «J -J •_mtm — y ■! f
Petric'^ ^lifeguard' drowns
, \ . ^ ,1 .■''■,.«,.,,..■
UA Cinema
Center I
474-4134
ROBIN AND MAKIAN
2:1S 4:1S, 4:1S, • 15 lOIS
M Offid Sat — lot« •Kvw 12; 15
UA Cinema
Center II
)0t99 W«li worth A««
474-4)63
TH« Ftmn»««t Rim mi 19t5
TUNNEL VISION
Storring Ch«vy Choft«
I, 3:00. 4:30. 6:00. 7:30, 9:00, 10:30
Midnight Show* Fri, Sot, Smm
UA Cinema
Center III
I0lt9 W«i(worth Av«
WOjHwO<KJ
474.3dt3
TAXI DRIVER
2, 4, 4. f, 10 doily
Midnight Show Fri. A Sot.
U A CINEMA
CENTER jy
TOt09 Wvllworttt A¥«
WMtwood 474-4 1 9fl
Wfinoor ol 5 Acod«my A^yordi
Jock Nickolton
ONE FLEW OVER THE
CUKOO'S NEST
1:15, 3 30, 5 :5d rOS, 10:25
•y Cacliy Sd^
Rick Nelson is a 32-year-oid
profcskiofuil lifeguard He is
UU, muscuUir. blond and
dopey-looking He i|»eaks in a
down-home accent which, since
he appears never to have left
Souihern California, seems to
have sprung full blown from
hift salt-ol-thc-earth brain For
some reason, every girl he
meets tails iti love with him
This IS not to say that Life-
guard IS unbelievable For
what it's worth. Sam Elliot's
portrayal of a lifeguard is
realistic, and possibly there are
some people w|)o find life-
guards irresistible The thought
that comes to mind when
watching Ufeguard is not
•Why isn't better*^'' but
-^Why bothe?r-
■I
Director Oanial Petrie is
probably responsible for the
film's stupid tone and Ron
Koslow IS res^nsible for its
stufjTid script which is not
eatirely forgettable: its taste-
leftneis occasionally combines
with manity to produce some-
thing really rich and strange
Koslow has a fondness for
jcrk-off jokes, which at least
are suited to the film Rick
remarks of a character named
Machine Gun, "He holds the
international record for jerking-
off . . . we all held it at his
age, b«t I think he holds it
more" Thcfe will be no
example htre of the series of
gynecologist jokes, curious
though they are. For some
reason, Koslow seems to think
U A- Ro^uol Wokh Mil Cotby
WESTWOOD MOTHER, JUGS, AND SPEED
10M7 Lmdbrook
\.^j — »- - — — .^
477 0575
DoUy • 2:30, 4:30, 6:30. •:30, 10:30
Mioiiight Showf on Sot.
AAonnt
Village
961 trcMfon
Wcstwood 478-0576
Grogory Pock loo Romick
THE OMEN (R)
1:30. 1:40. 4:00, trOS. 10:15
ftLMi Sot. 12:15 Show
FITTED
REFITTED
Westwood Viliago.
DR. ALFRED R BECKER
Optometrist " ""
10959 Weyburn Ave
ADJUSTED
POLISHED
GR9-2ni
that the concept of gynecolo*
gMts IS a scream
About the ploli there really
isn't one, unless you consider
the emotional traunru of a 32-
year-oid hleguard who worries
he's getting too old to hang
around the bcaph a plot Rack's
high school sweetheon ii
played by Anne Archer, whose
babyish, husky vo|ce is her one
and only acting tool. Kathleen
Quinlan plays a teeny-bopper
who develops a grush on Rick
and follows him around.
Only the cloddishness of
Pctrie's direction saves Ufe-
guard from being really of-
fensive When he zooms in on
comical parents who think
their children are drowning or
some cute pubescent boys pull
the bathing suit top off a
model_you can't get an^ry,_
Lifegudid gives off too strong
an impression that nobody
connected with it really knew
any better
</>
SEPI'S GIANT
SUBMARINE
VAGABOND
2509 WiUhire
387 ?17l
• Tuoft OotMc MuMcolt! 3Smm!
MocDoffHiM A Moufic« CKovolior
lubitKh't
THE LOVE PARADE ( 1 929)
Ffod Astoiro and fting Crotby in
BLUE SKIES (Tthnicolof)
DEL MAR
5034 W Pico Blvd
935-6424
Al ^ocino in
DOG DAY AFTERNOON
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UPSTICK *
50< til 7 pm doily, til 5 pm Sot. 4 Sun.
ORIENTAL
7425 Sunsot Blvd
876^0212
Jock N«chol«on in
ONE FLEW OVER THE
CUCKOO'S NEST
ond Jamt Coon in
KILLER EUTE
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ft G^G^ I
jdiscount on any
GmtS^pi,
with this coupon
good through 1976
-' }
tr
SUr Of TNi WMST A
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$100
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KENTUCKY FRIED
THEATRE
10303 w Pico Wvd
rh^ b««t of KFT t
lost 5 y»or%
356^7663
BEATING A DEAD HORSE
Ft. a Sot • 00 a 10 00
Now through Juno 27
JOE PASS
iiMio,29-July4
John Hondy^^
^ ^
HERm6sa beach info TEL 372 6911
■4-
MM im %M im y
Poiansk
i's
X
iy K4mm Parfrey
Never has there been nicli
an inspired examinatio^n of
paranoia and schizophrenia as
Roman Folanskis* TV Tenant
Shot entirely in France, the
film has minor problems
shoddy dubbing of secondary^
cjianKlfrs and occasional slug-
fiflHMM — but these are over-
whelmed by lu macabre
humor, offbeat tone and tx-
quiiiU. array of psychological
effects
The plot unravels slowly and
surely, and by the middle, one
IS convinced that ihis is ano-
ther Rusemarv's Bahy; with the
protagonist going through the
agonies of mass-pe^socrution
Before long, however. The
Tenant imprints it» highly ori-
ginai and personal watermiitk
as It viriualiy becomes two
separate and distmcc movies: a
claustrophobic world as seen
Lhrough the eyes o£ a paranoic;
and a calculating vieu of his
descent mto madness
Gir l-cra2y
Thc'deceptively simple story,
written for the screen bv
Gerard Brach and Polar^i
frOjm Roland Topor's novel,
concerns 'a man (Polanski) who
renis an apartment vacated
when the previous tenant threw
herself out the window After ^
visit with the mangled woman,
Polanski un(sub'*)consciously
accumulates the girPs charact.
eristics and hurtle* himself into
a parandidr>scfirj^ophrenic ren-
dezvous With death
Philippe Sardc's brilliant
labyrinthian score and Sven
Nyk vistas ( I ngmar Bergman's
photographer) shadowy, obser-
vant cinematography accounts
crucially in Polanski's master-
piece Polanski and Nykvist
open the film with a wonderful
how-do-you-do-It? wdndenng
shot of the bizarre apartment
building (designed by Pierre
Guffroy), that with Sarde's
bro9difig, contrabMtoony mu-
marvelously sets the tone,
surreal episode reveals a
■ positional brilliance and
Francois Bonnot sus-
•cenes with judi-
though leisurely paced,
rng.
Higyy caiipetent
PftiiMlri. in the title rok,
proves himself a comforuble
and highly competent actor
who does not refuse the chance
;very
:ioul
VTherelSa 'vj
difference!!! •:
I MCAT
: OAT
: LSAT
: 6RE
:AT6SB
: ODKT
: CMT
: FLEX
CKtr 35)Otr«
tf liiii mitt
oiiMccm
o
SmaiiclMHft
ttudy mattroH *
COffMt tti«t §r9 •
■upt lo>
u*
MnmoBos
:^.i
SAT- VAT
2 tOUCATlONAi CtMTBII
If *T MNI^MunON
A'
m agniflcenti y maca b
to immerse himself in a bizarre
and thoroughlv repugnant role
that inrhiiii scenes of trans-
vestism * Adjam, still the
round-featured beauty she was
in The Story of Adeir H. is
^iJJN) briefly seen at a friend of
^^ deoiMad tenant As the
owners ol the building. Shellev
Winter* and Melvin Douglas
are appropruiiel> slimy
To add to the international
confusion. Bernard Fresson
appears as oae of Polamkrs
boisterous friends He and
Jacques Mond as. a cafe pro-
1
'tiHi
Wiiiters, PoUmki; tikmf and schm
HAIR SIYIJ\(.
LBy#r Cut
A mora k>alancod
J and natural cut
Idtl 1 tcmroos A^uo aro,^oood V»ooy>
Mon Thni>.,..:jo,^tot:aipinondM WI9:00p„, 47S..t2^
477-9207
"» WOifc
733?
LOAN
TUNE-UP, LUBE & OIL $9i95
IttAkt
OVtRNAM $|0C
A-1 AUTO SERVICERS
^, 7»S7 VAN NUYS BIVO. on^ -?n-»i- 1
PAWOBAIIA CITY^.u.. .o o^c 894-7075
Titos Vandis
Actor
prietor and Claude Pelpu as ^
neighbor are very poorly
dubbed into English lo Van
Fleet adds eeriness as a weird
tenant
Outrageously mordant, iht
film undercuts morbiditv ^ith
humor, a feat Pohntski is fa-
mous for. the drowning scene
in knife M the Water and the
noir-aliang epModf in Oiiisa^
town Usualy bent on heher-
skelterish thfui. at with his
Mai bet h and the aforesaid
pictures. Po^Ml^i breaks away
from the mold and prc!fcents a
cliaiaatty ommsctent psycholo-
gical case-study as well as a
thrilling sutptMar tn The
Tenant
Tht' Jenant opens today at
the Mann Wcstv^ood
>
[
r
DRIFTWOOD BAR
'W Ocoonfront WuU
VonKO tooch
(lookiofoo£
Through Sot
'THE SHED QUARTET
IcUB'S
SlOl fico lifd
SlAtllOfiiCI
UIHT
h^nm 2S a 36
WENDY WALDMAN and
CHRIS SMITHER
^ . - 4
>im }%mm 27
THE COtlCY CARRCH
THE FUNK DOG SURF BAND
BESS FITCHET
I
«.l ll'\HS H^VIOS M/\M>oi l\s IUM>hS AM. Ml . UU,ns
JMn« 25 26. 27
EL CHICANO
SEVERANCE
July 1.4
JR. WALKER
BLACK SMOKE
656 2^00
JT\
t
I
!
Hollywi
THE STONE R
7113 Ston«r Ave
WMt LA 90025
477 7339
•••r L Winm
food, Gom«t a oth«r
indoor Spom
t/lBtk Nmrfh mi 0*Ympk
1 §ik Wmmt mi Barnn^tmtt
^*n%m 25 a 26
4PAZING RHYTHM
ACES
GOVE
Junm 2f -Jwly 4
TOMMY JAMES
with TK> fhiwdiMs
I
.V
•©•1BAIITA MOMCA BLVD^I^ 27«^1M
In
poNO'a
CtNMflM
Acting
Ik Coachwa
The producers of EOUUS
hMyt made available for
college students only 60
spactai on-staoa seats for
aadM)«''formance Friday
A Saturday evenings
$6 00: all 6ther perfor>
mances including math
available at theHbrHmg-
ton Hartford Bax Office
SMmt 1 0 card raquirad
^K^ ^OR THOSE WHO APPRECIATE QUALITY
"j^lg^ '^00 WISTWOOO SIVO 4 SICXKS SOUTH Of WIlSMMfl
CHAN'S GARDEN
loass u.idb>— ii at mmmd
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YFSY'S EAST INDIAN RESTAURANT
I
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RESTAURANT MIFUNE
Tf^T7lMte««ii.a WiJk
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lattl W Mm aM^ 474.9>4«
ar^Mou.!
Thm lnt«rnatK>nat R«Ml«ur«nt
(nMmiaMai tlud9nt C«nl«
100 HHoMiri AwntM W^wtwuoo 477-4587 g?-^ t^A4
II 50
1115
$1.75 •««ry nlto
J
I
it.
«r»
j
I
I '
— K
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
L«t ut 9htQ YC^ prnwonmi tflvct hone. Ms ara umcmumM m interna
tionai packaging and thtpptng Wa alap aa« appliancat tor 220 ¥o«tt
121S #aai ilii St. Loa liiaiiii 17
PACIFIC-KING
f
1-
UCLA placesi2th at NCAA
Summer Sailing Program
rad by Iha UCLA Sailing Club*
CiMMs: Last registration Today m KM 400 11 am -1
p m Beginning. a<Jvanced. and catamaran classes
available Enrollment fe0 of $25 must be paid to the UCLA
Sailing ClubJ^p refunds after 5 p.m.
ChMren't Classes: For ages 10 to 15 Will be taught in 8
foot sabots Monday thru Thursday 9 30 a m to 1 p m
Enroll at registration or in K H 501
Of^mn House: Tomorrow (Saturday) from 1 p. m to 5 p m
at the UCLA Boat Dock, end of Fiji Way. Marina dol Rey
AH welcome fpr boat rides, snacks, and fun ^
Information: Sailing Club Office (501 K.H 825-3171).
Boat Dock (Marma del Rey 823-9978). or URA Office
(600 KM 825-3703>
r Un>v«r«ity R«cr«ation AMociation
Konfinurd from Pace 20)
apparently pushed C oopcr,
who in turn bumped Oweaa m
order to keep hu balance
Oweas, in mid-flight over the
eighth hiirdle found he was
SoiAg to land on the railing)
that separate* the short lanes
from ^ tibc normal 400 meter
ones. Seeing that he was going
to land with his right foot on
the artificial curbing in the
middle of the track, Owens
knew that he*d break the same
ankle that saapped twice in
high school. So, he stepped
with his right foot into lane
four from his own lane five
and then had to cross over his
body with his left leg to get
back into his own lane and
the ninth hurdle,
ly the time that Owens had
managed that, Casper Mew by
him and won the race over a
cUnias Owens at the upe If
the race had been 15 meters
longer, it might have b«^n
different, according to Owens
**I came here knoWing that I
was the best, and I am terribly
disappointed, 1 don*t think it
was intentional (the push) on
Dcdy's part He was just trying
to keep balance. I was catching
him at the end. but 1 ran dut
of race.*"
Sinlar situations
Tully and Banks ran into
similar situations, as both had
ties for their position Tully
and crosstown rivals Ruu
Rogers and Bom DiStanialao
of use aU cleared 17-1 Vi on
identical first tries and all three
failed at 17-7. The three-way
etrmmU iltmmu Cmpt.
(Sound Art^' MtlSIQ WDRIi8liO?&
ELEQTRCNIQ MU8I8
AdVAMQEQ ELEQTRONIQ M
AlOlO 8m3 SYWrnSIZED QE
FiEsmiive
uufht by Dick Knar
p r od u( * '
CIOHT }-HOUR SC».MONS PER MORICMKV>
WOKKSHOH STAII r5 WKCK 9« ;l;i.y •,
Be filled by Experts
0«n«k«ns, Immtmd^
TighH
ir^
931 WESTMOOOtiVO
"Sro CNidGtrdIa
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. GR7 1^73
aANKAMERlCAflO
MASTER CHARGE
VALIOATEP PARKING
WITH PURCHASE
Wf SrwooO V ILL AG I
and MOTORCYCLE
(213)4X7 SUS
AUTO INSURANCE
YkS — you need auto insurance.
AH the more reason to contact us for discounts up
to 35% to most students — another good reason
for being in college.
See or call us in Westwood
477-2548
Agents for College Student Insurance Service -
1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build-
ing) LA 90024
'^WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?''
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
Say y« t© t»« righteous th«! it thall be well with them Woe unio the
wicked* M shall t>e til with him lor the reward of hi» hands shall De 9*««n
him iMiah 3:10
THE VOICE OF RETRIBUTION FOR I THE LORD THY GOD AM A
JEALOUS GOD VISITING THE INIQUITY OF THE f ATHERS UPON
THE CHILDREN UNTO THE THIRD AND FOURTH GENERATION OF
THEM THAT HATE ' ME AND SHOWING MERCY UNTO
THOUSANDS OF THEM THAT LOVE ME AND KEEP MY COM
MANDMENTS — Pari of the Secoh<d Commandment Eiodus 20 5.6
History makes some singular developments in respect to the
retributive (ustlce of God Nations communities families, individuals,
furnish tearful Illustrations that the wicked is snared m the work of his
own h«nd. ar>d that the way of the transgressor is hard' Wrong
doing oppression, crime. Bf. by no means reserved only for a future
retribution They draw after them an almost certain retribution in this
world There Is no peace to the wicked salth my God? He may seem to
prosper — riches may increase — he may revel in pleasures, and shine
In honors, and seem to ha«e all that hean can wish yet there is a
ca«>ker-worm somewhere gnawing at the very vitals of happiness — a
blight somewhere upon all that he possesses History bears at least mn
incidental yet decisive testimony on this point
Perilous It is indeed to a mmn s well being in this life — to his peace.
his reputation, his best interest - to do wrong Possibly the wrong
doer may not suffe> himself. yet» most ceiiaiiily his children and his
children s children will pay the penalty of his misdeeds Man is un
doubtedly so constituted whether regard he had to his phy^sical
social intellectual and moral nature as to make him a happy t>eing
The right the unperverled use of all his powers and susceptibilities
would not fail to secure to him a high and continual state of earlhly
happiness and prosperity And not only is the human machine itself «o
fitted up as to accomplish sMch an end. but the whole eiternal world,
the theater in whtch mmn has to live act. and enioy is fitted up in
beautiful harmony with the same benevolent end Every ^r of human
happir>ess. every arrest or curlaMmont or eitlnctlon of It. Is the fruit of
transgression or perversion The violation of a natural tow Is as utr^ to
be followed by retribution as tf»e violation of a Divine law The history
of indhriduaia, lomiMoo. oofnmunMios. f«oaof>s. is full of such
utrtaytioos?'
**ao n^ir^ your Un wMI llf>d yoM oiii" — Numitii 32-23
-^n tlioli not ba woll wifh the vvlcltod " - Ecdoateatot tU
t hoe* aafw. ao God hath requited mo.' — Judfoe 1:7
f'l
of tfie good old patrlorch Jacob
to bocofMo at an aarty afa. ai* •mlll9
botora the aroiiaad wrath of hit
•nd wrong In tt>e farvilly of Latoan.
la he relieved from tt>eaa doittaaac af-
ftlctions than suddenly he is bereaved of his favorite wife — Joseph is
violently lorn from his embrace of his own sons — and at length Ben
lamip the only ob)ect on which the affections of the aged father
seemed to repose must t>e yielded up to an uncertain destiny and his
cry is heard AU these things are against me' »_ .
Pharaoh defied the God of heaven and raised his hand to oppress
tt>e chosen people snd he perished miserably amid the rums o*! his
own kingdom Egypt never recovered from the shock of ^^raoh ssin
but since has been the basest of kingdoms''
David was a good mmry yet he sinned a great sin And his sin was of a
domestic character And how grievously was he afterward afflicted in
his domestic relatior>s his sul>se<|uent history remains the sad
memorial The Voice of God announced The sword shall n^wr
depart from your house' His son Amnon raped his half-sister T»mmr
Absalom her brother killed Amnon' Later on Abaalom usurped his
father s thror>e mnd drove him out. etc etc Vat David was a mmn after
God s head' — a m»n after God s h^mri in ttte way he repented and
accepted the severe ludgement of God. reminding one of tt>e words of
Job Yea. though he slay n>e yet will I trust Himf
Adonibesfk who had conquered 70 kings, and having cut oft their
thumbs and big toes made tt»em eat under his table w at length con
quered by the invading Israelites, who in turn cut off his thumbs and
big toes He acknowledge ttie retributive justice of tf>e act wf>en he
said As I have done so G9d hath requited me
Eiamplet crowd upon us from every quarter every r>eighborhood
furnishes them' Hmman was hung on the gallows he built for MOrdecai
Dogs ate the carcass of Queen Jezebel and licked up the blood of her
husband Hing Ahab The Herods furnish fearful eRamples But con
Bider Pontius Pilate Many of us quofe his nmm^ every Sunday in public
worship Suffered under Pontius Pilate'
Pilate vacillating between tfte monitions of conscience and a
miserable time serving policy dalh^ered up Jesus to be crucified He
baHaead him to btf inndcant; yet that his own loyalty to Caasar might
not be suspected he did violence to his conscience and condemned
Via Ifinacsnt He mu^i secuce his frtofi^ihlp of Caaaar. though it t>e at
the eipanae of the most appalling crime But how mlaerably he faMad:
and tt>ere was in ttie retribution which fsllMMd a striking fitnaas of tf»e
lo Iha crlma Ha haaMated at nothing to please his Imperial
at Roma. Yat but two years afterward he was baniahad by his
tame emperor Into a distant province/ taliava, bi tflofraoa and a^an-
It. and with a burden on Ma consdonca wtMeh was as ttie bum-
H. tie put an and to an eilater>ce which waa loo wralchod lo ba
lUME YOUR SIN WILL FiNd YOU OUT!' He that
and forirtiaVi Ms sin shall find moicy."
-Say ya to fha rlfMaoua. that N ahaM ba wall wMh Mm; lor Biay shall
aat Wm fruM of Ihalr dibtoa. Woa unto ttia wldiadf It
for ma reward of Ms haiMli t^ioN ba ^iman
Decalur Ga 30U1
deadlock ended, just that way.
It was an improvement for
Tully, who had a di&appointiqg
no-height performance iaft
year
Banks waited until iat Int
jump oi the day to pop 53-0%,
food esoufh for a third place
tie with Ed Lennex of Si.
Joseph's However, Lennea*
second be»i jump of 52-7 1>4 was
just enough to edge Banks* 52-
5!/^ for the third place points.
Mills did a great job just to
get into the final. His semi-
final heat included eventual
champion Quentin Wheeler of
San Diego State, scorers Rich
Walker of Arizona State and
Randolph Williams of Ken-
tucky, along with highly-re-
garded performers like Michi-
gan State's Chns Caasclman
and Auburn frosh James
Walker. Mills* third place
finish behind Wheeler and
^^WiIliaSi~was indeed ImpTessive"
and even though he didn't get
a point off his seventh place
finish in the final. Mills did as
well as anyone who made the
trip The best part is that he's
jusi a soph, with two more
years to go
Future bright
the tuitirc. things look
Bank's Mei^'I'T ()wcns.
and Ml... jii re
with Bennie Mylcs '
( I rant Nicdtrrhaus
For
bright
1 ullv
turn ati)ng
in the 440
111 in
hardlcv, AAl
f '"rad Suhr
ii -..Ml vards.
»n the long
in the 44()
J un Mir. Champ
and IcH Ha
Jcrrv HxTHo
jump and a rait rrt-nhewcdmcrf^
who rate as "super" from all
^arj Jose ( \\\ ( ollcgc pro-
duct Millard Hamptim won
ihr AAl 2m — heating"
I SC N .himcs (jiiRLN. discus
thrower Marcus dordien^s life-
time ^si IS two inches behind
the UCl A t)l record of 194-
10 and sprinter Mark ••Jenkin.s
of Notre Dabc High School m
Sherman Oaks has sped 9.5
and 21 0 (lahr's Donn
1 hompson and C'ar!i<»ffi4^ Henry
Williams are (he CIF's and
City's best respect ive^ly in rhe
440 yard dash. Football pros-
pect Cilenn Cannon, from Mt
Pleasant High School in
Northern Cahfri>rnia. is also a
fine sprinter
Bush and new hield Events
coach Jim Kiefcr should have
a talented group ol athletes for •
the 1977 season
Despite
appearances
this is not
d filler
.J .. _«_
I
Special
For the 2.600 mentally re-
tarded voungsters. the Cali-
fornia Spccml Olympics, to-
night, tomorrow and Sunday
at Drake Stadium and ad
joining campus locations, will
have the same signi^nce as
next months summer Olympic
Games in Montrc4L ,- -
The boys and girls, eight
years and older, hisd to qualifv
in preliminaay- meets from San
Diego to the Oregon border to
advance to the finai competi-
tion There are nine events in
the Special Olympics, with
track and field drawing the
most pa rtici (Mints.
Opening ceremonies will
take place tonight at 6 pm at
Drake, with a parade sche-
duled involving the competi-
tors, plus 500 coaches and
attendants. Events will be held
on Saturday from 8 to 4 pm
and Sunday from 9 to 3 pm
Admission is free for all
events
"The purpose of the Special
Olympics IS to enhance the
lives of the mentally retarded
children through physical fit-
ness and athletics." said John
West; Executive Director of
the Special Olympics for the
State of California
— Mike Sondhrimer
Tellez replaced
Jim Kiefer from El Cami.no
College has been named
UCLA assistant track and field
coach succeeding Tom Telle/,
jwho took the head job at
Houston University
I he 30-year old Kiefer will
he in charge of the Bruin
h<rld events and will have such
outstanding performers as pole
vaulter Mike Tully and triple
lumper WilUc Banks to coach
next season
Olympic long (umper Arnie
kt>hinson IS the most famous
athlete Kiefer hi«s coached pre-
viouslN and he comes to
i'CI ^ with fine credentials At
college he competed in the
friple jump, long lump and
,- elm .
Before coming to tl Cammo
College. Kiefer was a graduate
assistant coach at San Dm
State and for three years
served as head c^)ach
Warren High School
Downey
He
at
in
Auble named
Dave Auble, UCLA's assist-
ant wrestling coach the past
five years, was named Monday
•s the Bruins new head coach,
replacing Dave Hollinger
Hollinger resigned to move
into the business industry after
leading UCLA to perhaps its
finest overall seasoft in 1976
Auble has the qualifications to
lead the Bruins to another
strong season in 1977
The 38-year old Auble was a
two-time NCAA wrestling
champion at Cornell and is
currently the assistant coach
ftr. Hie United States 01ym|MC
Intramurals
Entries for summer Intra-
mural basketball and soltball
tcnms are due by Monday in
the Intramural ofioe in the
men's gym.
Tennis entries were due yes-
Jcrday, but late cntncx will he^
accepted > today and possibty
Monday if openings exist.
Action fets underway on Mon-
day, with boiketbnll foing
Monday and Wedaaiday from
? 10 6
TYPEWRITE^ CITY
47».7aK WESTWOOO
Adier Port.
Adier Elec. Port
Smith-Corona Elec.
Citizen S-4 Elec.
Lloyds Printing Calc.
CorvusCalc. % and Mem
Corvue 500
SALES and REPAIRS
BMkwiwrtcard lOWGayi^ a«*.
FL BAMBINO
(The Perfect Liinch)
$1.95
soup or a small saitfd
• A cup o4
• A gld&& o^ wtrw or c
• ^ hliT*'^^ on afrwh kahan rol. your choarc of hot m«at
oail, SMjen0t pepoai. aalami Jk choeae
c
i,:,.
H-
yVaxJizii, C7aro ^uy, Dxom !Jta[^
i«t4 «;i CNDON AT u>^Dgnooai
VAL fARKINC WSTWD (in gLDC
' 477.2S4I
I
r
5
I
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Regrettably
• •
Tuesday and Thursday from 3
lo 6 pm.
This Ad Is About NIckle-and-Dlming
You in the ASUCLA Food Services
We really dont like writing this kind of cd. lot ilono
running it m the Bruin for all to too
But we gotta
Some food prices in our mmm are about to be raised
We ve held 92%.of them steady since 1974 (ui^February
^75, some changes were made in outlying aroea, and
there was a small increase in the Treehouse) despite
dramatic increases in the wholesale price index
Anyone who's been inside a market over the past two
years can recognize that But ~ the prices we must raise
at this time wiH result in increases of no more than a nickle
or a dime There are six exceptions — and theaeereiSC or
20C ' --r~ ^ .
And we ve 'been careful that the taateu quality and
consistency of all items have been analysed to assure ttiat
our high standards are maintained You may be inter-
etted to know NOTHING in Kerckhoffs Coffee House or
the Truck f^rm will change
fortnaf Maw
I ,.
Sandwiches, hambur^jers. hot dogs, cokes, fries, coffee
and milk are the seme — no price changes
Breakfast prices h^yfi been increeaed - but just about
everyone wiM admit prices for the Breakfast Specials have
been unrealistically low. r— _^^_r-_____
Each and ey^ery price chenoe was carefully studied by the
Food Service committee members of the ASUCLA Board
of Control — and these were presented to the entire
Board, who then v6ted to pass them The Board of
Control agrees that theae changes must go through in
torder to maintain the degree of excellence you have
come to expect - and will continlie to get
This IS a complete list of changes, effective June 28.
ASUCLA s Board of Control wanted you to know about
^ these pnce increases up front, so you wpnt be surprised
— and of course, we hope. you understand- the rieceaaity
of this action
Sauerbraten
Moast Turkey
Breadad Sola
Roast Pork
Veal Outlet * /
Pot Roaat
Corntah Qama Heti
f ranch Burger
Breaded Perch
Stuffed CabHae*
,, Chicken Croquettea
' Cod Filet
Corrted Beef A Cabbage
Veel Pmrmaaan
$ as Si 10
1 10
95
1 50
as
S5
75
140
•0
75
SO
franct) Toaat
Hash Bro«vnt
Bacon - i strip
Bacon - 2 strips
Ham
Hamburger Patty
Sausage Pany
Toast ^ .'■^■
Note Jelly IS NOT included Its extra
30
45
♦
M
30
IS
IS
25
30
■■
40
45
aa
ra.
36
4S
06
Or Chppped Beef
It Loef
ucan Luncheon
Brd Veal Cutlet
Whiting
Macaroni a Cheese
ti - traa seconds'
Cttlciian - free seconds
Mexican - free seconds
Make your own salad (smalt)
Make your own salad (I
Cantap to order sand
Salad/Sandwich
70
1 10
as
ao
S6
75
138
13a
1 39
06
1 00
1 15
160
75
as
96
96
70
75
75
1 25
Corned Beef Hash
Monday Speciei - one egg. bacon hash
browns. A toast
Tueaday Special - one eeo A pancakes
^A^adnaseayapaciai - French Toest A
iinii sauaaoe
Thursday Special - One egg. link sausage
hash browns A toast
Friday Spaciai - Corned Baef Hash one
•90 A toast
Brum Special • One egg. two pancakes.
haeh browns, two link sauaagas. or two
strips of t>acon toast
/
45
45
SO
r
75
50
70
75
70
1 59
1 50
1 59
75
1 10
125
1 SO
Canr>ed fruit
Hot Cereal
Cold Cereei
Bran Muffin
tweei Rolls
Pudding
P»e
'2
Par>cakes - 2
25
30
30
40
Brown A Sarve Holls
16
ts
IS
30
30
40
40
20
15
26
JO
.SO
26
36
20
36
36
45
45
25
MiVMBAMa*aa>*a*i»^aM4k>
MIeenwMIe, we thought you'd Nke to know the Nof«i
youll And a brand new ialacliofi of foo^e in ymt
— n--
I FecMHV wNI be open«n« nM-aummer -
ASUCLA Food Service snirlronmani
.fi^.^
i^*b
■H«
I
E
9
J-.
<
T-BOrC STEAK $2.99
IT.
e
Bruins land 10 Shrine players
Get a great deal
The Sizzier's dealing out nch. juicy T-bune bleaks, broiled
to order Along with a hot baked pe)tato or golden french
fries and Sizzler cheese toast. All at a bargain price Can
your house beat our deal?
ly MiciacI SoaJhcimcr
DS Sports Writer
UCLA .fuutbaLi coach Terry
Donahue said last February he
rhnnght his 1976 high school
recniiCf were an '^outstanding
group of athletoi** It ihi*
:Yc*f's Shrine toot hall gante on
July 17 at the Rose Bowl will
be any indication, then Dona-
hue may have gotten the best
group of Brum prospects in
many seasons
, The Brums top every other
coHege with 10 all>star game
recruits, while cross->town rival
use was a close second wiCh
nine of the 56 participants in
the game This is the first time
in many seasons that UC LA
will have more players m the
game than USC Also the 10
players represent a consider-
able increase from the five
Dick Vermeil Shrine players of
a year ago (Manu TuiasotofH),
Jim Main, Ernie Saenz, Ron
Wollard and Ken Walker).
AU-City or All-CIF
Donahue has his recruits
Meet
Los Angeles Times Columnist
JACK SMITH
r^
-$C-
CAMPBELL'S BOOKSTORE,
Westwood, Saturday, June 26th,
between 12:00 & 1:00 p.m. auto-
graphing his new book:
WARD iUTCHIE PRESS
7.95
1^
•4-.
THE
ORANGE
Campbell!s/ Brentano's
^ MarmilUn ln« (
10918 LoCnnto, Wpgfu/nnH Villagp d77-19Q1
spread in almoft every posi-
tion, so the new Brum coddl-
ing staff will have various
individuals to focus upon All
of the recruits are either All-
City or All-CIF selectioai and
most are Prep A II- Americans.
Perhaps topping the hst ts
Cih 4A Player of the Year
Joa Van Vurcn of South Hills
High School He is the EBOst
versatile player in the game as
he could see afiliion at running
back, wide receiver or defen-
sive bkck He is tciH»ffvelv
scheduled to be a flanker for
Dooahue.
The two best All-CIF run-
ning backs are going to
UCLA. Artie Hargrove from
Long Beach Poly and Fred
Ford ot St John Bosco are
top prospects for the Fall Also
in the backfield is quarterback-
defensive back Rick Bashore of
Edison High School, who ap-
pears suited to operate the
Bruins' veer offense The other
UCLA offensive players in the
game are wide receiver Henry
Williams' from Carson High
School, who IS a top 440 yard
track man and St Paul All-
CIF offensive lackje Matt Mc-
Farland.
Defensive recruits
The Bruin detensive recruits
are headed by Chats worth All-
C ity linebacker John Kulusich,
who could be the best prep
plavcr in the counirv at his
position At detensive lineman
IS Canoga Park All-City choice
Bob Milhauser
In the detensive backfield
are Andy, Center from West
Torrance, who is also a tine
baseball pitcher and Brian
Baggott this brother Bill was a
UCLA linebacker -the past
three years).
use has several fine recruits
in the game Among them are
San Fernando High School's
Tri-City Player of the year,
quarterback Keny Moore and
Chatfey's 6-6, 270 pound de-
tcnsrvc tackle Anthonv Mjinui
JAMES WnOR
KRSmSTOFfERSON
VACOOUDeC
July 13 15
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(MVEMASOM ^~
ALGREEM
July 77 7f)
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UGHTFOOT
JuiyTOAtjG
JAMS IAN
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MEUSSA MANCHESTER
AuqS8
ELECTRIC UOKT
ORCHESTRA
tARRYMANAOW
Aug 14 15
MJLIMLUAMS
kiQ 20 ?:
JUOrOOliiNS
Aug 24 26
FLEETXVOOOIMC
Aug 27 29
UNOARONSMT
Si|itd>l2
MKOPRCENOWO^EM
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UCLA Summer Recreation Schedule
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•1
Arizona St. opener changed
_ UCLA's opening toot ball
game agj^mst Ari/ona State at
Icmpe has been changed trom
Tucsdav Sept 7 to Thursday.
Sept 9 due to the Ari/oria
pnmarv
I he Arizona legislature did
not want the nationally tele-
vised game to conflict with
primary voting and asked that
the game be changed
It wilJ be a rough opening
I Of new UCLA toot ball
coach Terry [>onahue He luis
to make hnr debut against
team that was undefeated last
year and ranked No. 2 in the
country Anrona State has
won over ^ per cent of its
games at home during the last
ten years, plus this will be the
first time in many yiMi that
the Sun Devils will have a
regular season game on na-
fional television
"■" IW"
PC
fa
fo
Cat
i
WC!
Sll«
4
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=
.472-
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^
1
8U^
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♦ Unw
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5:00
•
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4 ■
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■Of*
Call
1
•
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effi
CMA
Manr
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aanc<
•^
iBfflfT
$100
W*dr
Brtdg
479 3:
f
I
COWl
W««(M
•STGi
Tylsr. T«rry DofiotMM —I lor ASU
I
im
CLASSIFIED AD
Aovf nTMNia ofvicct
I 'Han lit y
•2S-2221
1ft wrd» $1 75«ay. ft ctwcuIN>
tnMrrHons ••.••
OCAOLlNf 10:S0 AM
Mo
Th« ASUCLA Commumcalion* Board
fully supports Mm Un<«*rsity of Call
lomta t poMcy mm fMn-dtacrtffNnatton
Advartialrtg apdca «»lll not hm mada
•mMMMO tn Mm Daily Bruin Ip anyona
wlio Blacrlmlnalas on iha t>atis of
•ncattry, color national origin, raca
foMfton. or aai Naltt«ar tt>a Dally Bruin
nor ttia ASUCLA Communications
9oard has mwosliQatad any of tt>a sar
vicaa „ad«artlaad or advartisars rmprm-
sanlad in this tssua Any parson ba-
liawing tttal »r\ advartisamani in this
laaua wloioMs Itia Board s.policy on r«on-
discnmination statad har*in should
commMWicala comp4amla tn writing to
Mm BtfOlnass m»nmq9r UCLA Dally
Brum 112 Karckhoff HaM. 30ft Wastwood
Pla/a Los Angalaa. California 90024
For aasislartca jaMh housing discrimt-
nation.problam«.call UCLA Houaing
CNMdO. (213) 82S 44ftr W»stsida Fair
Mouiing (213) 473 3ft49
campus
announcements
'numnrens wontcsMor'
toom. wrila. artd aam PubNahad mi#
iioii puBliitod wrtlars «»o«coma to club.
C«N3BB>1M4
campus services
compute '
priiitini;
l\ (M M IIIIIK
IiiihIimu
l))ll«ll-<t-lllll«t
11 k< i< khiill li.ill
>^ ■ IM.I I \,'>h
PORTRAITS
taken
for Graduation
Call for appointmmnf
osuc/o
campus sfydio
150 hen,hhoff hall 825 06? f m77 1
open mon-^ri 6 30-4 30
church ••rvicos
WCSTWOOD frianda maating (Oua«ars)
tllant Worship, Sun 10- am. Univ.
YWCA 572 Httgord Visitors walcoma.
472-7*60
(4 )
SUNDAY MASS 0:30. lOOd 1 1 30
Unnraraliy QathoMc Cantar (•40 Hllgard)
5:00 LliJthanwi ChoptU Gay lay Strath-'
mora).
. (Oiur Sor M 12)
•ducation
MAKE Monday night worthwhHa Jo«n
Bn ongoing Encounter Group lad by an
aiparlancad facllltotor taa yourtaN
•vMf laam how oMiars saa you. tpon
aorad by Toponga Cantar In WodT LA
Call 455-1142 or 472 -S781
(ft J 29)
entertainment
CHARTEPI a Party Boat and crulaa
Manna Dal Ray HMbor On board bar.
*■«€• "oor. Hfwt iMd and llva •nfr-
lolnmant S22-11S1
(7 Jv 13»
for sale
Iftmm BOLI X fuM compMrnonl o( I
piftM PMlar tlpt 1210 00.
M Jarry
(10 Jy 13)
SI 00 DUPLICATE BrMffo Monday NMa
Wadnasday aftarnoona. Wild Whist
• ridga Club 1055 Waatwood Blvd.
479 3305
(7 Otr)
COME out and 9n)oy a boauMful horaa
Waafcday and waaHond rldoa. by tha
hour half or full day For ft4 50 an
»»OMr. raaarvatlona, caf« '^npmngm Hiding
4S5ft01S; Ul Id TooMMa
Bd. ^- ^
n Otr»
CAMIMA BwMi ■ aoMwg eoBocMon ol
aOH and movia cameras S5-$100 472-
(10 J 2ft)
PIANO for sale IftOO or beat oflor,
Muat aaM Marlanl 477 9270
(10 J 2ft)
FOB SdM %pm - 1ft moABia oM
hotiaabroiian - ahofs - loaotola
watchdog ft2ft CaM 271-5707
(10 Jy 13)
"Taxos iMStrw
Titni
■as Ti twti.— yaa riMM-tara.M
»
convus soo
Mora than HP 46
4La«« HPN T
LN 10 • • Tr(« (SM. Cos. Tan
69
nmncuB
1 1 3ft3 Santa Monica 01 WLA
CALL 47t-7T91 StH WmI of ftan Olago Fwy
W4MEMAKIN0 brewing auppllea ft
e^t0ment Select California WInea
Th«r Grape Nut. 0312 W 92nd St. Weel-
chaatar. Ca ftOBftft. ft4B-4S3ft.
^ (10 Olr)
HCVWOOO - WakoBoM dining rm aot.
bookcaae unite, aynthophlon. novel
prize lit set. dlctldnarlaa Call 204-'
049ft
(10 J 2ft)
FOB SALE Sun board 5'10' laland
(Hawfllan) Twin Fin. Condition -good.
325 477-1185 ... . ^.
^^^ — (10 J 2ft)
STtEBEO System Flaher receiver, tum-^
tables, speakers. 3330. ft49-«ft9ft MBia.
(10 J 2t)
WOODEN Barrels - Kegs ft spools.
hatchcovera. netting ft rope, funky
tralaa ft boiea. old barnwood. 031-
Mil . „0O»)
Exclusively Ours!
ASUCLA Trader
thong sandats in a
burlap signature
bag
just $6.89
Sandatt arv black with blue ar>d
gold stripes m the soles, and
blue thongs You can use the
striped bag for a beach carryall
ASUCLA Students Store
SPORTSWEAR
■ level. Ackermen Union
open mon-frt •:30-S:30i sat 10-4
825-771 1
• UNIT Wrmnch- Normandy building
a4acofit UCLA Four 2 ir. 2 SA. FoMT
2 BA. 1 SA apis EacaManl HffionctoM
t21-2147 Mrs. Rich.
(10 iy 12)
TEAC 1M Csiima tfeeH
«raet shape. $1M. Nitaa t3i
(1« J 2t)
-Tt SR SO A. SR 11 A. tR f2. tR M. ale.
HP - Cfelf • Conrua • Neeua
Sanyo
lltei Santa Monica RNtf.. W.L.A.
REES ELECTRONICS '
Cail471-2D00 for beat pneas
wanted
f
Help Self by Helping Others
$S-S60 month for Blood Plasma
HYLAND DONOR CENTER
1001 Gayley Ave Westwood
478-0051
HOUBCKBBPtR wanted.
Sis
weekly. F|e«Ma hours. 47f-JS2i
(12 Jy 15)
good deals
I Factory Direct
I well construe led
MM 022 ••274
(OD Jy t)
opportunitiea
VOtUNTCfPt Summer redle aicMee
pro^l for KPFUPaclflca Audio Re
search AMs. Oaaon. Ulf Venice 831
1827
NEW sswpaiiy forming Cico«ont ep-
ponunlty lor graphics mng fashion da
algnera on )^ln( venture basia 391
8381
(13 J 2S)
io^ help wanted
ADDRESSERS wanted Immediately!
8forkel home - noeKperlence neceaaary
iBSsMiiit pay. Wms American Service
1481 Wilson Blvd.. Suite 101. Artlnoton.
VA. 22209
. (18 8 2)
NOW Interviewing - parttlme work-
Intamahlps Sept June 78-77
honorarium Jr - %r/Qmf^
goodorganizatlonal/communlcalloit
akilla, energy, humor Youth Dept.
Jewfah Federation - CouncU 852-1234
K-3S7
/1ft Jv t!l1
VOLUMZBiRS Public Counael- a non
profit PMBSc interest law off Ice. n—^»
yod. For more information, call Pubtk
Counaet at 277*4792
— -^- - (18 Jy 13)
PSYCHIATRIC After Care Center noePs
humaniatlcally oriented votunteer
counaeiors. MIn commitment 12hra/wli
for 8 mos. Call Terry or Allan 838-
4888 or 838-4034 M-F 10-4
(18 Jy 2)
TOP UCLA tennia player needed to pla)
and leacf) family of 5 located in Beverly
HMs. Payment wiN be made In caah. aa .
well aa through the uae of private court
— - lae contact 279^1078 ." _ .
T (19 Jy 13)
MODEL - Young Femela. Needed by
photography student for Spurs studies
8 bikini beach ahota . Up to $90 for
right modei Prefer alender build
Contact Michael • 13210 "B" Admiral
Ave Marina Del Rey. Ca 90291 Sand
photo H avallable « . ,
n» ^ 13)
in learfiffia
naanaa apaney. Tiiia la aalaa
Ih* peraon wll alao |Mm an
part* o( tha casualty Inauraitc* bu»in«»«
RART ttma poaMona open at Butterfly
Bakery. Set own houra 82 -88/hr.
Can 478-0002.
/is Jv M)
YOU can earn big dollar. Mornlnps
sis to nine Selling on talaphona CaM:
788-8 18S.
(19 Jy 18>
WORK-STUDY APPI.ICANTS: Lots of
Intereating )oba are avaMab'la at PubNc
Counaal - a non-profit, public inlereat
law ePIija. For more information, chock
wHh campua Work-Study Office
(15Jv13'
SUMMER JOBS
Part-time or Full-time
475-9521 for Appt.
THE j5b
AOtNCV
• '•••I'
VIM* Cft—xtfi
RELIABLE ^Irl light houaekeepinf .
Weat Hollywood 9 or 8 Mmea weekly.
**•*• ****»; •"ji'BoaaBne. Can 882-1084,
11-3 er eeenlRpB. Newe to be arranged
«^f (19 J 28)
MOTHER 8 Helper M-F 4-9 $2 SO
per hour plua dinner occaaionai baby-
altting Tobin 929-1989 925-7700 477-
7305
(19 Jy 13)
DRIVER required for 10 y—r old child
Monday. Tueaday and Friday 4,45 to
9:49 Thursday 1 00 to 3 00 Mulhoiland
Onve to Beverly HNIa and bach One
hour free to study 93.00 Bn hour Muat
have own car CaM 479-4521
(IS Jy s;
aervices offered eeivicea offered
aervicee offered
■or rept
I
Ir— helrstyling For more info cell
271-8238 Tuea Sat.
M2 0tn
HAIRCUTS 88 by
mm lactmlqua. Paul McO«aee«'s
7-8SS1. \'
nsoir)
PAHrtNr. .p,c«»% availahiM ^t 401
Gayley Ay^ue 848 lor both vmmmm
t%tnf%', 477-98^/ — — -^
(9 Jy 13)
^?^^SH or
your
11810
Bundy). 477 -atS
fij CIW^
MOST Aeia
payaienM. btecourvts for
Auto-Llfe-Homeowftera 9n^ Renter
Inaurance Village Office. Werner
ReMneen. 1100 QIawPew Stills 1931
477-3887.978-9151 .
VW MAINTENANCE SERVICE 929 ^
(TuMaup. «ai««aa|u«i. e«ichanf« ims*
brakM a aiMiah sdfwai Mrvic* tt
ctmmnmi 4 baltary afwck Iron* vnd
cofnp«««aion w«i)
VW ENOINi WOa« tlarw ai 171 .
10.000 mm» fuarani** t aay Mfvtca
on aachany** UMd v«r ai«ai*o«ia 90
rntt CLUTCH ariTM tMOiNC AfSUtiO
3t^03 Oo««n ^ark BUd SM 3S3 i;
(13 Jv 13)
LIBERATED Moving Coupla wtii mead
your beionginga at reaaonabic rates
C^i a2a.aaaa
- - (19 Jy 13)
PROFESSiONAL Cuitanat now accapi
ing studantt All tlylef studio m
Waatwood 795-2732 to leave meaaaga
Lorl
THE BODYMEN
Quality Auto Body
Repair 9 Patnl»r«g
479-0049
CoHI«lon'> Gvl •••ittanc* with inturanc*
clolfiM AlWntlon to^uallly repair and pamiing
Our aervleea twclMdat dtacouni ranuii car*
(MtoatarctMrga* 9 et A accaptad)
2320 aawteHa Plvd Waai l A
V.W. REPAIRS eicluslvely. 915 tune
up (pada 8 labor) 948 braka rmHn*
S139 valve job Free diagnoaia factory
mechanica, only German parta used att
werk guaranteed. Call tt>e Accelerator
"' (19 Qtr)
RROPESSIONAL Documentation Ser-
vices. Writirtg, editing research study
deaign A production to your require
menia Call 480-1584 anytime
(18 <3tr)
Being Ripped- Off en
Auto Insurance?
-Lowest Student Rate*-
•Monthly l^ayments-
ARROW INSURANCE
345-4985 887-2844 475-8481
BiBLiOGRAHiCS research, biblio-
graphies literature aearoh,- weMPig.
editlrtg. iUustrstion. tutoring (bibme-
dical/aocaci). 397-0294 Don i wait
unlM....
(19 QIC)
E)(PERT Tennia inslrucPen en mm^^
pdvala courts. Fail resulU. Partnera
prcW* 47.-3.2, ,,.,^,3,
MOi/inc ?
The (Kiginai-Eaparlanced Relii
QradPboving Service
FuNy Equipped Reaaonabie rates
Our 8th year- 7 dayt § week
CAMPUS SERVtCEB
Aak tor ... . Joan
SBB-S31S
MOVING Realdentlal. apartments.
ofhcea. t^rga/ smell )o6a Used furniture
brought/sold. Call Barney 399-9759
enythne N seee. ^^^ ^^
HANDWRITING Anaylst wM entertein
et pertlaa CaM Dabble 349-9138. .
(18 Jy 30)
SINGER - Songwriters Learn piano
accompaniment In atylea of Elton John.
Carole King. Leon Ruaaelt 8 Joni
Mitchell plua get down Blues )azi
country and goapel ImproviaaUon and
Piaory David R Cotton. 473-8381. 884-
2013
(18 Jy 13)
XEROX 2'2C
No mintmum
. . _ 1
KINKO S aLZ
CMFCH OU« TYPING Sf RVtCt
loivSIS:\ll
ELECTROI^VSlSyUnwanted facial 8
body hair permai>ently removed Gentle
safe method ftrn* consultation Ma
LiMla. 1833 Waatwood Si 477-3183
(18 Otr)
• •••••••••• •••B
RIDING LESSQNS
Bttidenta-Faculty-Famllies-Staff
• A M 9 A ApprovadrldlngatlaSlithmtnt
•Oroup laasona ahd privaia* cttlltfran A
f venlftf 4S4-t7fti
• • B 8 • •
•Baefdiiif ■ TraHttng
•CaM lor appotntmani
Day 4SS-111t
B • • • •
MOVING and Hauling Large and small
)oba Call Bill - 455-1013 Call Fred-
489-1448
(19 Otr)
i
P.M
ANO Claeeea • Burepaan Technique
companiat and coach tor aingers
- r Cotlgnola - 880-0789 attar 7:80
. . (1« Jy 13)
RECORDER Claas for beginners Starts
Men June 29 730 p m Call Charles
Fischer 388-2204 for info
(1C J 28)
M8 Qfr)
LEARN Salf-Hypnoslo with fr— life-
ftm^ reinforcement fr9t demoalralion
•very Tuesday night ■»., (p a hr A
ifl^Wlf ' * ^ — ^^"^^
VOCAL Teacher haa operMr»ga lor a
lew begmning students Moderate lae
Phone 920-3422. ^,, ,^ ,,,
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCt
Refused ^ Car«ceiied Too Voung
< Low Monthty Paymenta
LIGHTHOUSE INSURANCE 8ERVICE
394 1191
Ask for Don or Roy
TENNI8 Instruction on a private court
Aiao court rental Brentwood mi9» 472-
7903
(19 Otr)
LEARN Dynamic aeif-hypnoaia Sell
improvement in every way achieve aelf-
conhdence mental and phyak:ai wall
being, photographic memory Speed
reading reiei aleep National Hypnoaia
Inatitule Special reduced atudeni ralea
477-9825 979-3397 ^ yeera aipenence
HOUSEPAINTING
Best work. rriBterials: bk-
tBftors A mutti-room in-
teriors; serving the UCLA
Community 3 yrs full-time
since grsduation Days &
Evenings. 396-8979
AUTO Insurance Le«»est rates tor
atudenta ot empioyeoa. Robert W Rhee
939 7270 970 9793 or 457 7573
(16 Otr)
ATTENTION Single Parenu Call Par
ants without Par^rs Santa Monica-
Dlscuaaiona Sports Parties. Children a
Activities 939-0070
(19 Jy 13*
RECORDING ENGINEERING
CLASSES
N" ' ; MUSI' .AN •
PRO-.^ ..■-:.1M£D " ■K'
VOU NEED ' Mk in Th(
REC "
■ RECw.
BASIC A-DVAN( fcD lt^4
GOLD 8 Gl^AMMY AWAMO tfVINNER
BILL LAZERUS INST
LIMITED ENffbLLMENT 4 MORE
INFO. ..798-7454 OR 793-3822
' 116
BALLET Fun way to Beauty 1389
Weaheood and Univ. VWCA 574 Hll-
gard Adults Ciaaaes daily Beglnnera.
-Intermediates advar>ced 6 leaaons S21
Special rates 2 or more ciaaaes weetily
Irene Serata Diatinguiahed Dancer/
Teacher 391 3959
(16 Otr)
PREdNANT'> We care 24 hour aervice
nil
(18 Olr)
AUTO INSURANCE
I80TQRCYCLE INSURANCE
Refused? Too High?
Cencelied?
Low Monthly Peytnentt
STUDENT DISCOUNTS
T
222S
Ask for Ken
NEED A NURSE'' Eiperienced mmiur^,
reterencas Lir>« in out Hours arranged.
Will Ira^l Lee AM 276 2170
(16 Jy '•S)
V,-TON EXPRESS
MOVERS
Mov|OB>end HeuHng
' Rich 8S4-2SSS
Newell 651 3827
travel
EUROPE - laraei Africa Student
flights year round ISCA 11697 Bei
Vicante Bivd •4 l A 90049 888
Ol r>».
EXPLORE THE WORLD!
Tier an n Academic
within
LONGEST '
WORLDWIC
Veaf ~ long Student
Eu'^ope Israel A ttaAfric;a Snips
Rstipsases v^.,.fH Hostei c^^^m
Tou'-s Wor^ jdO Boofs^^Hp
PREE 76 STUDENT TRAVEL CATALOG
One-»top service s? me oniy nstior>-wide
no*^ D'Otit student travel organisation
Cl t E STUDENT TRAVEL
1083 Broirtor Ave 4224
L A 90024 ?BB8
( "> WesjwoQq ^'"eqe.eWd )
NCW ACADEMIC YEAR FLIQHTBI
1878-77, Los Angelee/Reris Round-trip
Oaoat Return <>3fent*i» y,„ p„^
Aug 26 Juna 2i 1977 ^ .10
Sep 22 Ju«a 2i i977 »
. AitO LMNtTfO MATt AVAII.aeLI DM
CHAaTtns out TO CAMClLtATIOWS
fv r>HONt poe setci^ic oatss
L i.i 1 rr
*«•
travel
TAHITI
ir2-12 S7W
2-16 SBB4
Rrlce InclMdea frsnaportation meala
el
ter divera
Eaplefers Umtmned
188 Slene Cenyaw Rd.. L A 88024
ECOMOBIT ^e«es lo OHem Teiiyo
Hong Kong. Menlle. Telpe. India
iflodeeR. Ftp. B Euaepe.
LOWEST PAAES
^
We meke ende tueei tor elmost
helf *»r9 Fiy to Eurooe Atrtce
BilBPti Eeet Atie
•OOK NOW T G C FLIGHTS
CALL
EURASIA TOURS N TRAVELS
274-8361
Open Seturdeys
LOW Ceet CHe*«er WgRM: Tokyo Hong
Kong. Talpa. MenPa. end oPier Ononis.
London, Raria.' Madrid. Zurich. Mew
yodi and HewaM for daMda ceM 474-
1211 (deys). 47S 1811 (oeee).
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charter Flight Service
Over 1000 flights to Europe this
Summer • Discounted Student
flights to Europe • Charters to
Heweli and Mexico • Student 8
Faculty discounts on car purchas
«s rentals anti leases • Study
lours • Camping Tours • Unregt
mented Student Tours • Rail
Passes • Fly drive European ar
rangements • Mtn. Tours • Hotel
Accomodation • Hostei Informa
tion • International Student 10
cards • Fr99 travel counseling •
EXPO Travel Library
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING!
/4S0CM/
Mn.-.n A 21^ ^. tXPC
10 4 8?^. !7?i '
RROFESSIOeiS INTERNATIONAL
srs-soi tr^rr^ma
TOC FLIOMT8 LONDON EimOMC
tutorififl
LBAT.
IndlvldMel. aeiell group Inetr
Se
(84 Olr)
EXPCRIBNCED
frem P
1748
P4 0lr>
CHINESE Mandarin Peking nallee
teacher well-eiperienced with Cell
tornia Credential individual amali
,r.up »33..>«5 ^^^^
LEARN Conversation in Japaneae
private or amaii group leaaont Be
Binners • Iwtermediale Experienced
teacher pnone 474-8881
(24 J 28)
CHEMISTRY Physics SlaMsllcs. Cal-
culut Algebra Geometry Tngono
ntelry. ConauHalion Etc Best m town
Auguet Wuggan M2-8080
(24 Jy 13)
tutoring
Jh
■n *
Edmng By Rh 0 983 9188 .
..■.■:' mom
LEARN S«
Call Akeat •5»-ea42
(24 J, 12)
to IWIe yoi
TBAT ORE MCAT. OMAT T
aublacts Raeaenabla rales A
Educadon Center 1738
S1t3 1081S Venice 837-4474
475
(24 Olr)
MATH Tutor^r , o, MA Grpd 8ta«atK:a
ramilMa. proto.»- ^'qebra and ORE
Wrv rttly 451-8838
(24 iy H)
chord voicinpa 8 i>' i^'esaiorva e« lap
medern and •mr9kt» blues keyboard
Feat peeed tf*%
tNaery 8 paBi.lMal
473 3SfS.
(24 Olr^
ROWER READING
24 hf cQ^afm Slant Jwf^ •
also
Wrtdng B8BM • Career Guidanca
ORE LSAT OBMT Prep
The GuldBnce Center
3017 SanU MootCB Blvd.
SantB MonicB
•2f-4429
'^o»»
typing
RUTH C DISSERTATIONS THESES
STATISTICAL FAST DEPENDABLE
SEVEN DAYS A B«» MANV TYPE
STYLES 838-8425
(S8 OP)
TVPM4G/EDITINO IBM
papers, dtssertattens.
saftes Long eapertence
27t-g388 or 278-8471
accurals
(2S Otr)
XRfRT typing P^ast -ace urate raaaon
able Brandy 487 3118 at%mr 5
(26 Jy 13)
TYWNO Faat accurate
•Ofteble ralaa Near campua
at
474
128
r)
TVPINO Feat eccurafe service at
Student ratea IBM Seteclric T^rm
pspera th«ftea. etc 882-8888 823 -43 It
(nignta)
f?1i<1'a
LIGHTNING TYPING CO
T»t««4t %p»*:tmtft
ftmm (•ttmeta*
eno^EsaiONAi. college tvpjng
•PeClALIgT
T*ffn-paaar» Th»i> D«— ma Hon* ^Miures-
fofvtgn I mng%tm9»* Scwneaa. NMn TaaWl
Dfqtmm% 4/^uwf ta*Un%. CsMWaaSHS K«ro«
•no enntina
Relet 133-7481
TVPIMG Let Caaay do H Term
theaea diaaerlationa etc Call 388-
7507 tor free eatlmale _^
RUTH liliiliH.. Pieaes. diaaertationa.
term papam, ndac Eipenenced leal
•28-278^
(25 Qtr)
TYPING at home IBM Eaecutive
Male Carpen dPPen
8 p.m
M^ Olr)
TYPING EdNlng,Paat Accurate MuNi
eaperienced/Picli up Deliver Righleeua
Rates/References/ Sandy 455-2488.
(28 Olr)
RROPESSIONAL Typing e«
niein. etc Peal, perfaet
»r8. Ca8 888-2884
TYPP4Q By LIZ - BCflfiBNPLAy
CtAUBT - TRBATIIBMTS -
N • CHOICE TYPE PACE (
^ ^'^ (28 OP)
lepel aecretery 8leer cempes 47B:>^
TYPING? Seven deys Also adding Very
leal accurate Mid Wllahire free
parking. Call Jomntm H4 8888
(25 Olr)
KAY Typtng. edHIng English grad
Disaartationa speelaPy. Term pepsin
8«eeas. resumee. tetters IBM 828-7472
(25 Olr)
TYPING, all needs, neet accurate
proeiieMBllf. 884 page Calf Shame
881-4BB8 BePeeen 5pm 10pm.
^ i§^ OtrS
PROFESSIONAL writer with B A In
Er;gllah (UCLA) wiN type and edit term
papers ttwaaa. etc Over 25 years ea-
perience IBM Setae trie Waatwood VN-
lege Eaey parnir^g CompeBBve rataa
One day aarvice BHi Oelenay 473-4883
(25 Olr)
diaaenationa ar>d
ratea CaM
(25-
TYPING of
ahort papers R
Katnv aUpr 6pm
epie hirniahed
505 Gayley acroaa from Oykalra
Bachvioft amgtea on^ bedrooma 473
1788 473-8824
^ (24 OtO
8ty JACWBLOR Apartment Pat Pbd-
^pBii UMIPN Pieiuded WaBT^ Bii:
^meh 488 3882
g8> 12)
FURNISHED Unhirniahed bachelor
814B Singlea 1105 Pool Heart of
Liaiiiraali 475-8SB8
' (28 Otr)
apts« furnished
At IT re UCLA
bnglas
• Bbr ^pfs
Tower Apartm«nit 477-BB83
' >*•■*■ '•<»■•■ ■ » >c"' £ e.*- -■'*■
">• t'age
SRECiAL SUMMER RATES af
b ■•r
■•i^fB
apts. unfurnished
ttTSONE BedrAom quiei charm
^"P<8 ♦»rep»a8e' aeavtew «...
Meee refrtg util 418 Oceen Ave SM
283 -ears
(27 Jy 13)
"?? 2 BEDROOM 2 bath carpeta
la ttrapiaca patio »tew alo««
orator 3248 Ovenartd 477 3200
(27 iy 13>
RRIME Wesheood location _.
2 BR paneled dan lormai dming rm
^ ntaaler 2 ttrepiacea gourmet kitchen
10538 Lindbrook Eve Vailarto 451
5471 Coidweii Banlier
(27 Jy 20)
CHARMIMO BPdBe. Oeeel Ro«<fe un
twmtehed ReePe penaWng tN^place
pedo Five minutes UCLA S200 month
8Saa450 Mon to fri 8-8
(IT Jy III
IE YOU aae
a e^ilet dignlfted
M rf«atu(v proteaa4onai
people aae 440 Veteran 1 bedroom
•THl 2 bedroom- plua den 5350 and
up Fireplace wetbar dishwa*h»r
;ony pool 473-«22«
(27 Jy 10)
1 BEDROOM apartment untumtahed
peNMng aundech Venice Itaech 8888
mo J82 187S Of see 7384
(27 Jy .2)
$320 imf Large 1
mom Dr 472 1003.
Strath
1127 Jy 2)
LAROE 3 Badreowf 2 belh
ee pePo. view, atove diahvaaeher
3248 OvedPed 477-3888
(27jy13)
apts. to share
OWN room (BPare kitchen batl^)
Gin oniy Tamp ebay Barrtngton/Plco
Lynne 477.8848. 477-8887
(28 J 28
FEBUU.E
weed 2-stery epertment. 2
2 balh Pool Great location Judy
472-4771
128 Jv 131
81MALE to ahere hao bedroom apt
pertially furniahed Raima 8132 50
PBBMU^ Miass M*pa 2 bedreem eem^
pfetely lurniahed apt nmmr campua
t180 ptua uMIOii 478-8812
(SB J SB)
»iPt.pMsPii8iil 81tB<mo caddaya
8B8-8740 evea 18T 8881
(20 J 28)
2 Ped/2beth wNb sa«e.
peel Palms SI 78 88 888
0
f Sfffef^ eeMveS*
(28 Jy 13)
8888/888 Vetiien^ S188 te 8288.
(S8iy1B»
TWO Bed. one bePi apt te Mteie wNP
male 5 min from school In W.L.A
SI IS a mmm. 478-8884.
(28 J 28)
t^nooM
81B8.80 inchidinf
Blvd 788-8228
(28 J 28)
ROOMMATE wanted to ahere three
bedroom apartment with two male
graduate atudsnM 1 niMa h^om campua
Rent $105 00 month No amokers
July lat 474-3888 Aaii for
(28 J 28)
"URNIBH^W Oetuv ept from. Jtify S-
iept 7 2 bedrooms. 2 batha poei
terwiis courta. ak. Culver City Bob
e^^F"^W 8^. . «k^ A <» .
'>• Jv 131
BmBMI Jidy and August ctieimfctf
four tMdroom house neef belbch Sunny
(SB J 25)
AVAILABLE July 1 Sept 1 2 bedroon^
lurMahad apt 5205 mo Call 388-5883
(28 J 28)
liouse fM^ien&i
room fML»nt
FACUtTY Slen Brsnhpeed 2
hauea Large ltvir«g room fvtlh'flrepteee
format din'^g Ca'pets Drapes At
appMaeeea. -tard ge^dene' 4 78 48""
•" '^•^ .30 J 2er
HOUSE ON BEACH
COOL comtoriable rapm ler
M er grad at'odent K»tchen
2838*88 _
(28 J 12)
LOvr »T> bath mw amen deai(pier'8
home >o| «e«nate grad atudent PPaP
p>iw«««^^, 580 00 870 1888
(38 Jv tt«
2 bedroom i bat^ turmahed houae
1 houaa from beach on a eu*et Men
hetlan Beach walk atraei Avaiiabia
Septembvr mrougn Jur«e 5450 pe«
month ideal tor trvatructo' wdh laen
Call Oick Lyman Reade* 54*
,• . 1
7 28-88
turn taf«ed Specioua 4
bed
rooma
bath* Pool Voileybati
C»'
5850 IS
rmntdp* UCLA 783
274 7
(30 Jy 13)
•RCl PNfRt redeia On Gaylev Ave
Acrees from campus Private- roems
Pom 888 wtth ttaih from Si 38 I Matisw
poviieges lounge laundry parking
avaiiebt* 1^*^ •^'^ ^ac Jerry Meyes.
138 Jy 13)
4T:
OuifT Pr*«af» 'oom bath « fchen
pnwitages Launo^v d^estwood efiianire
Mate faculty tiudeni Art#< S 30 p m
474 7122
l88Jvt:%i
CLOSE UCLA in baeudlMl CheviettPPs
3 bedrooma 2 baths l>utlt ins Oniy
8788 Andre Regie 474 8505
(30 Jv 13»
house for sale
ROOM lo rem All houae
Shara batfi Carpet furniture tUO^
Cell aMei « 398 5084
(38 Jv tji
MOBILE Home 8 K 40 turniahad Senia
Monica Adult Park No pets Poo<
13800 caah Pr Pty 828 8357
(31 Jy 13)
OWN room (sna^* mie n#n bath)
Girt only Tamp okay Bafnngl»»" n- o
Lynne 477 0840 477 0847
580 MA. , «duai# or leiuM, ryml
nonamoi^Wr (ni) rrtchan priv«i«g««i
WalktnQ dialancc 8fl i Maicoim 4 74
5147
138 Jy 13)
house to sharo autos for sale
TOUNC Won^n seeks lemale grad
Student or proleaaional to sn<;'«- ^'Miae
in Weat Hollywood Days 472 /
^es
(32 Jy 13)
T te sRere Pemals non smober
preterrvd Marina Mfmm S182 50 a mo
utti 029-8513
(32 J 25)
Furniahed t150 649-8805 No > reeks
(32 J 25)
ROOBNBATE wenled to siiefe roomy
beechHeyse wtth codpN Si 30 month
call alter 8 30 pm 38B-4B83
(32 Jy 13)
8MLE
st«are canyon
home
BeeuttfuHy
turruehed Own bedroom
Air condi
Bened
5100 month
plus uttiiMea AHer
8<B8p
m 27»..1iiO
f 88 Jv 181
SHARE beauHtui Spanish Houae Plre-
pardaii 5 min lo UCLA Matura
478-2822 Available July 10
(32 Jv2)
LAWG8 bPi*aa. Vertlce Beach own
bedroom bePweom yard, garden, troni
end back entrences 5200 382-4275
(32 Jy 1.1)
housing fwded
LAOV aingta 88 - needs 1 BR Pum
A^ SmeN panPon under 51 70. Peaan t
drtnb Ca« 841 3402
(33 J 25)
PEMALE
:ipllr>ad cat
SM/Pebns
^e. woriimg,
Own room your apartment
838-8348 eves
(33 Jy 13)
EELLOW (
a yeera
8/t/78
Division of
Unlv
0 ) with tsmily deatrea
' of 3 BR houae alerting
contact Or Haidt c/o
Opthalmology Stanford
' Center Stanford Ca
(33 Jy 181
room and board
OKchange for help
ea-
t f»ouaekeepir>g occa
by amiable capable
campua Pool garden
(37 Jy 2)
ATTRACTIVE private room 8 bath
Pree to reaponsibta lemaie student
in escftervge lor light aervicea 3 day wk
No babysitting SorT>e meals Walk to
campua Eicellent situation tor righ
person 479 8154
t'*f Jv 13
PRtVATE r
dianga for
atenel coobing
gin 3Mbs
474-8887
EXCHANGE poom vrelbinf dlptanca
Of campus for 8 hrs housework weekly
plus aom* diahweshing for 525 month
Gin only 472 99 ' 7 r,, 472 0055
'37 Jy 13)
ROOM in BN heme^NPpi
MieaePange
tor babysttting and HfNtPi
maebeeping
272-8801 or 2 7S 2780
f37 Jy 13/
PEMALf RooflL 8 beerd eacftange fer
light housework babysitting Prtvate
reem both T v Nesr uCla 4T4 0338
(37 Jy 9)
room for rent
'•culty sBfBtm '' bleeb WN-
•hire bus Weat Beverly Hfds 883-8888
(28 Jy 131
gULU
ROOM M pdveM Heme We
278-8B88 aRar 1 p m
tng
(31 J 2^i
71 PtNTt^ Hmm tirea new clutch 4
apeed very cleejn am FM Ongmai
owner Oaya481 31^44 fvas wknd*
470 3178 ,M, ^ ,^
(4.1 Jy til
72 GHIA immecutaie r«ew tires brekes
25 M euto aick 52000 Prtvaia party
(5*4 NAV) (?• • '"'" '508
(41 Jy 13)
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new brake fransmission 51050 Geli
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(43 JIBI
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i
Johnson-Stays In Westwood for senior year
^Continued from Page 1) ^
laid d«itkii»unt coach Larry
Farmer. "The NBA might have
a 24-hour withdraw rule pnor
to the draft, but the NCAA
only lays that a player will
remain eligible if he withdraws
hit Miine any time prior to the
draft -
Johnson's phone call to
Farmer wa& prompted by the
withdrawal of a million dollar
offer by the Denver Rockets. U
the Denver offer had stood,
then Johnton would be in the
NBA DOW with the ABA-NBA
merger
Detriot was scheduled to
draft Johnson for the NBA,
but the Pistons only offered
Johnson approximately $350,000
for three years, which was not
enough money for him to letfte
school. Johnson wanted an
outstanding offer like Denver's
to leave UCLA
. — Final
Mmr^u— Johnson nttumt
Hampton, Parks shine
Johnson finally made his
decision to stay at UCLA
around 2 am on Juae 8
Farmer and Bartow were im-
mediately notified and they
began taking the necesaary
steps to make Johnson eligible
to pUy at UCLA^
First a telegram was sent to
the NBA office to notify the
league that Johnson wanted to
withdraw his name What kept
^ Johnson, Farmer and Bartow
"^usy until 10 am (one hour
before the draft was to begin)
waa the search for a machine
that could transmit Johnson's
signature to New York for
official verification of hardship
withdrawal.
After unsucoMiful visiti lb a
duplicating company, the
Aitociated Press and the
Herald Examiner. Bartow and
Farmer arrived at the Forum
in Ingle wood Johnson went
home. A machine at the
Forum was able^ to transmit
Johnson's signature and UCLA
had its All-American forward
back
Marques miracle
**It If a miracle that we have
Marques back, because we
thought he was gone,** said Lee
Hunt, UCLA assisUnt coach.
*"! was flabbergasted when 1
found out and it was the great-
est fechng."
''When I found out, 1 let
out a scream of joy with great
cnthusiaftm^r" «Md Far mer —
Said privateiy
Bartow said privately that he
believed the 1976-77 Brums,
woul^ be better than the 1975-
76 team if Johnson returned.
Besides Washington, who was
the third pro pick in the
country, UCLA 'only lost 7-1
Ralph Drojlinger and guard
Andre McCarter frp.m last
yeaiH 27-5 team
Drollingcr was drafted in the
seventh rovind by the NBA
champion Boston Celtics, but
instead of turning professional.
he will play for Athletes In
Action, a Chnstian-AAU team
UCLA ofMt ^y against
At hiatal In Action in Novem-
kar« to Drollmfar will be re-
turning to Pauley Pavihon
McCarter was tlraft^d in the
six4h round ^ Kanaai, to ii n
possible he will be playing with
WashtiifUm, should he survive
the cut.
NCAA tide direal
With Johnson. UCLA
should be a threat for the
NCAA title David Greenwood
returns at center, but there it a
good chance he will be moved
to forward if 7-0 Breu VrooMUi
continues to improve. Seniors
Wilbert Olinde and Gavin
Smith are alto buck at for-
ward.
"The guard situation it in
solid hands, with Rayipond
jrowniend^ A xetuming ilartef
senior Jim Spillane. Sopho-
mores Brad Holland and Roy
Hamilton should be the start-
ers come November if they.
continue the progress they
made last year, lofcing a nice
problem fot_B(Mtow.
THIe talent
Add to that group swingmen
Chns Lippert a«d Marvin
Ihomas, plus freshmen stand-
outs James Wilkes, Gig Sims,
Darrell AUums and Kiki Van-
deweghe and Bartow should
have NCAA title talent
Wilkins highlights AAU meet
B\ Sirvf Fmley.
1>B .Sports >^ri|er
Mac Uilkms vupplicd ihc
pouter Millard Hampton and
MaKic I'arks- supplied the
speed in the \a!u>nal AAl
Track arid field Champion-
ships held two weeks ago at
Drakb Stadium
I heir pertof'maiiLLs turned
uhai had started to he a dull
meet inU) one ol the hetter
events of the vear
N^ilkilis looking r;. 'IV like
Hercules exeryiimc t\- ' p.ped
intj^^lhe discus ring J,i//led
the crt>vvd vMth the best series
in (rack and held hisior\ H\\
winning tosv uas 2^0-0
1 he series uas 225-2. 224 I .
22IW). 22H-H. 2Mh4) and 226-11
^_ Headed to ri L4
Hampttifi. a 19-year old
sophomore lr(»m San Jose Cil>
College uho is headed for
I'Cl A in the tall held off a
strong sprint field which in
_.i"
eluded James Cnlkestil LSC.
Clancy Lduards ol Maccabi
I rack Club, and Mark I ut/ ol
the Pacific Coa;st Club.
The most impressive winner
during the AAl \ was cx-
Bruin Maxie Parks who won
the 4e0 meters m 44 82 Im-
rViediatcly foll(>\ving the race.
Parks boldly announced he
uould wm the gold medal at
M lint real
Ihc women. .\(vhi) for the
lirst time competed along side
their male rivals vicre lust as
enthusiastic and impfessive as
the males, setting man\ re-
^ < » f (J s ■
^ait for 1977
hor I CI A track and field
tana, it looks like wait until
t year Mike lulls placed
second m the pole valui at 17-
10'/4. uhich was the same
height as the v^ inner. Earl Bell
of Arkanaaa State James
Owens. UCI As flash\ high
hurdler, placed second in the
I lO-meter events.
Willie Banks, jumping like
the old Willie Banks' placed
third with a leap of 55-0 '/4W
He had a legal jump of 54-8
Tully. Owens and Banks will,
form the nucleus for Jim
Bush's 1977 track and field
squad
hor Bush, the meet did pro
ducc one ,'ma)or highlight
Which uas the 5-1 i, 179 pound
Hampton He hoMt the Na
I J< racMd in the M)
(20 I ) which was set this week
He is the slate JC champion m
hoth the MM) and 2(M) meters
Ami anchored San Jose Cit\
college's \Mnning 44() and mile
relay teams m the State meets
Ihw IHMMT. ■ V . 7- , — —
Hampton, who will join
Bush's track team as a junior
this fall says he has not been
beaten m the 2(K') in r a
vear and a halt.
Bruin track debacle' ends at NCAA's
By Rich Perelman
' DB Sports Hrtter
In every d there is
supposed to, he a silver lining
Indeed, that's the case for the
Brum tracksters as they ended
their season at the NCA
• mpionships in Phila-
dclpf Pennsylvania three
weeks ago in a tie for 12rh. at
16 point.
It was the lowest point total
ever for a Jim Bush-coached
UCLA team, but it was cauicd
hy another in a long series of
Brum injuiies and other mis-
fortunes thst iMn^e stalked the
**4t^m^K^^^~^tMt^ Hie Start of the
X
complete onlv the 100 meters
before deciding to withdraw
from the competition Ed Mil-
ler of California who Akrxan-
er had beaten in the Pac-H
Championships in middle May.
finished as NCAA champion.
N'eXi, high jumper Jason
Meis-ieT failed to clear any
height in his speciality. It waa
a sad way to end his season, as
Mekb^ had been a cofiai9ti>fft
sl ... .,)Oter all year long }
tunately for the New Yo.*.
native. he*ll have another year
to try to score m the NCAA
meet.
who made the 400 meter hur-
dle final, but finished without
a point i|n seventh-place
StM dhappoiirtment
For Oi^eas. though, there
was still • disappointment. He
looked invincible in his heats,
blasting out of the blcKks way
ahead of his competition. But.
in the final, he was beaten by
San Jose Staters frosh flash
Dedy Cooper.
At the gun for the finals the
crowd at Franklin Field re-
sponded with a roar in reac-
tion to Owens* lightning start
Alter five hurdin, he had a
condition
First. Pac-8 champion Steve
Aleiiander. one of the favorites
in the decathlon fell victim to
B Hitific iimilMiiiM jfu] UUUIU
Bttt. there were some good' clear lead over Cooper intf ap-
things Like James Owens* peared to be in command all
second place finish in the hifii__j|ie way
hurdles. Mike Tully's tie for But Arizona State's Gary
third in the pole vault and Burl, who has a reputation for
Willie Banks* foun^ place tn- being "all over the track."
pie jump pufiHi. nUHip Miii5
(Continued on Page 14)
Kadn Smltti fMaliflM
Four tracksters Montreal-bound
EIM.I NE. OREGON Iwo current I CLA athletes and
two who will be Bruins next year, will be headed to the
Montreal Olympics next month, after qualitving in the
United States Olympic Trials here the past four days.
I'Cl A freshmen Evelyn Ashford. who runs the 100
meters and javelin thrower Karm Smith finished third in
their respective events to qualiK for the Olyrr- Aairfwd
ran 11.22. to record the fifth fastest time in c niicd States
women's track history Smith, who finished second with the
secoiid longest throw m American histor\ in the AAU meet
last week (20V to^ was an easy third here with a beat throw
of (IK7-9) PCTiwrow
Millard Hampton and Kath\ Weston, two athletes who
wril be attending ICl A in the Fall, also qualified
Hampton repeated his AAl 200 meter victory with a 20 10
clocking, the sixth fastest ever Weston finished third
behind new American record setter Madeline Manning
Jackson f I 59.81), with a persoMl taM of 2:00 73. third
fastest time by an American woman.
I'Cl A hurdler James Owens competed yesterday for an
Ofyminc berth Max re Farks aad Benny Irown, two former
Bruins, were still alive in the 400 meters, but Benny Myles
failed to qualify WiUic Banks in the long |Mnp and triple
jump began competing yesterday Mike Tully failed to
qualify in. the pole vault Conrad Suhr did not finish in the
800 meters
- Paul FariM
r'.r
-rr
I"
UCLA
Summer
v»
VoliMM XCIX Number 2
Ufi«v«f«lty of CaHlomia, Lot Aus^Im
TiiMday, June 2f, 1976
NY bathers
swimming
in sewage?
By A4mm PfefTcr
New York CorrespoMlcnt
JONES BEACH, NEW YORK
— Wliile most people who
journey to the beaches on the
West Coast enjoy the breaking
waves of the Pacific Ocean and
the scalding rays -pt the noon-
day sun, people^ venfuniif To
the beaches of New York have
recently had. to contend with
raw and partially treated
-sewage which haik wahscd up
onto the shoreline by allegedly
abnormal summer winds and
tidei.
Although New York Gov-
ernor H u g It C a f e y of f k' i a liy
declared I ong Island Beach
(which includes two counties) a
"disaster area *" on Wednesday.
June 23. in o^der to receive
federal aid. the beaches were
reopened and swimmers were
swimming as earlv as Satur-
IfJay ~
Carey also appealed to' Pre-
sident Eord to order federal
agencies ito/*AssiM' m every wa>
in the cleati-up effort" Ford
responded by sending tW6
assisianLs from his Domestic
Affarr< office to investigate the
matter
James Cannon, assistant to
the President lor domestic af-
fairs, said he thought the litter
was serious but did nm qualify
as a "disaster ** Apparently in
response to a suggestion by
Cannon. President ford an-
nounced he would send Job
Corps personnel to help clean
the beaches, but he did not
allocate any federal funds for
the operation
"I don't think that the
beaches should be open right
now" Jones Beach lifeguard
William Todleski said, adding.
"They (the officials) have
closed the West End beaches
which are only located a half
mile from here. So that means
{Cnmilmm4 on Page 3)
SIC supports
Westwood disco
David K*nn«r. promoter of thm cOfitrov«rst«l W««twood
coNiplMi: *•#« p«opl» go le tflacat. flnni piapii ■• la nia
•fil«rtalnm«nl
•)i Laurel LefT
DB Staff Keponer
The , St^udent i.egtshtttvr
Council has involved itsclt in a
battle between Westwood
homeowners and promotei
Oavid kenner over the cs
tabhshment of a proponed
four -floor entertainment com-
plex on (jay4ey Avenue in
Westwood Villagr
Kenner plans lu um: lot 12,
the Eederal Building's- miml^unt
and an additional legallv re-
quired 93 spaces in the West-
WiMKJ Onter to provide park-
ing for fhe entertainment com-
Orientation aids newcdmers
Program begins July 1
By Debra Aauzmer
DB Staff Reporter
More than 5,000 freshmen, transfer students
and parents wiii participate in this summer's
UCLA orientation program, being held fr(»m
July I to September 1 1
One-<liy* two-day and threes-day sessions for
^tudfhts and parents, as well as/ipecial night
time meetings for parents, wtjracquamt pro*
gram participants with IJCl A students and
personnel, the campus jlnd the Westwood
community
Comnhenting on the program, Oricntaiion
Director Bruce Barbee said. "The increase of
2,200 to 4i)00 students over four summerv
speaks for for the program and how wefl it's
doing.**
Offices and residential facilities lor overnight
guests arc located in Hedrick^ Hall
The orientation program is an opportunity
for freshmen and transfer students to plan their
class schedules with counselors as well as to
complete the necessary paperwork for UCI A
enrollment, according to a brochure sent to
candidates for admission this fall
A key feature of the program. Barbee said, is
the discussion of "decision-making." the stu-
dent's introduction to goal-setting in his
educational pursuits. ^ — rrr^ —.
Twenty salaried counseTTors, ranging in
academic standing from sophomores to gradu-
ate students, have been in training for six hours
a week since early March They will lead the
orientation sessions in workshops, tours and
entertainment
In a related pro|cct. tfie International Stu
dents' Center, in ccKiperation with the Office of
International 'Students and ^<icholars, has a>
orientation program for foreign students
Headed by Martin McCarthy and Student
Driector f)onald Billinkofl a September 9-11
session and informal weekly mctrtings through
out the lall quarter tamiliari/e foreign students
with language and cultural differences knd
assist them m finding housing ac^commodations
Most of the 300 foreign students are from
China (Taiwan. Hong Kong). <Hhefs are from
Caanda, Mexico. Japan, (treat BriUin. India
and Iran
Special pnentation session dates are also
being offered for student -veterans to gam more
infornutioQ about Gl benefits and for return-
ing students and students' spouaet to become
better acqunitrd with the clunput The cost for
the program ranges from $16-S34 for students,
and $5-$23 50 for parents, depending on the
type of sessions ' Included in the costs arc
meals, overnight lodgings and operational
counsehng feet. ^
Information about the orientation lessiolM
can be obtained at 2225 Murphy Halt The
Office of International Students and SchoUrs is
located at the International Students' Center,
1023 Hilgard Ave.
plex. called Dillons
A law. requiring all parking
spaces fof af\ entertainment
Uicihty to be provided within a.
750 foot radius would have
prevented Kenner trom usini;
the addittcmal needed space tn
the WcatwtNid Center How
ever. Kemier received a park
ing variance from the -West
side Communitv Planning
CoMManon that extends the
jMHt 10 950 feet, and includes
the Westwood Center parking
Numerous letters by var-
ious homeowner associations
induced Councilman /ev
Yarqslavsky to support an
i^ipeal filed yesterday to hUnrk
the parking variance given tn
Kenjier Despite the h<>mc
owners' object loris. SIC
tlvough Its metropolitan lobb\
lUHi decided to t>ack Kenner in
his fight to retain the 100 loot
extension, according to Mike
(iaIi/M info direcUMT
I he enierJainmcnt complex
would house a 4(k>-Heat night
club with live sound and tele-
vision recording facilities, a
buffet restauratit and quiet bar.
a combination disc and gMBe
room and live disco ada^Mld
dancing
According to Kenncr« -how
.ever, it*^ the ht>mcowners' ap
peal ir granted. ^ at Idist oae
flcKir of the proposed complex
would have to be cut from the
plans
SLC"s dcciaion to hack
Kenner and his Progressive
Entertainment Corporation in
the legal battle was made as
the basis of a decision from the
Undergraduate President's of-
fice, (jah/io said
"Our concerns were three-
fold." Ciali/io commented
"Parking spaces for Dillon's
seem resolved using lot 32. the
minibus and the Westwood
Center parking Fighteen-yeaf^
olds will be allowed into
Dillon's, though we're a little
(C ontinued on Page 2^
Special Olympics
Athletes show skill
By Mike fmeff>ld
DB Sports Writer
Piper Cttrtis jogged slowly around the bend of the track
at Drake Stadium. Iightini; a flanle with her torch and
signifying the ofemag ol the Eighth Annual California
State Special Olympics Friday night
The SpKMl Olympics featured the top 2.600 menUlly
retarded athletes in California here at UCLA*t Drake
Stadium
The athiaiifs came from all over the sute with tlif fcf^i
jcneyt. high^opcs and enthoMMlic volunteers. Helping in
the aMMe were nuiny Red CroM volunmera. hundreds of
entertainment mad fporu celebrities and fan.s wto a^
tiK efforts of tiK competitoffi, apes eiflM aad up
iantor of Cabfomia's Special Olympics,
Samoff. spoke lo m packed fnuidalaad of
Fnday's Ofiening ceremonial ,
"ticB of yoa are winners bacMMe Mch of you are
competuig bere tha weekend.** sa^ Sarnoff, the wife of
NIC*^ vice-president, David SamoCL
Hundreds of lai, white and blue baloons wcie cut away
immeduitely alter the lighting qf the eternal llaaK. OHkt
(C
«fe pwt «)
i
\
\
I
If i
tion a
biah^
mav <-
vour
♦J*..
I
m
t
3
"*• t
r
\
-si
mmm
mim
ir V. -^iij . I
m
■^-^
riB
>'
annfiniadsiof iheit
J
mi
building
r
iy Marttyn R
Dl Staff Reporter
U thoufhtft ot ftummer vaca-
tion arc already giving you the
telM, a clan in yurt building
fmy be aU you need to perk up
your summer
perk up your summer
Th€ yurt building will be
part of a iix-week leminar
offered thu tummrr by the
UCLA art department The
course, which ii broken up
into three two-week seminart.
11 entitled **CMMMrative Stu-
dies in [>esign. Industrializa-
tion and Shelter "
Ancient yunt« origmnily
used by Mongolian nomadi for
portable shelters, are tents
built with light poles and felt
•
i
c
3
I ■
jm W<f«»CTlB ^
NOW PLAYING MAiarS
12 4S. 3:tft^. SM. 7 M. 10.1S
• • •
0%
y^' ;!«.«. » .♦
Summer boredom
got you down?
f
l
*H\
.J
draw, paint, stitch, mold, cast,
paste, carve — to learn or for fun
Under the instruction of Dr
WilUam Coperthwaite. director
ot the Yurt Foundation in
Maine, students will use an-
cient methods and pnncrples
along with modem matermls in
constructing a yurt on campus
'•The Yurt and Social Design"
is a two week mini-seminar
which is part of the 6-week
course
Another two-week mini-
seminar entitled "Making
Things Rifkt** will deal with
correcting man-made errors m
design It will be taught by
Ralph CaplarK design critic
consultarft.
Occunng at the same time as
Caplan*s seminar, a seminar on
-How Things Got This Way"
will be conducted by Ari^old
Wasserman. industrial designer
on the 'TCLA art department
staff In this semingr. students
will look at design proceii and
the maching age - — -- -
The final mini-seminar will
be presented by Ellen Stern
Hams, consumer advocate co-
lumnist for the LA TimexMud
vice-chairwomnn of the Calif-
ornia Coastal Zone Commis
sion Harris will discUM **De-
sign. Quality of Life and Sur-
vival."
As part of the course, a
discussion on iolnr energy will
be conducted by Piriiid
Schoen and Fred Rice Sohen
11 interested in industrial solar
energy and Rice, who has a
solar-powered home, is in-
terested in personal solar
energy.
The seminars, will run from
June 23 to August 3 Judith
Milcr coordinates the course
and encourages all interested,
students to sign up
The deadline for registering
for the course is Tuesday, Junt
8 Anyone interested should
call the Summer Sessions of-
fice
Discotheque
K ontinued from Page M
leer> of the prices
7^^^ ?!!?'' '^^•^JMrc vkould be
a student discount on tFTc cover
charge and cheap drink prices
•N^eMI try hard to keep if
bccau^ It IS important.'*
Gali/io laid "I he students
think so. .tjoo. and that \ uhai
IS important."
kenncr said he expects to
attract performers who usually
pla> at m#jor nightclubs in Las
Vi^gas such as Helen Redd>.
Paul Simon. Veil Seda^ka and
Bettc Midler
"Pertormers usually play the
Forum and the Hollywood
Bowl to make money Occa-
sionally they like to see an
audience and have the au-
dience see them In addition,
the availabihty of video-taping
increases the economic poten-
tial over lust the admission
price.** Kcnner added.
However, according to Yaro-
slavsky. people who live in the
area arc not at^ll pleased with
Kcnncr's project "It's a very
emotional issue and people
tend to lose sight of the facts."
he said
Numerous letters have been
sent to Yaroslavsky and the
Planning Commission in an
attempt to stop the parking
plan
"•We want to arrest and re-
duce the proliferation of en-
entertainmtnt in Westwood
Village." Yaroslavsky" said
**rm not down on discos or
supper clubs, but it (West-
wood) IS not the place for an
entertainment estabhshment as
long as they heed a variance
That IS what the law is there
for and I -support the law "
In addition, there is a con-
cern that more entertainment
Summer Bruin
Volum* XCIX N<^Niib«r2 '^iTrtay. JunsJt. If 71
Publish«1 twice a wmk during m« sumf?>«r. accept during holidays and
days following holidays aad examination panods by tba ASUCLA
Communicationt Board 306 y^estwood Plaza. Los Angelas. California
90024 Copyright 1976 by the ASUCLA Communications Board
Second class postage paid at ttie Los Angelas Post Offioa
Alice Short
frmnk Staiiworth
Geoft Ouinn
Susan Kane
Tad Shapiro
Editor
Frank
Kim Wildman
Michelle Ouvai
Coma to thd Art and
mgnt on A lg««l -. yoyH find
lor aM liindtot
— bat
you can do mm «« bd
SUMMER AT HILLEL
900 Hilgard Ave - 474-1S31
Classes and Saminars
Tuddday Jung 29 IwagdHBaiii |g Jm^mm - Jdw«h Utara-
6 00 p m turd thdoiogy and hiatory Bmic couraa
^9mtgnmij to give background k\ Jw
(ifm Inatructofs - Rabbi Barton Ldd.
Rabbi Chaim ^siiigr ruiai and Rabb»
^^^^ David M Bdmor
^^^^•issday Jung 30 Wsadinfaln aid aooildljga. with Rdbbi
Aug 4 3-5 00 p m Chmm Sotdlor-FgNgr A dOdd study of
t^d difficult tdt if>cluding a dtacuMion
of thd ppgaiiin ol EVIL m it rdAatoa to
Ood
-.\'
New York muck ,^^^
..» , . . ...
' ,. '.
(Continued from Page I) >
there IS sttll a dilution probkw. I think the rcaM>n they opened
(he bcachci is so that the stale could make some money**
Todlcwskt also warned. "1 have had problems with hepatitis
The water itself will cleanse itself, but it is the sand where the
di!iease could be All these people here could definAcly get it"
Hempstead. Long Island officials have cited New York Harbor
at the source of the sludge deposits
Hempstead town supervisor Alphonse D'Amato said. "You
really have a giant cesspool, baaically. in the New York Harbor
area. And with this tidal condition, they (the tide%) literally
^sucked but all of these materials in abnormal quantities and
brougbt It out much further than they usually come out.**
'•D'Amato added another abnormal situation exists "with
ffdipect to the winds and tides gaiag w a southwesterly direction
far day after da> after day. materials were then deposited in very
substantial quantities along the entire beacb.**
City officials have responded to D*Amatp*f accusations b>
denying that New York Harbor is the cause of the mess.
Long Island dumps both its treated and untreated sewage 12
miles off its coast, according to beach officials New York ( itN
daily rids itself of 24.000 tons of solid trash. 14 million gallons
of liquid sludge (treated sewage remains) and 22?i million galK)ns
ot raw sewage
Whatever the cause of Wednesday's mess, it disappeared from
the beaches on Saturday, prompting Long Island officials to
reopen most portions of the beaches for svumming
Although Fodeleski disagrees with the v^isdom of swimming in
the water. Saturday sunbathers on Jones Beach^ were conteitt
with the government aitirioces that the waters arc sale
"I feel that they (the beaches) are maintained as best ihe> can
be It's not really an> type of^mTimanagcmeni I don't feel, on the
part of any Long Island official." one bather said, adding. "\i\
jusi something you have to live with living in a city that has 12
million people m it "
'*Thc thing i don't understand is how the beach could be
cleaned up today when it was declared a disaster area two davs
ago," one bather added
Concerns of campus voiced
by Metro Student Lobby
Campus
Events
Law Price Automobile insurance
for Students
:MilTS
|if cp«ttifitiofi
«tN bt iMid 8 30 pm 1 am \M^ 2 Ulltf
n«lion«l Slialtiif Ctnltr Fm
ly initrntaaail ttwlint Ctnitf
iounot trtt
— 4ii|llili ttmmntHtm trte informal pra<
tice for tofaian liMiann and visitofs to
am noon Mtaiiyt tfid MiKtnirsrtavs
Ackfrman j^]^17
-ilCLA VMip Hti U^$ nas opening ^
tor nt^ mtoifearf who witi continur
throuot) tht 111 Staff tacuHy and ttu
dants are mviM lo |Oin For information
call 13 pm Tutiday and wtgaaagay
RIRS
il Aim. a iiirr about ttie ptoplc of
btrran island of Aian off ttic Irish
It will IM ffiown 19 pm tonight
inttrnatioiial Studant Canter Free
%292
%2bb
$232
S166
24
1377
itii
S278
$232
%m Chacounta wtth 3.0 O^A
e
n
f
m
I
Typical annual rates for bodtty in)ur> and
liability Rates beted on Westwood area
ty dl
tt«e
Arrow Insurance Service, Inc.
H34 Westward iivd «10
West^yootf 475-6461
tiaiaeieo guitarist and
will perfo/>T> 7 9 pm every Thurs
day International Siudant Canttr 10^
Hiigard f-tm
YiS45S^ermanWay•10;
346^8Se
987 2844
e
3
+
' i
from Micronetian Traders
h
r /
B> Richard Karzen
I>B Staff Kepoiier
Improvii^ transportation for
UCLA students, relieving the
congested parking situation
and the construction ot a series
of bikeways leading to canipus
are some of the pnmariv goals
of the I'd A Metro Student
Lobb\
According to Pam Easter
director of MSI. the year-old
organization serves as the stu-
dent voice to tDcal city and
county legislative bodies MSI
^ill complement UCl A's
membership m the National
Student I obbv and the ( C
Student Lobby, v^hich repre-
nentf VC student! on state-
wide issues
•We're trying to change ihe
2 -hour parking gfwies aroufid — '
the co-ops and trats to all-da>
parking.** Easter said, "and a
bike path will be constructed
this summer from the Wesl-
wood-Ohio areas to campus, a
series oi tour paths that„>«?nuld
be. alternatives to the busy
business areas "
Easter and assistant director
l>ave Hirsch are working dili-
fentiv v^ith City Councrimah
Zev Yaroslavsky concerning
these problems In lact. dealing
With politicians is irne ot the
lobby's major Junctions
**We try 4o. establish per-'
sonal contacts with bureau-
crats, the 'mayor and other
people in power." Hirsch said
"We also serve . as an intor-
mation Itaison for the govern-,
ment "
Ihe Metro Lobby, funded
by $1400 allocated bv^the SI C
has a bo published a pamphlet
for students on ''How To Sur-
^t«<e 44^ T^ Crty--yi«fttl mfor-
mation. ranging from where to
apply tor city jobs to what pan
of the government to contact
concerning specific complaints,
ire contained in the pamphlet
Trader sandats
in our exclusive
signature bag
6.89
4
For men and woman springy sandals with UCLA
blue and gold stripes, and royal blue nylon thongs
Yours in a blue-and-gold striped bag with our
signature on it — giaftt for toting your chozzarie
about
t tevet ackerman union, a2$-77ll
n mon-fri 8 30-5 30 tat 10-4
students' store
")
Titos Vandis
and TtffoviaMNi Actor
Two steak
dinners
$5.99
OWef good only w^\t^
CO' ■ ■ 1*
t>everage is mciucied
Acting
it Coachmg
For Informaiion Cal
r
TWO $2.79 SIRLOIN STEAK DINNERS
AND TWO 49C DINNER SALADS
lwoO*t«
la July f
r«outar titnrmr
FOR \J\z
tizzLER nmw ITUK mutt
' IWO
FAMIY
■Mk^^i^
Off*r 90ad only tft^? Grtylf
— jum —
I.
QumiitY Food at
RmmMonmbSo Pncas
uAtk
niHimn'ifiHnMtr" l
Thmt % whnt i uuMfs ^
•f
^'V-T^
I
I
c
i
!
■■-.--'
1
r
Y.
UCLA AFFINITY CHAIVTEfIS
H2BO0 pkm Jipirtyw
iiai
July 6 •
S0plwnb«f
12
August 3
- ^tplmmtm
r22
OMmt fOMl charter d*al«
HAWAII
chartvri ttiN svAiiadl* for booking m
1 and 2
Sepl^mtMr
flit round-tnp on Continental
Waitlisting for August
(••t Travel group charter instructions)
MEXICO
TRA/EL SERVICE
in OTC s available August and
8aplafnber from $1M
NEW YORK
1, 2. 3. W99k flf0hti still availaMe m Se0tiiiiigr
from ItTf round-trip (see travel group charter)
EUROPE
2 3 4 6.8 10 ¥veek flights availBbIa on a scattered
basis to AmtHm^BtD. Frankfurt, London. Pans.
and Zurich starting from $37t round-trip
As a Stimmer school student, staff, or faculty member, you and your family are entitled to aM the services of the
ASUCLA Travel Service — the only official University charter flight service
With over ten years experience in charters, we re located right here on campus in Ackerman Union above the
bookstore (A-213)
At lower prices than elsewhere around town, we' offer charter flights to Europe Hawaii, f^exico. and New York;
student, faculty, and staff discounts on European car pur<:hases leases and rentals.. camping and study tours,
unregimented student tours, AMTRAK tickets. Eurail and Bntrail passes! fly-drivrprograms. plus vacation packages
all over the world.
Also available to you on our premises, thanks to the University s EXPO office, is the largest travel library m Los
Angeles and free travel cour>seling So what are you waiting for'? Summer school will be over in less than six weeks
and then YOU OWE YOURSELF A VACATION
Gome in and meetoursupersummer staff- Emily Dawn. Larry, or Kathy Here are^ome ideas of the neat things you
can do at the end of the summer
MONDAY 0'Vk1
Joui P»ck»g9 Includ0»
Hvtl/ t 4« trntM I NtH iii% milmiiixl mittttfi i||r>» »<<mi
< dtMntttn Sdil nil Matktii iTMh
Hvft/ §m>M« Otoiiwwl ( <Nt|»fw«'
>*Mi<wi <iiiii»r»tai-tai rNf««ttriNfH
HsmMutn \^ft»timr 9trjfk**'' •- >* "ii-^- ■•.. •. i iwk
I «i>«M Vwrtt >r<« 1t*9it It.
t(H.« MM* I T\» nUHtS !««< tl'tMKM. IA« » %MVirT
Hawaii
I win
twin (
.'<l(
M«ai
rum
11*4
JkM
I ion
llSi
-jr.-
Whet ebou! cherters?
There are two kinds of air travel schedule flights
and charter flights Schedule flights opeiele on a
timetable like a bus or tram and depart generally at a
pre-detefmir>ed hour no matter how full the aircraft
IS Charter flights dep>end on high occupancy rates
and prohibitive cancellation regulations
Under the category of charter flights, there are three
subdivisions the first <s the Affinity Flight which
simply means that you t)^y9 to belong to a club or
organization for at leest six months - with tf>e
exception being if you attend a school offering an
Affinity Flight (UCLA s Affinity Flights for this
summer are listed in »1 See upper right hand t>ox)
The second type of charter is tfie Travel Group
Charter which must be booked at least 65 days prior
to the flight departure The flight must be at least
•0% full to fly and if only 80% the fare can be
increeaad up to 20% from the minimum fare if ttte
fli(^ht flies at 100% occupancy
The Travel Group Charter has stiff cancellation
penalties but since 15% of the seels per flight may
be eaaigned to r>ew pminpai s after the 65 day
booking deedline, you can lemiiinea alMI get on a
flight up to the day of tht daparture
The third type of charter is" the Orte-Stop inclusive
Taer Group Charter known as the OTC It must be
booked at leest 1 5 deys prk>r to deperture and must
irtcluda a minimum amount of land arrar>gements
(m aaaanca. this is apackaoe baaad on chmr^m air
Orient South Pacific
OHI-ORIENT HIGHLIGHTS
1S DAY^ FROMflliO Japan. Taiwan Hong Kong Korea
OJA-ORIENT JADE TQUR
22 DAYS FROMIiaM Japan Taiwan Hong. Kong Thailand Malaysia
Singapore Korea
OBM TREASONS OF THE ORIENT
22 DAYS FROI^ SISM^ Japan Hong Kong. Thailand Sn
(Indonesia) Malaysia Phillipp.nes
OSP-GRAND PACIFIC CIRCLE
34 DAYS FROM $2343 Japan Hong Kong Thailand Singapore Bah
(Indonesia) Australia New Zealand Tahiti
SPL-SOUTH PACIFIC HIGHLIGHTS '
21 DAYS FRGMims F.,. Australia New Zealand Tahiti
OCS-INDONESIAN ISLAND CRUISE
17 DAYS FROM |141f Singapore Ba.. I.ndonetiei. Hong ^ong
OCP-PARADISE CRUISE
26 DAYS FROMtliia Janen 1h»ii*«H c^
v^nn viOTe Japan Thailand Smgapo-e Bali (Indoneeia)
Malaysia Hong Kong ^~
OCB-BALI CHU4SE TOUR
26 DAYS FROM $1i24 Jaoan Th«i'«nH c v.-
• ••«^ japan Tr^ai.and Singapore Bali < Indonesia)
Malaysia. Hong Kong
X
''ft — hefica eoed sevlnQs)
■■!■ .' 1"
ASUCLA TRAVEL SERVICE
A l*v«| Ack*nnan Union, with EXPO
82S-1221 op»n Mondav-Frid«y in-4
Editorial board resigns in Gallo despite
^?5!?£L" ?.ilJi2L'li^^«^^ege paper 1^^^^
D« SUff Writer ing editor. retifBcd in proUM l^-^^^^llJ^ ^ * "danfrr Hayward PublicMiow Board nmrr down- --^-^^-■- '
The entire edilonaJ board of kmmmt ihtTZouid ^.TZ «"^. P^^cnt ^^^^ ,^ ncv^^r ^7^ ^.. ^r."' .i.**^. ^^ ?
DB Siyr Writer
Tkie entire edilonaJ board of
• Northern Calif omia colkgr
paper resigned recently after
the campus publication hMf4*t
controversial decision
free and equal space to
anti-Gallo group.
The nine editor^ of the Calif-
ornia State University Hay-
ward. Pioneer, including the
an
editor-ins:hief and the
ing editor, resigned in prouai
they would have to
Pf*w^ free ad space every
time a Gallo ad was published
••We've iMd a lot of sup-
pon,- — «Bid ex-nr«i edkor
^Hy Tockey She said ihey
resigned on the issue of free
press.
A sutcmcnt by the editors m
th last issue of the Pioneer said
Dillon's Disco. .
(Continued from Pafe 2)
facilities ikould increase the
dcmiind for fast food opera-
tioRh idnd lurihcr reduce essen-
tial services. Yarosiayskv said
However. Kwcnnci said.
"Dillon's v^ill stave off the
threat of more discos and
theaters A project of this
magnitude is the best deli
against sht>dd> operations "
Fred Cowan, who represents
the 12 homeowner asscKfations
involved, disagrees I he
homeowners would much
rather have a shopping facilit>
We don't have a markcst ai^
we onlv have one department
store We don't see WestwotxT
as an entenainment capital *
he said .
Ant>ther homeovkncr. Bob
Fleming, said of the enter-
tainment complex, Zh ^oukJ
discourage other tvpes t»l busj
s from coming into West
^^tHHj A lot oi high qualiiN
shofts are leaving I he \ \\U^,
mig^t deteriorate into a Holl\
wood strip area ".
Kenner. who met uith the
ht)meo«r»ers about the com-
plex, said. **They'rc afraid
West wood willturmnto Holl\
wood Blvd Vou know, bad
peo^ go to discos, good
P«>pie go t6 the Phil-
harmt)nic "
Summer Positions
Available
Apply Now!
Positions open now for summer pro-
grams, International Student Center.
Detailed job descriptions and application forms
available NOW at Placement & Career Plann^g
Center, Office of International Students and
Scholars, and International Student Center for
Summer Study Program for Japanese Students
(7/22-8/13)
—■Residential Program Coordinator/Counselor
—Residential Program Counselors (3-4 positions)
Deadline for applications Wednesday. June 30
Cultural Exchange Programs for Japanese
Students (series of 3-day programs, 8/9-20)
— Residential Program Coordinator
Oeediine for application June 28
— RasMsntial Program Counselors
Oasdiine for application July 7
International Summer Programs of English
Language and Orientation (for newty-arrrved
foreign students entering US universities)
—Residential Program Assistants for S-w^ek session
,7/31-9/10) and 3-week session (8/21-9/10). three
positions each
Oeedtine for applications Monday Jur>e 30
All are intensive, residential proerams in UCLA
dormitories
In addition, two non-resident la I positions:
Program Secretary for ISC Summer Programs
Deadline for application Jur>e 30
Tours & Travel Assistant
Deadline for application June 30
Work-study eligibility preferred for all positions.
tktjbomrti had set a "danftr
eiM* precedent
''The pouibiliticft are endleti.
if Catholic itudents obftci to
contraceptive adt. they would
have the opportunity to have
free advertising space for nght-
lo-lifc statements.** the sute-
mcot issued *^by the Pimmer
said
The statement called the
board's decision a -travcstv"
^nd said "the combinauons of
counter-advertisements extend
to the absurd **
About }jOOi) of the 4.500
issues printed were *tt»len off
the stands "before cighi in the
morning." Tockey s^id
I he motion, passed jour 4«l*
two h\ the C'alifornui State
Hayward Publicatiow Bomrd.
saiered the newspaper to give
tke La Raza Coalition pnor
notification of the running of a
GftlAo ad io tluit th«y could
tree St cfiafit
if It
li-
on
The problems for the
Piomer first began early last
month when ii^ mem
the La lUza C
marched into the edit'
fiocs as reported by the
Bruin
They demanded __^
on the Ciallo ads which ran
that da\
Dan Sheridan, the managing
editor, said at that time thai
one demonstrator told him the
coalition wtiuld "close the
down.
means we could, even
cainc to
ICfSl**
The controversy of Gallo
advertising has sparked a num-
ber of incidents in the last few
we^Kl CM) campuses across the
sutc with several reports oi
msit theft of student news-
papers and threats (A physical
violence
i \
\
Slimmer Bruin
needs help, apply
in Kerckhoff 110
\
UCLA
Women's Resource
Center
190 Kinsev Hall
V
M
C(r
y.
y/
^
-y<i.
i^
< f,
Referrals
t academic, career
and life planning, child care,
health cdre, legal info,
assertion training
On-Going Groups
personal exploration
groups, consciousness
raising discussion groups
.^l.
^M^r>itiiit/^^^
\ \l
\V
'\
\
Other Services
individual and group
counseling _^
a comfortable room with
coffee, tea and friendly
people .
10 a.m. — 4 p.m.
825-3945
<^
^
Come in and find out
what people are doing
X look around, have some tea or coffee, share your ideas, meet
people
X participate as a volunteer staff member (two hrs/week)
X participate in a project
A -rvic* ai QFFP <;t..H>..« A r.
I V
yp ■>! »i —
■■ V . V „
">
' 'v.
11
I
m
l»
Photos j by
Maria Levine
Glenn Seki
;.■»--.
Special Olympics - Everyone's a winner
(Continued from Page I)
Spangicd Banner' by a 1975
winner and the singing of
**God Bless America "
The bicenuiiniai spini was
easily overshadowed, however.
b> the competiitive *tn0osphcrc
A happy, uninhibited mood
was present among the con-
lesrants If ever the Chinese
slogan. "Friendship first, com-
petition second," fipplied. it did
during the "weekend's activities
While the Olympic Games
offer fans all over the world
the opportunity to see sports
they usually doh'l ,expcTrcncc.
thi* weekend's Special Olym-
pics was not without its own
"diversity
F vents included track and
field, wheel chair sprints and
relays, softball throwing, vol-
leyball, gymnastics, bowling,
basketball, f hockey, swim-
ming and diving
T here was, no prototype of
athlete during the weekend of
competition Some were ner-
vous before opening cere-
monies, some knew they would
be nervous just before they
competed, others were calm
and collected — some were
veterans i>f three or more Con-
secutive Special Olympics
There were 4he confident, the
apprehensive, the perplexed
and those who struggledf just to
make It to the site of the
competition
During the opeR4^ng cere-
monies, the spectators ap-
plauded frequently and loudly
as the various groups marched
around the tartan track
Amidst "* tfrf^oductions of
several area directors for both
the Special Olympics and the
Red C ross as well as the De-
partment of Parks and Recrca-.
tion, celebrities from the
worlds of entertainment and
sports were presented. .
Bruin alumnus Rafer John-
son, I96() Olympic Gold
Medalist m the decathlon, re-
cited the oath of the ISpcciaP
Olympics "L^.me win: but if I.
cannot win. let me be brave in
the attempt "
A simple song with a simple
statement was chorused
throughout the crowd mo-
ments later, carrying the
words "How far is far** How
high is high? We'll never know
until we try until we try "
The athletes seemed to^joy
the atmosphere at Drake Su-
dium The large surrounding
building and the fNKMl size of
the UCLA campus was start-
ling to those from smaller
areas. •""^~"
"I really hke to run at
UCLA the people ate nice,
the track is good, and it*s great
to win Then you get to sund
on the high platform, ' one
contestant who finished third
stated
I here was intense rivalry for
first, second and third places,
but everyone was happy just to
compete The top 900 finishers
in CaliforniaX Special Olym-
pics will advance to the Inter-
national Meet in August
The California Special
Olympics was the climax of
many local meets throughout
the state Over 400,000 men-
tally retarded children have
competed in Special Olympics
meets during the past year in
the US The meets are spon-
sored by the Joseph P. Ken-
nedy Foundation
Unlil recently, nearly half of
the SIX million mentally re-
tarded children in this country
received no physical education
whatsoever, said John West,
executive director of the Cali-
fornia Sute Special Olympics.
He added that the aim of the
Specml Olympic program is to
build confidence through athle-f
tics, which should carry over
to the dastroom.
The Special Olympics has
gained local and international
recognition Over 2,500 local
meets were held this spring
with over 6,500 athletes com-
peting in sute Special Olym-
pics. California's stat^ meet
was probably the iMgHl with
2,600 participsau.
The success of the Special
Olympics would be minimi/ed.
however, were it not for the
many volunteers Over 150,000
volumeers have participated
There were hundreds of cele-
brities uking part to encourage
the participants duMng the
mn, to congratulate winners
After the finish, and to give the
ribbons to the top three
finishers aboard the traditional
Olympic piatfortn.
Such celebrities as Lola
Falana, Mike FarreU. Dick
Sargent, Roosevelt Crier.
Rafer JoiuHoo and Capuin
Sticky devoted a great dead of
time to the Calafonya S^Kml
Olympics Other "big names'*
taking part included Marty
Allen, Jackie Cooper. Bob
Hope. Art Linkletter. Mary
Jlkl Monfr AHmm West
(ftatSMn). Arte Johaaos, Red
Buttant, and tnanv more
summer bruin
DB Editorial
UCLA t griduition ceremonies, held Sunday. June 20
included a religious component in conflict with tbmmence
ments nondenominational tradition Bishop John J Ward, in hit
benediction, delivered the Lord s Prayer and made relerences to
the Holy Trinity, offending people with his dtipidedly sectarian
tone.
One orginizer of tlie ceremoniit nplained that the content of
i cJergymans speech cannot be directed But this laci( of
guidance offends a significant proportion of tiJ^ audience and
participants and can be remedied simply by stipulating on
invitations to spealcers that benedictions are strictly non
denominational.
Clergymen invited to speak at commencement should under
stifid at tlii euttet tliat the ceremony is non sectarian
Graduation must be geared to as large an audience is pouible
Letters to the Editor
e
S
To Bee
I would like lo know why d
student refirendum w^s not
held on tK4^.^i4i« ol heat It
*€«fm to me that the Powers
T.hjt Be" including the powers oi
the presM Hecid^ to arbitrarily
create* itant amounts of hot
air dnd distribute it across the
campus Considering the prices
that we must pay ior aach ^nd
every little unit oi knowledfe
(such as It IS). I terl that we. the
studatiCf in this asphalt jungle,
desery^e an opportunity to air
our cool views
further, I cannot understand
the unwarranted number of
bees I bumble, queen, and
Powers That) wliich appear on
this campus How can anyone
play pretty games ot "ro*! me
over in rhv dover" when rhr
bees have usurped the veget**
tion without vludent permission^
^Ithoygh one may argue that
this overabundaace of bees is
due to the chsm^tm fhe^rjfi
mx system I can Ur\d n^ eficuM^
tor the encouragement of bugs
ahywhere in a ( ' ' universits
Therefore. I urge the imnwdi
ate Mart oi re^ar ch on the
variefy ol cheese that compotes
the man in the moon It it be
blue I urge that justice be dealt
out tairly in usual merry-go-
««««d mode But if the sfudv
turns of oranges. I would dp
plaud peanuts from the peanut
gallery m Ceorgid
Nsme WtthheM
Kissing
Ei^or:
• picked up a copy of the
t
.^
Proved Awarewei^ campaign in-
formation bo< As I looked
through If I «kds pleased to note
the thof with which
the cand fands on issye^
of great in .mce wcfe pre-
sented
I was^ cipeciallv glad to see
'f\dt rdKing issue d mculation
given Its due cr i<e It may
occur to you (as it Old briefly to
me) thai all the ^ n< es to
bussing" . ■ 'necJ ine trans-
portiHK of ifiuoren to sc h<x>l in
large, yellow motor ve»^ '• . But
I aJmc>st tmmadilaiv rt-aiixed (as
I know, of courte. you did) that
there if only ofie '$' m th^i w^rd
as OMcwed to two in the word
President, ^ord u quoted in
the booklet as %ii^mg that he
would allow bussing to contiruie
urnler court orcier but suggests
education be furthered tbrcHlfb
olber means
On the CNNfWcntic side,
Henry Jackson afVd ^r^ Harris
dte 'ger>erally oppoMd to court-
ordered kissing Morriv Udal
^*'** . f!**^ ~^^^<'' 'hat "bussing is
the best method for quality
education though othdn are
sure to differ
Margaret White of the Peace
and freedom party is rviore ex-
pansive The Proiect booklet
stales that she will s«ippDrt bus
sing "wherever a minority rnay
desire it Senator Church, how-
ever primly refus^ to go that
id[. saying that he wants to
reach the /enith of education
"every way short of bussing"
On this particular issue, fhe
most sensible (arididate of all
may be. surprisingly, fimmy
C arteY He is itpMiad as saying
that though he does not favor
mandatory bussing he feels that
"voluntary biissmg should be
encouraged" This may be the
most impcjrtant clue yiei to the
famous Carter grm
Carey Southail
Sophomore. Hitlory
I
Cancerous chemicals? He retard for our workers health? HegwastH Why ole Stlmson here was just gettin riMly to retire anywayt
The Summer Bruin
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By Adam Parfrey
RoberT "All man's modern
period piece, Bu/faio Bill and
the Indians or Sitting Bull's
Him or V lesson is about hero
and history as myth If pro-
perly presented, Altnuin> film
could have shown movie-goers
tha^ they unqucstioningly idol-
ize fraudulent personalities in
art and pohtics Buffalo Bill
could also have people view
^•heroic events" more realistic-
ally Unfortunately, Altman's
presentation remains abstruse,
very !»pecuiative. and, tar
worse, deadly dull
Set at the Buffalo Bill Wild
West Show the movie (opcn-
* ?1 tO'Po f r Qw at the Plaza
Theater in WeMwood) also
aims potshots at the entertain-
ment industry, cjemagoguery
and ractsm^^ These firings, how-
ever arc only shots in the dark
thanks to Buffal Bill s un-
focused rambling. ^ ^
As much as Altman*s Nash-
ville was cxhihrating Buffalo
Bill IS asphyxiating Audiences
were enlivened by Nashville's
unflagging senite of energy and
life (with the dog-eat-dog
country music scene and a
deliciously stone^wall political
campaign); they will be
swamped in Buffalo Bilt%i\iT-
gid tundra ot talk. talk, talk
^Waddayatalk?*
Ned Buntlinc (Burt Lancast-
er) lalts to the bartender (gert
Remsen) about how he created
the legend of Buffalo Bill (Paul
Newman) An old soldier
(Humphrey Grat7) talks to the
crowds at the Wild West show
about the halcyon days of
roughriding. Joel Grey, Will
Sampson, Harvey jKeitel,
Geraldine Chaplin, John Con-
sidme, Keven • McCarthy and
Pat McC'ornuKlr"do nothing
but you gucaacd a talk.
Paul Newman, e^fSfed in a
never ending stresm of badi-
nage, talks to everybody, es-
pecially himself Only Sitting
Bull (Frank Kaqujtts) diicsn't
talk much although iie has
Sampson elucidate every one
xA his liull iboughii.
A It man chose Newman as
his star for precisely the same
reason Sunley Kubrick cho.se
Ryan O'Neal to play Redmon
Barry in Barn Lvndon he
wants a 2()th-century parcllel-
ism: Paul Newman is Buffalo
Bi41 Cody, a modern mvth
playing an old myth. We are
supposed to snigger too at the
way we handled minorities
back then A It man figures
we're so much more enlight-
ened now ' \
Women snubbed
Even while Alt man believes
himself enlightened, there arc
no decent women's roles in
Buffalo Bill There is onlv the
fallible, exj^^sionless Annie
Oak ley V or th€ dumb tirst
tbeu polplial tex-«>(fice draw;
Altmah ripilars Henry (iibson
and John Schuck would be far
more appropriate for their
roles (Omcduin Pat McCor-
mack ..su)nally humorous
on the Johnny Cariea show, is
simply off-urgei and unfunny
Only Keitel, Considine,' Samp-
ten and Robert IXtqur te'e
well a weak hatting average
for such a talented actors'
drwrtior
the famous Altman trade-
mark of overlapping dialogue
hsckfircs in this film While
some of Alan Rudolph and
Altman's duilogue attempts a
the
Lady (Shelley Duvall) «>r rh
buxom, flea-brained operaiu
mistresses "belonging" to But
falo Bill
The singers drone on and
on, afler a seeming eternit\
and a half and twenty possibli
endings, Buffal if Bill chair ^
toward its torpid and meaning
k's^ tlose' Huge gaps m ^^w-
1
W^msn at Cody: myth plays myth
tinuity don't help, either, and
there is a whole surrelrastic
episode with Buffalt) Bill going
mad that is entirely ana-
chronistic, superfluous an-d
pu//ling..
f qually unsatisfying is Alt-
man's usually daring and in-
spired casting Here it (is simply
ridiculous »« Its star-o|sling
which serves to blow a hole
through the film's paramount
thesis While Paul Newman is
extremely apt in the false-
maned. riarcissistic myth star,
Burt Lancaster is too much a
myth himself to portray a ba-
sically self-effacing writer Joel
Grey and Kevin McCarthy are
used hcteritTieems. strictK for
mvThic aura,
badly improvising actors grope
for contcmporafyioky ad-libs
l>etracting further is Richard
Baskin's cH)m-pa-pa score It is
so ugly and repetitive that only
a KHJ disc-fockev could love
It Paul 1 ohmann's excellent
cinematography captures that
necessary mythic essence lack-
ing in (direction music and
act mg
If we are to have our philo-
sophy lessons on celluloid, we
should at least expect some
cohesiveness and subihty of
tone Lhank God that Buffalo
Bill and the Indians^ is not
another pat Hollywood solu-
tion to lawlessness, but it's a
damn shame Robert Ajtmaa
couldn't bring ft off an s better^
Logan s Run : dazed new world
Charlton He%ion catches flak
'Midway': loud but not clear
By Kddif Ashworth
War films, even at their best, need a well-directed slant to
avoid becoming mere barrages of flying bodies and rampant
destruction The Longest Pa\ used personal vignettes
Against the backdrop of D-day Patton. in presenting a
complex picture of a colorful man, focused on the
miellectual battles of generalship Tora' Tora' Tora'
overwhelmed with technical wizardry and the historical
accuracy of a documentary
In Midwaw director Jack Smight has taken each of these
strengths and transformed it into a weakness, making one
boring, exocnsive movie in the process
Midway is distinguished from its illustrious predecessors
by a total lack of creativity Smight (Airport 75) was
undoubtedly commissioned by L'niversal to crank out a
kitschy Hollywood blockbuster that would attract the
heathen masses like a galvani/ed magnet
With a multimilhon-dollar budget and all the power ot
Sensurround at his disposal, Smight dt>es just that and no
more, combining a ihreadhare love stor\ and less-than-
spectatular footage.
Apathy permeates this production, particularly among the
"all-star cast" Toshiro Mdune (as Admiral Yamamoto)
fares worst in tMs depaftfhent; his role in the film is
reduced to an unfunny, simplistic parody of Japanese
commanders and his acting duties consist of standing
around and shaking his head To make things worse a
voice straight out of Disney (complete with bogus Oriaaiai
"accent'') has been d4jbbed in to reftlscc Mifunes Of the
entire cast, tiichiding Chartron MMlOn and Henry Tonda
only Hal Holbrook escapes with any vestige of dignity
Midway, if anything, is consistent. For tw.o-agd-«-half
hours It sustains its iceth-rattling noise, its flak bunts' its
god-awful Sensurround rumble, its immoderate insipidity
and Its resoundmy inability to susta;n interest
By J(»seph (.ore
On .lunc 2\Td. M d M
laurK'hed the largest saturatuin
advertising! campaijin in its
history to promote its latest
epic "I ogans Run" \\hich i>
really quite a shame
Not that "Logaa's Run" isn t
a remarkable moyic h m i^i
have taken much hard v^«»rk
and inspired genius on the part
ol the production staff to com-
bine an excellent science Ik
tion nyvel an<l a reasonably
talented cast with a multi-
million dollar budget and come
up with such a piece ol gar-
bage *
I>avid Zeleg Goodman's
screenplay (based on the novel
by (ieorge C layton Johnson
and William F Nolan) deals
with a vast domed city m the
23rd century The outside
world has apparently suffered
from a nuclear holocaust or a
similar disaster I he inhabi-
tants ol the city desote their
liyes to pursuing hedonistic
pleasures, like sex. until their
.Hhh birthdays, when they
gamble foru "lile renewal."
Some. ht>weycr. prefer not to
take their chances and try to
flee this IS where Michael
York comes m
•I
York plays Lagaa. a aicm-
ber ol the special police force
called the "Sandmen" whose
duty It IS to track down all
"runr • before th
fhe undclmcd "Sanctuary" ^>ui-
side the 4t^mtt He is assii
to infiltrate the underground
organi/ that aids the
runners i he plot thickens
when } (>L>;«n vwHrh^.y h.v Jl.
Nt»rk and .lenny Aguttei as
>t>rk's girlfriend, both rurn in
hasicalK bland performances
.Kichard lordan as another
N.mdman and York's pursuer
good, but his highly intense
'orlormance scemv out ol
place next to the bulk ^^\ the
ist's lighter treatment t»t the
dierial Peter Lstin«n as an
-i»ld man m the outside >*orld
oblivious to the domed city,
mugs his way through a
tharming performance that
proves to be the frim's acting
highlight
fhe e\*rrH»r sh«»ts of the
domed city consist m<»>tly i»(
laughahlv art if icial-l<»oking
miniatures fhe costumes are
ridiculous pastel togas thai
seem l4> be left over frt>m one
1)1 the inferior "Star f lek'^
episodes I he blow»dried hair
styles are pure t97g's. as are
the film's interiors which were
sh(»t inside a I exits shopping,
mall and k)ok H — The .syf>-
posedly revolutionary holo-
graphy seme' in which York is
interrogated by ^-D images* is
tedious and uneventful
Most of the plot cliches
(like blowing up the M(astei
computer) are not prcscni in
the original novel and can be
blamed on si . Ciood
man f he real culprits how-
ever, are producer Saul David
for his Jack uJ^ discrimination
in supervnfcNti^^^he projea
director Michael Anderson toi
his tailure to present a stan-
dard of interpretation from
which actors could work
••Logan's Run" really might
have worked but its hard to
figure out exactly how
ATTgNTION FOREIGN STUPgNTS
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G«y*«y A W9yl>ijrn .m.
ViMe9« LA
'voitf* Q9u^iv nl H99I S0f W09I toa'4wy<»t
Bruin women outshine men .
• •
(r^tifltiuMl from Pttft t#)
will enter IrC-LA in the fall
**Shc can be a real threat in the
2U0, .400 and 800 fff«rv* Hatnes
said The East German girit
aiwi't going to have ,it so easy
after air*
Babasiioff alto swam m the
1972 Olympics, where she won
a gold medal as a member of
the 800 free relay teim and
silvers m the l(X) and 200 free
Another 1972 Olympic gold
medalist (200 butterfly). Karen
Moe Thornton, was also back
m form Thornton, who just
graduated from UCLA, earned
a spot on the Olympic team
with a victory rn the 200 fly
''It wa» really hard lor Karen
to make , the team since she
won a gold at Munich and she
ju»t got married.' said Haines,
who was her coach at the
Santa Clara Swim Club "But
Karen is a tremendous com-
petitor She could surprise a
lot of people *'
Other OI>mpian«
Two other Olympic quali-
fiers^ K at hy Hcddy and Jeanne
Hancy. are also headed for
UCLA Hcddy and Haney
both finished second to Baba-
shoff in the 400 free and 400
IM rejipcctively
For the American meii, this
could be their best Olympics
**By far, this is the greatest
team we've ever had/' Haines
said
"We have a shot "at a medal
in every event "
The US men do face stiff
competition from East Ger-
many and Hungary, bl^t not as
much as the Amencan women
USC*s iohn Naber showed
that he is a definite threat to
East Germany's Roland Ma-
thes' domination of the back-
stroke. The Trojan senior won
the 100 and toO events in
record time. Na1>er shattered
Mathes' world mark of'2:QJ.87
in the 200 with a time of
2 (X) 64 Cal sophomore Peter
RcKca gives the U.S a one-two
punch in the backstroke, hav-
ing fmirtit^ lacon^ to Mahar m
both eveatt, and was only off
Mathes' record in the 200 hy
one hundredth of a second
Brian Goddell of Mission
Viejo also shot into the medal
picture as he erased Australian
Steve Holland's pending world
rcord (15,10 89) by lour se-
conds in the 1500 free with a
time of 150666 Stanford's
John Hencken. the 200 breast-
stroke gojd medalist at Mu-
nich, could win the KM) and
200 at Montreal Hencken was
lusi off his own world, record
tiniei in wmnirig both races
I ( I.A men
Although lour, members ol
the UCLA mcni swim team
made it to the finals oi an
event, none qualified for an
Olympic sp.)i Kip Virts turned
in lifetime bests in the 100 and
200 breastroke. but finished
fifth and sixth respectively.
Virts came close to qualifying
in the 200 He was in third
place with 50 meters to go, but
he tired in the last 25 meters.
Bruce Hardcastle and Scott
Gordin both made the 200
back finals but hardcastle also
tired and placed fifth while
Gordin was shaking off the
effect of an auto accidem just
prior to the race and placed
eighth
Steve Baxter UCLA's lead-
ing point scorer at the NCAA
championships, probably came
the closest of any Brum to
makmg the team Baxter
placed fifth in the 100 fly
(55 53) but he was only'"T:^
behind the winner. I'SC's Joe
Bottom (54 97) and 28 back
of the final qualifier. Tenn-
essee's Mall Vogel
' With t^e adxlition of Baba-
shoff* Heddy and Haney. nexi
seaspT|.'s TJCLA's * women's
swim team should be even
stronger ^han its second place
finish m this ycar'iL^AlAW
Nationals Hardcastelr. Gordin
and Virts will also be back to
holster the men's squad r
Lozier and TM . . .
(Continued from Pafe 15)
ing the 1 M method that year
In a quote from txielletue in
Actum, a TM^ biioklet on
athletics Bowa' said. "IM
takes awa> tensions and anxt
cties I don't let little things
bother me anymore -Belore
IM. everv game I played ear-
ned over Now I stan all over
again each day. ''._-.- ^
Mistaken ideas al^mit TM
have hurt its progress m iTie
STUDENT RUSH
'. . . THE BEST
AMERICAN PLAY
IN THE LAST FIVE
YEARS."
^ Dan Sulhvan,
L. A Timm
The LMt MBctInt or The
Kt>j^l>t«>
Offbc
Wbitc
Ma4t>oiia
fnamy 8 30 pm
Smtur^ 7prrr A 9 30pm
Sunday 7 30 pm
Studwn/Sr. Citizen Ruth
lis minutes lo curtain
For R««ervations P1«Mt C^l
856^0125
Groum. -ftn^ Abbott 345^ 71 70
C#fiK>€t Thecrtfc
366 n. LaCienegi Sivd..
Los Anga(«i, CA 90048
past hut. ihesc runnM> ait be-
ing dispelled. acci>rding to
Lo/ier T M IS not a state of
drowsiness It has been shown
that It IS a state i>l mind with a
predominance ot high alpha
>*aves necessarv tor mental
health
IM also IS not a cult It is
an individual experience to
enhance a person's fullest po-
tential, says Lo/ier. who says
IM helps m drug abuse treat-
ment and as an alcohol and
cigarette alternative lor those
seeking mental freedom and
relaxation
Don Leopold. Director of
the IKAE, was quoted hi
Sporimj^ V^M \ as saying.- "In
TM we go beyond the surface
level of the thinking process
We experience thinking at a
more refined level, that of
potential
**Fatigue is the most consis-
tent problem facing a profes-
sibnal athlete What allows
fatigue to resolve is rest. The
rest we get during sleep isn't
deep enough During IM. not
only the daily accumulation of
fatigue IS dissolved, but also
the most deepiv rooted stress
and fatigue sometime!! from
childhood, disappear '
Through TM. athletes hope
u> improvt 4he»f pgKerwMiacti.
Its maior beae^.was stated b>
I arrv Bowa when he said. "I
like TM because it's making
me into the kind ol person!' ve
.ilways dreamed of hcmg but
louKI fit'^rt l!it'
W
Trr
I
SmjUTThomas^sparkle in women's doubles
(Continuatf horn Page U)
Smith and ThoflMs com-
bined in the doubles compe-
tition to play bnlluintly until
the finals They were defeated
in the finals by Suniord's team
of Dianne Morrison and Sue
Hagey. 6-3^. 6-4 The^ Bruin
tandem, however, put on one
of the best dutpjays of tennis in
tolfegiate ^rcles when ihc>
defeated the number one
seeded team of Sunford's Lele.
Forood and Barbara Jordan in
the semifinals. 6-2, 3-6, 6-4.
Little iRMsifig
-If the girls (Smith and
Thomas) would have played as
well in the finals as they did in
the semifinals they would have
certainly won there was a
little missiag though and we
couldn't cone through," added
Zaimi^.
Nilsson and Jenny Geddes
lost to the 16th seed, 6-3, 6-1
However, the women had been
playing together for less than
three weeks
The Bruins, with 18 poinu,
finished fourth USC finished
third (Barbara Halquist, USCs
number one player, won the
singles championship) Tnnity
was the overall victor with 32
pcMpis ai|^ Stanford placed a
close second with 31 points
Horrors were accorded to
Paula Smith and Cindy
Thomas as both were picked as
All-Americans In addition.
Smith was selected for the
Junior Federation Cup team.
Smitli's decisMm
Prospects for next year rest
with Smith s decision on whe-
ther to return to the Westwood
campus or go professional Her
decision will weigh heavily
with her performance this sum-
mer on the Junior Federation
team
Cindy Thomas will be sorely
missed due to graduation
fo help you write
Communication
Skills
12 hr course stdfts |une 29th
9
Powet Rp4ding - C<rc«r Cuid«n< »
The Guidance Center
3017 SanJa Monica Blvd
Santa Monica 829-4429
ThereWa \i
difference!!! X
MCAT
OAT
LSAT
AT6SB
OCAT
CPAT
RIX
SMtltClMMS
CMrs«s tn«i Stf
■
Tape taciiriitt lof
fiii«««d toiMni
HArLIKOBOS
SAT- VAT
:^ »1S«
LOT A
A '713» 477 Jilt
2 tOUCAnOMAi CfMTfll
■■ft — ^^tSSS
u%
Bearwear's sun-n-fiin goodies!
Get out and got under, in all kinds of things that will proclaim you re a Uclan»
Shown hare. |ust a faw things from a huga taloction
nylon or>a-piaoJr facing swimsuiU. royal, navy. 9JS0
Wonr>on's crop top. white cotton 4^,
s long hoo^atf covarup powdar cotton/poly 15.50
s nylon opan wmmm tank top. 4.50, others from
s nylon racing trunks, royal, navy. €.00
Man's nylon boaar trunks, royal, navy %30
:h t>agt. 4.75 ^o 15.00
UCLA baar baach towal. fJO
& i«vet. adterma^ union. a2S-77ll
open mon-thurt 7 45-7 30, fn 7 46-^ X) sat iQ-4
I
4
1
>
UCLA's Scates returns to face Stars
v
DB Spom WriMr
Al Scatck. the man who hai
guided UCLA to iix NCAA
voUcyball titles in the seven
year history of the event, re-
tur«s to the Southland on
Thunday niftet when his E)
Paso/Juaraz Scd team of the
International Volleyball As-
sociation (IV A) meets the Lot
Anfeles Stars at Mission Viejo
Pro volleyball has been a
tmiqw experience
since his team hat keen playing
at only a 300 level and the Sol
are in danger o( not making
the playoffs in September if
they don'^t improve.
While El Paso is a tight
battlf with Tucson and Phoe-
nix in Its division, Los Angeles
IS in second beluad the
kagiie's ^bett" franchise, |he
San Diego Breakers
Jusi like UCLA is dominat-
j
I
tng the collegMUc game, the
Bruins are also a powerful
force in pro volleyball There is
at least one Brum on tiK ux
pro franchises and most are
starters. .
Scates has 1975 NCAA
MVP John Bekins and the
early 1970s All-Ammcan Jeff
Jacobs from UCLA The Lot
Angeles Stars have NCAA All-
Tournament selection Ed
Becker.
— ■ .1 . , —
The Tucson Turquoise have
four former Bruins on the
rotter. Nina Grouwinkel. a two
ymr All-Ameriam for the
AIAW diampionship women's
iMm, Tom Chamales and
Craig Thompson are the lor-
micr UCLA players of the
I970's Another former Scales
performer is 5-« Tothi Tnyeii,
who IS one of the uuickept
players
Tucson
in '^. the league for
San Diego, the defending
IV A champion, has Roscannc
Wegrich, who played for the
women's team and former
NCAA All-Tournamem selec-
tion Eddie Madmio. U^ekUo
IS the bead coach at San Diego
State
Phoemx is coached by Mary
Jo Peppier, who won the first
women's Superstar competj^-
tion
OLASSIFIED AD
ADVf RTltlMO O^ICU
Ml lit
S2S 2221
tt «W«a»- it Titfay 5 contt9cull««
ssoo
\
aooddsals
IMf 10 30 AM
aOlgX; ty eompUmmnt ^
«•••' iloi UIOM
(10 ^ 13)
•OATIMQ
ty (or canop
Paelory Dtiacl
I w«ll con»trucl«d
UM S22-0274
(GO J9 9)
■wp
'^^■a^i
-
■--T— *■-'-
-
- ■}-
■
Th« ASUCLA Commumc«(K>n« Boar^
fMlly •upporl* th« Unt««r»ity ot Cah
Ipmta t po«*cy on non-tfiacnminaUon
AJSvarttstfif apaca will not tea mm^
a«a<latola tn Iha Oatty Brum to anyona
who dttcrtminatat on iha basis o(
ancattry color national origtn raca
raMfton. ot aaa NaitfMK Mia DoMy Brum
Apr tha ASUCLA CpPNliMnt cations
apard haa mwaaaaatptf any ot thm sar
vtcaa p#«or(iaad pr advartiaart raprs
aantad in ttits isaua Any paraon p«
having that mn advarttaamani in H»*a
laaua vtolalaa tha Board s poMcy on npp.
dtacrt mi nation ttatad haratn ahoui^
MiMilunlcala compipinta m writing to
MM Buainass Mpnagar UCLA^aily
aruM. 1 12 Karckhoff Hall 300 Waalw^pg
Plaza Los Angalas Cali1orniaaa024
For aaaistanca with housing dlacftmi-
nation problams call UCLA Housing
Offica. (213)025 4401 Wastatda Fair
Houaing (213) 473 3049
^Oa tola Spat 15 mooVia
EST
% 125 Call 271 5707
(10 Jy 13)
flirt Ipffa' fhick with any lap.
SSOO Olall I ^.I4l-»-f N C-I
(GO Otrl
TitAM
Msss Trpwsi ssy— ritauMrt
^'
campus
announcfnpnta
BMim
CPttVIPS SOO fto~
or* tttpn HP 46 W%|(^
4 L«« • PPM TaM* Slack • cat
LN to • • Tnf (%m Cos Tan
»NV( . Of C OfC -MPS- itC
&«••• • P^tmt to Heel Cmm
|N)*V) • titiiiMiL MaMtoM •
Msraiw N • Ms0#i sM^ Siaiiaa«a
^CUS
^ 1 193 %mnta Monies ■> Wl A
v-.»
««
;— V
Let's hear it for a Bud-dy Summer!
1
3
i
Hooray for Anheuser-Busch for such contributions to the
American culture as Buciweiser. Budman. Clydesdale horses.
Busch Gardens and all the little chotzkas that go with them!
Get the little chotzkas right here on campus — such
Budman. Busch, Michelob or Bud waiter
16^z. thermos steins. 2.19 each
Budweiaer aalt-end-p#ppe
Budweiaer beer stein, 1
Not shown:
Budman Friabee, W€
Ctydeadale t«n«iarcfa,
a-fMck of IniMiyals
r shakers, nt set
t—r can coolarm, 1^
gifts, b l«v«< ocfcarman union. S25-771 1
{ open mon-fn 8 30-5 30 oat 10-4
students' store
WfllTEIIS
m09mUW^ formlm to
toofn, wftia
Mid aom ^bltahad and
non puMMl
■d wrttara wakfoma to cluto
CanatS'JM
4
(iJyi3)
0 FT DIAMETER Framad tunburat
Stftwg Scutptura $250 or boat ohm
-twnln^t 020 3551 Day t 025 -S4TT
(10Jy2)
TCAC 100 Caaaatta dock
tliO NMaaOM
(10 J 20)
Graduates
PERM A PLAQUE
your diploma
WiNEMAAING brawtnf tuppitot A
aquipmant tataci Calitornia Winm%
Tt>a Grapa Nut 0312 W 92nd Sf Waal-
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(lOOtr)
a%u< U/
^€pmpvt sfvdio
1 SO ket(khott hall 825 Otf » u77l
op^n monht 8 30 4 30
WOODEN Barratt Kaf* 0 tpoofa
haichcowart natting 0 ropa t'unliy
cralaa 0 boaaa. old barnwood 031-
n
HIGH QUALITY .
printing t«r r«#raaM«t(«M
f aarcti matoriai
1 a 1 ii»#ciiH««f h«n
•aa-oat i saaa
personal
COMTANION for Travot-outlnva
ad atraighl only f Aplar P O Boa
^0033 Loa Anfpiaa. OHSB.
(• Jy It)
entertainment
ChARTEM a Party Boat and criHaa
Manrta Dot IWy Harbor On board bar,
oanca fiwr, pvooi fooo ano mw a*<«or*
tatnmant 022-1151 ,« . ,,,
(7 Jv 1-3)
I
SIM DUPLICATE Brtdga Mondoy MNt.
Wadnaaday aftarnoona Wtid Whiat
Brtdga Club 1005 Waatwood Bi«d
COMC out arHl an|oy a baautHul horaa
WaaAday arid waahand rtdaa by tha
ttour half or full day For f4 50 •f\
hour raaarvatlona. call Topartga Rtdntg
tHiHa 455 0015 121 Otd Tppwifp
Canyon Btf ^^ ^^^
social events
"PAHTV on a yooht May awawing or
Wooliand with catorad rafraahmanta
Marina Dal Boy 022 1151
(iOtr)
EiciusivBly Ours!
ASUCLA Trader
thong sandals in a
burlap segnature
bag
just $6.89
Sandals are btach with tHue and
gold stripes m The sotos and
blue Thongs You can u*e the
striped bag for a beoch carryall ^
ASUCLA Students SlOFO
SPORTSWEAR
0~iili(. Ackerman Unioo
fffioo-fn 1:30-5 30; sat 10-4
. S2S-7711
• UMJT French- Mormoft^y bulldlna
aHeeent UCLA. Four 2 Br 2 BA. Fi
2 BA. 1 BA ap«a EacoMent fl
•21-0147 lira. Ridi.
I (lOJyU^^
DIAMOND f ngagamant ring 1 35
tarata Taparad diamond baguartaa
Appraiaad at tlOOO Sacrifica tor 51500
'*^'^^**' 110 Jv 101
Tl SB 10 A. SB 51 A lA 52 lA SO. a
Corvua Novua
^r«aaon«c Sanyo
ana waring Mechirtoa
11M0 Soma Monica Bl«d W LA.
REES ELECTRONICS
Ceo 4732000 tor boat pncaa
torrent
Help Self by Helping Others
SS-S60 month for Blood Plasma
HYLAND DONOR CENTER
1001 Gayley Ave Weslwood
4710BS1
PARICING tpacaa available at 411
Oayioy Avenue 140 lor ^eBi auiiHper
477-0007 ^ . ,,,
(» Jy 11)
BEVERLY HIMa inen a heiratytlat oilers
fraa hatratyling For mora into cdll
2714230 Tuee • Sat
home
n2 0lr1
CASH or treda your^ ueed racoi^i 01
I OByaaay 1 1010 Wilahlrafbahaeen
Bundy) 477 2S23
(12 Otr)
in
tdUb- Rldiead 471
at liomea rt9^.
-4170
J2B)
44a^1Bf
for sale
opportufiities
cr^
Enrollffi«ent %m
Student Acctdotit
Sickness Insurarw^e
^ at bargain rales tor
V yourself 4 qualHIotf
J aopBfiaents IS availablo.
^V> Broad covera9e
ottering hospital accidentat BoaHl.
surgical ambulance 1 out RBBant
benejits on ajeorld-wlde JlfAlo
1R 1 CBfMMMliBIII fMiBcy fOT BllBr-
mation A application contact the
Insurance Officer at tt>e Student
Health Office or call 125 1151
Student Insurance. UCLA Student
Health Serwico;^^.^ XA^
research subjects
needed
VOLUNTEERS naadsjl le flae
for aaperimvntai raaaarch 10 00 for
lOOcc Mood Call 025 5202
(14 Jy 11)
MARRIED Couplaa vMintad PhD Study:
^oioa paraofWNrfy hepptnaaa ^ nrs.
sceiea wailed Conlidantiai Paraortel
Feedbedi (213) 0O4-i700
^4 Jv IBI
^Kw With acne - to patBalpala in t^
toseech profact payMig «p le tftO lor
sae» biopa*ea and seriea of shola Mual
ba praaant during %Mmmot aasaion
U5'7300
f 14 Jv 2)
help watrtad
VOLUNTEBIIBRMMIcCounaal. anon
erofit puBOi Intaraat law offica naada
yov For mora tntofmatloo, (^ FuOMc
Counael at 277-4702
(15 Jy 13)
PSYCHIATRIC After Cera Canlar
humenlalically oriented volunteer
caynsalora Min commttmant 12hra/wli
for 0 moa Call Tarry or Allan 030-
4000 or 130 4034 M-F 10-4
nojyi)
TOP UCLA lennla player needed lo^pley
•^>A teach family of tiecalad in Beverly
HiMa Paymant wilt be made m caah aa
wall aa through tha uae of priaela court.
Ptaaaa contact 271- ,p70 ^,^ ^ ,,^
MODEL V4
pRolography aiudsiil for ftgura
S BBUiw beech shola Up to
rtght modal Pf%oi alandar build.
Contact Micheel 13210
Ava Merlna Del Bay Ca
If o^^S^bkt
(15Jy13)
•fiawranc* Suainaaa
lacomtni aari otwwr af
a law yaara (213) S37-
(tS Jy IS)
PAAT tima poaittona open at Butterfly
Bakary Sat own houra 12 -M/hr
Call 479-0002 ,^ ^ ^
#tO J« W\
VOU
can
earn btg
dollar
Mornings
aia to
ntr>a
Sailing
on lalao
iRaiie CaO
710-5152
ril Jy 13)
WOBK ITUDV APPtlCANTl Lota ef
interaabng |oba arw avalaBIa at PutMc
Counael a non-profit. piiBBc ifHaraat
law Offica For more trHoflliaBen. cfiecli
vMth campua Wors-liudy OlWea.
f15 Jy IT
SUMMER JOBS
Part-tim« or FuN-tima
47S-9S21 lor Appt.
THE j5b
C«i
•*« «•••
MOTMEPl Halpar M F 40 $ZM.
per hour p4ua dinrtar occaeienal BaBy-
•Mint Tebin 025 lOM 021-77BS 477.
... IIS Jy 11>
help wanted
HOUSEKEEPER
OSnaroua
claener lemewdad Ha
ly PleaMla hours 470 3030
WANTED Eapariancad talaph
OBBohora Making sppainlniaiiia
eatata firm houra ftaaibia lull |
•mm Can lam 477 1421
(15 Jy
I
rt
10)
RMO««E Oirt
eay Call Mike
If 470-011
(15 Jy 2)
SALES W
mc
Eacoflent let yoer
470^0101
I
nity for t»vmnc9m0nt into
t 0 A fm^utrop 470 1 700
(15 Ofr)
DRIVER required ler 10 ff eM eMM
Mendey Tueadey om4 Fndey 401 le
• 41 Thuraday l H to 3H "
Bsaedi HHia and
tmr Can 470-4121
<13 J* 13)
f tl Jy •)
ADDRESSEBl wentatf Immadiataiy'
Work at home noaaparianc* nocaaaary
VHcallant pay ¥l^rtia AmmttcBn larvica
140^ Wilaon Blvd Bulla 101 Arlington
VA 22200
^^ rtisai^
mom intarviawing parltHne werli
inlamahipa lapl June 71-77 12900
hbriorartum Jr Sr Grad atudants went
goodorganuational communication
skllla •nmr^f. humor Youth Dapt
•'•'•♦••• ^IdOlBBMi ' CouncO 012 1234
X 35r
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RELIABLE CIBL p t light houaa
heaping Waal HoNyweed 5 0 tlm«
waakly 53 00 hr ar«d faseUna H—d
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(15 J 20)
le eealat
Cell 750
(11 Jy 10)
WRITER needa C4
wNh book being worlMd
4370 Of 751-7073
ATTENTIONI
MtN 4 WOMftN VI)4tattO
023 42
services offered
r
VW MAINTENANCE SERVICE 120 00
IT
'S fesaBcy dNWii^ If •fil *#fi4 .
'JJX.
PROFElllONAl Documantedon Ser
WrtMnf. edmng. raaaerch. aludy
1 predliellen to your m^ulra-
mants Call 410 1114 anydma
(11 Olr)
THE aOOVMEN
Quality Auto Body »
Repair 0 Painting
475-0040
C^llaiort'^ Oat aaatcianc* witte inauranc*
VW REPAIBl aicHialvely f15 tuna
up (parta 1 labor) $41 breba roMna
1^^ aelwa |eb Fraa dlagnesla. Mctory
mechanlca. only Qfmmn porta ueed. at!
arork guararrtaed. Call ttia Acceleretor
^ (11 Olr)
aelHQ Rlppod"Off on
Aulo Inauranoo?
•Ldwaat Student Ratea-
'Momhly Payniento-
Afmow msufiAMCf
EXPERT Tannia irtatrucdaw en n§ot^^
couria Feat reeaNa. ItarBiers
470-3020 ^^ ^ ^3j
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noi/inc ^
The 0'iUir'«>-E
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grephiea litaratura aaarch •ritinf .
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unM
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LfAAN Salt Hypnoala wHh Fiea LNe-
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471.7037
tva Oart
••••••••••••••i
RIDING LESSONS
Students Faculty -FandMes- staff
♦•a MSA Aaarav«artatna**taatttfini«AT
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ing atudanta AM atylaa atudio in
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VOCAL Taachar haa opanlftfa for a
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Pt»ona 020 3422 ii^. .•
(n Jy 13)
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
Le«i Monthly Paymanta
LIGHTHOUSE INIUBANCE lEBVlCE
314 1111
Aali tor Don or Roy
TEWNll Inatructlon on a prtapM court
B«enhaood orom. 473-
(11 Od)
LEARN Dynamic aelf-hypnoala Self
In
477
171-3117 90 years
(lOOtr)
HOUSEPAINTING
BbsI work, matarlals; aa
tariors A multi-room in-
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Community 3 yrs full-tlma
sinca Qfaduatlon. Days ft
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AUTO Inauranca Loareat retea for
stedenta or amployaaa Robert W Bhea
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(11 Jy 13)
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^*^ (HOd)
RECORDING ENOINEERINO
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Irene Sereia. OtaMooidaiied Ooooof /
Teaeder UllBBl
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ftljyill
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1-.5—
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ai "« !.j'. jn
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mpm
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f
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pmfmmnH Diacounu lor nonsmolwf*
Awlo-Lit«-Hom«own«rt and R«ntol
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RotoMMon 1100 Glandon Suila IftSI
477 -Mt7. tTf-fflf 1
ELECTMOLVfttS Unwantad facta! «
toady Hatr parmananlly ramowad Ganlli
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tucm 1019 eaylay 477 2193.
(16 Otr)
i —
PflEGNANCV TESTING Unwanlad
pragnancy and birtti control counaating
Bnd ralarrai by cartHlad worrtan coun-
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Birth Conlfal Caalar Suite 513 1331
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'^^ (t«0»
PftOBLEM PragnarKy fr99 pragnancy
latlt Compaasionata woman coun-
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Gyrtacologtat Birlh Controt tnlafinatlon
Altarnativat to PragrtarKy 37St Sania
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■•/-" (IS Olr]
PREGNANT-^ We cara 24 hour aarvica
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MOVING and Hauling Larga and
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(IS Oirt
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MOVERS
Moving mnd Hauling
,^
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'^NawaM§51-3S27
ATTENTION Stnfia Paivnta Call Par
an4a witb^ Partnara" Santa Montca.
Dtacuattons Sporla. Parllas. ChlMran •
AcUvltiet SSS-OOZO
(ISJyU)
HANDWRITING Anaytot wW antaruiTn
at partta* Call Oabbia 34S-S19S
(1SJy30)
MtEO A NURSE? Espariancad, matura
fVlafancaa. Uva In/ out. Hours arrangad
Win luaval Laa A.M. 27S-2170
(IS Jy 13)
trav«l
PROFESSIONS INTERNA TiONAL
r.' MM Wastvood a*ir« LA M03«
TGC FLIGHTS LONDON EUROPE
•I WlUMw «LM TWA •«(.
'mm afk^Mtavr ttftta fMafii toaf
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ECONOMY Farat lo Ohant - Tokyo.
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BOOK NOW TGC FLIGHTS
CALL
EURASIA TOURS N TRAVELS
274-6361
Opfi Saturday
EUROPE laraal Atrica Studant
Flight* fBT round tSCA 11SS7 San
Vicanta Blvd 04 L A 90049 82S-
Itn fUm%
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charier Flight Service
Ovar 1000 flights to Europa this
Summer • Discountad Studant
flights In Europa • Chartars to
Hawaii and Maiico • Studant A
Faculty discounts on car purchas-
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tours • Camping Tours • UnragI
manted Student Tours • Ran
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rangemants • Mini Tours • Hotel
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tlon • International Student ID
cards • fr99 travel counaaiing •
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ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING!
AcKe'-man LInion A 213 with EXPO
Monaay-l^riday 10-4 ^2' L
. TAHITI
Sdptembdf 2^2 |7t3
Sdptemt>dr 2-16 ttiS
Pnce includes Iranaportalion maala
and lodging at Iha Bali Hm* Hoialt
Special program* awailabia lor divers.
Intaraatad*^
Wnia Esplorar * Unlimiiad
SSO Siena Canyon Rd C A 90024
LOW Coet Chanar fSghta Tokyo Hong
Kong. Talpa. MarWIa ar>d olhar Onant*
London. Pari* Madrid Zurich Hwm
Vaik. end Hawaii ^9t daiall* cali 474-
aail (day*) 47S 1S11 (avaa) W* a(*o
atrtkn— tlckala. PSA. Am traii
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(24 Otr)
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THE GUIDANCE CENTER
3017 Santa Monica Blvd.
' Santa Monica
629-4429
CXRCRICNCEO
beck from Parts,
va^aadon. Nacavi
4SS-174S.
NafMa 'rancffi leaoRac
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(24 Olr)
CHINESE Mandarin Peking native
laachar. wall-eiperlar*ced with Cell-
tornla Credential Indlvlduel. email
group S33-1S4S ^^^ ^^
OIeMISTRY Phyalc*. Slaflallc* Cat
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metry Conaultation Etc aaal In town.
Auguat Riiggah SS2-S0S0
(24 Jy 13)
LEARN Convaraatlon In Japaneae
private or email group le**on* Be-
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immedtata eenrlce Vicimty 451-4S3ir
(24 Jy iSr^
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chord votcinga S progre»*ion* ol top
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theory S practical application*
to keyboard 473-3575
(24 Otr)
TRANSLATION Tutor in French, (ter-
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(24 Jy 2)
NEED Help In Engliah*) Tutoring S
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LEARN SsMdish from a proteaaioruil
twsdish Machai Cad AIm at fS9-sa42
fid Jy 13)
PROFESSIONAL WRITlKlG EDITING
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27S-02BS or 27S 94 71
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the*e* dift*ertalion*. etc Call 394-
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559-1505 after 6 p.m
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experienced Pick up Deliver Righlacus
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(25 Otr)
PROFESSIONAL Typing of Thaala. Mfin
papers, math, etc Feat, perfect prtnlad
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, EdN soling, etc Experienced
lefal secretary Near campu* 476
7SSS
t9% Ot I
TYPING' Seven day* Alao editing Very
taat accurate Mid-Wil*hire Free..
parttlrtg CaH Joanrte 364-9S06
(25 Otr)
KAY Typing, editing English grad
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ttteaaa. pesumes. letter* IRM 626 7472
125 0«r»
Typing all need* neat accurate
proofreading SOC/pagc Call Sherria,.
9S1-4SSS t>etween Spm. 10pm.
175 Off
PROFESSIONAL writer with B A In
Engllah (UCLA) wlH type and edit term
papera. ttteaea. etc Over 25 year* ax-
partartca IBM Selectrtc Weatwood VM-
laga. Eaay parklr^g. Competitive rales
One dey aervice BNI Oaleney 473-4SS3.
(2SQtr)
LIGHTNING TYPING Ca
▼l«e*i* Specialiti
ff9 C«tim«l«t
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Kathy after 6 p.m S3S-62S5
(25 :
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from 90c per page 3S3-1SS3 9:00 AM
» « •*•• (2S Jy 2)
furnished
SOS GAYLEY aero** from Dyk*lra
Bachelor* *ingle* ofte bedroor?>a 473-
^^••*^^°*^ (26 Otr)
WALK TO UCLA
Spacious Bacneior* Stngle*
^ Be' Apt*
Towar Aparta*«.M« 477-SBSS
1)94' Stf«t»^r.">'*« Poof Elavator*
iragc
SRECIAL :>uMiMfcR RATES at
Glen-Fair T»rrace 476-702S
S43 Landfa"
• " •' !1#H 4.
FURNISHED Unlurni*hed<bachetor
S140 SingiSk $165 P^oot Heart of
Weaheood 10S24 Lindbrook 475-5&S4
(2« Otr)
SI 35 BACHELOR Apartment Pac Pad
Walk to bu*
i?S l¥ til
Rpta. uwfurniahad for aubladaa
PRIME Weatwood location
2 BR paneled dan formal dtntng rm
Ig maaler. 2 fireplace* gourmet kitchen
10939 Lindbrook Eve Vallano 461-
.S471 Caldwell Rentier
<27 ^ JB»
apt froM Jidy S-
a 2 balNe, paat.
PUWMItlitD
fennia courta. air Cuteer CHy (Sab
M^»^« 1^ Jv 13)
1375 ONE Bedroom, coxy chmrm
burning fireplace aaaview aurnleck
etove refrig util Ouiet protaaatoruii
prmlmrrmiS 419 Ocean Ave SM 3S3-
SS7S
••^ (27 Jy 13)
S160 SPACIOUS one
niahed Huge walk -in
drapea Pool barl>e<|ua
*on
AVAILABLE July 1 - tap! 1 2
lumiehad apt.. S20S/mo Call
(2S J2fl
unfur-
carpata.
Robart-
(27 Jy 13)
houaa for rant
COTTAOE at Venice beach - a«ie
room, unfumiahad atove rafrtgaiaSar,
yard, partung No pets 6275 me. SB2-
1S79 or 2S9-73S4
(SO Jy 2)
IP VOU 9n aaeiang a gulat. dignified
residartce amongat mature profeaatonal
people aee 440 Veteren i bedroom
and 2 bedroom plu* den S350 and
up Fireplace wetbar diahwaaher.
balcony pool '473^9229
(27 Jy 1^
1 BEDROOM apanmenl. unfurntehed
parking. aufHleck. Venice t>each t2BB
mo 392 1679 or 39g-7354
(27 Jy 2)
S320 UNF Large 2
more Or. 472-10S3
Stralh-
(27 Jy 2)
S3SS4.AROff 3 Badroom
drape* patio view
1249 Overland. 477
2bath.carpeta.
stove, diahwaatwr,
(2T Jy 13)
LRGE 2 BORM Aircond S200 15 mints
.AICLA CaM Doug 6-7203. Evaa/wbnd
(27 J 20)
I2SS 2 BEDROOM 2 bath cerpata.
drape*, fireplace patio, view, atove.
refrigerator 3249 Overland 477-3300.
(27 Jy 13)
to share
FEMALE roommate - beeutHul Brent
wood 2 atory apartment. 2 bedroom
2 bath Pool Great location Judy
472-4771
129 Jv 131
FEMALE to share two bedroom apt.
partially furniahed ^slm* SI 32. SO
CairGlenda 939-0770
(26 jy 13)
YOUNG profe**ior>ai female to tharn
2 bed'2l»ath with %mm9 Tenni* courts
pool Palm* SI 76 00 396- 1455 evening*
(26 Jy 13)
LARGE fashionable duplex Firef>lace,
living, dining, kltct^n own room 477-
3255 630 rtm^rmn SlS5i<lo S225
(26 Jy 13)
TWO bed. one bad« apt te shofe efltti
male 5 mm from achool In W.L.A.
SllSamonth 476-S354
42SJ2BI
I'i ROOM email houae nicely furniet>ed
StOO.00 including uttlltiea 2637 Weat-
wood Blvd 769 9236
(20 J 20)
LARGE Orte bedroom apertment Utfli-
tie* included S170 Huge baaement
apartment UtMitie* Included Si 70 Call
'**'* (20 Jy 2
ROOMMATE wanted to sfiere n%r^
bedroom apartment with two male
graduate student* 1 mile from campua.
Rent S10S 00 month No smoker*
AeslMSI* July 1*l 474-3000 Aek tor
FEMALE Orad student wanted attara
two bedroom apt Santa Monica SlOO
rno Marilyn 625-6570 395 3633
I7n iw 19)
ARTIST would like to ahare aupar 1
Mr apt lor aummer S *> VNikl 4r7-
'26 J
NON SMOKING Male lew grad aludant
aeeti* %Mm9 2 bdrm Orentwood apt
802.60 mo Gary S2S-4110
(26 J 2)
FEMALE Rmle wanted to thara 1 bdr
apt Pool aecurity oidg neer buaa*
83S-3409 or 559-6626
(39 Jy IS)
FEMALE *hare 2 bdrm Brentwood
SIISJIO month plu* utilitle* Call Laura
(29 Jv IS)
for sublease
to JULY 7 BCPT BediHtful cool apart
ment 1 -bedroom etudy S22S pei
month WaNi from cempua 477-9133
(29 Jy IS)
COOL 4 badroom house ^ BSI 1 Maes
Iraw bSPCh July Aug int %S2S 451
HOUSE ON BEACH
3 bedroom i beth furrwafied ttouee.
1 houae Irom t>eech on a gutet Man-
hattan Beach walk atraet Available
»r ttiraugh June •
t^&tH lar inatruetar
MBfa. Call Dick Lyaian. Raaltor. 545-
^^ACULTV Sleff Brentarood 2
houee Large Mving room wHh firepli
Formel dmrng Carpet* Drape* All
appliance* Yard gafdaner. 476-4077.
552 1497 , lMiJ2%^
.^Jtt.^.. J .•^* *.aMi*.M.«<« -mttMkxpMm
1 24 :l 29)
mtikttmamM ».ai>niwawiiania »• •
7/aS-9/9 lumiefied Spaciou* 4
room*, bath* Pool Volleyball Car
SOSO 19 minute* UCLA 793-2747
(30 Jy 13)
CLOSE UCLA in beeMdt6l CHsstot Hdia.
3 bedroom* 2 bath* built-in* Only
S7SS Andie Regie 474 9505
(30 Jy 13)
house for sale
MORILE »4ofne 6 X 40 fumisHed SaiHa
Mantca Adult Perk No pet* Rool
UJOO caah Pr Pty 926-9357
(31 Jy 13)
house to share
YOUNG
atudent or profe*sionai to ahare houae
in Weal Hollywood Day* 472-2515 Evae
6S9-9232 ,„ ^ ,,^
(32 Jy 13)
ROOMMATE wanted te sRert rooittf
beechiiouse with couple S130 montt>-
can after 6:30 p.m 300 4063
(32 Jy 13)
MALE ahare canyon fntme Beautifully
Own bapraam Air cor>dl-
SlOO month plwa utllitiea Attar
— — — *— ^^ ' — ' ' I *• * 1 '
SHARE beeutfful Spahish Houae Fire
pipce. garden 5 mm to UCLA Mature
female 476-2522 Awailabie July 10
(32 Jy 2)
LARGE houae Veihlce Beach; own
badroom. Itathroom yard. (Harden, front
and beck entrancea. S200 302-4276
(32 Jy 13)
FEMALE at«are 3 bedroom houae
lerge yard Dog OIC. Greet altuation
Si 20 mo Ave Gale 709-8361 eve*
(32 Jy 10)
housing needed
FEMALE Grad 40 working with die-
cipBROd cat Own room your apartment.
S.M./Palma 930-9349 eves
(33 Jy 13)
FELLOW (MO) with family dealrea
a fears rental of 3 BR house atariing
9/V76 Pteeee contect Dr Haidt c/e
Divlalon of Opthalmology Stentorr
Unlv Medical Cenlar. Stanford. Ca
(33 Jv IS)
room and board
OKchan^ tor help
PRIVATE room beth
chartge for light h
stonal cooking by
girt 2 tdlis from campus
474-6687
Board ex
(37 Jy 2)
EXCHANOB room waMiIng distence
of csmpua lor 6 hr* houaeworti weekly
plua som^ diahwaahmg for S25 month
Oirt only 472 9917 or 472-0006.
(37 Jy 13)
R0O6^ In B H ttome with pool
tor OoByaiMng and Mfh
272-0001 or 278-2700
(37 Jy 13)
ATTRACTIVE prtvale room S ba«l
Frae lo respon*ibie female etudent
IL*"i^!22l!r 'y V— ^>>*caa 3 day wH
^^^^ *R^^^^^v^^^w^^B eP^vate iH^i^^^K "Haas vh
campu* Excellent sMi«Npn far rMM
»sismi 479-8104 "^"
i
\
UCLA Summer Recreation Schedule
ACTivrrtts
1 21 - Sapt 10 1070
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■fwa
TM specialist Clay Lozier teaches athletes
Bm Cindy luks
DB Sports Reporter
"There IS a thm line bet>veen
a winner and a loser in' sports
A winning athlete maintains
concentration under pressure,
for the demands tor victory arc
great Transcendental medita-
tion (TM) not only helps you
achieve that concentration but
improves coordination, time
reaction and endurance as
wcllT
Those words were spoken b\
Clay l.o/ier. asstxriatc director
of the Institute lor hitness and
Athletic Excellence (IFAE).
iast Wednesday to <t small
crowd at the West l.os Angcfles
Transcendental Medita.|;ion
Center in Wesiwood
,; Lozier. who began TM eight
ye*Ts ago. has had iieveral
Brain athletes as his sFudents
Most notable arc Richard
Washington. Marques John-
son. Bill Walton and lommv
C urtiv
Started in 1973
"It started m 1973," I o/ier
recalled of his contact with
UCLA "Walton was alreadv
into TM and asked me to
make a presentatron to the
team. Coach Wooden was
positive about the idea and
thought It sounded good. What
impre\sed him the most was
the academic improvements
CLASSIFIED
?
room& boai^
axchanaa haj^p
autoa for aala
bicyclaa for apla
FEMALE Moom S board eactianga tor
llgtft houaaworli/babya<ttlng Frlvata
r&om/^mm/JM H9^ UCtX. 474-OaM.
A (37 JyS)
room for rent
SS500 PRIVATE roam, prtwale baOi
Female, taculty atudant 1 Mock Wii
ttHra bye. OTaal Oaearty HINa. 863 OSOO.
(aojyui
•EAUnOUL room
ctian. S nibi. UCt> F
•apt Call 470-3023.
tut-
mmtf Juty-
O0Jy2)
BEOaOOM tor rant 2.000 aq ft In
WLA. $120 mofHll. CaM Judy 473-2040
(30 iy 10)
room for maflcal.
atudant tCliplww
T2 OHIA Immaculata. new tiraa. braba*.
20 M. auto/atcli. 82800 Frivate party.
(804 MAV) (213)271 7S08
(41 Jy IS)
FIAT T1 124 Sport Coupe S-epeaO.
Abi/FM. mecttanlcally eacallent. muel
aell S1975 3S8-2SS8
(41Jy8)
71 TOY CaraOa 4 apO M/H Air new
radlel* Xint cond 2S mpq Si 850/
be*t ofler 833-4382
(41 Jy 13)
72GHIA Immaculata new ttraa briwa.
20M autoatck S2000 Frtaala party
(804 NAV) (213) 271 7S00
lai j« 1A1
1007 VOLVO. 4-door Abi/FM f4^:
now clutch, escellent canaNlafi. I8i«l
■aOt feat. 341-7000
(41 Jy IS)
WilshireWest i. #.'*•»••»..
ra*t *«r«*c«
1#^ 0««c*«t«*i« m** me**
pm*H •*•« see****!***
*• UCLA
477-31
L.A
After the ..present. I began
work With Washiiigiun. John-
son. Gavin Smith. Curtis and
Greg Lee "
That season. 1973-74, was a
"disaster" in view of recent 12-
year Brum basketball history
UCLA took third ib the
NCAA championships, had
theiT 88 game winning streak
snapped by Notre Dame and
lost two PAC -8 games to the
Oregon schools.
-•Don I blame TM," Lo/ier
savs * I his IS why most pro
fessional athletes won*t credit
their performances to their
practice of 7 M It's a very
personal thing and not an
overnight success TM is a
graduate growth and improve-
ment in evcrv area of life"
Transcendental meditation is
a simple method to learn, ac-
cording to 1 o/ier It requires
m
only 10 lo 20 rrumjics twice
daily and there have been very
tew drop-outs Lo/ier attri-,
butes thii. to the strong com-
miri^ehl a person makes when
he first .starts, the monthly
follow-up the Institute does for
Its students and its suocMi in
the field of sports
Word travcH faal
The wx)rld of ^orts. parti-
cularly the pro ranks, is that oi
a tightly knit community
Word travels falit. especially if
athletic improvements are in-
volved f he growing use of
TM IS a- prime example The
Easlern Diviiion-leading Phil-
adelphia Phillies were intro-
duced to the technique during
Slia- 1974 Spring Training
camp Shortstop L.arry Bowa
<became the National League's
All-Star shortstop iifter start- ...^
K ontiniMd on Page It)
AT ALA FrplPMlanal »" OS C
All caifipi aaaapl awbwi'ial
8300 800-0740. 477-0407
(42 Jy tS,
BwhS^^f r
•i**'"* (Canwf tliwtin Sbut) ■••■
d4L
LOVfLY
tAAO 1073 2-daor aadan
allck ort9»nal upbolstary
478-8708 or 224-3404
SiTtOwerlind
loaaO
(41 J 20)
nojviai
124 FIAT tpid»#. 1
On Oayta|
la Private rt
trOai 813a. KMBRatl
prlvltafaa. lounfe. Iaur»dry. parkbifl
avallabla. 8lS/a»a. Call Jarry Hayaa.
^^'***^ ^ (MJr^V
OUIffT brivata rooai/bath Kitchen
(41 Jy 13)
HalBtibacli Air
Only 18
ISO 7073
(41 Jy 13)
73 AUD1 100 Lt. Air
STUDC
liOtT AEPAM WHILf VOU WAIT
10% OFF ON I^AMTS ANO
Accetsofucs virrTH id.
HANS OHRT
UOMTWllOHTMCrCLtt MiC
tin oAvunr Avr
474-7111.
Aflar 8:J0 pjn. ppiy 30.000 mllas. Caeallbnl 83800
(41 Jy 13)
ISO Jet^t
•7073.
TOTOTA
cyctos,
lor sale
|41JvtS)
►bar; (
St47
tt73 VA88AHA
m'^m
rm-
*^^JKtm
» wr.'. _'.^,
-u*
n bi8rro •
■paad. vary ctaaa. A88/KII. Ortflfiai
•wfiar. Oa|f 401 3344 f vaa/wbadt
478-3178 ' Hli»)
HSiytsi
m
<■
* i
UCLA excels in Olympic Track Trials
Jv
^y.f
n^"f
J.
i
:T
■"^ '
■■
James Owens leads Bruin assault to
next month's Summer Olympic Games
e
3
^ By . Paul FarlH
DB Sipoiik \%rHcf
EUGENt,ORfcGON -Just
when It appeared that he might
be destined to ttnii^h out of the
money more ti.mes than the
Brooklyn Dodgers, the hare
and Adlai Stevenson com-
bined. James Owens came
through here in the U.S Olym-
pic trials with a performance
that could he as good as gold^
or silver " or hron/e
In his two years as a UC LA
high hurdler. Owens h^s been
cursed with a perverse-albeit
c«nMstent--.string of second
place finishes, two straight in
the Pac-K meet, two coatee-
uiive tn the NCAA fmalir, and
another in the NCAA Cham-
pionships two weeks ago at
I>rakc Stadium Most,howev-
et~except for James Owens-
don't remember or care much
about who crosses the line
after the winner
Except in the Olympic In
als Here second and third
pUice mean something a plane
ticket to the Montreal Olympic
(fames arid a chance to win a
gold medal ^
Though Owens is still with-
out a victory in a big meet, his
third-pJace Imish in the I IO-
meter hurdles at Havward field
last f hursda> m an automat
ically timed 1.3 57 (behind win-
ner Charles Foster. 13 44 and
Willie Davenport. I V52). there
IS now. a prtssibilitv that the
Sophomore from Sacramento
could win a gotd medal or
some metal next month At
least, by virtue of his con-
sistency hc*ll have an oppor-
tunity
"I think I can run in the low
iy% at Montreal.** Owens said
with uncharacteristic animation
immediately after his final''
**rm capable of winning if I get
a great start and if J concen-
trate over all ten hurdlcf. If I
do that no one can beat me **
Owens said he had lapse in
concentration in the finals after
he had powered to wins in his
qualifying heats An acciden-
tal spike wound from San Jose
Slate freshman and NCAA
champon Dedy Cooper be-
tween hurdles six and seven
would not have seemed like
much help either Yet Owens
says It was.
"When Cooper hit me." he
said displaymg his bandaged
hand, ^if woke mi:, up I knew
I was dropping and I had lo
get back in the race T^hal
helped me do it " There was
also help from an outside
^-jfcourcc "The Lord was with me
all the way." he said
Ciod way Itave been a Bruin~
through parts of these I rials
A A I) 4(K) meter champum atid
former IJCI A quarter-miler
Ma^<i;ie Parks used a little guid-
ance from the Coach also to
overcome a strong MX) meter
field and a stiff backstretch
wind to win in 43.38
**1 talked to my mom last
(Thursday) night and she told
me to believe m the Lord and
He'd make a way for me," he
said
Park*s friend. UCLA alum-
nus Benny Brown, finished
Jourth in the 400 in 45 91
Brown will also be wearing a
U.S. uniform in Montreal as a
member of the 1600 meter
relay team, half the American
relay team will be ex-BruiAs
For the first time there were
'Women athletes attempting to
gain berths on the American
Olympic team alongside the
men. Two of those women
qualifiers were Bruins
Javelin thrower Karin
Smith, fresh off her 203-10 toss
in the AAU mret (second best
ever in U.S. htatory) coasted to
a third-place throw of 187-9
here
Sprinter Eyelyn Ashford.
like Smith a" UCLA freshman
This past year, overcame a
pulled Jiamstnng suJiejCcd ear-
lier this season and the in-
experience Of only two years of
competition to gain a third
placx berth in the 100 meters
Ashford ran a surprising 112
one of the fastest ever by an
American Incoming Bruin re-
cruit Kathy Weston qualified
m the 800 meters
'•Twenty yards from the tape
I knew I was in troule." sa*d
Ashlt^rd "I was just trying to
--.T>c
•' ■ •«•
Kar»r> Mo« Thornton will try to duplicate 1972 Olympic win
Jhomton, Heddy. Haney make it
Babaslioff paces U.S. Olympic swim qualifiers
By Bob Heber
l>B Sp<»ns Writer
Shirley Babash'^'^ aa mi al-
most' one wom.i;. show, rr-
stored the hopes of the United
States women's swim team for
the 1976 Summer Olympics at
Montreal, as she won five
events at ff^y Qlympir ^wim
Babashoff's five victories
included American records in
Va^ m ^)Q jind 4Qa-iDetei
trials in Lpng Beach
freestyle cvcmi plus a world
mark in the ROO free (K 39 69)
and a surprise win jn the 400
individual medley Her per
forma nces eaac4 tome of the
frniinn fait h> tkv ^(hukiim
women after the ' nurr
world recof#i let raooMly by
the .Eiast German women who
iiave thfiiai^Mi AtiPuiMt Am-l.
mination of swimming
Babashofr lo I CLA
<- ^ Haines. UCLA's
mens swim coach, who is
coaching his sixth Olvmpu
iiaiii. ^jutiii' (1! Baroshofi. ^»hi.
i( ontinut'd on l*afr 10)
UCLA
Summer
<
Voium* XCIX Numb*r 3
University ol California, Los
Friday. July 2,
Young requests Reg Fee increase of $93
Raise needed to meet expected deficit
JamM Own» quaited lor
Slay with (runner-up Candra)
Cheeseborough 1 knew I'd
make it if L was with her Tm
so excited Tin numb right
now.**
Smith said ^ just c^me here
hoping to qualify f kept think-
ing on and off that I would
make it **
Several were not as lucky
Willie Banks fell victim to the
best quality of triple jump
competition .ever m the US
despite a personal best of S5-
4 1/2, the Brum sophomore
could only manage a fourth
place finish I he triple jump
was won by former Brum
James Butts, who graduated
from UCLA two yeal^ ago,
(but iTkr^arks and Brown he
still trains at UCLA under
track coach Jim Bush) Butts
popped a wind aided 36-8 3/4 ,
the best jump in the wof-ld this
year, to win
?i^^
t •
Netters place fourth
By Greff L. Rencaa
DB Sporti Writer
The 1975-76 UCLA
men*s tennis season ended
not with a hang but with a
puff as the Bruins finished
fourth in the AIAW Na-
tional championships as Sah
Lake City, June 13-20
The Bruins were touted to
place third behind Trinity
and Stanford in the tourna-
ment, but a stunning uptct
to UCLA's number one
player Paula Smith wrecked
the chances.
Smith, seeded second in
the tournament, fell in the
fifth round to unranked
Joan Pcnnello of CSU
Fresno 6-3, 6-7, 6-2. The
loss dropped her from the
singles competition and was
a siaggenng loss both per-
sonally and for the team It
held Smith's point toul in
the singles division to just
four, and the Bruins never
recovered
Coach Bill Zaima, in re-
flecting on the loss, said, ''I
tbiak Paula being seeded
second in the tournament
hurt her fherc was a lot of
pressure put on her becavtc
of her seeding
"Pairia was very tight and
y?rX_J^ntativc againit Per-
nello." continued Zaima
"She took her too lightly
and that was a big problem
It wav Paula's lack of ex-
perience in a priHiwc situa-
"'^" ^ "' *hsT wiMicd
her to lose
Smith, for one of the few
times this truon^ began to
P^^css and suited iiariring, at
the ball, according, to
Zaima. After a few calls by
the umpire went against her.
Smith began to get away
from her power game and
went down meekly in the
third set
Cindy Thonruu drew top
•eeded Stephanie Tolleson
of Tnnity in the fourth
round and lost 6-3, 6-2.
Tolleson advanced to the
semifinals before loMg.
Tolleson had praise for Tho-
mas as she remarked that
the Brum Senior was very
difficult to play ToUcson
mentioned Thomas' ability
to run down balls and her
determination in the match
Sue Zaro, juft recovered
from a slight case of mono-
nucleosis, pulled a surprising
first round upset over Robin
Kahn. CSU Long Beach's
number one layer The score
was 6^, 7-5. Zaro lost her
next match lo Kav McDani-
el. 6,2, 1-6. 6-2 Her lack of
tournament play m recent
weeks probably accounted
for the defeat
TWing to power the ball
PMt her opponent, Kim
^W»«^^w» defeated m the
lecond round. ^3. 6-0.
NiUson's rushing of play'
during the match made for a
••ck of concentration, ac-
oiH-ding to Zaima and
Hilt ilie lilt mil
I
By Bob Walsh
DB Staff \%riter
UCLA .Chancellor 1 harlcs
1 ¥^Mg iHi a^ed the U<
Board o( Regents for an in
Student Health
to A «»v mp4»sium
ranging from
Service tSHSi
on rape
For the last three
in program
iru r c.j \(s
vcars
co\tj»
urease of $9 V tn UCLA Regis
i^n'of ^^. ^^^"iiy^^iB,^^ But Pass/Fail grades will fwt te included
This
have been off set h\ iighi!
the b«Mlgets ot projtiaMis
funded! out of rcg Ice miunes
iind by a steady increase in
(Continued on Pife 1)
• ♦ I. • •^ • • • • • • •
• . - .• • • v<.* • V » •• -A i
»•
If Ch«ff>c«llor CtMiflM E. Young's r«qu«st to th* UC R«g«nto
it •ec^pted, ffl f— Witt incraaaa by $93 por ymmrin Ml, 1977.
1977
mi would be the
maximum ppssihlc increase
under a plan proposed by DC
President David S Saxon at
the June Rcjents meeting
While the prupaaal wai^
It IS expected to be
ai the July Regents meeting
The $<^3 MWViMe Ik needed.
Young said, to meet an ex-
pected deficit for DCI A of
approximately SI million be-
ginning in the fiscal vcar 1977-
78
$9.9 * millM»n ^peni
I>uring this past fiscal year.
o\cr $9 9 million has been
spent on reg fee programs
Help for UC program passes
iSj ^wan ^ HI INI
DB Staff Reporter
The State Senate in Sacra-
ito paised a bill last week
appropriating approximately
$2 million toahe UC Extemied
University program
The measure, authored by
State Senator Lou Cusanovich
aad sponsored by the UC Stu-
dent Lobby, now moves to the
Jjlate Assembly for considera-
tion
The measure, if passed by
the Assembly and signed by
Governor Brown, will provide .^ministration
novich bill reaches his desk
this August **
The program hasrtom m
existence, ^^r four years but
was dropped by the governor
in his 1975-76 budget Brown
felt the LTC could continue the
program using existing re-
sources. <^-.-''-
When the governor again
eliminated funding for the pro-
gram in his proposed 1 976-77
b>udget. the Regents decided to
phase out the program on the
recommendation of the i^C
President David S Saxon an
nounced that the (iniversitv
would no longer admit anv
new students to the program
I he Extended University
was initiatcijL as * p*iot protect
1972-73. sprving several hun-
dred lUidents who were qualt-
^*^^ f9L.*<^"iis»-"»n to the Uni-
versity but whw ^^re unable to
attend fulltime because of
a ontinued on Pa^e 4)
Academic Senate approves
plus/minus grading for fall
The Sute Academic Senate gave final approval for a plus .ind
minus grading system for undergraduate siudems at U( I \ lo
begin fall quarter
The approval canie at the State Acadc ma Senate m Mav atui
being approved bv the UCI A Academic Senate last March
As a result of the ruling, grades of B. C or I) may receive a
plus or rninus. while A grades may (miy receive a minu-s" A grade
of A* will m>t be possible ftu undergraduates I'.iss I ail gravies
are m>t included in the plus mmus grading
A plus will be counted in the giaUt poini average as i lo ui u
point more and minus will be ^ 10 ol a pofni less than the
acxompanying letter grade By these rules a A ^ill be equal to
3 7 and a B* equal to T 3 *>
Fhe Senate also approved a motion to change the dcfiniti«»n (M
an A grade from, jexcrllent to superior
"I he intent on of rcdetinition was to clearly sei aMdc A^^
special grade and protect it from grade inflation * %aid IV
Flwood Bussa chairman of the tTC LA Academic Seniifc
Another spokesman for the Senate agreed that the goal was
not to make It banter to ^NH-n an A. but "to keep the A pure '
(iraduate studems at UCLA have been ortMhe plus , minus
grading system since fall quarter 1975 I hey mav t ve an \
grade worth 4 0 for their grade point avera§c
The plus minus grading systetn received supiport from the
Student f ducationaf PoIictcs C ommisvion "We leef it will be a
fairer system ot grjMlmg because it will provide a more specific
represeniaium of the value of students" work" said Russell
( ummings. last year's director of the academic r council
— Sliervl I iedrman
the Regents with funds for
about 1,500 who, under the
Extended University program,
attend school |Mnrt t^me.
However. Preble Stolz, Gov-
ernor Brown's education ad-
vifor, told the Dwh Brum last
week that Brown will ••probab-
ly do so again when the Cusa-
Without the financial sup-
port from the state, the Uni-
versity cannot continue the
program "Last year's budget
was designed strictly to get
continuing students out of the
pipeline.- said Earl Roberson.
coordinator of budget affairs
at UCLA In addition, VC
New rules
SLC may hold closed pre-council meetings
(Co
•• Pate II)
QiMiiior Jorry Brown's algnatura may dvdda tha fata
tia EaWndod Unlvralty mmi it« i
Aaaombly nuiat mppro^ tha bill.
of
By Rmm Woipert
DB Staff Writer
'JCLA's Student Legislative
Council (SLC) returned from
its annual retreat Tuesday,
leaving the student body about
$1,700 poorer Unlike last
year's retreat held in Palm
Springs, where council held
some budBBlwy hearings, no
budgetary busiriess was con-
ducted at this year's retreat in
Lake ArrowlMd. .
In informal discuMioiu. SLC
did consioer the adoption of
**pre-council meetingi'* and a
"pre-budfrt wmnimgr One
member said, ^at SLC meet-
ings. It's like hanging your
dmy underwear out to show
With a pre-council meeting this
won't happen, since specuton
will be barred"
Members voted 6-4 in Itvof
of cloaad budget pre-meetings.
but the actual decision will
have to be made at an SI C
meeting.
Another member said. '^I ,
have problems with this. mW^
legislatures art moving toward
sunshine legislation.' where
Council alto heard Dayid
Vena, ASUCIA legal counsel,
addressing the group on the
question of autonomy for
ASUCIA from the U( Board
of Regents
Some members of SIX ex-
pressed fheir disaftection with
the present situation under
which the Regents have control
oi ASIC LA
They were cautioned b\
Vena, however, that the Re-
gents could put economic pres-
iConhnutil on Page 4)
would Hate to see SL( move
in the opposite direction "
M9g McCormack, UMgrgra
t
i
m^
««Mii
/
*.
n
*
i
■,-»«
J;
I
^E.B. Fratik*!^ M.o. M«dfe«i Group I Canbbsan Student's Group Sponsors
-
Hair Traii^lantatloffi
Acne-Complex iofi
Plastic Surgery
Dermatology
Allergy
Jamaican US Ambassador
tor
By trmk Wi
Di Stair Wrilir
Initcd Sutcs AUnd Rattray
wOJ tpcmk At aaea leiay m
Dodd HaU 173 on the topic of
-Jaaaaca. Cube and the
Rattray n appeanng at
UCLA at part of a West Coast
toor he k coadiActing, accord-
ing tb Juliao Beckford, presi-
dent of the Caribbean Stu-
dents* Group (CSG) here,
w^hich m nioMBffiat the event
for Rattray's
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appearance was begun nearly)
one month ago and his speech
marks the CSG's fint on-
ca'mpiM activity
According to Beckford, the
CSG reprenala over 40 itu-
denu from numidlhit countries
bordering on the Canbbcan
Sea, inchiding Guyaaa, Bclixe,
Trinidad. Tobago, Jamaica,
Honduras, the Bahamas and
Haki.
The purpose of the group is
la •"make sure the interests of
thcK students are represented
on campus and foster an
a^^areness of Caribbean cui-
turer Beckford laad.
Studanti' Group,
Miv« IHa Inlaraats
•od f oalar an
Is There A Western Pglli Of Initiation?
Meditation for the
Modem Man and Woman
A Public Lecture
by ReMOuartdo
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"Sfiice formiag CSC this
spring quarter. Beckford and
vice-president Compton Gill a
graduate student here, have
published a mostly newsletter
and several calendar event
letters ^o students invotved m
the group
**We plan to publish our
newsletter 4hfee or four timer
per quarter this ycir " Beck-
ford said, "to communicate
with people in the- .oc^ana.
tion and to let them know
what IS going on in the Carib-
bean "
Beckford said he hopes to
have an island by iiaMid sum-
raar> of news for their mem-^
ben, "FotL^xxample. we would
tnchide' inlcirmation such as the
sute of emergency that was
declared last "week m Jamaica
to cpntrol an incfCMe in vio-
lence in the city of Kingston
where 3M) people were ar-
rested -
"The Jamaicaa government
itas a plan to desubihze
fovenunent and try to take
over However, if you read the
L,A Timr 5 people vaaid ll^Bk
the whok island is under aar-
iial law Thjt u not verv inje."
Beckford said
of the purposes of the
Beckford ai^id. '^u to
try ^nd correct these kind of
wrong impitiyons We ate
want to identify spaofk prob-
lems Canbbean students
have, such as finaact^l aid
immigration, m addition to
making new CariMaan stu-
dents at home in Los
Summer
Bruin
>t9kmm KCIK -II III, 9
Frktoy July 2, 1971
Published twic«
tumm#f •Kc«pt
and days Hoaow
• Hsmmation periods
ASUCLA
and
306
CaMfom«a
by th« A5UCLA
Los
CobsmComction
TUf /Xai/i
j^ruHinJ K4ltar-ia.CMtf
aiAsiakrah gaoled hka
*^^^ a "hKh ol nmtktUks
tkk% caaipas as tile
la
Ithhk Wtaia.*.
sai iaeon%»«|#«et ar
—ill iiaaagHiathai
kmm^t^ or Hie araiA^t
Reg Fee hikji . .
T?'
Kontinucd from Page I)
student enrollment As a result.
UCLA has been able to ac-
cumulate a reserve fund of
nearl> Si million over the last
five years
However, enrollmeat here
has leveled off this year^^and
few possibilities still exist for
hadyrt cuts i^ithout curtailing
student services such as SHS
according to Young
Salary increase^
Inflation and sUte mandated
saiarv increases for University
employees are the two main
causes of the ever-growmg
costs of reg fee programs,
according to Earl Roberson,
coaiduiator of budgetary af-
fairs.
"This year, if it is approved
and signed by the governor,
there will be a $70 across-t^e-
bcNird salary increase for all
Uiuversity employees This in-
Cft^§€ alone 'Wtli cost, an addi-
tional $45a.000 a year for reg-
istration fee programs, ' Rober-
in^4tn- inten
S750.UUO of the reg fee reserve
funds
RobefMMi warned, however,
that this IS onlv a solution for
this year, next year LC LA will
i«icc the same sae deficit but
with nearly depleted reserve
fuads."
Four other UC campuses.
Santa Barbara. Santa CIruat,
^^n Franc'rr- and San Diego
'••*i^c also indicated thcv expect
to face deficit V - major cut-
backs m reg itc programs
According to testimonv
given by Saxon at the Regents
meeting, this will mean a sys-
tem-wide deficit oi $2 milhon
for the 1976-77 year and a $4 5
milliofi de^^icH m \^17-^7^
Campus
Events
mmmamnJt
Roberson cited tnflatioa, ia-
creating costs of malpractice
insurance and additional em-
ployee fringe benefits as adding
another $300, OOa a "year in
permanent costs.
Depleted reserve fands
Roberson explained that the
University would try to hold
the line for this fiscal year by
cutting coftis wherever possible
and by using approXirtiately
Student Center restaurant
— Office el EnvlreenifNtat iiM CeniuMtr
""^ lasSs volunteers iMmmtt^ *n work
JUS oft-CBWiiumef
Visit Kerckhoft 31 1 from 9 ifii^ pm
— iasaa Mipaannim. cetet)ration will
tM held • 30 pm-1 am tonight internatHmii
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3617
HCU VMlep NM Ce^ net spomnts for
new memtMrs wHe wHi continue ttirougH iie
fiK Staff faeatty and students are mviti^ lo
lOin For information call 825-4277 l4pm
Tuesday and M^ednesday f '
^— ■•'T.._.J^
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
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And bmiMii ttiKJentt. iwrd- portsi
'"r-.I^n ^.T'\ ^^f^^- But don't get franlu:^ ad-
Cit.ng the latest data from „^, (^j,^,,^, Sundberg, dean
i>
t
I
I
L BAMBINO
(The Perfect Lunch)
$1.95
f:
I
A cup of homsniii soup or a small saJad
A iIhs of \Mne or coffee
»/i sarKiwich on a fresh Italian roll, your choice at hot meat
ball, sausage pepper, aiami & cheese, egg- pepper^
^^mushrooms, grilled provolone c
. Scrvd daily at
the College Placement Council,
Money reports that the trend
toward job-oriented college
training has accelerated
Specifically, the market is
good for accountants, physi-
cians, nurses, secretaries, com-
puter programmers and elec-
tronic data processors, accord-
ing to one management con-
sultant.
^^^axMziLi Owo ^uut D
uc
Program . .
r^tafL
ltS4 iGtENDON AT LINDtKOOKi
VAl., rAftKING WSTWD CimBLDi..
471-2941
of the Placement and Career-
Planning Center here on cam-
pus. '*The bad news in the
media is making grad students
more uptight than they ought
to be," he said ^^It's bad. but
not that bad "
Sundberg cxplain?T;ic^ that
with the help of afftrmativc
action programs, women and
minorities have greater op-
portunities for employment
than was true a few years ago.
£or exa^mple, women itfc fct-
ting 27 per cent more job
offers than in 1974
— "^^ht^
Sd
-StUt
employment should approach
the tas4t' with the attitude that
there are indeed jobs of the
kind ihev want out there and
that they personally are the
ones who v^ill get the lob,"
suggests Sundberg.
A key factor m finding |obs
i^ versatility, accordinfi to the
experts^ Dual majors can onlv
be helplul
^'Cirad students more often
than not have skills thev don't
even know thcv have." said
Sund1>erg /;A typical hisii)rv
major identifies himsclT with
TTontiiNierf from Page I )
work or family responsibilities
The courses are conducted
by regular University profes-
sors in the late afternoons,
evemngs and on some week-
ends, and about half of the
courses are offered at con-
'vcnient off-campus locations.
The program has demon-
. straied a high student need A
stttdy compktcd after the pro-
gram's first year showed that
6« per cent of the students
would have found it impossible
to attend schofol full time.
Hr l-eonard Freedman,
dean^ of the IJ^uision of Ex-
tended Studies at UCLA.
said, :
"Up until now the hxtended
University has been a pilot
proje^ct If Goiter nor Jiraw^i^. iCotttinued from Page 1)
signs the bill the program wilf
most likely be state policy."
''1 hope we can get it to the
Governor's desk." said Judy
Samuelson "We will hkciy be
lacing a veto, but we would
like one more opportunity to
convince Brown that the Uni-
versity *i^t>uid be opening its
doors to all qualified students.
whether or not they can attend
full time."
that major instead ot a persot
with skills and interests
"To fhe outside world it
irrelevant tliat one*i a histor
major A counselor can idcn
lify his marketable skills • h..
added *
Come early
Sundberg suggested that tht
student searching for employ
ment come to the PUcemcnt
Center immediately, to ask for
help so he or she will not ha^
to wait. . — '"
At the Placemen! Cemrr
more information may be ob-
tained on the best wav to go
about getting a job and even
some statistics on stanrng
lanes
For instance, petroleum <
gineers are commanding the
highest anual average
SI 6, 788. A master's degree in
businws IS worth $15,132 ihes7
days, up from $15,000 in 1975
One inference a studenr
might make from these sta-
tistics IS to choose ji^ career
which IS in demarid I hi
woKild be wrong, say the carcer-f j
advisers interviewed by Mone\
Backfire
Such a move could backhn
they say. because the hot fields
get super-saturated, as is i;hc_
case ifi engineering. (A sampk
survey siujwed there were 1 3hh
undergraduate engineering ma"f
)ors enrolled at UCLA in the*
fall of 1975 )
SLC retreats again .
sure on the students I he- Re-
gents could not be forced to
collect mandatory fees for the
students In addition, IC
could possibly take back old
AS UCLA property.
While manv SLC members
Mewed ASUCLA control o«
their own operations and pro-
gramir. ably, it was
pointed out that operations
could become more unstable.
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UCLA Cardiographies Lab offers
wjth little continuity from vear
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SLC funds
Members agreed to consider
withdrawing aH.SfC^ funds
from Securitv Pai;ific Bank to
protest the bank's discontinua-
tion ol the Federally Insured
Stud^Bf-i oans program
In preparation for next
week's Sir budget hearings,
which should take almost 50
hours to complete, members
reviewed the ground rules of
the budgetary process.
This year, budgets will be
reviewed on the basis of "zero-
based funding." undergraduate
President Meg McCormaCk
Mid This was called the
"Governor Brown approach."
meaning every pennv must be
justified on the basis of real
need rather than convenience
or tradition
USA by-laws
Problems arose when the
Undergraduate Student As-
sociation (USA) By-Laws were
read. They state, "Commis-
sioner budget requests shall be
limited to 150 per cent of the
commissioner's final budget for
the previous fiscal year, or
$5,000. whichever is greater**
Tests of:
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Exercise Capacity
Valve Function;
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DB Editorial
What can you say about i Bicentennial celebration that results in
degndation? That the United States loves money merchandising
and parades?
America is uice a ctrtTd. dressed up In the wrong attire for her
birthday party When you re 200 years old. however, the effect is
not cute.
Congress celebrated the Bicentennial by wallowing in sex
^ scandals Gerald Ford tripped a notable number of times. Hollywood
^ worked hard to produce a show about a dog. The airlines planned
-, special' vacations to encourage Americans to travel And
I students, who should have been the most involved in the
■} celebration, were aware of the Bicentennial only because of
;S Madison Avenues informative advertisements that linked 1776 to
X everything from vodka to trash cans.
In all the tawdry tinsel that has adorned this year s festivities,
not much mention has been made of the actual events of 1776
Perhaps this neglect has caused the problem -no one knows
precisely what it is that should be celebratetfc
The Declaration of Independence was not written to benefit all
Americans Although the intent of the document has supposedly
changed in modern America, the Declaration still does not aoolv to
all citizens ^^
Ironically, this year is not the two-hundredth birthday of the
United States of America The Constitution was ratified in 1789
Apparently, the Bicentennial means never having to understand
history. i
Letter to the Editor
Trademark
Editor:
Well, you m^de us resort to
■MgHtmg fire wrth fire. An^hed is d
letter which was sem sometime
earlier regarding our trademark
Frisbee*.
Seriously, we have diligentiy
prolKled our valMflMe Frisbee«
trademark for over fifteen years,
have %pmm Kleraliy hundreds of
thousands ol dollars on adver-
tising our Frisbee* Hymg disc. and
13c now on postage for every
small "f"
Frisbee^ » a re^mmd trade-
mark of Wham-O Mfg. Co. for
flying saucers and discs used in
sports games. As a registered
trademark, we're offered protet-
'•on d^iinsl misuses, through
federal law, but a,. capital F"
seems like such a simple rtHMicir
Pleased
Thanks; — and our next letter
vwun't be necessary, and our files
will be corrected to capitalize
vour paper's name
If thfs had happened years ago,
wexi have gone dont^n the Esca-
lator, taken an Aspirin, and played
wah our Vo-Yo on the Imoieum
floor
But, because people kept put-
ting a slash bar through these
registered trademarks, the marTa=
facturers were stri|)pcd of their
rights The words were kMNHr*
^ased and exploited by compett-'
tors and imffafOrs.
We don t want this to become
our fate We have thought of
emulating kosten's Hyman Kap-
lan and sending our releases
about our H*U*L*A* H»0*0*P.
F*R*l*S*B*tnv and S*U»P*E*R
B*A*L*L
However, we were afraid that if
we did, the poor computer pii^K
grammers would wind up with a
bad case of Frisbee finger, reach-
ing so frequently, for the afterisk •
key Would you pleaietonsid«r a
much less painful approach and
satisfy capitalization of the words,
Frisbee. Hula Hoop and Super
Biff Also, please note the proper
spelling of these trademarks
^^nously, Frisbee, Hula Hoop
and Super Ball, are registered
trademarks of Wham-O Mfg Cp. '
(Frisbee - No. 678.186, Hula Hoo^
- No. 739,307; and Super Ball -No
811,650) The proper refvpHKe to
our trademarks is Frisbee^, Hula
Hoop* and Super Ball«, and then
only to identify Wham-O Pro-
ducts We realize this could cause
undue difficulty and if so, cap.
talization of the first letter a la
Friibee diK, Hola Hoo^toy, Super
Ball toy. satisfies our eagle-eyed
Legal Department
Xo paraphran^ Mr. Franklin P
Adams famous poem; "These are
the saddest possible words —
aspirin, escalator, yo-yo and lino-
leum."
Please don't add us to that
infamous fist: Thank you from the
bottom of our registered trade-
mark. .;
James W. Kerrigan
Executive Vice President
General Manner
The letter, itkktutd to the
U.C.I. a. daily brum and accorn-
panied by a Frisbe^i H^^^n to
a recent U.CL.A Daily Bruin
article that included the word
"fris
'Bd
Death of a Reporte
by Louis Watanabe
(tdJtor'i Note Louts Watanabe is a Daily Brum
itaff writer )
Don Bolles. investigative reporter for the Arizona
Republic, IS dead His death was the third gangland
style murder m Arizona in the last 15 moriths The
other, two involved a key prosecution witness and
a Mafiosa. ° •
Bolles had recently written about larid fraud
schemes and criminal entry into legitimate busi-
nesses in the stale vvhen on June 2, he was blown
dp^rt by d bomb attached under his car
The explosion left Bolles without legs and only
OPINION
one arm and he died soon afterward Before he
died, however, Bolles managed to implicate or-
ganized crime in the bombing.
Phoenix police have said their investigation has
involved prominent, influential people" including
some with important political ties
The growth of organized crime and public
corruption has become intolerable According to
th^ New York Times, criminal groups are profiting in
the millions of dollars though fraud and other
■9» tfl«
1^^ ^ ^' - * ""•"'*' o^imimm mt ike Summer Brum
*•*<*. *«• Howard PoMter. — - -t iin>iiri||
"white collar" crinr»es in this tast urbanizing, frontier
state.
The problem m Arizona, however, is rampant
throughout the nation, although perhaps more
subtly The sad thing is there will be no great
national indignation, only passive hopefulness that
government will provide easy soKjtions. -
Many citizens no longer are safe at night and are
now turning to the handgun for self-protection
Unfortunately, this so-called solution has resulted in
accidental shootings by untrained or negligent
owners. .
41 also seems obvious that once a citiien is forced
td buy a gun for prfMction. he has lost some of his
precious freedom to act as he choose*.
Some real solutions are; stiffer penalties for
serious and especially violent crimes, stricter
handling of hard-core -juvenile offenders the
reform of the parole system which allows murderers
and other dangerous criminals an easy way out of
prison in only a few short years and demands for
greater accountability of public officials
To be sure, any solution must also consider
reductions in poverty and unemployment but
perhaps the best solution of all is developing more
aware and interested citizens.
In the words of political activists, perhaps the
problem IS not one of being radical but one of not
being radical enough
•4
t1
NEED A SUMMER JOB???
THERE'S WORK TO BE DONE WITH INCARCERATED YOUTHS!
^•Bridging the Cap" offers U.CL.A. students and community people the chance to
tutor young men and women in juvenile criminal institutions in the L A area The °
youths want to learn to read, do math problems, learn about th Jr cultur^ othe^
cultures, arts and crafts or anything else you can offer them" |t oX ta^p. -I
n.ght a week on Wednesdays or Thursdays, or a Sunday afternoon where ou can
participate in the Recreation Program ^°^ ""
Volunteer with "Bridging the Cap- and put some of your free time to use thi. .Mm,«
M "iJt«25,2il 5 or come_by K^ckhoff Hall #4oi for m^^^^wl^.'^l'i""^'"^^
Tutor Incarcerated Youths
Sponsofgd bv th<> n
4
iiTifrinw^^^^
r
UCLA Experimental College
..___^.
Wdcomc to summer
Warm days & thick haze, beach babies & Hollywood
Southern California has it all.
You say that you'd like a bttle more this
Well, here we are.
The UCLA Expennr^ntai College offers more thw just a Kttie bit of
teaming for free! ~ in a relaxed comfortable atmosphere.
Summer 1976
Begin July 5
It's fun. ' y-
Come and sec.
Enioy a class or tvfo u/ith us this summer.
AHen S. Kessler
acting director
825 2727
ADVENTURES DS FOLK MUSIC
A bcturrmuMcaic turvay cowmg .«Mrly Jazi,
C«Mmo. m4 oiNv dhffac and tocid umm dl tdik mum T)»
•ocmi backy^ound muticaJ (kvulopmcnc at mch typ« at Idk
mmc » lOustrated with €mdtm mM liriwiplii at rarciy heard
authantic. tradttiofial kAk muac
Howard Feldman Buncht 2209A Mon 7 10 pm
lS¥Cf«C DEVELOPMENT -— • - ^
Thi» will be l«:turt. open dMcuMion and practitia^ppfcc at wn
toranyone mtmmtmd Pf«viou. kno^^adgt or (bmiliar.ty w.th the
UibtKt « not ^nacvMary Eitpact to anpoy |«urwH it* a hin
Goune
RtchardA Bobnck ik Tom Juttw} AU3517 Man? 309 30pm
LOVE
Wh*l » "whal the wqrid/naadt now-^ Th* happening wiN
inv/oive .ndivKiual and gppiip d»cuMK>n toward a functKjnal
defmttion o* the word k>^ and its relation toljjie Purmg the third
itition. laww wUi be dcvdoped to go into tht wortd and apply
th^ deiinitiona The middle WMiona wiil be a prnraniiii] oT thf
Hitin^ encounters, wtfh the final leii^n^
alone
Tu/lev N Brown AU 3664
c-hJulv 15. Aug 26 KH 400}
l^an 7 9 30 pm
BASIC FILMMAKING
Students wifl meet am night a week »nd on Saturdays Dunns
the night meeting* we will diacuas scnptt and crew functiona.
»uch a* /director, writer camera opcratt>r. editot. continuity ( lerk
and actoi* Shooting will taka^ilace on Saturday pratmM^ m the
UCLA West LosAn^eiaaaiwa Students viijl ftup0ly.aMm Super
8mm or Smm caroeraa. Wm. kfhts fcnd editing equipment
Jnatnictors haue on« Ktxiak M 22 camera and sikmt super 8mm
and 8mm aditor ^
Kunze Paul Otto "* GSM 2317 Man 7 30 9 pm
TAJCHICHtJAN ' .
T'ai Chi Ch uar\ it a IXWOyMir oM Chmeie >rlf difaim luitui.
uaad for health, iwiawat ion and meditation h rnwiaii of a
sequence of 81 mowetnenu pirfwiwaU in ikiw malim which halp
balance and amphfy internal energies whik? tonmg up muscles and
calming the nervous system It emphaaiaes awareness ar\d
improves concentration The obpacttw«»o#TaiChi ChWnarelo
know oncMtf and to Cultivate Jm'tmnm at
Daddl
Morutn Smalhtm&r
m
Mem 4 6 pm
TAROT CARDS
HermitrK phikiaophy . urn venal kay to ai wiadom attamabk on
this planet Numencal aqualniii and symboian) to practical
occultisrp. combining alchemy, astroksgy. kabbalah and nH^c.
Truly a mathematical machmt ^pkad to theabaokite. gMngthe
•Mkcr an opportunity to undtntand the true meaneig of one's
o«Mn hfe and destiny
O^idRobart Summers ~ AU3S17 Tu9%7 lOpm
T A/G CONTACT
Iniormal. tdf-organued erKountef ^oup onants. devekspsand
practkraa tranaacfional analysis, and baaic GastaH ther^y
(Texu: Sninar. Scripts Paople Liva. Same. What Do You Say
After You Say Halk)?. Harns. I'm OK - You're OK. James and
Jonea^aard. Bom to Wm. Park. Gaatah Therapy, many more)
Gaonge Houaknachf AUX64 Tues 7.30 9 pm
A modem explMWlion to a vary popular procaat caiad aai
hypnosis It is a tool that can be uaad to improwa btain functJen.
create good vibrations, calm good kpahngs, and obtain peHact
haalth This claaa will involuc lactvrt. and practica h « a hm claM
#iit iboiMi kipRMM to be both natural and haalfhti
Ttrry M|wd GSM 2214 vTues 7 309m pm
MANAGEMENT AND SUFE^V^'ON
Organisation arKi mana'*'\,.^a\]BD
Ranald Bmw ^ wt 43178
|for«iparviaoiry
Tues 10 am 12 pm
BaOHHYTfWm AND SUCCESS - U6MG MDMDUAL
ENBKiYFOBCES
Evarybo^ hat *'upi and
gam Body/ physical.
natural rhythms uaad in work/pby.
relations, buaaaaaa or profession The ultradian physical.
emotional and intellectual biorhythms will be considered.
^••^^irwtwi^, cn^nwD vrxj r^rmmrj tot eav ano omars. iWinw
cycles related to self caused errors/ ace idams. lagha/kMM.
loii^iiiMiini. money laas^gam. wcM bamf^irtaM. bfe^ death'
Your btorhythm record reveals three internally generated forcaa
related to Mna our kmrt»i daiwiiun ei lie and kwmg^ Diacovar
yoMr own. taue money, improve
ftl Schoro flunche 2i6i
I Me's quality now
Tues 7 30 9 30 pm
-UNI" 1NTERNATK>NAL LANGUAGE
Bas courae introduces Uni. a newly conatniciad international
- baaed on hundwdi of common words from many
The aan of ihts course is to provide an aaay to laam
*°^ personal communication between peopkt of many
countnas Um has been endOjPaad Vt»of eaaianak thtoughihe
workf and promises io become the new inramoliMah
langMagi. Bimhmh Wamscott. origvi^or of Dm will apaal-. at the
frtt imipnolclaas. and wiU ana%iiar («Maaiions about this fantastu
new langt^ge demgned for everyone TEXT Vni Tlie New
International Lanpiagt is required lu all students enroOed in
the course, and will be availabkr in the UGLA Students' Store
Enrolment » bmited
E/iaobefh Wamaott GSM 4^^?^ ,^ ^ ^^
Jui]^ 13
BASIC WfLDLKNUfe SURVfVAl
Courae at sHiis naa^d for e; - 'H:y survival m moontams
Swrra Club and OECA staff, the course wUI <
W the Sierra
Paul Sonrwfiakl DoddM
with a trip
U^eds 7 9 30pm
PRACTK:A1 MYSTICISM MAX>E EASY
^Based on the teachings . 20th century mystics We w« at
tan^pt le apply aaoierK ^da^mm
^'^^ttm^Mmnu^. Haines 127 Wwdw^Wpm
PROJECTIVE PROFILE -?
Consideration >h requested ol dfv«»l(»p»ny a basic manuai lei
are termed pro^ei tiv«; prr)tikrt<} enahk* individmrfs short
term prof^ammmg unthen own lo t ompksment and outgrow
li^ pattama^nd evok/t* p^r!»<ifwilitv tjrowth
Cjec>rge Hautikn4^i h: 4/' ^f, r • U««(/
•"t^''
PRINCIPI LS 01 BANKING
Th«^
hv U'tt UIHfXpUM ^¥^*
IfoMO/J-Bfry
: IP! LS 01 BANKING
history And Ium- %\\^^ '^ '^" ''•i'^" ' • "
1 »•» • W^ I II
.K-iM .m; '
ind deserts and other hostile anuiaonmants Lmphaais uf the.
counar-will be placed on th** deuabpment ql life support systems
mcM^rvdlble plant recognition^and use. tool making, firs*. aid
surviual kits. huMaig an^ trappaig and primitive "^navigaticm
il awareness techniqueti will prasam mjlhadi th»
can use m order to ^uaalhar paasibihties. find
direction using primitive -navi ret hniques and-vnhantf fh*-
-cdwfcdihce of the student in the indM/iduai abikty to adfutt to and
surmount Mullaiiis associated with wiMarr^ess survival '^
Pauia Harv^ GSM 1278 lues T3() 9 30 pm
TOJA;aRD anew ORDtR OE.MAN AND SOCIETY
(UFE DRAMA DYNAMICS!
Study 6f the original plan of a complale. comprehensive, mttr-
disciplinary eco syalam. organizing pr<iram to prepare a c cmi
"'^ ^^"^^*^ oj plan, ealabftah and develop mcjdel r mmmum
tewtodiawiaitaia potential cjf devafopmant and reoiwation i>n
cnrnpaaiiiiu r«»ources of every naUiM IMlHd optimum tutality
of wal-being of aM partic ipanis in comn^sMMMi; tnhtjiwi^li il
extansively as an international, mler government sopio-aconomic
piMRing nHMament under sysiams anal|«M and iiMbgntii scwnti
fic methfxlology as compsiiiaMisa taaHrrh; WNiie establish
and develop the ACADEMY OF THE NCW REPUBLIC
fellowship
Marv B DAmbfosw Rr^f 150 Turn* 1^ pm
/ htjfs 1(1 /jfn itttt
ZEN TEACHifNGS Of NO MJNfV
No mind is qpf^ucf ih.u. [ntU\ iH-i.aw^- .t (U'Mr«.vs truth N.-
truth mi ^td n<» ♦•HisMm *• m.reaiMV). or faith iifwlerHlamfrngftr
idkah No mind is hye mind dependent 00 rvnthirwj «tandlns
akwie in Its i ompk'i*>n»^ss CumHi nowhiw«t.^i«lD4j Moihinq I Hidfr
stand this irnn^i'dMi.'lv ctnd die lo youi oun »mall %^H and he
. orm' the word Lxpf rient p i^h* UMalitv of Zen U^t fur** medila
.lion, aiKi visilifvi vdrniub /vn ma»t«>rs "
■ ftei^ £dli/orc/ G Mu/tka lX>dd4H /,♦,//•, ^ m \nr^
BEGINNING i SPt R ANTO
fcup^raiilo. tr» s .#*jt. .IS AW interrwiional fcetond
language. n«>u - k million siJ.'dkWvthriMjgKoot
^^'♦'•«^ '' y^xpUiied >ti.vo.ahularly IS taken from
the mm>i \ ,^|,^, ^x\d it hds a iarcjr ^Kjdy »if url^hal
and translatca iiut^ Mifloygh th«rt> are speakers m aknosi
every country, Esperamo is esp«" mIIv v in F.urcif),
wd brazil Books and iiimiines ar«' ^ ^ ,n a wtde variety
ol subjects, and several counlnas i»f nd .lui F
radio broad* -*-•- this course wtll rov.ii mt t,.,
graMmar wi^; .i,. t^mphasi^ on < onversaion
TimothKiJ Rs^^ Aliihh4 1 hu, m^juj,'
>-*^>^4'
METAPHYSICS AND PSYCHIC AW ARENEai___
kwructor will teach you
- to see the human aura and understand what the different
colors mean
— to recbgnue thre^lors of dwrord and thaaa of harmonv ani
high vibrations , »
— to aae and uae tfiought forms
" to develop and irKrease clairvoyanca
— to use this kncHi4arige for positive insights
MiltanSchwaru Hmma 122 W'ttkmikh " FH, 1
Of UCLA BASKETBALL. PART U
An ei-depth sarvay ai Iks pmmmdUm and avants which pro
ducad the moat remaHMbb success m coUeyate sports history
Raiwt the champiofHiilp yaaia #iiiaiig|i aydto-viauals There will
be a trivia contest and rmiJI^ ^Mt ipnlim Part II covars
1966 76
A NEW INSIGHl INTO
3150
GOMANY UNDER HTTLP'' ,^
A study of the ThirH - ^^-VVViny from 1
Wmda. 7 9 pm
Ran Barg
Weds 10 am 12 pm
ECKANKAR
*
A tones of guaat spaabars toM share their knoMtodgt and ex
pmkmacm m Ecbankar Eckaakar is the Path of Totol " mmiii
and the Ancient Sci8to» ol Stod Tf»yd This maans propection bf
ik» itoiar cnniriniiwiii adacb trwiiis through the kM«r stotos
unti It aacends vito the acatolk stotos ^4mm fka iukigct pos
srhiaiiodliiiUMgliasafitoottoiHtoalaiiafoaaakwoaaionlytoths
f olowai s of tlMscianca It isHwvitoble that the sarioua spfrttual
student wiiaii|iUin%dttcoyar and watoar the art o< soul trawal
Hogon
C5M43S7Br
Wads 10 am 12 r>m
BACKPACKING
A daas daaing with the backpacking equipment, whara to get
It and then where to go hiking Taught hy members of the UCLA
PSYCHONOMKS
ECONOMICS
f^- An un< .rf h. u\. . ,4>w at aconomrs froHTthe pay* hoki^tal an
pomi ol view Th** devekipmeni and behavKir of dit
cultures in economics Minority econowacs particularly
women's ecornirhK % through history.
A Pwter Gar^ GSM 2317 Thur% 7 1 pm
raspns Ju/y 15i
macrobiotk:s
Every day we change 1/10 of our bk»od pfaiiiii. by the trans
mutation of food, which occurs m our small iniesnn«'» Thus ei 10
days we renew compbttaly the baaic subatancet uf our bkiod
to««m Gradually. wi*hin 3 to 4 years, bbod bacoMOS body cells
•toh. nmrs^, brains, organs, etc So natural/, food is our most
important investment to secure our graatost traasuva HEALTH
An increasing number of paopla m9 bayiwwiig to laakae that
wrong food IS the cause of al disaasa Many theories are now m
<^*^"'"^»<^<^^*'*wt<tor daily faodsshouki be. but the only isoy to
restore the composiiMn and hmction of die body m^ mmd « to
hjfly understand the aneient psreaptoiii pnd practice df the
Umversal Pnnc ipkrs. of how to rtinaii prepare and aamml^m
food according to the Micro/Macro coamoa aitorralBtomiiMa.
Subjects 1 The Un«|ue Prmcfile and >ts practical ^ipfecation
2 The Ordar of Daily Lie according to the Ma
cro/Mkro cootoos interrelationships, ibio
oycaNy. mantoi^r. spintuafly)
3 Disaaaa.iu oripn. cauaa and cure
Roy J Steeuens^ Mf 20,21.22 KH 000 7J0 930pm
Aug 24. 25. 26 AU 2401
MOW TO CiET WHAT YOU WANT WTTHOUT
BUYING IT
A survey c4 labor poob. larvices c(
temt^jiLjhi^ Los rii^Bi iiai Old you
hundtoib of servicaaaaa ■iitolsbls to you. fraa lor ^_.
thaae plans^ Complato adermation on hosv baai topraii I
h^irgronvtg phenomenon, mckidaig samples of actual
flirkordO Johnson Runciiel2/f Thun
JNU CLASSES ON JULY 5
c
4-y
i
*
vco Center
Cinema I
WMtwood tivd
475-0711
THE SAILOU WHO FEU FROM
GRACE WITH THE SEA (R)
%M,r40. S:fQ,i:OS, 10 IS
r^rk tn<ioo' A vco Oorog#
Avco Center
Cinema II ode to billy joe (pg)
ZTZl^L. *•*•' *-^*' *=«*' •^»>' '0:30
475-07 n
Pork Indoof Avco Goraa*
Avco Center
Cinema III
Witshir* n*ar
W««t>«ood Mvd
475-07 11
Pork Indoor Avco GaroQ*
SILENT MOVIE (PG)
2:0P, 3:55/5:50, 7:50,^:50
Pool's
Beverly Hills
WMth<r« Mvd ot Connon
1 bNi Eott oi B«v«Hy Dr
27» JI21
M«H«n trsffid* and J«di NicK«lMn in
THE MISSOURI BREAKS
BREAKHEART PASS
TuM-M apsfi 4:00
Sot-M^ MMft 13:30
Brentwood
2524 Wilshir*
(Of 26th S* )
Sor*fa Morwco
8293366 829 3367
laWrt l«dlwd, Dvttin H^Hmon in
I AU THE PRESIDENT'S MEN
TuM-THwri«:45, f:l5
fri.M»n 1 00, 3:30, «:00, 5:30, 10:45
^ndmy-Mtfnday 10:45 ih^w •! All fh«
^r»~d»fifli Mtfi •fily $ 1 50 wtH« thit Mi
Brentwood H
2524 WMthir*
(o« 2«Kf St.)
Soma Mo«Mco
•29-3366 82^3367
THE MISSOURI BREAKS
Tim^Hhm 6^30 10 25 >nW»(W« XjjK). «:M. 10:25
9km Chori** Scwvaiwi in
BREAKHEART PASS
TMM-TKwf* •;45 Mtly, fwi m»n 4 45 A •45
Monn'$
Bruin
WMtwood Villag*
MURDER BY DEATH (PG)
1:15, 3:30, 4:45, «:30. 1:15, iO:0(P
Century
Wozo I
^?040 Ay* of Stor*
553-4291 ,
THE BLUEBIRD
^ W «, #. 10
Sot, Sun, 2, 4, 4, t, 10
P1,n
Century
PJazo II
2040 Av« ot Start
553-4291
HAWMPS
M-F 5, 730, 10:00
Sat, Sun, 2:25, 7 30, 10:00
Oi«c«ont Tick«t« AvailabU ot K«rtkholf §•■ 0«f k«
Cinerama
Dome
■ Sur»«ot noor V«ni|[,_„
Hoiywood 466-3401
In 70 mm
LOGAN'S RUN (PG)
Dotly 12:30, 3:00, 5:30, tOO, 10:30
Crest
mo
1262 Wottwood Mvd
272 5876
474-7166
LADY SINGS THE BLUES
A
MAHOGANY
Fox Venice
620 Lmcold Mvd
396^4215
Adutt SI 50
CMd SI 00
ira
Ooy««l
QtmHhu. Poctfk ViWwtiww
— in A Htf^t km C«*olbl«
!• Oftd
IWffl
Hollywood
Pacific
■5211
^wl Now man in
BUffALO BUI ond Hm INDIANS
^oify of
12:30, 3:00, 5:30, 0:00, 10:30^
Los Pel iz
- 1f74
ICY BREASTS
Alain OoImi A Mw««llo Dmn
Manns Westwood I
THE TENANT
12 45,3:05,5:30, 7:50, 10 15
The Bicentennial!
What to do now that if s finally here
w--- By Laura Klemer ,
During the past few year* wcWc ail been !»iruck with
Bicenienniahtis The symptoms arc red. white and blue blood and
m many cases an empty pocket book This Sunday may be the
climax, of all the activities but not the end; Bicentennial events
will be continuing for the rest of this yrmr
Fourth of July events this year range from fireworks mnd
parades to concerts and exhibits Some have admission prices;
many arc free.
The Rose Bpwl in Pasadena is hosting a circus and fireworks
program fhc circus begins at 8 pm. the fireworks at 9 pm
Adults pay $3, children 12 and under are $1 50 This show has
been highly enjoyable in past years ahhough parking at the Rose
Bowl IS a trauma
.^im'°J''^*'*r"^ fireworks is Pierce College in Woodland Hills
(6201 Winnetka Ave). Ascribed as an "old fashioned fireworks
display the show will also include bands, clowns, and sky
divers Adult tickets are $2 50, children 13 and under pav S2 The
show runs from 7:30-9:30 pm
Anaheim Stadium will present its -Grand Bicentennial
Fireworks Spectacular and Pageant.- It starts at 7 pm with a
thrill sho^w which includes such acfs as Myoshy Amotto
executing a series of treacherous feats aloft while suspended
only by the hairs on her head " Fireworks begin at 8 15 pm
Reserved scats are S4, i5. and S6 general admission ,s $^
I he Coliseum is not exploding this year, but a free fireworks
show at the foot of the Santa Monica Pier begins at 9 pm
Los Angeles County is sponsoring an All Nations, All Peoples
parade which features floats, bands, drill icams^ and cars totalling
approximately 250 umts and 4000 participams True to its title
the parade will feature a wide varinfj/ of entries iniluding people
dressed as all American foods, a square dance unit composed ^f
the mentally retarded, a contortionist. 40 counselate general
corps and ihe usual clowns and equestrians The 10.8 mile parade
begins at W.lshire and Grand in downtown I A and progresses
to Sweet/er in East LA At prc» time it was nt>t vet decided if
the motori/ed unit, will b. ^omg through Beverly Hills and
Santa Monica In any case, it w,li p,ck up at Selby in Vest L A
and continue to Centmela
_ America^ composers will he saluted at the Hollvw^dd Bowl's
Bicentennial family picnic conccn Zubin Mehta and the L A
Philharmonic will perform mus.c by Gershwin, Ives. Bernstein
Copland and others, with a ( ,ak consisting of Sousa marches
and fireworks Baritone Shernil M.lnes. bass-baritone Brock
Peters and commentator Ralph Store are featured Only S2 seats
•re left; coaomfoert are encouraged to bring a picmc dinner
Disneyland will probably be a madhouse, but they wil have -
special fireworks Vhow at V pm and - America on Pa'rade' oil bJ
•ee» ai 2. n ami || pm
' S«me commumly evenlv include the Bren.w.KHJ community
„^^*Und piifiulc on San Vicei«* between 2*th and Bringham
fciTval ?. ?r1 '"". \*^ *^'*"""" Bicentennial art and music
ft^Iln V^ Estrada Couns Housing Project (3232 Estrada St ).
Beverly H.IK old fashioned day in the park at Roxburv park
r« kTJ '"'*'."' "*"* f''""* ^'"'»«« '«»• celebrities and rides
lor children and the Marathon Bicentennial celebration at the
Martin Luthe," King. Jr Memorial I than Corp Mult.-versity
Jul> .t to 10 am July 4.
TheGriffith Park Observatory offcrt "Surs Over America a
.*■'*•« "T"^ '" <=°T«"'*' «""«" a« I 30. 3 and 8 pm Adulli
P">L *'^- "'"*« •«" '3-17 arc $1 and children 5-12 ate 50«
Ihe Oarden Theatre Festival moves to Barnsdall Park for the
chiwll- "'' '"" ''°T "°°'' '° ^^ Ptn Dance, jaz/. m.me.
chiWrens programs and more wiU be available, all for free
hor those who doni want to hassle with tickets, parkmg and
P«>|,le in general there are several television programs airina
ClorHJU. Fourth » the title of NBCs ten-hour Bicentennial
coverage of festivals, parades and coiKcrts it runs from 5 am.3
pm^ Then a* 7 pm NBC presents "Happy Birthday. America" and
• Bob Hope special at 8,30 CBS begins its daylong show at a
tnore reasonable hour. 8 am. with Waller Cronkite ABC will air
their Cireai American Birthday Party at 1 1 am. 1:30 pm and 10
pm
But If you don't even want to spend money on electricity there
IS yet another Bicentennial event left which requires little cost
and little energy At IJ am on the W^st Coast (2 pm on4he Fast
coast) everyone is invited to join in a simultaneous bell ringing
ceremony to celebrate the moment the I >ec la ratlin of In-
dependence was signed .^*'
^
-■- ,*
*Silcnt' is hot
l9< John JB UjKon
Mel Brooks' humor has always been
just one brief step ahead of the Three
Stooges, with Its -emphasis on ridiculous
situations and physical buffoonerv In
Siteni Movie, that brief step is ail but
K'onV Without spoken dialogue to allow
for verbal humor. Brooks depend^ almost
entirely on the kind of sillv and mane
jokes that used to set us snickering as
children
Brooks deserves credit for the innova-
tion of returning to silence after half a
century of talkies The picture runs over
an hour and a half, providing about half
a do/en guffaws, twice that many titters
and a preponderance of mere chuckles.
When it IS funny, it is irresistable; when it
IS silly. It IS often overbearing Unfortun-
ately. It has many more silly jokes than
really funny ones.
Brooks, who collaborated with creator
Ron Clark and two others on the scrccti-
- plaj and directed^ thew Him, plays former-
alciyhi>lic director Mel Funn. who wants
to do a silent mov^ w^th an all-star cast
to save Big Pictures studios from bank
ruptcv He manages to sign Burt Rc\
nolds. James Caan. Li/a Mmnclli, Anne
Bancroft and Paul Newman (all of whom
appear in clever camem) onlv to find his
plans being interfered with by Engulf and
f>evour. a huge fcast Coast conglomerate
bent on buying out the studio
- Funn completes his film, despite dis-
tractions from Bernadette Peters as a
nightclub singer hired by the bad guys to
entice and spy on him All ends happily
with a successful sneak preview of the
silent movie after it has been retrieved
from the clutches of Engulf and Devour's
board of directors
One of Brooks* problems here seems to
be self-saturation Being involved with the
( 'i
Jilm di sixnianv levels, he apparently had
diffkultv m oh|cctively evaluating the
casN >ittfn slea/v humor which permeates
the'" (»i
1^ ' DeLuise's character .exists solely
.* utt of endless and unoriginal lests
at "^iMty constant eatmg. pies in the
lace ^lant candy bars and bathroom
jokiv Martv Ecldman is better used as
Eunn^ other ^-stant. a pop-evcd. flirt>
feHi.u^ho's ...i.stantiv being hit with
ladtt'^ handbags for making viHgar ad-
vanti> Feldman's gift f<,r phvsical
comtdv. his dexterity and timing arc
contributions which give the film many of
Its truK funny moments
It Will be interesting to see if Silent
MoMf can achieve the same level of
sue. ,s the other Brooks films It is not
up lo par with them, but will apparently
do ^»r now
Marty I
Demis Routiot, probably
unknown to 99 99|^ of America,
is a Greiek-born singer who it
immensely popular in Europe.
Formerly of the progressive
rock-jazz group Aphrodites
Child. RouM^t shows us a
more subdued nature in hit
laitctt solo, Happy to J^ . . _._!
The album is made up older
European staajiiji and folk
music rearranged into a pop
forniat. The rcsuh is an odd
collKtion of wine-sipping
French lovr simfM. liaL.n
cruising-the-canal sounds, and
even (for tho«e m the mood) a
south-of-the-border cut which
can be suitable accompaniment
for dancing the canoca
Although Roussos* music is
considered pop, it must be
judged in a different frame of
reference from other current
music.
Devoted Zeppelin and Pur-
ple fans should keep their
ditunoe If you are the type
who buys records only when
they reach the top 40, you rin
expect to pufrhate ffMppv try
^<' sometime after the
triumphant comeback of The
Critterj.
But for those willing to
listen. Roussos' album is
ilhim
enormous range and talent
should not be overlooked
— Marir ParaMty
Ji.^
LllJii
■ppialiiii. LuK
lection of classic mood songs
He i« a brilliant singer whose
Ever Moe .the Allman
Brothers Baatf Itnt made it
hig, the South in feneral and
Macon in particular have
spawned a seemingly endless
stream of narrow-minded, deri-
vative country-rock bands
whose sole purpose in life is %p
sound just like the Allman
Brothers So far the (harlic
L*nnicis Band is the onl\ one
to break from that .stereotypt-
Although Daniels has been
guihy more than once of
xeroxing Dickie Betts and
Duane Allmah, Saddle Tramp
Nhows that the band is tre-
rnendoutiy ulented in its own
right, and hasnt foiymen iu
ountry origins Although the
t»tle track it a long, intricate
piece of music more remi-
niscent of Quicksilver Mes-
•^enger Service or Sanuna than
a country band, the album is
loaded from surt to finiih with
'^ome very spirited country and
[>luegratt piayii^ The Charlie
l>anicls Band has shown on
(his album that they eovM be
^quaWy at home on suge with
Bill Monroe o^ Wh.Mv^ a^
Whm
Love
1%
New
amy
Pmmi
i
k^MB
Im
knmtlmml
iind hold their own in cither
'ase.
— BIN MofTitt
Billy Paufs new album is
exactly what the didactic net-
sage on its jacket argues
againtt. an ahertion
With exception of **Ma-
Joricf * id .!!Pcopk Powcr"^
Billy Paufs hMeel work mrnm-
ders. stalls, and then stops
completely
The first side greets the lis-
leaer with one very bad song
special entitled "America (We
Need the Light)" While Paul's
narrative iectinns are good, the
music IS monotonous The
lyrics, of course, have a singu-
lar commercial quality that
reflects neither Paul's vocal
abilities nor the meaning they
attempt to relate Lyrics re-
main a problem throughout
the album.
On the fhp side, the popular
hit, '*Let*s Make a Baby,*'
echoes Paul AoJui's previous
work. ''Having My Baby" in a
theine that seta the femmift
movement back a good 50
years.
Paul has failed to utilize his
vocal talents to carry 4iie back-
up music, making the album a
■—tteeltwi uf itptiitiiL luiigs
that flhould be far shocter than
the SIX minutes they average.
- Frank Widdtr
^
Manns Westwood II
AU T«f P»f$loeNT'$ MUN (K5)
AAanns Westwood ill
AUCE IN WONDERLAND
1:00. a:M. 4:00, S:M. 7:00. OcM, 10 00 tl M
An Aitko Thma*'9
MeroJta
9632 Culver Blvd
Culv*r City
559 43at
M*Oular Admittton $2 00
Coll »h»Qtr» *of »how hm0%
MOTHER, JUGS AND SPEED
3;30, « 30, 10 15
EMBtYO
4:15. §15
Motfn«M •nly mtt wmkmnd%
Monica +
'"I'Z^^-- THAT^ JNT«TAINMENT MUT II
451 Ma* ,»
A Lemmmim'Thmatrm
Monica II
1322 3nd Straw "
SofHO MofHCO
451 Ma*
Sam Illi«tt in
LIFEGUARD
pl«M
Tho EndUsi Summer
>)
A Lommmim Thmatrm
Music Hall
9036 WiUhir* llvd
S«v«rly Hifh
274.6M9
^^^-^
ln9rvKir ><rf man «
fACE TQFACE
SSatflfif iiv mhnaiMn
m tflfwuf f km hM«^" —
LA.
Monn'i
Notional
t^i5
10925 i«i»^roo4i Driv*
479 2M6
THE BIG BUS (PG)
\^:li._a^.4:45, 4:30. •:I5, 10 00
^pnvi
^ — *v..
NuArt
Theatre
< I 272 Sonta
«78^37V
479 52a»
7/9 . U« H U. Hmtpl.
MMn%Kf ili9«y . Til
'/'-/•••^ S*r—t. Um My P«fK«r T«M M»
7/$ . Im^ Hm Sw*n« Hmm
7/6 •••• •! IW aiid N.W Y^Hi %,^^ mm
Nttivol
7/7 Ik^m^ m OIm. Omkt^ Win»^ Utht
7/5 - aMuty of^ Hm
•t %tmm . Hm4m TH»y
*?
^ciht't
r*^
Pontages ode to biuy joe (pg)
HcHywood aiVtnm daMy at
^7)6\ 13:30, 3:30, 4:30. 4:30, 0:30. T0:3i
Picwood
277-i239
MIDWAY (P6)
D«lhr •♦ ia:JO, 3:00, 530, •:
10:
A Lmmmmtm Thmatrm
Plaza
477-4)097
4799077
A Ltfm0ntm Thmnfrm
Regent
t045 irammu
772-0901
BUFFALO BIU and fho INDIANS
NkiI
Imwmmmmmmmm.
STAY HUNGtY
SWVT AWAY
477 5iJil
W.
OtEYGAl
flaiidlpM
MOVIES CONTINUED . . .
it
. t
b ■•"••-•'»►'•
i
UA Cinema
Center I
iOM9 WvMworth Aw«
^ 474-4154
ftAO NfWS iEARS
2:00. 4:00. 4:00, tOO, 10:00
UA Cinema
Center II
I0999
474-4165
Av« 4''-
TK« FunniMf Rim •! IftS
TUNNEL VISION
Sfcrring Ch«vy Omms
1 30. 3:00. 4:30. 4:00. 7:30. f :00. 10:30
UA Cinema
Center III
10809 W«MwQrth Av«
\^, ,^ . m wt
474-3683
UA CINEMA
CENTER IV
I0M9 W«Mworth Ay*
^^iitWbod^ 474^4198
UFEGUARO
1:30. 3: IS. 5:00. 4:45. 4:30. 10:30
Wihn«r of 5 Acad«my Awor^
Jock Nickelaon
ONE FLEW OVER THE
XUKOO'S NEST
MS, 3:30. 3:50, 4:05, 10:25
UA
Roqu«HW«ich till Cosby
WE ST WOOD MOTHER, JUGS, AND SPEED
10M7 Lindbrook Doily - 230, 4:30, 6 30, 4:30, 1030
W*»t^ood
477 0575
Midnight Show on Sot.
A4of»o4
Village
96 » BcoMton
Wesfwood 478 0576
Omyory Ptk Loo Romlck
THIQMEN (R)
1:30, 3 40, 6 00, 8:05, 10:15
fri. A Sot 12:15 Show
• Gono Tiomoy ond Clifton Wobb in 35 mm
^ ^ LAURA (1944) „
VAGABOND ond Monlyn Monroo and Mitzi Goynor in
^ff^r;! *^ * THERE S NO BIZ LIKE SHOW BIZ
DEL MAR
5036 W Pico Blvd
935 6424
Audfoy Hopbum in
ROBIN AND MARIAN
I -I.—.
ond Rock Hudfton m
Cfi^ EMBRYO
^WV til7|Mn4aily,So»ur4ay>il3'30
ORIENTAL
7425 Sunsot Blvd.
876^0212
Jock Nichotfon in
ONE FLEW OVER THE
CUCKOO S NEST
and
UFEGUARD
.f*
a Gf> GO :
4P^4w^^WB \iWVVW*
y
KENTUCKY FRIED
THEATRE
10303 w ^o Mvd
554-2663
»h« b««t of KFT't
loftt 5 yoar«
BEATING A DEAD HORSE
fn 4 Sat a 00 4 10 00
JOHN HANDY
Mmi. July 5
lUAD
JutT*-3
DAVE PIKE
Jwly 9-11
X>HN LEE HOOKR
pbM DARROW lOOS
Li^thousg
30 PIER AVE.
'»«» "UO»NT OWrOONT
HERMOSA BEACH INFO TEL 372 6911
'Icy Breasts*
Lautner's dangerous relationships
By R«b«l Koehlrr
hor ihccr mind-bo|^ring
power, there seem lew movies
on th^iiori/on that will out-do
liv Breasts (at the Los Fcliz), a
classy French film by Georfet
1 autner In this film, plot is all
and those asking for more had
better stay away.
The labyrinthuin design of
the film asks many questions
and provides intriguingjy few
answers An author (Claude
Brasseur) has escaped to the
wintry south ol France to bang
out a cheap TV script He
encounters a young wonuin
(Mirie)le Dare) who closely
rcarmbles hit own heroine, and
after a bit of rejection on her
part, they build a relationship
Something is rotten in Frog-
land, however, because Dare is
being followed (by her chauf-
feur, no less), lives in a tightly
guarded and bolted mansion,
and it under some form of
^ychiatric care.
Dare, triftseur, DdiMi: three is a crowd
lOfll Klnro— Aoootio W— twood VMIapa
Men. Thru Sat. f!3fllH^lo6HM)piiiandM.IN»:00pm 47t-9222 477-ad07
la 3arierai
PIZZA
GR 8-0123
OQ9n 7 Dmys
11 AM to 2 AM
Between Barnngton and Bundy
11813 Wilshire Blvd. 478-0123
The producers of EQUUS
have made available for
collage students only 60
ipacial on-stage seats for
each performance Friday
t Saturday evenings
$6 00. all other perfor
mances including mati-
nees $5 00 Tickets arc
_j»^wailable at the Hummg-
ton Hfartford Box Office
Student 1.0 card required
Ftr laloriutMin cill
Titos Vandis
Actor
Tis;
Her lawyer (Alain Delon) is
overseer of all her affairs,
including amorous ones.
Braussuer sees himself slowly
falling into plots of murder,
assault, and rape. Not only
does he not know who killed
whom, but he comes to the
realization that he is involved
in a very complea Imft tri-
angle'
The plottiness of /cy Breasts
it fun, though, hke that of a
chess match We find ourselves
in the very much the same
nr>ettlc as Brausseur is, and wt
begin to auk ourselves, ^*Js
Dare the lady or the tigcr?^
Like everyone else in the film,
she Ruy be a plotter, but then
again, she may be the victim.
Lautner is fairly unknown in
this country, but he should
appeal to those devoted to the
work of Chabrol Maurice Fel-
lous* cinematography ts fairly
standard, while Philippe Sarde
(""The Tenant) provides* an up
and down score, tensely dra>
matic at point, dumb at
others.
The great stone face
The cast ranges from the
impressively dimensioned work
of Dare to the stony nothing-
ness of Delon, who is the Clint
Eastwood of GaHic stars — his
only expression is a poer face
Brasseur could have been bet-
ter. With his attempts at comic
relict tailini; miserably
But sdmeho>*. it all works
l.auincr's script has. much to
do With It, dropping you into a
what appears initially to- be
one thing turns out to be quite
another- The techniques of
illuTinrf arc where the pow«^^
/( \ Breasts ultimately lies.
Photographers
needed for
Summer Bruin
Apply in
Kerckhoff llO
The Summer Bruin
needs Editorial Car-
toons. Apply at 110
Kerckhoff Hall. Re-
member, Doones-
bury began In a
college paper.
Acting
& Coaching
For ^"^' TTiBtion Call
To hmip you pUy your tuture
Career Guidance
4 week program starts |uly 31st
also
Tutor ir>g • Wntir>g Skills •
Power Reading
The Guidance Center
3tt7 Sapta Monica Blvd.
Santa ^^ffwi^-H —
829-4429
One^shade of 'Crey'
B> Howard Poi^rr
thc-Massles Brothers
mentary (at the Roval Tliialrr
IfUKhi iiMii^ht af|d tomor-
«nd II am and I pm Juh
4. M. and \H) is predicated on
the arch jral a^mr ^less is
nriore * ^year-old v^j^man
and her ^< year-old spinster
daughter living in the old. run-
down Long Island maaiton arc
presented without embellish
ment lor 9() minutes just the
sort ol unobscured simplicity
that should yield profound
emotional truths
ft doesn't In this case, kss a..
ihe bidding sUfe career she
had to abaadoA and the suii.r
she could have married I f)
elder Edith talks about in
basicallv happ> iiic she has led.
and undercu' ^cr daug^lHe^f
from time tr. ume
The Mavslcs brothers lake a
good manv shots ot themselves *
shooting into a mirror but
otherwise display the no^i
pedestrian camera work imag-
inable-, uhich \*(^Cild be all
right it anything were hap
pcning
Ihe very nothingnof &i Hk
lilm gives II an appeal C am us
lovers might gt> it,r it f-or
people wr .n't imagiru ^hat
a person might leel after 20
• n a beat-up mansion.
Om Oariiens might be a revel
ation ol sorts Hut anyone
looking lor a deep, engrossing
or exciting experience had best
bring ^aK>n^ a pillow
less .
^rs and Miss tdith. Bou-
vier Bcale (who are. 4et it be
said and forgotten, the adnt
and cousin of Jackie Kennedy
Onassis) have lived in Grev
(jardciis together for 20 years
In 1971. the house was raided
M^ A)unt\ saniUtion and
ASPCA officials in search ol
divseased cats Two years later
Albert and David Mavslcs.
whose previous documentary
effots include Oimme Sheite.r.
brought a camera to" (irev
'(lardens
I hev were looking h.r a
penetrating iook at two un-
usual persons revealing ihcir
ice lings and telhng something
important about loneliness
love dcpcjidence. hope and
despair
^ What liicy got waj» a couple
of women performing for the
ohnoXiousU obtrusive camera
Neither of the Beales sav any-
thing anyone else wouldn't sav""
in sin^ilar circumstances Ihev
are no more or less silly or
perceptive than anyone else
thcv luvt happen it) be hving in
a squalid old Jiiansion
As often as she can. the
youufcr Fdilh tells the camera
she must leave and go back to
Nfv^ vOrk • She won't, of '
vduim: She complains about
On Campus:
Shakespeare in Royce
I'l sn^Kcspearc i Im on a ternatir ■ ■ — - ■ -u.
Olivier\ li^ (.1.., .„.! ^ """"f"^ •^"oay •phis this summer
U^^ '^'^ Hardu,a. s„ R.,ph R.chardson and ^
r>vj.in ai 7 pm and Mudcni iitkcis arc $1 M)
Oriental Music iaSchoenberg
Incsdav al noon m SchocnOcK Hall. tsri. Yuen I u. ^,aiU
per orm C h,mu€ muMc ..n the chm and pVpa and Iku.o Yuge
will perform Japanese mus.c on tht^jKUo AdrrH^s.on is (fee Ihe
musK dcparlmcn. js.ve. (rec noon concerts reguUrlv c^n luesdavs
sandAlmakei?
/
iJ.o\l
11)4 M^esiwood Blvd
M^esfwood (jlif 90024
''bone (21 3J 47) 9S49
I V«'
--O-
'^* t*%.i IS ».( Mi4 HIS ni
^Ny>yi I A f HI 1/ r« 1. ^
\ «An iNSTKlKTiONf i *
f o ^ ♦-
Uure
«>hn
T^
and MOTORCYCLE
AUTOii INSURANCE
YES — you need auto insurance ^^b«™
All the more reason to contact us for discounts u
to 35°o to most students - another good reason
^or being in college^i^
See Of call us m Westwooi
7-2548
Agents for College Student Insurance Service -
1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build-
ing) LA 90024
MtOttt
ail fiet llfd
^iluicf
UIHT
July 2 4 3
X>HN KAY from
Sf#pp«nwolf
ond
SILVEIt
X>NN FANfY ond
•AVNEYICKSiU
/
^^VirfkHS BAM.I<»S H«AIVIM»| INS KIMIK S A M» M K tlMI*S
July 1-4
JR. WAUER
BLACKSMOKE
get ready for the BIG holiday!
come to Sportswear for
these great buys . . .
itfly •- 1 1
BUDDY MILES
656-3300
JT\
Hollywood
THE STONER
2n3Si»i«Of A^
w««» LA. fa023
477 rm
loof A Wino
^ood. Gemot 4 o(
r/Saik Nmrfh 90 Otympk
I Btk W—t mi Bnrringfmm
f
July 3-4
TOMMr JAMES
MIRABAI
Jvly 6>i
Alphofiso Mouzon
ond
SEVERANCE
€^rmibabour
.• -^r
gff
ft V
3.00 nocklacos
here 2.50
Chokers in brilliant colort wtth start,
buttorfltos or hearts suapew^d on
colorod cords — banglo bracolota m
'walchfng colors
magnetic earrings, 3.50
/
wmlm aofMraloa
ilaawhan 9.00 oo.
here, 7.00 ea.
From Eowis Moonio. mix-match
bikinis you soioct younalf to
you 0ot the OKftct m. and the
stytoa. cdofs and prtnta you
Mrant
that go on the bmek and
front of your aar — and stay thof»«
Switch around tho colort at you wish
'himp. run have fun ^ His aorring* stay
on'
b lavol, ackmrmmn union. 825-7711
fO^ THOSE WHO APPHECIATE OOAUTY
'500 Wf ST WOOD tlVO ^ 4 MOGSt fOUTH OF WHlMMi
RESTAURANT MIFUNE
IUI7|mmMmm« m.l^A
■•• --.—*,-.
>«•!
0p6n fVKWHrt 6.30-5 30. sat 1(M
• lit
Jioci
I341S mbiiiii w^md u n^n to ^'v Mm» o
U94 U 474-9MS
jOTPOURRt.
T*»w umai limn iiiwT ■
igard
4667 82»^33a4
$i 3S
If n mmm oM»
araec
saga
< ■ ■ If
'<^
n
Tcacksters4>nMontreal collision
'~:TT..
i
vl
I
(Continued from Pa^c 16)
ford. and. hurdler J^mes
Owcni arc current student!
here Ashtord and Smith who
both placed third in their
evehtft. arc tophomores-to-bc.
Owens, third .in a 110-meter
high hurdle race which in^
cfuded most of the world's
faMCfl hurdlers, will be a
junior m the Fall.
Three of the qualifiers are
former UCLA athletes Benny
Brown. AJCLA's NCAA quart-
er-mile champion two years
ago, finished fourth last week
in the 400 meter trials but was
named to the American team
as a member of the 1600 meter
jreJi>L squad Maxic Parks, who
this year literally emerged*
from Brown's shadow, repeat-
ed his AAU 400 victory at the
Eugene trials to lead the Amer-
ican one-lappers into the
Garnet Parks if a gold medal
possibility and with Brown and
relay teammates Fred New-
house and Herman Fra/ier. he
could bring back two golds.
The third former Bruin to
make the team is James Butts,
who led the jLTiple jump compe-
tition with a world leading
though wind-aided — leap of
56-5^4
Hesiwood to Sep(. ___
Kathy Weston and Millard
Hampton, a couple of teen-
agers who , are signed, sealed
and set to be delivered to
Westwood in September, com-
pleted the group of eight
Bruins who will make the his-
toric trip to Canada
Weston, an l8-yc»r-old from
'm
4 ■ ^ .
Sacramento, wlio sftf out an
entire school year to train
solefry for the 800 meters,
finished third in her final lo
make the squad Her time of
2:00 73, a personal best, was
the third fastest ever recorded
by an American woman Wes-
ton will be no stranger to
the rigors of international com-
petition when she reaches
Canada Last year she won the
gold medal in the Pan-Ameri-
<»ft^Games at Mexico City.
Third fustest
Hampton who wili be 20.
three days after the Games
begin, sprinted away from a
fine 200 meter field to win in
20 11. the third fastest time
ever by an American and the
sixth fastest time ever clocked
Maxie Parks (upper right, number 203) gelt ready for the
start of his winning 400 meter effort. While below. Evelyn
Ashford (far right, closest to stands) comes out of the blocks
on way to third place m 100 meters. Both will representl^
U.S. at Montreal. (DB photos by Vicken Simonian)
W
Football
Schedule
UCLA 1976 F(iK)iball Schedule
Sepi. 9 at A/i/ona State
Scpx 18 Arizona (730 pm)
Sept 25 Air force (7 JO pm)
Oct. 2 at Ohio State
Oct 9 Sunford (7 30 pm)
Oct 16 Washington State
(7:30 pm) jV"^'
Oct 23 at California
Oct 30 at Washington
No\ 6 Oregon Cl:30 pm)
Nov 13 at Oregon State
Nov 20 UCS^|^r:30 pm)
APC's available
I'CLA faculty and staff
can »tiri purchase Athletic
Privilege Card* (A PC) from
the Athletic Ticket Office at
the loH cost of $25
The APC gives the holder
season tickets to all home
football games and allows
the card holder to purchase
»ea.son haskctball tickets
should ihe> be avaiUbl?^.
Wtthout the Athletic Pri-
vilege Card, facultv and
staff have little chance ol
getting basketball tickets
Also the APC holders re-
ceive tree admission to
men's track, volleyball, gym-
nastic and wrestling regular
season everits.
Time is funning out to
purchase thd APC and re-
ceive the discount on men's
athletic events. Call the
Athletic licket Office at
52101 for further infor-
mation
The Carribean Student Group
Presents
Alfred A. Rattray
the Jamaican Ambassador to USA
Topic: lamaica, Cuba, and USA
12:00 Noon
175 Dodd Hall
SUMMER IS HAPPY HOUR AT
./
Today Friday, July 2nd
Open and Free to the Public
10968 LE CONTE. WESTWOOD
SUMMER HOURS
'yo.Q-Sat 9-11
>
Sw" 11-7:30
SUMMER BEER
-PITCHER 1.00
CLA^S .25
••£?•
CLASSIFIED ilD
ADVCHTISIMG OTPICES
112
I o»micutt<#
mm
OCAOLINC f:^ A.m
TIM ASUCLA
luily •up^orU fh« Uni««rsity of C»U
•omts t poMcy on ntirt OTfiimnoHuii
Ad*«rfi»tr«9 tfMC* will not ^ mo#«
•voUototo in nm Daily Bruin lo onyono
who d»»crlm'r.ot«t on th« ba»t« of
•ncotlry. cotor noltonoi origin roc*
foMelCM. t mm. Hmtthmr Iho Ooiiy Brum
nor tho ASUCLA Communications
Boord has invoollgolod any of tho tor
vicot Odvortlootf er«dw«rti»or» ropr«
••niod in ll»l« iooiM Any parson ^-
Ma»H>f <l»af an advarliaomanl in this
laa«a slilalas Itio Board's poMcy on non
discrimination slatad haroio should
communicala complaints in irWhig lo
Iha Businoss Managor UC4.A B«li«
Brum. 1 12 Karckhoff Hult, 3M Waataaag
^laxa. Cos Angaias Calif ornia §0024
For aaalilHMa idBi houaiwg discrimi-
nation prpB lama, call UCLA Housing
Otfiaa. (213) 02S-4401 . Woslsida Fair
Houaiwg (213) 473-:^
campus
fpr
(Al
ataff). Fun Mp
''''^••'^(Ann CHr)
TA/6 COMTACT
3i17 Tuosdays 7 30-0:00
fiactH IsprmwII CoH
lo AU
iAMi Jv21
passport
identification
resun^e photos
osuc/o
campus Mfudi
ISO kmrckhoH hall 825 06? 1 m771
open mon frt 8 30-4 30
LOOSE SHEFTS - 5C
BOUND REDUCTION
LEGAL SHEETS - 6C
121 kerckhoff hall
825 061 1 .258
church
wcrrwooo ■■j^.^-..-^ itn-tniiii
•Hjnt Worship. Sun 10 am. Unlv
TwCA S72 KMaard VlaiiorB imii
H )
tUNOAV MASt tummar BchaOwla:
11
(
Uaf
Mfcication
COLLABOMATOII
young pappla
spaach. dlctlpfi
(iJy
CO«i^AMIONforTi_
aO olraighl only F.
Tnn Laa
(•Jyi*)
inment
\
CHAWTf 0 a ^arty Boat and cruiaa
On Oaavd Oar.
118T
(7 Jy 13)
ilJO DUPtlCATI _, ^
Wadnasday aftarnoons Wild Whist
•riOfa Club ltS5 Waatwood BivO.
470-3Sli
Oand rIOaa, By Bia
h«ur. half or full day. Mr $4 SO an
can T<
Mi 121 Old 'Ti
(7Qlr)
for rsnt
OAMKINO spacas avallaOla at 401
Ody«ay Avrniua $40 far ha«« aummar
477-0007.
(0 iy 13)
«tirr-A-TV tlOOO mon§h SlaraahMI
Blutfanf discounts Oaiiwary to • 00
47S-3S70. nU WasHsood
frss
to
•hots I
Call 271 -S707
(10 Jy m
HAlBCUTTllilC Morals wanlad for Of.
Jphn naymortd of London Wastwoad.
Blvd on Tuas Wad fvanings Com-
fvianing 5Fm No charga Call 470.t303
-A' (iiJy20)
for siEile
tOmmBOLflihdlCL .
Hvy OMty piala Hfm sApt |210 00
400-0221 Jarry ~U ^ _
^ (10 Jy 13)
Tl
ttrsjs
•aja-tOlt Tl ON »1 -M7 is Tl sa M Ml
con VMS =HiO go"
Mora
/ICUS
1 1 Til Santo Monte* Bi
WLA
CAt:L«7i mi
3hi yvMtori
ban Otapafary
0 FT
OIAMCTER frmmtd Sunhursf
iMni
1 Icinphi
•• S200 Of
■aat offar
BiPMl
toifaOao-J
001 Opya 010-0417
(to Jy 2)
A^ANTMCMT $
nuBlna a^a
■ avatylBOiB
mual
OO CaO OS4-0421 fafk
sf SrOO p.m.
mw
lakanOa).
(to JvO)
hM S». • draaaar tTS
•40. 40 I 22 haali-
ton Waal-
ita j« PI
Hm't T-BhirtB $3.50
Aopt'd ptytpt A coioro;
By MBMf Ton OVMI WOM
WoiMn's T-Bhins $4.00
salp
no
>l sail quidily
270.
(to iy 20>
.fri 0:30-5:30: POt 10-4
nor
Par
Pr/Pty
(!• iy 13)
A
Wa
p«ly a WPP* ipta.
(UnOb -Mf Ui -0)
t
t
0
BUNPBOAflO - 0 n. diBPn 0
0 pm - 030^ 470-2000
(to Jy tl)
^OB BALI 1 aat a«
ticliats Can O 703-0230 ohmf 0 00 p m*
U300
ftO J« 2)
WIMfOIAKING hrawlfig suppMaa 0
aquipmant Balact California Wtnas
Tha Grapa NykOlia ULUptf BL. Wast
chaalar Ca 00B4S 040 4010
0 UONT Pmnch- Normandy huildkif
■4i4Bii'H UCLA Wmur 3 Br 2 BA. Fppr
3 BA. 1 BA apts tacaOant tninjlni
■21-3t47 Oka Bleh.
(to Jy tl)
WOOOf M %mrrmi9 Kaga 0 spoola,
hatchcovars. natting 0 ropa funky
cralaa 0 hoaaa. 031
OIAOIOMO Engagamwnt ring 1 30
carats Taparad diamond baguatlas
Appraiaad at ItOOO OacHNoa lor ttOOO.
301-1100.
^ (to Jy 10)
H TBAILf N I^HmH Dual aala Currant
rao**tratton Naads work Muaf sail
f)M/baa1 oflor 372-1510
(10 Jy 2)
(OO Jy 0)
BOOT Pizzas anywharO ¥faa hpl daO-
vary Extra larga. PUdi wNh any lop-
05 00 Oipl I-X-P-f ^.|^^-C-€
(GO Olr)
than HP 45
La« • PPN T««M
4.W ia • • Tn« (tm Ct>t Tan
INV) • pCC~ Of C MIN~ MC
aaisr lo
)• SBSiwarn
*% • Ma*
It for
Sludpnl Accidpnt
Siclirwpa InaurpfKra
ot bprgpln rpipa iQr
youroplf A QiipNtlpd
rs awtmota
Broad covprpga
offpftng. hoapltpl. accklpntpl dppth.
•urglcpl. ambulpnca 0 out-ppHpnt
banaftts on a world-w>0p boolt
In t convaniant ^oliCy. fm ImUm-
mptlon A pppllcoBoil, ciHoct INo
InsurpfKra Offlcar pt Ihp StudoM
Hpplth Offlcp or coll B?S-1056
Sludpnt Ifipurpnca UCLA Stiidpftt
Hppllh BprvUcp. LA CA B0024
wanted
Help Salt by Halping Omprt
SS-SOO' month tor Blood Ptpsma
HVLANO DONOR CENTER
1001 Gpylpy Ava , Waatwood
478-0051
.Y HMIs man's
if— halrslyling Wof
271.0210 Tl
Inta call
(t2 0lh
f12 0lr)
112 iy tO)
opportmiiti—
VOLUOmBRB
pfP|PfBl Vpf KPPK
0110
(11 > in
MX-LOVt "^-Tiiijn «o«ad IP
parson 03 00 OaM Hypnoaia caa-
tapa ilO Parapaychological
^ Oapl-10. 1S4t7Tupppr tlpuf
Ca. 01341. — ^—
ni iy 10)
FLUBWT "~~"
July fraa
fpraama 470
social events
reeearcfi tifajecte
needed
MtN wNh PPM la I iBiipoii m rpl
■>■■■«>' proiacf paying up la 100 tor
•km b4opsios arnl sariat of shola liuat
ha prasant during summaf fosston
•25 7300 ""
iU Ja 3>
t!flp
VOLUWTf mo PuOUc Cauwaal-ai
proftt
you Fpr
Counaai ai 277-4703
(It Jy 13)
K^.
010 70 Jacks Bm
477-lOBO
Ci«iyt»
subjects
O0K>llfB0 nasdsd for Prlof 2
study on campus Pays IS Call Tanl
472-2000 270 4740
114 Jv 131
OWMOMM Worli
guago haach voiuniaav iummsi
127ft lor ^%»mm0r 1%
Foundation tor fha Jui
205-4555
*** Hoto wpntpd
WANT s supar sumfnar ^oh' Maha Pig
Ouctisf %w4*9h siiin cars cosmaOt
Una Contact Vvo«w«a 30i-5000 * nsan
(It Jy 0)
HOUBCKEIPffM
laanar damandad Oia hours
ihr Plaaibls hours 470 3010
)
Oaiidiao.af tatancs f«*«afch ln«iru«w«n4«
WANTfD Csp^rlancPtf
apMcMort Mpiilftg appotntmanta rapf
aalala firm, hours flaiibia full' part
Oma Call Bam 477 1431
np Jy 10)
BALBI W
fscallant lat
YOU CPP PPTM
sii to
700-5152
4t0-010l
t B.A raqulrad 470-1700
(15 Otr)
Qpilar Mornlnfp
kmm CpO
(to Jy 12)
WOMK OTUOV APPLiCAMTO LPis~pr
iniaraaimg )pBa mrn a<ia«aPls at PuhNc
s non proht ptibltc imaroat
For morm intormmnon chocli
with campua Work-Oludy Ottica
(It Jy ir
parts el th« casually Inauranc* Sualnaaa
s law yaars (213) §37
(ISJyIS)
ADOBffOOf BO wantad Immadlatalyf
Wpffc al homa ■ noaiparlanca rtacassary
--ascaNant pay Wrha Amartcan Sarvtca
1401 Wllaon Blvd . OuHa 101 Artinglon.
«A 22200 ,
(is 0 2^
humanistically orlantad voluntaar
cPMfiaalam Min commltmant 12hrs^adi
Ipr 0 mpa Call Tarry or Allan 030
4000 or 030-4034 MF 10-4
ot#»
- T
Okt
oopi
470-0100
(It Jy2)
MOW intarvlawlng parttlma worli
ln«pmahlpa ^apt Juna 70 77 $2300
honorarium Jr Or/Qrad studarfls mmni
goodorganlzallonal/cjpmmunlcatlon
aktlls anargy humdF Youth Dapt
Jawiah Fadaratlon QoyncH 052-1234
•X-387 ■
' ■ — -*^%:la--t^
SUMMER JOBS
PBii-ttffiB or Full-tlmB
475-9521 for Appt.
THE JOB
WAMT Tutor for Algabra I My homa-
•ummmi Ptaaaa piiona 070 7700 AM s
(liJy 2}
WRITEB Npp#i ppopboraiof Ip aaalat
MrNh haoh baing worliad an. Call 750^
4370 or 701 7073 ^,^ , ,^^
(to Jy 10)
TOP UCLA lannia playar waaOed la pipy
.pad laach lamHy of 5 locaiad m BaWHy
HINs Psymant will ba mada In caah.-aa
wall as through Iha usa ol prlwala court
«*^'"*^«^« (UJytH
^*
WAMT Tutor fpr Bpamah I «H
9ummmr Ptaaaa phona 070-7700 AM s
fIS Jy 2)
ATTENTIOMf
MON « WOSMM WANTIO
'•!«•« tin llttfM
|MM • laa »to
mm pfomta mm \tmmtnq jMof*
ofhart ts A owaf and aacoma pmti of a.
•Ki'lo firm
MODffL Young fmmmtm
photagraphy slu<snt for Ogura
0 Mbim baach ohpla Up to ISO lar
right modal Pralar slandar build
Contact Michaal 13310 "B' Admlml
Awa lOartna Dal Bay. Ca 00301 Band
(to Jy 13)
services offered
r ,.,«M s Ip 3 asu
■ Cam AnvatM y-«— ■ jj, 3,
ADULT tutorial canlar wants racap-
CdB MlBy Bi Chpftpa OTT-IBIO.
(It Jy 2)
MOTHtB 0 Halpar M-F 4-0 12.00
ppr hour plua dinnar. aappalocipl b' ^y-
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(It Jy 13)
DMIVIR mgylipd tmr 10 yppr aid chOd
MawOay. TuaaOay. and Ffl#py 445 ta
0:40 Thursday 1:00 to 3:00
Driva ta Bavarly HMs and
hour traa lo study t3.00-an
hava own car Call 470-4021
(It Jy 0)
Mouinc?
Tha t)rigina(-EBpartancad
FuOy fi
Our Olh yaar- 7
CAMPUS services
Aokfor
)00>0310
V W BtPANIB
ip (pans A
1130 spMa )pO
only
til
).
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PART Wmf pppNIpfM pppn at Bultarfly
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UROCMT*
lec flS tyi^es el )o(he;
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rial, Managamant. Cipflapi 0
0
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scraanplay and talavislon wriiar wtll
Ipach writing to Mmitad numbar af
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TO
(Faa OFfoa)
XEROX 2' ^C
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TOI
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Dai
apiPppMiBPPPip:
list.
ftOMf
MBLIAMtt Oirt p (.. Mfhl
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BIMLIOORAPHICO Raaapiph. OMIb.
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a^ay
idfRI
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imm
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nOQtr)
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f
CLASSIFIED AD
—nilcmm offered travel
AUTO INSURANCE !
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EXPLORE THE WORLD!
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aal/Af.
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fl^nt Travel orqarii/afion
CIEE STUDENT TRAVf i
1093 Br •• ' ^ ■' }
L A 90024 C.'.
/ -n Waatwood Village abov»^ ^
^ WVherehouaa Racord Stora /
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CHtMISTRV
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SpHng Summar A fati Chan«r«-
to
AUU3 LiaiiTio Sf AaLEOMtui
■HAarfatouff ' - i.Ariowt imouimi
av PHOHi foa »^cciftc dates
C I E E STUDENT TRAVEL I477.20t9)
to n«<p you plan yow >utur«
CAREER GUIDANCE
4 wii program starts July 31st
also
Tutofif>g - Powar Raading ¥Vriting
ORE t SAT QMAT Prap
Ths Guidancs C#ntsr
3017 Santo Monica Blvd
Santo Monica
829-4429
^^^wpi owaoiah from
FOR SALE Off* jMy tkrkat to U
good untH July 1 1 4S0'4t5S t2i-171t
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CLUTCM WITH EMOWIf NCOUILO
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tfaaign A
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to your rm^u^rm-
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Roundtrip from S169
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LdU/EST PARES
Wa moka ar>dt moot for aimoat
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BOOK NOW TOO FLIGHTS
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EURASIA TOURS N TRAVELS
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CHINESE Mmn^mrln Paking natlva
laachar, wall-aiparlancad with Call-
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roup 933-1S46
(24 Olr)
TRANSLATION TiHOr kt Wrmneh Qor-
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(94 My 2)
(6-11afN anfy)
NEED Hoio^n Engllafi? Tutoring 6
Editing By ^h.o 3S3-9lOt
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477
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9-6 Dally
I 'yP^ 'hmUCL* Community tot rftf 9m pmmr'
VrflAHTcRS (partial iwtonaai
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I'rom July thru June stay 2 'o 39 waaUt
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(23 Ob^)
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TAHITI
SeptiBmber 2-12 $713
September 2-16 $BS4
Prica Includos transportation, jnaah
Bmm. Bapaft
U»m,m^
474
(26 J 26)
BN
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2
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La Clanaga 9SS-3360
(26jy20)
HOUSEPAINTING
BBst work, maUrlBlt; m-
t»rtors A multi-room In-
tertort; serving th« UCLA
Community 3 yrs full-timB
BincB graduation. Days A
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9/21-9/27
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(16 Jy 13)
Being RIpped-Olf on
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Serving the UCLA Community
6 Its Friends
1023 Hllgard Avenue
, 9 6 Daily
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July 10 Oitn»vl«nfl .,, „,
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July 23-25 Sar, rr,«r.,co
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Our goal .• .0 ermmim mt^ .r^tarcullurai atchano"
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<a3 JY 6)
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ABOUT TRAVELING?
(36 Jy 3)
1^^ T»»*^ •^'tlng i„atiM, «rw
ry^***— 9paclalty TaMM papara,
'"^- '•••«^«. Mlaw. mm 636-7473
;;: ~:^-^-^-~^- . (25 Oirj
TYP1H0. ail R«iN6a, ntaf. accurate
*•' 'Att*'aiiiia!^''^y ^^' '^"^
________ rt6 0ini
TYPIWO ol
•^•^ ■•9f 6 p.111. 636-636S
— (26 ^ 7/:
!2I!!? £!5^' r* !g» -^ •^ ••ni.
^••f^36 yaara ai-
(36 Olr)
TYPINO/COfTiNQ IMM
saflaa Lortg asparla«Kra
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(16 Jy 13)
(39 Olr)
TYPIHO: Fast, accurate service at
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c
vpr>
(26 )
TYPI9IO Let Caaay do H TariR pMara.
IJJJV: ^••••rtatlona ate Call 364-
' 9v# Mr iMa aaMaiMla
(26 0lrt
TYPING at HoMa IRM Caacwtlaa.
666 ah9r 6 p.m.
mom
LtAT
Individual.
K 6^*«*6 l«M
\
(»4 0lrj
••ATM TuM^ 1^ ft, J, a^ ,,,,^
cakfuliia prpbateiBty. alpahM. MMoSt
'■■ " ' Vicinity 491-4636
(34 Jy 16)
•'AZZ PIANO TECHNIOUi6 AN aMM^
OMtf l^ory 6 pracNoal
•• fciytaem. 473-3676
(34 Olr)
Soloctod by Knoxvillo Journal
UCLA NCAA 'all-collegiate'
Ri/TH C OISMRTATKMIR. TMSSn
6TATI6TICAL FA6T/S5tlioJS'
5??S6"!SIi«~*^'^^ ^^
(16 09rt
*^i tfM Y6nir9 §17^6X4
(34 Olr)
By MidMMl
DB Sporto Wrftter
When liulyziQf i
collegiate athletic program, one
mu6t look at more than one
ipgit. Balance i6 the goal and
UCLA achieved this during the
1975-76 athletic year a6 the
Bruins won the collegiate all-
sports championship m the
annual survey by the Knox-
vdk Journal.
use had won the title the
past two yean and three ol the
last four sea6oii6. hiH the Tro-
>ans could only finish ircoad
this time The winner of the
6ll-6|9orts award ia kanrf on
NCAA finishes in the tea a^at
populous 6poft6 for member
institutions
UCLA, which last won the
annual honor during the 1972-
73 6aaiaa. finished with Mf/^
points to 77 for USC and 62'/^
for Arizona State The Bruins
did not 6cere point6 in cro66-
country. wre6thng or golf, but
^id well in the other seven
sports.
In football UCLA won tiM
Ro9e Bowl over Ohio State
and was ranked fourth in the
final wire service polls In baa-
kctbali. the Bruins were third
behind Indiana and Michigan
The swimming team also
traced third in the NCAA
championships, behind USC
CLASSIFIED >flD
and Teniie660C. The tennis
teaiii tied for the NCAA crown
with use
UCLA made the Regional
finals in soccer and the track
team placed 12th in the NCAA
championships The baseball
team won the conference
crown and then in a contro-
versial decision were left out ol
iht NCAA playoffs because of
a ''poor" overall record
The Bruins would have won
ion I
the all-collegiate crown by a "
wider margin this year and
would have been victonoua laat
year if volleyball would have
been counted Volleyball is not
played b> as many NCAA
member institutions as the
other ten sports, so it is not
tabulated UCLA has won the
NCAA crown six limes in the
seven year history of the event.
while USC IS yet to make it
out ol Regional competition.
A
^
typi"!
ppta mtfumished for subl^a—
EdN apalNna. ale li ^
lafal aacratary. Near campua 479
rts ot->
TYPmO! 6a«an daya Alaa adMnf Vary
faal accurata Mid Wllshira Fraa
Pdrklng. Ca« Joanna; Hi 9a69
" (2S Otr)
LIOHTNINO TYPINQ CO
Th«««» SaaciaMsi
ff^m SallMiaiac
PnOFEttlONAi COLLf GE TY^tMA
SPfCIALIST
Taf(«i aaaara. Tha«*». Dtaaanawan* faaiuraa-
Ti
621SM 2 6EDROOM Apt Mawar
buUdIng pool atr Larg* batti 10 mlna
UCLA in Sh«rmar> OaHs. Adlta 794 S 749
(2^Jy2)
1320 UWr Urge SmMfroom Strath-
mora Or 472 1063.
_ (2rgy t)
??-? aRAClOU8 ona
"•■•••<* >*%»qi» waNi-in CI
drapes Pool haras ii.
•on S66-6636
(27 Jy 13)
aptSa to stif
JROfiaaiOWAL WRITING. EDITI9»C.
RCaiARCH •OOIC6. JOURNAL ARTI-
CLi6«0l6aCRTATION6 RROP06AL6
MJStt WINTCRFIELD Wi6T MOLLY-
WOOD 666-6746. 770-6620 ^~
(26 Jy 16)
1-
-X
FEMALE Rinla arantad to s»ia«« 1 Mr
•pi Rool. security bklg near buaaa
336 3966 or SS9-9929
-■" "^^ • (29 Jy 19)
•ptofamishil
FEMALE lo share two
partially furnlahed Palms $133 SO
€66 Q|ai|69 636-6770
(26 Jy 13)1.
FURNI6H<0/Unfurnlshed bachelor
6140 6lnalef I16S Pool Heart of
Waatwood 16634 LindarooK 476-6664
(26 0IP)
SOS GAYLEY. acroas from Oykslra
Rachalors. sin^laa. ona hartrooma 473-
1799 473-OS34
(26 Otr)
YOUNG proleaatonai tamaia to share
2 bed'2bath witt> same Tar>nia courts
podl RalmaS179 00 366 14»S evemnga
(29 Jy 13)
kllchen own room. 477-
Veteran SISS ip $226
(29 Jy i3)
WALK TO UCLA
Spacious Bachelors. Sioglaa
1 Bedroom Apts
'k^ T»war ApanwaniB 477-9663
10641 Stratt^mora ^ool Elevators
Security Garage
•atOAL 6UMMER RATE6 at
aidii Fdli Terrace 476-7026
S^K^Olanrock 543 Landfair
476-463-510 516 Landfair 477
FEMALE appniiiiala • beauMtwl Baanl-
wood 2-alory apartmani 2
2 bath. Pool Great location
472-4771
126 J« 13)
FEMALE Orad
boo bedroom apt. Banla
^ . . — Mar«tyr> 92S-6970/
$166/
#66 Jv 16)
6136 BACHELOR
YOUNG
room/2 balh
alpia 473-69
aranis to share 2
wHHh aama Neat, rt
6. 477-6466 ,__ . ,,
(26 Jn$ 21
«»y 12)
LARQE One bedroom aparbnent U«tl-
tles Included $170 Hu^e baaement
apartment. U6«6as inckidad $170 CaM
477-6666
(26 Jy 2)
^tHALE ahaaa 2 bdrm Brenlwoo6.
$115.00 montt plua utlMtiea CaN Lama
(26 Jy 16)
NON-6MOICING
aaeks same 2 bdrm
$62 90 mo Gary 936-4110
(36 J 2)
unfurnished
•266 2 BEDROOM. 3 aath. carMla
drapes, fireplace, patio, alew. iioea.
2646 Oaerland 477-306
ROOMMATE wanted lo aftare beautifully
*" '^ ' 2 bsdraani apartment wNh
LaeaNd in Weai la nm^
•^••aO'mo Call Cllft after
6:30 p.m. 6664663.
(26 Jy 2)
^ YOU mm.
COMFORTABLE heo
Monica mpmr\rr*mt\\ for summer wIfTi
•ndiher female 366-2229 aeriy mmm-
In«a/evenln9a $90/ month
(29 Jy 2)
*^d ' bodrooM plua den. $366 mm^
yp Fireplace, wetaar. dlahwaahor.
(27 Jy IB) nd«
6UaM9ERR
Iffe 2-bdrm fumlahad
Fool $160 mo U
LAROt 1 ^^ ^^.
Blahwaaher. pool, rec Oulet $366.
ihd at BM. 767-6t61 oat 3637 Aab lar
(29 Jy 361
ful
$146/ mo 479-5366 • Audrey
(36 Jy2)
for «ubli—
^H^n
Fuai
7 2
idly »-
rFp jv 161
^^^ t6 JULY - 7
j^^ddfdd^/aHidy 6226 • per
IBM LkidBrddli. Bad VaNdrfd 461
6471
l»7jy
•*T"
) ,
4 ni hdiiaa t
BM. July. Au« 6936 CdP 661
(»^2)
C26Jy6)
lAPGE Spaniah ».,(^ (2 badroom)
Waatwood N*caiy tu'n.»»>«d piano TV
Avatlabia lata July mid 5ap
»r $400 ars S41(»
<29 Jv 94^
flOIMMS for fMit
COTTAGE at Ventca beach one bed
room, unlurmahed atova refrtyi
ydfd. pertung No pela $275 mo
1976 or 366-7354
(36 Jy2)
HOUSE ON BEACH
3 bai^aoi. 1 baih furnttRbd houae
1 bbdii from beach on a a^i^ Man
hattan Beach walk afreet Aveilable
i%irm $dSO par
Maol fpr bwlructor with teen-
Can Dick Lyman Realtor 545
7/36-6/9 fumlalied 6pacloua 4 dad-
rooma balhs Fool Volleyball Car
6650 15 minulea UCLA 763-2747
, m Jy 13)
-:* ' ' — ■
C'-Oy i^CLA In beauttful Cheviot HMa
J,!?^**®'"* ^ *^*** buHt-k^ Only
$766. Andre Regla HfJaBi^ •
<36Jy 13)
house to share
VOUNC Women seeks female «rad
adident or profeaatonal lo share f»ouae
In Weat HoNywood Days 472-2515 Evoa
669-6232
(32 Jy 13)
MALE
TE wonted lo
wNh couple $130/1
6:36 p.m 366-4663
(32 Jy 13)
uttfuBy
$166
6:66 pm 276-1666
fS3 J«
beouflfuf 6pen*ah Ho%tm Flre-
lardan S m4n la UCLA Mature
476-2622 AvaNMMa July 10
(32 Jy 2)
LAROE houae Venice Beach, own
, bdfhroom yard: jardan. front
anfrarKres $360 362-4276
(32 Jy 13)
PBMALE 9hmrm 3 bedroom houea
Mrpe yard Oog OK Oreat
6130 mo Ave Gale 766-6361 eaea
(32 Jy 16)
RRfVATE Houea lo ahare btorlna Del
Ray- Bedroom wfd« ftrsplate $170-
aaenlnaa after 9 00 P.M. 366-6646.
(32 Jy 36)
to share $176
amoker - mual Ilka dofs call 6ue
or BM - 366-7666.
(32 Jy 2)
ROOMATE Wisdsd fdr Mvoa m
own room 475-3673
C«Jy2)
housing
\ Orad. 46. worab«f, «Ba BM-
OOl. Own mom. watv aaaaSa^^
your
iVt3)
FBMALE trad atiMldnt. 26 desires
avBlot turn sinfle dr 1- bedroom
Weetwodd A6AP fhrouph Auaual
177
#«l .lydt
FELLOW (M D ) mm fddiMy doalroa
• fMwa fdNMI df 3 BR hduaa stajii_
i/1/76.
Divlaidd dl
room for rent
-X
raom for rant
autoa for sale
ROOM to rent All house prtytlefaa.
6hara bath Carpet rurnitura Si 40 00
Call attar ft 399 9664
(36 Jv 13)
124 FIAT Bpldar 19>0 milH condition
AM AF (buy mHes new pacnt new top
9^-746o
•*• ^^ (41 Jy 131
$5560 PRIVATE r^mm. prlaoie bed*
Female (acuity sftsBant 1 block WU
shira bua Waat Beverly Hllla 593-6666
(36 Jy 131
LOVEL Y rdow» bad! in ddilidn designer's
home for female 0'*^ atudant Kitch
prtvalaeaa 66646^670-6666
l36Jvi:ii
■ II III ^' I I
QUIET Private room/bath Kitchen
privileges Laundry Wesheodd WNahlre
Male faculty student ANaf 5:36 p.m
«74-7m 7,,„,. .
71 PINTO New tires new clutch 4
speed ^•r^ clean AM FN. Original
^^'^^•^^ ^•^ U*^ E«aa wknds
4» 9-3.1 79 - -.^^ _
(41Jy13)
On Qaytay
Across from rampus Frivala rooma
from $65 w«di balh from $135 KItctien
privllegea lounge laundry parking
available $15/ mo. Call Jerry Hayes.
1666 VOLK6WAOEN 6d4iareback Pa
.buMt angina (4000 milea) RabuMt fuel
Infection SI 07 5 00 E Hcallent condHlon
Anytime 365-3629
. (41 Jy 2)
1970 VQLK9WAGEN Bug aunroof
radla. clock gpod condition Low
MSdadfa Yellow Mack S1050 OOr Any
Nme 366-3626
" . - f4ij»a^
72 TRIUMPH Bpmire convert Eilnt
leevmg U6 muat aell 1 1995 beat or«ef
479-9966
(41 Jy 2)
ixm »w i^t
366 MALE Oidduata or faculty neat.
nonamokjar*. (no kitchen privileges)
Walking dtalanca 901 Malcolm 474
5147
FEMALE Grad preferred Ideel room,
laundry Kit priv Cloaa trans Call
,'^'»^^ (36Jy36|
WAT 71 124 6port Coupe S-^,,^^^
23 %7ri5!6-6l5Sr* •w»*MnL mual
(41 Jy 6)
oxchanoo for holp
71 TOY Coroda 4 spd R/H Ak
radlals XInt cond 25 mpg $1 666/
boat offer 633-43^2
TOYOTA Cor
W6-3279 Kim ^^^ ^ ^^^
B6 CONTX Low mNoa FM<
atareo Runs realty
6766 ^OR 646) 477-67^
(41 JY 13)
64 PONTIAC OP $110 97 760.
•rtq^nm and mtartar 996-0363 or
to Co-op. 666 Lawdlair 6-20 Omi%%
(41 Jy 2)
(37 Jy 3)
74 CARRI 2666 - API/Fai/Tdpa.
low milas. eaceMent C4
11
(41 Jy 661
EXCHANOE room. waNiInf diatance
of campus, lor 6 hra
OM amy 472-6617 ar 472
(37 Jy 13)
T3 AUDI 160 L6 Air ci
niallc. AM-FM stereo Four
only 36.000 miles EicellenI $3666
Odva 366-7673
(41 Jy 13'
ROOM In B H home wHh
lor babyamirtg and ll«ht
272-6601 or 276-2760
pool aacfianae ^^ • _ ^
'HMaokeepmg PlCyClSS fOr SttlO
(37 Jy 13)
ROOM, beard, prlaals balh - eachange
lor cii6d cdfo (Bdy. 9 yeera): weekdays
hoe. Eves 955-4223. Oeys 956-6450.
(37 Jy 30)
Ma;
ATTRACTWE. prlwaN room 6
frmm lo reaponaldla female stu6ant
ll||iHaan4aas3ddy/wk
Borne madls. WdM Id
Mr rtfld
<»▼ Jv 16)
476-6164
ROOM end Board home for two
•^••dra. 15 f—r did sdn. mm diNd „
6 ddmiMa frddi UCLA Mabinf dNmer;
poaaibia salary to be
Bepiember m
476-4363 eves
(3 Jy36)
WilshireWast i.a.Ma.,»^
Bicycles '••••^•«»
las Oiacowni* en '••oai
•• UCLA
11641 WllaMre Blvd
477-3135
LA 9002S
ATALA
FBBULE Rddipr 6 bddfd ei
llfRt houaoaadrli/bdbyalttlng Prlepta
V IMdr UCLA 474-61M.
477-6467
(42Jy 16)
autos lor salo
MH.au
MAV) (216) 271
HANfOHRT
uoHTweiOHT aicvcLaa. mc.
(41 Jy III
74 VtOA
■SJStiSr "^ "^ cyclssi scooters
,(4iJri2) forselo
1667 VOLVO. 4.
aaM Eaaa 341-7666
AM/FM rddid
BCDROOM far rowf. 2.606 aa H In
476-3*46
(36 Jy 16)
fl Jf »6>
466.
71RtVMOUTH
Air.
275 6616
141 Jv lat
I
t
4
I
iWilkes.
•J
lead City stars agamst^F
By Jeff Later
DB Spoiii Hriter
of the lop haiikctbiill
prospecti from around the
Southland will be on display
-next Wednesday evening at Cal
Sti^te Fullerton Gymnasium
when an all-star team of l,o«
Anfgkt City High School
piMyen meet their counterparts
from the GIF
Two of the top players on
the City squad are incoming
UCLA freshman James Wilkes
of Dorsey and Kiki Vande-
weghe of Palisades.
The other two incoming
freshmen basketball players
• who will be with the Bruins
this fall, fiig Sims of Rcdondo
Beach and Darrell Allums of
Lynwood. will not be playing
in the game dtiflo "previous
pc^rsonal commitment's
Plenty of talent
However, the coach ol the
CIF sqiiad, Ed Goorjian. has
plcnly of talent Goorjian, who
coached ^Brad Holland at Crc-
scenia Valley has CIF 4A Co-
Players of the Year, Johnny
Nash and Michael Wiley of
Long Beach Poly, to lead his
club Other top CIF players in
the game are Doug Widteldt of
' La Mirada and Johnny Greer
of Elsinore. both headed for
LiSC in the fall
A total of eight of tlK^ 28
players on both rosters are
headed lor Pac-8 schiwls in the
fall
Jim Thompson of West-
chester IS head coach of the
City team Along with the twd
future Brums in the game,
other top.fxlayers for the City
team will be Ron Baxter of
Dorsey. who along with Wilkes
was C itv Player of the Year,
and Londalc Ihcus ^Lockc.
Baxter, according to Daih
Brum sources, wanted to at-
tend use next fall, but re-
ceived no scholarship offer He
will attend Texas Umversity
Jnterr^itini! game'
j UCLA assistant coach Lee
Hunt laid, "It should be an
interesting game We're hope-
ful'that Kiki and James wilKdo
well, and ahhough I haven't
seen any practices, but if they
perform as they did tl>c past
waam, I expect they will do
well.
**We understand that both
have been playing well in sum-
. 1
Mtr laagues and they should
do well in the game,** con-
cluded Hunt UCLA aaaifltant
Larry t-armer will also be in
attendance at the game
Goorjian commented th^i
his team would miss Sims and
Allums **Gig .wi>uld have de-
finitely made the team.** suted
Goorjian, '*but he'll be oh
vacation prior to the game
Darrell never came out to
practice, but Lm sure he would
have been an asset"
Branninf nuMing
-Another top CIF player who
wiii not be in the game is ^ich
Branning, who reportedly
stated that he has played in
too many all-star games Miss-
ing from the City Jfcam are
C Ji> 3A Player of the Year
Alan Taylor of Kennedy and
All-City Selection Brett Davis
of Granada Hills
Wilkes. Vandewcghe, Sims
and Allums are playing in the
Olympic Development League
at Cal State Los Angeles The
league is considered more im-
portant than the all-star^me
because the competition at Cal
State LA is designed to get
them ready for UCLA ^ac-
tice come October 15.
Palisades All-City eager
UCLA r^rult Jmm— WMk«t (32)
* "1 ■ ■ ■
Vandeweghe 'recruits' University for scholarship
By Mike Kinegold
DB Sports Writer
For Palisades AU-City
per-
Kau V
•oUCLA
Montreal Olympics
UCLA against world on July 17
On July 17, the cameras will
whtf, the shutters will start
clicking and the world will cast
Its collective eyes on Montreal
for the XXI Summer Olympic
Games.
From the time, almost 9,000
athletes march into the
Olympic Stadium on the 17th
to the day ol the closing cere-
monies on Aug 3, an esti-
mated one billion people or
roughly one out of everv tour
people on the planet will
view the Games The world
will be seeing some of the
UCLA track athteM who
earned the right to represent
the U.S in the track and field
trials last ifi^k at the Uni-
versity of Oregon.
C urrent students
Three ol the Brum Olym-
pians lavehn thrower karin
'Smith, sprinter Fvelyn Ash-
(( ontinucd on I'aLM- 12 >
former Kiki Vandeweghe. it
was more of a caae ol him
recruittng the Unfverstty than
the Bruins goihg alter hin;K
After c^jnsidering Brigham
Young University. Stanford
and Utah, the 6-7. 215 pound
freshman selected UCLA. Fi-
nally, 4JCLA decided it wanted
Vandeweghe
Until recently, it was not
definite that UCLA was even
interested m Vandeweghe In
his junior year, coaches from
the West wood campus at-
tended several Palisades games
and were not overly impressed
They were afraid that he might
be a step too slow.
Situation changed
But the situation changed
this season and UCLA finally
offered Vandeweghe a scholar-
ship in early May. •' ^
**rved m the area all my hfe
and lived through the 'dy-
nasty' UCLA IS where I
.wanted to go all my life and
they wanted me to come here,"
said the mild mannered Vande-
weghe
Concerning, his possible lack
of quickness, Vandeweghe said.
•"The rumor started in my
junior year and continued
through to the beginning of my
senior year. I haven't heard it
since then.-
Vandeweghe added. ^ Maybe
It was because our offense (at
PftliMKles High) was a set -type
We didn't attempt many fast-
brcaki,-
Palisades assistant coach Jtm ^
Rofvall disagrees with V|
deweghc ^^Kiki doesn't fa __
hard as he can He looks slow,
but when he wants to he can
fo hard He's not slow but he
tends to be la/y." iiaid Rosvall
Rosvall added that Vaade-
wcgHe hMd been going ''all
out", however, at the end oi
his senior year,, in higli icKool
and wa!^ eipedaNy impressive
in an exhibition game against
made him.*^ said Rosvalj "It
"TTiarSr^a believer out of everv
<M*c^. Before peopir were unsure
IT he could reilly play for
UCLA, hut now we're posi-
tives^
\No pre^i^ure'
Vandeweghe. who averaged
over 24 points per game and
15 rebounds a contst. said-
'*My parents put nt) pressure
on mc at all (to go to UCI A) "
Vandc^rcghc's prominent
lamilv includes suster Tauna.
who qualified for this month's
Olympics in the lOO-mcicr
backstroke (she's 6-2); ii
mother who was once Miss
America and a father who won
All-American honors at Col-
gate and later played pro bas-
ketball for the New York
Knicks.
Vandeweghes father, Dr
Ernie Vandeweghe, originally
wanted his son to pursue
swimming, which he could en-
joy all his life After Van-
deweghe got tired of swimming
at age 13. he decided to try
basketball.
Tired of swimming
"Around 13, I got tired of
swimming It ruins your life
You're dead from being in the
water all day.
-| started basketball with the
YMCA or something Around
14. I started playing seriously."
laid Vandeweghe
**At first, my dad wanted me
to play golf pr tomething I
could enjoy in my later life
Then, once I started playing
basketball, he coached me and
made me imo a player." recalls
Vandeweghe
Strongest asftet
Coaches believe that Van-
deweghes strongest asset is his
shooting However, that could
not be enough to earn him a
spot on UCLA's 12 man var
stty The squad now includes
15 players, but when Pac-8
icaaon starts the* team will be
trimmed to 12. It was this
"trimming" which saw 1974-75
i'Hj Tiajci iN til \iM * VWm I V 1 iK
I ippert play \ery little for the
varsity this season, spending
most pf his time as center lor
the JV team
_ Vandeweghe. first tejm AM;-
City this year and All-Lclgae
as a sophomore and junior,
doesn't think^ his fate will be
the same as the 6-5 l.ippert
Vandeweghe said "InC'itv
plav. there are a lot of v^eak
teams and I ippert won the
City Player-of -the- Year on
kind of a fluke He's a little
man in college and not used
to driving around people"
UCLA's varsity figures to
include the two returning cen-
ters, the four returning guards
and -SIX forv^ards Marques
Johnson. Gavin Smith, Wilbcrt
Olindc. 1 ippert and red shirt
Marvin Thomas are five re-
turning forwards, leaving little
room for newcomers
Lqual with others
Vandeweghe considers him-
self the equal of any of the
four recruited freshman for-
wards, and Risvall tends ta
agree '*He's better than Gig
Sims and nrobablv equal to
James Wilkc> I'm not sure
about Darrell Allums." said
Rosvall
Rosvall continued. "When
the head coach Jerry Jarvin
(Palisades headman) went back
east for the all-star game, he
said he wouldn't have traded
Vandeweghe for anyone (None
of ITCLA's other freshmen
recruits played in that game.)
Then, in a one-on-one contest
he finished runner-up He
should have won. but there
were no real rules so goal-
tending was possible The
other guy goai-teadcd tliin oi
Kiki's shots And he lost fO-H -
Prepared for JV
Vandeweghe is prepared to
play JV ball in his IrcaMum if
he has to. "I don't eafcct to
play a great deal of vafaitv mv
first year I don't think flMat
freshman do I'd play swinc-
man some mavK What ,
^^cr ^ I'm lu^t ^Ui^ to he jt
"»—
X:--:-
r •
rii^^Hte
\^9 hmw9 lOund Him' - John 1 4b
WtfH US tcdiAII SUMOAf
CAMPUS CHAPEL
Ml Lmmftng at MratfiMMt 2 Mw W. •! Domw
••pfft«< Chaplain JACK TABCM 479-3MS.>t23f 24t
State Assembly appravesJiill
prohibiting iocai rent controi
■ — \
and MOTORCYCLE
AUTO INSURANCE
Ybb ~ you need auto insurance
All the more reason to contact us for discounts up
to 35 to most stuoents — another good reason
*or being in college
See or call us in Westwood
477-2548
Agents for College Student Insurance Service -
1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build-
ing) LA 90024
(213) 47»'7742
rwc iv M^^i i pai pM0A>'^aT«
A Gr^at
HANDBAG
SALE
20o/(
0
off
TilJuly 31st
Fif>ett imports - an
inventory problem
r
smPA
10920 Kinross Ave. Westwood Village
B> Suiian Siltoii
DB >Ufr Kfp<irtfr
A bill thiit would prohibit
local governmcnlsi in Calilornu
Irora impojking rent control if
nou hcitdin$ for thr State
Scfuttc
The bill. AB 37H8. intro-
duced by AsBcmblvmen
William Campbell (R-Whitticr)
and Julian Dixon (D-Los
Angeles) was approved by the
Assembly last week by a 47 to
23 vote
Section I of the measure
argues that rent control is of
**slatewide concern" and should
fall under the jurisdiction of
the state legislature rather than
local governments.
Durmg the same week and
relevant to the Assembly's de-
cision, the California Stait
Supreme Court ruled Berke
ley's rent ccHitrol ordinance
invalid, on the grounds (hat it
imposed unfair and unconsti-
tutional burdens on landlords
Berkeley initiative
The Berkeley decree was
passed by voters through an
initiative in 1972 as a charter
amendment It allowed for the
xreation of a rent control
board of fiye popularly elected
members, who would set rates
for all rental units except
government housing and taci-
litics for icmpuiary bomrdets
A Jing to one argument
tor iht Berkelev amendment.
^•Controlled rents would dis-
courage hight rent-quick pro-
fit and tickv-lackv apartment
construction, thus, helping to
stop destruction of older
hMMi i^n(^ preserving Ber-
keley's unique environmental
charac
Public emergency
In addition. Section A.
Number I of the amendment
says that Berkeley's high rents
and housing shortage consti-
tutes a "serious public emer-
gency," especially affecting the
SLC Approves — Maybe
poor, minorities students dfu-
the afcd.
In a ditcwidn cxpiciacd b\
Chief Justice Donald Wrighr
the Cahtornui State Suprem-
Court claimed that the initiu
tive process itself was valid ar..:
comt^luTTonal A public u.ie
the Coun contended. W(n,
indeed show that an "cmer-
gehcy" existed which would
warrant rent controls
The Court also ruled thai an
** emergency" was not necessar
to enact rent controls.
At the same time, however.
(Continued on Page 4}
Internal Affairs may get
Assistant to an Assistant
%y Louis Hatanabe
OB Staff V^riter
In a somewhat stormy ses-
sion late luesday night, the
Student Legislative Council
(SLC) tentatively approved the
concept of. an assistant to an
assistant .
Undergraduate Student ^ody
President Meg VfcCorma^k
asked SLC to approve the
creation of the position of
^•^.^^
telQlr
Summer Sped
\
I
r
\
Summer Bruin
VolufTM XaX Number 4 Fridoy July 9, 1976
Published twice a M^eek dunng the sumrrwr. e«(»pt during holidays and
days fottowtng holidays and eKaminatton periods t}y the ASUCLA
Communications Board 306 Westwood '^laza Los Angetes. Calilornia
90024. Copyright 1976 by the ASUCLA Comnfiunications Board
Second class postage paid at the Los Angeles Post Office
EcHtor-lA-Chlef . ^ ^^.-7- Alice Short
•••naging Editor Frank Stallworth
EB«ciitlv« EdHor Gaoft Quinn
Bualniii Manager Sosan Kane
Tad Shapiro
Frank Wtdder Sally Garner.
Kim Wildman Michelle Duval
Editorial Oireclort David Whitney JoanO|i Eglash
•porta Editor Michael Sor^idBeimer
Aaalatam Sports Editor steve Fmley
Pttoto EdNar — j©ft tapm
Aaalatant Photo EdNor Maria Lavine
EfHertalnment indei Editors Howard Posoer- Laura Klemer
Aaaoclate Irtdex Editors Adam Parfrey Cathy Seipp
■•••"••^ Editor Jeff Mitchei
Art Director ^.^^ ^^
Copy Editor »..;*.. Roberta Kaye
Copy Readers ...........,,.,,. Joe Jones Patti Crost,
— - ^ Joanne Ratkovich Jeff McLeod
Ubrarlart jq^, ^echowy
Campu. Events Editor , jg^e Wigod
l^^^^^^V^r. Dick Kreuz
f? JTV^ * Dashjian Barry Grey Alan Michael Kart>elniQ
Adam Pfeffer Carol Starr Robert Walsh Louis Watanabe Laura
Jones
Sports Writers: Mike Fmegold Jeff Later Bob Hebar Cindy Luis
Gregg Reneau. Paul Farhi ^
niologniiituu: Glenn Seki Sol. Ortaaaa Paula Gibson Randy Gille
Christy Gille Neal Natsumeda
Ad Staff: VioM Vance *
TFM-7050 W AM/FM Radio
# Ploy on batteri«s (nof included) or
with built-in AC cord
# Lorga 3" dyiKimic speaker provides
purm and rKh sound.
# Solid-state circuitry for depend-
ability and clorfty
# Earphone for private listening
belQircome»Q&hHi
$29
95
IL BAMBINO
(The Perfect Lunch)
$L95
S 0»UC4A.^
SOtwOOv 9 6
A cup of homeruBcli soup or a small salad
A glass of wine or coftee
't sandwch on a fresh Italan roil, your chace o« hot meat
h>U. «u«9e pt^. .alam, & ch««. egg. peppers anb
mushrooms, gnIM provolone c\
Served dftiv at
.^au/t22ii ^uro ^uiyi 9ip^ !JtaC,
wo ^uifi ^^xom ^jiuLu
laSau.lFNDON AT IINDSROOKi
• PAH^f^i
\AI
administrative assistant tor
special projects. This person
would be the assistant to the
executu^e Assistant for In
ternal Affairs Don Lesser
Internal Affairs handles is-
sues like campus saietv
panding student influence ^m
acaoCBiic matters. parking,
housing and other campus re-
lated projects.
Mo purpose
"Internal Affairs to me has
no purpose/* Willie Banks
student educational policies
comissioner, sard He said t fie
original position of" the exe-
cutive assTSlant for i;iterndl
affairs was created on a "'\ou
help me, Pll help you" basis
Banks denied, however, that
he was accusing McCorniiMfK
of creating positions to regard
loyal supporters He poiniv'd
out that McCormack would
increase her personal staff to a
total of SIX.
"We have a tight bud^Eci
Banks said ''We all have tcS '
sacrifice "
tnhance effectivenr^s
Lesser said he thought an
assistant would enhance f^is
effectiveness.
"PretlN soon we're goin^
have assistants up our huii>
Campus Lvrnis Commissioner
Rich Levier said He added,
however. "Maybe the assistant
to the assistant is being
brought up because there is a
need for it."
After further debate. Si C
voted to accept the concept ot
the new position witfi the right
to reconsider the motion
during the budget hearings this
v^eek f he question of the
assistant's stipend comes
fore the council agiun at
hearings
SLC also tabled the moiuui
to appoint ShelK Aewmar •
the position
hi
ih
IfRencB eiiocBing i^^
Closing X y
50% Off
Entire Stock
i^mHUm
Move to rule out single-se)
activities In schools halted
N
By Jim Stebinfcr
Dm Mair Writer
An attempt by the Department of Heahh.
FducaUKKi »nd Welfare (HEW) to discoufAge
father-aon, mother-daughter activities in public
idwolt WM halted Wednesday by President
I Ford.
' The rtitihg Is not expected to have an effect
on UCLA-related activities, according to DeMi
of Students Byron H Atkinson
Although fraternities and sororities here do
sponsor such dinners ihe> are private insti-
iutit)ns and are sf !K exempted from
federal legislation Any hontirarv ties that
hold similar events hold "parent nights." not
single parent funclu>ns, Atkinson said "It's
ridiculous, another example of HF W' trying to
run our lives." Atkinson said of the ruling
the L'niversity does require fraternities and
sororities to follou guidelines on discrimina-
tion, as well as sign an annual statement
pledging no discrimination But because fra-
ternity and sorority events are not sponsored
by, or advertised by the University and do noi
use University facilities, they are exempt from
Title IX guidelinci.
At issue is implementation of Title IX
guidelines Title IX refers to the 1972 Educa-
Unique pre-Columbian culture
lion Amendments Act. Iiile IX of vkhich
forbids *'icxual discrimination in all federally
aiaisted edimtional activitid." aoMrding to
Alan \ Charles. aaaiataiM chiuiorilor apaoftl
assisiani
Title IX's general guidelines were imple
menied by HfU which dreu up specific
regulations ^ school programs Much
of Title IX's impact has been m the realm of
athletic activiti ilthough they-lfre not the
only concern.
Th. luroversy staned five months ago
when the Jicotts An/ona school district
asked if such dinners were still legal I ndet
litle IX regulations draun up by HEW
schools found sponsoring activities illegal under
Title I \* guidelines could lose federal suppi)rt
In a June 25 Ictter^ to Dr Ira kmg of the
"^^ viale Scht»ol wstern John I PaU>mina.
regional d'fccti HIW\ Ottice for Civil
Kight^, ruled such activities a violation
PaK>mina's opinu>n held such activities dis-
criminated against students living in a singk:
parent home
Eord suspenitd iniplementation of the order
pending investigation of the issue bv govern-
■icnt lawyers, in a statement calling the
decision contrary to iraditumal values
'Civilization' threatens the Huichol Indians
By Leslie Suzukamo^
DB Staff Writer
Small, ancient and formerly
isolated, the Huichol Indians
of Central Mexico are going to
be steamroNed by civiM/ation
mpkis they learn to protect
themselves ' Monomically and
jKcially, says Susan Eger a
Latin American Studies gradu-
ate student he^i.^
After living with the
Huichols for over a year'. Eger
has come back to Los Angeles
to solicit donations to save the
Indians from civilization,
which she calls "the merctkss
giant that devastates where h
walks."
Among many otfier things
the Indians need fruit trees,
medical supplies afu| books
she said "^''
Pre-ColumftNan culture
Tucked away liii^^the nearly .
inaccessible Sjerra Mad re
Mounui'ns of Central Mexico,
the HuichoJs are one ol the
last surviving pre-Columbian
cultures Two such ancient
traditions which st^l survive
are the ritual sacrifice of
anitnals and the use o^ peyote.
a hallucinogenic cactus, in
their intense religious practices.
The uniqueness of their pre-
Columbian culture makes the
Huichols worth saving, ac-
cording to Efer
Recently, a road into this
tsolated area was completed
The first truck seen coming
into the Huichol settlement
earned beer and soda, Eger
said.
Chaiifc li iBrvlffck
To help preiervc the Huichol
way of life. Eger has joined
with her colleague Peter Col-
bnfi, who bas lived with the
Indiaiu for nine years and
Dena Gaka, a pre-Columbian
art coBector, to form the
Fmmdttwm fof the Indians of
tke Sierrtu. Claiming that
Jo
change is inevitable. the
Foundation v^ill try to help-the
Huithols adapt to change in
their lives m a way which will
complement rather than de-
stroy their traditional culture.
according to a stat^hient of
purpose drawn up by the
Foundation To accomplish
this task, the Foundation wVll
fund various projects touching
on hea4th and preventative
Jnedicine, ^^ricuUure. animaf
husbandry , education and
economic self-sufficicncv
F ruiT trees
Fruit trees arc on the top of
Eger's shopping list, along with
seed, tools and farm equip-
ment First of all. the trees will
raise the nutritional level ol the
Huichol diet, ^hic4i now con-
sists only of tortillas and a
httic beans; she said
Secondly, the trees will pro-
vide an economic base that will
allow the people to retain their
autonomy from the. incoming
civili/ation. espcciaHy in their
«i I l-i|R|N»rtanl religious prac-
tices^
The Huichols often spend up
to 40 consecutive day\ m m-
lense" religiojis cercrivioics If
they had to work alfday at a
tCjNitinued (»n Pafr 6|
w^^^^
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20" . Discount for UCLA Staff and Students
12U|LWcst Washington Blvd.
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397-2215
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\
Sunday Worship 9:30am
Unii/ei3JtKUjtheran
^nCip6l Sunday Seminar 11am
[Corner; otrgthmQre&Gayley
Fh. A Sat.. July 9 & 10. 8:30 p.m.
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CONTACT LENSES
^•Umoo0 Village
DR ALFRED R BECKER
Optom- t
10959 Weyburn Aire
AD
PO
Rent control bill
BBQ
This IS the place for Rib Lovers'
By fer the Best Ribs weve tried in LA
Hmrata tMrnntnmt
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Uiurel Canyon Turn Fj|ight Ar
Vou re There
(C'ontanurd from Page 2}
the Court decided that the
iiincndmcni placed uapBaiti-
tutional burdens on UndloVds
The Court argued that the
amendment lacked a **termina-
tMM ckine,** which wmild in-
sure an end to controls when
an "emergency** no longer
existed.
'Bottleneck*
According to Gary Grant,
executive director of the Cali-
fornia Housing Council, an
influential lobby-group for AB
3788, the Berkeley aflwadment
created and '"administrative
bottleneck** Grant said the
rent control board wa$ inade-
quately funded in addition to
being solely responsibte for
reviewing all rent legislation in
Berkeley
t-
THicomnntDiscouiiT
mfpmm
va»*'..
ASK OUR PHARMACISTS FOR ADDITIONAL
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Hence. Grant claims, the
Supreme C ourt ruled the,
amendment unconstitutional)
on the grounds that altering
rent-rates could take years in
light of an inefficient rent-
control board -
The Court decided, however,
that if enacted properly, tocal
government could impOBe its
own rent controls.
However, AiiBflDblynien
Campbell and Dixon's bill, due
to be heard by the Senate
Jjudiciary Committee August
17, says that "all control of
rent on private housing shall
be reserved to the legislature?**
Community's right
Opponents of the bill argue
that the isaue is one of the
community's right to imple-
ment such controls
Larry Tong, UC Student
Lobby director at Berkeley^
argues that ^many legislators
have lost sight of the real issue.
They are voting against rent
xontroL ralbcr than againsi the
constitutionality of each muni-
cipality being able to imple-
ment local controls ** He
added, '^From a student per-
spective we don't have the
initiative prooMi Baymore "
Opponenu alio argue ihc
measure is a tpBcial mierest
bill, serving the landholders
and developers The biB, op-
ponents say, poses a threat to
landholders* and developers
.tavealflieflU and livelihood
Tong contends that "shoulo
the bill bBOome law. it is highly
unlikely the legislature will
ever institute future rent con-
trob. California will thus lose
a viable means of keeping rents
One oi the main proponents
of the bill is the California
Housing Council, an associ^i
tion of apartment owners and
developers bBied m San
Mateo.
^Creates clBaoa**
Grant says that rent control
**creates chaos.** He aiglBlB the
inefficiency of rent control
laws in New Jersey, New York
and Miiiachmetu.
Harvey Englander, from Jot
Soxell AxKnriatrv f|fr Public
Relations Firm for the CH(
added that with rent control
**lenders won't lend, builders
won't build and consequemiv
rtnls will rise." ^ ^
Descriptions of fall
courses now offered
Descriptions of fall quarter lower division clasaet, written b>
the professors who jvilf teach them, are being offered in Lower
Division (Oursc Abstracts.,'
The abstracts, a project of the Office of Undergraduate Affairs
will include complete descriptions of course material, reading
lists, course expenses and prerequisites for about half of all tht-
lower division claftfes
Mary Crawford, coordinator of ihc^roject, explained that the
a^racts will be useful for choosing between two proles6orii
teaching the same c«>ur8e and between equivalent courses in
different departments. TJiey can also help students taking breadth
requirement courses outside their major departments,^ she said
Abstracts arc available for student use at college and
department counseling offices, the Dean of Students' Office, the
Ackerman information desk, and ihe reference desks in the
hbraries. In the fall they will be available at computer terminals
and ASK counsehng locations.
— Laura Jones
The Interr^akional Student Center
Officially Endorsed Contribution
r to the
^ Los Angeles City Bicentennial
"The International World
of American Cooking^'
A monthly presentation ot dinner, music and entertainnnent featuring
diHerent countries whoBC cHBhts have become part ol the Amencan menu
€€\
\f9
ToBeHeWAt
Potpourri
The International R^taurant of the
International Stuclent Center
1023 Hifgarci. WestwoocJ
Always on Sunday
Dinner and Entertainment
Sunday, July 11 ' 6:30 p.m.
Frankrin of Phildeiphia
Bi ponrayed by
Victor Penheiro
>»
well known motion ptcture. TV
nuen^ber o< Actors or\ Americi
Dinner and Entertainment $5.00
Please phone 4^e^ for reservations
International Student Center ATJ-AV?
Limited Space
- *'\
r-
Jews for lesits meet
with tolerance and
hostility on campus
group seeks public contact
>
Dl Stair Writer
Jews for Jesus By its ver\
an apparent contrn^ic-
in enif^ and by thHr
iadical theological step of em-
bracuif Jesus, the fo^l point
of hostilitv from mainstream
Jews.
-*We didn't expect to be
popuiar,** laid JxMtn Solan one
ot UCLA's approximately 25
Jews for Jesus **Our purpose
IS to be visible and approach-
Their primary means of pub-
lic contact IS via the distri-
bution of humorous cartoon
leaflets which relate Jesus to
such themes as Valentine's
Day. the Bicentennial. Israel —
"Everything you wanted to
know about Jesus but were
afraid to ask (your Rabbi)**
and most receiitly, the TV
series *^Mary Hartman, Mary
Hart man **
The ''Mary Hartman, Mary
Hartman" pamphlet almost
caused some trottble for Jews
for Jetus when the show's pro-
ducers, TAT Communications
Co., threatened legal auction
over use of copyrighted materi-
al. • ^— - -^ ■ .■.:.;.:' :
Jews for Jesus chairman
Moishe Rosen informed the
press of the developing inci-
dent and criticized the show,
saying. "They can dish it out
but they can't take it" No
legal action has yet been taken
Jews tor Teitts alio tponsbrT
several nautical groups, one of
which. The Liberated Wailing
Wail, has recorded two albums
and IS releasing a third m mid-
Juiy
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Laat Easter, Solan was one
<yi a group of eight Jews for
Jesus participating in a musical
and speaking tour of stnfe-
ridden Northern Ireland The
tour was sponsored by an Insh
Catholic millionaire who
wanted to share the messigir of
Jesus' love Because of their
unique religious orientation,
Jews for Jesus were able to
gain access to people and
places off limits to most
others.
**We were among the iem
people who could come and go
from the Catholic ghetto with-
out getting 'kneecapped' by
IRA snipers." Solan explained
'^Kneecapping" is permanent
crippling frotn bullets inten-
tionally aimed at the knee
-^"Wc taMwd to British sol-
diers and Catholic factory
workers, gave outdoor con-
certs, visited college campuses
(Continued on Page k)
Campus Events
EMaii
of campus will Im con
ducttd by. me Visitors Center ?pm Tuesdays
and Thursdays July 13 August 26 from
Murphy 1215 Free
—TIM FfMl Pap. will be presented by the
Theater Workshop 8 30 pm tomght
tomorfow and 7 30 pm July 1 1 Ralph
Freud Playhouse Si at Kccknott Macgowan
and Central Ticket Oflice
—Prelect Awtreeeti is now accepting
applications tor research assistants VitH
^-Itofckhoft 306 or call S2M847
-^VSPW iRMtfl. otters summer |obs and
field woffc pliQtiiient m community service
Vis«f NmSey 3W or call 825 3 7M
— Meatori PrkoMive iMHirt. will perform
Afro Cuban and beMy dances 10 ii 30 pm
tomorrow International Student Center 1023
Hilgard ^t9t
— ItoMlMMai ktmhem ll«ar and enter
tainment will be prsiMlM 6 X pm July 1 1
imernational Student Center SS by reser
vation only
-UCU VMlafi F«i Ce^ has openihgi tor
flew members who will conhnue ttuough the
fan Staff faculty MgHMiMii are invited to
|0in For mformatitllCii 18-4277 13 pm
Tuesday and Wednttity
CONCERTS .
-AlbeneieAlMer plays clMSwifMilar 7-
9 pm «very Iue»day iniifnatiowit Sfuasni
Center free
— IHM KappM. GfePk gmlprift and smftr
will pir1«rm 7 9 pm every
internahonal Student Center Fri
MEETWtS
special buy! men's shorts
elsewhere 12.00
bur price 9^0 >>
??99'^:!99**!n9 ^'kinfl shorts with lots of podtfta
in yoHr^atf:e of khaki or beige cord Waist 28-38
i
•-•
8iigpiiuili
film to
PH
14 ?i and 26 )
-loilif OBMt Cldi wiU mpit 7-1i pm
every Thursday M^omen s fiyiii 2M Mplnic
tipp and practice for aN OioM Mlwwlti m all
stylos of dance w»u bo proieiiad
— PrMiV MfM OMi iMy. 7 30 pm tomgnt
Ackerman 2408
tennis shorts, elsewhere J 0.00
our price 7.50
save 25%
Cotton/polyester yellow twill, witfi Ban-Roll
top that prevents waistband rollover Yellow
only, two front pockets, two back pockets
h
b lev«l ocfcAfman sjt^en.
-7711
mor>-fri 6 30-5 30" 8«t 10-4
8 to pm Wed
nooiays international Student Center Free
— -Frai CoNn. 1 10 pm Monday Friday
intemaatail jimont Center restaurant
-ffffloe of fofireoawotat aod Ceost
MMrt. needs volunteers interested m
ing on consumer and enviroMMMpI Msaps
Visit kerckhoff 311 from 9 am-5 pm
— MlaO tmmneem, froa oHorimi prpc
tice fo^ foreign studiHts and visitors 10 om
noon Mondays and Wiiiipoiays Ackerman
3617
Photographers
needed for
Summer Bruin
Concerned about
Caidac Disease?
UCLA Cardiographies Lab offers
Apply in
Kerckhoff 110
Tests of:
Cardiac Rhythm
Exercise Capacity
Valve Function;
Painless and Free
We need normal men and women subjects age 18-70
>24 lot iiifuimatiuM diid appolntfTwnt,
'^ ^x.
.iJ.
i
j
w
s
JewiiotJesus^jflore visible
(Confiny^d from Page 5)
and appeared, in a special TV
broadcast Easter morninf in
Northern Ireland After the
broiMlcail, mmny people recog-
nized us in the streets and
us warmly." Solas re^
I
While tlKy wttt m Belfast,
the group held a Seder (Pass-
over dinner) in a hotel mt-
aiirant
Passover Stoi7
**E very one was fascinated as
we told the Passover stor> and
when we began to sing and
dance the Hora. the whole
restaurant jOMMrf m." recaikd
Solan
Back in the United States.
Jews for Jesus receive at best
an amused toleration and more
likeK. outright hostilitv
"People will often tear-up
our leaflets, yell at us pr calt i»
names* said Evan Greenspan,
a jUnor majonng in sociology
here - ,7^^
We~get It from all sides."
explained Solan "Thoae who
don't like Jews dislike US and
those who don't like Christ-
ians dislike us. too"
"My mother thtwight Td been
brainwashed, that it was jusc a
st^fe.** Roihstin cootinued.
"but now. two aatf oae-half
later, the can finally talk
it openly "
"How can tl^y hr proud of
us?^ said Solas, ••what can
they say. 'My too. the evan-
gelist"* They just kecpt asking
themselves 'Where did I go
wrongs or look at us trying to
find fault"
parenu
Do Jews who accept Jesus
as Messiah observe traditional
Jewish holidays. Chnstu|i hoP
or both?
Medical Engji
Institute created
eerin
At the same time,
notice a surprising
Tsboo
"Jesus has always been 4a-
boo.*' solan contiued. "^The
Jewish Communiiv cannot ac-
cept that you can be Jewish
if^ a bo aco^ Jesui gg the
Messiah " ^^-^^
Rcaaion from the taraihes
oi Jews who accepFTesus as
the Messiah range from hot
....a.ngtrr.:io:...heiiii lokrauon.
"Initially. m> mother was
sii^t]\ hysiericai and my fa-
ther just ipii *! doti*t under-
sund.' recaiai Rustle Roth-
>siin Rothstin was r ought up m
the Conservative Jewish Ira-
d.ition. attending Suna> School
until she was confirmed
of 'Jewishness* m their children
after theyVe become involved
with Jews for Jesus.
"One da> m> mom said to
me You're more Jewish now
than you've ever been.' " re-
called Rdthstm and Solan
out her choice of
IS her ma^or^
vigorous studv of Hebrew and
two years spent in Israel all
stemmed from her involvement
with Jews for Jesus.
•'My whole relation to things
Jewish has a pew and deeper
meaning." observed Solan ** I'm
protrf of being Jewish. I feei
fulfilled." she said, adding^,
"You can't undersund Jesus
without Jewish knowledge "
**Some holidays, such as
Faasover. have been given an
added richness," said Solan.
"We see Jesus as sort of a type
of sacrificial lamb But holiays
suck as Punm we celebrate as
Jews, there's nothing m them
connodai 10 Jesus." she ex-
plained
"We celebrate holidays such
as Falm Sundav and Easter,
but not in a typical churchy
way.- continued Solan. "In
Israel, we observed Easter by
going up to the Mount of
Olives at sunrise and reading
prophecy from the Old and
New Tesument and then join-
ing together for breakfast. "
Solan recounted
Jews for Jesus, besides re-
garding Jesus as the Jewish
Mesvia^. accept the Virgin
Birth, the death and resur-
rection of Jesus and the iner-
rancy (100 per cent accuracV)
of the scriptures
"We're hard-core fundamcn:
conceded Solan with
a smile
By Sheryl TIedemaa
DB Staff keportcr
An institute to lormalize
research on engmeenng prob-
lems of a medical nature, such
as the attachment of artificial
hmbs, has been established at
UCLA Chancellor Charles E
Young announced the creation
of the Institute for Medical
Engineering last Wednesday
after approval by the liC Re-
fenls June 18th
The goal of the institute is
*^o combine engineering and
medicine to solve problems
which are of concern to the
practice of medicine." accord-
ing to Dean R R. O'Neill, who
will serve as co-chairman of
the Institute's steering com-
mittee with Dean A Frederick
Rasmussen Jr
flapid progress
Xhc hope is that people who
wouldn't ordinarily get to-
gether uill get together and
that "this ^ill result m more
rapid progress than when they
|ust get together spontatH^-
ously." sai'd Rasmussen "The
lerment ol getting bright, crea-
tive people togethc*^ histori-
cally, and we hope hcre-^lso.
nsiof Central Mexico .
(Cootijuicd froMi Pafe„3|
job forinoney to survive, they
would not have the time to
" "Ocv ote -to tneiT re ligion, tger
claims W iih the fruit trees,
however, the Huichols could
easily care for the trees and
still attend to their religioh she
said
"We want the Huichols tb lie
self-sufficient, byt not chan§ed."
she said
pie N^il Boutique
1434 Westwopd Blvd
Specializing in
• Porcelain Nail Scuf)Dturing
• luliet Manicures
• Pedicures
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»
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Cal us for Mn appointment 474-4Si1
Eger IS also looking for
books Books will provide an
undersund ing of the outside
wrcrrtdas wett ir icadcmTc
skills, according to the Found-
ation statement. At. the same-
time, the hook^ can^ provide
the Huichols with a ; formal
education about th^ir own
history, traditions and cultural
achievements. Efer said
Instead of being uught just
about Mexican culture in the
^schools. Huichol children
could learn abiiut their own
culture through the books and
especially tape recordings and
slides made hy (^;f^i\-j^^ ^.^^j
said
Book
LA
drivf i
Claiming that many of the,
books on t*ie Huichols are
superficial an'cJ grossly erro-
neous at time. Eger >aid Jt
might be enlightening for the
Huichols to read about how
the-outside world perceives
iKem
"^rn^.
Correction hi
CSG article
A Daily Bruin article of
July 2 incorrectly reported
that Compton Gill vice-
president of the Caribbean
Students Group on cam-
pus IS a graduate student
here G»U attends UCLA as
an undergraduate The
Daily Bruin apologizes for
the error. -~ — ~
The Huichols themselves
asked for many ol these pro-
grams and will run them alone
when the> learn how. Egcr
said
Fger rs especially looking tor
someone to' coordinate the
hook drive in I os Angeles"
Spanish language books on all
subtects are welcome, she said
The\ should be sent to Phil
Gillette in the I atin American
Studies Department on the
lOth floor of Bunchc Hall
-X
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN
Psabni 2 and Acts 4:25
##
-AMO THOU SHALT REMEMBER ALL THE WAY THE LORD THY
GOO HATH LED THCE THESE FORTY YEARS - Deuteronomy 8:2.
Fof f&m o«iaM9f«aon Th« Mm* Lord God has lod our natton nmm
^^ •^ y««»»^ 1T77.1t30. Gfwtfy ipiMiIng, N mm m mm 1t30 • our
•nd h#f 90vemm«nt b«g^ to turn away tromi hor>orlf>9 and
tihf Mm God of our fathers The God of the Bible Htt weyt
H*« Lewt. and H4i CoffHUShdmenta Howwwar. we kept or> wrttlr>9 on
our fnofiey "Hi God We Trust ar>d ttMl do. m ip^ of the fact that we
hmm -caat away the Law of the Lord of HoalB" m many
vary
Hit
murder.
mmmmmmm la MalKry ** Chnet said of Htmeeif
e Bon of Man ti Lord ol»etiiiiBi Pay Haee we fKHtaaen away
L ordMdp of 9m tacred day and iMfwad w ovar to the klnga of iporl
Bia daeff? Alao. do we not almodt boost that we
P«vvolty cooHiWR#ad by The
Nv«« ol murdataii. rap4att.
Htt
«e pifi lo
? We w« oot IMm BRa ID ipaoli ol our noovv Mid wwwteM MM of
MOT PgCgfVgD. 000 tS MOT MOCKED FOR WHATBOCVER
BOWTTH THAT BHALL HE ALSO REA^ mi Hi THAT
•OWrm TO Htt FL£BM BMALL OT TNi ^LCBM REA^ COIMIU^-
TIOM. BUT Hf THAT BOWTTH TO THt "B^MT BMALL OT THi
MCA^ LIFE EVERLABTBiQ' firrtiiu t:7. B
ahm
"Whif Do The HooBion Rooa?"
H*t Anointed and for the purpose of tfiBBiBUd of Hit Lawt and Com
mandmentt Let ut breaii their bandt atunder •r>d cast away their
cords from us In fhit Ptalm God also revealt lo ut the fruit and
han^t of thrt anarcn .ill bring the contempt of the Aimlghty He
IK^tsmefh in m% heaven, thalt laugh The Lord thall have them In
der*ak>n Then thall He tpeak unto them In Hit wrath and vex them In
Hit tore ditpleature
Dunng the patt thirty yaart or more hmtm ^ not beer
•4ieoassful and mmd9 s good |ob of "breaking God t and Christ t
munti^ and catting away Ihak cordt from us? It not the rise of
cnme rape riott pillage and burning of omt cHMs good evidence that
Godmaantjl>at He said about hoMtRg In daMon ^d veilng with all
■•••'••r mou wHo vdisct Hit Lawt and Commandments?
And God ^ aRfry wNh the wicked every doy The wk:kad
sha« be lumad mio hell, and aM the "fiATIOMB BiM loroat a^
^•alm 7:11 and Psakn f 17 •^ ^ ^
-I have not sent Ihaae orophdM, yot Ifiay r«,; I have not spoaen lo
But N Biay hod stood m My
My psepli to hear My words, Bmo Bio
frooiBialr osi swy . and from tie eeff of Biok I
23:21 22.
"Of fOdBlRB diony boate Kkmm Is no er>d Let us hear
Of »s edioM NMMar |of Mfe and daoBi): raor God and
lor BUS Is Bie whole duly of Mon. For Ood I
WITH EVERY BfCUrr THING -^iBll M
A^»««~««HI«*.r~l,wr»TI*iLo»*cl»o..„lh**iw
jwwmiwmrww ■*"••"■' Md WW my hoyaa. we Will
2< 14. IS
haa reiuhcd in a signilicani
number of advantages ** Ra^-
mtffffB BiMdd.
Faculty and itiidenu from
theJUCLA Schools of En
fincering and Applied Science
Medicine, Dentistry and Pubijc
Health will CBOperate in the
research efforts of the Insti-
tute.
•*TIm Institute will provide
space, facilities and maybe
even financial resources for the
students,- said Rasmussen A
new degree is not being
offered ^
nieod director
Collaborative research be-
tween the two interdisciplinary
fields, has been going on for
some time "but the formaliz-
ing umbrella structure won i
lake place until we have a
director/* said O'Neill.
I he search for a director hair
been underway for two years
f he !»ear<::h commrttce has cort
-9i499ed eight people so lar Iht
latest candidate recently re-
fused the position **The search
IS stijl gomg forward but I
coujdn'i tell you when it will
be completed," said O'Neill
The search has bpcn verv dis
appointing." Rasmussen added
Lndo^tii chair
The director's chair is an
endowed chair, which will pro-
Mde some money ''for the diN
mhomry usic. of the Im^
'ilic chair," according to
O'Neill
f^inahcial support lor the
Institute will corhe from the
state, extramural organizations
and from Mr and Mrs Ralph
E. Crump ^^
The Crumps arc alumni' ol
t CL.A, and Ralph Crump wa>
_^one of the fi^st. graduates oi
the Scho<oi of Engineering
Crump IS president ol ^ngi
l-f^+flics. Inc ol Bridgeport
Connecticut which mak.^
medical ifois Alihou|j:h Mu
Institute has been under con-
su ion tor some time. "ihC
spark was the mieVc^t and
commitment ot Mr. .and Mrs
"^ rui . >aid Rasmussen
I he Institute is presenile
housed* in Boelter ^Hall "V^e
hope ultimatcK that there will
be more space on campus, and
hope ultimateK tor a separ
building/'^sanJ O'Neill.
The Ftrst Play to mm All
Maior Criticat Awarils!
Amarxt
BOLUS
S
Decatur Ca 30031
tJ
p
1
nr^
•
■— "
'^
fj
*
p
1
i
■
The producers of EOUUS
have nia#e availaMt tor
coMoge students only 60 I
special on-stage seats for
each performance Fndav
& Saturday evenings
S6 00 all other perfor
mances including mati-
nees $5 00 Tickets are
^■iim at the Hunting
ton Harttord Box Office
Student 1 D card requind
iniormatiffi call:
Intolerance for Terrorism
by Alan Michael Karbelnig
(Iditor s \u(e Ksrbeku§ n a D^ty brum stjttt >^rner t
The Kraehs again demonstraHfd thfir avid intolerance tor t^rr
when Israeli coifmiindot heroK alK rescued the 110 hofOpiiliiid h>
terrorist hijackers in Uganda last weekend The ln^ning raid has
already becorr^e sonr^ewhat, ot a legend m itv own time It seer^s
incredible that the i ommando* could fly 2500jrniles into a foreign,
hoOile nation and literally vnatch up TTO prisoners and transport them
mMV back to Israel Although legendary, the raid is sure to be a
controversial subfect in the upcoming weeks and months before it is
quietly absorbed into the history books
"Don't you understand that from now on no terrorists will tKist Israel
and all future hostages will be killed ' said a friend Israel lied, they
broke their word "
In the first place, the fact that Israel rfiay have broken its word docs
not threaten the life of future hostages If anything, there will betewer
terrorist attacks against Israel m the future For the terrorist, such acts
have become sure suicide
Letters to the Editor
Cancer
V.
OPINION
Secondly, the terrorists want sonr>efhing, whether 11 be land or the
release of prisoners If ^hey began randomly killing people then they
would probably be up afairwt more than |usi Israel ar»d the lewish
people.
Whether Israel kept its word or not it not clear Israel agreed that they
would bargain somewhat with the hijackers, they would release some
prisoiwrs But nb for nrwil agreement was ever made The Israelis n^er
said that they would not attempt to knock off the whole operation. In
effect, the possibility of satisfying any agrccfnent was halted by the
deaths of all nnembers of one of the agreeing parties
It ii obvious that traditional legal ^nd honorary fM^dines were
invalid during the incident because both parties were fKH allowed to
enter into the agreeVneWt freely There is a difference between a man in
a store agreeing to give you a watch for SlO. and a rm^n in a store
agreeing to give you the watch because you have a gun at his head
In addition to the argurrient that Israel may have broken its yyofd.
there is sure to be criticism of the deaths that occured during the raid
The kilHng o4 a n u m ber of t:;gaTTda n sotdref s Was a ri u n a voidabTe ev eht
that now can only be mourned They were human beings with hearts
and minds like us, but their situation was markedly different Af:< ordmg
to the M Times, two London newspapers citing jhe hostages' state-
ments, said that the Ugandan troops helped the hiiackers lo, guard
the hostages Therefore, being accorrrplites to the hijic kers they were
subiect to attack The dead were humarrs, but they were humans that
had decided either directly or indirectly to risk their lives by helping the
•terrorists In so risking their jives, ihe'y or^fortunately lost them
Any Israeli commandos who lost their liv^ were alio risking them 7
but the risk was part of a brave rescue oper<»tion. not a terrorist t fir eat
The deaths ^ot a few of the hostages tppesreii to be accidental
Very few people like to die> not Ugandans, not Israelis, not terrorists.
Since some death was ^n inevitable consequence of the entire incident,
then It IS important to emphasize that it was the terrorists that hi|acked
the plane, and it was the terrorists who threatenedio blow up the plane
and execute the hostiges if their deniands were not met
Perhaps it took events like the barbaric types of murder performed
during terrorist raids into Israel and the tragedy at the Munich Olympics
in 1972 to teach the Israelis that sitting back and bargairving with
terrorists usually doesn't work Fortunately, the methoc^of bargaining
and dealing with the terrorists in this inc tden4 did
Idff'^'
, ^.wiitKal taffOon drawn by
Kurt/ rn the Ddii\ Bruio^i |une 29
depicting a callous management
representative disclaiming any
company retponsibility tor the
cause of cancer (death) in a
worker touches upon one of the
most important environmental
issues facing our nation today. The
iwenife of the cartoon is quite
simple American workers ire
increasingly having to work in ^nd
under dangerous conditions;
conditions that actually threaten
health and life Simultaneously,
these sanne industry practices that
leofMrdize the health and safety
of workers also endangers the
eco-system as industry pollutes
»nd cpntaminates the environ-
nrtent.
The moM dppairni am] ^trlkl^g
health threat toynd m the work
-pi^e IS the n- ^-^mrtofial #Hk of
acquiring laiut. t>ecause of the
presence of cancer -causing
agents (carcinogens) Spokes-
people for American business
often claim that environmental
pollution cannot be correlated
with risk to humsr) health Health
scientists, however, . ire be-
comingly aware of the in*
creasingly environmental nature
of cancer Where earlier theories
held that cancer may be caused by
or related tp viral infection, cur-
rent cancer research evidence
shows that the cause of cancel
may also be associated with che-
mical carcinogenic agents.
To achieve a quality of life for all
Americans, we must move on
both fronts and oppose pollution
of the workplace as weH as pollu-
tion of the environment As long
js out e<
IS rnoiivateo oy
di ' ru ipies based up'
p«u*n yvoiRt'fs ¥wlt be e«po^' '
dangerous <ondifu>ns in tht iij<
t<'' ^rid the ef>vironment will
C(>.. ..ue to be contaminated and
destroyed Unifed Auto Workers
President Leonard Woodcock
explained at a recervt environ-
mentalist-worker conference. "1
begin with a swnple premise A
fIfOWf *nd healthy tceilOf»ty can-
not exist within in unhealthy
environment Only by re-
orienting our priorities ind
policies so that they »rt more in
line with humanistic and environ-
mentally compatible practices will
we be able to insure the health
9nd salcfy of our workers, the
health of the economy, aruJ tf>e
stability and productivity of all
the ecosystem that supports us all
MteiiatI K<
I
TttI m. Comrades, what's Hit world coming to wlion you can't avon hijack
a |tl Icill a low hostages, and get away with it anymeroTI
a
•I
^mrm^r Bruin
Alk*
^esM^Cf Kt^R WrisveMAai
ff.
Two steak
dinners
$5.99
N
Otter qood only
< >n Choice Qi
oeverage is included
i.rf.
TWO $2.79 SIRLOIN STEAK DINNERS
AND TWO 49C DINNER SALADS
Good thru
July 10
dirtnars *i'A*^ fjw 'Jmj*' *• ii r>Mi«o (>«>tait> w
oat P\.\M rmo
*IIJC99
CAD ^ llMtT TWO
OMNEMS
aiZILER FAMIky STEAK NOttSI.
Qysfity food mt
Rossonabf^ Prices
That 5 what counts
, 4
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PqHi Indoof A»co Gorog*
THE SAILOfI WHO FEU FROM
GtACE WITH THE SEA (R)
l:3S 3 40 S SO. tOS, 90' IS
Avco Center
Cinema II
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475-07^ 1
Pork tndoor Avco Ootqo*
ODE TO BMIY JOE (PG)
T:SO, J:55, 4:05, • 70 10:J0
1 ''"'
►rry, no
Avco Center
Cinema III
Wilthir* fHKir
WMfwood Mvd
475-0711
Pork Indoor Avco Gorag*
SILENT MOVIE (PG)
2:00. 3:5S, 5 SO, 7 SO, 9 SO
PtKifie't
Beverly Hills
Wilthire |i^* ot Cannon
1 bMi Eost of l«v«Hy Of
271 1121
MISSOURI BREAKS (PG)
plut
GREENWICH VILDkGE (PG)
M-F ep«n 6 30
Sot Sun opmn 12:30
Brentwood Hobrt R.dford Du.t.n HoHrnan .n
l^'JTt" ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN
Sonio Momco Tu«»-Thwf« 645, 9 1 5
879 33<>6 829 3367 . W-M*n 1:00, 3 30, 6:00, • 30 10 45
Brentwood
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829 3366 825 3367
LIFEGUARD
M-F 6 30 ft 10:20
and
MlSSOum MEAKS
M-FS:1Sonly
— t-
A4onn's
Bruin
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477.0iW
MURDER 8Y DEATH (PG)
MS, 3:30, 4:45, 6:30, 3:15, 10:00
P>rff
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Plaza I
TO^ Av« of Start
553^4291
THE BLUEBIRD
M^6, a. 10
Sirt, Sun, 2, 4, 6, S, 10
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Plaza 11
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553-4291
HAWMPS
M.F7 00, 9 30
Sot, Sun, 2:20, 5:00, 7:30, 1000
ut«c*wnt Tick«H AvoilobU at KarckhoH toi OHk*
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In 70 mm Sf4
L06AN S RUN (PG)
Ooily 12:30, 3:00, 5:30, • 00, 1030
Sorry —
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772 5876
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LADY SINGS THE BLUES
ond
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AduH $1 50 7/14
Child SI 00 7/ If
tnd Anarchy TH« S«4w<tt*n w4 Mtmi
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p»€ mt Cmmtmi fmmof«M*IU
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466-5211
Poul Nowrmon in
BUFFALO BtU and tho INDIANS
doily ot
12:30, 3:00, 5:30, 3:00, 10 30
Los Feliz
1822 N Varment
NO 4-2169
FiOiKn ffvystory
— LA. Timo«
Now Frondt Rim Fo«tivol • 1976
ICY BREASTS
Aloin P»Un A MiroilU Dorc
Manns Westwood I
THE TENANT
12:45, 3:0$ 5 30 7 50. 10:15
entTcrt/O i nm0nt/
B> tMic AkJiwonh
'Man Who Fell' explores unearthly facts of life
it should be easy to disltkc
Nicolii!^ Roeg*s new film. The
Vd/7 k^ hi) Fell to Earth Some
will be uncomfortable with its
rather ponderous flow and its
virtual lack of denouement,
while others will likely be sus-
picious of any film that casts
r OivkJ Bowie in a lead role
But disconcerting and static
though It may be. The Man
H ho Feil to Earth succeeds in
challenging one's perspective of
what the art of the motion
picture IS or should be Rocf*s
film dispenses with a comfor-
table plot and adopts a more
visual approach that makes
greater demands on the viewer
I he film cuticcrns an alien
(Bowie) who leaves his
drought-stricken planet to
search tor water Withxhe4telp
of a briHiant atiornev (Buck
Henrv) and a plethora of ad-
vanced patents, he is able to
gam control of an cxtrcmeU
powerful corporation allowing
him to pilfer earth's water In
the meantime,, however, he is
befriended by a dim-witied
hotel matd iCttn&y -Clark ) and
a disillusioned scientist (Rip
Torn) As his involvement with
these people and earthly
society grows, he becomes
more and more isolated from
his oiMginal purpose Even-
tually, he loses his power and
his friends and becomes alien-
ated even from' himself
Rocg. with hi& extensive
cinematographic work (Ear
From the, Maddenrnf^ Crowd.
Farenheit 451) is. above all
eke, an imagist. Through
dazzling camera work. Roeg
and his crew depict the modern
world av .1 place m which
alienation is a tact ot life.
where real relationships and
commun^ication are illusorv.
where the ritual i/ed love ganv^
ol modia-saturatt-ci sncictv ate
tlie predpmmani torrn ot inti-
mate expression II Roeg
had allowed ^himself to- .make
a more traditional film (which
many, no doubt, would, have
preferred) the sense ot aim-
less isolation would have'been
rendered as saccharine and
insipid
Bowi^: iXb^n \h l^th
By Cathy Seipp
Betty Garrett is a seasoned
actress and comedienne, and a
welcome addition to any situa-
tion comedy. As Irene Loren-
zo, the next door neighbor of
the Bunkers on "All in the
Family." she is one of that
show's brighter spots Her one-
woman show." Betty Garret!
and Otfier Songs, ~R at the
Westwood Playhouse until
Attgust I. and it is a shame it
IS not better than it is. which is
reviews:— Other Song
d
In previous filnM (Dim't
Look Sow Walk about and
Performance) Rocg has been
able to chcit excellent and
natural performances from his
actors The Man Wh<* Fell To
Earth IS no exception; all of
the principal players turn in
fine characteriamiMM. He
moves the players acrott the
screen with a careful eye for
composition, denying the audi-
ence •^in easy sense of identi-
fication This forces the viewer,
then, to identify with the film-
maker's perspective and unique
outlook in order to come to
terms with the film
While I he Man HH(> Fell to
lurih could hardiv be called
"the entertainment experience
ot the year" or some such
gibberish, it is a film (like
Kubricks ynH^^Space Odxs
w I I that IN able to transcend
!*'< rigid conlines ol com-
mercial him ma king and ex
plt>re untrtHJ terrttors Al
tht»ugh the film is uneven.
RtKTg's niimcnt to tilm art
IN onlv slightK compromised
by attempts at commercial*
appi?ai
other 'Elizabeth
merely not unpleasant It is not
completely lacking in c^varm.
but It doesn't bubble over with
it. either
. Garrett gels off a bad SUrt
with an ovVfiy long, overly
boring song about "My Child-
hood" wriiten by her and Mu-
sical Director derald Dolin
People's childhoods arc rarely
interesting to anyone but them-
selves and their psychiatrists,
but unfortunately they seldom
realize it Garrett, as she rattles
on happily about her tainc
who taught her to dance, and
her mother, who taught her t.
sing, IS no exception _
Songs that rely more -
their clever lyrics than ihcii
melody are what (iarrtf
proves best at. and she in n
her element when smgjn>!
Stephen Sondheim'C "^I'm Not
Getting "Married" or a btK-t:
woogie song Cole Porter wrote
lor her Her voice is powcrru
and on kev but its tone cat
On Camp
Preservation Hall
The Preservation Hall Ja//
Band can offer a uniquely
authentic look at the Sew
Orleans ;az/ of the earlv cen-
tury They were there The
septet, which takes its name
trom an old storefront in the
New Orleans French. Quarter.
eonsiJits ol la// veterans m
""their TO's and KO's who still
play, still tour, and still create
a stir in concert circles I he
band is a walking museum and
a lot of fun
% '■< -
■ ■I— ^: -•-*-■'
.T^v\:zx
\
'Jw-^
#*
Tonight and tomorrow at
H 30 pm thev pla\ in Rovcc^
Hall Student tickets co>t
$2 50 Other tickets run trom
$3 75 to S6
Front Page
The theater arts departmcni
will present Ben Hechi aruJ
Charles MacArthur's hcwn-
room comcdv The From Pum
as the tirst ol the summer
theater series h plavs throuii^^
Sunday in the Ralph 1 rciic:
Plavhouse in MacCiowan Hali
at 830 (7:30 Sundav ) I>i
reeled by James Cad>. ili"^
production is being dcdicnicJ
to the ' memorv ol Protessor
James Kcrans. the original
director, who Mtf pnor to tht
play^s apcwing. Student tickets
are $1. general admission is $^
For inlormation call ^^
theater arts box otticc
825-2581
Folk class
The Experimental College •;
offering "Adventures in 1"^^'^
Music" Monday nights trofii
to 10 in Bunche 22Wa In-
structor Howard Fcldman \^ "
rr
^•i* Demond and frrsf^r% atlofi Hall land: originak.
Tmrt7
caKpvi>. and Aifi#r»can IvV^
with lectures and record •"
onlv be described as meno-
pausal This quality enhanced
ealrarct singers as Marlcne
Dietrich and Fdith Piaf. but it
does. not. do much- for Garrett
Dory Prcvin's "Taps. Tre-
mors and Time Steps" is the
big number of the second act
and the rhosi awkward point in
the show A ridicul(»u^ song
aboyt a woman whq is afraid
to fly because when shr7«'as a
small girl her father promised
rt> take her on an airship which
turned out to be the Hinden-
burg. this piece is not com-
patible with the rest of the
program Garrett would do
well to remove it.
Bett\ (, arret I and Other
-Stjftjf^' IS occasionally amusing.
but made bf very thin stuff
Neither (iarrelt's material nor
her personality is strong
enough to merit an entire
evening ol sentimental re-
miniscence, .r-
• • • .
A iaz/-rock mustcnl about
the life ot Queen Ehzabeth I of
Fngland is a terriTic idea. Vx^
tortunately. Paul Foster's E/i-
:aheth One at the Odyssey
Theatre Fnsemble is about as
untcrrific as you oin get:
messy, formless, coy and ut-
terly with any unifying
theme or -sense of purpose.
Joe Beriand and John Kel-
ler's music IS fine and lively,
and the musicials are first rate
Keller on the puino. Rick Hill
on drums. Michael Hill on
fct^t* and especially Ellen Segal
on the violin and mandolin
provide the few moments when
the show comes to life
However, the musical num-
bers are few and im between.
Foster's script would bejnefit
enormously by being lessened
by half and rewritten by at least
two-thirds He has bitten oflf
"Wich more than he can chew.
I be play deals with Elizabeth^
s^x life, her relationship with
Mary. Queen of Scots, the
sinking of the Spanish Armada
and the St Bartholomew's Dav
My
limited 'himself to one of these
episodes and focused his script
around I't' '5=7—
In an ensemble pFoductlon'
like this one. it is dangerously •
easy for the director to mistake
rampant hammmess m his
actors for energy, and frantic
upstaging for enthusiasm That
IS what has happened in Elf
siopal and ctinsistent perfor-
mance as the conniving Queen
Catherirle oil J France fVnny,
Macko plays King Philip ol
Spam With an accent straight
out of the barrio, which be-
£omes rather tiresome, al-
though he has some amusing
moments
Karen Kreider is a resplen-
dent Elizabeth tall and
Garrett: oumn
zabeih One Director Ron
IS unable to control his
and allows them to whirl
around the stafe like bau out
of hell. At the same tiioK, bit
pacing is frightfully stow and
repetitious.
Dan Graham is cfevcr at an
^*<^tiies. £ic2«b#^ Ome ^fm$mu
fi*r better off had Foitcr
Fiton Johii-iiie .'<li \ iJiiti»
•a^on. and Peggy Pamton
the most fully dimen
ir in her flaming red wig.
However, her acting is jittery
and disappointing. She ex-
prcitci authority by screaming
and strength by tlomping and
P'<>^l>ng T|k C^nx word she
speaks, in fact, is '*Grrrrr!" Her
performance would hci much
imprnvM I! ir^ WMVM n^ore
hke a i|uaen and iait Me a
hungr> bear
Manns Westwood II
Mi THi PtESIDENT'S MEN (PG)
Manns Westwood III
AUCE IN WONOERLANO
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3:30. a 30, 10 IS
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4: IS. 3 IS ^
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" Sivrrivif bv Ullmonn
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a tfot^rnvnt to b« KMifd'; —
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THE BIG BUS (PG)
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479
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Theatre «*•« ♦•r ah s#a»«n«
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471^379 7/ 13 — GrMtingt Hi M^fn
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Picwood
272 8239
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Daily •! 12:30. 3:00. S:30. 3:00. 10:30
A iommmh THfiptrm
Plaza
4770097
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STAY HUNGRY
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MOVIES CONTINUED . . .
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Stofftng CK«vy Cho««
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THE OMEN (1)^
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Pri. A Sot 12:15 Sli^
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Kolhoriffw Hopbom A toMft Young in
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SPfTRRE (1934)
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July 13-14
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30 PIER AVE
CiOSiD
HERMOSA BEACH INFO -TEL 372 6911
El Paso summer home for Al Scates
;
(jContinued from Page 16)
The i»mall high school gym
was hot and at times the ac-
tion was intcoM:, but perhaps
the most rAduint aspect ot the
match was its low-keyed at-
mosphere S<;^tes on the sidc-
hnes was proof ot this be
used the aarac iight approoeh
that has fnade htin a sucoets-
iu\ coach at UCLA, rarely
yeUing .instruction* from Ihc
bench and strategically calling
tunc outs. ^—- ^
Sat exprcaMioffilcsft
For the' most part. Sestet,
ooe of iwo non-player coaches,
tat expressionless with arm^
crotted and notebook m hand.
But as the Sol fought back to
tie the second game 10-^10, a
good rally sparked the an-
nouncer to comment, **Even AI
Scates smiied at that one.**
When hu team was d6wn 1-
10 in the final gAme, Scates
maintained his cool and joked
with the opposition's player-
coach Jon Sunley. Even at
this highly competitive level,
the match had all the sporta-
manlike qualities of, a beach
pick-up game.
Maybe that's what makes
coaching in the IVA like a
vacation for Scates. **For the
first time in my life. I'm not
working and teaching full-
time,*' he said, **iust coaching
voUeyhalL"^. And there are
many fringe benefits to his all-
expenses-paid vacation.
27 boles
After- a post game radio
interview, which was broad-
cast live iri El Paso, Scates
talked about the three-day
weekend he would spend with
his family in the nearby New
Mexico mountains The tanned
36-ycar-old coach said he
could play 27 holes of golf
anyday in El Paso's 95 degree
heat the city has an ^Ifva-
,tion of 4:500 teet
He doesn't get a chance to
miss El Paso with^a schedule
that takes him on the road
almost every week and brings
him to California twice a
month. Los Angeles, Santa
Barbara and San Diego are
three of bis "favorite places**
and the c6mpetition here is
superior io ihe Eastern Dfvr-
s^on (Phoenix and Tuscon)
"We just don't have the big
guns that the West Coast
teams have." Scates said. But
of course, the Wizard has sev-
eral trades in progress which
would strengthen his front line
Scates considers the pro
coed game completely differenl
fr6m collegiate competition
••There's no compahson," he
taid, "because the rules are
different** (at least two women
must be in the line up at all
tiroes, there u no mandatory
roution. the ball may be
played three times after a
block and each game is played
to 12 points).
Scates fiwtt his feraak
players the tame backcourt
assignments as the men would
4Mve (there are three women At
on hit team of 1^. Henaes tbe^i
same defense as at UCLA.
keeping one man in the center
back (o receive hard digs.
•*Thei pro athlete can't serve
as well as UCLA teams,**
Scates said with a smile. Last
year. El Paso led the league in
serving errors,, but he is work-
ing to improve upon this.
Former UCLA All-American
John Be kins is the lone Bruin
member of the Sol *^Scaies'
strategy to win is the tame at
at UCLA his philosophy it
still to get the most out of each
player.** said Bckins
The 1975 NCAA Most Valu-
able Player did not .start
against the Stars and law
limited action as a designated
server Scates said he wilL be
able to uie Bekms regularly if
his trades come through.
Bekins noted a big difference
tn^ the Stars- home crowd vs Et
Paso followers '*ln Texas, we
draw about 2,500 people
They*re really enthusiastic, but
they don't necessanly know a
thing about the game." (The
sparse crowd last Thurtday
was made up of Mission Viejo
localt and playeis' family and
friends).
Firm
Scates is a firm bleiever in
the hooie court advantage and
said his team plays better at
home in their '^beautiful new
Civic Center" than on the
road. **Our crowds like to
drink a lot of beer before CIk
fames and we have 25 cent
beer nights to help increase
attendance We have about
J JOp hard-core fans who pay
S3. 50 a ticket. -
In contrast. LA has no home
court. (The Stars play at seven
different locations) and the
worst attendance in the league.
El Paso will most likely win
i¥s division arvd play either LA
or San Diego for the title. But
irregardless of finish, Scates'
contract with El Paso expires
Sept 15 He will then decide
whether to sign for next year:
**That's the way T want^ it
(the contract),** said Scates, "so
we'll see.**
^-
Holland and women's athletics .
(Continued from Page 12)'
appointed by Judie Holland's
manner, delivery and means of
effectively administering class
content
One student replied, *•! came
to the class with high expec-
tations and I haven't been
disappointee." Another took
the class to understand some
of the terminology of sports to
improve communication with
her boyfriend and. is finding
Kinesiology 176 useful. **At
first I thought the class would
be interesting It has been But
I didn't expect to learn this
much about the make-up of
college sports today**
Enthusiasm also describes
the teacher/ student relation-
ship Dr Holland is recognized
as an infelhgent, capable and
determined spokeswoman for
the advancement of women's
athletics She effectively trans-
miimi— — — ^tttmaaaaaaa
niits this same energy and
excitement to the classroom.
Her eagerness to dispel
common misconceptioiu con-
cerning w^oipen's athletics is '
seen m this light. One such
example was revealed in a
discussion of the morality of
athletes "Women (athletes) are
just as big cheaters as men. We
just haven't had all the oppor-
tunity to cheat that men have,**
Hoiiand said.
: difference!!! i
CtMStMlly
: MCAT
: OAT
: LSAT
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:AT6S8
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: CCniGl
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: SAT- VAT :
Tapt taciiititt lor
of
oiottrioft
MaKe your own sundae!
10923 Weyburn Ave
HambufQ^r Hamit
*^^^•^^^mmmm^^^^^^i9ii9^^m^^9m%^9^eS^
} '■
A"
Allums ready for forward battle .. .
(Continued from Page 14)
resembles Sidney Wicks both
physically and facially **
Allums* lack of experience
could possibly hurt Him de-
fensively With his large size he
would seem easy prey for a
quick-cutting forward, but the
size could help. Allums plays
with the same agressiveness on
defease as on offense His
quickness and anticipation
allow him to cover smaller and
foster men.
-^ Under the lii^et, ARums
plays even taller than 6-8 as he
blocked an Vamazon" 150 shots
at Lynwood i^
**Darrell hasn't really been
tested thus far defensively."
said Farmer "But from what
we've seen he should be able to
handle bimirlf pretty welL**
The transition from high
school to coUegt can have an
•dversc effect on some prep
surs No longer arc thev the
»tan^ of the team. There is
much stiffer competition A;Jot
o( limes, a change will be
evident in the player*s con-
fidemie.
**rm definitely going to have
to make some changes,** Al-
lums said Tm not a lazy
person I'll »uy after practice
|0„shoot if thai's what it'll
lake I just want to be able to
contribute to the team.** ^
**Darrell shoukjn't have any
problem fitting into our sys-
tem/* FArmer said "Some
players tend to shy away from
their strength but DarFcll is so
•fiwsive and sure of himself
that even his lack of fxpcrience
won't make that much dif
lercnce ■*
J
h
Darrell Allums was
one o( the haziest playen on
learning that Marques Johnson
did not go hardship. Allums
leels that, even though John-
Ma will be surting ahead of
him, he can learn a lot from
perlmps the country's best col-
legiate player
I "Tm really looking forward
to playing with Marques this
ttmtn I think he can really
leach me a lot and help me
become a better player,** said
Allums
**By pfayiog against Marques
everyday in practice,** Fanner
said. "Allums will pick up the
same valuable experience that
Tteiih W+lkt?tr did- ptayiwg
against Sidney Wicks or Steve
Patterson had with Kareem
(Jabbar)-
Allums IS also a **ci>mplete
player" off the court as he is
on the court He had a high
school grade point average of
^^ One of the reasons he
scicciLd UCLA over many
other schools was because oi
Its academic as well as its
basketball reputation.
**Don't sell Darrell Allums
short.** said Hunt "He could
surprise a lot of people next
year.**
k
'r*-
^
Aon M*y«rt K«ad»d fof Montroal
I CI A womcnV basketball All-Amencan Ann Meyers
^mII be rrprcNcntmg the I nited States in the upcoming
Summer Olsmpic (james m Montreal
Meyers was a member t>l the I nilcd Stales women's
basketbatt team, which quahficd lor the Olympics last week
bv winning a preliminary tournament in Canada
Ihis will be the first time that women's haskcthall has
been an Olympic sport and Mcvers is expected to have an
excellent chance of starting at guard tor the American team,
which IS coached by Billic Moore at Cal State Fullerton.
Russia IS the heavy tavorite tor the gold medal, but the
I'nited States is given a yood chance at a bron/e and
possihK t'\cn the siKt-r medal
STUOENT RUSH
*'i . THE BEST
AMERICAN PLAY
IN THE LAST FIVE
YEARS '
- Den Sail I yen,
L:A Tinym
The LMrt NMlliit Of The
Kt>i4l>t^
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Wbitc
Ma4i>clia
Fndmy 8 30 0m
Stuurdty 7 pm A 9 30 pm
Sitn^a^ 7 30 pm
Studffnt'Sr Citw»fi fkifh V
ISminutos to curtain
Fof Rooorvotiont Ploao« Coll
85S0125
Graupt. J*fr} Abbott 345^ 71 70
GKooet Theatre
3§6 n. LoCionogo Blvd.,
Los Aritiii^ CA 90048
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JOHN DAVID
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July 13.ia
country x>e
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Baseball different in Alaska for Bruins
Holland Ivclurlng
^•mttnm
Holland teaches 176
By Foster W. MoMcy
. DB Sports Reporter
At surface inspection. Kine-
siology 176 (Women in Sports:
Contemporary Issues) seems to
b€ a typical summer session
ciati. It has a iarfe worl
throughout its six-week dura
tion, a slightly more infpr-
malized atmosphere than regu-
lar session meetings and an
average smattering of seniors,
needing precious units to ful-
fill graduation requirements
Women's Intercollegiate
Athletic Director Dr Judith
Holland is teaching the sum-
mer school class, which is
precedent setting to say the
least, it might be helpfuf to
envtsioh^lier Tnalc counterpart,
better krw!>wB J. D. Morgan, in
the same role However un-
likely as this analogy might
seem, Dr Holland has found
an effective forum to dispel the
myths concerning iht female
athlete today. Also she has
tried to overcome, to a small
degree, the virtual anonymity
facing women's athletics.
Women's administration^^
Concerned with the general
question of the athletic ad-
ministnltion of women's pro-
grams, there is a wide range of
topics for discussion in Kine-
siology 176. Topics include the
organizational structure of
governing bodies for collegiate
athletics both past and present,
the ehgibihty sanctions on the
individual athlete and Title' IX
ramifications The entire work-
load IS designed to et^imsi^
individual participation and
research.
This end is achieved through
assigned research critiques and
thought papers, as well as a
major term paper The quati-
tity of work was enough to
decrease the original enroll-
ment of the class, but the
remaining memben arc enthu-
siastic in their responses to
both the class and the teacher
^TifiMrf attraettoff
Students' original attraction
to the class is varied Some
were attracted merely by the
possibihty of taking a class
from Dr Holland Other stu-
dents came for the interest they
thought the class had to offer
Neither group has been dis-
' (Continued on Page 10)
By Marc DeiUra
SptckJ to tke Daily Bruin
When one thinks of the suic
oi Alaska, one pictures oil and
pipelines and Eskimos and
fkiciefs. Baseball u not usually
part of tiic tiMMgitt. However,
for 18 people who traveled
north ,last month, it was their
niai» 4ll0ught
The Westwood Bruina, con-
sisting of current and newly
graduated UCLA players, junior
college players and one high
schoQl semor-to-be, spent the
latter part of June playing the
teams of the Alaska League.
Although the trip was rocky at
times, both on ^nd off the field,
the trip finished on an up note as
the Bruins won three of their
final five games.
The Alaska League consi^i:»
of four teams, each an all-star
sqtiad in 4is^-own right. They^
are made up of the best avail-
able collegiate players in the
country - players from school
such a,s Anzona, Arizona Sute
and, yes, UCLA
In fact, UCLA head coach
Gary Adams is spending hu
summer as the hea|d man of
the Valley Green Giants, based
in Palmer That was one of
four cities Westwood visitedon
its two-week tour—Fairbaliiu,
Anchorage and Kenai being
the others
When the Bruins weren't on
the field, they spent .most of
their free time sleeping some^
thing that is harder to do than
it sounds. It was tough to sleep
aftar playing a ganbe at mid-
rughi tougher still when the
sun didn't set that day it was
tough to sleep when their bo-
dies said 2 am and it looked
like SIX in the . CMtning.
The worst of that was in
Fairbanks, since that was the
northemmoat city the Bruins
visited In Anchorage, it actu-
ally seemed to get dark for
about mn' hour - before the sun
started to rise at a^out four in
the mormng.
On the field, the Bruins
more than held their own,
despite their 3-9 record Most
of the games were close which
was a bit surprising consider-
ing the caliber of the oppo-
nents
Ken Gayord. one of the re-
cent graduates, played well
enought to suy for the rest of
witfi the
summer wiin tne Anchor-
afc Glacier Pilots. One evening
he drove in five "um against
the Pilots and the next day
they asked him to stay
Outfielder Curt Peterson led
the Bruins with two home runs
but will be remembered more
for the tnple he had ^f«"d
the Pilots Or maybe it's the
head-first slide that will go
down in the record bopk a
record for fastest stop and
most mud picked up in a slide
He also did a food job on
the mound, despite leaving
Alaska without a win He lost
ooe game on five unearned
runs and another because of an
inexperienced outfielder His
Recreation Classes
A few spaces are stiN available in the followiiig recreaticNi
clawes. Students should go lo the next class meeting.
Body Conditioning for WoomuMWF I2n-lp.iii. WC.IO«C
Gymnaitics aud Trampoline TlTh I2n-lp.m. IVfG2MA
TuTh I p.m.-2 p.m. MG2MA
— eo«e to Paulev Pavilion. Gate I
MW Ham -12n Mac B** 146
TuTh 12nrlp^. Mae^B** lU
MTWTh 7:15-Sa.m. W(, 2M
Sectioii 2
1e^ Skating
Judo
Sdf Defence
SKm 'n Trim Section I
Section 2
Tennis
Tout Fitn
\
MTWTh t2n-lp.m. WG2«0
some morning and aftern<NMi
times still open — come to
Paule> Pavilion, Gate 1.
MWF Ila.m.-I2.l5p.m.
Mac -B" 115
Classes are open to students, staff and faculty with current
recreation privilege cards. Question concernini; these ccMirses
can be referred to the Recreation Services Office; 164 Paule%
Pavilion, (Gate I ) 825-4546..
run average was ulkder'
3.00 and he was a team leader.
Plus, there was Fairbanks.
Center fielder Larry SiKer,
, finuhcd second only to Gay-
" lord in tkt battirig^kverafe race
and earned the nickname "Po-
lar Bear " Silver, who used to
be 'Bear.'* didn't earn that
handle on the field, but feather
in (he buses and a^rd games
which were a great part ol the
trip It was in recognition of
the verbal ribbing, mostly cold
shots, he was giving the other
members of the team
After finally adjusting (if
that's possible) to life in the
north and losing seven straight
games, the Btuins finally won
one Ray Tromba, a sopho-
more next season, got the win
in relief and Gaylord had hn
big ntflM (or day) to support
Tromba ' ' "
Taiwan delegation
The Taiwanese national
track team, which practiced at
UCLA's Drake Stadium the
past week:, is in route
to Montreal, where its parti-
cipation in the Olympic Games
could threaten the future of the -
Games '~
The 24-member track dele-
gation used Drake Stadium as
Its home base during its three
week stay here
**We are still hoping to be
able to participate, bul at the
moment we are not sure the
Games wilt accept us the of-
ficml Chinese delegation." said^"
Yang, last \*cek "We arc hop-
ing that the Americans rand the
IOC (International OlymjlNc
Committee) will come to pur
aid It IS. a most tragic Situa-
tion." -- -_';
The dispute lii over fhe 're-
presentation o< Tatwam as the
otficial delegation from C hina
Canada, which severed its poli-
tical tics with Taiwarr~1n 1970
and rccogni/cd the Peoples'
Republic ol China, has refused
to aljow Taiwan to call itself
Nationalist Clima and Hv its
flags in the dames
The IO( has refused to
sanction the (jamcs il Canada
does mn allow the laiwancsc
to participate I he siiuation is
still stalemated at the present
— Paul Farhi '
r
/
loan ICInroM AvwffHM W««twood
Mon Thru Sat. tiSOamlo 6:00pm and Fh til »i)Opm 47t-9222 477 aWT
(
Where Gi^ Amer^^
THE ALL AMEmiCAIf BUBCBR
If— Willi w< Wiw^ mmnmr i^^km A9m.
Xf OC ^*^^ ^^IS COUPOMONE 10 Of CUP Of COCA COLA
!•»•>*«• «— .■■ •• »— C«»« f «BCa
Thii Art rWwrt Thru liily Ih
tired of yesterdays hair?
tiAIC TCDAT
For what's happening now
styling for men and women
Jerry Redding's Jhirmack products
For appointment call 478-6151
tues. thru sat.
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with this ad
IIQS.GIendnn Ave Wpitwoa
-L.
LT-^-
i
-GkASSIFIED >ID
campus
announcoffnonts
social ovontm
lit
ITf-
(It iv a*)
0 Jy 11)
•COIMMIMQ
• MuNlpiir-
^ NifN iiati
a N#-
Get
DISCOUNT PHOTO
FINISHING right ,
here on campus
forr«nt
paaiciHa 4Nc«« «vfii«bt« »t 4ti
(•Jyii)
WAKING bfvwtnf •upplt«t a
»m«f«t t«l«ct CmMfnim Wif»««
Tut Qrap* Nut. §913 W tlM tL WmI
C« MMS M«-4tat
(lOOir)
• MMT French Mermaw^y bull^lnf
«iH|Mil ilCLA. Mur t ar. f SA. Pmm
t sa. 1 aa apii. timami
tt1-Sl47 Mvt aieH.
(i« ir i«>
otia
mpus sf vcfle
aCWT-A TV SIOM moMh t«»f«o^lia»
ttatf«ni dt»count« OmU^mrv to • M
^^^ com
I
'50 k^tckhot* hall 625 061 1 m27 )
op«n mon-iri $ 30-4 30
•xchmnpm
•tC ) to MN up
(r
Sunset
Recreation
Center
DELI A
SNACK BAR
is open
Monday-Friday
11:00-5:00
Saturdays, Sundays
and Holidays
11:00-6:00
complete
copying
service xerox
kerckhoff \2t
825061] '
education
lis
(fi iy 191
forsalo
^
BEAN BAG
4 CHAIRS
lS
$25 VALUE
NOW
>«12?
90
1t14 LINCOLN BL AT PICO
992-1966
O^CN SUNDAY
•OtCXfudcompNfiwntofi
Hvy duty ptm^ FINvr atoT (310 00
4M-^221 Jfry
. (10 Jy lai
good deala
UJJL
coavwsloo I50",
Mof« than HP 46 O%fo^
4 L«« • mm Im/ma tlacli • Lcf
LM 10 • • Tiif (tm 6m. Tan
tMV) • OfC-OfO -MIM~MC
&«■#• • Ptm to Aacl
•OATIMO
for
822 -•374
(OO Jytl
MtT PloM anywtMfv Pi
vary Extra imrff$, ihtcii
fS.OO Dm C X-P-I-H^^-M-C-t.
fOOOirt
/ICUS
COLLABOAATOII mmnfd prot^;!
t«ach young p«opl« a^ooch. diction
9tm0ng, acting Eac*ptlonol -^nfHid
394-4223
(S Jy 20)
1 1 39l1 Sam* Momca Bi WLA
CALL 47a rrvi IM W»«iofS«pO»»«e^«iy
APAHTMCNT moving —tm •vorytlMMt
imiat 9P-M1 •44-0421 {ahm SOO p.m
Of fmatmmm. ^ jp ^ ^
■Jeu
X
STUDENT INSURANCE
t for
Studip^ Accidpnt
Sicknddd Insurpnco
•t teffpaln rslM tor
your«dN 4 ^yWfldd
Is
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voroa tba Sociolol SommpI Waproduc-
Hon Proc«aaoa Coll mornlnga 470-
(S (Mr)
KING M tot S2M.
P«tuao SMi; JMac i lownga chalra.
mopio emmUk. HHI S3S • drwaof t7S
4«''-ro«M»d dinotta t40. 49 X 23 book
caaaa. rocord cap. mtrrQt 1021 Waat
^♦^ MA ^, 41
personal
V
*
COMPANION 1^ Trv
mV-mMk
npa NMd-
ad •trai{|ht only F
Apivr
P 0 Boi
7MS3 Loa Awfaiaa. il
BOM.
<iiy i«)
In
W«oNh A Ecology! B« your own
•oming Mg SSS aoWIng organic,
producta Coll 344-232f pr
Valortd Jacobs.
~ (• Jy 13)
effitertainment
MOBILE Horn* t X 40
MaMca AduH Park No p«u Pool
•SJtO cpah Pr Pty •2* tSS?
nc Jy W)
•UMFOOAAO • ft claan A poMaPad
Call aftor S pai - t2i.M 47» 2S0«
(10 Jy 111
MCCNTENNIAL t«l SALE Uaad akJa.
dawiea t19 7t ^ your cttotca K-2.
Flachar. Knalaal/Saali • Langa/Oala-
mlla San Marcos $19 70 Jack • tkl
SI»op. 1102t m. Ptco 477-3S0S
(10 Jy •)
Qfforlng. h<»dp4tst PCcMpnlaf dPPlh.
auf glcpt; iliii Midi>ca A oul-pplldnl
banaftts ofi • world-wtda basis
^ 1 convanlarH p^iCf . ^or Inlor-
mPtlon A pppMBMton. cofrtpct Ihp
Inpuranca OfVepr af Iha Sfudawl
Hddlth Offica or call •25-1tM.
KMiint Insuranca. UCLA tluiaiii
HppltK Sarvlcp. LA. CA. •••24.
wanted
MAM. », f I
PANTASTIC
fanf III acologlcal Sunday mountain
pool hikoa ^f •rlng/maat now
3t7-7aaa.
(7Jy23)
CAI
TI SM IS A. SM f 1 A. SA S2. SP M.
(2) 7/1S^7S. OMda
(4) S/l/TS. (714) 4S7
IliiS Santa Mawica Blvd.. W.LA.
USES electhonics
Caw 47»-lSiS tar Paat^i<^f__
Help Salt by Hm\p^n% Olhars
$5 $60/ month for Biood Plasma
HYLAND DONOR CENTER
1001 Gaytdy Ava.. Wastwood
|7Jy»)
CHARTEP a Party Boat and crulaa
^^^Sit^m Oal Ray Harbor On board bar.
floor, groat food arid Pva anlar-
I22-11S1
(7 Jy 1»
11.00 DUPLICATE Brldga Manday NIM
Wadnaaday aftarnoont Wild Whial
• ridga Club. 1SSS Wastwood Slvd
47t-13iS.
(7 (Mr)
USED ratrtgaii
claan SSO Call aflar S p.Ni. 477-4314.
(lOJyt)
BEVERLY HNIa awn's
fraa halratyling For a»ora Info call
CASH 91
(t2 0lr)
(10 *$ »)
BOOKS Garaga aala Bargains. All
kPtda Sun July nth. IS la •. ISSS
(12 Jy IB)
waMand rIBaa, by Pia
hour half or lull day fw M SO an
caPTi
; 121 OM Tt
fTMrl
(i»Jyt>
DIAMOND Cnfagan»anf Hng 1.SS
carata Taparad diamond baguatlas
MttiM SacrtRoa lar ttSM.
(12 Jy 21)
no Jv IS)
free
HAIRCUTTING MiBili aanlad lar St
•i«Rr« Rayaiawd pf Lantfan Waaiwood
Blad %t\ Tuas-Wad ivanlnga Cppi-
SPm No aHaP^a Ca« 47S-SB8S.
(11 ^2S)
aloctrlc typawrllar Mint condltloni
Eatraa Palall $250 Sacrlfica I1SS
277-S8S2 aaardpfs.
(1« ^ 1«)
chsufajeds
t4S CaP 471
Pays is Cap Tam
rujvisi
IIBiyBI
home
FREE Ktttana Sava 4 colorful fluffy
iinsni if^
i47-2U1 Awn Bit
balcbeavars. natting S ra^. tpPPy
(1«Qlr)
opportMnttiea
VOLUNTtERS
pralact 1^ KPPK
lialp wanted
VOLUNTBBRS
ft31S
«^?>-W
at277^7BS
BEI-LOVE
day psraaa S3
aalia lapa |10 Parspaychalaglcai
NuaPtula Oapl-10. 1ft417 Tuppor
(1* Jr 1*1
FLUENT
WANT a
(13 Jy
(i*Jyt»
help wanted
HOUBSKCEPBR
ICI
ily FIvbMM teaurv 470
)
WANTED Eapartancad tal
•aPcllors Making
•alala firm, hours tiailbla. full/ part
477 1421
(It Jy IS)
SALES ^
Inc
EscaNant lat
lift Jv Mt
lor
mjk.
47S41S1
47t-1i
(1ft Otr)
LfOAL
m Maalwood Hours/f Po>IMa' Fraaani
uat gradyiMt UCLA and fmm
m la«r aePaal bi San Franclaea
-Pdnk of tfia biaplrattan akana 47ft-
WANTBD Paapip aRidbata lyplngi
T4fad af laaNwg mm daP and uniP-
•araatlng |aB praapacu? Join tha
Bbablaa FaPdly. part ar tuN Mma A
O'oup af aaatagicaPi aawra and haaitr
img ftSt and PaPig
at 344-2323
(ii Jy
:^t-^
ENTERTAINMENT Booking Agant
f, UMp m laihala aapartartcad In anlar-
talnmant booking or mualc ralatad
bualnaaa 47«-ft1ft7
^1f Jy •)
LIABON rapraaantottva Muat ba
wffiifBf vaai
•4-37/liour
237 •718
MS Jv 23)
r
parts o( th« ca«M«l«y Insuranc* Suslnaaa
• ^m> yaara (111) t^-
(1ft Jy 13)
ADDRESSERS wantad Immadlataly*
Work al homa - rvoaapartanca naraaaar^
-aacallant pay. Wrtia AmaHcan Sarvlaa
1401 Wllaoo Bhrd , Sulla 101. Arlington.
VA ^SBS.
nBBi)
NOW Intarvlawing partllma aroHi-
Sapt Juna 7ft 77 S23BS
Jr Sr/Grad studanla «Mnt
good orgsnixatlonal/ communication
akilla. anargy humor Youth Dapl.
Jaarlah Fodaratton CauncM •S2 1234
K-3S7
fts Jw i:i)
SUMMER JOBS 1^
Part-tinfiB or FuM-Mfvw
47S-9S21 for Appt.
THE JOB
MCTORY
jmasL
i^JM
■M Mil
»-«i.MUMUaBBSK
TOP UCLA lanrda pipyar
and laach lamMy of ft
m
•la uaa of prtwala court,
contsct 27S-1070
WRITER naaRi caWabaralor le •
laalaf
wNP Po
an baPig worliad tii^ CaM
TSB-
4370 or
7S1-7S73
(IS Jy 1«)
ATTENTION!
A
wmm a womcn wantio
W\M Of Pari T»ma
\
iacHmg
M*>fig
t MOW atari nM • laS Mo a«asni
•aaa w
u ^^^a^^a^^^ ^^^ a^tf^^^^^B" M^m Pr^^a^a^Ma
■IPotk
«a*k aitt*'« tt ft ovaf una baco««ia part or ■
I* <M«n
t
Can
^tomtiosna
oMwn
LCM A
n9«*M (7l3»aff3-a
iS^
MODEL Young FamaM.
B bBdPl Baaab aliai|. 4Jp la SBS lar
rifpt modal. Pralar alandar Pulld
Camact MIchaal 13t1S rw
Aaa Marbia ttal Ray. Ca SSBI
(tS Jy 13)
\
CASTBOO-CABTBIO far Mm.
«^PBMb.» •SB.IBSA bg «|
TV Mava.
aaly." c^
(UOtn
BBCRETARY far
RfpbiB- f*Nng poraa
fpdd writing aPM
BMS •37.04S0
Raaaarch
matuaiba
1. ilBit al
IY S Bl
MOTHER S Halpar M-F 4-S S2 ftO
par hour plua dPinai. aecaalo(«ai bapy
•Mttng ToMr SaS-ISSS. SaS-J^TOO. 477
' MS Jy 13>
DRIVBR fo^Mbad lar IS aaar aM abBd
Manday. TiraaBay. and PRBay ArdS la
S:4ft Tburaday IrBS la 3:00 MuPiaBand
Dfllaa la Baaariy HBN and baaP Ona
baur fraa la aludy $3 •• an
baaa aam car Call 47ft-4S21.
(It iy t)
•aa lanlaay LaMara.
anonymHy P O SlSt*
OalRay •0291
(IS A 12)
offfarad
Babary. Sat
houra S2 -SS/br.
f tft Jv m\
URQBNTI
•ar m typaa af
La«aL Tt
Induatrlal. Managamant. C lar leal S
Ori
dical/
) 3S7-saB4^ Dpn'f
(IB
ANY . Part
l3.S0/br
(ItiylB)
(1« iyt)
(IS Jy
(1« *l t)
VOU PPP —fn big
MBiytB
(IS Jv IS)
ICAMTB LaM af
-1111.
(lb ONI
i
rtsjp IT
V
-f-'
-, .^aJ'
K
m
icf ofti'^d — rvic— gffwd
1~*UT0 INSURANCE
MOTMCYCLC IMSUHAMCE
TMHftgh?
tTUOCNT DtSCOUNTS
HAinCUTt U ^
17.
i»»MHieOinf ft
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MOVING R«tid«nttal •partfii«nl«.
MOVIMOMitf
Can M
1
ItlS. CAM Ff««.
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bf«MfM/»«M C«lf arnWy >tt-i7ff
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and UfWv YWCA. 574 tm-
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MOVERS
Moving and Hauling
fUROPC Israal
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Vicania Blvd. #4
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ISC
TOURS & TRAVEL
PiAHO Claaaaa Europaan Tachnlqtia
Accompanlat aiMl coach lor atajara.
Oacar Cotlgnola M0-07M aflar 7 30
P.M
____^_ (fJyiJ)
ELECTROLVtift Unwanlad laclal A
body hair parmanafttty rmmo¥9<i Gantia
■ata mathod Fraa conauitation Ma
LueH. 1019 Oaylay. 477-2193
(It Otr)
NEED A NURSE? Espahartcad. matura
ralarartcaa. LIva In/ out Hour* mrrmngii
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(It Jy 13)
f-"i»tn^^Ti
i
VW MAINTENANCE SERVICE: t29.t6
VW EMOIMf WOAK tlarl* at fTf
lO.Oao mNs« ummnttB 1
on Mchanfas. UMd VW
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I
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3S4-11S1
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Shannon
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SINGER Songwrttara Laam piano
accompanlmant In atylaa of Elton John.
Carola King, Laon #uaaall A JonI
Milchail piua gat down Bluaa, ^mix.
country and goapal improvlaatlon and
»>aory Oavkf R Cohan 473-«3«l 9M-
sns.
(IS Jy 13)
RROFESSIONAL D<
■Writing, adittng. rmfmrch. atudy
A production to your raqulra-
manla CaH 480-1564 anyUma
(16 Otrj
EXRCRT TannN Inatructlon on naarby
prlvata courta. Faat raaulta. Rarlnara
RfMONANCV TESTING - Unwanlad
^atfnartcy and birth control counaaMng
and rafarral by cartlflad woman coun-
aalora Confldantiar Pragnancy and
Birth Control Cantar. Sulla 513. 6331
Hollywood Boulavard. Hollywood. Call
461^4621
(16 0ia
LEARN Dynamic aalf-hypnoala. Ball
Iwprm amant In avary way acfilava aaW-
cMMMMioa. mantal mnd phyalcal waS-
balng. ptHMograpMc mamory
raadlng. ralaa, alaap Na«onai Hyi
InaBlula. Spaciaf raBucad atudant raiaa.
•77 SBU^ i7t-SSS7. 30 yaara mupmhrnKm
(16 Otr)
Hawaii and Naw Yorii
Aoundtrir '""^ SiaqqC
*60 (Jays adva quirad Larrj
DfjfTMittic and Inlarnadonai A.r t.utm< .< <i
ISC alBO runa local armB iour«
by car &nd bua at minimum coat
Call ua lor iniormation:
473 2901
0-6 Oaliy
trving tht UCLA Community tot rA» ith ^mmt'
wrlARlcRS (oafiiai i»aiinoa>
0\4^r JOO titgnts A dalat with daparturat
[from July thru Juna aiay 2 tn 39 waak*
ffvml No Oalaa Waak. »#«»••
MATTRESSES - UC marliating grad can
%apf you up to 50> on mattraaa aata
AH alxaa. all maH>r rtmm* branda. Don't
pay fm\Mlik Call Richard Pratt 346-61ia
(16 Otr)
RECORDING ENGINEERING
CLASSES
NdV!Cf-MUSiClAfv*-PRODUCER
PROGRAMMED TO IMPART SKILLS
YOU NEED TO WORK IN THE
RECORDING INDUSTRIES
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GOlCT ^RMBMY AWARD WINNSM
BILL LAZE RUS. INST
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BIF0...766-7454 OR 762-3622
■— QL
PREGNANCY Problam? Fraa pragnancy
•••••„po'"P«««ionata woman coui»'
aalora Rafarraia to board cartlflad
gynacologlat Birth Control Information
Altamallvaa to Pragnancy 3756 Santa
Rosalia Dr SuMa 212. L.A 204-0001
_ (16 Otr)
HOUSEPAINTING
BBit work, mRtBrlals; BK-
iBfiorB A multi-room In-
ttrlors; serving th* UCLA
Community 3 yrs full-time
Since graduation. Days A
Evenings. 396-8979.
HANOWRITINQ Anaylat wW aniaftain
m paniaa Can Dabtola 345-6136.
(16 iy SB)
AUTO Inauranca Lowaat ralaa for
MuBanta or amployaaa. Robart W Rtiaa
" -7270. •70-0793 or 457-7573
(^6 Otr)
V W REPAIRS aadualvaly. 616 tuna
up (parta 6 labor). 646 Btalw f^tm^
6136 vaNa )o6 Fraa iB Mdof^
machanics. only (^mrmmr\ parts uaad. alt
BMP^"*— <« Call tha Accaiarator
. (16 Otr)
Do.
> III
z
o
LAX
LAX
MAO
BN 7 24-«/07
Big 8/22 10/04
.^ 8/22-9/20
2" 6/25-10/07
■•^ 0/04-9/19
■^ AH J/"tStJBBBOzz;
AH ^9/ 19- 10/10
AH 9/ 25- 10/ 10
AH 9/29-10/17
AH 1/12-9/27
CI 9/22-6/21
AH 0^26-10/11
2
4
2
7/TO.0AI6
e/'2 1-9/27
9/12-10/03
LIBERATED Moving CoupN wIN mo«a
your balonglnga at raasonabia ralas
Call 626-5606.
(16 Jy 13)
XEROX 2' zC
No mmimum
Oi'Iin KINKO S CHKB
CHECK 0U*» TYPING SERVICF
Baing RIppad-Oft on
Auto Inauranca?
-LBwaat Studant Rata*-
-MonlMy Paymanta-
'arrow insurance
345-4565 667-2644 475-6461
LEARN SaR-Hypnoala with ftm9 LNa-
ikvia ralnforcamant. Fraa damoalratlon
»ry Tuaaday ntgHt. Jobn (B.A.. MJt)
476-7637
ria otri
MOST Aulo rtaka
paymania Olacounla lor nonamolwfal
Auto-Llfa-Homaownara and Rantal
Inauranca Vlllaga Offlca Warnar
RoBlmaw. 1,100 QliaBaw BuNa 1S3t.
677-SBB7. 676-61 51
(16 Otr)
THE BODVMEN
Quality Aulo Body
Rapair i Pamtlng
471-0040
CalMaiofiT 0«t aaalatanca
TENNIS InatnicBon on a prtvala
AJao court laiiMI. Branhaood araa. 472-
(16 Otr)
>aatLi^
KNOW youraalf through Aatrology.
Chan lor you. or apaclal
a frtanB. Baa
d plaaa af BNw
ordar for fTM la MRNVV ^ 11634^
(16 Jy 23)
EDITING Profaaalonal wrltar-aBRor
Pn.D DIaaarlatlona, manuaaf|Bl9«
OavM 464-7346. 464-2BM.
(16 Jy 23)
XMAS CHARTERS:Book Now!
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HAWAII 1 9 2\«as«ia tromtiaa
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OR I C NT Many daia« , trom 449
Cor>»acf ASTrA for owar 200 ofhar flight*
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Chartarrag raquira 05 day SdvarKa boolufio
Of :• tubiact to 20% incraaaa
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from Ono
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VOUTH, Europe »-yr from 9901
APEX.22 45 eOrtay »i<1v lvv>»i Eur from 0479
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TRAIN B FERRY TICKETS. CARS.
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CARlBe€AN. SOUTH AMERICA
8 Days from $88B
GETAWAYS
MEXICO CITV 6 day* 9179
ACAPULCO 9 days 9999
MA2ATLAN 8 Oayt ffff
MEXICO CITY OUAOALAJARA or PUBUTA
VALLARTA ' |gg|
MEXICO QRANO TOUR 15 day* |909
MEXICO YUCATAN 15 (Jaya 9009
Mexico CENTRAL and SOUTH AMERICA
15 Oayt J049
HAWAII (1 latand) 8 oava fSIf
HAWAII (2 lalanda) 10 days $199
HAWAII (3 lalanOa) 10 Oaya 9479
NEW YOMK CITY 8 day* $099
COPENHAGEN 8 days $409
15 day* OMO
TAHITI MOOMCA 10 day* $909
JAf^AN IS dayt fTM
TOKYO TAIPAI HONG NQKIO 9099
QRANO SPAIN. 16 day* 9909
|Ona-«fop aarvtca fof woridwtda loura cruiaa*
car* domaatic A iniarr>ationai ticttatir^g
PSA PREE COUNSELING ir>»urar>ca
inatani Raaarvation* Tichat Daliwarv
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MOVING? Apt
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674-6663.
$16 hr
I
rides offfmnMl
(16 JY SB)
• • ••• t
RIDING LESSONS
to PhllaBalphla mfm. Laava arowna
J«ay 12BI. 3BB-27SS. SSB-SBSB.
f»^6)
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traval
ni% .•» a»
EUROPE, lawai NY B OfMMi TttC.
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(t3 06r|
• • • • •
(IB Jy IS)
haN tara Fly to:
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NEW ACADEMIC YEAP ^ ' hTS'
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CHARTf us OUC TO Ca . .iH% tNOUtNF
lav PHONi poa SMC
C I EI STUDENT TRAVEL (477-2066;
EC09IO«nr Paaaa to 0««ant Toiiyo.
Ha^ BaiiB. Manila. Talpa. India.
■anplBiiBH. Pip. 6 Curopa
^^^^ (23 Jy 13,
TAHITI
SeptsmbBT 2-12 $7n
September 2> 16 IBM
Prica Includaa Iranaportatlon, maals
an^lodgmo at Bia Bafl Hal M
tpaclal programa iwaiiaSii for
Intaraatad?
WrRa: Cxplofar'i UnNmlteB
StonaCanyon Rd.. L.A SM
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charter Flight Service
Owar 100C fhghta to Europe this
Summer • Olscountad Student
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tours • Camping Tours • Unregl-
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r 1
• ' w v_ l_ A. ' ' W '\^L_
n A 2l3wfttieXPO
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SWITZERCANO One LA-Zurtct»-LA
otianar ttdiai Laava July 13 Botum
Aiifuat 11. S48BM. CaN TarrI Laaanlar
SB7-6100 V
^ (n JYO)
LAS VSQAS roMiB trip. July 17 6 16
62S.00/paraon 63B-1SS6 (24 Kra).
(23 JY 13)
: w •
# INTERNATIONAL STUDENT
• CENTER
^ Serving the UCLA Community
p 4 It s Friends
^ 1023 Hllgard Avenue
9-6 Daily
* TOURS! TOURS! TOURS'
" JOIN US FOR
taitoring
individwal. aaiall %fM9i9mU
PtOOr)
-t76B
CMQOr)
to rtaia you p«ar> your tuiura
CAREER GUIDANCE
4 mk program starts July 31 at
ioiy • M 9aa<ia<a « Ktnq%
Canyon Nai > Pam $b5 00
July 10 OisnvylanH 113 50
July 10 OitfMylanH
J.iiy '7 79 Grand Car*
July It
Naf • Paw
Sania Bmrtimtm
July If Lau
July 23-2S S«'
July 34 Pic
*»tii»a
(J
Wog^rt
July 3S J P.. y Muaaurr
4 B*arn Ptcnir
''•> 30 Aug Zior A Bryca Natl
Pariit
M4 0C
S9C00
19 00
19 50
174 OC
biud^nt rata non-aiuOanl ralaa availaO**
Quf 9oai It lo craala a« •niarculturai aichanqr
in a raiaaaa frii.naiy almo«ph«»r«> and to dtv
•*"• at a minimum cot» fc you
4Tn 7001
tutoring
Tutortno - ^ewar Reading ■ yyrmng SkMa
ORE LSAT GMAT Prop
' Tb« Guidance Cantar
9017 Santa Monica Blvd.
Santa Monica
829-4429
LCARN
CaM Aaaat
(36 Jy 13)
CNINf Bf Mandarlfi. RaHInf nmH^
laachar. wall-aiparlancad aritti Call-
laraia Cradanllal individual, small
'•* (34 010
JJttO Nalp In Enfllah7 Tutoring B
•y RiiJ>. **^ '^ —
04 0lr)
VMnNy 4S1>4636
(34 Jy IB)
if ?I5 ^••"''•••O. lOITtNO. Rl-
•lARCNINQ. TUrORIMO aV RMO
CHCBilSTRV. Rhyaiea. BMIaBaa. Ca*^
cuius Algebra, Oaomatry. Triaona
"wtry CanauRaBon. Etc. Boat m town
Auguat Ruggarl 362-60B0
(34 Jy 13)
JAZZ RtANO TECHNKHICS. AB
ehoai vaioBigB 6 prngssNawa of lop
modern and earlier bluaa keyboard
graato. Faat paa
cludaa Biaory 6
la keyboard. 473-367S.
.,.. _^^ (34 Otr)
LBAT. ONE. BICAT. OBUT
liBlaa. A.
1736
SS7.B474
S1B3. 16B18 V
47S-
(34 0lr9
TUT0RB60 •
Engllah Rti.D. Oafinan, grammar,
convaraatlon. writtng Eaparlanced
-7B4B. 4S6
ISO JV n\
JjUELL-Buailflad tutor for apaalallaad
476-3647:
(34 Jy23)
typing
XRCRT typing.
ttm B«andy 467-3116 a«lar S.
(36JytB|
TVRINO. Lat Caaay do H Tatm ^_ _
t^*da. diaaartatlona. ale Call 364-
7507 lor fraa' aaBmali
OSOIR)
f OITN- jaM Typing tarm paper.
•1747
mom
^^^9i9tOHAL Tape tranacrlbing
. and foarflla.
Including
and paychlatric IBM Eiacutlva ^7
dWnaa 626-6407.
(26jy8||
TYRING Done at tioma Tarn _
aaaaya. tt»aaea. disaartatlonarCaU-
Raba SMioff. 366-3643 ar 366^14
eXRCRT BiaalB
(t6Jy 23
TYRING: Faat. accurate aervlce at
studant ratea. IBM Salectric Term
R«R«^ W ••«. 311 IBBS. 623-4316
(mgMa).
276.g3g6 ar 276-6671
JWTNCJNaa«aTATKN9B
6TATiaTICAL. FAST
•CVtN OAVS A
rrvLBs
tjiplnsi
J...^
• tmeif^
m I » I ^ WI99I
(3S09n
ralaa Near campus ^ttona 474-
^ ipt iti#Miiiished jjgtwy for rwit^ hoifiw^wi^ded JBaii^^i^^j^
H^ 2!!i*!2L*5*r^^!f!:*»'^ ^ »-• 6 »uml.nad Spaclay. 4 ba«- a.aaA. . ^ — ■ ■ _
laat - accurala^Mld-Wiiahira Free
"pprtilng Ca6 Jaamw 3B4-6BBS. '
LIGHTNING TYPING CO
UMI013a9Bi99ai,»
3346 Overland 477 SJSe
(37 Jy 13)
.— L
61SB-019 60 Of LUXE 1 and 2
apartmants m Pelma Carpal
II buiidtng 637 73B6.
(37 Jy 23)
^ 36 -6 '6 tumiabad Spar la ua 4 mmm-
'oomt bat^• Fool Vollaybaii Car
6660 15 mtnwl^ UCLA 763-2^47
2 -^.(30 Jy 13
CLOaS UCLA m baauBM CRaalaf HBN
US^^^^J »••»• ByBI-ina Only
6766 Andra Ragia 474-6SB6
(30 Jy 13)
FEMALE grad aludeni fS oaairea
auBlal lurn smgla or 1 bedroom
Waslwood A6AF l^rouaf» Audual
•^ "177 evaa w^-j-
rii h, ai
FRO^ESSlONAi COLtEOE TVPlNQ
ICIAi.l9T .
T^aa*a Dtaaanaliawa #aatura«
6366 3 BEDROOM 7 batti carpata
dr^paa lirapiaca paiio view stave
mMgarator 3346 Ovartar«d 477-3236
9f *> '»»
coay cbarm
TYRING EdRbig/Faat Accurala MuNl
aapanenca4l'Plcli-up Oallwar Rightaout
Rataa/Refarencea. Sandy 455-34tt
ndy 455 2466
(26 Ob')
RR0FBBBI09MU. Typing af TlieaN. lafm
RROFES6IONAL WRITING EDITING
RESEARCH BOOKS JOURNAL ARTI-
CLES. DISSERTATIONS RROROSALS
JABKB WINTERFIELO WEST HOLLV
i746, 770-0030
(29 Jy 16)
rVRMO
at
6376 ONE
bur^[iing ttyaplaca
aSoaa ratrtg utM p ■laaaaiiiai
pratarred 419 Ocean Ava 6M 303
(27 Jy 13)
IF VOU mrm aaaking a quiet.
raaidacKa amongat matura
paopta aaa 440 ¥ataran 1 „,„„„,„
and 2 bedroom plus dan 1350 and
up Fireplaca walbar diariwaahar
balcony pool 473-6226
• m j» 16)
h?^?! '^^****"" Aircond 1200 15 mnt.
UCLA Ooug 5 7309 E»aa^«Nipd 569
7306 or Randel 979-.04a3
^ (27 Jy^S)^
VENICE
room apla
boat 623-71
Eaparl
474
(3SJ26)
RAw 6160 00 1
lo build biuawaiar
tvenings waafcanda
(27 Jy 23)
SYLVIA Typing IBM Eipariancad
aacralary naat. accurala Student rata-
764 page, moat )oba 68S-6B6ft
(25 Jy.23)
1160 SRACIOUS one bedroom unfur
ntahad Huga waMi in cloaeta carpeta
drapes Poof barbaqua Hmmt Robert
•on 56Bh6BBS
(27Jyt3)
EBIt apaHing, elc Espanencad
Legal Secretary Hmmr campus 476-
'••• I25 0tri
apU, to share
TYPING, all f»aada. neat accurate
pisaiiNiang. 66l'p9gi CaH Bharrta
/2S Otrt
TVrino af ttieaea, Maaarlatlona and
ICaltiy after 6 p.m 636-B3B6
■ ^ -. All >
FEMALE RnHa wanted to ilhmf9 1 b«r
•pt Poal. aacurlty bidg near buaea
636 348B ar 9BB-6S36
(36 Jy 16)
FEMALE la aliaaa baa bedroom apt.
partially furntahed Paima $132 60
Call Glenda 639-0770 ^
(36 Jy 13)
DISSERTATIONB.
and aiMdal reporla. Hrnm campus, aaay
partilrHl. 477-6272 after 5 p.m
(29 Jy 23j^
^>^«. . f^^ '^rp\t( irm typs papiiiri.'
thaaas, manuacrtpts diaaartallont
letters IBM Salactric II Call Anna
VOUNG proteaaiorMM famala lo share
3 bad/3t>ath with aama* Ten ma courts
poal Palms $179 00 366- 1495 a^nmia
avanmga
(29 Jy 13)
LARGE 'taalilonabia duplex Ftraplaca.
Mving dining kilcben own room 477-
>>3369. 630 Veteran $155 to $225
(36 Jy 13)
476-3;?26
TERM Papers, reaumaa. BCf»N
typing Free ptcfcup
<26 0tr)
I
3627
(29 Otr)
apt> furnished
FURN4SHED/Unfurniahad bachelor
$140 fingles $165 Pool Heart of
Weebaaad 10634 Lindbrooli 475-5964
(26 Ob)
909 GAYLEV-. across from Dykslra
Bactielors sirtgtea. 9mm bedrooms. 473-
tTi... 73^52* _^^^,
FEMALE Grad student
bao l>adroom apt Santa Monica $106/
mo Marilyn 625-6570 305 3933
^29 Jy 1B>
FEMALE roommaM
wood 2 -story apartmarft. 3
2 bath Pool Great location Judy
472-4771 ,1:
__^ " ' " (36 Jv I3J
FEMALE ahara 3' b)<f rm Brentwood
$115.00 month plua utlNttaV Call Laum
626-9660
(29 Jy 16)
REAUTIFUL 3 bedroom. 3 bath, un-
furnished apartment 3 Otocht from
:h Santa Monica $120 395 9270
- (39Jy6)
WALK TO UCUI
Spacious Bachelors Singles
1 Bedroon^ Apts
Tower Apartments 477-6653
>0B41 StcMtmiOia. Pool. Elevators
Sacurify Oarage
SPECIAL SUMMER RATE6 at
Qian-Fair Terrace 476-7030
540 Glen rock S43 Landtair
476-403-510-^1^ Landfaif 477.BBS0 i
FEBULE Grad atuBant
baa ba sir 9 am apt »n 6anta Mor^ca $100/
mo Judy 305-3033 after 5 /
(26 Jy 16)
..r^-
SUBMiER Rentala aaaSaBia "'Lusury
Fbiglaa and l-bBrma. WaM to Waatwood
and UCLA Cloee to Century City.
Heeted Pool 47S-9404.
(26 Jy 30)
APARTMENT to ahara for %%tmmf
Roommatss wants d le.9f«ara furmahed
2 bedroom. 3 boBi apt i-blocii bam
eaMpus $67 90 month untM mid-Sapt.
939 Landfair 473-0661
(26 Jy 13)
bi2bdr Brenhaood apt
$79 90 636-6670 -
(30 Jy 3Bt
Vh ROOM Houoa. bachelor kitchen
$190.00 utOHlea Included 2637 Waal
wood Blvd 706-9236
(36 Jy 23)
$240 FURNISHED 2 bdrma 6
Separata garage laundry South
Cornmg nmr SM Fary 6 Kalaar HoaplMI
•••■^^*** ' (26 Jy 23)
It UIM-
tles Included $179 Huga basamanl
apartment Utilities Included $179
Call 477-9966
^^ (36Jy13)
$190 VERY Attractively turnished Ig
1-bdrm Seperata garage Laundry Oi
South Coming cloaa lo SM Fwy 6
La Cianaga 699-3360
(36Jy20)
^Kmn single Apt m Weabaood norPi
of Wllshire $100 276-3676 or 631
(2F Jy 23)
FURNISHED /Unturnlehed bachelor apt
Short walk to campus. vMags Parking.;
$135 556-6466 (26 Jy 23»
apta unfurnished
OWN Roam and bath in WLA Only
$120 06 manth If over 21 call Laura
477 3662 ,,. . .
(26 Jy 6)
$150 FEMALE to shara 2bdrm Apt with
sama Avail 9 1 H—t beach 306 9440
116 Jy 16) I
ROOMBUTE' warned immedlelely 3
bdrm apt 11 bloc4'i from baach
Jnfurnishad Santa Monica $100 00
302 3636 or 366-3769
(26 Jy 13)
FEMALE to thar* ? 6«droom lownhousa
with female graduala tludani Moally
furnished $147 626-6679 a vea
(29 Jy 23)
for sublease
LARGE 1 beBroom and Ban
dishwasher, pool, roc Oulat $260
2ndSt. SM 797-9101 eat 2627 Ask lor
(27 Jy 20)
6279 CHARMI9ia RaMaa-Nbe one bed
'oom superb locabon mcludes gar
Rdfiar ana car garage Leaaa Rets
67S-7gSB
(37 Jy 6)
NEWtV renovated, security blBf.. V
block beech 0 bus. Venice Parity.
■IPBN $139
•V9^
LARGE Spanish styia (2 bedroom)
Waatwood Nicely furnished piano TV
stereo AvailatMf lata July mio Sap
MmBar 6466 479-5416
(36 Jv 91
SUBLET fully turnlahed large one bed
MMiaaBB National WLA $140
AagyM Firat 397 0166
(26Jy6)
16 JULY 7 garr aeamiful oool apart
ment 1 -bedroom/ atudy $225 par
aiafiBi Walk from campya 477-6133.
(iSJy 16)
6 BaBraam. i baih ^%»n^^thm^
1 bauae from beach on a quiet Man
haltan Peach walk street Avatiabia
»r through June $450 per
^ftMik lor irtalructer with l««n
CaM Biek Lyma^ Bealtor 545
13
¥fSiTiNG proieasor aaabs ti
3 3 badfoom rental Dec 79 May 77 Twe
daughtars agaa 5 7 42t3t 474-0179
(33 Otr)
RESPONSIBLE woman desires to .l
bauaaait Auguet Wast L A Pratarree
reterences 661-6797
(33 Jy 23
^tAT T1 134
AM FM
Mb $1679 366-3666
(61 Jy 6)
<i«IAT Trawspertaban par S7 Oaaan
yw Bug 9690 Ask lor Kartn 191 6661
or 990 1666
141 Jy 33)
134 FIAT
AF
635 M50
1
(41 Jy 13)
FEMALE Orad 46. wommg wNb dia
cipllnad cat Own roon^-^your apartment
6 M Palms 936-6349 •v
(33 Jy 11 >
'' PINTO
•peed very clean AM FM Original
owner Days 491 3344 Eves wknds
470 3179
(61 Jy 13)
$616 MAP VI6TA 3 ♦ Baa. 1%
diahwaahar Fifaplacs Gerepe
366-7703 ,^ _
_____^ (36 Jy 33)
1 BEDROOM aaoi -pen fumiahad lor
one neer ocean $300 mo Santa Montco
■^366 . _
(30 Jy 23)
BOHEMIAN baebSr gir
skirta maPaal lee Fa««cifully sought*
Geo Heuabnecht PO Boa 24271 LA
l33Jv6t
T2 OHIA. Immaci
36 M aoto stck $3600 Prtvata party
(964 NAV) (213) 371-7666
(41 Jy 13)
I >
house
TOYOTA Cort
new brake tranam»aalon $1090 Call
303 3279 Kim
141 Jv 13)
$479 FURNI6HED houae Mar VlaM
3 Ban. is bath Fenced yerd Sept 1
Jan. 6 3B7-4643. ,^ . ,^ '
■ ^^36 Jy 33)
house for sale
PRI99E Weabaood locabon _,
3 BR paneled den formei dmbig rm..
ig maalar 2 Hreplaces gourmet kitchen.
10939 Lindbrook Eva Velierto 491
5471 Coldweii Banker
HOUSE Charming 2 BR Ig r(
boar plan lira pi Iraa shaded ^
beautiful brick pebo complete pnvacy
many astraa Walk to schools and
sbapping 10 min UCLA On bus iinea
57 500 Tasea low Jim Kalley 475
3921
(31 Jy 6»
BACHELOR Pad Baaarly
n 3-bedraom 2 atory
$66,900 Sands baaltors
(31 A 10)
-jKMise to share
FATHER of hao wants tamals
student/ ona chbd lo ^hmrm neat old laar
fesBraaiii Venice home Good area
$300 00 plua 13 utNlbea 631 2136
(32Jy13)
VOUNG Women ••eks lemale grad
student or professionei lo ahara houae
in West Hollywood Dayt 4 72 2915 Eves
666-6232 -^
(?rf Jy 13)
MALE share canyon baww aeeutltully
fumiahed Own bedraam Air condi
baaad. 6166 month plua utllitiat After
9gBp;m 276-1660
r33 Jv 30»
ROOMMATE awnied to ahara roomy
baachhouae wipt fcoupla $130 monm-
9Pb allf r S:36 p.m 366-4663
"•'' (32 Jy 13)
BEAUTIFUL Topanga Cyn Spbt level
homa to shara $190 00 455 1710
(32 Jy 23)
2 ROOMMATES wanlad 5 bedroom
bauaa Venica Beach $160/montb CNff.
Phil or Adraa 366-6716
(MJ*6)
LARGE house Venica Beach, own
bedroom. baHwaom. yard, gardan front
$200 302-4279
(32 Jy 13)
FEMALE abare 3
iBifa yard. Dag OIC Great situation
6130 mo Ave/ Gale 796-6361 eves
(33 Jy 16)
LARGE house to share 6179-nen
tmokar rviuat Nka doga caN Sua or
B6I 306 76BS
(32 Jy 9)
PRIVATE Hoiiia ta
bay Bedroom wifi
evenings after 9 00 P M
Marina Del
• $170
9040
(33 Jy 30)
ROOM ATE aranled to ^t\mrm 2 bd houae
in i^oilywood Hills fireplece yerd Call
NONSMORER 3 bdrm 2 -bam Her
moaa 3 biks to beach Hm^r large
park $117 mo 372-4661 eve
(33 Jy 33)
WOMAN aaabs ouiet
great hotfaa aaa. Manna Pafak 1 162 66
; util 922-0913
_ (32 JY 23)
ROOMMATE needed for houee In
Beverly Glen own room $190 ma
475 2972
(32 Jy 6)
WOMAN grad 9lt\ur9 arlth 2 aan-smaksi
Canyon houae 15 mum UCLA Prtvala
room bath 463-1436.
* (32 Jv 131
twHiaing
or
bi
Cab 474-
(33 JY 33)
FURNISHED Delua ^
moaa
m^ittt Je 13)
FELLOW (M D ) sN«l family Baalraa
a yaara rawMl af 3 BR baMaa aMrBiig
Si' 1/76 Ptsaas caniaet Dr NaHR. t^o
ai BpinaiaapiBfyrtWttitmr
\}nkv Ma Meal CefMer. SMwJbiB. Ca
(33 Jv 16)
TRADE Yaur L A apartment {nmmt
Wllshire) for our 6 F apartment for
2 waaba la arte month Saan as pnsslbia
134 Jv 23)
71 TOY Caraba 4 spd R H Ab
radlais lint cond 29 mpg $i 990
beat offer 933-4302 ^"^^
, (6iJyi3)
TT AUDI ifiO Li Air ccmdtbaaad Auto^
matic AM FM stereo Four dear aadan
room and IxMird
axclianfla for hal
EXCHANGE room, walking distance
of campua tor 9 hrs houseworli weekly
plus soma diahwaahirtg for $25 rm>nth
Gin only 472 0617 or 473-6BS6
(37 Jy 13)
only 30.000 miles Escellent $3000
Dave 300 7073
(41 Jy 13)
71 VW Bus Olaapa 4 to 000 mllea on
rabuilt angina $2700 A- condition.
633r6663
(41 Jy 23)
66 OPEL KadaP New Cleteb. eooNng
ayalem. «Hrtf»g. motor mounia trana
mount $750 477.b403 9nfnm0
141 Jy 23)
6TUDENT wanted 646 week room
pertiai board in asdianga lor tiouaa
work chlidcara Call Mrs 6charer
969-6620
137 .Iv 9t)
ROOMInB.H home wHh pool escftanga
lor bebysitbng and light houaekeeping
273-6661. ar 270:2700 -
■ " (37Jyl3)
ROOM board, prhrala both aschanga '
lor chNd cara (boy 9 years) weekdeys
fraa Evaa 955 4223 Day* 959-0490
(37 Jy 30)
ATTRACTIVE private room 6 baPi
^rmm to responsibia famala student
In aschanga for Mght aarvtcp* 3 day/wk
R«babysittingSame meela Walk to
capipua EacaBant situation for rigni
peraon 479-9164
!»▼ Jv 13)
FEMALE b^oom 6 board escbange for
light houseworli 'babysitting Private
room/bath. T V Hmm UCLA 474-0330
(37JyO)
06 AUSTIN Heeley Roadslar Nica New
paint top t.iraa trans clutch radio
baeter bik 646 1220 ^^^ ^ ,^
66 CONTL Law mbea FM-caeaette
•lareo Puns reeNy smooth Must se6
9960 (POP 040) 477 0733
L_**!J!L!1^
MERCURY 71 Comet. autamaPc ab.
power steering vmyl top ftOOO 636-
6394.-632 6063 Good condition
^ 141 Jy 331
1667 VOLVO 4 doer AMrPM. radio
new clutch, escellent cortdltton Muai
aebt Evea 341 7666
(41 Jy 13)
74 CAPPI 3000 AM/FMrTapa 4-apd
low miles aaceNent condition $2050
Mike ^59-4411
(41Jy30)
ROOM and Bodrd homa of two pro-
^ssors 15 fmt old son Must drtya car,
5 minutes from UCLA Making dinner'
»f Hghi dutias. paaaiBie salary to be
rd July through Septem|>er gr
936-4555 days 479^363 avas
(37jy36)
74 VEGA Nalchbacfc Air .
Aulamalfe Only 10 600 mbM Oliver
62360 Oeve 306-7673.
_j ._ (41 Jy 13»
70 POR6CHE 914 $3366. 73 ANa
$5362. both aaceileni cawdJbui
awnevs Ca« 636-5396
(41 Jy 0)
room for rent
ROOM to mnt All house prMlegea
Bfiare bath Carpet Furniture $140 66
Call after 9 366-6664
(36 Jv 13)
bicycles for sale
Wt CaMfornia t ia«9aai
HKe
0(16 US(0
Corrtaf Staatwi
<?M I •♦KSki
■ mtlt %e
tjAtt^ fun awe (
""^ city rconisr OvsrisaS t Jafl*«%o»
aamwSM isy
166.66 PRIVATE rgpm prhrata baPt
^•mmt0 faculty student 1 block Wll
ahira bua West Beverly Hitts 553-0666
(36 Jy 131
LOVELY room/bath m woawn deeigner s
borne tor temele grad stuBawt. KHcb
prtvaleges $60 00 970 5066.
r36 Jv 191
f ■pvf* R«|M»
Witshtre West
[Bicycles '-• *!"}<•
*»•«» and UMa Si*** '
|11S41 WHahtraateB
to ni»reunl% on mo**
to UCl* ••iia»nl«
677 3135
LA
666 MALE Graduate or faculty neat
nonsmokar (no iiitchan privileges)
Walking distanca 901 Malcolm 474
5147
(30 Jy 13)
FEMALE Grad praMiiad Ideal r^om.
laundry icit priv Cloaa trans Call
after 3 475 4425
(30 Jy 20)
ROOM bi prhrata home for smplajad
peraon No smokirtg After 1 pm ^9-
<36A»;
OUIET Private room bath Kitchen
privileges Laundry Waatwood Witahira
Mala faculty aluPant After 9 30 p m
474 7122
ATALA Prolessionel 29 Og C(
All campi aacept universal side puba.
006 9746 477 9407
(42 Jv 13)
«K>ST at aain whili vqu wait
ttl^ oar DM paaTs amo accessoo
eiTM I o
HANS pHRT
LlOMTWf lOMT aiCYCLfS INC 7
in ffia VMiaa*
(9 OiOCKO FbObI CAMmuSi
ion GAVLCV AVf
47)
t'.
Iv
BfOPOOM for rent 2 000 sq ft in
WLA $120 morHh CaN Judy 473 2049
(36 Jy 16)
cyclee, scooters
for
H09IDA73
NICE bright rooms On Geyley Ava.
Acroaf from campus Private <ooms
from $99 wHh bePt from $139 Kitchen
privilages<t lounge leundry parking
available $15 mo Call Jerry Hayes
477 9667
r^a »w «e«
(43 Jy 13)
Calient
6614
MB Ca 73 66B6 mbaa Es
$350 beat ofler 474-
«a«- H. •
3oio T 76 1.6B6
Mftoaloraala
locker, helmet $600 Call 475-1373
mornlnga. aHamaafia.
(43JyS3)
Dart 9 cyl aulo new
brabaa $495 303 1400
(41 Jy 0)
4674
71 PtYI90UTH
HONDA Melanycie EacaBaM
79 ace 1673 CaM Jba 491
(43 Jy 13'
276-6616
(At Jy 30)
73 KAWASAKI 2SBcc tt^^um Bbeei
dirt Great 1st bike $366/best after
476-3466 aek lor Brad
(43 Jy 16)
I
• i
>
f^i J7i6r
t_*.
.AO^
I
i
i
t
Vandewegh
-»■
•
B> Mikr Kinciold
OB Spiirtib Hriier
Alter M poorly pteycd lirbt
half, the City AllSiars rallied
behind UCl A-bound Kiki
Vandeweghc and James
Wiike* to defeat the C IF All-
Stafk, 87-82, in action Wed-
nesday mght at <'al State
^uUtttmn. The win gave the
City All Stars a 4-1 advan-
tage in the annual event
Citv All-Siai!» head coach
Jim Ihompton of West-
chester substituted Ray Pot-
lonpe of Crenshaw for Lon-
dale Iheus of Locke to start
the jecond hall, enabling the
City to get the ball inside to
Vandewcghc (PaksadcM and
Wilkes (Dorsev) for easy
baskets
While not particularly im-
pressive., ihc C IF built a 22-
13 advantage at the end of
first ten-minuttr ptrunl In the
second quarter, plav was
ragged, with both teams
missing nu"meri)us inside
scoring opportunities
At halliimc. the City found
Itself trailing. 40-32 Both
teams shot just 31 per cent
for ihe half As the third
quarter began. Potlonge's
ballhandling. rebounding and
passing, quartcrbackf-d fht
coBicback Vandeweghe sud-
denly received some iMlliant
passes and hustled under-
neath lor offensive rebounds
for a flurry of baskets, two in
a row on slam dunks.
Vandewegh^ said. '•I just
wish they had legali/ed the
dunk a year ago. h would
have been more fun in high
school **
Vandeweghe ended the
game with f5 points and 10
rebounds, but appeared weary
throughout the fourth qu^r^^
ter "I'm out ol shape be-
cause It's summer I §mcm.
Ihe big thing 1 need to work
on now is/my endurance"
safd- the 6-7 atandout
Vandeweghe and Wjikes
seemed to enjoy playing on
the same team for a change
The two players have op-
posed each other several
times in the past, but how
both will be on the same
UCl" A team in the fall! Van-
deweghe described Wilkes as
a player wkh no strpng nor
weak points? "He does every-
thing well,'' said Vandeweghe
Wilkes played *: consistent
game, but didn't appear to be
g()«ng at lull speed. "My back
IS still bothering me some."
explained Wilkes He con-
lead City over GIF
Al Scat«t winning sixth NCAA till*
|Pro coadiing different
Scales and land of the Sol
By Laura Mishima
DB Sports Reporter
Temperatures consistently hit the mid 90's in El Paso
Texas but the sun doesn't always shine In fact, last year
the E Paso Juarc/ Sol (transbtcd ^sun" and pronounced
sole ) finished with a 6- 1 8 record
Then the pro volleyball franchise hired UCLA's Al
Scates. the new Wizard of Westwood (he has won six
rxL AA titles in the seven year history of the event), and like
a ray ot hope, here comes the sun The team has alreadv
won more games than last year in less than half its season
(a 4() game schedule) Under Scates, the Sol roK to first
place in thcjEastern Division and are 7-9 in IVA action.
Sol overfnatcbed h
Still the sun sets in the west and so <hd the Sol last week
Overmatched by a powerful, experienced Los Angeles Surs
team, the Sol played evenly for two games and then let up
m losing 9-12. IM3 and 4-12 at Mission Viefo High
School ' e»
Both teams gave the non-partisan Orange County crowd
of about 300 plenty to cheA about The Sur's from Jlie
was simply too physical ter the Sol, but Scates' -team
hustled and dove its way over the court to «Mte numerous
k>ng rallies. Then, as if their energy source was drained the
r»d and orange Sol bowed quietly into the sunset to the
western Division co-leaders.
(Continued fm Page It)
■■
s
■iawas WMkM, 32. (If
tinued, "I'm having daily rub-
downs and in August PII start
playing ruore and more I'd
like to be able to go KK) per
cent
Wilkes, whose back injury
hampered him at times in his
12 rebounds)
semor year at Dorsey, said
his back should be completely
healed by the time practice
surts (October 15) and he is
looking forward to playing
wtth^ Marqttes Johns off.
Johnson's decmon to with-
Allums late-blooming
basketball recruit
draw hif name at the last
minute from the hardship
pool made Wilkes elated
Tm glad that he decided to
stay at UCLA for next year
There are a few things HI
need to learn and he can
teach them to me There's not
a finer college basketball
player in the country right
now," said Wilkes
The CIF had Co-Player-of-
the-Year Johnny Nash of
Long Beach Poly, who added
eight points and 16 rebounds,
plus some fine defensive play
Also, Jim McCloskey and
Paul Wilson had fine games
off the bench, keeping the
CIF hi the game when the
City was about to pull away
ill the second half
-—Darwin Ct>ak tCrenshaw);-
had a superb game, hitting
eight of 15 shots in route to a
game high 18 points.
Ron Baxter of Dorsey
(headed for Texas), played a
sub-par game in relief for the
City Baxter was reportedly
interested in signing with
use but the Trojans didnt
offer him a scholarship Ac-
tually he wanted to leave the
area, so he chose Texas over
second choice Washington,
turning down atJSC offer
J'
u
4 1'
Bob Heker
"Dl Sports Writer
To make it in college basket-
ball today, you almost have to
spend most (Vf your first 18
years dribbhng and shooting at
the local playground Plus by
the time you are 12. you qan'tk
find any clothes m tlic
children's section for your 6-5
frame or shdts to fit your size
14 feet.
UCLA basketball recruit
Darrcll Allums is an exception
to this unwritten rule Allums
didn't surt playing basketball
until he entered the ninth
grade at Lynwood High
School. Then he stood 6-0 and
170 pounds. Four years and a
3-A championship later, Al-
lums was 6-8, 220 and one of
the area*s best prep prospects.
SUrted in nintii
"I didn't surt getting into
basketball till ninth grade,"
Allums said, "when \ started to
grow I i4wt wasn't interested in
it.
''My first year I grew
went through a
y/i inches I
lot of pants.*
In the Southeast I eague.
Allum.s looked like the new kid
on the block who makes good
After only two years of plac-
ing, Allums was an All-League
selection in his junior year. As
a senior, Allums was chosen
All-CIf as he led Lynwood to
the 3»A title
Allums. who can play either
forward or center, was re-
cruited along with Dorsey Co-
City PUyer of the Year James
Wilkef. Like Wilkes, he is an
outstanding offensive player.
But Wilkes might have an edfe
for the upcoming season since
he has more experience. UCLA
assistant coaches Larry Farmer
and Lee Hunt disagree.
Unlimited pottnUar
"I^WTell has unhmited p^
tential," Farmer said, **It juit
depends on how hard he wants
to work." r
**Allums has as much raw
tftlent as we've seen in a long
time," Hunt said "It just
hasn't been tapped yet He's so
strong, yet he's very quick and
aggressive DarreU' just needs
some polishing"
For his size, Allums is a
scoring, threat from outside as
well as inside the court
Though most of his points
come at the low-post position,
Allums IS also an excellent
long range shooter
**We played a passing game
at Lynwood, so I played inside
as well as outside That gave
me a chance to shoot outside a
lot-
Allums' rebounding is just as
consistent as his sconi^ He
averaged 18.4 points ahd 18
rebounds a game. Allums was
also the CIF all-time career
rcbounder at Lynwood.
""Darreirs very physical on
the boards at both ends of the
court." Hunt said "He has
very large hands which should
really help him with the outlet
pass. For his size. Allums is an
excellent outside shooter. He
(Continued on Page II)
N
couM b« lop \)CLA frMhman forwam
▲
-4-
Semester system
discusseiJ at SLC
budget hearings
..s
\
ki
I I > I >ii II m^
r
•y Rim Wolpert
urn Stair Wntcr
Student Legislative Council
(SLC) amniaJ budget hearings
saw the annouaoownt of a
probable Switch to the semester
em 11 Ifcc JimversUyL^
California {DC), and aimoal
resulted in the punishment ol
special interest groups at
iiCLA
The budget hearings will
have to trim the requests of
^SV.C commissioners by^-
$144,742 in order to meet tlie
maximum available figure (tf
$20«.595. ASliCLA's 1976-
1977 operating budget Due to
a decrease in enrollment at
t'CLA. this figure is approxi-
■irtrty S4.000 less than last
year, according to Finance
Committee Chairman John
Withers
"f would thfrik that with-
in tewnH yeart ¥ve would
probably return to a
•amaatf ^rt Ijiijil;
t«.
Willie Banks, student edu-
cational policy commissioner,
^^pn^wnced "by the fall of 1977,
1 expect UCLA to have a
- semester system "
Dean of Student Byron At-
tttMoa said "there is strong
interest in going back to a
form of a semester system
*X>ne of the prinlary reasons
^e changed from the semester
system to our present quarter
system was to move M) per
cent of the students through in
fess than four years,. With a
proposed lourih quarter, this
would have been possible "
However, after the quarter
system was adopted by the UC
the California legislature re-
'^Md to fund this fourth
ou^rter, Atkin.son said This
made the quarter system very
inefficient and removcJ its
main reason for being
he added
David Wilson, chairman of
the Academic Senate Council
said, -I would think that
withm several years we would
probably return to a semester
system.
"Mr Saxon (UC President)
would probably like to return
to a semester system II would
Vive the Universitv hundf^dt
of thousands of dollars each
year.*' W lUon said, adding that
a University-wide Academic
Senate subcommittee report
rfrnaiaH.Biltd tlit switch Such
a change would be instituted at
all UCs or not at all. he said
Spadal interests
Thursday night, SLC mem-
bers came ver> close to pun-
ishing most or all ol the sjiecial
mtcrr>t groups, under -frnn
Xl^ , ^'^"•<^<^"^ C ynlhia Mc-
Clain's commission
McClain. who has lurisd.c
tion over i^ecul interesi
groups at I CI A failed to turn
in. her budget requests to
Undergraduate Studcm Asso-
ciation (USA) President Meg
McCormack by^ last Wedncs-
day. McC ormack said She
added that this was the last
Jd\ lo do <o,^uoder USA hv '
laws
She added, howcvti. that
she gave Administrative Vice
Presrrdenf Cjary CoUisief ihf:_
"Tcsponsihiiifv oT" informing
corami^siuncrs of by-law rules.
She said C\)llister was negli-
BRUIN
ICIX. Hafffear 5 Univtrtity il CalHtrnia. lit
J«ty IS. ItTI
.£• JiNflfi i»(
In Hi* OC
Eleven group%
McClain said she was told
b>^ Collister she could turn in
her budget^ on the day of the
hearings The lirst vicej?resi-
dpnt has to submit a budget
lormed from autonomous
groups, while other commis-
sioners are responsible only lor
their own commission she
^^hile other commissioners
.ilipw immediately whether or
not their budget is over the 150
per cent maximi^m, she
pointed out her problem is
unique Since her entire bud-
get, but not each component ol
It, has to be under the 150 per
cent limit, each of the II
groups could turn in budgets
in exccta ol 150 per cent
hoping that other groups
would request les* than 150
per cent, bringing the budget
as a whole under the limit. -^
X ompletf denial
Facihties Commissioner Jetf
Conner proposed SLC not
rnaiidii any budget not in the
President's office by last Wed-
nesday I his would have re-
suhed tn a complete denial ol
Junds lor specml in4eresl
groups at l>et.A, unless they
could be obtained from other
^'ources
_ annbortetm^nf of c m^^m ^^i
•»f»H»t resulted m puo*.hm««l of .p*clal Inf.r^t group. <mi c^^;^^
taken It was almost midnight to pay **less than $0 75
and too lew members remained hour -
l4> constit4ite a quorum The
meeting was therelore
an
While olhar commit-
aioners know immedi-
ately whether or not
their budget ii over the
--: 150 per cent maximum,
•he (McClain) pointed
out that her problem it
unique.
Other SLC members pro-
posed plans to penali/e Mc-
Clain. but in less drastic ways,
such as placing McClain last in
the budget fmak/ation phase,
when budget constraints are
most severe; cutting her budget
by some percentage, such as 10
per cent and giving her no firm
budget but paying her groups
out of a special, enlarged con-
tingency fund • ^
Onlv one commissioner,
Willie Banks, spoke out
against any type o{ punish-
ment l>espite the prevailing
mood, however, no action was
was
j<>ur ned
C oesMMier program
A **Westwo<>d Consumer
Program*'* was proposed by
CoHister because **the UCLA
student IS discriminated against
in Westwood "
"Wha^jii^c want to do K pit
the ^erchants against each
other " thus lowenng prices for
4JCLA students, Collisier said
Steve Ghckman, the pro-
spective director ol the pro-
gram* said students account for
one quarter ol the business in
Woftwood and therelore have
a considerable, though un
tapped, amount of power
A "Westwood Consumer
Protection Board.** would be
competed o\ members from a
199 course on consumer edu-
cation, which Ghckman called
an integral part of the pro-
gram, would be estabhshcd
Merchants would be asked
to give a 10 per cent discount
to students, Ghckman said In
return, they would receive a
"UCLA Consumer Seal of Ap-
proval" to place on their win-
dow They would also be pro-
vided with free advertising on
campus, he said
Housing profrtfli
A "Housing Sundards Pro-
_ iei," proposed by Financml
Supports Commissioner Hugh
Miller, would inspM and rate
dorms, fraternities, sororities,
^Westwood apartments and
tptrtments in "student con-
centrations of population out-
side Westwood."
"On the bttti of the dau
collected, we evtlutted the rent
tad dete^^miw if it is fair."
7^hgn» Miller atid, a rtUng m
itMnd. This progrtm could be
comptied to the AAA moiel
rttiag progrtm," he said
Collitter ts^ed, **Do you
retluc how kN^ it would ttkc
JMI to comb the Wettweed
tret? You would htve to htve
20 or 30 people tt letit, and
fiu4tnli live til over. It*s jutt
not prtcticel ** Miller
Miller also requested lunds
for a "StudenX. Banking Rela-
tions Program." which he said
could save the Federally In
sured Student I oan (FISL)
program
FLSI IS the mam source ol
loans lor students, according
to Miller, yet Security Pacific
Bank.'/ C'alilornia\ second
largest bank, recently elimi-
nated the loans at their banks
Bank o( America continues to
give these loam^, he said
This program will work be
cause "banks don't like had
publicly and people don't like
banks," according to
"I'm going to go to
••dent or vice-presi
not going to deal wit
peons." he said
'Alpha Phi Omegt, who
nine the carpool tyetem,
it begging Jutt to ttay
alive, becaute they real-
ize thay did tuch a tar-
rible job laat year, M't
pathetic.
•t
To meet with bank execu-
tives. Miller propoaes a travel
expenditure of $550, including
$293.44 for taxi or auiomobiie
Miller, who has uken many
htnking courses and plans a
career in a money-related Tield.
HMi to use the $550 himself
to fly to San FrtacMco, San
I^iego and Sacrttwmo.
This idea met with some
skepticism Withers said ''it
seems that a simple ptiblictty
campaign would be enough
rathp^thtn foii^ to the pre-
-Youre talking about pres-
sunng htnks, hut with luch t
•mtll pcrcenttae.of their Iotas
bctiM RSL, thtyll tell you to
ao <ly t kite,** Coaaor stid
Cwpeel tyUM
Student Welfare Got
sioner James Rosen,
whose junadictMMi the
P»^«_Ctr^l Syafem ftlh,
"^*^'^ \\ one iteai o
T
:?r?.«>"-'»
--j -,-,
\
A
ftnt dirtctor, who he pr
L
\ ■' ^-
•I ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
I
im ut thip your pOTvonai ^nma hom« w« arc
tionai pacM9Mt«odthipp«ng We
PACIFIC-KING ^^^^ ^~* •^ •< «-<
itsu t/) tntmrnm-
tor 220 ¥Olu
igelM 17
482-Mt2
Comm Board won't get extra COXtt)
"fee Committee's pposal rejectetf
mmk
The Nail Boutique
1434 Westwood f Ivd..
Specializing m
* Porcelain Natl Sculpturing
* Juliet Manicures
* Pedicures
* Free Consultation
" . ■ u ■■ . — • — — -
$1 discount with this ad
CjM us f(K an appointment 474-4531
— >,
\
Wf Kim HUdman
Akur Miclmel KafteMf
DB Suit Writers
Chancellor Charles E. Young last week
rejected ibc UCLA Registration Fee Com-
mittee's recommendation that the Communi-
cations Board (Comm Board) receive $20,006
more than Comm Board had requested in their
\iilf^-ll Kudget
Comm Board regulates the students commu-
nications media af UCLA. Although part oi
ASUCLA, the Board receives a subsidy from
the Univeristy.
TM€ Jktm Fee Committee, in its recommen-
dation, omred the extra $20,000 to Comm
The Chancellor approved the pr^poied^
SI99.863 budget for Comm feoard. but said
-the $20,000 cut (of extra funds) is final."
Young suggested a committee be set up to
study the funding and publication of dcpan
mcntaJ papers Departmental publications often
keaefit only graduate students and arc of an
academic nature, according to Roben Rivero a
number of the Reg Fee Committee Reg Fee
money is intended specifically for funding of
non-acadenuc student programs.^
According to the Reg Fee report. Comn
Board requested for this year's budget an
iJLL%9 increase of last year's to be distnbutcd
OAKLEY'S*
Men's Haircutting
at its best
Long & Short Styles
Appolntmants
GR 99681 GR 34245
4061 Gaylay
(acrott Wettwood Thaatar)
Boar with the stipulation that the money fund
the publications of departmental journals and
newsletters Publication is now handled
through the individual depanmcnts
There IS a^i
difference!!! V
Ot t«ptri«iic«
MdMCCttS
tired of yeaterday'a hair?
For what'a happening now —
•tyling for men and women
Jerry Reddlng'a Jhirmack producta
For appointment CBi\ 478-6151
; tuea. thru aat.
3,00 - OFF firat haircut
with thia ad '
1105|Glendon Ave Weatwood Village
MCAT
OAT
LSAT
GRE
AT6SB
OCAT
CPAT
FLEX
ECHII61
jUrLMEOBOS
Sif-MT
2124 South ScpulwMa tlva
t>o« Mngmtm CaMornia MMM
(2 til 477 3»t#
»u» home •
Study m»t§u§ii *
■ •
Courses inat ttt •
constantly wpdattd •
■ •
Tj^ fkitittet for 2
i«4S0f«) ind 'or u\t ^
of UtqQlemtn\4ry 9
missed le
6DUCATKDWAL C£»lTI«
rfST»««»M«AriON
s^fCMiisrssiNcr •«■
as follows; Datlx Bruin $778, KLA $5,595
Southern Campus $4,148, Together $9|h
Nommo $907; Ha'am $868, La Gente $785
^estwinJ $521 and the Asian American publi
cation Siooper $717, with a $4,071 general
, surplus.
Reg Fee Committee, however, recommendecf a $12,330 in-
crease over last year, to br distributed solety between the fiver
special interest newspapers This would exclude the Daih Brum
KLA, and Southern Campus
"I think It IS . inappropriate for the Reg Fee Committee to
dictate Communications Board policy," said Young in response
to this , recommendation.
Jeff Cunard, a Comm Board member, saw the $20,000 increase
as an act which would overstep the Reg Fee Coftirtiittce's power
**l personally really abhor the ttkci that they could give us monev
and tell us how to spend it." Ciinard said.
Victor Nunez, a member of the Reg Fee Committee, said the
special interest newspapers are in need of more funds He
expUined since their budgets determined by Comm Beard are
insufficient, Re^ Fees recommended more fund*.
Lynne CUrk, editor-in-chief of Nommo, verified the special
interest newspapers need for more funds. She said their requested
:^dgctj»Cpmiii Board h never fulfilled. Other apewl HUerertr^
newspaper editors could not be reached for comment.
"We shm them (special interest newspaper budgets) down as
much as we can,*' said Cunard, who is on the budget sub^
committee of Comm Board Bi^t, he added. **we try to give them
what they need. If they need extra Ubles or chairs, we wbuJd trv
to find them ** - , ^
Cunard cited premature financial projections which arc
.miscalculated as one reason budgets sometimes need to be cut
What asked if he had heard any cbihplaints from special
interest papers. Richard Krucz, publications manager and
member of Comm Board said, ^L haven^t received, any in
particular . ^
Also discussed at last week's mectjng was the parucipation of
the smaller publications in the Comm Board budgetary process
ine Keg Fee Committee suggested to Comm Board the suffs of
special publications be allowed to offer in-put and make
recommendations. *^ !j
I ■
Semester plan
save 21%
Rugby shirts
7.50
elsewhere 9.50
save 30%
football jerseys
3.50
elsewhere 5.00
(Continued from Page I)
The requested carpool bud-
get IS 56 pet cent of last year's
approved budget, he said
adding. -| would have pro^
bably done away with it. but
the administration wanted it.**
"Alpha Phi Omega, who
runs the carpool system, is
begging just to suy alive, be-
cause they realize they did such
a terrible job last vear it's
pathetic," Rosen said He
noted, however, -there is room
tor improvement if they just
•« tketr ihh together."
Rosen indicated that the
.carpooJ concept itself must be
attractive. Last year, 2,600
people used the carpool
system, compared to 4,000 or
I (
cotton with contrast trim or navy roval or
maroon S-XL
5.000 the year before, he
noted.
Tm amazed that they had
such a high success rate, with
the amount of mismanagement
and foolishness that went on,"
Rosen said
Mark Young, carpool direc-
tor, said ^'people must know
about the tCTvicc before they
can use it." However, he ad-
mitted that "we spent only
$103 out of an allocated ad-
vertising budget of $735."
When asked why he did not
remove the program from the
auspices of Alpha Phi Omega,
Roacn said only that he would
try to have a voice in which
Alpha Phi Omega person be-
comes director.
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12"^ ^^'*' ^"-^^ 5 T-aday. July 13. 1.76
Communicat^n. B^ ariZ!?'"'"r°" ^^•'^ ^ th. ASUCLA
•0024 Copynghtt976'^t';7;^r77'*"^^"«^'^'^^^^
S«:ond ^' ^^ ZfJ * ASUCLA Communications Board
P««aae pma at the Lot Angaiaa Peat Office.
EdNor-«f>-Chl«f
•'la'^aa^ EdNor Alice Short
EsecuUve Editor Frank Stallworth
Qeofi Ouinn
Susan Kane
Tad Shapiro
Frank Widd«r. Sally G»rn9r.
Kim Wildman. Michelle Duval
David Whitney Joanne EglflSh
Michael Sondheimer
Steve Finley
Jeff Laptn
tlftnr
^••ws EdHofs
»l Direclort
Sports Editor
^••♦••■"^ tportt Editor
Photo EdMor
Aeelelenl Photo Edftor
♦ .
i\
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10 Minuet Down SunMt Blvd to
Uur»( Cinyon Turn Right And You r» Th«r«
Carter arrives in New York
for start of Demo convention
iy A4s« PfefTer
Dl Sisir Writer
New York Jimmy Carter,
whote bandwagon now ap-
pears more tike an express
lilmois and Senator Henry M
JsdHmi of Washington.
Ask of wonen
Another uncertainty which
has taken shape and could
" ' ^ ■ ' ^ and
so
party to vow that half of the
dde^tn lent to the 1980 con^
venuon wiU be wonmi
-«r>
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^e sell everything for motorcycles —
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tram for Washington EXT. disturb the unity Carter
launched his final and almost the t)emocratic party
certain bid for the Democratic
Presidential nomination as he
arrived in New York City Sat-
urday
About 2.0b0 'supporters sur-
rounded the former Georgia
governor as he made his way
to tiK Americana Hotel, the
Carter base for the next week
Acting more the sund-up
comic than the presidential
hopeful. Carter initiated bois-
terous cheers from the crowd
when he said, **l would like to
announce my own personal
choice for vice president- He
then paused and added, . "as
soon as Itn sure who the
choice of President is going to
-,^ rcformcrt un
fU^^Sr^ ^^^ ^° persuade
the Democratic Ruies Con,
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for New York
Carter went on to poke fun
at a \ew York Daily News
headline which referred to
President Ford's relucunce to
appropriate funds to New
York City at the height of its
moneury crisis last October -I
guarantee you that if I go to
the White House,- Carter said,"
"then V\\ never, tell the people
of the greateit city of the^
world to drop dead.**
AT' the convention draws
near, the only contained secret
_ jccms to be Carter's vice prcsi-
dential choice Even tins un-
known factor hst been nar-
rowed to a few by political
insiders. At the moment, it
seems Carter will choose the
vice presidential candidate
from among Senator Walter
Mondale of Minnesou, Sena-
tor Edmund Muskieof Maine
Senator John Gienn of Ohio'
strongly desire is the issue of
the future role of women in the
democratic party The debate
IS scheduled lo ukc place
Thursday afternoon
The controversy involves the
rules wh.ch wijl dictate the
process of selecting the dele-
gates to the 1980 Democratic^
Convention Reformers are
Senator Ad lai Stevenson lU nf /nn.J /"" Reformers are
Jt. JL ^PUilHng for the Democratic
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Concerned about
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•^
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offers
mittee to adopt such a pro-
posal last month The com
mrttec instead passed a resolu
tion which guarantees thi
party will -"promote an equal
division*' between men and
women delegates for the 1980
convention
''Many of the feminists ad
vocating a floor fight at the
Democratic convention arc led
by Korync Horbaf, « Mitionai
committee woman from Min-
nesota who, in addition, x^
working for greater femm.s:
rcpresenation on the Wmograo
commission The commisvion
headed by Morlev Winograd
Michigan statV^ Democrats
Chairman, ts rrsponsiblc for
recommending changes whicti
will improve the way conven-
tion delegates are selected
Cabinet positions
The Democratic fcminisiv
have also prepared a list oi
women they feel are quahficd
to work within the Carter ad-
ministration, including cabinet
positions. This particular is
sue though, will not be settled
until after the convention
Carter will be nominated for
tnc Presioency Wednesdav
night along with Mo Lidall o\
Arizona, who has publicv
given his support to Carter
Governor Edmund G Brown
of Californui and anti-abortion
candidate Ellen McCormack ol
New York The acceptance
•Peech will be dcUvercd Thurs-
day night
Tests of;
Cardiac Rhythm-
Exercise Capacity
Valve Function;
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Pree
Painless and . .^^
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can 825-3924 for information and aDnninfm^,.^
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Career Guidance
^ ^^^ P*«ifam starts July 3l»r
9ko
Tutoring • Wrrting SIcilK •
Power Readmg
The Guidance Center
3017 Santa Monica Bl^d
Santa Monica ^^
g^44»
Entertainment Index
Gilbert and Sullivan
not Greek to P'Oyly Carte
■•r-
■y A4aiii ^_,
Accompamed by only one
airplane, the D'Oyly Carte
Opera Company ftHed the
Of«i-air Greek ThptfT>t- with
the sprightly sounds of Gilbert
and Sullivan*s The ^'^e^- iaat
Friday night It was rndeed a
••epeMful opening night on the
*•« leg of the Cotnpanv's
North American tour, and if
the rest of the performances
are is good, the group can
return io Savoy Theatre well
satisfied
Tht' vfikado. a satire ot
English society and its atti-
tudes about iafMMi/ is one of
the most colorful Cfitt>ert and
Sullivan operas, and although
this productKin was somewhat
limited in the- exotic scenery
which usually accompanies the
work. It lacked nothing m
comedy or musical delight
As principal coawten lor
the D'Oyly ^^arte C^n^siiy,
John Reed plavs Koko. the
t ord HighTxccutioatt^^ 7 he
Mikado (and Sir Joseph Porter
in the coming H if S Pma
fore) Reed is truly the corri-
il.
fit
pktc comedian: Ik
dances beautifully.
ly. and reduces the audience to
helpless laughter with that
ecoa«B|f ei effort which be-
speaks comic fenius
Kenneth Sandford, who has
pUycd Pooh-Bah, Lord High
Everything Use, almost 2,m)
times, displays a pertact pe-
dantic ponderousness.
Geottrcy Shovelton ano
Julia doss, both relative new-
comers to the compans are
^cll matched as Nanki-Poo
and Yum- Yum Pitti-SMig is
hardly a major part, hut Jane
^••ttrffe amde It a memorable
o«e; M Edith she is something
to look forward io mThe
Pirates of Penzance -i
It ntflaiiiiy fTrfr in rnwuii
that the OXrvK (arte prcxJuc
tion of Gilbert and Sullivan
should be the definitive siykr
for were it not \u! the fint
-name the other Two iliipMr
never have been hea?d" It was
Richard DOyly ( vk'ht)
was in 1K75- arranged for the
collaboration of William Gil-
bert and Arthur Sullivan which
resulted m the production of
Triai Bv Jury Until 1889. the
three worked together. Gilbert
and Sulhvan turning out bnl-
^t comic operas while
nOvly Carte nmmmmi pro-
duction and buih the Savoy
Theatre exclusively for the
production of Enghsh comic
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- After Otlben an<l Sullivan
spill Tip in IIW.. D'Oylv
Index
continues on
pages
Carte, and later hi.s wijov^clen,
continued to produce Gilbert
and Sullivan works, and later
their son Rupert mainuined
Oic^tradiUt»», until 1M8. when
hit daugh^ter. Dame Bridget
irOyly Carte, toak over thui.
A Great
HANDBAG
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Til July_31st
Finest imports an
inventory problem
SmPA
10920 Kinross Ave; Westwood Village
tage review
v/^'
The Front Page
Although someuhat hampered by a slow and listlcsN lirsi
-act t^ theater arts department's pr induction of ^n Hechi
and C diaries M ac Arthur's 7 /»«' Front Pag, was a stvbsly
done, very funy show James Cadv^ direction was slick
Unjd and ta.st
He kept a tight rein on, and got quite a few
performances out of his larpe cast.
good
There were some pr()hlcm.s. though Steve fWevil was
energetic and comical as Hildv Johnson, but h^ seemed
more like a Ulented «ub reporter than the best newspaper-
man in Chicago His enthusiasm was boundless and his
---timing lust about perfect, but he was so bovish and bouncv
thai his portrait of a hardboiled reporter was rather hard to
believe
Another incongruity was Doug Spesert's costumes, which
were often glaringly 1940s, although the piav is .set in the
very early 1930s T he entire play ukes place in the Press
Room of a Cnminal Courts Building and Don C rabs' set 4
was gorgeously seedy. < ^ - f^ fr
position, which she holds t(>-
day Gilbert^ and Sullivan
operas have been performed
under the auspices of the
IVOyly Carte family for 101
years now
Tuesday the f Jth is the fast
night fox The Mikado but The
Pirates of Penzance can he
seen on the 14th and 15th. and
on the I6th. 17th. and IHth the
H MS Pinafore will be per-
formed The T8th is the last
night for the tour, and al-
though It IS b4lcd Jis the Pina
fore. It will. actually be a Mad
Nif^ht an impudent and im-
promptu melange of the three
operas ^
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OB Editorial
Space-Age Congressmen Blast Off
raise reo f^c €i4(. '^•^'u :^ ^axon s proposa to
give Mxon ihc okay he needj to raise re. fc». .»).
"mt '^^.'c .«"; ^'^r "°^ ^ '"-'' chick 1o7o ""hJ
same We deplore the underhanded manner that ha!
characterized thts proposal ™»nncr that has
--Jr^lmrSsrVn rT"^' " '"^'""^^ of Saxon's
Muacnts last attitude Saxon picked June to snrin.
his plan — catchinB th*. i/r i IvwiT V •?""«
ments and R^^pZr '*'*y- ""**^"' «o^^r"-
uicnis ana Keg Fee Committees at the worst Do^sihu
£r-rCer.-Lr1s:~r
Saxon has asked for a $16 a quarter increase at all
UC campuses Yet l]C Diu.J.:^ ' . *r^ "• *'^
*Sd W^^ 1 "^ «*o »«« seed an
uone on reSrH £ ^"'•^^ ""**^"' government has
^a^nlSt ^ J^L^^P"*^ "'"''•^'« Saxon's
simT^liS . ^y^""*}*^ 'ncrpwe « necessary,
rai rt; 7^" *?** «''" '^ <=h*ncellors the pow2 to
- fn^hnttemn, n?irr" "/ ""^ ^'^ "ep backward
Chei'Vrritulen^'rr^"' '° — ' '»- -->
While Chancellor Charles E. Youm has told th.-
Reg Fee Comai.tteelitre tHaTltotarSJr^ M ^
quarter is necessary ,o offset an expeJ^e^TencTt .„ e«
iTth^^fK""""'".* "' ^^"-^ ^"^ ^»' consuI.ed^S^ |.tof
m Uee'Is^oTun"' «^^^^"--' -^ R^« Fees Com!
""^:\r.^z rr;^ris"::^d:r^:-,
would students lose their court of last appeal - the
Regents - but expensive projects such asTe Spom
and Recreation Center and the Wcstwo<i Pllza ^1
project could be bu.lt by increasing reg fees^thTu^
ttra"rt:fi5 "r^ ^" VounglouldlSve ^d^
Recr^t on r*"!""*" "*^«' '° •»""** the Sports and
Recreation Center would be to show Saxon an
.ndK:ation that students wanted to see it built -aJS
Young, not student government or Reg Fee Con^
m.nee would decide what is an -mdicitior-
ou^it o? Ihl fPP*,^"' "^'^^"'""'^^ •« '^ combined
camm.« r f ^ ^""^^y- ""**'^"' governments, and
campus reg fee committees. Saxon has not been
hstenmg to either the Sute Department of Fmancc o?
Governor Jerry Brown r 'nance or
th?7;r" K*^ '"*' V ''**''y '*'^' ^ «"" no' increase
ceiling of $31 a quarter increase in reg fees is iiased on
S^d^'rC" \^' ^"^ '^»^ will fncreaii ^UC
Budget by $9 milhon in the fall of 1977 In the likelv
event that the .ute does not inciease the UC jJS
wT^r ^^ "*'* • •*»•«"'««"«»" increase above^
h.m^l?.i^. .°J""* ''''^™- "•« Saxon convinced
himself that the sute will come up with the additional
Tl^^ZnlS^^^'n' **^"^ "^^*'°- "^ sutement. to
pri"poSi*^iowr ''' "'*""" '"""'** ^**^* "'^ S**on
by Stuart Silverstein
WASHINGTON ,^ „ j,^, „,,^„ ^^
noied^h.. Am^ican polmcs .s only ^^n'Z^.
'o"g bf..n ^n m.egral part o» our pol....^
OPINION
Repf«enu„v« _ ,por,» „en, technology
For ..i f,r»t 1SS yew,. vMai were taken by roll
K,!r I '?^'' * *:* »P»<:»-*8e Congressmen They
h*ve l,»fle time for such antiquated procedure* A
solut^to the dilemma was^ound - ,h^ ^^f, .^
»n electronic scoreboard
1»0*rds are . lamihar „ght Banks of hghT
coordinated through complex integrated circuitry
*nd ma«er control panels - ,o?m letters and
numbers, keeping lans «M«rm.^ « ballparki
throughout the country —' — «*>ipirns
l« i» « viable iystem. to. like any ielf-respectm.
improved upon it.
Unhke the^ody, obtrusive behemoth, found
in moit sports palaces, the new House system is
angularly discreet Along the wa.nu. facmro
boxes o( the. same wood, iboui ten ttel in
ck^hed in-nch, Ceorgiao-n^otil wallpaper Aff -
tooks traditional and stately Bui, wait To, a vo^
Upon the .all tor a vote, mdiren l.ghtinR «t
fheeas. wall d.m^.and through - the talloao..?
shines a ro^,^, ,h. 415 < ongressmen^^n 'X.'
«J«Mnrh Mters As each Member , omes to the
fkxK to (ast his ot hec baUoi - *^ „.... °~,,
niaMir fifW .«•„ V^ *** puitrnn a small
oreen, aye Red. n«y (>, v (
Meanwhile, the oMeni boxes \
also eni.r,.^ .k * ooxes ,„, ,,i,- ,-nos nayr
*iso entered the a.tion. Mu.h as ih.- t>od«e,
board lists individual bmHnu aveiales .h- u *
^sarW li»>.» •— ™»»B aveiages. Itie House
•otra keeps a runmnR ^our» of the vole And
while these ever . hangm„ »w>eK ke^n .rw^sl
" m^te^Meml^ ^ '"""'^ ''"*" '^ "♦"'"
minutes Members have to ,asi voles At times
TkIT"" '"^^ """• ""• '•'"«' •■"' •• '«• shot
There ,s no bu/zer when time runs out but the
*^ r.*.*'"'' '* >"-' -^ •'"*' The vote »
recorded lo, the Congressional Record! !nd
business resumes
That, my trien^, ,» what they rail progress Bu.
there ,s no truth to the rumor that Carl Albert k
Soing ,„ hire an organtsr to enter.ain ihe -aZ, es
Airing quorum .alls In God w^trusl
• • •
cl^"Vl '^^ '"^^ *'wbacks .n wmning a
lo^ Congressional election » that two yeart
luZr" ""•»*"/"*«■ '° delen^your Seat agtim
>Uong opposition, for »o*^^^+^^e,hmari-
WWWcrat.c .ongressmen. many of whom tool
strongly gepubli, an districts by narrpw margins
„JL Washm^on lite » M*thmen-tmif ,n e«
•remely higl^inortality rate ("Cive me ell^io^
Of give me death.") election.
Ihi!!i.' C.!n« '""'' "* -twunding that many of
M^ <^°"ressmen are using their legM.)ai,ve
on lhe« <e-elertion campaigns. This pra< iKe is
tWabeth Ray mess irked »ft many people ( „„
gressional s.a«» are extrem^ wJ^J u> *-
legislifve and administrative work Pe,sonai wo^
rfn House ,ime4s, lor the mos, par, ,ole,a.e,i u.
siKne .,„i,es are goiOK l^-y.^.,! p,,.,^, ^,,,„;,':' -
^.Noizirv '''.;,:; ,r'"*-''^ - ""> —
, , ^"*'-"ii>*f dnd wlst> s#«f sr>fnf w)ur>«
lfl?Kl.ifor< J/»^,. fhf.tr ...» .L ' r\^un^
I frifff |ohs If, thi- process
Bring your letters, columns, and cartoons
toKerckhoff 110.
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flMMJrmnkml^ MLO^ KUdical Grou^
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Hair Transplantation
Acne-Complexion
Plastic Surgery
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leadbelly' producer Merson: over the stumbling blocks
Phon« for Personal Appointment • Medic*^ Literature on R«eMMt
AH Medical and MeaJth Plans • Credit Cardi/Credit Term* Avai
LOS An^
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B}' Adam Parfrey
"1 heard Leadbelly when 1
was a kid and he made an
astonishtng impression on .me,"
?»ay5 Producer Marc Merson
That impressian must have
been as lastmg as^ it was aston-
ishing, for, over thirty years
...later, Merson has produced a
lasting and astonishing film
about the great folk singer
HuMic Ledbetter entitled
Ljeadhelh It opens tomorrow
at thr Mann Chinese and
iiorial theaters.
Merson was a 1 2-year-old
student m New York's Little
Red SchotHhouse when he was
one of 250 kids entertained h>
the massive, white-haired
Ixadbelly^. who sang a vibrant
baritone and picked a twelve-
string guitar The scene was
vivid for Merson f**We couldn't
take our c off him"), but.
ironically . this was one episode
not included in his sprawling
biographical film of the in-
novative singer composer.- — -
The real story
. Merson, or "Buddy," as
friends prefer to call him, is a
youthful 42, but sports enough
_worry lines and crows' feet to
exude HoUywooidiMi kpttimacy.
He has produced numerous
television specials and shows
("terrific fun") and the well-
received feature film Tte Heart
ts a Lonely Hunter with Alan
Arkin and Cicely Tyson Ex-
plains McTson, l^adheliy was
an idea I had, based on know-
ing something of the music and
later finding out about the real
story I sat down and wrote a
50-page presentation of the
film "
This presentation contained
most of the songs and events
depicted in the finishtd film
(Merson had previously spent
weeks talking to people who
knew I cad belly Pete
Seeger. Alan Lomax and John
Henry liiLU Ik to^jiMK^^ lew)
and Mer^n persuaded David
Frost to put up enough money
to have a shooting script writ-
ten
Frnest ICinoy (Buck and the
Preacher) wrote the first draft
under the producer's super-
vision The final draft was then
shown to director Gordon
Parks, and as Merson says, "he
understood it completely, im-
mcdiatcK " Parks readmit over-
night and called Merson the
next mofjning saving he would
db k.—
The next stuntbltftg Wock
involved presenting the pack-
age to the studios, and without
much stumbling at all, Merson
sold P^rstmwAnt on the idea M-
financmg the parcel. "And
that's where the real work
began," .sighs Merson
. Two paramount pre-produc-
tion problems: budget and
casting, were still to be solved.
Financing a picture is very
clear cut "The studio takeis
Merson: Leadheih i^ very different from blues
singers like Billie Hu/hdav. You have the sense
that they were either n aimed or defeated by hfe.
Leadbelly is a man ^w/, made it — a triumphant
person. And in tht •. >ui, he never considered
himself down or defemt'd.
one point of view that is
that the ^ilm will cost as littk
as possible And the pi
Parks*
ducer takes the point ot view
that you can*t possibly do it
lx>r that amount of monev,"
* told
ply and with strength
B) Adam Parfrry
A sheet ol sweat coats the
muscular body of a chain-
^fkJXW^i^. aged Black man He
swings an iron hammer and
sings an in4pmitable work
tune The song is "Old
Hannah." The man is Huddie
Ledbetter, or Leadbelly, the
legendary folk blues figure
I he film IS Gordon Parks*
Ltmdbelly^ as moving and tri-
umphant a motion picture as-
you will ever see.
talking into an old recording
phonograph Thus begins the
rV*rFi*tKc ot leadheih . which
superbly parallels the develop-
ment of i cadbelly's lilc to the
development of his music
"Green Corn," "Fannin
Street," "Silver City Bouhd,"
"Cotton Fields at Home,"
"Goodnight trtne,' **Sweel
Mary," "Midnight Special.**
and "Old Hannah" are all folk
now. * • •
The film, dynamically script-
Rozaa lean and MoiJ^
Essentially, Leadhelli. pro-
duced by Marc Merson and
David Frost, is the epic tracing
of the eventful tile of a brawl-
ing and life-loving man who
threw all obstacles to the wtad
and suffered dearly for it. The
film, which opens tomorrow at
the Mann Chinese and Na-
tional, IS fffSMKd bv a musi-
cologist's (JMiii E BrodhoKH
recording wmmm with Lead-
bellv (Roger I Moslevl I r;»H
belly enthusiastically recounts
the events and songs of his life.
ed by Ernest Kinoy. points a
finier at the acute racism
Leadbelly had to endure
•round the turn of the centurv
In a poignant s^enc, Leadbelly
plays Uncle Tom lor Gevemor
Pat Neff (John Henrv Faulk),
hoping for a pardon Fhe
proud 1 cadbeUy virtually gags
on his ielf-mduced degrada-
tion.
Parks (Sha/t the I earnihr
Trrei, a Inrmtr phmugiai
novelist and cOTnnn<v.-r
captured (with thi
gPBpf"
matb|jrapher Bruce Sunccv
the count rvside\ astonishing
beauty: an 'ironic delineation ol
thci disparity between the
beauty of the environment and
the oppressiveness of white
society
_ There are flaws in Parks'
direction" the almost saintiv
treatment of. his subject ^nd
some uninspired editing and
detail work but l^eadhe/h »
so continually well-paced Mg
nificant and involving that it
remains his uncontested
masterwork.
As Huddle Ledbetter. Mos
ley IS narvelously broad in-
nocent and affecting As the
enigmatic Governor, Faulk is
briefly but memorably seen
Art Evans is especialK bril-
liant as Blind Lemon Jeflerson
Leadbelly's folk-singing friend
Although this is Evans' first
screen appearance, he is a
superb talent and a command-
ing screen presence
Fred Karlin's excellent score
adds untold life and weight to
Lcadbelly*s saga, and Robert
Boyle's sets are similarly ap
propriate.
The musicologist's phono
graph skips to the end I cau
belly IS ama/ed that his em ire
life story is recorded, but he i^
saddened by the prohabilit\
that It will collect dust on the
I ibrary of Congress' shelves
He wants his songs lo fly free
and uabound
In Gordon Parks' biograph-
ical film. Leadbelly's storN '^
told simpiv and with strcn^'th
-h
says Merson With the catting
of the virtually tinknown
Roger t Mosley (a viui and
ingenuous Leadbelly) as the
lead, and the lack of huge
crowd scenes or burnings of
Atlanu, Ijeadhellv was fi-
nanced modestly, though not
skimpily
During actual shouting,
Merson was careful to keep his
diitance in order not to impede
Marks'- directorial irhoiccs
Bruce Surtees (Lennys did the
photography and Associate
Producer Jack Grossberg acted
as Mcrsons financial liason
and attempted to keep costs
down ("he was indispensihle"
says Merson)
With principal phuujgiaphy
completed, editing was the
next step. Editor Harry
Howard worked with Parks
and Merson for weeks oh the
tedious process Meanwhile,
Merson had Fred Kariing do
the delicate juxtaposition of
4iOflg. score and tmage. —
Exeeutivc action ^
In early 1976, an answer
print (the actual edit,or's print)
of the completed film waa
screened for Paramouht exe-~
cutives and their response wna
good. Thetr enthusiasm was
confirmed by a preview audi-
ence's 90 per cent favorable
response This was, Merson
says, "with a white audience "
Paramount, still operating
under the old adage that
,i
siudiofc believe in ^heir films
propoftionalK to their cost,
was at first confuaed about
how to market Uadheilv "It
did not fit in any ol the
natural molds." Merson ex-
plains. "It isn't Jim Brown or
Fred Willumson exploitation,
or even iMdv Sint^.s the Blues
in the leMC of being a sen-
lational story with a big star."
Mcraon feels that f r'uJht liy n
as much a Black pi as The
Gndfathcr is an Italian film or
f-iddUr .>n^ihe Moitf. a Jewish
mov le
Behemoth
Paramount s promotion and
art was feeble
The studio artists drew an
angry, staring, behemoth Black
man; a guitar m one hand a
chain in the other Needless to
say, this was not the quintes
sential Leadbelly -"The art iv
totally fhifirepreseniative of the
film." exhorts Merson -Jlie
film should attract a young,
wh 1 1 e a ud le nct^TTie art wfll
probably drive them away."
Merson on Leadbelly, the
man: . "Leadbelly is very dif-
ferent from blues sinjers like
Billie Holliday You have the
senfc that they were either
maimed or defeated by life,
l^adbellv is a nun who made
It — a triumphant person His
material had. an enormous vi-
brancy And in the end, he
ncvtr con.sidered himself down
or defeated
Some ' Wiz^over rainbow
iK
\% luuML w tiniT again ^ei >'<^^'-
Huddie I ed better would have
wanted it that way.
By Laura Klemer
The H^'t: (at the Ahman-
son I heat re through Sept-
ember m IS full of beautiful
songs, lively dances, spedi-
cular costumes, talented cast
members and a streak of
happiness and vivaciousness
not seen or matched in
many years.
Winner of seven Tony
Awards, The Wiz is a new"
musical version of L. Frank
Baum's classic The Womier-
ful Wizard of Oz (script bv
William F Brown) Doubt -
lenl this show will become
as much of a classic as the
book and as memorable as
the 1939 version with Judy
Garland
The Wiz fUfU off am-
bitiously, just as in the ori-
ginal story, with a storm
•weeping I>orothy away
from Kansas to the land of
Oz. But in this show, the
storm IS made up* of several
dancers drenad in billowv
black costumes A highlight
of the production, the cos-
tumes continue to be fan-
tastically bright and creative
throughout the play De-
signed by Geoffrey Holder,
who won Tony awards for
both costume design and
direction, the unique outfits
were often applauded during
the show.
The audienee*s eyes are
treated to an array of color
which begins ^ith a yellow
brick road composed of four
dancers bedecked in hanaaa
ytllufi uwai. jatkeu iiaJ
two-piece suit with a mane
that circles his heiad and
conimues down to serve m
the lapels, the Emerald
City's inhabitants appear as
fresh and cool as a mixed
• green salad, and the Wi?
himself IS gloriously draped
in a gold and green Imie
cape with a powder-whitc
jumpsuit underneath
But under all this specta-
cle IS. something even more
spectacular an unusually
talented cast Each member
excels in singing, dancing
and hamming Ren Woods,
as Dorothy, is especially
gifted. A beautiful actress
with a glowing smile.
Woods sin|s with a high
level of energy and genu-
inely moves the audience
wrth her solo *Home "
AlHHllCI lULWUi tuiie, "H
matching «frr^^ T|W5 ^
wardiv Lion ww«iis a fuyv>
You Believe," is song power-
fully by Andre de Shields.
Harney, Rom: wizardry
as the Wiz Dorothy's co-
horts, the Scarecrow (Va-
lentino), the Tin Mao (Ben
Harney) and the Cowardly
Lion (Ted Rots) are fine
actors as well as singers
RoM, a Tony Award win-
■er, is particularly comical
as a hip king of the jttfigle
who pleads for pity by say-
ing **! was an only cisb.**
Charlie Smalfs music it
thorotifhiy ei^yable, rang-
ing from toil, touching
tunes to hand-clapping
songt such as "Eaae on
Down the Road.** George
Faison's choreography is
equally creative and fresh,
notably the dance of the
winged monkeys.
"Somewhere Over the
Rainbow." the populhf song
from the film, is not fea-
iuieti III TV mil. Put ta
rainhow is and the pot of
gold IS overflowing
SEPI'S GIANT
SUBMARINE
f
r
I
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good through 1976
I
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Good July 13 thru July ISl
Jerry Brown
Gerald Ford
Ronald Reagan
Jimmy Carter
Interested in helping the
UCLA community learn about
these candidates and others?
Project Awareni
is now accepting applications
for research assistants in
306 Kerckhoff Hall.
For further information,
Call 825-4847
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For aaatatanes mim liouaing AaeHmt-
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COLLASORATOM woMlpg • psmjtU
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(14 Jv 131
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OIAMOMO lfitPt«Md<»t rtn« 1.90
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COMPANION for Ti
-od auoig^i omtf #.
campus
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-wiirVliit womctHOP" lonnnif to
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Opylay Avonua $40 for bolb umrnmr
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Studonf discounts. Dallvary to 9:00
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Graduates ■■■■■■
PERM A PLAQUE
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Saturdays, Sundays
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Hoy duty plola PMtar sidt $210.00
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BLOOD Donors worHod 90 paid lor
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1129/woali guar
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help wanted
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Mabculous claarMrr damandad
ily Floilbis hours 479
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227. 9702
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(19 Jy 13)
AOOREBBCRB wpfHod
. Work at homa no a
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1401 Wllaon Blvd
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fmmodlatalyr
SUMIMER JOBS
Pmri'tknm or Full-
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good organizational/ communication
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PMd loach fPMMy pIj9 IPPPMB bi Bovorly
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=.27.-,070 ,„^,,,
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CoMMct MIchaal 13210 B
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ovo«tal>la.
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For
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lyplfftg. fWf«g. parson muat ba orgpnixoo
food wrNbif ablMa aaaantlal Stan at
1980 037.0400
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activity tima flailbia Conlpct DoM
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ACTORS
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i34 Jv23)
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AUTO INSURANCE
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PRO
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a wOMOi
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A iBVBl Ackpf man ^
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TOWYO TAlPAl HOfHO KORO
I OAANO SPAIN ia- ^c
^•A. PMOI COUMPOLMaO KmIooTii!
r.
47S-4444
■-■^.
eURORt larpol Africa StMBoot
FRpRIi yoor rpunp. ISCA 11007 %m
VIconIa BlvO ad L.A. 00040-020
YBOAB roMiB R^
JyRr IT i IB >
(23 jr 13)
eUBOFC laraol. N.Y 0 OfftoiH TOC
coat IB«Rla. A.I.S T 1430 Bo La
LA 001-2727.
*-T— ^^^^* (23 Olr)
I
ISC
TOURS A TRAVEL
Spn'ng Summ«r A rgii Charlart'
lo
■ WTfK-
London
Bnjttalt
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ISC atao runt local BfB tou'-
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Call U« lof infoffTi -'
473
9 fi U
^^m
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Insmuto 0*pf 10. 1S417 Tupp<r. liput
wda Ca 91343 _
(19 Jy M)
TV^INO Fatt^ •ccurat* sarvtc* ai
•lu««ni rates llM taia^tric Tarm
Mpara. thaaaa ale eS2-MO0. •23-431f
(nights)
(2S )
tutorinQ
TYPIWO •! thaaaa
Kathy ahmf • p.m
dtasartatlons and
ratas Calf
t21f LOVI^LV ^_^
•^mrtmmnt Srantwood utiUllas^nciudad
No pats Nogaraga Nonsmotaar Faculty
only 472-<M5g
(26 J y It)
(25 •;
UAMN twadtali
from a
Call Aka at
(24 Jy 19)
CHIME tC Mandarin ^alilnf fiatlva
taactiar, wall-aHparlancad with Cali-
fornia Cradanllal Individual, •mall
(a4 0lr)
TYPING at homa • I9M Eiocutlva
Naol and accurata Carbon rlPPon CaM
M»-1iM aflar • pm.
(2SO«r)
MUTH ftoloctrlc. Ihoaaa. diaaonations,
larm popart, mlac. Eipartancad. fast
(25 Otr)
WALK to UCLA
sious Bacnaio<» S«ngioa
1 Bodroom Apts
Towar Apartmants 477-M53
10941 Stratnmora Pool Eiavators
Security Qaraga
SMOIAL SUMMCR MATES Ot
OWin^afr Tarraca 47t-7029
540 Gianroch S43 Landfair
478-483-5 10-5 16 tandfaif 477
f«*fALi itiMo ope ol ton Olof o tlolo
tor tan sam Scarry MO- 1M7 7t3 I47i
. (2t Jy 27)
TOUNG pro«o«o«Miot fm^lTlI^
2 bo* 2bath wnh sama T*nnts courts
Palms S17« 00 30i 1455 •^•nings
(2f Jy 13)
FEMALE to shars 2 badroom lownhouaa
with tmmmim graduoH sludanl Moatty
lurmsn«d f 147 ttt-M 70 #«#•
(31 Jy 23)
CMiMliTPV. PHyalea iMtloWci. Cal.
cirtu*. Algobra. Gaomatry Trigono-
Cona^illBtton Etc Boat In town
Biiggart 3b2MM
(a4jyia)
MOFESSIONAL wrllor with B.A In
(UCLA) wM lypa OfMl adit tarm
olc. Oaor 2S yoora as-
. Joiocbte. Woatwood Vb-
lapa. Cooy ^rblng. Campobbw roiM.
lyaonrtoo MNOobMioy 473M«it3
, (2f Ob*)
SUMMEb Ponlola ■! allibli ***Luaury
•Inglos and 1-bdrms Walk to Waatwood
and UCLA Cloaa lo Cantury City
Haalad Pool 479-5404.
(20 Jy 30)
EUPNItHEO/Unfurnlshad bachalor
$140 tingia* $105 Pool H«arl ol
STRAIGHT Famola looking for soma
to shars apt rtaar UCLA campus WMI
ppy tiS.OO OM-MSO
(20 Jy 10)
FEMALE roommola wonlod to shara two
bobroofM ape. portlally furntattod Hmmr
baach. busllnas July -Sapt 1125 00
Rachol 302-4213.
(2iJy27)
JAZZ PIANO TECHNIQUES. All
I voicbtga A progaialona of' lop
wn and •m¥h9r bl(4s kayboard
Foal picad prhrala laatona in-
•toory A praebcol
lo koyboord 473-3871.
(24 Otr)
RUTH C DISSERTATIONS. THESES
STATISTICAL FAST. DEPENDABLE
SEVEN OATS A WEEK. MANY TYPE
STYLES •3t-042f.
(»Ob)
^y • QWg MCAT. QBUT TiUMb^
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StSS. ISBfS Vonloa SS7-B474
(24 0«r)
lo >wlp you a^an yout iuturm
CAREER GUIDANCE
4 wk program starts July 31st
Tiitoring ,- Pqwot RpbOmg - \^riting Skills
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Th« GuidancB Center
3017 Santa Monica Blvd.
Santa Monica
TVPINQI
fast accurata Mld-Wllahlro.^Froo'
parting CaN JoofHio: 3St SSOS.
(25 Otr)
TVPINQ by UZ - BCIIBCMPLAY BM-
OALIST ■ TaCATMOnrs - MANU.
BCaiPTS EDITINO. laM BCLICTRIC
N - CHOICE TYPE FACE, (fioof OHtMh
1). S82-104S
(2S Qlr»
TYPING Do«»a at homa Tarm popars.
aaaays. ihaaas. disaartatlona. Call
Roba SImoff. 3tt-3S43 or 3tt-3gi4
(29 Jy 23)
EJ^PBRT tbofla lypbif/eonauHlng. IBM
corracting caaaatta transcribing. SovorM
typlats Modlcal. paych.. loc<«.. ||onorM.
•th ft Mayflald Sarvicaa. 990^930
(25 Jy 23)
TUTORING _.
Engliah PhD Garman. grmmmmr,
convarsatlon. writing Eiporloncad
tMChor.bMMMIer. OovM 494-7049. 494^
'2035. ^-.^.
(24 JY »a»
TYPMKJ. Lot Caaoy do H Tarm
thoaas. dlsaartatlons.^tc* Call 394-
7507 iof Iroa aatknala ... ^
(25 Ob)
JJ^L -qualified tutor tor spaclalltad
-*-^— i»«trMCbo« lo Jiidiiig. wfHittg. spdablng
groupa. 475-2947.
EDITH- IBM Typlfig Tarm papors.
IJboaaa. dMoovtoBofia, raaumas. tottara,
manuacrtpM. Moot conaclantious. fiat.
accurata. 933-1747
(25 Ob)
JhgMab
937-9474
(24 Jy 23)
OIBBERTATJONS. th<
jports. Noar compua; aaay
9T7-a»72 fftar 5 p.m.
(25 Jy 23)
(24 Ob)
BASIC holography Claaaos tor noat
9-woak.cycta start Thursday July 22.
I 7:00 PM Studants must hava fully
■^Mtalils camara. and Nghtmotor Call
V tomm in for dotalls Art s Photo
2151 S«M«aot LA 90029 (213) 413-3343.
\ , (24 Jy 27-)
NEED Halp In EnglLah? Tutoring S
JdNbig By PhD 393-9109
(24 Otr)
EXCELLENT Typbt Wtll typa pbpars.
tf>oaas. manuscripts, diaaartatlons
lottors IBM Soloctric II. Coll Anna-
479-3229 - ^
(25 Ob)
TERM Pi -_ _
typing Froo pMiup. BaRMcf 39^3927
(25 Otr)
TYPING all nooda. noot. accurata
E^*2!?^l!!?L_*^^»»^ Co* •^'^
••1-4995 babwoaii 5pm-iapM, __>
MATR Tutofb% by M A Grod Slattatlcs
probabMty algabra. and GRE
•arvica VtclnMy 451-4939
(24 Jy 19)
WRITING HELP TERM PAPtRB.
THESES DISSERTATIONS ALL SUB-
JECTS WRITING. EDITING. RE-
SEARCHING. TUTORING BY PRO-
FESSIONAL WRITER 396-5471.
(24 Jy 33)
PROFESSIONAL typing sacvica l_„
Soloctrtc II EdNlrtg. manuacrlpts. thaals.
larm popors. dlaaariations - m hours
392-39a0.
(25 Otr)
IBM BCLECTNiC Typbig, EngNah Grod..
Eiparlancod thasas. dissarlatlons
Guaranlaod baautlful work 904 pg
WLA. 391-9494.
(25 Ob)
LBAT. oBior Mot , ,
Indlvlduol. amoll g roup 7nat ruction.
(B4 0b)
typing
gSfy- 1^***- •©cw^* aonrlca at
iMMa ralaa Noor compya. Phono: 474-
LIGHTNING TYPING CO
***• EsMm«tM
FbOFlStlOWAl COLLEOC typing
9PCCIALIST
T«n« aapvfs TlwsM DisMMaUom fumtur—
I^Bfttfii I smiistii tcWwess MsOt TaaiM
'*•••»•♦"• tiusie. iatllng Cow«»s»Mn9 X«ro«
tlm% Ma-J1«l
JPERFECT PAGES by Profoaalc
tngnsh grada. w/12 yaprs aaporlortca
IBM Corract Salact. - chooaa typa
atyla 999-2097
^ (25 Jy 27)
RROFESSIONAL WRITING. EDtTM4G
RESEARCH BOOKS. JOURNAL ARTI^
CLES. DISSERTATIONS. RROPOSALS
JAMES WINTERFIELO WEST HOLLY-
WOOD 935-5745. 770-0020
(29 Jy IS)
TfPmQ - Expodoncod
<M<f worti at homo. W
BofH. Baport worti. 474
OS 1
KAY Typing, oditing Engllah grod
Olaaanottons apaclalty Tarm popors.
raaumoa. lottors IBM 929-7472!
(25 Ob)
SYLVIA Typing IBM ERparlancod
sacratary noat. accurate Studont rolo-
754/poga. moat )obs SaS-4995
(25 Jy 23)
TYPING Edlbng^oat Accurata/ Mufti
aspartancad/Plck-up Oallvor/Rlfhtaous
Ratos/Rolatoiicas/ Sandy 499-2499
(25 Ob)
^WESSIONAL Typbig o« Thoala. larm
•^ ^Mi pofloct pdwMd
Can 399.2954
IBM Tbasas. larm
langiiogss. caa-
LOng aapaflonca. noot. accurate
" or 279-9471
(25 Ob)
IBM PICA Thoaoa dteaarlabona. tofwi
popors. EdH spomng. ale. Eapsrianood
Lagal Sacratary Noor campus 47t-
7S99.
(25 Otr)
PROFESSIONAL Topo tronscrlblng.
oBMIng. and rewrite Eipartancadln moat
Nolda including madlcal. payebdIpM
•nf psychiatric IBM Eiacutivo mm-
/25 Jw 711
pptb fumiohed
XRERT Typlrtq Tast
abte Brandy 487 31 ii pNar 9
131
^URN
of Wilshtrs
JiBS-
$190 27t.35J9 or 931
(as Ob)
MALE 1 b«i
upatairt
-fmm. iir<
9S27 ovanlngs Swaokonds
(
FURNIBHED/Uitturmobod ^„
Sbon waNi lo compua. vMogo. Parkir«g
9129. §99-9499. ,_
(29 Jy 23)
(29 Jy 27)
909 OAYLEY. acroas from Dykatra
Bocbslors. sbigtes. ona badrooma 473-
17SS. 473-0924 ^ ^
(29 Ob)
BOOM to ahofo bi 2 bdr
fmmmt* only PooirS75 JO 929-9970
(29 Jy IS)
1190 VERY Attractlvaly lurniahad Ig
1-bdrm. 9oporate garoga Laundry On
South Coming - cloaa lo SM Fwy 9
(29 Jy
FEMALE lo aiMO _
P«^<««"y ?»«'«1»»»«A ^•f»wa SI 32 50
<as Jy 13)
FEMALE aboro 2 bdrm Brantwood
IllSaS mofMb
9249 FURNISHED 2 bdiioo. 9 ^.
Soparata goraga. laundry' Soulh'
Cy*^^ fteor SM Fwy 9 Koloor HoopMM
(asjy
1180 FEMALE to
Avo9 9-1 Noar
(SSJy 19)
<29 Jy 19)
1% ROOM Houaa bacholpr klteban.
9150.00 utmtlos nrludod 2S37 Woat-
wood Blvd 799-923|.
llSJy23)
ROOMMATE wonlod ' itftiLf, 2-
bdrm apt . 11 blo<;ks iroM boocb
unfurnishad Santa Monico $199. 9C
392-3939 or 999-2^99
(29 Jy 13)
LARGE Ona badroom. aporbnoni Utlll-
tlos Includad tl75 Kuga basamani
apartmant Uttlltlas includad t17S
CaM 477-9999
(29 Jy 13)
GRADUATE
Sopt 592. own room. Pool. Eaonlwga
Vol 599-5729. Nina 939-0999
(29 Jy 27)
apt, unfurnished
1299 2 BEDROOM. 2 both, corpoli^
^'Apos. firaplaca. patlp vkaw.^toi^.
>.rafrtgarator 3249 Oitertdhd. ,477-3200.
(27 J^ 13)
FEMALE roommote Ona bodrodiii. fira-
placa. pool •mun*. nmf sctiool, ooeurlty
BIdg. RoasonalMa Elalna 479-94B94 479-
- I7t Jw 19)
FEMALE Grod atudant
bsd bodroom 4pt bi Santo Momco. StBO/
' 1S9-3933 oftor 5
(29 Jy 19)
S180 S21S BO DELUXE 1 and 2 badroom
aparimants in Palms QvpoL diipsi
Studant building 93/-79SSL.; —
..-, ^^ (27 Jy 23)
LARGE 1 iMdroom and dan Firaplaca.
dtshwashar. potfr. rac Quiat. S290
2nd St SM 757-5191 aai 2S27 Aak lor
(27 »y 20)
NEWLY fanovoted. sacurNy bblg.. '/f>«-
block l>aach 9 bus. Vanica Partly
lurniahad Bach. 990-1100 singte 5139-
9140. l-aa S19B417S 999-1001
(27 Ob)
9190 SPACIOUS ona
niahod. Huga waMi-m c
dropoa. Pool, borboqua Noor Roborl-
"^""^ (27 Jy IS)
FEMALE Rbite wonted to abora 1 bdr
apt Pool, aocur^ti
9M9m or 599-ii«
. (29Jy.19)
LMI^Qt loaMofiobte duploi. Flroplooo
tfbibig. kHcbon. own room. 477-
930 Voteron. 9198 to 9225
' (29 Jy 13)
****^" nrTniniil
aiMd 2-aiory ■paibiisiit 2 ..
2 bo«h Pool. Groot tocoNon Judv
472-4771.
(a9 Jv 131
for subl
FURNISHED Ookji apt
7 2 iodroowa. 2
C(
939-4511
from July 9-
gSS LARGE 9 BiBiouiii. 2 bobi
tbppoa, pobo, wow
SMS OaoHond. 477
CRy
'»• Jv IS)
(27 Jy 11)
IF YOU ara sasking a qutet.
raaldanoa amof>gai mobMO
piapls. aoa 440 Vateibw. l
and 2 badroom plus don. $350 and
up. Firaplaca. watbar. diahwaahar.
bolcony pool 473-9229
(27 Jy 19)
VENICE- Morbte Aroo 5190.00 1 bod-
room apis. Room to buMd bluawatar
boot. 922-7139 avonlngs. waobonds
(27 Jy 2S|
2 BEDROOM furrMahad apt avallabte
JMly 17-Sopt. or )uat Aug 5205 mc Call
(29 Jy 13)
housas for rent
7/98-9/9 hMfdobod Spoclous 4 bad-
rooms, bofba Pool Vollayball Car
1950 IS minutes UCLA 793-2747
(30 Jy 19)
MALIBU. daluaa Panthouaa - condo-
minium on boach. fantastic viaw 2
bdrm. 1 ' ) bofb. buNd-ins firaploca. larga
balcony pool, paddia tannis. )uat norbi
of Lao Cartllo Stata Baach. 5900/monlb
349-4199. 349-3099. 459-2751
(27 Jy 27)
IF YOU mn aaoktng a qutet digntfiad
foMBonoo amongst mature profaasionoi
poopte aoa 440 Vateran 1 badroom
2 badroom 9 2 badroom plus don 9
dining room 5300 and up Firaplaca
watbar dishwaabor.. bolcony. pool 473
'^^ (27 Otr'
9979 ONB
CLOSE UCLA in boouttful Cbovloi HiMs
2_>»<>40ms. 2 baths buin-ms Only
STSS. Andfo Rogte 474-9989.
(90 Jy 13)
8910 MAR VISTA. 2 ♦ dob. IS boths
stova diabwoabai Firopiaca Garab*
Qmr^nmr 988-7703
f39 Jv 23)
1 BEDROOM cool-port furnlsbod for
ona-naar ocaan S200^mo Santa Monica
Dan 929-7988
(30 Jy 231
5475 FURNISHED housa Mar Viste
2 dan 1'. bath F«nc«u yard Sapt 1
Jan S 397-4542
(10 Jv 23)
houso for salo
•ACNBLOa Pad Boaony aipo CbP.
yon 2-badraowi 2 alory babif ibmn.
SM.888 Sortda Raaltors 479-9494
(31 A 19)
fafrl8. uttl. Ouiot. .
pratorrod 419 Ocaan Ava*^ S.M. MS-
9979
(27 Jy 13)
apts. to sharft
PACIFIC Pallsodos Villoga • Spacious
3 badroom 2 story Spanish housa
nawly ramodatad dan famdy room.
formal dining room 2 baths larga
anclos4^o «ard $900 month CaU 479-
2049
HOUSE ON BEACH
2 BR ponoted don. I
Ig mooter 2 firaptecoa
10539 Lindbrook E
5471 Coldwall Bankor
«a Vallartob9l
house
(2« ly 23t
APARTMENT to shara lor summor
JPPbjmotes aronted to sbora furmaboo
2 iadiooin 2 bo» apt l-block bom
campus $97 so mafMh until mid Sapt
\T\ I anrtiih iTi aiai
3 fcadiaoiii. Y bobi t
1 hduoa bom boach ab a Rulot Mon
hattan Baacb walk stroot Arailabia
Soptembar tttrough Juna 5450 par
month td#a( *r>. -^''ttrtor mtih loan
Iflffi 'III fr -[ BaaBni nr
r99 iv
^' >
^r— ^
■aK-iOiHWnwii I iMWaamwmMft* -'
I Man lite
X
FATHER ot two wi
atudant ona chbd to sbora noot'old four
bodroom VarMca homa Good araa
5200 00 plua 1 3 ubilbas 821-2138
(32 Jy 13)
YOUNG Wamaa
•bidani or piaMsslaiiai to sbom houaa
Jw tbaat WoUywood Dajf* 4 72 is 1 5 Evas
»d S9 tS)
bowod 5100 monbi
8:88 p.m 279-1980.
192 J«9Bt
ROOMMATE wanted te
haorbbouaa wRb coupte SISB/i
coM after 9:-30 p.m 199 •091
(22 Jy 19)
BEAUTIFUL Tapawga Cyn SpNf
homo te •hmrm $19000 499-1710
(32 Jy 23)
% ulll 922-9812.
Hterina Pot ok $182.50
(32 JY 2S|
WOBMM
abara wtth 2 non-amokor.
15 mm UCLA Prtvote
room. bolb. 499-1420
(32 Jy 13)
MOWBMOICER 3 bdrm. 2-baBi Har
moaa 3 bllis to baach. Noor lorga-
" $117/010. 372-4881 oao
(32 Jy 23)
LARGE houaa Vanica Baacb; own
bodroom. bothroom. yord: gordan.
a«id back antrancos 9200 382-4279
(22 Jy 13)
FEMALE abara 3
larga yord Dog OK Groot ^uatlon
$1 28. mo. Ais/ Qoia 788-9391 oaoa. ^
(32 Jy 19)
LARGE houao to-ahara $175-non-
Mw dogs coll Suo or
(22 Jy
FRIVATE Houoa to sbora Morina Dal
Roy- Badroom arNb Wmplaca fi70-
aaaibngs mht i oo P.M. 988-8840
(32 Jy 2QI
teaba»o2bd.
Hill* firaplaca. yard. CaN
(32 Jy 13)
h^iaii
nBaiiad
VISITING prolossor soaks furnlahad
2-3 bodroom rantel Dae 79-Moy77 Two
9,7.4212^474-8179.
(99 Ob)
NEW Faculty wlabos to subtal turn.
Jiouoo or opt.. Sopt -Doc . 2 adults.
1 cbSd, 1 eal Monkkonon. 7 Bonon
A» S.E. Mbmaapaba Mmnoaote 55414
(912) 379 2719.
(33 Jy 27)
YOUNG Abomoy
•Pdago. or goraga
dlataly Call 993-5343
t imma-
(33 Jy 27)
PROFESSIONAL coupte doaboa teaaa
turnishod houaa In Wool-
^f«*9 iiplsiiiisi CaM 474-
(33 JY 23)
••f •^ONSIBLE womon doslros to
Houaaalt August Waat LA Proterrad
rotofaffK:as 991-9797
(33 Jy 23)
FEMALE Grad 40 working mm dte-
clpllnad cat Own room your spaMmaiit
S M Palms 939-9349 avas
(33 Jy 13)
FELLOW (M D ) with family doalros
a yoars rantel of 3 BR bauaa atarbag
•;1 T9 Plaaaa comact Dr HaMI. c/o
Division of Opthalmalofy. Stanford
Unl* Modical Canfr BlaiHoiU. Ca
(22 Jy IS)
ji^oam and board
exchanoe for h^p
EXCHANGE room.
al campya, lor • t«rs.
wa«ilf»f dlatanca
OM aidy 471-8817 mr
{t7 Jy 12)
ROOM, board
jr rtM rsrt fhB9 i m
•nta Ivoa 889-4223 Dm
Days
^lfc1iil»K«
(37 JySB)
i^iatfli
. vl.
-Bijyi looking to brigtiter lracl(
•y Steve Finley
Dt SporU Writer
UCLA head trBck coach Jim
Bush is the firgi to admit 1976
wB9n*t a very good year. At
any other 9chooi it would he
considered a great year
The Brums finished tJbe 4ual
meet scbboh with one loss and
recorded some of the aalkHi's
top times in the pracBBB.
The 1976 track ,and field
team was not characteristic of
past Bruin teams UCLA be-
gan the season recording some
of the world's best marks, but
then proceeded to decline fast-
er than a downhill racer
"Tm not looking for ex-
cu9e9.** said Bush, ''but we
were a young team and wc had
90ine key injuries **
. ^^ Vai< arfument
Bush does have a valid argu-
ment The year began with
miler Curtis Beck's back injury
and ended with long jumper
Jerry Hcrndon never regaining
the form which won him an
NCAA crown a9 a freshman
(1974). In between, junior col-
lege transfers Grant Nieder-
haus (intermediate hurdles)
and Bennie Myles (400 meters)
had to compete the entire sea-
son with nafging leg injuries
-Next year itojkhoukl be a
different story." said Buah
**A11 of my young men will be
■ y^f oUiteT Bad my a99i9tanu
•od I have jU9t completed one
of our nuMt 9UO0BHful recruit-
ing years since I came to
'JCLA I'm rBBll> excttad
About next
Any American track coach 'hs trade mark. Four
would get excited just hearing
the names Number one on the
list 19 recent US Olvmpic
Trials 200 meter champion,
Millard Hampton The 5-11.
^^5 |k>und Hampton, who
hails from San Jo9e's Silver
Creek High School. 19 probab-
ly the best track and field
pro9pect in the 9chooi9' long
hi9tory of surs
reeruil9 , ■ '
UCLA
Here's a rundown on tfik
year's recruits Millard Haoi^
ton: '*Hc reminds mt of the
great Tommie Smrrh ('t«
Olympic 200 meter winner) He
always has that something ex-
tra, that last 9Bcond burst of
speed you see about every 10
years,- said new aasistant track
^oach Jim Kiefer as he relaxed
in his office '■' _
Hampton, who is biall like a
boxer, dominated tfie Junior
colleft scene this past 9aaBOfi
In the Sute Meet, he anchored
both relBy9 (400. 1600 meter)
to wtm He aiso won the 200
and placed high in the 100
'>«•■ TiMNBpBOil, from Nor-
walks Gahr High School, was
one of the nation's top 440
men in 1976 Consistency was
timei
Thompson ran the 440 in 47
seconds flat He won the CIF
Masters Meet and placed high
in the Sute Meet. He aUo ran
on Gahr's top flight sprifnt
relay team He can help the
Bruins m many wavs Kiefer
said the 6-2, 160 pound
Thompson has run the 100
yard dash in 10.0 with a bad
«Tt and the 880^yard run to a
"Tcipectatrtc^^-ia. mm^ <:omtk '
Bush has indicated he wilt
Concentrate on the quarter mile
and mile relay
Surprifte paapie
Mark Jenkins, a sprinter
from the Vaiiey $ Notre Dame
High School, should surprise a
lot ol people Jenkins was
injured when the 9easoa
reached its climax with the
prestigious meets like the CIF
finals and the championships
recruiting prospects
Not since Haroki ^usby (1965)
ha9 UCLA had ^uch a con-
9i9^t spring prnipm. Jenkins
wa9 alway9 near hi9 best time
of 9.4 for 100 years He ha9
run four 9.5^9. He has run the
220 yard dash in a 9wtft 21 0
Jenkim 19 also' a fine relay
■ct
Lomax, from Work-
man High, IS a field event
coaches* dream come true He
ha9 done 49-|IH- m the triple
jump, and 23*1 P/i ia the long
jump Lomax haB''<hin 100
yards m 10.0 and can throw
the discus 173 feet. He sounds
hke a possible U.S. decathlon
prospect for the 1980 Oly»-
pic*. Lomax. who could re-
mind Brum fans of Willie
Banks, will proKBHy conccn-_
Traie on both horizontal jumps,
triple and long.
Keith Taylor could also be a
tremendous help in the triple
jump Taylor, who atteatfad
Harbor City College, has d6fT\i
5ri0" triple and 24V*' m the
long jump He also has run 9 9
for 100 yards.
Another JC transfer Bush
and Kiefer are hgh on is Mar-
eii9 Gordien of Mt. San An-
tonio City CoUcge. in the city
of Walnut Gordien has 9l_.
putted over 55 feet and throwa
the 4iBCiis 195-0 feet
Jiai Scfeatfsr, from El Cami-
ni JC. can 4dd depth to the
•pnni corps. The pre-law
transfer has run 21 3 for, 20CT
meters and 19 a fine 440 prm-
rding to Kiefer. hi9
"Football tracksters
Henr) Williams, of I A Car-
son High and Glea Caimua of
Mt Pleasant high 9chool in
San Jo9e are top track men
coming to UCl A on football
9chohirships Willuim,% k the
LA City 440-yard champion
with a be9t of 47 0 He ran
47.8 as a junior
Cannon had run 21 3 m a
laa^JB aa^owi ■■■M.._ 1 tA^M
wa9 well under 21 9econds this
year and has done 9 5 la the
100 yard da9h
Heading the lut of po9sible
recruits is Greg Foster from
Proviso Fant High in May-
wood. Ilhnui.^ The prep high
hufdier ran 13 4 for 120 yards
89 a junior This year, he tied
the national high school re-
ci>fd of 13 2 He has run 36 Oi
in the 330-yard low hurdles
and recorded four 13.4's
(C unlinued from Page 16)
was typified by LA Sur player
Ed (Harpo) Becker, a former
BrU4n All-American Becker
jode the bench mo9t of the
Tnatch, but was very much a
part of the action When he
iA^a9n*t in the game, he wa9
cheerleading for his team, kid-
ding with the opposing players
when they would make a mis-
take and anxious himself to
in
When Becker got into the
game he was superb However,
there is very httle substuuting
io IVA and Becker had" to
watch most of the game frorp
the team beneh and drink Iimc
Gato^a4c. Once, in the. maddlc
of a point. Becker shouted
ae^099 the floor to .a Breaker
player. -"Nict shot. Bill' He
was speaking to Bill Wardrop,
one of the top players m the
IVA. Wardrop, who ieads the
IVA or IS near the top in many
Biatistical categories, had just
hit a poor spike The spike had
been retrieved easily by a Surs
pUyer. and the Breakers lost
the advantage they had had for
that point While the point was
"BiiU^^bemg p^Uy^ Wafifl^l^l.
answered Becker with a smiling
retort and the game went on as
usual ">
Peter Stefaniuk (6-9) and
new UC Irvine coach Miles
Pab9t provide the spiking
power for the Surs The Surs
are also aided by the hustling.
diving 5-10 Danny Patterson
oi Malibu The San Die^o
club, which appears to be the
Sur*s title competitifm, is led
by Wardrop (6-^ and 6-4 lUn
l*eterspn Peterson, whp take9
the game more 9er]iou9ly that^
anyonf alae, 19 head coach of
the Santa Monica High Schoof
volleybaH team, which ha9 won
two CIF title9 m the last four
years.
— — IJCLA
Also on the San Diego
squacf 19 UCLA alumnus Rose-
-•■•e Wegnch Wegnch played
at a junior college and another
university before coming to
UCLA Then, at Westwood;
Wegnth decided not to play
for the Bruins becauie she
CLASSIFIED >ID
"got tired of It " IVA rejuve-
- Bated her spirit.
Wegncif especially Iike9 the
format, .which insists oa at
least two women playing pn
the court at all times along
With four men She said, ''If
ypu hgvc all ^Is on the court,
they're going to go99ip. The
same 19 true for guyg. Thi9 way
IS great Everybody reipects
each other and everyone's ma-
le out and ptiy
hard "
Wegrich, women's basketball
and yolleyball coach at the
University of Winnciota, is
enthusiastic about the league,
hut IS disappointed that more
women arlMl played in college
won't play professionally
**They don't want to give up
their net play." said the 25-
ys^-old She added, "The
league is expanding nexf ^nar
to Seattle aad Denver " Still
this IS a long way from the
hopes of 30 to 40 franchises
some enthMiasts envision.
Wegnch indicated that the
P«*<>Mie 4o wia was aaturall)^
fTBBter In the IVA than m
college because "money is m-
*olved^ mahe, iVA " The aver-
Bfe salary is S5.000
Becker disagrees. "I though
that the pressure would be
more with the IVA ^^raiMC of
money, but it's not." said
room and board
•xchanqe for help
room for rant
autoafor
irtaaioraala
ATTBACTIVI pftwi. ,00m 8 b^
Fr»« !• r««ponftlbl« \mmm\m stud^fil
No iMBytaBRf. BMW mmIs. wZk lo
EseoBoMt laMaaMi tor rtiM
479^184. '^
tv Jv IS)
998.98 FHIVATC
foculty.
B«M. Woof
1
Hllto S$3-
(39 Jy 19)
T1 PLyWOUTH
Sn-9918.
<^1 Jf SBI
V.W BOUAaCBACK. 1884
•I 88 K
Con
Biif S890
(41 Jy 29)
99 AU9TIN Ho«i«y Mootftlof Moo Now
M*nl lop liro« Irons clutch rodio
Hootor bNi 949 1220
♦ ' . (4VJy 13)
B9 CONTL Low niNoo. FM-como«I»
BwfM fooSy ■wooih Mual m9.
(BO^ 848) 477-9733
(41 Jy 13 )
cyclaa, acootars
foraala:
HONOA 380 T '79. 1.989 ifiNo* Cholfi
iockor. holmot 9900 Coll 47S 1279
(43 Jy 2S|.
988 ftMLf O
nonomokor; (
lillcliOM prlvlloooo)
881 Mill 47A
or 8147.
474-
(38 Jy 19)
TI^TOy Co,^ 4 «pa a/H Ak. mm,
r^aioU XliH. eoMd 38 mp%. 81.888/
(41 Jy IS)
•JMCUBVTI Comol,
8384. 822-8883
-n KAWABABI SBBoc fnOvro _
Jirl Oroof 1«t bllio $3S0/0o«t of for
479-3488 Oili lor Bfod
(43 Jy 19)
|3TJy»)
lOMWBry. Kll. prHr Clooo
3. 479^4429
Com
(38Jy38)
« - - '» • •/
Only 18JBB
I88-787S.
CNBV BIlMywi -87. 87J88 oM
mifiOf ro^lrs/polot S30e 473-3889
1M ins aoy«
. • (41 Jy 27)
bJcydaa
HI ir t» ^— • OViJ5*»y K^Byn ; Bocollofil
r37 JY23)
^y!^'^ ^rUolo rooiii/BotH intchow Tl PITQ M^^ gj^^
*OOSI In a.H. Iiomo igBh pool
trS-BBBI. or 378-2Tar
474-7138.
(37Jy1S|
"••n cloof». ABI/FBI. Oflf Inol
^^JT;.^*'* ♦•^-»»*4. ivoo/wfeiKio
44iiri3)
(41 Jy 13)
FMVATE rooww om Ooyloy A«o %mm
»om 888. «»B4 /NOP 8138. BBoro BoBi,
9^^^^v ^^^^^^^^VB« ^^^^^^^^^fa HH^HHlH- ^HBflHBf
477
Spot.
^^'•'''OaiNO 2 8HN A/C Pf%, Pt%.
S1B88 SBsJ^ ^•^ '•^
(41 Jy 18)
(38Jyir)
(41 Jy IS)
(37 Jv 27)
for rant
(38 Jv yw
autoa for aala
TOYOTA Coroo
f«o«r Broko. Iro
9BS-3378 Kloi.
• 88' oiflo ABI-m roBlo.
(41 Jy 1SI
74 CA^ai 3881
■«i*m^11
> J AjB/Wan'opo. 4.«pB.
(41 Jy 3B)
1887 VOLVO. 4
now dutch.
mBI Booo. 341
ABI/FM
Ml Jy IS)
(41 Jy 27)
CLABBIC 1888 Ford
'*»«tlc Bu«M 8ho
887
BICVCLI . 8l9onlroiit "A ~ Sno tS Al-
most oil Coniay -1
472-
143Jy37)
Wilahife
71 VW Bu« Sloops 4 18J88 ^ ^ ^
ISt"J!Lf"«*"* "^**® A. condition
939-9083
(41 Jy39
73AUDft88LS Ak
MBS. ABkm omoo. P%m 4mm mBbr
•wlf BB.BBB MHoo f ■ooNowt. SlSBB
BMw38B-7f79
TOVOTA T2 Corono SW Awto Cloon
•Njw Bro« 81888. 838-1872 (Boy) 482-
STSS (niflif)
141 Jy 19)
(41 Jy 13)
cyclaa, acootars
On Ooyloy Avo
Across from compus Frivols rooms
from SB8, «d» BoBi taom 9138 Kitchon
124 FIAT
AM/AF. Is
(41 Jy 13)
B BfBI IBURfi loundry. porhlng
ovollobis t1S/mo Csll Jorry Hovss
477-8887
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Mr. tl Gi
lor Kortn
141 Jy 23)
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388-7919
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(41 Jy 19)
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Brum
Shrine game
T
3% MiLC
tm SMTtt Writer
S The top 56 SouthUnd higi^
■rfcBDi iMlMi pUyen of 1975.
tfidiKfinf 10 UCLA recruits,
fathered last Thunday at the
Hyatt Rflgracy Hotel in down-
tamn Lot anfeles for the 25ih
annual Shnne luncheon
After lunch, the players and
^ coAchcf visited the Shrine hos-
Z piul. where proceeds from the
2 chanty game will go After the
7. vifit, practice began for Satur-
5^ day night's 8pm game at the
* Rote Bowl
{Seven recruits
The South team, which has
H icven Brum recruits, is work-
ing out at Cal State Long
Beach The other three in-
coming UCLA foolball plavgrs
art practicing with the North
team at Cal Tech
UCLA recruits on the South
team are Andy Center (West
Torrance) - db, Brian Baggott
(Servitc, brother ol former
UCLA star Bill) - db. Rick
Baiihore (Edison) - db. Matt
McFarland (St Paul) - ot.
Henry Williams (Carson) - wr,
Fred Ford (St :fohn Bosco^ -
rb and Artie Hargrove (Long
Beach Poly) - rb
=^Ford and Hargrove were
considered by coaches to be
the top two running backs in
CIF last season, ^prd said he
decided to attend UCLA be-
cause *'it*s close to home and
close to my family " Ford
indicated that he never
strongly considered prosstown
nval use -*! .wanted to play
where my opportunity was the
greatest. At running back, I
thought . that my best oppor-
tunity would be at UCLA " He
added, "The whole atmosphere
at UCLA IS good -
Confident Hargrove
The confident Hargrove
chose UCLA over such prcs-
BRIAN BAGGOTT
RICK BA8HORE
JOHN KULU8ICH
Thf lloa#Bowl.i»cp«*4M4K^s^|«,.1frju,nph^*rOfyoSl^.^^ ^„.^^, „,,^^ ^^^^^^
*^
tigious possibilities as, Ohio
State, Oklahoma, Nebraska
and Colorado. **! chose
UCLA because it hasJboth the
athletic and academic setting,"
iaid Hargrove. Hargrove, who
is considered a better prospect
than Ford, added, "Football i$
naturaJ instinct for me I know
I can play football But to play
I have to get the gradesL Now I
just have to surt choosing the
bo<»ks and do some studying."
The North team, which has
""three future Bruins, is prac-
ticing for the game at Cal Tech
ill Pasadena The North
"home" team has incoming
Bruins John Kulusich (Chats-
worth) - lb. Bob Mihihauscr
(Canoga Park) - dt and CIF 4-
A Player-of theOt'car John Van
Vurcn (Soiith Hills) - db
Van Vuren, who is already
being compared in some ways
to John Sctarra, will play de-
fensive bacit jr^the game but
can play more offensive posi-
tions '^We had a small football
team so most of us played both
ways On d?/cnse, 1 was de-
fensive back, but on offense I
•ort of moved around I en-
joyed flanker, running back;
and I even played some
quarterback «t the end of the
season.** said Van Vuren. Van
Vuren is ready to play either
offense or defense, but indi-
cated that he might prefer
offense, saying that on offense
y^M can be more versatile ^
The 10 Brum recruits re-
present the largest number o(
UCLA players in the Shrine
game m many years Bruin
head man Terry. Donahue
should have a pleasant prob-
lem watching the game He
will try to decide which players
could maTc the varsity in their
fint years
Professional volleyball: Another new sport in town
MilLc, JFlMfoM ^ leyball Assocuition (IVA). m^k.. th. »-«. ....... .^J ..« ' .u„- ...
By MilLc,
DB Sports Wriitr
Lately there have been such
•ports innovation as the
American Basketball Associa-
tion, the World Hockey Asso-
ciation and World Team Ten-
nis Now make room for one
more — the Intemation^ Vol-
leyball Assocuition (IVA)
Many new leagues have de-
veloped in the past decade, but
perhaps none have the flair of
the professional volleyball
league which combines male
and female talents on the same
court. The booming spikes set
bv skillful, swift oasses
make the game quick and un
predictable. ^.
Match intense
At Santa Monica College
last Tueainy night, 972 fans (a
small IVA- Cfbwd) witnessed
one of the most intense
matches of the year First place
t»M on the line as the de-
fending IVA champion Los
Anftles Surs played host to
the San Diego Breakers The
Stars and Breakers dominate
the six-team league, spht into
three-team divisions. Last
TiMitfsy. the outcome was in
doubt until the SUrs finally
won in a fifth game tiebreaker
as a vain save attempt by a
Breaker player went wide. The
victory gave the Surs a then
share of the division lead with
a 12-3 mark
In two previous meetings,
the Breakers prevailed, ac-
counting for two of the Stars*
losses this season At the bot-
tom of the Western Division is
Santa Barbara, with a 6-9
record In the Eastern Divi-
sion, all three teams are under
500 due to a regular battering
from Los Angeles and San
Diego El Paso, coached by Al
Scates, has a respecuble 7-9
slate and two Arizona teams.
Phoenix (4-1 1) and Tuscon (4-
10) cringe at the bottom of the
league,
Wo« fVA _
The LA club won the IVA
champioaahip in the league*!
initial leaaon last year and last
Tuesday mcreased hopes that
tuutil
champs At this point, the
•eason is fairly young - the
Stan still have aimott 25
games left to play
The Stars* momentum could
not be quelled in the fifth
game after they had rallied to
win game four, and they
marched, almost uncontested.
lo a 6-1 victory The fans for
the most part were non-parti-
san but when the Surs got
behind, they showed their fa-
voritism and helped the Stars
to their then division tying
mn.
The easygoing atmosphere
a ontinued on Page 15)
./
,
nipcii n
UCLA
O-Hmrm,
•IL.A.
■•••i
•wm^
i.,..
i \
^1
t-__
\.
UCLA
Summer
xax.Numb#r6
UmvwMy of California, XI
Frl4iyv4uly1«.197i
SPB will continue
phase out program
No new loan applications accepted
...« — J
Larry Drayvr o4 U<XA • Rwwcii Aid
a Mgh delinquency raf«. Selof* lti«
I Government wMI ^y, banks have lo prove their claims on
Them Is a lot of red tape '
•>'
Cwitingent apon issaance of license
ASUCLA mav 0
■ ■».,«■
2) The operation must not
be controlled by a State agency
or authority.
3) M^cmbers of the control-
ling Board nrust be oyer the
age of 21.
4) TheCliancellor must pro-
vide a letter stating the school
itself has no pbjectic^ to the
issuance of a license.
**GiA/en the license, we could
set everything rather quickly."
Sadler said He said getting the
J...
• By LcNiis Watanabe
DB Stair Writer
The issuance of a beer li-
cense for an on-campus pub is
probable^ according id a a
prehminary report given by the
office of Dan Sadler, ASUCLA
project director. ^ i,
The report *"siid tfie ficenac
hinged on the following four
conditions:
1) The operation must not
be student controlled
Or lose subsidies
County orders bus
lines to raise fares
By Slieryl TIedemaft
DB Suff Reporter
A recent county budget decision by the Los Angeleit ^oard ol
Supervisors requires bus hnes receiving county subsidization to
charge a base fare of 35 cents
As a result of this decision, Santa Monica Municipal Bus Lines
must either increase their fares to 35 cents or forfeit Los An^eks
county subsidization ''At the present we have no plans to
increase local fares It is possible that the freeway fare will
increase,** reported Jack Hutchison, director of transportation for
the Smau Monica Bus Lines
Fare increase
The RTD increased their base fares from 25 cents to 35 cents
beginning July 1, 1976 The fare mcrcMe "has to do with a
decrease in the amount of subsidizing money from the county,"
aooonding to Walter Thompson, news bureau supervision of the RTD
Last year RTD received $15.5 million from the county whereas
this year they received only $6 8 million "We had to call upon
Ihe users to heip finance the System,'' said Thompson.
As a resuh the base fare was increased and student fares are
now 25 cents with a student card The elderly and handicapped
wiU continue to pay 10 cents, the blind ride free For long trips
PM»<ilBc» will now be dM^ged 70e
Special ^rvices
Routes caUed "-line-haul service,** which make few stops and go
hong distances akmg fpitways, are considered to be a sftcial
service. Fares for these routes alM^ busways and the Duimond
Lanes now coat an extra 10 cents in addition to the 35 cent base
fare
**lt s a premium service and the per capita cost is higher than
for normal service and that is the ratiOMile for imposing 10 cents
eJUrVVThompson expUined Another RTD sp#«m^rson
explaiMd the rationale behind the premium as being the extra
service offered, not extra costs
pub ready by late fall qua Her
**wouljd be pushing it*' but
January would be a more re-
alistic goal for the pub's com-
pletion
..f^ Saddler said, however, the
early completion of the pub
would "i^epend on how quickly
the license was obtained. "If
there is a protest, i,t could
delay It by two months ' he
iiaid.
Alan ( harles, UnivcrMty le-
gal >rdinalor. wiid he
thought the Student Union
could get a license **as a bona
fide eating place " He said
there was a law against serving
beer within a mile and a hall
of the University with the ex-
ception of "eating houses"
Sadler is studying whether
the license -ein be issued to
ASUCLA because it is not
clear whether it is too closely
connected with students and
(C ontinycd on Page 3)
By Su^an Silton ~~
DB Staff Reporter
Security Pacific Bank (SPB) is holding steadfaac m a dcciaion
to phase out Us guaranteed student loan program
Since March. SPB has restricted loans statewide to students
who already haVc them, according to Gary Randcl, siudeni
affairs officer at Security _^
Pacifies Westwood branch
The hank is no longer ac-
cepting applications /for new^
studeaH loans
The loan program, known to
many students as FISL ^Fcd
crally Insured Si udcnl Loans),
has been in existence for 1 1
years at Security Pacific
Bank of America. Wells Far
go. iJnited California Bank
and C rocker Bank are among
the other banks that have of-
fered or do offer guaranteed
student loans.
The FISL pirogTfm has al-
lowed students with a family
income of under $15,000
to acquire loans at 7 per cent
interest According to C harles
Hampton, assistant regional
commissioner for guaranteed
(C ontinued cmi Page >)
Separate SLC seat
sought t^ minorities
to solve insensitivity
By Riaw H(»lpert
DB Stair l^riler
The Student legislative
C ouncil (SLC) budget hearings
ended I ucsday with a request
by the Third World Coahtion
for a separate SLC seat
The Third World Coahtion
IS composed of the Native
American Students Associa-
tion, Asuftn Students Coalition,
Black Student Alliance and the
Movimiento Estudiante Chi-
cane de A/tlan (MEChA)
4 C ontinued on Page 4}
-1-
^' ^-* -^^ 1
\nrwrMm' " •*!
California delegates
released to Carter ^
•y Adam Pfeffer
DB Staff Writer
(fSitW YORK) Cahfornia delegates committed to Ciovemor
Jerry Brown added then voles to Jimmy ( artcr's ^rtat of 7^tM) 5
when Brown released them Wednesday night
Interviewed earlier at the plush New York Hilton Hotel,
located in New York's Rockefeller Center, California delegates
were as unified as the entire l>emocratic party on the question oi
whether to wholeheartedly support Jimmy Carter for the
presidential nomination
However. California and most other delegates were required by
law to vote for the candidate they were committed to until after
(Ciiilii I M Pm 4)
(Continued on Page 3)
Tliafllflit
AfLlmBtiO
V- V
ij:
=T
i
\
i
9
<
•*V# hm^ found Him' - John 1 4b
WORSHIP WITH US »:46AM SUNDAY
CAMPUS CHAPEL
•n L«iwrWi« at ftlratfimoffv 2 Mks W of Dorms
Uffitvorttty Po^ltt Choploin JACK TASEM 47t-3Mf . •23-f24a
Compiling voter information booklet
-.^^
Project Awareness internships available
TYPEWRITER CITY
478-72t2
WE8TWOOO
47»-7at2
Adl^r Portable
Royal Port (129<*oval)
SCM Elec. Aut. Return
Adier Elec. Aut. Return
CIttzen S-4
Lloyds Printing Calc.
Hand Held Caic.
79»»
99"
169"
199"
219"
9800
11"
•I
SALES and REPAIRS
iaiirn|tojf Avft^ M— tfchry
Kdley Spellmmn
DB Staff Reporter
Opportunitief to meet and
interview leading political can-,
iidates are available now for
research astisuntb and interna
involved m Project Awareness,
a ttudent-run, non-partisan
political information program
at UCLA
Project Awarenaii, in col-
IftlMffmtion with Metro Lobl>y«
the \}C Student Lobby and
the National Student Lobby
(NSL), it currently compihng a
voter information booklet for
the November 2 Presidential
election.
Thii voter information
^••klet offers a report on the
Presidential race and the U.S
Senatorial race, three Coi
sional mam^ four State
biy races and State Senatorial
raon in California, as ncfl at
the 15 propositiont and ballot
neatures -to be voted on In
addition to important national
and sute races and ittues, the
booklet provides rnfornution
specifically ftafed to the in-
teresu oi UCLA studenu, such
at the a3x4. 24th wmA 27th
CoagriaHiottal dittrict raoet.
According to Proiect Aware-
ness Astifltant Director Tho-
A Great
HANDBAG
SALE
20%
off
Til July 31st
Finest imports - an
inventory problem
smpk
10920 Kinross Ave. Westwood Village
I
The UCLA Committee on Fine Arts Productions
^^ is proud to pretefu
I
^._
^
^
^
ANITA O'D
Saturday. July 17. 8:30
^^ Schoenberg Hall
UCLA
Tickets: $6.00
STUDENT TICKETS: $2.00 (2 tickats per LD.,
limitacf number available)
Tickets at UCLA Central Ticket Office. 650 Westwood
'=}
Summer can be more than going to the l>each
and attending classes The Office of Environ-
mental and Consumer Affairs has a lot of
projects going on, including: consumer protec-
tion, nutrition program, legislative watchdog
and others So volunteer today'
You make O.E.C.A. work Come up to 311
Kerckhoff or call 825-2820.
4a^
Laichas, the booklet Will
be similar m content and for-
mat to the vaiar information
booklet distributed for the
June 8 Calif orma Phmary elec-
uon, yet much more eictensive.
Rat ponsibili ties of an intern
may include collecting mfor-
OMUion on caaMates and caai-
paign ditrieture tutemenu for
the voter inlonsation booklet
this summer In the fall, re-
search attisunts will work on
other Project Awareneu pro-
grams ju aides to the director,
aMiant director or research
attittantt.
The bulk of the work must
be done during the summer,
since the information booklet
for the November 2 election
must be out during the first
U quarter
voter inform iMm booiilet Hk fkm
Telephone information sen/ice
•*! would say 95 pe|rcent of the
work hat to be done this sum-
mer,** said Project Awareneu
Ihrector Phil Kraiter, **so it is
imperative that we get our
research assistants and interns
in the next couple of weeks.**
in addition to the distri-
bution of the voter information
booklet, other programs under-
Uken by Project Awareness
are a fall voter registration
drive, classes for students and
faculty interested in becoming
Deputy Registrars and a voter
hotline for persons with trans-
portation difficulties to and
from polling places on election
day.
All persons interested in
pers^al and public pohticki
awareness are strongly urged
to apply for the positions
available by contacting the
Project Awareness office. 306
Kerckhoff Hall.
Parents helped by Warm Line
The Warm Line, a telephone information
service for parents of young children, is
operated 24 hours a day by the Thalians
Community Mcnul Health Center at Cedars-
Sinai Medical Center
Warm Line coordinator Helen Reid said the
program does not provide medical advice, but
meets a need for parenul counselhng that
pcidiitncfans and family doctors cannot satisfy
••We've serviced about 1,500 families over
four years on the Warm Line,** she said.
Ffeid regards the "Warm Line** as etpeciaJ^y
helpful to single parents seeking advice on the
physical or behavioral problems of their
youngsters.
"The children at the highest risk of develop-
ing emotional problems are the infanu of single
mothers on welfare," Reid said
Those women, .earning $200 a month and
being ued down to a young child at home all
day, frequently become depressed and need
people to turn to for child-rearing advice
Most of the volunteer phone workers arc
alto mothers of young chidren and arc pro-
fessionally trained id todal work. They are able
•o provide callers with information on nursery
schools, health programs, hotlines, legal ser-
vices and food co-ops.
**As inquiries come in for services not
presently listed," Reid said, "we will explore
other facilities that would be particularly
helpful to single parents.**
The Waim Line information number if
855-3500.
^' Debra Zavimer
STUDENT RUSH
". . . THE BEST
AMERICAN PLAY
IN THE LAST FIVE
YEARS"
- Oen SunivBn,
L A Times
TbeLaelNMOQtOflW
Cfffc
White
Ma4t>olia
fndm^ a 30 pm
Smwrd^ 7pm a 9 30pm
Sufktg^ 7 30 pm
StuOvnt/Sf. Dtaen Rygh
16 rmnytM to cunetn
^or Plweiweiiuin ^mm Call
K5>012S
Grmtm. Jtm At6onM§'/t70
0«in#rTh#otrc
3aa a LeC»«neti Blv<l
Lot Anoitet. CA 900S8
Summer Bruin
Volume XCIX. Numoere
Frtdey,Jii»yie,197«
Published twicea wooK during the summer, except during holidays and
days following holidays and examination periods, ^y the ASUCLA
Communicatior). Board. 306 Westwood Plaza. Los Angeles. California
W024 Copyright 1976 by the ASUCLA Communications Board
Second class rntlagi paid at tt« Lot AngeiM Peat Office
Alioa~Short
rieim sieiit^Brin
Qeoff Ouinn
Susan Kane
Tad Shapiro
i« • ■ », > I
' 1 1 » t
Frank Widder. Sally Garner.
Kim Wildman. Mteheai Duval
Oavid WhUney. Joanne 69lat^
Steve FInley
Jeff Lapin
Maria Levine
Howard Poaner. Laura Klemar
Adam Parfrey. Cathy Seipp
Jeff Mltcftel
MMw Lee
nocHina ^wyw
Joe Jonea. Petti Croat.
Ratkovich. Jeff McLeod
Jodi ZecfK>wy
Dick Kreui
Security Pacific. FISL ...
Koffifinued from Page 1)
student loans, the federal gp- .
vernment has insured S8 billion ^
in student loans since the pro-
gram befaa nationwide in
1962
Complications arose m July
of last year when United Calif
ornia Bank discontinued its
iVaranteed student loan pro-
gram on the grounds that
government wet inefficient.
BaalLruplcy .,
Students claiming bankrupt-
cy after graduation or with-
drawing irota school warrants
government payment, but UCB
ieaitts the government did not
meet its responsibility prompt-
ly enough.
According to SaUy Gilbert,
manager of Student Loans at
the main UCB student loan
facility in Northern California,
**We decided that we would
curtail oux loans due to the
slownett of the payment of
claims •* She added, "The ad-
ministration of Health, Educa-
tion and Welfare (HEW) is jUst
a mess."
Security Pacific has aban-
doned the program on grounds
quite similar to UCB Lari^y
Dreyar. itaarter of the Pinee>
cial Aid Department at UCLA,
claims. "What the banks have
been enperieaoet it a high de-
linquency rate Before the Fed-
eral Government will pay,** he
said, "banks have to prove
their claiflM on students There
IS a lot of red tape.**
Dreyer added. Security
Pacific has not received any
claim money for a long ttmc^
They are not getting their
needs met.**
12-lS meiMh^k
However, last quarter UCLA
began to notify hanks directly
when studenu withdrew from
adMol, according to Dreyer
He noted previously, it often
took 42-18 months before the
government received a list of
studenu from the school and
the banks received a hst from
the government.
**We had to sign an agree-
ment with Wells Farfe that
would notify banks directly
when students dropped out.**
Dreyer said He added *yPB
did not want any part of the
more efficient system "We've
Bus line subsidies . .
(Continued from Page I)
A -new premium service to
Westwood from Los Angeles
will be- added within the next
30 days. "Were changing one
of the diamond lanes to go to
Westwood. ' reported Pat
Barry, an RTD spokesperson
The increased fares have led
to a 23 per cent increase in
fare lox revenue. However, the
income from the fare box ac-
counts for approximafely 4he
same percentage of total re-
venue as it did before "We
never got more than one-third
of our total operating money
from the fare box,** said
Thompson. Due to inflation it
**accounts fgr roughly the same
peroealafe at before,** Thomp-
son added ^
The rest of the revenue is
provided vby the county, the
state gas tax money and the
federal government "It is a
heavily subsidized operation
because operating cosu exceed
fare box revenues,** Thompson
explained
Paaaewger dechnc
The higher fares have caused
a 10 per cent decline in passen-
which IS considered nor-
**That should keep up ior
two or three weeks,** said
Thompson. Then when every-
one is more accustomed to the
higher rates the previous num-
ber of pasaengert should re^
turn.
The RTD has received al-
most no complaints about the
increased fares, according to
Thompson "It appears that
the public isn*t protesting too
much,** Thompson said. *'Peo>
pie seem to realize that costs
are going up,** Thompson
added
UCLA -students arc exempt
from this time restriction, how-
ever, aciMfding to Thompson
The latest cards were issued
last month and will he good
through the summer and until
February 1977 *
~Fm unlimited nding with no
age or time restrictions,
monthly bus ^MMiaaeee availa-
ble at $14 for eae zooe and
S25 for two-zone paatet. With
a monthly pass the premium
fare for free service is not
charged.
Fare allerifttive^
The Santa Monica Bus Lines
also offer two alternatives to
regular fares For students 20
years of age and under on their
way to and from school, a bus
card for $135 is available The
bus card gives 10 rides and is
valid only between 6 am and 6
pm. Tokens are also available
^for use anytime by anyone at a
rate of ftvt for $1.
Bus cards, monthly passes
and tokens may all be pur-
chased at the ASUCLA Ser-
vice Center in Kerckhoff Hall
Tokens are also sold at most
banks In addition, the Santa
Monica bus card may be pur-
chased directly from the bus
line's nuin office at 1620 6th
St. in Santa Monica for SI. 25.
Pub . . .
To help combat higher fares,
studenu have a variety of op-
tions available to them The
RTD bet hne offers a student
ditcoem card for their student
ridership. The card itself cosu
30 cenu and aUowt students to
ride for 25 cents without zone
To eae Ike RTD card, tle-
aMHt be under 21 yatn
of age and enroBad for full-
tiaK daaKs. There is a time
restriction on the card
prohibiting studenu from mak-
ing student faie trips between
the hours of 4 V) pm and f> 4S
pm Monday t
Friday
(CealiMMd from Page I)
the University, both of whom
cannot run the pub.
If ASUCLA IS unable to get
the license under its name,
then the pub will have to be
run by a private contractor.
Sailer taid He said he would
look ifllo contract bids in the
near future
The report stated two poati-
ble locations for the pub. both
of which are leaaied on the A-
levcl of Ackerman Union.
The prime site is the space
pretently occupied hy the Art
*Mnd Engiaaaring Department
of the Students* Store. Ac-
cording to the report, its near-
neat to the Coop might allow
the use of existing facilities in
the pub*s food service
The other possihie site is the
Expo C enter The report taid.
however, the site could not use
rM'fcling lanlilir^ ai
as the prime site.
hard time with Secuntv
he added "I think
that Security Pacific Bank jusi^
doesn't want to be in the MSI
program ~
Gary Randel from SPB ex-
plained '^he government is not
responding to our wishes and
demands.** He insisu claims
have not been prooeetcd
promptly and that "Were sup-
posed to experience a zero
default if the government is
payMig us. Government has
delayed too long in paying us **
The issue has been compli-
caied by the fact that Bank of
Amenca (B of A), the leading
lender of guarantead student
loans at UCLA, is eaferly con-
tinuing the program.
According to I>reyer. Bank
of America h«indle!» approxi-
I
mately 60 pci Lent of studcm^
loans, while Security Pacific
handles onlv about 15 per cent
$34 aiilliun default
Ron Livermore, director of
B of A*s Servicing Department
in Student Loans, claims B of
A has about $230 million lied
up in student loans, approxi-
mately $34 miliinn of. which is
in dcfaultr— ^
However. Greg t ancaster.
aatistant vice president m
charge of Student I oans at
Sccunty Pacific, said that the
bank handles about $28 5 mil-
lion in student loans, approx-
imately $500.0(J0 of which *is in
default _
This means B~ of A, inter-
ested in continuing the pro-
gram, has aboui ^ 15 per cent
delinquency rate as opposed to
SPB's roughly t 75 per onii
delinquency rate.'
Livermore of B of A said
guaranteed student loans are
"one of the way_s^ our corpora
tion can help people in Calif
ornia" He added HSL is a-
"bemjfit to people utihiFing the
pr ogram^**
(C oflittnued onr*Page 4)
L BAMBINO
(The Perfect Lunch)
$195
A cup of Somemadt aoup or a smdU ^dlad
A glaas of wine-or colfec
H sandwich on a fresh Itafian roll, your choice of hot me^t
baH. sauaage pepper, salami & cheeae. egg peppers e^nd
muahrooms, grilled pros/okine cheeae
^
daily at
^^uxJtiiJi C7a;u ^fuus ^%am :jtuLu
LliuL
VAI PAKklMC. WSTWI) (IR ei IN.
477-2*41
AMER-I'CAL
1434 W«ilwoo4 aoiNPvarOTMMr IMiM Angvln. C«Wontia 1M24
C«ili>ay or Night - (21 3) 475-5721
*HMi
.
^-..,
*-
y
CtDdQlr
. (jonrx!ro & N-fi
.^7
rself and
\
Eight Trock Hoyer
A Htm
of ymtut cor
Speciol
$59
MmUI 351S *^
irock ^oywr
FM Rodio
Vtiii Croif tiTHt not mnkf ^iny% fowr fo»ofW ropoi. om oIm
^VB 9 Wi^^49l r^R ^9fli9 V9^
3517
iol
$79
95
P
\
belQircomeiQ&hHi
927 Westwood Slvd Los Angelas, C A 90024 (213) 477 9569 or g79 9616
'/» Block South of UCLA in W»stwood, H^urs" Mqwdoy tciHirdoy 9-6
m
• r" y 'ZJT*
m
1
Federally Insured Student Loans . . .
(CoirtlnMtf froH raft 3)
Livermore laid "^here Are
ftome definite wcakacMCt** iQ
the Area of government re-
tpoaac to deliquency clAims.
"But we Are confident that the
ffO^ftntmtni is overcoming thoae
proMraM,** he laid. livermore
Also noted A 15 pet cent de-
linquency rAte compAres fa-
vorably with other banks mnd
that **85 per cent oi the stu
denlf are still utUi/mg the
program — getting a gr^M
education and a greater chaagi
of a aood job."
Hugh Miller, financial sup-
ports commisioncr at UCLA,
believes the banks initially
entered the program becau;»e
they felt "they were sacrificing
fy There!§a vl
- difference!!! i
profits today for much greater
profits in the future " Miller
feels, however, tiie b|g twt-
cutives at SPB "arc not con-
cerned with today "
Miller contendod SPB's
action ^mM a very eooaomc
one." but he said, **Why can't
the banks leei the con-"
sequenced of their action'' We
are the ones getting hurt by all
of this.** Miller alto eijiplained
other banks, such at 3 of A.
**have more iocml responsibili-
ty, more ooMrm **
He argued SPB is the most
expensive bank to deal with
for students, citing its student
checking pohcy of 15 cents per
check as oppoied to B of A*s
policy of $9 a year and
Crocker Banks policy of 16 A
year.
Miller proposes D^LA ga-
ther intormation from SPB*s
top executives, who have the
authority to decide policy, and
negotiate with them and per-
haps help itmighten out go-
vernment delays in payment
"U negoiiatioins fail." Miller
said, "It will result in a mgaiivc
tiudent boycott** with the sup-
port of other interested groups
Miller prop nam that at thi^
point we withdraw all ASUCLA
funds from Security Padfic,
amounting lo approximately
$575 thousand in both interest-
bearing and checking accounts
SPBV Greg Lancaster ex
plained, ^If I were a student
rd be frustrated with a lender
loo."
Hugh Miller added. -This
one bank (Security Pacif
hurting us Let's react
k
■■- >
Third World Coalition request. . .
MCAT
OAT
LSAT
GRE
ATGSB
OCAf
CRAT
-fliX
ECHNG
NATL MEO BOS
SAT- VAT
ft»t« 35 yt«rs
of ttptfitnce
»n6 vucrtss
m. .
Smjii ckMMt
voiuminov) Komr
ktudv IIMt«(tJtt
Cou'»« t»tjt iff
contljnfiy ufkUtfd
■
iapc tMi>iti«« for
t9¥*9m% of C(«M
lessons «Ad for use
cf %u9pl9m9nUiy
Mjlif ups foi
missed Ifsso'^*. ' '
STUDENT RATES
ON WEEKNIGHTS
'^ Two New Shows
Open This Week —
at the air-condition#d
HOLLYWOOD CANTEEN
Caf* * Cabarat Thaatar
(Continued from Page 1>
Presently, thei« foupt re-
ceive SLC funding as separate
entities They would like the
Third World Coalition, an
umbrella group for the above
lour, |o^ receive separate fund-
ing, according to Third World
Coalition Chairperson Rocky
Mitchell proposed **that the
which
Third
I OS A'\^mm% Cattloin,m 90025 ''*'•
' 4" 19'9 • •
MPUN
" w^ Civ«
Mad Mountain Mime
■^And Music Company
a mad mime club act
iuaa-thurs at 9 pm - '
• ALSO '
THE COMEDY
CORPORATION
in
A GNU SHOW
or Chipo Off Tha Old Buffalo
fn-s^un at 8 30 pm
tsaturday lata show at 10 30)
Also Good Food
importad Daars & Wmet
THE HOLLYWOOD CANTEEW
7304 M«lrot« Av»nu#'
on Th-ftf* Row
RESERVATIONS
931-1066
Third ^..World be taken away
from the first vice-president"
and added they should be
given a separate seat on iiLC.
w/th full voting powers
"^Inacttaitivities**
Cynthia McClain. the first
vice-president to whom 1 1 spe-
cial interest groups report,
said, "I think that Third World
has a special need, due to the
unconscious insensitivities of
SLC to Third World needs."
Meg McCormack, under-
graduate student association
(USA) President, said,-^-Ttr'
gjve Third World a social'
teat, we would have to give
every other special interest
group a leparatc " She added
that she would oppose separate
scats for the dorms, the Ctay
Student Union and the various
other groups now under , N4c-
Clain,
Mitchell noted a constitu-
«
tional referendum would be
required to establish the scat
so, for this year, Thtfd World
wauld be under McClain, if it
IS funded All funding deci-
sions_will be made in the bud-
get finali^ation prooeii,
begins Tuesday
'^Cloaed forums'*
When asked why
World reqiMMd fuU
monthly ads in the Daily Bruin
to advertise their meetings,
Mitchell said '"unlike SLC, we
do not function in closed fo-
rums " McCor mack . replied
that, with the exception of
"executive session,** ^l SLC
proceedings are conducted in
public.
In other business, Glenn
Smith, ex-Liasion Corps di-
rector for the Student Educa-
4MMUl Policy Commission
fSEPC), announced the ex-
pansion of the Budget Review
Committee (BRC) which he
said was now iTnly in its infant
stages. The BRC is funded by
the USA president's offices.
**This program will begin to
involve students in the Univer-
^^y*s planning and budgeting
process," Smith said, adding
BRC "goes over the Univer-
sity*s budget hnc by line and
makes recommendaxions for
changes " McCormack noted
several BRC recommendations
were accepted as University
policy last year
"Year 2,ite-
"The University already has
plans to the year 2000 For the
studcrrts Wr have mput before
the dgciriotM are already made,
it IS essential to have a cen-
tralized, forward looking com-
mittee wht)se only responsibili-
ty is the budget," Smith said
. The program ran into some
resistance, though C^ouncil
members expressed spme re-
luctance to add additional bureau-
cracy Willie Banks, SEPC com-
Rliifioner. said. "We have so
many assistants I don't kaow
where to go for assistance **
Svnivsl guMe
Michael Gilizio, McCor-
mack's information director,
announced the reintroduction
of a UCLA Survi^ Guide
The guide was last published in
1974, when it OMMed a con
tion. The administration
claimed the guide advocated
certam practices contrary to
University regulations. The
gijide publishers were forced to
add a disclaimer, saying the
University did not necessaaly
support the content of certain
pMtapes in the guide.
**!/ everything goes on sche-
dufe, the survival guide will be
ready for the first day of
school,** Galizio said
Community nerviecs
John Kobara, community
services commissioner, pro-
posed a $162,894 budget *^o
fund 13 community service
groups.
Kobara called his commis-
sion "one of ihe few Univer-
sity entities that alloWs the
campus community a real op-
portunity to share with the
tax-pjLying community on a
grass roots level." His priorities
are ''the community fir^,
UCLA students second and th^
administration last," he said
Students gain as much as
cornmunity members, because
"true cdecatibn lies in- the
community, the real people,
the oppressed, tfhc underpri-
vileged, the forgotten ones
they are the ones who have the
wisdom,- Kobara said. "This
commission is a direct answer
to the demand that reflection
require concrete action.**
Convention . . .
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t-shirtf
4.75
elsewhere, $6; save 20%
Scratch the artwork smell the real thing (w«||.
•Imost') grapes grapefruit, charnes tmnmim,
•t s a delightfully silly summer thing to
ir and make everyone wonder who s got the
food Lots of colors sizes for men and women
XS to L f
sports
b level, ackerman union 825-7711
open mon-fn 8 30-5 30 sat 10-4
(CoatiiMied from Page 1)
the first ballot, or the candidates vote percentafe drops below 15.
or until the candidate released them from their oMifation
At a Sute Caucus oweting here Monday. Brown asked
delegates to continue to support .what he called "an unorthodox
venturc;\in seeking the party's presidential nomination
On Tuesday morning. Brown urged a group of non-California
delegates to continue to back him for the presidency.
Lalifornia Senator Alan Cranston agreed with Brown's
decision to suy in the .ace •* Jerry Brown has done, I think
superbly all through the year and I think he's quite coricct Tn
giving those who were sent here as delegates to vou for Brown,
an opportunity to do that."
When asked whether he felt Brown's decision could sub-
J^equenily hurt him politically, CrsMlon said, "I don't think it
hurts him at all I think^ople accept it when you enter m a race
you don t drop out the moment it appears to be over T Senator
John Tunney also feh Brown's strategy would not be pohtically
narmiul "^
-Governor Brown has a umque pohtical insunct and he's been
right almost 100 per cent when it came to decisions ilMt gsm
popularity ffor him," Tunney said
Antioch
college/west
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Application Deadline Aug. 1
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Hcrc*s a real fan cmitest •pen to iust about evcryoao! The folks at Capitol
Kecoras are lookiag for the greatest Beatles dra wlaff erer made! Make yovr
drawing Cin color or black & white) and bring it in to our store no Uter than
July so, ir7». Thereni be a ludging and the whuMrs wlU take home some
fabulous cash and merchandise prises! There*s no entry fee and no purehase
is required! Go out and put your creatiTe mind to work! Good luck! Be sure
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i
I ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
Lm ut thip your pvrsonAl cflMrl hom lAto af* ajpiciilitti m interna
tionai packaging and shipping Wa alao tail appNMMt for 220 vQUt
PACIFIC-KING ^*^* •^ •^ •« Loa Afifaiaa ti -
4«2'»M2
Letters to the Editor
-*>-
STUDENTS
EARN $300-$600 PER WEEK 4 MRS A DAY
We are National Distributors with annual sales near four
billion dollars per annum —
Call 654-6070 Ask for Mike Ryan
Fees
■«...,
On June 2, the Duly Bruin
quoted Maurice Osborne. Stu-
dent Health Service (SHS) di-
rector, as saying, "Why do we
owe something to students who
don't hTve insurance?" He was
referring, according to the
Bruin, to the 10,000 students
who cannot afford or do not
want extra coverage beyond
what they already pay for out of
their registration fees. Besides
that, there are also students who
feel the fees should cover every-
thing all year.
Osborne wants students to
st4#rt paying $19 for every SHS
visit, though certain trej
categories would still be cet
by registration fees, fi^w first-
hand experience with economic
ion and inflation, most
know that the $19 will be
increased, and the treatment
categories conewd by registra-
tiofi fees will be decrened.
Now is the time to correct
cavalier attitudes on the part of
bureaucrats who should be serv-
ing those who pay their -salaries.
Thus, I have a question current
students should ask Osborne
and a#ier bureaucrats, "How
much of your inflated executive
salary are you willing to sacri-
fice to* finance a program you
wish to foist off onto unrepre-
sented students?" This should be
followed by a scnrond question
tlb campus community should
.ask Itself. "Does the student
body and the community need
over -paid executives when their
unnecettary salaries could ga
:4ifeci»y into nssigd ppaerarm? 'V
Or to jMraphrase Osborne,
Why do we owe something to
management personnel we
don t needV
It is unfortunate that bureau-
crats like Osborne can only have
their humanitarian instincts re-
kindled by standing on a bread
line with their fellow humans
From time to time, bureaucrats
tend ia forget where they come
from, if. they are not reminded
tjy those they serve
lohn MarliffH
"" Alumnus
,--
VtWi'*
LOAN
f
I
—r. --Atjji*--
TUNE-UP, LUBE & OIL tOd^:
COMKETfW/rartt Ji~
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W/^AtTS I ^^
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•LKT to Of ROtCOf
/
v-J
and MOTORCYCL
AUTO " INSURANCE
Ykb — you need auto insurance --^^h^^
All the more reason to contact us for discounts up
to 35" ( to most students — another good reason
♦or being in college
See or call us in Westwood
477-2548
Agents for College Student Insurance Service -
1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build-
ing) LA 90024
Didn t anybody tell Cronklte. Chancellor and Brinkle^f the Convention s over? They ve gone
berterk and are down here interviewing the chain! i
TONIGHT
in July lb / uu p m
Royce Hjll UCIA
19
Shiikt!S|M*iirn •
liliii Series ^ /
^a ^
ROMEO AND JULIET
Nussey. Whiting. 0 Shea,
York
THE TAMING OF THE SKREW
Burton and Taylor
(^
%? •H). i SO'
T.ifc«.» Int.. t6f^,99»n
J "
Ihe -Viewpoini Page ^clci>mcs all letters columns, and
canoons Written material ImuM he Inple-spaced. typed at 10-6*^
margin*, and limiied^to KO lines Ml suhmissjons imast include the
phone number and -WMlie 4^ **»e atithor: names \nm t>e withheld
from publication on request No phone number-/ will be prmtcd
I he Summer Brum reserves the right to edit submitted material
and determine its placement Material is due at noon two davs
before desired publication date, though publication it not
guaranteed under any circum»t«nces All tnaterial submitted
becomes the properiv ot the Summer Brum
I ns.gned editorials represent a maioritx op.nu.n of the Summer
Brum Fd.torial Board All. other work represents the opinion ol
the auth<M .md does not nece^ariK ;encct the views of the
fd.lonal Hoard Members ol the Board are Alice Short, hrank
Stallworth. K.m W.ldman. Sally (iarner. Joanne F glash. Michael
Sondheimer and I aura Klemer
.
Concerned about
CanSac Disease?
UCLA Cardiographies Lab offers
■to
Tests of:
Cardiac Rhythm
Painless and
''^'
Exercise Capacity
Valve Function;
We need normal men and women subjects age 18
Call 825-3924 for information and appointment.
■^
DB Editorial
Students
l« hi. r*c*nl ««9.,trofM»n Fm prepoMil, (MivMity Pf*«id«„t
Dov.d Sox«n h(» ihown ogoin that th« Umv«rtity .1 Col.forn.a
« wjll.119 t* molt* lh« .tud«o» poy for th« m,.tok«, mod. by
TK« UC tytt«m r«c«iv«s 25 p»f c«nt of in •nfir« y^orly
Mi9»f from f«d«rol certtrocti ond grantt. Of this mon«y, $43
million pmr yMr it tpmnt i„ ovorhood cotft Mich os hMtifM
•l#ctricity, and library u«09«.
In kfH^. ^hm D»poftmMf ol H#olth, Education and Wolfaro
!••• ogoncy Hiot ovortoot oil fodoral contracts with collooos
and ufirvoriitiot, compUtod thoir oudit of UC/Fodorvt
govommont controctt.
m diicovrod rhot tho UC hod boon ovorchorging fho
dofol govommont ovorb«i» cooh by on ottimatod $6 5
million o yoor. Not much in comporison with tho onormoi/t UC
^•^t#t, but importont whon tho» monoy h oormarfcod for
Rnonciol Aid providod by tho UC HEW roquostod a rofund
from two yoort of post worfc ond • loducod ovorhood choiir
Uniyorwty finoncial oid (ot opposod to StiKlo ond Fodoml)
hat boon poid for from both tho Ediicotiofiol Foo ond tho cost of
ovorhood.
To tolvo tho problom Cfootod by ovorchorging tho fodoral
govornmont, Soxon hot propotMl tf roliovo tho Gonorat
Opportunity Fund (tuppliod by ovorhood mon.ot) of tho ttrain
of poying port of tho cost of univortity financial aid Univoftity
financial aid would thon como tololy from moniot raitod
through tho Ed Foo.
Wo obioct to this policy Jijijjngo for two rootont Fi;;t:
•tudontt should not hov4 to pay for tho UC t mittokot Socond
tho now policy will tomodoy lood to oithor raiting tho Ed Foo or
cutting ynivortity financial Old.
Tho UC syttom should inttood cut bock iri fti f j ji uj L .,
burooucrocy and projoctt tuch ot tho Wostwood Plozo MoU
Thu CMtbock would losson tho nood of op incroato in rog fo#s
mid put tho othor Holf ^ tho monoy ^,6 by ttudonH undor
portifli jtudont control — fto^ loo Committoos.
1976 Summer Ofympics: The Spirit ol Montreal
'"LEAOBELLY- ISAS MOVING AND TRIUMPHANT
A MOTION PICTUI^E AS YOU WILL EVER SEE!"
UCLA BRUIN
He iviisa tnuidereL
A chain gang graduate.
A brothel entertainer.
He knew it all . . .prisons,
women, figliting, andlie
put it down in songs
^■1 foral]tinie.fToni
^yf Itock Island Line"
JLl^ to tioodniglit
^^VN Ifw^" He is
\iy J alegend-
*^ His name Is
Leadbell|i
The Nail Boutique
1434 Westwood Blvd.
SpeciaJizing in
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• Juliet Manicures
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SPEND LABOR DAY WEEK-
END IN SAN DIEGO DIS-
COVERING ATLANTIS
learn about th^ mysteries of
the ancient world, lost conti-
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from the leading authorities
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Attend lectures, mingie with the
speakers, search for tfri answers in
dtscuttien g-i^oups, view exhibto' mmI
visit San Diego attractions — S«a
World, the zoo, ek^. -- ef^terxamm&m
by Paul Horn, world renowned jaxz
Musician. This international Con-
ference gear«d for the entire family
will be held September 3rd throufh
6th.'l976 at the Little America Wcft-
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^ Diefo, CaMomte. AdwM* f«nr-
X vjtibm neoMary - timkameHovd
^t^lcom^. group ratfs available.
A^M|Aii\^ non profit educational
kno«4a4i[t a^mt man's early oti0tm.
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Call in Ids
— Oaii Diegu (TU)
-f714)Sa0-7444
ASSOCIATION
Or «wriie: AMKA Otpt. A
1047 Gayley Avenue, Suite 201
Loi Alleles,. C A 90024
T
^
^1
4
tterfrmd parking fnWestwood^
^Ktf writteiHtrprevent new theateris in Village
^SSuKJni vJ7!^'!I!. '^T!^r1' ^P': '^^ P^"""* "nly one prking Spe.k.«. for all the hotei---'r^hhou.h the Ju.
Ic Fay
Reporter
Tvcryooe Inows how diffi-
cult parking can be in West-
wood on a Saturday night.
One reason is the 17 theaters
found in a half-mile square in
and around Westwod Village
where one can always find
thoiiti«4i of pri
vau residents as well as UCLA
students who ^eptad on Wetl-
wood for their everyday sliop-
ping, and all they find are
theaters and restaurants." Ya-
roslaveky said
To battle the parking prob-
lem, Yarosiavsky offered a
«mable viewing from Betty propo«ii lhrfir_ wccki* ago
m
Boop cartoons to Po
. lal«t. *-The Tenant."
^ City Councilman Zev Yaro-
^ slavsky (fifth district), repre-
]^. senting the Westwood area,
-realizes Westwoo4 residents
•5 lack not only adequate parking
"^ space, but also community-
m oriented services such as super-
X markets and drugstores.
which wouM virtuaUy eliminate
any new theaters in the area.
The Los Angeles City Council
passes on June 23 the proposal
which would require new the-
aters to provide at least one
on-site parking space for each
Ihree theater scats. Under the
city's existing Specific Plan for
Westwood Village, theaters
must provide only one parking Speaking for all the hofe-
space for each five theater owners groups (there are 12 in
icau, and these spaces may be the Westwood area), Slival-
at a Riaximum distance ol 750 man exprcnad "our gratitude,
feet from the theater Because appreciatioa and thanks lor
of the limued avaiUbility aiid_ ^Yaroilavsk^. A community-
high cost of land in the Vil- oncnted shoppmg center for
lage, Yarosiavsky believes the
new proposal would effectively
prevent a|i;y new theaters in the
area
Sarah Stivalman, executive
•acrctary of the Holmby- West-
wood Home Owners Associa-
tion, is happy with the success
of the proposal **As early as
1969," she said, "we feh the
need to restudy the existing
traffic and parking codes in
Westwood."
everybody residents, stu-
dents, businessmen is our
goal,'' she added
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POtTANLE
•••,••••<
^OPENER
' ^^ •• *• •• ■*^.|| iw m^ ^ ^.
r«r 59^1 '^£*^^*^'
Another Yarosiavsky pro^
posal might help Stivalman
and other residents realize that
goal The proposal was re-
ferred to the Traffic and Off-
street Parking Committee for
consideration two weeks ago
Fhui new proposal asks for
$6,000 for a study ol a possible
mall with an underground
parking structure "We need
normal retail act^ity to main-
rain the community," Yaro-
siavsky stated "Essential
_CMnmunity services are bein^
"fotced out of Westwood Vil-
lage by the inexorable growth
»1 cntertainrncnt-orientcd busi-
ness." Yarosiavsky added
_ The site uncfer study is. cur-
rently a city-owned parking lot
>n Broxton Ave The motici
which was proposed to the
City Council on June 30: is
intended to research ways of
providing such services aft su-
perr^arkcts and drugstores.
"Village residents just re-
cently have lost their onFy
remaining supermarket to
make room for three more
theaters," Yarosiavsky said.
referring to the Safeway which _ „^ , „^
Wft replaced by a three-theatCL_|iiaL an ^U^rtli^riu
complex last vear
Although the June 23 pro-
posal IS fatrly new. Yaroakv-
sky echoed Stivalman's feeliag
for the need for such action for
a long time
Yarosiavsky had tried a si-
~t»ihir proposal last summer,
"right after Safeway went out
and Mann's went in," Jackie
Brainarct Yarosiavsky'^ spokes--
person said Nothing <;«»0)e of
Yaroslavsky's intentions last
yti^t, however, because it
** might have been uocoastitu-
tioaal," Brainard staiid.
Councilman Louis Nowell
(first district) maintains this
attitude Noweirs was the only
negative vote in the 9-1 pass-
age of the proposal, because
''he felt It might be bad for
prtvale enterprise,'' Brainard
said Nowell was unavailable
lor cortiment
Brainard added that al-
though there is still one more
stage t0 §0, It IS felt the final
vole on the prnpaiMil *-will ht
iUit a formality They havt
approved it in concept.'' shv
said
"r>cspiie appearances to
some." Brainard stressed ihc
fa^i *Zev doesn't have anv
thing against theaters He does
have something aganisi cong^-
iion ' Brainard aisp erppha
si/ed Yaroslavsky's concern
with Jceeping the ''balance be-
tween entertainment, campus
and the communay He doesn't
want to see the Village bec(imr
center
added
City C4
2«v Varoalavaiiy
■• UCLA sludMvtB «»ho
and all «>«y fifHf
on
of prhralt r— Idanti
for ^^yrnin avryday
and restaurants.
Campus Events
EMIiTI
__ »-9pm rtaacmo toy nauttts 9 pm
"•••ipt. Women s Gym 200 Frse
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J^ckhoff MKfiavaa sad Csmraf TK:fcet
trie informal prac
tice for fofMfa slaisiils and visitors 1C am
noon Mondays and iManiMS.Ackerman
3517 ' "'
- UCLA VUliii FtidCMa Nm oasfunos tor
iw Msaiburs who will continue trwaaili Nit
tan Staff faculty and students are inviM to
HNn \^ wHiriaaliaw caN C5-4277 13 pm
■ at the Wi
pai. Joty21 _y ^
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"•'g'^g jW tr SS!^^ ^***
^ !^*^ *'*^ "^* summer ^oasaad
"T« •»"» PHSnsNt in community m^fm
Visa ifyssy 3N or calt a2S>373D ^^'^
**T!!r'' '•* *■■■•■ ®^0 pm M^.
inrernationai Stad«iC«i» .|5f^
rriiySTlilf-^ "iaitV-^fWay ,
i55?Lt!**'*' ^^•^•^ restaurant
^'^* fjwi 9 am-S t^
^-•pai.tvtryT
wrfl
Grtsk
74
iaiimafional SUdMlualdr .^
sw^er will pdrldrdi 74 ^m, Thursdays
'"twiyiaiidl SlMiIwi CsBUr Fiae
r ^tweli Scaalsa.
will.
noon July 2G Sc
a loint n
auditorium Pifse
,/
^..J-
Somelhing new^
— . Haydn, Vivaldi
By Howard Posner
It's always nice to discover something new
especially from a friendly source Philips
Records has recently recorded two musicolo-
gically fascinating works, one an opera by a
composer better known lor symphonies and-
ntsses, the other an oratorio by a composer
bietter known lor instrumental concerti. Both
•re superbly performed and^ recorded, but only
o«c IS a complete success."^
Joseph Haydn*s La Fedeha Fremtata (Fi-
^ty Rewarded) is an opera about delightlullv
•Illy people m a delightfully silly Arcadia,
where true lovers get thrown to a monster
every year until the goddess Diana can be
appeased Two or three hours of pastoral
foolishness might be a bit grating oii the
modern sute, but on this recording everything
shines, mcluding the orchestra Haydn com-
peted the opera (on a borrowed libretto by
Lorenzini) for the company at the Esterhazy
>castle. where Haydn had developed one of thjc
great virtuoso orchestras of Europe. The
French horns in particular arc given aomt-
- terhWy flashy parts
quite great Sopranos Frederica von Stade and
lleana Cotrubas are particularly distinguished.
to the surprise of ncTone. and there isn't a
warbler or bad actor in the cast
Tenors Tonny Landy and I uigi Alva are the
sweet, but rather priggish and ineffectual good
guys Alan Titus is Peruchettq, the foppish and
fickle comic baritone, who after being assailed
by robbers asks for something to restore him
"Something red white wine from
.Cyprus from Rhine or Madeira
or just a little bottle of Bordeaux "Bass
baritone Maurizio' Mazzien is the evil pricsti
•loprano Kan Lovaas is Diana The heroine is a
contralto CLucia Vaicntini), odd but not
unprecedented casting on Haydn's, part
^^^ who4e affair is conducted with the
brilliance expected of Antal Dorati, who has
recorded all 104 of -Haydn's symphonies tor
London Records.
Recordings
I niUPS SOOiEBMn
TOPANGA CENTEJ
^OR HUMAN OEVetOPMENT
*!•**>' -^-^ I
Droo-ln Encouniaf Qroup Pfogram
Sau 8 pm at 10640 Sta Monica Bl #4
Bfochurw 456-1342
$4wmiad
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Antonio Vivaldi's JuduhaTriufhphans is also
given splendid treatment Conductor Vitiorio
Negri and the Berlin Chamber Orchestra
produce splendid sounds and the OMt (Birgit
Finnila. Ingeborg Springer. Jului Hamari, EUy
Amelmg and Annalies Burmcister) sing As well
as does the cast in the Havdn
Attention to mtMacolofical deuil is carried to
the point of presenting two alternative versions
of anas at the concKjsion of the oratorio
proper
Alas. JuJtiha IS a bore It consists of endless
da capo aruu. for exclusively female voioet
(the oratorio was written for the Ospedale della
Pieta the Venetian girls' orphanage where
Vivaldi uught) --^•^^^
The action IS minimal: Assyrian general
Molofernes invites the Hebreii' woman Juditha
imp his tent, woos her over dinner and falls
asleep^ojpon she cuts his head off and saves
Israel Its all in Latin, and Holoferni-^' isn't
helped much by hi4 being a soprano
Only diehard Vivaldi fanatics should be able
to sit still through all six sides, well done as
they "are.
Both recordings by the wa^, come with
translated libretti and mformative historical
notes and miscellany The Philips people
obviously wanted nothing ^one halfway
Thig 1% f/)# f>lmc% for Rib Loymm*
By far the Best Ribs we've tried m LA
Hf ta iaawiw
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/i
• * I I*
'(j<* 't;
BeHkovem:
The MkMk Qmertets
The Jmmmrd Qymnet
IfiriMiii PTilf Wfi
This IS another Columbia
reissue, with just the F Minor
(Opus ilXJuartct being newly
recorded The middle quarteu
might be seen as Beethoven's
otwsMMR With the sonata
form: a war between lyric mel-
ody and dramatic music Thii
4lichotomy resulted rn some-
interesting, marvelous music, if
not the subhmity of the form
as shown in Beethoven's late
quartets.
The Juilhard Quartet played
the works as they were meant
to be played, with incisiveneaa,
clarity and verve Especially
admirable is their new record-
ing of the Quartet No 1 1 in F
Minor, with insight matched
onJy by the Amadeus Quartet
Phihps
— Adam Parfrey
been halted, at least tempo>
rarily, by -tendonitis in his
hands
Br That as it mav Romero
deals with Torroba Albeniz,
Terrefa, Turina. Granados,
and Rodrigo without a great
deal of superfluous flash or the
heart-on-sleeve sentimentality
so ofltn encountered with late
Spanish Romantics Still, an
entire album of this stuff can
^M l$*t "ITte««ili. eipecially
since Romero opts for the
same sort of moderately fast
tempi everywhere.
An otherwise superb "Cor-
doba,** in an impressive trans-
cnption by Romero, is marred
by an obtrusive and unnec-
essary studio reverberation
But Turina*s nonsensical -pan-
danguillo" comes as close to
sounding like real muaic as it
ever has.
]^«rm-hlneded Iberania can
apiHirently be done intelligently
but with feeling It can only be
hoped that Rosieros hands
allow him to resume preform-
in — and soon
^ H.F.
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I
Angel Romero, the youngest
and most brilliant of the Ro-
mero family, offers surprisingly
mtare and thorough readings
of these often superficial
»^ori^ Since the album was
racofiied, Roaiero*s career has
I — '~ 1
I To hmlp you pi»n your future I
I Career Guidance
4 MTcek program sum July Jli?
aho
Tutoring • Wraing S4ilK •
Power R4
WHY DO THE
ru ^ — - Psalma 2
f OO AND MINC rOO OUT Of THIS LAND UNTO TM« L^
...«.° 1^!*^" ^°°* *" 0*TH O' TMf CHILONCN OF
SMAIX CAMHV Kt^ m •ONES FROM HOtCt. 90 MMmTdI^
^ri^jr;«'J2P "« **• 'WT »< A COFFIN eOTFT -
MO MOSCS TOOK TMC •ONK* OF JOSEPH WITH HIM Foa
MC HAD STUAIOHTLr SWOKN THE ^ONEN^ O^ ^ll^
•AriHC. OOO wiu. mtmir visit too; WteI^^^
W MV SONEt HENCE WITH VOU " ' ^ '' ■***^ *=*^*
-AND THE SONES OF XMEM4. WMCH THE CHILDNEN OF
SHECHCM IN A PAnCCL OF OmXiWO WHICH JACO* BOUOMT
Of THE ao«s OF HAMon THi fatheh oTaneS^S
'U!5^.^^ y«lfTAHCi OF THE CHMJHUW^
'»^^9^PH. (Sartpmrt HtHmmwm of aia
tartn? JaaiWia as:31.)
HEATHEN RAGE?
and Ads 4:2S
J^'^IIg,"?/'.*' Jj'ji ^natation Mcm a -WWCflFUL MNi
oLr!!^ yj^^^'^^ ^^^^ •<>«>▼ -AND IT CAaK TO
im^il^l^T^ .K)SW^; AMD gNE SAID. LIE WITH ME MIT
•rr tjAgTEn wotteth not what ig with mc in the
2?^Jtr^^II^.T^^ committed au. that he hath to
^J!l^^ ^^^^^ '• ^^^^ OltCATEn IN THIg THAN I
•jmien;*^™ « «^ •ack anything fhom me Sut
I^^J^f^^ thou A#rr H» w«; HOW THEN caTip do
by Eia
lo Ma
AMOaiN AOAINET OOD? . . . ang
' aaytfif. ia aM Ma; ana Ha lafthla
aM fta land ol Egypt far
BbapMi 47:1g.ja mm
of AM
aa «pMI aa la
ta.
The Gutilance Center
3017 Santa Monica Blvd.
Furlly,
Ma N lartMly
an
if
•aa Tka La«#|. QM
'a HM ana yoy aMI ana asar mmg
i:aa
And May ahaH caB Kla
ia. God wMi ua.)
-niGHTEouaNEaa exalteth a nation: auT 8M m a
nEPnOACH TO ANY — ^ a^ W A
Wiiifiit fpiic will be discusssd 7 to pn^
» _..
I
i^JllJ MomcA
ipimNi iny im
J» SNEAO IN TMf LAND: FOU THE FAiii ^ 2rU2?
•O THAT THE LAND OF EOYrT AND AU. THE LANoS
CANAAIiFAINTH, »y NEASON OF THE FAMM^i^^S^
OATNMW l» AU. THE MONET THAT WAS FOUND MTM
S?-uTy^ ""^ •OOOMT; AND JOSCMI WIOUOHT T*«
^ITTJ:^ ** "*^^ AMD IN THE UMO OF nrtltjnT
THE EOVrriANS CAME UNTO JOMM. AND ^'^ itr
■^AO^WW WHY SMOULO WE DM M WY MMMMT FM
THE EKMBV Fan.ETM. aim) maBMi ~- -- ^^^
CATTl^ AMP I Wn4. GIVE YOU FOa YOUn C^
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t:. .....i.
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T
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Avco Center the sailor who f€u from
Cinema I
I c Wiiihir* nmor
475-0711
fWli Indoor Avco
GRACE WITH THE SEA (R)
1:3S, 3:40. 5:50, 0:05, 10:15
hi. 1:45. 3:55, 4:10, 10:50
•:30 PtCVIfW
Avco Center
Mfi yri. Hi 5pm $3.25
Cinema II
Wilthir* noor
Wottwood llvd
475-0711
Avco Center
Cinema III
Wthkurm noor
Woftwood Blvd
475-071)
Pork Indoor Avco Gorogo
CUfif
OUTUW X>SEY WALES
3:30, 5:00, 7:35, 10:10
SILENT MOVIE (PG)
2:00. 3:55, 5:50, 7:50. 9:50
hi it Smt Midnight Show
Pacihe't
Beverly Hills
^•'•hj.tf . Myd ot Connon
I bill East oi tovorly Or
27» H2J
it^irt Dm Hirm in
TAXI DRIVER (R)
MOTHER, JUGS A SPEED
_ Mon-Frt mpmn 6:00
Sot-Sun opon 12:30
BrenTwood I
2524 Wiithtro
(^ 2^ St I
Sonlq MofNCO *
■29 33*6 029 3367
■ruco Dom ond A#t Comoy in
WON TON TON
4:30, 10:30
ndPu»t»nH»HmewondtofcTtO,if,;liif>
AU THE PRESIDENT'S MEN
4:15
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a ufthn^ «l
HOT UPS and INNERTUBES
Ikiity of 7:00 ond 9:00
Moftn!i
Bruin
Wottwood VHIogo
47709i8
MURDER BY DEATH (P6)
1:15,3:30; 4:45, 6;30, 1:15, ibOO
Plifi
Century
Plaza L
JMBRYO
-<o40 Avo of Stort
553-4291
Ooily 6 30, 10:20
Sot-Sun 2:30. 4:30, 10:20
witff
THE RIVER NIGER
Mon-^ §25 Sot 4 Sun 4:30, 1:25
Cinerama
Dome
Surrtot noor Vino
Hollywood 466-340?
In 70 mm St«r«ophonic
LOGAN S RUN (PG)
Daily 12:30, 3:00, 5 30 • 00 10 30
Sorry — No Pomm
Cinema
1262 Wo«K«'ood Blvd
272 5876
474-7866
BINGO LONG AND THE
TRAVEUNG AU STARS
Pox Venice ' »' - nw.t^ •
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Child $1 00 7/ »-!!»• bnw frt
7 W - *
TK« Smh ikm
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vol 8ollo«
Ltfcion
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YIm Hm lied
TK«8Ndol
Hollywood
Pacific
Hollywood Blvd
Noor Cohuongo
466-5211
Qint iostwood
THE OUTUW
X>SEY WALES (PG)
Ooily ot 1230, 3:00. 5 30, 4:00, 10:30
lit* itiow Fri A Sot
A Loommlo fHoefro
Los Feliz
1822 N Vormofft
Hollywood
NO 4-2169
^••^•f rfOfvcti Fiifn Film
ICY MEASTS
— 1»7*
A4ALE OF THE OENTUtY
Manns Westwood I
THE TENANT
13:43, 3:05 S:SO. 7-90. 10:1
0nb0r t/O inmc n b index
■.".i-i-it.
By L4ura Kl
After two years of anxious waiting, the
audience at A Chorus Lme last work was
having trouble holding out those last few
minutes before the curtain finally went up.
Michael Bennett's Pulitzer Prize and Tony
(nine) award winning show has received more
publicity, prizes, and public attention than any
other recent musical. A Newsweek cover story
and large newspaper spreads have studied and
revealed the story and meaning behind A
Chorus Line: but the massive build up sut-
prisingly does not lesiicn the show's impact
Bennett's visual treats are so unique and
presented with such flair that reading or
hearing about them cannot possibly give them
awayr-- -
A Chorus Line takes place entirely on^a
^*^k st^gc with a single white line running
across the floor and revolving mirrors in the
back The bleakness of. the set, however, is
completely overshadowed by the diversity and
talent of the cast members^ Tharon Musser's
lighting and Bennett's staging and choreo-
graphy.
The la^t aspect is particularly intriguing The
movements of the line are very geometrical and
precise. Without the distraction of lavish sets
this precision is especially noticeable The
dancers split apart many times and in many
different ways, always commg back to their
onginal position on the white line like a pifelc
fitting back together.
A Chorus Line is not a happy musical. In
two intermission less hours, James KirkwocMl
and Nicholas Dante's book exposes the am-
bitions, childhood experiences and personal
problems of dancers going through chorus lint
aadttions Some of the dancer's anecdotes are
erne and funny, while others are revealing and
saddemng But each is very different, making
the show's point that chorus boers aic i«!'
diyidmUs, not robots
The voice of a 4iTecior (Robert LuPone) is
heard from a booth above the suge probing
the auditionees to ''ulk about yourself Not
ooiy » he physically above the auditionees. the
direct©/ also feels superior to them personally
because he "got out of the line.*- He un-
Linc' auditionerf
brlMfid the facet
aihamadely asks the dancers questions which in
*2™V,^*«« ■»*« them break into tears (Paul
pl^ by Sammy WiUuims) or into frantic
^^ ^y*T*v P*«y«<l by Donna McKechine)
t^oth of these, episodes are well done and
moving
Whereas some musicals have dealt with the
tun and gUmour of show business. A Chorus
Une %how% the real people involved the cold
director who seeks only perfection, the thirtyish
dancer who questions what she will do after she
cant dance anymore and the talented dancer
whose looks count her out of many parts
tach member of the line is extretnciy tal-
ented in acting and dancing Bennett's technical
genius m designing the staging of this show is
paralleled by the precision of the danc-^.
Marvin Hamlisch's music and Edward KIc
bans Ivrics fit the tone well Emphasis is often
placed on lyrics, but -Kiss Today Goodbye- is
beautfluHy melodic.
Ihe cast does not excil m singing, but it is
not important here Dancing is the main
emphasis, and it is done so well by each
member pf the line, it is hard to see how the
diFector gin make his final cut at the end oftlie
show but he docs.
»"
» - ■ ^ . -
Badham's 'Binso Long': energy without insiqht
By Joliii C hamplin —
Th^ Bmf.o 4^ Travrhng^AU-Stun A Motor K.n^s is a high-
spirited trim that can't seem to settle down and make its poim
I he theme IS racism, but for all its energy, the film doesn't'
generate much anger or come to any deep insight s^aboiitt^ -role
01 Blacks m society
The film does, however, effectively recreate the late-Depression
era m the South and Midwest It stars Billy Dee Williams as
Bingo Long, a |>ilcher for a team m the old Negro League which
existed before Blacks were allowed to plav ma)or league baseball
Bmgu defies ^e exploitative owners oi the league hv forming his
own All-star team ot players from around the league Ihe All-
Stars then go on a tour of the South and Midwest, dcmolishinir
all opponents. ^
It IS when the All-Stars play a white minor-lcaguc learn that
he ..sue of racism arises Whenihe All-Stars take a si/eable
^ad they are showered with garbage and verbal abuse from the
white fans r hey defuse the tension by putting on a show of
antics which make them look like the Harlem Globetrotters of
™ tK /'"""'l'' u^"' '"'•''' "'^^^ ^^'"^ •"> statement about
racism that might have been made.
"«Ty^^^ L more consistent on the subfect of the v.olencxlhat
ownt\T?h/T ^^^"^-':- ^^^^ --^ -i f'l^-es are the Black
owners of the league and their ra/or-w,eldmg goons The mam
owner, pU^cd hy led Rons, sptuuj nost of the iiiocicirving to
sabotage Bingo's efforts touar.) uccess and financial' inde-
pendence
I he acting suffers from the .ar,^ prot>lem that afOicts the Itlm
as a whole None of the actors ar. able to keep up with the
awkwardly shifting moods ot the lames Earl Jones turns m
the most effective performance as I con. the big power hitler who
^wants to ipve m lo the ownerv-i^hctr thr Alt-Stars' fortunes ebb
Wijliams as Bingo gives- a good pnrtravar of su.siained deter-
mination despite the uncertain >c: pi
Ihe film. attempts to makt .1 tcu Mde commenis. but thcv are
generally out ot place or s.. - v staled as to be almost
meaningless. In one scene the \ - ,,s are seen plaving a game
with an all-Jcwrsh team ExacilN w-. irtat-^gwne is included m the
film isn't clear. po.s,>iblv it mean\
30's were in the same league sot 1.1
scene has no meaning at ill
I he. film gets much of its c(.
score h> William (ioldstein and i'
Ron Miller.
Bmjiu Loom ends on a note^
young All-Stans ,s drafted oni .« ^_ ,,,,„ ^„„.„
actually makes superfluous all of the preceding half-statements of
the film
\merican Jews m the late
N Blacks More likcK. the
m the rousing Dtxtdafid
rifpi b\ Bcrr\ Gordy and
^hen one of the
>a|or league team, which
iMies, Stan Shaw, WMiams: depressk>n barnttcKinefS
The many voices of Billy Joel
By Howard Poaner
In a pop music world dominated by
excess and gimmick. Billv Joel is re-
freshingly well-balanced, versatile and
mature^ He is aUo relatively unknown.
With the exception of "Piano Man" a few
years ago. his songs have generally been
strangers to the radip and the charts
Turnstiles. JoePs new album on Co-
lumbia, displays his talents as singer
songwriter, pianist and producer The
eight songs are clever, tuneful wcU-donc
and even meaningful Billy Joel's sonM
always tell a story or make a point
without being heavy-haiiiad but that's
the only generalization that can be made
about them Joel Ml^ws no formulas and
^[^t^ no stock sound
JoePs voice is usually a boyish tenor
but he can darken it when rt suits it or
P"I^" ■" ®^ ^^'^^ ^^^<^s oddly 'like
Jolm. Hii piano dominates the sound
but IS as versatile as his voice
In '•James,'' a reflccuve message to an
Old friend is OMMd with the bubbly
a^itl-jarf mnnd nf an ,leciiK piaiiu In
plays a very convincing laid«te£k blues.
**A1I You Wanna Do Is Dance". Urn poo ns
teeny-bopper tastes to a bouncy rock and
roll background
The albums best song is "Angry Young
Man,- a former radicaPs biting look at
radicals:
He refuses to bend, he refuses to crawl
He s always at home with his hack to the
wall.
And hes proud of his scars and the
hattles he's lost.
A fid he strugffles and hhmit as he hangs
on his cross —
A</ hi.s honor IS pure and his courage as
well. ^
And hes fair and he's true and he's
boring as hell — i
And hell go the grave as an angry old
^Chicago X
Columbim
A Trick 0/ the TmU
.2^ »fntiments in other hands might
•^ ««^. but Joel delivers the words
about as fa« as he can get them out, and
surrounds x\^ ^^pg with a i.„^, fla^h^
New York Slate of Min<rJadsm^a«^ CI' T .if '^'*"^" includiiig mpidS
— ^ -iK-«»ii "«**^ ^ «♦»« ptano. n cowboyish har-
}fae< AnA
monica Imt and som^
wih rock r' \thms: very impressive, quite
surprising md a lot of fun.
Turn.stiit' 05 full of new twists and
varietN oi \^t wmrt that makes an album
last throafh many listenings, but it hides
f"]i fhr •■
nttthin^'
arc^und
listanar lUm CtwfH i
It may not be their beat
album, but Chicago X pamai
the test as another excellent
recording.
The II songs on the album
arc done with the same fiair
aad mellowness o€ past hits,
and ironically the top new
single IS about New York City.
There is vanety in music, rang-
ing from rock to jazz to the
traditional soft love themes
Fhe ben mm^ are sung by
teawM Peter Cetera: ** Another
Day in New York City," -Skin
Tight," "If You Leave Me
Now,- aad *-Mama Mama/**^
Chicago X will do nothing
to hurt ChicafO*s r^vlation as
one of the top groups in the
country: the album has the
varietv to show the
Atco
tfwe
haps the ideal in pop musk
maturity
lifctannf ih» pgfMup^' uftialt
With the lead singer and
main sUge pcnenality Peter
Gabriers departure and gui-
Urist Steve Haekctt's recording
of a solo album last year,
many critics believed that
Genesis was close to disband-
ing. In /< Tnck of the Tail the
r<MMiinder of the group (Tony
Banks, keyboards; Steve Hack-
ctt, guitar; Mike Rutherford,
and Phil Colhns, drums
lead vocals) prove that
they can get along quite well
without Gabriel.
Oeneiiii* traicaark of
cate instnimaaMiMi ii
w abundance on this
Tony Banks is the
More Movie Guide
com-
taiem.
- Mike
poser taking part in writing
every soafon the album; but
Manns Westwood II
AU THE PtESIDiNT'S N^B4 (PG)
Monns Westwood
AUCE IN WjONOEBLANO
1:00, 2 30. 4 00 S 30 TrPO 330 1000, H 30
H«d A»to»r« •aiia,K«lly
Monica I tmats entebtainmcnt part ii
1332 2nd Str««f
Sonio Momco ' ' plwt
«' •*« HEARTS Of THE WESJ
A Lammmh Thmatrm
Monica II
>322 2f«dStrMf
Sonfo Mofwco
45 1 saa* .
GUS
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A Lowmmim Thmatrm
AAusic Halt
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274-6a69
PACE TO FACE
9MNTHia uv UNniwiii
'^Orwotlv powerful ond mHmcHn^
. . . m mm—mnmni •• hm- hMfd' --
ChmHmt Chomplin LA Ttm—
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ts|0tionaJ
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479 2866
-^^"^^UEADBEUY (PG)
12:30, 3 00. 3:30. 3.00. 10 30
NuArt
-^^^ — olMckyMen. If
Midn»f« Sh«w Thundorcivdi
717 ~ TH« Damnmd t)maH% in V«nK«
Midnit« Show Pink Flomin^***
Theatre ^^^•^ *<•»»• vmmim
1 1272 Sonta Momco Mvd ^/ 1* ~ Oay •* fh« UciMt, 0«in«f«wn
47t^79 7/30 - T»«#fic Ploy^iU
479 326* 7/21 - aiifh.r«ll« R^ Q-don
7/22 - TK« Hm^dm Th#y Cmmm, P^f
Qmnmff A Oilly fH« Kid.
f^idnifm SK«w — Harder TKoy C«m«
PociKt
Pantoaes
Hollywood Ot Vin«
469716)
Jr J
ODE TO BIUY X>E (PG)
MAC INTOSH A T.J.
Continuous doily from 1230
^ctUi t
Picwood
Aco noor WMtWOSd
272S239
In Sonturround
MIDWAY (PG)
12:30. 3:00, S:30, 3:00 1030
a Lammmlm Thmatrm
Plaza
477.0097
479 9077
ly riofoy
— Hollywood loportor
BUFFALO BlU and Ht* INDIANS
Poul Nowmoffi. Jool Gfoy.
Horvoy Koifoo, gurf kMMaslor
Regent
I04ft
Tho workol
772-0301
S^Y HUNGBY
Th0OM<
Royal
1 1 327 Somo
WottiM
477 33f1
SVMPT AWAY
Smi 11 pm mmd 1 pm otily
OIEY GARDENS
(^tHo
»r»ol
9WM\^ V ICO wwn I inucu • '.
^A
N.
rt.fr.
i,
I
3ook review
UA Cinema
Center I
I0M9 W«Mwor»h Av«
474-4)54
^JUD NEWS BEf tS
2:00. 4:00. «:00. 1:00, 1000
UA Cinema
Center II
)0t99 W«Hwor»h Av«
Wvsfwood
474-4165
TH« Fvnni«st Film of 19fS
TUNNEL VISION
Sforring Ch*vy Cha—
1 :Ja 1410, 4;30, 4;0a 7M. t:00 10:30
Close to the '
By JcMii Morley
Wonum am the Edge of
Time (Alfred A. Knopf, 369
pafci, $10.00) by Marpe Picrcy
if either a fasciruiting Utopian
fantasy in the tradition of
Akjous Huxley, or the most
horrifying re-cmtaon of mad-
ncM since / Never Promised
You € Koae Garden.
Piercy weaves the two of-
poaiag fenret together so skill-
fully that it becomci the
institution, Connie is
forced to depend on welfare
handouts for her starvation-
level existence in a bleak New
York sluflk...
But one day all this changes
miraculously Connie contacted
by Luciente, a person from the
future who teaches her how to
mind-travel at will. Connie's
nund subsequently shuttles
"kock and forth between dismal
reality and a beautiful, perfect
UA Cinema
Center III
10809 W«llMorth Av«
W«stweod
474^3613
UA CINEMA
CENTER IV
10M9 WvIIm^oi^ A¥«
W««twood 474 4191
LIFEGUARD
1:30, 3 IS, 3:00, 4:43, •:30, 10:20
• j»
.jr
MACINTOSH Ml T.J.
a, 3:40, S:JO, 7:00, •:40, 10:J0
/
WESTWOOD THE MAN WHO FEU TO EARTH I
)0M7 Lindbrooli
W«ftwood ""'"
477 0575
12:13, 2:2t, 4:41, 7:10, 9:37
Midnifhf Show
Monns
Village
96 1 Broxton
Wvttwood 478 0576
Gregory Podi U« Romick
THE OMEN (R)
1:30, 3:40,4:00, 3:0^, 10:13
Pfi A Sat 12:13ill*w
able, thoufh tomewdat sim-
plistic aad founded on blind
idealism Her writing style, an
odd blend oi poetry and pa-
thetic realism, works once you
get used to it.
The descriptions df ghetto
life are surk and full of an-
guish. Piercy writes like she's
been there. Unfortunately, her
social criticism possesses all the
subtlety of a Remington 12-
gauge fired at cloae range and
often detracts from tbe other-
wise exciting narrative.
Woman on the Edge of
Time is no panacea for the
world's problems, but if no-
thing else. It should make peo-
ple re-examine that thin hne
between sanity and madness
•^
n\
VAGABOND """" Si«GmTi J^ '*'''
Rosolind RuM«tl
MY SISTER EILEEN (1942)
Piercy: she's been there
2509 WiUhire
DEL MAR
J^^hert D» Nir* hl
3036 w Pico Wvd TA)^ DRIVER
^35-6424 *ii •* AM -I . •'•^
3UV Hii,^ WRTWATER FOX
reader's task tQ unravel them.
In. the process he must decide
whether the central character is
A sane reporter or a madwo-
man recounting vivid hallo-
cinations.
f^omoH o9t ' the Edge of
Time is the moving story of
Ronnie Ramos, an aging Chi-
caaa widow [>cpnved of a
college education, branded in-
sane by a brief bout with a
world where technology hof
been replaced by humanism.
Individuals lead productive,
satisfying lives. Contemporary
problems such as the popu-
lation explosion, misuse of
natural resources, political cor-
ruption, racism, male chauvin-
ism and homosexuality have
all been solved.
The internal consistency ot
Piercy*s hew world is remark-
ORIENTAL .
7425 Son«#t Blvd.
•76-02 1 2
Mod«lin« Kohn in
WON TON TON
wifn
AU THE PRISlDENrS MB4
BILLY DEE
WILUAMS
tJHCHARIL
PRYOR
JAMES EARL
JONES
YANKEE ROSE
WAVES
EXPtfSS WAY
NMt W«d. Only
MAIIMNEAO
RAZU
DANCi
$100
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10303 W nco llvd
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th« b«st of KFT t
ia%t S yfar%
BEATING A DEAD HORSE
^1 a Sat s 00 a 10 00
Records
(CoBtinued from Page 11)
the other members of the
group also contribute parts
oi songs.
A Trick of the Tail de-
monstrates that Genesis is
continually maturing mu-
sically. It IS a must for any
one truly into music.
* Stuart Sanda
A Kind of Hush
Cvpenkmg
AAAw ■ -»■•'—"
A Kind of Hush, the lat-
est effort by Karen and Ri-
chard Carpenter, is a disap-
pointment for all the wjong
reasons The album features
the usual lush voice hi Ms!
Carpenter, backed up by the
usual arrangements that
characterize their work The
problems lies in the selection
oi songs — poor, mediocre
and washed-up tunes, with
the exception of their latest
hit, "I Need to be In Love."
Why Richard Carpenter in-
situ on resurrecting oldies
Uke 'tA Kind of Hush" and
doing yet another version of
"Breaking Up is Hard to
Do" defies explanation The
Carpenters could have had^^
the best material around,
but in this album have evi-
dently chosen to ignore it.
- Janle Wlgod
The First Play to Win All
Waior Critical Awards'
BlMGOLoirQ
Through July 18
DAVID TATHEAD' NEWMAN
July 20-25
ART FARMER
Li^hons^
^^ -\r% Dim Afcjc m
SrUDiNT
M^COAIt
WSCOUNI
^^ 30 PIER AVE. ■
MERMOSA BEACH MFC- TEL 372 6911
' The producers of EOUUS
have made available for
coWtjUe students only. 60
special onstage seats for
MWh ptrformance Friday
A Saturday evenings
S6 op. all other perfor-
••••cta including mati-
•••s $500 Tickets are
availaWe at the Hunting-
ton Hartford Box Office.
Studant ID card required.
Fir informitiaa call:
•t»mikti
;
FREE DRESS REHEARSAL FOR UCLA
SUMMER STUDENTS CurrMt R#o Cani
•^^•ta you wA ^Shm door.
JULY 19 %m pm
«•'
UM thru Sat July 30-24 1:30 pifi
Sun. July 2i . 3ilOAtMp.m
ScheiHfcBrg HaM. UCLA
THE GENTLE
ART OF
MAKING
ENEMIES
Starring RUDY SOLARI
A JAMES DOOHAN M The
San FraMMaco Rap»r lory Co )
A th»'atf icaJ faf.f>flPi' fiuij of tl»# famous •" #'
involving a suH . ..^hi by Amencdn a
James McNerli Whistler against English
critic John Ruskin
P
[
r
S6.00RaMrv«d
bo« onica 1 hour b««of« performance If " ' ^ —
-4^'
y* >M
3.
m
RaMy
for haHlliiM card
Flaish«r mnd Spmf^m
(Mt) and F»r»t Vic« Chairman
I on Sapiamtoaf ia m Iha Coliaaum
tor the Ahzi
Arizona.
Rally Committee increasing
(( onliffuied fr«>m Paer 1^)
parties^ trips, vacations, sports
activities and Mardi Gras
planned for members. Rally
Comm's ^^ardi <i^ 76 booth
was -awarded the Grand Mar-
shairs'trophy for **lt's A Small-
Hotdog-On-A-Stick World,"
a fully animated take-off cmi
the Diisneyland attn^mn
Participation in the Rally
Committee coMitU of accumu-
lating hours by stamping the
instruction cards lor use in the
card and light stunts and-by
repairmg and distributing the
stiml -related materuiis Mem-
bers receive benefits corres-
ponding to the amount oi
hours accumulated - _i..
"Benefits include gi>od seats
at foothall and basketball
games, the northern trip to
Bay Area and having good
times,** concludes hlaisher.
Rally Committee is open at
Kerkchoff 129, Monday- Thurs-
day, 6-10 pm, or people can
cone to the work parties (Juty
25; Aug 8, 22, 29 and Sept
12).
iuly 16 A 17
100011
nil fm M
■ntti
JOHN PAHCY
July 33 a 34
BARNEY KESSEL
twn. Jiity 35
itOMN WflUAMSON
f vafivioffy f^aif% tfia
MUCi D. SCHWAtTZ
t.tllTANS aAM.HIK M ANIMH.INS H(MmS AMU MM (HtriK
-1*
THE WOJRLPIS FAVORITE BEDTIME STORY IS
FINALLY A BED-TIME STORY .. .
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I AMk Wmuimi
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COUNTtY XX
MCOONALO
AND
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/
iuly 20-2S
STEVE MARTIN
UBERTY
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AN X-RATED MUSICAL COMEDY
STARRING PLAYBOYS COVER GIRL — KRISTINE DEBELL
WITH LARRY GELMAN • ALLAN NOVAK • TERRY HALL
SPECIAL GUEST APPEARANCE BY FLESH GORDON
SCREENPLAY BY B. A. FREDRICKS
LYRICS AND MUSIC BY BUCKY SEARLES
ARRANGED AND CONDUCTED BY JACK STEARN A PETER MATZ
PRODUCED BY W1LUAM OSCO • DIRECTED BY BUD TOWNSENB
fy. 4tb BK wnv r
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crvi
FOX Holtywood 463-2184
MIIV 12 39n? «.2!jt.S M .f »«• M.l Ji-a tt MRi
FINE AUTS Beverly Hills 6S2-1 330 NEW IVESTWiOB Westwood 473-7664
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1,1 ■
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ym
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1
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p
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2
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i
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mi
Bruin athletes assistOfg with youth camp
Kofitinutfd from P«gr 15) vaJuc ^^4ikc a friend r
Kofitinutfd from Page 15)
One other imporuar aspect
of the .^ogram, according to
Storer, it the mandatory free
medicaJ examination for paiti>
cipantf . A number af heart
murmurs and caaat of hifh
blood presfure were disco-
vered, and if the parents can-
not afford to have the child
checked, the university will do
It free of charge.
CovBHlnr Marilyn (ilucki>-
man says she likes lu call her
kids at home to see "what's up
They really enjoy it They feel
as if they're really of some
The kids also make friends
among their ^>eers from other
asaa*. One small girl flound-
ered across the width of the
pool« her skinny arms and legs
thrashing v^igorously and wild-
"Am I swimming'^ she
asked her friend hopefully
"You sure are," the friend
replied "Now just quit
splashin' me " — r^ — -
Well, things could be worse
As one child puf it, "I could be
in summer school.**
I
i
r
-11
tired of yesterday's hair?
IriAII? I^IDAT
for what's happening now
styling for men and women
Jerry Reddings Jhirmack products
For appointment call 478-6151
• -t — — II. 1., ' '
thru sat.
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with this ad
ItOfWOf
at UCt>'t youth
1 105 Giendon Ave Westwood Village
T
-Cl
miim
AN OPPORTUNITY
-•»— .
Bruins aiming for gold at Montreal . . .
^
m
m
To Meet New People
To Find Out About Other Countries
To Fill a ValuabfeRole
>■
Volunteer to be a
:- COUNSELOR
.inthc
*. •;:
FOftEIGM yrUDEMT
^ORIENTATION PROGRAM
American and Foreign Students
are encouraged to apply
y
For inlixllriation call or^ome into the International Student
r. 1023 Hilgard 825-3384 or 477-4587
(Continued from PafelS)
Karein IVIoie Thomroiv *
1976 graduate, qualified for the
Games with a trials victory m
the 200-meter butterfly Thron-
ton, ft 1972 gold medalist, also
faces tlie challer^ge of East
Germany*s super swimmers
Incoming freshman Katky
Heddy will swim in the 400-
met freestyle. A mcdalifit in
both the Pan- Am Games and
the world swimming cham-
pionships^ Heddy finished bc-
4iind Babashoff m qualifying.
Jeanne Haney, another
Jresh man- to-be, qualified se-
cond in the 400-metcr indi-
vidual medley. Her finish in
the trails was also in
I
GIANT S
SUMMER
CLEARANCE
"S
shoffs wake. (Women's swim-
ming alto starts on Sunday
and finishes on the 27th
LiCLA men*s swim coac)^
Hjeorge Haines wilJ help coach
the men's team.)
James Butts, a 1974 gra-
duate, could bounce to a
medal in the triple jump His
wind-aided 55-5 '^ led quali-
fiers last month in the track
trials at Eugene. Oregon The
U.S., with Butts, national re-
cord holder Tommy Haynes
And former Long Beach State
jumper Rayfield Dupree, is
fielding its best ever TJ team
Russian Victor Saneyev, the
72 Olympic winner, and Bra-
jEift Joao Oliviera (holder of
the Bob Beamon-esque 58-u'/^
world record) are the favorites
A UCLA graduate in 1975.
Benny Brown leads off the
American 1600-meter relay
te«Tr in Montreal. Brown
gained his spot by finishing
fourth in (Ketrials and had to
be named to the team by the
American coach, Dr Leroy
Walker of North Carolina
Central. Barnng the mjuries
and political complications
that smashed U.S. relay hopes
in 1972, Brown should win a
gold medal with the Jieavily
favored U.S. iquad.
Maak— Parks, who still at-
tci^ UCLA (bir(. whose athle-
tic eligibility expired in 1975),
11 the top American ©ver 409-
meters. Parks will be chal-
lenged by (or will challenge
himselO Cuban Alberto J uan-
tarena and_ Belgium's Pons
Brydcnbach More American/
UCLA gold If possible.
Jame^ Owens, a junior in
September, will compete in the
>10-meter hurdles He was
third against a strong field last
month in the trials But he
may be in over his head with
the pressure of an Olympic
final Maybe not.
A junior recruit' and a na-
tional JC record holder while
at San Jose City College.
Millard Hampton lead a
somewhat remarkable contin-
gent of Americans in the 200
meters Besides the 19-year-old
Hampton, the other 200 meter
members are Dwayne Evens, a
17-year-old Arizona high
school senior (bound for the
University of Arizona), and
Mark Lutz, one of the few
white sprinters of national
class caliber in the U.S. Lutz is
also the husband of 15(X) meter
Olynipian Francie Lameu
Lutz. Hampton, incidentally,
may win it all.
Ainpng the- -wtunen track.,
and field athletes is Karin
Snith, a 20-year-old sopho-
more. Smith IS a javelin
thrower with a best of 203-10,
a mark .set in early June at the
AAU meet in Drake Sudium
She was thirrf m the Truiia--
behind gold medal hope Kathy
Schmidt, a onc-tiaie ii^L^,
sttident who transferred early
last fall quarter to Cal Sute
Long Beach With another
throw like her AAU effort.
Smith believes she can move in
for a medal. Gold, however.
Tippiari well out of her reach
— until 1980.
Evelyn Askford, a late^
blooming 100 meter runner,
completed her freshman year
here winning a berth on the
American Olympic team She
will also run on a promising 4
X 100 relay team
Kathy Weston. 18, a frcsh^
man recruit from Sacramento
^yia^Rcno, Nevada, scuttled
across the hne third in the
fastest 8(K) meter race ever run
by American women Her cre-
dentials include a gold medal
in the 800 last y^ear in the Pan-
Am Games at Mexico City.
East German and Bulgarian
runners will hkely make things
tough for her
SkirU, Dr^sMs, Pants A Tops
Alto Greatly Reducad
The NIKE ALL COURT
Tennis and Baskett>aM
- light canvas uppm
durability
- famous Winibledon sole
$12.96
Op9n7dmr9
Mastercharge.
BmnkammtiCBrd
ypi'^ i^?J°';„ii|.n^nie'' youth sports program
ports Reporter and 17 ^2Lk>w ar^T!!!!? ^^^*^ "^ ***^^' *^ "»»«> other daily activities and the free Brum and U & r
MfounH i.r7iA». ..._._ . . ■«'•'" ■'^ "»ic« universities _ ^kr*T^. -^^.^^ .•._ l^_ ___ ■"^*"" •"*• ^^ ^
■y Carol A. Crotta
Oa Sports Reporter
Wander around LiCLA*s
athletic facilities any morning
dunng the ligat summer ics-
iioA, and prepaae to be en-
fulfed hy an amy of kids.
Pauley Pavibon twitches
with the staccato of fiercely
fought haskethail and volley-
hall games The pools chum
and froth as flutter-kicks are
pnctipad. The intramural fields
are busiest o^ all
dnHs, soccer matches and
hail faaws noisily coexist.
429^partMpilMi
UCLA*s athletic areius are
jumping with 420 participants
in the National Youth Sports
Program Don't look for it in
the Summer Session catalogue.
To take part one must be
between 10 and 15 years old
and hve in a UCLA **Urget
area" — Crenshaw, Mar Visu,
Venice. Robertson or Watts
While most UCLA students
do not fit those ca^egones the
Umversfty is neverthekss ably
represented on the program's
AaMag the 10
17 ooiMBSiors are listed
inch takmad Brum athletes as
footballers R,ck Walker and
Wendell Tyler, basketball per-
former Jim SpilUnc and vol-
Icyballer Lisa Vogelsang. Many
ol the staff memben return
year after year
Program director £)ennu
Storer bebeves it ukes a cer-
tain lype^of motivation "We
•ay *don*t ^aoir^ us >ust for a
summer job;-t:ome if you are
keen to do it,' " he said, sur-
veying the intramurals fields
from his second-floor office.
^'ItV hard Work and you've, got
to like to work with children "
Eighth year
The program, now m its
eighth year, IS federally funded
and sponsored by the NCAA
and the President's Council on
Physical Fitness UCI A is one
«f 111 national universities
which opens its campus and
lacihties to children from low-
income and inner city districts
The UCLA program has be
come% #iodel lor many other
universities _..
Because oi UCLA s faciTfttei.
the young people can uke part
in a W4de ranfr of activities,
from track and field and dance
to judo and karate. gymMsUGs
aad over 10 others The pact if
list too fast, say some staff
members but intense parti-
cipation is the key word of the
program There » no place fot
stragglers
daily activities and the free
choice period, ihc kids arc
given-lunch, served among
UCLA students in Dykstra
Hall It IS the combination of
the meal served and dming hall
alflMMpherc which has im-
pressed the program's national
officials most, not to iKntion
the kids "The food here ia
very, very delicious,** said 12
year-old Tawana Blevins
The most imprassiwe aspecf~
lius program is for part ici- of the dining hall ritual is
pation, said coordinator Terry clean-up. which leaves the
Scott^ if we sar a kid who average UCLA student
isnt participating regularly, we ashamed of his or her uble
replace him or her" manners *^
Bruin running back Wendell -Those kids rcaUy work hard
Brum and U.S. rugby team
coach, iseii tbe kids must be
"iellHlifeciphned It is part of
the enrichment I hey caa
choose their free activity each
day aad mom around the din-
ing ball We tend not to run a
heavy hand.** he laid
Niebauer. though he feeb
discipline is important said.
Ij's not Uke a dnil camp Wc
mtroduce the kids to different
i|K>rts and leach them skills
within these sports We don't
look to develop any
I
f
c
Tyler found his own solution
to the problem "The first week
they were bad httle brats," be
reported of his 25 kids. **liut
now, I make them do push-ups
if they don't cooperate "
Free of charge
The program is"* tree of
charge, even including trans-
portation b> bun from the
areas In addition to the two
on the tables." said coordi
nator Skip Niebauer. chief
la hie cbaeber and scrutini/er of
micraseopic flecks of dust and
crumbs -They even line up the
• salt and pepper shakers so they
lace the same direction."
''Self-disciplined*
. This practice would seem to
indicate an underlying philV>
sophy ol distipilinc. but di-
Storer, , who is itho
_ L ■ ^oanion lo me two rectw Storer, who .s Mi^
Four basketball leagues going at L.A. State
Continued from Paae lai tk. i„,^ . ..^ ^ ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^" ^^•M^W
sport" The group is now pre-
paring for Its Iri-Mdet with
thc>Otids from the USC and
Peppcrdinc prograoM, which
will uke place here on July 21
Sports activities are only
part of the program's overall
emphasis Storer says the rec-
reation program serves as an
"excellent vehicle to mtrcxluce
the kids to university hfe "
"We feel the program., must
*>c^ IWOfTcaaive. not |usi five or
SIX years of physical activity,"
he said'
<f ontinuad on Page 14)
(Continued from Page 3%)
many as eight consecutive
hours of basketball, ranging
from high school^ leagues for
boys and jtrls up to the pro-
' fessionaF ranks
, The pro-summer league of-
ficially gets underway this Sun-
day night and will run through
August 29 with the annuaiall-
sur game The women s col-
legiate league begins a week
from tomorrow, on, July 24.
with the championship game
on August 29 The high school
championship games are on
August 8.
Four leagues ~
Ahaost 30 athletes associ-
ated with UCLA aft particF-^
patmg in the four different
leagues, with the women's col-
legiate division ha_ving the
largest -contingent of UCLA
athletes.'
Heading the hst is UCLA
Olympian Ann Meyers wha
will play for the Inman team
fnamcd for the general mana-
ger of Portland Trail Blazers)
The team is coached by
Meyers' sister. Patty, and
Bruin teammate Beth Moore is
•l*o on the squad, v
The largest Bruin group is
on the Newell (named for
"Laker GM Pete) team Hcidi
Nestor, Lori Allen. 4 eslie
Trapnell and Janice Wright are
squad members
On the Sharman team
(named for Uker coach Bill)
are 1975-76 Bruin starters
ICaren "Mama" Nash and Judy
Lewinter, plus Pat Enckson
PUying for the Bertka squad
(New Orleans Jaiz association)
are incoming Marlborough
son for the Bucks, while Nater
has signed wijh the Bucks after
a stint in the ABA and has a
good shot at starting at center
for them Ml the fall
All-Amcrican Richard Wash-
ingto» and teammate Andre
McCartcr. both of whom have
Mgned contracts with the
ICansar-City Kings, are sche-
duled to plav with the NBA
Rookie team "We are con-
fident that b6th Richard and
Andre will play in the pro
ctirrently co
High School graduate Pcni^^J^ZJi ^^ k" '^' ^'""
Corlett and returning starti-r^^''^'*^^ *^*«"^ ^^'^ summer.
Corlett and returning starter
Anita Ortega
The Embry (Milwaukee
GM) squad has Jaqe Cohen.
while -Nancy Jackson. Veoita
Gnffey and Kathy Eit/gerald
are on the Colangelo (Phoemx
GM) team UCLA assistant
coach Chris Howell will run
the Colangelo entry
Dave Meyers
In the opening pro game
Sunday night, the Lahan wit!
meet the Bucks-Blazers Start-
ing for the Bucks-Bla/ers wiH
be former Brum All- American
Dave Meyers and Bill Walton's
back-up center. Swcn Nater.
Meyers had a fine rookie sea-
ba.sed on indications from the
two athletes," said Greg Katz,
director of puhhcity for t^
pro-summdr
as the top
returning high school prospect
m the .state, while Naulls
would be considered as one ol
the top juniors In the hack-
court with Ereeman and Naulls
IS George Ratkorich. who is
another possible Brum recruit
for next year ■-■*-.
San (iabriel is receiving
tough competition from Los
Angeles, led by Brum recruit
James Wilkes South. Bay is
also m the picture, led by
UCLA recruit Kiki Vande-
weghe The fourth Brum in-
coming 'freshman. Gig Sims,
has dropped oft pf the South .
Maddox. the Los Angekrs C iiy
Plaver ol the Year m 1975 as a
lunioi Maddox leads 4.he
league in scoring and rebound-
ing at this time
**Kim IS delinitel) the lop
high school senior lor the
1976-77 season and I expect
that every college in the I os
Angeles area will probably
have her at the top ol the
recruiting lisu," said Katz
Ortc>ia played on the same
team with Maddox when she
was a senior at Los Angeles
and might be a big help to
1>CI A< in the recruiting ftj^ht
come next Ap^'i
Several Bruins are also pl^y-
mg a major role in the high
school divisions as incoming
recFlNto lun^ been impressive.
San Ciabriel Valley js the only
undeleatcd ttam m the boys'
dlVi«iinn
I op recruits
DarreU Allums plays lor- San
GabrieJ as does 1 ynwo<!>d
teamm^ates Tommy Eraaman
and Tyren Naulls ( cousin oC.
former Bruin Atl-Amencan
Willie Naulls) Ereeman is
Bay team to^ concentrate
other activities
on
Fhree of UCLA's top
women recruits are atendouts
m the girls' high school divi-
sion l^mmic Breckenridge
from Crescenia Valley, I>eana
Blackwood ol Buena High
School and Lynn Wright ol
V cntura are #iwmg the leaders
:ri scoring, rebounding, assists
and Iree throw percentage.
The too nljitjair Ia* -»- -
women has been Los Angeles
High School senior , Kim
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I he high sv { *^»ol laagties a re
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Saturday and Sunday alter
noons The women's collegiate
laguc will compete on Satur-
day and Sundav afternoons
with some I riday games in
August .Ihe prolcssuinal
league will play on Tuesday.
frida\ Saturdav and Sundav
nights
Considering that one admis-
sion allows a pafiMi IQ spend
the cmit-e day, "one who loves
the game of basketball will
probably be at ( al State LA.
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THE ALL AM EAKAN KJMmUl
WITH T
tPat cyn or
ii
TMi AirOMd Thru July 23
V
V.
r
I
.T
■ »
CLASSIFIED
\
iMmn. VoMfs iRHy. tMi MMmi Mtf
ft Jt If)
TIM ASUCLA C4
iMlly >MppTH ItM Uwhwrlty of C«M-
••mte's paltey «i no^-^laeftniiiwIlHi.
A4v«nt«4f«9 ftpac* will net b« immI*
■waMaM* in Mm Oatty BMiln to anycww
who tfltcrtMln«t*t o« tli« ha^U of
• pMcastry. cel^^. nattOMal ortflfi. raca.
aiiptan. or aas. NaMMr %m OaMy Bniln
MK tha AtUCLA ComaMMticallont
BoorO has invaattfolad any of tfta %mi
vica* advartiaad or advartiaart rapra-
•anlad in thtt ittua Any parson ba-
Itavtng that an advartiaamani tn llSta
iaaua vtolalas Pm Board't poMcy on non
placrlminallon tlatad h«r«in should
cowwwuntcala comp:laMt|^ in arnttng to
lt»a Busin*at ^mr\m^mt UCLA Daily
Bruin 1 12 Karciihotf H^, 301 Waatw««p
Plaia, Los Ang«t«s. California 90024
For aaaialanca wiitt houaPig dlfcrtmi-
natiOn problams. call: UCLA Houaing
Offica. (213) 125 44f 1 Wvalsida Fair
• (213) mi'M —
MICMlLLf •■ CUpractar t—^,
•f I
ajdalralghi only f. A^«^ p q ««.
7BB33 Loa * '-
(B^ IB)
fttftoingnetit
COME oiit MiB an^ a
WaaMpy pnP waiSand rMaa, By Mm
•»««ir. Half PC iMll day For $4. SB an
••••w. Miip^pMpiia. call Ti
BlaBipa. 4BB-BB19; 121 Old ><
Canyon NB.
(7 (Mr)
campus
announcements
FAKTABTIC ^_- „..
funflll acolof leal BynBay^mountarp
PPI iiili#>, gjHP, Bring/ a»oat now
(7Jjr23)
'i » (AB iHiBanla/alaff). PmB Mp
By phpna. CPB Tony SB2-1BBI\^ ^
passport
identification
resume photos
(2) 7/tWlt.
(4) B/2y71. (714) 4B7
IBMi
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for Co-op
24 CdB 47
r7 J«2B)
social events
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waoliand wHh calarad raf raahmontp,
Btodnp Oolllpy. B22-11S1
(•CHr)
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/50 fcercirhoN hall 825 061 1 m271
open monfri 8 30-4 30
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Recreation
Center
DELI 4
claaalcal mualc. tonnlp mn4 Mklng'
3B7-B463 *** •"••*••- ^•''
(B Jv IB)
m J« 2P)
•or rent
SNACK BAR
is open
Monday-Friday
1 1 :00-5:00
Saturdays, Sundays
and Holidays
1 1 :00-6:00
com pi
printing
service
YmImIiiii;
mini<'i>-(iiiio
I'JI krr«kh«Wf lull
^WT-A-TV flO.BB MonBi BMfoo/Mfl
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Boor caMn. furrHahod, ...^ «.^
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472
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1-Pt OOLF CLIMB. Spc B MBora.
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111
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BpB tlM ny BBM paaaT*^
no j« IP)
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• p.n»
rwji^
BEAN BAG
CHAIRS
$25 VALUE
NOW
t^2«
90
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'^ •■P«rlmantal rasaarch $• 00 for
Call •2S-ft2B2
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MAPmiED CoMplaa waniad PhD BluBr
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I ^^^^ O^W 8UNOAV
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can •2S-7tS1 tor SABI
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atudy on cawtptia. Pays IB. Cll Jont
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OABAQC Bala LInana. glaaawara.
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Ffpp ippii
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Cowasontipl CpII Anyttma
274-BS44
Rrotoipm RrpgrwrKy Or9pr>l<ptloA
July 24
July 7n
M4M
Sipcli hair pratarfod S4S-O0B2, . -
(18 Jy 30)
RETIRE 0 Ndrae Babysit p«n Ph 413
11 OS.
<1«Jy27J
PREGNANCY Problem? Free prepnancy
teals Compassionate women coun
selors Balerrait to board carlif«ed
gynecolopiat Btnh Control tnlormation
Alternati««s to Prapnancy 3750 Santa
Bosalts Dr Sutia 212 LA 2P4 0001
(IS Qtr)
July 1 ? ts Gmna Canyon
Mail Pail laa 00
Jwhr «• tanta Pa'tMra
■••••ne i 1 . ijti
JM»y IS tapuna AH P.aa»a. »,4 ^o
July 2i2i ton Francisco
Waaaand
July 24 Picnic' Will Ao^*,.
tlaia l»a«* |« qq
July 7n J Pmui Gany MluaauMi
A aaach Ptcntc |« %o
■"••r *u Aug <ion a Pryr* Na'
'•'*• 174 00
iiiudani rata •«oft aluOani rata* mmmtt
Our 9oai .• lo rraala an .nlarcullu»ai a■c^anv«.<
•n a rai-. 'tandly almoap^«»f« and lo (
^** •• • .<m coal lo yuu
TRUCK/TRAILOR noo€ person with
trarMpon to move otm iMdroom to S.F
In mid Auguat. OfM way $70 3B3-2B81
nsjessi
HOUSEPAINTING S
PREGNANT? We care 24 hour
1111
tOWCppt
no 0«r)
QOVERNCSS and Mftit
3 Bays a waati 307.2BBB. BBa PBaB
^ _____j|isjy_«^
for film, TV. Ma«a.
By appointment
fISOBPt
Best work, materials; ei-
tertors A multi-room In-
teriors: serving the UCLA
Community J yrs full-time
since graduation. Days li
Evenings. 396-8979.
PBEGNANCY TESTIWO - UnwonMd
pregnancy and birth control rounislBif
a»Hl referral by certified women coun
selors Confidential Pregnancy and
Birth Control Cen%r. SuMa 513 0331
Hollywood Boulevard MoBywood CaB
4B1-4B21
(10 Otr)
BIphta Toliyo Hong
^ , Jp, and ottMr OrMnta
London Paris Bladrld. Zurich Now
Yoi%. and Hawaii Foi doMNa call 474
3211 (Bays) 47$ ifii {^v) Wa alao
hanPM alrPnes Hckela PSA Am trak
IWir. hotel reeervePon Addreea 1720
WnBiaadaivd
_^ (23 Otr)
EUROPE Israel N Y B Orient TOC
Low coal flights A I ST 1430 So La
CMnopa Blvd L A BBa-2727
(23 Qlr)
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charter Flight Service
Over 1000 flights lo Europe th ^
Summer • Diacounlatf Siude'
Mighit in Europe • Chprtara to
Hawaii arHJ Meiiro • Studant 4
Faculty dia/ ounis on car purchas
at rentals and leases • Study
toun a Camping Toun • Unragi
manlad Student Tours • Rail
Paaaas • Fly drive European pr-
rangpmpnta • Mini Toun • Hotel
Accofnoeptlon • Hoatai Informa
lion • Inlarnallonal Sfuden! !D
cards • Fraa traepl counaaling •
FXPO Travel Library
ASK US ANrTHING VOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING!
Limitad spptt ramp.ning on
SPECIAL FLIGHTS FOR
ONLY UCLA STUDENTS.
FACULTY AND STAFF
LA-PARIS- LA
Auguat 3-Spptambar 22 $42S 00
Amarlcan Alr1lr«at
Auguat 6 JurM 21 1B77 $340 00
T.I.A.
PLUS many Au^&r Spptambar
and Octobar dppprturpt ptiii
availpMp to London ''ronBBjri
Zurich' pnd,.A/npiardam from
$j;9
SECRETARY for Reaearch PrOgr
1yBB»s. -B^tfig; perapa aiypt Be organixed
goad arrlting aBIBp aaoanBal. Start ai
$B50 037-0400 ' ^
ftp J«r 9n%
EDITING Professional wrIter-BBltor
,a»Hh PhD OlaaartoNorw manuacrtpts
aapeclelly David 454 7340. 4^4-2036
(1SJy23)'
lost A found
•- #
GAY B SI mala
aarloui reaearch. anonyadty. P.O. 01S1
Btortna Del Rey 00201
(ISA 12)
HANOWRITINQ
aiparHaa CaM
$2S REWARD for return at ipd Bach
ppcfc Mken from Pauley Frtppy. iiPy o
Mo queatlona Leave pBone np. ~
14S-013S
(IS Jy 30)
(!l7iy20)
oftored
ELECTROLYSIS: UuMPfHpd tPclal B
body hair permarMntly removed Gentle
aafe method ff conaultatlon. Bb.
Lucia 1010 Qeyley 477-2103.
(IS OBI
MOVING Residential apartments.
offices Large/small )oba Uaed furniture
Brought/ aold Caff Samey 300-0750
BnytPna N' aave
.' (IS Otr)
V W RCPANIS aartuamalr $15
**P (parte B ipBar). $4S braaa .^,^,
$135 vehM lo^ Fme dMgnoala. Ipclpry
PHsBaiilis. only German parts ueeB, aB
•Offc guaramwd. Call tha Accelerator
2B0-4005
(1BOB)
XEROX 2'20
Ho minimum
HtCK OU« TrPiNC SEaViCC
w flood deala
man Union A 213 with EXPr
Mondav-Fndav 1Q-4 8?fS- '
EUROPE lar
FNghta for
VKeala Sled:
Africa Student i
ISCA 11007 San
04. L.A. BBB40. 020-1
ffi r»«r»
at ST Pluae any w>t>a#e Fi _ __
•ery Eatra large Pilcti. wNh any lop-
pmga $5 00 Dial E K-P E R l-E-N-C-E
(OO Otr)
STUDf NT INSURANCE
o^5^
LEARN SaB Hypnoato wNB Ffoe LBe
time reinforcement fr— demoetraBan'
every Tueaday mgBL JaBn (S.A.. mA.)
470-7037 _^ ^^
MP 0«rt
Wa aialie ends maat lor almost
half fare Fly to Europe Africa
Middle Eaat Aaia
BOOK NOW T G C FLIGHTS
CALL
EURASIA TOURS N TRAVELS
_ 274-63B1
OJBBfi Spturdpya
KNOW youraelf through Aalrology
PawnwaiMd oRprt tar you or tpppipl
gHI tor a BiMMi. SppB your BlrtMpla.
I pIpBp Pi BlrB« wMh aoH-ed-
wwaiape and ctiedi or money
' tor $7 JB to BIRNW 1 1B34 Qoit»am
(IS Jy 23)
Studant AtOCidBm
Sldinaaa inpurpncp
Pt bprgpin rptaa for
youraalf B qupBtipd
It ■iiioMoBlo.
Bropd covarpgp.
offpr«f>g. hoppltpl. PccMantal'aBBai,
ourglcBl, ■mhidpntu A
fnmm
••ly HIgB
S74-5BB3
$10 hr
CaM SaB
(10 JY 20)
ARROW MfUflAMCC
BBfipllta on 0 «#fftd-Br|at JMBlB
Bi 1 convanlpfM poScy! Wm Brtsr-
BiBMon B BppNcBtton. conlBCt «ip
IwBMrBwcB OlRcM^ Pt Rip Studpwt
Hpplth Offlcp or CPU B2S-1BSB
•teidpnt IftpufgncB. UCLA Studont
Hppmi Sofvlcp. LA CA S0024
FLY lo South Amen<;a Irom $31100
For (nl^fmafion writs LAS A-BX) Boi
243i2 Pf eat wood 90024. 473-0006
(23 Jy 27)
1^^ ■•"'u,i)it\, t(„ iht *>lh >#,,.
[^•■^■» I bHo (i»SftMii iislihgai
\Qvmf 300 tiigr«t« « (!•«•• wub dvpan <r»%
J'rom July W>fu Junm Slay ? lo 19 wick*
1^ Prpw Me Owias tPeaasPrlea*
IJL ^ f-A" BN 7 24^07 2 lata
IS S h^^ BN •/»? I0r04 • 41t
t ' AH S'^^li^JO 4 41«
lO =^ I BN • • «1«
ECONOBIY Fa«aa la Ortant r _
Mong Kong. Btonlla Talpe. India
Palilatan. TsialpgiitL Pip 4
4B4^>B30 404 2141
(22 Jy
EXPLORE THE WORLD?
LONGEST CHAPTERS - EUBOPE A
WORLDWIDE - 'tf and Academic
, "• ' ' —'^ w.fh.n
hips
' • : ' ■ t'ouin Hoatel Camp.nn
Jour I. AufK Abroad Boons. Amtrak
'PEETOSTuOfcNT TPAVEL CATALOG
' ' 'P »*»'vi(:«» af fhe only nation wide
-*' ' student travel organt/aiton
C I E i STUDENT TPAVEL
109.'
LA 9(X)2-i ,_^
Recorr) Stor(» -
NEW ACAOFMirvFAPrTGHTsi
0. « AH
^•^ BlB-iu/»u J
\U\.t OM SuaNMf »
ATIONS iMOlJiMr
Trs
oppoftunitipp
FLUENT
July tree
A«rta-LHe-Homeownera and Rental
Inaurance Village Office Woraar
f^iy»l
«•--#-#
477
B7B-B181.
BIcai/
•OQRARHICS
a. Iltaratwre aaarch. arUlpg.
•" ' ■■■■K BRwBiS* (Blomp-
I) 2B7-B2B4. Dpn't wait
(IB Olr)
'H.OSD
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
.Taa Yaung
MSURAMCE SERVICE
11B1
SCX-LOVt
Spy peraan $3 BB SaB
selte tape $10 Parapeychalaglcal
InetHula. Oepl-10. 15417 Tapper, fipuf
Ca 01343
trpval
ISC
TOURS A TRAVEL
Spring Summer 4 Fall Charlers'
lo
HAMCUTB S3 By
BiprOMlTWB
(IB Olr)
47B-B1B7.
(H Jr^
London
Shannon
Pali
Madrid
^ror%kUtr^
BrviSS^*
Zurich
Alhvnt
■IttanOiil
Hong Koog
AUTO Inaurance: Laweat ralaa %09
tmm ariipplo|BBa. RaBart W
•7SFS. B7B-B7BS or 467-7573
SHAPE Up LaaB
a^^ ^^^^ * — «««»■ — ^^^^^^
(IB Olr)
Hawaii and New York
VTON EXPRESS
MOVERS
Movtog pr«d HpuMflf
(10 Jy 27)
RIcli BS4-3SBS
21
ISC alao funs (ocai area tours
by car mnc bus st minimum rost
Call Ua «or infomwpon
O AH B'2t tO/?7 Th JM
LAX AH •/12.»/?7 I 4)S
aAA CI •'W-S/?' » 41S
1^ -• AH •'JO 10/11 i 4Ja
1^ LAk TO 7/io.p/pi 4 aaa
apA TQ •/2i'a/2; i 47a
XMAS CHARTERS Book Nopff
lEurop. from Hmm Vor* uom $W1
I JjAjy^" ' • ' •^^ imai$iaa
[5(£7^1^> ' ****** ''*"" • *••
lUHlKRlT M-.. ^nt^ ,,^ ^^
I Charts ...y „. j^y afl^rtrv f, rxMXi.og
8UKR AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL ta.icoas. lro«T,t3S7
TRIANGLE NVC Irsa mwm. trorr, Ml
ITRIANGLE HAWAII fr«« AiMSa tr OIm
NIGHT COACH EaaiDeeat from o>if
JYOUTH turopa 1 yr ham ffpf
APEX 22 45 •Odsyadv boos iwrfromt47t
TRAIN B FERRY TICK! TS. CARS.
CABI^R RENTALS. RAILRASSCS
INTRA-iURORf CHARTERS
SPECIAL CRUISE
I *'»«BBf AN w - A K' .-. s devs from Mtp
GETAWAYS
jMfxicocfTv • diiys tira
I Ar API /tec « da.^ gaif
M a—
AP'AS im
dayt <*
aay«
"■' day*
^•rt«} 8 days
.i*«u4« . to daas
'0 days
1*^^ -"j^m. tiTT 8 daya
CO#CNHAOSN • day«
"OMi IS days
'TAHITI MOO^fA • :,,.
jAPAN IS Oar^
TOKYO TAiaAl HOIKO KO«lO
OaANO SPAIN tf ,,»y,
I 0««a-aaaaaa<««c« *ir' Tiartdmai n_,
ITS aemaaHc a mHmm%tmmm m
r_*^ '•■* COumOfLlPO tnmfmt
OP»W »•' ia-4 ALL 'f AM
JE.E STUDENT TPAVFl <47? 2-jfi^
f^JJJCM luiorlng - Prench natlva
??•'-'*■' CaneafaaBaa. prammar mri-
^^^Alao buaineaa and technlcei
"■••••oBpa. Jaaa-Prancale 470-2743
— (^4 jy 2B»
?li? ^» P »« Engllah? Tutaring S
EBNPig By Ph.O 3B3-01BB
(24 Olr)
-ATM Tmarlag By BiJk Q^ap SliOiMm.
calculua prpBiBBW|. iHaBiP. and ORt.
imiasBlali aaf^Bca Vicimty 4$i.4B2B
(24 Jy IB|
B^RtTBOO HBLP TIRBI PARSRS
THEStS. DtSSf RTATIOIM ALL ty_
JECTS WRITIMQ EDlTlf«0 HE-
SiARCMINO. TUTORING SY PRO-
PBSSIONAL BTRITER 2BS-i471
Individual, amati grpupTnaf
(24 OB)
SPANISH AN laaala By Orad .....m
'^^^^^rConiacf RaBart Baldwia 8SB
' "■*" " RPi. 4B1 47B-1BSS.
Je IB)
mom
CNIOICSf J$andartn PaBBig aaltea
taacBar. waM-aiporlanaad wNB Cali-
fornia Credential fnBtftdMPl, oanS
^ CStQtl
WELL-qualHIed tutor tar
(1« ir 2B»
S-0 Oeitv
• ^ • -
in-uc d
I
^
■ »— i"w» •
'\
CLASSIFIED AD
Htt -.
tutoring
typing
furnished
l»t». to share
housing
TVPIMQ Fsat accuraf* aarvica st
alu««fil ralaa l»M ftalactric Tarsi
I).
I
u.~.
m )
•ASIC
tsr nsat
cyeAa atari Thuradfey July 22.
7:M ^M tludania muat lisaa ISIIy
rvpiwa si
KsHiy sflaf • p.m •as-«2tS
Mil
Art • Fhols
(213) 413-3143
(24 Jy 27)
(»?r<
WALK TO UCLA
SpactQua Ischsioft Stngtss
^ Backroom Apt*
10941 Strathmora Pool Elavstort
Sacurity Garage
tPiOAL SUMMCM AATEt at
Gi^n-frnk Tarrsca 47t-70af
540 Glanrocti - S43 Landfair
47t-4i3-ftj0.5H tsniisir 477
MIO^MIOMAL
fsrslahad t197 SO mo 4 72 4321
(29 Jy JO)
MM
Sagtnnmg
SI Waal
Csl 474^
(S9 JV 23)
TV^IMQ SI
FtMALEt0 8hsra2
M sr9M-«440
(2t^y
IBM EaacsHss.
(2SQ«r)
SOS QAVLET. seroat tram Oykalrs.
•schaisri. ainglas. ona baSrooma 47>'
urn. 4T,^ ^ ^
la Mais yau plan you* Miira •
CAREER GUIDANCE
4 wk progrmm ttari* Ju(y 31sl
alao
Tutoflng PQwsr Assding - Writing Skills
ORE LSAT. GMAT Prsp
Tb« Gui<tonc« Cmntmr
3017 Santa Monica Blvd.
Santa Monica
829-4429
ttUTN talactrk:
i»rm papara. miac
029-2792
(29 0«r)
faori aaiOMAL wrllsr tvHfi B.A. m
(UCLA) wM topa and a#N Isnn
•issss, ale. Ossr 30 yssra sa-
1
(30 Jy30)
aOOMV. comfortsMs lissaa WLA. 0-7
SMSlia bafSinlnf Aufssl 3. FurwIaHad.
pilvsla bslh 474-9701 Bftsn
(39 Jy 30)
tOUMO
conaga. sr garaga apsftmanl
dialaly CsM 003S343
|13Jy37)
•CrrEMaCM Manlsl wsfHsd FscsNy
coupta aaak unti»rni9hm4 2' fcdrsi.
itsoaa Assr'scasn Me kida/pela. 1*
yssra aarkalay campua aalanalss
(39Jy30
arslk Is c
0130.
I
TUTOAMQ " — iTin
Engllah Ph D Gmrmrn
corivaraation writing
tssshsr-lfsnalalor Dsald
3035
Ml. Oarwisn -
n, grammar.
Eiparienced
404-7M0. 404-
LEAMN Owsdh
ewaoMfi laecnt
IT CsN Aka SI 000-0042.
(34iy^ ^
47]
. OOOtrt
TTPIWOf fsasn day* Alao adMng. Vary
feat accurala Mld-Wllahlra fr—
perking. Ce« Joanna. 304 1909.
(»atr)
(39 Jy 3S) 143^
WILL OliMaaaa turntahed ipl aaanl-
Mig.. Oapt le mMsMs IscuNy
or aludant CsN ■■■iiSigt 472-
•ktna. modaat laa F
Gao Hauaknacht P O
MuMy
Ooi 24271. LJk
(39Jy30t
apt, unfurnished houses
rtpma ^ Uz - scaccNpLAv
ocairrs - torriMQ. lati iCLEcmic
H - CHOICl TYPE FACE (i
PSflQ. 003-11
(20 Girl
f 100-$31S 00 OELUKE 1 end 2
apenmania In Palma. Cerpet dri
'it buMlsg. 937-7209.
(27 Jy 23)
1010 MAP VtSTA 2 *
dlanwaaher
1-7703
1%
^39 J« 23t
OtSSERTATIOflt
^
m.
JAZZ PUMOO TlOlMiOUBa AM
modern and earlier bluea kaytooerd
fmt peoed prtaela
Oieory 0 prscOcsl
Is Iwyfcssid ImprswIssOwi. 473-307S
(24 Otr)
psrtUn9^477-0272 sllar S pjn.
LAPOE 1 bedroom and dan Flrepleoe.
diahwaaher. pooK rec Quiet $209
and SL OM 7S7-S191 est 3027 Aak lor
(27 Jy 30)
1 aEDPOOM cool-pen
ana nam ecaen. $300/mo
Osn 039-7300
(30Jy33)
(35 Jt
EXCELLENT TypisI WW type ^__ ,
theaes. manuacrlpta. diaaertellona,
lelters IBM Oelectric II Ceil Anne-
470-3229.
(2S Otr)
typing
typing. Free piekvp. dsOvery. 300-
-V ranei>eta<. aecsHly Mdg.. vw-
Mech beach 9 bea, Venice. Pertly
lumlahed Bedi 009-9100. alngla tt3S-
0149. 1-BP $100-9179 300-1001
(37 0lr)
IF you ere aaeliing a quiet
(25 Olr)
.:r*«*-
TYPING Faal. accursia
474-
(25 otn
TBULY V
fsporta Feet
It.
LIGHTNING TYPING CO
typing. Oelactrtc
02
(30 Jy 30)
ma 440 VslBfWi. 1
and 2 bedroom plua den. $300 and
up FIreplece. wetber. diabaraaher.
PQPL473-0220. i
' (37 Jy 10)
0475 FUWNIOHEO bouaa Msr VIsls.
2/den. iv« belh Fenced yard Sepl.1
Jen 5 397-4943 .^ ^ ,,^
(39 Jy 23)
PACIFIC PaHaedea vmsga - Opscious
3 bedroom 2 story apartlah house-
newly ramodaled. dan. temily room,
dlnirtg rsonr. 2% bsllia. larga
yard. OOOO/monfh Cs9 479-
2049
NEW Fscwity wlabea to aublel fyrs.
houae er apt , Oapt OSc. 2 adwita.
1 diOd. 1 eel Monkkonen. 7 Bsrlsn
A«. O.E.. Minn up BUI. MkinaasM 00414
''1012)379-2719
(33Jy37)
house exchange
TMAOE Your LA. apartment {nmBf
Wllahlra) tor our 9 F apartment tor
2 waaka to ona month Ooon aa poaalbla.
Paul or Oua 415-003-
(34 Jv 231
board
$13B-$17t,
•tue«f»t turn ct
m
Fra* EsMmam
PPOFttSIOMAL COLLfOC TTPmO
V 9PCCtALt9T
Wlii ^S^Wa, I fiWiVt l/lWWvaV99V^lMi ~We99vW*
PERFECT PAGkO - by
Engllah grada w/t2 yeers
IBM Correct. Select, cho
style 559-
type
VBMICE Msrina Area $190.00 1 bed-
fssm apu. Room to buNd Mueweler
022-7130 iMidnia. weekends
(27 Jy 23)
3 BOBMO. 1V«
buHt-lna. lanced yard. 15 mln.'trom
yCLA ymn Nuya CsN Eva or
(30Jy33)
479- 1(
000 Lsndlsir Ave
CA 9(k)34
house
(39 Jy37)
TYPING Oonm at^^^lmie. Term ^_^
esseys. ttieses. dlaaartSllona.^Cair
Reba Slmoff. 399-3043 or 399-3914
(25 Jy 23)
HAuau.
minium on bescb, Isntsallc view. 3
1 '^Odth, Oslld liii. fkeplsce. Isrge
pssi, psdIMa lennla, )uat inmBi
ol Lss CsHBo 0«sla Bae^pli. $500/month
349-4199. 349 3900. 400-3701
(37 Jy 27)
om and board
[Change for hel
BACHELOR Ped
2-kid>asm. 3
Glen
ROOM
tor chNd
(31 A 10)
sra (boy. 9 yesra):
909-4223. Daya 189 §400.
(37 Jy 20)
(20 Olr)
'*OPCBBK>NAL Typbig sf
■t. payeh . lao*i.. general
91b year MayOald Oervloaa 000-0030.
(35 Jy 33)
m^ri^ Work
TYPING IBM-
deen-eccursla
Fssl-
TYPMiG/EOtTING IBM
Bstly 073-4410.
(25Jy30)
a An «- -« -* —
* wv^, |Hwivmp sen.
10030 LIndbroo*. Eve Vallsrte 451
house
'^^ - yO^^ bnd j>ssrd^ Iwma of Iwo
~^9»ii9, 10 yMr sVssn. Must drhra cer.
5 minulaa from UCLA Making dinner.
oBier Ngbt duMea. posslbls selery lo be
July throufli
929-4555 days. 479-4303
(37 Jy 20)
•xparlence. naot. sccurala
sr 270-9471
(25 Qtr)
TYPING Let Casey do H Term pepers
..^OIA. disaertellona. ate Call 304-
7507 for frea asBmpls.
«»Olr)
RUTH C. OISBCRTATIONO. THESES
STATISTICAL FAST. DEPENDABLE'
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK MANY TYPE
STYLEO 939-9429.
(39 Qtr)
2bdroom.2 _
drspea. petlo. built-in atove 3349
(27 iv
tmmlthmd Own badroom Air cendl-
$100 month plus utHHIea After
pn, 2T.-1.W ,„ ^ ^,
STUDENT wantad $30/week. room.
pd^H*! boerd In aicfienga for houae-
work/diOBssra Gbll Mrs Scherer 395-
9930
(37 JY 23)
aptSa to share
furnished
BEAUTIFUL Tepsnge Cyn. OpNt level
leahara $100.00 409-1710
(32 Jy 23)
ct
(39 Olr)
Pimn Sbifla Apt In
of Wllahlra $190 279-3579 or 931
FEMALE ahsra apt- si tsn Otsgo BMii
for fs« sem Sherry 000-1507. 703-1478.
(30Jy 37)
WOMAN
a quia! nonamokar sfiarm.
Msrtns Pet ok. $192.50
(32 JY 23)
BACHELOR telher needs gentia lemela
Is Help with children DaitghrtuI room/
Ooerd provided Priwala antranca bath
Really need help Right person will lova
» bare. Muat ddva Cen provide car.
lO^NaOSO. bsma 459- 1 224
(37 Jv 27)
FEMALE RsHa
^OFESSIONAL WRITIMG. EDfTB«Q.
RESEARCH BOOKS. JOURNAL ARTI-
CLES. DISSERTATIONS. PROPOSALS
JAMES WINTERPIELO WEST HOLLY-
WOOD 039-9749.770-9020
(29 Jy 10)
•^••ViBY Attractively furnlahed tg
1-btfnn. Oiparali garage Leundry On
Coming cloaa to SM Fwy 0
(29 Jy 23) FEMALE
(2SJy to.
MONSMOKER - 3
moas. 3 bifca. to beech Mmmr large
"^ $117/mo. 372-4001 eve.
(33 Jy33)
MOTHERO Helper Llve-m nmmr UCLA.
Room, bosffd. asisry 2 boys. ll 9 S
Musi drhm 473-0072 770-4150 Ben
_ (37 Jy 10)
OUTURE
14
(30Jy30)
S340 FURNISHED 2 bdnna. 5
Seperata gersfe. leundry
rSMFwy.OKelaer
YOUR own room m 2
mmM. Very nise. Isf«s. Only OIOO/ms.
* % llMIBsa. Mar VMa. Steva (<
(30 Jv30)
FEMALE share 3 bedroom houae
Isrga yard Dog OK Greet
$130 me. Avs/(2sla 709-0301
(33 Jy 10)
10 sRer
plua $90
"^or 15 hours weekly Oenia
C2TJy30)
(20 Jy
!LV 7y**» editing Engllah grad
^ Term pspers.
030-7473.
(35 Olr)
1% ROOM
$190.00 utomas
3037 Wssl-
(30 Jy 33)
FEMALE IMIIMISM •
wood 3-slory spsrtmsnt 2 bed _
2 bstb. Pool. Orssi locstlon. Judy
473-4771.
PRIVATE
(30 Jv'^
Del
a $170-
nlng« after 0:00 P M 309-9040
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WALK to UCLA
SYLVIA: Typlng/ISM Eiperlenced
aacn'
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FEMALE ahere 2 bdrm Brentwood.
$110JI
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ENTWOOO 3 BO w/yd Oulst but
neer shops, bus. ate - Eicallent
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c
EXCHANGE room, welklng dlalance
of rampua. lor $ hra houaework weaMy
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ORADUATE
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no Jv30)
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pool, sauna, nssr school, aecurlly
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QUIET Privets reom/beth KItcbss
<ao Jy 10) JJJ
(
(79 Olr)
***Luaury
le W4
UCLA. CIsae Is Century C%.
470-0404
(30Jy 30)
)
a. garegs $l00/mo Gr9-
0 waabands
. (29 Jy 27)
housing needed
VISITING prefeaaor seeks furnlahed
2-3 bedroom lenlBf Dec 79-Mey 77 Tws
5.7 (213) 474-9179
_ (33 CNr)
974-7132
(39 Jv
$99 00 ROOM. bsBi. ^
kitchen prlvllefes sheltered petls-
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a.
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ties included $175 Huge besement
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aaBBONOIBLE women desires to
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miaisnces 001<9797
(33 Jy 23)
(SSiyYBI
bdrm apt WLA. OBTBBdioo.
19 473-1974
(29 Jy 20)
MLLOW (M D ) with lamily desires
s fssra ranlsl sf 3 BR houaa sUrUng
0^1/70 PISSSS CSMSct Or HsMt. c/o
Division of Opthalmology Stanford
Unlv Medical Canter Stanford. Ca
100 Of 19
worn $05. lerga from $12$.
'^^v kHsliso, Mondry
•«lbr9pm
(39Jy37)
■01^
What's Bruin
"PLAftnd Montreal OJympic XIames— ^
The athletes of the world (and a few
from UCLA) start making (heir quajd-
renniaJ sports Motory this Saturday when
thB Olympic Games open in Montreal. A
and ends of OlympK import-
PaulFarhi
l!T'^^ui'^*'^'^JT' ^** ^^^"*" '*^' *^ ^"n Meyers m wowJan's
U.5^ lu^im month leads the world this have chjmes of vary.nf deg
'^^'^ils of some metal
athletic
to win
s s a
[
r
e s
e a
a 0-
— Nice fuyo do finish first
Millard Hanfipton, America's fastest ioO
mater qualifier and a top UCLA track
recruit this year, proves it. Despite his
own state titles ^nd national junior
college records while at San joae City
Collo^ this year, Hampton immediately
rcopOMS to quaotions about his junior
coltege career by praising his 440 relay
teammates. Together, they set a national
JC record In May.
For Hampton alone, his rise from a
merely outstanding junior college runner
to a gold medal prospect has been
meteoric. Two mor^ths ago, few had ever
heard o4 tKe 19-year-old |unior-to-be
and fewer still — except for the con-
fident though modest Hampton himself
— considered him a potential Olympian.
— UCLA athletes (pist, present and
future) who have qualified for Montreal
should be good for several medals in the
Games. Besides Hampton, forwier ,3ruin
quarter-miler Maxie Parks, and future
Brum swimmer Shirley Babashoff appear
to have the best chances for golds
■•^Bshoff, who loads the American
women swimmers to the Games as an
entrant in seven events, could con-
cwvably pull a "Mark Spitx" by winning
all of her races over the rival East
Germans
^•^ **5o has multiple gold medal
pwnpacts as a member of the American
1€00 meter relay team. Along withBenny
Brown, another ex-UCLA one-lap great
-and two others. Parks is on a iMm that
has been concadad the gold since before
It was even selected.
The other UCLA/USA Olympians
height toul in track, three in swimming
— How mtich would a gold medal be
worth should a Brutn wm one? Ofia
sports shoe representative raports Ms
company pays about $10,000 under-the-
Ubte to such visible gold medalists as
Frank Shorter in return for Shorter
wearing his company's products exclu-
sively.
The fact that "amateurs" accept all the
cash they can grab is hardly a shocking,
scandalous matter For athletes such as
Shorter, whose 140 mile training waaks
make a steady >ob a physical -ipooil
bility. taking shoe company ^nd meet
poapotion payoffs is the least he can do
suve off a life of living out of Mc-
Donald's ^nd sleeping in the backseat of
a Pinto It is only the sedentary ^nd well- .
heeled amateur^ officials, whose under-
standing of American athletes' needs
could fit on the head of a pin, who are
in opposition lo government-funded
One has to disagree with UCLA track
coach jim Bush's statement that, in
etoance. the United States will prolMbiy
*end its strongest track team in history to
MootraBi but will come back with iti
fewest number of gold medals ever
(That would rne^n five or la$9.) A more
reasonable {ind even conservative) esti-
inate is nine sold medals for the Ameri-
can men
a a
Though amateur sports on an inter-
national level IS perhaps the best to be
found, it IS clear the world can do
without the Olympics {and indeed could
probably be best served by their demise.)
They do not come dose to attaining any
of the naive ideals they were suppaoad
to foster They %re over-priced cirruse^
which serve as a world-wide stage for
politicians (and not athieiao) to do battle
A decentralized, of*c^-a-year world
championship m each of the Olympic
sports would prove who was really the
world's best 1151 a given *»vf»nf. anyway
I
I
Getting card stunts ready
. - .^ ' ^
Rally Committee in full swing over summer
By Cindy I uio
DB Sporto Wrioer
**Join RaUy Committee
Just for the fun of it!" Thatsi
the new slogan for UCLA's
spirit support group, flally
Committee (Rally Comm), ac-
cordihg to chairman Mark
Flaisher
The committee members
have gotten a head start for
the fair this summer 'We have
4i~tuii progrftffi ef act
planned for the summer," said
Flaisher
Included are work parties
every other Sunday to plan
and prepare the stunts for the
upcoming football games And,
of course, parties to reward (he
hard worke/o. "What we're
rtally emphasizing this year io
the social aspect/' he con-
tinued.
''Rally Comm is a good at-
mosphere to meet other peo-
ple It's fun and a great way
fc^r males and ftmale$ to ^
together socially.
It'$ aioo an excellent way to
become involved on campus.
CLASSIFIED AD
Flaisher said the R( appeals
to every student group at
UCLA the Greeks, the
dorms and the commuters
''There's something for every-
one -
"^It's the sort of organization
that won't Kronflict with yout
other interests Members can
put in as much time as they
want or as little as they want
and they wrtl get as much out
■^.affy 1 oTTTm as rhev ptH
, Orientation program
^-Rally ( Omm has been work
ing actively with the oriema-.
tion program, presenUng not
ly their spirit activities at
LCLA. hut that of overall
campus participation in sports,
campita events and spirit
squads Filmed highlights of
half-time activities are pre-
9ctrted as well as informative^
talks given by the members of
the RC
Freshmaii are being particu-
larly recruited "The most en-
joyable thing for me is seeing
the new studenu as the new
aKmbcro," Flaisher said. "The
rhore members vou have, the
more you can Jt
Already, membership is up
4() j;Kr cent over last year, with
20 o( the I (K) members being
incoming freshmen.
"it's just a lot ol fun" 19
Flaisher's favorite liae - "This
srason we'll he having three or
four light shows because of all
our nighi games You know
we're thc-^iy ones who do
tight lAmmn in the world *
Bicrntrnnial uUute
P^amned tor the lirsi home
game against Arizona is the
final Bruin tribute lo the Bi-
ce nicnnia I One ol the features
will he a rockrt blasting off in
lights Irom the student sBCliaM.
Another stunt U that of a
volcano erupting
, The chairman won't give
away any plans foe the USC
jame but he promiaeii "^ou caiT
be sure all kinds of things are
planned for the Tro|an9 "
After the football 9caoon io
over. Rally Comm becomes
mostly a social group This
year there is a full schedule of
a ontinued (»n Page l^y
autosforsal«
autosforsato
for sale
74 CA^ai
low mNaa.
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$294. 022 9003 GooO c
(42 JyOOt
^
^■■■■^1 m
— \ • •• 1
Cfc
_;}_.,
mam
i
1
Dream come true' at Rose Bowl
r
^J
m
Jon Van Vuir«n'(42)
•y'^Michad Sondli«i»ef
' Dl Sports Writer
^fA".*J'^^'*" *■ the-R:6*c Bowl ,. a dream come true for
any UCLA pUyer For 10 Bruins recruitt, the dream come true
wiIJ take place tomorrow night at 8 pm at the Rok Bowl when
U ed *"""*' ^^""* "**** ^^"^^ All-Sur clumty game ii
The Shrme game is the highest honor a high school player can
recCTve since traditionally the top 56 Southland players arc
selected The 10 future Bruins represent the largest number ot
prep pUyers that UCLA has ever had in the game
Seven players on the South and three performeri for the North
are the UCLA contingent in the game Bruin first year head
coach Terry Donahue is looking forward to tomorrow night with
mixed emotions
Crtmt opportunity ' '^-
-The Shrine game is a great opportunity for our recruits to
play in front of a large crowd in a Urge sudium and to prepare
them for the college experience;' said Donahue -The negative
factor m the game is injuries. Someone might get hurt a* easily in
pra^cnice as the game, but I hope our W players get through all
UCLA recruits on the South team are running back Artie
Hargrove 6-0 198 pounds, from Long Beach Poly and Fred
^ord, 5-11. 184 pounds, from St John Bosce Both arc likely
starters and should get cxcellefU pre-UCLA experience siqcc the
^out^ If running the veer offense
mmm
• ■■JI-..JI .L.i.
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"■\
UCLA
Summer
Vo«um« XCIX^ Number 7
University of California, Lot Angeles
. July 20. 1976
Regents approve minimum $48 yearly Reg Fee hike
Will go into effect in Fall 1977; students
here probably to pay maximum $93 yearly
The Bruins have three fourths of th)C starting
defensive backfield for the South In the^ deep four
are Brian Bagfett, 6-0, 180 pounds, of Servite, Rick
Bajihore. 6-1,-175 pounds, from Edison and Andy
Center, 6-2, 210 pounds, from West Torrance.
Henry Williams, 6-0. 165 pounds from Carson will
be a wide receiver, while Matt McFarland, 6-3 240
pounds of St PaulNwilI do both the punting and
place kicking McFarland it usually an offensive
tackle, but he had knee surgery last season and hit
4p0or feels it is better if he only kicks due to a
slight reinjury last week.
Jon Van Vurea, 6-2, 185 pounds, from South
Hifk, will either fiiay defensive back or'half back for
the North. The other Brum recruits on the North arel
inside linebacker John Kulusich, 6-2, 212 poundt,
from Chatsworth and Bob Mihlhauser, 6-4 240
pounds from Canbga Park, a defensive UckJc
-Jr-
The ten incoming freshmen have different impres-
sions of the Shrine game and entcrw\g UCLA in the
fail, but the one thing a U agree upon is the Shrine
game is a "dream come true."
—-Artie Hargrove: T tiive been looking forward to^
the Shrjne game since the day my high school lost in
the first round of the CIF playoffs I warn to come
out and do what I was telected for.-
Fred Ford: "I m looking forward to mainJy tryfng
-Tnr
to beat the North since we have lost the last two
years. 1 ran the veer offense in high school, to i
enjoy the fact that we are running rf^e veer in the
Shnne game and that I will be runningNit at UCLA."
Andy Center: "The all-sur game is tfugreat thrill
tor me becaujie 1 am worl^ing with mafev athletes
that I read about and 1 wilt have the chance to see
just how good I am "
Matt McFarland: "1 will be ready for UCLA m
the fall My right knee is about 90 jper cem now and
I might lose maybe Jive yards in my punting and
P^«ce kicking in the Shrine game bccau;* of it -
Brmn Raggett: "Watching UCLA in the Rose Bowl
made me want to go there. For the Shrine game I
am looking forward to playing in the Rose Bowl
instead of watching"
Henry Wttfiams: -^l hope to make my career m
iooiball and not tn track (Williams is the City 400
champK)n) I like wide receiver better than defensive
back and am looking forward to getting open deep
in the Shrine game (WiUiamsHfias 4 5 40 vard dash
speed)."
Rlek Bashorr -i was an AU-CIF defensive back m
Jiigh school, but J Am a^lutk diimpp4im£d thiii^+
ArUe Hargrove (30)
Bob Mihlhau^^er **lt is a good experience to play
.for the first time with guys who are as good as you
or better UCLA will be a big step, but 1 am looking
forward l9_,ii. with freshman nervousness."
Jon Van Vuren **The Shrine game is a dream for
me since a lot ol guy~s do well in their own school,
but never end up m the game 1 am not sure whether
I will play offense or defense and I'm not sure which
way 1 will play at UCLA, but 1 like offense better
because I have more freedom"
Kuluaich: "The Shrine game is icing on the
cake for me When you make All-City you know
that you are one of the best, but the Shrine game
gives you added incentive There is more pressure on
me since Lam supposed to be ojie of UCLA's top
recruits, but 1 am trying to take it in tUidie."
Plu?
f
m
^
can't play quarterback (Bashore was recruited to
UCLA as a quarterback). It is a dream to play in the
Rote Bowl and what is really important is that I am
the first person ever from my high school to plav in
the Shnne game."
13 Bruins competing
and minnt
UCLA has had some outstanding plavers in past
S.irine games hke John Sciarra, James McAlister,
Kermit Johnson and Fred McNeil There has alan
been many Brum recruits that have played in the
._&hrjne game arid never evetTttarted tn four years at
Weitwood
The 10 recruits is UCLAr^ greatest total in Shrine
history, but it will be around 1979 before the public
will know how successful recruiting went m the year
€H 1976.
Montreal Olympics begin tomorrow
Saxon
•achof thetUC
9ranl rmg fee
lie and $31 • ^iinrlai to
wNhotft further mctkm on th« p«rl of the Reysntt
B> Bob Walsh
i>B Staff Writer
SAN FRANCISCO Bv an
11-5 vote Friday, the Regents
of the Lniveriity oT Califorr>aa
apprm^_ ihe firit memmic m
the Regi>t ration Fee
I96K.
Ihe increase, which wUi-
go intt) cltect until the h«fl of
1^77. will mean a minimum
increase ol $16 a quarter (^4^
a ycMT) at alt VC campuses
In addituin Reg fees at
UCLA wij] probabiN go up
additional $15 a quarter above
tfic systemwide increase, bring-
mg the total increase UCItA^
students can expect to %}\ a
quarter ($93 a year)
I his extra mcreaae ac UCLA
will be possible under the "dil-
terential fee increase*' option
given to I niversiiy Prtsidcnt
David S Saxon hv the Re-
gents.
Saxon can now grant reg lee
increase?* between $16 and >3I
a quarter to each* i^ lHe r>»fle
UC campuses, without (urther
action on the part of the Re-
gents -
i^ClA Chancellor ( harles
E. Young IS expected to ask
Saxon -44) increase Reg fees at
UCLA to the $31 maximum in
the fall of 1977 The money is
needed, -according to Young, to
meet nearly $1 million of in-
crease costs yearly m reg fee
programs.
it^ was this *'diflerential lee
increase" that became the rally-
ing point 1)1 NiudxTit opposition
to the increase Members ol
student gt>vcrnment at both
Berkeley and UCLA, and the
UC Student I obby lobbied
extensively to make aMitMMMrl
inGfWWe above the $16 a quart-
er raise suhieci.^444. further de-
" bate and RejCTtiii acti(»n
Student leaders had e\
presM-d their lear that uirhout
further review bv the Board Of
Regents, reg fees couUJ ht
increaiai without prior legi-
timate student reaction
Two last-minute amend-
ments were authored bv Re-
fents Charles I field and I arl
P Willens th«t 'wi>uld have
curbed Saxon's power to, m»i-
laierallv Wg itcs Both
were voted down bv 115 rtiar
>aXon did promise students
would^->be consulted regarding
the contVols that wifl be drawn
tt|| to^uide the raising of reg
foaa Urutrr the differentia I fee
increast v la use
"I have agreed to work with
students on these guidelines
and I am comnulicd to that,"
Scixon
•et for pro league
CSLA summer cage home
By Mickael Sondheimer
DB Sports Writer
Basketball is one of the few sports in this country that is
played competitively year around The /hotbed of the round-
balJ sport over the summer is Cal State Lot Aisles
Basketball fanatics spend their summers at Cal Sute Los
Angeles, where the summer gymnasium temperatures
sometimes rise over 120 defi^a. There are sometimes as
^ (Continued on Page 15)
By Paul Farhi
DB Sports Writer
The Games of the XXI
Olympiad in Montreal, its re-
cent political turbulence jiot
withstanding, will reach a bliss-
ful fruition tomorrow with
athletes from the whole of
planet Earth march in the
opening ceremonies. Thirteen
of the 9,000 partiapants will
be tied to UCLA The run-
down on the Weatwooders:
Ann Meyers, a senior-to-be.
IS a member of the U.S. wo-
men's basketball team A Two-
time AU-Amencan pick,
Meyers, sister of former Brum
and current pro-basketball
player Dave, should sec exten-
sive action on the highly re-
garded women's team The
USSR, led by the only
seven-foot female center in the
game, is picked for the §old
mc4aL The U.S. could surpriie
lor a silver. A bronze would
not be shocking. (Women's
basketball begins on Sunday
and finishes July 28.)
Shirley pa— mwi^ a juntor
collefc transfer from Golden
West College, figuratively and
literally leads America's wo-
men's swim team Babashoff.
no stranger to international
competition (she was a 1972
Olympmn and a 1975 Pan-Am
Dr Hugh Kieffer
UCLA scientist, has
tremcly occupied m
two months at the
pulsion Laboratory
dena The 37 year
lessor ol phvsics is
staff of 74
UCLA aids Viking endeavor
■ yming
been ex-
the last
Jet Pro-
in Pasa-
old pro-
one of a
scientists respon-
scvcral seminars next winter
quarter at LCI A However, he
will not be teaching anv regu
lar classes. According to the
doctor, his "experiments with
the Viking will be extending
lor two terrestrial years.*^-
— Se«»ll /irrman
Ihe University Prevident ad-
mitted, however, under ques
turning: the guidelines would
be drawn up and implemented
before they were reviewed by
the Board ol Regents.
fn related actionr^ttie kc-
fents approved two policy
changes that will aflect student
tecs and programs
The first was to shif' -^rnr
f9 mifhon ni student pio^.unis
to ti:_ C Hu<fgci from student
lee tunding Saxon said the
University was in the process
of trvmg to convince the State
t»> pick up ! hr , >^r ol th^
programs Sax. . .iUvi.j as vet
<here has been no v,.!,j indica-
tion Irom the Su^.. as lo how
much (il the $9 mUiion the
Stair will give He said 1! the
State ful not pro\idc the ^9
miHiu.. , : an amount veiv ncai
that figure reg lee^^ould have
to be in. f.'ased past the V^M
ceiling
Ihe second action was uj
rtiakc the FducatiOfiftI Fee
($I(K) a quarter) the sole source
ol linancial aid provided by
the I ' nivcrsitv Prev iou»ilV .
m«»fit \ lor Universitv financial
aid was aisi) piovideti httm
revenue earned bv the Lni
versily on lederal ct)nlrac4s
However. I he IVpartmrrrf'Sij
Health. I ducatM»n and Wellare
(HI W) had ruled in April that
UC haiJ been t)vercharginj4
lederal agencies tin contract
and requested .1 refund
Student groups <^bi I lo
this actio.n. pointmj^ out it
could lead to the mcreaae ot
the Id-fee in the luture They
aKo felt the Id lee. which was
established as a tem^orary^fce-
during the Reagan A<1rninrs
trati<»n would n«)w become
very permanent."
Voting against t He increase
were Regents Williifm K (o
blent/. Frederick Ci Dutton
Charles L fild. Farl P Wil-
lens and Stiidt fit Regent
Dwyn Pceples Voting lor the
increase were Regents (;ienn
•( ampbell, Idward W Carter,
William F Forbes. fVWitt A;" '
Higg>. John H 1 awr
M f) . iotcph A Moof, Kt»h. It
() Revnolds. Wilharn I rench
Smith. Dean A Watkins. W,lh
am \ Wilson and Saxon
^
Games multiple medalist), will
swim in seven races (five in-
dividual events, two relays)
She IS the top American hope
for told(s) in waters currently
infested with f^ r.
/'
Her
top race should t>c the
ler freestyle, ah event in
which she set a world record
last month at the US. swim-
ming trials
•ible for making t(xlay's land
tug of the Viking 1 a success-
ful venture
Making use of an "Infrared
Thermal Mapper (IRTM).*^ an
instrument housed in the orbi-
tcrs scanner. Dr Kicfler has
been helping to find the soft-
est, safest set-down for the
Viking 1 lander
Ahhough the chief purpose of
rtie Viking mission is to see if
water exists on Mars, •^all
personnel effort is being con-
centrated on landing sites,"
according to Dr Kieffer
l^y Rieasurmg temperature
differences on the surface,
IRTM IS able to describe the
terrain of Mars through com-
puter read-outs
The thermal mapper mea-
sures the toul light rcflMle^
from the surface of Mars and
the total amount of ^thermal
energy on Mars' surface Dr
Kieffer claims this is the Tirst
lime anybody's ever tried xo
•easure the total amount of
reflected eneryv' nn \A.r.
surface
rJr Kieffer^ plans
hold
Regents vote UC
faculty salary hike
■y lob WaKh
DB Staff Whier
Besides approving an increase in student fees and a tentative
nnict-of-interesi code (see related stories), the Regents ol the
I mvcrsity of California approved salary incfCMes for iK facuhv
of either SK(X) or $9(X) a year on Friday
fhis action approximates the $70 a month increase m»t
app'jved by tbe StMe for its employees
-•Instead of rigidly applying the S7(>-a-m<»nfh, or SMO a year
mcmic in our faculty salary ■calcs said Archie KleiiMartner
University vice president in charge of iriditii and personnel
relations, ^^we rounded the annual mcfwae to SiO0 and $900
This Ii in keeping with our cMablished custom of setting
faculty salary icaks in even hundreds,- he added "
This will mean more than a $70-a-month incrcMiie ($«M a year)
lor pr^fmmn presently earning more than $25,200 a year It will
also ami a lets than $70-a-month incroMc for proiesson,
aMOCiate profeaaon, aasisunt professors and inatnictors eftmiiit
tela than $23,OiO a year ($KO0 a year).
The RdiHMs also approved the offiml dipcaublishineat at the
Sckool of Criminology. Berkeley T his ends a two ycmr
between the University and studeQUuun the Berkeley
the fate of the idMiol.
Neil Taxy, ASUC prciidaiit at •erkeky. gaw his --epiuph- for
the.sch(x>l, citing university insensittvitv m the desires of ittidents
as the cause of its dcoMK. __j
The UC Nai fotoe into the natural gas busrness approval of 1 1
filah an kkit l>a»n ciiiiipus. • — '■ •
1
i__
The
tditch will be
V from buildings and
4Cowtiwyad on fage 2)
'Z'-r-.-k
m
1
Regent disclosure Hbill vo^ed
Tentative code may ask
for details of holdings
By Bob HaKh
DB Siafr Hriier
The VC Board of Rcfrnts
approved Friday a tentative
conflict-of-iniere!»i code, but
important chanfci «^ill pro-
bably be made bciorc it be-
comes final
The tentative code requires
the disclosure o( financial
;• holdings thai might be affected
1 by decisions of the Dniver^ity
4» made by the Regents or iJni-
^. versity administrators The
code al»o requires tlieiB not to
fMike or participate in dcci-
sioiu in which they iMve fi-
nancial interests
I he code is rcnuned of all
stale agencies under the Poli-
tical Reform Act of 1974 (Pro-
position 9)
I he chaofes Tn the code are
expected to close certain loop-
holes m the tentative code.
The tentative code does not
require Regents to leport their
investments m stocks and
y»«»««f»»~
*
\
bonds, nor would it require
them f^r most cases to divulge
directorships they hold in com-
panies doing business with the
University
F he Regents would have to
repon directorships ii com-
panies that would have a ''rea-
sonabie forseeable chance** of
benefiting by decisions made
by the Regents It would be
the Regents who would define
each 'reasonable forseeable
chance **
The Regents could, as Re-
gents, vote on investments
made by the University which
might benefit companies and
corporations owned wholly or
rn part bv members of the
Board of Regents ^
VC General Counset Doanald
L. Reidhaar said after the code
was approved. "Wc no^^^ant
to take a careful look ai the
code to see if more provisions
about disclosure and disquali-
fication should be added *'
According to Reidhaar. since
the Fair Political Practices
Commission postporfed tlieir
original deadline of August 10
1976 for the submittal of the
code, there will be ample time
lor revision •
In addition to probable
oophciw, the clause ordering
the donation ol profits made
on textbooks authored and
assigned bv professors to a
an table cause brought ob-
jection from attending pro-
Molecular Biology lnstltut«
Molecular Biology building opens
R«.dha«r: Th« R^g^nt. wmtt to taM • careful look at ft^ co<irio"**
mof pfov..u,n, about ditclo.ure and dl.qual*fk:ation should ba
H
li> hftp you pUii ytfur iulurf
Career Guidance
4 M^(*<>k pfoKfdm sum )ulv 31st
also
IuUmimk m \>\ , Skills •
7 0 P.o^n^ef .kratjiMf<
The Giudance Center
3017 Santd MoriKj Blvd
Sdntd Monica
82S-4429
Salaries
J
((ontinued from Page I)
classrooms As of yet, there
has been no announcement ol
\*hether the (University will
develop the gas wells or will
instead leaic: Jhe suc^^^ to «n
>utsidc company.
UC I A's request for authori-
zation of a $2.5 million loan
for needed hospital equipment
CONTACT LENSES
DR ALFRED R BECKER
Optometrist
10959 Wevbu^- Ave
POL I
GfM»-2 1
tcssors
StevenfUarrnet. prt)fcSsor Ol
I aw at Berketty. cited the
clause as an example ol the
Regents overstepping their
authoriiv and interlenng with
"^ ^^caHcd in his tcsiiajonV
**iin educational decision, not a
governmental one"
It IS expected the Ifnal ver-
Mon ol the code will nee in-
clude this clause
was approved by rhe Regenu.
This IS the first phase of a
two-party three year plan that
will meafi a toul of $5 million
worth of new eqaipiacM §6i
^tltr UCLA hospital. —
Also approved was $|
million lor ihe construction of
bikeways on the I ( Santa
Cru/ and VC Santa Barbara
campuses The monev is
mainly being provided b\ the
federal government m the form
of construction grants
The Molecular Biology Jn-
strtute research building, de-
signed to provide space for
graduate-level laboratory
courses, is scheduled to be in
lull operation in the fall.
**Xhfc. Molecular Biology In-
stitute IS an inicr-departmental
discipline." said Dr. Verne
Shoemaker, MBI associate di-
rector The new center will
-make available six advanced
laboratory courses- within such
departments as Chemistry, Bio-
logy and Bacteriology, he cx-
plained. .
The seven-story building's
facilities were funded by a
$230,000 grant by the National
Science Foundation, Shoema-
ker said. ^ij___
According to Harry Shtma-
bukuro of the campus archi-
tectural office, "the building
proper is completed /^ and
staff members are already in
the building and. conducting
research. **
MBI offices, stationed for
years m Young Hall, whU nom^
be moved to this new buildm,
in the Uft Sciences Center
Bulging eyes corrected
- Bulging eyebali* and other
eye problems associated with
(i raves' disease, a thyroid dis-
order, may be corrected by
surgery according to an asso-
ciate professor of surgery here
ThofiMi C. Calcaterra and
^oaates al the Jules Stein
Eye Institute reported surgerv
can be performed allowing
swollen tissue in the eye socket
to be compressed in the sinus
cavities.
the surgical technique cuts
under the upper lip into the
maxillary and ethmoid sinuses
and removes part of the parti-
tion between the eye socket
and sinuses. The procedure can
be done on both eyes in about
an hour.
-rr^
Lions Club arranges radical surgery for girf
Summer B
RACECRAFTtRS INTERNATIONAL
STUDENT DISCOUNT OFFERED
with valid ID
We sell everything for motorcycle —
— Racing & Touring Gear. Oil. Plugs.
Helmets. Riding Apparrel. Tires Ftr
7^12 Sunsei Blvd
HollvwcKxi 876- J600
M-F 10-6
Sat 10>5
Study Lists
Available
Study lists verifying clait
enrollment for the first sum-
mer session can be picked
up at 1254 Murphv HalJ
Identification is required
Deadlme for enrollment
m second MMion summer
school is July 23.
Vdum. XCIX. Number 7 Tu««l.y, July 20. 1976
flays tollowng hol.days and examination period, by the ASUCLA
^-nmunications Board 308 Westwood P^^ Lo> aZ^. ^^r^^,
^on<,^2TJ,21'' "' "• ^^'^^^^ Communl^Too. Board
second clas5 postaB, P«.d at the Los AngMa Post OffK:e
OAKLEY'S*
Men's Haircutting '
at its best
Long & Short Styles
1 GR 34245
1M1 Gayley
(acrott Wettwood Th««t«r)
GR
Summer
Meditation
Study
U.S.C. PhD Th«i8
Mof« voliintwfs nudtd foe mid
AuQ'iSt Free 4 wk meditation
course • film Sen«t pfwamad
Nc>n-m»<iitntn p^tHmmC Call
^fl 1-4707
EdHor-in-Ch»«f
Managing Editor
Exacutiv* Editor
Buslnast Managar
Atalatant Buslnast Managar
W«ws Editors
EdHorlal Olractors
Sports Editor
Aasistani Sports Editor
PHoto Editor
Assistant Photo Editor
Entartalnmant indax Editors
Asaoclata Indai Editors
Maltaup Editor
Art DIractor
Copy EdNor
Copy Raadars
Ubrmrimn
Campus Evants Editor
Publications Man
Alica Short
Frank Stal (worth
Geoff Ouinn
Susan Kane
Tad Shapiro
^ Frank Widdar. Sally Gmrner
J — , Kim Wildman. Michelle Duval
Davfd Whitney. Joanne EglMf)
Michael Sondheim«r
Steve Finley
Jeff Lapin
kimhm Lm/int
Howard Poerwr. tmnv Klemer
Adam Parfr«v Cathy Seipp
Jeff Mitcf>ei
Mike Lee
Ro«0ftiKaye
Joe Jonea. PJifti Crost.
Joanne Ratkovich. Jeff K4cLeod
Jodi Zecho¥vy
Jane Wigod
••^ Writers. MikT^Oashiijin Rmr^ r^ . ^^^^ ^^^^
Adam Pfeffer Carol si-rro k ^ ^'•^ ^^"^ M*chi»f Karbelnig.
Jonea ''•'°' ^"''' ^^^^^ Waish Louis Watanate. Laura
G'^g SlTrlaTu P^:, 'flT' '•^ '•••^ ^^ ^^^^ C-dy Luis
^'sTcZ^H.%Z.^^^^^^ ^-^ ^> Q'^on Randy G
AU sail, y,^^, Vance '-
ille
B> Joanilf . Eflash
DB Staff Writer
L>c&crib<^d by a friend at
"iwcci. gentle, and petite,"
Marie Delight WMi is hoping
for a new future and a new
face.
The fourteen-year-old girl
suffered from disfiguring
physical detectii since birth
She was born without eye
iockeu or tear ducts one
blue eye droopa tMd the other
bulges The iofi pan of her
skull grew together too early,
flteking her a victim of cranial
stenosis. Her speech is impeded
because of a cleft palate She
suffers from curvature o( the
spine, wearing a full neck and
back brace 23 hoursx a day.
With the help of various
or^ni/ations and individuals,
A4arie will travel to the UCXA
Medical Center to undergo
surgery and three weeks of
recuperative treatment The
operation w *^so mind boggling
that you can hardly describe
It," commented WestwoixJ
Lions Club President Bruce
Monfettc, one of Marie's bene-
factors.
The surgery involves taking
bone from her hips and ribs.
^ peeling her face, building eye
sockets, lifting her brain, and
shaving her head The opera-
tion could result in blindness
Mane is "greatly concer-ncd
about having her head
shaved,*' Wonfettc said, add-
i"Nt; **The most beautrfu! thing
in her existence rs her hair
Having her hair shaved off will
be like like a movie star being
injured in the" face."
Because of the- "remarkable
job" 4one by Marie's parents,
cojnmenied Bonnie Sawyer.
wifev Ol WcTtwood Ttoh
Sawyer, "M^ne ii a well-
rounded, intelligent young
girl." Sawyer met Mane and
her mother, Mary Holt, when
they -were in Los Angeles for
the extensive examinations re-
quired before surgery
Oldest oj the four sisters in
the Holt family. Mane does
her share of family chores and
attends school Her father.
Richard Holt, is unemployed
—Living tn Artrofia in a mobile
home, the family wants to be
with Mane when she returns to
Cahfornia.
**They were planning on tra-
veling out here in a small
trailer,- explained Sawyer
Marie's grandmother, who was
with Mane for the three opera-
tions the young girl had to
undergo before she was four
years old. also desires to travel
with Mane to Los Angeles
The West wood Lions, added
Sawyer, will "hopefully work
out a plan so that they won't
have to travel in that soalJ
trailor '
"I don't know what I would
do if it were mv child,** said
Sawyer thoughtfully "Cranial
stenosis is inherited and shows
up in the eighth to tenth gene-
ration m a family And Mane
«M the oldest But they went
ahead and had three more
Mane's skull problem was
dMOOvered by accident when
she was an infant. A doctor
was treating her for a minor
illness and noticed the prob-
lem. With an average person,
the sdt spot in the skull does
not close until age eighteen.
Marie's skull grew together
before she was four years old,
lesultmg in the deformity of
her face.
And her other problems,
suLl! MS the
tw-nign fool ol
her Riottlh and S-ahaped spine.
make her ^^dillerem" appear-
ance even more noticeable
"Marie is intelligent." Sawyer
ci»minriMliil. '•she knows when
people stare "
Mane is in special education
classes at her aalMol "Her
teachers say that she docs very
well.'* Sawyer said, adding
wryly. "I think that I'd be
much more than a year or two
behind it I were in her posi-
tion But the attitude of her
parents have pulled her
through *
Lately. Marie has developed
double vision Glaases will noi
correct the problem until after
surgery Because ol the lack of
tear ducts. Marie's eyes con-
stan>tly irritate her But the
Holt^ family is "trusting in
God," commented Sawyer
"They brought their Bible with
them"
The Wcsnwood Lions be
came involved in Marie's prob-
lem after receiving a letter
from the Para4iac Valley Lions
Club in Ari/ona Mane had
been accepted by a doctor at
UCLA, where new surgery
equipment , is available Doc-
tors had agreed to examine the
youTig girl to sec if the new
techniques would be beneficial
The Wes^twood Lions were
asked to hcJp by meeting the
Holt "family, finding them a
place to stay, and "generally
looking alter them and caring
for theM' in their time here,"
explained Monfette
Ihe Paradise Valley Lions
had already developed a fund
for Mane, and other Arizona
groups also contributed
Darrcl! Sawyer donated all air
flights, "no matter how many
are necessary," added Mon-
^cXie past president of the
Westwood Lions. "ChieP Bal-
lengcr. also helped the Hok
family ,• — ^ -
"Bui more mi^ncy^-is needed
for the girl's operation and
stay.' Monfette said "The
Westwood Lions are trying to
arrange everything so that the
family doesn't have any prob-
lems or worries 1 here have
been numerous fund-raising
events in Arizona"
Since
GIFT IDEA
Having a ^ove AHair?"
V«, ftMoy o< m Kmv 4 hwr «#t«ir wt&^ «fi uui
ilinilng vtnl«||r wmr Buf »wmw mmny tmwK
K«i^ yow 9t%tnn^ * hnr boftlp a« wmw oniy lo
'"HF* ^^ namr wh*n you «»4wm»d ip m4m tm
pMfcfiair H «gMn *^ rtf^-^-rii iria.awi II
'>*' (orfsliMlg yow c«n
»n*rs » mmitk or « y«ar fi
Wmr £aa n m%
M<ioe lac M oflly » Ji
KaodliWf
V«P
V«^l«l
«/To*»
\m»\^»tmlttttmMA
l«^
■<H^«^^llim m ^^^pt^-^nr
00 7-20
Monfetie also omphasired
the lamiiy wants lo comr with
Mane "The grandiiKMhei has
been with them through all the
girl's problcmn. and they have
always, been a cloae. supportive
family "
When the Holt family was tn
Loi Angeles for Marie's exam-
inations, they look the voung
girl with them whenever they
went out on excursions "They
always have," commented
Monfette. "even though the
results are often stares and
comments*'
Mane will return to Los — come home crying because the
Angela by the end of Sept- children teased her But then
ember to undergo the twelve- later, she always made friends
hour surgery that will involve a who became protective "
team of twelve d.^i.-is I his
operation is performed only irj
New York and Loa Angeles
"Concerned studenu - coukf
visit Mane aad wmkit her feel
welcome." Mnwfmi MgpHled,
adding. "Bui ihcy must be
sincere "
Ahhough Montciic admitted
the fourteen-year-old is "dis-
concerting" to see. he rmphi
sized Marie's ability lo com-
municate with people "She
switched schools several times,"
he said. "At first she would
f hi "^ rnaaad L
M nuiesic commented
"piBMed to serve in ii
such as this We provide Ihe
most help -Id the , slight dis-
•^^•Magid, bhnd. and so on.
We give ahK>lutely free eye
examinations and screenings.**.
In the last eye screening. Mon
fette added, ihe Westwood
Lions Club fliiBHHnd thirty
caaes whi) needed further ex-
amination
Mane is now planning lor
her new life After surgery, she
will drop her first name and
call herself, m recognition of
her new physical being and her
outlook on the future, •'I>eli£ht
Hoh"
>
r
r
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The SizzItT^ Ir.ilinK out rich, juicy T boru broiled
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fries and Sizzler cheese IfiMl. All at a bargain pncc. Can
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—^^ t22 Qayl«y tk^mnug
(vMer 1^ Come)
VI
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laaa westwood boulevard
■7
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3
Razing o( •landmark' causes outcry '
Building's demolition approved
r
By Bob UaKh
DB SUIT Hrifrr
SAN FRANCISCO Over ihc prcMcfti ol
rcprrscnutivck of both the Berkeley cWMBunitv
an4_ student governrhent. the UC Regents
approved the demolition ol a building' con-
sidered by some to be ik historical Uni^Mrk
The Naval Architectural building, a rustic
brown shingled classroom built in 1914. \^as
defended b> members of the Bcrkcle> Archi-
tectural Herttaje^^iety ^»^
in the bcrkcle> cormnunity
Fhf dtmolif was needed to make room
let a ne\* engineering complex which u
scheduled to be but^t on the site-
Lawrence Garvin, lawyer for the society,
accused administration otticials ol being lax in
their environmental inpact review ot the
building and the proposed building will now
taite ; Its place
CiarvifKCrrmended the administration's label-
ing *)( the building as an earthquake hazard
was untrue, pointing out in (he San hranciM:o
quakeprone area, wood-frame buildfffgs survive
better than most other structures
NeiJ laxv Berkeley's new student govern-
mc>v4-tM^esident also ciilled the university's
review of the AiaAai Architrcttirai Building as
"severly deficit and should not have gone^
unchallenged "
V
^^^ m the Initial Assessment in no
way deals with the hist« aesthetic or environ-
mental impact ol ra/ing the building
**Ihe building is diMBMisd as being a tem-
porary' sifulture,- however, we need only took
at the Naval Architecture Building and it's
immediate environment to observe how aetthe-
ttcally beautiful it really is.*" said Taxy
Among those that requested the Regents to
^^p»re the buihiwHjK^ere Btrkelev Mavor War
iimque buflding-— ren Wiinkrr state archttect Stm Van der Ryn,
and John L. Frisbce III. regional director of
the National frusi for Historic Preservai
Regent Wilham Forbes, of I os Angeles.
agreed with Garvm the building was "attrac-
tive" but added it was a **fire hazard, unsafe in
case of earthquake, and in fact, obsolete"
The oniy Regent objecting to the action was
student regent Daryn Pceples Peeples. ^n
undergraduate at Berkeley, called the building
"an s in a concrete desert **
After the vote was taken Gavm said the
Berkeley Architectural Heritage StKiety would
probably ask for a permenani injunction,
blocking demolition of the building by the
I niversity.
Garvin said J>c felt the M»tict;. ^ chances of
getting a pcrmitncnt miunction wt
Tent." based on the incons^siancies within the
study di>ne b^ tHviversitv adminisi
Forbes: Th« N^al ArcMt»clur«
Is a fir* hazard and
Students' Store expected
to be ready by fall quarter
* "v
Ack«rman Studsntt Slors is sch«dulM< to b« rssdy by ths bsginning of tali
quarter. Dan Sadlar, ASUCLA profcX mmf\m9^ %^t6.
HiHel at UCLA
Frkiay, )uly 23
A Shabbat with Professor Abraham Kaplan
"ftABBAlAH AND HASIDISM
Abraham ikapbn has been a srudenf, faculty member and chairman of
the Dtpartmeni ol PhUaMphy at UCLA Hf is currentiy Pro<e»K>r-of
Philosophy and S<k loiof y at Haiia University. Israel and President oi the
Israeli Philosophical Socwety. kmiegt^Capian s pubiica^tiumimiuda Pcnver
A Society. The Conduct of Inquiry Individuality The New Society, and
Love ^fyd Death
co-sponsored by The University of ludaism
4:3t Senrire 7:3i Dinner i:M Program
RESfRVATIONS 474-1531
,^ B^ Susan SiHon
DB Stair Report
The anxiously awaited com-
pletion of the North and South
campus Students' Stores is
tentatively set for the begin-
ning of fall quarter '
Dan Sadler. ASl CLA pro-
ject manager, anticipates the
South campus expansion and
remodclirig project begun laaT'
May. will be "wrapped up" by
Labor i Day He added the
^f^I?^^S?f"P"*' store"wTiich be-
gan consti'uctjon last October,
would hopefully be in service
b\ the beginning ot Fall Quart-
er Ackerman A-Level reno-
vation IS due to begin in June
1977
~^he expected cent of the A-
level project, $900,000. is "cx-
pensive, but necessary.*' ac-
cording to Sadler He ex-
plained the Art and Enginccr-
tng Dcfjartmcnt would be
moved to B-Levcl, replacing
the "Confectioners" depart-
mem The latter service area
would be moved to the front
southwest corner of the Stu-
dent Store and would be called
**Thc Country Store '
"The Country Store** would
take the -place of the .super-
market discussed earlier this
year. In it. Sadler said, "We
hope to be able to seUthc kind
of light grocery items one
might reasonably find m Uquor
stores "
A-Level Renovation involves
redecorating the Coop, adding
new furniture, and rearranging
the Coop menu. The billiards
function would be reduced
from 17 tables to about nine
and the bowling allcv would be
reduced to eight lanes form the
present ten lanesi^iBoth of t^^se
actions would allow more
space for lounging, and a pro-
jected Crafts Center available
to all students.
Both the North and~ South
campus facilities are being
funded by ASUCLA net in-
come. Student Union indenture
Funds and Registration Fees,
according to Sadler. He said
the money ASUCLA earn>
through commercial enterprises
like Printing and Duphcatmg,
Lecture Notes, and the Student
Store ''basically should be re-
invested into student facilities."
Women
invites you to a
Summer Open House
Find ou4 what the Women's Resource Center
has to offer and what women's groups at UCLA
are doing. This is a time to share ideas and
concerns, so bring a lunch and a friend and
join us.
*
Women's Resource Center
Kinsey 190
Wed. July 21 12-2 p.m.
Regular hamburger
betteri^Calpirg
-Regular" grade hamburger is a better bargain than higher
priced meat labeled 'lean" or "extra lean" according to a
California Public Interest Research Group (CalPIRG) survey.
In a random survey of II westwide markets, nearly one third
of the ground beef purchased off-the-shelf was found to be
misleadingly Ift^lcd under proposed California meat labehng
standards
The survey data shows the average package of reguUr meat
has 25 I percent fat at 74 cents a pound, average "lean'' grade
has 19.9 percent fat at J I 28 a pound and average "extra lean"
beef has 15.2 percent fat at $1 42 a pound
The on-campus group'* findings were surted by a desire to
support changes in regulatory legislation which presently require
ground beef to have no more than 30 percem fat, according to
Charles hcnstein. a CalPIRG spokesman
Fenstein said there was a bill pending in the State Legislature
tnai would enable consumers to know what they get when they
huy hamburger ^ » j
The bill (AB I8Z3) introduced by Assemblyman Joseph
'^«n«oyajD-La Puente). prohibits stores from advertising and
labeling ground beef as regular, lean or extra lean unlets they
meet specific amoums of fat A spokesman m Montoya's office
said, however, the Senate and Assembly are working out a
compromise on portions of the bill One area of dispute is the
required fat content ^or the three categories
— V.omk^ Watanabe
BBQ
This IS th€ piace for Rib Lovers'
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summer bruin
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recruits may surprise veterans in
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— ^ • ■ -"
DB Editorial
Tit one
by lee & slatei
^t
As if students did not have enough to worry obout with A't,
.^X-C%, D'%, nod F's, fho Stote Acodomic Sonofe recently gove
linot approval for a plus and minus grading system for
undergraduates at UCLA.
The new system hos also boon opproyd by the UCLA
Acodemic Senate and will begin in the fall.
One of the Academic Senate's reasons for implementing
plus minus grading is to bnng a holt to grode inflotion. Grade
inflation is presently stoble and is expected to decrease within
the next few years Besides, it is equally possible that more
plus grades will be given, thereby increasing grade
inflation
J
Grades of B C, and D mcTy receive a plus or minus while As
may only receive a minus A plus is 3/ 1 0 of a point more and a
minus will be -3^0 of a point lest tfxjpn the accompanying
grade
All of us have experienced or at leost observed the clawing
and grasping for fust ,a few more poinTsV to get a higher
grade Students co^y off their peers and plagiarize constantly
in classes The plus/ minus grading will only CKcentyole th*
above problems. ■ .'"' ^-
With 1 2 gro<les to worry obout insfood of five, the omphdiii
on getting a grade rather thon looming wilt be even more o
reality. «.
W« heor comploints every doy how the university is only o
forum for regurgitation and how mony students refuse tooid
their contemporaries for feor of roising the curve. Tho
plus/ minus gtoding system will only perpefuote fheso
conditions. Wo think it should not be put into operotion in flii^
fall
in:
Thomas Simmons
Petty Bureaucrat
Brown Waits Behind the
by Adam Pfeffer
. . '.rrLnl
DB Editorial
. vA. - »-'»x.Mi>
Despite student opposition, the UC Regents approved on
increase in student fees lost Fridoy. Thetr approMtion meons o
$ 1 6 per quarter increose at all UC compuses, be^^ning in the
fall of 1977 '
The Regents also gave University President David Saxon the
power to raise student fees to a totol ceiling of $3 1 per quorter
if any of the nine Choncejlors request the money. - ^
By letting it be known tf^iot he will osk for the moximum
amount possible under the Soxon plon, Choncellor ChorUs E.
Young hos token owoy the power of tf»e Reg Fee Committee
He did not consult the committee about tf%e raise.
Young hos already announced that he intends to ask Saxon
for the full $31 increose as of foil 1977, Young mcxie this
decision without consulting UCLA students, again showing
that the administration considers student representotion to be
a pitiful joke
While the Registration Fee Committee will still represent
students in deciding how the fee mor>ies will be spent, it will,
unless Soxon and Young say otherwise, be powerless to control
how much is poid in reg fees. But the Reg Fee Committee
should hove thot power.
While Soxon hos promised to iiKlude students in the procoM
of drowing up the guidelines tfnit will control ony increoses
osked for by ony of the UC s, he did this only offer being
pressured to by five Regents and vorious student groups. ~
We also call on Chancellor Young to give hisguorontee that
he i^rill not osk for on odditionol increase in reg fees post the
systemwide increase of $16 o quorter unless such ocfioQ is
recommended to him by the Registrotion Fee Committoo.
This would bring the use of rog fee monies bock into the Reg
Fee review process, where it belor>gft.
Furthermore, we ore osking Oior>cellor Your>g not to woif
until Soxon drows up his guidelirtes or until student protest is
heard by the Stote Legisloture. Young should demonstrote thot
this rf>etoric of concem for fhe students ' tt more thon ii#st
mere wovds, witf^out ouHide prompting.
(IditoA Note Pfeffer is a Daily Bruin stiff wntecj
Nevir York_— The r^suiU-^re in. The rhirty-
spvenrh Democratic NationalXonvention came to
a (lose in a state of yawnity In reality, the show
"was over before the ( urtamv were even drawn
J he ph)t had "been revedl«;»d before the li|?his
wenf up The climax had subsided beforf»«^he
band could play a sirtgte introductory^ ^lote
, The few remaining factors were insignificant
Iheihow had been directed by, produced by and
■*!—!"
""■■■■•■"••"»■
OPINION
starred jimmy Carter, d politician who had braved
the seas of anonymny ♦or years only lo find
himself welcome the beckoning light in six short
rrK>nths.
There was another survivor, however, who has
been washeci up onto the shore of popularity."
(governor jerry Brown, who said all last week that
the point of remaining in the campaigri was "to
create a little bit of activity here at the con-
vention," succeeded He also succeeded in
keeping his name in the national spotlight.
A^ed at a press conference in his McAlpTn
Hotel headquarters whether he plans to run again
for the Presidency. Brown answered. If I had
enough energy to come this Uf . it might give
indication of a general interest m the subjecl."
Brown added in the me^»iif>g. '*My goal was to
win but barring that, it was at ^ast to get my
point across and I did that quite effectively '^ But
did he?
Tom Bradley, a delegate from Marylarwi. not
the mayor, gave his impression of Brown. T think
jerry Brown struck a responsive chord in the
American people that hasn't beer^ struck Tn d
king time^ In Maryland, my home state, he drew
i.«5Wds like I hadn't seen since jack Kennedy and
I think we need to have that kind of person in
^^^ f'*' ♦ I think some day we'll find him in
the While House '
While Brown has ignited exciterrvent where-
ever he goes, he seems void of real issues "I
"perceive the^years ahead to be filled with s^Wous
^< onomic struggle and the problems of Quality
au stili very far from all the (JNropte of this
country," he tolc^ the Pennsylvania delegation in
a caucu*^ meeting last Wednesday
Even his own delegates that were interviewed
seemed confused on what he stood for "He's
dynamic arwi he's a mover and this party reiHy
Jie^ somebody like tfwt," Arnirew Burns, also a
Mary (and delegate, said
T think the issues that came out were those
dealing with honest government and honest
representation." delegate Tony Gutierrez of
Stockton. California said Others mentioned the
environmental issues and the "reordering of
priorities for sociaf programs " But mainly they
mentioned charisma as his ma|or asset.
^^ ^'^^"^"^^^^^v night when jimmy Carter had
gone over the top to win the presidential
nomination, jerry Brown strolled to the Cali-
fornia delegation microphone in order to con-
cede all of Its delegates to Carter. Asked later
why he did not announce the withdrawal of his
delegates from the podium. Brown said. When I
go to the podium. I'm going to have something
to say ' Let s all hope so for the sake of future
Pfesidential campaigns.
A Letter to the Editor
Miss on Kiss
Editor:
The reader is fieiied to a
letter to the editor entitled
KISSING by Carey Southall
whKh appeared on June 29. The
author accused Profit Aware-
ness of misspelling the word
bussing (as in schcx>J bussing)
Carey claims the correct spellins
contains only one "s."
Ac ( or (ling to Webster's Seventh
New CoMifiaie Dictionary th«'
correct spelling is bussing, not
busing.
Carey, next time look at a
dictionary first. The Bruin
doesn't need any t>elp in making
Midiael D. Komo^
Graduate.
UminfM^
WriMrtt fiMl
ol Mr StiiunH'r ttruut
ftworli nprmmm ftke ttpmmtn ttt iHr 4utlMw jnd ^
•«*w«- M»mh»n (W fktt 9mm4 «9r Alkr SK<*n. ftsiA
h»^tmf (f^Mli. Mm>m«H StMtmmkmmt, mmd l»ur* Klrmef
«vmI vuhfiMfflrd m«Mi hr typrd m¥i Ifiplr-^Mrd
ininii ft-fc-i iMiqiim. fkr iMinth l«mii m pauwanit....! .,.,a.
NMvimufn. AM iMiml
itMwId Irom |iiihti itiwi mi
. I lo rdit MikMMivd m^irrial
I t« fiMT 41 noon Mm 4*y% bvtorr
thr propvfty ol llir Siimmf
Andy Center we« caMed
beet altileie en ^nrT tiim
^-*
Henry Williams 4.S. 40 speed
i*i be valiaaM* •§ a raoelver *-
ion Van Vuren could b« UCLA't
most vortallia recru4l in yaars
Low Price Automobile Insurance
forSUMtento
Fomola
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Additional Discounts witti 3.0 GPA.
pjoi-^^
Typicall annual rates for bodily m|ury arrd pcQ^^rty damage
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Arrow Insurance Service. Inc.
UCLA hmmd
tarry Otgfm»mWk» to
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North, South.
TV
(Continued from Pife 15)
Baggott has the speed and the
football mmd to become a
great defensive back. He read$
offensives extremely well He
a^ays knows where the bail is
Vct7 seldom you will catch
him playing out of position I
think he will play safety for the
very
Brums although he
well do the job at con
said Hastings "^
Whether UCLA'* 10 recruits
can do the job for the Brums
this fair, time will tell, but one
thing IS certain, they did the
job Saturday night at the Ro&e
Bowl
TherelSa
difference!!!
— r
Sports
seeks
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writers
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all prints are 22 i 28"
July 19 through 23
9 00-5 00
T/tthoute North Patio -
Ackernnan Uni^
^•••fited by ttie Art/EnglnMring O^partmant
Of ma ASUCLA StydafUs' Store
I
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
Lm ut thip your' personal etttct hotrm ¥¥• ar*
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Ytb — you need auto insurance
All the more reason to contact us for discounts up
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*or being in college. i^^^^^
See or call us in Westwood
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1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build-
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tired of yesterday s hair?
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For appointment call 478-6151
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Glitter covers lack of
STUDENTS
EARN |300-$600 PER WEEK 4 MRS A DAY
NiaHOfiai Distributors with annual sales r>ear four
billion dollars pm annum ^ ^
Ca)l6S4-607Q Ask for Mike Ryan
Reardon, Firming; baubles, banglef aiMHieMfe
On Campus
What Kismet lacks in originality and intinuicy it makes up in
glitter - over three hours M it The Civic Light Opera's
production of kismei at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion is very
handsome, very colorful, and does full justice to the musical If
Ktsmn IS to succeed at all ,f n< eds to make a spectacle ol itself
and director Albert Marrc Tiakcs quite sure that it does.
However, all the pomp and c rcumsUnce in the world Ciiiuidt
hide the fact that a shim has a heart of lead
The play is about fate ("kismet" in Turkish-Arabic) and the
unpredictable twists it can i^u- making a rich man out of a
beggcr and a princess out ol hs daughter Of course, virtue and
wil are always rewarded and evil and stupidity arc aiwavs
punished I 'ntortunaiclv/ the pitH is about as predictable as real
fate IS unpredictable, and the story is so shallow that although we
know everything is giung ir. turn out for the best, it is difficult to
care
-=-W4i*t makes A/Awpr mcmoiaW ii itt score, which probabty
owes more to Borodin, from uhose thcm<?s it was adapted, than
to Robert Wright and (ie/t)rgc Forrest, who did the adapting
t
Liolar Pirandello meets Romper Room
> By Cathy Scipp
If Luigi Pirandello were
alfve he would sue the Theater
Arts Department and kiU
Charles L Vernon. No matter
how good or bad his Lioia
may originally have been, Ver-
non's "adaptation" of it i^ a
travesty and the theater arts
department's production of it
IS a pagaent of unprofessiona-
lism
Vernon has, for reasons best
known to hirasell, changed the
setting of Pirandellols play
trom luly to Mexico He has
also changed it into a nnisicat,!
sort of. by writing lyrics to
traditional Mexican and
Sfwrnisli music and having his
actors ti^y to sing them., A
typical example of his lyrics is
the jolly line "1-2-3-4, gallop to
the music*' which also pretty
well describes the choreogra-
phy
TN P*iy » about Liola^
young man with a I ust fpr
Lite, his true love. Marta, who
IS unhappily married to the
sterile Incle Ramon, a con-
niving girl named Theresa and
her conniving mother; Liola's
three illegitimate sons and their
three mothers, and assorted
quaint ^ old women and ador-
Sutherland: lackkitt for Me
abk children who live in the
town If these characters sound
remarkablv similar to those on
a daytijiK soap opera, the plot
IS even more so
The cast's behaviour (waving
at the -audience, breaking up
onstage) js fiagrently ama-
teurish They have obviously
given up and one can sym-
pathize with them. They are,
however neither talented nor
experienced enough to get
away with it
Eric^utherland's characteri-
zation ot Liola consists of a
never-fading maniacal grin
Still, h^ does utter one line.
"She simpK doesn't know why
1 laugh and sing the way^ I do"
in a naively jBcpacabk way it
is such an accitiratc comment
on the entire play. Ltolo con-
tinues in the Macgowati Little
Theater through the 25th
4r • •
Jon Phillip Palmers The
Gentle Art of Makinf^ Ene-
mies, about the Whistler-Rus-
kin libel suit, will be in Scho-
enberg Hall Julv 20-25 at 8:30
PM
# • •
Soprano Pamela Scanlon
and Oboist Barbara Goore-
vitch give a free noon concert
today in Schooikerg Hall
Outtake: ZZ Top's jungle boogie
The Texas rock/ band ZZ
Top has hit upon a new source
of animal attraction they're
using animals as an attraction.
According to the group's
management, "ZZ Top's World-
wide Texas Tour: Bringing
Texas to the People" (a du-
bious goal at best, by the way)
features a pure-bred longhorn
steer, a 2,000-pound black buf-
falo, two trained turkey vul-
tures, two trained black vul-
tures, four rattlesnakes, and a
timber wolf
The animals will travel with
the utmost in vetcrinarv cav:
and creature comforts and will
apparently be protected on
stage against high dccikki
levels.
The addition of the travehag
menaferie may seem at first to
be merely a superficial attenn^t
to fill the gap in ahimal rock
created by the breakup of the
Animals. Byrdt, and Beatles
But the real animals may even-
tually learn to uke on more
imporunt Hage duties, such as
tack up vocals or auxiliary
percussion
We welcooK such develop-
ments as a much-aaa#ad break-
^knm^ in rock If Mick Jag-
fer and Joe Cocker can be
stars, a buffalo deservat wmmt
kind of opportunity — his
diction wiU probably be
clearer. And ft*s only a matter
of time before he surs in a
Ken Russell film.
Car dealer Cal Worthington,
incidtiany, will host ZZ Top's
August 7 show at Ami^kam
Stadium, where he will wrestle
a tiger and perhaps hawk a few
Mustangs Which of course
bf in
g>i y>i Ui inigfiUMi v*nm
nd
re
I^T- ^^•u ,\^^*?«"u'" ^^^'^^^^r -Baubles. Bangles at
Beads and Hes In Love^ may he corny, but the meknlies a
lovely and rise above the datedncat of the show
f^" o"" ^*'* '''*'' ""* "*^' ^^'^ ^U^rpoci who carries the pla>.
John Rcardon is competem His singing is more impressive than
his acting, which Ucks the larger-than-life personalitv needed to
fill the role.
Rhonda Flcrning is just the opposite as Liilume, the femmc
fatale wile ol the Wa/.r of Police (George Gavnes). Her singing
strikes a harsh note most of the time but her performance is
brash and tunny. particuUrly when she growls "virtile is its own
reward while bumping and grinding to the song, "Rahadlakum "
Vjciarta Mallor> sings beautifullv and adds some charm to the
sttcky sweet roie of Marsinah. Kaji's daughter Dancers Aulani,
.^Victoria AJ In and Virginia Ann give Ktsmet a needed shot in the
arm as the three Ama/on-like Princesses of Ababu the show
livens up ama/ingl> w hencvar they whirt onstage wah then
curved swords and glowering expressions Bonnie Evans' virtuoso
dancing as Princess Samaris of Bangalore lasts only a few
mmutes, but she shines like a diamond in a sea of rhinestones
Hick shtick in
'Robber Bridegroom
By Adam Parfrey
Alfred Vhyr*s The Rohher Bndef^rtHtm. opening play of
the season at the Mark Taper forum, is a rousing, roaring,
and finally wearing hick-musical Wearing because there has
been so much meaningless roaring during the previous
mtermissionless hours.
Directed by Gerald Frccdman with free-wheeling aplomb,
the show demands an easily satisfied audience who will
think a blatantfy stereotypical show is a cute idea and
decapitation and retardation are' amusing
The similarly thcmed Dark of the Motm imbued more of
a fantasy-hke. mythic motkJ to its mountain people than
bustion re
* Hmrar^ P
The Rohher Bridegroom While Dark of the Moon
explored the tight-knit and religiously fanatic society of the
backwoods Bridegroom can he teen as a Carol Burnett skit
about its subject matter.
The plot conuins the ugly stepmother (Barbara Lang),
the dashing robber (Barry Bostwick), the love-struck
ingenue (Rhonda Coullet) and the doting father (Stephen
Vinovich). With three viOafe cretins, (Lawrence John Moss,
Emie Sabella, Tnp Plyaiale), you*U have three times the
laughs, nght? It ain*s aaoeMarily so.
Still, the company OMikes the best of it, with Boftwick,
Plymale and Vinovich contributing very good genre
charactenzations. Coullet deserves spaciai mention for her
dimensioned portrayal of the stock -duiracter ingenue' and
her tuneful and pretty singing.
[>ircctor Freedman saems to have his company extremely
well rehearsed, utilizing every facet (and more) of Doi^ilM
Schmidt's brilliant set. The McVoutie River Volunteers
supply Robert Waldman's tuQes, thankfully not two hours
of variations on "Turkey in the Straw. ^
The Robber Bridegfm€fm, then, is a very well done
mu«tical ^hoxix an overdone topic One might rename it
Much Ado About Sothmg. The show runs through August
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"TiT
■»:
4
E
2
\
j:
UCLA football class of 1980 impress
Commmm94UomPmgrU} J^uJu^ich was right behind hifli because it as a touch o^n^ Fvi^n th^.i.h i ^....m ^«k a^.
(tomiimmd from Page U)
yard dash iibiht> on m 40 yard
punt return and also broke a
25 yar48r..The first punt return
as the individual plav of the
•
1
"The puni return wa^ de-
signed to go left, but tlir
blocking wasn*t there, so I
reversed to the right and found
aa opening There was no way
anyone was going to out-rMn
mtiT taid Williams, who was
"open deep several times, but
passes were poorly thrown.
Bob Mihlhauser was the
most impressive down line-
men in the game The South
stayed away from the left side
of the North, mainly because
Mihlhauser was at tackle and
^ulusich was right behind hifli
at hnebacker
••Everybody is good in the
fame, so it is hard to be out-
sUnding. but I thought I had a
tair game.** said Mihlhauaer.
who used his quickness to
pursue several plays to the
opposite side of the field
Quarterback om kk mind
-ftick^ Sashore did not have
an-^o«Hstanding game in the
defensive backficid, but ^--m
possible his mind was on the
quarterback position He was
named an All-CIF defensive
back, which is why he played
the position in the Shrine
game, but Donahue will use
him at quarterl>ack in the Fall.
••I had a good time out there
v->
I use It as a tough game,
with a lot of good players,"
said Bashorc **l think I will fit
in food with the veer, since we
ran a lot of sprint outs and
roil-ouls in high school in our
r offense"
Matt McFarland. who was
probably the best offensive
lineman in Southern California
before he tore ligaments in his
right knee at ttK end of the
regular season last year, only
kicked in the game The knee
is almost completely recovered
and he is working out most
days with UCLA trainer
trainer Ducky Drake so he can
be ready in the fall.
Even though • I could only
kick. It was a big thrill to play
in the kose Bowl.** said Mc-
Farland **! love the Mocking
aasignmenis in the veer offense
and I think I will play guard at
UCLA I also plan to punt and
place kick (he averafed over 40
yards a punt the last two years
and has 50 vard raaft m field
foats) -
Ford, the other Brum run-
ning back recruit in the game,
ran the veer all through high
school **The Shrine game was
not the same as high school,
because we only had nine days
to get the offense ready I
enjoyed playing in the game
and I was comfortable with
Artie (Hargrove) in tlMEi
backfield.** said Ford. _^
Cm rtabic might be the
best word to describe the
I CLA recruits All seemed
ready for the challenge of col-
lege football, but the future
BnMW did not seem nervous
like manv high school seniors.
Thty p mad to their
bilities in the prestij^
Shrifie game and Donahue got
his wish of everyone coming
out of the game heahhy If
Saturdav night is any indica^
tion. then it is likely a few of
the freshmen will be on the
traveling squad that goes to
Ari/ona State for the Sept-
ember 9 season opener
Lost Bruin recruits do w6il
UCLA r*crult Hmmjf HNIHamt (25) about to catch past in Shrina gtnf
(Continued from Page 16)
coach and he seemed like a
real, level headed guy. I likedL
the atmosphere over
there was a unison in the pro-
gram."
Play quarterback
The prep standout (eel con-
fident he's *"good enough" to
play for USC, possibly next
year His position is ifiiaiTer-
back
**! know I can dp, the job
and quarterback is where I
want to pli^y I feel 1 could
step right in and play next year
-»f Coach Robinson needs me."
_^Moore played exlremelv well
1 ( )7 t he A orth team Sat u rday .
racing for I 18 yards in IM
carries with 2 Tl3's (rncludin^
a 51 yard scamper iri the 2hd
quarterly Moore IS rated a blue
chip prospect who can .plav
olfcnse and dclcnse itotf^ihis
versatility makes .his~ljntcnnal
unlimited.
Jeff Fisher is another
Trojan-bound loot bailer who
was outstanding Saturday Ke
caught 6 passes for one touch-
UCLA picked third
.-^'
Football magazine favors USC in Pacific-8
down as a flanker and doubled
as a delensive back He was
highly recruited and UCLA
carrdiate lor hts
services. Yet he chose Southern
Cal.
"Off and on**
"SC came bclore UCLA
did," remarked the I aft siand-
^put. "tJCLA was off and on,
ya know and it's alwavs been
a dream of mine to plav toot
ball for USC"^
**But my parents went to
UCLA and if UCLA had come
on strong like SC did
^ Fisher pr^^fcrs to play wide
receiver and hi* 4.7 40 yard
dash speed in"*pads lends ere
dence to his wishes He could
prove to be a big mistakr for
the Hruins
It was the lack of recruiu
inenj h> UCLA coaches that
.caused Kevin Muno to accept
Notre Dame's . scholarship
offer. The refection left Muno
hurt JT^-
"VVry diMippoinfed''
'*Sure, I was verv disap-
pointed I was verv surprised
that the\ didn't recruit me Not
braggwg or anything, but I
thought L was the best veer
quarterback in C Sf And
that's what I'CLA runs
Muno (^-(). IK5) who al-
ternated with Moore at quar-
terback Saturda>. threw a
touchdown bomb to Fisher
rzn& overatt pasned^ tor t^
yards. He kept the North
battling back with clutch
passes and strong running
Evidentlv these skills weren't
enough tor the Brum brass
"I thought I could have fit in -
over there.** said Muno •'The>
ottered me a baseball scholar-
ship but It would have been
too hard to walk on and get to
play IK It the> would have ot
fered me something I would
have taken it "
Rick Parma s choice to
attend San Jose State was due
to his djsaiisiaction with the
Brum ottense ssstem
Passini! schiMil
"I wanted- to ^y t'o^'^CLA
tiu a while." said the former
Kennedy ot Oiangc County
M4r **But then I decided to go
lor'-s passing school in which
I'd have more chances to sl)ov^
mv stufl. UCLA wanted me to
go to a junior college "
Parma caught 5 passes tor
the Sq«tV«tTd-^howed a quick-
ness anUlpreciseness of running
routes that reminded observers
of CaPs Steve Rivera a tormcr .
Shrine game sian<f(Tut. '^'
B> Michael Sondheimer
DB Sports W riter
UCLA IS picked tot only
third in the Pac^flc 8 con-
ference and not ranked in the
top 15 teams in the country in
the newly out Street and
Smith's coikfc football maga-
zine. . ._ _
Street and Smith s is gene-
raly regarded as the most com-
letc and accurate forecaster on
college football, but this year
Brum fans might take excep-
tion with the publication
USC is rated second in the
country behind Ohio State in
the pre-season poll, with Calif-
j)rnia selected as the llth best
team in the country USC and
Cal arc picked one-two in the
conference, with UCLA rated
no better than third and only
slightly picked over fourth
place Stanford
Washington is picked for
fifth, with Oregon State in
sixth. Oregon as seventh and
Washington Sute in the cellar
The Trojans are predicted to
go through the season with a
IMJ mark, while California is
lorccast to go 8-3 (losses to
I.SC. Oklahoma and Arizona
Sutc) UCLA IS predicted for
a 7-4 mark, with losses to
number If) Arizona Sute,
number one Ohio Sute, num-
ber 1 1 Cahfornia and number
»w<, I SC
Running hack Wendell Tyler
^hc Irmc pre-scason Brum
All Am^nriin \ <€ k.. r...^
mcliiding cover boy Kicky Bell
Olher Troians are delensive
tackle Gary Jeter, offensive
4ackk Marvm 4*ewe4r arnl Itnr-
backers Mario Celoito and
David Lewis
California quarterback Joe
Roth IS a pre-scason All-Amer-
Hcan and the maga/me says
Roth IS the second leading
Heisman Trophy candidate on
the West Coast to Bell
More Pac-8 pre-saaaeo All-
Americans mclude Cal offen-
sive tackle Ted Albrccht,
Washington guard Charles
Jackson Oregon State defen-
sive end Dennis Boyd and
Stantord's wide receiver Ton\
Ht+f antf dcten s i \ c 1 1 n c m a n
Duncan Mc<\>ll
Street and Smith believes
UCLA has one ot the tougher
fo<>thall schedules m the
country, since four opponents
are ranked in the first M The
magazine does not rule out the
Bruins winning the Pac-8. but
with question marks ct nose
guard and quarterback it ap-
pears third place is more likely
in Its estimation.
lOfllKlnroaa
Mon Thru aat. ••
W— Iwood VlHaga
to 6:00pm afKlFhtH 9:00pm 478 9222 477?2o7
Concernetj about Cardiac Disease?
UCLA Cardiographies Lab offers
Tests of:
Cardiac Rhythm
Exercise Capacity
Valve Function
Painless and Free
need normal men and women subjects age 30-70
Call 825-39g4 for Information and appointment.
^•A.,
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uHnh4
S. The deeisUm •! the lud^s is finoL
irS!!S! fr^r^ **^ mdtmrtUing mgencie3 or mny
of thonr frntniiy mtmtmhet s,
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^f** •» ••■y **"^ moeoMtmry to enter. Good iuetd
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ttis Buslnass Manaaar UCLA Dally
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For aaaManoa wHh houalwg diacrlmi-
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HOOO
1B0 an.
itniont
MICHffLLf
ChMfdclar r9m4mr mn4
•fHla-
279-0330
(0 Jv3B)
^ MaOad to blrtt^
Bay paraaw 3300 taN Hypnoalt caa-
•atta tap* tlO Parapsychoioglcal
Inatltula. Dapt-10, 1S417 Tuppar Bapul-
WINf aiAICIMQ. Braaring auppllaa A
a^ulpmanl •#lact California WInas
"■^ '^-ipa IM^BBta W 03nB Bt. W^m-t.
(lOOB)
to paid lor
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Ca 01343
(6 Jy3Bt
fiteftainmtit
campus
COMi auf and 9niey a baauttful ho<aa
^—^dmf^and laaaliawd r«das, by tha
hour, half or full day For $4 50 mn
Bdur rasarvatlona. caN TapanM
•UBias 455-001 S: 121 Old Ti
Canyon Bd.
_^^ (7 Otr)
FAMTASTIC picturvsqua Invigorating
funflll acologtcal Sunday mountain
pool^ hlhas Frfo. ^Pg,/m„l ^^^
125 VALUE
NOW
BEAN BAG
';4 CHAIRS
" > «1 2 *
1914 LINCOLN BL AT PiCQ
14534 VICTORY BL
ATVANNUYSBL jUatf
392-1966
3B - -r:T~^-^^2y
*** ^^ ag^oMWBaot noaaaaaw
iMonta Ba«Bi avary hour an Mia
i^'jA •_*" *• 3 pm In frmnt 2527
(14 Jy 3B|
(aacond
wanted
SCIENCE
OOVtRNCBB mm^ BfM Boui
3 Bays a m—k. 307-MO. Mn
(liJr
KCLIABLE stuBam - BfN i
J,*!l^*! *••*"* ihcluding waak^ndi
03.50 hr gasollna Fart-llma Hf»
can Ba arrangad CaN 002-10B4
(19 Jy 20)
ADORES SEBS aranlad Immadlalalyf
Blofli at homa - noaspartanca nacaaaary
--ascallani pay Wrila Amarlcan Sarvica
3 or
(T Jy 23)
(AH
CoU Tony SB2-1B00.
). W^ Mo
(Ann Otr)
Get
DISCOUNT PHOTO
FINISHING right
here on campuf
OneCK TheaBa MdMta - 1_
Baaia/Crolli (2) 7/l0/70^OBHa
JdM (4) 0/2/70. (714) 4B7
WOODEN Barrala - Ka«a B -,.^^^
hatchcovars. natting A Vopa. funky
cralaa 0 boiaa. aid cactiia. 031-0001.
(lOOOil
VA 22200
r
II
nssa.)
(7 iy 23)
•ANDS naadad for Co-op straat mama
•at July 24. CaN 473-0030: 47i^70
»nlnga -"
a J« 20t
t-aat OOLF CLAiBB. Bag B HBcra.
^-W^iQ^*^ drhrar puftara. Bhona 213-
-1747
(10 Jy 23)
URGENT'
,__^ naadad Ipr tik lypas ot (obs
nginssring. MaBteBI. LafMl. Tachnical.
ndustrlai. Managamant. Clarlcal 0
^amsaMc. Oradualas 0 Undargraduatas
'atedma
r R eaiPLOvaiCMT aqciscv
(FasOPfM)
social evente
CAL , ,
T1 BR 90 A. SB 91 A. BB 92. BB 9B. alB,
i.M. 303M107
INSTRUMENT
BUILDER
^npmf%9nc96 bo okillBd mBcha-
flic In dBBign and building of
BClBncB rBBBBrch InotrumBnto
f^q/ukn^. PoBlttofi Bt CBntrBl
InBtrumont ohop Bt iinlv. of
OrBgon PIbbbb BBf« rvtumB
or inquiry to:
— "OiBOfoe LbbcIi
icignct SorvictB/
Room 1 Sclonco 1
Univ. of Oregon
Eugone, Oregon 97403
$03/686-4684
osuc/o
compus sf vdfo
ISO kerckhoU hall 82S 061 1 m271
open mon-fn 8 30-4 30
Sunset Canyon
Recreation
Center
DELI A
SNACK BAR
is open ^ r
Monday-Friday
11-00-5:00
Saturdays, Sundays
and Holidays
11:00-6:00
PARTr on a yacht day avat^lng or
waakand witti cmtmrm^ raf rashmanta^
Marina Oal Ray 022-1191
(0 Off)
11900 Bania Monica Blvd.. W L.A.
REE8 ELECTRONICS
Call 472-2000 for bast ortcas
•ALEt WaafwaoB. Excallani 1st ymr
f^ommmtth banaBM. InaMa ofNca salaa
■OBl apportunlty for advartcamant mia
managamant. B.A raqiiiiaB 070-1700~~
47O-0101 u
____ (19 Olr)
BE GINNING Sqoaradanca Class Ttiura-
days 9 BM starting July 9 MuHlpur-
posa room Watoslar Jr High t1330
Graham Placa ^ nmm Sawtalla 0 Ho-
10 Jv am
for rent
aCDROOM Sat with Saaiy Mattraaa:
Oinatta Sat Living room lurnishinga.
Good condition Moving out of slala
925-702^ or 5| 1-1201 aftat «!■
(10 Jy 27)
SUMMER JOBS
Part-time or Full-tlfiiB
—♦75-9521 for Appt.
■I I
BENT.A-TV $10.00 month Slarao/hlfl
Btudani discounts Dallvary to 9 00
4793979. 2393 Wastwood
(9 Otr)
LIABON rapraaantatlva Musi ba sanlot
Of grad FlaaiMa iMurs wortiing wHh
studants WastwMd oftlca S4-97/hou-
227^702
• -, (19 Jv 23»
PHONE Bacialary No slano «r"W*"g
Parm/part Bma 93 90/hr Evanlngs
BfiiBand dIBea. 473-9702
(t0jy27l
BBYCHIATRIC Aftar -cara faefflty na«Bi
humanlatlcally oriantad volunlaars la
iaad racraatlonal ai n»Biai HoMra and
acllvMy^tima flaslbia Contact Oatol
(15 Jy 27)
ifCHMf
ATTENTIONf . ^
MOM a WOaw N WAMTEC^
'full O' P«ff ' ym^
«"»»pai aapsnuiuiat fpLjnoM
. mof nmri turn'* iot» Ho •■psnaMss m
n^mmry ttmcau** «« fKo«>«a» mm irMn,||. afsvli
w.l^ om«f» IS S o««r mn0 bmcomm part of «
•^•Uomna* firm •»— « -
^•*' ■ ' »Of inHniSw •n«orma|io«i
'fowaio 3 aai^j
■iO Baar cabin, fymlaliad; „^„ ,«„
74O-7030/304-7400.
ft Jy IB)
of unm mn pnnit
v~
ffbraala
$2.50each
-.3 for $6.50
■OOOEL OpportunHy Want aflracBwa
Hmmt0 for Swank. Gallary. Huattar
mm^mzirt— EacaBant pay If arraplad
Eam $19 for inBBd laal. WiHa: Bhola,
14 Waatminlalar #32 Vanlea. CaNfomM
JJETITIONINO iarn up to 93 90 aV
'ms-jtib * **' ^*'^ "*^ **^'>
no Jv291
tunnr; fh* Mwrvti^
FIMf Sania Monica Chlnaaa Raalawant
orlantaf waltraaaaa atarting Auauat
/full lima Can SBB-fBTI.
(10 A .,)
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plus C(
Ouarantaad salary
Omn car .3BB-10B4
•ONV Trinitron 19" color TV - aKV
1920 with handsoma walnut stand/
magaaina rack Ukm nmm full ortolnal
w^ywtyf BalMrBBM. aacrtfica 9300
(10 Jy 20)
Whort Traahouaa Nofih Patio
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Whan July 19-23 9 00-5 00
CASTING-CABTING for NIm. TV,
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BCCBCTARY tor Baaaarch Rrpgr^n
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oducation
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HEWLETT-Backa rd 29 calculator.
Partaal cewBIOuii piua orlflnBl aooaa-
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(aaaB/vMB wBiui $79. CaB OObZibT
(10 Jy 27)
wanted
OAV A Bl mala aa. fwrtaay LaHaca.
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Oal Ray 00201.
(10 A 12)
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A lOBa'^liaraa nafsmt f»M
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j;j^^^^^_'o^»urthar informatloB
* ». Ct
(I
(10 Jy 30)
MAM. ao. EducBlad. Mtetura Jual
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jroch young poopla apaach. diction
7021 mr 901-1201 aNir aBi
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ale Oood condition 939 477.97Bo'
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n
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(12Jy»)
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4 Mo*. » P. %9 SO
a»f»> 4,4 00
Siu<toni rat* non Muaani rata* avaMaa**
Our «oai •• to craala ao •niafcuHwrai •ictianp*'
•n a raiaa*4l ir
IW ■j>TIaTIa
FEBMUJI
hair
wantad for
S45-0002
(ii Jy 30)
TRUCK/TRAILOR nom4 paraop wHtt
Booapart lo moaa ana iHniaiii feSF
In mid Auguat. Ona awy tTO.'OBB-SBBI.
(IS J» 30)
BALLET Wun way ta Saauty ISBS
Waatwood and UnN VWCA 574 MH-
fVl^"*^ Claaaat daMy Baglnnart
Inlarmadlalaa. advancad 0 laaaona $21
Bpaclal rataa. 2 or mora rfaaan waaaiy
^fmnrn tarata Olatlngulafiad Oancar
Taachar 301-3000
(lOOfr)
473 2
tf2^^ 'N'Od SaBy fit Raff Ph 413
• PREGNANT?*
Fro* toolo.
Vary Low Coat Procaduraa.
. CofilklontlBl CbII Anytlma.
274-BS44
ProMom Prafnonc^ Pf9BnliB tloB.
SKIERS
SiMnmar tuna up spaciai'
- HOUSEPAINTING
tHndinga cttactiad (Bring
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)
cnargad accordingly
iOdli'a SBI
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SZJHL
ELECTROLVSIS IMwanfatf facial B
Body hair parmanantty ramoaad. QanBa
Mfa matfiod Fraa conauliatlon. Bb.
UBii. 1010 Qaylay 477-aiBS.
'^ ^ (10 OBI
Best work, metehefsT
exteriors A multi-room
interiors
serving tt^ UCLA
Community 3 yrs full-time
since graduation.
Days A Everiir^ge
396-8979
MSGNANC V BroBlam? Fraa pragnancy
taats Compaaalonata woman coun-
•ators RalarraU lo board caflif>«B
gynacologlat Blrt^ Control tntormat»on
AllarnatlvOvia^agnancy 37S0 Santa
Or Bulla 212. LA 204-0001
(10 Olr)
PROFEOBIONO INTERf4ATfONAL
TOC FLKMI^LSSiDSfc
HLM TWA ate
*rmm ataMOaciMa Lanf ana
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charter Flight Service
Owar 1000 f lights to Curopa this
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Faculty discounts on car purchas
as rantals and laasas • Study
lour» • Camping Tours • Unrag*
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I Tmng0m0r^t% • Mini Tours • Hotal
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cards • froo Iravai counsaling «
EXPO Traval Library
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING!
I 'Tiitfciv; ««>rai» ramaioir^y ^M
SPECIAL FLIGHTS FOR
QNLV UCLA STUDENTS.
FACULTY AND STAFF
LA PARIS LA
Auauat 9-Saptambar 22 M2f 00
A mar lean Alhlnas
Auguat 0- Juna 21 , 1B77 $340 00
TIA.
^od Octobar daparturat tfiti
avaiiabia to London Frankfurt
Zurich and AmttOfdam from
S3 79
ftUROPE Israal Africa Sludanl
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Vicanta Bivd «4 L A •0040 020
I.,
FREONAMT7 Bfa
lOB-1111
cara 24 ttour
(I^Olr)
MOVING Raaldantlal. apart'mants.
olBcas Larga/amall )oba Uaad fumNura
brought/sold Call Barnay 3OO-07SO
EDITING Rrafaaalenal writar-adltor
w^ Rt«.0 Diaaartallons manuaafMa
a spaclalty Oavid 404-7340. 404-2Bai.
(i« Jy »)
RRCQNANCV TIOTIMO -
pragnancy and blrBi control counaaMng
and rafarral by carttflad woman coun
•alars Confldantial Pragnancy and
airBi Control Canlar Bulla SI 3. 0091
(1-4021
(10 Olr)
(10 Otr)
w
MAINTINANCE SERVICE 120.00
(T
0
0
)
vw naonn wobk'
up (parte * labor). 040
$136 valva )ob Fra«
machanlcs. only Qofmmn parts uaad. all
worti guarantaad. CaN
loat a found
(KOirl
■• "Bas fWHamaa 1 aay aarviea I
•■aliangaa Uiwd VW dtaanaals t6 I
If CLUTCH artTM iMoaM aaauiu) I
XEROX 2' 2C
020 REWARD for ratum -of rod back*
pack takan from Paulay Fnday July #:
^_ 5^**»*^ ^—^ phona no Blava
, (17jy20)
Ho mm«mu»ti
BROFESSIOOIAL
012:111 KINKO S i^LT/u
CMFCK OUa TVPIWC SFWVICI
gooddoato
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SCOT PIxaaa awywhoia F
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MOVINO?
aarly • h
074-0003
tlOhr Book
nf Call
LEARN BaB-Hypnos4» wMh Fraa LNa
Bma rainforcamant Fiaa damoalraHai
avary TuaaBay mgbt. John (B A . UJk.
470-7037 ,.. ,^
na fHr-
(10 JV 20)
KNOW youraoM Mirougf) Astrotogy
Pd'aoooBaaB oBart for you. or spaelal
gBt for a fvland. Saiii
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0B7-aB44 47S^0401
aiaLIOORAPMfCB Raaaarch,
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BIcal/aocacI) 3B7lo2B4. Don't wait
(10 OB)
ordar for 17 50 to ItRNW 1 1034 Oofham
Av* •4 LA 00040.
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TEWkHS InatrucBon on a
THE BODYMEN
Quality Aula Body
Rapair 0 Painting
470-OBao
CelMaion? Oat aaaialaiM*
Oar
a Oaf A
LA
paa. 472-
(10 Otr)
05.00 Dial E-X-B.E4l|.E-N-(::-C
• roo Otr>
STUDENT
INSURANCE
Enrollmont for
atudont Accklant
Hcknaoa InaurBnco
Bt borgBin roloa lor
youraolf A quBlHlBd
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LOW Coat Chartar fNghIa Tokyo. Hong
tCang. Talpa. ManNa, and ommr Ortanis
London. Barls Madrid. Zurich. Naw
ToiB. and HawaM Far BataBa caM 474-
»11 (days) 475 1011 (a«aa) Wa alao
tickala FBA. Amtrak.
iBon Addraaa 17]0
(23 Otr)
LGwisT nnu
Wa moka anda moot tor almoat
half fara Fly to Europa Africa
Bliddia Eaal Aaia
aOOK NOW T G C FLIGHTS-
CALL
EURASIA TOURS N TRAVELS
274-6361
Opan Saturdayf *"
FLY to Bbuth Ainarlca from 5311 00
For Information wrtfa L A. 5 A P O Boi
24362 Waatwood. 00024 473<OBB0.
(23 iy 27)
wrtAHTcR§ t partial i««tirtos)
Ow«r 300 fi.ghtt 4 (^ata* with <lapar<u'«t
from July thru Juna Stay 2 lo 3f araak*
^mm m 60m Wa^a artaa'
- LAX HN ^24 0 0/ J,
< LOM BN 4'?^ *0/04 •
ASOCL^
ECONOBTf Faaaa to Oftant Takya
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■2141 _ "'"
(M J9 '.. •)
EXPLORE THE WORLD!
LONGEST CHAO^'^O'^ f..or^r>.^ ,
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Y«ar - lont. ts wtthin
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Toiirn vvorh Abroad t-
rBFFTR STUDENT TBAvri rjiTAi OG
• eaffht
t.f)' ;,' h\ stiidanl travai organization
C.I.E.i. fTUDENT TRAVEL
Ava I
C4ii . :.J 477 206^
NEW ACADEMIC YEAR FLIGHTS!
L-J--
1 ^ ^r ^
f
I /
4ia
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419
i AUTO INSURANCE
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nooon
MATTBEBBEO UC
you up to 0B% on mattr
ouffteBl. BiitbulBncd B out-paBont
bariBflta on a arorld-wlda baala
In 1 convanlant poMcy. Fof BiIbt-
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IwtiiOBiiCB OMoBf Bt IhB ttudont
MbbNIi Offica or call B2S-1BBB.
tludBfit IriBurBncB. UCLA EtiKBnt
HBBlth SBfvlcB. LA. CA. BMEB.
travel
EUBOBB.
Dpf«*t
1^0
(10 Olrl^^
•dvodi N.Y B Oflant TOC
A.I.BT 1430 Bo U
LJk. 002-2727
(23 Olr)
frorr^ t337
trofnOMl
nia tr laat
frotr^n^%
tfotr> laaa
AUTO
Ifiaairanea:
Laa»aat
ralaa toe
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•00-7270. 07B-B7BS
or407-7B71
(10 Olr)
VTON EXPRESS
MOVERS
Mo«B»g pfid i^BuBng
Rich BS4-
NawoN 051-3B27
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Tlia original
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TBBiwa
CAMPUS SCRVICtS
tor J
39t-€3ia
ISC
TOURS A TRAVEL
Spring Summar A Fall Cftarlart
odon
•Brussels
:>nartnon
-Zuricb
Pan*
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Madrid
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1 rar>lilun
Hong Kong
HAIR CUTB tS.BB -Woiiian By
llcanaad profaaalenala laarnlng our
BMAa€ Up
sad
OOBO WllaNra Boulavard OOB-
(10 ^ 27)
Hawaii and How York
Roundtrip from 1 169 00
llf7Jq
LIFE
Pfione 337/7651
time/Life Libraries, Inc
MOVfMO and Naming Larga and
MN - 405-1013
(tBOin
An Pqii
(10 Jy 30)
ISC also runt locat araa tours
by car arHl bus at minimum roal
Call Us lor Intorrrtatlon
Q.« na«»v
^. •/2ft-t0>0/ •
"T 0/04.Bt« 2
•^ ikio-to/03 a
^^ »/ii 10/10 s
AM »/25 1010 i
AH 0^29 10 1 7 1%
AM f/i2-a/27 a
CI »<22^?i »
TG Mo-a/oa 4
TO 8. 21 -a/77 • 47*
XMAS CHAflTERS:Booli Hpwt
lEuropa from lA 'rom ftMtf
IE urooa frorr Naw Voia l««mtBI1
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W T C ' 2 3 wiia. . irom tias
jORIENT Manvdalas from 444
«uO|act to 20% »ncr«Ma
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL Ea«icoa>i
TRIANGLE NYC tr*. miam.
TRIANGLE HAWAII waaAj
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I APEX ?? 4saodav adv a6o«i Eu' I'O'r. lars
TRAIN B FERRY TtCKETS. CARS.
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INTRA-EUROPE CHARTERS
SPECIAL CRUISE
CA«iBB£AN V AMEAiCAtoavS from SAM
GETAWAYS
MEXICO CiTy e oayt %tr%
ACAPULCO 4 days MM
I mazatlan t davt ofil
MEX CiTy OuAO O' *» VALl AUTA •
MEXICO ofi**^*^ roua 15 aavs
MEXICO AN 15 days
MExCENi :>uA«lfa 1ft aava
HAWAII fi island) • daya
HAWA lands) todays
HAWA . anOsi to dSyS
Imfw ><OBm Ctry 0 days
COPENHkOCN 4 aays
|fK>ME IS mm
TAHITI MOOfftA to days
TAtPAi HONG NO«^
oAANO SPAIN 16 <l«y«
Ona-saaa samiaa tar mnn^mtOt tawrs. cr
hoiata car* aamasHc 4 tniarnaiiaasi aaa _ ._
aOA ^atl COUtlttLIMO »rt«taiit aa^r
TrSBOlABl
■jfaT". «v«t' *n- r "'H '^,^^.lU*trr^
C IE E STUDENT TRAVEL 1477 2069i
^ I oPPortuniti—
FLUEMT Bpamah foa»f lo IBaslea anB
m
(13 iy
lictos wanted
00B40 la
Iddva atlaf Jy^ 1
CaM Bat 021 iM
(r» A0>
tutoriiHi
rRtWCM ttitBfffif - FrancB natlaa
OMaBar. ConaaraaHan. graiiiiiia. . «•(
tlno Alaa Bualnaaa and taclinical
m^w
NEED Nafp in f nf llahT Tutarlna B
Sy ^^ 0B0-B1B0
(aaotr)
WRmNO HELB^ TBRBi BABSRS.
THESES OlSSEBTATK>f« AU BUS-
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far
0074470
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!^t:^trr ^'g'^^/'/mtt/
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aiirfB
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CLASSIFIED AD
. r
tutoring
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(MOir)
CNIMCtE M«n4«fin F«king nmUw$
l*«ch«r. ««ll-«i^rl*nc*d with Call
f«rfit« Cr»4mnUmi Im^I visual. »m«ll
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LSAT. OKI. MCAT, OMAT
•Iflt. 1t»1f VmIm tS7<M74
€7§-
(a4Q«r)
t-vwdi eyol« alarl Thursday July 22.
7:M l»M ttudanit must hav* fully
■i|yalaliii camara. and Nghlmatar Call
or coma In lor datalls Art ■ Pl.oto
21S1 iMwat LA •002t (213) 411-3343
(24 Jy 27)
to NMp yoii ^Man your fulura
CAREER GUIDANCE
4 wfc program starts JuJy 3i8f
also
TMtor<n£ -^Po»Wf R— dmg Writing SkiHi
Th« Guidance Center
3017 Santa Monica Blvd.
Santa Monica
829-4429
TUTOaiNG
Cnf|llate. Ph.D. Qavman. grammar,
convarsatlon. writing Esporlancad
>— char-tranaiator David 454-704t, 464-
203S
/24 JY 23)
LEAfIN ft
from a profasalonal
Call Alia at •6ft-tM2
(24Jy\ ^
PIANO TECHMIOUE8 All stylos
chord volclogs « progaaalowa of lo^
wiodarn and mmrUmr bluas kayboard
10M1a. Faat pacod prtvala laaaons In
ehidas thaory ft prKtIcal appftcatlons
•o kayhoord Improvlsafton 473-3^7$
(24 Otr)
typiwft
TYPIHC - Profaaaor ■ wNa
In typing book manuac
larty arltclaa ftalactrfc.
and scho-
and mmo.
motk at
Eipofi wor«L 474
(» 1
Typm$Q Faai
at
Phonar474-
(25 0«rt
o?
LIGHTNING TVPfN<> CO
Thi
COLLCOE TYIMMC
tPtCIALIST
Ti
>*• Mu#c EdHlnff. CaawMini X*fo«-
Ing. Pnnling Plwaiwg
Mil t33-74ai
TYPING, EdMng^Padl. Accurala/Multl-
aHpanancad/Plck-«jp. DaMvar/Plghtaoua
Wtaa/Watarancax^ftandy , 4S6-24ftt
(2S Otr)
PHOPlftftlONAL Typing of
^^nf.
TYPMO/CDfTING IBM
papora, dlsaartaHuna.
•atlas. Long aspariancs, naal. accurals
271 Om or 27ft'ft471 .
(2S Otr)
TYPING Lot Caaay do H Tarm papors
thasas. dissartatlons, ate Call 3t4-
7507 for fraa asllmala. ,^ ^
(25 Otr)
typing
apts fiimistigd
PNOPffttONAL lyping
••••ctrtc II Editing. ii»aniiacnp«s. ihaala
(2ft Olr)
•Pt«,tosh»
laH ftELECTPIC TypiMt. - ,
iaparianaod thasas. dissartatlons
••••ranlood baautlt«il work SO* oo
WLA. 3tl Mt4 •
~ir ^~BS Otr)
EDITM- laH Typlhg Tar^ papars.
Moat consclinPaMa. fast
•33-1747
(25 Olr)
J^T Typ,^^ aditing English grad
•padafly Tarm papors
waumaa. laflars, laM. •2ft-7472
(2ft Oti
SYLVIA: Typlng/iaM Eaparloncao
— c*^nr: nool. aocurati fttudant ipla^
(2ftJy2S)L
TYPING Faat. accwrata aorvica at
atudant ratoa ItM ftalactric Tarm
papars. tftoaos ale •ft2-ftftM. •23-43 Yft^
(mfMa).
(M )
(MA ft)
WALU TO UCLA
ipchalors Singlas
1 apftfoom Apts
M ApaftPMilB 477.fttft3
n SiratHfnore Pool, £ia¥ators
Security Gfragc
tatOAL ftLMNNCN RATEft at
Olon-Palr Tarraca 475- 702ft
.^ 540 Olonrock S43 Landfair
47ft-4ft3-»t0^ftiai^dlair 477.ftftiO
PlMALElo
m^vm
TYPNiO of
•hort popart . RaasonaMa rolaa CaN
Kalh^uaflar • p.
WLA. ••T.lfti^MO
. 1ft 473-1ft74
(2ft Jy 20)
i»^m
TYPING at homo laM Esacutlva
and accurals. C
"lots aftar • p.m
at Olr)
AUTM
krrm
ft2ft-27ft2
Eiparloncad. taat
(25 Olr)
J*2«*»»0«AL torllar arlNi B.A. Im
Infftah (UCLA) adft lypa antf atfliMn
On* day sorvloa. BM
VM-
(2ft Olr)
TYPINOf ftovan days Aiao aaMPf. Vory
fast accurata Mld-Wllahlro. Froo
pof1ilr«g CaM Jomnrm 3ft4-0ft0ft
(29 Olr)
TYPIO fcy LIZ • scaciiiPLAY tPf-
SCaiPTS • EOITINQ NMH MLECTaiC
U CHOICE TYPE FACE (noar OrlNMi
-1040.
(2ft Q^
DISSERTATIOtM. tioaaa. tarm _
and spaoal raporla. Hmmr campua*
partiing 477-«272 altar 5 p.m,
(2ftJy23)
EJICELLENT Typlat WW typa ^__._
Ihoaos, manuscripts. dIssartaTions.
lattars IBM Salactric II Call Ann*-
47ft-322ft.
..:... (»^)
typing fr— picAup. daft«ory:~Sifl>2B27
(25 Off)
^y^T Yours Typing ftorvlca TI
rapafls. Faat. accurals typing Salactric
II. Low rplas. Bartera Sftft-17ft2
(2SJyaO)
PERFECT PAGES by Profasslonals
EngMsh grads w/12 yaars •npf^mnem
IBM Corract Salact, - choosa typa
atyla 9ftft-20ft7. ' „
(25 Jy 27)
TYPING Dona at homa Tarm papars
assay* thasas. dissartatlons Call
Baba Slmoff. 30ft-3ft43 or 3ftftr30l4
(25Jy 23)
^X^WT thoala typfng/conauNIng IBM
corracting raaaaWs transcribing Sovaral
typiats Msdioal. payeh.. laah.. fMiaral
•th yaar MayBaM ftar^eoa •ftO ggjft
(25 Jy 23)
TYPING IBM-
claan-accurala Sopia pick
Work nlghla/wnliiwBa. Batty •73-441ft.
w->< (25 Jy 30)
RUTH C DiftSERTATIONS. THESES
STATISTICAL FAST DEPENDABLE
•EVEN DAYS A WEEK MANY TYPE
STYLES. •3ft-ft425
(25 Olr)
furnished
FUBN Slnfla Apt m
o^JI'Mahlra ItftO 27«.3S7ft or 031
(2ft Jy 23)
llftO VERY Attractlvaly furnlshad Ig
1 bdrm Saparala garaga Launtfry On
■^ ^ ' lo Bid Fwy ft
(2ftJy20)
1240 FURNISHED 2 bdrms. 5 eloaals
ftaparata garaga laundry ftoulh
Coming nmmr fM Fwy ft Kalaar I
(2ft Jy
IVi
$150.00 utftlllaa
2ft37 Waal-
;(2ft iy 23)
WALK lo UCLA BaMiBHH pflaola
P'^'als baPi KNchan taoMBaa
Buftplng. 473-lftaO
(isiyso)
LARGE Ona barroom. appiBiiant _ „
tlas Inclu^ad $175 Hufa Basamoul
apartmant Utilltlas Included |17S.
CaN 477-OOftft. ^
(2ft JyM^
•uMease
SBft OAYLEY. across from Dykstra.
Bachslors. ainglas, ona barrooms 473-
170ft. 473-0524
(2ft Otr)
ROOMY.
WLA. 0-7
ba«i. 474-«7ft1 Bflan
(2ftJyS0)
Lajal Sacrolary Noar campus 47ft
(2ft Otr)
»;
^gO^SSSIONAL Tapa transcribing,
.andrawrlta EspaHancadln
fSft Jv30)
M psychlafric IBM Eaacutlva mm
19* Jw'nt
FUBNISHED/Unfurnlahod bacholor
• 140. Singlas $105 Pool Hoart of
10ft24 LlwiiiDak 475.ftftBft.
(2ft Otr)
TYPIMO. all naads. naat. accurata
1-
Walk to W
Cam Shama and UCLA Cloat to Century CIfy
€**r\
.MjUB.
LOW Coal Wfohaood houaPig. tlSft-
tlTft'for • waolis room ft board 47ft-
Aaa. 90024
laSJySO)
WILL
wood Aug
1431
lo
Call
lacuNy
472-
tmfumtaiiMf
(2ftiy30)
houses for rent
•100-1215.00 OELUKE 1 and 2
la Nlnia Carpet.
•S7-7200
(27 Jy 23)
mo
VIBTA. 2 ♦
77BS
1*^
(30 Jv 23)
1 BEDROOM
f
dishwasher, pool. roc. Oulot •2B0.
ted SL SM 757-51S1 eat 2027 Aak lor
(27 Jy 20)
in •200/mo.
(30 Jy 23)
NEWLY ranovaiad. aacurNl bidg.. V
Mock beach ft bus. Venice Partly
himiahed Bach ftftO-SlOO. single $135-
$140 1-BR $ tftO-ftI 7ft. JBft 1001
— (27 Otr)
•475 FURNISHED houaa Mar
2/dan. iv. baBi Fenced yard Sopi 1
Jan 5 397-4942
(30 Jy 23)
VENICE- Marina Aro» $150.00 1 bed
room apts Room to build blueweter
boot •22-7130 evenm^a. vseekends
(27 Jy 23)
•450 3 BDRMS 1^« boBis Fireplace
iMfllt-rns, lanced yard. 15 min from
UCLA. Van Nuys Cafl Eea or wtafcaiiPa
•94-0901 ^2r'
(Jo Jy 23)
MALfBU. dakise Penthouse condo-
NNMlum on beach fantastic view, 2
Mm. IV} both, bulld-lns firepiecs I
balcony, pool, pa^ila tennis. )usi n .
ol Leo CariPo SUHe Beach. ••OOy^npfiBi
34ft^1ft9. 149. Mft^. 4ftft-2751 ZT
(27 Jy 27)
1 bdrm houaa for rant In Yinioa
-4Canala 9200 a mo. CaN •21-3300
(30 Jy 27)
as. house
If YOU t9 seeking a quiet. dlgnWod
raaldancs amongat maturs proleaalonol
paapia. aaa 440 Veteran 1 bedrooa».
2 Botfroam^ ft 2 •■Braam plus den ft
dining room $300 aiKf up Fireplace.
welbar. diahwaahor. balcony, pool 473-
•22ft
(27 Ofr>
BACHELOR Pad Boeorly Olon Cm*
yon 2-bedroom 2 story Mekif room
•09.500. ftands Realtors irf 9191
(31 A 19)
PaiME \^eahaood locaBon. Spacious
3 BR paneled dan. lonpii BbilnB rai
Igjnasler 2 firaplocaa. jbanwal fcBthon.
10939 LIndbrook Eve Vollarlo 4S1•
•2•S LARGE 2 bdvoom. 2
drapes, patio, built-in stove 3249
Owpfloftd. 477-3200
(27.JV2B)
house to siMre
•240 2 BEDROCm BaBi ft >/,. 3
perking, new carpet/ drape, #auBlao«dlil
•37 7200. 3037 Keystone/PMwia.
(27 Jy m
■•^*-' "^"^ canyon BpMa BoautihiNy
furnished Own haftumii. Air condl
9mmd $100 aionBt plus uBNtloa After
0:00 p.m. 279-1000.
,^S3 Jw 301
•30ft- 3 BDRM. 2 hoBi.
and Nvlng. kitchen garden, ft mm frwii
^ICLA. ft mIn. from ocean Avolleble
-1-7ft. Tel. •3ft-4ft24
(27 Jy 23)
BEAUTIFUL Topanga Cyn SpNt loaal
lo share $1MI.OO. 455-1710
(32 Jy 23)
aptsa to share
WOMAN
great houaa r«ear Mertna Pet ok $102 90
* 'H util •22-9913.
(32 JY2S)
apt WLA 987 so/mo
473-1074
(2« JY 23)
KER 3 bdrm. 2-beP> Ht-
3 biks to beach Hmmr large
•11 7 /mo 372-4ft«1 eve
(32 Jy 23)
FEMALE to aharn 2 •■grajm. 2
room m WLA Only ftiao rrnnSi
477-30ft2 _
f23 Jv
PRIVATE House to sfiere Morlna Del
Bey Bedroom with fireploce - $170-
eventngt after 600 P M 300-0040
(32 Jy 20)
PEMALE roommate One bedroom Hre-
pla^. pod. sauna, neor school, security
""" Reaaonoble Elolne 479-9405. 470-
t99 Jv
BRCNTWOOO 3 BO w/yd Oulet but
noar shops, bus. etc. - Eacellent
•Ituatlon •20-3003 Ed Keep trying
(32 Jy 30)
FEBULE - aBare apt at San Otofo
lor loft sem Sherry 900-1597 793-1479.
(29 Jy 27)
FATHER of two wonts female graduetv
•tudeni orm cMM la ahare neat
BaBroom Vealea Bame Goad
•200 00 plus 1/3 uBNBaa. •21-213ft'
(32 Jy ^y
housing
PEMALE grad
?•*'"""' **f» aaanheood apt FuBy
lurntshed $137 50 mo 472 4322
PaOPESBlONAL c
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CaN 474-
(33 JY »)
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Faculty
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h«uae noor oceon'No kidaApeta 1
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LAROS houaa to ahare $175-non
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(32 Jy
3 bath Pool Groat location Judy
472-4771 /
lALE shafe3 ^
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(22 A ft)
NAVE c
•anw/ .
1150 mo 475-2972
bi
3rd
(22 JyaS)
(2ft Jy 27)
bgyainfljjaadad
lloaa July Sept $125 00
(20 Jy 27)
VISITING
3-3
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Dec 7S-Moy77 Two
S. 7 (213) 4744173
(33 Otr)
mJniO)
(I
$100/mo Grft-
I 190 dy •»;
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fHNJsesIt AuguatWoat LA Pmlsrred
roferances 001 •aVB?.
NEW Facufty wlahes to sublet turn
house or apt . Sepfl^^Dec 2 edults.
1 chNd. 1 cat Monkkonen. 7 Borton
A« S.E.. •BwHiipiMi. MlnnasoM $0414
(•12) 373-27 tft
(23 Jy 27)
TRADE Your LA. apartment (near
Wllshire) tor our ft.F. aporlme'nt lor
2 wssks lo one monNi. Saan aa paaalBIa
Pawl or 9m. 41ft4ft3-
<34 Jv 23)
IxMird
6 wlUi
$13B-$171I
UCNA Ml s ■iuOvrtt run ceed coaps ratios
room and board
OKChange for he!
ROOM,
•or chftd care (boy. 6 years), weekdays
hoe. Evoa: ftftft-4223; Days: •ftft-ft4S0
(37 Jy 2
ROOM and Boord. liama af two pro-
laaaors. 15 yeor old son Must drtve car.
5 minules from UCLA. Moking dinner?
other Nght BuBes. poiUbli salary to Ba
diacuaaed July through lipliiiibi or
•29-4555 days. 47S4303 »ves
(37 Jy 2B)
STUDENT wonted $30/woek. room
partial board In SHchangf ,|#r
work chMBcara Call Mrs Scharei
••20 ^^
(37 JY 23)
BACHELOR father
to help with cNldren OeNghttuI roam/
tKMrd provided Privets enlra«K:s baBl.
ReaNy need help Right person wUI Ipyt
n here Muet drive Can pioalBi mt
RaBort Office •37-0424 home 4ftft- 1224
(27 J«27)
MATuac famalo iiudant lo
girls ages 14 end 1^ after
prlvats room/l>oerd plua •••
for 15 hours weekly Ponia
0_
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Joffn Kulusich: tfie man USC wanted and
127 Jv3B)
EKCHANGE room walking dialanca
of rampua. lor • hrs housework wsakty.
pBM oomo BtaBwashmg for 925 monBt.
Gin only 473-0017 or 472-Oftftft
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room torrent
-EMALE Grad preferred Ideal fom,
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after 3 475-4425
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•70 MALE tBiBawfenly iftmb, ^
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paof Fomala aBiBant Rof 27S.SSSB
4S7-7127 •-«■—.
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.-■*^
By Mike FinefoM
DB Sports Hriter
John Kulusich threv^ down
his helmet gently in disgust
when It WBS certain the Soath
\ll-SfBrs had prevailed over
his North team. 2i*li, tn the
25th annual Shrine game
The 6-2. 212 pound Chati-
worth High School graduate.
haMad for UCLA in the M,
played with his helmet
on tighter than ever through-
out the game however
Kulusich seemed to be in on
almost every tackle for the
Nprth squad, but admitted
later he was only going 80 per
cent At the start of Shnnc
practices. Kulusich had deep
cut* 111 his foot when these
healed, a pulled groin mu\ck
took their place. '■
"^If ydu win, you can judge
your performBnce But if you
loK. you can't just uiy. Well. I
played a focxf game It's too
bad the team Ksi It you do
that the rnotivation for
winning disappears.** said Ku-
lusich in a poftt-fsnoe inter r^
view --^ ' r
The ibfts by the North team
broke a three game win streak
in a series which Imm seen the
South dominate Kulusich ex-
plained, ''We only f|UMl nine
days to practiaB. Last year they
had 14 days Defense is more
rcsiponsibility than timing So
our defense was okay, but our
offense had a coupLr ot bad
breaks "
Handled Sperling
"^M*
Kuhiftlch
ftnlahing touch lo South baU-carrlor
^— i-^mnipres«»nl laekles
It .an ouisianding defensive
player for the gftme had been
Miaied. Kulusich and his omni-
present tackles would have
won the award However, no
award was given and" ^en it
one had been awarded. Kulu-
sich viruuid not have been
happy at fust being the lo^
defensive/player when his team
had gone down to detrat
Kulusich
Lied upon
•BW him handle
South guard ^lyrone Sperling,
who IS headed for l^( Kulu
sich laughed. "Sperling only
gave °me trouble on misdirec-
tions; Other than that ^te-^was
no problem at all But I'm not
knocking him- as a player ^
to t'C'l A. Kulusich ex
plained, he will bring good si/e
and speed, but ru>t mu^h cxr
per le nee He is looking for-
ward to the upcoming Pac ^
grid race '*USC and Cal should
be our main ofipositioa, in that
m4mr sBid Kulusich He
added. ''So we should be able
to- get first or >econd But
who's shooting tor •econd "
Ifuluiich chose dCLA be-
cause ^4t>4>lcased him the moftt
lociatfy-fifd^ aihleiicallv He
cwasidtfiid VSC but had de-
cided earlv i)n (K'l A Kulu-
sich hopes to tollow in the
footsteps of Manu I uiasosopo,
a starter as a freshman How
ever, he will accept any posi
tion on the squad where he can
help the teani
LducBtkNi flr^
Overriding tootball tor
Kulusich u education "Foot-
ball isn'r a carver I or me," he
^«»»d vKilJusich had a ^1 aver-
age m hijih sctnrobimd hn^
mieresis at I'ClAivary "trom
science to design " Fc^t ball is
a pastime. said - Kulusich
"And It can'end at anv time.*'
he concludes
I t)r Kulusich howevci. lool-
balhR just beginning His uhi
mate individual gtial at tiCI A
IS tT> be an A II- American "t
riii^hf as well go Jof the lop
ht says 'And I'd sure like it>
play here (Rost Bowl) on a
vt-arK basis *!,
5
Coacties laud Brutn recruits
(Continued from Page 16)
he was m the Souths back-
field ^4
Loves football
"Kulusich loves this game
called football," said the other
head cOach of the North. Pali-
sade's High^ Schools Dick
North. "Kulusich enjoys con-
tact and most of all he is
strong, fast and has a great
football mind His greatest
iraset IS his lateral movement
along the line of scrimmage I
must say he docs need some
work on drop back pass cover-
age but that problem can be
woiiMd out when he gets to
UCLA-^
Bob MihlhauscL irom Ca-
noga Park, also played an
outstanding game for the
North squad The 6-4 230
pound defensive tackle has an
outside chance to start for tlie
Brums m the fall.
"Mihlhauser is a complet<^
tootball player." said loncs
"He knows how to get-thejob
done He was- by far the best
down lineman
training camp
afigresftivc and
give him
Just
we had in our
MthlhauMrr is
he loves to hit
a little time to
develop because he is )ust
reaching his full p(>W4U+ar'
The coaches from ihe South
team had high praises tor all o\
their players, and especially for
the seven DCl A recruits fhey
all played important roirt m
their tcamV vidof]
Running i>a^r«Artie Har-
grove of I ong Beach Poly
High School was the most
impressive performer for Ihc
South squad
Artie Hargrove
"When he comes to play
there is not a better football
player around." said head
coach Chris Ferragamo ot
Banning High School "At
limes he becomes a little la/y.
but the competition at UCT A
should correct that. I think his
best position will be tailback,
but I have no doubt he will tit
into the Bruins' system "
hred hord is another top
running back candidate Ihe
5-11. 184 pound Ford has the
moves which can help make
him a top college player like he
was at St John B4»sco High
School ■' -' y
"He has quick fcipt and great
lateral movement," (aid the
South s other head coBch-7 41^-
year-old Glen Hastin|^ ol Pla-
centia'^ Fl Dorado High
»^^rftft^^^#^ - -- —
Flanker. puiiT rmirini
Henry Williams ot Carson
High School may he able to
help the Bruins m man\ ways
Not only is he a good flanker
prospect but he prt)vcd -he can
also return punts Dtrrmgr^T-
urday night's game he returned
two punts for Vi yards (one
long f*eturn was nulUiicd by a
chph . 1^ ^ .s
"Wrth some better blocking.
Williams could have gone all
the way. said ( oach Ferri^-
gamt>o "I have seen him pla^*
U>r the ilast V years and \ have
never seen a better college prcv
sped He cftn also help the
Brum track team You know
he was the city champion in
the 440 yard dash"
Andrew Center of West Tor-
rance played an outstanding
game at his defensive back-
fieid position
' te'
"Center was the best athlete
in the camp," said herragamo
"There was one series where he
even called a play. He is strong
and loves to hit people His
greatest asset is to be able to
come up.iiisi tor the run He is
goihg to make someone at
liCl.A.very happy''
Rick Bashore of Fdison
Higlr. Bfrd^'^ Brian Bagg<itt ot
Servitc did cxceJknt jobs tor
the South rn the defensive
backtield
Bashore trom Huntington
Beach was recruited to UCT. A"
as a quarterback 1 hift may
l^ust be his best poftitiMi,
"He was the mofit intetfigent
player we had to work with,"
said Ferragamo. "I am sure
UCLA will find a place tor
him He comes ready to play
everyday I hat )ust makes a
coaches |ob that much easier "
- — Perfeet DB —
Bagjrott. who is from AruH
heim. IS the pertect defensive
back. ;< rciing to the coaches
<ith<? Si)uih team w
"At 6 Icet and l-HO fHiuruff
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UCLA footBall recruits shine in Shrine game
Future Bruins excel
z in l<ey areas of play
: *•
C.
r
By Stcvf Finlr>
DB Sp<»rtN Writer
Tlie coftches for both (he-
North Mnd the Si)uth agreed on
one ckm«it »t the 25ih annual
Shrine All-Slar looibiill classic
UCl A. 4im». uruck :4irid with
ten top recruiting prospects in
the Soulh's 2h-2() win over the
North
F he game was played very
well both otlensiveK and de-
tensively The key play o\ the
game was when a pass by San
Hernando's Kcnnes -^ Moore
landed in <ht hands of the
Souths I ouic Campos ot San
Pedri) A heavy rush made
' VIoore release the ball early
and away ran Campos tor a
linefwwA-drigiijn of a M) vard
t ouc hd own '~~"
-—' — ^Ips and downs
Other than that pla\ b<»(h^
teams displayed the ups and
downs ot high school all-star
games TTh:re were touchdowns
bv both running and passing,
but there was also the inter-
ceptions, tumbles and penal-
ties When It Was over. UCl A
had been a major facior in rhe
Sau44v^-w4rihrflg an^ the North
siaymji close
"Vriih the exception ot SV
Paul's bWensive guai*id Matt
_Mctarland. all oi the Wtst-
v^ood-bound recruits played
extremely well considering they
had only about one week to
prepare for the game M char-
land IS havinj^ tpryblcms with
his right knee which limited his
playing ability, but he promises
to be readv when C( I A meets
Arizona Stale t>n September 9
Although the North lost the
game. Jon Van Vuren. John
Kulusich and Bobby Mihl-
hauser impressed everyone at
the Rose Bt>wl
Help many wayn
**Van Vuren can help LCI A
in many ways." said J im^ J ones.
Van Vuren's high schoc^l coach
at, South Hills and coach ot
the North "He can pla> both
ot tense and defense i doj^4
know where the Bruins are
going, to use him. but where-
ever he plavs. he will be able
to help He is not only a great
receiver from ihc flanker posi-
tion, but he was a^o the ^esi
athlete in our .4;armp Van
Vuren has goenl hands.. but. his
greatest asset is his ability to
block I have never »cen a
flanker who can block as -well
Kulusjch. who ivas all over
the field, may be UCLA's top^
recruit J ime and tinfie again'
(( tmtinued (»n Pa^e I5|
Kulusich o
rvcov^ry Mrly In game, Unforlunalaly, KuHislch • iMm loat 28-20
JT
'smiling' over Shrine effort
use recruit K«nn«y Moor* Irlat to aHudt
09 fhn^H
South ruah
Recruits thai got away
Shrine spotlights non-Bruins
^y ^••''fJJ I Reneau
DB Sports Writer
The 2$th annual North-South football game last Sattirday
night at the Rose Bowl provided DCl.A gridiron fans a view pf
some of rts most, highly pri/ed recruits
Alternatively, and perhaps ominously, it also showcased many
other talented high school footballers who chose to pursue their
athletic endeavors elsewhere Talents such as Kenncy Moore,
Rick Parma, and Jeff Fisher are just a few of the excellent
players the Bruins did not gel who could come hack to haunt the
Westwotxj club in future years
Wanted too badJy
Moore, I OS Angeles City TrHPteyer of the Year at San
hernaiido opted lo attend VSC \^n A wanted him badly, too
badly in Moore's view
"UCI.A was constantly pressing me I guew the term is called
bird dog^ng. T hey recruited me for two years and thev were just
too itroiig.**
OSCf attitude was differeot toward Moore, however •*! feh
really at home over at SCT comminttiHf Mnorr -i t:.tir^H t.. tK,.
(Continued on Pase 10)
By IMicha^L^ondheimcr
DB Sports Writer
UCLA's first year head foot-
ball coach.rTerry Donahue had
the same type of smile on his
face after Saturday "ifrghi's
Shrine game at the Rtjst Bpwl
as he did in the same Ideation
fast Jan I when the Brmiii
upset Ohio State.
The reason for the Donahue
smile was simple His 10 re-
cruits had done as well if not
better than advertised in the
high school all-star game. The
seven future Bruins on the
South won over the three
I'CLA recruits on the North.
28-20.
If there were any doubts
Donahue and his staff l^ad
recruited an outstanding crop
of high school players, almost
all had vanished by the end of
the first quarter The 10 in-
coming freshmen excelled at
running the football, pass re-
ceiving, defensive line play.
ftne^M^eftmg. itnocicttig down
passes and kicking
Tough for freshmen
Donahue has said he does
not think freshmen will be able
to' break into his hneup at the
-Start of the season, but after
the Shrine game it is obvious
several of the freshmen can
make it The most likely are
Long Beach Poly running back
Artie Hargrove, South Hills
flanker and defensive back Jon
Van Vuren and Chatsworth
linebacker John Kulusich
Hargrove executed the veer
offense to near perfection in
the game, rtishtng for 92 yards
in 13 carries (a 7.1 average per
carry) and scored the first
touchdown of the game.
**! didn't ltt¥e as good a
game as I expected toor~ SHUT
Hargrove "I am looking for-
ward to UCLA and running
the veer in coUefe. because
after tonight (Saturday) I like
the veer a lot better than the I'
I ran m high school**
Roue Bowl thrill
Playing in the Rose Bowl
wafc a thrill fur HapgFn»f "h
real I v
play in the Rose Bowl It is an
important place and I wanted
to do vei7 well here," said
Hargrove. The best analysis of
Hargrove's performance was
made by one of hi$ fans after
the game ** Artie, you made the
city of Long Beach very proud
of you and now you can do
the same thing for UCLA.''
Van V uren has the "coachei*
attitude to play football He
likes to play every play^-of
every game, because lie be-
lieves "that IS how he does his
best "I enjoyed the game,
becaiite there was no way I
could get bored since I had a
different look than most play-
ers, T love it when I can play
both offense and defense, be-
cause I think I have the ability
to help at both spots." said
Van Vuren
Offensively, Van Vuren ran
the foo'fball cai£ght several
potaes an^d even almost com-
pleted an option pass, which
he threw over 40 yards m the
air. **ln high school we would
thrown one or two option
paeaes a game When the play
wcm, we averaged 48 yards a
catch." said Van Vuren.
Key intereepCkM
Defensively. Van Vuren
laade a key interception in the
end zone, pulling a poit out of
the arms of another Brum
recruit. Henrv Wilhams of
Carson "Henry didn't really
have a chance on the pl.j^
because the quarterback was
scramblin|( and just threw the
ball to the comer of the eiKi
zone. I was in front of Henry
all of the way and made the
interception.**
Van Vuren appears to be as
physically tough as any player
in the game and should be
even more ideal for a comer-
back position than flnaker with
his 6-2, 185 poMid Innnr.
Kulasich was tHe defensive
standout in' die fame and it
baaame evident early why VSC
was upset when it lost him He
was in on tackles m almost
Brum teammate hred Ford jusr
short of the goal line
"1 can*t wait until I get to
UCLA, because 1 want to see
if I can ptay as a freshman^
Coach Donahue has told mc
that UCLA IS expecting r lot
(^ tQod things from nie and I
am just hoping tfrat I can do
^-what they want." said Kulu-
sich.
Three-fourths
/Brum Baggott. Andy Center
and Rick Bashore (he will be
quarterback at UCLA) didl a
fine job as three fourths of the
South defensive backfield. Sta-
tistics prove how good their
coverage was The North com-
pleted but 12 at^ passej and
there were five interceptions
Center was particularly ef>
fective in cutting down the
blocking on the North sweep
plays. r .
"this was the best hitting
game I have ever plaved in."
said Center -^My job was to
Uke out the interference so
that the sweep runner would
have to go wider and our
defensive pursuit could catch
him I might look bad on films
because of this, but I know 1
did my job and that it helped
the team win. which is what is
important "
ftiigoct came up to make
several tackles aj the hne of
scrimmage He also knocked
down a couple oi passes and
looked especwIK good in the
Jiccond halt Perhaps hi>
toughest critic is his brother
Bill, who graduated last vear
from UCLA and is now a
graduate assistant coach "I
thought Brian plaved a solid
game, but nothing spectacular
He was a little rntty m the
first half, but did much better
in the last two quarters." said
meant a lot
i»Lif luiiiinig pljv uii itig flrnt
nc to scries, including two stops ot
-1 thought overall the UCLA
recruits were excellent and
really shined." added Baggot
Willuinis **-hhnd**
Another recruit who
*'shined" was Wilhams The
f.
r
UCLA
Summer
VoUmiio XCIX. Humbm $
UnhrofsHy of Caltfomia, Loa AngolM^^
• July 23.
SLC considers backing disco
Yaroslavsky, residents in opposition
Th« Westwood Carpet Company will be |he eMe of i
iinment cbmpleM if Oavtd Kenner has
oepiNMobv
I. new Weslwood
his way,.
By Rum Wolpert
DB Suff Writer
Westwood Village will have
yet another enteruinment com-
plex If private businessman
David Kenner and the majority
of Student Legislative C ouncil
(SLC) have their way.
Kenner. who piant^to' build
the four-story complex on
Gayley Ave where the West-
wood Carpet Company pre-
sently stands, ran into prob-
lems due to the opposition of
We^twood homeowners and
C ouncilman Zev Yaroslavsky.
according to UCI A^Metro-
U)bby Director Dean Zipscr
Kntertainmenl faction
YarosUivskv objects on two
grounds, u ding to Kis Press
'^^Secretary, Jackie Bcainard He
feels the traffic congestion in
WcstwoTVd IS already "horren-
dous.* and he feels "the en-
iertainmcnt faction "of Wcsi-
wotKJ has begun to overba-
lance evervthing else.' Brain-
ard saicf
Potential rapists offered Gounsellng
With the support of SLC.
Kenner hopes to counterha-
lance the homeowners* bp'-
position. This would be im-
portant since Kenner hopes to
win a parking vanancc. which
would allow him to enlarge the
complex to include a fourth
floor for conceru. Zipser said.
Without the vartince^^Uie com-
plex will have to be only three
stories The Los Angeles Board
of Zoning Appeals will hear
arguments on August 10, he
added ^
Before SLC even considered
a resolution supporting Kenne?
at their Monday meeting. Un-
dergraduate Students Assoc i.»
Hon Pr5j,sident Meg Mc< or
f^fit^k decided to support Ken-
.ncr
McCormack directed Zipser
to work on the project, and
her office ' has been lobbving
for Kenner. /ipser said
i'rfeney
"Because of the urgtrncv of
Ihe discf) matter, most of my
attention as Metro lobby dn
rector has been devoted to
this.- Zipser said Earlier. Zi|^»
ser said. ''I'm spending all my
time working for the disco."
In addition to the subsuntiaf
amount of time devoted to the
disc4? 1^ McCormack and her
staff, a resolution was pre-
sented to SLC Monday
I>espite the apparent majaf*
ity support, council entered
into an extensrve, heated de-
bate, and the resolution was
tabled until the next regular
SIC meeting
^ Adilid benefh
When" asked it she had any
problems supporting a pnvate
businessman in an off-campus
venture with UCl A\ stamp of
approval McCormack re-
sponded. "I'm not supporting a
busines.sman. I'm supporting a
concept I'm trying to secure
an added benefit for the stu-
dehts.-
Other council members,
•f Continued on Page 5)
■.«»«•'
i
.1-
By Su^an SiHon
J DB Staff Reporter
Potential rapists can now
rk counseling thorugh a uni-
que rape prevention program
^^^L?^'^'*^'*^^!^ in XpriV by the
Ihalian Communitv Mental
Health (enter at the Cedara-
Sinai Medical Center
The program, the first of its
kind m the naCiaiu offers "cri-
sis counseling" for both rape
victims aad J^ould-be rapists^
l4 hours a day. seven davs a
According to Connie Rus-
sell, public relations director
for the program, "crisis" sug-
gests a state of having lost
something Losing, a father, a
job or even idl-dignity from
rape would conttitute a cnsis.
she explained
"We are trying to help faci-
litate their (victims and poten-
^1 rapists) getting in touch
with their own situation and
how to cope with it." Russell
Program director Adele Hess
said the inspiration for the
counseling service came from
her work at the Los Angeles
Cotuity Sheriffs Department
where she saw prupli "contem
piauog violence towards them-
•ctves or others:^
"What IS important is to g|««
potential rapists a chance to
discuss this unspeakable topic
and ventilate some of their
^fcars," Hess explatnad^
Russell noted Hess* program
was designed to help prevent
rape while also counseling vic-
tims and their families The
priorities of almost all rape
programs in the United Sutes.
she added, center around
"after-the-fact stuff"
"We are dealing with a par-
ticular group of rapists,** Hess
said "Those who do premedi-
tate but who are not really
prone lo violence, and who are
not psychopathic They are
obsessed with sexual ideas**
Since the program*s incep-
tion April 19, 15 potential /.
rapists have sought help from
the rape center
Tlie 45 counselors handling
rape victims, their families and
would-be rapists are all com-
munity volunteers who are
trained for a period of
6 weeks According to Hess,
approximately one-third of the
volunteers are male
UCLA students are among
the coui«alnri participating in —
the program The next training
session, said HaM, begins m
September. ^^—
Hcit said ''people are myt-
teries They are alienated and
isolated, and often they don*t
understand themselves or
others."
She added, '*Giving poten-
tuilly sexually violent people a
chance to relate on a personal,
non-object I vized level with
women is very important.**
Potent ml rapists and rape
victims are encouraged to call
the center at 855-350*.
Counseling, job placement
Students given admissions help
o-y^
i
spceoster utili/cd his 4 .S. 40
<< ontintied on Page l#)
9j MM mmmmyt
Dt Staff Reporter
^or many diMi#MMMi|§Bd yvvi^ P^opk, the
burranrraiM. runaround can make getting int^
college frustrating if not impossible The
EducatanaaT Opponumty Center (EOC ) pro-
graan seeks to change that
The federally funded program provides free
counseling and cnA^gt and ypcational plnea-
Ment services to low-income youth.
EOC n^rates locally through centers in
Venice and downtown The Los Angeles
program, part of UCLA Extension, is one of
twelve across the coumry
Aidams sees hm joh and i4mu of the
tion^l lobbyiiU ombudsmen be
tween panple who want to get in and the
colleyet.'*
Staff m the centers provide futu. udents
with assistance in filling out financial aid
forms, oitnining recommeaiiiHNH and com-
iMetMg admniiat applicattaat. Special ser-
vices are availahle for veterans
After the students leave the center LuC
rcgislarly follows up on them to help with any
problems that might occur
Adams said the progi^m has made a notice-
a]^ change in the Venice commumiy **Little
kids now have role models to look up to who
coUaja," aaid Adnwta, addin£ tipis
Inside the Bruin
in turn starts the voungstrr^ thinlnn^ about
AoolMMbHito
K«H(»r ha* tough fob
1
'■!»'■
WOUtMl^ WITH US % 11 riM timClJT
jCAMPl S CHAPEL
•ptiit Chapf m JACK TABEH 47f .)44S •23-«a40
AUTO
and MOTORCYCLE
INSURANCE
rES — you need auto insurance
All the more reason to contact us for discounts up
to 35 to most students - another good reason
*or being in college
S#e or call us in Westwood
477-2548
Agents for College Student Insurance Service -
1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build-
ing) LA 90024
AN OPPORTUNITY
-^-«-
To Meet New People
To Find Out About Other Countries
To Fill 3 Valuable Role
VolOnteer to be a
Unsold produce
hotline created
Tbe State Dcpmmm
^Mmmti And Fomd
Afncuhure have crcAtcd
iclcpkemt hoiUac for^ unsold
praiaoe
The toli-irec hotline number.
l-tOO-«52. 7.575. will enable
fMnatr% aad ccMisumerft to bu\
&mi sell cropt before the\ are
M> kHiftr edible
"This innovative soluLion
mAfks the bcgirning of food
4ial^fMe between the farmer
in4 consumer and offers a
V laMe solution to the surplus
prakkmr lairf^Statt senator
Alex P Garcia. Chairman of
the Serute Subcommittee on
Nutrition and Human Needs
-The mmm§t n clear.-
ttaied Garcia, "that the sute
must make a commitment to
food programs that will con-
tribute to the optima] health of
tizens •*
Garcia added the experi-
ineBta}^ information clearing-
house hat an unreaJizcd jwk
tential for preventing the
pi food in California
■
Summer Bruirv
VolMim XCIX. Numbar •
Cji«cutt«« Editor
Aaalstar?t Bu«ln«M
Editors
Frtday. July 23. 1f76
Puthwhmi i^iicc a w««fc duripjD th« Mummm •xcopt during ^o«i<iaytand
days ioHomtng hoUd^s, and •aamtnation periods ^ th« A60CLA
Communicationt Boaf^, 30t ¥Waalwood Plaza Loa AngMaa. CaMorma
90024 Copyrtant 197a by tfia ASUCLA Communicationt Board
•**'*■*** '•*— poataga paid at tha Loa Angalaa Poat Qffica
Aiioaa^
Oaoff Ouinn
Susan Kan^
Tad Shapiro
FranK M/iddar SaMy Qarnar
kim Wiidman MicHaMa Ouvai
Oavio Whitr>«y Joarma tgimm
^*chmm» Sondhmnm
Stava FiMtey
J«tt Uiptn
Maria Lavine
Howard Poanor Laura Kiam«r
Adac^ Parfray Cathy Saipp
J«« Mitch«j
«ot)aftaKaya I
Joa Joriat Patti CiDat
Joanne Ratkovich jaft McLabd
"JOdi Zachowy
Jane Wigod
Dicli Kraut
it Oti
Edttor
AMistant
Photo CdHor
AaalatarH PIhMo EdHor
EfttortBiiMMnt maax Editors
4iaoclBti fndas editors
Editor
Art Director
Copy EdNof
Copy Readers
Events Editor
"^■•^•'"♦'i
m-
#
COUNSELOR
■-^*
in the
FOREIGN STUDENT
MENTATION PROGRAM
American and'Foreign Students .._
are encouraged tio dppiv
Crime and Punishment
Use of pass keys alleged in thefts
For mformation.call o/ come in e Intern
-Center 1023 Htjgard 825-3384 or 47:* T45a7
ent
f^a
•y Alaa Michael KarbeWg
Ol Stair Hhlar
Mmbst S6000 worth of-
equipmeni was stokn from the
Center for the Health Sciertcei
^n three separate thefts during
the first week of July, a^c-
cording' to the ICPD: ^
In -ait three incidents, locked
rooms were i>roken into with-
^-^ut sign of forcibie entrv -Ap-
p9rcnti> the suspect entered
^ith a pass kev " said De-
leaive James .M Pembroite of
^ LCPD
A room in the emergency
department of the Medical
Center was the scene of the
largest theft The items re-
ported missing include a video
c*mer^, video cassette, color'
monitor, 16 mm film projector
and a video tape machine knd
reel louhng S4.6I5 worth of
equipment. The theft occured
sometime between July 2 and
5. OffTcc machines wort in $918
were also taken from another
room during the same pen od
of time
: ti^-^i
" ^,
H«* fitted h\ Kxperts
Oantiiini Leotarc^s
Tighls Brpond Girdle
Speciolties
^ - LI i G«7.|773
^^ k I /" Ir BANKAMrRlCARO
MASTER CHARGE
VALIDATED PARKING
^. _ WITH PURCHASE
-»TI WtSTWOOOaiVD WtSTWQQDwii.^r..
mi
Sunday
JVorship 9:30 am
nsE
trowMGl
[nJKersilKUjtherari
I Sunday Seniinar li am
'othmore & Goyley
aflLOAfi
HM-HL^UBE « Oil »24«
fiiiuS
When asked if thefts this
large ^ are routin^c, Pembroke
said, "Its an unusual occurence
— they usuaUy don't happen
that often."
Another theft on campus
which probably involuted the
ti$c of a pass k^y occured in
the Geoiogv Building Three
pieces of electronic equipment
worth a total of $1390 were
taken. Pembroke Explained
while pass keys were lised m
both the Geology Building and
the Center for Health Sciences,
the incidents are probabK un-
related The paai keyi^or the
two buildings arc different, he
said;
One unusual theft which
Pembroke said took a lot of
"nerve- occured while an of-
ficer of the UCPD was at
lunch on July 4. When the
officer returned to his car, he
•bierved the Police radio an-
tenna from hif ear was mist-
ing. The antenna is worth $25
^
A-l AUTO SERVICES
^. 7957 VAN NUYS SIVD
CITY
so or eoacQg
Concerned about
UCLA Cardiogra
Cardiac Diseaser
phics Lab offers
Tests of:
Cardiac Rhythm
Exercise Capacity
Valve Function
Other thefts which occured
>n the first weeks of July in-
clude:
— A 1968 VW two-door Wis
broken into with a prybar or
icrewdrivcr on July 8 The
right windwing was forced
open, according to the police
report The car owner*s park-
ing permit and gate card worth
Sno, were removed
— On July 9, a student lost his
backoack and its contents
worth $98 when he left it un-
attended on the Southwest
Comer of the arena floor in
Pauley Pavilhon It was as-
sumed to be ftoimi
A $140 Mofobecane bkrvcle
was stolen from the bicycle
racks at the entrance to
Oykstra Hall According to the
PoUce report, the suspect used
"bolt dutters.-
We need
Painless\and Free
normal men and wornen subjects age 30-70
Call 825-3924 for information and appointment '
Correction
The July 16 Stmtmer Mntm
suted that community servioei
commissioner John Kobara
MKiaad a budget of $162,894
^ his commiitKNk Although
this was the original figure
••bmitted at SLC '
"^ it ha^
'Latin Lover/ other
stereotypes studied
••I^tin Lo¥B«.- "La/y Mexican^.*' and * HoiBlooded Utinos**
are but a lew of thc-^ereotypes ot Mexicans and Chicanos being
explored b> Raymund A Paredes ol the I CLA bnalish
I>epartmenf ,,.
J t^^ ^ —^^ I'^^y »n ^ Amcncaii Mind" is the topic of a
r««Pi* fr*m raeaMly awaf^ad to Par^ikk by the American
Council of Learned Societies (ACLS^. Haivdat. who raaaived hts
rhJJ from the I niversity of Texas, has devoted five years of
laaaarch to "how and wb% Amertcaaa get some ot their strange
Ideas about Chicaaaa.**
Paredes hopes la document the historical ongins and evolution
of Mexican stereotypes held by Anglo- Americana aa they
appeared in the American print medui. including newtpapers
magazines and governmental correspondence from the Ute 1600*1
to the present In addition to the origins of these stereotypes he
will examine how they have become entrenched in the American
cukure For example. Pancho Villa and Fmihano Zapau , two
popular figures from the 1910 Mexican Revolution draped^ with
guns and ammuniiiDn. are common depictions of "MeJuouM**
held by Anglo America
Paraias attributes some of these ideas to 9anous historical
events and popular misconceptions throughout the last four
centuries Mexico's Spanish influence was a great contnbution to
the ^^inning^ of derogatory sentiments held ^ a highly pro-
iriciih America Anti-Catholicism played iti_|»rt in prejudices
against Mexicans as well as Mexico's protest against U.S.
"manilcsi destiny ** and westward expansion
Paredes, along wit*) George P Fletcher of the UCLA Uw
School, were among sevetr^JC faculty members receiving ACLS
repearch j^rants [he American Council of Ixarned Societies is a^
private non-profii federation of 42 national scholarly organi-
sations devoted to the advancement of humanistic studies and
liberal arts partly funded hv the government
^ Keftey SpeNman
to continue
Student Legislative Council (SLC) budgctarv hearings may
continue indefinitely throughout the summer Although con-
ceptual approval for all SLC budgrti was concluded July 13
finai budget approval began July 20 and ..will continue indefi-
nitely, -u
The budget proceedings b^n each afternoon at 4 pm and
continue as late as 2 30 amj in the second flcHir men's lounae Of
Ackerman Union
Ajt of Wednesday mght. no student -] rl^ni Imiit mum^ni
the meetings
Council members must limit their spending to $208,000 after
conceptually approving total budgeting of approximately
$340,000 Discussion will^ begin with approval of a %4Q0 budget
for the Student Facilities Commission and will include the
proposed $133,000 budget for Community Services Commission
Titos Vandis
Actor
A Coaching
For Informatnn Cal
— TTnr
Tha producars of EOUUS
have made avatlaMe for
caltoge students only. 60
spaoai on-sta^a saats for
each pertormanca Friday
& Saturday evenings
$6 00. all other perfor
mances including mati-
aaaa $5 00 Tickets are
available at the Hunting-
ton Hartford Box Office.
Slyiem 1 0 card requirad
.-/..'
FOtEIGN sTuomn
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Hair Transplantation
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tn*Jr
Low Price Automobile Insurance
for Students
Slngl*
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Summer Sale"
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An cxircmcfy favorable environment dunng
fetal developmeat in the uterus OMy produce
outftanding individuals, according to three
UCLA icientiflts.
In a recently completed study. Stephen
Zamenhof. Edith van Marthens and Donald
Guthrie of the UCLA School of Medicine
found rats with better nourishment in the
womb were born with more brain cells and a
higher brain weight than their littermalet.
Genetic factors could not account for the
superiority because the rats were bred in a
closed colony.
—"The significance of the study ts that brain
development can be altered in uteral develop-
ment," van Marthens said "How significant
this lis to humans is something we don't know.
The results should be imcrpreied academically .
not on an applied basis. ' van Marthens
explained.
However, fellow researcher Zamenhof be-
lieves the study's findings may be correlated to
human bcingi. -In the past, whatever was
found in rau acat later found to be true in
humans, especially in the field of nutrition " h«
stated '
Zamenhof cited a previous study done Ian
with G.B Holzman. in which measurement of
head circumference in human babies was
correlated with placental weight and cell
number The babies with bigfer heads had
better nutrition in the placenta. Zamenhof said
Ihe scientists hypothesized the otititaac^ng
rats fluiy have had a better placenta and blood
supply than the rest of the litter Of 720 rats in
the 37 generations bred. 16 were found to be
superior.
— Jodi Zechowy
1
to MMc' I Mr
This ^i^ the place for Rit Lovers f
By far the Best Ribs^weve tried in LA.
Hvral<| Examiner
Casual Dining
COMPLETE DINNERS
from #2.7S
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10 Minues Down Sunset Blvd to
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We seH everything for motorcycles —
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We need
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KH112
•!'*"'
7932 Sumel Blvd
Hollywood 876-
M-f 10 -«
Sal 10-S
Haw at UCIA Friday, |uly 23
A Shabbat with Professor Abraham Kaplan
KABBALAH AND HASIDISM
Abraham Kaplan has b«en a student, faculty member and
chairman of the Department of Philosophy at UCLA He
|s currently Professor of Philosophy and Sociology at
Haifa University. Israel and President of the l>raeli
Philosophical Society. Some of Kaplans publications
include Power & Society. The Conduct of Induiry
Individuality, The New Society, and Love and Death '
co-sponsored by The University of Judaism
6:30 Service 7:30 Dinner 1:30 Program
RESERVATIONK A7A.nzf^
TherelSa
difference!!f
MCAT
OAT
LSAT
6RE
AT6SB
OCAT
:h:
CWtf 35 jrtars
•ftiftf tenet
Mtf UlCCttt
■
Small ctMMt
■
voiuminttft ktmt
•
Courses that are
constantly
t«pt facilities for
reviews of ctass
tnoowi awg tinise
of
SLC goes disco .
n
NAnmBos
W-U7
'iMaoum
Loi
'2'3l4r7 3»it ' ^
(till
(Continued fron Page I )
however. expreiicd doubt*
over the tfiscoi tfcMdihaity
"Dsacc and drink"
WilUe Banks, Student Edu-
cationaJ Policy Comnuitioner.
felt many fiftmiciJ membert
**«Mit the disco for their own
fun, to they can have a nanrhy
place to dance and drink **
Kenner aiso promiaed UCLA
itudenu a ''discount applicable
lo the cover charfc," and to
^eacoiinife an additional even-
ing of performance during the
week limited to UCLA stu-
dents,^ at a substantial dis-
count," prompting more de-
bate.
EOC. . .
(Continued froni Page |>
EOC al&o conducts an out-
reach program extending their
kcrviccs^o inmates at the Cali-
fornia Institute for Women in
Chino Cheryl Dea'rmon. a
graduate who now
as a counselor at the
center, visits the insti-
to assist women apply-
UCLA
works
Venice
tution
ing to college through special
programs available to ex-
offenders.
**The women who have
applied for the program* have
a betur chance to be paroled
since they have already made
plans for thciV future," said^
Venice coordmator Adnenc
Smith. , _ ' "
EOC community involve-
ment has also included spon-
soring field trips for prospec-
tive students to universities and
colleges throughout the state
"The field trips serve a dual
purpose, letting the future stu-
dents visit the schools aiid
allowirvg EOC staff to get ac-
quainted with the college ad-
ministration," Adams said
CampK Events
you to , invtstigate consumtTcomplaims
Visit Ktrckhoff 311
- imntmm mi iMiii^ ^m imsi.
tHMU 14 pm. dancNig t»y — luTt^ 9 mi-
midnijht mm. mmmyt GyiaM Pm
--lM»«l CMvtrttHis. fftt informal
9ntMe» for focMfn slMiiMi
10 ivfi-noof) Hofidiys md Wi
Ackorman 3517
— ^"Mr Tsvi. of campu^wiir bt co»»-
ducted by thf Visitors Ctnttr 2 pm
T4M84ays af>d Thordays tww-Auaust 26
Murpfiy 1215 Ffit
now accaptmo
w :..^ ^ rwaarcli asaltlMtti Visit
Ktrditiofr 306 or call 65-#l7
- w..^. sumrrwr fobs
and fitid work piMBMant m community
Wsit Kioaay 3M or call $25-3730
KMtltaal hik Daaaat. 8 10 pm
lyt international Studafft Cafilar
Frat
.^ ^'^ P^ llonday-fndav
intornationai Student Center rastaurant
RUW
"■ Nwip •■BBu^fy. wid b« stKrnn. M
pn tvery Tuesday International Student
present scenes from standard Oftras
»«oan. July 27 and 8 pm. July 28 ScfK)
•wiifg Uttia Toaster Free
* ^WMTt Iniuring sacred ItarofM aiwf
A^artMaajd Cneh folk mualc. aoon. JiHy
» •jJijBiaroLittie Ttioaisr Fraa
--dMito m AjBVil^v slMiM puitar
M pm. every Tuaday. Mvnalinai Siu
Since no contract has been
drawn up. such promises are
not Icfally bindmg. &uU. SLC
Presidentuii InforoMton Di-
rector Mike Gahzio said, -J
don't think a contract is possi-
ble, and It's not necettary*
Cultural Affairs Commis-
tioner Lou Karasrk added. "As
ioon as this disco is buih, all
Kenner*s friendhness won't
mean a thing"
Even Adnumstrative Vice-
President Gary CoUistpr, who
co-sponsored the resolution
•**<^ "'Kenner cannot guarantee
any discounts for us in the
concen area of the disco, be-
cause the enteruiners will have
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS I "
•t us Ship youf p#fOo ..thome ^ F'rji.L ina;!, ^
naf packaging and sh.pp.ng Wa alao aall #«r 9*s .,0^ ^
their own
32 parking
Mike Keetec, Diredor of the
Otfios of Environmental and
Consumer Affairs, noted
"UCLA's lot 32, which Kenner
plans to use as a parking fa-
cihty. IS destined for destruc-
tion in the UCLA lona ranae
plan" ^^^
Although Zipser said park-
ing for the complex would be
»n lot 32 and the Monty's
building, council members did
not seem concerned about fu-
ture parking problems, and no
discussion was held regarding
this problem.
I'ng end shipping W« ai^o
PACIFIC-KING ^^•^'^mm^ t
m
for 220 voHs
17
>
I
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torn opvf.
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In tho field of electric typewriters
tor home or office:
Shop and Compare
Hand Held Calc.
Printing Calculators
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ir
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OB Editorial
.i-T^rf""'"* •••*"•" *•• ^'•"•"«' *»"«*^» A««*^
».•« (NSA) r«pr«.n.o».v.. Brion Eisb.., r«. • •«• (..«•
cempo.9n Tho. iww* wo. thm oMition •» fh. NSA p^t
■««. ii.1.*, p^l^ ,0 w»rfc yi9orou.ly f .b«li.h »h«
?1 Th,.jKom... ,*^ mod. .y.r tw« month, ooo Th«
P^i«n m o £on.ri»„tioool r««*r«Hlwm ImM Jun« 3 Boon
r.'ZI" T^i"* '" ij!^**** •♦ NSA -pc^.nto.jv., with
vo»in9 privU,^, ,#h« tpM, ond a ».Uphon«.
SIC m^mbmr until « d«cid« »• fugn," adding, "I d« hov*
•••*•• bo»in*«« remaining on cowncil."
*''***?■ •V*'*' •**"''' *• *"*i^**i*ioUm. It cenflicH with th«
•pint and th« .tot.m«,t. .f hi. eompalgB, H, ton, and h«
w^.^ on. ..MM _ ^ .liminatian of hi. pwitjon
f..barS w«. p„, int. offic. by rtod«,t, who wr. tirod of
rr^ fP«''*»;otin9 rtud«nt bureaocrocy .at away th.i,
Jir^r** **^' '^ *••*' '**«^ •"•mplary candiata;
•«• wh. would •liminat. «nna««.«.ry dra7n. on .J
mon«y. '
ln..oad, onctho •l.ction ,.tum. war, in, h. di.<oyo,ad
«,mo romaming b««naM," which hod «ppor.ntly .lippod
t T;?^*;; " "^ "'^'' '*'• »»«»•'»*- •'<•«' "o r^^
C-? l^**'***"!! T*" '""• " ^*"'''* •"-'"«'• campaign
liJdldltl^t """"'•" '^*'* '•^ *^ •'^* "^••^♦v •*
— 1>^Brtia.g romain., and i# $IC foil. .^ „p.dlt. hi.
on!wZZ^ £^ZJ^^ "••mbw. *•«« hav. no tf.«blo
Zrn^ Ih. l«K,««,tly a.fc.d qu-tion: Why do .tudonn
poinf
So you tbought student iMtili w« bad before? Wait until »e itorl clurBlnfryou for m
Progressive Labor Party Predicts
-3'
Letter to the Editor
Cm
• 1
for all Southern Calif ornians
who have ever enjoyed the
wonders of o^r sandy beaches
Of towering coastal bluffs, the
time has come to speak out For
despite the defeat in a Senate
committee df SB 1579. the Cali-
fornia Coastal Conservation Act
of 1976/ coastal legislation is still
alive The provisions oi SB 1579
have been incorporated into a
new brtl. SB 1277. sponsored by
Senator jerry Smith (D-Los
Catos)
The btW h now undergoinf?
hearings by the Assembly Com-
mittee on Resouries. Land Use.
^d Energy. At a hearing m
Sacramemo on june 24. pro-
ponents of coastal legislation
outlined the provisions ne^6^
for adequate coastal protection,
including strong safeguards for'
lite-«upporting wetlands, chan-
•*lmg of development into
Existing developed areas, en-
hancing productivity of the ma-
rine environment, and enforce-
ment of the public right of
access to the shoreline. All of
^^>«e netii are dealt with in SB
1277
As in the past pro-develop-
»nt lobbyists assailed the idea
of coastal planning Representa-
tives o4 organizations such as the
California Association of Real-
tors and the iuildmg and Con-
struction Trades Council stated
«jat they saw no h^ed for a bill
like SB 1277 and asked that it be
cut down or defeaMl. Other
^^^ker coastal bilK. AB 3402 i>nd
AS 3i75. ire rKMv being offered,
which would leave the coast
^ " m the hands of the local
■OvernrT>ents that performed $p
J^hazardly prtor to the enact-
">ent of Proposition 20, the
Coastal Initiative.
With that initiative, the people
of California voted in favor of
comprehensive, tei^ficial plan-
ning for thii,. resource that be-
longs to all of us. SB 1277 is the
measure that would fulfUl that
mandate It is supported, among
others, by the Sierra Club. Plan-
ning ind Conservation League
League of Women Voters. Cali-
ternia Coastal Alliance, iryd the
League of California CUie^
The Assembly Resources Com-
mittee will -hold special hearings
in Los Angeles at 9:30 am on
July 26 and 27, at St Roberts
Auditorium, Loyola University
m Westchester For an infor ---
mative sounding of the is ?
•nv i. try to attend the
hearings A vote will take place
•n that Committee on August 10
But the toughest fight for the
bill will be on the floor of the
Senate and may stretch out until
August 31, the final day of the
legislative session.
Letters to Southern California
Senators who ire swing votes in
the debate for coastal bill SB
1277 are badly -hjbJ These
include Senators Alan Robbins
(Van Nuys-Nort>) Hollywood)
David Roberti (Hollywood^; Alex
<-«rcia (downtown. East L A )
Nate Holden (Mar Vista. Culver
City). Alfred Song (Momtrey
r»rk), Robert Stevens an^l^'rnes
Wedworth (both South Bay
«»••«). If you aren't sure who
your Senafor iy you can find out
by calling the Sierra Club office
at 3i7-42B7.
RM Sinclair
iiCLA Urn Sdiool
f£cy.rof's note Cher/csey /. a member^ of the
Progressive U6or Patty)
In thFmidst of the sunda rd convention hooola
surrounding the select^>n. as Marx so aptly puTiT
QJH^h^ch n,ember of the rul-ing class is to
represent and repress the peoplf for the next few
r !^' i ^"* '"^ prediction^ of the Progressive
thrust toward fascism in the US not from tl^
sTcXH^'irr k«V/f^'^ Politicans. but from the
so-called liberals. In a much vaunted display of
^lon!^ t^'^'V^' Democratic Party goosesteps
along behind its new Puerher. jimmy Carter
By Leone Cherksey
OPINION
Th.s pUm ol Georgia farmbov, actually a
powerful plantation owner and member oi the
same agf'culture-boss class noted tor in fierce
repre«Km of farmworkers efforts to organize for
better conditions in California, falls into , he same
t^adtion of pretending ,o represent C.mm^
i '*/*'!" demagogue Louis Day Hicks a
slum landlord And. like Hicks, Carter stand, ior
the trend of racist violence *tro» +he t-s trom^
bu. s,„nings m Boston to cross-burn.ngs" in Los
Angeles which announ<e the birth ot a neo-
taicist movement m this country
Carter has a consistent political history of
^cking racism and segreK,,„on A member of a
^^greg^nalist Southern Baptist church. *«. n,ld
i^^^ - — ^'OM"!*! I nurcn, -ne tol
He^^,'" '""*■ ""° "^ basKally a redneck
1,^, «°'"''"°' °* t^O^K- on a ticket w„h
notorious racist Lester Maddox who drove blacks
out of his restaurant with an axe-handle, and with
the endotsemehf of segregationist Roy HaT s
and ol Wallaces presidential campaigns As wr
of C aner s campaign for governor, an'anonymou
Carl X.La ^"^"'^°P*- »howir>g his opponent
fr.^ r rr :'t*''r"*' ' champagne shampoo
H^k t^ea^L*" '«*'':'^" P'-V-s on ,he Atlanta
HJwks team, m which he shared ownership
^a^?*^/"""^" '^ *"'*' '"'^ of them aM-
W^l!^!' i^'UfjT! "^^ —odM^ with Ceoree
.n aTtteT^ X°"DSL'"J.l''Kl:f ^°"'**^
ki. ^ t^wwpiey, who had criticised
h» nomination of )ack*on instead of WaCe <«
the democratK «,«««„«, candidal. Thi
never had anything but the highest praise for
Governor Wal ace Thm.M -_ 1 f'^ 'w
"«"«i.e . Mwre ace limes when two
-T^ working toward the same end canTccom
pl.sh more .f they a,e r,ot completely °ed
together, I th.nk you Urill find Governor Wallace
words In 72 Carter +»im.self threatened to
support., racist school boycott in Au|o,Ta unl^t
the state legislature called on Conf rS to ihituTe
a constitutional ban on bussing "*^
r;^^.*. '»""^^""8 °f segregationist pol.ticans lik.
Carter from local offices to domination of the
t!^^ 'Z •*" ^^- ^P'^'heid, a brand of
Usctsm, IS characterized not only ^y the syste
^1 fP»;f"°"; exploitation and stripping of
poetical ri^of a large section of the ^|^
rule by the capitalistic class of- mea*ers ol their
wh^ 'T, ^'^'i' !"^°"'h '^♦"ca. white students
recent^ «r:'^ '^" ^''^ '"°'^''» '"<* *'«''»
recently against forced use ol the Afrikaans
^ vT^ ' '^ °' ''^'" executed for opposing
South A? "^r* ^*''* °'^' ♦'*^« ^y^"^y
South Africa is character.zed by militarism and by
TWus Carter s pushing of other right-wing
positions as well as racism should cor^e a!^
Mirprise Carter avidlly supported rhe US im-
^L^ *"*^ " '" ^'«^'"'"" to the point of
C^Wmning mass murderer William Calleys
conviction as a blow to troop morale (N^
Ir., r^-*"''^'' •"** ^^^" ***''' '♦»*' "^- -^"rde,
Naton^rr 'I "'"• ^""- P'O— « "o s,«d
^oll^? Guardsman with live ammunition onto
oe^^^u ' '^P? "«■ *"PP°"^ 'he <l"'h
^nals T^T"'"*" «*««~'*0" oi "habitual cr-
M,7J^ J"*^ maintains the Supreme Court
comr.nt *^'*'**" '""'""R """"«' confesswns
contains too many lechn,c*liti....s." His other
^nZ"^ V"'r ''*"" ""-on-busting to su^-
U^nX'.T^"^'' '" '"^"^ ^erv.ces.'are t^o
details on Carters deeds, see H»rper\ March
of^hTTi ***°**''' '"." ** "* '^''•'V symptomatic
wri^ Lil2:"'' "^°^^"V '-hich the ruhng class
mfliiinn V^*l"* '*.' 'o'"«'on to unemployment
a ism The \ °'*"" P'°^'*"» '»'«' by capi-
hZ Z ^ '"* '^ "^'^ "^ repJessin ,
di^rmin^ bourgeoBie baring its fangs in in
oeiermination to suck tk* mZ, ui ^ ? *.
working class ^*~^ ''^ ^^^
Sommpf B,
A»r» SiMift. Frank
gnt^0rt,Q i nmchb -4^ndi7, V
•y Mmi c\
Clint Eastwood returns to
classic form in The Outlaw
Josev Wales, a lively, wcli-
■idc murder^and-rcvcnge sage
that wanders all over the desert
^southwest amid a sUccaio of.
shootouts
Once again bastwood plavs
the loner Joscy Wales, re-
venging the maasacre of his
farming family As a confed-
erate soldier, he refuses to turn
himself into the Unioh armv
for amnesty after the Civil
War Wales watches as his
buddies, who had turned them-
selves in, g(ct mowed down by
a hidden Catling gun while
reciting an oath of allegiance
to the Union The chase is on
Although Eastwood, is the
**lone" man, he rarely gets
much time to himself In his
cross-countrv flight from the
4^-nion posse, he meets a vari-
ety of oddballcharactcrs who
flavor the otherwise long (two
and one hall hour) film
The best of these is Chief
josey Wales': an undvij Eastwood
f
r
D«ii George, who strikes just
Jnc right combination of bit-
terness and wrv humor as a
siivcr-haired, lop-hattcd Che-
rokee
/•I guess that's why- we lost
to the while man.- he tells
Eastwood. -We let hira sneak
up on ui." He winds up ac-
c.omyigplm E«itli*od through
of the movie
As usual, Eastwood attracts
violence He never precipitates
It. but always uses his gun and
his quickness to resolve all
difficulties. yojr> Wmies seems
to have more shantniaa tk^
previous Eastwood films, but it
Eastwoijd return to lorm
■y Adam Parfrey
Claude BerrVs Mmk^of the Century
playing at ihe Los Feli/ theater until
July 27, is an engaging, contemporary
^^ench comedv that pokes lun at the
male ego AlihuMgh 4t has only enough
material for a 30-minute skit arid
becomes -ret^et It I ve. Male contains
enough challenging ideas on its subject
to warrant attention
r>irector Bern also stars as Clwide
the hysterical and varn haN^^Riher
who constantK suspects his. wile (Juliet
Berto) ol seeing other men" The situ-
ation peaks when Berto is held hostage
m i--4)ank heist, an J Bern is- more
concerned about her basing an allair
with her kidnapers than uith her
welfare
Bern is attempting to show that the
posscs'sivenes^ of the nutlet absurd
and possibis dangerous
It works, at least for the first hour
Interestingly. Male has a slick
Hollywood look to it. complete with
gl<'ssv cinematography bv Jean-Pierre
Baux and snappy editing Claude Mor-
pokes fun at 'Male' ego
ii still the outnumbered while
lutf outshooting the black
hats
In keeping with contempo-
rary themci of penoeful co-
existence, Eastwood at one
point parleys with the war-
painted leader of a Navajo
tribe The scene almost be-
comes too wordy as the two
expound upon their philoso-
phies of life Ultimately, how-
ever, they agree, pointedly,
that a battle would be de-
structive for both
Aside Irom the violence, the
one thing which keeps the
movie going is its earthy hu-
mor At.tietrer however, this
humor falls flat, as when Eaat-
Wood remarks dryly:
**rvc heard ^ there's
kinds of sun in Kansas
shine, sunflowers and
o' bitcliii.*
Eastwood himself
-#eint "n excellem jo
mg good performai
Hhe supporting p|
keeping the occasioJially am-
plicated action within hounds
three
sun-
sons
ev(
vers
gan's score sounds like reprocciacd
Have Grusin (VwrdRpriSi AVa/Zi^^nd
Bern and Jean-I ouis Richard's script
has a decidedly American tone even
American college T-shirts are worn by
the actors
Taxi Driver. The Sailnr Whi> Fell
trom Gra<e With the Sea and Stay
Hungn are three examples of Amen-
can films with personal and intimate
themes usually reserved lor the Euro-
peans Soon, France will be exporting
their filmmakers to ( alilornui and vice-
versa.
VoA^'v awing, though s -.mes too
high pitched, is multi-iaccted- and
insightful Berto and Hubert Dc-
^''^^Hmps as Bern's sympathetic-lnead
a;^ particularly winning
^ ^^* Shnp was Bern's previoiH
sinematic outing Male ttf the Century
points to more ambitious aspirations
than his previous gentle sex comedy
Let's hope that Bern fertilizes his
future films with less frolicsome filler
and greater substance
4
SAn6almakecj ji^
1334 West wood Blvd ^' ^^ ^^^
West wood, Cahf 90024
Phone (213)473 9549
• "• ' ■^":"il;> ^^111 '"'« HIH PUKSCS MA
."».> PRICFCASCS
I.A.HIK „,<.l-, CRApT INSTKUCTION<;
Berto particularly winning
I
no^r in
conlfl
xl village
faisHions
I
tirvd of yesterdays hair?
For what's happening now
styling for fiien and women
Jerry Bedding's Jhirmadc prodi
For appointment call 478-615
lliru sat
PERSmON
3.00 - OFF Hrst haircut
wtffi thisad
i can/ aa a iO% 9)iA*cuni ^€et(ificai
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WM»wood U»d
475-0711
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Porfc tndoQf Avco Garog^
TMi SAIlOff WHO FiU FtOM
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SILENT MOVIE (PG)
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Mon-frrd 30, 9 30
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7 pm ond 9:15.pfn
Coll for w*«luind fimm
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MURDER BY DEATH (PG)
1:15. 3:30. 4 45. «:30. 3:15. 10:00
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In 70 mm SfmopKiiic
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Stage Reviews
J[he Crnite An of Makinx
Enemies, a new play by Jpn
Phillip Palmer, is a lukewarm
diMapointmcnl: an ambiiious
•■i iniclUgem idea w^hich
doesn't quite work The play is
about the libel suit the painter
James Whistler brought
agMinsi the art critic John
Ruskin, who accused Whistler
ot "Flinging a pot o{ paint in
ihc public's face " It could
have been a witty courtroom
drama what it ends up as is a
mess.
To begin with, there is far
too much posturing Director
pan Caldwell apparantly be-
lieves that becMise the play is
set in the 19th century, it is
fitting lor the actors to use
I9ih century stage mannerisms.
'nc result is curiousl> dmtd
Although this IS a new play,
one gets the impression one is
watching a revival ol a period
Anna Mathias as Maud
Franklin. Whistler's mistress,
struts around Irke LilJian
Rus.sell Will Marchctti as
Whislter seems more concerned
with impersonating a Victor-
ian dandy than with playmg
a real person Drew Eshel-
mans performance as (and
Palmers treatment ot) Ruskin
'» cudely one-dimensional: a
doddering old prudt not to be
taken senousiy
Even so. such staginets
could be got away with if
it were done with energy and
style, but the actors play their
parts with an odd combinatioa
or staleness and uncertainty
C aldweli seems to have wasted
his rehearsal time, and been
satisfied- with too httle. loo
toon
- Tartly Seipp
4r 4k 41
n the people, wofi^rjo to
Shakespeare this summer, then
Shakespeare is coming to- the
people, hv way of the I os
Aflgeltfs Shakespeare Festiva.rs
rousing and rowdv touring
companv of the great Bard's
Taming of the SHrfw dirr
by Kim Friedman
To. be performed at parkas
and recreation centersjhough-
out the I A 4rea between now
and early September. S^irc^M 1$
campus, in the park ahd
an updated and ihoroughlv
e^oyable production, made all
the more deUghtfuI by the park
settings in which it ,s be,,,
done. ^
- The energy level ol this
bawdy and often frantic pro-
duction IS such that it carrit
the entire audience right alon.
With It Exemplified by thecal
clawed and cunning Kate of
^iu^an Tyrell, the cast leap,
bounds and skitters acros
makeshih trailer-stage 1,
works beautifully, making for
one o\ the most enihrallmL'
and involving theatrical
pcrienccs imaginable
Somewhat unorthodox, hut
all the more pleasing |,>
unusual qualities w,r«>K ^an
be seen this month at I A ( ;
Hall parkway af noon^on f»
28th. M rhur Park
;<'n the ^oth and Chatx i/u*.
Manna Del Re> at 8 30 on i
31st Picnics, blankets. >rishr.
and other creature ^un.:
arc welcome and admissior
^ree
- John JB V\,iso„
♦ ♦ 4c
By Marc Pnlmieri
Mustard (at the Matrix
Theatre) is a kitschy, almost
funny piece of musical theatre
It IS unique as well It isn't
often one can find Ziegfeld
vaudeville and a 50*s rock and
roll number in the same show
Mustard \% the stdry of Jack
Rubcrtian and Scratch
Bugsby. two flounders from
New York's tin pan alley dur-
ing, the forties The boys get
lost for a week m the Ozarks,
and are forced to stay with two
neighboring hill^)illy familtes
until their car is repaired. They
hoth fall in love with two
O/ark inhabitants. Betty and
Marv Timkens What ensues is
mundane
Manley Marks' music is en-
. I laming, though not inspired
The acting is merely adequate
u tftv one exceptiofi: Bruce
.')tt (Scratch) infects, enough
personal energy jnto the ma-
tenaJ to make it genuinely
tiinnv — ■, " ■""■
Mustard provides an evening
of impotent theatre that is
marginally entertaining be
jjUiusfi, rather than in spite of.
Its weaknesses
'Taming of the Shr#»w^^ rousing
Book Reviews Book Reviews Book Reviews Book Revie
By Adnm Parfrey
iiGLA has ^ -^ufc,
jangling skeleton in its re-
cent past. Not in the Ana-
tomy Department, nor in
Cha.ncellor Young's driving
record; not even that mys-
terious workman buried
under Janss Steps It's
UCLA alumnus John Ehr-
lichman. and with his new
book. The Company (Simon
and Schuster, 313 pages,
$8.95), its perfectly clear that
he's back to haunt.
As Richard Nixon's Do-
mestic Affairs Advisor and
CREEP
A river of lies., gushod
from its Pennsyjyania Ave-
nue cesspool, and Ehrlich-
man. One of Nixon's^ "great-
est public servants," **rc-
signed "
Repenting for dollars
Ehrlichman wrote The
Company in sedusion in ah
old Adobe house in Santa
Fe, New Mexico to ostensr
ibiy repent for his sins. As
the untaxed American
churches well realize, re-
pentance is profitable; and
with his authorship of a
slick, sick political •*thrill-
►52M
Chnt lptfwo«d
THE OUTUW
JOSEY WALES (PG)
0».»y •112:30.3:00. 5 30. too 10 30
n
A Lommmim ThmottA
Los Feliz
I §22 N V.rmo«f
NO 4-2169
^•w FrMich Rim Fvstivol - If 75
MALE Of THE CENTURY
WE CLOCKAAAKER OF ST. PAUL
wntt#« A dif«<t^ by Wf^n^ T«v#rn,*r
Santa Monica High School
Hall-Of-Famcr, Ehrlichman
was just one of vour below-
average, run-of-the-mill poll*
ticos Quiet. Self-iitociiig<
Greasy Discreet
Watergate struck News-
men became interested
They came, they saw, they
reported Hearings surfaced
Millions of citi/ens, belching
^>ccr gas. watched Ehrlich-
man on television. Sweat
-i*PPer lip Guiltv
Ehrlichman: laughing all the
way
unhlu^h
cr." Ehrlichman
ingly agrees
The CIA IS the villain in
ihe Company the organ-
ization must have somehow
irked Ehrlichman Appar-
antly Nixon did also his
unctuous prototype in Ehr-
lichman's unctuous novel is
Richard Monckton, an oily,
scheming, ugly bmtard The
author transforms H R
Haldeman into the symoA-
^hetic TT TmJ^"^
James McCord into Lai^kX'i
Haglund, the President's
The pedestrian plot stag-
gers around William Martin
f>»rcctor of— the--CIA. who
Attempts to cover-up an un-
favoraWe report called '"Pri-
mula." Meanwhile. Presi-
dent Monckton enjoys bug-
ging (that's spying, not an-
noying, though he^ does that
loo) everyone he ineets. The
final confrontation is an
exchange of dirty hnen J*-
iwcen Monckton and Mar-
tin.
Colerfiii as cnrdboArd
Weoden and cliched cha-
racters arc just what one
expects from Ehrlichman
But let's not underestimate
him. Maybe his characters
•ft dull for authenticity's
sake the Nixon Adminis-
tration was as colorful as
cardboard Still, the plot
plods and the narrative
gnashes away at some sem
blance of competence, which
it usually fails to achieve
The dialogue is laughably
pat and grandiloquent, and
each chapter reeks of every
phony political melodrama
to date
A typical Ehrlichman sex
scene: '^he quickly brushed
her lips against his cheek, a
kiss that might mean no-
thing, or everything." Dumb
computer-like descriptions ,
are assigned to each and
every character: '^he had an
athiete*s body, powerful, but
very feminine, with a ta-
pered and taut waist, round
arms and strong wrists
High cheekbones contoured
her face and set off her dct^
*>rown eyes with a hint of
iaugh crinkles At the cor-
ners"
Perhaps John Ehrlichman
^ not mean for us to
take this piece qf flatulence
•^nwMlif. Well, lM*s laugh
«ng. AB^ Hie wav to tl»
-»——<*
The Vampire tells all
By John JB Wiboa
For lightweight, pleasure reading, it would be_.
ditficuh to find a more appropriate book this
summer than Anne Rice's Interview With the
^umpire (Knopf. 372 pageS; $8 95)
C onstructed in the style of those Sweeping
installment novels of the i9th cemury, Jnter
^iei^ follows the life-after-dcath of a former
plantation owner from his conversion to
vampirism ^n 1791 ta his current quest for
victims m modern New Orleans
It IS the content more than the style of R^"$^
writing which makes her book as fascinating as^
It IS Her writing itself is sometimes maudlin in
Its overdoses of sentimentalism and often
excessive in its flowery phrasing
But the plot devices she uses, the myths she
and hatred of one another, creates the veiled
analogy Vampires, in their desire for com-
panionship and mutual experience, are open lo
homosexual-like relationships
~-~ , ^^ Good and ^oocd
When nm converted, louis » sUrtled by the
resultant increase in his sensitivities *-|t was
as If I had only just been able to see colors and
shapes for the first time " Capable of hearing
the slightest rounds and fully appreciative of
the vivid color and heauty of the world around
him.^a vampire finds himself in a sute akin to
being good and stoned the veiled analogy m
Hie novel. •'^
As I ouis and Lcstat drift apart, the older
vampire attempts to revive the retetionship by
bringing a third member to their group a
dispels about vampirism and the veiled
analogies she nukes aboout the subject are
hoth intriguing tmi ro ■pilling
Homosexyal relationships
Lottii, the vampire whose interview is the
narrative substance of the f»ovet, is bitten by
the handsdbie Leetal while in a fren/ied coma
over his younfer brother's apparent suicide
I ouis^ tooA teeomes like a slave to Lesut.
giving up control of the family lands Und riches
in his thirst for knowledfc about his new state
Hicirrelationship, sharing a coffin at night.
""^"^ — — " ' " tif minng victims to
Rice and friend: the thrill of killing
five year old orphan named CUudui. In one of
tl«« tm%.^\rm ^L*..-L.: -I <^ . ^
rupapifupiwn Hk ihuM
^^ Z**^ yowwig close lojjethcr in lhtir_ love
^ — ^.^..•.. .Mi.iivw ^Miuuui. in one 01
the more disturbing elements of the lk>ok, we
see Claudia grow to menul nuturity while
remaining, forever, physically a child
Their travels lead the three angels of death to
Europe and communion with French vampires
whose jeAloMsy and ritualism destroy CUudui
and leave Lestat a listless fatalist awaiting his
own demise
Rice obviously knows about her subject
matter, and has created from it a most inter-
esting h««k, AAnittedly far from being a
dmm /ntenjfyir; Iffj^ t^ Kirm/Mfg if nnnathi
ICM one of the more intriguiag mamk oi recem
years > ■ --
fm*'
Manns Westwood I
THf TENANT
la 4$ J OS, S:M, 7:$0. IftIS
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ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN (PG)
Manns Westwood
— AUCE IN WONDERLAND
1 00 a 30 4 00 J 30 7 00 • 30 10 00 1 1 30
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1332 2nd s,^ JACK AND THE BEANSTALK
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FACE TO FACE
Storrtfft9 Uv UflTcvMifMi
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^0935 Lindbrooli Oriv*
479 7966
LCAotaiY (roi
12:30, J:00, S:3B, g 00, 10:30.
7/»-
Kid
NuArt
Theatre
11272 Sonto Mofitco
47Aa379
479 32*9
Babbit A tlio
l»PW
7/Jt-
^^
ORIENTAL
7433 Suntvt Mvd.
876-0212
MISSOURI BREAKS
*OBlN AND MAIUN
I
^octhr '%
Pantages
46^7\6\
OOE TO BIUY XX (PG)
SMAU TOWN IN TIXAS (FO)
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AMOWAY (PG)
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BUFFALO ma and fhm INDIANS
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f
More Movie Guide
UA Cinema
Center f
)0M9 Wvltwonh Av«
W««twood
474-4 1M
BAD NEWS BEARS
3.00. 4:00. 6:00. 1:00, 10:1
UA Cinema
Center 11
10999 W«il worth Av«
4744165
AU THE PRESIDENT'S MEN
12:45. 3:10. 5:40, •:05. 10 30
UA Cinema
Center III tunnel vision
w^twood '^ '^ 4 3<r 6:00, 7:30. 9:00. 10:30
474 3683
UA CINEMA
CENTER IV
10889 WeHworth Ave
Westwood 474 4198
SMALL TOWN IN TEXAS
1 30, 3 15, 5:00, 6 45, •30, 10 20
VAGABOND
2509 WiJjhif
387 2171
35 mm^ Jock ••nny A C«ir«i« LombcKd
TO BE OR NOT TO BE (1942)
Morgar«t tuth«rford A Edith Evont (tolbr)
IMPORTAhfcE Of BEING EARNEST
Manny
Village
96) BrOKton
Wvttwood 478 0676
6ff«9*ry P«ck U« ■•mick
THE OMEN (R)
1 30, 3:40, 6:00, 8:05, 10:15
Fri. 4Jo't 12:15 SKow
-)-.
END OF MOVIE GUIDE
START OF CLUB GUIDE
Stom ^ July 23
WHIZZ KIDS
PEGASUS
DUCK SOUP
LEAD DIAMOND
AAAIZENHEAD
$100
Tliwr*. ft
KENTUCKY FRIED
THEATRE
10303 w ^co Mvd
556>2«63
rh* b*st ol KFT «
io«t 5 y»ar«
BEATING A DEAD HORSE
^" A Sof i 00 ft 10 80
Now thru Sun.
ART FARMER
July 27-AMg 1
ETTA JAMiS
plus
DARROWIGUS
V«^ tr\ Dim Avir M
^^ 30 PIER AVE ■
HERMOSA BEACH INFO TEL 372 6911
Tkam Soutkerm KnigkiM
ABC
After 25 yean there aren't
many musical bases that the
Crusaders (Hooper, Sample.
Hentoiou, and Fclder) haven't
touched They've been playmg
together since they were boys
living in Texas. At this point
you may think that they
should be about to run out of
good ideas and the energy to
translate them into' good
music Not so they made an
extremely smooth transition
from jazz to whatever, and it'
continues to work Those
Southern Knights is no ex-
ception. "Spiral" IS disco with
several pleasing twists to it
**ICeep That Same Old Feeling"
and "Feeling Funky" are the
lookouts Those Southern
Kntghts IS a must, especially
on hot summer nights.
* Reggie JackMM
AM-type music His voice and
piano technique work well,
interpreting the feel of each
song, in addition, SMftka has
beip from some able side men
including Nigel Olsson, Jim
Horn and Elton John (on the
-Bmd BloodT -.iilavored
"Steppin' Out-)
There are some moments of
dull melodies or juvenile
lyrics, but these are over-
shadowed by the numerous
i0od cuts Best are the rockish
title tune and the senuous
•"Lwe In The Shadows."
— Tom Smith
make anyone want her for
herself.
Kekk Cmnrmdiim
A Mylum
if You WtuU Me
Caroiyn Franklin
RCA
h*/i
Steppin Out
'^eU Sedukm
R(Mrket
Sedaka's-bapk for the third
time with a colleaion of inn
terc!rting MOR rock base sure-
fire hits
Twenty-odd years of writing
experience has sharpened
Sedaka's writing style to a
point, giving cohesiveness but
never dullness to the album
These arc lively songs that
touch on musical tastes from
gospel iQ country Sedaka's
muscianship i^ far above the
usual _ifuality of this album's
To h^p T»>w i*i«tii yyjijt future
Career Guidance
4 week ptogrdin starts lul>- Jl»i
Tutoring • WritinK ^»<'^ •
Power Reading
The Guidance Center
3017 Santa Monica Blvd
Santa Monica
829-4429
On this, her lepMid album,
Carolyn Franklin proves her-
self an excellent writer, good
producer and unfortunately,
unfulfiHing vocalist
Franklin's voice mixes ele-
ments from the beat of them
including some Gladyr Knight
smoothness and Diana Ross
sensuaht> What she needs is
some Natalie Cole excitement
The songs on^ the album,
mostly written by Franklin, are
soulful in the best tradition of
rhythm aad blues While she
does fine on the slower num-
twrs, especially "From the Bot-
tom of My Heart," the up-
tempo songs, deserve a more
fiery treatment than she gives
ihcm.
Her work as a composer for
her sKster Aretha will invar-
iably insure Franklin a place
on this earth lor years
to come It will take more than
her work herc^,. though, to
Summer
Meditation
Study
use. P\%0 Thesis
More vo*unt«n nwdad for mtd-
August Free 4 wfc meditation
courie ♦ film Series presented
Non-medit«tor» preferred Call
681-4707.
In this debut album, Keith
Carradine deomonstrates that
simple pop tunes can be ef-
fective when masterminded by
a skillful arranger This disc is
appropriately titled Tm Exuy
with each track representing
the uhimate in easy listening
music. Carradine relies upon
his distinctive gentle voice and
some snappy hohi arrange-
ments to add color and punch
to his material
The album's title track, dri-
ginally recorded for the movie
SashvUie. garnered Carradine-
an Academy Award last yar.
For a first effort, this LP
show* premise Carradine puts
his songs over with sensitive
vocals and competent guitar
work, but seven of the ten are
about love. VaH'aiy would add
more depth
— Laurie Beretikiii
Talent Shows
Running tomorrow mght,
actor Michael Alaimo will
be hosting a weekly Satur-
day night talent show at the
International Student Center
on Hilgard Ave UCLA stu-
dents will perform from 8 to
9 and from 9 to 1 1 prof^-
sional entenainers Wft be
teatured. Admission is one
dollar
Any students who wish to
offer their talent should
phone 825-3384.
/onesco's
ACT OF DUTY
Chekhov's
HIGHT BEFORE THE TRIAL
..Fna30pm
$1.00 Off «,.^^^^
Santa Monica Playhouaa
1211 Fenrai %\mm\ r '^^
Your Complete Ice Cream Store
Choose from these toppings .
Hot Fudga
Hot Appia
Hot Blueberry
Hot Cherry
Hot Boysen berry
Chocolate
Marshmallow
^f*''*^^^^Be» ry
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Banana
Red
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Peanuts
4
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_ MAKE YOUR OWN SUNDAES!
malts • shakes • banana spliu • floaU
10923 Weyburn Ave.
nftflr Hamhurger NofDiot
;..
V, .:.
Kelfer fitting intD UCW's trade provam
(Coffitiniisrf frofli Pagt 14)
volVed We as coaches have the
opportunity to tell kids if thc>
work hard enough they have a
ciaeat lo go to coliege. travel,
meet new people and most of
all they fJM a diaacc to know
themselves,** said Kcifer
ILeifer If no stranger to pty-
cliology aad many other aca-
demic subjects To suppon a
wife and two children he km
taught philosophy, physics.
Americaa History and physical
educauoe. High school u
where be met kis wife Linda
Hu diiidren are Jimmy, ttm 6
and Katie, afe 2. ^ *
"My wife and I are very
close,** said Keifer I really
enjoy my private life. Some
•if/* JJ;*'^»<>iuit* around
he pool with the fam.K or
»»ien to my steraa.'^
Accord>n« tp ICc.twS record
he did not do miKh mium
-round After collejc (^3-
llcifcr prq,«aed directly into
to* present pro«e«i«i H,s fim
encounter wuh world cl«„
tr«ck tnd f«id w«» .„ s«n
DjeiOM the m»n»^ of the
Sm Diefo Tr»ek Chib Dunn,
that time Keifer helped de-
I'J^r .T'' •""-known tr«A
•1X1 fiekJ sun u Amie Robin-
Culp Ketfer mil found time to
l^n • Masters degree at San
Otego Sute.
After his iu> u, San Diegi)
Itetfer and his family moved
Summer Intramural
north to the i##wwy .rea
^ ^^'^^ ^c accepted a coaching.
"»gn Retool In jusi a couple
Of years he help«i turn War-
rens track and cross countr>
programs amend
To Fl Camiiio
^'^""1 Warrc;n High he
moved on to El Camino JC
I here. Keiler became known
a* one of the better field event
coacltes in Cahfornia
Although Keifer came to
UCLA with a solid back-
fround and distinctive reputa-
tion, he renlizes it wiH uke
time to incorporate hu ideas
imo the program.
"i did not come to UCLA to
chaijie anything." suies Keifer
L« s jCist say I'm aa addition
to UCLAs athletic program.'
STREET DANCE
LIVE BAMDS
REFRESHMENTS
M
SAT. JULY
Corner of Landfair & Ophir
UCLA's limited summer In-
tramural program will come to
an end next week with champ-
ionships in the men*s Softball
competitions.
Semi-finals are scheduled for
baskMball on Monday and
Softball on Tuesday The finals
in basketball are scheduled
next Wednesday in Pauley
Pavilion at either 4 or 5 pm
The Softball finals will be Md
on the intramural fields on
Thursday afternoon at either 4
or 5 pm
Sotftball IS a wide-open
competition, but theie is an
odds-on favorne in basketball
The lop Tanked team is the
9qvma sHudi has UCLA aanit-
ant basketball coach Larry
Farmer, former UCLA assist-
ant basketball coach Gary
Cunningham and lurmer
UCLA All-Amencan and pro-
fessional star Maudi Abdul
Rahman (Wah Ha/juird) ^
i
^
•^«
n fiK si)n\(,
Lay^i
A mort
/--^■""
laaii
Thru:
I^H.
477-
MeUU'S
mnir
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iwly 23-34
BAtNEY KESSEL
-KMN WiUiAMSON
^^f^nmny frmnt the
••*caao«g sTtiNG aANo
MUCE 0. SCHWAtrZ
^nin' Hmpkkm
lANDOlJRis BiHHiS ANtt II1;CIHIDM
THE WORLDS FAVOnrTE BED-TIME STORY IS
FINALLY A BED-TIME STORY .. .
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FRESH START
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i
From tho creator
FloMh Gordon.
Mow
BtU OSCOg .
My 23-25
STEVE MAETIN
ood
UBEETY
July 27
SUPEHHOOT
July 28
FOE UfE EECOffDS
SHIGEffU IZUMfYA
AN X-IMTED MUSICAL COMEDY
STARRING PLAYBOY S COVER GIRL — KRISTINE OEBELL
WITH LARRY GELMAN • ALLAN NOVAK • TERRY HAU
•♦•EaAL GUEST APPEARANCE BY FLESH GORDON
SCREENPLAY BY B. A. PREDRtCKS
LYRICS AND MUSIC BY BUCKY SEARLES
ARRANGED AND CONDUCTED BY JACK STEARN A PETER MATZ
PRODUCED BY WILLIAM OSCO • DIRECTED BY BUD TOWNSENO
ftimwan!
FOX Hollywood 463-2184 "
Beverly Hills 652-1 330 MEW =>*^' ^^3 ^^
I I
FOt THOSE WHO AmmOATl QUAltrr
'300 WfSTWOOO SIVO - 4 HOCW SOIITN OF
7ai*tjf«itMm
' 1 M • f » • 4 ti • S 3S • 7 ti
• m%nmm
I14W wiifeii. Mva u n*.#ii« v^Mbm
U 474-9S4S
Thw
MllT1«*7]f*4««|«*7Ji.tJi
n4/i9S>7Kn
iiWII daST FUtt C«li M«a 7
»4/Ma3362
477^4567
itf
EAT OUT TONIGHT!!
■1 I
CLASSIFIED
^
■'^
Z'*"^'
f
OCAOUNt: 10:J0 A.M.
^ ^CnSOMAftLff UCLA W^Mmm
•JJtolo in««t eutffolnt co«4
g»m„ -.^ ,:« ,^.
Own
olC«ll
MICNtLLf
▼^ ASUCLA
f«*ll|r tuppof-U tli«
•wiilB't M«av «» ^„„
Advertising tpac* wilt not b« m«d^
■"■"?•'• ♦" •» O^y •rwm lo aoyofw
Vl^«tf*«erifntn«t«a on th« bo«is of
■■■■■Iry, color, notional ortfln. roco
""■••w. or aoB PHolthor Iho DoMy Brum
•J©f th« AtUCLA Communlcotlont
•om^ hm mvMtigaiog any of Itio oor-
•»co« otfvortisod or odvorttsort ropro-
•onlod in \h^% loouo Any poraon b#-
llovlng tftot on odvortlsamont In ihio
!!?T.T!^*y^ "^ •o—^» policy on non-
WlBWiiwllan clolod horoln should M.^
^Z complolnte tn «vrll»no le fOf rMlt
2^ Suolnocc Monofpor. UCLA Oolly ^^^*
•«••»». 1 12 Kofckhoff Hon. 30f Wootwood
Jloao. Los Angoiot. Collfornia 10024
For oaaislanco wllh houalng dlacrimi
nation problams. call UCLA Housing
Office. (213) §^5-4491 Waslslds FalV
Hoiiatnfl(213H»a»1
(• JvM)
fociarpvMite
•yAWTT- on a ^mt^ ^^ awnto^"^
J2;j*»«Jr«th catorodTTlroSmNrntr
Monna Ool Roy t2a-11fl. •^"«••
(tOtr)
hpip wirtttrf
BEAN BAG
CHAIRS
•25 VALUE
NOW
• hii.
(ii A ia)
47SJSi;i o^^i'*'^ °*"^*^ •• • •«
ItOtr)
TMUCK/TRAILOII
•"MpOrt lo ONMO c
47»-»7«. 23M WMtvoM.
campus
iHOoun^mpnis
1914 LINCOLN BL AT PiCO
14434 VICTORY BL
AT VAN NUVS BL
392-1966
In Mid Auguat Ona way $70
Hi Jv 30)
i3or(
*y PMH^ cm To«y IM-ioo^j^^
^UTRAITsfi^t^
taken ' ' '
for Graduation
Call foi
HA^tTYUfTl nootf
»»^'«»«ts. ^^dno 274^121:
(11 • 2)
HAJMCUmiia
Jolm floymdiHi of I nnduii ***tsfMnii
' out)
Mto
5*^ ITEiL conlarancs diTu
will y M4-14M. •■*
(10 4y 27)
j--t QOLF CLUBt. Bog A h'SST
jpffm^^^. p,m.«. H»«a 213-
(It Jv2t)
"^ - V«iif - Conrua - Novyg
lor- ■ -
MC8 iLCCTRONICt
cm 473-mo tor boat nHi»>
Nty Divia>p« pfcoionioi 0^;;;;::^;
'!?*i^^.?"y* '■'♦»« '•ovs aa-
•« ^«*Ne Aolodofia or a
»« poraon. t3.00/fir.
a roora and osor 477.
(IS Jf 3i)
SSJZfi!!"* '••"••^ ""n..dloi.ly,
^Jiyf?.*'^' piy. Wrtta Amortcan
crsuc/o
MOVING tdio: PumHuro
^^mpus sfvdie
150 herchhoft hall 825 061 I k771
open mon-tri 8 30-4 30
SuffiMt Canyon
R#crttftion
Cmter
DELI A
SNACK BAR
J6«p«n
Monday-Friday
^ 11:00-5:00
Saturday6, Sunday6
and Holiday6
11.1)0-6:00
-,* c^'^'*. imoii
472-340i. 47«.503e
.. ^ ' ' (10 Jy 23)
FUJICA fT tot . bik ^^^ . „ -
cond. taM oory f35-iS4r^
• (10 Jy 27)
OW'LTl OK and npw prtWma. M^
■"•^ »*^ A« HandSwTb^ iffU!
>"OWln. tSB-MM. ^ •"
. (10 A 12)
P-'r^'^Ty.Q ^•^ Woitdn Bkrvcia
^^Mppod ttf. docb ndio ill p^i^
$2.50each
3 for $6.50
t
(10Jy27)
Il^^-TT^^I.^''^^ 0«fclond-il,dnd
JJJ?^JJ^>5^ •«:««- Com Allaa4M-
fObiawaninp or arfHa ABao. its ToMM
_^^_^ (10 A 12)
("l^Viy/'^^^Sf:®" J?. if^TSit
r^Lr?^*:J.jfcSi
Whara Troehouae North Patic
Ackerman Union
Whan July 19-23 9 00-5 00
Aei •#»! <
(l« Jy 2S|
wanted
BOUND REDUCTION
LEGAL SHEETS -- 6C
121 k»rckhoff hall
825-0611 .258
ytBTWOOO trtanda laaMngTS;^!:!
473-7ilB. ^"^ ^"""^ -oteonw
H )
^•^•^ (040 mwmJTjSTS ^^*^
(ChSrOlpl
(1«iy23)
WOOOtN BtiMi. ■ f^i^Tapajite.
awioa a aaaoa* old o^^^k^K^ ^si-^^^^^
. :_ (lOoitr)
HOUBgMOLD dialiiidatior/a.eoiur«
.•^■■aan (Baaia). ttt. P>lyoli shag mo
laiBlVnit cuaMon 071. Cat tsZSii
(It Jy 27)
'____ nacNr)
^^aM or tfvaa ypur
JJ^JcOdyaaay. 11t10«BMlli«|
■orrtngton-Bundy). 477-2U3
to mia
n2bbi
Juati
7B21 or it1-12t1 aflor ala
NOU8BHOLO
'••••»» r^ and rug
Bob iSi-idii.
(Boora)$li
too Cat
(10 Jy 27)
S5-$60/month for Blood PimMmm
HVLANO DONOR CENTER
1001 Gayloy A,ra . Wo.fwood
478-0051
•ducatkNi
n
OS InsfrvManf
M ntnii
A W«COU^^ mmn^mm and"S-
"^ Call Ntomlnfo. 47f-
(iOtr)
LRATED
■j^k Mara than HP 4i Q9^
•anta work liayaafcoooino ^!t!!!!!T
componlonahip n:Sni?\^Jl:t
(It 4y 23)
9!>terteimn#nt
HI a/1^7«. (714) dBF
p^m
■•»»«■ Ml wiM ai WLA —
(12 Jf 23)
J«w. teaN or NiN ga,. Pgrggt ^
•■■ ttit; tti
X -.
(7 0irt
fun! Ill aeoloal^^TiT^ ■•■•Boraan^
rwMM Ui subjBcts
MARIJUANA ■• „„,^
>1 ^tycbalafy tludy 33 Bt b*Mr
Call47».til4 ' ^^^ "•"'
Hi A <B|
Hit 21
SwTotSi3IlS5zrrrz-— ^r
•2-j"" Mj-rop. No oiiTH^n^
-^ "'^ ^yaiont by hour or ogigr
BJJJ* •• youraaW CaN 473-B44g vgoii.
SCIENCE
INSTRUMENT
BUILDER
CspVHBflCBd B3 BklNBd flMCKB-
"*cl|n doBlgn and building of
tciBncB rBBBBrch InstrumBntB
r«9ulrBd. Position Bt contral
InstrumBnt phop Bt Univ. of
Orpgon. PtMoo tBnd tm%\m^
Of (nqulry la*
©•OfQB UBCfl
8c«#nc« 8«rvlcM,
floom 1 SclBncB 1
Univ. of Orogon
Eugono, Orogon 97403
j03/666-46i4
UABON
04-07/iipMr.
Mi J« 231
(1»^3t)
FEilALff
(ii Jy 3t)
UROCNTT
Undargr
T.a.
ovarnrr aocmcv
(Fwa
5i:r^ •J2: Mtt/iir i^mS!
Wasfwood ofNaa. 473-3712. ^
<1lJv271
^VCHIATRtC AR^^ora taoMllv noo^
hwmanlallcally arlaalgd ^^immS^F
•cthrlj^liota flaalbia Con^JJctorbl
(11 Jy 27)
ATTCNTrONf
■«•• « WdMSH WAMTtO
;_ ^ull or P«n Tim«
Caw ^
4714101
.!i'"!!!«ERJOBs
Full-tinM
i7S->S21 for Aggt
IDPY
• '•4
*>*»ll
^VCMIATRIC ARarcofo ConiT-ooi
ciZITii!!'***^ orlanlod ••iMnt^
-^ JS • «ona»a Cap Tar^ ',,'^2^
(It Jy 2B|
fliObrl
(It J« 23)
ACTOfts
MUSICIANS
WRITERS
DISC JOCKEYS
Each of you haa picked a challenging and r«.,.rrt.o«
TanrTn::? ^^^ ?"^ '^ -mrn'on.^'.: trXi
P^Sm^ !?Ii^^"?" ''"' *• ^ '""•^h "•«• your
proTeasion- mtHctivtly .commonicatlno with d«>dI. i.
■mtHial. Our good raoa Mm t^c« «- A P«>Pia la
plan of a baaa hourly wJ!T JtJ^ '^ ^°"' '""^^ * ""V
_--H ^^ nouny wag* ♦ commission ♦ bonus VWa
"••d anargetic. articulate Moole w r.n f,-.Tv
due* TIma-Life Boote to c^ml:!^ "'" *° ""'^°-
^cdlant traininTpSgr^Srtrri; T' '*^ °"'
profeasion cho«i. from T Mil ^.^^ '" ^°"' *^
you Plenty Of timTto pur^uilour^^^J^'^*' '^
337-7651 for an int.rv^^lJSm::^^' "^ ^"
OlBt)
LIFF
Phone 337/7651
Tlfn#/Llle LlbrirlM, Inc.
477
7/31
(It Jy23l
WtAVINO ITUOIO IBBB^W^t
•»»d Baolnn^M -- •*'
•Of 'iiaow ciaMo. still opan
^lraln|ng Ouaaaaoaona_M.A^ a,
>oos *n aa»— r saunsafing r«.««,«a;
^ atudawi NurgPig
•sp or iMloroat halpful Willing i^
Sfiportun
traval^
tAMT truoY AaaoAO
f^:.**"^ .ta*>wg ar PuM i>^TZ"/^j^
_LV ^ ^ *»'4»«^ *» gaaa ■^wan^.p^^'
•* sait-NiaMwAM^A m^M -»- - •'■osass
iic»Ma/>tt t iiii^^i ■^*'*^* Aosat
4ti»r (J1S) Ma-ffTi
(It A.>
(It A 12)
ALTBRNATIVt araalily Colloctl^^iy
tLICTROLriii Unwantod loclai *
•••y »»lr pormanantiy ramosad Oafnia
r!^?.*V*-^f ''•• conaultatlon m
LmdN. toil Caaylay 477 •2133
(It 0«r)
■iRLIOORARNlca a^. ^^""^"itT
J*^W^'* •oareb. wrlllfig.
bluaa. country goopol t mw
•teal laiprovlsatlon Iboory occofii-
ponlmoni and arranging for singars
(ItA t)
RIDING LESSONS
tludanla-^pculty'Fpmilioa-Blaff
tS,!Ll !*••'•"•• "•"•# •••••"••♦m.nt
444-4711
flooddeato
2! /?* •^T"*^ '••o Hoi dali
!yy *■•'■ *•'•• <•••«*» «iMb any loa-
-*— ISM Dial f l-p-l-p.,.^.|i,.c!t
lao Otr)
travel
'
Bay 4ii^litt
dicaiTaaa
(It Jy 23)
JOURNALIBT . WrMar naadTMriiJ^ia
•IHFrtBdy adia aiaala la loam baw to
•Hlo Tal: 5S3-iBtB.
(15 Jy 23)
HSjicF
'••II- tt7-BBB4. Don I wpH
. (It Otr)
A^^ . ••• • pMaols court
J^aaurt nmlal Brantiaood ar«a 47av
(It Obi
VTON EXPRESS
MOVERS
••ovlng and Hauling
Z^ nichtS4-2BBf
Nawoll 651 3327
MANOWRITINQ Anoylat «NI
-* 341-1131
(11 Jy 31)
^ly!?!;^^ O^^^^'HaBaa Bas-
^V^ • .P'o^tlaii la your raouPo-
mOai BBIONt INTtRNATIONAL
Toc FLiaSrrTSNotBi iuro^
*^MHs sr^^HMM* a^ai twa aii
♦wonts Call 410 IS44 snytlma
ASUCLA
TrBvel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
ChBiier Flight Service
O-r 1000 f(.gh„ ,o c^,op* ,^,,
Summar • Oiscountad Sludani
Miflhf, in Eufopa . Charters lo
Hmmmu and Mei.co • Studan. 1
^ Scully discounts on car purchas
• • rantals and laasas • Study
•ours . Campmg Tour. • Unfao,
man.ed StuGani Tour. • Ran
Passas • Fly dnva Europaan «r
rangomonts • Mini Tour. • Motal
Accomodation • Hostai Informa
'•on • Intarnahonal Studant ID
rV«i I '''•• *'■''•' coun.ra;tnfi . |
EXPO Travel Library '
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING' -
Ltmitad taati romamtoo on
MI CIAL FLIGHTS FOR
ONLY UCLA STUDENTS
FACULTY. ANO STAFF
LA-RARIB-LA
Augual 3-SaptomBar 22 MSSjBB
Amorlcan Alrllnos
AMBual t>J4ma 21. 1177 $341 00
i • l*^^»
PLUS many August SaplgaiBBr
and Octobar daparturai ttiii
availabla to London Frankfurt
Zurich ^nd Amttardam Itdrn
$379 '
(It Otr)
BALIS- ^
Attractlvo, rallaBlo ond Hoolttiy for
holal boullguo Part and full- Bom
(213)277-1773. ^^'
' (Ii Jy 30)
PfTITlONINO: ipm up to $3 11 .-
h0Ur Full timo or pprl ilnJ /3>i iT
$45-3733. ^^ «»aia- 4Z13)
Own ear 3Bfl
(It St)
, III -^^ ■ ■ ■
r^^m I amo BaaiBaao M^as ^s ^^^^^^^^
?*?*g^' *•* •<*" ••ours. 32 .tB/br.
. '11 J» in
AUTO Inauranca Lo#ast rata, for
^•-7270. 17S-f^ or 417-7173
_: ' ""'" " • ' ■ - ' (HOlr)
MATTRCSSf 1 . ui aioHi.t»„g g.^^^
AMtil?' •J •• tB% on mattrass sals
>ayratall Cat Richard Pratt 341^1 tl
(notr)
MOVINO ond HouNng Largo una a«^
♦o6« Cat BH ^lllir""^
ni-Otr)
HOUSEPAINTING
B«Bt worli, ffialBflals;
•JctBrlors A multi-rooai
MO^inc ?
Tho original
FuNy
Our Mb
Roasonat>ta raias
7days s
CAMPUS SCRVICEft
Aali tor . . .
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT
CENTER
barring tha UCLA Conr»munlly
4 It . Frtands
1023 Hllgard Avanui
9 6 Dally
TOURS! TOURS! TOURS
JOIN US FOR ^^^^
•ALLtT Fun «io# lo BoAwty, 1311
^■* ancuias YWCA. 174 m-
^"Tjjajtor^. Diallngulahad Dancar/
Tpaonar 3B1-3BSt.
(ItObr)
^J<V 2J 2ft San »r«nrl»co
iu»v 24 P. - I. ao
ftiai* Peril
- J P...: -.. « ,,^^
J».»» m Aug /Ion i aryr« |«ai i
Slud.r.1 fai» „or. •lud.nt rat*, e.auai.,..
H,f goal la lo crMla an tn|»,cullii.ai •.. hanq,
n a '•laaad ifiwndiy •iminphmtm and to i
/IS0CL4/'
S«!*?^ '-T* la Ortaat - Tobyo.
Hw»l Kong. Manila Tplpa. Indlp.
^^^ • ladaab. Ftp. A i,
141
lltJy
'.♦•#
ISC
4'« ?991
Abia lo
Fidl
tma (31 boara) •watiB taiary p^
F^onth For furfHor Informotlon
contoct Ro< Chromon. "*-ffini Paba
'•*% YMCA. 310.3104 (m53Sb|
(Ii Jy 30)
mrhng ttiB UCtA
Community 3 yrs full-tlm« .
tIfiCB grafSuatlon.
Days A Ev«nifiM
3gt^79
xSi!^Fi!d DI^m!^ w^Har-adltof
a spoclalty DosM 414-734l"«ir^mB'
(It Jy 33)
I AUTO INSURANCE
I MOTOUCVCti INSURANCE
•^__^ TooHlfh?
, Payt ,
rrUMNT OtSCOUMTt
^aa poc Rat*
LOWCaal
Loadoa. Parla. Moiiria. Zurlob. Na«
ISrS^JfTHif '•^ ^*^^ cat 474-
Itll JBaya). 47l-iiii |osoa). Wo aiaa
TOURS A TRAVEL
Sprtng. ftummoi A Fall Chan«
Alhani
••lanbul
Hong Kong
ItOViNO: Raaldonllal. apaMaiaata.
alBoaa. Lavfa/aawll )aBa Uaad Iwnhuf
Bfayfm/a^>ljl. Call Barnay 311-1711
**** (11 Otr)
CHAPTERS
Ovar m flights A di
'ommunt}y for thtTif^Sat
FINf
parfful Umm ciil itiiTl'
V W REPAIRl asctualaoty
up (parts 1 labor). Ml M
1131 soNo lob Ffoa
111
EDITING Prolosaianal writar aditor
Nro dagraas, tormmt Tima-LNa
^_^ **•¥ faa aaiia your
(11 A 12)
(11 A u)
• - -« — •/
OAV * Bl ,*ola sa> fontoay Latlara.
sanous r9mmrch. anonymity P.O till
Marina Oal Ray 10211.
ft! A 12)
^i-r ••^•77v'zrr „t:^ ;:r
Cat Ma Aocalarator
(It Otr)
XEROX 2' zC
Ho minimum
AUTQ INSURANCE
[MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
.Taa YoMog
KINKO S CfZg^
i!*»4»' s«oanr«a»an.
Loar , . _, ^
UOMTNOUBS BiBURANCS SERVICE
314-1111
Aat lor Oaa ar Ray
■RBF^aU^
»y i^win. Jaiin (B.A.. mji.)
ftaoir^
LEARN Dynamic solf-bypnoals. SaW
iifvi^aofffarod
»tf IlirougVt Astrology
diart lor you. or
Hid. BoWi your
477
(It Ob")
tar 17 Jl to
Pi'^gnticy
HAIR CUTS ligg
iiconaod profoool
RAUL
tt7.4ll1
fit A 13)
WOBKN By
(USD
JONANCY •">' "«- _^ ^
ftoato. CpMpaaalonola womon coun-
""■'"■■ Roforrols lo boord cartlflad
1111
312. LJL ttiSStl
(itOir)
(itoa)
(11 Jy
PREGNANT?
Fiaa
RETIRFO Hur%m
Ills
VOCAL Taacbar baa
A«ilo-Llta-Hoaiaoa>oors and Raatol
Inauranca Vlllofa Offica Wamor
Roblwaon 11B1 MMBon SuNs 1131
477.«BBr. B7B-B1S1
(ISOin
St«APE Up
(parttsi itstinos)
, _ - dsiat with aapsftu>*a
I'fom Juir thru Juft« stay ? lo 3f w««»ia
Ijj ^ '»•* «• Bsiss WMAsansf*
1$ ^ tA« aw r/24^07 1 t4M
IS S ^^** tM •/?? tO/M •
^ ^ AH i^a-irti 4
g,^ i/n-fo^ •
*^ ■ a^ts tty/oj^t" — igt
^'^ l/tt 10/10 s lit
AH irai-1p,lo a ago
AH Wn-IOn? 2S igg
Ah 9/ Y 2-0/27 2 4a»
r;j 9/22-4/21 M 4lf
AH •^a4-»o/n a «4js
TG ' 10-4/09 4 4i9
TO 8/?i Q'?^ I 4yg
XMAS CHAflTERS Booli Ha^
HAWAII 1 A. «a.a. .^„^
ORIENT MsnvdaNS tlsT
pro.;?, r^-*:2r-- «---«
SUPER AIRFARES
BICENTENNIAL fsstcoa., .rom»M7
TRIANGLE NYC U^ m..m. irom mi
r«lANGLE HAWAII ♦,.. Aia... u ^
YOUTH Eu,^. ,^, ^omiiia
ir!!L" ** *^** •^ •»«* tur from $479
lllt^t IV^^"^ TICICETS. CAR?
r^.SJ5^ "«WTALS. RAILRABSE8
INTRA-EUROPE CHARTERS
SPECIAL CRUISE
'oEfAWAYr"^^' "--
MfXICO C(Tv 6 rt.^ -,-^
ACAPULCO 9 sari HZ
mazatlan 9 aavs ims
I5-51T^^S^^ •' ^ VALtAaTA • I S
MIKICO OPANO TOua 16 day. ' !S
MtJiicO ruCATAJn 15 daJT^ S
MtXCINT/SOAMfA 15dEs
HAWAII (1 .aiM^) a <|»y,^
I HAWAII (2 •stsndai 10 days
HAWAII (3 i«i4nd«) 10 davs
I Ntw yoPK CiTv 9 doya
ata^BR, laays
itdiya
TAHITI MOOPfA 10 days
JAl»AN 15 days
TtMYO TAIPAI. HOfSO NOMO
HswsK and Naw rorh
" ^ • f 199 00
A.irii
■'ir «{«o runs local t^r^^ lours
t>v car artd but si minimum cost
Call Ua for Intormatlon
<73 2991
9 fi Daily
EUROFC israal. N Y 1 Orlant TOC
Low cost flights A.I. ST 1431 lo La
Clonogo Blvd. LJL 113-2737
(33 Oa)
Wa maka anda rnaal lor alatopt
HaM fara Fly lo: Eurooa Africa
MMmaEaal Asia
•OOK NOW TOC FLIGHTS
CALL •
EURABU TOURS N TRAVELS
274-S3S1
__ Opaw Salurdari
EURORE - Isroal Africa Studant
FNbMb 9—9 round ISCA 11117 San
Vicanta Blvd M. LA. •B141 131-
XPLORE THE WORLD!
farF'7finT!»nriu''TL.* ,r
i
Is5y
f f S^UDTNT '•pAvr
|2^'"«« COOmifLiaO Inalar*! llMaT
oatN M^ la^
(ttJf M
Mors_ Confldantial Fra,nane> .^
mttm 113 1331
>.•.««> « •
(1*J7l7)
(1tOlr»
v> ( tsif^rn ^tA*-: A.
tHA¥tL
(''onfm-uCQ
'^.J
CLASSIFIEDvlb
tjfpin
n.V te
9m
fronn tSltOO
L A t A P O %%m
Ixpi
(23 4y 27)
TYFfWQt t«««n days AIm» •^•Mno Vvry
ta«i accurals M4«-Wilahlra Fraa
parkiog CaN
(2SOlr)
:«. .^. las A 12)
WILL
M«r CMt niiMi le fupopa aMI •«•«<
abla froM $37f Mound Irtp-conlaci
■yaapa itXawt Tra«a4 IM7 Broalon
A«« tMHa It Waatwood Tal: 477-
07M Act Mow.
(23 A 12>
EXPCNT Ihaaia typtiv^/ conauMMf . IMI
corr*cHnf BOaaaNa tranacribin« Savatal
typiala Motflcal paycti . lacH.. fa«iaral.
•th yaar Mayflald Sarvtcaa fO jgjt
(2fJy2a)
^«»^«CT ^AOf t by ^
Cn9llol) grads w/12 yoora aipartaftco.
IBM Corraci talact chooaa typa
atyla &&t-20f7
(2S iy 27)
apt mifamtehii forsubl
IF YOU ora aaalilf^g • quM dignlfiad
raatdanca amongat mmturm prolatttonai
paopla aaa MO Valaran 1 badroofp
2 iaOroowi A 2 OaOrooiw p4u« dan A
#nii»« room 1300 and Mp r Tiplin
watbar dishwaahar balcony, pool. 473-
•220 «, ^
(?7 Olri
1431
or aludoot Coll
472
(21^30)
offforod
KAV: Typlwf. a^lfing Enfliah frod
OioaanaMuin apaclalty Tarm popora.
*" laWara. IMM 120 7472
(2tOlr)
to Mboda _
714<A3»-3211
■ coiMHry Alii 2-31
Wdwt to Go? liofy
fMJy30)
SYLVIA: Typ«f»«/IMi. fip^rfoncod
'^^P'vo. moot )dBb> fllo^CSoa.
(2S Jy 23)
TVWNG OoMO dl boma Tano ^^^,
aaaay*. Ihaaat. diaaartatlons Call
Aoba S4moM. 3tO-3f43 or 3M-3t14
(2f iy 211
rv>.>>^ -^ rim^il i_ r
clMfiaccufola toMo ptcbup/daflaory
Wor* Ri^la/waofcanda Botty •73-4410
(2f Jy 30)
ttALItU dolwaa PafMhouaa condo-
minium on baach. fanlattic viaw 2
bdrm. 1 , bolti. bwMd-ir«a flraplact large
balcony pool. paddH tannit |ual north
of Lao Cartbe Stela Saach. tSOO month
340-4100. 340S0S0. 444 2751
(27 Jy 27)
houses
CH
477
(SOS0)
Typtef of
OOMG te
teo«o aflai
CdllP8it2i
rolaa Iteofcompua Pt»ono:474-
(2f Olr'
t20i LAMGC 2 bdroom 2 botb Carpote.
^rapaa. patio, built in biov* 3240
Ovartar>d. 477-3200
(27 Jy 30)
FUMNISMCO 2
oadMiMa SS II
• wba. 470-
If
'9b .W Ml
It.
aapar
(21 A 0)
tutoring
WRITING HCL^ TEUM PA^CMS
l^^y^^^^f^y^OBt^'^Li. SUS
SJARCMINC. TUTORING SV PRO-
\L WRITER. 3SS-S471.
(24 Jy 23)
TYRINO. edMn9/Faa(. Aecufola/Multi
aipahancad/Rlcli-up. Dallvar/Rightaout
Ratea/Rafarancaa/ Sandy. 4SS-2400
(25 Olr)
LIGHTNING TYPING C
^*»^ apts furnished
two - 2 BEDROOM BaOt A \, 2 cof
porblrtg. now carpat/drapa douMa ovan
•37 7200 9437 Kayaiono/Potma.
(27 Jy 23)
•S10 UAH VISTA 2 ♦ don V^
-7703
130 Jv 23
'i
1% ROOM Houaa.
$150 00 utMlbaa i
wood Btvd 700-023S
SS37 Waat-
(24 Jy 23)
apts. to share
1 SCDROOM coot-porl fumlohod lo
mff-n^mr ocaon $200/ mo. Sonta Monica
0«, .25-7«. ^ ^ ^^
TUTOmMO -
Engllah. Rti.O Garman. grmmmmr,
convara«tlon writing Eiparlancad
taochar tranalator Oayid 454- 7044. 4S4
174 .IV 71^
HAL COLLEOf TVPtNO
tPiClALMT
Taoism ^^^^^m#a TI^^^i^b p%i^^.^,^^^,^aa m '
rofvtfn LanguaQM tcimrtcm: Math TatolM.
Ot*«ram« Muatc. fdHtng, Coummtin^. Xmrom
tnq PttnUnQ Olndtoig
:^1t1 tM-7441
FimN StefM Apt. In Woatwood north
of WlUhIra $140 270-3579 or 931-
FEMALE roomniota abora 3 badroom
2 bath apannnml $115 Larga tunrM.
boo milai from campui 277-5074
(20 Jy 23)
•475 FURNISMCO bowaa Mor Vlate:
2/dafi. iv< bolb Fancad yard Sopt t
Jon 5 307-4S42
(30 Jy 23)
(2SJy23) <te4
WtLL-Quallfiad tutor lor apaclallzac
Inatructlon In raadbig. writing, spaatamt
EngNah. bidNtebola. groupa 475-2047.
•^ (24 Jy 23)
TYPIMO by LIZ SCNCCNPLAY SPf ■
C4ALIST TRCATMCMTS MANU-
SCRirrS EDITING l««f SCLECTRIC
M CHGiet TYRE FAC^ 1«aar QrlflNh
Pmki 0O2-tO40
_; (28 OW)
DISaCRTATIONS. Sioooa. term papars,
arte apoctel foporte. Moor campua. aaay
partiing 477-0272 aHar 5 pjn
(25 Jy 23)
SUMMER Rantola a»alabla. "*LMaury
•«n«laa and l-bdmn WaHi to Waatwootf
•n^ UCLA Cteoo to Canlury City
'^aalad Pool 470-5404
, (20 Jy 30)
FEMALE roommate wofvted Mtdtwon-
Soa. No amobara. Claon. brtgbt. apacteya
-^ Own rooM. 475-1177 DobbI
(20 A 12)
1450 3 BORMS 1^. botea ^
buHl (n* fancad yard 15 mln^ from
UCLA Mmn Nuyi CaN l«a or
rao Jv 23)
LEARN Swadlah from a proteaatenai
Swadiah laachar Call Aba at 059^042
(24 Jy. ^
LSAT. ORE. MCAT. QteAT Tutorte« oB
■Mtebcla Rooaonobia ratea A Mondoll
Iteiiatton Canlar 1730 Waatwood 47»-
•103, 10015 Vanlca 037.0474
- -: (24(3[lr)
MCf LLCNT Typlal HMO typa papan.
tt«aa«s manuscripts. dIasaMationt
latfora. IBM Salactric II Call Anna-
470-32a^
_; -, ^- _ . (2SOfr)
tERM Papars. raaumoa. acrtoteToanaral
typing Fr»« p*chup (tettvary^ 3BB-3S27
r (2S Qb^)
•240 FURNtSHCD 2 bdrma. »
Saparata garaga. laundry, SomMi
Corning, noar SM Fwy • Kalaar Moapllal
054^300
(20 Jy
WALIC TO UCL4
SpaciotK> Bdcheiors Sta<ji«*j,
1 BcKlfOom Apts
Toaror Apprtmawte 477.BSSil i
j '1294 1 Strathrnorp Pool Elewafof4»^
Security Garage
BTECIAL SUMMER RATES at
Qten-f air Terraca 4.78 7029
i>4afii.r.ff>cii f)43 L .iJMjidif
iJ*^*^*^ "idfair^^^ 477 »09(j ,
GRADUATE
bdrm Luaury, furnlahad WLA apt.
RobPbdBon. terniM. Protar rH>namofcor.
S37^te2lSbolte ,^^„,
housa
PEMALE toahor%2^dMn atudloapt wte«
temoN giaduaWqiMdant Naor
- :lcy 220-2251 or 3SS^440^^,j^
I
PRIME Waatwood tecobon _^
2 BR. panalad dan, formal dtnlng rm
Ig moalar 2 firaplocaa. gourmat kllchan
10530 Lindbrook Eva Vallarlo 451
5471 CotewoN
MALE 1 bik campus studio (BR
upstairs llv-din kitchen down) Prtv
yard. fir«pi«ca. garage $100 mo Gr*^-
0027 avaninga A waakanda
(20 Jy 27J ^
BACMtLOn Psd Bovorty Gten Can
yon 2 badroom 2 story Mab«g room.
SSS.500 Sands Raaltors 470-0404
(31 A 10)
jf^ WAteOTECMNlbUES Alt stylaa,
diosd aotetefa A progaaalons of top
modfrn and aarltpr btuas ktyboard
ote#ta Otoory A practical appbeaBoiM
to koyboord improvlaobon 473-3B7B.
(24 Otr)
TYPING Raotebopr's wHc spacialtaas
In typing boffk monuscrtpto and acho-
i teny arbctoa Soteclric pica and alba
•^•^•54-42S0
O^. LSAT. oBtor toaf praporatlon
'J*^*^teMOl. amall group inatructlon
IMI - PICA Tboaoa. dtaaortobona. torm
papors Edit spallio«, ale Eaparlancad
Lagal Sacratary Naar campus 470-
^55
(2S Otr)
SUMItCR rantols furnfaftod WbBi to
UCLA Utilit»as inci Child OK Rool.
Alr-conditionad 530 V9^rmn Ava 477-
S343
(20 A f
•ISO LARGE Furnrabad 1-bdrm Sa-
parata garaga Laundry Naar S M Fwy
A La Qanaga 055-^300
(20JylOfr
- _- apt. FuMy
lurnlabad $137 50/fpio 472-4323
(20 Jy 30)
house to shara
WLA 2 BR own room Smokar OK
0»ar 20 I ftOva 2 cats $137 5d Lii
0254200 days. 552 2000 avaa.
f (20 Jy 23)
NAVE comfofteteo
Glon w/ona room o
$150 mo 475 2075
imata
rS2 Jw 71V
GRADUATE
Sapl S92 o«Mi
Vaf 559-5720 Hknm
wantad.
NONSMOKER - 3 bdrm. 2-bato Hmt
mosa 3 biks ro baach H9»r larga
park Sll7/mo.372-4SS1 tfp.
\ '■■' '' ''(32 Jy 23)
mem
TYPING Lot Coaoy do it Tarm popora.
ibasas dissartationa. ate Call 304-
^507 tor fraa aatimato
(25 Otr)
505 GAYLEY. across from Dykstri.
Bachalors. singtos. ona bodrooms 473-
1700. 473-0524
(20 Olr)
(20 Jy 27)
PRCMCH iutoring - Fronch nollva
tln». ^iso bualnaaa and tocbnicol
l»onatobon Joon-Francoto 470-2743
(24 Jy 30)
te«€D Holp In f nfltab? Tutoring A
MteWB ©y Pb.O 303-0100
(24 Otr)
EDTTM laM Typing Tarm papara.
dtoaortatlons. raaumaa, lattara.
Moat consclantioMS. teal
S30-1747
(20 Olr)
474
MODERN CLOSE TO UCLA
$2S0 - 1 BEDROOM 1 BATH
1350 -2 BEOROQIM-^^BATH
(IDEAL FO« SHARING I
DCLUXF aAfinFM TYPE APTS
(213) Z73.6M2
MAY B€ LEASED UNFURNISHED
(2»
PEMALE roommoto Ona badroom fif-
ptoca. pool saur«a. n^mr acihool. sacurtty
Raasonabia Elalna 470-0405. 470-
190 .Iv
•RE NTWOOO 3 BD w/yd Outot bid
naar shops bus. ate EacaltonI
altuatlon 020 3003 Ed Kaop trying
(32 Jy 30)
FEMALE mhmr9 apt. at Son Dtofo Sloto
tor fan sam Sborry 00O-10O7. 7S3.1470
(SO Jy 27)
■jii WITFT ■ Ml,
FATHER of two wOnta ,
^er«a cbbd to Bhmrw naat old foMT
Vanlca homa ciood ar«a
1200.00 plua 1/3 uOIIUoa. 021 2130
(32 Jy ^
(24 Olr)
CHINESE Mondorln Pabing natlva
toochor. Mrall-aaparlancad with Coll-
•omto Cradonllai individual sn4li
S33-tS4i.
(24 Olr)
YOUf futur*
CAREER GUIDANCE
< ^^ program atorta July 3ist
aiao
Tutorina - Powor RMdiog Writing Skills
ONE LSAT GMAT Prop
Th« GuidancB C«nlBr
3017 Santa Monica Blvd.
Santa Monica
t29-4429
PROPtSSlONAL wrftor witb ■ A la
Engltob (UCLA) wM typa ond adN toao
pvv^onca IBM Satoctrte. Otootwoud VS-
fcEoay portong. Cm^iSMw iptoo.
Ooy aorvtoo. B« Datoiia>. 47S-400S.
(2SOlr)
RUTH C DISSERTATIOMB. THESES
STATISTICAL FAST OEPCMDABLE*
SEVEN OATS A WEEK . MANY TYPE
STYLES •30-042S
(25 Otr)
LOW Coot
S17S lor 0
1
. ftss-
room A boprd. 47S-
Ava 00024
(20 Jy30)
ROOMMATE - tomato oonoNidbor to
on bdrm apt WLA •07.90/mo
"* ImwiKtotoli 47S-1074
^- ^ i2SJV2a)^
LARGE houaa to abora - SlfO-non-
Midbor~ m^M Oba ^^^m» ^^m ^
(32 Jy
FURNISHED/Unfurnlshad bacbolor
• 140 Singlas SIOS Pool Haart of
Waibaood. 10024 Lindbroob. 47S-SS04
(20 Otr)
f^y*-E roonmioto wontad fb shara two
badroom apt. porttoby furnlahad f«aar
baach. buallnaa July Sapl 5125 00
Bochal 302-4203.
(30 Jy27)
PEMALE - Mtoio SL ^
Itord Dog OK Qraot altuatton 0120 nm.
(StAt)
MALE
TYPING, all naada. naol. accurolo.
pwilrioMnf. SOO/paga CoN Shorrto
SS1-0S0S Sbtowoii Spm-lOpm.
WALK to UCLA
'OPi. KNchon todHltoa.
473-ioao.
(20 JySO)
TOUR own room to 2
«onl Vary nica. tof«a Only SlOS/mo
% ubNbaa Mar Vtoto. Stoaa (avaa
) ISO OSOi
(SSJV3S)
canyon
Own
•too
p.m. 270-1
Ab e
Aftor
f» JaOOl
PEMALE
2-atory
>«S1
OMif Thuradoy July 22.
muat hova lully
^ bfRimotor. CoM
•" *or datalla Arts Photo
LA OOOSO (213) 413-3343
(24 Jy 27)
P;»!;«»»»ONAL typtog saratoa l(_
■••^rtc II - EdNtog. monuacrtpto. tooato.
torm popora. dtoaortatlons all hours
302-3030.
(25 Otr)
IBM SELECTRIC Typing. En««Ml Ovodl
Erportoncod thaaas. disaartatlona
Ouorintood baautllul work 00< oo
WLA. 301 0404 '
(SSOtr)
EtNOLES 0170.
Soe«irHy buNdbig SuNt-toa. now
No pota. WLA. ISi SISS '^
(20 Jv 30)
2 bath Pool Graat location Judy
472-4771 '
BEAUTIPUL Toponga Cyn
•100 00 45S-17'lS
(32 Jy 23)
(30 Jv'
sublease
WOMAN aooba gutot
graat houaa naor Mortoo. Pol ob. 0102 90
* % util 022-0013
(33 JV2SI
apt, unfurnished yyiyiED 2 u^jna
.. ^WESTWOOO Charmtog 2 bdrm.
3 OOlRa. Oraptoca. buNt-ln kMchon.
2
SSN
470
S-SoptlS SOSO/
(30jy 30)
(27 A 121
TYPINC^ Foal, accurata aarvica at
atudant rataa IBM Solactrto. Tarm
RRP;^^ tboooa. ato 0S2-0000. 023-4310
""•^^ (39 )
SINGLE Apt., old build . low blocha
- ■ ■ - ,> p,
(37 A 11)
»• on Rnbirtoow from
^wy OOSO Kpffto (At
C«M0JS-Y417 •lis/Nio.
AUG Shora apoctoua aunny two bod
room apt SynBock off badroom Blocks
Washwood •lOS 273-9000.
(20 Jy 27)
honsifiQ needad^
VfHa^ protoaaof aaahs furnlahad
2-3 badroom rantol Dae 70-Moy 77 Two
•.7 (213)474-0170
(33 Olr)
YOUNG ANomoy
cottofo; or
iVowoat hoJ^:
tmont imma-
(aSJy27)
^
(
1
TUTC
soil.
to Bf
to Moth .
Doctorol
Phyalcs A Eco
(34 A 12)
%i
^^^P^^l
1
TVRIMQ/CDI
2/0-0300*7
TING IRM Thooaa. torn
2TS-B471 * **^^^*^
OS air)
^aVafV
0 p.m
[ocalrMtPurants
BWTH: Sotactrtc
tarm ppi
020-2703
El
rtotlona.
00. toot.
(35 Ob)
S329WEST
0012
(37 A U)
s\
#^4«/^/,
TRULY V
roporto. Foat
N. Low
3nd^ SM. 7S7.9101 aal 2B27 itok tor
(37 A 121
curato typbig.
17B2.
(SSJySO)
TYPING ot homo - IBM E—opliM
2^ accuroto CorBon ftobon Cal
•1SSS dltor 0 pjn
^ IMOtr)
!2.?'*ii'°''^*" ^•^ tranacrlblng.
•<*bng.andrawflto - *
JiEWLY fwnoawBd. aacurNy Mdg.. %
Mocb baach i bus. Vanlca Partly
RMWtohod Bach SOO-^IOO, atogto •130-
1100. 1-BR •180.»17S SOO-tOoT
(27 Otr)
COMPLETE DINNERS
bom $2.95
Casual Dining
This ,t mm ptmoB tor R» Lowmra*
ByffWmBmt Rm%mm trmt n la
•n4 paychlatric IBM EsacutlVTrnT
(31
HARRY'S OPEN PIT BBQ
14S« CRESCENT HEIGHTS
•tSunwcsir^
11-11 7doya/wk
Lunch/Olnnor
WTO S. SEPULVEDA
1 Block So ofMMohbv
fOO jy ij)
-*^^
— ' \
Scates igetting ready for typical sp
^CootiiHie^ frMMl Ps|e 14)
^ To okliuB SicUAiuk. Fi
Paso IfBded 1975 IVA AlKur
Larry Vockc, b 6-6, 210
pounder Vocke is an out-
standing hitter and bjocker.
but Scales wanted the bigger
Stetaniuk to piay the middle.
. Bigger! front line
With (he additions ot Zajac
and Stelaniuk to go with 6-6
fom Read. Scales now has the
higftst front line in profes-
sional volleyball
Since two w/omen nrist play
at all times. Scales wanted to
improve his biick row play. He
has an IVA all-star in Lucy
( ourtney^ but he was weak on
the other fide T9 slkviau ths
pfoblem. Scales called West
Germany and gpt 1975 iVa
Ali-Sur Annedore Richter lo
fly bBck 10 the United States
«o play for him
With setter Jooe Lope/ from
•tbeiJ and former TCI A
NCAA MVP John Bekins.
Scates now believes he has the
kind of team that can win the
IVA
Tight battle
Loi Angeles 10 in a li§ht
battle with San Diego for the
Wpstcrn crown and the home
coun advanlaje in the play-
offs In recent matcJies former
UCLA Att-Amencan Ed
Backer has started in place of
new UC Irvinr I^BSch Miles
Pabst. who has been out with
a sprained ankle LA player-
coBch Job Sunle> was MVP
in the league last year and is
having another outstanding
has f(rui41y grown ac-
customed to the differeners
between pro voiByball and the
collegiate game The trades
were dcsiBBed to l^ke advan-
tage of the IVA rule of no
rotation, meaning the players
stav in the same position
throughout the game Also he
WESTtRN l>l\lSIO!S
EASTtRN DIVISION
TIAM H
Sbb Diego 17
Loo Angdco J9
Santa Barbara 10
L GB TEAM
B
B
II
l»/2
6V2
Phornfv
El Pafto
.Tucson
I
7
13
15
19
i\\
1
IV2
hiis learned %o# 4o- iMticr uor
the two women that fiittst be in
the hneup throughout the
match
Typical Scatf»
If LI Paso 1^ hrrBBMBf tlic
typical Scates teoBi. tben watcb
lor the Sol to become ba hot as
the iexas wcaihrr Amig tbe
last ten matches of the 40
match regular scas«in Los
•Xni?tlrs and San Utcgo are the
hcu < lavorites to reach the
IVA finals tor the secood
straight vcar. but Al Scales 10
ius( starting to utili/e the
lalcnts thai have made him the
most icspccted vt>llcvhall c<»ach
in fhr I'nitcd States
I
r
_Sondheimer Says on women's athletics
(CofiKiir from, PBtB -14)
four or five of the lop six
AIAW teams^ tn 1975 com-
peting
GymnBOlics has been an
overloolMtf i|tort at UCLA for
the women as well as for the
men To change this image.
Holland will hold a Gymnas-
tics Spectacular in October
Tli^ event will feature per-
formers from the nationally
recognised SCATS club, plus
UCLA men and women
athletes
Swimmmg will be another
major area of concentration
especially with the- additions ot
Olympians Shirley Bahasholf
kathy Heddy and Jeannte
Haney It iv pooaible the
UCLA nwB and women might
swim together m one^>mect
Holland will top off the
record setting women's sports
year by hosting The AIAW
National I rack and Kield
C hampu>nships on V1.iv 19. 20
and 21 in Drake Stadium
Many Olympians are expected
to compete mcludmjj UCLA-
Montreal performc sprinter
Evelyn Ashford. middle ii\s-
tance star Kathy Weston and
javelin thrower Karm Smith
Women's sports arc also ris-
ing ti? such an extreme in
popularity that Holland is now
planning to diBrfe tbe public
admission to home events so
thaji^jhc women's program can
start funding itself in hope-
JijlK a similar wav as the men
In the short span of just
three years, women's sporti bBO
reached the -plateau where
there is now enough intcreot
that women almost jdo not
have to compcfr- m the sha
dows of the men
Need Housing?
COMING Sept ^-
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CLASSIFIED ilD
AvaiiabJe?
ISSUE
Sept. 7
,.r>*^
FacuBy
coupl« %mmA yf«fuml»l»#4 2* Mrm.
*»•«••• nmmt oc«an. No kid»/p«is ^*
y«or«. B«rli«l«y compua •HUnalen
23S71.
NEW r»cuHy wl»h«t le auatvt furn.
i®^^®' •^' MBi.-Pfc.. 2 MulU.
(012) 370-2710.
<33 Jy 27)
room and board x^
•KCtlanQO tor halp
aOOAi board. c«r tSO a«lary/me
Eachanaa lor Orta<wy mn^ NfM -fim
work Pulonoa Ofiontol. 074-BBM.
07Jv27)
autoafbrsala
autoa for sala
cyclasy scooters
for sala
•0 WHITE VW Buf. BoByMI onflMa
condition CoN AM 213/470-4170
f41 Jy 30)
1072 VW 411. 4
22.000 mMoa 02200 CaN 473-0007
HiJyi7)
IT
OWMBB OMIVEN VW B4« 1070 XInf
iR oicfionQ9 for
071-1000.
DODOE Don 1000. 0, oaeallam
OHIon. Now.Oroa. braiioa. ahocha.
B075 boat HI IMi
HOWOA 175 1070 1100 of mm
aall good ptiyataal CBwOMIm. CM
74 KAWABAKI FIIA
(41 JytSi
<4a Jy2i)
PftOFEt SIGNAL
m w«««-
CoO 474-
(33 JV23I
BEB^ONBlBLi womofi Boolroa to
!*;m— «« AiMHOl Wool L.A. Pfoforfod
wo<aia»icoa. 0il.«7t7
(»Jy2»
S4fl0-tS00 A fwmtm§ 44 Mrm. liMOd
w^lMt* IMMf rMfn. WU^BM DiOOli
4774030
(33 Jy 23)
BOOM. Ooord piMaaalory Cloofilfif
CodMng. Hdip para lor Xmo hablaa Phofw
4704101.
">3y^Jy2>l
•TUOEMT want«d 130 woo*, roooi.
In aachon^
Coll Mra
(41 Jy 23)
71 PmiO 4 apoad Ei
Now Ofoa and batfory Oapaning UOA
31200 47S-0117. ,^^ , ^,
VW •OUAIICBAClt.1004VoNof«ti
dual cortoa. Mfh conip.. cofM. ABv dM.
H to K, idpdiiiiod; aac
BAMMCUDA Con« 1007 Low
Eiol cond Now tiraa. claaaie
Mual aai 301-2042. 072-3405
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Keif er replaces another coaching legend
t
— ^
\
VJi
Sieve FWey
Dl Sporti Writer
•i Newly appointed assistant
^ track coach Jim Keifcr has
larte shoes to try to fill.
Tom Tellcz (now head
coach, Umverstty of Houston)
was regarded by many track
ejLperu as ;he best fietd evenu
coach m the Umted States
Tellcz has tutored »omc of the
world's best athletes, including
high jumper Dwight Stones,
triple jumper James Butts and
^ long jumper Willie Banks.
21 Some of Tellez*s pupils are
^ expected to win gold medals at
^ Montreal this month. Can an
4 articulate, young man with a
jl^ refreshing sense of humor,
5 handle the pressure of big time
^college track and field''
**Everyone talks about the
pressure I don't feel it An
institution hke UCLA recniits
athletes, not one individual
Naturally there arc good and
bad parts about recruiting, but
when you are selling a good
product or program your job
becomes so much easier.**
Little difficulty
Keifer has been at UCLA
"htttrovcr a month apd al-
~i(t«dy he seems to be fitting
Imo the program wuli httle
drfficultyr^-^
^Cofch (Jim) Bush is in
Montreal so this gives me the
opportunity to really get to
know UCLA*s tytlaat- laid
Keifer.
Keifer probably came to
UCLA at the nght time The
Bruins have just completed x)nc
of the best recruiting years in
the school's history.
The Bruins have just signed
letters of intent two more
outstanding track and field
athletes in the form of prep
hurdle sensation Greg Foster
from Chicago and distance star
Vicken Simonian from Los
Angeles City Colkfe.
Earber this month UCLA
signed spnnters Millard Hamp-
ton of San Jose. Mark Jenkins
of the San Fernando Valley
and Jim Schaffer from El Ca-
mino JC Quarlermiler Donn
Thompson from Gahr Hig;h
School IS also West wood
bound Add to that list field
evem stars Thomas Lomax
ff/om Workman High, Keith
Taylor Irom Harbor JC and
Marcus Gordien of Mt. San
Aptonm Xity Coliegc an4 yeu^
have a recruit ing_y^ar that
should be described as impres-
sive
Vcff7 simple
**Stars develop i he m^ Ives,"
continued Keifer **A11 a coach
has to* do is make sure the
athlete gets the best traimn^
possible We can offer different
programs to fa the athlete lt*s
all very simple Really, my
family* and I have been very
fortunate Coming to UCLA
fulfills one of my dreams. As a
seventh grader I wanted to
compete in the Olympics and
become a track and field
coach These were my goals.
As you can see only one has
become a reality.**
Born and raised in nearby
South Pasadena, Keifer be>
came involved in athletics 'at
an early age. 'f
**! look at myself and see
what athletics has done for me
then I am able to relate the
positive things that have hap-
pened to me. I tell all athiciet
that athletics can be a .>tepping
stone to better things This is
whcrj: psychology gets m-
( Continued On Page 1 1 )
Jim K«M«f rvlaaing in his office
OM
Meets L.A. Stars tonight
- ^
^ Scates trades El Paso into winner?
Fomwr UCU^ All
By Michael Strndhrimer
DB Sports Writer
Al Scatcs built a collegiate
volleyball power at UCLA
through good recruiting Now
at El Paso in the pro leagDcv
he IS redesigning his team
-through trading
The new look El Paso Juare/
Sol of the International
Voilcy^ll Association (IV A)
will meet the Los Angeles
Stars tonight at H pm at
Rcdondo Beach High School
fhc Los Angeles Stars will
have Al Scates night this
evening at Redondo Beach
High School
rin honor of Al Scates* con-
tributions to collegiate volley-
ball, we will allow any UCLA
student ..with an ID card to
purchase a $3 general admis-
sion ticket for $1," said Rich
Leviss, LA Stars publicist
Leviss also announced the
Los Angeles Stars would hold
another Al Scates night on
Augu 1 1 at Redondo Beach
High School, when the Bruin
coach makes his final local
regular icaton appearance.
When last seen in Los
Angeles. Scales was Ti!?ading his
Eastern iJTt^sion over Phoenix
and I ucson with a 7-9 mark
Now F'l Paso IS 8-15 and oae
game behind leader Phi>cnix
(*^".U) **t tl^c hallway point in
the season I he team has been
restructured and should have a
tough test tonight against I os
Angeles f 1 5-6) the Wes^iern
division runnerup
Scates' UCLA teams we^e
noted for coming on strong at
the end of the season and that
IS what El Paso will have to di>
in Its last 17 matche!^ to win
the Eastern crown and advancc
to the playoffs.
It appears El Paso can now
get the job dx»nC'>^»t^i the sign-
ing of former UCLA All-
American 6-6 John Za|ac and
the addition of 6-^ -Peter Ste-
fanfuk from the I i)> Angeles
Stars
Zaiac was
taken in this
bv Phoenix.
«-t
the first player
year's IVA draft
hut the Heat
-4»#>tfM'^not sign him Scates
knew the USA National team
star would play tor him in El
Paso because the> are Lh>se
friends lo gctZaiac the El
Pasu franchise had to give up
Its number one draft choice
Hcxt year, plus cash
f Continued on Page 15)
Sondheimer Says
Holland making women No. 1
Michael Sondheimer
Women's athletic director
Judith Holland claims to have
the best overall program in the
Umted States.
For the 1976-77 school year
•Ik has already set her sites on
proving it nationally by having
tone outstanding events in the
works for her athletic teams.
Holland docs not believe in
fetting recognition for one
which IS to her credit In
her mind there is no such thing
at a "minor sport," which has
infeucd the mens athletic de
arrange events for all of her
athletic teams and the pre-
liminary accomplishments arc
impreiiivc.
kiCLA basketball fans will
have the pleasure of watching
the women play three times
this season before the men*s
faiaes in Pauley Pavilion Hol-
land it working on bringing
several —tiinal ^wecs to
UCLA for games and con-
ference nvals Cal State FuL
lerton and Long Beach State
are being mentioned at a poa-
as one the preludes to the
men's games.
in volleyball, Holland has
afranged a week trip for the
two-time AIAW champions to
Hawaii to play the 1975 AIAW
runnenips Also Holland has
arranged to bring 25. of the
better votteyball teams aciMi
the United Sutes to UCLA in
November for the National
Volleyball InvitatioVial The
tournament is scheduled to run
for two days.
Holland has mid kHt hac
___ j_ ^ . ■ . . " — ^^ ^ r~"^ -••"' "ng if ill ^tn iia^i
"• "" ""' "'V'^'^O '«. s..ble non-le«gue coum.ny Mfnc (C««tmu«d o« P... IS)
I
;
^MiavMIMtaMnmarir i^ »i»n i«««»ni »
I Bike safety education also recommended
o
t ^
j 600-mile local bicycle network proposed
O
3
' Sy Debra Zauzmer
Di Staffs Reporter
A proposed Bicycle PUn for
the Los Angeles area, which
would crtiac a 600- mile net-
work of bicycle routes within
the city, was discusicd at %
public hearing before the City
Planning Commission Thur»-
+-»-
- \
YOU BETTER BELIEVE IT!
Ihe GERALD WILSON
ORCHESTRA
alive wih the jazz
sound thiit IS now
At Royce Hall • UCLA
Saturday. July 3t • 8 30pm
STUDENT TICKETS: $2.00
(2 tickets p#r i.D., limited
number available) i'
jT.ckets at UCLA Central Ticket Offfce.^SO Westwood Plazi
scyi cofflMTTK OR flK !gn HMicnons
No final action was ap-^
proved, however, on the plan's
proposals of bicycle safety
education, funding, or the con-
struction of bikeways The
plan has been ubled for five
weeks in anticipation of pubric
ItiCtion
The cost ot tlie long-term
bikeway construction effort.
$20 miHion over 20 years, is
subsidized by an allotted por-
tion of the sute fa»ohne saki
tax. The price of paving con-
crete routes will averafe
$Mt4XI0 per mile, according to
KObeii Kcm. I. A I 'la fining
Department assistant
"If ihe street is wide enough
we can put the bike lane be-
Program motivates
high school students
ly Rms Wolpert
DB Staff Writer
Singer O.C. Smith and actor
Greg Morns were among the
calrbnties at Upward Bound's
^Wednesday night lecture series,
held at Dykstr^ Hall
Upward Bound is ^ program
I
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-^ood July 27 thru Aug 1
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for disadvantaged high school
students. Run by UCLA Ex-
tension and funded by the
Department of Health, Educa-
tion, and Welfare, it serves
over 100 students from grades
ten* through twelve from Jor-
dan, Roosevelt and Vcttice
High Schools
**The program serves stu-
dents from low income families
who have the academic ability
to go to college but who lack
the motivation," according to
Mary^Ckstleberry. Castleberrv,
who was in the program her-
self, just graduated from
UCLA with a Bachelor of Arts
degree m English. She now
works for Upwatd Bound
There are two components
to Upward Bound: academic
and cultural. Cast liberty said
The lecture senes, held every
Wednesday night. is an
example of the program*s cul-
tural aspect
TfMRIlLQRDS
M
THE LARGEST RECORD STORES IN THE KNOWN WORLD
TOWER'S TOP 10
1. "WINGS AT TM£ SPEED OF %OVfit'' Wings
2. "aEAC/TIFUL NOUE" N*U EHamond
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4. "EREEZIN' " Gkarg0 Benson
5. "SILK DEGREES*' Box Scogfs
6. "IN THE POCKET" James Taylor
7. "NIGHT ON THE TOWN" Rod SUtvort
S. "CHANGESONE" OavUI Bou;f«
9. "CHICAGO X" Chicago
10. "TAKIN' IT TO THE STREETS" OooMc Brothers
YOUR CHOICE 3 JSS
ALL SCHWANN USTEO AT *.«• (FKAMFTON
7^)
OPCNEVCRY NITE OF THE YEAR TIL MIDNITE
• kl
Aiyjtur/
k» •
iaX8 WESTWOOD BOULEVARD
la addition to Smith and
Morris, aaress Glona Hendry
and actor Michael Roberts of
Barer t a showed up. Three
weeks ago, basketball stars
Mahdi Abdul Rahman. Walt
Hazzard, Curtis Rowe and
ICeith Wilkes were guest lec-
turers, according to Rahman,
who IS also an Upward Bound
program evaluator
(Continued on Page 4)
tween the parked can and the
first lane of traffac.** he said
On those routes where parking
cannot be restricted, a curb
iMie or sidewalk bike path wiU
be designed
TlK^.Wcstwood hike way citf- (-
rently under construction, the
existing San Vieentc Boulevard
path, and 90 nules of com-
pleted routes around Venice
Beach. Dockweikr Beach, and
the valley's Sepulvcda Recre-
ational Area, will eventually be
incorporated into the larger ^
city plan
**The reaction (at Thursday's
hearing) was generally very
favorable," said Keen, "and m^
expect the plan will be ap-
proved with the Environmental
Impact Report It's being given
wholehearted support by our
State Legislature and City
Council **
''If anybody wants to make
comments on what they think
(Coatiaued on Pate 4)
J
-u.
Summer Bruin
Volume XCIX, Number 9
Tueaday , July 27, 1 976
PublTshed twice a week during the summer, except during hotidayt and
days following holidays, and examination periods, by the ASUCLA
Communications Board 306 Westwood Plaza Los Angalaa. California
90024 Copyright 1976 by the ASUCLA Communications Board
Second class postage pard at the Los Angeles Post Office.
EdNof 'ki-jdiiaf .
Man«9ln9'EdMar
EMecutlve EdMor
Busirieea MIeneger
Aaeistant Business Manager
I
EdMor
irlB EdMor
Photo EdHor
Aaeistant Photo Edhor
EiMeftaNiniecit Inoei coMocs
Aasoclale Index EdHofS
Makeup EdMor
Art Dkeclor
Copy EdNor
Copy Readers
Librarian
Campus Events Editor
Publications Manager
• Alice Short
Frani( SUIIworth
Qeoff Ouinn
Susan Kanf
Tad Shapiro
Franii Wtdder Sally Garner.
K»m Wildman Michelle Duval
Oavid Whitney Joanne Eglaah
Michael Sondhaimer
\. Stava Finloy
Jeff Lapin
. . Maria Le>anf_
Howard Posner Laura Klainar
Adam Parfrey Cathy Saipp
Je«f MitcfMi
MiiieLie
Roberta Kaye
Joe Jones Pattf Croat.
Joanne Ratkovich. Jeff McLeod
Jodi Zechowy
. Jana Wigod
Dick Kreuz
INTRODUCING TO THE
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stores you would pay twice as much
Of course they come only m packs of 12 per time
length, but you get 12 cassettes for the price of 6f
Now you can record twice as much for the aftme price
without sacrificing quality
Comsette Retail
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12417 W. Olympic Blvd.
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foncifnitttii liiLJifcieu tu yuuf uuur snipping prepaiq
M^
• f
yi^-^\
The UCLA Selling Club wIN hold nglsaaauii for
at PauAey PevMtoii, Gale 4. on Ttuirsdey. Auguet Stt«
from 12-2 pm Coet Is $2S.aa OfV a Nret
■^TT
Group will probe
public files abuse
By J€>dt Zechowy
/ DB Staff Writer ^^
Jose Brum cnrolh m a clasn taught by Profetsor X,. wKoJs
currently under federal goveriuncnt scriamy as a possible
subversive i^ojic'i enriillment is( T^iiorded in various lilcs which
aire distributed .among government agencies These fiTes haunt,
Jcwe— +^ the rest of his life
hact or fantasy'' The above practice is not uncommon,
according to John Mettlp, advisor to a newly-formed campus
organization
Mettle's group, the campus chapter of the National Com*
mission ofi^ Law Enforcement and Social Justice, intends to
invcNitgate and ma]ce puMic ahuses of infcir^nation-Vy different
law enforcement agencies, such as the CIA and KBI
Our basic purpose is to create needed change." Mettle said
"We will point out the dangers of the system to people 'by
contact lei^islators. Congressmen and Assemblymen **
The national commission, which is headquartered here in Los
Angeles, has discovered computer banks are set up by federal
agencies to receive inputs of information. Mettle said The
computers are not designed for the correction of information, he
The UCLA chapter, which will begin fenaally opera ting /this
will try to find out what information is collected on both
-students and non-students, and how that information is utili/ed
b\ governmehtal agencies. , --it--'
Orangutan researchers
endure hardships in wild
By Loeis Wall
DB Staff W flier
Insects and harsh hving ^'^^•'
ditioos are a 4a% expei.....c
iiPiL • tj V ■" - " •tpnoiai canoi"
<lair in aiiihropitlog) who is
studying araflant m Indo-
nesia
For the last (our and a halt
years. Birute Galdikav-Bnnda-
mour and her husband. Rod.
have studied the red apci^j^
the Indonesian fiingles.
I hey work in a i4-square-
mile study area, one dav's
journey from the nearest town,
UKatcd on the coast of Si)uth
ern Borneo in the laniung
. Puting Reserve
"We're living in a steam
bath." the browh-haired re-
searcher said lemperatures
are almost never below 90
degrees and antv are every -
.where, she »aid
f hough insects and moisture
arc an uncomfortable problem,
the couple have spent over
^.000 hours observing wild
orangutans behavior
Different from other mon-
keys and apes, orangutans tend
lobt solitary in adult Life,
wandering over tong distances.
Birute (laldikas BrTn^amour
said. .
. "ft seems to be hormonal/'
she added. The couple specu-
laics^at might be nature's way
ol controlling the population
SD 'enough food is available
OranguUuis eat fruit: young
leaves, insects, bark, shoots,
and ground plants as part of
their normal diet, she said ■
Ihe coQple also iphabilitates
captured yojung orangutans
and returns them to the wild
Without expert guidance, the
animals would die from di-
leaic, WMilntttrttmn and neglect
The two researchers provide
this guidance, and help the
apes become "wil<f' again T he
orangutafiH.are supported until
they learn lo adjust to the
jungle.
Orangutans display creativity
in the construction of overhead
shelters during rainstorms
They use leavei^ "hke a big
umbrella.** Birute (ioldi|as-
Brindamour said.
- The'y ' have also discovered
nsak orangvOHH spend more
lieic on the ground than pre-
vHHialy believed, she said
Tliay aMiy apc^ as jfnocli as
SIX hours travelling on grottnd.
and ground aaits were found
on two occaaiom. Birute Gal*
dikas-Brindamour adidad.
^^^>^^Co^
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Pair of Heela—
(with one at r«g cost & tt>is ad)
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The Village Cobbler, offering the
fittest in shoes, sandals, handbags,
briefcases, notebooks and ledther
accessories.
Th« Vill«g« Cobbler
"moCfytey
477-1649
hours: _ _
M-W 10-7 FriS Sat 10-10
Thurs 10-9 Sun. 12-5
(offer good through Aug 6, T per customer)
Campus Events
««»OUNC(MfaTI
— Takf Ml AlMf. musical version
of 0 Heill s Ml WMvMM wHf bt prnaMBd t>y
ttte Dipartiaini of Ttieatsr Arts 8 30 pm July
2f-31 anff 7 30 pm August 1 Ralpli Freud
PlaylHMise Macgovian Hall $1 for studtnis
S3 tar ottms ticftati avatlaMt at Kerciilioff
Canlrai Ticket Office and Mutual Agencies
— LMk iMMMfi AagM. will be praaimed
^ the Summer Thealtf Mtaflisliop July ??
Avfust 1 All performaaeissaliout except ?
pm August 1 Students SI tickets at Mac
gowan Box Office of call 82S-2581
— OawMBV PrUMiai fri|Hl will tram
you to invesligaie consumar campfaints
Visit Kerckhoff 311
Wmmm M pm dancaig t>y requMli • pai-
WiaMy. AMy 30. Wwmw s Gym
practice tor
10 am-noon
acJMrwMii 3517
itfttd by the Visitors
IS aaw accapting
applications tor (esearch iiiiHinti Visit
Kerckhoff 306 or call i2MM7
— PngrMi ImrtI oftPn summer |obs
and field woOl jNacement m caamiMmty
sarvire Vtsit Kmsey 1W n' -aff i?5-3730
— leternatleeal felk Oaecit 8 10 pm
We<tnesdays International Student Center
Free
will be slwwn 8-9
pm every Tuesday miernatianil Student
Center frwt
' — ciacnn
~aSUI iHMar IpMi VMMp. wW pre-
safit scans from standard operas, noon and 8
(Continued on Page 4)
ENGINE^ING
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Interesting assignments are avail-
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with majors in ME. EE. AE, or
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Contact your placement office or
submit your resume to
Mr E. N Bailor,
Employment Manager
C3ENERAL DYNAMICS
Convair Division
PO Box 80847"^ : :
San Diego. CA 92138
An Equal Opportunity Employr M/F
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AMER-I-CAL
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Upward Boufid It a program for dAsadvantagad high om^tmtm^i
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i
Themost
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in the history of
human survival.
AN ■^■rapmF "5TORY OF MODERN DAY GANNIBAUblvl
Upward Bound
n-
CAUTION
CANNIBALISM
T
.zx
V
Rlmtmtcny
MCotor A Aafj
JNik
STARTS WEDNESDAY JULY 28th
AT A THEATRE OR DRIVE-IN NEAR YOU!
While the guests called the
program a successful experi-
ence and applauded its effort
to keep them close to their
community, they cautioned the
students against dropping out
of school in favor of a career
in the entertainment industry
**If you want to be m show
business, make it yourfninor.
and make something else your
major," Hendry said ^
Upward Bound students are
Campus Events. . .
(Confifiu^tf from Page 3)
pm today and tonight Schoenberg Little
Theater Free
— MMwralfy SanMr Omrm. mV present
e conceft featuring sacretf t)aroque^and
American and Czech folic music nooin July
2». Schosnterg Little Theater Free
—UtttU 0 Alaar plays classical guitar
7-9 pm every Tuesday international Slu
itm Center Free ,-
Correction
The phojif number Tor a
food hot-hne recently cre-
ated bv the Slate I%art-
ment of C onsumef AHairs
I and the Department of
Food and Agriculture was
incorrect ins listed if] last
Friday's Dat/v BrutH The
correct number is 1-800-852-
7525. The Brum apologizes
tor any inconvenience this
may have caused.
n-.
I by Georgr Martin aiio avaiiabi* on qu^in
fripMijOff rff(
provided with other Cufturat
pnrichment programs in addi-
tion lo the lecture series.
A talent show js held eacji
year wBich students act m and
produce, accordmg to Bobby
Smith, Director of Upward
Bound The night after the
entertainment lecture, the stu-
dents heard Al Green at the
I m versa! Amphitheater
''Sunday is our family affair
day We might go to the
beach, or have a barbecue, or
go horseback riding. The im-
portant thing IS students, staff
and tutors all intermingle^^ We
become close in a way that
would be impossible at a regu-
lar scliool," Smuh said.
Upward Bound is a lot more
than just a cultural program.
Smith noted, adding the aca-
demic cornponent it vital.
During the summer, pro-
gram participants live in Dyk-
stra Hall for a period of six
weeks During this time, they
attend regular high school
classes, taught by h)igh schook
teachers, from >^ am until
lioon, SmTtlii Sid '~~^"'
Castieberry pointed out ihc
J^gr^m docs not end with the
summer. During the school
year, the students attend
classes at their regular h^gh
scheel, but they receive tutor
m% three times a week Thcv
also come to UCLA on Satur ,
(Uy% for study skills and addi-
^tional -tutoring, she said .
"Oii^ theyVe in, the\ sia.
in. We recruit once a year hut
students suy in Upward.
Bound until they graduate high
school."
She added, "We even have a
program called *the bridge.
The summer they graduate, wc
tutor them in courses such as
Subject A. This forms a brrdge ^
between high school and the
skills needed for college." she
said.
Upward Bound has been
very successful. Smith said
"We have m^re applicants than
openings." he said. adding"'thai
over 90 per cent of the Upuard
Bound students enter college.
and over 70 ^t cent rcnj^n
Stagt. FBm and Tclaviaion Actor
Titos Vandis BicycleS . . .
Acting Claaaes
* Coaching
For Inlormation Call
— (fi 13) 60f4;H —
(Contifiued from Page 2)
a bicycle plan should be, tflfv
can write to the LA Planning
Commission," said Jackie
Brainard. spokesperson for
Councilman Yaroslavsky's of-
fice Yaroslavsky was instru-
mental in creating the West-
wood bike paths
The plan also proposes a
bicycle safety education pro-
gram through the public
schools.
Write
Summer
Meditation
Study
U.S.C. PhO ThMit
Mora volunta»rt neadld for mid
August fr— 4 wk maditatior^
♦ fUm Series preaentad
itori prefarrarl fiail
681-4707
Prices have been cut on these
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Scientific, basic log, trig and
exponential functions
now
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The HP-25
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ivith purchasa
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A $6 00 value, this t-shirt is
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•••ctronica. b la««l. (wMi Khoot
opan monday-fnday tao-S 30. aaturday io-4
11
<#n*i
± - frr
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m
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summer bruin
poinf
n
Cockroaches Bug Washington
by Stuart Silverstein
iidrtofi \oie S4l\femein is « former Dsity Brum u^ii ^nt^f j
WASHINiCTON •- Minor) 4m» r«p««i iHetf - A ts no^ ^pp^refii a
new hiiffinf scandal » surfaong in A^hmgton. leu than t«»o vears
afier the lirsi M^as laid to rest Buf this ooe wtW nof be solved bv
••oUted tragiiivfiu o^ magnetK tape — the ftokifion n not m> umpke
The Contlftiif«oo » wmHarly useless against this new rhreM In fact,
the only viaMe answer lo the problem miftM be the oiie-ihe Bntnh
tried in 1814 — burnir>g Wa«^r>flon to the ground
The bug problem spreading through the cap«tai cit> rhn rear has
rtothif^g to do with miniatun/ed u It r ^-sensitive microphones but
rai^i^ large black ugU obooiious imeects v\ailiMfpon is be«n^
overrun by cockroaches.
OPINION
The hftle beasts are evr- Here Tfiev ^cuttte irrougr^ tne
Georgetown streets torcing -..^.led rcwuranieurs tmu mnutner-
able ockKlftt mserucides to siav m byfwmij The%^ ihnve m the
lisabaf fMiftirig houies that abound m itm nmtkem quadrant ot
the city — but can also be found m the plwshett borte ' - *- -
liBwntown They even mlih rated tfie MHwfe House ^- ^^y^ Mr... ^
massive search and destroy operation b% Secret - ^v^ru-tiofted
exterminators put an erid_ixi- thai fora*
But rK>w. the prob4em has gone too tar '^ >#• ^tUlkmmm^ iitl^
creatures have invaded mv apanment — - anc ~e*-^ to be wirnimf
the battle
Like most oi the other LClf interns, f ftty m jin old CeorgfiQwn
Unnrersitv dorm whose name I would ment tor* * iOiiic^ iiaw%e^
hiends hadn t told nne about VVadiM^p^ii's ihjnc ttajwi T^Mfcid
laws To sav the building has seen better davi does «0I do the
situation lustice Let nie |ust say that the
ifianifement bandies about show the^
smoy-free sunlight - with model-T's pari^ m Irqim And die
buddm^'-^jras already tailing apari then. ^___
Eveo in Its »&f%nc^^i§it. however tt^wpuld be Quit^ an easv piace
in which to live. w?»h lar^e romfonable. Jir-cor>dftiMed rooms ~ it
It weren t tor the walls — orlack pt san>e M is my hmNM oninioin
that the walls oi this buikUng" 6nly ^ppeMt to be pjjrtti to the
naked eye. but actually are solid hunks or cockroach, coverd with
two coifs ot paint M night the kitchen looks like the jet from a
gra<ie-B fungle rnovie. wit^^ ^*%arnf>s"ot hungr> if>seo> destroying
everything m their path.
We scrtartud lo the LCl^ intern coordinators We H take care of
It they piomne^ They didn t We called the buildtrtg s manafer
and he put our room on the list 0I ^Hom lo Jte, veiled b% the
exterminator who came and Mt TIm bugs dtfri^t .He told the
t'CLA people again Thev put pressure on the butldirigmanager
and he said thi« if we lourui our own extermmatcK, he would foot
the biU^ We callf^ an ester minaior. who stinked up the room, ^nd
guess what' The cockroaches must have been wearing gas masks or
something because fhes were still arouncf
So now. It has come to the pmm wliere it s either them or us ¥^e
spray them They laug> V\e invent sadniic little ways to kill them
(eg' shaving cream akohol pooh with 4 match ifipjcil at the
appropriate time the old taithtui heel-stomp* thev repK bv holding
reunions on our pillows.
NASA Control, we ve just received the latest Viking I picture
and there s something you ought )p l(now ...
Letters to the Editor
Tree Tables
.1 pnde myselt on b^ing ^
Iea0 Itn percent "above thcr
ifi loldrar>^ I aKo try to
a "Ihre 9r\d let live" atti-
toward other p^ple How-
t am beginning to build a
re»ef«ment ^bout the
people who Irequent the Tree
H^e at kmchttme
On a recertf lurKrhtirvie viMt I.
was forced to stand with a full
ttay Of loHOd. while rK>n- lunching
people occupied, the maforitv of
the tables As I moved among
the crowd, snatches of conver-
filtered through the
hub- bub led me to belike that
Aie tabtei liKPf^ bemg mmd by „
people who were studying,
catcfiifw up on their cor-
respbrJence. ind re^dinji^ Four
(ai^ were baiiif used ^>-
Q^'tf^t\\ by i0> ur>schadMled re-
union of old gradi area 19<7
Or>e large table wai. if tny ears
were rnjt decetving me. being
occupied by a group calling
therrrselves Roller Derbies Anoo- •
ynrnxis Abo it sccMfd that a
large number of tables were
being used by haternal groups
political groups, service organi-
zatioTH. and social groups This
strange aMortment of people 6ki
have one thing in common,
none of them were eating
lur>ch
9t the rT>ar\agement ire look-
mg for my tray an^J dtshci, t Mt
tbem on a km flop hwmth in the
Village whcfe I finally found a
place to sit down
P.S. Tell the Chef the sirloin
tips ind noodtei were excellent
a trifle cool for my taste
ioren MidM
SCaN
Inctituie lor Social
Kesearch
This system has several advan-
tages. First, studies have shown
that it is effective m curbing
grade inflation. From a random
sampling oi professors from 200
..^eottogci and universities acrotf
the country, over 80% said tbaf
they preferred this system be-
cause, m the words' of or>e pro-
fessor, "it more accurately de-
scribd a student's position in
the class ^nd takes the pressure
off o(_an instruaor to give the
^•fher grade to the borderline
student '
Plus/minus grading is abo a
fairer mmmm of evaluating stu-
dents' work. For example when
the S^ade of 0 ' is recorded.
dMire is no way of telling
whether that B -w^ 9r>e pQint
shy of in A or or>e point over a
C. In v^w of the increasing
' competition for graduate scfKX>l
admittance, for the student who
falh a few points short of an A,
•t » a nejlLjrnding source of
irritation to feeetve- the same
grade as the student who sneaks
m iust over a C
The editorial states that copy-
>ng answers, plagiarizing and
r^mtung to aid or>e's peers for
fear of raising the curve will
increase when plus/ minus grad-
ing IS introduced I litl to see
hoijir pkis/minus grading could
aHedt these practices If any
change were to occur, there
would probably be a decrease in
such activity rather than an in-
crease; since the student doesn't
feel he has to slime for those
extra points in order to |ump up
another whole grade, the em-
phasis on frailcs is reduced
In coTKrlusidn. while grading
systems may not be considwad
fair and good, the implementa-
tion of plus /minus is certainly an
improvement
Apparently it has never oc-
cured, to these budding politi-
cians that student apathy may
indeed be caused by adminis-
trath^e (studerftjcfcafne^s Pleas
for "student participation" m
the ASUCLA bureaucracy ire
usually in the for^ of unsti-
pended or poorly stipended
positions. Most students I krujw
rely mostly on their own inconr>e
for survival, ir\d $100 00 a month
barely covers rent Clearly in
student government as well, you
get wfiat you pay for.
So when I read that some
committee has decided lo spend
extra :mmnif on jitiy student
store decor atior>s ciir to support
building a Westwood disco in
my supposed "interest" I can
hardly blame the Regents for
attempting -to bypass student
government approval for Reg
fee increases. -Student govern-
nf>ent is already Wind and deaf
It may as well be castrated
IL
Quality
Plus/Minus
Decisions
A recent Oai/y Brum odtoorial
oppMed the mipfcumntation of
pius/niinys grading at UCIA I
attend a tchiol — Stanford Uni-
versity ~ during the regular
school fov which eittploys this
•ystem. and I commend both
fbe UCLA afid State Aodomic
Senates for their approval of
As a student at UCLA m my
senior year, the number of deci-
sions rrwKle "m my behalf" and
"for my own good" nei^ cease
to amaze me considering that
no one ever asks me wfiat I
think. On the contrary, ^tident
government elections usually
tocMson "tellmg a suppoMdly
apathoHi flkidem body what to
think
We here at UCLA are be-
coming exceedingly disgusted
with the quality of the paper
toweh you ire currently pur-
chasing
Aher washing the harnh or>e
attempts to grab a p^per towel
only to find a limp, mushy por-
tion of ^per towel between
thumb arui index finger. Addi-
tional attempts ire usually urv
successful so 4hat one gives up
ind in desperation ends up
either 1) shaking the hands until
dry <€6-00 seconds). 2) wiping
the hands on shirt, shorts,
blouse* pants, or dress, or 3)
leaving the hands wet (hoping
or>e won't encounter a hand-
shake on the way back to the
" e or claitpoomi.
Is this another "economy"
of the administration? If
it could be a winner if
give up on these tdweh
or it could go the
odier way. After cor>dttioning,
towd uaofi wiH become enraged
9nd keep on with their attempts
to secure a "wliofe" to«vel
(tf>ereby bankrupting the p^p^
tomftl bu^ec) Ot towel use will
dbappoor comptoiefy 9r\d urv
«antoy^ dirty hands wW previil
so.
Westwood Recreation tenter .
.1- .■>■.»
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
Let ut Ship your personal
lionai packaging and shipping Wa also tall
PACIFIC-KING '^^ ^"^ ••» •«
m
for
(
^Continued from Pigirni
tnorc volleyball courts,
ball diamonds, more tetinis
courts, a scorer, football field,
dMSrooms and male and fc-
mmle locker roooM. There aix
«Am> plans to build a large
gymnasium ^iid swimming
complex..
Tanowitz would like to en-
courage an UCLA students to
just get involved "Students
can always be an important
factor m helping younger kids
find that right direction in
life,- said Tanowitz "Plus our
volunteer program can always
use a little help from
our friends "
West wood JRark is located at
1375 V^eran Avenue (in back
of the Federal Building).
SUMMER
POT FARM
FUN!
fWNEELI
Pj|an<Ci»aiiiwg
ctay ,
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THE POT FARM "^' "^^
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Santa Monica O AO* /O / A
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men s women s
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14.99
Corn* In' and fill er up' Tha
great mechanic's suit every-
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tn tan or rm^y Assorted Appli-
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Men's sizes M-L-XL. women's
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O
sportsvvear. b level
eckmrmMf} union
mon-frl g.ao-S 30,
•et 10-4
Q. Why are these men smiling?
A, Probably because they re registered to vote.
If you would lik^ to pub smiles on faces like these and earn
aproximately $3.50 per hour or more ...
BECOME A DEPUTY REGISTRAR
OF VOTERS!
It's not difficult
Just attend the class . . .
July:
.^T^
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Mt FITTED
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Mark Rydeirs 'Harry and Walter* goes to pieces
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297 Dodd Hall — Campus
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT CENTER
1023 Hilgard. Westwood
for further information Phohe 477-4587
ly Adam Parfrey
Mark RydelFii Harry and
Waiter Go to New York
thould Kave been a breezily
paced, witty filin about two
oafs who. almost inconceiv-
ably, realize the headiest of
their grandiose get-rich-quick
Bcheines. Instead, Harrv and
Walter is a torpid and wit Jess
nnotion picture, unquestionably
if oafish as. its stars.
It's around, the turn-of-the-
century when Harry Digby
(James Caan) and Walter Hill
(Elliott GouldK two rtuierant
vaudevilhans, are imprisoned
for takmg money out o( their
audience's wallets. Harry and
Waiter's criminal proclivity a
surpassed only that 6i their
rival Adam Worth (Michael
Came). The three event uaily
head on a collision course The
suspense lies in the question:
Who ends up in the money?
When Harrv and Walter de-
I '.
mands snap, crackle and pop
Direaor RydeU (The Reivers,
"P^ Cowboys) and Editor
Fredric Sieinkamp opt for
sosgy medium shots and mini-
mal cutting When Johff
By rum (Inserts) ^mi Robert
Kaufman's script screams lor a
vigorQUft, scrambling style, if
receives a mild st)ft-i
instead
Caan: in
•iK M%6 out the other
Stage reviews: wry ^alf
and perceptive 'Hearings*
The Company Theater's pro-
.^^^J^??...„9^ -^'^ ^y ^^>rt Gold-
rg \i. a complex play about
• olution. chaos, dicjtaiorship,
iss-murdcr and deviation
Sound like weighty material?
ilemarkabjv^ aided by first-rate
acting aryi directing, 5a//
emerges as a perf^^ct^ blend of
coetemptative liMJ<iry and wry
humor
chard, ii a difficult character
to cope i^ith, as he is~*lier=^
natcly gentle and dcaructive.
Prichard extracts just the fight
.amount of sympathy and ani-
mosity from the audience in a
beautiful and discerning por-
trayal. ..'^s*^'
Gar Campbell, who also di^
rected the play, effectively por-
irays Kop with unfailing
f rtchard: gentle and ilettruclive
Mam character Ad^am Sak,
an uptunding American bu»-
ncMOMin. meets up with Arture
K.o^, the town detective and
frustrated dicutor, who is M-
natic in his belief that the
world is "knee deep in so-
omy
The two men nse to power
after war and chaos suddenly
break out, promising to end a
food shortage that follows The
thortage worsens to the point
that even the San Diego zoo is
devoured, and Salt must resort
suluiiun
energy that intensifies the
frightening and psychotic
nature of his character
The play is long, 2»a hours,
but the energy of the acton, a
few enjoyable sei^i, awl some
really cleve scenes nuke it very
fast paced With obviously
limited budget and facilities,
director Campbell, and ta^
lented aetors have made Sah
into a highly sucoaasful pto^
duction
— Mary Para lieu
• • •
^ajt, piay^e ey Miehaei Pn-
'f^ Asian- A mem an Hear
'm- ^ the East- West Piay-
. house, is a multi-media pro-
duction that deals |ikrceptivcl\
and delightfully with racial
prejudice, especially that uhich
has been perpetrated upon
Asians The play is a ratfcshm^
piece of entertainment because
ji presents its subject obfcci
ivety, without bitterness
r/i< Asian American Hear
inffs is dialogue,, comeds
dance, drama, even simulated
tcleviston and music (mostK
excellent, some of which ua^
contributed by Paul t'httiara
Assl. Professor of Music at
UCLA). The piece is in a ca-
baret formal. teUing its stor\
and making its statements
through short- scenes or vig-
nettes written, directej[ and
staged by different members of
the 3 1 -person ensemble aivd
other contributors.
Some of the vignettes arc
hilarious, like "I'm Wong,:
which abound in delightful
confusion and well-placed
puns. Although some of thc
show's humor seems Xq ap
proach bitterness, it is deftK
kept within the realm ol
healthy satire
At less comic moments, as in
"Dora and the Counttler," the
pointlessness and presumptu-
ouaaait of racism is examined
Dora is an ''A** student leaviag
high school She wants to be a
doctor, but her counselor ad-
vises her to help allevmte the
shortage of legal secretaries
Dora, after aH, is Oriental
Later, we meet the "Phili-
pmo Janitor:** a fully trained
physician, dancing with his
mop. wistfully contemplates
how siioaaHful he'd be back in
the Philippines, lecause he in'
Philipino, however, he is not
suited to practice nKdicine in
the U.S.
Tht ,9/kom daaai with
••yellow- aad a reiteration of "1
am Asian- American, do you
hear me*^ " What this number
lacks in originality it makes up
for in integrity The Asian
Iran Haarin^f nini lill
and Gould play Caan
Gould as well as the best
numics in the business, but
don't count on tn-dimensioned
characterizations Caan and
atpacially Gould are believable
ai goofs only because they are
fOOfy themselves
Caine and Diane Keaton are
just competent as the lazy Mr.
Rich and the energetically
idealistic Miss Poor Veterans
^ack Gilford, Carol Kane, tert
Remson and Charles ^ Durning
add interest, when allowed to,
in this overly long comedy
Laszlo Kovacs* wonderfully
suiuble cinematography. The-
oni V. Aldredge's magnificent
costumes, and Harry Horner's
very able production desiga are
a few honeyed bites in a mo-
tion picture gone tour.
Rydelfs choreography of the
supposedly funny song and
dance sequences are woefully
inadequate Some old footage
of Chaplin, Laurel and Hardy
and Harold Lloyd could has^e
taught the new hack old tricks.
The climactic sequence involv-
ing blowing up iu.kaDk vahit
and detaining an opera's final
curtain is amusing, if over-
long. But the longevity of this
epuK>de provokes boredom, not
nail-biting, and stretches the
film's plausibility to birakiag
point.
In short. Harrv and Waker
coUapaai at the climax: a fatal
blow to any situation comedy
It opesi tomorrow at
selected theaters.
On Campus
A fallen
By Catliy Seipp
The 1 heater Arts Depart-
ment's Look Homeward An-
ffel, an adaptation by Itetti
Fnngs xd Thomas Wolfe's
-novel; is a sincere but plod-
ding production, with a fine
set by Don C rabs and weak
performances by mo>t of the
cast -
The play takes -place in
and around a Morth-Caro-
lina boarding bourse which
IS orned and run by the
<jant family The bickering
Gants and their lodgers and
visitors are juicy actors'
roles, but the majority of
the caat seem unable to han-
dle their parts: most of the
performances-are listless and
flat. ^
^ "There is one exception to
this, however. W.O Gant,
the father of the famil)^ and
self-described bastartf, rT^
given "a strong portrayal by
Patrick Quinn. the only be-
lievable cast member Quinn '"
plays Gant as the ■fallen
Titan" he is, and steals every
scene he is in
Gabnelle de Cuir is uncer-
tain in her role as Eliza
Ciant, and she plays her as
such a fragile and helpless
woman that she is implausi-
ble as a dominating mother.
Patrick McGuire as the con-
sumptive Ben Gant only
ce«es to life in his death
scene
Lorna Brittan is suitably
ladylike as Laura James, the
••pWer-woman" boarder who
falls in love with Eui
August 22.
— -M«rk Palmui
Gant. the seventeen-year-old
baby of the family who, like
John-Boy Walton, writes
and wants to go to college
But Randy Johnson is m€nt
silly than sensitive as
Eugene, and it is hard to see
what l^ura sees in him
John Cauble's direction is
competent but too slow-
moving and tired This pro-
duction IS net terribly
exiting, but at least it can be
taken s^iously
• • ^
Take Me Alona a
musical version oi Eugene
O NeilTs Ah Wiliierness, wdl
tie presented by the Theater
Arts Department July 29-
August I in the Ralph Freud
m m m
The UCLA Summer
Opera Workshop will give
two paderaances today in
HalL at noon
tpm. Scenes from a
variety of works will be
presented The University
Summer Chorus will per-
form baroque and folk
music July 29 in the Scho-
i iulf thiaiLi
noon Both music ewanls aia
free
r
f
The best, the most unusual, the
most unique acts needed for "The
Gong Show", a new nationally
televised series.
Such as: Acrobats. Jugglers, Tap fJancers,
Puppeteers, Mimes, Stilt-Walkers, Dog Acts,
Mimics. Harmonica Acts, Washboard arid Saw
t Players, impressionists, Bell-Ringer». Sword
Swallowers, Fire Eaters and What Have You.
Amateurs or Professionals, Call
/ Chuck Barris Productions
(213) 46&-9153
tired of yestvrday'^i tiair?
irlAll?-T©DAy
For what's hupp^ning now
styling for mon and women
ttarry Redding*g Jhirmack products
For appointment call
tuas. thru sat.
3.00 - OFF first haircut
wffh thfs ad
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(/
^•ftj!**"**'
A SocialisT Labor Party Statement
How Should We Celebrate the Bicentenniel?
r
Westwood Park
Above all else, however, the revolution
needed today requires the organization of
the social power w hich has grown more than
any other over the past 200 years —
economic power. During the last two
centuries, Aitiericans have built an econ-
omic machine that can Anally provide the
basis for abundance for all. "tiven more
important, that industrial machine has put
economic power potentially in the hands of
the majority of people. For the first time in
history, the majority of people, the working
class, can wield economic control over the
forces of production, if organized industri-
ally. Economic domination by either an
individual monarch or a small class is no
iorfger necessary or tolerai^Ie.
Economic freedom and democracy wiU
be integral parts of the next American
revolution, the one that will build socialism
^n America. They will be principal compo-
"TTents of the socialist government organized
to suit modern society — a government
based on industrial constituencies, demo-
cracy on ihe job, social ownership and
control pt the means of production, produc-
tion for use inifead ^f profit. ^^
Two hundred years after our first revo-
lution, then, we are confronted with the
same task: overthrowing an oppressive
social order and building a new society.
To accomplish this will require the most
organized and conscious revolutionary
movement in history. It means prganizing
all working people In America into a single
jiocralist industrial union movement, a
movement that takes the shape of the
industrial economy itself
Through such a union movement, work-
ers can mobilize their latent economic
.power to fight capitalist exploitation more
effectively, and ultimately assume direct
control and management of the nation^s
economy. Through such a rank-and-file
movement of producers, social ownership
and democratic control can finally be
brought to the most basic social activity.
At the same time we must organize
politically, to contest the politicians com-
.mitted to continuing capitalism, to educate
for the need for socialist change, and to
openly and painstakingly gather our forces
in as peaceful a manner as possible.
There can be no better way to celebrate
the anniversary of the first American
revolution than by tackhng the revolution-
ary demands of our own time, and using all
efforts as our ancestors did to continue the
fight for freedom and build a new society
suited to the conditions of our time.
How many Americans alive today
would have supported the revolution of
1776?
Do the American people still have the
revolutionary right to change their form
of government?
When is a revolution noMtary?
Few if any of the bicentennial cele-
brations now under way ^11 raise such
questions. They are more intent on
merchandising our history and glonfying
the past than on applying the lessons of a
revolutionary heritage to the social crises
gripping the United States on its 200th
anniversary.
But if the bicentennial is going to be
anything more than a hoflow exercise in
rhetoric and propaganda, these are the
kinds of questions that should shape its
directions.
in a nation with a strong tradition of
democratic revolution, there are too few
Americans who really understand what a
revolution is. For too many it conjures up
only a frightening picture of anarchy and
violence, misconceptions that are readily
nourished by the capitalist interests that
dominate the media. For others, revolu-
tions are historic events in the dim past of
little current relevance.
But revolutions are neither specters to
be feared nor artifacts to be studied as
ancient history Rather they are the way
oppressed classes change society in times
very Inuch like our own. «•
In the final analysis, revolutions bring
progressive and necessary social change
which* can neither be avoided nor sup-
pressed. They jcomc whenever social
conditions burst the confines of political
and economic institutioris handed down
from earlier historical periods, and force
oppressed people to replace outmoded
institutions with new ones better suited to
^thcir needs and conditions. In the process,
an exploited ^leople overthrow the gov-
ernment and domination' of a ruling class
no longer fit to rule society.
In 1776, Americans took up arms
against tlie domination of foreign power,
a tyrannical monarchy. They opposed a
political, economic and military des-
potism in order to secure political free-
doms, economic self-defermination, and
control of their own affairs. They re-
placed a feudal monarchy with a re-
publican form of government more suited
to their needs, and more compatible with
social progress. ~*
But the American revolution of I776_-
did not mark the end of history. In the"
two centuries that have passed, the social
system founded then has grown and
decayed. In fact today, in many parts of
the world it is the United States that is
viewed as the oppressive foreign power. It
is people in other nations who write
declarations of independence, take up
arms and fight to rid their countries of
U.S. domination.
At home, the majority of the Ameri-
can people, too, face an oppressive system
even more powerful than the one their
ancestors fought in 1776. They confront
the domination of a small capitalist class
which exercises political power through
two indistinguishable parties, which owns
most of the property and controls most of
the weahh, and which thrives on the
labor of the working majority.
Under the domination of this small
ruling class, political freedoms are being
eroded; the power of monopolies and
government bureaucracy grows; militari-
zation, economic exploitation and slow
environmenCid suicide intensify daily. The
democratic principles this country once
prided itself on, though never extended to
the economic sphere^ are less and less
1 lift.
If democracy means control of society
by the marjority of the peopje, then
democracy does not exist in America.
The tyranny of an Enghsh aristocracy
which ruled through a king has been
replaced by the tyranny of a small
capitalist class which rules through its
political servants.
Even more than the Americans of 1776
needed to win control of the thirteen
colonies '*owned" by the English aris-
tocracy, the American people today need
to win control of the social economy
••owned*' by a small handful of private
owners. The capitalist ecdnoniy and the
goverjnment that serves it must be over-
thrown and replaced. And just as^n 1776,
taking control of the means of life re-
quires organizing for revolutionary
change.
Every revolution means getting rid of
the i[5Td order arid buUding the new. One
of the most progressive aspects of the
1776 revolution was That the revo^i-
Honists ondefisrood this truism. They did^
what they could to build machinery that
would allow the people to reconstruct
their government when changing social
conditions demanded it, as they knew
they inevitably would_ in: time. \ ""^
Some of the democratic weapons they
forged in that first American revohitipn
and incorporated into the nation*s basic
Imt— the right of free speech, free press,
free assembly, the right to a free ballot,
the right to amend the Constitution —
were intended to make that possiblc^ ^
That these same rights are under grow-
ing attack by the very government which
is supposed to protect them is itself an
indication of how reactionary that gov-
ernment has become, of how little it
resembles the revolutionaries who
founded it, and how much it resembles
the tyranny they overthrew
Vote for the Socialist Labor Party Ticket
- JUL£S LEVIN for PRESIDENT
CONNIE BLOMEN for VICE PRESIDENT
The SLP program calls for a socialist
democracy based on collective ownership
and rank-and-file control of the economy. It
calls for workers to organize politically and
economically to replace capiulism with a
new socialist society.
SLP Campaign 76
P.O. Box 10018, Palo Alto, CA 94304
a Send me more about the SLP campaign
a I want to volunteer for SLP campaign
., work.
a Send me a free copy of the SLPs official
journal, the Weekly People.
1^*™
Address .
City Sutc Zip .
FREE STUDY CLASS
EVERY TUESDAY AT 7:30 PM
215 W. 5th ST.. RM. 1008
DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES
FREE SPEAKERS FOR GROUPS
WRITE SOCIALIST LABOR PARTY
f O BUX3;45 LA PULNTE,CAL 91744
.i'-i.
new atmosphere to Village
By Sieve Fialcy
DB Sports Writer
Wettwaai Park and |lecrea-
tion Center brinp to thii
community probably tome-
thing It has never had
Wettwood Village has al-
ways boasted about being the
home of the UCLA Bruins.
Movies, shops and restaurants
mmct people from all over
Southern California. Ilow the
village has tt*s very own park
and recreation center.
With its dedication cere-
monies performed over three
oiofUhs ago the park m on its
way to becoming one of Los
Angeles' most popular
-We feel the park offers a
variety of activities not
only for the UCLA students,
but we will have clasaea and
programs for senior citizens
and children as small as three
years old/* s^ays recreation
director Robert Tanowitz
Tanowit/ has been with the
department for more than 10
years He was a recreation
assistant at Robertson Recre-
ation Center before coming to
Westwood Park At Robertson
he was mstrunurntal in^ devel-
oping many programs At
Westwood ^irk he feels he #ill
be able to incorporate his own
' ideas ioio the programs.
Although Tanowitz realizes
UCLA students have enough
. to think about at school, he
feels the park can offer every-
one in the vilUge'a chance to
"get away"
"People can come to rhc
park for lunch or just relax
under one of our 534 trees,""
said tanowitz '•The summer is
_the perfca time for students to
"' mt.rod uce themselves to our
facihties."
Westwooid Par^ has basket-
ball and tennit courts open to
the public This park is dif-
ferent from many pthcr parks
because >t has a sand rnliryboH
court.
Recreation aaststanis Mary
Kay Smith, Mane Bordonaro
and Armando Avalos give
Westwood Park balance They
tpecmlize in many forms of
recreation and are able to
leach an assortment of donet.
"For a small fee a person
can learn nruiny new hobbies^
Slates Smith "We teach arts
and crafts, begimiiii£ lennit
plUi^t
p There!§a 'v]
: differencen! i
llMil CiMMt
UvrsM l«l«t «rff •
"B^w VBCvV^RBB •BC ^
DAT
LSAT
6RE
AT6SB
OCAT
mrr
FLEX
NATL MED BOS
MT-MIT
^^
rttrmm*
we even have a slim aad
trim ciMt.**
Westwood Park also has a
day camp for children from
Afn 3 through 12 Dog owners
«•• get otedience training for
their amnak. The recreation
center alio oOrn special rap
group teisions for teens and
aduhs.
**Right now we are conduct-
ing a summer volleyball
league,- said Tanowitz **The
kague IS open to both men
and women of all ages. In the
fall we Will begin our basket
ball league and add other
claaaes to oor already full prcv
gram.**
Tanowitz and his staff will
probably be a lot botier than
they are now, if Phase II is
>
f
carried out in 2 to 3 yearf at
promised by the City al Loa
Aofrles Under this ph^isc the f
park It to be expanded This |
cipanaioo wMI include six
K ontmurd on Page 7)
i-J
^:4
TISHA B'AV
*.-.%
WORKSHOP
Wednesday, July 28th 5:30
Workshop to study the themw «nd tradition* of the
holiday of.T.sha B Av..(n.nth-dBy of Av) wh.cti ma?ks
»»»^«truction of the First Temple m Jerusalem by
the Romans in 70 CE,
■^ DjKwER sfeRVED _ ""
iMrn-with us through this workshop in preparation for
Wednesday, August 4th 7:30pm
which is tisha b'av
Jgin us for this apa^al and significant progiaxa:^-
Hillel 900 Hilgard 474-1531 - " -
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agents for College Student Insurance Service
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THE HEATHEN RAGE?
Psahns 2 and Acts 4:25
IF TMOU TURN AWAY THY FOOT FROM THi SAaOATH FROM
OOWIK8 THY F1^ASUR€ OM MY HOLY DAY; ANO CALL TMC SAO-
•ATM A DELIGHT. THC HOLY OF THE LORD. HONORABLE ANO
•HALT HONOR HIM. NOT OOMO TNME OWN WAYS. NOR FIN
DING THINE OWN RLEABURC. NOR SPEAKING THINE OWN
WORDS THEN SHALT THOU DELIGHT THYSELF IN THE LORD
AMD I WILL CAUSE THEE TO RIOC URQN THE HIGH PLACES OF
THE EARTH. ANO FEED THEE WITH THE HERITAGE OF JACOO
THY FATHER: FOR THE MOUTH OF THE LORD HATH SPOKEN U "
TM» PMMQ9 froiM laMah M: 13. 14; tiinim ..ould b« ••« H ^m m
^*TT*^ *'_^"I**'^"* ** ••••^ •^ ®^ AM^ihty Myt Hit W0r«^*
•mm 10 "OMIim Onimiim tw TH<
•IIRoMrOirw*
In
rMf« fl«M CwiaMw hMT God hM MMMO KN piwiilM M
iD-not
H ItiOY ■■■■■I nMUMft unto M«. mRH TIi» Lof^ %mi
I of this cMy of« lh« SaObMti D«y bMtl
*" **!?!lll ^' •"*"*"** ■*~*^ "^ "^^ •-« -^ "-• •»
, ^ ^ ^ ~ •^ "'^ — • "^f . ^ww moo piMooo, oio moo of
JuOMi. and mm >-k of Jofuoolom. onO •«§ cRy
t> THATTHfY
THAT THEY WOULD
THAT THEY UMDERSTOOO TMS.
THmm LATTER BMOT
of .
ofHN
ofOio
m^^^^^^ '- -• ^^^^^ CITY SHALL RCMAIN
^y^^ ^ CITY RNALL RCMAIN FORE VERf " TNoy
■■■^■* ■" •--'- tohoimrGoOAtoiiiMy'i
m loot o tMir yooro Ipi ipRo of
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■■^ "^^^ ^ •* •»^'« ••'^i" - •of »io ormy of
■^•* ~~::'"^^^
Mm op to Oio Klotof aoOytofi to RIbtoh looi^ lOM ««
^Tiiifcl I -- •wKlofof
491 RMtofi. TNOf HE PUT OUT THE EYES OP "*'""" ^
KINO OF RAaYLON OOUNO HRH m
TO •A0YLOM. AMD P|^ MM M PRIOON TILL THE DAY OP
DtATHT "^ "* "•^ ^
TMnli of too loot
mt]
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U % C>l««
p. 0. BOX 405. DECATUR. 6A. 30031
I
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lit
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Advertising saac* will mmt b0
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Baafd Imm inwMMaBlod aay ol Mia sar*
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sontad in this Issuo Any parson bo*
llovlng thfl an sdvortlssmont In this
MMM tflalaiss Mm Boord's policy on non*
<Mdcrlminatlon stalad liaroln sUmid
famiumcoM caaiplilNii ^ aiMlnf |p
Mm Muslnsss Monsgor. UCLA Dolly
•mm. 1 12 KarcldioM Ko«. 30t Woolwood
Ploxa. Las An^las. California 10024
W9r matttamcu srtMi haaslng dMcrimi
nation probloms. call UCLA Housing
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BCVMLV HNIs aMn's
traa MIrslylIng War aiora'lfifo call
tri-tEM Tims - Sat
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announcfntrts
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— i
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<■■! • (Ai
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1001 Gayiay Ava.. Wattwood
47t4MS1
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(10Jv27)
0 p.in.
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DISCOUNT PHOTO
FINISHING right
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luiCA rr 001 - Mk.
1^> 22 mm l5 Fu|lnon IoimSm sioaO
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n^^m
QUILTS OldandfMw
SACK PACK IMO pmrinor to Hiko Nia
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Trad wMk. WialMi. RiOiil 450-21M.
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SCIENCE
INSTRUMENT
BUILDER
EnpmH^ncmd m Mktli«d nMdw-
nk: In dMoign ond hMMdinB ol
sc«#nco fooMfcti tnoyumMnte
foqulrMd. Pooltlofi at central
inotrutiiMnt shop at UnU. of
Oro^on. PI— 00 oofid rooumo
or Inquiry to:
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, Sctonoa S«fvic«s,
Room 1 Sdonco 1
, Unhr. of Orvgoii
Eugom, Orogon 17408
503/6aS-4M4
(1ii7 2S)
27M.
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(212)
llf A 10)
NATURALIST far tummor Camp-
al
FAMTAmC
Olstrlbuto naar gas saving produat
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aflar Oial. "Sky's Mm LiMM . CMI Psad
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rts A 12)
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open mon-fti 8 30-4 30
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loopon
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11:00-5:00
Soturdoyt, Sundays
and Holldoyi
11:00-6.-00
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fwm f to 3 PM
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Imvc ypur ptsyers workiaf
fether**
''Ai lM8a*t risuprl in pro
said John Bekias,
UCLA NCAA MVF.
wlio was cut last week by El
Paso for teaoGiai reasons **Hc
lA AO loose, tlie same wsy he
was St UCLA "
This looseness is reflected in
j the fact Scales can pisy racket-
ball before the Loa Angeles
EASlch or Ik caa play golf on
"the morning before the NCAA
championship.
ScatCA* manner for s match
^i|asn*t chaofSd either in the
profaasAOnal ranks. He still
dresses relaxed for matches,
with an open shirt, simple pair
of ponts and usually tennis
shoes. On the bench, he has his
UCLA assasunt Andy Bana-
chowski on one side and his
chief Bruin scout Dick Scott
on the other side. He still usas
A statiAtician. Chris Talunas.
the cover girl on this month's
Voile vbaii Maf^azint kept the
stats, even though Scates cut
her IM month.
The winner of six NCAA""
titles in seven yaar^still gives
Ml players signals where to
terve the vollayhfil even
though it is more difficilh in
the pro ganne because teams do
swith beaches at the end of
game like in the college
faa». When a referee makes a
queslioMble caH Scales wUl
rise off of his scat and stroll to
midcourt to give his interpre-
tation of the play.
GM OS htnch
T|a (BBC big difiercnce for
Scates is the fact the El Paso
General Manager Wayne
Vandenburg siu at the end of
the bench Vandenburg likes to
yell at referees, opposing play-
ers and uncomplimcntar> fans
aad he has made it his policy
to back his players. 110 per-
cent.
At a recent match in San
Diego, the San Diego player-
coach, Rudv Suwara wAs **bad
-mouthing" several of the Sol
players since El Paso had lost
the first two. gsfloes. After an
El Paso player tried to make a
difficult save and missed. Su-
wara took the volleyball and
according Vandenburg. "deli-
berately threw it at his head.*
't)nc''El Paso playet-Ji^ent after
Suwasa, hm it was Vanden-
burg who fiaall> grabbed Su-
wara and 'leveled him ** It
took three of four players to
restrain him
*^r am always going to look
out for my players and a guy
like Suwara deserves what he
fsl,** said Vaadsnburg. who is
also a founder of the Inter-
national Track AASoetation
Contro venial call
With El Paso leading 11-10
ia the foarth game and serving
Tbr the match, a controversial
touch call on a spike was made
by the referee aginst the Sol.
Scates sat calmly accepting the
call, but Vandenburg was very
upset and kept yelling at the
referee. If El Paso had lost the
gaoK, it is likely Vandenburg
would have said a lot more to
the referee than he did after
the match.
While volleyball is con-
sidered a •'minor sport"
throughout Los Angeles, it is.
the **best game in town** in El
Paso The Sol lead the league
in paid attendance and their
fans are the noisiest in the
IVA. Volleyball is important
enough to El Paso that there is
road radio coverage Scates-^HjT
a post-game riidip show live to
El Paso after the match
One of the players Scales
got in his trades is former
UCLA All-American John
Zujac. He lii^as the first pick in
the draft by Phoenix, but
would not Sign. **! dacidad I
was going to hold out till Al
got me." said Zajac. "1 like the
pro fame, but I think fafolar
volleyball is better because of
the all-around skills involved **
In the pro game, the players
stay in the same positions
throughout the aMah. The pro
game is designed for specuilisis
and that is wh> Bekiaa believes
that he got cut "When ELPafo
made a budget cut after the
first 20 matches, 1 was cut 1 he
pro league was something I
wasn't used too. because I
think 1 am more of an all-
arpund player."
**! like to set. hit and bjotk
but the league is full ot spec-
ialists. Most of the rest of the
setters in the league are small
and wouldn't play -otherwise
There are people in the Isagiie
who speciali/e in hitting,
blocking, setting and passing
and It is tf>u^her fpr the all-
around pAaiKr.^ added He kins
The Los Angeles Stars calkd
Friday evening **A1 Scates
nighi*^ "wuh good reason It
seemed more like UCLA vol-
leyball night Over ten former
and present players were in
attendance, including AU-Am-
ericans fred Sturm and David
Olbright, plus Danny Freeman
and Gaorjgr Negrete 7 hey
came OMI to wi^ch the mm%x\
of coHsfiate cosching battle
the format of the pro game
and win.
After half the season. Scates
has. finally learned how to
utili/e his coaching talents to
advantage in the pro game He
IS using basically the same
offensive and defensive patterns
as at UCLA and it worked the
best of the season on Friday
night.
Scales said. "I told my play-
ers at the first meeting that it
we get into the playoffs we will
wtn the IVA champiunship and
1 still feel the same way.'*
After the win over Los An-
geles, Scates has aa ciaellefit
chance of becoming the first
coach m history to win college
and pro title5» in the sarue year
>
I
c
a
John Sciarra doing things differently in Canada
r i
<CoMtinued from Page 11)
excel. But still Sciarra has had
to malLe^somr a'djustmenu^
— ^The wideness^oPihe field is
super,** states Sciarra. ^^Btn the
3-down system takes some get-
ting tised to You--rcatty have
to get a lot done on fiTst
down.'*
" I t*f imponaat j^o^ esu btiitrx
running^ gpiSiie'ol^^^^ you're
isciiif second and long a lot
We didn't have that foing for
us against Saskatchewan last
weck.^
Since there are only three
downs. Sciarra is passmg more
than he ^did for the run ori-
ented UCLA Attack But
Sciaj^a doesrft seem to have
any problem as he completed
over 50 per cent o\~jrs%%t%
durmg the exhibition season.
~ ^1 do pasi more tliaiiH did
at UCLA, but the extra throw-
ing, has helped my parsing
game out a lot.**
Sciarra had somewhat of an
— advaritage over other
in~xamp. because he had the
opportumtjL^o play soifw NFL
football m the Clucago Bears
rookie camp before signing
with Columbia
**lhe Canadran athletes., are
extremely good overall" said
Sciarra **Some playe^^s dcmH
have as extensive a back
— ground or aren't as sound
fundamentally. They don*t
have the environment we have,
where kids have been throw-
ing a football
aroumi since he
six. Here they^^^itMt out- on a
pair ot -rcr^ skates kniKking a
hockey puck around " —
Ihe Canadian footb«ill sca-
soa usually runs through mid
that Scuirra will be returning
to 1 OS Angeles ar the time of
the annual irSC-UCLA Coli-
seum battle • -^^ _
^>clar^a believes that UCLA
will , have a strong team again
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HAiytT)
I
or hasebatt^ in I9?6 "and thinks thal^Teff-i
was five #r ^^^l^ankv^prih. iir Sieve Bukich
Will do a good fbb ot replacing
him: He still trys i(t tnllow
UCLA sp>)rts vkhilc in Canada
and will always be a fan of I os
Antteles. _
I? all goes well JojL Sciarra.
he could play in two champ-
ionship games rn the same
year Ihe Kose Bowj on Jan-
uary. I and the Canadian (irey
Cup championship game in
November.
iaat I laa ■•»
(90 Jy 27)
141 ^
141 4 19
i1.1S41 WiM»»oa»a# JA SSStS
fdaj^
i
\ Poor academic achievement
=Mr
1 —
eager Gavin Smith dismissed from UCLA
r*-
Gavin Smmi \ak»% his' rtot shot tor UCLA
Scates returns
^— i*
El Paso upsets in^. Stars
B> fVlichnel JSondheimer
i>B Sport!i Writer ,
When your team has lost
of its last 12 matches, it
unusual lor the coach to
II
IS
be
talkmg ftboul wmnmg the
championship
A relaxed and confident At
Scates iww predicting his El
Paso .Hiarcz Sol team of the
tfrtcrnatioha^ Vollcyljail Asso-
ciation (iVA) would win the
championship come September
il his team mikes the playoffs
The prediction came before
last Friday night's match
against the dctendinj? IVA
champion I.os Angeles Stars at
Redondo Beach High School
So what happened'^ Scales'
team went out and played its
t>est match of the season in up>
ictting the Surs, 12-2, 12-7, 7-
12. and 12-10
Earlier in the year. El Paso
( 10-16) was •?*^ aruJ leading the
F- astern division over Phoenix
arui 7 ueson Even though he
was in first place. Scates did
not think he had a champion-
ship sifuad. During -ttRT^rast
thrcr 3r5ekl»_tw, has made sever-
al trades and shifted his per
sonnel This changing of play-
ers caused the losing streak,
but now Scates his happy with
hts lineup
**l think out^ six starters are
equal to any other six in the
league now.** said Scates before
his team was preparing (o play
racketball at UC L A last Friday
afternoon. **7he key to our
winnmg is how well our team
can play together as a unit
The talent is there, but it is
difficult to win if you do not
(C ontinurd on Page 1$)
%> MicKael Sondheimer
DB Sports Hriter
Gavin Smith, given an ej
lent chaacc o\ starting at for-
ward on UCLA's 1976-77 bas
ketball team, has been dis-
missed trom the liniversity for
poor academic achievement.
Smith, who was temporarily
declared academically ineligible
first basketball p layer in, recent
menKiry to not complete his
four ycvi of basketball eligi-
bility bccausjr ol academic
reasons
"It IS really ironic that Gavin
rtment*! academic coun-
Jlources indioNC Smith was
given many chances to make
Lbe academic requuoKatt, but
dufing the spring quarter he
did not fulfill his contract with
the I)can in Letters Sl ScieiKe
ad was subsequently dismis.sQcl.
The 6-6. 200 pound former
AII-( n\ player from Van Nuys
High School, was a valuable
front-line substitute last year
He was expected to battle
Wilhcrt Olinde and Brett
Vroman for the third front-line
starting-spot with Marques
rumored to possibly be trans-
fering to either Nevada Las
Vegas, San Diego STate. or
most likely Hawaii Wherever
he decides to go, he will be
irieligible during the 1976-77
Co«M go pro
* One close frierui ol Smith's,
and aware of his academic
situation, said he would traaa-
fer to another four-year college
and then decide whether he
would play based on the pro-
fessional draft Smith's dMH
graduates in June, making him
Daily Bruin
would have this happen to
hiim." said Keith Kelley. Bruin
Assistant Athletic Director
"He finally had the chance to
play and failed the struggle
We would have expected him
to do well during the spring
quarter with the opportunity to
start m the fall."
**»•! surpriised^
Kelley indicated the athletic
department wa^ "not sur-
prised" at Smith's dismissal
because he has been in con-
stant aqifiemic troutJte~"dTiring
his three years ait UCLA.
** I here is no question thaT
Gavin has the meniar ability to
ma*t^irTt__yCLA, but he
simpK did not fulfill the mea-
^rurg^' ol making the grades
necessary to compete.'' sa^d
Kellc^u-Wh^ is ^4ie athletic
Johnson, and David Green-
wood.
Basketball rarity
Smith becomes a basketball
rarity at UCLA in more Ways-
.than one Durmg the last \i
years^ 97 per cent of the Bruin
varsity basketball players have
graduated with dggxces. ac-
jjordiag to Kelley. but Smith
will not have the opportunity
"We have had inci^dibie
success with our basketball
players graduaim|; and J can-
not remember a tHif where a
player Uke Smith has rtot made
tt through acad<^mfcalH Sid-"
rtcy Wicks had to- go to Junior
collejc liefore jie came into
UCLA, but thar^was a dif-
icrent type case." said Kelley
With still one year of college
eligibility remaining. Smith is
For Smith, it was a case of
selecting the right University in
term* of basketball, but the
wrong one academtcally He
pr o ha hty— rotf^rf have made^
academically at UCLA if he
woiild have gone to class, but
7t kas been said Smith put
basketball and, his sociif- 4ffe^
ahead of the classroom. Conse-
quently. Bruin has kctbvH fans
will no longer hear the familiar
^stKJortiavin shoot" at Pauley
Pavilion.
(li)»s
■lafHiiQ ^
starting for British Columbia ""
Sciarra flying high in Canada
By Bob Hebcr
9p«ns Writer
A famous Canadian airline
advertises. "Come up to Can-
ada." Former All-American
quarterback John Sciarra did
and so lar he's found the going
great
Sciarra is presently the sun-
ing quarterback for the British
( i>lumbui Lions o( the Cana-
dian Football League Scuirra
led the Lions to a 3-1 mark in
the exhibition season which
included a win over the Jmmm-
to Argonauts, who are led bv
former USC star Anthonv
Davis In that game. S i
sbowed the paaamg talents he
completing N of 17 pones tor
2 touchdowns and scampering
for another.
But in last wcck*s regular
saaggtt •fM«er apaiaat tlK Sas-
katchewan Roughnders, the
rookie quartertMick got a taste
of what it^ like to he a
veteran. Sciarra completed
only 3 of 13 paaaes with one
intercepted for a touchdown as
the Lions were cruiiiBd. 35-«
''It was a nightnruire of a
game." said Sciarra. **Every-
thiag had been goiiif so well
but we couldn't seem to di;
anything right (jamcs come
and go and Vm just glad we
got this of\t out of our svstem
sarlyi
After the initial loss, Sciarra
is facing an almost identical
situation to the one UCLA
faced after the 1973 season
opener
"We went down to play Ne-
braska and got blown out of
the stadium.^ continued Sciar-
rf. "But we still had a good
team and finished the season 9-
2 We have a good' team here
and I'm still pretty optimistic
about our chances**
. The Canadian style ol play
» almost tailor made for
Sciarra Its wider field < 57
vards as opposed to U.S.*s 50)
I hts— aHemrs r nm^riented
player like Saarta to really
|i onfinueo cm rage I5>
— Y
eligible for the NBA draft Pro „
scouts believe he has the
necessary talent and a te^m
might want to gamble on him
the later rounds Otherwise
Smith will play his last year of < '
college and thejn hopefully jo
pro
X
K Inside
today's
Bruin
Page 16
s
Women's
professional
Softball
-H.
Page 8
A stab
at
swashbuckfer
UCLA
Summer
Volume XCIX, NumberlO
University of California, Los
Fffklay, July 30, 197a
Lighiing Improved on campus
In prime mugging areas
By JodI TMltomy
-_4>a Sftaff Writer
The prime mugging areas on
ipus are being better illumi-
nated at night as one phase of
l_ieven-$tep program
The amsi, ^4»h4ch include
iafiss Steps, tile steps from
Hedr^ck Hall to the tennis
courts, and the area west of
Powell Library, were det€^
-B»ined^o be dangerousjiriien a
""year's list^xjf crimes were plot-
ted on a map of the campus"
— ^he areas where numerous
— comes were committed re-
ceivetF^rap prioruy for illu-
mination, as most of the.
cnjrnes were attrihut'ed to in-
adequate lighting, according to
_Jtenneth Leithold of the Cam-
pus Architects and Fngineers
Office
Leithold. the chief electrical
engineer, said this phase. (Step
2) of the program, also entails
remedying the situation by
iWtaHing new lii^ht fixtures or
replacing the old. incandescent
lights with mercury lightbulbs
which emit a brighter light.
Step 2, which is costing
$133,000 of state funds, is
about 75 per cent complete.
Uithold said Step 1 of the
^^~•'■ >
project was recently completed
St a cost of tl 00,000^ juid in-
volved better illumination in
"emergcncy-^sKSs. Impifoved
lighting north of Murphy Uall
was included in this phaw nf
the program
No sioney has been~"ippra5:
prisrttd -yet for steps^hree
through seven of the pro
which will improve lighting for
the entire campus "We re-
quested funds for Step 3 but
the Stale had no money
toHLeithoid
Student Body
President Meg McCormack
hopes tojemcdy that problem
She. is currently reorganizing
the Cawpss Safety Taik Force
for — xhis fall Among the
group s^LTiori ties will be to
ftad bur where hghting i^ most
led by students oo cimpus
**We Nave found out to some
^xtenjt where lighting is
That was a few ymmn back
The Chancellor ha^-«sk.ed us to
restudy the project and put it
in (for approval) again.**
leithold said
_ .^, needed,** McCormack jiaid gtv
^^'f !•• -4llg examples of the top of
Brum Walk, the south quad
near the chemistry building,
and the Sculpture Gjirdcns.
McC ormack added a more
formalized surVey of "Students
Restudying involves fi«t-.^,n ^c done, perhaps through
making a required survey of
tJK campu^ Leithoii exr
plained Requests for improved
lighting cannot be msde for
the campus as a wbole. In-
stead, if it IS found lights are
needed at one location, then
the cost and procedure at that
6ne particular location must be
determined. This is diffKult to
do. because~tiK traffic condi-
tions may vary, and li^ be-
cause there is not an adequate
ktiowledge o( where students
feel lights are most needed.
^
an ad 4n the Drndv Brum, as **lt
ts dilTicutt to produce an un-
pr^itfliced survey.**
Step 2 of the lighting project
will be completed by isassry
at the latest, probably earlier
Chan that. Leithhold said, add-
ing that an tmpjcovenrient on
, qlmpus can already be tees.
TIm remaining steps of the
program each involve one por-
tion of the campus with the
order of steps determined by
where the most mght trafHc la.
r.
^
'^^
ifc._^--
students' Store thefts down 60 per cent
,^''
Plainclothesmen cut shoplifting
ay Lomk Watanabe
Da Stair Writer
^lifting is down from last year at the
Studenu* Slore. according to Osry Mould.
opcratKMH OMasav for store security
Inventory loaasi are nom leas than two per
cent of the toul merckaadiae Mould said,
com|israd'4o 5.3 ^er cent (or S404 000) last
MouM aunbuted this reduction in part to
■ introdueiiBa of studat plainclothes se-
Two or three peraons on the averaae are
apprelMidad aaeh week compared to at least
twice thst nujBlxr al the begiiining of tkt
propsm Isn fall, he said. Lsat Fridsy. three
persons s«ae srresied, Moold nid.
The Uiint paiiciitaae sf lip alfs is from
employMS** Mould ssid. Lsaaci hy employe
are mci asoasaarily thefts heGSsae some
COOK frofli sanplsciag itcaa.
MaaM isid. however, srtsal Ikefts by em-
pAayses sre **harder to detect" thsn shoplifting
because employees fake selling items to. a
partner The nderchsadaf. saaM Hko be taken
out because the psftaer hsa a wtim isceipt, he
SHupiifigii ire cfiHrrontafl 5y iM ;nAin
Mould said. If the thief it a student then he or
she can sign a coiifcsiion which resulu ta
disciplinary action by the dean q( aiidr;itp,
Byron Atkinson The alternative is arreat and
the filing of criminal charges, he said.
The hours from 10 am to 2 pm are the pruae
tinMi for shophfting, Moald enplsiasd. The
people hired for the ascarity force sre *dif-
ferem ** according to Maaid **You haw lo he
really offended by steshi^*' he sddsd. He
explained dunng the interview sad tnuniag
pcruKt one could tell if s sew ascarity maa
igibwed' interett in his job.
Students hired m§ phaasla^as iscurity esm
hstwsen S2 70 sad S3 12 ps# haar« MmM ssid.
Mould ssid there wss '*so dooai^ the
^ogrsm was worth its SIO;0M coat per yesr
bscauie it has saved shout
Daa Ssdler« ASUCLA
the drop in invealory
However, he wss Isss o^iaMSiic
program*! success.
He ssid it wss difficuit to judae dK
objectively because other factors
involved in the decresae. He' oiisd
decresse in the number of shoplifters mud
chsnges in
-BE
m
security after thsy
the
-4- — -
gowg-^g^w
, I
u..
J
1
^A
1
Wed. Aug. 4
TISHA B'AV
Tisha B'Av (ninth day of Av) marks the destruction' of
the First Temple in Jerusalem by the Babylonians in
566 BCE and the Second Temple by the Romans in
70 CE
Join us for this special and significant program
^t30 pm - Program & Services
Hillel, 900 Hilgard, 474-1531
I
r
^TT-
. -, '•>
#4*-
■***-
■ 'H
a gradual* ttudant. ar* part of llva \}CLA
tuaiad laapt for uaa In postal oparatlons
U^ Postal Service pays for research
Hydrogen TiTeled jeep developed
dcnl project The students won
Staff Hrilcr fint prize in the Urban Vehtdc
of five UCLA stu- Design Competnion for a
profestors are rc^_ •Xirernhn reconverte4 to rmr ort
searching the feasibility of hvdrogcp
hydrofcn fueled leeps for^mr^ — €nginering Professor Wil-
Van Vorst and Alan Z.
f^.
in poilrt operations Fundir^
for the research has been pro-
vided by the U S Portal^ Ser-
vice throuth i one year l cc^
tract of approxtmaieK 150.000
UCLA was c4)o§en for fhe
research becaiise of a prografn
^»cgu^ here in l^^ as a stu-
liam
L llman are the project leaders
for -IJK^ research whic »^ no^
Carley, and KarT^aultr.
Wofkf's Wgcit
The Postal Service if inter-
ested in these alternate fuel
sources because -they have the
workrs_Jarge5T motor vehicle
fleet and over 10 -peT-eent of
their bud^t is for transpor-"
tatif^ri. arTording to Mike Mc-
L
Foir
aimed ^at reconversion of ^— 4ftanus. Public Information
P(^Ul jeep 4o^ run on hydro-
gen. The graduate students
working on the project are
Barharn Ghoff amain, Carl Mc-
ummer
\9
B rum
Ffidiy, July aib, 1976
^JC sr^z *•
axcapt duringiiolidays and
•nation panods by the ASUCLA
X§^^0tm^motKi Plaza Los Anjaiai. California
Pf •*• ASUCLA Communications Board
mwm Loa i^wpaiai Poat Office
Alice Short
Frank Stallworth
Geoff Ouinn
'- 1
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
i-^t ^ if^ your ppiaonai aHact home We are ipacialists m mterna-
tKX^i DacftaQKtg and shipping. We atso sell appliances for 220 volts
PACIFIC-KING ^^'^ ^•^ •^ »« ^^ A-^*^ ^7
I
l
Summer Sale
Men's Wear
*•
^
i
Food Sl
S.W Delicatessen
Open 6 AM Hi U PM Daih
$1.99
Sport Shirts
•nany 50^c off
^ro*^ $7
Jeans
1/2 off
from $6
DA1L\ SrCClAL
DINNLRS
Officrr -tff— Los^
Of f ici
The advantages of hydrogen^
are it's pollution free, has higlT'st^
efficiency and high fuel econ-
omy "Hydrogen appears to be
significant l> more efficient
than gasoline in the number of
miles per unit of energy." said
Alan Z Ullman, Co-Principal
Investigator of the project
r llman estimated hydrogen to
be 50 per cent more efficient
than gasoline.
Ullman explained however
"a 20 per cent or 30 per cent
los^ in power," oecurs with
hydrogen.
Backfire
The research team is pre-
sently making modifications on
the iccp to combat the ten-
dency of hydrogen to backfire.
Ullman explained significant
damage to the jeep had re-
sulted from this problem '
Since liquid hydrogen must
be kept at low temperatures, a
great deal of insulation for the
hydrogen tank is necessary
The research team is working
to eliminate this larfe bulky
tank
In terms of economic feasi-
bility. "A big problem is the
production and distnbution of
hydrogen," according to Van
Vorst Hydrogen can be pro-
duced by three different me-
thods. Two of them, .utilizing
natural gts or cost, ^re diffi-
cult because of diminishing
The only other method, in-
volving electrolyiM cf water,
isn't completelv pLifgBHi.
possibly making the prqduc-
ti«a«tf hydrogen on a larfe
proMcn.
I II
-ftC
l«92t
Dr., ^
V1i. C
men s wear
wen < we^r
V. ■• J > «« » y o V
r%VK
AOOd
4/7 4/i
"Hydrofen is inherently
safe.** said Ullman. ''If the unk
rtiMid rupture, in pgiMipte it
coyld Ignite " Howrvct Hyiiro-
fsen fM IS very liflK. igaii to
nse quickly^ aiid wouldn^ coK
In as accident last worn-
ji^
Souiville develops minds, bodies
UCLA ilumni aid non-profit program
ly Frank WiMv
wSii
Staff
Souiville. a non-profit
ance program set up and aided
by several UCLA alumm, cur-
rently offers collegiate scho-
larshtpt aad year-round career
advice to uiidqpnvikfDd teens
The program, formed six
years afo by UCLA alumnus
and former Bruin basketball
star Willie Nauk, was designed
to ''develop the minds and
bodies of teens in the Greater
Laa Angeles area," accordiag
to Gas White, Souiville vice
president in char^ of heakli
irs.
According to Nauls, the pro-
deah primarily with
Ls at Its inception since its
main focus was Watts How-
ever.-Nauls explained. '*One of
our maia pinlaaaphies is to
^ing people together from all
ethnic backgrounds.**
-.1'
■aakaikaH ciwinieting
One of Soufville's major ef-
foils has been us camp funda-
mental program, which last
year gave approximat^y two
thousand boys fr^m 15-18
years^old'a chance to receive
basket ^I counseling from such
former UCLA basket haJLMars
as Bill WaltofL_Xarcem Abdul
Jabaar and Gail Goodrich
For the-4ast four years, the
Iqaaip JMi held at Claremont
Men's I _ College and offered
three one- week sessions during
the summer. Approximately 250
were divided into groups
of $-\0 boys, and lived with
their assigned coach, according
to Willie Nauls. .
This year, however, the -sum-
mer sessions have beef} held on
Wednesdays and Saturday~anH
"Silndl)' mornings at Hoiiy-
wood High School, with the
Cooperation of the Los Angeles
City School District.
Boys chosen for thie basket-
ball program are recommended
by a network of coaches from
junior and senior high schcktls
mnd recreation parks through-
out Los Angelet.
HeaMMave and survival
"Our emphasis with athletics
in Souiville is to get their (the
participant's) attention and
then help them with health
care and help wilii auryiyaiy**
Gus White Mud. ^ ' "
These changes in the camp
fundamenul program have al-
lowed SoulvUle to expand lU
ridav,
30th
I a romantic comedy ■
I
comedy
by William Glatsar
STUDENT RUSH $3
I
7072
fn.
Film Series^ ^
services to 5000 boys from the
previous 2000 '*We wanted to
reach more kids," Nauls ex-
plained
The scholarship program,
which was esubliihed last
August by UCLA graduate
and present developer of high
rise construction, Sam Gilbert,
will have granted' eight to ten
college scholarships in athletics
and other areas to interested
teens by September. Nauls
Nauls cited UCLA alumm
Sidney Wicks, Curtis Rowc^
Roy Hamilton and Marques
Johnson as former participants
m these programs
White added "We*ver done
a lot of thinking and planninpj
about setting up a program for
girls, but It IS not definite
Whether it will be athletic or
not"
White, who IS also an aatoci-
ate professor of surgery and
the director of biomechanics
research at Yale University,
teams with UCLA Medical
students in giving free physical
examinations to Souiville par-
ticipants. '^'^'- -
Funding tor tllc__Soulville
Foundation is attained through
solicitation drives every year
:>
grossed about $200,000 last
year
Presently, on Soulville's
Board of Directors are former
Rams player Rosie Gn^f.
Nauls. WhiU, AAM Records
Jerry Moat and Gil Fnesen.
Youth services director Joe
CUrke. Ode Records* Lou Ad-
ler, CPA David Bamen, Sam
Gilbert. San Diego Chargers
owner Eugene Klein. Charles
E. E>rew Medical School's Ass-
istant Director Dr Myrtle U.
Caton. Marty Friedman and
Beverly Hills Federal Los Ass-
ocuition's Preston N, Silbaugh
UCLA alumm
Nauls said of Soulville's vol-
unteer staff of about 50. 50 per
cent arc UCLA alumni
Though the program has
received the endorsement of
political figures such as Mayor
Thomas Bradley. White said.
"Souiville IS concentrated on
the development of individual
human potential without a lot
o\ attention to political as.t
pects Most people have utili-
tarian mtcr^ts and this organ*^
t hose
FIZZA
NOW m^
>000 (C
GR 8-0123
Opmn 7 Days
11 AkI to2 AM
Botwaan Barnngton and Bundy
1 1813 Wilshirv Blvd. 478-0123
m
I /at ion embodie5f a lot
attitudes"
ot
and pro(e>sional-bcnefit gamef.
According to Nauls, Souiville
XL
IL BAMBINO
(Th€ Perfect Lunch)
$1.95
A cup ol homemade soup or a
A gU&s ot AA^ne or coHae
S sandwichon a h^^ Italian roll, your choice od hot meat-
balL sausage pepper, sabmi & c
mushrooms, qnll^d pn
^ \ uxJiz\zix
Served dailv at
X
^ ;
i4.^ni
Ufa I
laarrTTr \ >n«v-A* 1 1 viMiiiook
477 2^1
— ^TMKTFOOP
Authentic Food of Thailand
Phorm
39t-8820
11 700 National BivO
Los Ang««MaQQ^
This IS the place tor Rib LoVmru!
By fBf^Uie Best Rlbswe^/e tried in LA
Hm9M %.Mmnunm
COMPLETE DINNERS
Casual Dining
$2.75
'^.
H ABRY'a OPEN PIT BBQ
1432 CMCSCENT HEIGHTS a1 SUNaET STRIP
10 Mihues Down Sunset Blvd to
Laural Canyon Turn Right And Vou r§ Thmrm
Summer Sailing Program
sponsored by the UCOTBailing Ciub^^
Ragistration for^tMna: Thursday. Aug Sfhtn Pauley (S
€nt ranee. -€iate 4) from 12-2 pm and again in^KefCkhoft
Hail 400 oh Friday: Aug 6th from IVf^m The cost i^
$25 00 and classes start Aug 7th and last 6 weeics
Children Sailing Claaaes: Mon-Thurs 93(1-1:00 possible
weekend clases. if interest $25 00
Open House: Sat Aug 7th. 100-6:00 pm. Every t>ody
welcome ^ '
Instructors and Assistants: Call Jacqi at 825-3171 or
479-9664
Information: Sailing Club Office 825-3 r71. Doci( 823-
9978. or URA Office 825-3703
>
U.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25 .
Ifl VM rW9i PaaMvi,
LAW Of THE LOMO
In ir^E waMi TfM AlRNaavy IMS fftrowi
lotioiaya
whaM IM Wka a tfvtf pAaiilaa ay
ma wthamatmtr h§
aUThammta^tod
Oayaa^ wa winii o* Via
Hm Kina« ^1
Tha God ol Tlw
aiTlia
OaaalTlia
and nAan hama nam iiMclad God's
i«**000 IS THE
OOVEHMOII AMOfiQ THE HATIONS.
"AMD THOU SHALT TEACH THEMI (God's l.awa) DH.IOENTL V UNTO
THY CMNJMIEN. AMD SHALT TALK Of THEMI WHEN THOU
SfTTEST IN THME HOUSE. AND WHEN THOU WALKEST ev THE
WAV. AMD WHEN THOU LIEST DOWN, AMD WHEN THOU NISEST
UP - THAT IT aUV GO WELL WITH THEE. AMD WTTM THY
ac7
-niVHAT AME ^HE COMaCOUENCES Of THE RAGE Of THOSE
WHO DO NOT BELIEVE IN THE GOO Of THE MOLE? H^ THAT
SHTETH IN THE HEAVENS SHALL LAUGH. THE LONO SHALL
HAVE THEM IN DERISION; THEN SHALL HE SPEAK UNTO THEM IN
HIS WRATH. AND VEX THEM IN HM SOME DISPLEASi
2:4. S. GOO 'tIAKETH THE JUDGES fOOLS -
CONTEMPT UPON PRINCM -.* Ja» 12:17. 21 AGAIN GOD
•^WMNGETH THE PRINCES Of THE EARTH TO NOTHING HE
MAKETH THE JUDGES Of THE EARTH AS VAMmrt '
In Oiar day and aiwiiaapn hm no* God lauflnd at hold m Sirtslin.
■polun In Hto wraNi, and paMtad oanlaaip« upon many a king, ptinoa
and ndar? WHataaaal ail MMCaar liidSlaaw at llMaMa;INalaiilfaliir
aRd HHM' Of oofaiany* amaaoam, ano avnon 8iRoa« pfo^H onoa ^w ^aa
aaNn anta naw ooma ana ponoi in wnaaa wwnanwna nv^v li^ m^^m ^
Una naUoiia ai Una aatw^ aidiidaig ow own. nad lo wnaa ^aa aano'^iip
Of Tiw Alndpnvy s wnaah ana inaignaaon •—• noo aiawa aawa* a numooc
^pOO. mH^^^ w9 VvW^WV «WWW9 V^^MH. ^^v^^WWMV V^W vv^^^^. VSi^v Wv ^^p^^
AhoS who ragad nifiiil Go#t Lawa: "1 HAVE NOT TROUDLED
laRAEL; RUT THOU. AHID THY f ATHER-S HOUSE. IN THAT YE
HAVE fORSAKEN THE CORNHAMDaKNTS Of GOD " lal KMigi
lata
"WUrr THE WICKED ANE LIKE THE TROUDtEO SEA. WHEN rr
CANNOT REST. WHOSE WATERS CAST UP
MO PEACE SATTH m^ MOM TO THE
•a
TAKE TNOU AWAY fNOM ME THE NOME OP THV gOMMS PON I
Of THY VIOLS. OUT LET
tt ^mflw^^d
4)
IWI
f
I
I
<
mi
Marti
TOPANGA CENTER
FOR HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
Drop- In EnoOMfWy Group Program
Salt B pm at 10S40 Sta Mpaipp Bl M
Brochurat 455-1342
$4«Nhad
Campus Events
TYPEWRITER CITY
478-7282 WESTWOOD
N«wPortabt««
Smith-Corona El«c.
Smith-Corona Aut.
479-7282
139*
169
**•*•••
• • * • • « * # ♦ *
§6
• ••••••*•
Olivetti LexiKon 82
Changeable Type Bail
259
95
• A****************************-**
N«W"Prlnting C«ic.
SALES and REPAIRS
Bank Amcrlcard 1089 Gayl«y Av«. Mastar Charga
—Tifcf Mt AlMif. musical v9rt»aa 9I
OHiiM'i All WNimH wiii bf prttaaM fey
llw DipartHunt of Thsaltf Arts 8 30 pm.
laai|M aai laaiirrow ind 7 30 pm August
1 flaip^ Frtud Playhoutt Uac9om»n HaN
SI (Of ttudwu. S3 tor ottters tickets
awailaMt H KaicMialf Central Ticket Office
sad Mutual Agencits
I PfHia. will tram you
to invest loaie
KafdUiaff 311
compiatnts Visit —
M pai. ttaaefeii fey rUMliii f p^
midniolit tonigfit Woman t Gym m rjm
* tiljlafe. Csatrertetlo8. ^99 informal
practice for foretgn students and visitors
10 am naaii. Mfeniayt a"^ i^aiatpiays.
WfT
0*M»«I» IPf % ill* AV ^' »w* Mr ov
Vir--
l ,!
Imtn, of campus wMI fee con-
ducted by the Visitor 1 Center 2 pm.
Tiiiiiavi lad Ttmrsdays now-Aupust U
from Murphy 1215 FfOi
^plcptiaas tpr rpppprefe apililMili Vltii
Karckhotf 306 or call B2S4t47
IravB offers summer lafet
«vork plMpaMal «i community
iprvici Visit Kiaaiv W^ 9f cm 65-37%
-> tataraetlaasl Folk leases. 8 10 pm
ys International Student Canter
nLsa
wiN be sfioam 8-8
International Student
pm
every Ti
free
OMCIiTi
ii Afenr plays classical guitdf
7-8 pm. evpry Tuaeday International Stu
dpm Canter Free
— SdMB tippa. Greek guitarist and smgpr
will perform 7 9 pm Wednesdays Interna-
tional Student Center
^Jeae Per|le. will perform flameata
music. 7-9 pm Thursdays. International
Student Center
~4iMMiiai t« Sail anil. Jaz^-and Black
history part 11. 7-10 pm. Ayguit 2. Bunche
.730
pm. tonight
aiiM MfeM IfelBv. of
iMkmmmjtMr-'^
2^6?"'-i..
• •
Mm SiMi JMKS EML JKS KTB NflE «E1i1( MU
t
OPENS FRIDAY JULY M EVERYWHERE!
Da y«u Umk lika Hms whan yau 9^7 Or%m sidad chawiieg, if nal
la poifi or currant dantol traotn'^^nfs, may ba ralotad fa o
^par^af. TIms ia Hia ^M^act •! o rasaorch invaatifcitiafi
cwffVfiHy bainf caeiductad of tHa UCLA Pawfl SchMl~a TMi
Otnk. If yau cKaw axcluaivaly on mnm %i6m, yau mm naadadl»r o
poinlaaa invasf igotian. Call 835-5 152^ ond laova o massoga far
(CoMliiiued froiB Page 2)
mcr with the jcrp there wST no
"We first stail our testing of
the vehicle Itself in three or
four weeks,** said Ullman "We
won't be driving it around for-i"
several months," added Van
_Vorst. The team will be testing -
the vehicle under conditms
similar to those of actual post^~
-af taapa. The Postal Service
I" ^
MOllT CIMCIM Moih
NOliSAV CiNtwe-Cancwa P»r*
Toem & coiiwTeT #i-fiic
SANTA a»'! H(WA •* i'.M! /
ptfcatT MILLS efveriiiaiii
emttrife mn/mm
•.A CIMMe •] Manna Oe e«>
PA PCI ene #1 ^o'r««(f
wmmn s
rpi T«Ni I
riCSTA
TWNi'Vlf
rppTWILl
BtUPA
Hcaaicx
•ti»
#1
caiviB #2
i lASLi eece ^mi •■:
CMfMM CIMTfe #S »i
Lafieaeok
eeKaicAAA citiiifle #•
•aaetfie *'-"^'»
gets the jeep June I, 1977.
**TlfBK"^are good long term
prospects for hyd^fogen
„__£Oining an important fueL" but
•'not directly applying our sys-
tem,** said Ullman. This )eep is
geared to th^ Post Officd
which has a lot of stop and ^o
and slow speed driving. -
The PMAal Service is also
investigating other possible fuel
rciouroet M8ch at electhaty,
natural gai, diead, ^ulsified
fiicb and hquified petroleum
gas. **Hydrogen is probably
going to be the fuel of the 21st
century,- said Don Crane, Di-
rector, Office of Fleet Manage-
ment for the Pott Office
Tiverton
Tiverton Drive from Le
Conte to the outpatient cli-
nic will be closed beginning
Monday for a minimum of
90 days due to con^tmction
work on the hospital park*
ing structure. One lane will
renuun open for
Concerned about Cardiac Disease?
UCLA Cardiographies Lab offers
Tests of:
Cardiac Rhythm
Exercise Capacity
Valve Function
Painless and Free
We need normal men and women subjects age 30-70
' uaii azty-MtiA Tor information arid appointment.
To help you pl*n your fiHutr
Career Guidance
4 week program starts )uly 31st
aho
Tutoring • Writtng Skills •
Pai»ar Readir>g
The Guiilance Center
1017 Santa Monica Blvd
Santa Monica
•29-4429
ACT OF DUTY
Ch0khov's
NIGHT BEFeSE THE TRIAL
Fh ttSO
$1 .00 Off ^
tail
VI
\
summer bruin
polnl
i
DB Editorial
Smiiin %^ flitf iitif Mm% McCormock r#eafiff y 4#cM#d »o
tuf»poft a privata butiti^ssman fighting to odd a cambin^d
diaca ond concart •titarfoinmant complaM to Waatwoad.
In aa daing, MiCoiiifcli fva Danrid Kannar, Praiidant ^
Pragrasaiva &itaftoinmant Carparcittan, Inc., o tKaorafteol
afomp of opprovol fram oil UCLA utidorgroduafa ttudantt.
K«nnaf nm>m9 m«t with tha Student LagialQtiva Cauncij 9f
Hkm% McCarmock. kn^ McCarmock n%yt%f c#nauNad tka
afudantt.
Har ihow 9lk um^^w%, in har rala ot rapraaantotiva al tha
afudantt, it imporfont to ¥i9^nmt. AifKough tHa ditco it olroody
oppravad, Kannar naada painiiHian far tha cancart locility. Ha
cen ottampt to uta McCormeck't opprovol to countor tha
protattt of homoownort, morchontt, ond tha local councilmon
in tho coming aona haoring.
'% mmm m tiaiawrwntad. Sha w«ra not alactad to
prtvafa butinaaaman ond thovld not continuo to abuta
tbo powor of hmf aloctad oHico. 7- —
Bring a letter to the
editor lo Kerckhoff lltt
•f Mm EdUonal toard.
*^<X-
^utkuH «nd do ntsr~
ao«rd.anp Alifc SKort. f-ttnk Vua«»<>rth. tiim
Lamm
kimum- AE m<arf MJ mu>l br^ tHr n<imr *t\t\ piMHtr numnhfn nk Mir miHkk ;
withheld friMn pMbti« <tiiiw mm ri^iit. No irirfkunr numbrrs will br ]^inl«*d IKr Sunmu'f Hnnf>
'^vrrvet llie rifM to mM *ttkm'm9 ijnMmnd mtd l«> drlwminr •!% pl^rmrnl on iHr Vir«»|>4»HW p^grs
MjIriMl 1% due 4l iMMin fmu d«iy« |H'^om> jifMred publit ^lion d^lr. thounh puhlH jtinn t%-~mst
4M«lr«pd Mwd>i *r%y « tff< um*t4m r%. ^M mafciiVi*! «ubmiM»d W«omr% Ihr |>tii|N'rt^ «*4 llir Suttmn •
fWlfl
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Letters to the Editor
Conscience
AMERICAL
INSURANCE
1434 Westwood loulrvard^Suite ••iot Angeles, CjlHornij 9tt24
Call Day or Night — (213)475-5721
L^§t Friday's D^i/y Bruin edi-
tonal expressed concern that
aher campaigning * solety on a
platform to get nd o< my oHioB
and then resign, I have yet to
resign Both they and you are
entitled to an expto^Mtion. Since
the editorial staff didn't even ask
for one before printing their
editorial, let nr>e o^fer one no^.
There remain a few tasks, im-
portant tasks, that ne^ to be
done before i can resign in
good conscience. Let me note
here that I have npt collected a
single penny of pay for being on
SLC. just as I promised when
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otMi l^Pf ■■HI^^Nii^^p P^w
running, and what tasks remain I
am doing Sot free -^
'One of thcte tMs H; securing
UCLA* studM government's
continued participation in the
National Stucient Association Life
Insurance Program. Not only
does this program offer low-cost
life insurance to new L/CLA
students, but it aho will provide
SLC with approximately one
thousand dollars of incoir^e that
It can use for other student
programming. I am now work-
ing with the Dean of Stucients
Office on this projeO %n6 it
should be completed withtn the
rtext two weeks.
Another task is to ensure that
elements under the NSA Re-
presentative's budget last year,
such as the National Stucient
Lobby contribution, make an
orderly transition to the Student
Bocfy PrNiiitent's budget. As the
author of Student Legislative
Council's Budget Reform Act
that opened SLC r budget pro-
cess TO more orderly and open
student input, I also feel a sense
of responsibility to help make
that process woJ'k
The other single important
r^
Ijtive Coundl. H^6 \ ncH falkn
and broken my hip, leg, and
wrist the day the referendvjm
and abolishing the NSA position
pMted, I would have been able
to complete these tasks and
resign a while ago. But as I have
just been able to return to a
school and resume work last
week on phasing out my office
in ^n orderly fashion, I will
x^rmin on SLC for the few
weeks necessary to fulfill these
obligations.
As the D^i\y Bruin and Stu-
dent Legislative Council already^
know, I have previously com-"
mited myself to finishing up my
duties and resigning by August
31st, well before the school year
starts.
-~^ Brian Eidberg
NSA Representaiive
Student LegMative CoiMicil
Regrets
Editor:
Betsy Wetsy'sl' letter in Tues-
day's 8ru/n described her great
concern over the quality bfThe^
task remaining necessitatmg my— paper towels currently bernj^
staying on Student Legislative provided for campus use
Council a little while longer is We would like "Betsy- to
the preparation and presenta- know that Purchasing too has
rinncf a Closing Report of tfrr b€?en. -concerned fcK more rea-
Otfice of the National Student sons than quality Due to a strike
Association Represenutive. In at the paper-^^viills it became
iht^ \_mxi\ uy^^e recomrr>enda- — necessary to accept • substitute
--ttcms to SLC as lo^ow they can towel \f\ oxif last shipment Our
best go from here m handling primary concern at the jr>omf?nt
their ^atUUation and relationships »s to pbtam sufficient toweis^ fpf
vMth thf .N^tlQna^ StudenLJUso*^^ campui^ *>eeds.
ciation And Nation*! Suideht We regret ''Betsy s" discomiL
Lobby — — fiture and hope for^ early settle*
Let me assure fHifPne that I ment of the strike so we can
have no intentions of going a^ain supply regular stock,
back on my campaign promise * IC.A. Weydert
and St av i ng on -»iJcteTtT~t:egiS' Campus Material Manafer
TOWMG
COMPliTC W/WbtH
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7957 VAN NUYS BLVD.
PANOftAMA CITY 2S NLKS so or WOSCOC
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Volleyball tougher for men in 1977 .
k m
. (Continued from Page 14)
liMlfti niki will be used for a
while in the -women*! flMK,
became thc\ have their own
set o^ rules to use.**
**l think the ncw'ihifct. will
■MMi that the team wah the
best six vollcvball plavers will
wmr said 1975 NCAA All-
Aoierican Fred Sturm, who
will be a Bruin as&istant coach
in the Fall --UCLA will be
hurt the most. betiiu»e last
year we would have lost a
potential spikcr in GoCUchall.
the best setter in Ashley snd ir"
OMght nr)can that someone like
Singin Smith (Bruin freshman
hitter last year) might be
switched U> tetter**
_ UCLA IS a rnember of the
Seat hern California Intercol-
legiate Volleyball Association
(SCIVA) conference and the
loipie is expanding to eight
ich|»oU next year with the
gdditioa of VC limine. Four^
:hing changes will make the
stronger
Marv Dunphy, who most
people credit wtth Pepper-
din^*s second place NCAA.:
finish, has moved up to the
head coiKhing spot replacing
Harlan Cohen
Former UCLA^AM- American
-Ed^te Machado has resigned at
The producers of EOUUS •:
have mada available 60
apacial on-stage seats
for each performance
FriOay and Saturday
evenings $6 00 vAH other
paWorrnances including
matirtees $5 00 Tickets
am available at tha
Huntington ^iartford
Box Office with
identification
Far information call
ST.
• There IS a '^
difference!!! I
MCAT
DAT
LSAT
Vl MPV IfWCt
OTiUKCtM
SMsiiclnMn
CMT
FLEX
C— rm wmmt
lapctacMilm lor
'^«««l'«lcins
NiUl MED BOS
SAT-MT
CtMTrn
■«oO»
.("I *\l'
San Diego Slaie and there
five candidates for the job at
this time The leading CMidi-
date is (ormci I CLA sur Jeff
JacoN. wIm> was Mach^ndo s
asstfUnt the past two years. "If
^•Bmlm fets the job. then San
Dicfo Slatr-W4.ll be tough next
year since most of their hitters
arc back.** said one UCLA
player
Former Long Beach Slate
All- American Miles Pabst is
leaving hn alma mater to take
the head job at VC Irvine His
ptacc wiil be taken by vftcrm
coach Dick Montgomery . who
used to coach USC I ong
Beach Sute had a fine team
last year >but had injuries and
team internal problems In-
siders believe M6htgomery is
the answer to the problems
and the 49'enr*sNCAA title
talent next year if he can find,
a setter
. USC may be the toughest
competition for the Bruins
next year The Trojans kept
controversuil coach Ernie Hix
over the objections of his
r^layers, but even with Hix as
head coacli. they are an out-
standing team The main rea-
son that use wiU be stronj^is
foreign players
Bra7t4ian Olynapian Cclso
ALL AaisaiCAM
Kalachc will return tor his
senior year Kaiache did not
plav this year to concentrate
for the Montreal Olyiiipics. but
he has heen a thfcc icaion AU^-
American at USC. He is con-
sidered as the most dominant
player in the coUegiate game..
USC*s main weakness last sea-
son was setting, bitt Kaiache
has taken care of the problem
by bringing his Brazilian cou-
sin, Jose Abid, with him ^^^"1
made the USVBA All-Ri^^.v
team when he plaved with
4MBche in 1975 at the I'mtcd
States championships. Also
USC is expected to get back
sundout spiker Steve O'Bradcv
vich. who sat out last year, and
San Diego Sute transfer Tim
Spees.
Al Scates is used to winning
when the odds are against him.
With nine out of the 12
players that traveled to the
NCAA Finals in Muncie. Indi-
ana returning in 1977. Scates
should have another MCAA
championship caliber squad.
One thing that must be noted
IS the new "Wizard ot Jkak-
wood** has iiever lost an
NCAA championship when He
reached the final round of
foi*r The NCAA finals next
year will be la Pauley Pavilion.
[
I
i
a
3
free
(jm. igoi CUP Of
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This Ad Good Thru August 6
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475-0711
Pork indoor Awco (jOfQQ9
OUTLAW JOSfY WALES (PG)
Hi. 5:00, 7:3S, 10:10
Sat 3:90, S:00, 7:3S, 10 10
Avco Center
Cinema III
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475.07)1
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SILENT MOVIE (PG)
2 00. 3:55.5:50, 7^50, 9:50
Pri. A S0t. Mklnighf Sh«w
Pochc't
R90#vt Show ifi
Beverfy Hills
W»M>*f« Mvd Ot ConrK»n r:
1 Mh Eott of i*v«dy Or
27M12J
THE SWASHBUCKLER (PG)
ROOSTER COGBURN (PG)
^•«ly frtw 1 :00
Brentwood I
2524 Wil»hir«
t29 3366 •29^3367
BUfPALO BlU AND
AND THE INDIANS
~ 1:45. 4:00, 10:10
ODE TO BIUY XX
4:00, • 10
Brentwood M
2524 WiMwr*
(ot 26ltt St.)
Sonto Montco
•25-336T
MYSTERIOUS
csk:
Morvn's
T^iK
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WMtwood ViUog*
477-bfti
MURDER BY DEATH (PG)
1;15. 9:30, 4:45, «:30, 1:15, 10:01
P^ifi
Century
Plaza I
7(kC k^ oi Star*
553-4291
AU THfe PRESIDENT'S MEN
M-# 1:00. Sirt 4 Smi 1:45, 4:00. 10:10
^-^ THE DUTCHtSS^^D THE
DtRTWATER FOX
iM^:15, 10:25, S^ 4 S«m 4:10, 1:35
^^
G«ntury~
Plaza II
2040 A^ of iitmn
553-4291
GONE WITH THE WIND
M,T,TK,Ft:00
W«d, Siit4 Sufi3:30, •:00
Cinerama
Dome
Swn««« rt«ar Vtn«
HoNywood 466^3401
In 70 mm Si
-^LOGAN'S RUN (PG)
Dally 12:30, 3:00. 5:30, 4:00, 10:30
Crest
Cinema
1262 Wo«twood IWd
272 5476
474-7846
THE BINGO LONG TRAVEUNG
AU— STARS AND
MOTOR KINGS
Mtkspd Hym JomM iorl Jm«m
W««lini9hta: 4.4,10 pm Itliy O— Wtlltom*
SiH4SMff«2,4,4,i, 10pm
DEL MAR
5036 W Pico 4lvd.
935-6424 ^,. j^ ^ ^^
jP ^\ ^ ofid Sot of«d Sun.
^WV »tN3 30
MISSOURI BREAKS
BLAZING SADDLES
7/J0 -
Fox Venice '/»'
620 Lincflld Itvd ^'\L
396^215 ^J^_
Adwh SI SO 9/4.
CMd II 00 ...
t 6
Hollywood
Pacific
K CoKuvnge
►5211
HARRY A WALTER GO
TO NEW YORK (PG)
Doily ot 12:30, 2:30. 4:30, 4 JO, 4:30, 10:30
M.4 Sot.
4 lD«<wwi<y TK«o#r«
MuBf rfofwn rilm Fosttool • 1v74
Los Feliz
\Vn N Vermont
THE aOCKMAKER Of ST. PAUL
Milmi' * Afocfod ^f Oortroftd Tov«miof
t-WiMi ■ ■ d
NO 4 2149
-Homio McUin Sto^p, A^Tft ^fff^
-V\
Gnt/Grboinmont/ indGx
• ■•'
^
!K
r-^
Goldstone's 'Swashbuckler' pirates an old genre
By CairuB Kent
The title tclU it all: Swash-
huckier. A swashbuckler, of
course, is a rogue who lives
and dies by the sword He*s
usually an outlaw, often a
pjrate But **s wash buckler** is
also the name of a genre And
that's what this fMm is: a icll-
conscious attempt to recreate
those seagoing epics of the Mf%
and '40s duected by accom-
plished craftsmen like Michael
Curtiz and Raoul Walsh.
There are differences, as one
might expect. In this '70*1
version which, is directed by
James Goldstone, Robert
Shaw IS not the Robin Hood
robbing from Lhft/.|;ich to give
to the poor he*s a crook out
for himself and his own crew.
Tiir poor people on ihe island
are thrilled by liis^exploits but
receive no direct benefit from
his crimes.
It « tkc girl played yff
Gearyitve Bujold who even-
Tuany forces Skaw to perform
a revolution4ry 4Ct: to over-
throw the evil tyrant (Fpter
Boyle) who holds the island in
titf grip We see the pirate
through her eyes, but even she
is basically out for herself
Swashbuckler's upper class
characters are sadistic and
perverted The lower classes
are greedy and disgusting All
in all this ii a highly ini44ib:
thropic movie.
The music, art direction and
other production aspects are
all fint rale The fights, though
not as ingenious as the ones
devised by Richard Lester for
The Three Musketters. arc
realistic 4iid exciting.
And the performances are
good. Unlike Olivia dc Havil-
land, the staple heroine of '30s
luvashbuckiers, Bujold doesn't
wait for the hero to rescue her.
She is fuliy capable of de-
lead ingL herself in a fencing
match; of threatening to ^ut^
th4»« balls off a British soldier
and have him hetieve her.
lames Earl Jones bhnp
more to (lie role of side-kick
'than cobiic relief. Comple-
menting Shaw's flamboyahcy,
Jones shows-Hs the digruty and
~ romanticism uf the ta-loving
as:
\.
•■^>.'
*Clockmakcr* Ghimcs
By Itobcrt Kodikr
This week one mor^ii4iiie
can be added to~The list of
great European filmmakers
Thot name it Bertrand Ta-
vemier and hit firat film to
reach America, The Clock-
maker of St. Paul <at the
Los Feliz), is ^ne to be
reckoned with and admired.,
Michel (Philippe Noiret)
is a clo^kmaker and refl4if-
man *%ho ^eems content
with life and his work. Out
of the blue comes the shock-
ing news his son (Sylvain
Rougerie) and his son's girl-
friend arc being hunted by
the police for the murder of
their factory boM. Every-
thing appears clear enough
at first, and it teems the film
will remain a simple de-
tective story. -^^
But what begins as a mys-
tery evolves into a terse
drama of inner search and
discovery. Michel senses the
police, and particularly the
Commissioner (Jean Roche-
fort), Mtt too hot for an open
and shut case, that there is a
larper meamng to captunng
these two kids. Is the moti-
vation for the murder po-
liticaP The son's room is
bedecked with slogans of
Celine and other leftists His
boM was 4 dicutor of the
worken, 4 tyrant. MicheL 4t
first regretful of the son*s
actions, begins to sympa-
thize with his plight.
Tavernier'i Chckmaker is
paced in a life-like manner,
showing its people naturally,
almost off the^c^uff. The
narrative is nothing Ina
than masterful: as clawicmBy
manipulative as a Greek
irajrrl] Bur above alU it it
supremely intelligent
Intelligence is the word
which best describes Taver-
nier*s works. They are nei-
ther head trips, nor mind-
things for mtellcctuals. but
brilliantly thought-out stor-
ies told in the .nost dramatic
and economic manner, shot
in a style that is alternai-
ingly traditional and Tree-
^ "^ I .ML*..-
spirited:
Noiret has always played
his coks with more realism
Philippe Noiret
than any other French actor
but not unti he worked with
Tavemier did his genius really
sprout forth. Rochefort and
Rougerie are particularly
good in two complex and
substantial supporting roles.
Beneath the surface of
this superb film is another
element, however trivial
77ie Chckmaker^ is a tho-
roughly French fihn Lately.
Gkllic directors have been
Americanizing (heir films
more and more Resisting
this trend, Tavernier fills his
film with the sights and
sounds of French food.
French music. French his-
tory. French culture. His
thoughts and politics are
modern, but his love for his
homeland is part of a long
tradition among French art-
ists, and IS only another
dimension in one of the best
wnding pu7j!iw ni^r pay- nims oi ma yqir
I'.
man Geoffrey Holder is sly
MBfd effective as a knife-throw-
i*m spokesman of the people
— one wishes his part had
been expanded Although
Shaw and Boyle both have
their moments as hero and
villain, respectively, they never
succeed in making us forget
the grandeur of Errol Flynn
and Basil Rathbone
Suprisinglv tor a pirate
picture most of the action
Ukes place on land. The ship
never laK¥es the harbor Whe-
ther this was due to the budget
or the need of the screenwriter
to link the fortunes of the
pirates with those of the ts^
landers remains ui
But if ^ou hke this sprt of
thing, you cnuMn't ask for
more in Saturday matinee en-
tertainment It has a sword-
fight on the beach, a chase
through the wo€4s thatends
with a 1000-f<iot pfimgc Into
the sea, and a spectacular cas-
ne-raidii^ climax Swash-
hycklef k tptally familiar and
totiilly welcohie
Boole reviews
•-*^ — ,
»kiU34- -.iHi
Jtoss l^cDonal^s golden
4 ^ -^ By John ( hamplin
In Ross MacDonald's latest. The BiMe Hammer (Knopf, $6.95,
270 pp.). Lew Archer starts out inveitigating the theft of a
painting in a small California c(>a,s-tal town, and immediately gets
caught_up in the tangle of events and personahties that surround
the painting.
The thief is caught i^uickU enough, but the painting remains
elusive. In his pursmt of it Archer is led deep into the past lives
of the characters involved: the^os^ner and his wife, the thief and
th^lTMdel who had posed- for the painting. Archer is soon faced
with,^a number of murdets, twi) in the present and one in the
past, which ,J)ffCf>me increasingly pivotal as he gets closer to the
painting — i"^-
As elusive as the paintmg is the painter hirrtself, who had
disappeared 30 years earlier, but still figures largely in the minds
of the town residents. He begins to figure largely in Archer's
mind as well, since it becomes apparent he holds the answers to
the proliferating murders, past and present
Between the murders and the suspicious goings-on. Archer
spends most of his time cross-examining the principals in the case
and commenting, sometimes aloud, sometimes to himself, upon
whatever aspects of human nature the situation leads him to.
At one point, after looking at a stained-glass window In a
woman's house, he reflects "I here were times when I almost -^^
wished I was a priest I was growing weary of other people's pain
and wondered if a black suit and a white collar might serve as
armor against it. I'd never know **
Archer's heavy, sometimes nastily sarcastic sense of irony,
makes him tough but keeps him real. Occasionally, though,
MacDonald lett Archer's ironv get away from him. When Archer
follows the daughter of the painting's owner to a decadent-
looking commune, and gets a noseful of its mentbers. he
pohtifically remarks to himself. "They stank of curdled hopes and
poisonous fears and rancid innocence and unwashed armpits **
The
familiarity
penetrating eye for human weaknesses; most of his characters —
and his most interesting '^ecni to be loaesi of odc sort -^f
another. Biemeyer, the owner ot the painting, fights with his wife
to the last Th^r daughter is on reds moat of
he depth of the story's characters comes from MacDonald's
iliarity with all aspects of human nature. He has a
the Tint
the time until she joins the aioue^tntioned commune. The young
art student who had stolen the pointing leads a frustrated life.
On Caknpus
The Gerald Wilson Orches
night at 8:30 in Royce HaJl
compoeer, trumpeter and band
a member of the Count Basic
Tongilit in Royce ^ J- '''^
screen- y< Mkl^mmmer Stfi*^'\
Hall, starring Diana Rigg and
directed by Laurence Olivier
^^ A,>tk^^y Qt^^lt^ Sfudenb
is $2.50
a Will pcrlorm lomorrow
^ickets are %5 and S6. A
ider, Wilson was formerly
nd Duke Ellington bands
Shah^qpoHcan films will
Dream, directed by Peter
n f^ichaiiMB and Hamki,
'th Olivier, Jc^ Simmons
i«v SI. 50, general admission
!• wcapr from his drunken father m4 domineenng
mother. Archer pities him, but hands him to the pobce aq^MQf
Ami so on
MacDonald has turned out another good one He maintains a
firm ghp on every device and characSer, twisting and re-twisting
the pkH rigtol up to the kM sentenoe Irhere all of the story's
threads are neatly tied off.
• • • ■
Richard Brautigan's Loading Mercnry With a Pitchfork
(SuDon A Schuster, 127 pa0es, $2.95) is hatf-fiUed with short,
proey, to-the-point-if-thefe-tt-one poems that are occarioiialty
insightful and often amusing. BrautjMi ooocentrates on thoughts
(Ifs time to train yourself/ to sleep alMe again /and its so fucking
hard) and bits of devemess (1 talked a good hello /but she ulked
an even, betitr food bye) and sometimes on nothing at all (Home
again home again hke a tnrtle to his hnloony and you know
where that's at).
The poems are neither grant nor memorable, but they waste no
time. In fact, the whole book can be read in under a half hoUr.
Xjuaruyiiig It itn lUt Bghttsi uf liglpi leatlmg. —
/
r^-x :-_-:.
.1 .jm
t^\
x-^
Manns W^stwood I
THE TENANT
11:45, 3:0S. S 31^, 7 SO, 10 IS
Manns Westwood II
SURVIVE (R)
Manns Westwood
ALICE IN WONOEITLAND
1:00, 2:30. 4:00. S:30. 7:00. 0:30. 10:00, 11:90
A Lommmt9 TTianlra
Monica I
Sonfa Momra
4}1 MM
SWASHBUCKLEI
tOOSTEl COGBUtN
Monica II
1 322 2nd StTMt
Sanio AAofWco
431-SdSd
liU«S9wy«f
SUtVIVE
BUG
P
Music Ha
S»v«r)y HiSt
In^fTUir
FACE TO FACE
■"»*»—
*'OfMif»y
■^s-?'
' " "T
National
10925
CAMaOT
r.m. S:90. 0:30
-".i.
'>*">v/fc.
NuArt_
Theatre
7/30-
7/31 — Thm
Pmrf i, Tlw
I
1 1 272 Soi
47S-437V
479-S249
a/ 3. s/4 ^ hm
s/s -
\
ORIENTAL
7425 Sufwat Mvd
•76-0212
ODE TO MUY X>i
and
THArS ENTERTAINMENT N
Pontages
7161
GATOR (PG)
•t 12:30. 3:00, S 30, • 00, 10:30
4i«w 9fi. a S«t.
^atihe't
272-S239
. • MIDWAY (PO)
AitPOtT 1975 (PG)
#:00
12:30
Plaza
Wttwood VtUmg*
477-0097
479 9077
OATOt
Regent
777 OKI
SWASHMICKUi
Royal
n32/sonis
477 53S1
SWVT AWAY
wUm 11 pmmmd 1 |
GARDENS
I
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' »
Mfc-M^^-^M
V •
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-*— *.
More Movie Guide
UA Cinema
Center I
W««twood
474-4154
ODE TO BIUY XX
2:0^/4:00. 4:00, 1:00, 10.M
UA Cinema
Center II sailor who feu from grace
W«Mworth Av«
474-4165
WITH THE SEA
3:00, 4:00. 4:00, 4:00, 10:
UA Cinema
Center III
FUNNEL VISION
»Mif MfW'^of^ A^« 1:30. 1:00, 4:30, 600, 7:30, 9:00, 10:30
474'3«83
„^J"'W*.
UA CINEA^A
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BEATING A DEAD HORSE
ft. A 5at • 00 A 1 0 00
aUBGUIDE CONTINUED
Backus pro at shortstop
(Continued from Poge I i);
(in 27 Mpooamce^, Joyce m
23-2 with an 0 15 ERA) But
Backus is not p\wjfm§ in the
ftliadow of the. leftfue*s co-
founder.
In 37 games, the CaJ Sutc
FuUerton graduate is hitting a
rcspectabk 280 (30 fof 107)
She doubled home one run
and scored another to account
for Connecticut's only score
against Santa Ana last Friday
On the field. Double V-R" is
equally impressive: one error
*«• 45 iititU and three put outs
for a fielding avermfB of .980
Backus has been known to
make the difference in a game
In the 1970 World Series, she
stole home on a wild pitch to
score the winning run in the
final game. Her play in WPS's
first half of the season enraed
her a spot on the Eastern All
Star team. But as a perfec-
tionist, she IS not satisfied with
her all-around play: Tm play-
ing terrible defense," said the
soft -spoken first year coach in
V a pott-game interview at Santa
Ana Siadium, "there's just no
Omental push."
Homecoming for Backus
Playing the i^ioncttes was
like a homecoming for Backus,
because she atarted with Joyce
on the Lionettes (then of
Orange) in !%♦. Twelve years
later, the EuUerton resident is
tht visitor. — -
After the game. Backus
visited witii friends, signed
autographs and" taUted about
-the WPS, UCLA and her
transition from Raybrstos to
pro ball
^ ^he hew league is great
it presents a good, wholesome
image for the community But
it's still m the4e»r-ning stages.
FoFlSstance, we've learned to
schedule our -games when
people can come, not in the
middle of the week.
**The game is the same*^ -^
but the season is much longer
"■»»m(f**7t
(12(^ gamci), so we carry 18
players (12 are former Brak-
ettes) Pm still making
adjustments to the new peopk,
new coaches and a different
management'
**Coaching at UCLA has
helped me with analytical as-
pects of the game. As a player,
I tended to do some things
naturally But now I analyze a
sitution and then apply it to
ray game."
Biggest amct
Backus. 30, says experience
is her biggest asiet and offers
**the experience of playing at a
high lever as the key to pro
Softball. "In this business, you
are asked to perform con-
stantly, and without experi-
ence, the pressure would be
unfair. UCLA has the players
(for pro ball), but it's hard to
say who is capaBTe because
there^ are so many other factors
involved."
Backus spoke of a rigorous
travel schedule that might go
like this: up at 5:30; calch a
plane at J, motel at I, ball-
park at 4:30; double-header,
and catch another plane b^
midnight t =«»
"We're more on the go (than
last year)," she said, "but f
think we play better when wt
play every night (Connecticut
just lost two game^^. io the
Lionettes after a day's resL On
their cuxrent 25 game road
trip, they play 21' days with
only five days off)." — —
Backus is at home in her
travels and among triends m
her profession Sporting a
styMi royal blue and green
uniform that she designed lor
the leayau. Backus w»^ kind to
an autograph seeker who mis-
took her for a teammate The
low-keyed, sincere athlete was
also friendly to the Lionettes
(jenterfieldcr Detibic Ricketts
'as she approached the visiting
team's dugout ^ - ^
. Rifketts, Cal Slate Fuller-
SALT
company theatre
2745153
'*Apfcalyfse ca« b? fun " - i a Tints
**ltiatlf»lly laiy"- Htltywood Reptrtcr
lon'a premier guard, came over
to ask about Sluirroa's room-
mate US Women*! Olympic
hasketball coach Billie Moore
**Have you heard anything?"
asked Ricketts about the U.S.
Women's National team that
won a silver medal in Mon-
treal. Backus shook her head
no. then praised the FuUerton
senior for two well-played
games.
It was 1 1 pm and the Con-
necticut team was packed and
ready to move to San
Diego for another four-game
series (they split the series,
losmg Saturday and winning
the next night to make. their
season record 48-19). Then it's
on to Phoenix, San Jose for
the All Star game, and to
Chicago before jetuming to
Menden to finish the season
Backus will continue to tra-
vel at this pace until the third
week of September, when she
IS due back at Western High
School for the fall semester.
Theil it's back on the free-
way to UCLA, which should
be easy compared to all the
traveling she's done this sum-
mer The UCLA softbaU coach
has lined up a tough, three-
limes^as-many-games schedule
for the Spring, including tra-
vel up north and to Arizona.
The College World Series is m
Omaha. Nebraska. >^~
Bruin Notes: Backus is cx,-
cited^^tbout next year's UCLA
team that went 13-4 in 1^7^
and was^ co-^champion of the
SW+AC league the Bruins
lost only three seniors pitcher
Charjene Wright, catcher Les-
lie t rapnell and shortstop Jane
Bevlef ■ ^ . IncominiL-JCi m-
elude pitchcr-outfieider Susie
Calderon (a lefty), catcher Lee
Lindscv and pitcher Melanie
Kyler, all members of Golden
Wc^rX<*llcge\ two-timc junior
college national championship
team Kyleris playing summer
ball in Sun City. Arizona.
WhcR asked how Kyler will
improve the Brums' chances to
get to Omaha; Backus said: "A
team is a team, and no one
player can do it all Tonight
w^ evidence of that (the Fal-
cons could not score a run to'^
support Joyce's pitching feats)"
Vi
Weightliftlng part of body fitness }rsan6almak6Q
/
(-
^^ wwHtf ^^ • nwHwey
Di Sports RgpwSw >
•^ivc me your tired, your
poor, your huddled masses
. " Perhaps by virtue of the
general perception of the in-
habitants and activities of the
UCLA weightroom, th^t
phrase should be continued.
*And I will make them into
bronzed hulks of Herculean
fortitude, achieving near-God
stature by pumping ton after
ton of glistening steel " While
not entirely false, the weight-
room today IS perceived and
used by a larger vanation of
athlelic disciplines than it has
been in the past. This is largely
due to the advent of recently
increased trends t^o%k(ards body
fitness, of which weighUiftmg
IS a part
Ohfinal apprehensiofli
One can overcome possible
original apprehensions by
_wjndenng into the UCLA
weightroom. located in the
MAC B building (adjacent to
Pauley Pavilion's North East
comer) to try to understand
some of the motivating factors
that drive non-athletes to build
the size of -their bodies. Very
few of the people interviewcfl
tiad designs on emulating the
great gold medaf winner Vast ly
Alexeyev. the Soviet super-
lieavy wei^iit, who is con-
sMleixd jthe: Ji^orliTs strongest
^man. - ■ ■ ^^ '-^...,
On the comrary. most ex«
pressckl doubOras to the wortis—
of such a program of singular
focus. "My purpose m coming
here," said student Lyic Green-
berg of -Westlake, ^s" to
a c h I e ve -a - me n t a 1 d i sc i pTT n e
through body fitness, and
working out (m the weight-
room) is part of that. I've
found thai I study t^est Wftcn
I'm Ml tl^ b^st' shape, and
when Fm out of shape, nothing
seems to come together."
Vaahy percepcioii^
Perhaps the biggest tendency
towards the perception of
weightlifters is one of vanity.
and If u not an easy generali-
zation to reconcile.
It seems to be a basic
assumption that weightlifting
helps to improve self-body
concept, while the use ciif
mirrors is prevalent in the
weightroom itself Oilier fac-
tors to be considered equally in
determimng motivation should
be those of endurance and
strength
The mirrors are used to help
a person underglMKi the var-
ious muscles employed m se-
lected cxerciaai^ and therefore
better realize motor functions
and body coordination
■J ! 4114 W#M»ood Bud
^ Vlre^twood ijM 90024
, ii-.r;i«*> sANliAib t>ClTS I'iHU His PUKSCS ua
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A moviot in tha Nutrition Fiald
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NIcb S54-2BBB
Naa»aMBS1-3B27
aleal. Improvlsatlaa. Hiaary, aaaaia-
ppataiant and arranging far
B aaMMwftsrs. Davfd P
(10 A 0)
RIDING LESSONS
-■MM . ■ 1.1 IB LI I m
loatSffound
■
LOST Jaty 22. NutiNii gal
» 2. Saward
■01
(17 Jy 20,
Pf^SQfMMICy
■USOPE laraaf ' Atrtaa Studoat
Vtcanta B^sd 44. t.A. 220 tS. 020-
<w»^
.O.A. Aaar*v«a rtaifif ••taatlslmisMl
!•«»• sfia artvsia*. eliliar*n 4
aap or Intaraaf baipful. WHflng. ta
^ PREGNANT?*
(ISA It)
AUTO Inauranca: Loaroat ratfa far
•^^^'^^aaa. waaa^ »s. wnaa
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(12 Ob)
-Ilia
Faop
Vary Low Ceat
CuiiWiiaiillPl CpN
CHARTERS
(I
I)
Ow«r 300 riignu 4 dais* with aaasrtur«t
from Jutv inru Junm tlSy 2 lO M «*••*•
uu OM '/a4.a/07 a laM
LON ON i/22 104M • 41*
AH ^n^io 4 4ia
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AH t^M-io^io t m$
AH t/2t-tO<17 a% Mt
AH 4^12-9/27 a 484
CI 4^aa-«^2i ai
n^ a^M-iaii a
la2 to rnc^tm *
PHA TO 4/^21-4/27 |
414
XMAS CHARTERS:aoob
494
from
trpm
mtTmB
Attraatfaa. rallabia and haalthy far
botol boutl^ua Part and full-tlma.
rHESBSS • UC ^^-i-^i^ p^ ,j|,
ypp MP la 20^ an aialbaaa saM.
(IBiy
_|iriy2B) B^
s#fvic— jpftefd
tors Confldantial. bragnancy and
212. 0221
MOVINOaiM
laba. CaM BM
(«rob)
4»
WniTBII
wftb lliaaaa. tarai papara In aaclaf
iay 4SB«4BS7i^
(10 A I2i
rS^-tlTLS? HOUSEPAINTING
•est iMork, Tnslertalsr
exteriors A muHI-room
^^Inlertors
Berv|fl«i.llie UCLA
Cammunlty a^yis full-time
•Ince grsduaSoii.
Days A Evenings
39e^97r 7-
iurm-up apsciar
ctwciMd (Brtn^BooliJ
PPEONANCY brablsw? Fi
taata. Compasslonata woman coun-
solors Pafarrats to pi>ard cartiflad
gynaaologlat. Bl^ft Control Information.
Aftamabaaa la bragnaaey 37S4 Santa
Paaaba Of SuMa 212. LJL aoi 2201.
'■■"' --■•^~ THOb)
tromttaf
IroHitlOt
in«
f uroa* (ro«T« LA
Europa from Hmm Vor*
HAWAII 1 4 2aa.as
NYCi 2i«-44
ORIENT Msovasiss
X*wnsf f«g raauwa44di
pr«c« tufifsct to 20% trtcrw
SUPER AIRFARES
eiCENTENNIAL issawast
TRIANGLE NYC >rM m>mm
TRIANGLE HAWAII frMAiMti.if aaaa
NIGHT COACH mmcosm from laif
YOUTH EuroiM'f^ tromlUa
APEX
Uoirt
1111
(12CW>
- - 2*i» Horn isn
TNAiM s Ftaav Ticicrrs. cams.
CA2IPCR RENTALS. RAILPASStS
NrrRA-euROPf charters
SPECIAL CRUtSE
€Af)»PPCAN. SO AMg»WGAaa»y> fromaOOO
GETAWAYS
MEXICO CITY • (toys t1f4
ACA^UtCO e day*
'MAfATLAN • dsv*
»4CX.CiTV QUAD or P VALLARTA 0 day*!
IMC X ICO OR AND TOUR tS dsy* ■
■^^
yHKl
BALLET: Fun aray to Soauty 1208
Waatwood. and KMh TWCA. 274 HN-
i»^wiii.Olainwi.an
IfipilMi barata. Dtaffngutsliad Cifcaar/
BEST
•wr
22v00 DMI fi-2-R-E-R-l-E-N-C<E
Fiaa bat
any
lOOObl
(ISJv^
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(tS Otr)
NOW: AT MANDELL
EOUCATIONAL CENTER^
1738 Westwood ^
Ho minimi
:ri-:i:
KINKOS :r/*
(10 A i:
TUNS
I .-
Aug.7lb11
NAM CUTS -SSSS - SOBII Sy
prafaaalonala loaratag par
(12 EB)
RIppdd Off pn
Aiflo InatirpfiopT
ARROW INSURANCE
A
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTONCVCLE tMSUSAircf
•-" ■ po fwe*^ •
STuoewT otscouirrs
^ti
MEXICO YUCATAN, 1ft
me:
XCENT tOAMOR tft davT*
HAWAII (1 .sisoarTBiyr —
HAWAII (^ itMtfHlS) 10 asy*
^ MAHUUl (3 ••tsnoti tO days
MOW VObK ClTY.4 0ay«
COPENHAQSM. b-daia-
•oair t4:aayt
TAHITI MOOPEA 10 day*
JAPAN 16 day*
TOKYO TAIRAI MONO KONQ
OMANp SPAM t4 day*
•«?•
9fm
4 miMaiaaanal ashsaRf.
FOA. aPOt COUMOOLIMO. Ifislsnl Rss«r-
MOVINO Paaldantlal. apartaiants.
brought/sold Call Barnay 200-0722
N aaaa. ^^^
EDITING Frofaaalanal wrftar-aeHar.
S BMlppSpnt
bPWPlHo on 0 arorie-wiaa bpoio
bl 1
pipttofi A
IfiaufMica OfSppf Pt Sia
Haalfb Off lea er epll S2S-1SiS.
SiHBpnt NiPtMeiiPP. UCLA SNMlPfM
Hppltti Sanrlcp, L.A. CA. tSSSA.
^';;';;;; COUPON
(10 A 12)
ji ALL GM CAR OWNERS:
MR. QOODWRENCH
LUBE, OIL
& AC
FILTER
SPECIAL
fSS WT. OS. ONLY)
FREE!!!
MAINTENANCE CHECK
NIQ. $ia.io
WSAVINO STUDIO. 12S0 Waatwaad
atHaas atlll opan
I:
I:
if
l:
J
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2
/ta 4 i»^
ISC
AUTO INSURANCE
IMOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
Taa ▼(
Low
ILIOMTNOUBB
BBRVICE
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TOURS & TRAVEL
Auntaamt A fmti Citmiimtm.'
-Parts
Madrid
Pr8f»«i»ur^
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LEARN Dyi
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Roundirip from S149 00
0gf*
AC
xyMnPar
t cStant raa^n^r. wtodabiald yaahar7ch^H lira Pjjjw^ra and condition.
t -'*'■» mj tMm »-H-7* -
•l*o runt (oral arva tour*
0' sr>d t>i/« at TiinimuTi co«
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Charter Flight Service
Over 1000 fhghti to Europe this
Summer • Discounted Student
" qhts in Europe • Charters to
M ..V3!' and Memco • Student 2
Faculty discounts on car purchas
es rentals and leases • Study
tours • Camping Tours • Unregt
m#»nted Student Tours • Rail
Passes • Fly drive European ar
rangements • Mini Tours • Hotel
Accomodation • Hostel Informa
tion • International Student 10
cards • fr99 travel counseling •
EXPO Travel Library
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING*
Limitad aaats ramaming on
SOCIAL FLIOMTS FOR
OMLY UCLA STUOf NTS.
FACULTY. A»K> STAFF
LA-RARIS-LA
22 242SS0
tSlABBjBB
11,1177 SSilJB
T.LA.
PLUS many Aiieyot. SoplOPtBor.
and Octobar 6mp%rXurmt ttill
I37S
O
(iBJyss)
Call Ua
aaa
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* • • •••••• #»
^^^^^^^^^^^m^^P^T^I^^^^^^^^^^^^
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i.HV
ii
CLASSIFIED >4D
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trav«l
^, "^ —
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ii.17
MY C%. Lmm
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(23JyM)
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, PtA. Ai»-«Mli.
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CtSOir)
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mL A iM«p».
tutoring
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1 'ourt ^ork Abroad Books Amtrbi^
FREE 76 STUDENT TRAVEL CATALOG
One-stuD ■.
C.I.EE STUDENT TRAVEL
L A 90024 C..
/ ir Westwood Village above \
\ Wherehouse Record Store /
NEW ACAOEMiC YEAR FLIGHTS'
' Lo» AngplPs Pans Round-trip
:-. . '>% Mm f-
S .
ALSO tlMlTED SEA'S AVAiLAHLf ON SUMMEF-
TMAP-EBS DUE TO CANCELLATIONS INOUIBE
B' ^M JNE FOB SPECIFIC DATES
C I E E STUDENT TRAVEL (477-2069)
LOW Coet FMghto Ip Europe elMI ewoll-
•tole Uofn 1379 Round trip-conlaci ..
Europe Student Travel. 1007 Broilon
Ave Suite IS Wettwood Tel: 477-
0790 Act Mew.
(23 A 12)
w*
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT
CENTER
Sorviny !h» UCLA Community
A It s Friends
1023 Hllgard Avenuo
9-6 Oaity
TOURS! TOURS! TOURS!
JOIN US FOR
July 29 J Paul 0«ny Mua^um
4 Peach Picn;c St SO
July 30-Au« 2ion « Pryc* Nett^9^
Parkt $74 00
Studvni ra(« non-«iud*nt r«ic« awsiiaoi*
)e tran-. sitving
■••5 srtacti* ana u.jy fg un ovaf
Our goal It to crvat* an intarcuHurai aachangv'
in a raiaaad fnvndiy atmoaphara and to do^
this at a minimufTi coal lo you .
one. LftAT.
IndlvldMOl, amoll froMp InelrMCtlon.
mow)
TUTORING -TrofielotloMOormpn-
EnfAoli. Rt«. O. Qermow. jiemmpr. con-
wffillng. Cvpoftoficod topcfior.
(24 A 10)
TUTORINO In MoHt , Rhyeict A Eco-
nomics Py Doctoral Candldole. 020-
111.
(24 A 12)
CHIMCtE Mandarin Reking native
loaclier, well-eHporlenced with Cali-
fornia Credential. Individual, small
(24 0«
typing
TYRING at home
Mopi and accuraie
Mt-tMO after • p.m
Cxecuifeo.
C«N
mom
WrfMr (B A EngOah
UCLA) wMlype/edM all papors. Faat
and accurate 450<4717. . '^=^ _.._-
HiAttl
TYRING! toeon^^a^ Alao edMlwg. Very
fast accurate MId-Wllshlre. Wfm
paftOng. Ca« Joapne: 3i< HOJ.
:^^^^: CM Olr)
KAY: Typing, eiliting., English grad.
PlaeertaWawe spealaRy Term papers,
lattors. IMfl 020-7472
: (25 Otr)
mmmmmmmtmmmmt^tmm
LIGHTNING TYPING CO
ThMta ftpw:uiMa4
Bfmm JLaPieeiles
COLLEOC TYPING
Tarni papara ThMta. IMManations. Faali
Fof««on Lanpuapva Sci«nc«ft. Melh Ti
OMigninia Muaic Editing. Co«*na«Mn«. lt«fOi
"-'--'— -Jitl f»-74
TYRMG by LIZ - tCIIKMRLAY RRf •
j-I fi ^ a llfilMBlIM a|
ncMS offwfwo
II
)
EorriMO
TYPE FACC. (
(isoin
TRAVCLINQ
to Rhode
1.
m coyntiy Aug. 2-91.
Wa«it lo Oo7 Mary
m^hm
EXCELLENT Typlel W« type
theses, piaaiuscrlpts. iiaaartatlont^
letters. IBM Aelectric II. Call Aano-
rkies wanted
^fpRiB. Free plrtiyp.
mom
Ca«Rat021
July
PlAi)
tutoring
yr.
Lpfpl tocrotary
iar
470-
mom
HOAItl
wRrnNO nmj^ term rarcrs.
TMIRn. OMRBRTATIOW. ALL tUB-
JICTS. WWTINQ. BMTMOL Ri—
8EARCHIMO TUTORING BY RRO-
171.
(Ma IB)
10 («elp you plan your future
CAREER GUIDANCE
4 mk program starts July 31st
•*ao
Tutoring -P<o»ar Reading - Writing Skills
ORE. LSAT (M4AT Prep
Ihm Quktenot C«nlBf
3017 SsffilR Monica Blvd.
SmMm MofilcB
R.Tafiii
etc. Call 9B4-
mom
om
RRORBBBIOMAL errtlar
(UCLA) «« tvpe
He. Oeor
erfIR B.A. Ri
mom
RUTM C OtBBCRTATfOHS. TNCl
STATISTICAL. FAST. OERCNDABLI.
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK MANY TYPt
BTYLZB.
typing
BTATIBTtCB
47Sa742 ar SSt-SSS7.
Ry
CMaWi
A in
•7S-4410
(2SJy90)
474-
^^^^0^^99^^^^^^^ " y^^B^p ^^
"^m^
RUTH: Seloctrtc
term papers, mlec
020-2702
mom
TYRR«a of
m^iK
TYPING: Fast, accurate service at
student rate%. IBM Selectric Term
papers, theees. etc. OS2-0000. 023-4910
(nights)
m )
TYRfWG
daaNae worti at
dant. Expert
(S
TYRNOO. EdRlRB^FaaL Aoetirala/
eKperterK:ed/Plck-up. DaRear/Ri
m'om
TRULY Yours TypRig Service,
reports Feet, accurate typing. SelecIRa
II. Low ratep. Barbara SSO-1702
(20 Jy IB)
».
TYRRIG/EDtTINO.
p^ars. dtssdrtaBana; languages, cas-
aalMa.*Long esperience. neat, accurate.
270-0300 or 270-0471. *
^ (2SQtr)
apts famished
SUMRICR
•••Lusury
1 Oiiiin. WaNi to Westwood
and UCLA. CJoee to Century City "
Heeted Pool 470-S404
(20 Jy 30)
$231 FURNISHED single garden apt.
Utilltiet included. No pets.
Feculty only Nonsmokar.
(20 A 0)
VERY large basement apartment, has
iMndows all around. Kitcften Reeeon
Utillttes included CaH 477-0000
(20 A 0)
T""
.^mm
SljQirS. tlfB,
No pals. WLA
(20 Jv 30)
WALK TO UCLA
Spacious Bachelors. Sir^los
1 Badroom Apts
Ipiilmiiili 477-00R3
11 Btrathmore Pool. Elevatbsi^
Security Garage
BRCCIAL SUMMER RATES Pi
Olan-Fair Terrace 470-
540 Qlenrock - 543 Landfair
470-403-510-516 Landfair 477-
(20 AS)
$100 LARGE F
A La
A.M. Fwy
(3SJy9B)
Apt In
of WllaRlra. SIOO. 27S-2S7f 99 B91-
(2S A1S)
SOS GAYLEY. across from Oykstra
Baehalars. amgies. one OiOraimi 473-
1700. 47VBSS4. ^ ^^
MODERN - CLOSE TO UCLA
$2S0 - 1 KDMOOM 1 »ATH
$9B0 - 2 MDMOOM 2 BATH
(lD€Ai FOP OlIARtNQ)
ptLUXt OAMOEN TYFC ARTt.
MAYBE
apt unlumiahad aota. toahara
minium on Poadi. tantaetic viaw, 2
IVbl
240-4100, 340-
(27 iy
MBWLY >awasplBi. aaaurttif PMf^ %-
toipck Poach A bus, Venice Rarfly
iiMmened. naon. 9^^H9'^w«
S140. 1-BR SISe-flTS
(27 otr)
2 bath RopI Great lo^atlpn. Jisdy
472^771 ^^^^
127 A 121
|B2f WESTHalllppppp. 2
•012 FovnMin
foTMibtoeee
or A 121 22
IF YOU are seeking a Bulai
langat maHuf pr<
440 Veteran 1
2 bedroom A 2 bedroom plus den A
Mning rppm. $200 and up. Firepiece.
wetter. dtshkraaRar. balaany. popL 473-
(27 Olr)
BUMMER Aug 2- Sept. 19 (Oalaa
negotiable) 1 bdrm In nice 2 bdrm
eree Sl00/mo. Olak
•*'^^** (20 J 30)
or etude ni.
IP
CaH
472-
(20Jy3B)
3 BORM. 2
Owng, kitchen
UCLA. • min from
-1-70 Tel
garden , a min. vrom
FURNISHED 2
Ai
0
.19
(20Jy3B)
(27 Jy
92B6 LARGE 2 bdroom. 3 bath
drapes, patio, built-in stovo 3240
Overtpnd. 477 -BIBB.
(27 Jy 30)
housaa for rant
MEW 3 bednh. 3 bath security Mdg
Carpote. drapes, stove, dishwaalior.
(27 A SB)
«- - - * .
SINGLE Apt . old build., low blocks
N. on Robertson from SanM Manica
Fwy, OBOR>tafila (al RaRMaaiil #1
-1417 S12S/ma.
(27 A lat
.
^
SSiB^ BO A Dan 1^ bpBi. Bipea. IS
adn. UCLA. Estrae Day 2B0-M7S. eea
837-0730 (30 A 101
9400 2 BRBI
Ray. Slave.
Lawaaalgo
OOOOI. 1 bPRr.-Martna Dal
*^^^ (30Jy2BI
CHARRRNG spNI laval 2
477-
mtm
apfcfcrte share
'^\_,s^^.
2
H
• wtis 479 9009
19.
-^r
»*
FEMALE non
t% bath fumietted
IP aampus. Avail immed
IPBURy 470-4100.
ho«ise for sale
^^^^^
LARGE taaliionaRle
firepiace. dining rm.. fcitcRen.
030 Veteran. 477-
BACHELOR Rad
yph 2
a •lory
RaaHors 4
(31 A 10)
(2rA 10)
FEMALE toehare 2 bdrm
female gmduats student Near
BRENTWOOD
:ky 220-2291 or
(20 Jy 30)
F^BULE.
badroom* lar^e vcontwood apt. FuiRf
furnished 9l37.90/mo 472-4322
(20 Jy 30)
Ultro MoORrn. 2 Story Houoo
2 adrwi. V^ Bo. 10 yro Hum
^^~~" i88,tM
Opdn Sunday; 1-5
By Owndr .
•2B-t310 ~
ROORNRATE - aham 1 bdrm. air.
^laoe. pool. 9 ndn. waRi to UCLA. $140
Aak tar BdR: 473-7133. 477-0744.
(30 A 10)
house to Chars
JWIIlWl
FCBUU.E
Nos
Own room. 47S-1177 Dibbl
BRENTWOOD 3 BO «/yd. Quiet but
nmmr s«iope. bue. etc. - Eacellont ■
(32Jy3B)
A 12)
OROmot
II ai
$120 ma.
(StAB)
local
COMPLETE DINNERS
p.. $2.95
Casual Dining
"Tfm m Pw p^aoa tor Rm Lotmrg'
By fmr fie Baal Rfte «p'«a rnad m la. *
HARRY'S OPEN PIT BBO
1430
at
11-11 7 daya/wk
Lunch/Dlnnar
No
1470 S. BBRUL^
1 Mock So of WHahira
47S-7B9B
CMJylRI
mom
m^m
.inaimaavvaatanwmiiiijijuiimimmmm.mnnnmm
"i
LTfec ^axMn <cf\ooffn
• OpBfiB 7 mn\ fof bfBBRfBst. tuncti. and dmnBf
• LunchBon SpBC^lB Ottily
• DInnDr SfwctelB from $4.50
• TfOpiOMl fWiMI BBaim
• SundayB: ChRmpngnB BninoK-IIIXI Id 3:00-poolBidB
oil) %ra •»»
**'■■■"■•••
Second Summer Session Recreation Schedule
BUlii^ CANYON RECREATION CENTIR
Ejrt.S»71
• «-
ACTIVITIES
21 - Sapt 10 IBTB
• at
* >
•tMaw iVM
Tm
• %mm
I (Wm
/etaff
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9a .a. - 10 a. a. WaMo''a Ofa RmI
10 a.d. - U a.a. Wopan's Gyn Fool
-' U a.a. - 12 aooa Raaaa'a Qpa Jaol
Adult/ cttiidren siria lassom - aoe kaloe
7 p. a. - 10 p. a. Bac.
' T p.a. - 10 p.a. Bae.
1 p. a - U pa. Bac.
M*rw ><
f^atiag
ChllOroa's Art ^
Saetioo 1
2
Tto
Oat
9at
f«t 110121
SataSuf<
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12 1mm tmmm
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10 a.a. - 11 a.a.
U!l5 e ■ - 12;!^ Bac Caator
12 boon
tioQ Center
TT
Bpc Coat
1 p. a. Waaen's Gja^lOO
. X53671 for ialomstioc
daaaea offerod for bagtMlng, lotewsediste . advwKod ekat«rs C
$6.2^ to tprlaia tbe oae hour laesiso. sod addltioMl tr^ skate
card end all equlpaeot.
p.a. Nan's Gia T^SL
t:
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Tiack
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MWEb
mVTb
Tti9 aup. * 6 a.a.
12 aaaa - 1 p.a.
*s Cya 200
's Gjga 200
\roLi.fva*i.L
tSC
SSI
'•fitly
lach pereoo will sigD up for oi
Otaiaota aad Rsculty/Otafr
N»ulty/8taff oaXy
WNfVtk
laaaoe offered:
9 a.a. - 2 p.a.
5 p.a. - 7 p.a.
10 •»» II •»•»»> '
IS aN« ' a^
]% . *^
1 • Sam
»~l>*>i»t<)
«was««*i
1 ■ OiMn >
«
10 w«i ftpm
MK. MS
«l(. AW
All 9 a.a.- 2 p.a. c
diatriSutad at U:l^ s.a
All ^ pa. - 7 pa..claaaas:
.. First coow - first -
12 aaaa - 1:10 p.a, Friority
9 p.a. - 6 p.a.
t ■
mSr^dZ
IBFoiiAL
CABYQB
If n a.a."~12as p.^^iiie g ii!
Ttt^ 1 p.a. - ^iIb p;r. yL^'s jbp
awe SUM
M f«m
IO«M« Sam
Ot I
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Cmmnwmt
_u.' ...H •-.'•«^ ''-.'> <«.«h Wm I'
ioa about the above classes . call di!!iskitit «r eoaa Oa
fee. For enrollaent dates call oKt. '^36^
MP 16k
Cmu'ii li*«r<
»•. 7 Apm aMfiiyrH
r.Sam t9^
'« s «e
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I
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Slioot amfDribble wins summerintramufal^af e title
Surprise would be the best
word to use to describe the
~**A*' .Division Intramufal bas-
ketbBll champions. Shoot A
Dribble The Shoots DribMe
squad led by iCen Weiner;
defeB.ted Sunset Canyon Re^
creation, 38^ for the title^ last
Wednesday afternoon in
Pauley Pavillion.
ti^' ganic, iwarTcd by; tB^vy favorne in the "A" di-* In the finals, K was the 5-TT iff doling ^marked tiir play of
technical fouls. Bobo*s Raidcis. .Aosion. but the team was absent Wctne who aide tJw winninjt boi£ tinuns iii
won the *'B'' divuuon hy de-
feat in^^the Lumberjotfrks. 46-44
behind 21 pomls by Fll^l Agu-
iure. Mark Wright liad
25 points for the loscrt. .jn%
Shoot A Dribble upset
Powder River in the semi-
finals. Powder River iMto Ihc
former UCLA All-American basket on a tip-in over a 6-3
Larry Farmer (away on a re- playej with five seconds to go
cruiting trip) and Gary Ciin* _ in a gam^ Weiner tallieCT'T
ningham (involved with a p-
pointments at the Alumni Cen-
ter), so Maudi Abu Rahman
(Wah Hazzard) cotild not car-
r]^ilK k»Bd by himself
game lugh 15 points Bob
W it hers astandout throughout
the playoffs led a balanced
Sunset Canyon Recreation
learn with nine points. Cold
to win the tntramltnyL
title by a couple of J>oints, bitt
this year made up Tor Tit ^
cause it was a great witt«*l said
Weiner
- MichBd
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I
• •• . ^ ^ ^^ i- ' — '■ ' ^ ^=— ■=- : ■ " ■ •■ T
JSia'softies' in women's softball
My imtin Mkhimm
^ DB Sports Repurtir
^ The Sinfa Ana Lionettet
^ reacted unprofettionally iaat
Friday night after beating the
Cooneqicui Fakcioa, 5-2, 1-0,
in a doubleheader of Women*s
Professional SoftbaU (WPS).
After shaking hands wtth the
Eastern Division leaders, the
Qfange County ball club hud-
Kd together on the nu>und to
stap hands, hug each other and
scream with joy.
The Lionettes had done
r? what no other team could do
^ — they swept ConnecUcut (46-
9! 17) in a double-header More
^ than that, they gave pitching
•^^ wonder Joan ioyoe .fliUy her
f^ second loss of the wtamm
against 23 wins
^ Standing ovation
A partisan crowd at Santa
Ana Stadium added to the
jubiliation 1>y acknowledging
their favorites with a standing
ovation • Their support of a
tCMtt ihat is fighting for second
place on the West Coast is a
^ yoaiUMC iigp for the future of
'titc WPS, which contains sev-
eral Bruins
The 1,746 in attendance Twell
over Santa Ana's usual 1,000)
did not Tost come to see (he
Lionettes (42-32). Many fans~
oune to sec Joyce, the Randy
Jones of WPS accprdiDg to~
"^^Sporot iJiustrated\ ^ ;atid ^ hex
^ pitch that 15 sard lo be clocked
"~at a mere 90 miles per hour
(ten yeais ago, it was 118
: jnph).j;
^ Bobby SojT^nd Little Miss
oft ball players came as a
team - these young girls were
cquipptrd with glove in hand,
M|dy to catch souvenir foul
balls They, J»©.,^jdcntify with
sports tdott, and the WPS
league provides positive
modeb.
Joyce IS the center of their
attentioii, aad rightly so. She is
the co-fouader of the lO-team
WPS league and owiier-ma»-
agtr of the Falcons. She com-
bined knowledge with tenni^
star BiUie Jean King and new
proleague starter Dennis Mur-
phy (Murphy has helped create
the WFL in football and WHA
in hockey, among the several
new logucr he has been a part
oO to organize tl»e league and
shares the finances of her team
with professional golfer Jane
Blalock.
Before realizing here dream,
the WPS, Joyce pUched for the
triple- A Raybestos Brakettes of
Stratford, Conn She lead
them to eight national cham-
pionships m the last ten years.
-.Like Jones, Joyce draws a
big crowd whenever she
pitches, and with an ERA of
0.15, she setdom lets them
down.
Her performance Friday was
no exception Joyce scattered
five hits and struck out seven
in 6!/^ innings, but a first inn-
ing error set up the only run
^"Ifiat — mattered. The solo run
was unearned, but the Falcons
could not generate enough
offense to match it.
** Player of '^jf^^^^igfy^-^--^-^^^
Not to take anything away
from San(a~ Ana*s spunky,
underdog Lionettes, but Cathy
Benedetto iiyas clearly ^the
"player of the day." Before the
ganae. Lioifiettes* officials in-
troduced Benedetto's barc'nt
who were visiting from Wash-
ington, and iatiK- first inning
the dettgfiated- hitter offered
her* welcome by ripping a
Kathy Neal riser of the kft
field fence for a two-run homer
and a 2-0 Lionette lead.
Connecticut countered in the
top of the fourth when DH
Donha Terry singled and
shortstop Backus doubled her
^ >me. ^Double R*' later scored
trom saeaad on a Ncal stngle
up the middle to tie the game
2-Z
But Santa Ana would not
quit. In the bottom of the fifth,
they got three more runs on
three hits md an error. Again,
Benedetto was a contributing
factor, doubling in one run.
The inning also featurexl a
squeeze bunt by Lionette oen-
terfielder Oebbic Ricketts
(known 'qn the collegiate level
as Cal State FullertoQ*s play-
nriaking guard}^ and a base hit
by winning pitcher Carol
Spanks (17-12) a UCLA gra-
duate.
Sweet victory
Benedetto (2>- II) came hack
to pitch a four-hitter m the
second game and get that
sweet victory over Joyce. The
Lionettes made a number of
fine catches defensivelj^ and
took advantage of that iNlg
opportunity to -score.
Ricketts continued to spark
the teanv offensively ^r- alK wit
two — for three agaihitt^^toyoe^
three for five ibr the jcvening.
in the first inning of the night*-
cap, the >4 number two hitter
Hied her long legr and quick
speed to beat out a OMpli^^ ,
bunt, steal second and come
Ton a Mickey Davis
single thar fmed off Joyce's
riSSr--
.'•.•.••
Pf:!:!:^!J*5!Sf^iS^!:^s«-i::'«::r::;^a5>;^
'Do)ilile R' at slwrt
Bruin coach makes the team
ly La«ra Ml
DB Sports Rc^orlar
SliarroB Bacfci u GAA
vitor at Western High School,
Anaheim. Laat spring she
uught a PE class at 7 am m
to make 3 pm sa^tball
at UCLA, an hour or
so away depending on traffic
As^ if two jobs and the Sanu
Afia Freeway weren't enough
travel and trouble for the
UCLA women's softball coach,
Rackus holds a third job dur-
ing the summer pro softball
player for the Connecticut Fal-
cons.
This obligation denies
a summer vacation, but **I do
what makes me happy,** said
the Falcon's number six
batter, ''and I'm dbiiig wlwt I
lo^ to do.**
"Double R-
Sharron fhotc the "Double
R**, her nickname) has been
playing in national, tourna-
ments since she was" 14. At
shortstop, she has great
'■*«*-•
and mobility, and a rifle arm
most plays look
It ii no HBall coito-
ciicncr that jin^ her eight years
wkh the Raybettot Brakettes
of Stratford, Conn., the team
pqn eight national champion-
tliipa^
When the much-heTalded
Joan Joyce organized the
s Pro SoOImU (WPS)
asked her amateur
Brakette teammates to go pro,
il jvaa-a -naUnral step up for the
winning shortstop who wears
number ux,
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
The Falconk— are winaing.
They play three timmTlHiiny
games and use a different
name, but they dominate the
pro ranks in the same way at
the ■m"*-^'- "■ybcatoa. .With
an overall record of 46- 1 7, they
4ead the Eastern Division by 16
loycc factor
Of course, the p«*^^ing aoe
Joyce is a factor, and wli^ ihe
starts, the Falcons usually wm
(ContflHied on Pipi 1^
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Rule changes key
UCLA volleyball streak threatened
By MiduMl
DB Sports Writer
UCLA*s dominance of NCAA
volleyball will l>e in jeopardy
next year due to rule chMges,
new coaches and foreign
players.
The Bruins under coach Al
Scates have won the NCAA
title three years in a row and
SIX times in the seven year
history of the event The secret
in most of the championships
^wms having the best overall
team, but collegiate volleyball
will literally involve only six
players for t/tm 1977
arad Hoaand
Holland nearing 100 per cent
UCLA gnard Brad Holland.
who uqderwent knee surgery
last April, played at full speed
Monday in Pauley Pavilion far
the first time since the surgery.
•* Monday was the first time I
played fullcourt in three and a
half months." said Holland.
nflMi hat an excellent chance oC
fltarttng at guard in the fall for
the Bruins "My knee should
he as good as new by the taU.**
Fellow players indicaMB
>HoUaad*s big problem it to
lose the 15 pounds in weight
hs hai addsd 4ur
from the injurv Holland
he hoped to play as much at
poaaible from now on to get
back into top shape for the
The sophomore suffered the
ifijury during his senior year of
high ichool at Cresccnta Valk^
aad pleyed with the knee
^aOMige throughout his UCLA
freshman season He had
surgery two days after the
completion of the season
Trainer Mike Wells said
Holland was right oa
The United. States Volley-
ball AssQtd^ieii- -fUSVBA)
which sets the standards for
the NCAA rukt, hat adopted
international rules for the 1977
season in an effort to improve
the United States volleyball
program world-wide.
Inter— tianil nikt mean in-
itaad of being ahk to Mtb-
stitute three times for each of
the six players, collegiate
ooaches will only he
one tuhatitution at every
tion. Thit MgBUi the team
with the strong hench and the
One that hat the front court,
serving and setting
and return U over tte net
usually won ^ Z^Z
UCLA is the school that will
probably suffer the moit noe
the Bruins pottets the deiepcit
squad in collegiate volleyball
Latt year while moti tgnadi
would use only seven or eight
players, Scates usually played
at least ten players and some-
times up to 12.
Rules efTect Braina
With the new rules, a itand-
out spiker Mike Gottschall.
UCLA*s leading hitter in the
NCAA finals last May againtt
Pepperdine, would not be able
to play unless he could also
pats in the back row. A setter
such as Bruin Peter Athley,
who Scates considered as the
beat pure setter in college Uwt
row.
year, could not play unlets he
could also hit and block ef-
fectively in the front
Backcourt and serving s|
ist Mike Frankhn, who
several critical plays in the
NCAA finals, would only have
one rotation in the hadi worn
instead of his atnal three under
the new rules.
''In the long run the switch
by the USVBA to Interna-
tional rules will be good, but
the rules will hurt a lot of
short people and speciabsts in
the collegiate ggme,** taid
Andy Banachowtki, UCLA
men*s aaaiilani coach and head
coach of the two-time AIAW
championship women^s team.
"I don*t think the Interna-
(CaaiiBned on Page 7)
MIi-l»a*l Sfimitbri— rr
Ako whei\ a ball it touched
at the net in a block attempt, it
will not count as one of the
three hit! allowed under inter-
il rules The collegiate
counted the touch at a
baa able to save the looae ball
/^
-♦«3u.
I
UCLA
Summer
jC
. X'. .
XClX,Numbsr11
Ufihiwilty of CalNomla, Log Angal^g
Friday, AuguglB, 1B7B
SLC lends student support to discotheque
Proposed private business approved in unprecedented move by council
I I I * I ■ ,^
t
By Rnas Wolpert
DB Staff Writer
la an unusual, first-of-its-kind action Mon-
day, the Student Legislative Council (SLQ lent
the support of UCLA*s student body to a
TMTivate, off-campus business proposal in thi^
case, a planned discotheque in downtown
West wood
SLC members approved a tesolution wmp-
porting the plans of Progressive Entertainment
Corp. Inc , one-time owner of Bahama Ma!na*$
disco in Marina del Rey. to build a disco on
Gayley Avenue in Westwood in the old West-
wood Carper Cuiiipawy.
The lone abstention on the vote came from
.SJLC administrative representative Rick 7 iit0e
Ailitiunal floor
The planned disco, called Dillons, still must
receive approval from the Los Angeles Board
of ZpiuDg Appeals next Tuesday. Plans for the
disco were waylaid after City Councilman Zev
Yaroslavsky and honieowneri" m Westwood
protested yet another entertainment coniplea m
the area. 'Da^id iCenner, president of the
my. originally had received approval for
ift but fan into resistance
SLCs role m the proposed disco apparently began in the of&oe
of Undergraduate Students Aaan. President Meg McCormack.
Mike Galizio, McCormack*s information director, had told
an earlier SLC maeting that the disco would provide discounts
to UCLA studeiiu. Ahhough the board heard a number of
proposals regarding discounu and "Students* Nights,'* no
a three-story c<
whiil he sought ah additional floor for his
Tha4: -resistance was based upon the
nui^lber of parking spaces requnrd by zoning
- — la<W's, and the issue may-^^be determined at
___Juesday*s^. meeting of the zoning appeals board-
The action of Si.C drew the criticism of
Pebbles Taylor, UCLAji^ Assistant Coiicert
Manager, who described the move as unrea-
sonable and said the disco would compete
directly wtlh campus concert activities.
- r,' - ■- ^-.T^ Dianaaeat
-''Taylor said officials of the planned^ disco are
**being dishonest with the students by teUing
them they can bring top acts, mto a hall with
only 298 seats.** The notion that the proposed
disco would feature^ "major acli such as Helen
Reddy and Paul Simon** came 'from Metro-
Lobby Director Dean 7jft^' who^-hna held
conversations with the otHrporation.
But, said Taylor, **The Roxy (a rock theater
in Hollywood) can't do that, and it is larger. It
has a repuution and it*s owned by (industry
entrepreneur) Dave Geflcn."
An employee of the Roxy, who asked to
remain anonymous, held that **There isn't, any
way (company president David) ICenner can get
aeit like Reddy or Simon to phiy a small club
tike that Td like to meet this guy JJLenner). In
fact, Td like to hook him as a comedmau**
At issue IS whether SLC is acting appro-
priately in endorsing an off-campus business
that has no ties to UCLA and the student body
that is repfeeented by SLC.
Place to tfaace
A rough draft or the resolution that was first
presented to the board suggested that students
demonstrated a dcane for a place to dance.
While McCormack has indicated her support
oi the disco« she has conceded she has never
■Wt with Kenner or any official of the cooi-
pany Mike Galizio, her information director,,
explained the statement of student interest in a
4ia60 this way: **Last year, Metro Lobby did a
survey. There %vere no specific questions
regarding a disco, but a lal af returns expressed
for a nearby piece to danoe.*^
-Very little tlnM^ -^^r^
He added, **lt*s not likie Meg just asked a few
of her friends what they thought of a dnco.
Meg hae pot~in~>cry httle time on the disco. I
d0n*t think she put in any time.** Galizio said..
When atked how she could support a private
mpus business without having met with
any officials of that firm, McCormack re-
sponded. **! tfwirMtke (Galizioji very ranch, he
asked me if he could go ahead and work on cBe
--dieco, and I said ymJ* She 4mBdkad her lack of
pcniniial i n > olvenaeni sn the project a* '"Iri'tle-
; an attorney and head of the disco
profed, was asked wheCher lie might agree to
eater into a contract guaranteeing certain
4iicountsio UCLA studenu. *^Oh yiesili. It*s not
incomprehensible that we wamid agree to that
kind of thing. The priee I charge for any
particular act would depend on how mmch we
have to pay fpr theni. That is out of my
control, so it is the aalift, not nic. that
determines whether or not itii4ents get a
special night - ^. ^ '
Galizio. instrunientaj m gaiiling SLC ap-
proval of the resolution, aaid, **! don*t think
ILenner would agrec-io a contract, and we don't
legal gnarantees have been either agpnd to or put in writing
by the disco company.
N«MlBiket, SLC voted approval of the resolution, which
will prepared mad written in Undergraduate President Mc-
Cormack *s office.
Coaeeru official Taylor iaid that **To open
an outside house in Westwood is direct comp^j
tition for UCLA*s fine-art prodwelMM Mid
every student programming body on camptia.**
She laid studenu at UCLA are *'trying to
learn about programming and producing them-
The second Dillons goes up, it will
I (Continned on Pajge S|^
>
I
I
Enrollment down 20 per cent
By Jo^ Zechowy
DB Staff WHier
The amount of new itudeats
accepted this fall has dropped
JO per cent from last year*s
figure, according to a Planniag
Office official
l^aet fall we had more new
studenu than we had planned
on,** 9md AkM P Fedderson,
Prinapal Adimmstrative An-
alyit, in eiiiielaHMig the
a freshmen enroU-
lo the ""ideaT
of 3J5D, R
UC Davis is the only other
UC camptis that is currently
redirecting iMdentt, FeMenon
•nid. He explained thnt if re-
direction of studenu can be
considered an indicalor of
popularity, UCLA may be-
come the second or third nKMt
popular caaipni thm ^Ul.
Latl fall, 10,007 students
met the University entrance
Thit fmSL IJ30
aceeplai, unit-
ing in the decreaae al
To ineore the
figure, F^ddmmm said
at Mideiila may he
ihM &U. FnoMrty,
UCLA never imd Hk mmd In
redirect mmdmm.
in contrast, UC Berkeley
alwe3m reoeives mote
NawBmker than it
forcing ad mi
to redirect studenu
aie taken in.
r* (the
that apply to thoee
or third
if more con-
tinuing studenu than expected
remain at UCLA.
Theae factors leaulted in an
o^crenroUment of 800 students
-iPiaAmen admissions for fall
1976 were cloeed in early
December of last year, the
^ date UCLA has
to impoee^ -IMderson at-
titti cut-off to the fact
are applying
earlier thaa in the
Advi
19
lo
M for
tnch as the Academic Ad-
vnaoaoieat Program (AAP),
ROTC and foreifa mmdmm.
There it a dmnee that
1977) will cloee ia the latt
of Novemher, inentfer-
ig» It it always
to the Miien(*s advantage to
file ia Wovember (the
itMig parmn^.
Board of Control returns
from $1 000 vacation to lake
Two members not confirmed by CoHndl
fr<
ly Ram Walpert
DB 9mm Wff«ler
Members of the Board of
Control (BOQ, who set tfK
fiecal policy of the Aaeo-
ciaiad Stwieaie of UCLA aaaociotioa.
(ASUCLAX liiwid iroa a Exacnbve
workmg vacaiioa ia.Lake ASUCLA, it
the
sijoeo.
full control €4
all activities of the asso-
ciated ttndentt which ia-
--^'
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Crime A Punishment
Tire slashing r
By Aiaa
DB Staff Writer
Three tires on a 1975 MonU:
Carlo were slashed July 21 m
one of thrae acts of vandalism
reported to the UCPD during
the last two weeks.
The car, parlied in Parking
Structure 2, was found hy its
owner with the right front Urc
and hoth rear tires flat, an
estimated $150 in damages.
According to the UCPD, the
tires were slashed with a
"possible sharp instrument.**
Lafer that week it was re-
ported siii unknown chaBMesI^
had been placed on a vehicle in
Parking Structure 9. level 4
After washing the car. the
owner noticed several spots on
the left side of the cac where
paint had once been
A third act of vandalism
damaged the Desert Gardens
Gate on the east side of the
Bdtahjckl Garde^ns during the
night of July 22. The suspects
**iiiad a log as battering ram
and smashed the wooden
gute,** according to the UCPD
police report There was no
daoMlfe rcporx issued as the
gate* was repaired by University
personnel.
in addition la the vandalism,
two thefts occurcd in late July,
probably involving the use of a
pass key A typewriter and
other equipment were stolen
from Neuropsychiatric institute
58242 betweeii July 23 and 24
Although the room was
locked; rhere were no signs of
forcible c^try. indicating the
possible use of a key The
main item missing was an IBM
Model Correcting Select ric II,
worth $800 Total loss was-
estifnaiecl at $851
A locked room m the Center
for the Health Sciences was
also entered with no signs ol
forcible entry, and $65 worth
of plants were taken from the
windowsiil The plants missing
were described as 2 Philo^ea-
dron type, 1 Schefflera and j
Prayer plant.
Other thefts which oocured
the last two weeks of JuK
were:
Six dcmal instruments
valued at $1075 were taken
from the locked locker ol a
dental student. The items, which
had no serial numbers, were
taken sometime between July 23
and 26
^=-^our chrome bub caps
wprth $140, 20 8-track tapes
also worth $140 and a carrying'
case worth $30 were taken
trom an unlocked car parked
in Lot 14. level 2. The incident
occured July 21. **
And last hut not least, io
bicycles were stolen, and one
was found.
BOC vacation . .
v i
XContinued froai Tiff t)
three school days required
Tby the By-Laws
Mi:Cormack said,"'"' "'*lt
wasn*l my fauh I directed
niy secretary to have the
rndas out Friday ** Due to
the lack of notification. SLC
voted to send McCorriaacTTs"
appointee's^ to^ Arrowhead
without confirming them.
. Don Laiiar> (SL^4 Inter-
aai ~ Affairs Coordmator.
■tuyied . $400 was alreai ^
wasted ^cause the BOC
vacation was postponed two
times hafattr"^
"I am -against sendi
non-members to the BOC
retreat After t hcjr go, it will
reinforce our icndencyl to
confirm them later on, ei^ciL
if we would no( have done
so otherwise." said John
" Kobara, Community >er-
A-iccs Commis^ner.
Kobara. added tMf could
be a wav to force^LC into
aTyproi filing unqualified peo-
ple After the retreat. Mc-
Cormack could jugpie her
appointees must be con-
firmed, because ^Thgy~"went
on th!< retreat and have so
much more knowledge than:
an altgrnate person Who
^JKM go, iCobara. sAtd.
McCormack appointed
Brian Eisberg, David Bender
"Sommer Brum
VokMnaXCtX.Niimbarll Friday, August S.I S7S
Published twice a week durtng the summer, except during holidays and
days following holidays, and examuiatton periods, by the ASUCLA
Communications Board 306 Westvrood Placa. Los Angeles. California
90024 Copyright 1976 by the AS Up LA Communications Board
Second ciaas postage paid at the Los Angeles Post Office
aewoy ■ifi'Cnief
• • • • •
t ••« • • •<
*^»e «.#•!»-•'-• e^jm,
1 '
• • • • »^«'« « •..•>•».
Alice Short
Frank Stallworth
Qaoff Ouinn
■ Suaan Kanf
Tad Shaptfo
Frank Widder Sally Gamer.
Kim Wildman, Michelle Duvat
David Whiinair Jeanne Eglaah
Michael Sondheimer
•'••£»««'»i Steve Finley
■>»-«H»yi»»;y..#.»»i.».« »■#=>!!»:♦« . . Je«T Lapin
^ ..... 1 lyiarta Levine
s£n6almak6R ^
1334 West wood Blvd
WestwoodCjIif 90024
Phone (21 3) 473 9549
Corn*" of Roc»>»»sr#" ^nd VMfstwwood
. II-. fi.f». SANDAis ^€lTS roix Ht.S PUKSCS liA' .S
iATH£« foois ,i»„^ CRAFT INSTi^UCTidNS
'aia.
IL BAMBINO
(The Perfect Lunch)
$1.95
A cup ol kmmmmmie soup or a smaU sabd
A iIms of wnw or coMaa
S tandiMch on a fresh heken roll, your choice dt hot meat
ball, tway pepper, salami h chacse,
Smymd deik^ mi
^\^a\jti2 2L^ C7ttro ^uui ^lom Ckad
was «.l (NOOK AT IINDSaoOK) "
\si PianiNif ifctiTisu tra hih.
Uo Wilkes to BOC. As
resident, McCormack if
also a member
Brian Eisberg. currentiv
National j>tudcnt Associa-
tion ityfaitntative, was ap-
fVMKST^I^ipite his currei
position. As a member ot
SLC, Eisberg voted to send
himself to Arrowhead. He
said he plans to resign from^
SLC by Auguj^t 31.
David Bender, who was
Information Director for
Larry Miles, cannot partici-
pate iti BOC decisions until
the fall quarter starts, even
if he is confirmed, according
to Byron Atkinson, Dean of
Students. Atkfffiton said
Bender was not a student
last year, but will attend
UCLA m the fall.
Bender said he has a GPA
of "^approximately** 2.0. and
lists his date of graduation
as "^eventually."
Leo Wilkes, who is cur-
jrently attending UC Sanu
Earbiara, was not present for^
the meeting at which con-
firmations were supposed to
have taken place.
BOC members appointed
by GSA president Pauline
Brackeen ate Manuel Mar-
tinez, Walter McCall. de-
mon Williams, and herself
(Jniike the undergraduates.
Brackeen refused to disclose
to background or qualifica-
tions of her appointees.
47T-2%S|
Gold Rush Salute
In a ^kommitmM salute to
the performers of the
Gold Rush days, the Mother
Lode Troupe will pMMBt
"-Divas of the GoMen West.**
next Swiday, | pm. m
SdMen^erg Hall
The program, set !■ •
pioneer saloon in San Fraa-
ciico. will include parlor
inngi, operatic arias a«d a
Miodrima entitled "L^tl^
Had Ridi^ Hood.**'-^
Tickets, available at the
Ctiitial TitUt OiTiLL lien.
arc S5 aad S6.
Si
Photographers
needed for
Summer Bruin "^
Apply in Kerckhoff 110
la ffarierai
FIZZA
GR 8-0123
if
M0« d«H»
KAifr O v«.
Opery 7 Deys
M AMto2Akl
Datwaan Barnngton and Bundy
1 1913 Wilshire Blvd. 478-01 23
I
C
m
c
1^
L.,.wH
West Center nearly ready
By BnMe A
__ OB Stair Reporter
UCLA M gettiaj a brand
new TrTint finnr** aaf h the
different locations." He said it
would be advantananvt to
in
whe refnlarty deal with
To hmlp you
jahfs.
Writing SkaH — SpMd
C^
.4
n
2S
Tlie Guidance O
3017 Santa Monica Blvd.
"Santa Monica
Janiei E. West Alumni Center,
due for completion by Sepl*^
ember
Located in t hr_jeographica I
''TicaTt^ bTncrrtj^ (between
Pauley Pavilion and Ackerman
Umon, the Alumni Center wtti
provide a foc^ point for inter-
action between tlie University
the gene r af com mumtyr"
of Its functions will be
a comprehensive
pne-jitap information center
where visitors to the Unrver-
.sity, students or faculty will k^
able to find out about campus
activities, cultural events or
directions on how to get
around the giant UCLA cam-
pus. The four information ki-
aaki Incaied around the peri-
meter of the campus will be-
come secondary eniranoes. .
Tjhe modernistic concrete
structure desigpled by Caudill
Rawlcftt Scott ^ill feature first-
level meeting halls for the use
of campus organizations.
Alumni support groups, the
business community and va-
rious friends of the University
Plans call for a two-story
gallery to be used for a variety
of events and exhibits, and the
new Founders Room, which is
being relocated from Pauley
tainhon.
The Alumni and Develop
mcnt Asancintion will operate
the Center and wiil occupy
offices on the second layd.
Gene Clair, director of the
capital campaign for the Alum-
ni Center, points out, **At this
time, we have about filtv
Alumni people who are trying
to wnrk from ofTioet in four
The building wilt alM> house
central ticket office for
all UCLA eyents. athletics ex-
chided
Ihc Alumni Center is actu-
al^ the thirdTpaf! in a triad of
Sfucfures collectively known—
as the Memorial Activities
Center, a project hegun with
the^construcnon of Pauley
Pavilion in l%5,. and to be
completed with the addition of
the Alumni Center and a hew
•sport s' and recreation rfacihty
jplanncd lor tiie future.
The total coat of the Alumni
Center ii S3, 151,300 includmc
the oail of the building iteOT
entry plazas, pntiot aiid gar-
deae aiad contingency and in-
terest requirements.
Funds are beiny raised .hy
aka UCLA Foundation, which
so far has acquired approxi-
amid^ one half of the toul
The Center is named in
honor ol James t West.
UCLA a4umnuN who pledged
S506.0QO at the start ol the
campaign
Other tunds are being drawn
from maaeV left over from the
nal Pauley Pavilion cam-
paign ($543,000) plus $120 (KX)
out of student regi.strafmn Ires
No announcement has vet
been made as to an oUi44a4
**grand opening.** and it wilt
take at laaat a month to finish
—preparing the building tor, um:^
hy t|KL oec^Af^nts M public '
Eventually, the Alumni Cen-
ter will be the cohflcrstone c
the West wood Pla/a project,
whereby West wood Boulevard
-^.between 5>unset and S^raih-
morc will be closed off to
automobile traffic, dnd trans-
formed into a paiaitrian walk-
'•. 4
^<^
Sri.
Pair of heela
(with one at reg. coat —
offer good through Aug I2th)
The Village Cobbler offering the largest
selection Bort Carleton shoes in the village,
sandals, handbags,*' briefcases, notebooks,
& leather accessories.
yUiagr Cobbler
11 10 Gmyley
Freehemd Jewelry
479-^273
M'W 10-7
Frt A Set 10-10
Tkmn, 10-9
Stm. I2'f
Designer Steven Hannah pretents exclu-
sive sate on attgoki. silver. A. custom jewelry.
LOOK FOR OUR STOREWIDE SALE
Auatitt 14th thru 28ttil
««M
sas
. M
TUNE-UP, LUBE & oil iOA^i
OVftMAIH t
195
L
A-1 AUTO SERVICED.
894-7075
7957 VAN NUYS BlVO.^_
FXNOfiAMA CiTY 2 •i.Rt to or acmcoc
-«N)
^
\
/
X-
V
Sunday Worstitp ,9:30aiii
Ufw^rsilKUitheran
^^1 lU|^wl Sunday Seminar 1Jam
Corner; Strc/' jre&Gayley
s
^ Or.
and Dmmn of Wm
that braaat i-raya for woman
INa fM of
X-rays, breast
linked
By Suftan SiltcM
Dt Staff Hriier
Wo«Kn undet 50 face i nsk
of developing breast cancer
from tubjection to nummo-
graphy. or breast x-rayt. ac-
cording to Pr Lester Breslovk.
cpidemioiogist and Dean of
ICLAS School of Pubbc
Health
As oitfetioe for hi> claitn.
Brealev ell€^ ^Mrversl iludie> oi
• ho ha\<rbeien ei
to radiatio«[^ the results
whidi hM^$ been carefulK ex;
a mined unct January b> Bres-
U^aad bis team of four doc-
e\pUined Cbc umd-
les involved »omen e\j
racial ioQ'^^^^_lia|iaB*s atomic
b'v raMMMHi^ for
ocher fcm^
^ exposed to the amounts of
raduition that were iflvolyed.
Further that the greater the
exfwsure, the greater the hkeli-
hood of breast cancer occur-
In addition, to these studies,
Breslow ciMd an ongoing
breast«-cancen detection pro-
gram initiated in the early
t^60'$ by New York's Health
Insurance Plan (HIP).
**lBipaet am
The program, Brestow cx-
plamadr-ipat ** designed to test
whether scTeemai for bmst
cancer i» :i systematic, or-
ganized fa&hion wouTd "have
ah impact on monatit^^ from
cancer"
The HIP project, dau Jfcr^
which IS available for irvini
vears. comf^fcs twm
samplrs of 31 thousand women
ielecied from -the; HIP nK0l:
berstifp and lifBd 4iJb64--years.
Women in the *lfiKly group"
were ofktmi icSMMif exanu-,
a phy-
ui exaatnation by health
^ ,^., Is. iirstruction ii
hirtiwi self examination and
-^ the " control
their usual
n^ical
care,** $aid Breslow.
The comparison showed 33
per cent of the 132 breast
cancers detected wpuld have
been missed kmd mammogra-
phy not been included in the
screening examinations.
Howtvtr. Braitow explained,
all of the benefit of manrmio-
graphy occurred among wo--
men over 50 years of age
Reductio.a. in niortality was^
abour 46 per cent at ages 50-
**Therc was a very substan-
tial red uctioi^- ^ti mortality for>
women over 50 and ^na reduc-
tion under the afe of 50, just
no ^ncfit Whatsoever m
screening- that could be mea-
sured by that paHicular pro-
granC Breslow said.
'Bresiow added ITTfTJNa-
tionai^Academy of Sciences
report revealed there is
hazard in radiation of the
breasts no matter what thc-
4xnount or what the
women who arc given mammo-
graphy.
Dbcontinucd J
hi light of his analysis of
these studies, Bresla^ recon\^
mended that mammography be
discontinued for routine screen- __
ing of women under 50 years
of ager He made this recom-
mertdation on the basis that
the HIP study showed no-mea-
surable benefit from such
screening and there was a de-
finite hazard irom the radia-
tion received.
In addition, Breslow con-
cluded, "There is no absoKitely
safe dose** for X rays He
urged the amouni of radiation
exposure in a tnammography
be reduced to the lowest pos-
sible level to detect breast
group of women over 50 who
ought to receive the betKfits of
mammography," Breslow said
He added, "There are about
90,000 cases of breast cancer
per year, with a slow increase
The more raduition received,
the greater the nsk of develop-
ing, breast cancer. kVns simple
as that"
fOtBCN STUHNTS
Skipping SpmckihsH o(
r^
Campu$ Events
^ ^ I Visit dlBf. Z pW'. TtfSS-
Utt UC ttuiint labbi m SscriwmHi Nsi* aiyt md Thycsday ^ Augutt a tiap
lion a tan Inat Isr ont mrtc yoors Visti Mwrahy 1215 frm
Umm^^^^I WS ter ^utM^ ^
__«^^^^^_ A^^^^^^^ ^^fc^^a te^^M Iv^Mi "^^^^^ ^^^w^^^^B n i^^v ^^^^^HMH
w^m^tf ^^s^^ m^am^' la^M hwii lOfMoaiiM Hk fMMrdi ■■■iiliali Vtaa
MCU. S-ll 0P, SMMfiM. fnWmMOTBl SSSSSmT JaS^SS^
cUTmSm it yon ^ ^ --- *•••'*' •-••/
m awlormino
wttfi clMscai iMiar
SJMJIpaffijil
rap*
to iiMliunity
3M 1 dtf VM730
•-10 PHI
M pm. tfancmg by
>'s
wiN tram you
Is Hwssaasit
WsiskNiUlii Ii imiiiiiiNft— fcOppsyim
MiK. Mfi a«. 4i£iSl Hi
flat Tiatwiiislifcaipa.,
——a aw iiaaiiiafac SMi
lies Isf twwy lUiiswy mi amnion ting- WUTWm
SMa. Mwiiays aiid Wedntsdays A(iHflHS_ -Mai|M|MMMilM| of2ndNWf.73d
3Bt7 p«.lBMflit Ackefmim 2401
Private business supported . . .
(Continued front Page 1)
knock out these students
having that iearning exper-
ience.** ~
McCormack, a supporter ot
the disco, said that UCLA
does not have the -front
money" to attract these same
performers to our school and
away frQjii__Dillons Taylor
disagress. **Student Committee
for the Aru, as well as Cul-
"tural Affairs, is given money
each yeai — ttr put on perfor-
mances with a risk factor." She
said UCLA could produce acts
like Paul Simo;i. since there
would be no pro blem^sef ling at
least 298 seats, a reference to
the total capacity of the diM:o
at proposed
Asked if SLC*s action might
sef^ a precedent and encourage
other busines&men to seek the
student body's seal of appro-
vat McCormack- said, **l
would be extremely upset if it
set a prsca»nt.
Galizio said, "If there is a
need for a service in West-
wod, whft^ private enterprise
can provide aiid "which student
govern ment_tfap not, then we
will support that private enter-
pritc."
A check Wednesday of the
corp#raie division of tiK Se-
er etatyoIJSxate*! office m
Sactamento indicated that
Kenner*s firm has not filed a.
required incorporation form
idemifyliii officers of the cor-
poration. California law re-
quires the form be filed within
90 days of thr^fc^-ef incor.
poration
Records indicate, however,
that the required filling out of
the form is three years -^yetr,,
doe Kennier indicated that the
cb^rnpanT"wa~s purchased in
1975 and that he ^rt^ no sprri-
fic information on whether this
procedure has been carried
outT Jl__. ' ~~-^- — ^■'"■■' ■
Summet^ailJng Prograni
sponsored by tl^JJCLA StflffKi Chib^
Hsgiatmtior> for^asalii: Thursday. Aug 5th in Pauley (S
Entrance. Gate 4) from 12-2 pnr) and again in Kecckhoff
Hall 400 on Friday. Aug 6th from 11*1 pm. The cost is
$25 00 and classes start Aug 7th and last 6 weeks
Children SatNng Claaa^s: Mon-Thurs 9 30-1;00. possible
weekend clases. if interest $25 00
Open House: Sat Aug 7th 1 00-6 00 pm Everybody
welcome ~ » -'
InatrucieMT^ aruJ > Aaalatanit: Call Jacqi at 825-31 7 1 or
479-9664 -^^-^
Informatlofi: Sailing Club Office 825-3171, Dock 823-
9978. or URA Office 825-3703
'V.
"Twg comnm discoumt drug
ASK OUR PHARMACISTS FOR ADDITIONAL
PRESCRIPTION SAVINGS ON GENERIC DRUGS
ll nil OtUbS
■ l •<■! out.
V
ami
MUSM
KM
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MTBttlVI
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DISCOUNT coupon
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WMn
Roll
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4inr
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tiRITI DRUGS
w^mmmtmmmmi9 >•»
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PrMcri^ $4
■tw PrMcrlpliMi i Um/ttkm IrMn • PrMcri^ ^4
Nm flSatf at Mpv •Hnt druf sicrt. Ut Mir PlMrNMcist ^Mlt ■
BMNTiS lOW, law Ptld. 0«r pkmnmmht «« fhrc "
^^ VM • Cmpm W«rfli $1J0 hi amr SMHl* Bnit Start m
al Smi Hurt. Grt SMHl* Prkt - Vm'H h» ^mi f9m Mi #
i^^mmmmi^^'^^^i^^^^^
IMiapyoncoupowi
m^im^mmmmi
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I
summer bruin
Review of 13 'Ruinous' Years
by Stuart Silverstein
Daffv Bruin HmU wntmrrt
rational demarwling
li
<
I
WASHINGTON — In a iociety to
logical explanations for all phenonr>ena. the number thirteen has
persisted in carrying the most sinister connotations. The most
tmodmt\ triumphs in structural steel, so orderly in every other
hr>annef, seldom boast a thirteenth floor Walking under a U6<ier on
the second Friday of the month (when it falls upon that date) is the
height of folly In fact, the only poftlttve aspect of that singularly
wretched number that I can thmk of lies in the haul of salable
goodies reaped by the lewish youngster when he beconr>es a man
on that birthday Generally, however, that is the exception that
(dare i lay a?) proves the rule Thirteen is the curse of the digits.
t%.v»m0mtxM*mvi^-f
*
y^
OPINION
With this in mind, it is indeed symbolk that by mid-November,
with jimmy Carter rho^ probably voted into the White House by a
comfortal|5le margin, it will have been almost exactly thirteen years
since the assassination of |ohn Kennedy — thirteen ol $he most
ruinous years m our history.
Thcrie are political assassination There were r^ct rioTs" in the
streets An entire generation was alienated from the Anr>erican
dream by an ill-conceived, criminal war A president was caught
breaking the law with the cavalier disregard of the mp^t hardegjjgd^
kiUer — ^nd almost brought down the government in the
I iifi t can H Mfxico is doing ft f still
1..^^
tetters te the Editor
process.
Thefe was ''a- depression which resulted ♦•"the «i>empk)ymer>t of
one Aijnerican in ten. There was hate, and there was bitterness But
sOOn» pray, it will all be history.
; for most of us who watched the Democratic convention last week
end heard the addresser of Representative fofdan thd
Carter, it was a hew beginning. Neither Jordan, whose ancestors
were slaves, nor Carter. whQse_ancest©rs' society promulgated that
institution, vyere brimming with hate or yindictivenss. but -rather
hope and compassion. They did not muJI ov?r^^outhern strategies '
or /'white backlash.' but rather the dreams and aspirations of the
''pHh^ple. ArHijwben a black wo/T^a.n trom Texas car? elicit a standing
ovation from the whiit<L ^eleiHes of Miasrssippt — whgrc ten ^etn
ago <?»vil rights activists were murdered for daring iq $tart vQtefi-
^ registration drives — the times are indeed changing And we h^
seen it happen. We are the generation of change
-More on Plus
Editors ■
I don't wish lo belabor this
issue, but I think there Is ano;
thai mera^jgMH^b^
ation in the discusiSpoffne
plus/minus grading system (See"
Daily Brum fudy 20th editorial
and July 27th Letter to the Editor
on the grading system being
discussed). ~_ " ."
Wby wasnYfSe A-*" recognized
as a possible grade? I'm sure
Apartment
Hunting Season
Our political experience has been one.,of drvisiveness ^nd despair
We were weaned November 22 in Dallas. We spent our formative
years on the evening news, m quaint sounding locales such, as Da
Nang, Pleiku, and Khe Sanh/ We reached maturity in the year of our
lord, 1968 — in Memphis, at the Ambassador Hotel, and m Lincoln
Park. And something died within us that pleasant spring day at Kerit:
State. Watergate |ust proved what we knew all along.
But now. the light at the end of the tunnel, to paraphrase the best
and the brightest of a decade ago. is at harui. For the first time since
Zachacy Taylor took office 128 years ago. we will have a President
from the Deep South. But while the blacks of Taylor's day called
him "masia.^ and tilled his fields, this time it's "Jimmy/' as Ar>dy
Young delivers the teconding speech. > — ^>f*
To be hor>e5t, I really don't renr>ember what it was like when the
United States was looking to the future with confidence, rather than
distrust and pessimism. The New Frontier was before Yny time. But
after thirteen years, I think it's about time to see it all happen again.
Look out America, my generation has grown up.
TtiaT"$fudipnls~oc?a4i6iialty do
work, )ust as gymrusts occasion-
ally do Itr^TTe-^'^pearff^") rou-
In addition; #^ student could
earn an A>. the extr'a three-
tenths of a grade point earried
could be applied againit any
grade points or fractions
of grade points he may have
dropped in other classes. An A-**
would certainly not detract from
the value of an A, but would
serve to reward the sljdent who
does especially outstanding
work. If it is now possible to
show that a student did less than
straight A work by giving him an
A- grade, then it seems only fair
to recognize an above A
formance with an A-*-.
/Before yoo run out to bag the
big' game, our office would like
to pr^ire you for the dangers
ahead You see, wfule we don't
conduct guided tours through
ciasftified a^. we meet 4J^ w^
troop* o^ QBUalnes^ -'^^ 'from the
battle of tenant versus landlord.
What ' Id," beware^oti
1 "No. there's no large security
deposit, but, I do charge $125
showing fees (or leasing fees) to
cover ee§ts of advertisements,
preparation, any my timf^^et
cetera.
. If you hear this, get out. This
charge is prpbabiy m response
to recent court rulings that all
"^i&pmits must be refundable if
not iMed for intended purpose
(like security, cleaning, key) so a
fee' is charged, so far these
'fees' haven't been challenged
in court, but that's no excuse to
pay them.
2. "Of course the deposits are
refundable, unless you leave
earlier than (say) six months. In
that case, you automatically give
up your security deposit."
Look, we aren't lawyers, and
don't practice law, but this
dgrecii iciii t»- Rnui^ri ■■ Tne
forced lease', and is illegal in
flionth-to-month rental agree-
ments.
3. "Well, if you want nf>e hold
the apartment a few days/ you 'II
have to give nr>e a depbaiLon it/'
" ■ Now you're in troubjle: if you
change your mind, you have no
right to your money back, unless
you agreed otherwise. A holding
deposit is not refundable: and .
you should agree in advance ^-
what the deposit will apply to
^lyhen you take the apartment
4. KNOW: the difference be-
tween fees' and 'depoaiti'; what
each deposit is used for; how to
get deposits refunded; you***^
rights in getting you apartment
repaired; when you can and
can't be evicted
So. before you sign, come and
see us in Kerckhoff 311 We
have a free bulletin on 'Wow to
rent and apartment', a shelf of
books' and resources, and
trained investigators who can
answer your qustions on many
consumer topics, and even me-
diate with the other, party if
you've tried everything else.
C
Aftairt
NEED A SUMMER JOB???
THERE'S WoVk TO BE DONE WITH INCARCERATED YOUTHSf
'Bridging the Cap" offers U.C.L.A. students and community people the chance to
tutOLyoung men and women in juvenile criminal institutions in the L. A. area.
Theie youths want to learn to read, do math problems, learn about their cultures,
other cultures, arts and crafts or anything else you can offer them!! It only takes
one night a we^k on Wednesdays or Thursdays, or a Sunday afternoon where
you can participate in the Recreation Program.
Volunteer with ''Bridging Ibe Gap'' and put some of your free time to use this
summer. Call us at 825-2415 or cmm by Kerckhoff Hal MM for nfK>re information.
Tutor Incarcerated Youths
sponsored by tKe CofVHTHjnity Services ConmnWon of S.LC.
>-i-
4-..
UCLA loses baseball field battle?
ly Paul Karki
!>• bjKirtft Writar
Hmaecmmtn who havc^
fought the cofuUuctLon of the
proposed hasehall field at Vet-
eran and Cayle^ Avenues have
apparently won their three-year
hattle with UCLA
chances the on-campus fa-
cility will be huih are now
called "slim" by assistant
UCLA baseball coach Glenn
Mickent, a member of a Chan-
cellor's Committee, which has
studied the controversial pror^
iect since it was first proposed'
in 1973
"I can*t say that it (the Gay-
ley-Veteran field) is a dead
issue.** said Mickcns^ "but my
Ofiumism has drained consi-
derably"
Mickens said heavy opposi-
tion trom nearby homeowners,
many ot whom arc **very po-
litically intluentiai." has been
responsible for "bottlenecking**
the project. Homeowners have
tried to block the construction
for fear of excessive traffic and
„ noise in the area.
The committee is currently
considering alternate campus
sites or the possible purchase
of federally owned Sawteilc
Field, where the Bruins have
played since 1963. Sawtelle
Field Uk about a mile from
campus on the Veteran's Ad-
ministration grounds
~^Tfit Gayley-V^eran she may"
be used as an intra-mural field
according to Mickens. if home-
owners approve 2n alternate
plan propiMcd by the commit-
^tce. The committ^ |||tt sug-
fetted the northwest comer of
the current intramural field be
used as the site for the baseball
facility and the vacant lot at
Gayley and Veteran, in turn,
would be rennovated as an
intramural field
The switch would establiab a
cluster of UCLA's Rujof on-
campus sports lacilitics with
Pauley Pavilion, Drake Su-
dium and the proposed base-
Wi field concentrated in one
area.
Mickens, however, holds lit-
tle hope the flip-flop would
appease all of. the involved
parties:
'^Chancellor Young wanted
the field at the Veteran-Gayley
site, bdt 1 think he would go
along with the switch But I
don't think the students would
like having their intramural
field moved, it's like sacred
termory to them " He added
some opposition to the switch
would probably ansc from the
homeowners.
UCLA may abandon plans
of building a baseball park on
campus if It can gain exclusive
use of Sawtelle Field, accord-
government would have to
declare the field '^excess land"
.^4or UCLA..^to fain exclusive
ownership
The baseball team has a
fufid of SI million irhich was
originally earmarked for the
cufistruction of an MHcampus
ballpark This would probably
be used instead for imptove-
ments if the team took over
Sawtdle.
The $1 million tqf at mcludct
an athletic department dom-
uon of S4U0,000, made in 1969
and which gave impetus to
hopes ol the fteld*s uhtmate
construction, and a donation
of $650,000 from the Pardee
Construction Co of West Los
Anfeles which wanted the field
named in honor of the late
former UCLA and profaasional
baseball star Jackie Robinaon,
according to Mickens
If UCLA purchases Sawtelle
Field. Mickens said improve-
ments in the landscaping and
parking facilities would be
made Between S26,0O0 afid
$30,000 from the Chancellor's
office is presently being spent
at Sawtelle to move the out-
field fences back approximate-
ly 40 feet and improve existing
lightihl irCLA has spent in
excess of T2bO,000 at Sawtelle
on ma intriMiBf f atncc the team
moved tliere in 1963, Mkkcm
added -—
"It hurts us.- he s»jd. ''ifs
got to Use takes a kid and
shows him a multi-million dol-
lar tacihty like Dedeaux Field
Then he comes over to see us
and aH we*ve got to show him
lik the gopher holes! at Sawtelle
Which school do you think
he'll ^icQbftbly
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
Lei ua ihtp your peraonai ellect hofne Wa ar« apeciattsts in
PACJFJC-KlliO_J*!il!!M»« t- *"-*• t»
_i
Something New - Exciting in
Auto Insurance
It you don't h«v« iiaOihty tnsuraoc* tha f>aw financial
responsitxhty law could affect you m >f7S ^
^^odifted rates tor Ouaiifylfig Itudawti
C#il To#ay For Your fr^t Quotation
245-7275 Hov# RotM — WiU^Trav#| f04-Ot44
Mercury Insurance Agency
1 — .
^1
' >
1
Many national college subscribe to SEA . . .
«»
E.B. Frank*!, M.D. Medical Group
Hiilr Transplaittiiffiirr
A6n«-Compl«xion
Plastic Surgery
. Dermatology
~— Allargy
Phoo« for Parsonsl Apyinimtnt • Madical Litaralur* on Rapuaat
AH Medical and Health Plans • Cradit Cards/Cradit Tarms Available
1.oa Angeiet
cLak^wood
6423 Wilfhtre Blvd #t^
5203 tafca¥i^ood Blvd:""^
655-«533
531-7420
Huntington BaacHeiOi Newman St Ste C (714) 540-6806
(Continued froni Paf c Wf^
inaccuracies, but at leaat all
sut>scribing schools can get an
idea of who they can watch
during the upcoming ,season
"1 his list provides a good
cross-preference for the univer-
SI ties They can see if there are
any athletes that they , sh4HJki
iMk into who thry iKight not
have noticed previously
**Colle|es usually send letters
to high scl^ool coaches asking
them about their top prospects.
But I used to be a coach, and I
know that unfortunately, nof
all the coaches will reply, even
when they have a good proa-
pcct."
During the season. Laacofei
and his staff will go out to
football games to look at the
prospects Then they will pre-
pare unbiased reports on the
athletes They will also look
for other top athletes on the
field besides the ones who arc
acknowledged prospects.
"'Well have scouts out at the
games, uitA we ^ will atoo ic-
qolr? game films from the
dincrent schools so we can
better evaluate the players,**
said Lascola
So fair, the ^BrAr has gotten
subscriptions from man> top
schools, including Notre
Dame, LSI). Kansas State.
Arijo, Brigham Young. Color-
ado State. IHinoas. Oregon
Sute and \l^shingtoqi^ Siate.
among others. Each sdll^el
receives the same information.
Also, the schools may per-
sonally talk with the scouts to
find out more details on
players that the particuiar
school may be interested m.
Lascola said, ^1 know our
service can help even schools
hke UCLA and Southern Cali-
fornia, even though they be-
lieve they **own** the area in a
sense, and already have it well-
covered "
Laicola. who has coached in
Ohio, Calif ornia and An/ona
stated. ^Tm going to try and
give some of the athletes here
more attention^* Soala ei thca#r
kids 4pnx ever get noticed.
Our biggest goal is lo help
ballplayers in Southern Cali-
fornia get some attentiop Cali-
fornia IS" one of the prime
locations for high school ta-
lent, aloai..mith Texas and
Ohio
I w0rr^" believes §EA scouts
arc at least at good as those
who are -coaatdai with indi-
vidual univermiet, BUiny being
just school alumni Lai6aia*t
«uff had experience coaching
on both the high school and
college level, and this experi-
ence, according to Lascola,
enables the SEA to know what
colleges are looking for in an
athlete ~ i
Time will tell if the SEA and ,
services like it are definitely an
asset to college recruiting pro-
grams and whether they can
save money.
"THE
ri. ... r .-r-v
FUNNIEST
COMEEYIN
50 YEARS."
¥MNidM •CdTT. ilPf
ll^OOtfs
THE YEAR IS 1849-
THE GOLD RUSH HAS SWELLED THE TOWN
OF YERBA BUENA FROM FIFTY FAMILIES TO
A POPULAHON OF 25.000 - aiostly mala.
tradittm «i Ma am
Moihm Lodrnttoopm
Schombvrq HaU UCLA
Sunday. August 8. 8:00
8Shi MODoottD wnamjmmitmmm
AAMQttu mntt EikMHi Siim
Sjiw mcum mifUKiimmmm Vtxm
cav«rOiaM-
^^^a# A^tf^aM^^^
47S-07n
VaQatai2«lt2l
Fasts Drtia-la«»-79t1
•iV CMM 3704318
Omrt in 447-81 79 _^^
UATwifJ A 924-1^12 8tlidi OnMfrln 343-8688
SludMt tftdMls: tlM vilto I.D.
TicMts at UCLA C«.-;t7Si TIelMt bfAos. MS Wniwud Ptua. L A
•II MMMflt A«««iciM: Walllctt't SNmIc CHy-Llb«r% Amiic»m
■taM*M
W
891-8833 Mt.
Lflsanwprwfin 421 1831 CI
FasMoa Camtr Caitait n8-8H r
142
HunttnQtQO
MMBTI
Cinama 147-9808
788-7111/351
.-JL
r*-
.1
I
i
f
I
«
J
U* .
ONTACT LENSES
riTT^O
REFITTED
\Mestwood Vil
DR. ALFRED R. BECKER
Optometftst
10959 Weyburn Ave
ADJUSTED
POLISHED
Qm-2111
SEA begun to save football recruiting costs
tirvd of yeslerday^s hair?
HAIR TODAY
For what's happening now
styling for men and women
Jarry Radding*s Jhirmack products
For appointment call 478-6151
tues. thru sat
3.00 - OFF first haircut
with this ad
1105 Glandon Ave Westwood Village
f
■■^. " t-
TYPEWRITER CITY
478-7282 WESTWOOD 479-7282
N«w Portables .-^—
Smith-CorofM El«c. » 139**
Smith-Coroffii Aut 189**
Olivetti Lexikon 12
Changeable Type Ball
259
95
♦ ♦»•#•#•#•##♦♦♦♦♦,♦■••♦•••••••••.••••
Printing Calc.
Batrik Am#ficard 1089 Gayl#y A¥e. HastT Chmtsie
Sy Jeff Later ;
Da Sports Writer
With the rising costs of rc^
cruiting top athletes slowly
strangling the fooibati pro-
grams at many univeriitics, a
new group called the Scouting
Evalua^oo Service (SEA) of-
fers schools a chance tp trun
their recruiting budgets.
The SEA is m its first year
aad IS the product of its
founder and head, Dick Las-
cola, a former football coacr.
oo both„i.he high school and
coUegiate Wvels.
For the $42 price tag, the
^hdbl receives ^the following:
in June, a prospectus on all the
top high schoolers in Southerti
California entering thc^ir seruor
year, as well as a junior college
prospectus, two evaluation
forms during the seaton rating
the top prospects in detail, and
at the end of the season a
synopsis tecapping all the top
^ r cp and junior co Ijcge^
athletes.
The June reports are com-
piled from the information
gathered from the Southland
prep coaches, who are asked tu
relate vital information, such
as height, weight, speed m the
40^yard dash, etc.. on all their
top players. Then the coaches
are also asked to make com-
ments on the particular qual-
ities of. ibcAJkhlete.
Lascola admits there niav be
K^aotinued on Paje 7)
(Continued from Fagr 13^^'
U.S National Doubles cham-
pian in the |5-and-under aat
group If it wasn*t for an ac-
cident. CprlctT miglrnrave ne-
ver started in the sport „
**l couldn't play volleyball or
basketball because my leg was
in a cast I was going cra/y
just standing around, so 1 just
started playing tcnnws one
dav" . —
lonesco'^-^
ACT OF DUTY
1 Chekhov's
NIGHT BEFORE THE TRIAL
/.ix ^.
^ft^l
<d^ . Wa^/^m^
<#^^»i
Fri. 8:30 pm
St-OOOff •-..--
Santa IMonica Playhouae
1211 Fouvlti tlvwt twMi Momca
For mmtmmm caH sas-trrt
•>.*
By popular demand . , . Hillel is having another
U SQUARE DANCElu
Sat. Aug. 14 ^
<
9:00 p.m.
<
/-^
(^ Complete WitK &
^^ Professional Caller ^
■■>_
•.r
■5 >^^^^^^SL ^'••25 - nwnbers ^
mJ ^*-"^^^^2]^^^ $1 -75 - non-members
Qf atURCAud. M
MSQUARE DANCE tf)
Hillel • yOO.Hilgdrd • 474-1531
VMhy M^ tdMoi Em«-WmI AN-S<ar
nigtil at 8 pffi at SlnvtrtnfpNaNi
(51)of ChatwvorSi,
in SaMfus. UCLA hMd
^70) from
quartSftMck Andy Mussack (12) from AQOura ar* th*
UCLA off«fiai«8 guard K«Mh Eck wHI b« an honoranf
and anothar Bruin alumnys, Lo* Angalti Mayor T
in ¥in Muys.
(74)
w»Nb8
'-f:^^
women s
Corlett was once ranked se-
veiireenth for her a^e group m
tennis m f^7f She also let-
tered four years m high school
sbtrba#."-
14 H.S. letters
All together, Corl^l^wojD 14
letters in volleyball, basketball.
teiinis -und soft ball It would
seem her only free time would
be ,to practice, cat. sleep and
practice seme more But just as
she excelled on the court, t or-
lett was also an AH -CIF per-
former in the classcoom. She
compiled a 3.5 grade point
average But even Wirh the
rug||ed athletic schedule, there
IS still time for something other
than sports Well almost.
-.. **rm going to the hca^ a Iok
during the day. IrcaHy love
the .^n and the water, and
piaving volleyball down there "
UCLA football press guides
UCLA'i 1976 football
press book is hot off the
presses and can be obtained
for S2 9t either the Student
Store or the Athletic Office
ill Pauley Pavilion
H
The press book features
first year Bruin football
coach Terry Donahue and
Heisman 1 rophy candidate
Wendell lyler on the cover
The % page booklet con-
tains all information on the
1976 defending RiMC »«mi^I
champion Bruins, including^
information on the players
and coaches, rosters, past
alunvni football records and
future scheduks.
;
^/lor
Mexican Food A
N.Y. Delicatessen
Open 6 AM til // F M Daily
$1.99
DAILY SPECIAL
DINNERS
includes soup or Salad, and
of
Pffi
Sot CMICotor
Moii.-Frt., !Mnr«d 3 p^.-\\ p.^.
..^MM. a Swi., Senrtd NomhII ^.m.
I if IS Undbrook Dr^ Wntwood
47S-2732
(Near Wf^twoo^ Blvd.) - Free Parking I of
4^
r
UCLA Summer Recreation Schedule
ACTIVITIW
■m'
l<MI N
4^*»u'
•tru *•
OOl* Ww^^.;.-- mtmmtt
t^ r^itttKft 40WI ••»< '
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■hr <*>* tX'***<>-.i. <«• ••■I, «iiiMK< <e I
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■ •|1I»»<9HM*«' ir»'« • «*»«^i »«•">*••.«—-- . ....^.^_ . H. * \Umm'mmm.:.-£'
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11)00! oJh>fu^ yt»*«^
• • •
/ I
aw
*v-f
.: *'
.vco Center
Cinema I
tins 00 $2.1S
HARtY A WAim GO
TO NEW YOtK (KS)
1:U.I:4S. 4:00. 1:10, 10:2S.
Avco Center
Cinema It
475-0711
GUMBALLtAUY
M S:4S, 7:SS, 10:05
2^ 1:M. 3:JS, 5:45. 7:55. 10:05
Avco Center
Cinema
47W)7n
f>ork Indoor Avco Gorogo
SaBiT MOVIE (FQ)
aM). 3:55, 5:55. 7:50. 9:50. 12:
mim
^ocihc't
If!
Beverly Hills
1 MifM>o< lovoi^y Dr
2711121 ~
THi SWASHBUCKLER (PG)
ROOSTER CXX»URN (fG)
dcNiy ffwn 1 00
Brentwood I
2324
Tot Wki St.)
Oiffit
THE OUTLAW
X>SEY WAlES t^G)
--J
!•««•••
Brentv^gpd l[
2924 Wliiiiiw
(ot 2iili ».)
t29-3aM .•25-3367
BAD NEWS BEARS
Bruin
Wofltwood Villo#e
^MURDitBY DEATH (PG)
1*U^ 1:10. 4:45. 4:90. 4:15, lOtOO
Century
Plaza I
2040 Avo. e« Star
553-4291
AU THE PRESIDENT'S MEN
Nl^trOO, %mt$.hm 1:45. MO* 10 *0
THE DUTCHESS AND THE
DIRTWAT6R FOX
HM 4.1S, 10:25, 5M 4 Smi 4:10. 5:25
Century
Plozo II
)040 Avo o* 9tf%
553-4291
GONE WITH THE WIND
M.T,Tlwft:00
«V«d. S«t ft S«Hi 2:30. 4:00
Cinerama
Dome
Suntof noor Vino
Hollywood 466-3401
_ hn TOmm ond >»ef phonk
lichord Horn*
J- RETURN Of A MAN
CALLED HORSE (PG)
Doily ot 12:30, 3:00, 5:30, 4:00, 10:30
Crest
THE BINGO LONG TRAVEUNG
AU— STARS AND
MOTOR KINGS
Cinema
1262 Wottwood Mvd
272 5576 WoeknigliH: 4. 4. lOpM •*•»> ^o* «»»•*••«•
474.7i66 ^
S«fASMfi2,4,4,t, lOpm
DEL MAR
5036 W Pico Slvd.
935-6424 ,_
50<
4aUy tM 7 p.m
ALL THE PReSIDB4T'S MB4
MISSOURI BREAKS
Fox Venice
620 LmcoW Itvd
396-4215
AduHSl SO
CMd SI 00
Hollywood
•/4. 7 — T«siDrti
•/9 — CM*MMlUi
IKo
•ffho
nm
•5211
HARRY Bi WALTR GO
TO NEW YORK (PG)
0^ m 12:30. 2:30. 4:J0« 4:30, 4:30. 10:30
Los Feliz
1t22 N. Vormo«^
PMm r—liwl • 1*74
THE aOCKMAKHI OE ST. PAUL
MO 4-2169
AfimoAm
/
JL
lii^
t '1 I
.'fci ■ i»
Gnt/^rt/O i nmonb
-- V.
LA. County Art Museum
^*«^
Leonardo's anatomical drawings: science in art
By Mlic Lm
— nir^tection of 43 anatpmical drawings by Lcoiwirdo da Vmcr
on view in the Frances A Armand Hammer Wing of the Lot
Angeie& County Art MnKoni August 7 through September 5,
reveals both the artistic and scientific %kil\ of probably the only
true Renaissance Man. This u the first time the collection has left
Windsor Castle. These drawings and noutions. mostly drawn
from human cadavers, demonstrate mm^or anatomical break-
throughs that would not be rediscovered for three hundred years.
Numerous examples include the discovery that blood flows
through veins, the conf^gttrmlion of the optic nerves and the
discovery of cavities under the < zygomatic arch (cheek bone).
**Mo8t of these drawings were lost for hundfods oCyears," iiaid
Dr Elmer Beh, founder of the Elmer Beh Library of Vincuina, at
UCLA *1Ctng Charles of Prance locked them away in a chest
and lost the key. When they decided to see what was m it, they
had to call in a locksmith to open iL" — ,-.™__
Aside from observing the determining the function of what he
saw, Leonardo also invented several anatomical study aides. A
drawing of **Thc Brain" ( 1 56fr«^ Innr Mk noUTion that if wax
ted into a body cavity (in this case the cerebral ventricle)
and the remaining tissue is stripped away, the resuH would be a
cast of the shape of, the ventricle.
Dr. Belt did note, however, that despite the accuracy of most
of the drawings, Leonardo made some mist&kes. Most of these
••were made when he drew from what he read, rather than from
what he saw. You see, the problem was that during Leonardo's
time there were no reliable texts He often got his understanding
.^jo( anatomical principles from dissc
o< die Arm in HotaUd VhgmT (ISn^
Some misukes were due lo the iatMHiihUuy of the ______
t dnwing of •'The Human Foetus in the Womb** (1510-12) is
ually a human fetus in a cow's womb A more obvious
■iftake it the rendering m( a dog's thyroid in a human neck Dr
Beh feh that the misuke was made "while Leonardo was dissect-
ing a dog at tiK same tune. He inay have picked up the dog*s
thyroid by mistake.**
The Muscles of the Neck" (1513), one of the last anatomical
drawinf^ by Leonardo's hfe, reveals how much he had forgotten
ab«st his previous ^udies His age and infirmity made his work
highly inaccurate. The skuU and neck are too lurpe for the
shoulders and the schematic diagramming of muscles is
completely wrong. The notes sa> that the muscles of the nci:k arc
analogous to the **mast of a ship with its stays.**
Carlo Pedretti. a UCLA Professor of Art. considered one of
the foremost authorities on the documcnts^^f Leonardo, feels
that the drawing, calkd **A Comparison of the Legs of Man and
Horsr** (1506-Ot) is the perfect example of the combination of the
concern fof-Minitific itedy and art. "This was probably a thing
he did whilr^ie was conocrapd with the Battle of Anghuiri (an
unfinished painting depicting mounted warriors). Here he con-
sumnMlcf Ihs scientific study with his paiming,*" Pedretti said
Tlie^xhibjt IS set up ma unique fashioo. Since Leonardo drew
on both sides of a sheet, the works are set between two sheets of
clear plastic which allows far viewing of both sidear —
The hours for the cAhibition are Tuesday through Friday 10
am~5 pm, weekends TlTam-^ pm. Museum members are admitted
free, geaerml admission is $1, and students with ID and senior
Citizens 50c
Stage Review
TT-
■^-i^M^^h^M
ut/--
• ,j '.'-W*,
i.:~:
The Publie^orks
By Howard P^
Improvisationai theater is
too often non ae^uiter th^^
%ith actors, pulling all
sorts of silliness ^nst of their
hats and-expectmg audi-
ences to be inJUanested irt
things only actors could
possibly cart about.
The Public Works Impro-
vis^tioiial Theater, perform-
ing Friday and Saturday
night at the Church m
Ocean Park (235 Hill, SanU
Monica) is a refreshing ex-
ception, for reasons both
professional (they put a
great deal of polish on spur-
of-the-moment routines) and
artistic (they consistantly
come up with material in-
teresting to involve the audi-
ence)
The group consists ot
about a dozen professional
actors, most of whom look
vaguely familiar as a result
of appearances in television
or stage roles In Public
Works they are anonymous
the group is an ensemble
in every sense of the word.
Most of their routines
begin with a cue from the
audience. They develop a
sound collage from two
words (e.g. Carter and The
Future), or tell stories on
subjects given by the audi-
ence, with each of three
actors contributing one
word at a time in order.
There are group stories
acted out as they are spok-
en. Given **The Porpoise in
the GaK^B,** the act<»li
managed to MWtaia their
tale through an evening in
bed with the poraoiac aad a
breakfast of Wheaties.
Perhapt HMMt interesting
IS **The Dream** in which a
dream is taken from the
audience and evolved imo
an entire series of fantasies.
Given a wommn't dream that
she was marrying someone
other than her husband m
complete psycholofical and
sexual reality, moving from..
marriage to fean of rape to
th double lUadard and sex-
ual restriction and mores
all <4hie while remaining in
contact with both the on-
gtrval ma rr rage scene and
with the idea of Chicago,
songs about Chicago taking
on a hideous mocking qu»l-;
ity.
The cast members coop-
erate in microscopic detail,
and after two years of work-
ing together they ktrow
when to support and Ex-
tend an idea, and when to
abandon it by moving on.
Occasionally, a line intended
to close a scene gets no
response from the light per-
son (who ends everything
with blackouts) or a cast
member gets caught in the
middle of a hne as the hght
go out. but It's all part of
the game the audience
fells as though it has won a
round with the pro.
Outtake
Jaws, millions ol them,
will be snapping again this
summer; though not as a
sequel to the epoch-making
Universal boffo burgeoning
BO bash. Warner Brothers,
publicity department will
distribute millions of gum-
balls this month to hail the
emergence of The Gum hall
Raiiv, an action film star-
ring Michael Sarrarin
The plot, which involves a
cross-country car race,
a little hard (o swal-
ryive^ Indigestabte
lilpMi*MI'**r<4
By AIM ^^ielHicI- Karbelnif
'~ Although It may be^ triie that
a boolt cannot be judged by its
-j»'
Ouca|o^ the group took the
the context of a
low.
Fysally hard to difnt is
the fact Steve McQueen will
piay the lead in a film ver-
tioa of Henrik Ibsen's
Enemy of the People. -| am
not a dMncally trained
actor," MeQueen admitted
in a recent interview, **but I
<h»n»^ 1 can t^andle it "
in
WOI ill be watching. Steve
^ Adaai' Parfrev
cover, in the -case oi The Gum
ball Rally, this ,(ilm can be
fudged by its title. The movie
n^j^%X Uk^ it ^sounds bubble
gum.
The plot is ~ about a cros.s
country auto race where con
SeitatitS compete for nothing
but W guroball machine Un-
fortunately, it ends right there
Like an old skeleton, the storv
completely-^— .lacks flesh and
blood
The minor subplots which
run throughout the movie are
sometimes funny, but arc more
often extremely boring. There
are many spectacular crash
scenes, a few cheap, sexist love
scenes and some interesting
chase scenes. The problem is
that the subplots are obviously
added just for effect, com-
pletely removing any meaning
the film may have had
If The Gumhall Rally is
Meant to be nothing more than
enteruinment It still has sev-
eral drawbacks. From the be-
ginning of the fi!f?» the viewer
has the feehng something is
wrong When the rich execu-
tive pets bored at a meeting
and begiat lyrcading the pass
word - "^gumbair to begin
the race, one immediately
k-nows the plot is to be a tunnv
escapist faatasy. However
throughout the picture the
characters Uke Hk race and
the ensuing events a bit too
seriously, CMHMg a confusing
paradox.
While the
there are
scenes. In
situation is
tailed and people Hv through
plate glass windows only to jet
and return tollieir miracu*'
lousty unharmed car. ~~^^
A few funny scenes contrast
with screen wnter Leon Capf
tanos* geacfaily poor dtaiofne
flows through^ the picture At
times It IS hard to believe what
the characters are fiyng. .
The'^rection of The Gntm-
ball Rally u about as sturdy as
the gimmicky cardboard seat-
belts^ which the theaters come
Thou Shah Not Eat
Neighbor,** but it fades away
i^thc^ quickly after the huoMHi
^pruDC fillet, leaving Ǥ with a
movk rhat*s nothing mott than
iting exploitation
The film is based on the true
story of the 45 passengers
whose plane crashed in the
Andes in \912 The 25 sur-
vivors, facing starvation, work
up the nerve (awfully quick, it
seems) to eat some of the
human body burled in~tlie~
snow at 20 degrees below zero
for a^gsdL. should still be soft
as ground round Apparently
the special effects team, ^t^_,
lected minor details hke theif.)
The underlying theme of the
film (and the ostensibk jut*
tifica^on for all the gore) is the
moral' coaaequenoes of canni-
balism All of the passengers
;pray a great deal before and
after tbey eat; in one sciae a
■Mn holds a rosary on one
movie itself fails,
a few hilarious
one sequence, s
built up to where
two of the ch^acters are quite
realistically on the vfergc ot
killing each other At this
point one character pulls out s
gun, and just when the viewer
is ready to sec Wood, water
t)iMi
equipped with. But then again,
there is not much to direct.
Director Chuck Bail pastes a
series of soenea tofether at if
with chewing gum The resall
is a 93-minute film which uHiy
be fit for an evening
show.
* m ^
ia the snow to
alive
squirts out oi tne oarrc^l
scenes «ffer crash sequences
where 10 or 15 cars arc to-
Survive is sloppily filmed.
poorly acted and ntfcrably
dwbtod from the Sfmmh. It
would have been inetantly rele-
gated to Chanad 13 were it
not for the very ftakatic spe-
cial effecu, frbik include
dangUag inicuimmr^i9¥<red
nsennt to be something like
skinning and filletiag ecene
(It's strange, howefver, that
a stnp of meat in
another. But the whole mmmH
mm m niddenly droppad; the
Id Mrvivors are reiCMd aad
the film ends. What we are left
with ig aathing more than an
Making tbe film even iMfC
is the endless, rtpe-
which never quite
eisodg^ to be a
dirgi, hut which might
have been.
Manns Westwood I
THETEMANT
1t:4S. JOS, SM, 7 SO 10: IS
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Manns Westwood III
ALICE IN WONOERLANO
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the be«t of KFf t
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CLUBGUIDE CONTINUED
<\m . l^^jSi>«*->*»
♦', I
vN
Seek third straight AIAW title
Women's volleyball gets talented newcomers
By Cfaiy tab
IM SfMNtk WrHcr
( Editor* % note: This u the
ftrsi in a series am women's
athletic recruittrtg for the fail.
Today volleyboU.)
UCLA's tti008Mful women's
athletic progmm should con-
tinue in its. wuyik with the
fiumticr of quiUjijy pUyers the
Bruins have recruited tor the
upcoming year.
Having won five conference
utles out^ of a possible nine
during the 1975-76 season, the
women's teams promise a con-
tinuation of the traditional
Bruin success in shorts.
fhe women's ' volleyball
team, which has won the
AIAW national championship
the past two years, is especially
deep with talented newcomers.
The prospects include Denise
Corlett, a freshman from Man-
hattan Beach who is on scho-
larship to play both volleyball
and basketball.
j Another • frosh recruit is
Carrie Ignacto, a food setter,
" who comes from 11 "volleyball
family. Her father, Catahno.
has • been instrumental m or-
ganizing the U.S. Volleyball
Association (USVBA) tourna--
mentK in Southern California,..
and is a top international re-
feree.
Paula Gussman, a Golden
West College tra^nsfcr. and
Vicki Miller, who didn't play
while at"T:?CLA last yeaiivJboth
0m^^cn pXaiyxn^ for USVBA
' tea iS ^T\6 could add their
valuable experience to ~.^e
Bruin lincuir
Santa Barbara transfer Bca
Weiss, a very competitive
pliycr with good funda-
mentals, and freshman Lisa-
Nauli, a leftie from Glendale
College, round out the list of
incoming Bruins
However, coach Andy Bana-
chowski doesn't expect "^a
/*'■'■'
UCLA fd\-haimf\cm\ T9ri CondDO tliouM hav* additional
from Incoming nacrults
^-1
whole lot oP help_i.fefi|^ our
recruits We only lost two
players out of the twelve I
took to the Nationals last year
(Nina Grouwinkel and Lisa
Vogelsang). We also have a
n u m b£J- o f e x ceil e n t pla^rs
from the J V .learn who will ^
trying for spots ofi thc.^ Var-
sity,** Banachowski said^
**Natali has a good chance of
-Iwipmg tts." he continues, "and
maybe Miller I expect a gcxxl,
strong group trying out aadL
^very competitive one A^n& if
the new girls can help us, it
will be a real bonus.**
Thp- women's volleyball
league was recently reformed
and IS now the Westrnr^'of-
Ic^iate Athletic Association
fWCAA) The i\\c teams inr
clude^^^Q?5«LJLiSC, San Diego-
Jsiatc. Long Beach State, and
Cat^ State Kullertpn h&rtu
-t
V .
W
chowskri figures that the maiiL
competition, next year will be
Norihri4gc, ^olh respcctab^
teams.' won't be in our cort-
frsciipe any longer,** he adds.
'*but~'we will be playing them in
non-league garlTes It should be
% cpmpetitive season.**^
-i^^
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•miTieiiiiiiMifcii 1
-h-
\'
V-
Babashoff goM medal UCLA Olympic highlight
• # ■ 1 • i
n
^
K onfinued froni Page 15^
"The difference between us
(the US and the USSR),
oh. about ten inches." said
l^illi^ Moore, the American
e^Utlkn, referring to the pon-
derous Semenova The Ameri-
can center, Lusia Harris of
.MAW champion [>elta State,
IS a lowering 6-3.
Mcfti' icored t< iir an
opcnuig loss to Japan and then
14 High School letters
^hacl )5 m a wtn over Buigar«;
After a dismal performance
against the I ssK. !ihe had
eight and nine points in win-
ning efforts over Canada and
Cxechoslavakia The last win
brought the Americans to 3-2,
the same rctordi as the Bul-
garians, but the Yftver was
cinched becaiiae of the Ameri-
can's ^-7^ wjn over the
broii/c medalist Bulgarians
"^^^^^^n^n T^ro ^v^aas oi
acuvity. It IS still BabaalMiirs
idby fold which hngers as the
draflMtic moment for the
L'CLA Qlympians For several
moments at the Olympic pool,
Shirley Babashoff could finally
be at ease as a winner The
frustration had ended
**! swam my best m all my
races,- -she ^aid. '*Thn ttme. I
just had better help**
Denise Corlett Bruins' 'all sport' recruit
by Moh Heber
DB Shorts WrMer
When UCLA women's ath-
letic department landed Denise
Corlett for the upcoming sea-
son, it \new theHlruins had^
one of the top recruits m the
nation. Now. all they have to
figure out is what sport she*ll
pUy.
At one time or another,
Corlett has ranked near the
top in five sports: volleyball,
bMketball, badminton, tennis
and Softball At Marlborough
High School, the was chosen
the CIF Girls* athlete of the
year, the local equivalent of
the lyifUivan award,
'No favorite
**' reaUy do»*t have a /avor-
••They never forced me into
anything I didn't want to do.
All they wanted was for me to
have a good time **
Though she ^oes excel at
other^poru, volleyball i*-Qor-
llett's best. At 5-10. she .ia::a
towering force at the nci But
her quickness and agility also
make her and effective setter
At Marlborough, Corlett
was selected CIF Player of the
Year of her junior and senior
years She is now a mcjshtr of
the Santa Monica Dippers, a
Corlett could see a lot
(J action She was also an A-
CIF aakction m basketball 1st
CIF selection in basketball last
yattr.jyhik averaging 27 pointa
and' 17 rebounds a game.
Corlett it currently playing
"im the Olympic Development
Uague at, Cal Sute LA. as a
member of Bertka's Ja/7eUcs
along with Anita Ortega
In the Ja/zelles'. opcniing^
game, Corlett demonstrated
her versatility She forced er-
rant shots and ball control
lerrors due toiler dominance
t« ^i
ite,** Corlett said "I guess I
like the best the one I'm play-
jng.** ' . • '^ •"''
Her start in sports is typical
^^;_many "athletes It wis pri-
larily, **AII in the Family."
*^ My mom was the coacH^Ht •
my grammer school and also-
in my first two years of high
school at St. Mary*s an4 tny
dad pliyed basketball for Loy-'
ola (Lot. Angeles) J They used
to play voMcyball and basket-
ball a lot, and I always went
with them. Sometimes they
needed an extra player, and I
was always around
United States Volleyball AstCH_ under . the hjsket. Corlett
ciation team that finished sec- showed quickness when she
ond in the 1975 finak. Last went to receive pasacsirom the
year, Corlett was selected to high post position
the All-Rookie team...===r^^^^- Aside from her defensive
^Pcniic hat an excellent plav it wasni one^oTCorletts
opportunity to play a lot for us
next year,** said L'CJLA__Mi!fc
men's coach Andy Banaehow-
ski. **She's very^ strong at The -
net, plus she's also an excellent
setter She hlT enough exper-
-lence and could even start lor
. ^ Chance ^o start
"I Think f^~have a good
^<^^^ product lyg scoting ga I
S'tie iihly ift<:ored lour points
on two tip-ins and, for one of
the feHL^imes in h^'i^sreerTltSS-
ioxi^ out
OfTicials calls
I couldn't believe some of
the calls t^e Q4ficials were
chance to start,^ Corlett Saidj,
makingr The last two
were really ticky-tack.**
Besides her prowess in
'Some of the girls have gradu^~4eybalJ and b*vkc4i)all, Cor-
ated, so I haVe a better chance "let t was also CIF player of the
than I would in basketball ** year m badminton in 1975. In
Even though UCLA does 1974. Corlett was part of the
have a fine returning team. (( ontmued on Page g)
MceiB'S
MthaM
iMttlntti
oiHr
(.1 ITAKS HAMJCM HAMDOMNS WOtms AMI) RKC'OflDS
^^^9 •^W d 9V^MI
FtEOOlE HUBftAKO
(I
I)
a/ia. a/14, a/is
JIMMY WITHEtSfOON
a/ia, t/iT
pivt The Ouidi
454-3200
H*llywo«d
tHE STONER
2113
Wm« la.
477 Tjat
•/4 A a/7
wmvouM
•/i2-a/is
DONNY
HATHAWAY
. t/0 - •/•
AN0KCITY
IHTTHMBAND
tS^otdiaibouriW
oooKVMLa * asHBia • Hoav aaiaMM ' nn aaa Mor T^^^^^^
ii • »
'II 1
^>
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-1'^
^=V-
Return of Single Voice
-rr
Impressions of Montreal Olympics
m0*
^ MarcDellins
MONTREAL — Aher 16 days of
watching the best athletes in the
world run, shoot and jump, I
can finally put my impressions of
the XXI Olympiad down on
Rahman (Walt H^ziard) has
ptayed on a NCAA tttle winner
ind an Olympic team. That was
in 1964.
• •
I
MMc««>.'--, % ,
- *,|1
»e&l rales
»le9e students
- t
AMEBrtCAL
4-
..... ^
1494 Wettwood
Call Day or Night -
.m Angetc*. CaHfornu 9M34
t13)47ft-ftZlLT
The biggest thrill was watch-
ing the U.S. basketball team rout
Yugoslavia to win the gold. ,
il. The feeling, watching the
players receive their awards
while the pro-Anr>ericar crowd
went wild, was a orice in a
lifetime experience.
»ing Scott May. Quinn
Buckner and Adrian Dantiey
destroying someone other than
UCLA was extremely enjoyable
because they are great basket-
ball players and deserve ail the
honors they earr>#dr
At the same time, I wa4 dis-
appointed that there were, for
one reason or another, no
UCLA basketball players on the
squad. I tired people asking me
why nor>e of my players fl^-was
wearing a UCLA sweatshirt most
of the time) splayed.
On«7 "Ralpfe DrollinffM^, was
invited! to try oui but dtd not
make the team. Marques lohn-
sorv*-wUs reportedTyncrt' invited
while Richard Washington sup-
posedly passed it up to sign with
the Kansas City Kings.
'_ Everyone has the right to do
what they want but it was inter- >^
esting that May^~Jlkifk«pr and
Dantiey — all am^ng the top 12
_picks in the recent NBA draft —
pui^Qfi^siipQiiXg^ piO-Tontracts
until after the Olympics. __
Whil*^ ^ICLA has worr' 10
NCAA titles in the past .13 _^
years* only Mahdf AbduLi^
.proud of the way
the Brum contingent on the US
Track ind Field team fared dur-
ing the eight days of coiiipeti-
tion
Quarter miiers Benny Brown
^nd Maxie Parks both worked a
long time for the goid medals
they.earned as half of the 1600
meter relay squad. It must have
been espekally 'exciting for an-
chorman Parks, who was over-
shadowed by Brown during their
years in Westwood.
Past Brijin lames Butts brought
home the^ sih«r mmM^ 4n the
triple jump, while future Brum
Millard Hampton earned a sih/er
m the 200 meters and a gold as
part of the 40b meter relay unit
at the compdMon sites was the
rate so high
• • •
It was disappointing not to be
able to see any of the swimmifH
^nd Itttte,^ the gymnastics in
the Hdhtts made it impossible. I
was able to see the final basket-
ball lame fo just' $25 but $75-
$100 to see John Naber or Little
Nadia w^ a bit too rich for my
blood
• • *
Rating right up there with the
final baskc^Mll §anr>e was the
opening ceremony Those who
had seen the one foor years
earlier in Munich said it was
better, bti*h»t was a thrill to see
something like that for the first
tinw.
Canada, of course, got the
biggest cheers but the U.S.
firmed right up thereivhen our
^ ^ . ,. ^ huge squad entered the sta-
IJITL. 'T ?.• 1""".'^ '^^dHmv Thef«H.nK o< the flag, the
third leg. who broke the race ** ^ •
open ' ^
In addition. Parks finished fifth
in the world in the 400 meters
while sophomore lames .Owens
took sixth JO; the 110 meter high
hurdles They don't giye nwdats
for that performance -bui being
sixth in the world is pretty d^mn
good . „ .
• •
■ ^.
H..-
\.ij.
■*■?'*
THE WORLDS FAVORITE BED-TIM^ STORY IS
FJNAUY A BED-TIME STORY
At times it was Jiard io con-
iftincg' myself that i was actually
at the Olympics, after watt^hing
thertn on television. The OTympi^c^
Stadium IS. frragnificent, despite
what Owight Stones might have
said. The crowds vyereible to sit
"arid watch events during the
rain without , raincoats and um-
brellas and the other vision-
obstructing objc^cts The way the
lighting of the torch and the
colorful dances were quite a
start to a two week period^^
great experiences.
As for closing, I have been
told that it wasn t ai "greit as
expected. I wouldn't know since
I instead went to see a corwrert
g^iven by Peter frampton at tbe
-srte^ ExpscL '67: t didn^t have a
ticket, but there was a-^^am plat-
f€>rm over 200 of us sat on to see
the stage and there was no
trouble neaiifig. hirtv. '"^^
m •
What couldn't be Sl^en in per-„
sor was seen on television Not
only could we watch ABC, but
stadium was designed, rain, only — Howard CoselL
the Canadian stations had ex-
tensive coverage in IStoili Fnglish
and French, i eoiild actually see
Olympic boxir>^ without hearing
J.
4.
•■•4.V.
fell dtr the compijtitors, not the
spectators,
• • •
The worst part of the -event
was the food service. Hot dogs
for 75c. small Cokes for SOc and
beer for $* were the main con-
cessions at most of the events.
Only the Forum (50( for hot
dogs and 15c for Cokes) was
reasonable and few of the vari-
ous sites bothered to put ice in
the soft drinks. __
The rate of exchange on U.S.
currency was also a bit ridicu-
lous at Olympic sites While the
standard is three per cent, it was
up to live per cent for food imd
souvenirs. Many of the restau-
rants had even exchange and,
the banks gavii^ a fair rate Only'
The only problem was that
most the Canadian coverage,
both written and electronic,
centered on Canadian athletes.
Unfortunately, thffy didn't do
very well. -%„....-•— • -
Most ridiiCMldus nr>emory oc-
cured on a tout of tf>e press
headquarters. During a press
briefing, the big F>ews was not
the African boycott, or other
problems, but a contest to find a
song for the closing ceremony
Not only were questions asked
about this song, but answers to
questions about Rick DeMont (a
gold -medal winner in 1972 who
had his medal taken away) were
avoided to discuss the "wonder
song."
Well, it couldn't all b^ per-
feet. I guess
at-"-
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THE EARTH IS ALIVE
•r
A Public Lecture by
Dr. John W^skom,
Professor of Geology
Northwestern State University of Louisiana
8:00 p.m. Tuesday, August 10
Geology Room 3656/U.C.L.A.
sponsored by the Ids angeles omok>giral society
iJ13) 479.315^ (if1j)47g3in
T
#j^;.
r^
"'"^i.:-
N^
Butts, Meyers win silver medals
(Continued from Page 1^)
Motrril o^ytaey. Owens
moved tcnously from a heat to
the quarter-finals then from
the semis to the final, one time
qualifying by as litUe^^ .02
laeefids
In the final, Owens drew
leoe. three, a position which
put hiflR next to the favorite.
France's Guy Drul, and two
iBaes over from American
tcamiatt ^^''t I>4ivex^>axu
ent
fastest of her ton
races, which rsAfed
11.21 to ll.2«
the eventual bronze medahst
For three hurdles, Owens
ly^as awesome He had left the
blocks in front of the. field and
continued to lead until Dnit
powered to the front for good .
Steadily the others made their
way by him, as Owens ran
with fierce determination ,-=r
biit ragged form. Drut*s win-
ning time was 13 30, while
Owens ran a respectable 15.73
in ftULth
Evelyn Ashford
Owen's story was iiiuch lilte-i
that of Evelyn Ashford, soph-
omore member of the UCLA
women's track team. Ashford,
from Roseville, California and
obscurity, surprised most
everyone by inaking the Amer-
ican team at 100 meters. But
her results from Montreal
cleared her of alLcliarggi ol
being a fluke . ^
She finished no worse than
third in three preliminary
races, ttien charged-by-fwes^
!UMtt-
from
As a maihcr oT tlie t S 4 a
100 relity team. Ashtord's
chances oi mcdaling wc 4.
not due to her ov^n inexper-
ience but to the cettMtive un-
familiarity between ic^m mem-
bers Brcndji Morehead. the
top American sprinter, went
out with an injury and was
replaced ^4eflig--ft2mper MidR
tha Watson But the Watson-
-OT'
fhe field despite a horrendo|tii5
start ifk' the final. Her. fifth
time was 1 1 .24, the sec-^
to-Ashfi>rd relay connection
wouldn't mesh in the final and,
coupled with two other poor
passes, Ashford had to be
happy__with seventh
Mixed results
Two other Bruin track wo-
men, javelin throwcj Kann
Smith, a sophomore, and HOO-
meter runner Kathy Weston, a
freshman, had mixed resulls m
Montreal
Smith reached thr javelin
finals, finishing eighth with a
t^irow of 1S8-8 (she had quali-
fied at 194-9), while Weston
wrair ehminated early in tou^h
800 qualifymg. She ^an 2:03.31
ma heat, but fimshed a mmi-
qualifying fifth
T he four Bruins who com-
peted for tticirlialive countries
finished out of the^medals al§o
Pole vaulters I racanel!: and
Simpson H^tni unplaced in the
finah. Doman*>ky dropped out
-h« — 400 quarts-finals, ^ and
Evans ^as a close fifth la Uir
100-meter butterfly final.
Besides Tabashoff UCLAJl
three other wooMA twu
typiticd the dunking the "Eaat
CiermanN gave the AnMiiiiaaai
Brulal testament
Karen Mac T horton. the
1972 2BmMier buttrrtlv gold
medalist ottered the most bru-
tal testament to the bast Ger-
man's nautical power Despite
breaking her own American
record by two seoeaii, M
was fourth bchmd a Gerokaa
' sweep — "■ — ''■ — ^
Freshman recruit Kathy'
Heddy, an international vet-
eran, managed a fifth in the
460 free final, while the third
Olympic member swim trio.
IK-year-old Jeanne Hanev of
Woodland Hills, failed to qual-
ify in the 400- meter individual
medlev
But Babashott will not be
the only female Irom UCl A to
return with a medal Juniors
Ann Meyers, starting on the
first American women's basket-
ball team ever to play in the
Olympics, won a silver rmedal
behind a devastatihg IjluikMan
team. - -* ' "^^
The Soviets and their t-2,
280-pound center, I' liana Sc-
.fnenova, have not been beaten
in internatto^at competitjon
for five yctfrs They demo-
lisj^^d the IJ S , 112-77, en
route to the fold. Meyers had
her WAjrst -— gafne poimwutc
agaimit the Russians, scoring
only 4%6 points She averaged
%^' points during the tooma-
mem's five gamcs._:^ ^^ —
(Comlpiad oil ^afe 11)
.-J
r
I
—Schoenfieldsays women swim changes a must . . .
(Continacd from Paige tf)
•m Olympic yg^ Mvg^ ""^ $'W^^ com«back for lulil
neat oav« up iw ivlplt iMne a OMipia of yMwa aea.
iswimmers
tl^^W^
eloped women who liave al-
most the lame body build as
men The Americans were con-
siderably smaller than the
GDR woioeiiv Even with the
East German success, Schoen-
cfield feels the Amencan women
will not go through the same
strenuous prgfram.
Tlienrt a-aeciel sundard
thai American women don*t
want to look like nneru And
that's what the East Gernyins
all look like. They all had
broad shoulders and larfe
thighs. lt*s acceptable for men
to look like that because they
look good that way. Girls
don't."
**Shiriey BabashufPs' a big that medal is worth to you. 1^ ,
girl. But she looked like a don*t think girls want to ^^^^YlAAn^ lAfOJ
dwarf next to Kornelui Ender weights Society won't acc^spt^l l^7^?%J ww^?l
She must have been over six -Saffc. muscular women. ' \ /U^,
feet and' near 200 pounds " ^
**The selection process for
Fepr years IcH-
The AmericaiM have four
years to catch up w\th the
Eastern Europeee iftions for
the 19M Moscow Olympics.
By then the rest of the female
swimmers in the world aMy
swim and look like the East
Germaas. According to Schoen-
field, there will have to he
some changes if the American
women are to keep up with the
reat of the world. '\
• **It all depends how much
the Olympics needs to changed
too. Ender and Last Germali|
have been working out to-
gether for yeata. We have one
meet to pick the team and then
you work out toeether for only
about a noonth. li*s no wonder
they're so
jjTontinued from Page 2t)
to coach at the college level
Haines still maintains that
train log is the biggest factor
*The Aaaarkaa men did so
well because of their training
program in coHeiB, which in-
chides a lot qL weightUfting
David Wilkie waa/tiM only
foreign swimmer to win^ m fold
medal and he swam at the
University of Miami. Women's
swimming is suiting to pick
up in college though This is
where the US girls are having
a chance to keep up with the
foreign girb.** ... .
**The AmeriflMM train just as
long and %ik hard as any of the
foreign countri^ The govern-
qqjent support doesn't have that
much to do with it The two
teams that lifted weights the
most were the one's who did
the best That's what it all
boils down to.**
Ibe Amencan woman do
have four Riore years to pre-
pare for the 1980 Moscow
Olympics But by then, many
other natiofu will have picked
up the cue aad the weights
from the Germans. For the
Americans, if they arc to raise
their gold sundard, all of ihc
weight will be on them. — ^
r ,
- f
a '
U
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3
Hampton, Parks, Brown bring gold medals to Westwood .
from Pifc l%\
their pass
**Peoplc didn't think much of
ymT Keifer added **frU fMs
in unknown, sad they said it
MM s fluke u'hen he beat
USCi James) dikes (m the
\AU )M) But DO. no. Millard
Hampton is fbr^real"
o o o
lUO- meter relay^ meant
90rU of revenpc and rcdcmp-
:io«.
Parks, i qusrtermiler last
ieca as a Bruin in 1974, had
^smerged as the top American
bv winning both the A At and
— Olympic trial 400 meters Peo-
ple started taking his chances"
for Montreal gold senousiy
- after he had made good on h^
proclamation that. "^Tm going
to nruike the Olympic team and
»o IS my buddv Bcnnv Brown *'
Brown, another former Brum,
had in fact .made it. but as an
iltcrnate for the individual
^ He was assured a spot,
however, as the fourth man on
the nHAy~*~ — '^
4f9 disappotetmefit
The 400 final, though tar
fr&m a disaster, had been a
disappointment for Parks. He
finished fifth, third among the
^Americans, m 41,24^ Xiiia^t
phenomenal Alberto Juaiiti>-
rena, who earlier had won rhe
800 meters in world record
time, had l^eaten Parks by just
^hort crfr^a f ul^ sccoiul T he
juni bl in |5 wcf e 4|^
races nfiay have been run r
^«-r
Coplyfi
||pd|, KaSiy W'
pnd Kpdp tpdii (dBN) ipm lip UCLA
month before -
Ihe relay exploded thrf
m^yth Taking the baton
front on .4he final leg. Parks
efTorttesftly held back SUtamp-
T^dc of twwgn teams, fcie was
blocked m 44.9. a Split CX-
teeded only on 'tbev^merican
team by Brown's tuggeting 44. 2.
So^iown and Park&, the dy-
fiiWirlBiio oi^^JCLA quaTter-
miling just two yean ago, stood
joyously aiop the'victm^stiHid.
gold medals about therrneciks
A far leit celebrated team-
rtiatc jfom the 1972 UCLA
team, was abo medahng in thes
aTTairf of Montreal J:ames
Butts narrowly missed winning
a goid. medal m -t-he^rt^te
^ufii^ ^ yrospsct t^at one yea^
teemed Isss likely than ca-
iruin Dwighi Stones aoC win-
ning one
For four of six fWMlds la Iks
tripk lump. Butu Isd all, in-
eluding two-time defeadiag
champion Victor Saneyev of
the USSR sad world record
holder Joao De Ohveira (yf
Brazil Then, after a chaBenfe
from Butts to validate hit ere-
~deniiaT as the world's best.
Saneyev came through with a
mark of 56-8 3 4 It stood up.
and the former Hruin had to
settle for s silver st 56^ 1 2 .
Still. Butts, who had trained
dailv at 6 am in order to hoid
down two jobs, beat ever^msc
else in the world, including
Oliveira
James Owens beat only two
Russuins in his final Olympic
hurdle race among eight com-
petitors BmL the experience of
Montreal ihay have paved hts
road to Moscow* 1 980^ with
gold
jQwcm ii 21 and a iUJftior-4o-.
be. and should his IsgS slay
unnuingled while playing fooir
ball, he may develop into the
world's best ov^r the 1 1 0-meter
hurdlss.
^Fastest hurdler*
** James is the fastest hurdler
in the world, there's no doubt
about that,'*^^i^-"Keifer. -BiiF
he's not the best technician.
That will come with eJLper-
lence ."'.•_
Experience 'aiay have been
ilie p«atesV~ benefit freni hts
(CfMrtinurd oa Pag^^li^Tr:
I
c
1
. ■'«".
t ■»
^ymplc breaststroker In 1&72
^
T
Sfftoenf ield doesn't think gold medal worth
"W^ Bob Hebcr
DB Sports Writer
At the 1972 Munich Oly-
pics^ Paha Schoenfield's time
of 2:4JZ.O was god enough for a
silver mcdal^ in the 200 meter
breast stroke
Pour yeaDs jater, Schoen-
field's doeking Would not have
even put her in the top 15 at
Montreal The top twenty
might be a safer guess. The
l>est any Amertcan did iti the
.200 was 2 4i.6fl5th pjacc) «a^'
improverhcnt --of Ofi4> 4 sec-
_ohds over Schocaiicia's mark.
Ftjrithc American women, it
was their^v^st Olympic medal
showing in history. They_did
not win one individual gokf
medal, as East Germany dom-^
Inated the women's swimming
events SchoentieM ^lieves
part of the reason for the poor
American perftirmance are tile
priorities involved
Ji^. anvironmeiit
V^ Southern California, we
have the. environment rHJjSPir'
poot^ open ^11 year. People
swun just fo.L_ilie rec^reation
.Th^ competitive aspect isn't
emphasized so much like in the
European countries.** laid
Schoenfield
Sohoenfield, a former UCLA
sof\g gtrl swam^ as a sideline to
her main interest, dancing.
**Swimming was more of an
extracurnculat activity for me.
I swam |ust so I could stay in
iinape for dancing It "Was fun
working oos with team becaiisc
you got to meet s lot of peo^
pie. You had a good time even
though ' you were working
hard."
**The East Germans pick the
out at seven or efght and
\t their whole life to swim^
ming All they do is swim' and
sWim It depends if a gold
nsedai is woritK that i don*t
think Americans want to spend
the rest ol their ITvcs like fish
in water. There's too many
other thiofi to do:*
Through extensive "Weight
lifting. East Germany has dev-
(CoRtlnycd on Page 19)
s I
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1
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1
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^■^>-d^^
■
CLASSIFIED AD
DIAL 88-2222
a*
■^■-^
•il
— ' ». i..
v^
•^mmm
\'~-
Olympic Games success for UCLA
Babashoff, Hampton standouts as
Bruins win 4 gold, 7 silver medals
$»iirWy BabMhoff won aMI
Haines a€st coach
• -1
Mirn swimmers^^rilt&'fldlL-
By Paul FftrW
DB Shorts WrHer
By fmll, the tumultuous
of Olympic competition
will have sul>&ided for Shirley
■•kftshoff. her red. white and
blue American swimsuit wUI
Inve been replaced by one of
basic blu^ ^Mid gold.
But until the final night of
women's swimming in Mon-
treal, Shirley Babashoff the
biggest catch among a trio of
UCLA Olympic swimming re-
cruits — pondered a somewhat
different set of colors: blue (at
in feeling blue) and silver (as in
the color of four Olympic me-
dals.)
Baba?khofT discontented ,
Her discontent was due/ in
fact, to thej:plor of those
medals. She had, after alU becfi
built up as the golden girl of
the U.S. women^s team, the
one American who had
chance of taking soxnc of the
and gold — away
^fcfioonof m uicula r
froip EatI Germany
Bifl-the had finis'hed fifth in
race, iccond in four oih-
Cn, >f^ tnti ftOf ^*f *? g*#^#%rrf4
glitter
, from
^i|Omen
DB Sports Writer
Paor to the 1976 Olympic
Games, U.S. Men's Olympic
aitittnnt swim coach and
UCLA ^ lM9|d cpach George
Haines said the American men
^ad a chance %&^^wti % jjfild
. medal in every swim eveniT As
the gancie!^ closed last weekv
^. tia^uica* Uatement turned' out
to he more of a prophecy:
^ " When the lane markers had
finally been put away, the Star
Spangled Banner had been
played as many timet at any
song on the Montreal Top 40.
All told, the American men
swam away with a record 12 of
13 gold medals and 2S of 33
individual medals. They swept
four events and in five others
\^lhey went 1-2.
But on the other side of the
pool, the US wonnen turned
in their worst Olympic medal
performance in history. This
time, it was the East German
women who had the midas
touch. l>ed by Kornelia Ender*s
fold medals arui world records.
East Germany took II of 13
* races and 16 of 33 individual
medals. The Americans only
managed to ''save face** by up-
setting the Germans in the
^ganies* final swim event, the
4x100 freestyle relay. The only
other race where East Ger-
many faltered was when the
Soviet Union pulled a sur-
prtsing sweep ia Uk 200
breaatstroke.
Haines, who coahccd Aumer-
oiii male and fenale Olympic
champions at the Santa Clara
Swim Club, waan*t surpriMd
by tbe East German pcrfor-
manoet or tlie poor Anwrican
showing.
**The American girls will
never again win imlcis they
ftart lifting wngjitf hkc the
American men aad the East
Gcnaan girls do,** Haines said.
The men have an advaiay
swimming in cnlifjr, tal IlK
German prb are also tratmilg
at a similar level. That is really
the only difference,** added
Haines.
Amencah women
their ' male counter-
^_ Shirley Babashoff, who at
^11, 160 p<$unds, is a big girl
by American standards, was
said to look like a dwarf next
to the muscular Ender. M^y
of the GDR women war j«st
as solidly built as many of the
U.S. men.
*^bme of tbote girls could
have played for the USC foot-
ball team.** said Olympic 400
LM. champion Rod Strachan.
''Ansafican women a^ vain
c
%h/t owned had been lifted
from her. Though she aeemed
to pop up in more places than
the girl with the ^hony French.
accent in the coffee commer-
cial, Babshoff would touch the
wall seemingly always f^ftw
frustrating Tractions behimd the
East l^rtnaiis^ principally
four-tiOK giiM medalist Cor-
nelia Ender and, 15-year-old
distance swimmer Petra Thu-
mir M ore9ver^..4he press that
once adored (and always
hounded) her was turning
VICIOUS, calling her Surly Shir-
Ity l^i oomments like:
""' *Swiai for fws*
**ln th^ U.S. we s^mm for
fun. I don*t thuik they (the
.£lt»t Germans) enjoy it. It
looks more like a }ob to them.
They*re told when to get in jthe
WBler, when to warm upi It
seems very restrictive to m^.
We play around. I never see
them doing that And 1 read
an article that said t|iey*re told
to think of swimming and
nothing else. There*s no way
rd let my coach do thai to
kMI thiog they
JBE
in a way,** Haines said. *They
don*t want muscular bodies,
but then they can*t keep up
with the rest of the world.**
*'it wasn*t aa ovemigbt im-
prpvement," said Haiaaa, re-
ferring to tlie Eait German
dominance. **E»ciytiuie we got
better, tkey also got a littk
better. Bvi every time we
dropped off, they still got
better. They have been im-
proving for a loag time and
weight training had a lot to do
with it**
ABC-TV commentator
Donna DeVarona, who Haines
coached at Sanu Clara, suted
that part of the AoKrican
downfall was became coaches
like names }^A 01 IWUH clubs
to
J(C
•a Page 15)
Ender responded that Ba-
bashoffs legendary training
(reported over 12 miles of
swimming a day) didn*t seem
like that much fun, either.
Despite swimming three life-
time bests in her four indi-
vidual events, Babashoff was
obviously frustrated by her
failure to strike gold. On the
victory stand after a second to
Thumer in the 400-meter free-
style, she held back the tears.
The next day however, she
visited her mother at a motel
and the tears flowed.
Publically, she managed to
keep her head above water **I
feel great,** she was quoted as
saying. 'Tve swum really good
times. Vm really proud, not
fmstrated.**
Laat eveat
The 4x100 freestyle relay
was the laat event on the
Olymptc swimming program,
and a fifth silver lecmed im-
minent. But dramatically aad
triumphantly, Shirley Baba-
shoff finally, won that elusive
gold medal.
There were 16 other (past,
prewm and mwn) ucla mi
l^as playing ^mes ia Mon-
il the last two weeks. A
doien represented the U.S.,
while four of them (Don Do-
auinsky. 400 meters, Bruce
Simpson, pole vault, and Clay
Evans, lOO-mctcr butterfly.
Olympic wrap up
from Canada; Francois Tra-
caneili, pole vault, from
France) represented their na-
trve countnes. Besides Baba-
shoff who accounted (or five of
foreshadow jrcatn here.
HaoiipjIliMi moved easrty
through three qualifying
rounds of the 200 meters aad
then ran Jamaica^ (aad ios-^
mcrly USCs) Don Qximrryt to
the wire in the final.
Quarrie, holding off the 20-
year-old San Jose City Colkfe
star on the turn, then eaMlg
ahead down the stretch, won in
20^. Hfimptoa cant close,
but couldn't gain on his tech-
nically superior aad pressure-
tested nval. His 20.29 secoad
place time was off the 20 10 he
ran in ths U.S. Olympic Tnali^
still the fastest time in t4»e
world this year.
-'^-^ - knew ia order to beat
Don 1 had to be best coming
off the 4urn.** Hampton said
later **! ran a fast-turn, but
Don's was faster. In the
straighuway we were about
the same, -hut 1 cotMa^t^^aaicir
hini.*^ New asaistanf track
«oach Jim Keifar ijj^, **! didn't
think Millard cduld b^t him
(C^uarrieT, but he suff made a
nice run of it. It*s like Millard
said, you- can't catch Quarne in
the itiaigiil ** -_
Tar art to relay
Silver aMdal in hand, Hjamp-
ton turned his fleet f eet oa the
^ .*. 100-meter relay, an evaal.
%(e had been added to only
after team member Houston
McJ[^iBar was unable to compete
because of a puUrt musclar
laaMMi ivaa piaert aa the
third of four )am^ m paaition
the seven madais won by
America*s women swimmers,
the Bruin Olymptamr returned
home with an^KnSditional six
medals: three gold and three
silver.
Haaqpton asaat imprcMhrc
By far the most impressive
of an outstanding group was
Millard Hampton, a junior
college transfer whose Olym-
pian sprinting feast seem to
which advantageously used his
curve running skill ^^ ~
Running from a rain-slick
lane two. Auburn freshman
Harvey Glance and Texas prep
Johnny Jones kept the Amer-
icans even with the field for
two legs. Then Hampton, run-
X)^\n% furiously on the turn,
emerged froin a crowd, and
with an adequate paii to an-
chorman Steve Riddick, he
had a gold medal to match His
200-meter silver
**I think Hampton won the
relay for im,** commented
ICeifer "He ran just a liaa^
third leg. He made up for
whaiever daaer and tiK
ama (Joaes) lost oa
(CmiHI i oa Page If)
M
Inside
today's
Bruin
Page 10
Harris
returns
as
'Horse'
c
Page 20
Who's
Running
for the
Roses?
UCLA
Summer
Voltjma XGIX, Ntifnb«r 12
ilnhferslty of CaNfomia, Log Angelog
Thuraday, Auguat 12« 1t79
...
Five UC campuses to hold rag feOik_e to. $16
■V*'"*-'*^'- *^*^KvJ*^
9f
Dm Siair Writer
Five U niversity 'df^Caiifornia ti^C) campuses
will attempt to hold registration fee incrc2!»es at~
the linitia! $ 1 6-a -q »ar t e r ( i4 8. - a - year) level
hef^Uumii tn fall 1977 as passed hy the ftrgcnts
last month, i^^cording to UC officials.
UC campuses at Davis, R ivrrsrdef ^^«F
ranetsco, Santa Barhari and Santa Cruz have
expressed hope no addition! I inrrcasesu-auft \j€~
needed to handle current program^ and*^
services , '_
However. Berkehqi^ Irvine
increase But he added, **We want to take only
that which we need "
Likewise, the 1 1 -year-old Santa Cru/ campus
try and hold the increase al the $16 a
quarter . level ton maintenance of currefTt=
program^ acct^rding lo Peter Wilson, aitiitant
14> thejyicc-Chancellor oi S^tudent Affairs
WtIsM wacried. however, that to incorpora^tc
new programii may require additional increases
Fee hike stands
Criticism voiced
*trvic«r
<^^mn lT«nr||yr.iri^f hatv>*ilnr- hrancis >A ^^^
said ^'Sixteen doUars Will he p>fcii4y * Uax hi^.
Los Angeles »f»d XOUO sludenu. most of^-Ahom arc graduate
Wy jpai Fein
\y% Staff Wrticf
Ihrec of the five UC
gents who voted against
fccent mcreaa
fees have told
■■ipi>ii]^
rCfii
San Diego will prohahly request the maximum
■$^-irt|ttarter ($93 a year) as allo«red under the
new "differential fee iacrea&e" option given io
University President Pavid^A Sa»^n hy the
of Regents.
ACTa» *t haard .
epttoa eaablef the nine campuses to
request reg Tee increases up to~33l a quarter
loUowing the initial across-.t he -hoard ^icrease
of 116 a quarter without further consent of the
Regents.
UCtA Chancellor Charles E YoVng has
\y expressed a~fieed for the S3 1 a quai^r
Xinrnm to cover increased costs ot
progtams '
^ Santa Barhari. Vice-Chanccllor of Stu-
dent Affairs Edward Birch said, "We need the
mcrease. 1>ut that's all we need Wewill not opt
lor the additional increase for the first year **
Birch admitted VC Santi Barhara f^ould not
OMtntain the quality of its program andMiM the
He added. "We've heen very, very
short' of moffey,^ iaainlv due ro h^Vmg the
same numher 'of'-lPfViccs ai Ijhe-laig
LFU9C9.-
At UC Riverside, officials witl attempt to
held- the 'increase at SJ6 but are cdti^cTned over
the «fems' recen^* move to make tlie $100 a
quarter educafrorvaf^fee the sole source of
University financial aid According. to Al Miles.
Vjce Chancellor of Studcni Affairs at River-
side increases in reg fees will depend^ on the
eost'Of programs left bv cd fees coming over it)
handle fiiiantia I aid
•*We are not extendfing pais the $16 leveJ if
it's possihle." Miles said "and we're making
damn sure we're not spending any money in
vain."
, Student evaluations
UC Riverside is now holding stutkht evalua-
tions of certain programs and services, such ai
- \i (Ctinttnued on Page ^)
■«4
the
anTgistration
The tiathr^Bntm
that th< initial $L6-a-qiianer
increase will not he altered hy
and that the state
should ofl^r some reg freeze lid
hlentf.
Earl >
tbe inc
-Frant ist o
Bank 'hung up' on school loans
»*
By Si
DB
Secunty Pacific Bank (SPB)
claimed two weeks ago the
United Sutes government wiU
ant answer the phone.
According to Jim Smith,
senior vice president of SPB,
the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare's Office
of Education cut off telephone
cammunication following a
Senate heanng \^\6 last Nov-
ember to identify problems in
the Federally Insured (or
Guaranteed) Student Loan
(GSJ-) program
The federal government ini-
tiated the guaranteed student
loan program tn 1962 and has
since insured S8 hiMion in
student loans
-| thmk Ken Cotr, aidniinis-
trator of the (GSl ) program in
tl» Office of Edaciatiaa. was
very unhappy about oar ohier-
vations in the Senate hearing
that his office was Inching in
controls and proper admmts-
trauon," Smith said
iie added ^No etlKff haaii
that I know of has heen pro-
hibited from making tel
calls to the Office of Edoca
tion
43#
As a resuh. SPS, Ihc second
leading lender of guaranteed
student loans at UCLA, with-
drew from the OSL program
last March, restricting loans to
approxtamtely 450 students
who are already receiving
loans
Meanwhile. Bank oi Ameri-
ca (B of A) is continuing Its
involvement as the leading
lender of guaranteed student
loans at UCLA handling
about 1.330 loans. B of A is
also expected to accent all new
applications from (|iiahfied
students this fall
In resonse to Smith's diiia
SPB *ifav '^effectively termi-
nated from anf communica-
tion," Robert^ Carmody, direct-
or of the Division of Program
f>evelopnient in the Office of
Education, Washington DC
explained, **SPB has been com-
plaining extensively for a long
time Greg Lancaster (assisunt
vice president in charge of
stadent loans at SPB) is oa a
crusade of *Do rt our way or
not ^
Carmody cited several oc-
casions on whijiJi.. Lancaster
and Cole met and a specific
instance in which SPB did not
attend a meeting scheduled by
Cole
••We want a system that
solves our problems, rather
than complaints." Carmody
Canaody added the Office
of Education avoided giving
redundant replies to SPB by
telUng lU staff Ken Cole would
be the only person io respond
IM Bint
to
Unrecetvcd payments
Smith of SPB explained stu-
dent loanees are given a nine
month grace period upon gra-
daation. 120 days after which
banks are eligible to file claims
to the federal governmrnt for
unreceived paynf>ents
However. Smith noted, the
government has on oacafton
taken more than W days to
respond to- sach cUims
Presently, of the $29 million
worth of student loans made
by SPB. just over $500 thou-
sand are unpaid
laak of America, however,
cfaiiflKd It had $3-$4 miHion
ontataading from the federal
gill eminent out of a toul stu-
dent loan program of $2 Ml
million.
For awhile, we weren't get-
ting our claims paid for any-
where between 60-90 days J'
-if
[o stu^nts
William 'K Co-
Charles ^ Licld 'and
W I liens, voted i^tainst
month in S.jn
Lrederick O; l>tfi
ion and Student Rlcgpet ij^rvn
Pccples, who also voted no
are on vacatmn ahd were un-
•vaiiable for. comment
All three Regents felt the
across-the-board inGreate of
$16 a quarter would not^ hii^
qutHianMl further at the «rat
Regents meeting At the Jaly
meeting there wa^ little debate
on ^he issue because, as Wil-
lens said. **When the, volej are
there, nobody talks "
' hield, who leh the increase
wir*-an easy way out to bal-
aa^ the budget.** said it would
be *'a valid expenditure of the
stated money to reduce the
cost of the University edu-
cation I would rather see the
fees decrease. I feel that very
strongly."
Claiitiing that many pro-
graaai funded by reg fees are
hard to regulate in a budget-
ary way. Field said reg fee
hikes are ''an easier way out
than fustifying incraaaes in
those programs"
Earl Wiikns alM ¥itad no
on the iiicitaac la hecp pres-
sure on the Stale Legislature,
although he saw some sort of
increase as inevitable "I think
the Stale should pa\ for it all
he said
Wittens protested the form
oC'4hdX^ii«of«ase. stating. "I
wasn*t convifxred that the pro-
oeis whereby they had deter
mined to put the hike before
the Board was the best pro-
cess •
Field and Coblent/ abo cri-
tici7ed the increase's format
hut for different reaaaas. Field
took JMae with the -diflermtial
fee tferease" optioa given to
President David S. Saxon,
wtierehy he may increaae reg
fees at campuses who request
it _
which gives
campuses the
*• *
the individual
authorization to
raise fees without coming back
to the Regents.** field said.
**And I feel that the paamd
proposal was not given suf-
ficient back-up in the materials
presented "
( ohient/. however, tibfected
to the increase simply being
across the board He said some
campuses will now operate
with a surplus while others will
find a deficit.
As f«>r Slale aid. Coblent/ is
not too opUdMstic: but
would hope the State
contribute more
-I
would
Thursday Bruin
\
No, your
does not need fiaiag.
ing today, the. Summer
Brum will he coming out
oat^ a weak oa Ihu
five moft Xmufy
1 he fall quarter
tion issue will he
starting September 2
/
aH..
fc'^:
B4' fitifd b> K\ peris
Dontliini). L*otardt
TigKti Bra ondGirdr^
GI7 1773
HANKAMERICARO
MASnH CHARGE
VALIDATED PAHKING
¥¥JTM
931 WfSTWOOO tlVO WfSTWOOO VIUAOC
Hayden will vote for Tunney
C
9
OAKLEY'S*
— - Mbp's Haircutting — <r
at its best
Lone & Short Styles
, Appointments
GR MMI GR 34245
1M1 Gayify
(across Wastwood Th««t«r)
By Skeryl Tied<
DB Staff Writer
After lining the Democratic
primary to U.S: Senator John
Tunney lait June. Tom Hay-
den now says he will vote for
Tunney in his race against SI.
Hayakawa. the Republican
candidate, this fall
During the Democratic pri-
mary campaign Hayden re-
ferred to Funrf^jri* "Someone
who **doesn't know what hi!k
own philosophy is.** and said
I unney had taken positions
that wtfrr-^i44KBj:Ji»e of a pol-
itican thaiV^^oasically unreli-
able •-
Hayden if votmg for Tunney
btM is not actively supportmg
him or working -in his caw-
'paign. "^Hc^f voting against
Hayttluiwa.** said Sam T.
Hurst, |4ayden's press secre-
tary. Hayden "hasn't endorsed
John Tunnev. sidtd Hurst
"I'm not putting m> energy
into it because it*s a campMlR^
involving lesser evils,** Hayden
explained "Its just not a pri-
ority Item with me." Hayden
said "I just don't think that
the Tunneys of t|i» world will
bring much change and the
Kayakawas will uke us back
Something New - Exciting in
Auto Insurance
It yoo dor> t have liability insurance, the new 'maociiil
responsibility tai^ could affect y^u *n »975
Moditied rates -tjir Quality ing Students*
Cc^ii Today F-^frV^f Free Quotation >■ '
245-7275 Hov« Rot^t X Will Trov«l JtMA^B44
Mercury Insurance Agency
-ir oe pl*&tt Wv Jmtl
' Tam Maydsn ttalet that he wHi vote tor John Tunney
over S.I. •Hiakawe In the IpIL MeafnehMe. he wM concentrate on a
of hit own. lewafd "more progreeehre human poMttca.
^^~^—
to a place I don*t want to §•'
teck to,** added Hayden
Sinct ttie campaign Hayden
hat been concentrating hit
energies «• ^kt farmworker's
initiative and local campaigns.
In the fall, Hayden will do a
speaking tour on behalf of the
farmworkers. Hayden and his
supporters will alto try to
mobiliyf vuluntccrt and helfy-
raise moticy for the farm-
worker's initiative. **lt*t a cam-
paign that can be won,** Hay-
den said, referring to the pas-
sage of the intiativc
Recenily Hayden returned
from a conference in Santa
Bartera with 140 members of
bis staff who are '^trying to
create a grass roots political
coalition that can work on
issues and candidates,** accord-
ing to Hayden. "We're trying
to develop political machinery
that can* really deliver votes,"
+iayden said.
The goal of the organization
IS to forni^a-**progfe«Hve or-
ganization in California to
lobby on issues and affect the
ptpwer structure of California.**
said Hurst. It's a ''strategy that
has a very long-term commit-
ment to changje the balance of
power in the state lo more
progressive human politics."
Hurst added
The group will sponsor a
scries nf Organizer Training
Schools with economists, his-
tpfians and^spcakers, including
Haydeiou "teaching the work-
shops The idea behind the
workshops is to deveiap a corc^
of people interested iri w^lt^ng
in the orgam^^uaa^ ^
^ .. •
-^ As far as plans^ Ifl^ rupning
for office again. Hayden said,
**at soi!ne ppmt. yes For the
Vfprcsceable future I'll just be
working for this organization."
•■ -'
rt*i
4' - -
.The Bruin ^^^^
I..,,...
needs
Photographers
Mm'
Applv^ in
Kerckhoff 110
««r"~^«^^
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Howard Poawar. Laura Klamar
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lonesco s
ACT OF DUTY
Chekhov's
NIGHT BEFORE THE TRIAL
y tm*t f /)***•
<C/»v6.^
Fri 6 30 pm
$1.00 on^^^^^
Santa Monica Ptayhoiiaa
12tl Foyrai Slraat lana
fw ws— *waaaw^aa-aaa"ayfa
i
To he^ )^cMi prmptre tor
LS.A.T. — Course bRjiwi Sept 4
CJtX -^ Course bagifi'Sapt. H
CMJk.l. ' Course bapinK Sapt 25
20 hr\. review and asicaaa lait^f^
Wririnf $ldl|i - Spaad tM^irvg
The CiMance Cetiler
301? Santa Monica Blvd
Santa Monica
S3D M»
Two
for foreign students
Orientation provided by ISC
>■
•^v"
•Jn^-^-V
\
Voa
Scair
Tbc International Student
Center (ISC) if currently of-
fering several different orien-
tation programs to foreign
•Iti4cais.
According to Martin Mc-
Tirthy. director of the TSC
and the International Summer
Profvams, the Orientation Pro-
graai is divided into two
phaaei: the Rckidemml Pro-
apain now in progre!i& and the
Foreign Student Orientation
^rograqfi wheduled to begin
this tali
The Residential Program is
a three to »ix week program
for foreign &tudrnts coming
directly from <»hroad with
plans to attend college in the
United Slates /ipproximately
65 per cent of the participat-
ing students will be attending
^UCT A in the tall, according to"
WcCanhy The remaining stu-
dents will attend other Ameri-
can colleges and universities
McCarthy said the^ Resi-
deoUai Program '^allows the
student to gain as quickly as
possible skills necessary to
succeed both acadenfiically and
Socially ** This is accomphshed
offering addit ic^nai English ^
courts to those to reign stu
dents who feel the need tot
them, McCarthy stjiliC
asst«f~lrtflr^the problems of
ciMtural and academic adjust-
ment These counselors arc
selected on the basis ol their
abilities to understand and
VNN'k well with ^ople trom a
vwiety of , ^dtfimfiil cuhures.
according to McCarthy The
coyftifton receive
board plus a stipend diiring the
program.
The second phase of the
l^nternattoiuil Summer Pro-
gram^ includes a **housing
week,** a four day orientation
and diacaaaion groups starting
fall Quarter This prograrp at-
tracts approximately ^00 4o
300 newly arrived foreign stu-
dents
During^ **houstng week,"
counselors work with the
Housing Office on campus m
helptng foreign sfndems ftnd
living arrangements This is
loUowcd by a four day orien-
tation where problems of stu-
dent adjustaital, student
health and **ftirvTval Uctics"
are discussed, said McCanhv
Alao avaaiabk lo both tor-
studeiMg
wtti be an **inter cultural dis-
cussion group** afioaaiii^ to
Carol Salt/man, "Associate
Dean in the Office of Inter-
national Students and Scho-
lars, and coordinator pf a
workshop currently tratning
UCLA^ studenu to lead, t|iesc
discussion groups. The dis-
cussion groups, to begin Fall
quarter,' are intended to pro-
vide students with an oppor-
tunity to cxchaiife views and
feelings on a wide riingt ot
topics relevant to campus lifr
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
Lat uaaNpyour
tional parliaaiwg andahipipinq ¥Ve
PACIFIC-KING ^^^*
iai at., tea
4a2ta62
laltatt in »niama-
foraga^aiis
IT
san6almak6Q
13)4 a^esiwood Blvd
WeM wood. Calif 90024
^bane (211)4719549
'" ' SANDAIS t^elTS riJIK HIS pURSCShA'.S
.«rH> bRICFCASCS
»^ CRAfT INSTRUCTIONS
I I A f Mil* UH>IS .1
I v»
*^.
•• *•■ I ■>•
••♦ »■»♦
>
I
I
n. BAMBINO
. (The P- iect Lunch)
^_ $1.95
■ ^—~i'-r-
■ TPC'
^
adiluioh. ocicntatioh discus-
sions foyusing^on the student's
particular field of study and
^5tudent-faculiy rjHiiti|ons^iips
ar^e made available ,aeL-them
During the progi:am^ iloreign-—
students hve m the dorms with
American students Who have
been selected iMd trained to
i
Clerical erroT
causes death
A clerical error <^ using a
blooditransiusion mist match at
the hospital here resulted in
the death ot a niajor UCLA
contributoc^ according to an
anicle in the Ijfs Angrits
Times last week
,Taft Schreit>er. the (|H-5^ear-
old MCA. Inc executive "and
Republican fund raiser who
contributed about Sl40.00^7to
the hospital died June 14 after
earlier receiving two transfu-
sions of the wrong blood type
The Times said Schrciber
was admitted to UCLA on
June 3 for urologic surgery
^nd the operation was suc-
cessful.
■f
The night after the surgery.
boamngr. aae unit of type B
positive blood was fivca to
Schreiber because he report
c#y showed signs of anemia
inam biaad laaa. Schrcrt>er\
correct blood type was O
teOMMT of continued inter-
nal bkrediag. a second trans
fusion wjhi |:iven about 10
hours later which was also type
B' popilipc.
T he Times said the error
occMrred wbea a technician.
who was typing samples from
two dillerent patients: acci-
dentally switehed blood types
A report by the medical
examiner-oarwier said Sebrei*-.
ber*s death was caiiaad by the
reactions, including massive
hemorrhaging, rcarfhag from
transtusions of the wrong type
blood.
Georpr Smith, director oi
clinical laboratones here, con-
finned tht article T he mishap
was the first fatality dtK to
transtusion since the h<ispital
opened in 1954
laUk Hatanale
• A c up 6i KomemadB soup or a small salad
a A glass of wirw or coWtt
a S sarkfwich on a fresh Italian roll, your choice of hot maat
ball, samay papper. salami & chacac, egg peppers arxj
mushrcxims; grilled provolone d
..4V
o C-^fiiui ^tOJn tftuLy
itaa H.I f sfHfs A I I iNpinnot^ r
\M rAaiu.v4. wsiwix iM ai IX-
T
T
f
Of yesterdays hilrt
ia«Mri V
KAJUMFeDAT
F^riwtief s tieppening twm
itjdteg f 0^ Wien aiMl wometi
Jerry Aeddl^'s Jhirmeck products
For ^eppoitilmefit pan 47»-ei$1 -
lues, thru set.
J*-**,
Host families for foreign students
Tbe "flost Family program, operated by the International
Student , Center, loatchef* foreign students with volunteer
American families who wit! provide a source of friendship dunng
the student's first few months here, according to Host Family
Chairman Connie f'feff
Serving as host family to newly-arrived foreign students amy
lead to lasting friendships and enjoyable cross-cultural cxperi-
eiioes. said Neff.
The program does not provide housing or board, but rather
gives the newly arrived foreign student an opportunity to know
ah American family on an informal basis, she said ...^. .
Those interested m the program should contact Neff at
477-4587.
S.W - OFF first liilrctit
" jeitti this id
1105 Glendofl Ave Westwood Village
■ManvMHBnHHBmmiaBmBBMmBaHBHaHBi^aBi
I
.J.W
THAI FOOD
AuiHentic Food of Thailand
Phone
3ai
tUaaNationatBivd
LosAngalM9b0a4
INTRODUCING TO THE
PUBLIC
•**5!
^5?P""
s
afc%
>»m » ^
•\
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4
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the profaaaionars
caaette
COUPON EXPIRES AUG 19
BUY ONE
ANY ONE OF
OUR a
FAMOUS BURGERS
a
i«
3TOePM
ONLY
Wastwuod Store
OMhr
No Tate Out
FAMILY RESTAURANTS
TEAKS-BURGERS-nSl
i073anoxTow
A \lk
LOW NOISE HIGH OUTPUT TAPE GOOD TO 20,000 HZ
These premium qu^rKty cassettes have previously been
available only to leoording prolassionals.
Now like the proAsssieeets. you too can buy direct
from the maniilSOturer and save If sold through retail
stores you would pay twice as much
Of course they come only in packs of 12 per time
length, but you get 12 casaettes for the price of 6^
Now you can record twice as much for the same price
without sacrificing quality
cao
C80
C120
12
$1496
21 50
29 75
Value
S29as
43 09
59 64
on
IF NOT SATISFIED RETUfW FOR YOUR M09iEY BACK
No risk to find quality that is e4sy on your txxIgeC.
Mail order with payment to
CCIMeiiil CORP
12417 W.
Lea Anealaa^ CA
12
I
I
I
I
f I
/-
*«. "rf.r'.f —
■ ^,-1.^
mmmtm
mmmm
u
s
TOWING
TUNE-UP, LUBE & OIL SOA^s
X)B Jg»t>OJ
INOINf ^^
OVItMAUi tlOS
A-1 AUTO SERVICE.'; .
- 7957 VAN NUYS M.VD. —
r MPiUnAWlA UlTT 2 , 9lh% so or moscoc
B94-7075
_, -^ — , ■ >■■
10%
discount Witt) coupon
on dry cleaning only
Good from Aug 12-18
10%
discount with coupon
on 0ry gleaning only
Good from Aug 12-18
Number t Dry Cleaners
1126 Westwood Blvd. -
478-6310
Next to McDonalds
Complete Dry Cleaning and Laundry
Parking in Rear
X'
[••■■ ;•
iL,...
f
Low Price Automobile Insurance
for Students
S
SmgliT Mmato
IHff»9i« M«««
^20-23
$326*
%276.
^292-
l-g- aj^^Jnyii
Typical annual rates for bCkJity injury and properly damage
liability^ Rates based on Westwood area ^>-^ '
Arrow Insurance Service, Inc.
l434WcsUwoodBlvd #10 ~MI|45, Sherman Way »107
Westwood 47S44I1 ? — c! Reseda 345-4566
»7 2844
Pair of Heels
with one at reg cost — t$
through Sept 8th
u
SALe! AUG 14th-28th!
Ma/or reductions on Bort Carleion shoes &
sandals, briefcases, notebooks^ handbags,
luggage, book ba^s. wallets & belts.
i ittoMe Cohhter
477-1649
niO Gay lev
Freehand Jewelrv
47^^273
Himr%:
%4-H 10^7
Fn it Sat 10^ 10
Thurs 10-9
Stm 12-5
Designer Steven Ncinnah presents exclu-
sive sale on all gold, silver, & custom jewelry.
'/2 off on any pmk of earrings
I offer good «k thi« ad tlini Scpi »ih)
Economist Cartter dead at 54
4
-f
- Economic Allan Murray
Cttfticf. UCl A^^ppoicsiijf aiuLj
turmer Chancellor ot Nc4
York L'fiiver»ii>. died Wed
nciday. Aitfust 4. following an
extended illness Cartter was
S4
Renowned Cor his studies of
graduate education. Cartter
mduenttal leaders in higher
education in the Ignited States
by Chanxf maga/ine in 1975. a
national higher education mag-
a/The
Cartter had been a professor
here and director of the La b-
orary for Research orr Higher
Education since 1973 He also
served as vice president: of tKe
-Tligher Education Research
Institute in Westwood •
At the time of his death.
Cartter was principal invMl-
igitff9r of a research project on
career opportunities and, job
experience of doctorates tn the
humanities, funded by the An-
drew W Mellon Foundation
He was also principal irrveni-
gaior of a s^ttdy of the impact
of student financial aid pro-
grams, funded b> the \' S
Office of Education
Cartter had recently com-
pleted rc«icarch fff<fiin on a
study of the entrance of college
educated men aifd women into
the tabor force and a pra|ccl
;>bn faculty productivity, i — -
before conr|ing to llCLA,^
—Cartter spent a year as a senior
research fellow with tl^e Cai^-
negTe Colhtrrti^SifotT**^ "H igher
-Education m -Berkeley Prior to
TfTat. he_was Chancellor of
Cartter received his BA from Hemmings ol-^West Newbury.
Colgate tn 1956 and his MA Vermont
and PhD from Yale Univer«y The famtK fe^«lestt^ conin
in 1949 and 1952. respectively butions be sent to the Salk
Cartter it survived by hij^ Institute. PO Box 1809 San
wife. Jill Warburg Cartter. six Diego. California 92112. for
stepchildren, and two sisters, cancer research, or lo Project
Mrs William SiOM of Glen- Hope. 9200 SwMet Blvd., Uis
UCLA's Ho ChiMinh trail
devastated by developers
View
9200
Illinois, and Mrs Ernest Angeles. 900W
:"-i
fj AIM Miduid Karbelntg
DS Staff Writer
UCLAi Ho Chi Minh trail
annihilated early this sum-
as bulldozers cleared the
land at 535 Gayky Ave to
provide for the construction of
a new 60-unit apartment build-
"■vci
The Ho Chi Mttili trail, 'm
official unofficial n^we since
the Vict Nam War. ran from
the University Cooperative
Housing Aaaociation (the Co-
Op) on Landfair across a va-
cant lot to Gay ley It provided
a shortcut to campus for many
of the students hving in the
Co-Op and in the surrounding
buildings
"It used to be great to ^
runmag down Ho Chi Minh at
m§^ and seeing who could get
through it without a broken
ankle.** Tom Lewis, a resident,
reminisced.
Last year there was a pro^
poaed condomium project on
the same land as the trail, but
It was scrapped after consider-
able protest by members of the
Co-Op^, according to Lewis. <
Lack fai fifoteit
~^Whrn tite"' building began
jte summer, it wks only after
a SP^day courtesy notice
which came near the ^nd of
ipnng quarter *'By: llicii every-
had been done,** Lewis
The. ima that^consjtruc-
when OMny regular
residents were gone probably
contributed to the lack of pro-
test this year. Lewis said
There are also an abundance'"
of studeni apathy surrounding
the destruction of the Ho Chi
Minh trail **Most people who
Uved iiesie 14 spring knc<(^ 4t
Xthe aj>artment) was going tip.
and they didn^t dd^anything.^
Lewis said v
The apartment complex,
which IS replacing the vacant
i^t on Gayky. )^ill be 60 units,
inade up of mostly bachelors
and singles. There will be 18
full one bedrooms according 4o
project manager Andrew K.om-
reich.
"^1 wouldn't call it a low coet
housing project, but it will
serve some students.** K.om-
reictt said The one bedrooms
are expected to run from S250
to $350 naonthly.
Lenore Weinsteia, a spokes-
woman for Nagei Construc-
tion, said. **We*re hoping for
perhap\ faculty to 4ic ml^^
csted "*
Kornreich said the building
coat **bet ween 11 milhon and
S5 million** and that it writ be^
completed ^*aftcc.,the first of
the year ** He addel^ apirnple-
tion would probahly be. ''closer
to May.*^, ' ""^
Resident! of the ComO|> of-
fered to build a concrete walk-
way aloaa the aide-of ihe
J^e^ Y Ork t ^'Vgq^y JpT. r^**— ^Ittian Murray Cartt.r. UCLA professor of' •conomlcs
THfir^tfrom t966-72). ^^1 i r~"^ aigtaiiwlds bocause ot His siudln of
Bom in Nc>ik Jeaey in 1922 "^ ^" -
Influential
fCofitlniied
explained Waytie BaKeir. vice
president in charge of speci-
alized IfioirMMIil Bank of Amer-
i
d.
r^
u.-
'A *
AN«OUNC(MENTt
AvaNlSll. tor Codirtctor of
the UC Student Lot}by m Sacramento Posi-
tion i&i tuH amt tor oneltffie years Vistt
Kercknotf JDS (or tfslaAs
—UtmtKi BiHMMS fsatures talent u&m
UCLA. 1-11 pm Sattirdays international
Studtnt Center Call 825 33N tt you are
interestec) m performing
— armilM tipwlin. witt^ classical guitar
Julio Martmez Smrwr 5 30-9 30 pm (S^ SO)
Music 7-9 prri tomgtit International Student
Center
,C— iWii PraKaiR PfilHl mil tram you
49" inveslf^ate consomcr coiSilsints Visit
Kerc|<hoft 311
— fiilMi tmmmwHHm. tree mtormai prac
tice tor tortiQn students and visitors 10 ai^
'•>--^k..,..4 '• 4wi*
m)on Mondays ai^J. jft^ntidays Aclterman
3517
— lattrMtleMl ^alk Bancti. S-tO pm
M^dawsteys International Student Caottt
< lessons 6 9 pm dancing by request 9 pit>
7 midnight tomorrow Women s &ym 2Q0
■ Frse
f
T«^ of campuS'^Will be con
ducted by ttw Visitors Center ? pm Tues
days and Thursdays nuM August 26 trorn.^
Murphy 1215 Free «
— Pr^tHi tmnmrn rs nqm accepting
applications for research assistants Visit
KtrcKhott 30S or call 825-4S47
— PriirMi trtaii otters summer |ot>s'
and field work placement la. jcommumty
sarvica Visit Kmsay 304 or call 825-3730
..^—TlMMi NariNR. arpM wilT prHInt a
recital featuring Mro centuries ot American
organ music npon August 17 SchocnOerg
auditorium ^rse
He added, however. The
j^ knifth of ^tirne it takes for the
government ta process claims
has been greatly im^oyed.**
As-'tiie reason for this im-
provement Baker cited a com-
puterised systenn of claim pro-
cessing, installed in February
by the federal government to
reduce the back logging of
claims.
lo Jerry Qflockr,
^iee pfen I d e n^ j n charge o f
sHicJent loans at Wells Fargo..
**! feel that m the su jnonths.
government paymeint has
picked u^p They've become
alert to the problem.-^--
.Wells Fargo, which haiufles
in^m 160 * UCLA, guaranteed
student loans, intends to stay
in the program ^ "at least
through the fiscaf year I97#>77.
Oflock said.
Corcker Bank, also pJanning
to remain in the GSt program
with 125 UCLA joaM, does
iConttnMcd on Fafr 9)
IINA8S
m fm Mmic. the wOrid-wtde
of African music 7 10 pm tomor
row Bunche 2209
pm
IKETI
-hmi NIfitt Bible Siiiy. ot 2nd Peter 7-30
tomorrow Ackerma^n 2406
SALE!
Kent mna Company rs ploasod to
announce our annual CASH-SALE
Substantial roouctions have been rnodt
on our soioction of imported aod donrtestic
clothing Mnd furnithir>gt You may realize
savings of from 40% tc 90% on fir>« quality
suits spofts coats, siadis dress and
sport shifts and r>ocliweaf ¥Ve invito
you to
Starts August 16th
Minimum allofation charge on all
n'>OfChandtae
loss Giendon Ave
Teiephona 477
Hours t X am-aao pm
Kent&Ca
s Oi«rr,gllElirt
The producers of EOUUS"
Nive made availabia BO
special on-fia9a aaaia
tor each performance
Friday and Saturday
aveninga $6 00; all other
performances including
matinaai-$S00 Ticketji
are availabia at ttw
Huntington Hartford
Box Office with propar
identification
Ftr IwtifgBgg call:
TMe Ad Good Ttiru Augyet 19
building at the CotOp*s ex-
pense, but the offer was re-
jected, according to Tom
Gordon, president of the Co-
Op board of directors He said
the builders wanted a secuntx
hailding. and a new Ho Chi
Miah Irail would violate that
More affictal
^ontcntmf 4he — ertctns — of-
CONTACT LENSES
FITTED
REFITTED
Westwood Vili
DK ALFRED R BECKER
Optometrist
10959 Weyburn Ave
ADJUSTED
POLIS*«0
0^9-2111
(/>
^
SEPI'S GIANT
SUBMARINE
the new defunct Tfatl. l>ennis
Hisatck. assistant manager of
the. Co-Op said. "It's been
there forever.** Several' long-
time residents of the Co-Op
added that when thev came to
(JCLA. the trail was already m
use
In the summer of 1974. John
Burke, then a Co-Op resident,
did some; work improving the
trail He put up stakes mark-
ing the boundaries ot the trail
and also cut some steps in the
steep parts, thereby making it
BBore official, according to
CfOrdon
C
O
u
f
discount on any
Giant Sepi
with this coupdfl
good through 1976
DELIVERY e?5«i©i '»78 sn?
iunch
m .
and
dinner
I \ I l//\ H IS I
1076GAYIEY • WESTWOOD
me ot the W^ole NA^eot P\zi
■L GOURMFT OUALITV I
INEST ITALIAN CUISINE
and
wine
■WW
rr
Vj.
I »
:;r
r-
4fitt-.
-All these mu^t go — not that there s anything wrc&ng wrth any of ♦
tt>em — It's just that we have too many' Some are one-of-a-
kind detilt)nstratorSr^ others are older nr>odels We ver really
chopped the prices so take advantage 49f this clearance now
and save lots \ * '
PRICES eUT UP TO 50%
• ?
Brand
Rockwell 10R
Rockwell 20R
Rockwell 30R
Litronix 1102
Litronix 1602
Litronix 1603
Litronix 2230
Litronix 2230R
Litronix 2235
Litronix 2240A
Litronix 2240R
Litronix 2260
Litronix 2260R
Litronix 2290
Lloyds 335
Lloyds 445
Tnginaliy
Now
23 95
15.95-
1 ■ '.
39 95
29.95
■ , .
29 95
25.95
19 95
13.50
18 95
12.70
•
" 18 95
12.70
,
29 95
20.07
39 95
26.77
29 95
20.07
29 95
20.07
39 95
26.77
39 95
26.77
4995
33.47
29 95
20.07
44 95
30.12
31.95
21.41
4»fir;«r"^ li^
•r"
t
i
electronics, b level, aclterman union. a25-77l1
frt a 30-5 30 sat 10-4
.tf , .1
1
u
M
I
m
I
<
z
summer bruin
DB Editorial
3
4
i
n
Sscvffty Kictfic Book's dmchian to pk%a%m out its guoronf««d
studont Uon progrom showed that fho fufuf of fHo studont
if too ofton ovorshodowed by tho drivo for profit todoy
Socurify Pacific Bonk, tho socond leading loncior ol^^Muon-
•••d ftvdont (oan« ot UCLA, totd m a writton statomont m
Mofch that tho fodoral govornmont had not modo poymont on
dofoulto<f loont ''in o tinfioly fashion."
Tho bonk hat docidod to limit lobns to s tudontt who olrocMfy
havo thorn
It is cloar that Security Pacific Bank does not fool a sociol
commitment to tho ffniitn^* in the guaranteed student loan
program.
For UCLA students to effectively influerKO Socurify Pocific
Bofik's present policy, we encourogo reinvestment of shocking
or itiforost-bearing accounts ot o bank otf>or fhofi Security
Pocific.
Relations with South Africa
by Michael Baiter .,
(tdttors nale ti.altet /> a furddUdie si >f in the JJCLA Bialogy
Department) ^ .
The newy media in ihi? U.S. har> bren up in arni"> reiently over the
inieciion <rf "politics" iniib the Mbntreal Qtympics. The first
controv^sv concerned Cdnddii s refusal no aUo^ Taiwan to compete
und^r f^"' spbrious name Republic of China ' the 'lecond concern'j-
the bw», .A\ of the -garihiei> by close to thirty nations ih protest over
New Zealartd's sending of a ruf^y team to South Africa. (IrUjgcesl-
mffy. the media has not mem toped the iici that the U.S Aerit a
r ugby. tcgfTf'"TOr''^ggft'F^ff>ca wfThtn rhe -p^»» t;^-^ f — -^^-—
OiiL::fHiitKir^^rH^ spofTs ^^H latofs wouTd h^ve us believe that
^i'<!
m
theie 4ici4^ are "politual!, whereas allowio|^_Titw an to call itsrit
"China*" or sporty and lukural ext hanges w4tK |KQ44^^fi4^:^ ^ate
"apolitical" /""-^ ., ' ~-i .Iv-^-'- ••-'■*'^vc^"«*F.;'>I^;^ ,...,.
: \f\ 4t|fhi ot rhe -re<^em -refeelfw/ns against the racisT South" Afrtc an
-gtovernm^nt by. thousands c«f Blacks^and theifiiKhi]re >uppofters. this
wTth"examVbe-i wfjether fnencJIv TeTaliohs wifh fhe Soulfiern
JiixM^ A4>K'nii" can, be c^w * be lapioHtKal.." '
,/
•f
, -: I . ,^ 't , ■ i . ■-*. .
The*^ system ol ^Aparthid (literally, separatton ') rivah .*n-^ope,
organization, and ruthlessness the racial policies of Hitt<^f^^-d«d the
Naiis The 19 millio_n.Blac ks of South Africa. 7(y'/,, of the fijcipulalion.
are in -virtujU ecDf^ilipic enslaverftent to 7he white ruling ^lite! Ir
addition. 24 million pooplv of .xnixed racial her rta^e ("coloreds")
have no pc^litKal rights'* and :Ure I fttle; barter tKan the Blacks
^ Sonr>ei-ot the feature^ ol Apartheid include
1. Blacks and coloreds have no "vote aricfffo represeruatives in
Parliament
2. Martiage between whites arid other races is prdillllStedr Sexual
rebtiosQir between the races are forbidden by the; Immorality Act
Hundreds of people are brought to trial every year for "violation"
of this law (The Cape Times, 25 Aug 75)
3. In cities s6(h as Johannesburg. Blacks are forbidden from living
within the city lihiits and are segregated into-Massive townships
outsicie. The only exception is made for servants Who work in the
homes of white families Many Black women work as live-in maicis;
their husbands must live m c rowdect* dormitories in tf>e townships
and are forbidden to stay overnight with their wives in the city, even
li the employer would permit such a visit. (LA 7»m.es, 22 June 76|
4 A n^w law alfows tor the arrest of anyone suspected of "en-
dangering state security, and their confinement for up to one year
without bail trial, or legal counsel (/ A Times. 5 May 76)
5. The nonwhiies in South Africa are sub)ect to incredible
economic exploitation Black miners, for example, are paid about
one-tenth the wages of white miners, thus creatihg enormous profits
lor South African. British, and American mining^ companies
Operating th* •
The list focs on forovet In casf anyone might think that SoutJi
Africa is "softening" its racial pohcies. however, the latest
fovernment plan provides for the sofragation of most of the non-
white population on 13% of the land under the new Homelands"
policy Africans who refuse to give up their South Afrrcan "citizen-
ship" arrd ^ecome citizens of the homelands can be forcibly
relocated Already over a million Blacks have fallen victim to such
forced relocation {Los Angmh$-Times'^"!T' February 76)
This. then, is the society whose "polit ire legitimized when
New Zealand, the US anci other countries send athletes to South
Africa In a further display of support for this racist government, the
U.S. IS sending a women's gymnastics team to South Africa in the
near future This in spite of the fact that South Africa has fual been
expelied from the International Amateur Athletic Federation for
practicing racial discriminatmn m ^Tht«>tir^ r//.v ^rigmies Time 23
lufv 7^).
t ^tien such exchanges are justified by saying that if the U.S. keeps
the "Kfios of communication open" it may be able to inflyorwY the
South African government Such argunr>enis are disproved, however,
by the daily utterances of South African oHiciaK in defense of
Apartheid, and by their murcier of poMlMy as many as 1000 Blacks in
the rei^ent roMltellft centered' in
Letters to theiEditdr
..J.V
Lauxiect
1--
(dilor:
Am I misirlterpretirsg yOilT'
statement, or is the DB actually
c;ondemning Meg McCormack
for backing an enterprise bene-
ficial to the student body? For
what sFnall proportion of us will
be adversel>A^ffected by the
opening or expansion of the
Westwcx>d Oisco compared to
the number who shall r«?ioice at
the availability of a student-
oriented entertainment facility
in the immediate vicinity of the.
largest concentration of student
JuMjSingr Doesn't that give the
president a prerogative to lake
affirmative action? Since opWa-
tion of such a facility by the
University or any of its affiliated
organizations is unfeastble, why
should Meg be chastised for
supporting the only viable alter-
native, private investment?
Perhaps she has made some
procedural errors in this matter;
nonetheless, the benefits of her
assuming an active position in
favor of the student body to
balar\ce the numerous other
well-wproionted interests in this
matter far outweigh the pos-
sibility, of deleterious conse-
quences. Meg should be lauded
for supporting the students, not
lamblilld for backing Mr.
Kenner, for that, is merely in-
cidental to the rr\am issue
CKarlet T
Winning
ssful achievement in ath-
1 -
letic competition does not last
lbn|. The glory attained it
short-li^ed at best ahd soon
those who were the toast of the
,jtown today are forgotteni to-
morrow Whoever wins the face,
has done so because they are
better prepared, better trair>ed
and perform on that particular
day to the..^tmost oi their na-
tural God-given ability and/or
talent When one athljete suc-
ceeds, there will be many who
fail. The Olympics seem to bring
out the best in some: like
Penn State's Mike Shine who
placed second in hi^ event;
he raced hts hardest and was
extremely happy as witnessed by
his jubilant hug of Eciwin Moses,
the victor It was simply fan-
tastic that Shine placed. After all.
he was a longshot to finish in
the top four.
For others, the Olympics are
where they perform well but not
as well a\ they would have
liked; for example Dwight
Stones. James Owens. Mac Wil-
kins. Olga K of but and others
Still there are those who simply
fail to qualify for their par-
ticular specialty. It must be re-
membered before the guns
sounds, that everyone cannot
succeed and sometirnes your
best is fust r>ot good enough
This is what. I believe,- hap-
pened to the U.S. women swim-
mers who ^ere handily defeated
by the East Cermam.
1 am sicii and tired of local
and college r>ewspapers. magt-
zine journalists arui sportswriters
criticizing the EaH C^rmans for
.lacking femmity. t'OCtassionally
follow slwi;^iining but I have
observed that all women swim-
mers including the beloved
Babashoff have lai^ge muscular
shoulders and chests It has
been my urt^tntanding that the
very nature ofTom'petitve swir»-^
ming demands strengthening of
muscles. I have yet lb see or
perhaps 1 have tnisscd some^
thing, a female athletic swimmer
with a Twiggy shape, a Lauren
Hutton stature and the grace of
Veruschka. It seemrs to me that
journalists who covered the
Montreal Olycnpirt ^re looking
desperately for an excuse to
explain the dismal performance
overall of our women in swim-
ming Babashoff says she would
not want to adopt the East Ger-
man program of preparation but
Shirley would neyer be voted
the Fabulous Babe or Revlon's
Ultima II girl. I think the U.S.
women simply got beat as did
UCLA's girls as well, regardless
of their event and no excuses
should be given to compensate
for poor performance arwi pre-
paration.
Perhaps, in some aspects, the
United States ought to re-
evaluate their system of pre-
parirvg individuals for athMc
competition, especially since the
U.S. wants to improve upon its
currently ended performances.
After aH, winning has nothing to
do with being masculine or fern-
inine, just so fong as you win.
l^^*
-«.j-
m*'
r^».
Seduction by an Oil Lobbyist Succeeds
by Stuart Silverstein
-l:'
i"
(idkof s note Si/versfe«n is a
former Daily Brum %tafi writer )
WASHINGTON — This week, it
finally happOffwd After ^ the
rumors, the wild stones, and the
dreams, it happened I was se-
duced by an oil lobbyist And it
worked
The start of this unparalleled
adventure was quite mundane
was working on a staff report for
the Appropriations Committee's
Interior subcommittee, on the
iubfect of •using old salt caves as
oil storage tanks, so a supply of
OPINION
petf n w6ukd b€*^avaiiable m
case of an embargo. Being ot
superstitious nature, and noting
that 4.hrs profect had been P'*-'
CtMili with a ipood unknown in
this hallowed bureaucracy. I
figured tome sinttter force had
to be behind it Aha." I ex-
clairr>ed triumphantly, it must be
the oil companies. It is a well
known fact that they are behind
alf inMftous plots. So 1 called the
American Petroleum Institute,
aka the oil lobby, for answers
The functionary mannin
switc>>board was of little Kelp
The functionary she referred me
to was little beftfr Th** third
person I was referred to finally
gave me the answer I was look-
ing for No, thofo ^iiiii't any
specific oil refiniers or distri-
butors specifically involved in
this project, but it is still being
viewed with interest and . .
So I finished my first draft of
the report and forgot the whole
matter
tarlv Tuesday morning, the
receptionist bu/zed me and told
me t had a visitor I was sur-
prised, because- not too mar\\
people con>r*^tt> iee -a punk
intern wnh uttc^rly no status in
the HcKJse infrastructure So I
$e misguKied
soul anyway:
Hi," he said, extending a
perfectly manicured hand an&
smiling a smile that had at least
48 teeth in it My name is
( deleted , the M|. 1 'm_ ^»*^ 'be
American fetniiiEym Institute.
too long afUS ttie sentence strur
tyre liidociphefable, so I ^ had
-feferfeo ftiem to the Congreia
man, c^re of his legislative aide
They were gftting^patd to read
such drivel
desk pMtMy
light ot day
'Veah i did. t
ed
"Oh right." I retorted casually
wonderning why he had cie
( ided to honor a little peOn like
me with his presence. After all.
he could/have been bribing at
4cafl two regulatory officials in
the tin^ he was spending COMH-
tng down to the Rayburn Buitd-
•rig for our little chat ,
'Of course, you know why
I'm here,' said the smooth orVe
'last weok, we talked about the
salt dome "I aVViJme you re-
ceived the HMterial I sent out
last week '
I had Two papers, teplete
with graphs and two- toned
covers, had found their way to
me the day before I had leafed
through rhem The words were
**>^ell the reason I'm Here »
ToTee that everyfhlnf^ In ordwr
We want to make sure that the
decision makers have »H the
facts when they make up their
minds on these vital issues. Is
there anything eke you noed?
No? Well, here's my card If
there's anything eke I can do
for ymu, just let me know/' And
he \e*t, — - —
And. damn It all. it worked
He had rryade me feel important
1 started the final draft of the
report tcx>ked at it. and coaid
not believe what t had wrlHen
It looked like an Exxon ad I re^
drahed it. left out all mention of
the oil companies, and the last I .
saw of- It. It was buried on the
congreMfHan's special assistant s
fo
I was shaken by the
whole thing 1 coniidor myself
gMfe than a little lophklicated.
and more than a'llttle paranoid,
but that guy had effortlessly
siiowed me^jgywgif^JPrflending
I was important, a decision-
maker, he had affected my por-
copMofi of the issue Without
even realizing it, I had almost
tufned in a report that pictured
the oil giants as knights in white
armor, bringing energy to you
and me |ust because it was the
Arrterican thing to do. And he
had done tt without :eyen trying.
With this in mind, I have
come to the conclusion that the
legislative efforts to break up
the oil companies will ir>evitably
fail There h th#t famous- \ixiom
that |po«%^ breeds power. And
when It reaches a certain point.
It cannot be stclppod. Such is the
.way of power pdlifics. Especially
when mm^ nm opi oil
I
>'
i
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— - t ...
happen if
f^ ^, W^ a)mo5f ;
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3!!:*^.o'L\oci
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TTT^ss^teBie;
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-^^'
>•)«■.
«■ «
\
DO YOU
REMEMBER YOUR
RRST WEEKS iN
COLLEGE?
; I ■ . . .. _' ' .
• Did you feel aldne.and '*out of it'?
• Were you confused and lost?
• Did everyone look like they knew where
they were going . .t . but you were going
nowhere? ^ -* .-:_,.:
• Did it seem that everyone had some-
one to eat lunch with . . . but you?
• Were you referred to as
NU75777600 (if you were
referred to at all)?
• Did you streak across
campus . . . and no one
noticed?
• Did everyone seem
unapproachably?
^'W
\
-\ .1
^VK~. „. -^^Jh
_%-:.•-
Wouldn't it be nice if there
had been someone to turn to?
You can be that "someone** for
entering 1976-77 undergraduates.
Just call the Mentor Program
at 825 8425 and be a friend
AfMiice M.
^^•^^«
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M M (
♦ »-!« •^-to *-* Urn ».«
smtam
-^
Sluflent loaa problems
iCondttiMd fru« Pafc $)
"^evcntutflly get a guarantee on
claims.** according to Dave
Samson, public affairs ofTicer
at the bank
Im
tlie biH. explained SPTk
Smith. IS the *'deccnir«h/ation
of tiK ad rill ni&t ration, the re-
quirement that the OfTicc of
Education encourattr slate pro-
♦« »
■I-
Ignited Cafifornta Bank
(I C B) and Bank of California.
Tike SPB. have curtailed their
involvement in the program,
citing government irresponsive-
nets Mi the main reMon for
tlMir actions.
UCB, which pulled out of
ilir- GSL program last July,
prtifiiiJy Jiandles lU remaining
70 stii^kat loans at UCLA
BakeN>of Bank of America
insists, howevirr. that ''at. least
things are in the working to
change the program T
He cited bills in legislation,
namely. Senate Bill 265 7 ^
which, if passed. wo.uld ''nruike
it more equitable to continize
the program." ' — ,
-The princfpal advantage of
fn addition. Bank of Ameri-
ca noted tt chaiiged ibe maftt-
mum amount for a loan from
S2.500 for graduates and medi-
cal school students and SI. 500
f^or updergraduates to SI, 500
for botti graduMci Und under-
graduates
Carmudv m the'-Olfter -of
GSL in Washington DC. ex-
plained rhkt ah^ 70 claim
examiners have b<feen Jntcd by
the federal government to help
ehminate the back logging, of
claims, in addition to the com-
puterized system
He also noted an entire nc¥k
set of regulations will be pro-
posed by the end of the Kuirt-
ner which will then be open to
the public for -criticism in^
eluded tn the profosab is a
pilot pl^n to hirey an Escrow
agent to iMUidIc dishursemrnts.
herebv attempting to "remove
the burden from the lender **
~ "^€1 responjia'^
However. Smith from SPB
insial4 *f here's been virtualK
no fiiyMMe in a year and a
half There has not been an\
improvement in the optfUion
of the Office of Education in
the last year and a half"
Carmod> said. "Other lead-
ers tiave been Wery responsive*^
to tlie attempts made hV the
federal government to impro\c
the program
Satty Gitbcn from I'CB
said. "Security Pacific is not
optimistic at all."
Carmodv addf ' '^ We've ad-
mitted we've had serious prob-
lems with backlogging on
claims, however, we've^^one a
long way. and we're not fi-
TiTsbrd -vet "
Reg fee increase
I
(Coptinued from Page 1)
health and career planning, to
hci^ efficiently xhcy are
working and where Miy
changes should be made These
recommendations wilf'then be
forwarded ^o %ht Kegist ra 1 1 On
Eee Committee •
4^C* Davis, anticipating only
the S1b-a-quartcr inriaaiti may
have to make cutbicks in cer-
^?i!L-P^ og^ "[!j.J!J!£^ services,
although Executive Vice-CiiaDt-
ceUor Elmer Learn said it was
too early to say wherjC these
cutbacks vH>u Id be. -*
**^.?...Sr'f going to atltf^pt to,
adjust programmatic levels so
that we ^o not have tiy exceed
the $16 limit." Learn said
When a«ked "If' Yhese adjust-
ments would -mein laying;
people off of wqrji, he an-.
swered. "f tbink any JH^^Mtf
Rient to be made in personnel
would be from attrition ratte*
than layoffs "
Berliele> increasie
Howfver, siuden^s at UC
iBerkeley can expect feg fees to
increase in the two j^ars fol-
lowing the initial hike. Vice-
Chancellor of Personnel Ro-
bert F Kerley said. "Were
going to go for the S16 a
quarter in 1977-78. then the
following year wc will add
eight dollars to that, then the
following year another seven
dollars."
Kertey added he did not
know of anything which will
change this plan, claiming
**This increase is really an
amount to cover inflation, the
way we see it."
''In tiM ¥€4"
Both UC Irvine and UC San
Dtego also blamed their re-
quest for higher reg fees on
inflation. UC San Diego Cho»-
cellor William D McElroy
tsid. "Our present plan looks
like we are going for the maxi-
mum we can get over the next
two-year period, otherwise wc
would immediately §o in the
McElroy explained since V^-;- tbatrrbut bevbrtd that. third"
3%^' Diego IS a "^iwanpower year ^e'JI have to increase Ibr
' operation." payrctH^-H^f-^mS^^— 4crr-igain I here> no doubt
tenance of existing programs
cause a heavy burden on rcg
_ lees. "Over a three-year period
we will go in debt approxi-
^mately SIpO.OOO even with the
increase This is at the current
' rate of inflation of aboiit si<^
percent " .4. ~~ ""~~^
Loy ufis
abujui that "
Although 4rvinc officials
have yel-trrnakje a hai-d look at
the increase. Assistant Vice-
Chancetlor of St-udcni Affairs
Rji^cXJLi*^^:r€^n«e also cited
"tnflii 1 1 On as x he "ca use f or an
addiiiorwU increas ^
^At first glance the %\^^
t dd it.'^kte stated "Just^
Claimping L'C San Diego has looking at the ^ad^stment to
cut^ibaek as much as it jqui. treake. due to inflation, the SI 6
McElroy said lifter the next" doesrl't appear to handle the
.three-year period it *'migh1 ^pxjOblems we're facing" Law-,
have to lay off some people^ rence declined to discuss u hat
temporarily W^ can bve with vkese pr*ohlems were ~
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EL MONTE TOUMIIGf
E Monfe Dnvt-ln 44S-6422 UftiliC Arfrsts 3»-<n?
ALSO IN ORANGE COUNTY
COSTA MESA WSSTMINSTE^ MALL
Bf»Slo« Cinemas 4 b4C 7444 BA T^m A IQI ims
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Cinema I
Wittltir* n«or
475 0711
Pork IndoO' AvcO OartM
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Hlf 5 00 $2.25
HAfttY A WAITER GO
TO NEW YOtK (PG)
1:3S, 3 45, 400 • 10. 10:2S,
Avco Center-
Cinemo II
w««f«»ood Mwd
475 071 I
Pori (ndoor Avco GoroQC
Swffi
GUMBAU RAUY
fn S AS. 7 55, 10 05
1:25^, 3:35. 5:4S, 7 55 10 05
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475-0711
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-*y»
SILENT AAOVIE (PG)
2 60, 355 5:55, 7 50. 9 50, 12 00
Pocihi'i
Beverly Hills
Wilthirc Btvd ol Cannon
I bMi Eo»t o< B«v«Hy Of
77 1 1121
THE SWASHBUCKLER (PG)
ROOSTER COGBURN (PG)
cenfiM>eus ikpiiy ff»fw 1 :00
Brentwood I
2524 Wilthirc
fof24l*>St)
Santo Montco
t?9 3366 '829 3367
Bill
MOTHER JUGS AND SPEED
6:30, 10:25
and Ctint Eottwood m
THE OUTLAW X>SIE WALES
8:15
^tA
Brentwood II ^''^^^ **•♦♦»»<•« •^ ^•♦'w o m^it
^524 Wtlthir*
lot ?6f^ St i
Sonto MonKO
829 3366 'il25.3367
•hSKj.
BAD NEWnrARS
4:45, 10 15
HAftOie At^ MAUDE
^'^ •;35l_'
Bruin
We«twood
477-0»«^'
If^URDER W^^EATN (PGr
\%l^ ».30, 4i<5.l k'.dQ, OJW, 40-00
Pf»tf
Century
Plaza J
^64a,4/4r^o« Stars
553^3*91
I r. .
ALL TME PRESIDENT'S MEN
M-f^4:00, Sat 4 $wn I 45, 6 OO, 10:10
Tl^ cdNVEtSATfON
^•ck#ff 0f ff •fCllrlSW Ffiflff Hclltff 0ff9C#4
«»ff
Century
Plqza~fl
3040 Av« o* Stort
553-4291
GONE WITH THE WIND
M.r^TK.Fi00
«M.SiilA SiNii:30, trOO
>«tl(«rdiK«HHall ti^af <
^^
Cinerama
in 70fnfn ond %U
RlCfWMl HofFtS
ftETUlTN Of A MAN
^n^noo, v.„.^ CALLED HORSE (PG)
Ho«ywood 466^3401 «...
' Dotly of 12:30, 3:00, 5:30, 4:00, 10 30
^^i
Crest THE BINGO LONG TRAVEUNG
^. AU^STAtS AND
v^inemo ^ motor kings
27*5 .*r'~°°^ *^'' ■"*""' '^ •••^ *•'' j*^
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Sot 4 Swn 2, 4, 4, 4, 10pm
DEL MAR
5036 W Pico Blvd
9356424
50<
«*oily till 7 p.n..
BAD NEWS BEARS (G)
AU THE PRESIDB^T'S MEN
Fox Venice
620 bncoid B»^
394-4313
AdwH 11 90
Child SI 00
mmnhf Pyihmm A Htm Naiy
— TK« itmry •« O.
•IfK*
^m
Hollywood
Pacific
5311
DRIVE-IN (PG)
ond
BABY BLUE MARINE (PG)
A Lo^mmtm Th9ft*rm
Los Feliz
1827 ft Vfmiit
NO 4 2169
Now fronc^ Hkm fotftvol • 1f74
THE aOCKMAKER Of ST PAUL
wrifton 4 dirocfod-4y iortrond Tovornior
•up«rlot»v« tof to bocomo « cUmk
--^•fmo McUin Sloop, AfT^ff 0A4IC
NIXT: iowi tonior'B 'U Ononno'
Harris as Ht>rse: an uiihappy 'Return'
By JoIm C'lMniipiliii
The recent nuclcss «>f GttJ-
77 has if -nls hliclty.-
rcvitali/ed the movie s^equei as
the road to cinerruitK' riches
Hoping to ca^h in on ihr ricu .
wave, the makers ol ^ ^^'^
Calieii H*»r%€ liave |»iven us )
that's right He turn uj a
S4on i atl Httrse.
Once again. Kichard Harris
plavs John Morgan, the fcng-
livh explorer who crossed paths
with the Yellow Hands, a
SiAiux tnhc. and learned, pain-
iuliv. their wav ol hie In his
latest adventure, he returns to
the Dakota I erntitrv and helps
his tribe regain their land Irom
the white trappers and frtiow
Indians who have attacked and
ens lit veo r|Be'm
f he plot IS simple enough
the Indians' struggle lor re-
venge and lustice and the
movie would be ea^>^ to/watch
wer^e it not lor ilie^C4tcxit=:
ciating. explicitly blood> ritual,
a sort ol acupuctufe-with-
^^^^ *if** . Harris ufider(^
in order to help the tribe re-
awaken their IcMl Spirit Ellis
Herman's ma\e-up and special
ellcctk crew has niade the hal(-
hour scene intiniteK more
painlul lor the audience that it
appears tu be lor Harris
I he cx^ eh U>ng spirit
invoking__jiiuai also includeu a
( arU>s C astaneda-like mewa
line romp antf '^ylt -encounter
on the >now-swept l^akota
plain Neither scene dtjet* |us
tice lo the Indians' lilestvie or
spirit ua I It > I he l- fs ruual is
little nuiic than ^ ..us and
the dialogue on trie plain is
onlv pretentious
^**^V.pl. 4he eharactenr are
* ronsisieni. il somewhat, un
i»rijcilial and p^ed^ taWt ' (^le
Sondergaard is the aged
i tk ^oman who advi
Harris abouT
the ln4uMl*s
Geoff re\ I ewis is effct-
iivtMv nastv m a btJTntrlTng
wa\. as ahe greedy while
trapper who has captured m<Kl
ol the Ye4low Hafid^
The character Harris trie* to
create blond, boyishly ener-
getic IS obviously designed
44-4- contrMt with the 4mFk
dispirited Indians However, il
comes till a IfTtle overdone
Harris parodies himsell b\
Hashing his pepsi>dent-w.hitc
teeth at every opportunity and
'»^^ ung to every event He
alst) imJul^-v m U>ng. t»pen
mouthed pauses intended lor
dramatii ellect. but they make
him look mtne like a lobt»ii>m\
victim
Director Irvin Kershner and
cmematographer Owen Rot/
liian el lectively capture tlkr leel
ol the %Mde open plain and the
loreMed wilder new. Wc als«»
get a sen^r of 4he InduiiH.
dcpcadimce on ibe land ior
survLvaf both physical and
?»p»rnii*L Alt ol this, th over-
shadowed; unlt>rt u na t e I y 7 by
ii^ ssive fOic jngj Hilrris'
pfet titled nnipre^ertt egp
? •
c review
'^.-r'- . . •V-Vv^'.Vt*<
"■Vw^'«V^1«Hti»> ^f*%.*
f
— ^
dutiful Noise
""^^ Diamond .
Columbia
Noi-oiil^^e Kctl Diapi^ohd's
alburns am.ong the mojrt so-~
phistrtated inpop music. lhe>
arc among the most preten-
tious as well.^/ L^^^. "
Beauttf\ul i^)tsr ^9^n^\b\\
lollows the precedent set b> its
predecewon . {Servnadr for
example) But the collection ol
songs on this album diHers
Irora pasl efforts because it is
probably Iht ~«Mt Uivcrse
gathering of songs Dlamonld
has produced.
Beauitful Noise presents
Diamond^ recollections of his
early 60's days as an aspiring
voung songwriter in New
York's Tin Pan Alley The
album successfully recreates
Ufr in what is, to say the least.-
a unique corner of the uni-^
verse The presentation is exe-_
cuted with style and taste.
Vox those who find them-
selves very attracted to Dia-
mond's work in general. Beau-
iiful Soise will undoubtedly'
lurthcr heighten their admira-
tFon, for him "For thoft who
take him with the prcnerbial „,
graiW 9I salt, this Engaging
album stiir nieritV at least a Li
couple fi'ileiiu^^^r— ~-
— Marc Palmieri
Saiahf, Ms C otp
mtertse and liiyri tight x>n hyr
lathiir's shadTow with her soul-
tul. rich and'' ver'satilc vouo
I he entire album.is a nice
balance j^f disco and good
Iwterring; but Natalie sets .j
special lire to "(iood Mornui^
H ea riache.'.' i, Vfophist'icaied
\t^d \ "- a nd ^ip uc h M v"
One cut. entitled VI r
Me4od\ " sounds, so much like
J
A ret ha
nklin It should H«
on A r-t t Ka * s Sliar A le a I b.ii rn
^nHu/ir IS lops on the list *ltM
your record collection and
•possibly a stepping stone to -a
gold record , ^-^ --
J
' ie Jacksfwi
NeA DiJMnofMl
Natalie
Natalie ( ule
Capitol
\
Why mess with a winning
combination^ Capitol Records
has enough sen^c^ n(»t to It's
FOMfid two lor Natalie ( ole
With her second album.
O'Jay^ at Greek
The O'Jays proved at the (ircek I heat re Jast week iha^
they arc still highly popular an4 ctitertaining after 20 year^
ol performing The trio lang and danced with so much
energy it was almost tinng. In one number they demanded.
"get off your seat, stomp your feet " The andiencc
responded* accordingly throughout the entire concert
B4cked by the incredible (ircek Theatre orchestra, the
O'Jayt 84n^ many rousing tunes and also indulged in a few
dramatic numbers such as the romantic **Ju»t, Let Me
Make Love to You" and a unique arrangement of Morris
Alpcrt's "Feelinp.-
One of the quieter niMBents in the show was the well
harmoni/cd "Family Reunion," and a medley conveniently
showcased their past hits. ''Back Stahbers T "Love Tram''
and more.
Some of their best received songs were "Living for the
Weekeiid.- "1 Love Music." fend "For the I ove ol Money "
The 0*Jav's nev^ album will be released next week
Melba Moore, on the 84ne bUL was diaspfointing An
obvM^usly ulentcd sHigeFv M«ofe wm. riddled by a p<x>r
selection of tbngs and the mabihtv to mHintain one style of
fttfigifig thiough each tune
-I
Those who have waited three
-and a hall years lor the l(»llo>*-
up lo H<tUaml will be \cry
disappointed with this album
It contains eight oldies du^
seven new songs, but the oldies
arc badly chosen CKocV n
Roll Music" and '.lust Onee m
Mv Life" are the onlv '>ruv
that deserved to be red»>ru
and most ol the new song^ a^<
either lightweight or dull
" I hat Same Song" stand
out as the best origi|^l
has appealing lyrics and ^^'
attractive melody. "Susie C in
cinnati" and 'Tf's Ok' are
moderately interesting musi
cally and the lalter's lyrics are
more involving than the others
Strong production and ai
rangements (with the fullest
orchestration of any album
since Pet Soumh in l%M *^"
441 the songs 4re offset bv
occMiofuil thin, off kev lead
vocals Altogetlier. this is the
Beach Bovs weakest albun.
excepting Si* Timgh
— Jeff Mclc»*i
\
WiMd
Jcir Beck
tp4c
t...
Too often the svnthesrs '
la// and rock is an unn.ir
- nufrnayr oJ the worst elements
o\ each ol whi4;h Icff Beck v
iWiM hv Bltnx was a flagranr
examplj^v ,Mth«»ugh it had^ r^
few hright momettis_>uch as
"Scatterbraih." th« -album, was
"generally muddled M^ repe-
titive Happily, alter ^ good
deal of trial and error experi-
ro^niajion. Beck h^ tma-liy
struck upon a good |a//-r(K*k ■
formula -in H ireJ his latest
instrumerital elf<>rt
^i ireJ skillfully avoids the
lailu/es that plague thcNlicId ol
, »a/y-cock, An overstated beat
dr a 4hiefne, driven into the
ground are not uncommon
among the riff-ralf of riff-rtKk
But whereas hea\y metal is
sucK a highly energi/ed music
that Its power can compensate
tor oft-lacking imagination.
ia//-rock otters no such advan
tage furthermore, the intricate
ma/e-like wanderings ol the
fa// mufHeian frequently make
the )a//-rock instrumentalist
seem, in comparison, ^ike a
I heseus who" has become
tangled in his thread
Irai^TTs Itke "Blue Wind."
Sophie." and *l ed Boots."
however, are well-conceived
and well-executed Motils are
clearly stated. developed
powerfully by Michael Walden
on drums, and embellisbed by
ex-Mahivishnu keyboards man
Ian Hammer Jeff Beck's
guitar ranges Irom the soft and
lyrical to the fierce and
seanng. but never fails to elec-
trify
From hts early days with the
Yardbirds (the group that also
produced Page and Clapton)
through his albums with Rod
Stewart ;ind Ron Wood, his
talent has been apparent B«t
no that he has found himseK a
format altboiigb ironically
Beck composed none of the
pieces on Hired himself (his
backing musicians cover the
writMig chores) his time has
'•'^'*tr to shine Beck and ta//-
>^>vk can do a UH 4oc each
other
— K«»ff>erf ttoiuneris
..-^- .^-tatut
U l^attra KIri
^ ::^ Jhe C omed V C 4>rpurai loa^ at ihe_int imac^ HoHywood
CUnteen i7^e4 Melrose Ave )K a ulented young group W
^c^medians Fojlowing their successful lirst production,
which began last November, iheyxrciTed a lacimd show. A
Gau Re\'^^ ^'^t-Chti's nff the Oid Buflui
. Some of the faces are familiar from television^ roles and
comergials.; biJR^^ It iv obvjl)us the group enjoys '^rforming
wifh a live* audience ^T he audience ^njoys them too.
alth(>ugh there are some drag|^ moments Iji 9ne sketch,
mo old 'ifnen (fNeil ihompsoJrSiid Mfke MirManus) are in
the park reading artd commcntmg on ne^A^paper items while
teedmg pepperom to the pidgeons There are funny lines,
but many -fif the jokes fail Noticing the slump. Thompson
points out an article that proclaims "Audience kills acting
team of two"
The slow sketches aie counter balanced with scenes such
as "The Facts ai Finance," in which Thompson and Nancy
Stem discuss their persofial gains and losses in the business
t
world: *'l remember when I had my first investment
experience" or "I know your type AU you*re after is a fast
buck"
The acting is very good. 'iNit Hie writing is even better In
fact, the scenes that fail in the Gnu Kevue are unsuccessful
beciuse both the acting and the wnting kick the general
inspiration of most the skks. Many are deverly unique and
wouid be welcome additions to the dull humor of television
variety shows
Technical Director DeiMUS Chnstianson adds much to the
show with his unusual sound effect talents One of the
highlights IS the library sketch, with Dons Hess as a student
trying to write a paper while Thompso- -ts baa ode her. his
every sound amplified ten times c in istimnaon makes
Thompson's sneeze sound like an expkM*on and his heart
beat like war druips.
Tfie Gnu Reveu runs Fridays. Saturdays and Sundays at
8. 10 pm. "•**' ~i iflrtiiigiy' Saturday^sbow at iO.36 pin.
Studem adiiifcon is S2J6^ The Hollvwond Canteen Cafe
iis4^ ^inm iBfl fiimmif iii«nu
' f *
J!'
i» ••)•.
Monns WestwOod I
THE TENANT
T3 44. 4:Bf, SJO, 740. 10 IS
Manns Westwood II
SURVIVE (B)
Monns Westwoodlfl
AUCE IN WONOERUND
TOO 140 4:QD. S 90. 7 00 • 30 10 00 11:40
No ono odtnittod \»ndm9 IS
A lamtnmlm fhmottm
Monica I,
^nlo MofMCO
451 84S4
't NodMfig but action of dio Drtvo-ir
^mmm f^otfd ttvlf on tbo tcroon tool
DRIVE-IN
ohm ion VIncont.MKhool
BABY BLUE MARINE
■ •' .-I
Monica II
IJ22 2ftd &»««ot ,
454
Km Kr««foHaf«oo and
THE SAILOR WHO FEU FROM
GRACE WITH THt. »A\
p^ipp H^^porT ^Rvvcnwn in
f AREWEU MV LOVELY**"^
J
^A4A>
A lo«mffiJf«-' fhmatrm
^**>
Ingmor Sofymon t
FACE TO FA^
Music Haii— stotringu^
9036 w.Kh.rr S4vd '^OfogHy^twaHul o<
ff^timi 'If', ,9111 fho bott movK in town
974
nvegnffiotnt.
•*- Joy 4aywm
jatn
41''
tmm ft)
3 00, 4 00^^^^00,4:00;. 10 00
^t 4
NuAtt
TKeqtrc
V1272 Sof^to
47S-437V
479 526?
Mvd
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Mtdnti
s/ ts -
•4/14-
4/17 - I,,
4714 - TtM O.«of
If^bl*
HmOvM 4»m*i
ORIENTAL
7425 Saosot 4lvd
876-0212
dint
OUTLAW X>SEY WALES
•nd Po«#l N^wwion in
BUFFALO BIU ond th* INDIANS
'Js:
f'n, ^1,
Pontages
ot Ymm
7I«I
GATOR (PC)
FOOD OF THE GODS (PG)
Po<ltH
Picwood
Ptco nmor
2774234
In Sonfturround
MIDWAY (FG)
LLiCKYLADY
Sat, Smo —
a Lammmim
Plaza
W9tfWGod vmagm
4770097
479 9077
A l<^^*S4^^4^
Regent
1045
272-0301
SWASNBUCKUR
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Urn
i^lsdatim
la a fiofoo befdo al dio toaas ^
Inat
•sot witty
w* ■■ ** ofiBo, ana as voiooaas
Royal
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at it
M Pi#nny
SMI
— Joa#fn \jn^m
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SWEPT AWAY 1
477 53S1
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A-snarecHDrum*
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UA Cinema
Center b
^ 4 4 1 54
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OUTLAW JOSfE WALES
^lt30, S-tM. 7:19. i:m IP 30
UA Cinema
Center II SAiiORWHOfeuftOMCRAOE
N)t99 wiiworth A^l^=^^^ WITH THE SEA
UA Cinema
Center IJj
I0t§9 W«nwoTlh Av«
W««twood
474. 3683
TUNNEL VISION
4y.-*^4a. TtS» to 36^
GROOVETUBE
3:15 6 10, 9;05.
By Cadiy Seipp
/>rum **lt bleedk. jt lim&, rt
burn*» " Well, noi cxictiy^ Pcck^
pict get hit in the f^tces with
shovels 'd lot. and we see nfia|iy
«khoti» of girls falling out of
thetr corsets, hut Drum t» sttll
not tLs sensational as the ads
promise It ii^ however^ every
bii ds trashy.
UA CINEA4A
CENTER 1\^
)0n9 W«ll«i»o«#i A««
Wcttvi^ood 474 41 9t
DtUVE.
r'.l'
1:30. 3:1S, SCO. 6 45, 1:30 10:15
V\r6StW0OClSun-Thur» 1 30, 3:43, 4:01^ •:!*, 10:51
iUj,'.>Okr
Fri-Sot 12:15, 2:2»;4:41, 7:10, 9:37, 12:00
VAriAROKin 35.j!nm Technicolor Mu^cols!
7.^^f2 '^•^^ through Sot STATEf AIR (1945) b«ck
ZZZMmifm0imm litfVy Grobio^^ffrlWMASX
AVI. , Sun-tUot Cormon Mirondbjf}
_ *^ >:J«ft«ND IN HAVANA ( 1941 ) oimI
"~^ *^ THitt UTTLf GIRIS IN SiUf (1946Tw»th
2309 Wifih.fe
387 2171
Sun-Tuoi'
Jun« Hover
•■■♦jjfrn:
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40O V^rnich
THE OMEN (R)
1 ;30. 3 40, 6:00, 6:05, j0< IS v^i
■i1>U^i.i
m^§imi.-yi:
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f'filk Pmr*tm% 47i.#yyt
LuncH** tmd
iaotic coclitoiU
CMliHiil HMf 4-« pm
Cont«o««« CuiMft*
A ^*/>,
"^i:^^
FOR THOSE WHO APPRECIATE OUAlff¥-
»
i son wt ^.' wTror 4 gioCuS SOUTH Of WIISHIRE
T:SZ<fTZlL
17473 ¥Vit«Ki«* Slwd LA t3«-t7t0 ^"^ '*•** 0'^«»» *
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lffit«fnott*nal Vmdwt<K«« )1 2S
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KENTUCKY FRIED
THEATRE
10303 w Pi«e
55^2663
the b««t of Itf T t
lo»f 5 yop*
BEATING A DEAD HOtSi
p>t. a s«t i 00 a lo oo
CiUEGUIDE CONTINUED
Drum (Ken Norton) is the
adopted son of Rachel (Paula
Kelly) the lover and slave of
Marianna (Isela Vega) who is a
Cuban madame and Druin*i_-
reil mother L'nfortunately,
Drum's bulging muscles catch
the eye of Bernard Demarigny
(John Colicof), a perverted
Creole nstocrat who drools.
'*What a sight that necger
would be eh, streeped down
nekked'^
To get him away trom De-
Marigny. Marianna sells Drum
to Hammon Maxwell (Warren
Oates), an amiably vulfv
owner of a slave-reed ing farm
whose nymphomaniacal daugh-
ter (Rainbeaux Smith) molests
the male slaves. DcM^ngm
l^ioia^K lip at a dinner pa^ iuuX
tfiieMKS castrating Drum
Marumnii makes a toast ^to
^stration of all Rien,**
which effectively puts a stop to
the conversation
-Maxwell gcmfftmily— pro-
mises "^a shiny ne^ silver dollar
to the first buck who gets his
wench knocked up.**Drum ap^
peart ta be trying to do this to
Pam Grier when the slaves
revoh and burn down the
pianta<tion. This -tr^the ctnnax.
Norman Wexler*s screenplay
is pure camp, but Steve Car-
ver's direction is not so sure of
Itself Ihe m tqeaet'sre cu-
riously stcnle — Carver seenu
most interested in bloody noiM
and whipped botfiet. He also
trys to iwicct a nicaning ,into
his film, a futile exerdie if
there ever was-
Oates and Colicos pUry their
roles for laughs, but Vega and
Kelly valiantly do their 1>ett to
make their pai44 believable.
Norton is muscular as Drum,
which is all that is asked of
hint. — -r^ — -^ — — rr ^'
[Respite its silliness. Drum's
exploitation of slavery ia ex-
tremely offensive. The makers
of Drum re^rd slavery simply
as a resevoir of k-inky sex
scenes, and though the film
condemns slavery on the sur-
face, it actually celebrates it.
'■m-
Laurence Olivier's Henrv V. starring' Ohvier
and Robert Newton, and Orson Welles* ^n/-
s/a/jT, starring Welles and Jeanne, Moreau. will
be screened tomorrow^ at 7pm in Royce Hall.
Tickets can be bought at the Central Ticket
<^>4lK'e I8r 1^ the door
jy^ripwiist Thomas Harmon will give a free
,™^^. ,^^^^^^ Tuesday in Schoenbcrg Hall In
hTSmor of the Bicentennial. Harmon .will per^
form "IWb dentunes of American music .
Lutenist Toyohhko Satoh (right) will give a-
concert ol B-enaissance and Baroque music
Sunday at Kpm in the Euenos Ayres room ol
the. Recreation Center Admission is free.
^,- Saxophonist John Klemmcr's cpncert sche-
duled for August 28 Kas been indefinitly
p(>si|>oned. ■• - .
\t.%
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WITH LARRY QELMAN • ALLAN NOVAK • TERRY HALL
SPECIAL GUEST APPEARANCE BY FLESH GORDON
SCREENPLAY BY B. A. FREDRICKS
LYRICS AND MUSIC BY BUCKY SEARLES
ARRANGED AND <;ONDUCTED BY JACK STEARN A PETER MAT?
PRODUCED BY WILtilAM OSCO • DIRECTED BY BUD TOWN SEND
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GM
CWBIALAliO AnaH^ 714/635 760 1 WJUTH COAtT PtJUEA Cosu M— a 7i4/i;aa.^mo
.^^■
T-r
winteFcofltifHies-te be a Bfttm^TT
in the hi
school t^a§BC Or
her team ^ould have done
belter
£>caaa Black wo<*d.*' "Ueana has-
a good sMbt' and is quick ior a
fir I her si/e (5-9) She has a lot
of potentuil."* said t.ewinier ol
the Buena High School All-
CIF choice.
Taai BiiciiwirMfi "ti aa»^ Xaas
play in the high school league
and she killed us She won't
give and is always diving for
every loose ball She is a good
rebounder, and with the stuff
Ellen will teach her. ^plus the
goad coaching -the fot from
Chns (HoweU) an4 Trap in the
high school league, she could
become a fine plaver.** said
Lewinter of the Crescenia Val-
ley All-CTF selection
Denisc Corlett: "r>enise is real-
ty tough t tiave watched her
for two years in the ^ higft
school league and her improve-
ment is.unreal She is a big girl
who can shoot, but if you
guard her to close she will
drive around you, anfi shSr is a
fine rebounder," said^Xewinter
6f the Marlborough All-CIF
Faalaatk attitudes _^
^1 have met most of tSe
recrmts. and the one positive
thing IS that all of them have
fantastK^ attitudes. They are
real tmpcjcssive because they all
play team ball and cheer for
everyone else," mid Lewinter
"It iA_^ coaches' dream dho
make up t^^e ^^^vn for next
year with jiil inany ulentcd
players, and 1 l/now that Ellen
is excited "*" '^
When, t htry collegiate ieagCTP
at "Cal^UtC'l.A is finished, H
wilt
TOYOHIKO SATOH
performed ^
Aug- 15
S^OOPtlllt
Buenos
Ayre%
Room
at
sunset
canyon —
^recreation
center
t
/
FREE CONCERT U FREE PARKING
Cultyral & Racraaiipfm Affairs in co-operation
with the Department ot F»ne Arts Productions
for a
^
. J' , ■ ■■ •- . -^
when Ann got her^" dream
to Montreal and win-
Atm M«y*ft (IS) mm^~tmmkmf (22)
it back'tn IM tan tor UCLA: ItMtp
coach of ^ team^ sard i.ew» Jtte
ler. -^ "•"'•• .,.r'"^"'"or
Whether ii^is_coiicfimg or ning the silver ^^medJi I It.l am
playmg. Mnwrner plans to be a -^iill pkv^ m 1980. u would
^rt of women's baske*bali4or be the greatest acc-wipK^mcnt
maiiy. years to coiiie If. coach- to malce the Oismpic, team."
ing docs not happen i^v tlie^
...c— -
• J ^rj
not end basket ball for next ctmpk of years. Lewmttr i:dHor*s Note: Afeafure st€>r>
Lewmler. "I anrnpteving (*n the^_ said she wouli consT(3c7 dcdi- 2B^^^lmk^^ jrrruits \% right.
^•y^^L^^n^"*^ West AAli catmg her tiTne to making l he. 1^^ Brrckmrtdfe
^■'♦w^^ ^ defending \9m US OJvippic . ie«iT w IN run in next wreki Vi"A^
^^icpuldnl nave been
team.
champioD^^Eiloi ia thrt>laver-
Aogusf 12-15
MAa« Alliso«i^
Aug^ 19-22
L. A. Four
Lawrindo Almeid
.JtM-
ha^
mer Brum edition.
,v.-t-.--v'
i
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v
W Aug 17-1$
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Uphthm
30 PI^R AVE.
toy BfawnT— Shelly
Marino' — Bu(l Shank
plus Ricky J.
••♦•^OtS WlHCOMf
JTOfS STUOfNT-dMSCOUN?
'* ClOSfD MON T^H,
HERMOSA B^ACH B»0- TEL. 372 6911
J '■•
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^^^^^^^^^c TOP 1®
^.j. Silk ©«r-«** ^"^
6 NEII- "if^raT A Night oj»H*
i;a.Mvta.. ^- ,« .^
VOUK CHOICE J;:^^
llm
not T\tt tm
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ulur
(.1 ITAI4S M/!l!W.li»K
lAWINH l%S li<Mms ^MiMMOItllS
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r it I
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8/13, 8/14, 8/15
Jimmy Witherspoon
plus
G.C. Cameron
8/T«-^/17
The Romones
plwf-
The Quick
Festival Seating
656 2200
Hollywi
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T
Football practice
DCLA football practice
will get underway on Wed-
nesday with the annual pic-
ture day, with contact drills
bef inning on Thunday.
action will take place both
in the morning and after-
nooii. With the athletes try-
ing to get into s
o|Wfi^r
on Septentbcc-JL^ many aM>-
nents Hkt th^ tofr. picture
can be expected. •
Two of the top ptopif to
watch wIM be Roat lowl
hero Wally ^'Hollywood**
Henry (I ji, who will be back
as a h|inker fod kick tm^
n7«»pi^
back -—^ candidate
Wendell Tyler (2;2).
A ft
rr—T^i
IQOz.
Johnson's
119
C SM
»-"...fi
Ds^
•■-f'"
»>.
» -
A^.
hr" ---
• ^ ■:....-' » ■ .■.»■'.
pdpiMr aeifiahd : . . JfUfeTTs having another
U SQUARE DANCEu
Sat. Aug. 14
•
New Opportunity
9:00 p.m.
fl
r^ Complete With &
D<^ Professional Caller ^
_. '*" )^0^' $1.75 - non-members ^#
^SQUARE DANCE S
- PSliMliaMnts witl b« wrvvd
H/7/e/ • 900 Hilqard • 474-1531
Medical & Law
Students
Find out
how you can earn
$500 a week
Part-time
— f-
call
Dennis Gilbert
or
Mitch Fisher
'278-6006
M0NY
MUTUAL OP MIW YQMM
(This u the second in a series
on women's recruiting for the
fall Tcniay tennis and tracks
Popite an off-ncason in the
recruiting, the UCLA women's
teiuiis team expects
ul^ieston
Coach Bill Zaima \% very
optimistic that the lone Bruin
recruit, freshman Bccicy Ml of
Riverside. wiU be an anct to
the defending conference
t.himpiQjga^... , mha fi^inhtd
founh at the Nationah last
June
'•There nrre really only two
players worth going affcr this
"year." says Zaima, *^BclJ and
Lynn Epsitein. -whom we lost4o
the University of Miami. Flo-
nd«. Next year, howcver,aevea
out of the top ten ranking
junior amateurs should be en-
tering freshmen "
**Our scholarshi{>i» go to peo-
ple who*ll eventually play xnie
or two (singles) for us, and
who should start out aniong
our first four. Bell should be
there -
The Bruins will have one
and possibly two spots to fit!
from last year*s minnirit >'—
All-Amcrican Cindy Thomas,
th^ number two singles' player,
is the sole Brum graduate
Number one player Paula
S mitfh , na med an Ai-A mer ican
as a freshman last seasdn, is— course
for
t Ivnnla.
undecided as to hc^ return to
Westwood. Wheih(»rn^ will
turn pro will nioSt pj-obabJy
depend on>mw she fates with
the Junior federation Cup
tCtfWf this summuer
**Thc coming trend for col-_
icfc players ti to play for a
yeaf[ or two i1ia» f© pro/;
Zainia 4^pntinues. "And should
P#uUr g6 pro'CAfly, «hc'd be
keeping in the Bruin-^ tradition
wuh the liitc$ of Peter Flem-
ing, Jimmy Connors and BiUy
use. wRo finished third at
.the j^tionals, alftd lost no one
to graduation, is expected to
give the Brum netters their
strongest competmon during
Icufue next season Zaima pre-
dicts UCSB and UCL who wrill
no lonfer be in the same con-
ference with UCLA, will be
ranked among iHe Wp 10
teams nationally, and non-
league games will be scheuled
wiib the two schooto. (UCLA
women's teams arc in a new
conference, the Western Col-
• •••••• ••TJWB
TherelSa *vl
difference!!! i
(Kef Ayttrt
•ftvtneiict
MiMlCCMt
Sfv^lic
«Mt«fl«K
IMt«r« •
legiate Athletic Association.
t^M Use. San Diego Stae,
Long Beach Staie and Cal
Stale Fullerton.)
"It'* MUeresting to note.** the
coach poncluded. "^that where-
ever there's a strong women*!
icrmis program, there is a
strong men's program and vice
vcTia. The top four teams fi-
nishing in both the women's
and mcni Nationals were Tri-
mly. Stanford, use and. i5f
UCLA/-
The new name in women^
track for the upconlKing season
will be frosh recruit Kaihy
Weston Weston^ an 800-rncter
runper. will be joining Olympic
teammates Evelyn ^shford
imprinter) and Karm Smith
(javehn) on^ the i^fCtAritiim
under- 'second- year coach Pat
Connally " ,
According to Coni^llyf. '^Wc
have a lot of new-gtrls. Ij^t ncjT
tme" coming in who already has
made a name for^berself except
Weston Several^ of the girK-
from the '74p2iLiAiAW ehantipH
innBhtp taam who dtdn^^
pete list year ma> also return /L
'*Conferencc-wu»e.'' she con-
tinued. "ouiL competition wiJI
be use Nationally it will he
Seat tlie-Paci tic and Prarie
View, and TenncMse Sute^if.
they dcculc lo ^m the AIAW
A major addition to the
Wcytwood squad w4l be that
Vicki Vodon. their new
trainer frpm Cal St a t^ J: A
Conally cuj^its her witfe^gi^ng
Ashford ready tor the Olym-
pii-^ after a pulled hamstring
last ^ March
'*Vicki IS an excellent trainer
who will help us not only i|i_
J he fir*t aid department
AMERICAL
INSURANCE
24
1434 Westwood Boulerard^SMMr Mtfi Angiks, CaWorni-i t__
Call D«y or Night - (21 3) 4TS.S 721^1^1
c
J
cspccrallv wiitr iiuutv — prevent
tion," says the Njnuiunf^ coach-;
"W^ should have r*» f anusiiV
iprog^ram for otir ^trrK *^ ■ . "
As .'^aiL^ETt»jkS-couniry. "'Con*
nall> isijoined „hy her new
assistant coach. .Scott ^hrsolni.
, a former Er^ih runner and
coach from Arcadia High
"ITall the people come hack,
we'll ha vic a good team I again
iS6ni^:^ki\\ to nwiiuon'^anv
tiameft for tear of c/hbttfra^ijng
-the girls or putting too much
pressure on them
BiH.^— Can Hilly i4^m4»e».
'^Vm keeping my fingers
crossed We'll bei res^pectable if
not ..the besi/*
FEDERAL PRISONERS
Want workshops in
• Budget and Finance
• Job Resume
• Job Search Techn^guRs ii
• Financial Aids for Higher Education
• How to Succeed on Parole "
as part of their pre-release prograi
PLAN AND CONDUCT A WORKSHOP
WITH OTHER STUDENTS
1
1 - '. '
^, --w-
•»— ^^
- i"^r>- ■
-
1
u •
4 Kinsey Ha!J
825-76if
pr6ject
Interchange
I
>'[iiiii I'
"«■
if
iw<<C>v?i»»» >"*f
THE HEATHE
Fsahns 2 and. Acts 4:2S
l##
On m cf\mm day two —fmorn had baan praachad. o««a by Marttfi
Luthar m>^ tha oltiaf by a friand and hit co-laborar wa w»M cati Doctor
■ Lultiar %mi6 to hit frtand^ You pfcH0^ » 9oad tarmon. but I Ukad
rmna battar than yours Wall Doctor. I mm irTir !■<§■ your
tupanorHy Wo. Papllad Lulhar thai it »»ot »t Iha raaton I IMiad mina
\it^f than youft It that avary child and illitarala tarvant pratant could
undarttand min« mr%^ knaw what I wat lalktn^) about iHif much of yourt
wat only undartlood by tha laarnad and th« tcholart
}fr% ago thara was a prominant politician in thit stata who
oratorical alMlity a«ong with a tlowary gift of gab. Aftar o«^
of h«t tpaachat hao \mrm9f% mm\ and one aaliad Iha t^tt%9f H ha had
heard tha ipaaeh. afid on Warning thai ha had fwt h9 taid Man y«u
4am \ know what you mittad. batiava that wat tt>a ftnaai tpaach I 9^m
ha tura want to to«Ni*«' What did ha talk about aakad Nt
AAar hatitating a NMIa. I don I know h9 fwmf did tay what ha
ilMnMEOBOS
• $AT-1ttT
}f9« S«Mfl
tot An^tfi
f7n. 4T7 j§%%
fOUCATlONA. '.(MTfA
j*l»I
On a number of accaaieina laMart hava coma aaking the ob^tiva of
lich probably it anaiiNvr way of aaking. nufhat mf you
talking about Our firti article appaarad on Iha firti Saturday of
March 1M2. a«id «RMb Iha atcaption of Iha following weak thpte baa
baan otia in aaary tfiiirday paper: andmihahratofiaaMllnaNma
•aMpMPbig anat. diractly or tnd^ractly . wo hava talkad about Iha fact that
gaoofolly tpaoking Tha Cluifch la aoppiipl and baa funbod dtocipiina.
and INa roa4flla of comipNng God t way m Ibooartti wM fmmn m Hia
and. and iha f^ might ba naar. Iha viaMation of tha wrath andcurta ol
Ood upon yt at mdbPldiiala. owr nabon. a«^ tha world, cahing aManhon
«o Iha tact Ihal Ma wat Iha coMaa ol Iha dottr uciion of Iha wortd in b«a
doyt ol Mooh. Iha caoaa ollha aloMallon of Iha wraMi and ciiraa of God
the Jawith pipplt down through Via canturloa. Ma cauaa of tf«a
from la taca of Iha aorVi of graat cibaa and naiionaand
kinfrtama of antiqutf y . and •» caMoa of all Iha diaoaitort. trouMoa. olB..
ol flHHMnd iwclydlwg mm atmmmm wa raoi abouf in ovory #af s
iiiiiiipMii* Tha hooihon roga' lo got rM of God t Moral Law. Tan
CoasMansMantt. and Tha Almighty holds Niom in
and vaaae Ihom wNh aN adaorsHy Wa hove alao in d
tin ually taMiad about «io tad «iat God tent NIa ibn lo Via oorttilo I
hgMaoManoat to aaary tout ttiat
Jaaut Chrttt. ar>d win wma Hit CooMnan^Piontt in thair haorta. or In
li« Ihom up a^ora Ihay will want lo "obey Gdiljnd kaap
Hit Commandmantt which it tha whole duly of mmn. ^-^
— ** • — ■;
It It tinguiar how long tha rottan will hold togofhar'. prb^idpd you do
not handle It roughly Pictura a rottan appla hanging on a traa or
altawhara. it holds logalhar a long tima unlatt il tails ot it handled a Ht
tia roughly and than you hava rottan appla tauca Ona fn%t%m4 of
corruption la 'ffOllanr>att Tha aarlh t>acama corrupt or rotlan in tt>a
day% of H90\. Go4 handlad it rathar roughly it want lo piacat and
\hmf wat nona left ascapt tha mmn who found graca in God t tight, tha
mm\ who faarad God and ot>ayad H^m* - Soma f\9^9 attimalad Ihara
might hava baan 4S0 billiont of ptopit in tha aarlh whan Iha flood
— Tha Jawith nation at a wdiolt bacama corrupt foHaii God
mdiod tt>am roughly through fhm canluriat and behold lt>air hit
tory tuffanng. and how Ihay hava baan tcaflarad
Thara it much roltOMioaa m^ corruption in tha home Ofid' family iifa
of our nalioo; Ihara ia much rnWiPwaii and corruption m tha poMlicaf
Ufa of our f%MHm Iha mom eauaa of Iha corrupbon and rotlarnaat m
Iha family afid govorhMonlal Ufa of our nation can l^ tracad lo corrup-
tion avid rottarmaaa in our Protattant Chnttian Church lila and avary
ona of ut who ha«t Ipbofi tuch vowt mr^ aapacialiy ratponaibia' Did
not God haMla oa royghln wftan Hm parmitlad our Pratidant lo ba at
Mo doubt in our mind but that thit parmittiva
of Tha Abmghty it a rabuka to Iha fttkr^ nohon* Ganarally
Tha Church raluaatlo gat rough with itt own roWanwott of
of God s taws and Word, and ao Iha
^^w w^wwoaoa* wia civii powofa o*
It rafyaa lo gal fough" wMh miir#af. robbary. vMt Im-
N said Wmm and again Ihol bia CMy of
^^ ^^o gpaai powar or ^^la nanon. la mo amraa
sMi of Mn and riiipipldf bMgMMy pf auch crimos m all bda groat
I.
rably
har M^vdta
•Ji ona di-
What can ona if^an do? H% can do bw
lamtuka 10:41 42 An
Manila. IhOM ara carafid
tngisnaodhir
W labon away from har -> Tha good port Mary ehoao awB to sM
and boor Hit Word. Go and do Ukawiaa. got rid of
•Odd rruit by Iha powar of God*
/
V
etASSIFIED-.
DIAL 625-
for s«l#
YVAM OM J««H«li
t1
OCAOLINE 10 30 A.M
•4 - •
fisli fof ■ polMvllsMy tul-
fllllnf r««ull RmpoM: TO. PO ••■
CommuntccMonc BoMi
twity •upportt lh« Uni««rtity of Call
;y OM i«««i-4
* CI RADIO
KMiaOtftfaiaMt* ra^to Qrwt
hom* co««Mnu(McMton» t««t and
csrrytna eaa^
LIST PVNCf
Cattlor
tgs:g;g'^
il-tM ti
WAMTtO: §.M^n»ne94 f^pho0t9
477-1421
Ifi Wm OaMy Bruin to mtftm
who dUcrlmtrt«t«t on lh« basis of
•ficoslry. color, nollonoi orif In. roc*,
•r w«. WoWhor Iho Dotty Bruin
"n»« AtUCLA Comntunlcslions
has lnWoa<i9a>od any of Iho soc
vicos advsrtisad or advortlsors ropro-
—n%»4 In this IBSUO Any parson ba-
ll In this
'I
tftacrlminatlon itatoA horoln should
ttta tuatnass Mana«or. UCLA Datly
•ruin. 1 12 Karchhotf HoN. 3M Wast«»o0d
Ptasa. Los Angolas. California §0024
For aaaialanca with tKMiaIng dtaciliwl-
natlon probloMs. call UCLA Housinf
Otftca. (213) 425 4491 Wastslda Fair
Houatwi pU) JOa-1002
entertainmMit
Hour, half or full doy For $4 »0 an
4M-101I; 121 Old T«
"** 17 CHn
I71-1J
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(10 A 12)
help v/«it#d
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wo^ ■Or nwn
CALCULATORS
Tt SM 10 A. SR 81 A. •« 42. OR M, oC
Hf -Cidii
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11M0 tonH Monica RNO.. WXJL
. MIS ILtCTROMICt
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OfBiMdiii A
TJI. OHP
vr UM
(IfStI
LIvo-tn •20-0204 talf Ana aorv«M
ITS a^out »«a aA (If A It)
(Fff»-tiifii, tlOO
4/4. $40
. 447-2204.
(t ) ; )
campus
• ^j
torCkoatI
(AN trnmut^'t^H). FON Mo
'^••^Ahn Olr)
IICIiT.A-TV 410.00 motm
•tudant discounts Ootlvary to 0:00
474-3470. 2203 Wastwood. .^ '^
BtO %mmr cdbtn, Hirfrtattad. naor laiw.
Sloops 4 430/day, 4174/wooli Rod
740-7030/004-7400.
■-■.-■. _x---^ .^^^.^ S 2)
HAMtTYJURIV
274<4021.
(list)
HAINCirmMQ Modala «Mniad for Si
John Raymond oH Lontfoai Woal«dd#
Slvd on Tu«>s-W«d, Xvonlngs Cmm-
mantng 5 Mi. Mo charts CaN 474^300.
. , 0^1 S SI
OAL Frl^y/Soorotory.
^alllon. part-llnsa mornlnfa. dor,
orraw^. iMip 'ahlpplng clorli Li
lomilo ligiiilMM - Santa Monica - aMff
t2.7flir « wSllii 473-2070. ^^^^ ^
NOUSeKCCPC# WAMTtO • 2 AmR-
MOOMS RIR WCEK - UOHT CLE AMWIO
MUST NAVf CAR. 43 RtR HOUR. NEAR
CAMPUS AT MAMOdRtLf CAMyOM.
CALL Ml|. FOK. 47S-SS0B m 273-7711.
(14 A 12)
f^
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flbroal*
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AUTO ALARM prtact
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(10 A 12)
to ■<
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FOR
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(to A ISi.
QUI Ln Oil mm now
DELIGHTFUL 7 yr. oMifM noodb 4 Ony
roomAboard with WLA family with
of comp. a^a. ^paaant scftooi
E7 1-3300
WArndr. .CaIL RacA
•r Inlofoat halpful Wlttnt to
Sfmd. piua room and boov^l.*
flSA4l^
•FECIAL OppnrtiM%4»ddmillf nwnpy
for aarly morning work Drama or
apooch studonis praforradt' Waaos
aMrOng 44.80-412/hr li
10:00 Am 213/021-4730. T.*
ALES Mi
MAKE UR
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open monfr: 8 10-4 10
M9 • 9%
WAMTED to buy
FT. Carol 302r1004
Grvat Bu«ineat OppoMurifiy
CALL NOW
930-2410
>-' '/,
(10 A 12)
(12 A IS)
'" ' ■» ^
A"t^
...fTUOENTO Earn wMM yoy*
fonoral MSorotory wort. Including
^' floaawora. ate $3 44 hour
i
EUROPE. MioM. M.V S OfMni TQC
Low coat MfMk. AI.S T 1430 So U
44-47/1
'RESEARCH ASSIST AMT'
iO»^fl>adi
cational
b«ck
grour«d in m«atur»m«nt and tts
applisd to aducaiionai raaaorclt »n gutdsnca
and counsaling and aMpanonoa w conducting
>ss»t in planning coorOtnat
mg sod -cortducting r«apprcn m confunciion
wtth ma UCLA Cooppratiws Program wtt^ ma
National Univarsity (or T«acnar Education
in Iran
Owpiiyaiaiii LaaaOax Qraduaw Ochapi of
education UCLA
i97g aaalonmant «hii laai lorup la 4 mamhs
IHigHw lar mum ^pAoadan: 4apt 1. 1474
Sand vita artd appticatton to '
/ Affirmatiwa
SALES
OPPORTUNII\
WEEKENDS
jRl RfMk^fwte-ssN our sdv»f-
ttilng display o«rvics mi B«auty
Trado Showo throughout Wast
"CfMigt ^^*^«~ 1^ nil ^Mi^uMMM
paid. €xtfMWiRnary opportu-
nity tor ttia right otudant oalao-
/ Rwn. Writs: Kan Shilling, NBS
114 W. Uttfipls. CtMcago, Illinois
aiRLlOQRARHICS Raaaaich
ffOthiat lliarature soarch writing
•MSng >ti.^»^>*>- hrtorti^ (bioms
tflcal/socsci) 347^0244 Don i wait
until
MOST ~*^
JMymania Olacounts tor |,„^^
Auto-Llfa-Homoownors and Rantol
Inauranca Vllloga Off lea Wornar
"••MdOn. 1100 Qiandan SMNa tSSI
^m-m&T. S7S-0141.
•ALLET: Fon voy to Roouty 1SSS
nd Un** TWCA. 474 HH
Cloaaaa OaMy Raftwnam.
. advoncod Olaoaona. 421
2or
fiWngui9hm4 Danvn^
TllMlii 301-3004
(IS o»)
iORS MOW** Our
UCLA studonto ■ ill at laaat 4lS/hr
Wa naad sovaral mora articulate. In-
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTOI^PYCLC INSUMANCC
\L^u- To© HIgti?
1.0W Monthly Payr
STUDENT oiMcouirrs
. . . Aok for Kon
WRITER
M0VIM07 A^ SpaclaltoO tlOfir Sooii
opamUon! CaM Sob
(14 A 12)
Mrm papors In toclol
7.
Its A 121
FuOorrr
Com Maris
TV
oy oppolntmont
(IS Otrt
EXRf RT ToafMi
114 A 01 P't««t« courts Faat ffpum. Rortnom
illJLr' provtdad 474^3424
fit S 4)
Its A
—rmOCMT ^pH 3 ehOSfon
fomoa. MdiSf Sunday af toi
UCLA 47S-4031
LOCAL
Somathlng you con So to
aacond Incoma. Co4 OSS^SSS.* 7-4 pm.
(1« A 12
AFTER adiiodi dSRO cora or play group -^
11:30-4:30 doHy: 4-yaar old
In $aptaml>ar. Tdli
or Ipra sKora coat o< alMar. ,
I can mulSi MtotolM imnaportaOon to ^^JO Ihdiiranca Lowaat fOlas fo
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
Too V
UOHTHOMIE
MSURAI
M-1101
SERVtCE
ASUCLA
Travel Service
ONLY OFFICIAL UCLA
Chan*»'^ FiifiKt Service
Over 100< Europa this
Summar • Discounted Student
flights in Europa • CharlOfS to
Hawaii and Maalco • Studont A
raculty diacountt on car purchos
es rentals and leasai • Study
tours • Camping Tours • Unrogl-
mantad Student Tours • Rail
^•-r.3C€ » -Fly driwe Europoan ar
rangemanti • Mini Tours • Hotel'
Accomodation • Hostel Informa
t!on • International Student ID
cards • fr— travel counseling •
FXPO Travel Library'
ASK US ANYTHING YOU
WANT TO KNOW
ABOUT TRAVELING?
Charfor FMghts lo
London Orussels
Shannon Zurich
-^»«la Ath«nt
-Madrtd Istanbul
Frenkiurt Hong Kong
H«w»f' «nrt N»«. -••'54 00
Or>« W«««i Hmmm a
• 5 day»4 nighis MaiaNar> V^MOOS
#6 days-S ntgMt Martda tron« t^S^OO^
^ f days C^rllylwan Cruls« from t4t0 00
/1S0CL4/
InlerrMtional Student Center
1023 Hiigard Ave
Cell Us tor intormatior
473 2491 • 825 3344 • 179 0423
9 6 Dally
• • •
EURORE
larael Africa S«o#oift
ir round ISCA 11007 gon
Vicente Slvd a4. L.A OSSO. 020*
V.W
««P (
t12S
SIS
). tdO brake
n% rMr«
CMoroniaed CaM die
(to
tttRS)
^s.
WAMTED: ORISMTAL RUQS
po#»y ^ollT poy for oMhonnc ^cea^^*
NuSofff ^Humphrey for Vloo.^
) pneo...$i.OS. Oudal...Toahlro
' 0SA1«
•■«..«
*V"*^-
Recreation jr
Center
^ DEUifc
SNACII BAR
^^ is open
JMondey-Friday
11:00-5:00
Saturdfyt, Stmdaye-^
end HoHdays
11:00-6:00 )
no TURNTASLE. SRiMO M01EO
Idga. AlMMi nd». f
Sam after 0:30 Ml, 470-2110.
vv rwRRT
SEVERLY HSIa man's
free hdlraty ling. Por 'dtore Info caft
271.-S230 Tuea - mm. ^^^ Olrt^-
WRITERS A^
^tESEARCHE^S
UES from Weitwood/Ret Air Fran
_ — ^.-. I la • ■)
CmeULAfE poiMloiio: Eom MR Jo $3 JO
on lite. FuM or port Sma. (219^000-
students or
000-7270, S
LOW Coot
Miis.Ti
Londof!
d I ti
or d07-7f7».
TH'^gwancy
a-
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•■» ■■\
(18 A io;
ApORESSERS wonted ImmaSidlalyf
Wortiat^
^siy. Wrfta
(IS A 12)
FOR idlK
VA
1S1.
Rort-timo for fho fallowing booRo
--"T ' A mbvioo in TRiTF^tf ition f i#l#
1. TIlS UfllVRfSirt AfjpcOR^It^w'"'
/ Xiacfcoo's NMr i'
Lo
DIatrtbuta new gas saving prodMCt
aiooopNig Sie country. 10^lk-SR% InonMao
fuorontaedt Up loi ItJSS RpbI monSi.
mmt ttat. "Sltrk Rw UndT CaM Fiod
OSS-1310 Moort
_ (10 S 0)
iJATTRRSSES - UC nidi Hetbig giK con
"■IWrfRiriSnsiR* on matlfooL jHH^
AM 9^M»%, all malor name SNpiSi. Don!
pai liliO. Can RicHard ^ralt>«S-01Y0
I- „ (to Olr)
PREGNANT?
Modrtd. Surlch. Mew
For debSa caM 4r4-
ISrf^Wofo). 470-1011 (Moaj We ala4
RSA, km-^^nk^i
I OW Coet fOghta la Europe sttti avi
from t37t round trtfNcontact Europe
Student Travol 1007 Sroiton Ave SuRa
10. Waohoood Tel 477-0700 Act Now
(23rA 12)
ECOMOMV Faroe to Orient Toliyo
Rong Kong^ Orsn^ia- taipe. India.
-^- f?«Sffi- Si»lS««rtiii.U f^k. A :iiMOR4
^•^''**' '-^-2141. ' - -
CSS Oil
A
-*>-^
nos2i
HpUSEPAINTING
Bist wodi, fnattrtols;
jRxtofiors A multi-room
' fPOO
Vs^ \Mm Coot Rroooduroo.
ConRdofitpof. CaII AnytRno
RroOitini JtvoRnoficy OfrSIiIssI
EXPLORE THE WORLD:
LONGFST CHART''
_ ■•n»'»H| WW Vn Ik Community tQi tttm 5
iWrlAR T EH S (partial I'lttings)
lOvST 30Q fjj^hti A <l«t»» w^m aapartuf
from Juiy Ifi^u June llM^4t'l<ry9~*>9t9*i»
'/•-. .,
1.9 • •
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SI t/14. Sleh 12-Opni appd.
r
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♦ r
c«it2o.aTj ^^^^,
WINEMAKlNCr.' broiring aupplles S
IftOulpment. Select Callfdrnia Wtnoa.
The Orape Nut 0312 W 02nd SL. Weol-
(10 QV)
■*-.**•
■H-
complete
copying
service xerox
kerckhoff ]2^
8250611
cJMirch
t —
BEAN BAG
^ '^ CHAIR$
$25 VALUE
MOW
90
^
1014 LINCOLN BL AT PICO
14534 VICTORY BL
AT VANNUYSBL
392-1
Holp 8o«f by Helping
SS-SSO/ month tor flood
HYLAWb bboioR CtWfER"
1001 Gayloy Avo;; iMotwood
47S-Q051
'
-1
OifA S42-2310 worti.
(12 A 101
opportuniti#>
COrptptafMi. WLA 474-2128
(If A IS)
m
SUMMER JOBS
PmrV-ftmm or FuN-ttnit
47S-M21 for Appt
4.Pro^t VNdfig lll/AmoRbR 1/
»iOR*l'sAH(l
S. 190 * Yrs. Ckib
6. 1 Hsfvt A Vision or Ths
PNIosopfiy
r/ Pries Consumer ^,
1 r
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gOB
^rrn
^yygym
»«•
MM - Yrs. Clii^ Olympics
(itTR) rr'
R. U.L.A.Sj|,A.M. todsty
U.LJLBJkJkM. Scoms ol
EaceNenl let
r>a-i
WESTWOOO frlanda maaSng «
Silent Worstilp. Sun. - 10 am. Unlv'.
rwCA S72 Mllgard. VIoMon wslcema.
4i72*70S0. ' "^
— (4 )
T
SUNDAY MASS Summer ScHedule:
OrSS and 11M AM UnlaoraRy CeRiaSc
Comer (040 NSfOPd) Join Uol
ICASrOlr)
FOR Sole: RoyM Electric TypowrMer.
Caee; pica type, keyboerd return. $,150.
Cdll Sue. doya. OSO-0370. , .^ ^^^
Jr. of Al Jolaon
(cdM Hmpedol Anasrertng Sendoe)
fMa lo conlroct for legal
wHA Hio Flo Ziglleld Follies of Loo
^"•■'■^. (12 A 12)
FEMALE pop vocaNat noeda plono
accomponlat arranger. HNiet nMd muelc.
Compenaotlon pareawl of oet. 045-0022.
(13 0 0)
i9S-oidi
S«n<j Resume to
ilntvortal Corico^, Inc.
c/o Paul Prtgl
Harvard Houaa ___
^_, W1 8. Harvard Blvi, f
LJk. Ca. 90006
Will koop ropliot curront ot pre
proceed.
\
(liObr)
ROLAROIO 280
with
477-S722.
Mm'
eO nCRW.
(10 S 2)
•ducation
THe Soclelal SoauM
tlon Frocesses Cell mornings. 470
(BOir)
MEDICAL SCHOOLS
Moving plecement problems for
' you loan IMSon madtaM aoRool.
For (nformaOon «srMa ImmiMalilj to
SKDICAL STUOEMTS ASAOAO
5120 Maorglaii Ave.
CdW 01724
(212)221
social events
WOOOEN Rorfola - Kaga S
boteticovers. netting S roee. fynby
oMcadua. S21-SSS1.
(10 OR)
$12JS • SSSjOS. 47S-
(10 S 0)
lofoel
2711 Eat
^^SttentiW
LAW ft MEDICAL
STUDENTS
Find out how you csn earn
$500 s week* pert-time
CaN
Deimis QRbert or
MMch Fleher al
(IS S S)
Tcxpf liitffrviiiaiif
TI m ia-e«s.ss ri an si-saes n m
.
278-6006
.N.Y.
ceenw .=^00 cqM
rosoarch subjocis
noodod
WAfTTED lor
'^Aerr* on a yocM Soy evening or
weeliene wMb cotoree rolroabments.
Del Roy 022-1151
fimn
(14 A m
If you hove a Slatlnct problem
M4 A
— rvicod offfoirod
alool. Improeiadtlon. tReory,
penlniont and arronglng for
S imeoiMBia. ReMSR. CoRan 472-
(ISSf)
Cos 274-
"NOW To" SteSReia'* '^oiooa beni Rie
SpRR WorM" T^oa or CaaaoMaa. rWvIM/
aaS) AfSnooSve RiuduaSawa, 1S4S N.
f4S1-0S2S).
/IO Sfl
on a pReoM ooyrl
ioeaioo.472-
(ttcan
aarvlng tha UCLA
Coftiffiunlty 3 yrs full-ttma
iteica graduallon, ^ ,
. Daya i Evofiln^ '
E UC t 7«. C T . I r-k f ^. r r r^
Confidential Fregnency and
012. 0S21
WOT
• ^* *l
^TunrwT TpAvT;
(IS OOF)
RELF-jBts^EMSE for
aiMiHHMg dee a diee di^y 1
Cidl
(IS ASS)
^MCYFrablem?!
IdoM, CompasalOnale women'coun-
aeiors AeferrSis lo-board eertlfioe
Kr tAX CM 7 24^/07 t
^ AXm »N 6/72 10/04 4
C^ AH A22S/20 4
•/?& 10/07 4-
AN
^^ Ik 1#- 10^10
Alto
Ah t^SO-ilO/ir
AH j^il-4/27
CI ' R2»-0/yi
TO r/iOA/oi
pnA 'to 6/21 -a/77
laIi
P0M
XWUM CHARmtdloaR Hmm
iurolM Uwr kA framSn
Eufopc from Naw Vonr from fMI
Df^SiiM 212. LJL
RSR Mve> Fly set E'
LSARMayi
ftOOlr)
-till.
AZi- •=
(IS ORf
aooR Moar r.Q.c. flights
EURARUTOUIIS WTTRAVELR
(tSOOr)
\^^^Pel 9W9t9W^fmfm
XEROX 2^C
SUOa» tor only StSS a pofoon. Two
lobdM lor aoM One aw y Oe-
Aeiiiuol 17Hi irooi Ooblone.
(22 A 12)
KINKO S
[fL^ r
ACTORS
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Each of you has picked a chaMenging and rawardtng
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profession — affactively communicating with people is
asaantial Our good reps earn $4-$6 per hour with a pay
plan of a baaa hourly wage ^ commission ^ tx>nua. We
need energetic, articulate people we can train to intro-
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excellent training program will assist you in your own
profession choose from 3 part-time shifts which allow
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for an interview aooointment
"aSSV
SIOVIWO: Realdentlal. apartmonta.
CoR Romoy 2SO-S7S0
' (IS om.
HAIR CUTS
llcenaed profesalonale looming our
CUTTERS. SS7-A8B1.
(IS S 0)
MOi/inc >
(OOOirt
rruoENT J
insuhance
jansAsto.
Europe from Naw VoOr
H A W All 1 4 2 wiiiM trofiiOioo
NYC 1^3 wasae tromf
OR ICNT Many daise ' from
'Cr>ar%f raig rsquMa 44 day adwaikca
' lo 30% Mtemaaa \
3..
• « •
T. S c
FuOy
bAtieflto ee o tvorld-tviao Reolo
Ri 1 eeiiv
^^ m Rio atudont
Heemi Offlee ec cell S2S-1SSS.
RRiaofR lnoiireim, UCLA aiMasiif
Health Senrlce, L.A. CA. saaaA.
BICENTENNIAL tdsaxMSl trorr«SS>7
TRIANGLE NYC tma miami fro«« not
TRIANGLE HAWAII itm aisshs fr
NIGHT COACH u
YOUTH Europs yyf
APEX 22-45 eoday adv Abbs iur from un
TRAIN a Rf RRV TICKETS. CARa.
CARIRtR RENTALS. RAILRARaES
NrfRA-EUROPf CHARTERa
SPECIAL CRUISE
CAAIOSCAN SO AMCmCASdsy* UKm\
GETAWAYS
Mexico CITY • aayt
ACA^ULCO t
MA2ATLAN 8 davs
MCX CITY QUAD or^ VAU.AnTAa<
MfXiCO OAANO rouff 15
MtLXlCO YUCATAM IS
Mf X CENT SO AMI ft tt
NAMAM (1 HOMlO) •
HAWAII (t MROS) 10
HAWAII 0 islondSt to
NOW VOAK OtY • aoya
COeiSIMAetM • day*
«OMf
TAHITI MOOASA to day*
JAPAN IS aayt
TOKYO TAieAl MONO KOMQ
OAANO 'OPAIN y% esy*
1
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n«
-*— -^ ww>^. ns g PI .■»■■■■■■ —
EDfrtNO.Aroloaslonal wHter-oeitOf. L SAaiC RHOTOORARHY
T^LUS '•"■"*• ^'•^ •■^•'' ••■• Iciooasa ^gln Taeneof. Sept 2
keen
llf^Ja
LIFE
Phone 828-7465
Time/Life Libraries, Inc.
All Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
■ J
(isAtai
ELECTROLYSIS: UmMnlo^ iMloTs
apla loRioS. Pt
(IS A It)
477.f1SS.
nSQR)
WEAVINO STUDIO. 1SSS Weetwoi
aiee. apgliiyow alin stIN open
wr^sant oy tne apopli. GaS •m'o)
RREMATURE E)oeoloRon? Yoo'Son
iooi.i— eei irtot oiioAapo-
IwAlolisi Stueonia OHrot Hoee
A
-ISIS.
Many D»f Tour* mf ofta'vtf if%fy
Aug « 10 13 15 a ir
* M 14 (ft 11 4 ^j
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Inlerr ii Studeni Cenfe^~~
tu^j ^■ i Ave
.^ '3 2991 • 825 3384 • |79 0623
(sesti
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CLASSIFIED >flD
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Starting forward candidate
^
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•pts. toshaf
DIAL S2S-2222
houses for rsnt
WNkes
■■"I
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ACADEMIC QUIDANCl
SERVICES
17 y«aft S«rvkio Ifw Cofumumty
Enrottn%0 Small Oroupt For
LftATAOME
Ci« 47»-72i7
Avs-t17f
•pi Two Mu
t1S7Ji. Csi 47y-2H3
(JtttI
JtALC - 1 Mk csmpiM-siu^io 19.11.
rir
Sf %pmnfh %/21 Itiru f/1t/7t Hits
11-
Call M7-43M for
for infofmstion and rsgtstration
B of A A Mssterchsrgs AccapUd
JAZZ PIAMO TlOimomt. AM
!• A froMMiuiM of lop
*m4 ooflior biMoo ksfaoprtf
Ihooot. SMfiuocrlpU, dlssorlallons.
loftort. ISM ftoloclrtc II. CsH
flUtfi ••*'
HM^MS. 47t>
«rALK TO UCLA
lachoiort. Singloo
1 ■siiBum Ap<i
Tsopor AfsXsMSii 477.aMl
10941 Strolhmoro Pool Etovatort
Socurity Oorago
•PtOAL •UMtiKfl MAT! t si
Olsw Fir Tortseo 47».7«Si
^S^ Qtonrock 543 Londfatr
47»-463-fr10-5ie Landfoir 477
$1M pAm 1/t
.tttjfd
FEMALff lo msio ISffo
SPC. - Sopi 1 Miry FoN Otr WsMiifif
iiliiiMH Is UCLA Kip-274-UM MsfsAs
CM 11)
i47f.
ft-prVCttcA
ImprovtMtton. 473-af7l.
(MCMr)
UCLA) «M lypo/o«t OH
1717.
li"
FUnMltHCD/Uffifurnlohod bocholor
1140 ttfiflot fits. Pool. Noon of
WMtwood 10t24 LinOrooli. 4/ft.fM4.
$1t7 SO rof«t plwo sisctric •M-1742
(Homo aflof t:tt) or m-mm (sfNos)
If
If
(MA 12)
Fofll
Hi A If)
o h«lp yob pr«par« (or
l.AAi - CoMffP biigDnt S«pt 4
G.R.E. - Course begins Sept 11
G.M.A.T.- Course begins Sept 25
20 hri, r^oviiw ihd practifc« totting
also
Writing SkiHs -'Spood Rooding-
Caroor Guidanca
The Guidance C«flH»r
3017 Santa Monica Blvd.
Santa Monica
029-4429
TUTOMINO In Mslli.^ FJiyaiat A lee>
nomlct Hy OoctOfBl HmtHk^H f2f-
FOaM. Sliiglo Apt In
of Wllahtra tIfO 27f-af7f^r ffl-
/^'^'^ (H A If )
FIMALE lo
**y*_.
471-
fM 1 2)
/»«
LIOHTMNiG TYPING
MODERN - CLOSE TO UCLA
wm - 1 acoRooM i iAXH
. $3i0 - 2 aCDflOOM 2 BATH
(IDEAL fOR SHARING)
DELUXE OAaOEN TYPfc APtt.
(219) 271 Mt2
MAY BC LEASED UjNFUANlSHEO
APAaTMBNT Is
Pool 1107/NM
ooN Low 479.atf 1
WsaioUCLA.
1y pMeso
I2f A If I
FIMALE ahoro 2
with looiolo grae
;h. Boeiiy
ATTH ACTIVELY
ft
t.M.
tf fyo»^-VW«r" tiroaloMo Viaego.
Hf if)
house for sale
aaEMTwooo 2 a^
Ipowlth £■
4f2-M74.
•7S13 or (Off)
at A It)
df A12)
BRENTWOOD
Modern. 2 Story House
2 Bdrm. IM Be. 10 yrs New
(at A 12)
Logel ftfcretory
I
TUTORING -Treealallon (Soriiien
Fli. O. Qjirwew,
Exi
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^1^
mom
TTPINQ. all woorfa. noot. accuir«t«.
Nice PHWATE aooMa.
cooking locintlei. Utillllfa lnl€u^4L
PsfMnf aaeillpls. Pool. WMk UCLA, ^r
472-lfM. (2f f 2)
§•• OAYLEY. acroaa from Oyia4#«^— « -
Open Sunday 1-5
By Owner
11a
ing ready for start of UCLA basketball 4—
■y Michael SoMHieimcf
DB Sports Hriler
Even liujugh tCLA recruit Jamej
Wilkes did not play oiie of his better
games, his Los Angrlct icam won the
19-7^ OlyinfMC Development League bas-
ketball title b> deteatmg Inland. 67-66.
last Saturdas atternon at Ca) State 1 os
AngrlcN
>^ilkes. in a foul-marred pi ifiiraMiacc.
had but eight points to go with his 10
rebounds Wilkes sat out the last 10
minutes ol the first half after picking up
his third ^rsonal toul. plus a technical
He then got his fourth foul early^jn^-tiW"
second half but he vwas abh^ to ^lay the
last ten minutes without fouling «Hit and
helped in the I os Angeles comeback that
;, overcame a 44-29 second-haH deficit
**The referees have been inconMsicnt all
seasonr^-Miii— W4Akci. of his loul trouble^
'In iofne games they let us play and
in other gannes they call fouls when you
barely touch soawoac.'*
Technical foul
Willies g6*t the technical tor com-
plaining about being Tilt when an Inland
player t^H>k.. the ball avbay on a Kbound
'Things like that have been happening to
me throughout the season, so 1 just lost,
mv head and got the T .** said Wilkes.
The 6-7. I90.pound Wilkes
Scottsdalc. An/ona immediately after the
game top plaf in a three-day high schm)!
all-start tournament Wilkct >tli ^y aa
an alumni team of college-bound Laa
Angeles area seniors, including CIF 4 A
Co-Player oik the Year Johnnie Nash
Last year Wilkes played on the cham-
pionship team in the An/ona tournament,
while this ycAX it will be only three
exhibition games, since the event is tor
future high school leniors
Wilkes privbablv has the best chance of
anv ol the I'C'LA freshmen t»l " seeing
playing time in his first year **I had hopes
of playing as a freshman even before
Ciavin (Spfiith) left, btit now I ,iiave a
"ianp^r ,. opportunity and things are more
'open** S.I id- Wilkes
The 1 \ngeles City Co-Pbyer of the
Year has only been going about **50 per
cent** of whAt he is capable in the Olym-
PK Develofanrnt League .^Jiis^nu) re of a
ychaJlcnge foF kim to p^fty daily at Paulrs
Pavitum with "iiLicial pmlt'^^llonal stars-
and I CI A teammates.
**! always enjoy playing with my high
School laammates at C al State Los^
Angeles, but when I play at UCT.A. I
have to play more to my maximum, and I
would rarther pjav there.'* said Wilkes
Wing forward «>.
Possessing sht)otmg range ot about
Icct, Wilkes would prefer to be a
FJiraxd^^in the LC'4 A oilcnsc rather than
an inside forward, w^ho plays^-W4th his
back vo the basket "I would
IS
Offrthe wmg where Ican^niove aroMa4 I
doa*l Jike 10 post every tinfie. ta if ^ im
outside I can take advantage ol mv
shooting and dri\ing ability* said Wilkes
When Wilkes gels back from Arizona
he plans to begin '^w or king aut hartf** ^%
IJCi \ in prepafatK .r fall practice
SoiiKciL perls ctaiai iliai Wilkes has. aal
playad as hard air>llr is caf»ablc. and if he
IS motivated at (CI A. then h tid be
the' ikccoad^^wi l«uward to Marques
Johnson
One thiag liH sure is that \^ tikes likes
lo win Probably his Wi»rsi basketball
moment two years a§*> in the 1 «»s
Angeled i jiy championship game in
Paulev Pavttioa against \ reniont when his
undefeated Dorsev squad was upset I hat
was the last time Wilkes has lost a
championship game '
J. W||^rv h^i tK»iiii nialTriHli i> till pii I
two years, aad this --year Dorsev won the
L jf>s A n gctgr t il y . t it le He x-tHnes-4^
I 'CI. A with aljuost a fwo-veai champion
ship winning streak, and h<' v^i>uld like- to
continue it for the Hruins
The High 'Sch*H>l All-^me^lcan hopev;
lo have a suv^^essful four-vear career al
IjCI A and then tt»p it i»ff by plaving in~
the 1 9110 01 \m pics iJ the <>pt><»'rr%mits
-cximcik abi»ut *'l v^oulddetinitelv ctmsidei
pluMMg in the (.>lvmprcs hfi;t4isf it ^^tuiUf
be a cme-time evpefiefivi and life's all
abi>ui experiences. ■ sa^d \^ ilkes
f
►
-^
^
1
I
c
/<, -
A If)
another Otympian in Meyers
17f(l. 471-0S24
rooms.
47»-
(11 A If)
■ »•».,
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tnHi. wsiilo UCLA. Il4f .
for Boa: 47S-71S. 477-f744.
(» Alt)
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HiLP: TENM PAPCaS.
Tifaaat. oisif PTATioNi. Atvaua^
TXCTt: -nmrriMQ. EomMia^-aa— ;
gEANCHINQ TUTdaiNG BY PBO-
FESaiONAL WaiTEB 3ff-S471
(24 a If)
I, aNMM f ro«ip li»olrMBilsw
IV-..
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(29 Off)
anAouATf
laM iCLCCraiC Typin«. EMflgMtGi^d^
Eapoflfssai - thoaoa. aisaartsUofia.
Qiiaroiilosa ^oowtlfyl work. ffS p#.,
WLA. 3f 1 ^
(29.0lr)
t to iHsra. hopofully. noor
$11f/iWSiaiLautaal
Facu<ty\only. Avelleaio Imroodlploiy.
(27Aiar~
NOW: AT MANDEfUL '
EDUCATIONAL CENTER
173i
• ■ • , * ^4 - .
CiWATiyt DRAMA far
CMILDflEII
m A It)
_IJIlSporti Wriitr^
^With all the championships
aiid^ records UCLA iias
amassed since its first basket -
iMifi title in 1964. there is St rH
OIK almost un belie va bit ^tatis-
— I. ^ I
tiCr-^—
, . u , J-*-
.Lo«e|ia Trelieek, itit
CeMTttersaa
FeMALE to aHoro 3 Mne. apt.
2 tsia. gwa^-ay iapt \r^m
pool, eloao lo HaesA A alieppint M S A
1117/tee. vaaCaii \ it Mf-Mfl, ,
^ ^ (» • 2)
mt
Oati"^ne Bruin. Maudi H^
dul RahmanfWalt Hazzard) at
the 1964 Tokyo Giimes, has
ever representee) the UhTtcS
>tatcf ai the 0^mg^cs^4n the
sport ilCLA- has dominated
the most =""
' But fof the fjrsi^ lime in 12
7"yeaTJ7Thdrr was a Brum play-
ing^ basket ball_fQr I'ncle Sam*
in Montreal Ifwaim'l RichauJ
Washington or Mafques Johtt-
'SoiL She was "^tea Meyers
who. with he^ dM^^^ijluirc^^^^
brought home a stiver medil in
J he Olv triples' inTtiaf competi-
tion of women's basketbAll
** Playing m the Olympics it
i^[iat an amateur athlete wants
the^ n^ostT Meyers ^aid **h wat
pretty excifinK. forTaeVjAisi
getting there i*m reallv glad I
had the chafltaLii^xepfesent hiy
counrrvr*^' '*"'^ "^ "-""'
■->• Wi.
Amerfci<flii_believ mg i n ' t hem:
selves rhat kept them going. '
~^^ reaflv helped W * 4ai.'"
said Meyers of the experierTce
she gained plaving in* the
Ohmpics Wc^ji'CLA) d^'t
always plav the best teams, but
_^_- , ,^. .- 1^^ compel ilLon, a nd^alent
An5f1f^icans marvigic4 16 --dicti: was.-thc hest every mjght **
regroup aiid Tost only once 'Even though the Rus^i^i^
more (to the Soviet linioUK won ihc^^old.. mrda^l.. ^Icvcfs
-ail!^,. HP>P<" ^^ silver medal by licheVes lhp l-nited Siaiev has
-" llcieating C/echoslovakia Me-^ i good chance to get it b^ck \n
ytft ...rexplarhcd it wis the four vearv at_Mi>scou __!; ,
r^e*ll Jic evoii better in
t9M). If we had as much time
to play u»|^i^thi^^#s .the <»ther
countries, do. \V% no tellinii
-h*»w — aoad isc'd he
Af»^^inf'"trtninched by
Japan' nr their ^ nmg game
MeverH. unhkc other 4)Kr«-
p I a n s " u o n " I nevessaf-i+v -be
Uu^koAg^ - forward^ jo the I9HII
^^iUahi*^ aow . / 1 *ttlh^Ki.vL iv>o
y^rs left t<» 'y^lav for I 'CI A^ l--^-=^
canit lo<>l"t~hat far ^head Tttm
v^ant to lake everything
step at a time "
1
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CNIMEtE Mseaerln PoAlei nottoo
laoclior, woll-oaporloficoa wMi Cell-
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(24 0lr)
MEED Halp In Eofllah? Twtorln« A
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27f-t2tt or 27t.f471.
pet. accurota.
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tttf Msaela (el MsaiasAi^ Fi.
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xk booch a b«ia. Vooica Partly
aodi. Mf-$lfO. ainfia fiat-
fiat. 1-aa fift-fi7f. att>itti.
' (27 Otr)
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ATtagMAii-aii. cr A 111
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IC^IAL 92S-2222
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ViaiTINO prfoaaor iaofca ternloAst
2-ltUiiam rowMfPec. Tt-Jloy 77 Two
i. 7. (212) 474-f17f.
(320lr)
ImMW* to 9tMM«
roofii for rant
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lioutokoopln^. aoforoncaa. Aotort
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or AooL 477-1111.
Ml A 111
WOMAN WILL IHAHE LUXUaV
aCY APAaTMIMT WITM
gru-
OCNT/PACULTV. POOLa.a8ACKrrC
fitf MONTH PLUt 1/2 UTILmia.
M a tot
PsL or Mrnar
nM.4t4-7iit
(U A It) 1^
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room and board
kitchon prlvllofoa).
tfl Mslealwt. t74-
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EnftaA (UCLA) wM lypa anS atN lami
(27 A 12)
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^■i^V^V S % ^^^^^^^mi% wU^^0^^^ S
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BBQ
COMPLETE DINNERS
^ $2.95
Casual Dining
By tmr fh» a—t Rib9 mm'tm fnad m L.A:^
WtTM I.S
HANS OHRT -
urn iTswiSrr Mcvctas. »» ; ^^f ''
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typing
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ITATISTICAL FAIT. OCPCMDAaLC
lEVEN DAY! A WEEK MANV TVPf
itYuct. in tmn
iMOai
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M toenis, IfooOk Mmt UCLA.
Qroa S-I-Tt tltltt ^ZUII^ipj,
■ m»»tiiiin>»tmit*iini 111 1 11 1 , 1 1 1 i\n , I
a^M
-r-rrrr 1 1 ii unify
Ho&C
L7n£ ^axcUn <c^oorn\
•^Opant 7 mm for braakfatt. lunch, and dinner
• Lunchaon Spaciafi. Daily ^
• Dinnar ^ipaaiaii from $4 50
• Tropical jafdaii aaWinf
• Sundays Champagna Brunch— 1 1 00 to 3:00-
11481 Sunaat Mrd., Uha Angalaa, Qm,
ra aiaaa typat and loeationa ol
AttI
CKIItT
171-1141.
loar mtoota fljtt. 271^1742
(41 A 12)
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\
I Sondheimer Says
-4-^SeSttftnffTmrtrtffTnDr UCLA as practice be§*fts
i
UCLA might have, a better
football team in 1976. but the
Bruins might not repeat the 9-2-
1 Roie Bowl championthip tea-
son of a year ago, as fall pr^cttc^
7}^ Spauiding Field.
2 Scheduling is the main reason
«4 that a return trip to Pas^dens
Z will be more difficult All of the
9 tough games, with the exception
9 of use, are on the road, po-
. tentially. the Brums play four
f' teams that could rank in the top
10 at the end of the year
agatnst a team that was
unbeaten tnd ranked number
two in the country, is as tough
for Donahue as when loniMr
head coach Dick Ventwii
oper>ed two years ago it Tenne-
ftse against Cooridye Holloway
The other non- conference road
game is at Ohio Stale, v and
Woody Hayes IS pointing his
»ea»on this year around rever^ge
against the ^mink and then
beatmg Michigan for the Na-
tional Title
The conference road opener
spot o* Frailer ^re the two key
positfens to fill but the other 20
places, plus new |C kicker ^r^nk
Corral, seem strong. -..^.^^r^
—Oar»k worth exectHcd tHr veer
intry this year, with two
AH- American candidate wide re-
ef "
MlqhMl SondheliniM'
ind quick r>eM might not over-
come his size deficieticy.
offense m the sprirtg as well as
did Sdarra, with the sole ques-
tion nuirk being his ability to
throw the football. On the prac-
tice field he looked good, but
Donahue held him underwrap»^
in the spring game. If he can
throw effectively, then he can
definitely do the job .Bukich is
an ,e)MreWent patter and could be
nuiiibiiMliMrBlMillivuiihlallcii.
Heisman Trophy candidate
Wendell Tyler and letternrwin Jim
Brown will be the starting run-
ning backs. Theotis Browtn, |e-
werl Thomas. Ernie Saenz »nd
possibly freshman Artie. Hargrove
m^kf the two backfield spots
Otcar Edwards ar>d
standout free safety Pat Schidt
anchor tf>e backfield Levi Arm-
strong and Harold Hording re-
turn at the corners, with |C
ftobby Hosea ihd Wilbur Hardin
in reserve. Sophomore John
iynn could be ifie»ed to
after a fir>e spring.
Rayn^oruJ Bell ^nd Brad V<
return at mside lin^harinr with
Tetrick had an impi
spring in holdinig off six other
players wfto were tried at the
posrtion, but there is stilt a
possibility that the 240-poyil4>
Tuiasosopo wilJ be moved to the
i^ot. If that IS the case, thcM
lOphomore Bruce Davis or te>
nior Tim Tenningkeit will play
tackle. |C All- American linennan
Jim Simrr>erman missed spring
ball, but he could make a run
McCormack resigns; reneges
*
The offf?nsive line is a veteran
u^it wtth rctuf ning starters cen-
te^ Mitch tCahn, tackles Rob
Ke/irian and Cus Copem, and
pai^-time regular guards Keith
Ick .and Greg Taylor The line is
not as big or pf>y^^ as 4ast year
with the graduation of Ranciy
Cross. Phfl McKinnely and Jack
DeMartmis, but the quickr^ess
.and team<^ork should make tf>e
1976 group almost a* s^ong.
Wfff\r Heriry will be one of
better fiar>kerbaclfs and kick
returners in the natipn, while
UCLA probi^ Has the b^t
one-two punch at tight end in
|hg cpMi^liy with Don Pederson
and Ricky Walker Split end is
another question mark, with
part-time starter James Sarpy, |C
transfer Hom9tT9&$BF and pos-
I
'rt -
. I
B^ioes^h^ sciheduling^.proo-
lerr^s. ji is always rough fbr attest
year^head cqach like Terry Don-
ahue^iyith a r»ei*r starts to put
things tofetfier rigf^ away 'Plus,
Donahue must start a new
quaWerbatk either Jeff Q^nkr
wofth Of Steve Bukich., m the
triple-gpXi^n veer offense. Arw-
ther big question mirk 1s':^cye
Tetrirk at nose guard, replacing
All-AmerKan Cliff Fra/ier
.. ' One .Mtaiild figure that with 45
of rhe M) players returning who
wjpre tn unitorrn for the Rose
Bqwl, the team should be fne of
*the better in the co^try T()at
shouid be the case for UCLA.
but If IS possible to achieve that
recognition ¥vuh a 7^4 focord.
Opening at Arizona State.
,ir* at Catifoftiil. fand the Bears
should hay^e therr best team.
since 1^3,. wTfTi Heisman Trophy
candidate quarterbac k Joe Roth, f
"besides Arizona- .State, Ohto^*
S^te inii CiHfornia, use should
havc._Jts~1ieST' team "since the
national-championship year of
*1972. making four possible los-
ses. Add those four games to a
tough conference opener
against Sta«tford arid a road thp
to Seattle to face Washington,
where LiCLA has not won since
19S8 and one can see that
Dame fortune will have to, cast
a glan<e toward Bruiotown for
UCLA to return to the Rose
Bowl
The quarterback opening left by
fbhn Sciarra and the nose guard
sihiy Olympcah James Owens
battlirig for '^the ' sfar-fing .ipot.
OvereWr there .should*; be rtrvore
j^eMt and long iiteys.
Pclen&e h-fhe most solid<pert
of tf>e team-barring out' Tf^
^ majority of players who stoff^cd
use in the second haK >snd
played such an outstanBing
ganrve; in the Rose Bowl against
Ohio Slate wilf return. Donahue
IS hoping to imull the san>e
kind of defensive pridie that is
evident in the Midwest and if he
rail do It. UCLA should have JIC^
excellent shot of winning every
game
The defensive b^arfieM was
tf>e weakness at the start of last
year, but now it is a stronf^point
It had better be. since Arizona.
State will probably have the
most explosive passing attack in
SLC consideis impeachment^
three types of charges
^r ftwa lilrtipert 4 B^k Wabh
DB StiJf
Undergraduate Student Ais^
nriBiiii (V^^jYi 1 i i Meg
McCormack, who Monday an-
nounced her reiignation from
office, TioJisy reversed her
pledge to resign stating that
she would remain in office.
Monday afternoon, MoCor^
mack announced to Student
LegiilfttYve Council (SLC) that
she wat resigning **for the good
of the P reside ticy aad the Aia>
ocMrtloii.^ On Tuesday the told
the Daily Wriiin that *'this
confUct wiH be beneficiaf to the
studenu and to the
McCormack*s decision to
retlgil f o I ! o wed an info f ma I
roeclmg of StC ihcmbers Sun-
day night Eicven rhembcrs
attended the meeting, at which
^ overwhelmingly agreed to
V|^i n irnpeachmeQt peooeed-
ings if McCormack refused to
volj^ntaniy ste|^ down. ~
several campMfs outposts with
l|ut^ was not aware
that she was rcqui
clare phones.
Dtte pr
McCormack said she had
reversed her decision because
**thc outconK of an impeach-
OKnl hearings will bcnefa the
atudents: They will m^ due
prooiM m action, and they will
understand how' their govem-
mem.**
She added. *^ didn*i reati/c
that I goofed 1 goofed because
I was disfraught Yetterda)t
(Monday) 1 tii^ught *Who
needs H — I don*t get paid
tloilgti to take >it* U pon re-
flection I changed my inind."
The reiurtxon of cmitieil
members to McC oriiuickS ? ye-
cision to remain in office
ranged from fhpck^ to outrage,.
attongii two members iat?d
thqi^jvere glad la^sof the coiF"
troversy hecon^ more opea
I-
ttxtl'uiir.v^
potentia^l Att-American Jerry
Robinson ^ a ^ possible starter
Tom Mii'phy^^ ^elt::' Muro and
frc#iiiian standout |ohn Kulu-
sich provide exceMent barkujp
Starters Rayimond Bufks an
F rankle Stephens return at out-
side lir>ebacker, with convert
for "I Starting spot as well.
Based orv spring practice, the
playetfs seem to havjr a lot rhore
confidence in Riverside junior
College transfer kicker Frank
C«rr»f than they did m incon-
sistent Brett White the past two
years Corral , led tfje nation in
^ AMboiili membere agreed to
kieep tht charges against her
>.•.
(unnmg hack Anthony PaoTaoi X"" '-<>"»', "^J »)* nation m
aod John Fowler « top »u«f— P""""? "^' . y*" '"'' ^ 50-
stuutes -r-. ■ .; "rd-P«u4 <.eW goal i*^. ,
If there is a defensive weiak-
ne*^ it is in the line. Starters Pete
Pele and Manu Tuiasoiiipo re-
turn at tackle^, but Pele missed
spring practice with academic
problems and Tuiasosopo missed
nr>ost of practice with a kr>ee
infury Tetrick is only 5-11. 208
pounds, which is small for most
nose guards, and his strength
A year ago this r^orter
pkrked^iJCLA to go all the way
to the Rose Bowl. This year he
wfll not make the same pre-
diction becaMse of the difficulty
of the ^schedule, but he will t>ot
be surprised if the Bruins again
are in a ma^or Bowl game, if r>ot
in Pasadena come New Year's
Day. 1977
jji^necrct, it was '^learned from
^ reluible sources that they fcli
iglo three categories: campaign
vioUtioiis, mentai tnsubility,
and misconduct in oGfct.
Late SmdB^r evenings Gary
Colbster and Cynthia McClain,
the two SLC Vice-Presidenu,
spoke with McCormack and
iafonacd her of the charges
wpumgt her. McCormack was
toM that she faced impeach-
aent proceedings if she did not
resign, according to McCor-
'^*- •■-^"■••wn away;
Wilbe Banks. Mdkm Edu-
cational Policies CommisioDer>
MHd ''Meg (McCormack) must
be out of her mind. Yesterday,
she says she is -quitting for th^^
food of the Asaociatipn (US At
and today, she says t^H stay
on for our good.*'^ "^
"^rm just totally blown away
^he doesn*t uiiderstand the
seriousnesii of her office^ She is
going to put the entire associa-
tion m jeopardy She*s tirying
to make herself a martyr".
Banks added **lt sounds like a
stall strategy meant to thrown
Council oH balancer'-iie said.
This opinion was echoed hy^
SLC" general represeriftative
Ron Hacker Hacker said,'^lt>
-a: purely political strategy lt*s
bullshit She knows that im-
r peachment would start on
Monday, so she pirelendcd tha[t
she was going to resign, iff
order to throw council off
She's psycho." z:...:^- -
When asked if her an-
nbunceirient was a political
move, MrCornuck said,
"yoiJ*feHch»diting me with more
political skill than. 4 have"
^" ^he Undergraduate Student
^ody Constitution rcquyes a
three-quarters affirmative vote
by the Student Legislative
Council to impeach MiiCor-
tiition doe| not speJJ. out^ what
IS grpu rids tor ^ impeachment,
leaving it to the discretion of
SLC. - The majorirjr pf SLC
members l\ave indicated their
eagerness 'to begin the im-
peachment process
*^-'
By Mirhael Sondheimer
DB Sports Hrtter
When ludv 1 cwintcr began
playing haskcthail at UCLA
tour years ago. she never
/ dreamed her life would revolve
around the sport
Today Lewinter has finished
her college athletic eligibility,
but hhc had mM clotted out her
basketball career Just as she
was at UCLA. Lewinter is
currently the floor general for
the Sharman Shooters of the
^U.S A Women's Collegiate
League at Cal State Los An-
geles.
lewinter has liecome
"hooked on baaketball.** and
she IS not sure whether she will
continue pUiymg full-tune or
•••k for a high school or ed-
lege coaching job Regsrrdleas
of what she dctides. Lewinter
wiU be h^k at UCLA for the
wext academic year to receive
her degree, and she plans to
h<ip WwititH's Atlileiii t»i
Basketball and Judy Lewinter go together
rector Judic Holland in some
capacity.'
Satr«fytng yet disappointing
la.st year was probably the
most satisfying, yet most dis-
appointing, for lewinter at
LK LA. She established herseM
as one of the best female point
guards in the country (she
went all the way to the final
cut for the US Olympic wo-
men's basketball team), but as
a senior she miaaad her goal of
going to the Nationals
'*lt was hardest on Trap
(Leslie Trapnell>and I sHice we
were saaiors." said Lewinter **f
think this ycar*s team has a
good shot of going to the
Nationals since aMMt of the
players return. 4>lus there arc
some outstanding kids coming
in.
UCLA lost last season in the
Regional semi-finals to Loi^
Beach State 78-77. in what the
Brum women called the worst-
ofrtciated game thcv have ever
(mn III Lgwim^f hid a simi
n in.
"1
lar disappointing experience
last month as the ro oaach of
the los Angeles team ih the
Girl's Olympic Development
League
MenMiries of loaa
The Los Ahgeles team had
won the regular iiMow champ-
ionship, hut Lewinter suffered
a one-point setback in the
playoff semi-firtals "The loss
brought back memories for
me.f because it was a heart-
break like last year. The me-
mory af the Long leach Sute
game will always be there for
this year's team, and 1 think it
might give them more incentive
to make the Nauonals.** said
Lewinter.
Lewinter believas thai Beth
Moore, who is also pfaiying in
the. Cal State Los Angeles
league with the Inman team,
writ rephux her at point guaidl!
**! think that Beth will do a
good ioh of rrplm^^ rr^^ k..«
(Mosher. UCLA head coach)
could move Aniu (Ortega) to
guard with Ann Meyers," said
Lewinter
Heidi Nestor is the person
Lewinter thinks will replace
Trapnell at center "! think
that people from last year will
move up at all positions,"
added lewinter
Incoming recruits
While coaching m the high
school leagoe and playing in
the colkfiate assocwtion. Lew-
inter has had the opportunity
to see four of the lop incoming
Brum recruits, Lynn Wright,
Deeaa Btackwood. Tam Breck-
enndge and Denise Corlett.
LjFM IK^rigkt; 'M think that
Ly«a ooutd make the varsity
very easiK.** tui Lewinter of
the guard who led Ventura to
the CIF title •'She can shoot
aad paas. plus she is a very
good floor leader She was
hamparad h^ a pulkd iiiu.^tk
., IIIIIIH 111
■r "
t, i ■iw*'
G«»re Jyay L^winfr it is also possible that £llen (Continued on Page 13)
Among the evidence pre-
sented was a signed letter from
Ronnie Menor. her campaign
miBi^r and member of M^-
Cormack*s personal staff,
which charged McCormack
with violations in her cam-
paign last spring according to
several council members
Menor said he had signed the
letter but that he feh none of
the ^^irregularities** were im-
paachable offenses.
Other allegations wefe that
McCormack spent ' about
S2.000 on her rimpa^? The
knit is $250. McCormack
denied t|us charge, saying that
no my knowleige, 1 did not
Uiat ""it couUr haW
over $250 without my
knowledge; anything*s possi-
ble-
Another alleged campaign
violation was McCormack*s
advertiMiB agnqr to aid her in
her campaign. She denied any
improprities, hut said **I had a
friend that worked for an ad
agency He gave me some a^
vice.*
TItt third campaign violation
alleged by SLC members was
the use of phones not kiled in
MifdfBfk'i rimp^'g" '*«-
McCormack said she *^
Delegates, press
enliven Missouri
By Geoff Quinn
IM Staff Writer
ICANSAS CITY Anything approaching the excitement
and exhilaration of this convention has not been seen here
since Ihe $hriners came to town a few months ago.
Normally Che pace of life is slow in Kansas City - a
reflection of its Mid-Western heritage, the climate and
Southern influencee-that are readily observable in the
architecture if not in the dmlect But, while the Shriners had
a parade that lasted for eight hours, the arrival of the
Republican delegates turned the entire aty and its outlying
areas mto a two-ring circus by hyperactivity.
The delegates are housed in over 30 hotels dotted
throughout the city and outlying towns Because each
delegation considers their hotel a command poit of soru at
weeks end thousands of miles will have been logged by
people getting around to do their politicing The effect is
that the entire area has become part of the convention. The
two arenas still remain Ford's headquarters in the Crown
Center Hotel complex, and Reagan's at the Alameda Plaza
Hotel (bastion of the Cahfomia delegation).
Headquarters for the press oarciis dowmown in the
Municipal Auditorium: a I936*s sryW* irena with two floors
stacked on top at each other, where many of the earlier
press conferences were held.
Kemper Arena is where the actual convention is held, hut
what television reveals there, though SMniicant, is only a
tiny and final part of the strange pofacal process here
Ford cairtral
A ftw notes:
— If not the rtalffitfi, Ford certainly controls the con-
vention. AH ofRcen of the Repubbcan National ConrfmhiiK
a loyal to him The result, claim the Regamtct, was that the
President was able to wrangle more seats in tW arena than
they wffe.
— The main duty of committed del
afid convince uncomnutted ones. Thus,
to keep their mouths shut have done
uiiiim ui^i IBB mil naif or tna
(O
m to seek out
of free
r Crime and Punishment
■V
I Acid attacks investigated
^ By AJmi MicbMl Karbelnig
rJ I>B Stair Writer
2 Although thert arc no new leads, the scarcii continues lor a
«upea who assaulted stuitents with caustic add as recently at
JuJy~r6, according to the UCPD
. "y^ •'^ wprkj^t on It <Uily.'' said Sergeant Joe Ares It is
iMd to trace a suspect that none pfnhe victims have seen he
added
According to Natalie Hall, a UCLA public information officer
the acid thrower has struck five known times this year -For ali
we know there nuy be some unreported mcidcntsr Hall said
jj MM of the vidlims were sleeping or studying in the study
5 carrels on the fifth floor of the University Research Library The
^ victims were always women wearing pants.
- The first reported aad throwing incident, on April 23 1975
1 was the only attack which did not occur in the URL The scene
1 of that attack jvaf the |Mo on the north side of Ackerman
^ Umon.
I' Two other acid throwing incidents were reported in 1975 One
J took place on the fifth fteor of the URL on November 21 The
a other im on December i3. on the third floor
^ ir^." ^^ *"<^>^^"** this year occurred 6n the fifth floor of the
.u h^^ were on January 2i;April 9, May 20 (two attacks on
this date) and July 16.
(Continued on Page t)
Fundmg for Financial Aid
not covered in Reg hike
•'....,• I
tf.lfitJK''
'-!Kr:
9f Susan SSHm
DM Stair Hritar
As students on financml aid
here face gmter needs with
the recently approved registra-
tion fee luke elective fall
quarter oi 1977. (he source of
additional fundmf for the Uni-
versity of California {VO Fi-
nancixt Aid program is uncer-
tain.
"*We're not quite sure where
the additional funding will
come from," said Richard
West, manager of Student Fi-
nancial Support Services of
VC Admiimt ration at Icfke-
ley. ■,:-.
According to Larry Dreyer.
UCLA financial aid director.
the $16 quarterly increase in
reg fees approved last month
by the VC Regents is not "a
drtstic increase^ to as to sub-
stantuilly affect the number of
Financial Aid applicants.
Additional $41
However. Dreyer explained.
"We have to come up with the
additional $48 yearly for the
approximately 9,0()0 UCLA
students' on <fdiie kind of fi-
nancial aid
If fees increased an addi-
tional $15 a quarter under the
^^differential fee increase** op-
tion granted by UC President
David Saxon to individual
campuses. Dreyer expects more
applications for financial aids
at UCLA
According lo \Afest. about 55
per cent ot the approximately
$85 million in iJC Financ^ial
Aid awards last year was al-
B
;,:c
Volume XCIX. Numbff 1}
Thursiliy August 19. 1978
••••• • <»••<! dtiftng th9 Mcond fmtmmm MMion. Mcapt during
a*i.j-i'i A i!^ ^^* ••''•■*•••' •'■■liM. ■"* •iMimin«!»oii p*riodt. by lh«
^AauctA Communication* aeard 3QS Wrtlwood Plaza. Lot Angalat,
OHHornia 90024 Copyrtotit 1»76 by ttw ASUCLA Coftmiunicattona
Second claM poatag* paM at ihr tw AflBAM Pot Oftica
■•vf*r
u.
Edltor-if>-Chl«f
Managing EdMar .
ExMutive EdttOF-^-
•usln«M Manager
Assistant ~
." i
'i»:--'' f-^^.
EdHoHai Dir^tamTT:
Sports EdHor
AMittant Sports Editor
Photo EdHor
Al»ce Short
frank Sta^iVyoVth
•"-'r-' *•«• •'^'' *•• » •^^ ••^*^*-'»Oaoit Ouinn
• ":i * .— ; 1 ■ - V ^. .
V • ' ...... Tsd Shapiro
Franic Widder. Sally Garner.
*^'"i Wildman MK:heHc Duwal
• •' • • < •
>,••-•••
f -^
^
'T*
UCPD ha«
'•1
up its **g«ir
by rovsrting to tha
fey S«
AaaistanrPTloio icdROf
gntartainmant twdSM Edito'rs
Aaaoclaiii indsi Editors
H EdHor .;,^
Mor
• •••••
David Whitney Joanr»e ILq^m^rs
-— Michaai Sondheimar
. -r . :^ • "§t^e Finley
-iM Lapin
''it ti'l It. I U,t t_ I
-' <b
M|irta Li
Howard Poinar Laura K lamer
Adam Pirffat|^^ Cathy Seipp
- ••.':^:t:rrrytr-^ Mitchef
Mike Lee
Rot)ertS~Kaye
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Th, Bu*n^ Advisory Counc.. o. .h, .n..rn.„on., Studen, C^,„
P*«««nts
•tf Only SWiUllar of th« Summer
Topic
"What, If Any, Are the ChanoM
In Doing International Business TodayT
A panel of BAG members, experts m fields of bankino
mance. manufacturing, .mport.np. etc wlirmSe
the discussion. '"v/uffraie
Thursday, Aug. 24
6:30Dfnner 7:30-9:30 Swnlnar
at tf)e
International Studant Cantar
1023 Hilgard. Westwood
P»«at# Phona For Raaarvations
with proper UCLA J^-eiRiTl...^^^^ -^
Med to the UC by Hie federal
government.
The UC has in turn invested
these funds in the Supple-
mental Educational Opoo^^
lunay Grams program, various
loan programs and the CoHear
Work Study program, all of
which are Financial Aids ot-
springs and UC administered
BEOG bicrettc
In addition to these pro.
grams, the federal government
finances and administers the
Basic Educational Opportunity
Grant (BEOG) program, which
involved appro xinfuitely S,gOo
UC undergraduates last year
and IS expected to increase \^
involvement to aboiS J2,0()o
undergraduate next year?, ac*
cording to West. ^ ~
The State 'also contributes
Xo the UC Financuil Aid pro
gram by offering California
State Scholarships ancj^ College
Opportunity Grants
Ed fee
0 — The \JC also supports its
Financial Aid program with-
the money acquired through
the $100 Educational Fee
^*^f«cd each student per
Ji)^J^^^t 'dT\6 through overhead
monQv earned from ct^ntrac^ts
:Twith the federal government
According to Ad Brugger.
^y^ special assistant to the
Vice President of ^Univcrsitv
-^BdJSludcm Relations, the Fd_
Fee last year provided tb^
Financial Aid program with
about $T9-20 million, wh44e_
Opportunity .Funds (overhead
carningsl fiontiibHi^aboot $J-^
'% mi Ihon. — — ■— ^ ^^ ,xr^^^^^
Brugger explained ft was
"difficult to predict wulj great
exactness" what effect the reg
fee increase wilJ have on fi-
nancial A|d.
However; lie added; ''There
will be an effect, but I can't tell
you the exact magnitude; it is.
It will be ioftcned by the fact
that BEOG and tlic sute will
pi \xp a large portion of the
increase""
**Wc hope that some increase
will be taken up by BEOG
awards; for the remainder, h\
the stated said West
West explained, however,
this additiona'l funding would
(( ontinued on Page ^)
.Waiting list face
students wanting
accounting classes
Student wanting to enroll in
Accounting I A or IB may
have to consider waiting as
long as one quarter.
According tp Ida Fisher,
administrative analyst for the"
Graduate School of MaMift-
ment, tbe waiting list for^ihe
couses has over 300 students
and the list is growing.
Currently, only three sec-
tions for I A and one- section
for IB arc scheduled for the
fall quarter, aad it is not cer-
tain tber there wiH be more
•actions aMed.
Any increase in funding for ,
inore sections would awnn cuts
in another budget tecave "the
University is in a fairly stend>
state,** Associate Dean John
W Buckley said
He attribute the apparent
popularity ofi «jtlK coarsci to
s^iudent interest in careers.
tfi~nolr» a
Buclctey
;^crtiiied Public Accountant
can be a« lucrative as a career
in law
V ;
Chancellor to see policy matters first
%/ ^ : • _ «. • -l ^m
5 •
ng grants
;- ay Jloi Pelt/
Da Staff Writer
ChanccUoi CTlirles E.
Young Ka» approved the Uni-
versity Policies ComaiMsion*s
(UPC) ricooMnendatton to
continue its operations but has
directed the Connnission to
Ctennel all matters through his
office fifii. _
In a letter replying to UPCs
recommendations. Young said,
-•^It can be concluded that the
CommtsMon should continue
to serve the campus commu-
nity, acting as you point out.
as *aoiicus to all parties' and as
*a uselul source ot advice
"in long range planning^
In add44i«n. Young granted
the following UPC requests
To keep approximately Vhe
same membership, that is, four
solvents . three facuhy, three
staff and three administration
representatives. • including the
ombudsman; lo have ter^s
• of service be two years with
sUfgertd terms. To estab
lish the Registration Fee Com-
mittee as a separate committee,
thereby reducing I PC \ stall
and abolishing the position of
executive Officer
However, the Chancellor re-
jected the Commission's re-
qtiest to have a member of the
CQmmisaion»».or a **rasc offi!^
cer;- examine all nmtiers
comihg before UPG_Young
instead told the Commission
any specific charges thc> re-
ceive would |>e cleared by him
Young sygfested ir. his reply
letter that -*t he Cogryni^uMi^
reconsider only those matters
about wh^ch it receives a
cific charge: and that thiH
charge would come fiMa^
me, either directly or by peti-
tion "
U PCs' rl?'i?bmmendat ions re-
sulted Itom I heir self-evalua-
tion last ^ar, which included a
_ ^- •».*. ■ * ( • • • •
of Commission
questionnaire to students, staff
and administration on the sub-
ject of UPC reorganization
Esubhshed in (9«t. UPC
was designed to consider **ap-
propnate matters W general
concern brought before it by
members *"* '^^ rtmyiit coi
munity." as stated in its re-
vised charter of 1974
However, the Commisssion
had been critici/ed lately b>
administration officials lor
handling issues already as-
stfoed to other (University de-
partments
UPCs last Executive Officer.
Ann Lawrence, resigned last
sufTirper under what she called
*^he animosity toward me and
my Commission. "
"We were duplicating too
much wor4." Byron H At-
kinson, dean ^of students and
UPC member, said •'On the
whole, the e^^ercise of self-
xv»luation was a good one -It
IS now clear what it is and is
not It Ml now more orderly **
Atkinson expressed diasatis-
taction. however, with the
method ol selecting UPC staff
members, calling it "clumsy
and awkward.** Unchanged m
ibe latest recommendations.
UPC members are appointed
from Stall Affairs Committee
(SAC), a UPC subcommittee
which in turn recruits mem
bers only from employee or
gani/ation.s on campus.
Atkinson and Barbara R
Wade, executive assistant to
the vice chancellor ol admin-
istration, both complained only
employeees from organizations
arc used
"This restricts other staff
members from serving on the
Staff Affairs Committee, which
amounts to about 80-90 per-
cent of the University staff
beinjg unable to setve." Wade
said.
\
Subjecl A fee eliminated
E. C
^•. ^ ^ Da^ Stair Reporter)
^l^cctive this fall, freshmen entering the ^wveiriify of
California campuses who axe required lo enroll in Subfcct
A wfM be exempt from tbt once manditory $45iae lor ibr
course. . ' ' ' ' ' , ^ :::i=^.^-. ^^^ ^- .
Freshmen who fail Xo %cg^c high enotigh on the English
Achievcqicnt Test,. English SAT. or the speaal^ubfect K
entrance exam must pass Sut^pct A bcfoin^^itorfring oth^
English codt^es.— ^ — — :— ^ -. .„ ^. ^ :^
-The fee was eliminated lasl month by tJC_.
Jlavid S, SiiMML
Coblentz. — .-
"T^resTdchT^^Saxort and 1 feh ^ve iitf- the authority to
eliminate the fee on the basis oi previous disQission by the
N^rd (of Rcgcnu),- sauf Coblentz
v'^We felt, a^hd the consensus of the~hpan^ wa^, tKar it
(Subject A) shouldjb^ part of the regular curriculum and ao
one should be penalized for it.** explained Coblentz.
_,tJC Vice President Chester O McCorkle explained thaf*
preyiously Subject A was considered a sthctly
He cited the fact that a high proportion oY incomiM
sliMleats are fkcHjw^futtd %^ uke the rim si
AITJCI^ lasf ycaT^irper cent of the entering freshmen
were reqiHred to ukr Subject A. Proportions raMe from
21%. at Sana Criiz to 54% at San Diego, according to the
University Committee on Educational Policy. . .,, ^
Last year the cost of the Subyect A program wig $453 OOQ
^^'tm. ^^ ^''*^' °^ ^*^ Budgetary «o4atioos Miiton
Vion Doautt. Qf that, 48 per pent was supported by student
fees, said PuMic Information Ofiioer Sarah Molia:^
^Jf^-^ Bo^ of Regents^Wtn jpay aJbout 75 per
eent of the cost of last year's prografn to support this year's
Subject A program. Ahhough the fund source
H^
lates
Students
identified. Von Domm said that it will probably
Reaents* Opportunity Funds.
•^However, the issue oi funding is an open question lof
next year,- added Von Domm Funds cannot be committed
due to problems related to the ^thAiclu m iederal mniy
the University may be facing;; he explained, _,
(Coiftlnued Oft Page 8)
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''"^V^JIT ^^'^^ CiNTUatff WiAgA TttCATWC —^
\^2040 Avof the Stars ~ Century City - 553-4291 /
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BIKECOLOGY BIKE SHOTS
10 RIKE SHOPS IN WEST LA Mia
CULVER
-m
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f Law students get 12 units of credit
j
3
Foreign students
Learning and woric experience combined I learn new culture
DUiK D Wicoi
OB Staff Rapoftrr
Law school MudcniH at
_.UCLA luvc the unique oppor
-^ttinity to combine lcMrnin|t mhJ
full-timr v^orik cxpanaaof in
tlM i^uartci Av^a> Program
Meordmit to lilrtlarl Kappa
port. asMstaiit dean of lyacial
pr^ramft here
Students receive 12 umtt of
credit for one quarter of work
ifi nonprofit legal agencies,
judicuii clerkships, government
agencies and public interest
la%k firnu AsiifMngM
Umis iritide luch divers
as the Pacific Ulaii^ AU»ka
and N^ashington DC.
^jrade* are not a . primar>
fadsr Ml gJMWWMig &iudeni» fpr
th« program Students are
inters ie%k*ed b> various Icfai
40MMMa on the basis o( per-
sonality, reliability and per-
so«a motivMmi*.
Michi Yamattfoio. admini-
strative aaaagtant to Rappa-
port. said. "The Quarter Away
Program at I CI A is a viui
part o( the academic curri-
culum allowing the student to
a^pK his Icigal knowledge in
real-lite courtroom situations **
lhi» program is onl> wun
ducted on an experimental
tests at Yale. Michigan. Stan-
ford and the University of
Pennsylvania
Ap^oximately 150 law stu-
dents are currently taiag part
in the Quarter Away Propram
Students arc. eligible for this
program from their fourth
tkrough seventh quaners while
in law school Programs run-
ning ihrough the summer pro-
vide students with a regulnr
monthly salary. For example,
a student working for the An-
chorage, Alaska City Attorney
can earn SI. 000 per mbnth
over the summer Programs
operating outside of Los An-
geles during the regular aca-
demTc year provide round-trip
A poftKM of Westwood*! pa|t has been recmptV^ HL a
permanent hirtancal. exhibit at Contempt^ Westwoojd on Le
Conte Avenue . --^
The exhibit, presented b> Donald and Kirsten Combs, utili/es
phofofraphs and dixuments following Westwood's history rron
ITUI to the present In lUt sprly ItJpO's. Maximo Alanis was
^ given a land grant b> the Spanish government, the site of
present-day Wcstwood After AUnis* death the land changed
owaaiahip several times until John Wollskill paid S4(ltJ00 forlfic^
pri>peft> m IM^ In 1^:2. the Janas InvcaMrnt Corporation
purchased most of the lan^ljyii J^^gan b^
^wmwmmdi. The tirm S4>kl its remaining holdingN in 1954.
Dennb Tani. a I'CXA student, and Rowe Rader Baldwin,
formerly on the staff of t^CLA's Athletic Ticket CXTiot and an
authoritv on >^c»twoi>d hiMoTx designed the a*hibit Other help
'^' '^L^^^'^'^ came from the b state o/ Ana Begue l)e Packman
Chase \/^anglin. I helna Hoover. David Clark and Fomcii
library -. —d'- ■■■ .. 1^ , - . -'.
'Historical iilia today^OMexiai-onU through government
suhaiiigi ior b\ becoming setf-^upportii^" said Don Combs. To^
"^i^aJieConretnpo'U esc wood! built in 1929. a.s«PPorting
the C omhses trHMlprmed the budding into a muHi-
'■*!L5?f"* center. viImA JMBllMk coatetnporarv furniture
shops. 9 4911-car pU>houae and SuauoaX- Restaurant '^^^
Westwood
Hiptfation.
eSerti
^ -
i^^OC»»M««S -4^
TOPAMGA CENTEfi^__
HUfiAM OEVELOPMEHT^
■■■r-^^\ Najv W^astwpoo -^
Drop-ltr gnc QMmai Qmmm P'ograwn ♦
Satt^ii^m' atjbeagsiajMepica.Bi as '
$4wft^ad
UttA, Is part al
on LaCbnIs Ai
CdNTACt LEli^ES
7"
•"^Xl
IQdSd Weydurn Ave
ADJUSTED
Gf)9-2111
■"??*■
tiAli? TCI5A¥
Fbr urtwrt happening how
tyiing lor iMiifi and woman
> jf Aaddingg Jhirmacfc products
■^-ClFm appointment call 478-61St "
liiM. ttiru sat.
- 3.00 - OFF first haircut
with this ad "tlZ.
■ .»■ . '
" -I • •
11<K G>*n<*on A«« W«hN>od Village ;^
^.'^^
%.
•apfe^
*.
■ft^.
%.
spuar
Saturday. August
»Sv
Opport
Kent
Medical & Law
Students
Find out
, how you can earn
$^ a week
Part-time
/
call
Dennis Gilbert
or
Mitch fWsh^
isai
•"<:■;
MONY
^.t„
f.i ;
^•*
transportation and a monthlv
stipend allo^i^aiice.
Tracey Westen, administra-
tor of the Quarter Away Com
munications Program, said. **|
think the program has k>ccn
ircmciKlousiy succssful becaut^c
It gives the student a rare
opportunity to be exposed lo
law practice while still
in school." A student working
under the communicadoas
phase of Qiuuier Away' may
have the opportumty to work
io the Federal Communica-
tions Commission, Congress or
Senate. Westen added. ''The
student expenenccs the whole
gambit of activity from the
inner-workings of public
broadoHt law to litigation and
speech writing."-
Assembly bill asks
Regents to annul
Reg Fee increase
A resolution sponsored by
51 California Sute Asscmbly-
mcnt asking the Rfcg^nts of the
University of California to
rescind their recent decision to
iiicreaae student fpttL m ciav.
rchtly working na my to thi"
^^noor-JsT iht Suae Asembly
The resolution, authpred^by
Assemblywoman ^Tctwm P.
Hughes (47tfa district), con-^
cerns the decision by th^ Unm^
of Regents m July to increase
registration fees fropi. $K)0 t*-
between ^It6 iMl $,131
quarter starting fall 19^77:
•^11 deprive ^n> low
^^aa^joiddk income students^ of
from
Uication from the
Unlv^l-sity 6f California.':
However, ia a rccem interview.
UCLA Chancellor
Young disputed this, saiying,
*^we see ao indication that it
Uk^4tt ncteaae) wiU affect the
^pc of people a>iiiiiig here "
A^^<*«n« to Hughes* Sa<7ii
aMto office, t^o of the. five
Regents that votca^i agauat Sha
increase had written letters
supporting the resolution
However^ no word has been,
received by Hughes* ^^ffi^
from any of the 11 Regents
iffho voted for the increase
The resolution ates both the
absence of the four Regents
that are Regentt by virtukJ of
ihcu^ elected offices from the
July and June meetings at
fhich the increase was dis-
cussed and the lack of any
uniform need at the nne UC
for a fee increase as
for reconsideration.
Carttntly, the rcaoluuon is
awaiting action by tlK Sute
Assembly Committee no Edu-
cauon, alter whKh it is ex-
P«ied to go to dK floor of the
Aaaembly for a ¥oae.
the aaiilnimi is not
■paaUKloard
It, ft ia expected io
t« aaoe it n the
Assembly that controls the
Ui
■\
This summer hordes of stu-
dents, speaking foreign lan-
gaaaM aad sunding "out from
the usual Southern Caiifomia
have invaded the cam-
1200 to 1500 students
come from many countries to
t*ke daaav m .intensive Eng-
hah and tour (Jalifomia for 3
to 10 weeks. Ninety per cent of
Ike students are from Japan
and the rest are from Viet
Nam, Korea, Saudi Arabia.
Umted Arab Emirates, Vene-
«aeia, Brazil and Mexico
The students have paid for
the program themselves, spon-
sored by the UCLA Extension
Amei^ican Langpaat Center,
so tliat no sute expense is
involved In the classroom^
teachers spank only English;
and they emphasize skills in
conversation The topics ''and
dialogues provide the students^
with practical knowle^ae and
information necessary for deal-
ing with situations- demanded
by a new culture Students also
learn conversational English
through a lehes of excursions
to various places in California
These include: a Los Angeles
City Tour, Cauluuu-IiodgarV
Sudium, Huntington Library,
Disneyland, and Universal Stu^l
dioL. Last week. 7pO students
and (a
j^urple ties and scarves, strolled
through Westwood Village to
the Federal Bmldmg. There
they ^oa^^ed 22 RTD buaes,
which took them.to the Holly-
wood Bowl
The youngeat group Is :he-
tween afes 14 and 18, and they
have already studied English
fof about 4 years.
The American Laanaaf
Center offers special profrani^
on contractual basis for groups
of interested individuals from
countries throughout the
world. It provides a means for
students to pursue the study
and praeliee of English on a
daily basis
Irene Park. Instructor and
Academic Coordinator of the
Language Center, said, -^Cul-
ture hides more than it reveals,
and it IS hidden most effect-
ively from Its own members
One of the best reasons for
exposing oneself to foreign
ways IS to generate new a^ware-
neas of one's own culture. This
is accomplished by aperies of
contrasts and cojroparisohs
One of the most effective ways
to learn about ourselves, while
J^tbe same time promoting
iRleruational understanding, is
to uke the cultures ol others
seriously **
Paul Rpbeson's
atory retold
**PauLjroheana
Artist,*" an audio^visual mq-
,sical biography of the laxk.
^"linger and civil Ubcrties ac-
tivist, will be presented again
— «■■» ■•* |^«p^MfOTf 'VVTCVPVW;
„-?i' l'^^ P"J «n Bunche 2209
;^ This tribute is onr-^^jpight
programs eniiticd "Adventures
»n ■Folk Music," m the Ex-
^on.. Aug. 23
5:30 KH 110
//-../-/^^^^^■
perunental College; ami will be
presejitcd by record coUccf^^r
in^jB^tr^ fccttirer tiopiar d
F^WmanT It wifi j^DrverHlo-
beson*s achievements as an
athUtc.- yingei. actor. 'petcg
and cfTil libertp activist and
scholar ill linguistics and |i9lk
music ^
Admis$ion^ls ftec
ifart^
Sunday Worship 10:30am __^
Unii^rsijlKUjtheran
Sunday Seminar 9 30 am
, Cornec Sf rathmore &Gay ley
We Offer
■ #
A Unique ORportunity
To Learn About
A Foreign Country
Without Even Leaving
Thp United States . . .
Have a foreign student
as a roommate this fall.
For informafffofi, call or visit
The Interiuitiorwil Stuclenl Center
1023 HUgard Ave
DELIVERY
I
478 5117
o^>
lunch
ar.a
dinner
i 1 I I// 1 M IM
1076GAYLEY • WEST WOOD
Home of the ^ .-ot P./jo
GOURMET QUALITY
HnEST ITALIAN CUISINE
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i
r
and
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slun
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19;
^^3S'A
SJ. til Ml Wi. fi4
*■■«
l« »»)!*• «»44««ftt»t«k«t
s
I
t-l-
summer bruin
poinf
»,..^ — »;%
Souvenirs ariyone?
Photos by Maria Levine
.- -'♦
3
r
DB Editorial
Th« cUciftion by StudMt iody Pmirfiiif Msg NkCmmmtk
to rMifffi ofid h«f tubMquont rovortol of thot docition will
rotult in furthor probUmt for on olroady floundoring
Studonf Logislativ« Council.
McCornKicli'ft rotignofion w<ot lMHty ond
lock of rofiortol thought.
Evon tf^ugh XMClimuilc'* originol docisiofi
» - »
concoivod, Kor roasoHs, for romaining (to '"Wnofit" tfto
studontf ) oro incontittont with tho pcobobU votulti ol hoc
octioffi. — L -^—
trotod o
poorly
Tho Sfu^it Ugifttflf^ Gl^ncff thoutd moko o
quickly ond officiontly and not involvo thomtolvot in
ondlott hours of doboto.
SIC should bo in tho businott ol rurmi9%g mm studont
govofnchont.
FORD n'y:
••-*Wl ~H
totth the^"Buy-bicentenflJal
by E^^ Edgar and Pat Murphy
31
- (Edit or i Note: td£ar ^^d Miur-
phy are members of the Re-
>/olunonary Uudent Brigade >
hdy 4ih, w^ ~ HdMelphM -
Thousands of people carrie on
— — fhe~4ay and ro th« placr^-where
' Iht ; rich ~were t elebratrij^ ^??§it.
:-^ years of theit. rule to say
-i^ "We ve Carried theHich for 200
-::v
- Ye^,. let's Get Thero Off Our
--JlCfcS!" Woriters, sfudertjs. ve-
^^Jterarrt alacj^outh came'
^"across the c6antry— "Organized ♦
^ by. the^Rrch Off Our fes -
July 4th Coalinon
":.— P
i^
_=i»f
iu._ 1~
+
OPINION
* I -
-A- i-~
— 4
']
" , ^ \ ^
-- tvery sr^ g,k^ Wa^ the rich
^ir\d thetr lacl^ev's tried to pre-
• ^^^:LTtH«^ from happening. >., But
we did it! '
luly 4th. 1976 was i6 have
been the culmination o^ a full
yoof 9f "feeliog fr*e Beneath
'>fll ^ t+ve boy-bicentennfal "
that disgusted everyone, M a
deeper message — buy this sys-
tem Since 1776 the rich have
ruled this country and now we
, ire told to celebrate This ako
comes at a time when' the Amer-
ican people axe facing the most
serious economic crisis since thc_
30's and millions face a future of
being unemployed or |oining
the army This rich who rule this
country in their bwn interests-
for profit arsri not for peoples'
needs- launched a tremendous
campaign to resell their system
to the very people they are trying
to grind into the dust At the
same wvMt they are layt>ig peo-
ple off the job, they are'telling
us to buy tmore At the same
time they ^e talking about pul-
ling together in peace af\d \\a±z_
mony. they ^are talking- about
another war And behind ft all,
they are saying this is the "best
of all possible worlds" so accept
youi^^ot in fife
But we know that throughout
ory ol^^s country, the
working people have rtttt sat
back aUd tak^n thp^ anacks Wr
^b#¥^ ■ toufhf Iw 'what we have
'^hd.io rhe-1^ ivii^ way, the people
"were not buying this bicenten-
-nial coyer-up The demonstra-
tion «n >hilade1phia was called
e feipond to The ilEJ^ and
attacks on The AM^Kcan' people
by our rich rulers. Our main
demands focused Qn two of the
fnost ttfatant rgnning^ sores of
this system.; "|obs or Income!"?
and "We Won^VHight ^ Another
Rich Man s War! * f^a^ this
counterattack was a great suc-
cess. The "official" bicentennral
celebration wara flop with rhil-^
lions-^fjtpe^rted not showing up
Frbm ^ho~beginning. Rizzo
tried to stop the demonstration
by denying us permits to set up
a Workers, History Pavilion,
which would feature a beautiful
and powerful photo display of
the history of struggle in the
U.S., and denying our march
raute and held our demonstra-
tion. '^
0«*f^ militance and organiza-
tion showed our determination
td make a powerful and im-
portant statenrient during the bi-
centennial On iuly 1«< actions
in Philly at unefhpfoyment of-
•^.
•~f
I
Kansas City Bombers
ticos; at^V!^ hospitals, on <^if-
/ferem Campuses, and at Phila-
delphia General ^Hospital (which
IS the only public hospital in
Philly and IS now threatened
with a shutdown) showed our
strength and unity of purpose.
The response of the people of
Philadelphia was tremendous
Our. actions and the enthusiastic
response shewed that ours is
part of a growing movenr>ent in
this country to change thinjps
and take on the rich.
It was through our discipline
ar)d organization that our unity
was forged Thousands came
together, not as separate interest
groups, but rather as represen-
tatives of thousarnis more who
wanted to come together united
around the sanr^e demands, fa-
cing oft against the same enemy
The lessons of the battle of
the bicentennial are being taken
back into the workplaces, onto
the campuses ar>d into the com-„
murnt^es. People came from
many different struggles — min-
ers from Virginia, steelworkers
from Los Angeles. Farmworkers.
City workers from New York,
electronics workers from Mil-
waukee, and students, veterans
^ri6 youth from all across the
country All are taking the les-
sons learned from one another
and helping to strengthen ttie
>
movement to change the condi-
tions we live in.
We all c^fne back from the
battle of the bicentennial with a
greater determination to further
build the fight to get the rich off
our backs.
" There are many lessons that
we learned and we will be hav-
ing a program and an informal
discussion at the Sunset Recrea-
tion Center on U.C.L.A/carnpus
on August 24, Tuesday in tht
Buenos Aries Room from 7:30
p.m. There will be a slides how
on the Events in Philly ar>d we
will discuss the future road for-
ward from here, loin Us!
^
.tt_
PUNcno^eo ?
>.tM .1 ^1
ATAraBIIVM
iMif iji* tsi«Y«^sjia dessfo
riWflMJJT
VailfyDftio-ln9S2-24t1
CapMol 243-4li1
Canlury2l T«ii»772-
Plckoidi OftM^ •42S723
h-5171
ri2
DrUoHiiiK-^bti
FotTriilBiJtt-
UATolR'A'
CVTY
540 7444
Jumpsuits
Reg $39. Now
Sweaters ^^ .^
Rag $12 and lip. Noi«$t)~lO
Jeans
■ . If
Reg $22. Now
Dresses
Reg $25. Now
=3^=^^..
Masterchargg, M
Bankamorlcard
Store Charges
0|>an 7 days
Other Locatlona.
SANTA MONICA 9HERMAN OAKS
tSii 8wiU Monica MaM 14502 ymutrm Q^
/
•m-m^mmmm
: -._,- -»
*:^^!^;^^!iG^lT^^N^ Republican Convention
L«tu«
bon^i packagtaQ and
PACIFIC-KING
12U WMt Ml St . Lm "niitu 17
4§2-m§2
vj
Kr fitted b> Kxi
^. Ti9»#i
6«rdl.
Gt7 1773
n*^^:
" t
VALIOATH)
r^/s IS the plBC0 for Rib Lovrs^
By far the Best Ribs we^re trted m LA
COMPLETE DINNERS
3 mCasual Dinmg
t
CARRY'S OPEN PIT BBQ
1432 CRESCENT MgtOHTS mk
(rotitiiiu«d ftom Page 1)
spent a food part of his alter-
on Sundiv Monday and
parading about the
center of town with a sign
rcadtof '^ttncommttted** hang-
ing from his neck and he never
had fewer than two reporters
fottowiag luoi.
Mart pispli tliM ipM*
TTs^Tlie political fallies here
are let up to impreas the press
as much as the campaign
workers and delegates acliislly
mvitcd. Both candidates habi-
tually naake sure more people
attend than there is space for.
The pronimtial offspring, with
Tonv Orlando on hand to
make sure everythmg goes
smoothlv. have been the main
attracUMi at Ford ralhes, while
quick glimp&es of Schwcikefs
children. Pat Boone, Efrem
Ztmbttliit Jr and a group of, convention as
\oung dancers called The Kids party for Jbcir
40 Mtnuat Down Suntat Blv^
to
LauraJ Canyon Turn Right And Voti-*« Tha
re
Next Door
rallies.
star at T^eagan
-^ Getting new infnrmitisM
froni preat conferences is hard
arul getting reliable informa-
tion IS even harder As early m
Monday evening both John
Scan, Rcsgs»*s campsigB
manager and James .Baker.
Ford*s chief delegate expert,
iMkl arrived at 1,140 delegates
for their candidates Amazing,
since there are only 2,259 dele-
gates. ^
^^*''*^"^ Newspapers
-r The essential way infor-
mation IS pasasd around here
IS through rumor and the
newspspers. In fact, news-
papers arc so important, that
both the New York Times and
the Hashmgion Post are being
flown |n daily for the duration
of the convcrfhon
A local reporter accurately
noted the people here vtew'the
a coming out
city, £ven IVve
years ago there would have'
been no Republican extra va-
«-»>
TYPEWmJER CITY
,478-7282 WESTWQQp W9-7282
»
N#w Portable w/ c«B9 59**
i-
Adltf "Glee. Port.
i^Olivettr ElM. (BaU Styl
.i-K'*"
ClliZMiS-4
259»»
• * * * •-•>
##•••* a. .. * a a
* * a
H ^ • • It
--T-^-rj.
Hand
Caic:
lot*
* ' i
Printing D^ C«lc. ,..■ - ' — "~
$AU$ JiDll REPAIRS
Jfctnkamencard 1089lGa^ley Av^v--*la$tercharge
Acid attacks
f Continued from Page 2) -
"This is a terrible mystery,"
said Hall None of the victims
saw iljc attacker and were hot
aware ^ the attack until thcj
noticed a burning sensation on
their skin Most of th^ victririr
then ran to^ the bathroom to
wash the substance off Hall
added the acid was usually
-deposited "on the buttocks am4
thighs" ^—
the ^HTPD-s th^ year ex-
'pcrimcnt with the use of white
^lice cars endied a few weeks
ago when a new fleet of^^iacl^
and wbijilJE^ ear* a^nvgfL. ac-
cording/to the UCPD
Lieutenant Thomaf J. Kuehn,
head of operations for the
UCPD, said the white police
cars were used in an attempt to
lipften the police department's
image
Although the image was
softened considerably, said
kueho, /problems which oc-
curred becauaie of the white
cars mi! weighed the benefiisjif-
the , new im^gc K uehn added
the community copipfaincd a
lack of po lice pa t rol Keca u?*c
they often "did not recdgmze
the pohcc cars Offiecfs some-
times compra'incd "they got
*flagjRl"Ttown^ twtax^ cabs,"
Kuehn said
here At that time most
of the tacihties med by
the Republicans did not
exist It took a bom again
(Continuatf cw Page 9)
Subject A aa.
^Cnnrin— i a«M Pa^ 3)
The individual campuses will
have to supplement the money
from the Board oi Regents
according to McCorklc.
At UCLA, Coordinator of
Budgetary Affairs Earl Rober-
son said that Subjea A ,wpuld
probably be supported from
the "urgent needs money"
which IS actually UCLA's allot-
ment of the Regents Oppor-
tunity Funds but that decision
hasn*t been made ye|.
The decision to eliminate the .
fee came after the University
JCi>immUee oa F^Mgat ional Pp^
licy recommendedi»in Mliy that
the fee be abolished and thai
-uniform practices in assigning
credit for Subjact A be es-
tablished
At the present time, cam-
puses may assign credit at the
discretion of the faculties of
each school of Lctjters and
Sciences, according' to com-
njittee chairman Claude Faw-
cett. ~^^
In the future a course equi-
valent to a college level course
.might be designed so credit
coyld be given, said McCorkle
, De«#^^ttedLMtcge ofXfcu.
tcrs and Sciences at UCLA
John G. Burke also said i\
Grand Old Party
■t-nM*r.-.
there it. a possibijity of full oir^
partial credit for SlJ^lct A. —
This fall at UClA, plans arc
being made I© introduce "a
httle mor^ advanced materiaP
into the Subject A course as am
exj^imcnir'said Burlte.' */
. V
^."•r-
Socialist Labor Party
V — ^ .mit __ m'ttl^mmm0m=mm ^^ : — ■ •^' • M -va*
~f^
"T^.
sm?
^hsiire the facii' What are the distortidnsf
Here's what the Socialist Labor Party says.^
1
41^-
XSm/JI""
Wlio owns what
Socialism is the coiteaive ownership by ail
the people of the factories, nulls, mines,
^^--failroads. land and all other instruments of
production.
Wlio baii«f iU
. Socialism means production to satisfy Ku-
' nfian needs, not as under capitalism, for sale
and profit.
Wlia runs thiiias
Socialism nr>eans direct control and manage-
d—mem of the industries and social services by
the workers through a democratic govern-
ment based on their nationwide economic
organization.
^Under socialism, all authority will originate
from the workers, integrally united in
socialist industrial unions. In each work-
place, the rank and file will elect whatever
committees or representatives ^t^ nseaid
to facilitate production Within each shop or
office division of a plant, the rank ami file
will participate directly m formulating ^rui
implementing all plans necessary lor e^
cient operations.
electing all necessary ihop oHkers,
the workers will alieclect representatives to
a local and national council of dieir indimry
or service ~ and to a central congress f«pi«-
ipenting.aH tf>e iruiustries arui services This
all-industrial congress will plan af>d coor-
c^inate production m all areas of the
economy.
All persons elected to any post in the
socialist governnr>ent, from the lotwen to the
level, will be directly accountable to
the rank "^t\6 file They w^H be subject to.
remc^val at any time that a ma jomy of tho|e "
who elected them decide it is necessary
Such a system would maW possible the
fullest democracy and freedom. It would be
-a society based on the nKist primary free-
dom — economic freedom.
Individual rightr
For individuals, socialism means an end to
economic insecurity and exploitation R
means workers cease to be commodities
bought d^f\6 sold on the labor market, and
forced to work as appendages to tools
owned by someone else It nf>eam a chance
to develop all individual capacities and
potentials withm a U^ community of free
individuals It means a classless society that
guarantees full democratic rights for all
workers.
WtenI ••cinlism is not
t Socialism does not mean government or
state ownership
♦ It does not mean a state bureaucracy as in
Rusftia, with the working class oppressed
by a hew bureaucratic class.
t It does not mean a ckMsid Party-run system
without democratic rights.
^ It does not nr>eaf\ "nationalization." or
"labor-manageiTient boards." or state
capicalism of any kind.
♦ It m^^rti a complete ^rnS to all capitalist
social relations
•••^ •^ can 9at tocialtsm
To win the struggle for socialist freedom
requires enormous eHorti of organizational
»r>6 educational work. It requires building a
politKLai party of socialism to contest the
power of the capitalist class on the political
held, and to educate tne malonfy ot workpfs
about the need for -socialism. It requires
bSilding socialist industrial union organi-
zations to unite aN workers in a dass-
conscious intiustrial force, and to prepare
them to take, hold. 9t\6 dperatethe tools of
production.
You ^te needed m the ranks of socialists
fighting for a better world, to end poverty.^
racism, environmental disaster and to avert a
catastrophic nuclear war Find out more
about the program and work of the Socialist ~
Labor Party and join us to help make the
promise of socialism a reality.
What can you do?
f« Lonrn mors
The SLP publishes a wide range of literature -
on Various aspects of the socialist move-
ment Its official journal, the Weekly People,
offers a clear analysis of the news each week
from the workers' point of view. Send for
h-ee copies. . '
2. Join us
The SIP is open to all who agree with its
program of political and economic 0€%dif\\-
zaflorT to replace capitalism with a new
socialist society Learn more about SiP's
ideas and program If you agree, you belong
in the SLP
A.
JLO
Party
914 IndMlrtal Ave.
Pals Aho, CaMsraia 94M3
Free Study Claaa
i^'ery Tuesday at 7:3i p.m.
^^ ?15 W. 5th St., Hm. liti
Dsiantown Los Angeles
Free Speakers Ick Groups
Writer Socialist Labor Party
(CosliMMd l^om rwm •)
attitude by the city fathers and the financial
i^urcaa of Hallmark Cards to turn a city of
dSGsyuig structures into one of modem office
buildings and convenuon halls The transition
y iuat begun and some of the results have
Men humorous and tragic.
Soma sluervations:
— In their bstte for modernization, laasas
Ciiiaas have come to worship the office
building, constructing them without regard for
their need. One casualty stands near the
Muoiapal Auditonum downtown. All of its 30
plus floon have remaiwad uaoccupied for a
^raged cttizcaa
' y -^ Across the street, a historic byildirig wss
torn down soon after being declared a land-
mark The office building that was to rej^lace it
never matenalized Instead, the corner became
a parkmg lot with trees around it to appease
enraged citizens. ' ^
— The saintly morals here will have to be
corruptal before aayone will thmk ^ this a»a
swinging city, due to a ban on nudity, the three
remaining massage parlors actually give mas-
tages^and for similar reasons dancers at bars
here are biMed as exotic rather than erotic
Scnae oT decency
Despite the problems, ICansas City was ready
enough for the Republicans, who for the most
part like the sense oi decency they found here
There were a few surprises, however Th^ fmt
was evident from the moment the newcomers
*i.!?P5^ °^^ theu^ air-conditioned and de- ^
humidified planes This section of the country
tt hot and mwiiy. One ialilornia delepiu
remarlLed tbat without air conditioning, the
Wivention would be about as exating at an
on-day m Congress -WaUting outside here it
lULc drowning in a warm stcanbath,** be taid
Abo, televtsion weather programs are accom-
panied by an unsettling feature called skymMch
in which a newscaster taUies up the days toll of
tornadoes acroat the Mid-Wett.
Yippic invaiian
A new shodcs were in store for the locals as
well. An invasion of Penn Valley (actually a
knoll) by the yippies was the most prominent
IHot only do the yippies overlook the Presi-
dent s 18th floor suite, but they ako look down
^il ^*lf "Today Shows- tent, filmed Uve outside
the President's hotel every hiorning.
i<P*^ ^^^^^^ coniingant fiumbers no more than
IX) but the community was stdl scandalised.
Jutt to make sure they continue to be, tiie
yippiet regularly place obscene signs in viewsf
a heavily used street between their knoll and
tte Presidcirs lioteT They alaotk inn y dip in
the pook of a nearby monolithic monument to
World War \ The city was forced to.pay for
the yippies latrine.
All m all, Kansas City is uking this con-
vention calmly, letting the Republicans go
tcrambling around without much attention For
6ne thing, they tiand to make a lot of money
of their initial investment of $500 As one
Reagan delepnr put it when she handed the
porter^ the second S2 bill in 10 minuted
'^^PM^ilcan« are good .tippcn."
jrsAn6almakee
I
1334 M^e^t wood Bivd
^estwood, Calif 90024
Plir» (2111 473 9S4f
jj . i«.loM»SANnAlb ftClTS 1*1 Mi< MIS PUKSeS MA'.S
r<v .ifM> bRI€FCAS€S
'^XilATHiK foois ...M^ CRAFT INSTRUCTIONS
, ( C omimied^ TrdiirTige~7r
cover only half of the total
— J2^5 UC undergraduates on
fmaneial aid
have to make"^iip 1fliat^.4^fe5
ference (oT studenUi. inoL
covered T)y additional BEOC
funds) from the University oi"
-ll^-ipderaT government At We "^
demonstrate need, there is a
definite case for funding. V ,
He added there k jM-iex^
piitHed "mcreasc frorp Rcgehial
funds despite the Regemu' ap-
ProvaJ^ of -the reg fee mcrcase
*'fri..no way can f tell yoii
that wjtb the! reg fee iniTtnat
we Will get an allocation from
the federal government," said
Bruggcr . ^.\v
^^»»nc Sedicum, assisunt to
the director of the BEOG pro-
Campus Events
MMtUaCfMfHTI ~
^ .j^-c — « •••'•i^^i ^ ^•^Irsclsr at.
me UC S4udent Lobliy tn Sacrimtnto ^i
tionisfull time lor one-mr«e years Visit
'' ^J^'^WiP^^ *^ dletaiis j ,j -.
f^t^lMlMr HaMM. featufertaiabtl^om
UCLA: t-11 pm SjUirdays , kHernation^
-:JiMiN9t Cf^iMi Cad a2^33t4 If you
— r-rf!"?!^ — ' t
ir oill
tX^lNtt^ra
_ - — offtrf svfTNfeir fdtys and
tieJd i#Dfk placemem mliomnuim!y service
Vita^JUos^^Jti or call 825-37X
MlfeMi. HO pm
-, — wftttrainyoii
H) mvestigaie consumer complairrts Visit
KcTckhoft311
— cNfint CiawrHanLi^ inrormai prac
^tice fpr toreiQn studentiPand visitors 10 am
■^^^^^^^•On Mondays andWednesdijn*.
3617 ».« ,
lessons Sr9 pm dancirt(j bV-i^qucst 9 pm
rni^fUf. tomQr»T)<* Womeri s Gym 200
.- •nia,.'"' •.■■:'•*"-• ..^.,-»
"•' • Umm\ Tnay V campUs^'tiHIHn coo-
ducted by the Visitors Center tm.^'Um
44ys and Thursdays noi^:Auoust^' Iran;
Murptoy 121S Free
AwarMMs IS now accopfing appli
tor research, anlnlants VisJJAticI
71^30
imtraatioairHyiim Ctotti
for fiuttand^iano. wi,
be performed 7 8 pm tomorro*^' ln!«r
natipntl Sftudant Canter Free
lavMai.CMpi by the Miim^z
emsemble 3-6 pm August 21 International
Sy<fM Danler Si 9t the doar
"<t
gram in Washington, DC said,
'•Until tfte 1)udget hearings'^ .
resume by October, no one will
know what allocations will l)e
made by the federal govern-
ment "
. ^ -* •rti8l-«w« bJSkosiad. 7-10 pm
August 23 Bunche 22ffl|
-Trmasiiii imwa^iwal %mlmm Taiif
-some changes null be discunad 7 3oaad
pm August 24 (dinner 6 30 pm) Inter
n^fional St4«WYT' Cent*. Can 477^4617 for-
reservaTitfni ' -/
•
f
— -
•
•*
-
^^^'
•tl*
*
'■'— 1...
^-.~..
..
. !;
-
r
'
.»<.
RhotogrftpheTs needed
Summer Bruin
Apply in Kerckhoff 110
\^X
•.=-f
SomeihiogNew -£xcitirig in
1 Autolnsurjahce
If you 6onl have MafeiMy insurance the r»#¥v ^ inane tai
_ respond! tjj I ity law could affect you in iVzs
... .1. ... -• -._,
/VWxIilied .rai*e« for Qualifying Sfudants
Call Today For Vour Free Quotation
« -. * » ^ '
. frwac.irc'*
24S-7J75 Hov* na*t — Will Trov»l fe4-0t44
Mercury Insurance Agency
1
i^
om. tutu ^jp Of
'».V
> 4. * 4. ^« •.t.iV^^*^ »^
t -v^ . *,
». ,
^\
k.
•y-ffr^^
i-^^
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1. ; '
' rr— ' -r.
hrTTilFI
.vco Center
Cinema I
47y07 1 1
MM SM $2.25
HAttY A WAITR GO
TO NfW YOtK (PG)
|:1S. 3:4S, 4:tK>. • ip, 10:3S.
Avco Center
Cinema II
W*Uh*r« nmmt
475-0711
^WiCfl©#l iOffOXIfl Ml
GUMftAU RAUY
W Sr4S, 7:5$. IQrOS
1:3S, 3:3S, S 4S, 7;5S. 10:05
<«€•
Avco Center
Cinema III
WtMurm nmof
WMfwood Mvd
475-07 n
SILENT MOVIE (PG)
1:00, 3:55. 5 55. 7:50. f:50. 13:00
Fn 4 Set Midjlyplit Shmw
Beverly Hills
Wibhir* Mwd of Connen
I bJk Eo«t o« lovoHy Or
271 1121
niTUtEWORLD (PG)
THE FOtTUNE (PG)
SL^^^^ V -MOTHER JUGS ANoIfKO
2524
Santo Momco
♦:30. 10:35
•Mrf CKfH ■■■Km ltd ht^
THE OUTLAW X>SIE WALES
•:15-
^
Brentwood ft
2524 Wilihiro
(jot 2«i^ Si )
ri
•AONCWSBEAtS
v*:4S. 10: IS
-^ -■■f^-^
MAUDE
■ ii<Hl.i|
• 35
><,^.^J».^. _ ' 'MgH
Bruin
/MUtOfl lY DEATH (K)
1:»S, 1:
Plaza I
ONt HEW OVn TM CUCKOO'S NBT
KING Of MAIViN^'OAtOENS
- ''IM*')*' l*:» (M 4 ton « IS. tilS i '
Century
Ptaza II
2640 Avo. o« S«or« '
M3-4291
Cinerama
Dome _^,
Swmot noor vino --.r^l.
166-3401
T GONE WITH THE WIND ~
IMl2:3O;«:a(0
KiCflOfV ftOfTfS
RETURN Of A MAN
CALLED HORSE (PG)
D««»y •# 13:30 3:00. 5:30 tOO 10:30
Crest
Cinema
1262 Wotn^ood I
272 5t76
474- TIM
THE BINGO LONG TRAVEUNG
_ AU— STARS AND — ^
MOTOR KINGS
Wo«4mfMt:«.a, lOpM
S«t4S«Mi3.4,4,a. lO^m
■my
DEL A(UR
935-4434
CUCKOO'S NEST
50<
^^9m7p,m,
fox Venice
r"
•l/M
Hollywood SHADOW or the hawk (fc)
Podfic — *
- STKANOa AND
THE OUNHGHTEt (PC)
'»n
Los Feliz
N ¥m
MO 4-216*
THE OOCXMAKn OP ST. PAUL
mrtffm 4 4if^€9%4 by •■rtrwnd T«v#rfii«r
1% Umnw • dMpc '
toM^. AfTlff OAMT
t '!■
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Gnborbo i nrmnt/
>
Drive-ln':schlock around the dock
My JOMMK EglMll
Don't drive out of your way
to see Dnv^-ln
THm inept nu>dern copy of
"American Grafitti" provides a
few moments of slapstick hu-
mor, unfortunately offset by
solid time blocks of boredom
A It hough-die script was ap-
parently intended to to-und
tongue-in-cheek, screenwriter
Bob Peetc must ppsiesi either
a short tongue or a cavernous
c hee k the humor rarely coD-
CofinOiseurs who appreciate
the sensation of wheeling
around a imall-town roller-
skating rink, however, should
be prepared for the heady
excitement of reahstic views of
pom-pompied skates, a burst-
the-balloon contest and nu-
merous shots of unusually ugly
teenagers and children chewing
bubble gum.
The plot, fortunately, is lim-
pie enough so that if you fall
•sleep ipL minutes after the
picture begins, ymr will stiM
understand the last 15 miniuett
of the film.
Lisa Lemole^s Glowie is a
onc-dimcnaio-naJ Mae W.eat-
■A..;
r"H^•''•
ra Tull
Barbie dofl heroine, exhausting
her repertoire of ineaningful
flMooi aad her husky unsexy.
voioe. Hcf quest lor a **sincere-
relationship with the carroc-
haired Orville (Glenn Mar-
ihower) includes an unejipe^-
edly violent fight between
Glowies old boyfriend, pwif
leader Enoch (BiUy Miihkcn).
and the noble Orville at the
Remember the Alamo Drive-
*^l--,";inw — "•. ..
nwhilc a '^ pBit _^
foMled and sent imenul gang-
sters play a homespun^ -routinr
in their plans to hold up iW
dnve-in We are abo subiccled
to a series of vignettes ranging
from the drive-m manager*!
rage when shot by a cuMomer's
water pistol to a grass-smoking
"oUcrly lady and her middle-
•fed son. And the film .
at the AUmo, Daasjer %,
reels 00.
The disaster flic>. mcorpo-
ratmf- a tktat wave, a fire, a
hyacker, an airplane craah# a
sinking ship, a hungry shark, a
flood and an earthquake* is
emsiljr the most entertaining
of the movie . __
Director Rod Amatcau en-
courages his fairly talented cast
to play up to thar obnoxious
mies. All performers poaacas a
Texan drawl, an overdone use
of "^in't" and a score of tnte
one-hners such as -You're so
bossy you'd show the Devil
how to run Hell!**
The picture does. -contain a
tew bright spots, such as
Techni-colorful views of pretty
cnffa.!.. Robert ioMup's cinoMi-
•erinl view pnmm% a reali>tic
^«ow at Smalltown, USA.,
^nd the dnve-in scene opens
with popcorn preparing to
pop, orange drink swirling in
its machine, and the pro>ect-
ioniat switching on lights nad
electricity The dnve-m ^cene
closes with ihr rmpfj pnpi
>ff orange drink
disappcanng light.s of '^Re-
■Kffiber the Akmo "
A^ rectimnl^di^ throughout
the movie includes the charm-
li^ refrain, ^'God's gonna §Bt
you for that.'' After sT^ttiif
through "Drtve-ln" you md>'
«tonder What evtt deed yom
uiijrnowlmgtynTomplistacd;l±-
i»i»' 1 1
•y Hoiicrt Goldberg
Jethro Tu|l was too ydtmg"
-lLiq die Alt hougtr -plagued by
the critical failures , pi iheir two
latest albums, the srx year old
P-'* vh group pfoved jili' Sutt--
powerful performance at
the. Coliseum that- (even if
Martin Barrc is balding) they
can still rock /n* rolb .• -
f he qu*l»tet T Anderson,
Barre. Evan Barlo^lk. arui^ now
John Glascock), sheared awiiy
rhe superfluous, and replaced
the usu^l string section with
backing keyboards man David
Palmer, to regain fighting trim.
Tull opened the concert with
"Thick as a Brick." and con-
centrated on a hard hitting
show The emphasis was on
the power rock of such num-
ber as ''Aqualung." "Cross-
Eyed Mary," and **Locomotive
Breath." and this was far more
prevalent than the bnroque
lyncism of "•ouree.'*
Fortunately, controlled force
never degenerated into lond
blanng Utilizing medlies taaod
on "New Dny Yesterday" and
"Wind Up," tiK group went
into extended jams, yet never
\ium its tighf. as Anderson
perched on one kg and snorted
UMnifli his flute, and Barre
unlaHiMd iHS binsinf guiur
talent This compact thrust of
the music, combined with a
more judicious selection of
material (a greater reliance on
concert an improvement on
Tuirs last siMm.
The quality of the musician-
ship snrfrisingly extended
through the opening nets ns^
well Starcastle. admittedly a
Ves-derived band, wns none
extremely nre^iit in n%
i-
"%dr^ _GalAaghefv~^^fh/i gifiedr
blues guitarist, wiro" improves
u p o n t he C: 1 a p t on t r adrti on"
wiihf his own fast-paord^ MMh
grindifig^ ax w^rk "*
Alsc> co-billed with lull was
Robin Jrower. who was the"
wea^csivsact of t he-show The
Hendrix rip-pffs. and the mo-
■i^-w
Barry Manilo
p==-ii *
Singer^compoaei^-acranger-
piani&t Barry Mam low g^vc a
truel^ refreshing concert last
..i^ormerly^Bette Midler's mu-
fc< director. Manilow aUo
JUL eJUerfsmr~carecr~5r*)i
^writer of commercial jingles
He played BSaHy-ef these in his
eiltertaining ''VSM" (very
amall medley ) -
A medley of "Could. Tf b^
Magic" _iuid^ "Mandy" was
backed ^uprrbl\ by the Mam-
low Amphitheatre orchestra
and rightfully retxived a
standing ovation as did the
t nil re cnnciin.
I jfn Klemer
r
Mirjporr -75 ♦ Drufn ^^ Maf^num Force- ^'Return of a
Man Called Horse ^ §cqiiehtis Syniptoms anf liayy-
'tendednesa,, mindlessness, exploiXalion, 4mmI actti^ nnd
even worse direaion and writing American^ Internationars
Futureworld ja yet another fevensh example
__j|s a iottow-up to MGM's 4>uckmakuig We^wmkl (which
.'.•ffW*-
.. L
I ' — ,
B02 Scaggs
L
should Itself have been^a TV Movie^, A^u/«r#wcWJ lackr the
original's punch, orifib^lity and fascination On its own,
Futureworld, although it sports iwie intereiting new piHBi
of gadgetry, ultirnatcly stinks.
Richard Heffron's direction/>s clumsily silly, Which
amplifies many of the script*s blatant structural bloopers:
Peter Fonda and BIythe Danner's efforts to foil a
Hitlerian plan to convert government officials into robots is
the thrust of thfe^lot The problem is, it has little thrust.
less suspense and vunually no plausibility
notonous and redundant pass-
ages wera^^not quite compen-
•••cd for by the music's high
energy level There wna, liow-
ever. no doubting Trower*s
technical proficiency on the
pmar.
rock concerts are
frenzied ^ffairs, and
this one was no exception: it
««i zoo-time at the Coliseum.
Over 50.000 people were
ctnnwicd into the staduurh. and
the day was highlighted by 167
drug-related arrests, several
Ett-fights, people vomiting all
around and stfme 35 OD's.
But above It all. the music
played, and the crowd swayed
and clapped, oblivious 10 all
except the loud, yet remnfk-
abl> clear notes that the
arrangements Following u.in
rrrl'^ itmnd nniom »>»>
the air,
•■w
"Wfr
ofMlM Tnl
weekend at the Amphitheatre
His beautiful ballads and or-
chestrations were lush and his
voice, despite a cold, J?!
smooth
But the moat enjoyable ss-
pect of the evening i^^s Mani-
low*s warm and humorous per-
ananlity. It ia rare to find s
performer who talks to his
audience rather than a/ his
audience Manilow was sin-
cerely pimnd to be on stage
obviouiix^ toudmd J>> ^^^
MHidinB ovations and apt
plause.
Manilow's repetoirc included
a good combination ol his
quiet tMip such as '*I.ay M<^
Down" and a pretiv new turn
*T^his One's for You*^ and hi^
upbeat numbers tudi as "Cit>
ffwvtww kM "jump
Biu>gic "
Bo/ Scaggs' Greek Theatre
rrt last weekend was out-
standing even though Scaggs
himsell didn't sund out The
stage set-up was incredibly
slick, filled from back to front
with a talented and powerful
orchestra whose sound was
sharp and clear although quite
often too loud for Scraggs'
voice to be heard
Monetlieless Scaggs* arrange-
ments were exceptional and he
performed a variety of styles
from his current hit "Low-
down" to some very heavy
rock selections at tlie end oi
tiK show. "Running Around
Running Blue" was a super
jazz number durii^ which
many oi the ulented musicians
soloed. Alio a highligitt waa
**Georfin,** although once again
it was difficult to
m I
voice.
Maxine Nightengale. the
act, was a surprise
of her recent hit **Get
Right Back Where We Started
From" one expected a soul
Actually the strong
English singer per-
Futureworld ii set in a pinee of com^kmtd^
fant«|f, nad ym very ianiliar locatioM (such 1
Control in HoMloo) are miliaed to nve Al an extra
ilnnp witii Mayo Smmi nsd George SdMnck's
(winei tent the picnew audieMe a«o gnroxyMt 0^
r), infua« «i
I 10 the piiinniiuu. One cnnM tnke any of it
sefiouflly.
If it wni not for Hjrthe Daaner's
new repbrtv Tracy Bnlnrd, afl would be loat.
a truly gifted actrev who should be seen in
than this.
^ter Fonda is ooe-dioHnMBnl aa v
reporter, of is John Ryan as a heavy The
Arthiir Hill finally has an apfiiiipiinti ^fan
a robot.
Howard Schwartz's ctnemategraphy
color, and Fred Karlia*s chnky score is URay
Futurewarid it not
stiff
m water-
starved studio that mnst live there.
A^nns Westwood I
THE TENANT (t)
Monns Westwood II
SHADOW Of THE HAWK (PQ)
■«.
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Ma nni Westwood III
- ALICE IN WONDERLANO
% 00, a JO, 4 00, S:M. 7«0, OKI. 10 00 1 1 M
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Aug. W«d 25
Toxos in concert
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BATING A ^0€A0 HOESi
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aUB GUIDE CONTINUED
Stage review
Mersky*s crazy salad
ly Catky
A>f3 Mersky at the Codfish Bali, pUying ot
the HoUywood Center Theater uotiJ Sepumber
3^»4iuperb crazy lahid of 14 '"tfranas and
ehofMlm,** all luperiatively performed by the
akrmingjy ulented Kres Menky.
Menky geu off to a bad start with -Knott,-
an irnuung and tunelets fong with lyrici by
R D. Laing. There ii tomething peculiarly
cmbarraiajjig about pop-psychology set to
music
But Mersky's other characters are capti-
vating, from her prim ''German Teacher" by
Ruth Draper (**I also like to kugh, kinder, but
we are not here to laugh, wc arc here to learn
German!") to Mersky*s own '"Susan Carole
Harris," a precociously smug molested child, to
a hilarious parody of Marlene Dietrich, called
'^Blah,^ Mah, BUnd And Blase."
The best material Is Written By Jordan '
Crittenden, whose inspired loonhiess Mersky
performs perfectly In ''Lady On A Street Of
Smart Shops." Mersky is an aristocratic tady
plagued with visions of the inconsequential
future: her no^iady began with a 'Vision oi the
exact date when Arthur Schlesinfor-Jr/s shoe-
lace would become unlaced." ^
In "Mrs. Gilbertson Manages On Her Own,-
Mcrsky is^ ^a^ -bmus^^-wmI^— who resorts to
"entcruining gentlemen- aiifay^ from home on
business trips, "l^ui only those fcntlemcn who"
miss their wives ... . and f always serve them
dinner w^th at least one leftover vfgiiaMe."
Merslcy is a harfijbd housewife who shoots
^ i^uum cteaaer in "Thursday Is My Day
For Cleaning," only to rcahzclhat 'n he vacuum >
'!
^sf9> s
Mcfslcy: inlinilc vaiiely
cleaner had a aightmate abdLL was m it.
have been something it sacked up."
What makes Mersky*8 chawwictt succciiful is
that she fends them realism, providing a toudH
stone which makes Cnttenden*s iMlMies ring
true to life Mersky is aa actfcis and comb-
dicnnc of infinite i»iety, and her 24 fantas-
tical characters are all startUngly believable.
--^'
jSERVIGES & DINNEB
Fri. Aug. 20tSr^ L^.5-r
Servj
Dinner: 7:30
■'tr
Call for reservations — 474-i53t
. ■^^'^'' RHIef Council
~\900 Hifgard^Aye, :
-^•^
JKlVt*"^"^^ '
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TOWER'S -t^
««*^""#
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t^i^^WMM*"
; PETER /"^j;!, At Tit«»p«'^fc;,
% lui
t-m « w
Down in the Valley, recruits sparkle .
instrumental in helping the
West to its first iiurjprtauig
score ^ ~^~
Mussack. a 6-2, 185-pounder
frpni Agoura High School,
caraod AU-CIF honors in 1976.
but tlie Bruins never offered
him a scholarship.
"Pm not going to UCLA
with the intention of trying to
aMke it as a «alk-on," said
Mussack 'Tm going there
mainly for the aeademics and
social atmosphere I do plan to
go out for junior varsity bit-
ketball, however."
ChnsliuMen, on tiie other
hand, who was Uirgely respon-
sible for opening holes in the
-East's defense during the first
Trive, was one of the most^
sought-after Imtmen in the
area. Bilcaaw 4>f his size (6-5,
255) and strength, Chnstiansen
-««a rccnitted by several major
football universities and turn^
down scholarships from a
number of colleges, including^
use and Sunford. to attend
UCLA. In addition, the All-
City players Tirbm Canoga Park
Hich School' can play •both
and defense, as he iM^
iQ U|Cr"6ttt-West game -
Kaliiskh tTrapii
When Miissack . and Christ-
iansen were not on the field
grinding out yardage, they
were watching their defense led
by fellow Brum recruit John
Kulusich — hold their own
against the potentiaBy explo-
sive East offense At least for
4 while, that m ,^
After a game on fourth aad
one on their own 39 failed the
^^. •« • ««4te of why
Charles White of the **San
Fernando Super Trio" is re-
f4*«ittJ as UCLAs major re-
cruiting loss.
White, who along with team-
mates Kenny Moore and Kevin
Willmms (the other two-thirds
of the trio") will be attending
use next fall, took the hand-
off on the very next pbv and
scampered around nght end
for a touchdown, and the extra
point gave the East a 7h6 half-
time lead
Brum coach Terry Donahue
says he has always been im-
pressed with White*! versatility
and^lakf he would have 4ovcd
to have^him come to UCLA
-heeause "he can play any-
jivhcfc " Doanhue\ words Were
justified as soon as the secjtivi
i^iatf began.
White handled ihe lic)ioff
duties for the East as well as
his chores in the offensive
backfield He received the kick
at the four and returned it 71
yards to the We»t 25
White's return set up the
Ease's second tiagtwisiin when
quarterback Moore took it
over from the three, nine plays
laser The extra point attempt
was blocked by Kulusich
The East went on to add a
field goal in the fourth quarter
which proved to be enough.
despite a West touchdowa m
the final minute of the game
Dcfcnshrt hattit
As evidenced by the score,
the game was a defensive battle
from the opening gun. and iwo
of the men most responsible
were future Bruins Ron White
of the Fast and Kulusich of the
West ^
White, the^mainstay of the
East defense, led his team' in
tackles with nine The 6-5, 260-
P^^fi4 tackte from CjmvTvrr
H igh School said . he» .cho:*t
UCLA becausic he was im-
pressed with Donahue, a con-
pliment Dmaaiuie returns
"We usuallyjttart our fresh-
men out on defense and then,
depending fln how wrlHhcy dc
there, move them over^to of-
fense later." said the first year
Brum head oaach "It looks
like Ron might have the ability
to go either way for us, but
Sat.W^tPfjrh^
lZ-S^.0^
^. .».«..—>'■
j'j
...«««•
OiMAiUiJlA^t^
V- «rvn':'"' ""*
|V •*-, ."9 ^k-^
/.
• "1
r
'•41
4% 10 RM^
WESTWOOD VILLAGE
1067 BroJtton Ai
L_
^e'll have to wait and see
because ail he's played against
to far IS luf h school competi-
tion "
White is considered a fierce
competitor and his ferocity ims
evident last week In \mtii, a
little too evideat.
With 1:35 to go in the ume
he was the recipient of what he
considered a hite hit. and he
became involved in a bit of a
rumble As, a resuh. he was
thrown out in his last high
school faaiialLjame
Kulusich went into the East-
West game a marked maa. He
was known to be the strerigth
of the West defense and the
East planned to run right at
their opponent's strength
But Kulusich went on to
show why he was na«ad first
team All-eity and why he was
^fercd full rides from oyer 25'
^chocjjs *-
He led the gaaK in, tackles
wiih 12. blocked an extra potat
and was the bum mo<it resp<K
sihle for holdii^ a hacl(6al4
which avcrafid over four
tottchdowns a 'game during the
year to only two
I he 6-2. 215-pound line-
backer from ( hatsworth High
School chose UCLA hiraast
of Its locaiiaa^ aaataaHs ittd
social attributes as well as its
4>>i>itiC prograoi. But despite
his oonsiderable athletK prow-
ess, his education remains his
No. 1 priority.
"I'm using football merely as
a vehick, for edaratiaa," said
Kulusich 'M have a lof of
interests aad I feel |ilC:i A 4rt1
give mtt a jchancc U) explore
ihem rm\ rca% looking for-
ward to going there"
Surely, the U< LA coachng
*taff-is-44K>k»ng^w^raTd to
having him
r
I
Mifie Tully, the Bruin
|H>lr vjTuhrr who madie an
unsuccessful bid for the I .S.
OKm^ teaai ^ast Jvne in
C>fef<m, has been soariag las
his toar of I urope.
Tully, a^iuni<»r in tfie fell,
'•«« the pfeMifi«>us British
AAA etiaiiipionship last
Tully Hot
weekend in Londirm's hisio-
rjc Crystal Pah^e irack sta-
oirnn. His, winhing haiilM
was 17-5-3/4.
' Am he did but summer
ToMy has been in Lur^^
competing in invilatioffiit
meets thr<»ufhout.
■■»•%«.-
^*!-r*T*>^'
..j^-Jt-
c
I
i.A. Four •
L^ufindo Almoido — ^W\f\ Jonoa
Bay BroWn ^ Sholly Aupiiat 3 1 Sopt 2
Mofifio - Bud Shont • j^^y q^^^
plus Ricky J.
.4 •
Lig^thons^
STUOSMI
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HERMOSA BEACH INFO -TEL. 372 6911
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utHr
<*('ITANS MAN.NM»
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August 19
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Aug 23, 24
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THE STONER
2n3SlM«r A^
Wm» la f0023
477 7J3f
Aug 19-22
Aug 22-29
1km Opaup With
PiO PICNllO
tEMbabour
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I
SEPI'S GIANT
SUBMARINE
Al Scales' Sol-hil Experience
-t ■<
discount on any
Giant Sepi
with this coupon
good through 1976
iUCING TO THE—
PUBLIC
ly Midiscl
D» Syorti Writer
Al Scfttct tM noted at llCLA
for hit teaii)*t peaking at the
cad of the season in tine for
the Western RepoMdi nad the
Nationals.
That formula has brought
htm six NCAA volleyhall titles
in the seven-year history of the
event, and now he is hoping
the same plan will bnng him
his first professional volleyball
title.
■ , ,. .i
^cafes' El Paso Sol team is
in a tight three-way battle with
Tiicson and Phoenix for the
Eastern Division title and a
berth in the International Vol-
leyball Association (IV A) play*
offs after losing last week to
"fc»oa Angeles.^ ^ """^ "^ — ' ■ ■■^.■'-
Diego Sporu AifM the hkely
site.
**l think we have an excelknt
chance of winning the division,
because we have our last til
matches at home," uMiA Scatct.
ftattt advantage
f^mfing at home in the IVA
it a tremendout advantage, not
only because of the crowd but
alao the ofTictals. The referees
are selected by the loignc of-
fice, but the umpire and lines-
men are picked by the home
squad, and Scales has been
involved in many protests this
year. ^.^.^
f Practically every road game
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JFN©t SATISFIED RETURN^FOR YOUR MONEY BACK
Tigiit race
With only two weeks left in
the regular season, two games
separate the three clubs in the
EAst. San Diego has already
clinched the Western Diviiioh
trtie and a bye in the first
round of the p4ayoff$. Los
Angelet ll^ clinched second
place and wiJijncet the Eastern
Division champion in the firt
roun^ . ; : ^
iSanta Barbara, the third
place team in lhe*AVcst, has f
bcticx Qvcrall record than any
team in the East, mtiie Sptk^
^^^»J' meet tfie Eastern Divi-
sidh runner-up in tfee ikat-^^^J^
:::t3bund. w*ih llic wismfcr meeting . playrng tl^^^jaoif roJe^aa tlw
San Diego in the acmi-finaU. men. The womeiii don*t^nave as
7^e finals are: scheduled for n^uch *C|uickness la jlieHr f!Ht
we have played this year has
had some controversy btramf
of t*ie officiaiir said Scatet
''The referee is usually OK, but
the iitiesmcn and umpires arc^
homers.
Most players and coaches
consider the Sol fans to be the
''rowdiest" in the keague be-
cause they cheer eacetstvefy for
the home team, boo the op-
posing players, call thicta
names and also try to inti-
midate officials who make calk
against El Paso.
Jicates has fmatty adjusted to
pro volleyball: His major prol>-
km is jearning how to eor-
Tcctly position the two women
that must be i^n the lineup
according to IVA hi^., -^-
^Orrgtiially^ I started out
using my UCLA defense in the
i. . 0«OER FORM
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Enioy two OBiicioui 9tMJim
ihnnmn wttti your
chtm^td the defense to adjuil
to it," said Scales
£1 Paao*s main chaUen^ for
the title should come froin
Phoenix, the moat unique team
in the IVA Pho^^x, led by
player-coach Mary Jo Peppier,
is the only team that plays
three women in the backcourt,
with Peppier doing the setting.
Every other team plays two
women m the left and right
backcourt, with a male setter
m the middle. Phoenix claoM
that this change has put them
in the run for the title. Scatci
disagrees.
-The key for Phoenix is the
block and not the three women
in the back row,** said Scales.
"When wc lost to them in five
the other night, we must
d^g ibackcourt saves) at
least 31 asore baffiT It was
block that beat/ us, and John
Hcrrc^ (1975 UCLA AU-Amcr-
ican) is just hitting great for
them - ^ \
The IVA was financiidly
shaky last year and did not
look fOMl at the start of this
season, mxi presently, all six
franchises are expected back
next year, and the IVA plans
to add Seattle and Denver to
'*^'«Bi^Jiif I think the iMifae
will turn the corner,** "ittid-
Scales "I . will defmately be
iiack at UCLA in the faM, anC
\ win not evaluate whetho- 1
will return to E) Paso until the
tlie UCLA 1977
son."
^IMER NOTES: Scat^
reported hcjias hcanf former
UCli^A^Lpiayer and UC Sama
Barbara ^Cdltlfi Rudy Suwara
has gotten^ the coaching job at
San Dicgp State Suwafa, who
js currently the head coach o?
tha San Diego Breakers in tl^
pro league, hgs 4>een a '^hcat-
ed* tiVal ol S«;ates for many
years and he couldj bring San
Dicgo back to the national
power it was a few years ago.
According to Scalas; Pcp-
perdaie and USG will be the
teams to beat in the Southern
Cahfomia Intercollege Volley-
ball Aiso^Hilion (SCIVA) next
year because both had out-
sunding, recruiting years, get-
ting the top Southland talent.
Scates did report that even
though UCLA did not have
any scholarships to give, Ik
believes that three top pros-
pecu wilt enter UCLA in the
fall.
.-.- /
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Ssll s btll collactor to ao to
hall, and thara'i no9>in§
ha can do to you. After
I've told you what bill col
lactors do and how giay
do it, I'm going to tsH you
Slip by step, what to do if
you're hit by a bill coNac-
tor Not what's in his bast
•nterast. but what's in
your bast intsrast
Send $2 96 to Stanford-
Publishing Co., 8444
Blvd. 7th Floor.
HiNs, California
«0211
N.inn
< iiv
S|J4(
> 4i^M:sllU>aKats>aKi^
••(^
m^mmtH'-t't
« t
Women get 4hree top hoop prospects
Continued from Page 20) /zone/- Bl;Tk-.,w^ «..^ ^. ' .u.u . ^ " •
<!.
(Continued from Page 20)
among the leaders in field goal
and free throw percentage, dh
well as assists.
"Peana will probahlv piav
forji^ard for us," Moshcr ^id,
-^^Wc haven^t had. too muth
weight, so she should be, very
valuable under the basket"
•*! kind of ¥(ould rather plav
forward," B(ackwood said
ijng forward than guard l can
cut more to the basket and-4^
think it would help my outside
shooting " ■;. ,,... r-r
^ Blackwood is effeSive at the
top of ke^r in -a zone defense,
due to ^;jher quick«a». and
height, ^ ^he would -^av a
^:»BTPio^lBan ' ' '
--• •'It's more of a challenge
playing man-tjo-ihan than
^one," Blackwood said vl
think It's more effective and it
lets you put better pressure on
the ball -
T||Bi Breckenndgc is aptly
.jsalkd imt M 4he best basket-
ball playfrs-to come mit ol
Cresce nta Va I Icy ™+lTgh . i be
school which .^ prxjduccd
UC t A^;s5.,^tad Holland She
was an AII-CII- choice in both
hef junior and a^nmr -years,
averaging 19 points and IK
>#elloufids p^r game Brecken*
ridge^- along with another
UCLAj^fuit. Denisc Corleti,
wUJ battle Heidi Nestor toTl he
starting center ^jsfr vaatcd by
TrapjQcll
which she prefers to plasing up
high. ..
Tough at bottom
**l like plavmg down low
rather Than thi: Iwgh post. "
iircckcnridgc ?iaid ^Vm more
confident ol my shtH there and
I can roain more, underneath
the basket " '"^tl^
—^•Tams d big, strong girl
Who's very aggressive under the
basket.*' Mosher swd "Shexan
shoot well in low, but sh?s a
ktt tSeiteT outside shooter than
people think
r
and Blackwood were ht)ih hrsi
team all-league selections
PlaylRf time
"^hoiigh she will he going ^^^^^
another AII-CIT^^play^FTTii?^ most com pctii ion
Vejitura Though varsity re-
turnee Beth Moore appears i»)
have ific I aside track to le
winter's floor laa^r ptisiium
4^
nridge is also vefy
mobile foriier size, (5-11. |.55f
Her best shpi ji^ HNiiti aVoond
jiimp ^t%pfn the loiw povtL
%i:cckenridge-was fin**jn the
field gdah- percentage (54 per
jxnt) and second^ln- Tree throw^
jlhobting '(77 per cent) while
pulling down^,,j|tfic rebounds a
'^*"^ *?Li**f J'^J^ school divi-
sion of 4 he Olympic Develops
ipent League Brec^nrid|e'
lett. Breckenridge leels she has
a good chance at plasing a lot
for UCIA
"•It's going lo *H-. hard with
all the talent ub^ the team this
year^ But I think I have a
pret t y good c ha nee top lay this
yg^f I'd like to work on my
-outside shot so I could maybe
play Miine at forward "
Like Breckcji^ge Lynn
WrIgRt was aglj in All-C'llr
•election inr^thsJhcr iuoK>r
fOtEIGN STUOiNTS
Shipping Sp9€ial$%f% M,
AUTO*«OtlifS
''^••CWSf MO10 Atncus
COMMCffClAl Ca«GO
rtUCK
P»efc Up 4^
* "Lyna Should help us a lot,"
M(Kher ^uud:/ She's a Ver\
good plavmalcr and ball
handller,.^ Her quickness is pro-
bably hcr_tepesT strength "
Hot shot
Lfke most point guards.
Wright IS alst) a good ouisidc
^hTTOier~t:ast year, she' "fiH at a
near ^tW^ vent clip An excel-
lent passer, s'he is eflec^v'e at
leedfhg the high • or Jou jhisx
. » Ipr turn around >uruperv On
:^"<*^°'«^y/V\^ the fast, break she h^»'ihc
wngm (5-7. im average^ -abilitv to draw the delender
over 16 3 points and 5 iMMilt avJind then Ihts^Tol^firc)! the
game as the point guard for wiivg's 4irM an
x~^
"M)«
' limw
;rt ^.,,
to t+nr ol
etisx Jav^,,
.J-
-t*
-w»%^" . ,i„i!'. Jju
•,e'**=«""t.4-
TUNE-UP.IBBE&OIL $04
IMOINf
OVItHAUl
w/aaart
A-1 AUTO SERVICE
^ m7 VAN NUYS BLVD. 004 TO-TC
PAWOflAMA CITY k ^^l^„ o94-7D75
The produeaia of EOUUS
ha¥a made ivailal>la §0
apaciai on-ata^a aaaii
for each parforrnaoca.
Friday and Saturday
avaotngt $6.00: all oth^r
including
15 00 TiolMi
available at the
Huntmgton Hartford
Box Office with propar
idantification
IF TMOU TURN AWAY TMV FOOT FROM THE SABBATH FROM
DOING THY PLEASURE ON MY HOLY DAY AND CALL THE SAS-
BATH A DELIGHT. THE HOLY OF THE LORD. HONORABLE AND
SHALL HONOR HIM NOT DOING THINE OWN WAYS NOR FIN
DING THINE OWN PLEASURE. NOR SPEAKING THINE OWN
WORDS THEN SHALT THOU DELIGHT THYSELF IN THE LORD
AND I WILL CAUSE THEE TO RIDE UPON THE HIGH PLACES OF
THE EARTH. AND FEED THEE WITH THE HERITAGE OF JACOB
THY FATHER FOR THE MOUTH OF THE LORD HATH SPOKEN IT. "
H w km^p Wm SaBtoath at outtinad above in i^miuh SB. 1 3. 14. wa wNI
ba changad to aa to daaght oursalvas m tha way of Tha Lord and ba
lad with tfia hartlifa of Jacob - whtch maaat JaaM Christ aad
E vaflaatmg L Ita Af N Is. Is M noltrua that moat of Bia food wa aat on tha
Sabbath lor our adndi and haarls la hmm tpent. from tobacco.
^oncarns. ate /> We^niyht swim through a lot of
jaod hara and thara. but Nia a«ld of all this ts
•o fat your monay and wa naad to bawara last wa throw our souls to
^ ^^aiaiT* ^^^' ^'•"■hi^ to apati again mm ehyrchas that hava
baan eioaad on SiMiday and WadwMBii nights to SEEK THE LORD
^J^^^^ "^^ •^ FOUND' Probably most loBu w.li dism.ss th«s
•iiBBM**an wMh no BisubNI but. my. how you m«ght hava tima aii#
caaaa to thmk of m 1BNILI THE AGES OF ETERNITY ROLLr
A law days ago our papars slalad that crtma and lawlaaMaoa m-
craaaad laa por cant during fba IBBas. THE CURSE CAUSELESS
SHALL MQT COfiEr > Provoibs M2
A law yoart ago Bia wrNar apant Bia night in a cMy about a hundrad
mdat frooi homa. N was a WodRoaday mui affar suppar ha want out to
loofc yp a church aaiaaa Biara was prayar-maating. Found ofia &nd as
ha got doaa by sow soma loBn going in carrying covoroddMias As ha
.*^ ?o* l»«w on; h9 haaHalad about gabig in, dacidad not to and
ralur^ad lo Ma moial room Soma of my thoughts tt^t mfluooood ma in
THE HEATHEN RAGE?
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
b«g suppar. and I naodad to bawara of giMtlony: in viaw of tha graat
crtma. rioting and lawloaanass wa raally naadad pfYfmm^tmg with
fasimgand prayar - Christ said soma kinds of disaasas. davUs and
wickadnoas could only ba ovarooma by prayar and fasting and than
thara cama to my>d Bia words of Scriptura kn Phikpians 3 1i 19 (FOR
MANY WALK OF WHOM I HAVE TOLD YOU OFTEN AND NOW
TELL YOU EVEN WEEPING THAT THEY ARE THE ENEMIES OF THE
CROSS Of CHRIST WHOSE END IS DESTRUCTION WXOSE GOD
^THEIR BELLY . AND WHOSE GLORY IS IN THEIR SHABIE WHO
•HMD EARTHLY THINGS' Whosaglory is in thair thmmm" -Is thol
not aspaciaily appl.cabla lo Ihbsa who go about in naor lUJiniiiT
Howaw. lat us conaMar Biis matlar from anoth^ vlawpobii Wa
Christians striving to ba faithful and pay our vows unto God •
bawara from dodging and running away from avM. hypocrisy and
tacy, but fight tha good fight of faith, andura haidnooa. ba found m our
p^caof duty andunng to tha and. ' At loaM Bifoa diflarant timas in tha
BMpola Christ %mki Hm mat andurath to tha and shall ba soaod" In
PMfw 4$ a. 7. and again in Habrowa 1:a 9. wa ara told that Gods
Throna IS foravar. a scaptra of hghinygiim la Bia sooptra of His
Kingdom mtHS Cfirtat • lova of rIgbliiMaiiaia and hatrod ol bii«dty
cauaad Him to ba ■ iiiihmd abosa all Go to Church and prayar-
NMbbng. toMi to God parMnalty youraoN about tha tarribia condition of
crbna and avii. CALL ON HIM TO SAVEf "t aoid aol to Bia Houaa of
Jacob, saak Ma in vain*
SEARCH THE SCRIPTURES! In Damaronomy 1 1 ta-20 God says
to His psapli whoni latar Hm says Ha wHf mokalCbigaandPfloalaynIo
Himsaff. Gat yourself a Bibla. kaap it with you. RCAO m tT ALL TNI
DAYS OF VOUR Li»^E THAT YOU MAY LEARN TO FEAR THC LOfID
YOUR GOD TO KCEP PRIDE OUT OF YOUR HEART CAUSMQ YOU
TO THINK YOU ARE BETTER THAN YOUR BRETHREN TQ KOP
YOU FROM TURNING TO THE RIGHT HAND OR LB^ FWOBI N«
andstatutas. toBiaafldyouaRdyoo
bi Bia lond God mmm*\t>u
" J
> • • « ft •
isa^k*«iOaA »t^^^^^^k^
UK; ^R. 30031
■y ■■
^.'
■ ^ \ » -"^ •-•J
Need Housing
COMING
Housing Available?
SPECIAL
Sept. 9
HOUSING
ISSUE
Submit Ads by Sept. 7
^ -^
CL ASSIFI E D >l D
i,.,,»r
DIAL 825-2222
unfurntehiid apte.
for sybleas#
autos
VgMICI_.<|«Hn« ArM tIM 1 b*tfroom
»-T1JS fiwmwf. wit9kmnif ****^
(27 t 2)
WOMKING iMicte _.
4447 40 -rvnt ptuv vtvctrit tM-t74t^
Otoflw after SM) or 273.«ttt (offlc«)
\ ..,.
NtW 2 b«drm. 2 balti Mctirtty _ _^.
NNM^orstof,
(27 A M)
MOOMMATE F»fii«|» nonM*io(i«r Putnm
mrm: Two •lory; 2 b«droom Ron!:
$112^ AM aM<t421. PU •38-372f.
<20S«|
171.
(»A1f)
VftlTIMG pror«t»or •••kg turntsh«d
»-:» hiili ••«! f«ntol o«c. Zft'ilAy 77. Two
d«u«hlars apM S. 7 (213) 474-t17t
(33 Otr)
1t72 CHCVV VAN EUCiLLffNT mum
MIMG COMCM7IOM i.€ COtfTf CLdT^
NCMS lOnt Lf COMTC AVE 477.Me^.
<41Att|
NEWLY yowewted, McurHy Mdf.. V
tolecfc b««ch A bu*. V«ntc« Partly
fumlshad BMh $«0-i100. alnvla $13ft-
$140. 1-BR t1S0-t179 3M-1001
(atOlr)
MALE ' 1 blk. campua-ttudto (■ R
upatatrs, Llv-din.. hllchan down) Prtv
yard ftroplaca. garag*. SlOO/mo 47»-
M27 avanlnga IT waa»awda.
(2t A 2f )
terr 9 - Jan S Larg* apt: 3 b<idr. 2 ba«i.
dtnlf>9. IMng. ktlchan. pardan
• mln frofti UCLA, t ndn from
HOUSE tfTTINO
AMiiaia. UCLA staff maniiiai gtiait ol
lonf larm Rafarancai a«aMab«r -4rt-
itn. 473-1210.
A <•»
OOOOE Dart, wtiota/parli. tbH
w/10.000. wfrtng.
170 Jchn or Mafttn
rtlras w/10.000. wtrtng.
000-OOT
■7-1.
(4lJt •!
hcMisas for rant
OaOO MONTH. 2.bdrm guaat
Canyon . wM tra#a ranlol accaaa far
tfiformadon about ^aiiia^ SM. ftmtwd
Ral. or larfar 1-4 ht^
Mf. 454-72S0 avanlng/
FIAT 1078 120 Hlcfffii^ AM/nft?>ftfdMaf
x^nl Full warranty 1^2700. JOO-OSSt
["
JL
IT vou m9
■mongat matura profaaaionai
440 Valarafi. t> ba#«oom.
2 badroom C 2 badreaiH pl^ OdH 0
^^'^Hl ^22? *** •*** **•* l^»rap«aca.
walbn^TMifciwpaHar. ObIbowk . pool. 473-
0220.
(27 Otrt
FEMALE to a^ara 3 bdrm. apt wMfi
2 fam «rad« by Sa^. i Own bdnii.
poot. ctofa to baach « Bhoppiwa Ift S.M
t117/nio * am. iOMfeoOl ltO-2051
(20 S 2)
'^w*
(09 A at)
p20 wilt Hollywood 2 bodroom/
a bath. Hardwood floorf, firaplaca
Mfrtfarslor 0O12 ~
WOMAN WILL SMAHE LUXiWV
-MARINA DEL WE V APARTMENT WIXM
RCORONSIftLinwONSMOKER. STU-
\ DENT/FACULTY ROOLi^,«IAeH:rrC
1105 MONTH PLUS 1/2 UTILITIES
023-0201. J
O*** hirtrrmn MMiIi, ppjn wtOHn wMk
of UCLA. Uo»f. fafrfg. unfumiahad.
•0210/oiofiAi. 1"? mil inioiT.
ISO A 101
JL
HOUSE lo ahara wantad or gyaal
SM. WLA. MMo^nd itudant. 020-2207
' " (39 A 10|
72 AUDI 100 LA. Automatic, air. AM-PM,
naw ttra* Original ownar
^lia^oNar §25-4070 day*. 700-
^ - ' 'i*nd».
(41 Aior
9 SO* O^V^I^i'bolli Slo«a.ls
. Extraa. Day 904-2070. a^
037-0730 ' *^^^»'^**
' rsoAioi
^F9on% and board
axchanqa for hal^
CMty.||wiM 9*2 T». 9000 iHipa, PA
f/t. air. P/pwiy. 470.9940 972 PNA.
-..vP'.*-— "^i- :: — —.— , — Aj| g gi ' \^
M 4 tor
/r„r
£^£S^
(27 A 90)
aiftta. to itiaia
.LA
■"^
IHilO)
___ CHANMINO-ipM loaal 9
990-0790. ^rf-mm ^ ^
V ISO S 0)
■ 71 rov
ROOM/Boord In aadianga lor OMioa, J *l«0. 8/H.
XInt. f t0007 00O-7S00
... fT'^
r,|.
tlioffo ? badroom
t% baai MnMiad apt. Gbfdfa.
M ddmpgpr Pralar grad. AaaO:
tam/mo,-^ tftOltlaa 470-4100 ■¥■
' ' (20 A 10)
090 VfMian. 477.
(90 A 10)
OOOO 3 MM r^^a. Pam RfQ^WMIiar/
Ofjrar Vlaw Waatalda VlUaga. lH^ar
PRIVATE
0747
(37 A 90)
HI SOI
Orlvo. ail
«l PONSCHB 012 Xlfit coodrMBM adM
oflar (7S0I«AP) 000-0107
|4t^**IOt
r
mmiam
~.^i^^
to ahara larga 2 badim MrtT 9
477
•<Mdofif fo aliara>apacloua^
^'baPi apt. '/. Moqkirooi UCLA
A«a. 0100. Xvaa A
housa
MOOM: Soord ^
Moai fiova cor
ooly. 270-7000 •u 75. 274
RACUOA 70 Automatic
itaaring b^aliaa Atr . tuclial aooia
Vif^i top. fi«y wbdNa Of««biai owoor.
•70-7100. 037-9110. _^^ . ^^
. ^"fOt SOI
/<«
(20 AJO)
(37 A 20)
SHARE 2 bdrm.. 2 ba apt in Srantwood.
^ool. gym room. fT^OSO. , V
(9SA10)
PEMALE grad' •ludant fiat tpa^iout
W. Wood apt ta ahara Own room!
Furnlahad 0176 jfio) 470-7900.
(2f A 10)
•ACHtLOR Pad - Soaorty Qlati Cao-
yo«t. 2-bodroom. T alary llwtog •>f«om
$00,500. SandB RoaMora 470-0404
(91 A 10)
ROOMaiiibaofdIfi
47S-f410; )
-tk^^'
PORO 7f «^ T. pldiup. VO. A/fTP/S. ^
^••Ll*??*! •^*' "•♦♦••*«MCII454|, xsao4o
room for ratit
(STAOO)
SO MQ MIOQfT.
Ml AlOi
"•»*-
VpUNO lady
fum.
0ZO-1OS9 daya/ 090-IOn •«/
1100.
FEMALE to ihara larga luiurtoua aludo
•pt - Sopf 1 thru Fall Otr Walking
OlMMa lo USLA IC*|K274-00t5llanrtia
A70-7000 i,- '
(20 0 9)
iJi
ahara
ISTS^ORD Van
^ j__ a^ulpioant. VO
OUItr prfaola rooRi/bofb. Jtltcl^on Wt^W Oiya
maamtm
ROOMMATE
P«ioe!. pool. 9 ado. woNi to UCLA, i 140.
473-7199. 477-0744
U)
,_ FEMALC lo
WOMAN wawiad to ahara WLA houaa
Pratar gradttata ttudant or working
— Rant $125 473-4003 avafilnga
r
■^,
GRADUATE rbommata
room. Pool Hmm
Vdl 900-0720 or Nina
a Miam larga abMla
^^ ««Ni lo campua TamI 479- ^
!^ _; ^20 0 21 I. WOOMMATffof
PEMALE ahara 2 badroom atudlo apt * ■* '^^ ^
with famala graduota •tudani Naar
McuMy atudoiN. Call aflar 530 pm
474-7129. -"
(SO S 0)
HI * 90)
(32 A 20)
Own
$01/mo
(20 A 10)
bMfech Sacfcy 300-0440/ 220-2251
(90 S 2)
9720v«119 Iftcl
009-
(92 0 10)
900 MALE groduala or lactdty noot
nonfmokar(n6 kJtchan privllagaa)
(90S 9)
PEMALE lo ahara 2 bdrm unfumlahad
apt n9mr campus but Oapt tIN Juna.
Prafar tanior grad $130 • utillttaa
CaOiy 303-1900
120 0 01
rantal
I
WANTED lamala boardar Oulat. non-
tmnUr. ardaOc. Uaa mpMN
Iw Mffa houaa. ViRMo 1 ^
^ffch.^tlO month CaO Staaa or Lbida
(92 A 10)
ROOM. bath. pool. )ocuizl tauna
KItchan Famala Non-amokar $45'
-••* V-^^*». 553-0771 Margarot
(90 0 0)
II
PEMALE grad thjdant thg^ two bdr. apt.
0100/mo 10-11 0m m 0-12 Sat mom
r9a a at
LOSFalK Araa Starting Oct 1al:.ihom
yf ^y- ^y^'T^ 2 badroom aparlmant
••••r pubSe tranaponatton atKl traawoya
100' par mo FaOow graduala atudant
or upparclaaaman wantad Call Joa
iOCObt 003-7074. 7-10 AM or 11 12
PM waakdayt Kaap trying waakanda.
(90 A iO)
RENTALS IN ALL AllEA
STUDENTS WELCOMCi
TOP RENTALS
11S44 Woat
WAifTfP: Ploommota ta ahom my 9
bodroom. 3 bath homa In Waatwood
artfh laundry. 274-2094.
(99 A 90)
PEMALE nnw awiabai Own room. $100
n2''ilL-^*'®'»'»S^ 405-4000. homa
(90 A 10)
OAVwoman looking for othor-pay
PRIVATE roomron Qoylay Ava OmdM
from $00 Larga from $125 Ohora bath.
kMchan^ prlvll^gaf , laundry Pdrking
Waakly ratat avaHabla 477-
(30 0 2)
cot. 705
Wilshire West tu^m^^^
Bicycles '-••^••»
10*. Ol«C*«H«l« •«« M»««l
i •• UCtA MiiaiwU
477-3195
t.A. 90023
11S41 Wilthira Blvd
(92 A 10)
^rr-mrr
hoiiainq naadad
OWN Room furmahad Wattwood Apt
Call aftar f:30 P M May occupy 0/15
0 $100 Donno 2713034 Tl - .
(20 S 2)
:Z MOIOE RENTER S PUBLICATION
FEMALE Omd
laundry Kit. priv Cloaa Irant /cali
aftar 3 470-4425
^ (90A10|
autoaforaala
lO-SPCEO Meyclaa^ Ona
cdnd Ona otiiar import..
473-2423
Any
•(42 A 10)
• Mtaiif a
ROOMMATE naadad SaauOful two brm.
apt Two bOn. -niBiii ^^^ o^m.
$137 50 CaO 477.
(90 SO)
'MoF«*lo
GAVmolagraduata8bitfafM(naw)
apartmant to thara. hopafully. naar
ooaipua and undm $1 lO/me««lh. but at I
OOfit knew ttia mrmm wrtta anyway
Loland Traiman 2906 Nawbury aA
^^-'-'*- Ca 04703 or can pMOjiti tJSs!
_^, (33 SO)
BEAUTIFUL apartmant la
2 badraama
wamaiHjaa • 14
1423. 451-1020
$100
(90 SO)
I M TN«w Ti
MLV a atviocD oailv
eyff#«i Hat. m aoolii«t f«,m of o«*r 200
HOMOO. OUPlint « APTO TaoadWr wiai
AVAILAMLITV OATt«. - JlTllTrll^
at laARiA. aoicf
PRQPESSIONAL
or
70 AUSTIN Amarlca R/H. SOck grmmt
bdfWp. Car. 0020. 090-0907. 470-7001
(41 A 90)
1071 FIAT 124 Vary
itpddO-AM/FM
Day 270-0000 Nt-553'^-55bl
STjOCNT DitCOUMT
MOST nt^Aia wMiLf VOU auuT
OTf OM MOTS AMD ACI
WtTM 10
HANS
LlOHTWtlOMT OlCVCUit IMC
(01 S 0)
4»iail. FiRlPLACtl. K)OLt. OAAAOCt «
M Waal-
Call 474-
(2 OLOCRt FhOai CA«M»U«)
ion OAVLIV AVE
473-J
VW 70 Bug Auto aRcallani
AM-FM $1000/baal oflar
■pi. Pur-
niahod. $110 irtcKidini dOOMaa. Paboa
By 0-1. Non-amofcor 4770214 laa««
(90 A 10)
FEMALE 22 2 bad apt $112 WLA
279-0041. O-Oom 012 pm
(20 A 10)
atAT/ ••. ■•"^ •'•• lo UCLA
$107/mo Intamalad party olaoM
«•• Lou 473-0001 ^ '^^
'20 A 10|
FRESHMAN
•••» (1 f) InMiaalad lo ahartng homa;
aaehanga for hoapltallty. yardwork.
houaakaaptng Rafarancat Robart
HamNton (010) 750-5040 ,_, ^ ^^
f 99 A 90)
(41 A If)
tl5^^*^'* ••fpw aulamatic Air
cmOMlBidn^'taijIo'naai baMioa A iboa.
(41 A 10)
cyclaa, scooters
for sala
74 PIAT'194. 4
c
. 1
HI A 10)
VW 00 Etcallant cor^dlllon Nawly
^•bolM angina, trantmlttion. ca>b.
KAWASAKI 400 (75) MbH
Cad 470-1S94 from 7p.m. to 0 p.m.
(43 Alt)
Loot
(ii A m
tBT
S\
«;~
CLASSIFIED >ID
AOVERTISINO OPPlCjBS
tAOLlNC 10 30 A.M
Tha AOUCLA _
fully aupporta tha Unlvaralty of CpM-
' — *-)'t poOc: - -
liting apoca will
bi Ma Dally Brvbi to . ,
who dlacrimlnatat on tha batlt of
ancaatry. color, notional origin, raca.
rabgion. o^ aoa. NaWhar tha DoMy Bruiri
nor tha ASUCLA Communtcatlona
BpBPd bga M«aab«alad any of dia aat-
vloda a^wftlaod or advartiaora rapro-
aanlad In Ihia laaua. Any poraon bo-
llaalng lliat an adaarttaomont in thla
laaua violalaa bia Baaid'a poRcy an non-
dlaerlmlnotlon atatod horoln ahould
tfw f vama^aMonasor. UCLA Dally
Bruin, 1 19 Karcbholf Had, 300 Waahaood
Plddd. Loa Angalat. California 00024
For aaaialanca wNb fiaiialna diacflrei
natlon.problooia. call: UCLA Houaing
OHIca. (213) 029-4401: Waalalda Fair
• iqiDSsa-ioBo , .
for sala
Sni Eat Sits
OiaJO • 09SJS. 09B.
nost)
PIMALE pibp vocaliaf 1^00^% piano PMt
Tax at Intfrvmanf
(13 S f)
Tl
•1-aaat naa
L RATED
iKmia
y T'^* OM Jpyylah oduoalod prp
is 69?^
<77.1Wr
nosti
21
• amaO nab lar a frTiiiOiQi hd-
JMIJna raault Raapand: TO. PO Boi
(•A9S)
* II 1
a^if^-^;;^
VPJ^»»codla working with yoMig
rr-
at $3/hr Calf ilN Selvwarta
r Sapl 21at
(It A IS)
CALL 47a- rrai
WOLLINBAK Jaol to lool Mpamci^ -
OAL Friday /Saaratary paroHMOot
poaltlon. part-tlma marnlngt. car,
•rrMda^holp ahlpplngr Clark Ladlpa
MmiM laaMbna • Sania Menica - alon
SBtlVbr • fpNaoPa OTO-oaPb.
tntortaininont
bw nbono. CaB H^w 0S9-1OO0.
wy pwowo. ww*^ Ma »^^^^ q^^
Get
DISCOUNT PHOh
FINISHING right
here on campus—
f€^mp^s studio
ISO kefchhoH hall 825-06/ 1 m771 \
open mon In 8 30-4 30
STlBR
0S9-0001 or
-,.:..■ ■■
»» • ««»•
NRMVi- Odtnponaallon Ropiy
••■ 4S1. Boaorly Hdlt. 00213
(7 A 90)
CALCULATORS
Tl SR 90 A. SB $1 A. SR 52. SB 9S. oM
Craig
' 11!
Santa Monica Blvd.. WLA.
a
St-'
nn A ib«
WAimCBS port bma
SiXl
(to A 10)
STUOBNT Ip alt 3 chOdran
Obmaa Moatly Sunday af la
UCLA. 475-0031
(10 A 91
,,^ *.*,...rt
FLEETWOOD
imp 2
Pan Mprcy 0
.#>^ ...hi
Oun i/H/N Uhhi
tor Mgn 0/30
"•«KIJS:i;,'(?''A' ■tb)-
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(PH Sun). $100
0/t $00
t 007-2905.
TWO fainola mtmm 9^
lralnAd»,Play f ul . truly boautlful and
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~^-^-— ^^:^V . ^11" A IB)
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— f
(0
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274-4021
(11 • 9)
BENT A TV $10 tfO mondi Otarao/hIB
Studam dtacountt Oalivary to 0:00
47S-9870. 9903 Waatwood
(1
-*r^
/>•«
Sunset Canyon
fttcraation
Cantar
DELI*
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^opan
Monday-Friday
11:00-5:00
Saturdayt, Sundays
and Holidays
11:00-8:00
Wedding
SrmounCenients
kerckhoff ]2, "
82506(1
i
i^HL^.J^J'^f' »175/wooli. Bp# '^^
HAIBCUTTINO _ _
John Raymond pf .London
BUd on Tuod;.Wad gaonlnga. Com-
vNo cftarga.CaO 470-B9B8.
fllSBI
4^^
./.-MO*
TWO
"X:^, —
UCLA
• '$200'mo 423-
bid aaod Wbtii :
t^t , -, -,.-1- i-.|~i>'l-l»l>J*u|*'ra^-
' n» A 101
Aian 477^100. 400 KaMoa Aaa. WbaT
riO'A 101
ISO SKI'S, boota. Mndbiga $90 ,.„^
aol bnfly $30 10 tpaod blcycl* $25
'472-4323 „^-
(10 A 20)
WANTED Volunlaar ahtartalnara.
■PMdia contact th9 lOC Program Offloa:~
(to A 10)
^
(10 A Ifl
WA1
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Kbig.
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MUOMTPUL 7 f aM 0ft noada $ 4m
i/boord with WLA foaNly AMR-
""rSLSSSt •!?: '•~* ^**~«
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WAMTID la buy camara Otympya pan
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^ AyBOlf Caunty Hm tmmm Bpportunitido fof data
ProB^!flPro«ooowiB»^w.th a .trgn, 0Blowti#«r or MMiorf
•nviroftmdnr
OMU PROC^Ji SUPERVISOR
btoinUnihc* FORTRAnF "^
•nac^riwnicorjoimfWfwciManvirsnnMMi. ^
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^ (MB»niBn«$iB-IFjORTRAN)
Th;^ 0t^;^an roqu^ro, rhra. ywiWffihcd^^.h.n tha W thraa
un^vaar of tha roquir^ 4«poriancf mutt hawo boon m comoutar
PrograrTimrr.a ut.t.jmg FOftTf^AN. ^.th.n tha laTthrf. JSST^to
n^iom to larga-M:ala th.rd-ganarat.on computart ItTt^^Sfi
procouing, a tmnif icant portion ^ j^hich Ihould h«i« i— r; r^
progr.mcn.og .r?^ORTF^ AIST fo. a •2rgricio.,^1t^
n^^'mf? l"*^'*'^*' -"-^vs-s arnl data managamant pS^ Z^
*^
tdchniquot
ippiy in
Aug 31 at
lor aiinar or both
nont batwban Aug 27
(IB 9 9)
church
wdv ^^M ia
aporatlona. AC/ DC. AC -adaptor, ra-
chargabla battarlaa includod Bvoa-'
(to SO)
BTAMTBD: OBIBMTAL BUM.
P4^T will P4y lor authanltc plaeaa.
(12 SO)
t.^ Ainoioi Couftfy
. Mall of Admmittratton _
222 North Grand Avanue, Roofn 493
Lot Aiwsln. California 90012
(21,3) 974I791
tqual Opportunity En>ployar M/F
. ^ ^( ,
H Worahlp. Sun - IB am. Umtv.
A. 079 HBpafd "Hfli _ wJtaMm.
•79-7SSS.
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10:00 p.m. M
$100.00
090-2110
'to a toi
•too halratyUnf . Par mora Info call
tf1-€290 T«aa • Bai
020-0343
1tOtOWMahlra(
r). 477
(10 A 10)
(12 0lr)
SUNDAY lOABB
.11:BI
nOA YB)
(CbBrQBI
SS-BBB/ month for Blood ^iBoma
HTLAIIO DONOR CENTER
(tBASSl
1001
Ava., Woatwood
47B-BBB1
#091
BEAN BAG
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yodbiaii
ft2A1BI
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oPPortunHtoa
01]
CdBL 01794
(919)991
Y014 UMCOLN BL AT PICO
VICTORV BL AT VAM NUVO OL
Si2-1 —
af A
LAW 0 OKDICAL
STUOENTO
Frhd oiit how you CBn 9mrr\
ACTORS
MUSICIANS
WRITERS
DISC JOCKEYS
Eachof you has picked a challenging and rawarding
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r>09d onafgalic. articuiata paopla wa can train to imro-
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excellent training prograrrV will aaaiat you m your own
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»-r
Phona 020-7405
t Oppoftyfilty Kmployef M/F
*M*I
v>
■^~~^"^ 1--.-.-L ■■
.*-»-
I ■
>• •
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C^,
■'/
help wantod
Ti-i
(If A It)
fin
tfCnffTAflY No
app«ifilm*Als by ^
pr«f«rr«d PmrX-u'mm tJ 7f %%mr\in%.
MALI ¥«calM
RIDING LESSONS
(HO) A VCOfTATIOM
(It A at) at>-74
Cat
Hr._ ,
•^••l* sfi^ Group Contact Jamot
' m Tlio
n
CttAltl
MIEOMAMCY ^ntliJi.Tr.
—%f% Aoforro4« |« ^••rt corllttotf
CLASSIFIED
MOTHCIIS
• «o«l
t^
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271 AZ14
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WAMTEO: Eiportonco^
•tialo ftrtn, liOMrt tloalblo. fwfl/pork
*^ •"•«"'*»' (ISAM)
i,
1
— P
Vf'V "^
-■•f
WRITERS & ^
- RESEARCHERS
.JNrt-fime tor th« fttlowing booki
4 movies in the Nutrition Field
1. Tht Unhwrsal Approach to
J "XlMclioo • N«tr
SlipMlBfllil
tTUDfNT pen gmo
w*okiy 12 St por HeMr Ft«en« 27t-
2333 •«••
lit A It)
^JCLA^^fO«o«»or roqutrot *-ftuathotd
t lieMfs. 24
Ml ovofylngs
___^__ (IS A If)
nCSPONSWLE •luep«M fwoeoe for eoMy
per«-tMM babysitting tor QtM aludont
«»tth two ctHMron 47S>S1t4
(IS t 9)
•ALLfT Pun i.., ^ dmmn^ %L^
WaabMMMi mm IMIv YWCA. t74 Ml>-
M-
^^athigutaboe Da«»eef/
OtOtr)
UfSII ^^*- CMIPWi SEJIVlcet
•^^tt. AM POM JOAH.
■ 0« • t)
4. Proisct Viking ltl/Amo«tM 1/
Noalt't Arte I
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•-IHyAVItlonof Tht UfHtwiaf
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Part-lifM Of Full-tliM
47S-SS21 for
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AUTO INSURANCE
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rkiee wwled
travel
DIAL 82S
tutofi
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_ _ , — ISCA t1tt7 tan
VIeenia Blve aa LA totat tlT
VACATION. tabbaMcal?
'•••ranco* Worii FortuMa
^rotvct plants, pels
i:je^m
nflal ^refweecy mn^
t13. ttti
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CHARTERS ps-nst tisaimi
O... 300 ll.gM, 4 aaiM •.»^^^1ur••
•'orr, July fhr« jun, ,j.y j .^^ ^ ^^^^
I . ^ Pram Mo oaiss ««as p,im'
C »> UU tN 7 2«<«^07 I ASM
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Ah •^at-10'^t 2 sjp
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w.- '"* ^G 4/71 -•'27 I S7«
typing
by M.A 0«oe
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^^*ciniiy ast-attt.
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•R^s eissartotlons. ale Catt 2t4
7tt7 for ffoo aabmola
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ttt t tt ^yiNN tacrotary Noer
p-^i^irs^Pi.n.* ''•^* *^' •eeereie
from
'romtiaa
♦'0#n lift
^ .to hniiSfW Oct
Maluro. Mo chiiec^. ||ois 71
t71t. •_,--i*'^*>'»^'
m^'
photograph
,^jrgr--
"4MM Mho
alcai. Improvlaatlefi, Itiaery, accem-
Mitane arran«lfi0 for ak»«era
IMMTCII'
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H.
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Fitft or pan taia. {^^^) Mf.
(ItAltl
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Cat sr4
a. ISO - Yrt. Oufo Olymptet
(197t)-
t. U.L.A.S.A.A.N. Society
UX^SJ^.A.N. Scoutt of
T^
«Wi.^.".»>«i^»'
Send Resume io ,^
Universal Concoptt, Inc.
c/o Paul Pr«g|
Harvard Houaa
•91 S. Harvard Blvd.
V::i?L "" l-A. Ca. 90009
i W»H Heap replies current at tfoi^cta
EXCELLENT 2nd incoma Musi) ap|f
add atempae no. 10 sn»aiopa>^t D^
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AUTO INSUR/
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Lf^m'^r^ r ngnit to
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On» M^a««i Hm^mi> iron s
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^ days Carltob«ar> Cfuisa from S490 00
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474
(29
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OIOIIIE , _ _ .,, ^_ ..— _,
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abp^99lOMAi C0U.904 TT
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EXCELLfMT Typial. WIM type ^
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latlars IBM taiactrtc H Call Anna
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FANTASTIC ^^
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'9rpunii -Hi m«asuram«nt and ttattstics a
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raabng. acfj ftjma/jinca m
aUucationai rvsaarcfv, :_ — :"•■■ r
#aipasa»|«aaa: Assjfejh pbmwWiyyoofdinat
•atJKad cooduchng rasaarch m coniunction
With Ihe UCLA Coopiarativa Pro^ram-witti tha
Nation^ ur.ivsrsiiy for Taacttar Edacjsuon
•n-l«a#^ ••«.•-
QrJMhiaia^chooi o<
^^ . — No talar than Sapt IS
ia7e saaignmsnt will bsi (or up to 9 montt>s
Oaoaana lar 9Mn| appaeaban: illpi 8 1974
Sand vita and application to
V.W NCPANIt
MP (porta A labor).
f^»f*^i^
<19 • t»
ftf
li/^aocad) 3t7.02t4. Dent wbM
(1»09r)
Elba
fftJt. Dial E-x-p-E-a-i-r^s-ci.
(ODQirl
■■}■'■
ir
UROENT? :^
nabdad for •« typaa tf lata
lEnglnaortng. Madlcal. Lagal. TaoMteaf
llndualrial. Managomanf. Clerical A
lOomaatlc Graduataa A Uadaigradualai
|Walcon»a.
T.a EMI^OVMtMT AOCMCV
Education UCtA
UCLA
UCIA IB an Equal
m09TmmfHk9 aanplabli Mor S|y
paymiiiii. OlactMMla for norti'noli' j
Autb-Llfa-'Homeownars and Ra««tai
Inauranca. Vlllage-OHiea. Warner
Nabbiaab. T1|i ^
<77-tttr, t7t-t1tt.
-*" r ■
XEROX Z2C
^o6io K>NKOS 474-'
<««€ ^
•ntarnationai Student Center
1021 Hllgard Ar"
Ca!i Us (or intormation
47-. ?oo. . «.. M»4. 879-0623
_ _ _ «liy
• • • •
.■.*r»ivU . . . , . <i f|^ J
■WNOPf. tarpal. NY t Orlant
Loat coat fNflMs A.i ft T I48t
**' "Mad. ±Jk. tS2-272f ;
T2!t^S^^^ '^^C (ra. miantr-ttrtMi
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?At!2Lm'''*^ TICKETS. CANS.
INTRA-EUROPE CHAHTEIIt
SPECIAL CRUISE
'cETAWATr'^ ^'--^
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MAZa:, AN adav« iS
Sf ' ;:U «^*^^° «»' ^ VAttAltTA 6 dsy^sS!
Wf ' CO OaANO TOii« 15 agy, «»»^»»«»
Mfc*iCO- V«CA7AN IS doJT^
MEXCENT SOAIPER tSdal*
HAWAII .( 1 isiaodi 4.days
HAWAII (2 isisftos) ^0 day*
XAtMAli .^3 jaianids) 10 days
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J'HiTrMOOatA ttlii^ -
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TunrO TAIPAl HOU^,
ORANO SPA<N--v«-(Say4
^— ior«anika...lo/«i
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IfSA. Fa»t COUN9lLI»»a^l#
4i^.iteafciyaAa^
romng SmaR Groupt For
LSAT A OMCPfaparaHon
ttAT aiorts tapt 1 1 - QUE aton. tapl 19
^ Call •tr.^mo for
for information 9>fd regittratmo
j_oj^ 4 Matl'ercharqe Accepted
TAr Typing adltlng Engttah grad
DiaaartoNona apacialiy TarXi
In typing boob
larty artlclaa
iaiiaaa
acho
altia
TYPWiO Editmg/^aat. Aoabrefa/MuW-
aipar«ancad/^tcli-up DaMvor/ffigfitoous
.hatoa/Mafarancaa/tanily. 4SS-3499
(29Qtr)
ptoa pad altia J^^^f^ '■** *"
/a« eat s^m^
***" «ANOTtCMNfOU«t AN alytoa.
ct*mt4 aelatita A proaeaatons of top
modern and aarltor l^luoa liayboard
''**^ fy >"p«* tilLiI, laaaaoa to*
to Itoybeird Improvlaaton. 4n-3tn
(I4 0trt
TYPtNG EDITING IBM T^aaa. tort^
papers. dtoaartotlo«>s languages, caa
•altoa Long aapartonca. nael, aacurala
279.tttt or 279r-t471
(29 0«r)
TYPiNOI teaen days Alao adtdng ¥aiy
lael • eccurata Mid Wiishira Froa
pefbing CaM Ooanrta 19t tttt
I
(MOIr)
fumiahed
CHINESE -Mandartn. Ppbleg netlva
toacbar wall-aaparlancad arltb Cell-
lornla Cradan|lai. Individual small
fiaiM. t33-lt4t
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. ^.J^^ ^**»' arltb • A In
Cnvllab (UCLA|| ai|t tope aad adit toor
*" o*o^ 29 yaaie aa-
Onadby
LaAT. ONE. MCAT. 0914^7
MOrEtfKMtiL
473-4tt3
(29Qir)
»->OHT atrr-ocvanstda
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ocaan <naw In toatatui quiet
Adultsomy nop«t« SMS mo 3k2 7t11
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It
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tiPt.^Pfy lo: Europe Afrtea
•■ b»U CT'^'M^Uyfl 4,'^ J9^'
"^flf I'M pn A world-wide baals
Iw 1 copaeiito*H ^ollcy F^ Intor-
•OOK WW^TOJC FLIGHTS
EUHAINA TOUHt W^ YlUVf U
- J(74.t3t1
Saturdai
UC
•oaa you up to 9t% en
At ptoaa. at niaier neai
Poy retot Cat Utobtid
i"f
.477.
(ItOlr)
OlMoer at the Student
Health Of lite- or call tlf.ltSt.
Student Ineucance. UCLA SMpnI
Healtp Service. L^. CA. fS024.
iCOMOtfV Faras to Ortont - Tobvo
!;?.?T^»?y Mantle. Tpi^, Inaia
^"^ Fin. i Eyrepa
■2141
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•mriMbtifato 4tt-47t7.
- (StAIS)
PUTM C OtMCPTATtOanr^^YMEStt.
STATItTICAIr-FAtT-^tFtNOAStE
<SS¥Stt DAYt A WEEIC MANY TYbl *"
STALES 939 942S ^^
(2ft Qtt)
94tt LAAOE 3 badrooai. 2 ,„
=^ <topai diahwaafwr belt-to atoaa. patio
:' 294t Oaprtofid 477-32tt
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Trade Showt throuQhout Wppt'
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Wa naad aavaral mora artlcutota In-
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sarvtng tho UCLA _
Comfmmity 3 yrs f ulMfma
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{UCLA volleyball
V
goes International vsl Japart-
\
v'-
■ i»«r»-^v
X
NCAA MVP Jo« Mtca wiU iMd UCLA •gainst Ja^an
The best Amerioin colkgiaac vsHiytaiJ tean
- ux time NCAA champion UCLA — mi a
colleguite all-ctar leam frooi rniiryhall HifM
Japan wilt dMi in an internataoa^ dMe-match
scries in January, the NCAA ummmmd last
week.
The ftmtm, under iHad coach Al Scales,
have dofmaated American mirgiiti volleyhall,
while Japan it considered to have the best
overall volleyhall program nationally for men
and women in tlie world toiay.
' -^ Tlvee ttMldlti
The sertet is set to open Friday night
January 28, at Sao Piego Sute The match wili
tlicn move to Pauley Pavilion on Saturday
mght, January 29 and fmish at UC Sanu
Barbara on Monday night, January 31 ^
Considering expert's estimations that the
United Sutes volleyball program has dropped
'," M"^>'<y the past four years, the UCLA-
Japanese- series should lie an imeresting battle -
Seated IS thought by umt to be tiK prepiier,
volleyball coach in this country, and he has aa
experienced team,
v^ Th^ predicament for Scales is that the
matches against Japan come early in the year
only three weeks prior to the surt of the
conference- scaaaa It has been his policy to *
brir^ his team along slowly, but he says he.
does not want to be embarrassed by lotinfi
soondly *
Scates will have a ueteuw-^eam to sendinto*
the pressure of international competition. The
J976-77_ Bruins arc paced by 1976 NCAA M¥P -
Joe Mica, only a junior. TIk Bruiw also recura
AU-American setter Oavid ^"^^^'if'** aad cMr
•Ifcer turtmg setter Peter Ashley.
Mike GoOKlHai, who was the leadii^ hitter
in the NCAA playoffs, k hack at m nliiili
spiking position Part-time sUrters Doug~
Brooks and Doug Rabe return as middle
blockers, wtele top frtpiBrn Singin Smith and
6-7 I^.C. Keller are yoasibkr sUrtmg hitters aa
sophomores. Steve Suttich and Matt Albaie
return as setters, with Danny FrcenoMUi, Gcorpr
Negrete and possibly Greg Giowanazzt, at back-
up hitters.
for
N *•
Ififrth Straight year
-| am looking ^prward * to playing the
Japanese All-Surs," said Scales. "It will .be a
good challenge for both me and the teanr; and
1 hope I can schedule the alumni match prior
to the Japanese series to fei at liady.**
The NCAA is sponsoring competition in
several sports %ith Japan Besides volleyball.
-^^^ kj^tej^SM. l«r_M. lokyo (iK:LA .
^nnis coach^len JBaMeCt wiB run the cbOegi-
ate team) and k iott conpetition.
**ThTS competition is a trcmendoui^^ 1^^
intercoliegiate volleyball,*' said Walter G
Versen, chairman of the NCAA vollcybali
committee '*The exposure and the opportunity
to compete against one of thr brjl voiryball
playing countries in the world will be a |
thing for U.S. unapallegiatr volleyball.-
SpaertatTon has pernsted that the UCLA
volleyhall team could defeat the US. nationir
volleyball sqiiad. The Japanese sories this
JSSiavry might add weight to '
fA<-"— *
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_nwomefrsiMkerUiosti
aoain
i,i»<'a="
^.:'- l^CLAji twT>-time AIAW women's volleyball
Tlfhampions will host il)C^ NationaUlnviiational
lournamcnt for the ninth consecutive
. Fnda); 4nd Saturday, No verober 5-6 at Pauley
T^aviTion, the Women*r Athletic r>c pa rtrnent has
' said - .^., ^
-r^ TJMji^^team tournameht -ii uaditronally a
preview of the AIAW championship, which this
'year/ will be "Wrf^^December 9.1 1 m' Austtn,
Texas - ■
4;Ong Beach Slate jin# fifth place Srigham
Voung UnivcfsHy liUvc already accepted bids
Also, Cal State Northridgc, Texas, Nebcaska
and Lamar University (texaf?, which Id-
va^2? }!l^)^ Nationals laH year, havr ac-
"eqplid invitations to-pfaiy. ' -m^- i.
In attrW of the 24 bids have be^lllieGBpted,
and Holland is looking across the country for
"the five remaini;ng spots.
•■V •■
Five year tradilicMT"
During the last five ycmrsii^^^^ of the
UCLA invitational tournaTncnt has won the
AlA^^tlc UCLA m 19T5, 1974 and 1971;
^ortg Beach Slate in 1973 and 4972
UCLA women's athletic director Judith
Holland has the top teams in the country -for-
the tournament Only Hawaii, who the Brmns
will open with in September, will not (be in the
tournament among the* top five teams in the
count r\ last year
Houston, whicf? finished third, fourth place
•-■■»«*-•-
•-r-j^.
~ '^ ht^^ NationaJ lf>vi^
Utional Tournament it expected lo be finals
night The semi-finals and championship match
^ill be placed at night, with the final match
scheduled for the center court oj Pauley
Pavilion - * v*w^-»-
Since UCLA lost only two players from its
championship team, coach Andy Banachowski*s
s^uad is favored for the AIAW title With the
return of All-Americans Teri Condon and
Leslie Knudseh, Banachowski is /"optimistic"
about a third straight crowa^' »
" — Michael
Women's cage recruiting produces
Blackwood, Breckenridge and Wright
/ ^, By Bob Heber
DB Sports Writer
Over the last two years,
UCLA's men's basketball
oaach Gene Bartow has shown
hi<i ability to recruit the best
talent m the nation by ob-
laming the likes of David
Greenwood. Roy Hamilton
and James Wilkes But UCLA
women's coach Ellen Mosher
has proved that anything a
man can do a woman can do
equally - if not better
Mosher. too, has laiided some
of the nation's top recruits
The Westwood women will
be bolstered this year by three
o\ the area's top players:
Desna Blackwood. Tam Breck-
enridge and I ynn Wright. Who
krc currently placing in the
vMmmer, Olympic Development
League at Cal Stale Los
Angeles «
Mosher is hoping the three
new fre%hmen can fill some of
the gaps left by the graduation
'T^ ■■*■ ■■• « J ■!■ J! L^ewimcr ano
1 liH Tiiiiiiii li ^
"Tm really looking forward
to working with girls," Mosher
s«id-"*They arc all. well skilled
fundamentally and have a
good knowledge of the game I
think they really should be
able to help us this year.**"
CIF mak
Earlier in the year, Black-
wood, Breckenridge*^ and
Wright were on high scliool
teams which were fighting for
the CIF 4 A title Since most of
last year's Brum team returns,
the competition should be just
as fierce between the three girls
for the few s^als left on the
""irarsity
Blackwood's Buena High
team was defeated in the opm
ing round of the playoffs by
Breck ridge's Crescents Valley
squad Then in the finals,
Wright and her Ventura High
team bested Crescenta Valley
and Breckenridge for the
championship.
There's a little bit ot a coin-
^xKence behind Deana Black^
mnn^m «ttwr»l
lives on is named "Varsity
Court " But there was nothing
coincidental about her play at
Buena High in Ventura. She
was an All Channnel league
selection her last two years.
Last season, she was selected
second team All-CIF while
averaging over 23 points a
galme.
VinatBe
A weH rounded player,
Blackwood phiyed forward at*
Buena. but for her size (5-10,
150). she IS quick enough to
play guard She' is considered
an excellent ball handler and
feeds off well to her team-
males. Her size allows her to
shoot over smaller gMavii Ipam
outside, but she is also mobile
enough to drive through the
key. Strong on the baaiia, she
averaged over 10 rebounds a
fame. In the high school divi-
sion of the Olympic Develop-
nt League this summer.
ickuood was sfc— d in
'S
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Freslnnen mtcr UCLA
All-Star game final prep test
.ttf***"
My
DB
Three UCLA football re-
cruits set for lawyaai scholar
ships — and one incoming star
who'll do without
In a game dominated by
freshmen from both UCLA
and use, the
speed and off<
wore down the W«l*s
to tooK a
iM ■')«•«<
day yesterdajr, UCLA
TW first two uate practiet hwm S-f:5S am. wMi
€i tke i^Hid gaiiif »wi f:55-ll:5« am ••
Al a^aadmen wii practkc
FWi.
t^m t hy M'n I ^.tif
scoring tl5i9 average)
Vr/MITInued on Page l^
their own against a more-bally- 16-12 win.
hootti ino of use prospecu in Two of the «^ .,.-«•,
sH^h^r ^'!!^-'^l^*"?n"!!!^ ^^ quarterback Andy M^
acnooi ^^fcasNWmt All Star safcfc ^aml teammstr tircgg
^fc H^^JlgM^r it Bir- — rihriniinitn. ■ taakls. aiars
mingham High. ^, ^^ ontinued on Pi^ i^)
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' t
UCLA
Summer
Volum«XCIX, Number 14
University
thuraday . August M, 197t
Rough drafts allege misconduct
•^
Charges against SLC president revealed
c
■y Rum Wolpert
DB Surr Writer
The Dailv Brum has learned
of specific allegations tluiLjnay
be presented rri im|Kachment
proceedings against student
btHJy president Meg McCor-
mac4^j*. — - -Li ^ ■_ _
At least four people have
drawn up rough draftir pf aitle-
gations against McC ormack.
who was elected to office last
spring A fifth, an a.pp<>inted.
llflember of McCorniack's per-
sonal sta([. IS expected to write
a S4miUr statcnoeni shortly.
^ The sutenl):^nts. not jjet re-
leased, include allegations that:
^^ .MeCormack spesirva^T^
proximately $2,000" m her cam-
paign. T he : 1 1 mit }% $5 507"
. ~ ■' McCormack had a pro-
fesi^i-onal advertising agency
design '^much of her campaign
literature withoy[t jMjng it
— McC'ttrmack had a tele-
phone insiatled in the apart-
ment of at leaist one person
without ; listing It
7 During the t:Campargn.
McC ormack agreed to appoint
numerous persons te vmportant
positions After her election,
reneged on iliesc^ p n u rn isgt .
-J^cCormack determined:
who -woiilid be appoitued J3
certam positions that required
interviews before interviews
were held
McCormack kept secret
tiles on xertain councilmem-
bers.
- McCormack bed to, and
shuMoid contempt for, SLC
In respoiMT^to Iheie atlega-
tions McCorjnack denied
spending S2,000 on her cam-
paign saying thut *^lie might
have gone over the S250 Umit
Nascy Siemion, in charge of
McCornvack*s campaign fi-
nances, ^id "between all the
Coca-Cola and tobacco we
consumed, we might havi?
*pem $2,000,^« thtt wat ^
totally arbitrary figu/e. and. it
ificiudedL stuff like parties we
had " -£^*
Jay eye Jasi years Elections
Board Chairman, sid^** unless
si^mething like a party fur-
ihe^ the process of -gettirij^
^ clectccL It didn't torvc lo^e
C(]4!t added tHat ''as far as
Mt Ulcere concerned on the
board, McCormack violated
no- campaign laws, m tact, I
would say that>he was pretty"
-tilcan.^ - ' ,.,-.
McC ormack said she did not
use ^ -pruiessioiiial ad vert iwng^
Siusam ^i«Sy pf%^i^m aivgJdcCormacli
firm. She said thai Jlic
friend -rta^orks at afirm, but
satd 4ie -helpcd^cr cm onl>^ one
occasion^ and 4kt tKr job la^
correctly TTIttf -was confirmad
Yfy Bruce Nefson of Ayrc, i^if-
gehson and Macpwiald * "^5:.
* ,MgC^:P€ mack ad mitt ctT^-l^^^^
st^onsibihty for having a pJione anotter phase ioitalled.^
apart-
ment ^D«t ~»aid, •'h was tenu
tively votrd the most non-
"^^rcndent resident at Q$littra. f
. was practtcaity hvmg at NancyY
<Siemionh durios, the dpF
^^ignr Since I didn*t want to
tie up her only liile. 1 had
McCormack' atfhowkdged
that the did pg^^e' to appoint
certain penons ,-Js-.
lifer
'rliasfrii hor miisi.
SIk defended this action by
spying "It >4i ' I h< l^retiden tt'
perogative to appoint or not
|Cr*iittniie|i oii..Faf^ 7)
V-
i. ■c^'^'gs;..
helps Reagan in Kansas City
-.B)^ Ge<»ff QttteflL
-Di SUIT \% Titer
They arrived by bus, tram
and plane to accompany their
delegations to the Republican
^i>iational Convention Some
were ahernate delegates, some
were reporters and some, like
/John Withers of UCLA, were
there to help their candidate
Withers, however, a junior
and chairman of the UCLA
Ltnancc C Ommitlcc under the
undergraduate student bod>
president's office, did not ty-
pif V his felloe*. . Reagan ?Ajp-
portcrs — a group he called
'"hard core."
**I rea4K don*l know where I
stand, whether Lm a conser-
vative Democrat or a liberal
Republican. I'm a registered
independent They wanted to
stick me on the Youth for
-'-■'^-
Reagan bus, but J couldn\
handte that r( He -took a Grey-
hound bus to Kansas City
mstead f . . "_:
Withers wm4 he wen!
to Kansas City and worked for
Reagan in order to get
a chance io participate in the
political prcKess.
For tlic experience
**l came here for a variety of
reasons." he said last Thursday
night before the convention's
final session ■**4-4f ope the ex-
perience here would help me
make up my mind."
He said he will have to ''sit
on It a while" to let everything
he saw and licsrd here fall into
place By Thursday night, how-
ever. Withers had some
thoughts about some of the
problems at this year's con-
vention. , .
'*The difference is organiza-
tion.*' he said of the Ford and
Reagan campaigns **They\e
(Fofd) got organization re-
sources Most of ford's stuff ^s
very professionally done
"**This (Reagan*s following) is
iSSUy very much a grass-roots
njovement "
Zoning panel rejects disco bid
By mmm W<
-*= DB StiifT Writer
The Board of Zoning Appeals unani*
mously rejected tHe bid of Progressive
Entertainment Corporation, Incorporated to
obtain a parking variance required to add a
concert hall their proposed West wood Disco-
theque. Dillon^s.
Dillon*s had earher been given the unani-
mous ^king of the Student Legislative
C<^uncil (SLC) and of Meg McCormaclL,
Undergraduate Student ^iMgiation Pres-
ident.
The decision came after a three-hosr
meeting held at City Hall August 10.
Carl Matson. chairman of the posrd, tsjid,
**ln a»rar tmn yasi
first time we*ve played to a staadiag-rooin-
only crowd /^ ~*^ ^"^
Board me^mbers emphasized that the
planned four-story Dillon's may, still be built
However, the proposed fourth floor cosccrt
hall will have to be scratched, stfioe it was
the Concert hail, not the accompanying
discotheque, game room or restaurant, that
required a variance to secure the requisite
number of parking spscci.
, Ail^High over 100 peo|sie' packed into the
crsw^srf hearing room, only three spoke
support of Dillon*s. They were David Ken-
neth president of Progressive Entertainment:
Benjamin Pick, owner ci the property and
4^
w
''■r 7)
!r!snni
■■*■■*■
Withers came to the con-
vention partly out of a ciMSae
encounter he had with a Rea-
gan supporter on Brum walk
last January He agreed to help
the Reagan campaign in return
for a chance to see politics up
close He psid for his tmsii
portation, $50 for the bus ride,
and the Reagan organization
psid for his lodging. He paid
for his fo€id.
CiMllcngc effective
Although Reagan lost. Wi-
thers belie^^es the challenge to
Ford was not in vain. ^Its
effect IS there A valvsMe con-
tribution to conservative sAesli
has. been OHi^ jtiei by forcing
the issues into the open**
Asked whether the party ess
win or ever survive, he rephed,
''I don't think there is any way
to predict the future of the
party-
Still, some of the young
Republican "hard cores,
soufcd ^ Ford*s «tacSor|r 4iit
Wednesday night, wen
tffMim 4 frw
tlwy oosM sot su
the President in November. **!
see no difference between the
two men, and Carter is a better
speaker,** a bitter college junior
said. Withers, however, said
most of those he talked to
would vote for Ford.
Withers spent the watS ir>
guing with uncommitted dele-
mt stfMrsMi tCMrrying
week was anything but dull for
the UCLA student
**lt*s kaas ersiy**
**Tlus IHM been a lot bke
being at Disneyland - it*s
been crazy We were puttisg
up Buckley things all over tbe
place ** Withers and Yousg
Repuhiin^ for Rcasss cssi-
^^>^^^^* ^ _*^ ^.
New York Senator is bspci be
nught draw V4
Ford, detyse tbe fact it
not issdissed by ibe
Rjeagan campaign or|
tion
Withers said be ifsai fmn of
I uesday
tults
(( cNMJMMd ^ Page 3)
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^5^WiST tfelMTURY^fpOLI
ICS
fSTD, LOS ANGEL FSCALifDRNlA
•y Fniiili W
D8 Stair Hrtter
Stockholdin, Sweden Stu-
dents traveling niMftd in
Europe often encounter the
name International Youth
Hostel Federation (or YH).
specializing in lowrcost, tem-
porary housing tor young tra-
velers.
With housing tacilities lo-
cated throughout the world.
the YH provides its members
with standardized, clean, sleep-
ing and living quarters in va-
rious tourist locations
The hostels themselves, how-
ever, aic not the same 0«e
example is the .youth hostel
located in the center of • 4his
..4»t:y^^i#mcfl5r a .trading ship,
"the threc»«a4uud schooner, "af
Chapman" docked near ihe-
..city centec: in the bay. is the
temporary home for approxi-
mttely 140 "hostelers." per
night during'^'Stimmer.
According 16 the warden of
this youth hostel. Birgit ^e-
Uha, the ship k one of the
' flMBt teautifuily situated hos-
telf iA^Swcden and possibly in
tlifope itielf.
Thii hostel is one of the
Tlie **af Chapman" itself wai
not tuT^d into a Youth Hostel
until 1^5 by the city of Stock-
holm, .whic^ still .owns the
vessel Originally constructed
as the firll-rifpw **Dunboyne"
t Whitehaven in 188^, !th^
limited
fi'VA fifi^TT iMi ^nostei IS one of the at Whitehaven in 188F,:tht
W«W*ww8 f *. „ .mq^t popular ^^>slcis thafcJ»r--^^jr$el received its name when
....-fcrr....
though we dpiTt advefOir^ !Bt
all,*' she said. "Usually in the
morning when we open, the
fcceptiofi o'fffce here is full
with pe6pk waiting, ^.berths
J)ir-i3«ipd^^ Mehha addetfr"==^
Faalitiei on :bQM4 the old
~as~ a iraium^ .vessel
to the Swedish na>^y The **af
Chapman" was then used dur-
ing WWII for storaje ^until
1945, when the ci^y bought the
i] an4 Coffered «t-rfo ijir
but with a
menu," Meliha added
Currently, plans arc under
way t6 add more living^uart-
ers in a building just adjacetti
to I he "af Chapman^"" prcscni
berth. Though the plans would
be completed ^n just four
yeart; Meliha said. "The plaTT
calls for n~ope iMdern types of
family roorr.s, but V\\ never
leave, ril sink -with the ship '
"The warden Jbn.^JMz^M.
for 4h€ lait f2
^T
vessel include tMit+ir«homs' with
iMUr and cq^fo running'" water
-'—*'* -L^f. VM>»*'« »Tirw- |,^M^. m, IMi,p»Mi«"| MM '*^B€ law f,
Swedish Tfiuriiif CRrt^ t^ ^je^ J|cars;'*>fe1iha har been worf
used as a youth hostel
^liogft,!lJtr. approx^mate^y-^95p
ing onjihe "»f Cfcuipman'
since
•^~^ jwnwyt
*****«^i;v.ja^ W three years were spent
-»^^-
and showers
among m a ii y y o t«1ryhostets
' **Many qi our guest.s dome to
^waiih ia«^ rclolhes here," He^-
Jiha said. ^ ™ ' — '
-—In addition^ there ajrcgalley
and dinUig.. fadrlities^ on board
that are used to sefve breakfast
to file travelers. "I serve braak- ,, ^
fast myself.'* Meliha said, "I _.p»fery year," Metiha said
always loved pooking. and 1 ' '
eryoy sieving a lot of people
' **One of the
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reasons that
people come here, I guess, is
ti|»t it's pretty here," %ht
added. "People just hear about
us in other Y out 1^ Hostels and
so we are very popular even in
the off-season."
According to Mehha*s Es-
timates, most bookings are
made by letter one or two
months in advance "We get
around 10-12 letters per day
when It gets busy here."
DC police book
former student
for acid attacks
UCLA police reported
Thursday they had booked a
University employee, Robert
Sunley Baker, age 29 for in-
vestigation on the charpe of
assault with a caustic chemical
Baker's arrest followed sev-
eral months of investigation by
University police of a number
of incidents in the UCLA li-
brary in which women were
attacked with acid, resulting in
minor to first-degree burns
Baker, a 1970 gradaute of
UCLA and pah-time labora
tory assistant in the Depart-
nott of .Physics since l%5,
«M taken into riliidy shortly
after noon last Thursday and
booked at the West Hollywtad
Sheriffs Suticm. He wos later
released on S5,000 bail
A preliminary ktanng dale
IT
refurbishing The ship ti> its
presen^-oandition Most of the
flooring and. original.' furnitlife^
are stiH mtict and bemg^ used!'
includKig, lampi, portals and
the 'old ship's clock. "
"App^ojfi^alely 13,OftO kids
pass through the af Chapman
"ancT
about J 36 to Mb aofne here
daily ^uring the summer." Of
the vinous nat<i ona litres osing
the ship, the record for one
year was 123 different coun-
tries. Last year there were 96
different hationalities, accord-
ing to Meliha's figures
To operate and repair the
ship and pay its full timr crew
of lO.-iapprpximately $300,000
is required to break even. Oc-
casionally, the Swedish Tourist
Association helps balance the
books. Meliha said, but nor-
mally the occupants alone will
pay the bill
Previously, some income for
the ship was generated by a
lunch restaurant on board The
restaurant, however, became a
Meliha added. "T^is is *Tny
life n6^ One n^unt think of
the 140 people as y^ur fimil>
^YoLL^^Hist believe in yourself in
:l|^k4«S''clirc of people and ac:
cepting the responsibility." ^.^
~ Exaininlng^ the boat from
tQP to bottom for pQfN^t time
before going home/ Meliha
said "MaYbe ii*s the atmos-
phere that' mikes me Attached
to this ship I should have been
a -sailor
^You get to know a lot of
young people. I' like yOung
pt'Cff]^ and ripeak just as
much foreign language^ as \
need "" .^
Other benefits that Brigtt
Meliha receives are found in
travel She has often^ been
invited to the homes of youth
hostelers that have stayed with
her at the "af Chapman"
When she traveb during the
months between November I
and March 15, when the ship
IS closed, she has often stayed
at their houses.
«
Currently, Meliha is being
helped by her daughter, j^st
— ,., —
burden because it was too busy , she once began helping the
and popular, she said
"We have tables outside for
people to eat at, and the tables
would be filled with people
enjoying the view and eating at
lunchtinK We may open the
restaurant again next
original warden of the vessel
One doesn*t know when the "af
Chapman" will be discontinued
as a youth hostel, she said "It
is getting old. but ! like her.
and so do the people who suv
here"
Summer Bruin
Voluma XCIX,
U
Ayfuatat.lfTt
ASUCLA
CmmmunicmHmtm foartl
tSTS ay
•I
FUM yci
— Helena Von.,
scT
Alioa snort
Frank OiaNwarlh
Q«Ofr Qumn
Tad _ _
. . Frank Widdar. SaNy Qanwf.
Kim WttOman fuilctwlla Duvaf
•••«..
^*^i**
Stava Fmiey
Protest GOP con vefttinn
YIpples no longer a threat
By Geoff Qmkmm
DB Suir Writer
Membership m the Yippee
y used to number in the
thousands. Their every move
^mg wmdied by the nation and
their expected presence pa-
nicked local citizens
But those days are gone
This year no more than 200
Yippees showed up in
City, though thousands
expected by their leaders, for
the Republican Convention.
Last week they were ignored
by the press, except for a few
iniilor protests by citizens.
Asked where th^ Jerry
Itubins and the Tom Haydens
were, a cynical organizer re-
phed, Jerry and Tom are out
to ^ lunch
10,000.-
The site
convention
revolution by voting out tl
now in government Others
thought violence was the only
way to bnng aboMi change.
wuk^^^bc otha.
I.:. — T
of the Yipfiee 1976
might have been
called a "city on the hilF in
Ronald Reagan terms. Their.
brightly colored tents and tee-
pees rested on top\ of a knoll
next to what was both a me-
morial to World War I aad^j^
convenient vantage point over-
looiking Gerald Ford^s cam-
pau^ headquarters at -the
Cro#M Center. Acres of grassy
&tid%, along with disUnt police
barriers Itept. t hem isolated .
|h^^the' great expanse only.
SMied to emphaaiK the alien-^
of tlm small group .^_-_
Many disagreed as to what
they wanted to accomplish.
-Pm a rational activist. 1 ad-
vocate no laws at all.** said a
Yippee whose hair was painted
several different colors "The
only way to bnng change is to
use force to get the people in
power oul^ of power "
Others argued a Yippee vot-
mg^. block could change the
lyitem. Most admitted, how-
ever, that there was too much
apathy for any movement to
be successful.
"People here don't even
jwant to jp to the trouble, of
registering to vote. U'a too
much work. So how can we
iiave any power?^
Despite their snntl numt^ers,
the Yippees, with the aid of a
powerfiil sound system, made
their protest known to the
Republicans Each night they
bombarded Kemper .Arena
with verbal blasts on the PA
system from a protest area
provided by convention offi-
ciab None of them were ever
permi|ted inside and none tned
to storm the gate^ They
shared the area with Young
Republicans who were pro-
testing their protest Fnthusi-
astic young Christians tried to
push the words of the Bible to
all in the area
FroCcst
They also produced hun-
dreds of slogan bearing post-
ers, placing them through the
city. The protest they staged at
Ford's headquarters brought
the police and. more import-
antly, the press
L>espite their acuviiy,. there
were a minimum of problems
with the pQUcc^Ibc^^ltcc
here have been acting ration-
ally although the\ drive four to
a car "
Even the gey nghts protest-
ers, suyin^ with the Yippee
camp, had little trouble with
the law. ''The police even sto^
pcii traffic i^r ;Us . when wc-
marched >Ao the arena." said
one gay actiiists. ^^
h
aiKM
) _
...:!*h was the pathetic 60's and
now it's the' apathetic 70's The
oiovment has^ gone bust,** a
diaiUusioried Yippee observed.
Juat what was jm the
^^ iMiiy of cfeiOie living it ^
park M week? Some j|f the
"older ones there had com-
ni^tted most of their 4sves to
this dying movement.
::.^^fTlK movement has afways
been made up by individually I
think- it *s bot^ our greatest
strength and our preasaal
woakimC said a omui whose
gray l^air aaade him one of the
oldest there. "" ,
Like^ the Republicans, he
said, the party was having
identity ^rnhiawi "Half the
people who protest don*t know
what they aj:e protesting ahout.
We have a party but we don't
"have a platform.**
His cpntention that the Yip-
pees lafk unity was supported
by others there. Some wanted
(Continued from Pagf U
sionaire at Kemp^rr Arerva
;-Younj| R^jpublicaoa ire givirtg '
buttons to sell for S2 — * $1 for
"^the cause" and the other tor
*^^&m <»e» ves They- ' ^|*C .j?rotti-' -
bited,, iiowcver, from selling
buttons at the arena.
'«
__^ night. Withers,
wttfc^ several disafipaiMad Rei-
gan siipporters. were nearly
arretted lor shoutttif R^g||n
alofMt. under a loumain at 2
am after a thorough drowning,
ef' sorrows oyer-ahe defeat
He said he Lon&iders a TueS:
day afternc^oft raid ^n Ford
haadqoarfrri^ in Crown Cen-
ter, the^'high light of his vrsit
"There wibre 1,500 Reagan sup-
porters atftdj we routed (tne
Ford people) in Crown Cen-
ter. - ^
The 7 uesday afternoon in-
cident reulted in the arrival o(
a schooT hiu load (H pi)lice
who later tried to control the
cfiowd Qf ReagSJ!.^ supporters
(age 19 to over 80 years old) in
thnr goodnatur^d attack' j^
."Fcnrd headquarters
His plans tor the near fu-
ture? A bus ride to Lake
Tahoe and a Ije^w days, ot^much
needed recuperation
Proiessor Max S. Dunn,
I.^^TT^i'iHcrnationaJly knownl
for his fMearch 0|t. amino!
I acids and proteiia diet
Tuesday in his Bel- Air home]
I following a long illrieK^sA
{mejOQonal service for the
UCLA Emeritus Professor
lof Biochemistry will be held
at 10:30 am. Thursday,
September 2 in the Cali-
fornui BiOan of the t^CLA
Faculty Center
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1
Dillon's Disco . .-
H-:...
...
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i
3
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2
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summer bruin
poinf
Gary Frrtiaiiii. a UCLA entertainment and the com
tludenc who tpokc for OECA, munit> service atpccu of Wcii
V •
wood
**lf parking ruie$ are to mean
anything anywhere, they must
mean tomething in Wettwood
DB Editorial
TIm
•f Shidant
At on
SIC
« •! bM^ at 1 30 offi. TK#y dff«a«d Mifai— tii !•
I
^4Ulibfl^Hoffi. t^m^vol ^ Off! •WcfMl
iiatirwiirod in o f#w hiHip •!
, 9atH#nfif .
'»-•>■*
tetters 4o
Humanity "
said Che 29t teat concert hall
pliit a discQthquc, game roocn
and fWlMlMat, could not pda-
fibly create lest coAfnttion
than itt present owner, the Village,- he said
Wqawood Carpet CompMiy. *Westwood must not he-
Fnatfnian noted the carpet come the entertainment center.
ooM^Miy » not even open in the traffic congestion center
the evemof. t» even a tingk and the parkiiig shortafe cen-
cuftoroer at Qillon'i would tcr of Lot Angelet/' Yaro-
iMMte ooflfBMNHi. tlavtky ttretacd. Kenner was
City CouncUoMin Zev Yaro- vuably uptet because some
siavily, in wteie district Dil- repcesenutlvet of ho— owneri
••^litf«r on6 Mcqotn tmrnadiot^ly, of Which %m%m sh« wos
< pi!tt»n««d with o list •! Q\im^ "
J ' Tha ^C mambart inveivW in
mz
(ContiiMMd from Pagt II
Ziptcr, du^ector of UCLA
Metro Lobby, accompanied
M^Le Galizio aad Craig
Ehrbch of McCormack*t office
to the heariaif.
Zipter said. **Meg McCar-
Back and her staff cavefully
imdied DiUon*t and decided to
tuMort it.**
He argued "This is a type of
facility that is especially de-
sired by the ttudents;*^ and
•iiti, *Tlie grantiiif of the
parking vahaiioe wil reduot,
rather thaii increase, traffic
conjestion in Westwood*
UCLA's • Office of Environ-
mental and ConsuoMT Affairs
(OECA), which
loa*s, disagreed wkh Zipter.
Charges
|C3MipHHilNaBFaitl) "'^ about evenly oytf wticthei or din discutted nMril itttjef
nppoutt wiipaievcr iie or skc not^ to make the actual hKcar- j The representative of the
r.^ AA,^ * 1 : Brentwood 'Hpmcowncrt As-
sociation discussed the increase
wanted to hear he? tide before of violent crime in Brent wocmI,
a public trial baginS;
National Student AHocia-
acknow- tion representative Brian- Eit-
and MOTORCYCLE
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All the more reason to contact us for discounts up
to 35 to most students - another good reason
tor being m college
See or calf us tn Westwood
477-2548
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1100 Glendon Ave Suite 1447 (Monty s Build-
ing) LA 90024
i
I
&oo*s would be built, also ar-
t tiM project.
Yaroalavsky , said he had
nothing against a discotheque^
groupt, which opposed Dil-
lon*!, ttretted the negative
moral effectt of a discotheque
Although Fred Cowan, presr
but added it is essential to idem of the West Side Com-
maimain a balance betwmi the munity Planning organization
and leader of the i.anti-Dillon*s
p^— w.^^*^l.^^.j forces, said tfic issue of mor-
SV6£I160. • • •^'^y "^^^^ "^ *>^ discussed,
ly of those who to]
iees fit. After I kaaanse presi- ings secret, a council member
dent, I had to weigli pubhc said. He added **a lot ol people
food l^aet private gain, and
I apointed the roost qualified
applicants
McCoi mack
ledged that she decided to berg, who is spearheading the
mine
-«:-.M..
~ In the fhurvfi^ AufM Ifth.
^t^Tif i^ o^ m^ Summtr Brum,
-« story '# js .piiblf§jhed) fbout iHe
^l^ impe#<:hrnent of. X^nnUtr-
ale Student Association
t Meg McCorm^,
eommeni* of a^Jhld^ penotial
tOKUFH <*er^ reporSsd by-ituift
WOlpert snd^ job Wahh.
fatpa «nadi^ by cwtain
of the SLC Thme cmwctwi rf^
ferred to such ^n dbfbtr^a matter
as her i\l^^ memaHwaibiim
^fhapi M»e--ttfK*ergradhiale sru-
wms ol flii^ eampos, wlio sr^
i;er»eraHv more Uir^'imd 'mature
thjn students «i»ho represent
in !M.C. XlkrT deade f he
, then— kai mra
Also, tlie fltnidefif
tution ffs ^er> ^^^gutt and leaves
the^iafefliA iacJMipeacHfniNM to
0^ t*ie SiC _^
Welfare
with, my summer
vacation was gp on w^eltare. oft-
irv to You can^t get ^ i4 you're ^
not a-midew, and it's not mtm
«|»ks lo^get processed
county agency, they don't pay
you a single dime. Usually it
consists of hdrd-h^ work., dig-
ging ditches »nd repairing the
Toad; the people who work
along side you get ^ive dottars
♦iur because, they belong to
4^ tapar ate caate. No-one pre-
that T(ou work need! to be
" Vii\,wktilitlmmf ■■-,
-r
\l5»-i-.-
^ \ such >ad ..thi" tnwrxdt u re
^ th^ I <^, not wiilr Sfg
.them.. it^fT^enoy^to^'Vead the
^'9^^ P^fi^ arride'^ot .the Au^ms
■J?ih, tissue : tQJiu♦^ understaiid
*^M L*?^ rejtaing tor T]^
comments matde by MMihan lljf
SIC were •«npr^p^'SdS^e?i.
<h« Jruin to Ihelevel oif tile
Nqtion^l inquirer in prinling^
them
What IS going to happen is a
matter which t% non yet dear^
but It should be hope<f that art^
decision on the rmn^ will not
be made until aher the begirv
ning o^ the faH quarter, whan
^...
Student Association Freiidienjt
and capable of Hmnisi tnmHT
sikoitid not detract from the
laifiiaiMl|r which she deserves to*
be-^eated with
won't e«en-iet yau^iply if ^ou
morc^lhan Ihre doAaii in
Iwtjientally tttey en^ <
you to e^dlS^ starve on the
Of jget '# job du^mg the
•ni^nral. etrher wav
to be bothered,
for welfare -
to spend M least
te di^ waTrrng
. "f>lus five to ten
to the. Pico Of-
te^ hot reqairlfg j whole ^fof
a* hassles. One of their re^
__., .„. I*., that .yo«r muyt
^^l^W-- -^^t- "twn , ipos .every •-week ■
and^fhia #inn wrmen proof of
^•"••1 49me so Voor r^m can-
nai be more than S70,00
a month fthey- don't want you io
the Waldorf Astoriai And you
have to fom the "work profea
The work ppagact cothisis of
futi>time 4Uve tabor for some
'ddr^e^ raffier it is necessary "foT
your moral fiber (Welf are. ..bcr
"ttw- people who don'i'
wbrk soon turn -into dcunks).
Apphrants are threatened with
the work pro|ect at their iftt.
interview in the hope that they
n^pht — rtcomidar while there's
still time:^ Mieve that the'leal
purpose of the work project is
tp protect the sanity of such
fndu«.i4uafsTlpt Ronald Reagan
Mnd Man Raffi?rty. For them, life
Would lose all meaning if wel-
fare people didn't have to work
This profect is undoubtedly
uncQn;»u(ut40nal, for if ~ impjiki
labor enforced by threat o^ the
police ppwer does not eonstlture
slavery. I don't know what does.
Further, the right-wing politici-
ans intend to ^iipMnd these pro-
tcax i^d use them as a tool to
break siirikes. "giving ' free
slaves to favored business pigs,
much as Hitler use to favor
Krupp or 5femer>s. It should be
emphasized that these projects
haye nothing to do. with makir^g'
pe^iple pro<iuctive; they forbid
you to take a county |ob on the
MWW' t>asis ai the paid «^m- .-.>.:
ployees, and the time you spend"-*^!^
at work can ^orce^d^ij togive.up^r^
a part-time job and prevent you
"fiofh looking. In ihortr-one be- '
coihes ' '.*b6o«ted"
prevent you from looking. Tn -
short, one beconr>es ''hpoked."
My job is relatively easy;— filing^ "^
work at the welfare office itw>lf
They kanp imianie fNas, often
If
appoint Biiaa Eisberg. and drive against McCormack, said
David Bender to BOC before ^m three ytM^tl cannot think
interviewing aN the applicants, nf a fovernnsent in woftc
bttt snid **! ran on the issue of "Oiape llMn McCormack*s. Mo*
itttdenc autonomy, Md two of CoiPmack lost the fight agaiiist
the pcopk that tnom ai^ grM ng iee i
~9hi1 ntoiit autonomy are Eis-
#erg and Bander ** ^\
McCormack denied tlwit ifce even lost the
kept any file on -anyone, and
snid ifiie felt that ike was re- Connack^ kag^n^ iMndidly
she b|s made
no appointments to the reg fee
committee or to BOC, and she
implying there was a corre-
latiotr between entenainment
complexes and crime.
Mafson reminded the tpeak-
ers ^that tuch tttues, even if
accurate — were outside the
scope of the Bonad oi Zoning
Appeals.
Kenner noted •''All of the
parade] of horrihlji. that the
owners point out wiB^ OOGHT
even if we arfe not allowed io
,f
■>**■
•r>e
i
m\ to six:, but would be
more than enot^ to fill a. steel
de$k drawer o^r-asinfle individual.
Nearly all the KwHare workers are
filf^iiirm reeordkieping, and.!^
tfeel qjMite sure tfiat the county
^>ends more money keepirig tabs
on the poor than it^oesto main-
tain them. As I go to woHrin my
closet-like filing room, I have the. ,
strange Kafkaesque sensation oi
.some9ne waiting for ihe trial,
constantly hassling bureaucracy
until the njoment comes when he
is hnally absosrbed by it. caught
up completely m the twilight lone
of filing c^|>ir>iff|ft.
The rent rs over two nHKitht
overdue. itr\d the check still hasn^
'build'' tilt ciiiesrt portion ^
that ''Mc- Dillon*t.
—^.^^' . "^« have the b^jding per-
paralyzed iftvdenlgovemmentr~lRt, and there are already
**>; *«^ if^ ^^<« «^ ^«««^ I inrtdher and only her r^ mloJ^m iii lk# 4>alMing,'' *ent
r :— — -^^ ner said. He added "^Dni«rs
Will 6pen ^ Of about Maaai ,
rdlesjLpi the Board'i
DiHi'tniake
V *j.*.^»*»»»»wt
. othefwiaKr^-si^
Student Legttlkthle jtouncil^ — [ McCormAck responded by
<SLC) is moving toward the nyif Tm the one that's try-
impeachment igf McComifCk ing to speed u^ this i rnfaii go
in^secrel, executive sessions. UmC /we^ can get back^to the
.SLC. .ptembais are. splits bMsuMJaaJfli govei^fH^ '^
♦ •*?
f^"'\
Advertising Center's
^deternoiiruitioa|N«^ui 3ai<j he was
^Unsure as to ^(jutnwould be on
the, fourth floor.
'u*»-"
< ^
tXtU'
■r- '■- 'i; '
tiyP9S&.i5: to give you a conF>pTehens(\Aei=
:ing understanding^ of -o^yer^^^ V
^ "fyerf-»^tt^\ ospert of it >^ . \
^.Account Maro^ment •Creative, CofKCj^ ^
• FIxDto IntrodMCtion
*^ Agcftxy TVPfoducfiorj
^Public Refotions
♦Creative Execution
• Copywriting Workshop
• Print Production
f7-V
^HO^^''^''
vMeek
•Graphic design
•^lllL?stration Workshc^
• 'Advanced Coqo^pt^
• Photo Workshop'
• Package Design
Media Workshop
/v>>
.1 *her rt«. b*«.o- CJLimm^m >^ JSI ^LJL cJ«^„. tjre.k «,.k« '^ving- free overdue. *nd .h. check stjfl h*sn* J ^ W
m quMte.. mtm^ ' — • - ^^' h^iUHmT^LrSl 2!^ »'aves to (*vored business p.g», come. - I lA ' M — ^ ^^
•■ ■ - *"'•-""* *'*^ ««'•«'»«»•. -""Cb « H.„e, use to favor D«M O'Hmm. I 11 V^^Tu^*^ §0^£^9 m9
Republieans remain dieepiy split arid scarred I fi t oW^l^'^ 7t- t^ "
-^-^- byGeoffOulnn. I HI «oP ST^W/^T^T ^^ p.-^ TM ^^"^
Ou,oncovere<y,he were pw«, .i„, d,^ ,or the Ev«. i« I, can. the CO* . .n . ;l l.. I 11*1 »' *-.<TA00 CWf^^ |||tft#«« "^^
<
Tia.
(idnor's Note Quinn covered rhe
^i9^td>iKan Convention m K^ns^
for the Sumn^er Brum.) . ,
' t>«ptte 4 can ♦or umty
sounded over, and over jgam at
Thursday night's Nrrap-up imiow
of the Republican " iiionil Con-
ventKK) the party, remains
deeply sp4i»
OPINION
Gerald Fork's
speech,, pociefs oH
seats, f^otably thote oi
the CjMoffiM dHegation.
grim re^iodets ihe Reagjn
the GOf
Even
W
s vote, some
w'ere pudlning doom lor the
-new GOf ticket. A lew went so
far as to prophesize their party's
jdemi2e.
Ke^igan's loM «v» a bitter Mow
to his supponers Manv felt that
the convoHten had been rigged
against him from the start. The
President s control OMer tiiatii
ot the Republican National
Committee, they sjid. allowed
Ford to garryer almost twice as
many seats for his guests as
^^igiw. In any event the part.
program pamphlet distrihuled
•roitr Tuesday night comiMcd
only one pKture of RoniW tea-
|*n — «l le«t. one less than of
the Prcsidem's dag, liberty
A caucus 01 diifpymled Rea-
gan fupportert — le be held
soon in Chicago — will tell
that wing oi the party
oe-
by Geoff Quinn
even if if can, the GQP is m
♦or a rough time.
That Ford had to fight as hard
as he did to assure his rK>mina-
iion IS iust one indKation of the
pany's weakening position.
Many with the Re^an wm^
however, discounted the noHon
that Reagin't challenge would
hurt the a party m November
Asked «illg*«r fkm MiiMuri
delegates' vote for R4igwi eartr^
er this year alter Governor
Christopher S tond aryd other
state Republican leaders h^
supported Ford was a sign of
trouble ahead. Paula Hawkins a
powerful national committee
woman hcmy Florida, said she
did not thtfik.^ was so. "Ford
had no bate in Missouri/' she
said. "We have nt^^f been ma-
chine oraemgd or power
Like many Reagan supporters
ihe disagreed with those who
daim Reagan's challenge hurt
the party, "The Reagan-Ford
controversy was good. It in-
creased interest " She also ap-
plauded a trend of individualism
in the party. Independence
•nvigorates the party at the grass
rcxus." she said.
San Oicgo major Pete Wilson,
a dark horse candidate for the
vice presidency until Thursday
morning, challenged allegations
that the Republican Party will
represent interests that are too
narrow lor moat voters in Nov-
€mkm. "The great irony of this
year.* he said. "Is that both Ford
^^ ^^^'^ identify wkh the
■Mod ol ihe maforiiy of voters
who are tired of paying too
w^uch for iw> litfie in return "
Asked if the partf cpuld sur-
Vive a rejection of Ford m Nov
ember in addition to a Demo-
cratic controled congress he said
he thought it would: "Yes. R
would survive because this
country is basod on a -two party
system " Wilson explained that
most voters are interested in
srnall government. He pointed
to England's pull away from
socialism, a trend he tHgpHied
the Democrats are nyoving to-
wards. This he said, is his proof
^at ^ig government doesn't
work.
Vermont, however. party
chairman Walter I. Kennedy,
represented anodier view held
in the party. Quoted by the
ICansa^i Oly Timei he said. "This
clec^ wtif felt iivhtthir ive've
MeMfiLied the storm of Water-
t*t« I see the pnnlhility of
'hf demise of the party."
^i^. *^-
\'\
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THE FORTUNE
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RETURN OF A MAN
-- CAUB) HORSE (PG)
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THE SHOOTIST (PG)
0^ •! 13:30. 3:30. 4 30. 4:30, 4:30,
10:30
Nvw Pr«n<K Ftlm Hsftvol - 1074
I r>c P^IU ^^^ ClOCKMAKER OF ST PAUL
W> rWIZ •"»••♦€• A i>>r#cfd k^ 0«rtrand T«v«riiS6f
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Af Tiff OAffir
Stiiiil6 W^d JMm ff*n«ir t **U Cll#«fWl6
^b.— ^
I'
Gnberbai nrncnt
By AiImb Parfrey
The Shodiisi opens the way
director Don Siegels film
career began with a bril-
liant monufe. Nowadays. Sic-
gcl handicrafts superb films.
4rid like a Florentine master,
he inscribes olJ Im artworks
with the prefacing credit, **A
Siegcl Film."
TTir Shooiist combines Sie-
fcfs celebrated facility as a
Uut action director with his
kss exploited skill as a per-
ceptive actort^ director:
Siegel'sThe Shootist': Straight from the hip
1 he opening montage chron
ologically dcKuments * JR.
Books* (John Wayne) infamous
gtinslinging career Siegei dr-
verly uses clips from Wayne's
old Westerat. equating the life
and times of his mythical lead,
JB Bool^s, with the lifework
of the equally fantastical
Hollywood Ugend.; John
Wayne , ,,
The Shoot isii% Siegers most
pastoral feature since his ac-
claimed X^e Segut/ed, The
Py4t*M%iMtal camera anc^jicai-
ting ifSSr characterized hil
Otrty Harry and The Black
WindmUt are not iir evidence
^ere. Cinemat^^^pher . Br licr
Surtees Dmy Harry. Lemm.
bathes The Shootist in flit
Hskns Cftns^m^Ande
R/Mmm Rico
We all know the story of the
IJgJy Duckling — the cruel
Biockery he cifcomtered, the
hardships he . tinderweru ^wben
he ran awiy, his amazing
, transformation mto a magm-
ficent swan. Some of us may
also be familiar with the old
rofiianticized version of the
author's life — the consum
attacks Hans Chnstian Ander-
son suffered for his "preten-
tious" ambitiou to become a
Digter (poet artist), and the
respecr and love he eventually
won throughout the world,'
from the poorest child to the
highest nobility.
Indeed, Anderswi*! life has
become a kind of fairy-tale,
one based on fact but which
igndres much of the complex-
ity of the real man — the
passions, the eccentricities, the
dreams, the ordinary everyday
occurrences that made Ander-
son not a myth but a real
human being
Elias Briiiidorfrs biography
Hans Chnstian Anderson
(Scnbner's, 376 pojet, SIOM)
presents a realistic and detailed
picture of the man Tbt major
p^ion of the book is an ex-
tensive chronolo'fical account
of Andersons life; beneath an
aloMat formulaic imoCXu story
''es a rnagioMiic of facn.
Born in Odense in 1805, -
Aa^onoa 9*^^^ up withtfiPMm
from «]ier children His time
was spent reading, daydreom-
mg. or playing with tlK 4olli
and toy timier naie for him
by his father, a ^^r shoe-
Maker His father alao rfod to
ftTm a great deal. From earliest
childhood. Hans was exposed
to such a variet\ of works as
The Arahim Nimk^ Hol^gtft
N^ hen be
autumnal hues, eschewing
faudy Hollywoodish lighting
and caaicrawork
T he aat^ is the tiirni^of-clie
century West, and as gun-
nfhers hnraiM extinct. Books
rides to tfce end of his trail;
The Carson C ity Sawbones
(James Stewart) finds a maltg-
nant cancer m Books' body
Six weeks to live Vfuch to
everybody's chagrin, the shoot-
ist decides to move into Mffi.
I<^>gcts <La*ifen Bacaif^^Nwg^
M^ house to^^ie ^Word travels
■•■J* and greedy townfolk
Oower like vdliures over the
dying man for a piece of his
pie.
^ Books figuret W w:on*t have
much bargaining^ power ofl^gp
he's dead, so he haggles his
korac away to the livery man
(Scatman Crothers) and bis
body to the opportunistic
undertaker (John Carradiae)
^hase jpptto is, * *The early
worm gets the bird.:'i~
Screenwriters Scott Hakf
Miles Hood Swart hout s
m pcppcrtfig a j»otcntially tta-
tk scenario with continually
mtnguing^^ialoguc aad.action
"^^ ntrieia^Tnan a PrdmitTican
fCCdnfpftihment for
Hale and Swanhout Ja make
John Wayne seem dii
t'd. ^mhtle and sensitive without
hetat naudlm
Aad Wayne livot ap to the
assignment The Shootist is
quite the J^ (and most ap-
propriate) dMmder Wayne lias
ever played
Unfortunately, the cast is
not uniformally good "^VouVe
a fine color when you're on the
Icrapr remarks Wavne to Ra»
•liot BdcaA is too colorlessly
prim and far too old for sense
and satisfaction Carradme
mugs embarrafStllKlv through
out his scene, and Harry Mor
gan is too broad to be believed
as Marshal Ihibida —
These surface blemishes ar^
more than overwhelmed, how-
ever by Richard Bmsos short,
but Wildly eccentric Sweeney,
Sheree North's viperish Se-
repu, Richard Lenz\ unctuous
Dobkiris, Crothers' infectious
Moaca^ Stewart's solidly pro;:
u>fesssonil Doctor .and, oiF
The Shoot isi may or may
not be Florentine mastery; but
it ^aiams..Don StegeJ> re- '
•i^^iied ^uiiL affect ing|Mci|i^t
or a 4ira^ man's ~
was IMarfatlkr died, lea vinf^
him to the' care of his itiother.
a superstitious and overly-
protective but loving woman
who was-tlvrrroughly fmaaiiTd
her son would one 4ay. be -a-
aticoHft
At. the ae of 14 Anderson set
out from Odense to make his
fortune, convinced tiMit the
road to happiness lay throQgh
'•♦»«•• .'
form" a musical number from *
the Royal Theatre's ftallcts or
read Yr£)m the rather poor
dramatic, works he' hifrisclfliid
"^ "tliafiin to write But A;idcrv«>n's
obvious determination and;
willingness to receive help and
advice brought him lo the '
attentipii of aevefal prommctrt
citizens of Copenhagen. aiUDng ^
them the {businessman Jonas
Iranian Njgk^
kki the BUe
the renowned Royal Theatre in
Copenhagen However, break-
ir\g mto the theater ngi
»•• 4o simple as he had
thought; alone and with no
money or letters of introduc-
*"**'*i Aaaafiofi had to hard-sett
^J*!*^ »«o any contacts. His
nawwte made him the buffoon
♦or many a dinner part\. for at
rhr Iritt •wsnuPBgiiMMM fir
Colfin, who took the bay -nr
almost aa a too
A conflict which plagu
Anderson throughout his
was his hatred of the tvg
unfair clait structure in '
neaniark of hh da>. on
one liaod. and his deep-r(H>
desire to cast alf his
aa 1l» other
d
fc
*1C
hum'
»*^uld cnthusiasiicaJU
i^Tiiraiion
he
attainc V'
koughi
renowned 4>eople the wm\f'
over, Anderson never q off r got
aver the feeling, that he Was an
outsider looking iii His letters
an diaries indicate that this
war partitularly painful for
him in ih« cai^ of the higher
class ' Collin family, for
ah hough tliey did indeed love
him like a son, they never
looked upon his literary acti-
vities as anything serioua.
The same type of insecurktes
•lood in the way of Andrson s
relationships with members of
the opposite sex He thought
himself to be in love sdrveral
times (among the ladies were
Jenny Lind the famous
"Swedish Nightingak^ and
Lottiae Collin, daughter of the
family), but the advances he
made apparently never con-
sisted of more than extremely
passionate love letters and
romantic poeons, many of
which were never sent. As far
04 is known Anderson never
consummated a relationship
with a woman; he always con-
sidered himself awkward and
iwwaatad ^m this mapact.
AmUes hk woaderful fairy
tales, Anderson also wi^le a
VBfiaiy of novels, travel books,
plays and memoirs. Brea-
dorffs book rartlaaii a fine
of the m^ior traaa-
of Anderson*s different
as well as a section
aelected fairy ules in
il
But the most fascinating
chapter of the book is called
"What was he like''" whi^ch
fiwci H complete portrait of
Anderson^s personality, froai
his rehgious philaio»ihii,i <to his
fear of being buried alive. An>
r
ri. ^ ^^*^^^P^^^'^^ even yeti are safe Jwm t^
Shadow of the Hsmk '-' ' * _t '■ ...'^-'-^'s' * r=:
^ A rntSTlidged attempt at an Indian vcfaton of the Exorcist
the film succGBIajn exploiting American Indians, women
and humanity in fetleral Alrhqujh the atrocity is hyster-^
icallv funny, it is not intentional Georfe McC awan's
direction and Npririan Vane's and Herbert Wright's*'
screenwritmg could br faUl^ if taken senously.
Chief Dan George as Old Man Hawk suffers through a
ridiculous role as a stone-faced- shamaif?" Jan- Michael
Vincfnt as Mike possesses an exquisite, tailored sweater
that remains intact throughout a seri^a of incredible
advenuires. Obscenely clean-cut and All-Amcncan, Vincent
IS a cardboard fool. -
Outdoing Vincent in the art of one-dimensionality
Marilyn Hassett (Maureen) plays a '•lady of the preis.*
Vincent is the ultimate male chauvinist; Hassett is the
uhimaie justification for male clmuvinism
Manns Westwood I
THC TiNANT (t)
Monns Westwood II
OOFOt IT (PG)
11:44, 1:40, 4:45. 4:25. 4 M. 10:10
Monns Westwood 111
AUCC IN WONtJEtlANO
- .l..!iy> » ». ^00, 5 30. 7 00, 4 30. 10 00, 11:00
14
i*fmmmmm
Thmattm
Mbnico I
1332 2nd Str««t
Sonto Momco
VmcMtt, OiM 9mm Oa««9 In
SHADOW Of THi HAWK
PHi#
OtlVi-IH
latioi
iu(
< r IS (thankfully*) Uibeled
K iintinaad «ii P«fr 40>
I
Phony dmlog and stilted iT— atiiii atoand Viacent
^^i^JT ^'^^ ■■««" ^hen he bopigjll) exclaims. "Holy
shit. After the duo is aearly nin over, by an evil-forces-
dnven car. HaaMt limilfci perceptjvelv, "Someone's trying
lo kill us " *
By that time, you won't care if they are killed.
Voodoo, sorograHat, floating white-iMod with Mpari-
tions and a nouhle aamint of fog and mist help to
pofliaUy detract from the idiocy of tiK bmvic.
^^use they have no vapid lines to deliver, the animals
*^ u ^ ^.*^^^ mOky. Tbe snake slithers very
nicely. A bear d^plays beautiful brown eyes And the hawk
can fly
At laaat wc caa sya^wbiic with the law prn
the hawk's " "
low
AAonico II
451
in 9mmm'ln •!» Mt latf
ST IViS
OATOt
^^^^
■»itf:ut
Music Hctll
9m TO FACT
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it's SIM dM iMtf
Nationot
,<-,, ...^ «T'$ JAUC AiOUT MM (90)
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„.w.,tf H««'l»4 l»»tMf
1 1 1 ^V i^T WNMMa'H ia#w '. riHaMPMviwdi
Theatre gl'L^STJ^ *^m°f
iii
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479 32Af
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M«ii/ao-r
piMaMdMi
We4f/I —
ORIENTAL
7429 Sufisat BM.
876^0212 >.
SAKOt WHO PKL FtOM
Gt ACE WITH THE SEA
SWASHBUCKLER
Pantages
of
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BURNT OPPiRINGS (PG)
Omkky m% 12:30. 3:00. 5 30. 4:00. 10:
thtt
Picwood
Pko nm^ WMiwood
MIDWAY (PQ)
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13:90
Plaza
4770097
PUTUtf WOR»
2:15.4:15/4:14, 4:1S. 10:15
M A4ai
In
Regen
ent
■URNT
^^^* 'S fls witty MS a is wisa. and as i
^w fw le wwwny
rsnsTKSC-*" i^'l mill I
Royal
477 5441
a vanv ay una
f ■ — '
1
i
I
UA Cinema
Center I
"'■■r nil
474-4154
SHADOW OF THE HAWK
1:4$. S.-aftrt:3t
DtlVE-IN
a:2S, *:4S. 10:10
UA Cinema
Center II
W«4lw<K#) A««
I
a
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THESHOOTIST
1:00. 2:SOr4:40l «:M, 0:20, 10:10
474-4165
UA cinema
Center III
474-34t3
SAILOR WHO FEU FROM
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ENTER IV -
W«llwort*) Av«
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2:IS. 4:1S,0:IS,i:1S, 10:1S
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VVeStWOOCl 'rt-M ft:W 1:J0, 4:41, 7:10, 0:37
10887 Lmdbroofc mmd mi^mU^
Westwood • •• . -.^ r*--
477 0575 Sim-TKMf» 1:30, 3:43,)4:0Q. 4:24^ 10:51
VAGABOND
2509 W.|«h,r« ^
^fi — -'-rr- — ^ — r*r- —
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^m HW m«n wWo ivMiri*. **Ktef JCfiitf ^
MIGHTY JOE YOUNG ,( 1 94f^
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Vitloge
961 BrOKton
WMtwcwd 478 0576
THE OMEN (t)
._.__ ■""" ■ I '
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:90rf?40, OrOi^, t.-OS, 10: U
Fri. A Sat. nils Sliww
Hi ■•■■
^-■i.-
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In 9m WmIwco4 C««t«vr
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fOa THOSE WHO APPRECIATE QUALITY
1500 WfSTWOOO ilVO ^ 4 ilOCKS SOuTtt Of WliSMme
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Th« int«rn«tionai Restaurant i-amiiiaia ff»ff LwncHM flSO
lnt«rnattona< Student C«ntvr InKnftiwiml Son^wicH— $125
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Tims A<«« 31.W»d Soft I
KENTUCKY FRIED
THEATRE
th« Wat of K^'a
l«at S
•EATING A DEAD HORSE
^ 4 Wt • 00 A 10 00
CLUB GUIDE CONTINUED
'Burnt Offerings'
Going up in smoke
M Heard That'
■-si
^•.-.v,^
,*—•.•**♦ *^
By iolM JB->WilMM
Karen BUck. Oliver Reed,
■ctte Davif. burgess Meredith
and Eileen Heckhart represent
several generations of the finest
acting talent available, yet
under the direction of jV
movie-nuiker Dan Curtis their
film Mt^ns Offtnngs is a medi-
ocre 4ito^pointment
It is bosed on a ploddingly
written and lemi-plaferous
novel by Robert MarMco,
which borrowed mor^ than a
little from Shirley Jackson*s
Hauniing of Hill House Both
deal with mysterious old man-
sions wte#fc vibrations and
••spirits" overwhelm and even-
tually possess their inhabiunts
The main difference is that
iacksons novel, jukT "the
Rob^ Wise film^mHte from
It, make Surni Offerings look
meek and silly by comparison.
This movie opens with a
family answering a newspaper
ad palced to rent out an enor-
mous old house for the sum-
mer^ From the ^ginning, we
reaJly don't kmm who thcic.
people arc, what they warn
get away from for the summer,
or why we should eyen be
interested in them at aJir"
Karen BUck has mAjM
looked or acted less appeafihg
than she is^^iiere in the role of
the wife of a piofessoi. Her
character is a gross materialist
who sk>wty comes to care more
?bf the precious bbjeas in the
fnMnsion than for her husband
and son Black |>ortrays' the
woman's grad^ial pnmniiiiii by
rhr spirit >f the ^ousc^
craning her neck, popping her
ey« aiid loviag^ly fomtting the
4*iitaiCts around Jicr. It 4s not a
role with which any actress
could have bcdn very ^Ye'ativc,
.but^^onieone with Bteck'^s^ca-
pabiltties sllould^have done
more. i* "''^''\
As f he '^professor . hushan<j,
Otrver , Reed J^tiL iiuie ttifmt
than 'brood a iot. gnash his,
tecfh and fall constantly in and
aixt~of a thick British aoOT^Iit.
In supporting ro|n? 'Bvraess
Meredith and Eileen Heckort
play the proprietors of the
house as a couple of addled
dingbats, turning in perfor-
mances far beneath their u-
lents
Only slatternly oldBette
Davis stands out as the spMcy
film cliches, like thinp going
bump in the night and night-
maiw oheut hearMa» otewii
in tkirnt Offenngg, cHen pro-
ducing more snickers than shi-
vers. And the plot development
is such thai phuoof nothu^ ^
An unsound proci
J
'."iU-itm*"^
"•".^••Tl
By Cathy
/ Heard That, at the
Whiskey Theatre, is a deafen-
m% flMMical comedy about the
transition of three ghetto lis-
ters into a top singing groii|i.
The trouble is, you wish you
heard it a httle less.
Darlene (Jessica Smith),
Loitic (Denita James) and
Hannah (Patriaa Hodges) are
the singing Whaley sisters, a
•iloomw, a hooker and a coo-
-oniiC** respectively. They hve in
a never-never land of a ghetto
where the rich, white JU«dlord
(Ted Mann) not only collects
the rtrnt ppfiaaally. he also
hang!» around a U>t. chatting
with pimps and assorted street
types.
Smcc thr Whatey nevCT '^y"
the rent, Charlie decides to get
his money back by making
them into surs. It is ne^er
apparent, much less helievahlc
how; he does this, but by the
end of . the play the singing
sifters are abruptly covered in
satin, and spangles, implausibly
liipBCiilal IT iast
Lonny Stevens* direction is_
pocked ^th such corny
as Grandmas getting^
down, or men leaning over
backwards when domineering
women talk ie^^em. Each of
the Whaley sisters is aligned a
stupid little gesture Hodges'
" '' cturcher '^ her
■^i.g.»>^i^„ .
•n**'
•lidL^jteed: sn
l^aunt who i
the family
,ijoiD.f-^termined buoyancy te
"^ilooth bed is one ^ the few
ieally disturbing ^cicmcnts tn
the film ^j
Since he coHohprated on the
screenplay with William F
■wr _ --^-^Jt*-^-
zf
WT^i^ytt
|*^a
vacatiort«(% with resolved orrexplained *|r the
Her descension end. |i(or only do we still not
k»ow who thcierharactCTs are,
»or whx^thes^ thiogs hap-
J>encd, buT w«»arcn*t even clued
in as to ^ivfiat did happen.
Burnt Offerings proves that
a ^ood east doesn't always
w , - .. . " ™**^^ • B«^ movie' It is fm^-
Nolan as well as directing, v^tmii|g..«|^iMll is disapp^^^^^^
Curtis deserves the ma)or to set se much ulem wasted
blame for the film s lack of on such a murky, irrelevant
coherence or chills Horror and commonpUcc film
4'^^Xtf^^^yTifff^i.*-
ACT OF DUTY
Chekhov's
*»i>r»l
M to, St«^«nts $2.50
•■MB MBMear Ptafyfioyoo
1111 Pouffh -
For
.pjtr'jtt mmtM
1976
The Year We Gained
Our Independence
It's been almost two years since wc came to the
villafc as ^Two Guys From Itdfy, " But, all along,
owner Ron Anthony Nardizzi went far beyond
the standards of a franchiscd resuurant . . : and,
everyday the customers told us so. ^
Betides the traditional pizzas, pastas and veal
dishes, Mr. Nardizzi citated his own special
dishes and named them after his own bambinos
Zucchini ala Gina, Chicken Noel, and Veal
Christiaau which all soon became very popular.
And then finally the biggest luncheon sensation
of them all, IL BAMBINO —
So with all these reaoou, it became quite
obvious that we should change our name to
Anderson
(Continued from Page 9)
as such, and the wiMie chapter,
like the ttan of the book, is
extremely weM-documented
with extracts from Anderson's
own and his fnend*s matenais.
Britidorfr has wnnen a fine
^>Otra|*y. Hmns Chnstimn
Anderson provides as complete
a scmroe of information as one
would desire on the ooce-ugly
duckling who ^rramn the
ro Mp fou prepare tor
LM-?-. — . Course b^m» Sept. 4
QM±. — Coursjl bcgim Sept T)
C.M.A.T. - Course hifim Sept. IS
20 hrs revieW arid practice testing
ako
Writ»n| SkilK - Speed Reading
— - Career Guidance
Tlie CiMmtt CefHer
3017 Sanu Monica Blvd
Santa Monica
829-4429
fyrherelSa ^
fLAfajTiai/u^
ItalfaM Riiiinnte
J/
A^.
477-2^1
Validated Parking
Westwood Center
Las Terrazas
The Las Terrazas Com-
munity Action Center will
have a fund-raisiv coaovt
this Sunday at I JO pm ia
the foothafl tudium at Cal
Slate LA Mane by El Chi-
cano, WilUe Bobo, Ralfi
Pagan aad Taena wiU he
featured Tickets are $4.50
(S5 at the gnie) and can be
bought at an Ticketroa OMt-
lets. Proceeds go to tlic
building of a community
in
MCAT
•^liiM o
•<WpilMWH •
OAT
UAT
iMHIelfMtt \
• •
ORE
• 0
AT6SB
Caurm IM »> •
ODTT
rapt iKiMwa lir ¥
IMT
iNMNtJIlilVMt #■
HIX
■wteruli «
Cwv^l^i
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NinriMEOBOS:
SAT-MT :
(21}f 477- Jilt %
COUCATKMAl CCNTfW
Smith** Darlene makes mottths
and James* Lottie tries
to cover her thighs with her
mini-slurt when embarraisod
Mann piaya Charlie with aa
ever-present smirk, and has a
aerve-wrackmg habit of jab-
hing hit finger forward to
niake a point and then leaving
it har^ging in the air indefm-
acly.
Victoria Stevens* and
Mickey Steveasoa's script has
promise, but it needs a firm
director who will curb, instead
of encourage, the vulganty it is
prone to. Sammy Friedman's
music is fine, but Kenneth
Blanchet^s sound ma4es it
drown out the lyrics aM« of
the time
V»"-t»M
William
Paul Williams treated his Alhphitheatre audience to a
quiet, reUxing concert last weekend The singer-composer
sang many of his popular songs to the shrieking approval of
teenaga^rls aa weM a. a large group of aduh fans
T ^*'J?™^ ^"'^'' '""^^ ** "^« Me Be the t>!ie Yoo Kim
lo. Traveling Boy.- ^I Never Had it so Good" and a nice
arrangement of -Dream Away" were highlighu. Williams
has never been considered- a virtuoso singer, in faa his
voice IS weak and nasal. But somehow it is suited to his
^om^ which easily sund out without the aid of a strona
voice: " , " ^
Also ^n asset is Wilham!^' wittv suge personality Ttifc
munchiLin-likc perfwa^i commented humorously on this
year's political conventions and later on his hcro^-'Bl^it
-Man,"" who saves f|t ^opjc. , *' •*
For a hupge part of the concert Willuims performed With a
small baclfybp group only. This was an intimate set-up. but
Williams: Jimiicd voice was muctr aided when the Amphi-
theatre Xtec^iaira came on later in l^e show Unfortunaiely
!^l,,9r£t^«L»'i„i'%l^ vfciu often uninspired, not giving
Williams numbers the lushness that makes them «n
gooscpintply.' ' " . _^ -^ss^..,5=is-iifi-=«±:
r
>
[
r
lates
stydanls
■.^.*'
..(-•..v-c.-v'-c-'-f-t-k'"
AMERI-CAL
I
I
,.:»v_^K'._y..ii
/•
1494 W
jMiiAaa*-
, ?! ', v^ jf »"-' iJi
Can t>ey «r Ni«lit - (2 1 3) 47i^a721
l^ost PeoplaMeed
In ^ttfying the type ot work iri wh^h they can feei most productive
and f MltUlid Career cho«ce is a matterpf SfjjfxpiUMion and this it an
^i%% \r\ which ;^ ♦f-extremefy difhc^Ult to t)e d^fc^ve and realistic fH
provida from profseeional and business n\mnmgimrt\mry\ ejtper ien^e
'^- •** ®*Htct»ve snaiyeis el your carsar aftsfoatwes and. develop with
i^ _ ***^ ^**"* *?.f*^*''^ /otrintoryouf chosen —
It. conf*0|MiaHfifSHvtew %ail (213)
'<■
William Burch AaaocialM
1 100 Oian^sfii;^ Aua.' iyMt 1 iQg
.■-*
.J'
:r* A
«.y"-'-
xmyrMKw^fKni-
ilHlilv
T*" . ,f
////
•^^j^^KSD®
V *** t^^
^E237
Aug 24-2f
AypiJI.Sopf 2
^•P^ 3.S#pt 5
■Kftfi
. Sonny Cnta
U-
^-^ 30 PIFR AVE •
MCRMOSA REACH INFO-TEL 372 b«>ll
TPN
EmanuetL
UNA
WERTMULLEITS
TALK ABOUT MEN*
f¥
454-7300
BUCK SMOKE
plus
THE COMPANY
:ii!^
THE STONER
7113
WMtlA a002S
^77 733f
LucMana PeiuQi
Aug 26-29
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Graduates
PERM A PLAQUE
your diploma
•loopt *. l20/tfayrl17S/wooli. Rod
ior sale
BEAN BAG
M CHAIRS
>S14 LINCOLN BL AT PiCO
14534 VigTQnv BL AT VAM NUV8 BL
— 382-llii
$25 VALUr
MOW
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poaltlon. part'lliAa mornlnfa, car,
frmnd; liolp aHlpplnf clorlt. La^lW
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1200. 473.
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,^ Mo, eiia««a. Inf ormaian 4l»iMiit.
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Racreatton
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DELIA ^
SNACK BAfI
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Monday-Fridiy
11:00-1:00
Saturdf ys, Sundayt
, and Holidays
i-- 11:00-6:00
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APT. SIsa wadfawood «pa ttava. 4
mmrnr - 000. Mafrlgaralor - 07S. Cla«w
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, WRITERS A
RESEARCHERS
Pofl-timo for tha following b^oiit
A moviM in fha Nutrition Fiald
1. Th« Ufilv«ft«l Approiieh tio
"Cuckoo'o NmT
3. Pro^ct Amooha
4. ProloM^ Wj^ Hi/ Amoeba 1/
MiMh'oAiin . ^
S.ISO^ Yro. aub
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7.Niii9f/l
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(1»71)
t. U.t Jk.SJdui. SocMy
UXA8 JUUi. tcouli of
^' UfHiwnal atmem^kg, inc.
c/oPaul
^^ HanfaidHougg
"■^""~ — "^1LA' CB;:.aoaas
Wiff M^pVapliat cijrrant OBproiacta
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l^aeaivac MfeOM
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warranlaaa. Baal ollar: J?0-1
(10 A 20)
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lamp too. 401-0040.
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121 krrtklHirr half
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Works taatf: Sti. 4t1 "0040. ^
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LlOWAWY WaOtv^UWHa OT irtda K 7?"
hlf h El0tit ikt9mmr% WalniH finlali.-
1210. CaO (2H» ao< 0<00.
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DfUOHTFUL rtTaM glrf naadi 8 lOly
raaai/.toaard witti .WLA family wNk
9^ camp. a9* Pio— Ml
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UCLAFuOy
WAMTCO: OfNCNTAL NUQA.
Pf^y^^lH Pdy far authantic plaeat.
dd onaa. 1110-0070. -■7>^-'-
(ir««r
Iroa HakafyHnf . Far mora Hifa aail
271-0220 Taaa. tit ,,, ^
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Our new rMtaurant at
Santa Monica A Bovatly Glen ia
rg^ taking appiicationa for waiters.
«B waitreaaao. buo boya A kitehon jtair
*^ Experienca piaiatiaU S^
^pt&i Sh#ffnaf) to apply
10369 Santa Monica Bl>^
.i*"**.
no A Ml
•ouo
dAaN ar
Oak T«
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NOW HIRING
aiQ Chair
$10. 401
4itAaai
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TIM
Intfrvfiieiif
aUMOAY MAOa aammar OcKadula
Id 11«0 AM UnlaaraNy CaaiaA
(•40 NN«af«) Jala Ual
(CtitrOtpi
Halp ••« by Halpim Oitm%
$5-$60/mo«tih tor Maag Plaoni
HYLANO DONOR CENTER
1001 (2ay«ay Ava.. Waatwaotf
47».00i1
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HP 40 69c
470-
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oPPOituniti—
1017
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1101.
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ACTORS
MUSICIANS
WRITERS
DISC JOCKEYS
E^hof you ha. picked . chaH^nging .nd rmvarding
profflMon and your ability to communicate with pMol*
|« an aaaantial part of succaaa. TiaM-Uto Books hat a
orS^H •*!!.i!ir!!P" '^"^ *• ^"^ '""c^ "M your
P^ofaatwo — anactiwaty communicating with paopta is
•ttWTtial Our good rapa aam $4-$6 par hour w»i a pay
Ptan of a baaa hourly waga ♦ commiaaicm ♦ bonus Wa
rjaad anargatjc articulw. paoai* wa can train to intro-
"*^..""*^"' ^*** '° custom** in many stataa Our
*"°.'""." ^'Ti"-'! P'^°9«^«'n win assist you in your own
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1^ ?!!I?! °* *""• '° P"™"* ''***^ •cwlwnic caraar Call
828-7466 for an imamfw appointment
llfTJa
LIFE
(14 A
Phona 028-7465
Tima/LNa Li>nirlat, Inc.
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from Jyh
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110-0 fl
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pralaaoiaitali laamlpf aur
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SUMMER JOBS
^ 471^a21for"
470-0107
no a a
aludont with aiparlane^ - IMp r%
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MOl/lflG^
C^miPUt HRVICU
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I BICENTENNIAL
TRIANGLE NYC kaa
TRIANGLE HAWAII i
NIGHT COACH
VOUT^ Oampa. 1^ . kaailMI
I A^EX 21 IMOiii aav aoan far frpm MM
ICAMFtR RiNTALILRAOMtS
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ISPECI AL CRUISE
CARtOaSANOO AaiRlCAtdaHTj
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MEXICO CITY • aawa
lACAfULCO. t'tfava —
CtTYjHMO ar
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MtXiOO nXUTAM, 16 aai
MOX.CffNT/OO AMOA 18 M
HAWAII (1 MMntf). tdaya
HAWAII (2 mawa»r Td day*
HAWAII (3 tMana*] U) aay*' otit
tijfOMfiaaa t»ffT;t 4av oom
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nooo«
forming .fioaf m Conlamporary
Laad Qy^r. Hqc> tuay ■CoMntry^.pKi
•wwr» ^ iaalnnan or A^vpnoM
rLJP» ^^ Tf^tning Nacitetiy
»n#?B(tik>n by a^acttcma JNpJiaiiui.iai
.'ilJfDu want H Right. Oul<H( and OracjUMl
^r*¥ai|a arid Sami^rlvala inatructlSr*^'
•CONOIfV l^^a la Oftoat ^ TalM.
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Oaan. laKaadMa. oai-faOOi
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pay idM OoO ntaAaM
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1 1
Qooddaala
•A.N.O.A.
Oay406-1iW
V^TQN EXPRESS
MOVERS
AUTO liia«iranai»:
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nOOir)
gyOMlT TaaNa In
prlaata aawfli. Pwi
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dOan on aaaiay
noooi
aoff. Mio iaifa. Mali, wMi ai^ iop-
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■^ ffOOQiri
ptiotograptiy 1^^
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V
HouMlNodei
•quirsd For Jag
>^ mqaif a fuH tima houaa
modal to worfc with our dMipn
and aainpla dapartmanta irTAa
fitting of all JAG danlm. opoda-
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Modalling axperianct io not
raalty raquirad but you do naad
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%, Oar-aOM. Oant »aN
HOUSEPAINTINQ ::
•••t work, malartela;
•xtofkKo S muHI-foofn
IMartoca
•onring Itw UCLA
CoHmiynlly 3 yra fuH-ttma
Ooyt S E^anlnga
JAG
whict) ia: Buat 34 Waiat 26 Hlpa
36. Thto iob pra— nta a oarlain
)raa of ftexlbitity \^ flratty
oom«on« for inliouaa
wodotHng. but if tha pinon haa
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DIAL •2S-2222
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Hot August days for Bruins. Donah
typitia
■Pt unfumtohad
•itt. fm%% V
174.
inr
(aA
(»#Ofc1
SM 4111 Am Vi
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itif
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•Many 0*y Tour* ar* oft«r»<| mo'ff> m«n cmc»
Aug 26 J P^ui Qvdy |
• M...»um A B*»(.h Picnic (8 SC
§ *>.U . W« <
&«n franc iMTO «>••». SMO OC <
' Aug 2« Okl Maat Ghoat : •>«'< ^
(Caitrol t12 00
Many Otha« Tour* ar«i availabia •<, rail
Internattonal Student Center
1023 Hilgard Ave
9-6 Dally
• 473 2991 • 825 3384 • 879 0*23
^HMtt. OMtrrATIOMt. UJL
JICTt WnrriNQ. iDfTMO. M-.
MAMCHINQ TUTOflflM BY pno.
ACADEMIC QUIOANCE
tCRVtCES
<»yAJi)
oisti
frofytfi^ — n>tce Tr»iMcnMM«.
(27 AM)
AM)
way al
i«-tf
17 Ymtb S«fving tha Community
'I
Enrolling Small Groups For
LftAT A ORE
Catlarai ,
(trail
UCLA, f 1«7/
fMttI
Tropky candtdaici
^•■^•■■i », of
•ct! of use Ust
■nd the Bruins
American backs four iimei.
*nd Tyler outperformed his
«»oted opposition three timet,
including in tiK USC pMM
Tyler said. "Personally. I'd
It or for
Ricky
year, Tyler
All-
.-•>.«
■ •• • '
like to belp better our icam.
Fd like to fet 1.000 ^Mii, but
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break me.
IJat potential
ASH will be striving lor at.
Whoever makes the fewest nus-
ukes will wm We're going lo
try and win every gMBe. We*re
capable of returning to the
iisa.1
VQMfiO nay
•fs-isai
SIM.
lattava.
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Call gir-agao for
■4©f mlormatton mrt^
NCffD Help In Engllah? Tutoring A
MHh»fl ay PhJ[>. MS-flM.
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ASK US ANYTHING YOU
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TVPMu/eomNo. i«h.
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af.?7S-»471. -*-.
or AM)
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(24-^ S)
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ISOf.
Ct7 0lr)
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t:M PM. Mar
271
cat
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477
In
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fssasssrfsss^s
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list MONTH PLUt 1/2 UTI^TIEa.
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tOITH- laM Typing. Term papaUT
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typing
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1 a 2 bedraoms. Large courtyard. S62
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CMua/ Dining
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171
• Opana 7 am for braalcfaat lunch, an
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• Dinoar Spaclala from $450
• Trdpk:ai oanJan aatting
• Sundays Champagne Brur>ch~11:ao to
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!:**-»
■ %*»♦»■'
(CofiliniM^ froM faf€ U)
jo^ will be the one who ruiM
Hit laam the best. I want -to
play any way I can. Anyihmg's
poMible. This game (with the
San Devils) right now is the
most important one we have.
This is a ^must win for us.
''I have a personal goal*
taid Bukich 'That is to go to
the Rose Bow! Whatever it
takes. We've got to esublish
our rurining game, but with
OMr gireat receivers, it would be
a watte if we didn't use them r
Tyler aloMe
Halfback Wendell Tyler has
a different problem than that
of Dankworth anjd Bukich. It's
unlikely that anyone is going
to beat him out for his posi-
tion. So the competition for
the fleet-footed, shppary nm-
■ung uaca witt oaaM- aiMMN^
frOBI tll&\:.;. backs of' other r^ff - , r-^ ■■— "^•' »•■*- «wwb«,v«mmu, wi&n IHC
•chooh who. •long with Tyler tl.!!?*"'* '«!***'''" ""''" •»««>« «" Newton adequately replwx
are considered Ts Hei m.n JIT't Jh^**"" *:" '^^^ AlJ-A«ner.cn Steve R,ve« .t%Ut
, """n end. The defensive Itne i* alM in Bead ot inprovement White ii
' . , . ,, ?'*L*"f ^ conference •ciMduk in that UCLA^^and Sunford
Art IP HlirnrnUd u^ ^^^ •• *'*'"*• '^'** ^SC a* the tough road game In
nlllC ndiyiUVC •"•'J^ •« 'PPe*^ that the »ewi aw mongtTot^aJI thanTyear
Artie Hargrove. co„.Klercd "^^ •'*'"•' ■"«"" '^'»«* for «*• «tl-r team, u, the
the top high school running
back that UCLA recruited this
Smr, bat not been admitted to
the univertity and will sub-
sequently attend Long loich
City ColfcijiF^*^' "
This ^Kt "war
week by a Long
JML^aas proven beaiiiae the
Long Beach Poly gr^dulM bit
not been teen arUt;LA. fool-
ball praclka,'^ -■ -
Cat readier for race ...
((ont^iied from Page U)
return plus a couple of All-Amer»can JCs have transfered
All four linebackers, including prc-season AU-Amencan Phil
Heck return, plus three of the four secondary people are alto
back. The hne tf the question mark with lob Warner at the lone
returnee.
G«>rgia. Oklahoma luii Arizona Suie. tbea tbe Bears are a
definite Rose Bowl conteada*. "
- Roth has the taknt to oar aoiSrin the as^w^boaiirii^jtr^
Rote Bowl if we lue all the
potent uil we have.**
Regarding a rivalry vtth
uses Bell. Tyler said, "The
talk about me versus Bell
Means nothing. For me to gtt
the Hcisman Td have to do
iOMWlbiag fantaatKL 1 haven't
even been AU-American yet, so
l*m not worried about the
Hciaman.
**! must admit it*s hard to
compete in the same city with
Ricky Bell. But I don*t have a
grudge against any football
player fm
^\p\9^ my
bopefully
J
I
team
to tbe Roae Bowl.-
tbc Braiat, under a
coach, faoe a gapK with
ASC which shapM up as aae
of the oMitt important inter-
sectional matches in years.
Listening to Terry Donahue
and his team, it saeaM unlikely
that they'll let the prestige
gained laj»t year melt away in
the Aruona sun without a
good fight
Babashoff top women's swim catch I
>
By C Indy Lais -'J tried to rccruit-bdih dis-
:,j-^"* Sports Writer lance swimmer* and sprinters -
•Depth and vcrsaiihty" are Gsabam said ^Sprints arc im-
the key words describing the porlant. but distaaan are
1976.77 womeo'ii\^im icam,; jcquaily important.-
»ays coaab CoUen Ouham
Shirley Babashoff, winner gf
fold and Tou
r'.
The recreation and intramurai field north of Pauley
Pavilion will be closed from 6 am to 6 pm dai^ from
August 27 to Scptcai^ 3 ^le lo titt i97e United States «
Amateur Golf Champioatbtp at tlie Kf Air Couatry Chik
During thar time, tb^ players lanbe iniraaaiiiir iiiTl uil
tbe field as a practice drivuig range. ^
In addition, llnmi Walk wiD be ddaad during the ««m
period from Parking lot Ii^l^jo Drake Stadium to protect
individuals frc/m pottibly beiag bit by a #atf-iball
i!^^^^ ^^'^L^'^''''^ alai^ilk^iflutb^jide of.^br
MAG :V HMidtov tmd^ itofif t^ north tide of Pauley
Pavihoa ''
one . fold and four silver
medals at. M ont real ». will be
joined by Olympic teammaici
Kathy Heddy and Jeanne -
Heddy at West wood 4his year.
Lorrie Provost from Fresno
and Shawn Houghton from
Novato, Calif., top off the list
of .five very proitiTsTiig
Grahani. Has additional
depth in the* number pf re-
turnees from fist year's team
UCLA returns Margie Moffit.
ICaren Melick. Lou Ann
Cramer and the Worthen
tiiriiis, Xim and Shelly, but will
be without veteran Olympian
K^au^n Nioa Thornton who gra-
duated lasr quarter.
v"-: '
comers.
Both Heddy and Htnighton
competed in the AAU meet la
Philadelphia over tfhe weekend
Heddy winaiag4be 260-meteV
individual mecjieyf and swim-
in the finals of the ^12to^
48(hfreestyle while Hough-
ton competed in the finals o<
the lOO-met^r freestyle. ^
_ tbe wm coast, Sun-
focd will be very tough The
^TfMvarsity irf Mtaim. TTdrida,^
tl«s won the aationais the paat
two years and they'll be up
(here. Also, Arizona State has
recruited well and had been \ht
powerhouse before Miamr?'
said Graham about tbe coming
m competitioiK^
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^
Rose Bowl road opens in August for Bruins
■ tmsHL^tlLm JoirlJlIll' ^t ?AA°^ 2LE ™ r ""l*""' ' • " «"«««»-k?^ How effacuve We do
AIA— iTiZ. — -/ ^ llT.zf^'^'?' Tl' y***^* "•■*- ™?l'*"'> »«"« lo uie If we ■« • wUI WendeU Tvler t-r .^ • „.i,. ..
1. , I ••
\
i.-'
i
't
1
tiK turt of tlie
D a
III sway. Uie UCLA Imi-
M team it already at work,
prepanng . for thie coming
•casoii. At the team's picture
day last Wertawdiy, a apmt of
''cautions opcioHifli*' pervadad,
as playen aad coaches started
anticipating the season opeiMr
on September 9 at Arizona
Sute.
UCLA head coach Terry
Donahiie* at 32 one of the
nation*s youngest college
coaches, is aware of the pres-
sure surrouitdiaf Hli teamT"
itrst gacne as wel^ as his debut
as coach. Yet he aJsqt ^seens
w'ell-equipped to handle it.
PresentlyrPonahuc is fear-
uig his preparations for fhe
whole season and not just for a
peak effort in the opening
clash with ASU.
fdb like to have hot-
JW weather,- said Donahue,
-Wferring to the conditions
under whkfh: the nationally
televised opener at Tempc will
probably be played.
. - - Ai 11 wm^'
•however, we're trying to
prepare for ai-Hgamig^ right
now. The jpcek before ^ tjie
game f%Mth ASU) we'll prepare
lor it, just like we'lMp^nng
the season,* he said. -
And what of the loss of
Sciarra, last year's
out MMterback?
** Wlwi yon lose a great play-
er like John Sciarra, you'll be
hurt Yet this year, once again,
we'U^ have a young teaai, but
our defeve will be matured.
Well miss some of our kids
from last yanr. Our goal right
now is to improve every day.
•^We're gouig to throw more
rd anticipate we'd throw in the
are! of 15-20 passes fm^mue.
Our offensive hne is not as big
is laat year's, but ir Won't be
an aerial show. We've simpli-
fied our offense a bit ^hts year
to make passing easier,** the
first year coach said.
Backs catch
"We will prohaMy throw to
our btcks more. Play-action
aiv inoff
behiad.
When isked who would re-
place Aiparted All-American
Cbff Frazier at nose guard,
Donahue said, -Right now
(Steve) Tetricks our note
fBerd. He may have had the
best spring of anyone.
This is a tough conference
this year If we can pick up
where we left off in spring. Til
be very happy ."^nwd Donahue
Many of the Bruin players
echoed Donahue's feelings aad,
like their coach, they are feel-
ing^Uie pressure of the opening
now two weeks away.
The pressure on the Bruiris
ii on both the team as a whole
as well as on several indivi-
duals. The big questions
i remain: W h^- wifl
at quart ritaiik?; How effective
will WendeU Tyler be?; and
Can the defense play as well
as they did in the Rose Rowl
throughout this season?^
Daokwortfi. v. tahirh
The two pfaiyers battbng for
the quarterback job. Jeff
Dankworth and Steve Bukich,
expressed similar feelings
about their pursuit of a
starting job.
Dankworth said, ^ We've all
get pressure on us. I don't
think ofie person will deter-
mine the success of the foot-
ball team 1 think I can n^ove
(he football team."
Of his new coach; Dank
worth says, "I think everyone's
eju:ited about playing for
Donahue He relates well to
the pUyers. We want td make
*is debut as freaiju possible
We do have the maiehal to
make it back to Pasadena
"I thiak comprtitioh within
the teann is good," Dankworth
said. "^Vm not* here to have a
personal rivalry with Steve
Bukich. I think we wiU have a
No I quarterback selected.
^ •»
**! think It's fortunate that
we*ll be called on to prove
ourselves early I think that the
team that goes through
sure early matures early,'
eluded Dankworth.
Bukich, who is generally
considered the better passes of
the two, on his quest for the
quarterback job, said: **lt's too
bad people ha%« aMde spec-
.lila^tion before anything kas
happened .^
..iv-^ljg- man who will get ^^KT
(Continued on Page 15)
f«i|*-'t-«iti*'''*-'t**^T'* '
,.-.J
use
PAC-8 race
>"— ^
While the UCLA foalhall team.«^ ir»duaUy rounding itself
into shape, their *i^riends- at that school across town opened up
their fall practice with thr~^aiiliual pictXiit day
^ For many years VSC has been dominating college football 4n
Southern x^alilomia, and even though UCLA » making strides
to shed iu position as the "Avis" of Los >liMeles, the frc«ans
like It or MM, ire still m the dnver's s^
Yet even though US<p is loaded with uknt and is. the favorite
for the Pac-8 iitk what else i' new?-- the time for the
pimg ofThe king may be at hand. After ^ long and successluf
IL
Sondheiiiier
DB Sports Writer
— Optimism reikis supreme 6n the California^
sfftdflKti and/ootball fans believe this will be the ^
gO.-tll_lhc Rose Bowl as practice beffir
n opener at Georgia.
California team been to
Icna, but the feeling of head coach Mike V^ite and his staff
IS that the 1976 Bears x^ould be tly besrtegin at Berkeley in^25L.-
,,■«^•"i^^•.
-•^ . •
tr — 'T^'*^^'
\..
The Gypsy Wagon, the Nerth Campus fted
facihty sarviag students since the early sixtiei,
will be permanently removed tha weekend.
Replaaiig the Gypsy Wa(
Wednesday is the new North
facibty. The facility will haw a
dell case containing yogurt and ice cream
products; donuts, pastry and desert iten^s. and
hamburgers, hot dogs., steak sandwiches, so«M
and stews.
In addition, a snilUI convenience store within
the larger facihty will provide students with
such items as film, candy, cigarettes and
wm
rf' —"^
itti
* BERICELEY
campus becaiM
year the Bears
Monday for the September 11
Not since January I, J959nSjMi~i
t*>'**«#*t-
sm-^KT^^^^ ^ J^ttaAi reign m taKl pf the Trojans. John MclC.y'hasVt tliT cotoL_»»n!
completed their Miree (Uy> of jajms *nd moved on to «o«:h the ivw Tampa-Bav Club in th^~-llit v»r flu. a,.™ i-i w, u ~ t u^ w ■ ^. .
manda;tor.y. nonrco)it«c»-eoif- JSFL"^ ■ • " ^ "***^"'^*''^ » »^ ,r"^ ywr <"e »«•«■•» -by Heismaa Trophy ruhnerup Chuck
ditionffif rfrilh and now we Robin.^ i.k« -o.,,^ '*""" "ra^C nin»cd goint ^e PMytog o<iiy |iir—| |)rt:2g-|4 Jafc
-A^At the pre- d.y W^*,^^7-?5^ t::ti^^;^;n^ ^^„^^"r^ """" " ^«^-''V- -<* ^-^ ^^
^^tfe <Hi«aioa^ fiMt^^iled of Fox " ^L^i*^„*7 "^/^P*™" ^"*'" tisw b^nced squad from past ip cHn m the country. . ^
— tSiSihue WM »impTy. how will ^[^uUicHt- Cift Tustory of football «xceitom a. •*«--«. i.. -jl^ *' *****"* '"*!? »-/f»«d '" «•« <op 15 teams ip the tution m
:# »-5* ^^m, D<«i-^Pr .eck of tale,t7d p.(?^'r'lho.S''r:*^H^S».'? ^^''^^ eC.'"nir^i^ ""' ^~^ "^^^^ '''
. ^, r^'^'TTT^^^^''^^^'*^^° '^ h«d_5paching joi'i picsant orte * S^.TjJT rX "
,^ iiT " 'i' -' '^ ?"?r!? ..•^•*!*****'"« '^ use attack S Ricky BeUranoiheri. ^-W ' ^ ^*^
>.>■>*»
^CLA
:■ — -^ .
L..:.
"^'^y
VolumeJCCIX, Number 15
University of Cattfomte, Lde Mg^tm
^•P«*tnbffa.197e
-•^*
-Ar-t»
McCormack
CIS?
%a»M**
-«i:.^'
well. Before ifs over, UCLA
win Geld a sohd« competitive
team. We'H be^*efE^rh%.** ^
'^*^e have two quarterbacks
right now (Dankworth and
Steve Bukich), ind its a very
heated battle for the position.
But I believe this competition
is -aood.
•; " priiiiiil
Spring was an adyustroem
period,** Donahie said. *^ow
the season*s here, and I feel
mpre pcessurc now than I did
in the spring. In the spnng I
think we made normal pro-
pels. From an offensive stand-
point we didn*t handle the ball
tveU enough.**
iihe of brilluint U^C UiTHacks Bell »« considered one of the
favorites io c^ture the Heisman trophy -: - ' ..i — "
I. Thr^ntfliiive hne u anchored by All-Amehcan Marvm Powell'
iJ^f*^^?*W is strong as well, with Ali»Atocrican Qary Jeter
headmg up a poup of six rctiirning defensive starters.
a Quarterback?
: . P* Sa^ ^ qii«ion mark fefttkt S€wS» ¥ qtrtrterback.^'lf
cither Viaoe Evans, Rob Hertd or Walt RiMisom can manage to
throw the ball wiifi^^ some degie^ of success, the Trojans should be
just fine. If not, the ulents of receivers such as Raady Simmrin
may be wasted.
Robinson bebeves his team will be good, and that they have
the potential to be outsunding. He's enthusiastic and reports his
players are also
The Trc^rn have a ^ne crop of incoming freshmen to go
along with the nucleus of veterans. An easy opening schedule
won't hurt them either At this time. USC is still the team to beat
in the Pac-«. _.
^ — — Jell Later
Pro scouts rank Roth as the best quarterback Brospect in the
country and the 6-4. 205 pound senior w^Oi the instrumental force
wChttfor^la W0i^ht eight of Ms last nine gashes a year ago.
Torti !Slewton, who started .. last year at fullback, has been
switched lo tailback to rephux Mu9clcl^Standoill sophomore
Paul Jones moves into the starving spot at fullback Flanker
Wesley lA^alkcr has 4.4 s|peed for 4a.jacdi and pro" scouts
consider him as probably the top "aaceiving prospect m the
country George Freitas returns at tight end, with five tbp pUycrs
batthng for thk split end position
The offensive line has returning starters m pre-season All-
Amencan tackle Ted Albrecht and center Duane WUliams, fsilh
four lettermen and three JC transfers in tight fightt for the other
^pals. Wacekicker Jim Breech is another offensive weapon since
he was t^ top Pac4l kick scorer a yev ago.
Defense whs the mam weakpomt last year for the Bears as the
Berkeley crew gave up over 21 points a game White is confident
the defense wilJL be •'vast ly improved" in 1976 Tjbc reason is that
regiilaffs, wha start^_ihc final game agatast Stanford
<CofttiiHicd on Page IS)
. ». fHIMf
,,r^^>^\»
^^WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?^'
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
This Second Ptalm was ipsliSH about thrM thouMnd years ago by
King David. in9pir9d by The Sp«Ht of God, CrMtor of the World mnd
Universe Probabty about ata hundred years Mar about llve-si&|h of
the nation of Israe* who p rt the Ptabn in Oiek MliralMie y»ere
*^*!!*!*^ •'^••^ •he •unounmng nations, thus giving the Psalm and
Mswaaaage a ftuich wider opplHunity lo be h— rd by men. Then about
a tbooaand yoovs allar Ood iaoe W to Israel the rest of the nation was
•canered aboirt ttie great Aoman Empire and «ie then known world.
Ounng the heo tboysand years tincm that time e»e Psalm has h^aveled
with ihe adeanciiiy dvMUation and greatly Msssbig mankind
known and taken heed to
" bacami mIgNy and pawsrhd edioo bwaon and dhaved m Italy.
France. OofMany. and ospoeMly England known at a certain period as
THi LAND Of THE BOOIC
rom THE WORD Of GOO IS QUICK. AfiD POWERFUL. AND
gHARPER THAN ANY TWO-EDGED SWORO. PIERCING EVEN TO
TNC DIVIDING AtOHMil OF SOUL AND gPNHT. AND Of THE
JOINTS AND MARROW. AND IS A DtSCERNOt Of THE THOUGHTS
ASIO INTENTS Of THE HEART. NEITHER IS THCNS ANY
CREATURE THAT IS NOT MANifEST IN NI»«OHT: SUT ALL
THINGS ARE NAJ^ED AND OPEN UNTO THE ETES Of Hl«l WITH
•MOSS WE HAVE TO DO SEEING THEN THAT WE HAVE A GREAT
HIGH PRIEST. THAT IS PASSED INTO THE ttrftVim. JfgUg THE
SON Of GOD. LET US HOLD FAST OUR PROfESSION POR WE
HAVE MOT A HIGH PNIEST WHICH CASMIOt SE TOUCHED WITH
THE FEELING Of OUR INFIRMITIES; -^UT WAS IN ALL POINTS
TEMPTtD LIKE AS WE ARE. TET WITHOUT SIN LET US
THEREFORE. CORNE BOtOLY ^MJO THE TMNONE Of GRACE.
•"•■'■ II ■ ii
THAT WE MAY ORTAtN MERCY AND GRACE TO HELP IN TIME OF
NEED. — Hebre«»s 12:4-16
TMs Psalm with its moaaage has been preeenled to Sie -nnpspii
readers around AManta every week for the past fourteen and a hoN
yaars — about 7S4 Hmes. In view of its history swRe mmf% who
noendy is bodhr mistaken in thinking we were pmii
ob^eebooahlt Mens to Ms ctxtt^^n and others.
If aeked to do so could you give God s rmiiigi in IhN Psalm ^
eaaMy understood words lo awoRier? W# are undailakliii la do this,
hoping it will be helplul lo some one eloe in hoaibig what God has lo
s/^ God asks Why do Ihe heathen rago.and me people knoabioa
thif%^? Hoalbon ar>d such people are plaeed bi the sai
an declofod to be Chose who rage agabM God s U
liiaiidManls lo get away from ttveir control and restraint — you
check up on your reaction to alt of God's Ten Comi
The CommandWMiNB ot His King, The Lord Jomm ChrisI The Psalm
tens us of God's reaction to tbolr rage and foaManee: "HE THAT
SITTETH IN THE HEAVENS SHALL LAUGH; THE LORD SHALL
HAVE THEM IN DERISION SPEAK UNTO THEM IN HIS WRATH: VEX
THEM IN HIS SORE DISPLEASURE God neat ls«S MS His Rvlor.Hia
King is His Son. aOd tt>e hooRion and poaplo slioE be His poeeosalon
whom He wM bfook wNh a Rod of Iron and dsab niom lo pieces like a
8 vessel. Rut nole His wonderful invRabon lo Mesabig wRior'
■■»"'y •*•« «WtE NOW THEREFORE. O YE KINGS: RE
INSTRUCTED YE JUDGES OF THE EARTH SERVE THE LORD WITH
FEAR AND REiO«CE WITH TRESStINO KtSS TNESON.LESTHE
RE ANGRY AND YE PERISH FROM THE WA Y . WHEN HIS WRATH IS
KINDLED BUT A LITTLE RLE SSED ARE ALL THEY WHO PUT THEIR
TROST MS HNS.'
it
The
have made available 60
'^ aach parformar^ce
Friday and Saturday
•bRR^ngs $6 00: all other
parformances includNig
matinees $6 00 Tickala
Huntington Hartford
#aa OfRoa with pr opof*
Identification
Fsr
i
By R«BS Holpert
4 -fldcrgradiNNe *^%eieibtiiMr
.^resident .Mjcg N4cCdrmAck'
- was uniH#m<Hisf< cenj»urcd by
Student I cgislative Council
^^|SI last Ihursday.' hut »hc
Eiiaped the piospeci oi facif%
impeachment hfiinl^ics
The censure said thefe viTould
•he **no further investtgation.
format or mfortnal. at th^s
time," into earlier allegattom
that she I misused her office,"^
exceeded^ campaign.^xpefidi-J!
tures. and beha^)ed erraticllly
Except tor a short dct>aie
.prior to the fmal vote to cen-
sure, SLC h9ki all discu<»sions
in secret %esiions
The motion to censure^^
charged McCormack with thb
following wroofdoings. which
McCormack admitted to:
— installation of a telephone
in the apartment of a friend,.
Nancy Siemion, during the
CBHupaigfi that was used mainly
for campatfa purposes hut not
reported'^ as a campaign ex-
pense
requesting an undated
letter of reaifiption from^SLC
of Irian Eisherg m return for
his eppMitmcnt to BOC.
removing notification of
appointments from the
mailboaas of all SLC members
and then J|r^ about it
— ."undue and negligent tar-
diness'* in making importaal
appointments She has yet to
make registration fee sppeiut-
ments.
— "repeased and negligent*'
^^Mhttiap af the af^mtment
procedure.
The motiop to censure also
established an appoiatroent
search committee, which will
make recommendations to Mc-
Cormack on iroportaat ap-
pomUMls. Prior to thil Mc-
vole
• vided- far •mrnedTHtr'^rerhovaj
of Mc< Ormack should she ever
> commit the sadir /type o^o^
fensei_ T " . .
Nonetheless,, this * iiKHiOfi
Tfiarkcd the end of SLC dehb-
crationi on McCormacV;
whMTh ftarted several weFts
ago when iht resigned atid
thtfn*ftrscinded her resignation.
M^Qrmack can be fofthcr
» nvrsf ifitcd H dny new violp-^
tion^ are diacoA^ered. even 1f
they were committed at a
^Och earlier (tei^. -
\ Prior to the-^HTormack
censure a stroiifer <^urse- of
action was proposed by Wilbe
Banks, Speciaf Educational
Policies Coiamissjoner
~ Banks prbpased the forma-
tion of an investigative com-
mittee to look into the charges
against McCormack
This committee would have
released a report to SLC on
the charges against McCor-.
mack. SLC would have then
had the option of impeach-
in making appointmeau.
Ill addition, the moAoR pro-
The committee was to have
been chaired by UCLA Om-
budsman Don Hartsock. but
the motion was defeated by a
7-5 vote Voting "yes" were
Cymhia McClain, Rich Levier.
John Kobara. Lou Karasik
and Waiie Banks. Voting "no**
were Gary Cejhgipr, Jay Bun-
dy. Diana ^MepHiertf, Ron
Hecker, Jim Wniea, Brian Lis-
herg aad Dick Cbhart.
The cefisitre, which passed
unanimously, was called a
''It was politically better to
fo to a oeasyre then to nsove
to an impeachment hearing
that we couki not win," said
Lou Karasik, Cuhural AfTaifi
oinee fe<|inies a tl
affii Hiati»t vote, with
tions cothiting as no votes
fcapaiik pepiWRwIK fw^nitd ■
-ipovrd to im>each her and
loiiU .the teehaf /was that ^e^
-^wouldhavr doac.#feat damafc -
lo our '^nuipir.*'
-ile noted thar "in^xrrder to
avoid the heari^ McCoiimack
gave a lot We've opened the
presideNhs office to Counal
now: 'itise*ll pay a lot moxc
attention to olir demanding'*
Karasik said he was strongly
opposed to the nnaRiier mi
which the compromise was
made. ••The whok i^mdn o^
the compromise was had A
compromise in secret is rotten.
"The public had the right to
hear the charges against hlc-
Connack, even if Colliiter
(who spearheaded the drive
apainst McCormack but later
led the fight for a compromise)
decided thai we coukin't pet 75
per cent oi the vole." Karasik
added
"If I embezzled $50,0UU. we
could go into executive session,
where I could promise S5.000
to each SLC member Who
woukJ know? That's why Tai
apainst closed meetinp |n a
T this important."
The vole to move into a
•iot) on Thursday was
6-5. Student members voted 5-
4 in favor of an open meeting,
but Rick luttle. the adtiuais-
trative representative, and Dick
Ftthart, ihe &iumni repreaaata-
fttr.^'Wfti voted for secret
seiaiaa,\hi'inging the total to 6-
5.
voiiag for
Collister,
Bundy. Tuttle aad Eh-
hait. Voting for an apes aHet-
ing were Kohara, Bnks, Mc-
Clain. Karasik and Hacker
According to First Vice-
Preaident McClain. "Counal
^^ew tor tne^ wORHpeaRiRse oe—
cause Ihey uectded Meg de
lanaaik pg
poMic hearing on the
hut said. "If wi
two
"Some council mcmocrs just laid the two were not comra-
didn't want to hurt Meg. but dictory heoaasc. "We were
aMMt feh a compromise was elMed to
pood for the ssseaiation They tWR, which
wanted her to resign again, bttt aMttin to he Md hi
whea they saw it Would uke a segWR."*
fight, they went for this com- McCormack said removal
prnnRgf," McClaiB
The day kAoConnRck *Ve* too hasih, \mmmm *I
the eaawwearir ^vt they weie aol aMHtai of
he Hmal turpitude "
Sin added "I ihmk that tf
she admitted her mtftakes but
ir lay ahead.
McCormack, however, fa
SLC
• f 'jm K%_ ■:-
cDHTwrr
FITTED
REFITTED
Village^
OS. ALFRED R. BECKER
Optometrist
10959 Weyburn Ave
X
ADJUSTED
POLISHED
QR9-2111
Crime & Punishmctnt
Moore door handles
Rtr^i
erai
PIZZA
GR 8 0123
Opf n T Dmy%
11 AM to 2 Ay
B«tw«0n Barrington and Bundy
11«13WiteMraBlvd. 478-0123
TUNE-UP, lUBEi OR $94
iiSiS
OVIlHAUi
*m
AUTO
7957 VAN NUYS ILVD.
894-7075
t i^-^H^.^-H, *m-
liA.H?\,T«)l3AT
Fm Jfvhaf • J^^ now
MtfHngfoij^^ ind women
jf nry ftedding's JtyritlAck products
,, -j.,^ f^Tor •ppointm^ call 478«€15t
IMM. fitra sat
- ^.,j>.i.*j
i! T..jy»rri^
3.00 -OFF first haircut
with this «d
By AliM MldMl KarMnig
DS Staff IIMot
A number of door handiin
and d#or htop% were ^tol^n
from three floors of Moorr
Hall the night of Auguxt 20.
according to three separate
UCPD theft reports
A custodian for the third
floor reported that 27 braw
door stops and a brass door
handle were missing from the
third floor west corcidor Ac-
cording to the poftfoe report,
the suspect entcredV and ** re-
moved with a possible screw-
driver the described items from
their fixed mounts.**
The second floor ctistodian
fouAd Utfce locks for bath-
room stalte missing, in addi-
tion to moce< door h^fndles and
Slops ^
The same types Of brass fix-
tures were also removed from
the first floor corridor, ac-
cording to the police report
All tjirec thefts were assumed-
to have occu^d betw/een I am,
and 12:30 pm.
No estimates of value were
available for the mnrssing brass
fixtures. 0 ^ .-
El&ewbrrenfffi campus, on
August 12, a student Visiting
from Japan had her luindbag
stoten while she was cai.mg
breakfast in the Rciber Hall
cafeteria The purse >\as left pn
a shelf outside the caleteria ar
the timr of the theft
»cp»ra
Minorities participate in
seminar oh engineering
H«- fiUHl fcv fCxpertg
ft. im^^mrdt
Tifh*!
Stair ^
Approximately 90 Caltfonik
~*^ ' [>l students from mi-
nofity groups are currently
participating in a two-week
•«ninar designed to introduce
Ihem to the apportuniiiea aad
demands of an engrneering
The program, caMad the Mi-
nority Introduction to Eoa-
necnng (MITE)« ia hosted^
U» UCLA School of Engi-
neering and Applied Science.
Participating in the program
win be Black, Chicano, Spa-
nish surname and American
Ind^ students.
/*K.ifou look _jL_lir -popu-
lation of underpaduate en§i-
ncering ciaiaas, minorities vt
definitely under-represented.**
S|iid Assisunt Osan Richard
Stern, engineering director of
WTTE
A ct ord I ng' to Sergeant Wil-
liam Hansen, this incni^nr
would be considered grand
theft sflice |he total value of
the items missing is over S200..
The handbaf cfmt»iined'$80 m
travtierv checks. $25 ca.sh, a
' Minolta ca me rir worth $450,
and a Kamura Zoom lens
^^^•"^ 1^*^250^ The total csti-'
mated loss includ4ng the saiuc.
s>i th* handBag is $3*^^14
Other thefts: - A U- *
room In thcJ geology bunaing
was broken into August 9 atid
an auto floor^ jack and trans
mission jack, worth a total ol
$2bO, we're stolen The pohcc
report said tha| the locked
room was entered with a "pot-
,i||wc pBM Key .
Sevetttten btcyvfes were'
trolen «atid two found in the
laf t two weHor of AMg u s t
<*Wi '«!'»'
introduced to
Ptom» D. wacQ»
,,_->. TH
latas
students
AMEStVCAL
.V- -^
.T-^t
'VM'
1434 WcHwood BoMlevMlMMlle fLm Angdei. __
Call Day or Night -(21 3) 475-5721
We Offer
A Unique Opportunity
To Learn About
A Foreign Country
Without Even Leaving
The United Statea . .
Have a foreign student
as a roommate this fail.
For mformation, caH or vtsit
The IntematioffMil Sttident Center
1023 Hjlgard Ave
S25-33M 477-45t7
.. . DB SUIT Writer
- The liCL A Summer rtrien-
^^attoflu-Program 'naw^-^gnr? tn^
^^comir^yVtudcnts the chaiicc to
gel acquainMpd witb>tudent
government and its^ Fepresenr
tativw: **The Sutler JEresh-
rnan Onentation Program pro-
vides Student Council with ate
excellent way t^oe neon rage
imprrssionabte new students to
join .student government and to
help them^^nderstand how it
functions. ** according to Ron-^V
me Menor. Student Legislative,
Council (SLC) Information
director.
SLC mcTObers meet with.
transfer and freshman students
on a weekly basis. ">Ve try to
show new students that we arc
~1iuman, ordinary people and
anyone can get involved in *
student government," -^ said
Menor.
These bne-half hour orienta-
tion sessions are divided into
three parts First, the structure
and power of student govern-
ment IS ctescribed. Student
^^over nnarnt is • broken down
into vanous offices and com-
misi^ions dcaJi mg '"%r\x K* 'a 1 1... ililH
pects ,jatj;;ai»pus li}c^' -i .
Tht^rlStmid part of tlieiie
*ses$it)ns concerns how ^io get
inv<>lv];cd in jstudcnt goycrn-
ment. Dne din wa^ch fgr ad-
vertised St ucfent government
positions appeared in. the
Lkiih Bruin or come to thx:
third no< f Kcrckhoff Hall
to. ulk wan the student com-
misaioners, :-.
• ' Thit third part of xhese ses-
•tpns includes a rap time where
new fttKfenti -a^e^fr«e.-«^^
any cjijiest ion«$ a bout student
;iS»/trnmcTit and to interact on
f
--j>
I-
pcfiohal basiS wielr'^^indiv
dual CQunctl^-mcmbers; * ^^
There arC currently 25 ito-
dent govern meni-orientat ion
workshops operati^- with 20
new students in each one in
this wayMudents have sman
Jndivklualizcd Workshops*
where they get to'';:^rsonair\
know the council^ members
according to Menor
The jTiajority of hew siu
C( ontinued on Pa|;r .M
-The 50 students accepted to
the program were selected on
tbe liasis of rheir academic
records, community activities,
motivation and recommenda-
turns ffom trirhrri ail
sclors. Many of these students
will be filing their colicfc ap-
^pjications for next year by
Ndvemjtwr and! according to
Stern, '*Tlie ,counscli|ig they get
XQmci at a point where
changes in^4licir academic pro-
gram ciin^ still be made to
-prqxnrc them for a career in
engineering" .
Student panic I pant Rolando'
Gucrr^rc of Polytechnic High
♦n Sun Valley ' explained;
")V'>iaF-l really wam^-fQ^^kam if
what ftepa^-l -hȴr t^i, tale' to
gfrt- taif.; tollcjie iid^'what is .
available rp me in the engi-
;ftecnng ' "fiefat*— \"'':"^'^'*" ' ' ■ - .
MITE, a naticm-widc pro-
gram.' is patterned 'after ^ an-
{i^mefH^y orientation program'"
started at the University of
lllinQis in 1^^ ?hc MITE
program was offered at I'CLA
for the first' time last year and
-n^f^'ttMi highly by its. parti -
dpaiA^ itt. a . program-evalua-
^vettionnaire.
Twenty-two ^of last year's 45
■/ m^l
WITH . ,
tsi wisywoootivD wisrwQQo wiii^..
Thw 15 th0 pf9c0 for Rtt Lomnf
By far the daaf «/6» weVe fr^ed m LA
COiiPLrrE DINNERS
Casual Dining g,^ S2.78
HARRY*a OPCN Prr BBQ .
1452 CRESCINT H&QHT5 at aUWMT tTHtP "~^
10 Minuat Down Sunset Blvd to
Laorai Canyon Turn Right And Vou r« Th«rc
\f
Student
^^(ln^wiAW
^.7 »«.J#»W
AmMmM Oym Rtchard Simm. OKietor o« HlMTE
A tmall d.v».r«fied Real Estate lnve»HT?«HCompwro«w»
a part-time educational prpgraro « an as»»um 10 |»ie
presKlent. The position involves research, financial
analysis, tax consideration, decision making'arfd the actual
consumation^ deals in the real'world o< business. Thi, is a
"""•^f program which- ipvoJves rtb monetary compen^
sation, but will provide the ujccessfuJ ^^am,*vith an
unexcelled educatK^nafexperiertce The ,ob is the tMtti«o< a
oreer in mveswients, business, law or other Telatid
profession* This- position is a source of ^-- rufm ..,
iJtoutMe hours. . ^_ ;»
Ask for lay ^^'^'^'^■fh~'Ul'i. n^ 1lCi ^
I
^VA#A.».
.jJUAa
t.^y
students said they planped to
go into engmcering time in the
futuie, 'and 23 lauded t4»e pro-
gram fbe- *ha\irtg" helped thcm-
in thpr 4»choo} work, according
to tfie -^luesttoniiaire ' ^-V
The pr,c>ir3W» this year m-.
cldidetralMay clasjittf m pro-
blem-*© lyjugififtath history apd
..student-run lab experiments.
Speakers representitlig the var-
ious engine^ing disciplines will
lecture ajid counselors will
meet wiTh ^both students Mjtd
iljeir parents to discuss ad-
missions requirements and fi-
nancial assistance. Tours to
local industries are also sche-
duled
MITE is principally sup-
ported by the national En-
gineer^' Council for Profes-
jiio^-Development ( ECPDT,
wiith" additional funding from
LTCLA'^and local in dui^iiai
€tT4BM
V Accordingn«**lrtw» Andcr-
son^ director of tlK'^|=^:a4i6tBic
Adyaacemem f^ogram (AAP)
and a^coKjrdinator of MitE,
. "The prbjgnrm provides an en-
vironment tlMir^is safer where
people get to know each other
^on a*^craenal level, helping
each other to grow and to
maximi/e their fullest poten-
tial-^
UCLA Foundation, Alumni
I win awards •
Orientation
y-^w - «■ *
"discount on any
Giant S^jji
with this coupon
good througtL]976
![•
'The UCLA. Foundation and
the UCLA Alumni AsscKia-
tion recently received recogni-
tion by the Council on the
Advancement and Support of
Education (C ASE) for the suc-
cess of various alumni pro-
grams.
1 he Council mexnbcrship in-
cludes both public and private
2-4 year colleges from all over
the world .
UCLA upheld past noterict\
by returning from Washingt(m
DC. where the awards Were
Summer B
» -fv-i^
'A;
TfHiraday,
K 2. 1976
AaUCLA C#n«munlc«t}ona Board. SSt W
C«p»rHhl 197t b^ iht
1 ■.
^1M«. Lea AfifclM.
^~t Offioa
Alice St^oft
FrtnkStallwoith
G«oft Ouinn
SuaanKane
TadSh^iro
Frank WMdar. Sally Qprrvtr
Kim W.ldman. Michall« Duval
David Whitnay. Joanna Eglash
^iattLapin
^'ganna RatHovich J*Ma(lrt.«o«>
JodtZaoNowp
JanaWtgod
DtcliKrauz
Vtckt Vancg
presented with acoata4ea in
three major areas. The CASE
Exceptional Achievement
Award was presented to
UCLA for thctr. direct mail
program which tsiicits finan-
cial support from Alumni. This
effort raised over S2I million
last year. The money is divided
into either restricted funds
according to Ilia ipecific re-
quest of the doQar. or into
unrestricted fun^s tliat are
channeled into the nce^d
areas at the dean's discretion
The UCLA School of Publu
Health Newsletter tMi Hk rei:!-
pient of the fmt >laoe grand
award spoaaoped by 7/m<
Maamme for llie best news-
letter ^ut out to aUirnni 7>»<
If CI. A Monthly Won the La
ceptional Achicvcai^^ Award
of beat alumni aewyaper, a
(Cootinuai from Page 2) • ;.--•
dents participating m this pro-
gram are not political science
,?¥Jors or prospective lawyeri.
"Students from all walks oi life
participate in this program,"
said Mehor.
Garry Taggart. assistant di-
rector for this orientation pro-
gram, said, 'The level of en-
thusiasm generated by new
students for this program is
very promising" Another
freshman onentation session
amy be held in the spring.
At this time, the aaniaM
extend only over the summer
Further teaiiaM wdi be held
September 2. 3, I, 9, and II.
All aeasioAa meet from 10-
10:30 am on the sixth fk>or of
Hedrick Hall
u*
AUTO tNSURANC
We can save nnott Hudenti ap to 3b% on studant
discounted policiM. Call us in the Village for a
quotation:
477-2548
agents for Collaga Student Insurance Service
1100 Glendon. #1447 ("Monty's" BIdg.)
?;.
OAKLEY'S*
Men's Haircuttirig
at its best
Long & Short Hair
DELIVERY 4.-sa<f^ a78 5117
'07fc ^ArifY . WES I WOOD
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GH
SCI
from
«-'-, j '
^"
Another nude <o
Sculpture Garden
Wy SuHiin l> 'UfiiMii
DB sun Krp4irter
* a ))ron/c sculpture b> Ari!»(ide MaiUol will soiyn
be added to the Franklin D Murphy Sculpture Garden
The 42-mch fenuik nude sculpture don^itcd b> Hcnrv Ford
II. ilk armles5i and mounted just hclov^ !hc kneo.
"lorsu' \fcas cast in 1938 ai a loundr> in France. The
:ulpture is unique, caftt separately uith no arms or Urgs
•<>m line of Maillul's earlier works "The 1 hrcc (iraccs
"lorsa" valued at S50.0(X/. v>a> caled at Mr I .»rd -
Detroit home before being given to UCT A
Arisiide Maillol was a Trench sculptor born in IH61
Influenced b> Greek s»cuiptors. MaiUol became the scui^or
of the Me<lilrrninean ideal "Torso** is his lecead piece in
'the Sculpf^e Ciarden the first being a ?'^-inch bron/c '
•"Heroic Head"
The Franklin [) Murphy Sculpture Garden covers over
throe and a half acres on the north &ide of campus and
4ncltMks 61 sculptures The garden was" deigned and buili
for. stMlents to enjoy art in a, natural setting by Murphv.
former UCLA Chancellor »nd Ralph H '^'orneil, landscapt•
archltect
— 411^ o9Mi§y'-of -(iie—gBfoen IS its opcnrten. ^ddit: ~'-= are
made, but not so it becomes heavily" populated. I he garden
IS for people to live in, not seulpiures.** sa.id Gerald
Norland, curator of the Sculpture Garden •
Dynamic Rehydri/e Orarrgtv't* one-ton sculpture b\
f lelcher Benton, wilt also be added this fa^l M^^ and Mrs
Fredrnk Weisman of Beverly Hills donated the s<t*rfptu re
which IS being manufactured especially for I'CLA.
Tof«). by Aristid* MaiHol. »m cMt in ttit at a toundry'm F
Thf wo9k it a n«w idiillyii to »w Sculptur* Garden
Center for manaijement in arts opens
A ^udy center for Cuh oral
Policy and Management m the
Arts^, the first in the nation.
. has been established at the
UCLA'^s Graduate School of
Management.
"The study center is a place
where the faculty basically
gather to communicate their
research knowledge and where
we can address problems faced
by those with an interest m the
ar^s," said Dr Lee Cooper,
director of the study center
**One of the big problem?^
that continually work on ^
how can arts organizations get
maximum impact for their
managerial dollars." explained
Dr. Cooper.
According to Dr. Cooper,
aits institutions would con-
tinually suffer financial Mkin
if tt were not for the extent of
• private patronafc, foundation
!"PPort and tuppon from-tHe
federal government '•fn gen-
eral, one of the end products
of fostenng exchange through
these 1 as would be
eMeaivc tmmmtmtnt **
•aid Dr Co«pir.
The study center will ^pon-
ter feminars, conferences, pob-
lic meetings and a ipeaker*s
^ropan throughout the year
The center will u»c the facititics
"' ihe i!iraauate School of
Management and is currently
developing a collection of
readings relevant to the stud>
center in the GSM Library.'
According to Dr Cooper.
the Study Center if going to
open this fall; but it has been
in existence in the preforma-
tion stages through winter and
spring quarters
Albert Bush of
engineering dept
dead at 60
Funeral services for Albert
F. Bush, professor of engi-
neenng and public health here
and former director of the
Metropolitan Water District of
Southern California, will be
held at 10:30 mm Saturday in
the Church of the Recessional
at Forest Lawn, Glendale
The 60-yoar-old professor
died ia« S«iiny followii^ a
Heart attack near his summer
home at McCall.
He had taught
1949 and had been director
the MetropobUn Water Dis-
trict from 1961 to 1975
lush was a lortg-time re-
Comp
Mi;.ii>«i^»44»t
Doctors talk to 'patient'
^y Vi«-M€i Qmm aoui Parrv reoreienti the
programmed to foe paranoid
CI
iy \m-Mm
Dft Stair m
"How are you feeling
lyr
Tm fedHif OK physically/*
' "And eaocionatyr
"Fm not getting ataig too
wdl with the other patiems.**
The **patient*' ia tlie above
conversation is mehmtty a com-
J^tei programmed to be p«ra-
noid
Kenneth Colby, a psychia-
trist •• tkt Neuropsychiatries
Institute here, has developed,
with a team of researchers, a
computer |>rogram which simu-
lates paranoid patienu
Doctors communicate with
this artificial intelligence model
via teletype, using nor
every4ay Engliilt
can demonstrate weak, me-
dium and strong kveis 4>C para-
Parry represent! the type
of paranoid patient who is
hospitalized and still wiUing to
talk to people "The model
does not nmulatc the guy who
is l0cked up in a cage some-
where," said Dr Colby
Fear, anger and slmme are
the negative effects represented
in Parry Fear and an§rr are
acttvsM by external threau
Shame is evoked by feelings of
seK^Aadequacy. If Parry con-
cludes that the interviewer is
■Mkvolent or incompetent, it
ilMy verbally attack |he inter-
viewer oi^ refuae to communi-
cate anymore.
Parry has been judged- by
hundreds of psychiatrists
dunng the seven years that it
4ias been in use. jKcordmg to
Colby It was difficult for the
judges to teM tiK differences
•'.
m0 paranoid
film
between Parry
patients
Cojby is using Parry to test
his shame-humiliation theory
oi paranoia His theory post
ulates that shaming and humi-
luiting a person could make
him paranoid, explained
Colb> T
''The Tahitians should have
low leveb of paranoia The cine for disease ^iapMJsi sand
parents threaten then rhuJiiiLjtxMg aiiminisiration. s^id
but they don't shame them." ^ "
Colby speculated
Colby said that he hope% his
theory will help others to
M^S^^mdkifftBi, manafr and
prevent paflBIKr^ ^ '
Artificial intelligence is also
Colby, adding, **A tremend4>us
amount of work is being done
m this field About MH) per-
sons are involved "
»»,--• •
I
I
X
If you were to need some
information on old and cur^-
rent movies and films, would
you know where to look? The
pliwe to go is tlie UCLA Film
Archive located in 1438 MeK
niu HaH
Fjiunded m 1968 by the Mo-
tioi^ Picture Division of the
University* of California, the
Filfh Archtvt Wis developed to
fin- tlie -need for a motioa
£ttture study center qb the
-mtH Coast Now it is the
iMpM institutional* pollection
west of the .Mi^tssippi ind the
fourth 111 am i»^^ie -—tioo.
Charles Hopkins, one of the
two associate cujratbr^ ex-
plained that the. f%ns are coik
irirbuted by stadUM^^ijnKluceTi,
concerned indrviduals and thf
industry personnel. The m»-
jority of filnfi Ir the archive
collection are froUrt Ihe Twen-
tieth Cemu^ Fox and Fara^
.mount Studio libraifes
4^ue to the unstable /ilm
stocks, „ miiny films prior to
>^^ notrengcf-e»f^l^ Mqw,
however^ with careful ston^,,.
the archive takes the profar
safeguards to insure maximum
fiife expectanc^^, .
Hopkins aKo staled that the
facilities are open to students
and faculty from UCLA or
cHhet camjpuSes m* any-depart-
fient He emphasucd ihia the
archive is not restricted, hut
sboulo be used mainly for
-riaearch «nd study
The film ^hive itself prer
sently \utkAMS original 35tfun
titles UCLa also has Itele-
visioo and radio libraries hut-
tlkls^ are kept-^eptrate from
tile film archives.
being uNrd inlthe field of medi
McCormack • .
ColKv'i
b> the
Mental Health
I
was funded
Institute ot
(Continued Jrum Page I )
Rient, but I will work \jb l^iJd
a good relationship with coun-
ICarasik said ''She's sitilrt
#nd she's capable, so shell be a
good president il ^he sticks^o
her commitment, wfhich she
prohshty -will, since weVc
got Iter promise to resign hang-
mig over her^ head.**
In a. rei»ted sessioii, Mc-
^rmack's Internal allaifs eo-
Don
rep-
■■■*#j=i ■
7
lying many
the prmis ikat w sh<mfnn
department film history
and seminars, ^the iitf-
ordinator and
lesser, was unanimously
rtmandcd hv SIC
Lesser recent Iv brought a
letter fiefo re S^TT'lor the pur;
pose of excusing McC^maci^
absence that day ^ • -
,Both lesser* and McCor-*
rnack admitted that l/sser lied,
when he said that McC ormacli '
wrote the excuse In actuality.
U wrwte the ^nrt himseM ^
without
ledge
l£ i.
M cC ormac'k * know* ^^*
— - ^«S'.
^
searcher into the causes and
rrnwidiu of air aisd water pol-
liUtJbn^^ studying backyard itr
gHenKon at contributof^ to
smog in the 1950*1 and deve-
loping .M-m€
wmu water
rathfiP thafn tiirougl^ attaching
smog devices on cars. Bush
was the first tncu^ sponsor 4^
tiif' Student hydrogea car
ject here.
hod of reclaimiili v^^V^ «*'^^«i ^ !»» wife,
IB ths 1%0's. "7^* ^^® ta^* Richard
. • * »tw Stamon, a ditughter^
,^ ^ 5W ^ itiacsted that Beverly A«B» of ^manllo
tlK ultmate control of auto- «i#ywr grandchildren
poUution MM come > - l^^ Watanabe
chive:: 1 1 1 1 n i^ i .rare pnnts^lor.
^bKc Jscreowqgs m, jiuseums
and- film festivals, m Lcwt
Angeles They sponsor alter-
noon aod evevtng irriirapup
for public 'viewings inrMdlMii
14a9T**A crombination l6-55mm
Stccnbeck viewing machine is
available for individual screen-
,1—1 ■ - X t- A _ - ■ ' —
mgs
Q)tugjHMiMt isasy in fasnwuiitdrgmi
tipn « IttW tffT«^''Df Mit^ihrtff VMTt Visit
KerckhoM ' '
!.,>
* .',
i-tm^
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bet tor SMwr studwHi antffvftiiars 10 am
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work placsMim in community larvica
-^MSM Massy3M or caH C&47»
riffPlfrNa liaMi riOpm Mitd
.i!)^(<lh<ltC^^$^M0ent Qmmi f rot
wiH besfioitn froffi 7<i pin
"'HZr**'? •■•rti* aMsn km Jtpta mi^
'" portorm ? pm. figHiimi s ScSfro
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See the nationally televised UCIA-ASU football
gjfne and spend a ntght with us in Tempe. Rrctent
this coupon upon check-in at our lod|pt and you
will be entitled to a 10% discount on any type of
room you n— A A Football Game. the "Tempe Spots"
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do n, I'm fDWif la li« you
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<Contifiikad as.Pj«r5)
■9fcSS«JZL
^- 1
,v
J
I
;^
summer bruin
poinf
DB Editorial
J
^
,<'lUtWtf'
A Girl and her Bagel
AAsg McCormock! M«g McCormodif
^ ^^^ •'P^ • ♦••^' ^^^ wot o nic« giH who lik«d
^ bogoH, dronk C«4l«/ and n«v«r af« brookfotf
^ ^ Hsf cl^ftotf friends toid that th« wot !•• nic« to p«opl«
1 ^1^* "^^'^^ turned, fhoM dignified ^ualificafioof
I rM«#H«d in i^f •Uction by a mur\^%m ol Hm p^pW. Woll,
a •♦ •^•* %^^%f\ pmr cofit of rHo rii|fi So lor, to
•mI wot tho nico onough?
For of 1:30 om, August 16, tho tlo«ping Mog wot
owokonod by o tolopbone call And alot! two mombort of
Studont Logitlotivo Council twoopod hor off to Tiny
Naylor't. Sho drank only coffoo.
9 ii^Mod to -iooigfi, impooclimont would rotult. So tbo
rotignod.
Thon tho didnt/
AH vorioty of naughty littlo doodt wof^-rovoolod to tho
p#opU. (ftemombor? thoi j^not who hod givon hdr Mm^
mondoto.)
Iwt tuddonly^ tho poopio h^ird nm mm. Woro Hioy
dBun No, SlCijfctporlod mio iho doop, dork doptht o*
5«CfOt SMtfofM, ^wfiofo fh* poopio and tho prott woro
forbiddon-«o dotcond.
What hopponod during ifho throo^ tocfot dqyt
pMpIo could not watch? Wot StC wmihg uriddliriif^ suppose that's what you're afraid and provide for yourself Vou
of rotignotion? Woro thoy torting through moiNbokot'' Wof«T-£^^-"^^^
Ihoy footting booolt^ No thow w.r. ,^^^^ H i^ ^ ^" ^^^ « ^••^^^ ofhardworking ta«pt^efs What's
TiL, •-.L •L. • V-i T . . T • '•«»»'"r ^•^^ Haven't .ifouevf^ heard of shar ^ more you have T^auH^r!fvL
iSii"^if^ "^^ .^^"*'' ^""* •• ~***^~^ ^ou found two other, who^d^ yoOrT^Pii. w^re be.ng txalnK
MOtAl: ditliko bogolt, don't drink Cokot, ond always ^^f "'^8 *« '^'^n to yoy*.-^r,p-, 71^ solutuDn for yciu to aV^
t broqkfatt. Don't, bo nko to >ooplo/ bo nico ttf SIC '^^ ;^^°"«d t>e ^uf iaokmg, obe-constar^tly hassMng bureau.
V -, , .'^ot <jtiite the ..Waklorf Astoria -^ ' -
** -bitf orhefvhave mafiie iJ in such
Nw I kmw yau wen iiHD DMA rMtrtti? Jiil a iucky
i»p«ci^
In the. Atjgmr SfhlJ^sue df^the
bummer Brutn, there a|if)ejred a
iptter jn which ihe^-^uthor tried tb
illit«»rrate .th^ plight of those
mg to get on the wei^U;^ rolls.
After readrng the letter I first
thought it was a satiriral rOmment'
on the mmorTty m our society who
feel it is tfieif privilege to lounge
airound and collect weffare. while
I ■
cifcumstances.
Your next complaint -i^. about
th«(~M^<2^kpi;<^€t which "consists'
rk-.r«.rt./ H i_ ®^^" ^'"^.idUvcJUbor' for some
Ihe rest of us.^ const itutejHwn.. eou^ry a«ency" Let me correa
taxpayervprovide y.6u wicKairee^ ^ZlusTuSor .s when yZ^
IrvirvgJJosHbiy. I am massing the^ f,,^ed to work Yog^hav^^X
boat, but aher r^read^g the ar- -option to go out; find a ,o^1nd\
tide several timrs. f believe you make^living. Lackir^f the mcen.
K.C.
i^, — *•• — ■
..yT »»•■?''
were act uaTty serious
Assu^ming the author was in
earnest, Id Hke to '^toke mxcep-
tion to a few of his comj^iaints.
First we're told that in order to
stay on th^ welfare rolls you
have^to apply for ten jobi every
w^eek. Rough life., isn't it? Sup-"
pose you actually found one I
ttve to find youcielf a iob. you
comf^lain whep^^he county re-
quires you to partttrie^j^ in a work
tKolect in exchange tor your w#
iare dole, jz:--^ -* '* '* •^■■'^■<£\^" ' ? • ■ •
Mr. Q Hear n. I f^ you are an
example of a small but growing
problem in our nation. Yqu ^re
lazy and lack rnotivation to go out
rt(p-^-v
•f>«i r>JI
..»•<
OPK)SE0 TO
OlJ '"THE cm4f R HANO,
!%» NOT TCTTaLLY 0?9(ybtD
--■* ' ■
,. ^•i very dbtr aught when I
reacf the article about Meg Mc-
Cormack, Thursday. ^ug|tif 19. ^
felt tlje informa-tiOh not duly
disturbing as to what Ms, McCor-
mack suppotodiy did, but in re-
gards of how the members of SIC
spoke oi her. I also felt that many
ot the thin|^ said were cruel, and
very unnecessary.
I am nor supporting Ms. Mc-
Cormack, cottdoning her Actions,
or saying that she should resign. I
am saying that the procedures of
impeachment should be carefully
looked over a) to how one is
-warmed of impeachment. Ob>
taming more information as to
how the aaual process is brought
about, etc.. would be helpful for
the students to know. I abo think
that sparing Ms. McCorriiack from
meanmgK»s "name calling" rs of
definite importance.
CloriaDci
Faber
f*
Man of a Thousand Faces
Carl Faber I understand
he s being given the boot I'm not
surprised.
People like Faber are incongru-
ent with the mnton concept of a
"""I!!!!!!! ^^'* ** » univemfy
^uppotod to be? A delving<into all
manner of esoteric subjects of
questionable value to contem-
porary life? An escape, a retreat
trom the adult rotpomibility of
'•nding better solution* to our
urgent problems?
Schools are where this nation's
values 9r9 tfahsnr»med to the next
generation If our iocicty strhoot
for security and comfort, H it
depends on the uninterrupted
pfoduction of, a great variety of
_ fhif%i. if it requires bnv^doKier'
so that theieconorriy can op^Sr
at jieak efficiency, ifit is curious
about how other people have
. lived — then- th«rriTij^ wtH «
q*±tie undorstar>dably pecmeate
our universities^ f " •; ^ -"r
, What happens when a persqn
like Faber comes along and tries to :
teitfh about things; which have
Itttte ^eiovance' to par Midety's
t 'Tf 9**^ ^afu«? - Sipbjects '
whieh are not only rather irre-
l«i««t, to those vakies, but whicH
serve to distract students from
their primary goal of learning
¥Ocattohal skills and professional
roles. -
' lor Fabor goes on and on about
topics such as the fiature of a
person's identity . ... 'What gives ^
a life its meaning? *How do^
someone know who he really is?'
And so forth. , .
Such topics implfcitty seerrf to
question the system itself 9^6 its
undef4ying values . . . What are
our lives really like? 'Are We at
peace with ourselves, and with
others living on ttie earth?' Are
we giving up our conr>ection with
tne iky ar>d the sun, with trees and
the ipeech of aninnab?' 'Are most
of us unaware of the eriormous
ipeces inside ourselves, unaware
of our breathing?'
Here is a sample of tt>e voice of
Carl Fabor: ''Listening, when it's at
its deepest; is . . . a revolutionary
•ct. If you are really with some-
bo^ . . . and they're allowed to
break out . . . and make a mo-
ment and all of what that
■•••ns to people you fan the
fire of human spirit. But if you're
not there if you're detached,
and living on yesterday's answers
. you kill the humar^ spirit,
often without even intending to.
Ohen intending the oppoiilt By
imposing on rt. tnd hokting It
ciown. And those moments will
'•ever hapf}en . .
Faber's subjects are beyond
*^ords. People like him are totally
out of place In our nation's uni-
versities. And that, ladies and
gentlenr>en. boys and girk^^is ¥vhy
we are dying.
R. Epiimi, Phi)
ind0>d
By Camy Soipp
Let's TM Aboiii Mem. writ-
ten and directed by l^ina Wert-
muUer. ii a sequence of four
episodes about Maii*s re-
btionship to Woman Oftcr^
uneven, ocfasionally wildly
funny, the stones arc connec-
ted by a running joke of a man
(Nino Manfredi> locked out of
bit shower. Covered with
^lotbing but MMipttids, Mma-
frcdi, who pbiyi a different
hero in each epbode, wanHen
hopelessly around hit apart-
mcm^gjding^ pvcrhcaring biii^
oTcoirverMtion which lead into
Ihe main stories
in the opening story. Mbn-
fredi is a nch business Mas
who it horrified to
that his spoiled, lex-kittcn wife
(Luciana Paluzzi) bat becm
Maalmg jewels from her fncnds
to amuse herself Suddenly
news amves thai be it ruined.
and the businessman hopes to
bvc off his wife's dishooctty.
She IS however, embarraaiad to
steal while he watcbet and is
charmed by the idea of living
in a garrett.
Manfrcdi aind Milena Vu-
kottc are an aging pair of
circus performers in the second^
alopy — a knitt thrcMilir and
his wife, who it also his tarfet.
He it stubborn and caiaiiBa,
she adoritig and mnaipg an eye
aad a leg. She is alto not quite
of this world, seeing in her
*Ives'
At.u .. •* ^"^ Michel KarbcM^ ■
bonil*^«i " "?" — f?«*'f"' *^ mtn,u.ng. i,. Wi, ofte.
o^«L L!!!f^"i L*" *"»P~« « bum upon horribly
oy«na*^mm* awl the intoc« becomes so twitted and
tmjt eventiaMy^-WoKe* iiicbmptehensiblc
Lef stalk about Lina
ftdXKKK.*'**
•*^- ,:
'''II* " ' •
•^1
CTiwIes Broiaon plays St. ives. an ex-columnist stuck with ftie
^^ril-J^* ~* »n,pct.vr In fact. « to |«« « 1^ sig^ '
^verytinie^ ihe appcwt m a tcene with St Ives ik ha« an
uncontrollable liige, ttr |(eel her dothgr off r'^^r" ""
-_™*?f 2!JI!2L!I* ««tep^Jfi. relay iMM,^ Janet ihi^
Z« ft^t!i^ "*■ Sfe«r<itht aSa-fimWlly delivers
"''^'•" '~.^'..-
brihish husband a viiiiMft of
•nbe Archangel Cabricl-,
Fellinrs influence on Wert-
jnuller it bcavily a|>parent in
"tWf- ii;p ryTlle re lat i o n s h i p
between Manfredi and Vukoiic
being rcmarkaVly similar to
that of Anthony Quinn aiid
Giuhetta..J4ataiM ifl Xa Strth
dm. But Wcrtmuflcr it not iii
i«r eienjcnt here, and tbit
ttory qiuckiy dnfts mto fo/c^
sentiment.
Wcrtmuller is at her bcft in
the offbeat and ghouhshly fun-
ny third story, ia which Man-
Manlredi, Pahizzi: the nuOe #iiiiiial
fredi inrietentiflt
i ''>ii-\
'{ Cl
cut ^nd a clubfoot He forces
kinky sex out.,<>f-hit^ wsfc
(Margaret Lee) jTRoV however,
can't do anything right. -A
VMllor boy ivith a whipr siieers
Mgitfredi m ditgusk^^li^^abr^
solutely indisputabf^^ou*re a -
cretin." Discovering his wile*s
plot to kill him. Manfr^dli
shoii»brr how, since the is too
hqggjm a creun to 4oJt hcr-
teif. ^.... , ^.™-. .^- I-
Wertfiiuller*s final story, in
which Manfredi a a lazy pcp-
«wt i«4 PatmiiH^ his'
the
long-9 uff er 1 ng wife .
and tiresoiba^ arid tHe most
unpolished^ ol the epiio^at. \x
also seems out of place Along-
side the > other;-^ more soi
ticated segments
'f Talk About Men a ™
masterpiece - it is often ct^op.
py and tfC loosely tied to-
gether. But in thjc. startling
origiiiahty and xxxatiiibbal hnl-
Itance dif itt tcript ahd direc-
tion, the |HWIni|»^ Wcrtmul-
ier!ti future tourt dli forc^ arc
very much'^ evident
. \.. ..I
I'-^MK^'.
rtsr^
■»
•> .A-
reasons
you
^..•. I •
»t you bring ut four m«t»ri«l by
Thyraaey at 1040. wt II aef M
out by TuMaay noon — or g^ve
us a wook. W H t conyoni#nt
Woro a fullMrvic* Prini fHap w«lh UCLA
stMdonlt worlimg hmf tnd thoy r* soooMlvo
to tlud^nt noods and wants
.%!
f\'^>
»
r^——
•llypo
Our
We could tell you lots more, but let's t>e reasonable
frtday 8X)a-5pO
t21
11 fTg?
-"—"-'•
-r--«
..« - —
■»•— *— 1^^
- 1
T
■ I'
■■V
A tres bien *La Chienne'
I
I iMIll.ll]!
By Roktrl K<
Jean Renoir always made
filmt as tf he were trying to fet
some poison out of hit system
All of his work is hke an act of
«nppiiii hioMcIf and mankind
nmkcd Mate the public, which
i» why his films, a>e so totally
tragic. They arc true mirror
rcilectiofis of life, framed with
thr slightest tough of rage
U Chmme (LA premiere at
the Lo% Fdiz) isn't the angry
film so typical of Renoir*s later
years It is a bitter and hcart-
*lt story of a would-be artist
who IS hving a would-be life
His name is Maurice L^rand
(superbly played ^k^A41chel
Simon) biil his last name
might as well be Renoir, for
this is really Renoir's night-
mare of his own father not
^^imniiakiff>g ff,-«s m pmffi^ or
a man.
Not that we dislike Maurice
he ieooi at ^rpetual -
with himself He battles
monstrously aagi^ wik, with
the best weapon, lilcMc, aad
•• # painter, he's very good
He is simply too kind for his
own good, and when Lulu
(Jame Mareze), the -*>itch- of
the title, comes along in the
night, his attraction to her
beauty it fatal
Ironicaay, Maurice, even as
* part-time painter, needs
beauty With every dark, mid-
night shot af TiKodore Spar-
kuhPs camera, you are re-
minded that this is the very
thing that consUntly avoids
Maurice Lulu and her Don
Juan lovcis Dede (Georges
Flamant), seem to be a good
connection for Maurice to
make some money from his
work, but fhey 1iili,hifti:The
transpiration of events m this
film is like Simons approach
to the role: morote, aatanly
understated and overwhe4m-
. tngly sa^.
Poawbly hngaii it was his
fint try at sound, Renoir re-
corded all the scencsi at the
time they were shot — oalieard
of in 1931. This meliculousness
» refleda^ in the sets, and the
painter's eye for the setting up
o( the camera tlhiuJings. sha-
dows, multiple actions and
icaMt in the same shot).
The tragic story and the
performances of Simon and
Mareze are what one remem-
bers, however. Even the
charming ending, with Maurice
•• an old man, cannot diffuse
the total air of saiaaat that
Simon and Mareze convey so
^»f^ They^ are two Umc MN|la^
Sarjft in a wortd^of hate and
illusion, a wo?ld * all too
modern.
Commoner's crisis
Bruirr
Staffs
N
St. Ivcs-
>*»
Continued front Page 7> ".'-'
wtSch Si, Ives does not share until much later ^*^
St 4«e» confronu near fata) situations evcrv-two or ihm
«n1^^*"^*** ***"'*' never know by ha frozen f^
ilZV^^' -^^ •■'""'" '*•* **'^- ^hfther boinj taunted by
Janets advances or an opened switchblade -
r^liA]^ THompson-s direction is above a-^crageV-akhoufefrUe
could have done more with MaAitniTljaii Schcil and John
--"^^TL^" "«"«^"r /«?"'" *h<, were Va^o^in this film
, .: '"•^,'>_^««'-mans screcnplar'Crtifrairts the basic flaw of V/
X" ^--'^?^ attempts, anrf many corpses. -St: l.ves finally
wS'^nTr „""""'• ^"' '*'\^«>'"'' »>«i' tV ledgers are found .
with four pages niiss.ng From ihexe.- th«»-**ory beeomev ^
ff^r'^SlW '*°"'''"*'^ ■"*"*"' follows ^andi,'*!^^ ^
Whether S}. Ives is trying to get the pages bacR or what ir^
Thr o^^*? t*'^u-'j"^' '* '^*y-fO'n« to siduce someone els^
The story hicks cohei.vc weaving of actions ghd characters that
hHd together aiid«lefi*es:-i well-written mevje '*™'"'^'
Jl'n^-r
—•»<'.
'■,.1
.* »
» '
*i
'. »i
FKOK
s&^^isa
ril ^
•y JolM C .^■■,
I The energy crisis and its traumatic effect on the economy
are the reinih of the energy industry's profit-seeking and the
government's sh^n -sighted ness So concludes Barry Com-
moner in his wide-ranging and thoroughly documented
book. The Poverty of Power (Knopf, 314 pafca* SIO.OO)
Actually, none of his conclusions are really news For
example, it is well-known that Amaacan oil companies held
down production of American oil reterves, relying intend on
cheaper, hence more profitable, foreign oil. It is the
meticulous detail with which Commoner recounu cases like
these — citing figures from industry and government —
that makes h^r book so forceful. He i>inds all the potentially
borini^ sutistics together with a lucid, cadent style
Commoner claims that most energy is wasted through
misapplicatioji. For example, he shows that a Mat deal of
energy couW be saved ff we were able to heat our homes
and water with the waste heat from power plants especially
nuclear plants. Later, in the chapter on transporution he
stales (again, not surprisingly) that cars and au-crafts are the
most inefficient means of travel. He shows that while diescJ
trains mrethe^ most efficient forrh of transport that^Wn fu^i
directly, the most efficient of alf are elect ric-powered trains
Commoner portrays the nuclear power industry not only
as a failure, but a dangerous one. It has failed b^MM* k
was supposed. to provide ehergy more cheaply than faaHl
fuels, but doesn't any lonfClr. Part of the reason for this is
that Urtnmm pow produces less energy for the money than
It used to. Nuclear energy is dangerous beduK it taddles us
with tofw of wastes which will last. Commoner estimates
a^ut 200,000 years. He asks, logically epou^^ -Who is to
TOnd watch over this radioactive kg^MTT* What socud
institutidn cin promise to last that long?^ ~
^ His main soruTio'ff to the ener^ cnsis is solar cnerav ^
The only renewable energy souri:e.- He spends mo« of £
discussion of solar rticrgy showing very convincingly tew
simple. It would be to ejnvert enough solar energy to
^^^^^^ ener|g.,»feortaSs,i t,.u^,,^^ mde^tirifcnt from
r^m' '"f*^^:^ ^^'"'y ^ ^isST^iascmatmg is
Cornxnoncr^s^hty to explore unexpected areas.. suc;h as
apiculture, and rel^ejhem Jo^e^^^
:^^J?'^" » ^ully integrated view- of .the energj^ crisir
^owtnr how itaflects. every phase of our lives. But he also
takes a positive view, p- -r -if fcMiril ■niiiiiMi ii tim
same time he de&Mt fhr jfrntLjii '^ ' - ■
ThePoveny<rfPower^ov^ ^^
irJLI**' ?^ T" *^' *"- *" ^"^^S^ policy-makSng position^
Omil^oner^ Ideas ccyrid belhe feguii«r:of thelr^ ^
energy problems " s.,:—
ATTCNtlON FOREIGN STUDENTS
Let ua ship yoor pefsooal^ff^ct Homt )h9mm
tiona^ packaging and shipping. W« jrtpp sf^r
PACIFIC-KING ^ tais w^t em.^t
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17
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h+1
In this latest effort, James
Taylor continues the hraMd-
ening trend so evident in Coril-
^ In the P(Hket features a
variety of souads. Irom the
Ptea^nt **Stea>er the People"
u ^ *^*"^ "^ omaa^i Ciotta
Hayi If to the sarcastic
Moary Machine*" His reflec-
tive and introspective side is
most effectively portrayed m
^Daddy's All Gone- and
•^Golden Moments.** so sad but
K) beautiful James has help
from friends David Crosby
Graham Nash, Art Garfunlcet-
and of course Carly Simon Of
BiHe also -n^ -a fT^T^^lllailoa
with Stevie Wonder, "Don't he
Sad *Cause Your Sun is
Down;^ featuring ^levie him-
•elf on harmonica. It, is an easy
tune to empathize with, as are
all the tunes on this album,
it' is an incredibly nice cut
'~^7n to.
name W^hile dissatisfying as a
whole, the unique Ohio PUyera
puisaiifig vocal and instru-
•eaial sotiads aMke this a |.
bum a bore to bsten to, but
to , dance to
— Jodi Zactewy
MCA
Still lookiMg for a formuU
to give them the critical ac-
claim they never received
Grand Funk has put out their
best album in a long tune
Good Smj^ ^ Good Pkiym
marks the group's first album
on MCA and is also the first
with producer Frank Sappa
While not interfering with thcir
^y<p, '^appa^ sttbtle mftudices;
help G rank Funk come aerOis
as a food *ol **rock your socks
But for his first s<»lo venture,
Ferguson's album is a worthy
product From the start of the
opening cut, ^Snakes on the
Run,** Ferguson sets a hvel>
pace with clean, driving rock
rhythms which have always
charactenzed his compositions
The title cut, a gridicon met-
aphor for Ferguson*^ station m
the rock world, is easily the
LPs best, revealMit the artists
most aaaaiMs ipcals as well as
the disillusionment with his
past which has CHHd him to
•tnkc out on his own "X^m-
amoa QtjT aad an updated
version of Tni0k*s **M€d*ctt!cd
Goo** are Ferguson's best
'^^l^ers here, thankfully pro-
viding enjoyable melodies aad
avoiding the droning jaaH
•^h plaguy Jofo Gunn
Musically, the album stalls
twice, with a couple of funk-
rock numbers which U^k spe-
cific direction, **Madam Dok-
tof.- and **Time and Time
Again."
f
^onccrtsConccitsC
Fleetwood
Wigotf
:>
Ohio
•l»*W»V''
The Ohiojriayi^is newest
album doesn't jaoisure up to
the quality of their previoot
•t. k , etpecudl^r The recent hit
album, Hortev W hal- c«m''*^
datum does have however, is a
ht^h-j^dwcred number, '^Who'd
She Coo,** currently receiving
™"^**^W airplay , if s hot easy
1© keep stiH while hstening to
Ihis^ song, the beti on t^e
album
Soi^ like 't>ut To; Get
l^"^ J^<. ^•Coiag tbr^The
ristbr provide a nrach needed
high energy drive that has been
missing in some of Funk*s
album^^ hMe. Though still
lackiag in what it takes to
become a forerunner in the
contemporary music scene, the
lllbuni iMMy be their best re^
.Reived and best ^cUrng ^^elease
tt/ date
prank Funk Railroad hds
always had problems wifh crit-
ics and audiences over the: age
^,4t. (W (indcr the ^idlnce
:e^ Zippa and MCA, ihc^ail-
road may be '*back 09 the-
track.- -^-__ '
- Jack^M
tf.
«r^«^HPl^^
■ '*»i^iiy
The other ciif!i^ ran^e ffSSg
\t tg medioci^.^M^ •^«r#
ytH^-'Jt the Player's jgive %" try-
J4IIJ Halfway through, the v arc
"^overly long and draggy The
Jitlc cut and ** Precious ^Love**
*C* ^*>^'*"> guilty of jthi*,
Contradict lofl lives up 10 iti
" iQfiesco S
ACT OF DUTY
Chekhov'^
SIGHT BEFORE THE TRIAt]
r>rlifhiful teiUcdiA at mmrm. eanhx
humor , _ L4 lmme»
Fri. 8 30 om
$a.S«, Studanla $2.50
Santa Monica Playhoyaa
AM A
*^-*r44iC?-r
v--*,
.- — -P«i4-.
•k^M-»' '^
All AU>ne m the Bnd lone is
not 9Uttv ^le rock masterpiece
Ohat ope wotfkf; expect from
vocalLst ptanisi Jay Ferguion^;
once an integral part of Spirit's
creative genius, tlicii the f^^l
pomt of his own Jqio Gu^
For several ytmn, Fleet-
wood Mac was a rock group
whose name wal famiUar to
pop music hsteners, but
whose music ijwna
•ttly to a small sagpent of
the pop audience.
This year however, after
»ome personnel changes aiid
a spectacularly successful
album, Fleetwood kimc, the
group, has reach^ the sUr-
dom level The *'new** Fleet-
wood Mac had four told-
out ptorfonoaQces at the
'^^vh^ersaJ Aa^Miiciicater last
.week. ^^. ^ - ^ ' • , "
Thi grtfip is proficient
with both hard and soft
yy^jtCy^nd although the
wee *it singles on their
latest album are a|| basically
mellow songs, the bao^
spiced th*m up a bit wifh
•otne ^iiardcr * rtffs fe^nf or-
tunately, the selection of
. certain numbers and their
•po«uion-in the S8t.was ques-
tionabler -^ — : -.r-
Chnstinc v^ Me Vie showed"
hcfif If to "he an excellent
vo^^st, but too often idle
was stud^ 'behind hct
b9H3|M.hrhAch siK
very uiell *
Tbe^J^raup cao-^ t^nttnue
^ fcow 4U^F inature if4hey
can l^m to ^gjse more carer
m the planning of their
sitows They've shown-tlmm*
selves to be an excellent
in the studio, and in
future could be a
stafe attraction.
nr
•^. Jelf Later
Ufht that can hold the pro-
lOMsd attention of the most
WirtUBB of listeners
- Marc
Copland Judy Collins
Last week at the Holly-
lad iowl, Aaroa Coplasid
condudad^ a program of
three of this own works. It
was a remarkhble evemng of
music, Copland span de-
tuoastrating the rafiityii
and good taste that has
nade him oae of this
country's grant compaaaii.
The progrim consisted of
bis t^Suile from Billy the
Kidr *t:onosrto for Clarinet
and String Orchestra** and
"Symphony No. 3." The
**Suite** IS full of UMsical
humor as Copland simul-
taneously pokes fiin at and
reveb in the folk-tune flavor
of the piece. The *X:iariiii
'^ to" vaci
^^udy Collins broufhi io
her Umversal AmphitlHatfe
•VfiiBaaM last waek a
uvely. varied aad entertain-
iac tbow sua contm^'
demonstrated her versatility
and her exceUaaoe as a vo-
calise and fnasioaa. Coiw
can move efTniHasBly fron n
8oft ballad like her own
^•f* •• the Bpsad** to a
rhythnuc folk tune like
Stave GoodmanV t^ of
New Orleans,'' switchiM
MBk afjMl forth f roar guitar
to iniuM, and oocaaioaally
•uiiwg unaccoi^pamait as
in Mtau Farinas "Bread Jk
T ;'-*i?" 'i"" '"
.«'*
the sardorac and the str
"•Wtrf'+y*
■MP
forward, while "The 3rd
-Symphony- is an expressive^
yet restrained, work with
loase curious surpnses.''*^ .
jynderfymf most Copland
muiic, Jiowever, >::ts- a
teireshingly simple^ danty of
expression His musac^ has
somethmg for every o«j^' yat '
he never jieglects his tech-
•ical expertise ancf impec-
cable craftsmiBsBip. kxnef'
cfting of.4JJa|dpMl is a^d^
Collins was' backed by a
five-i^riilicr groulp of ..mu-
sicians led by. Ken Bichd.
■iiu purformed two origin
waita^jrhich proved to be
one oTlbe evUMc's
li#iis 7^
-Colhns clo:
•'1
^ , i her ^jbom^
with J4mmy Webb's The
Mwa is a Harsh Mistless"
and Stephen SondhelsiuV
"Send in tiM Ck^wn.*" She
T^ve the latisfyifig pcrfdr-
■i*«oc expected from such a
mature and caf^ble folk"
artist -
v-nK WASH*.*.
tetsieen the hours
9 and 5 anything c
4. - and usually does
^iss.-.#*-«''5^tf^**...
'•' y ,
: lit
FUNNKST COMBnr
M 50 YEARS."
MrowssmMRML
vcasioii acoTT
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for aach
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•voiruno8 16 00. all other
including
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&i th«
I HuntinQton Hartford
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idantfflcatiofi
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Uwlnsbq •hil■.kMlllp|.lil*^
hktt^mwmwtm
saiai
trark mwt
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WORLD PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT
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FUTUKEWOIIID (#GJ
THEFOtTUNE
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oopotrr ^-
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Brentwood
2524 WiWiarv
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2040 kmm df
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- if f ■>■>•— li«liii-: 2:30. 5:41. isM;.: .
7 :I4;^«^S fci> tiw liwi 4:34r >aa. .10:^
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^ury
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1640 Av« of Siao
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CONE WITH THE WIND
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^•t 12:30. 3:00. S:90. 0:00, 10:30
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OOETOMUYJOC
SHADOW Of THE HAWK
Fox Venice
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Pacific
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OtSESSION (FG)
2:30. 4:30. 4:30,
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iwt 12:00
— H.y Tmmi
Wendell Tyler plans to make UCLA M
/
Mn college football
By MidMi
Dl Sfm , ,„
Wendell Tyler hai finallv
°^^^ — ^otk a penon and
« foolMl pUyer. This com-
bination fives UCLA both tlie
leadership and offensive weap-
on it needs la its quest to
return New Year's Omy to Pas-
odeaa.
The senior running back #fMf
Heisnuin Trophy candidate i%
no lonfer putting personal
goals ateod of team Obfcctives
*s he did early m his career
Also, he has outgrown the
rcpuution of being i fumbler
a tag line that M eiusted since
hu first TiMifMI i^me for tV
-#iuinj^whea he fvicble^^ a
kickoff in the 1973 season
opener at Nebraafta
Tyler was as gifted as any
running back the Brums had
recruited when he entered
. UCLA in 1973. but there wai a
question of wterher that po-
tentul had been overcftuiia^
-when he was not in the starting '
*»nettp for the opennig game —
!*»« year due to frequent fum-
Wtag episodes.:
^^i^a^Mi ^ ■ — ja '.^^^t ■' —
The Crtttshin^ H^ ScSopJ
graduate had to overcome the
pUyful antics of fellow pUyci;^
»iKl Wudcnis, who kidde4 4itfflr-
aboiit>aving a handle attached^
%o the foot bail so he could
carrr it successfully
By Michael Sondheimer -DB Sports Editor
fiMBbliag. He excetted the rest
of the scasoa aadWielped kad
UCLA tmo the Rose Bowl and
subsequent victory over Ohio
Sute
'Brain rcapact*
Tyler is being mentioned for
all possible honors during his
sepiof season, but he isn't
concerneVJ with winning the
Heatman Trophy, All- Ameri-
can honors or even breaking
Kermit Johnson's school career
rushing record of 2,495 yards
(Tyler has 2,171 yards) Tyler*s
fool is to just help -UCLA;
fain respect across the 'country .
lor Its- 'football program"
The^5=m 4SS pounder siitf
<^ tlie 1976 Bruinsf ''Wc are
goiag to.hHenhe Cinderella
tcain of atl of college football
We are not going to get much
recognition, tai we are foii^
to^be in the running for the
whole show.-
Tyler rushed for a school
record of l,3U yards (be aver-
4ie4 ^.7 yards per Sra^ a
"year ago and he b«hev(S he
can do even better ihii year,
even though the offensive line,
is Hfissing stattdoiits Randy, :
Cross^-^^vd-^MnJ McKinncly
'The "WlMiicians*
^T think the offensive line of
TKeiinaa), Itetth (Eck),
Miich (Kahn), Greg Baylor)
^^^ G"« (Coppens) is 4»ot as
big as last year, but they are
Olao Sute had to be the big.
mm mdividual moment of mv
footMl career, while winning
the Roae Bowl «as Uie hi^
light so fac in foocMl,** uld
Tyler. ^^
The sociology major was not
surprised that he scored on a
loitg touchdown run m the
Rote Bowl -I had a dream-
before the Rose Bowl game
that I would break a way and
■•l^* the winning touchdown
I told somcbodfy i^bout it be
cause I jitst feh that it could
happen,** said Tyler -
Actions over words
y^ itu become one of the
leaders on the team not in the
sense of being a vocal person
but rather m letting his actions
be the form of leadttship .
"My job as one of the lead-
ers is to try to spark the team
when It IS down. I have got to
find some way to give u& a lift,
and this can be dotte by brcali!
are my best because of aiy
quickness. I thiak both Jttf
mmd Steve can do tiK job at
qiMcrback. and I aai tare I
wt5 i»ve my tinung down with
them by the Arizona State
Tyler thinks an important
aspect of the 1976 Bruins n the
closeaais among players. "^We
arc a cloaer team this year than
last year, and even the coaches
are doaw,** said Tyler -This
year's teaa Ims a lot of charac-
ter, with some great p^yui
and some yoyng caiKrieiaoad
payers T doflTl thiiilk «o llave
-proven All- Aniencaiis arl
coBy tHe saat as a
but this saaMB TyW will "b^
better utilized as a pats rc-
cavrr out of the backfield *•!
IM^e the Mlaa aT being a pats
receiver bacaaw I think aay
additioaal passing will help
the
the
affect me oae w^ or
UCLA ^.
i.i?r?"** ^ probably is
UCLAs top football media
P«[»o««»ny. Tyler has tried to
become the i^ooKHion man for
but together as a uast we
Bove the potential to be as
#ood as last year's' team -
"-< - Foaibtifig in aail
Fumbling u no longer a part
of Tyler m his mind He says
that all backs wtU occasionally
fumble and he does not worry
4hiMII It aay more. At the eritf'
oi tait iiaaon Tylertopk sodk
Tvler work..H K.lVi • ^^- * . ***' '^^' OMi tftey an
. .t.L y^ ^"^ ^^^^ quicker,** said Tyfer. -The of.
i stargng spot last vear and' fcn«ivi» hn-» .. ^^oiiiJ Ti^ t^v._
his stargng spot last year and
**^ wnprcssivc performances
^»i^tT^^c»a(M[he broke ak
S2 Tartf Tgychdpwn run). Air
-*v.
to
-rlwmf ifmtt of col"
oreMotjoatg to get
much ^ecagniiiQM^
An^ 1% mre going to
be in the running
for the whole show. "
Force (r42 yards) and Ohio
State (6.3 averafe pec carry).
In spite of thoae cttbr^. Tyler
probably did not gain the
change in repuution from a
fumbler to one of thc^ better
ruaaiag backs on the West
Coaai until the conference
at Sunford
fcnsLveJine,Js called The Icbh-
Atcians' because they might be
small, tmi they cm fiji^aflty-
y^^ng^^nd I ihmk thev wiJl do
.. the- 'jib ** '-' ' .-^ v., ■"■'^-i ' ■:'■'''—
Two^iime Heisman trophy
winnct. Afctte Gnffin of Oh^o
_Sutd,i,iiaj» with the-tiincinnati
Bcagals), 1975 Hcism4D Tfo^
phry runncrup Chuck Muncie
^of California (now^ with the
New Orleans Sainu) and 1976
dHcisman Tr-ophy Tavorite R|c-
ky Bell of use are very much
a^re of the running jta fen is of
fellow back Tyler
The Bruin left"" halHback
made his imprint on the three
All-Aaiencans by outplaying
^•** •■ hiad-to-head competi-
tion to spark UCLA to lU
three biggest wins of the year
Cat, use, OSl
Tyler rushed for 143 yards \n
tBe 2t.|4 win over Cahforma
He rushed for 130 yards
agaiai^ USC, including a 57-
yard touchdown effort m the
OWUCLA
up the nmhing game like
m the Rose Bowl. With tBct
defeaici having to worry about
throwing to the backs A W^
M to our utefltcd receivers likr
Waily (Henry), R^ky*(Walker>
■it-ejviiM*
^Pedersoffl, it should'
make our offense better,*
^•»-
Bram football and his t^»»^
- rnrnHtt.- -; - ^3-
niaant to put UCLA foot-
^4Ji^ff~fhe jnap and have
ggggji^jim more respect for
our program,- laid Tyfcr -Ry
me publicising tSfCL A- football
and by lalkmg^td wntenr^abofii
our other players^-thcin 1 «an-
•«' publicity for some of my
f^fli^o^es that thfH^Mtrhught
overlook **
. f **ll«A__iMie. of flic t^
teates in the CiHtpuV like Ari-
^^ Stale mnd Ohi^ State in
/pre iTMan is .ea^yable for the
former CremhtfW' track star. **! ^g . , .,.
want *to go out of \mfiit^ by ^ - "^ wouid like to be
skying the best, e^ tf w -•- '^-^ - -
■^r said Tyler
rV4
mg a long run tw coming up
with a key first down.** said
Tyler
Baaed on his perfornunces
in the last half of the 1975
acnson, defenses figure to key
on the 9 6 sprinter, but Tyler
^opes It happMt. **lf defenses
key on me they are foii^ to be
m ^ trouble bacBBK Tkwcis
(Brown), laawi (Brown) and
Jewerl (TBonut) are good
that will hurt the other
•Old Tykr. **I peiianallv
think Thaolii mifhl^^ve all
the rushing records «k ^my"
t«fH and found o«i he had
weak hands, which could have
^ the cause of the funbka.
I ^^ « tBo iMIi I took
showed I had the weakest
hands of aU the backs. Now I
squeeze tennis boBi to try to
strengthen my hatt^ aad I
think^fumbhng is a thing of tie
4.2iaa
fioc only did he rush for 100
rards (oniy three short of the
«;*oal recottfX hut he played
mom of Hie fame wrth a
cracked wrist Tyler finally
^ cotsid carry the ball
lo worry about
25-22 win In the Rose Bowl
against O^ Si.«e, Tyler got
172 yards in 21 carries (an 8 2
averige) and scored the g^mr
clinching touchdown on a54-
yard mn in ths ftmri
The touchdown
vr
The major problem Tyler
has had^ in fatl practice is
Oetting hit timing down with
quarterbacks Mf Dank worth
and Steve Bukich •'Timing
with the quarterback is the key
^or me in the veer offense
— I hit the holM so tm.^
Tfte: **My inr 20 ynrds
The physical aapea of prac-
X » about the taav for Tyler
^ach year, but be kda that
■■^■^ fOMOHK it very iayor-
tM •MentaHy I think I know
What I have to do to get tbe
job done come Saturday's.*
•Old Tyler "I think oiy abiliiv
« kttter wben I coMMtmieon
what I hmm.xo do-
PffMMl fa^
""y P^swaol MOl ii to play
the beat fooMTl hove em
P|*yg^ i« college, and if I
_^ •'Flayif^ a tough'' pre-seaaao
*ch«lufe will make us mentally
n -ready for the Pac-8 race be-
cause we will get a t% lift
knowing wv have iplayad
afasast the top c- teams if we^
h«ve a foodl showing.* added
Tyler
The 2 1 -year old Tyler has
looked quicker in practice tbit
J«ar He sfys he u in the betf
•l^pe o# bit career. Perhapa
improvement over three years
has been running back ooocb
Bilhe Matthews.
**Billie Mattb»«« has prob
ably been the most infiucfllial
person in my career He has
helped me a great deal in the
different aspects oi the game
and has also been a big help
ncademicaUy.** said Tyler
^•■obae over Vtrang
Terry Donahue is better for
UCLA as bead coach than as
an assisunt. aeearding to Ty-
ler. "Coach Donahue bM
*'^^^^*»« ^^Bwac ne is now
more opm awMJed. He is more
conccmad about keeping his
pItpMi Mliafied, and we have a
better player-coach relationship
with bun tbaa we did wt|h
Vcrawii.'* tmd Tyler
Tyler bat bad hn ups and
downs with tbe laoal OHdia
dunng his tbroe yaan at
I'C LA bacaaie of his 'irrTatii-
tent play, but the prcas rtnctn*!
"Oflect bm.
-The.only tsoK I 9K.1988I
with tbe prett is when fbcy
rlnwi^adi our team. Mott o^
tbe SMw tbe ^laaa iprrMhutt
about our team when they
don*t really know the kind of
team we have.** said Tvler •*!
ham buiH fugiii m bt i uHw
tkeOj. Simpson of
VCLA f^tbalL We
4on V lijQve m profes-
^^^^slonal football player
.J*H^t can publicize
our school the way
Simpson ^fm, ami J
would ate to be the
person thai some day
• VCLA could look
, upon with pride. ""
Tyler has become concerned
with helping youngsters get
Into athletics. He was a coun-
selor this summer, for the
UCLA Youth Sports Camp
and he has gone back to Cren-
Bhaw High School to ulk to
tbe students
"I went to Creatbaw alter
spring practice to UH[ to ath-
letes about getting a , good
education while pbiyiaig CQllege
foosbaU," said Tvler
J he UCLA
An cJacotiow is important 10
Tyler **l woold hkc to soaM-
day go iMo pro fooibaM. but I
would also like tb get my
di^gree in case something hap-
pen and I can't play fmhall.-
said Tyler
Tyler is especially bcf^ for
a big year ia his effort to "iet
the public know tbe ksnd al
football ptogram UCLA bat*-
He oaolda^ have sal a antch
higher goal in h« efTott to get
Brum footbail to tbe pub*
**! would hke to be ibe O J
of UCLA football*^
Tyler -We ddifl bai^ a
professional football player
that can piMidae our aatoaol
the way Sinygpa caa, and I
„ ^- BHRi Uk^ 14 be ike pertoa
peraoa aU tbe tnae icgardleai cbni soawday UCLA could
of wbai bappent, so I doat let ^-^ -
Manns Westwood I
THE imANT (■)
CHINATOWN (R)
Manns Westwood Ii ^^^
GO FOR IT
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BEATING A OEAO HORSE
9v« ^ W t 00 A 10 00
CLUB GUIDE CONTINUED
Women try for basketball tfynasTy
OB Sporti WriM
"(Eikior's note This is an-
other wHclg in the conttnuing
series om wmsmt's athletic re-
cruiting.)
Men*i bukctbftlJ lias b€0» m
the spoilighc in Westwood for
the pott decade, but the Brum
women are on the verge of
ttarting a dynasty of their own.
UCLA has landed seven of
the nation*! top athletes who
promise to further the Brum
court siinfffiM.
Denise Corlctt is perhaps the
most UJked about newcomer
At 5-10, she was an AU-CIF
first team selection while at
Marlborough and the CIF
girls* athlete of the year. Coach
Ellen Mosher expects Coriett
to see action at the forward
spot.
Gleodale wns a two-year All-
^^^^.•^ Crescenu Valiy
'•She^.a^ very v^Hi^tile pUyer
and r^yiy strong,* says
Mosher. A left-hander at 5-11,
Breckenndgc is an excellent
rebounder and atlds to the
height which the Brums wci*.
lacking last yean.
Another Alf^lF fgoijair t%
Lynn Wright from Vent^«, A
fbod.playmaker ind haj^hoad-
4er, Wright ciuld craclt ihr
ttanin^ Imeup its a frciiMBOs
•t guard. ^' . ^1.
Deana BUckwoojLlChit of
Buena High m Ventura/ is an
excellent forward at 5- 1 a, but
h** the qiijckn^is and ball-
handling ability to play guai^»
nttackwoda \^ strong on tjic
boards, drrves through the key
well and is also in^ accurate
outside shooter ^^
The smattei o1^ the inc^omihg"^
fteshman'^ii Oi»n^ Frierson
. from N«shville, Tennessee. A^ .
5^, Fnerson was: considered^'
by soflie to be the best guad
' in the Slate and iieipcd lead her
team to the Junior AAU Na-
tional Championship last your^
^-Biev Grootc and Cyd Crimp-
ton round out the roster of
newqomers ior the Bruins
^ Both, are 4-3 and' from Ihe San
Jose .area.
^'Bev has a hot of potentiiL-
Mosher says. ''She reminds ih^
o{ Tom Burleson (§fattlc) tall
and gangly She'll need to
work on building up her
strength."
Crampton made it to the
second cut of the Olympic
trials and is stronger than
Groote, according the UCLA
coach. Groote and Crampton.
will be vying for the center
position along with Brcckcn-
ridge and returnee Heidi
Nestor.
The UCLA's women's crew
team is expected to continue
Its success, according to
fourth-year coach, Larry
Daugherty
**We'll be fast . . faster
than last year," says Daugh-
erty of his defending Western
Sprfnt champions "The varsity
eight- boat, will have everyone
returning, so the girb Should
improve their time."
Daugherty has 15 returning
letterwomen, a new experience
for a program that usuiUly hns
to go out looking for mnnhni
Last year Was the first time
that prospective participants
had to he cut from the team
Jackie Stitt of San Diego
hna the moat experience of the
recruits Stitt, a freshman, has
rowed with ZLAC and the
Ass6cuited Rowing Cl«h, hmh
well-known and prestif^^ns
rowing organimiuns
Diilgliuiy expnoH the Brum
to have thatr strongest compe-
tition from Califfii and the
of Washim
which pfawatf 2nd and 3fd ,.
hind UCLA in the sprints
Both perennially have itrm^
men's crew teama.
Women's crew should gM a
boost from the Olympics,
where a Long Bmwh woBmn.
Jonn Lind^ won the stiver
medal in the sHigle sculls.
UCLA was represented by Jan
Palchikoff, a 1975 graduate
and former member of the
women's team, who finished
fifth in the doubles;
4i 4t 4t
The women's gymnastics
team is ^looking forward to a
real successful year", according
to second year coach Lee Ann
Lobdill. _,
"We have three ^ fresh-
men recruits m lUren Atkiaa
(C4id£hy; CftJilX i*^ ias..
kpwski (Highhind Park, NJ.)
•nd Jeannie Watkins (Long
Beach).
Lobdill ^:predicting a third-
phux finish for the second year
Bruin squad. "LafV" year, we
were fifth outi.of the nine
istou in our conference. This
year, with the new league, I see
us behind Fullerton and USC."
^••-Fullcrton pUced third in
years nationals, exceliem
for ^he second year team," said
Lobdill "Their conch, Lynn
. Rodgers, thought they should
have won it and will be out to
do so this ytaa. FuUerton's alan
done some good recruiting,
due tp the repuution they've
mcently gained" -
use has lost their conch of
the past two imiim, gsd Lob-
dill ian^t sure of the cAiot tha
will have on the compQition.
••th the Trojans and Fullerton
have had women's gyMMJilici
teams a year kN^er than the
Brums.
UCLA will no longer have a
JV team, meshing the tcnm
will haye to be cut from 19 to
12. Lobdill expects tevefi or
eight returnees from last year's
iquad/ including Cindy Lewis,
Frank and Sue Levine.
Three members of last year's
team will be missing 'becauae
each has made the UCLA
tpirit squad. Cam Marcus natf
Karen Self will be cheerleaders
and Laura Setto will be a song
girl. ^^
The Bruina npen the 1976-77
icaaon-oh December 4 at
Long Beach Invitntionnl
1
Hopes
f!!!!?'''^':^!". 555 "'''''» ^''rting in Oakland
OAKLAND - It his three
years as a UCLA centef ta the
late If60's, Dave Dalby never
played in the Rose Bowl Now,
as center for the National
Foothnll League Oakhind
Raiders, Dalby may get his
All it will uke is a winning
season for the Raiders, plus
some good fortune through the
NFL pkyoffs. If that hippens
then Dalby will be in the Rose
Bowl site of this year's Super
Bowl puBS.
In four years of pro football.
Dalby and the Raiders have
in the ra^ for the Super
I^PPy^ *o make the team My
•»•■< )PMr I thought I should
^ P^ytm • bit and my third
^^L ''" fluseraWe,- he re-
called
Starting esalsr
But last year. Otto, the age-
less All-Pro, couldn't make it
for another ssnsnn because of
h» knees, and Dniby mhented
the starting center position m
ff72 Bruin graduate -We give di^appomted in my sopi
1? f '^"> B*^^ protection, yenr hncnuse we came so cleae
snd that really helps out a lot " and never had a chance aft^r
It was not until Dalby's that. One of my roommates
seriously considered s pro- m a row " !ff!r. .^ ■'^,*?P^* * *P«^«*
have always come up short
-wheii It counted Dalby expects
to be there at the finish again
Cloae every year
"We've himi so close every
year Lieel bad hecaaas this is
my fifth year, and we've been
\6 the championship game
' three times and I'm really^ fru^
trated It's going to uke some-
thing. 1 think wr-got a w&mL
shot again thu year 1 13 the
little liings, a had break here,
• ^<i 'break there. , Someday
the breaks areqfomgjo cornel
our mmif,^ aiid the 6-3, 250-
pojund center. . r
Frustration was a familiir
feeling for Dnlby in his first
few scispni . iflt OakUind He
tried to- hreak into the starting
^■up <te^ite a ^rimjpliy
hopeless situation —
"When I. was first Jrsflcd,
m Otto wa^' here Tifid' I
*plsyed behind him. 1 thciught
l« would jaevcr^jetirc. it took
.Jprevdr. '
Bmh m UCM fcut ho _,^
^i2j?T**"^ It Nw n«M»f« grSTha
seriously considered s pro
fessional football career.
Thought IM s«hI
"I never really thought about
It because I was much too
small And then in my senior
year I started thinking about it
hecause I got a lot bigger I
matured and put on quite a bit
of weight, lifting weights "
Wei^, 'or lack of it. was a
problem for the fourth-round
Rnder draft choice early in his
career He weighed somewhere
around 200 pounds (light by
lineman standards), nnd'^'as a
PFcp UCLA 'was the only
major school that was inter*
csted in recruiting him
"When I got there (UCLAJl.
they had smaller, quicker guys,
but in my^sophomore year they
started dmnguig to bigprr
players I probably would
nevpr have gotten a scholarship
i» It was 4|()ow^When I ^me
^t of high school I was 200 of
205 "pounds and then Uiey^
changai, I got there just in
time." '• .^^'^ ■■..-,
^ Dalby spent his fiqjj year.ai
^^^Aj^ '*'^ freshman learn
team We make a lot of side
heis Last year was the first
year I won." joked Dalby .
He still follow^ Brum ath-
in a row
Obviously, having a room-
mate who played for the Tro-
jans provides for a bit
of friendly rivalry
"Besidet my roomie, there
are a lot of SC players on the
affection for UCLA.
"I love the school . . a
great atmosphere West-
wood Vilhigc n ^., j^,
t^ollege IS a great time of your
life. I'd love to go back and do
»t all over aaain **
AtL AMEaiCAM
v^
^t/HS^
front of All-Pi>e quarterback
■Rch'"Subler. • -„....-
"He's got a lot of cotlfidence
•nd he kind of ,n.t,lk ,t .n3 ^".^riF* !. 7'^'"-" '«»«"
when he pU**.- Oalbv «U W^ '^ ... ^ ""* '^"^f^«^,! J"'« «»»•«
He dpp.n-, press you oT.,?. 2^."" """" .**l'"* ^^ ^
him." *'^^r ^% cnance anc^^moved ''»jht m ,a|'
Pk^rtr..»- u r * ~ ' stniting center Ijiai scasfii:
SuWer i»-*^tua| one. ,mee LSC for the chaJTlo il to
S^*»^i. k«T ««-• ^-P*' Bo*l- .*|,c Ko.e Bowl . *^ °
I. 3iays oa Jiasilv bruised
A-— ' ^
.»•»»
^^-1'
f^!u»" »n«"t*
Bowl (oar
•^**'i^^wif*^*(^p*"
M«k^«*l<^..'
iiUf
wsa^ J^ -; . ^. . ''H.ptiti slor'df presiure d*^
.fWy^-fiatt year L was just^*;^ ^offenw^^^
UCLA
^ fhink' anybody who plays
^college football Wants la'^o ;o
itVie H «^ Bowl i wasJimd of
COCA COtA
^^ . ■ >e\ V-- "-'-'■■if- •
■•*
^3atk
.'..J..
■^■J=~"
Playboy picks Neblfi^ska No. 1
Mas'* tied IS po^nt mn^ to
Nash leads Sharman to title
By Boh Hehcr
DB Sports Writer
"»|,uc iiiie, last Sm««y night at Ca State Lot AaScT
Nart. who will return in the fall for her •eniorT^rCTT^n a
hit con»5«ently from the outsKle. but^,^ «or^ 1 ^
unexpected dnves through the laiie "^
,rj^iLZ'T''Jr ^L'""""" ^•*'' «'«'• "«»•" ^ wanted
*■**■'■ '*y •"""« «»»cni into foul troMbie early in ^
#
...T*?^^?^. ^<^LA ptoym, Judy Lewwter and Sfceda A4mm.
^n.'TSi 1^'*' P"" '" ••* Sharman win. La« W. 2SSL
o. j:;r Tnr M^, ^s-. ^L^r;u£ \i't^'-
intermission. •" « lun naif 4mm to 38-32 at
Just as hraian began lu make m ^ ^u
Meyers. -■».» f-..h,^r.".*" """^^ * ■">*« «" the aecond hall
for charging. mSl^ ^^t ^i/Z^ ^*^ ^ ^'^^ ^«''
rally *••«"" sue leit. to did the BtaaMMe kepet for a
IICI.A alM dommaied the AU-Lcmw ttmm m ^ " i «..;....
cu*«i ^mn Moaher was a second-team pick
By Michael
IJDB Sports Writer
. Piayboy Magazine^ which
uisually knows as littk ak^Mtt
football ii k 4acs ahout Wo^
men, has just come out with its
annual Pigskm Prevapw m the
September issue. ^ ^
The accuracy of Fiay hoy's
Pigskin. Preview is such that
the team it normally selects as
No. I in the country is upset
^^two or three times durmg the
■••son. Playboy didn't even
think Rose Bowl champion
liCLA would be a major fac-
tor in the Pac-S httt year.
This year, Piayboy is pro-
jecting Nebraaka as the No. I
team in the country, which
ihouid mean that Oklahoma
will win the Big 8 tuk again,
use is ranked NcTZ with
rCLA listed as a poaaihlc
breakthrough into the top 20.
t^SC i% picked to go 10^1
throughout the season, and is
ranked second natiaaaMy, with
Cahfomia seiaciSid tecaad in
the Pac-t at 8-3 and UCLA
third at 7-4. Sunford is named
for Ibiinh with a 6-5 mark,
with Oregon fifth at ^y
Washington and Washington
State are picked to go 3-8,
with Oregon State in the cellar
at 3-9.
Michigan is picked third in
the coutitry. with Pittsburgh
fourth, Arizona State fifth,
Texas AAM sixth. Alabama
yvemh, Notre Daase eighth.
and I exas
hall coach' Terry Donahue
shouki . have losing games
againsr No. 5 Anzona. State.
No. 13 Ohio Sute (it has been
many years since the maga/ine
has rated the Buckeyes so low).
No. hi California and No. 2
use, according to Piayboy.
No Bruin players were se-
^Icctcd for the 24-man All-
Annerican team USCs Ricky
Bell and Pittsburgh's Tony
Dorsett were selected at the
running hack slots, with Wen-
dell Tyler hsicd as the most
likely hack to break into the
All- American squad.
Besadas BdL USC also has
offensive Uckle Marvin Powell
asd defensive tackle Gary Jeter
on the Plajfkmf All-Amcncan
team. Quarterback Joe Roth of
California and Washiagton
Sute punter Gavin Hednck
complete the Pac-8 AU-Ameri-
more than seven games. Dona-
hue will have the first chance
to prove the so-called experts
wrong when he meets Arizona
State September 9Un a-game
UC4-A IS supposed to lose
Harris pitclies
team to title
S«P»6--<lJiid
Smpi 9- J 9 - ic,„„y Bo»r«l|
5«p» 13 _On« night only
Jomes Cotton Blues ban6
So^tl9.21_St.phon.Croppolli
30 PIFR AVE
Along with Tyler,
linemaa Menu Tui^
defensive safety
and oulsiie linehaeker Ray-
mond Burks were listed as top
plajMr «a the West Coast.
The anigadae chums that
Donahue must find s quarter-
back and that a depleted offen-
sive line wiU inhibit the
running game. (In actuahty.
the offensive hne ret uro&. three
starters and two pan -time re
gulars.)
Almost every football maga
zine on th^
in
Pitchini^ has been the overall
sofc spot on the UCLA base-
ball team the past five years
Thanks to Long Beach C rtv
College transfer Greg Harris,
the mound position will have
an excellent right arm.
The California Junior Col-
lege Player of the Year pitched
the Fairhank Gohlpanneai lo
the National Baseball Ci
Wichiu. KaMas
Behind the two-hit perfor-
mance of Harris, Farrhanks
won the semi-pro hasehnO title
over the Anchoraae Glacier
Pilots, 2-0 in ti nnin^.
Hanpia. who selected conch
Gary Adaam* team over USC,
Arizona State and Arizona,
has turned down proiessmial
offers to pitch next season for
the Bcumik. With H^irns, 4.os
ngeles-VaUcy JC transfer
I4avc .^^hxmdx and returning
«tandotrt Tim ON*-'" \a .,.^y
^•fH 2 - Safsf 5
FBEDOIf HUBBABO
OfKl
Coldarv
Sapt 6 - Smpt 8
^Flying Burrjfo Bros.
•^•cicl oddad offrocf ion
Mirabai
454- :
phis Gri ndar Switcfi'
'J i ttAmd^D _ j:
^-^
THE STONER
2tt3SlDn»rA^
w«M LA
^77 7799
4 Wifw
1 MWmttmi
Sapt 2-5
THE STAPLES
^^^^^ '^* •'•^•# SMH
Pb^I Maaway
Sapt9.12
Th# Originol Hoz«
fMifuring
J^ry Mtlter
lent'
tC LA first year head foot
iccied ( ( I A cither third or
fourth in the. Pac-8 anri most
believe the Brmnv ur'l
M^
K
r\r\
best pitching stall tu '" uj
in hiv hrief stay ai \
- Vfi^K-p^i c-mdhcfiuet.
a • a
If V-'
BiVD^ L. A. a:
»-*»l.
I
m
I
I
uarterback battiel
;^»t ^inrtefteck for tW
Stpitmbet f mmmi «piiwr
•I AruoM Stale.
Senior Jeff Dinkworth
iripkt} has a sU^ht edge at
thik time over tophom^ire
Steve Bukich (left).
Da«kw4>rtli, cofif^idered
the Wttar runner, Imk^ im-
proved Mi paviing MMiH
J«^> im FaN practice. By-
kick, contidered the Wtt
••■»•*'' ^■* improved his
mhmty to execute the riin-
ninf pha^ of the Veer_, of-
feme in practice.
It m likely that both will
*€t action in each game thi»
JWUntil one e»tabli<ihcs
■•■Matf aft the numhet one
quarterlMick. '
'^'Zy^ita^' !-°? '^"9«'es Ramras tackle
I Snorts llMw.r««r .u_. .♦ » ''""ip a«y oy aay^ was due to h*- mf m^ f..ii __ ^. -^ .
•y^^ikf Teyerbaufh
V^ DB Sports iieporter
OAKLAND - Al Oliver, an
offensive lineman for the Bru-
ins in 1972 and I973^ispeht last
season On the Los Angeles
Rams' injury rcsci^c list and ic
currently trying to earn a spot
on the Rams roster, a difficult
task considering the team has^
some df the best offensive line
men in football.
But, Oliver is a religious
man ( he. plans to become a
minister '*whchcv<^ God scc^
fit" to uke him, out of foot-
ball), and his ^attitude toward
,;te-tituaiidn wjth the Ri^ns
reflects that of $«>mconc who
ipi put his life in God*s hands.
:\ ^Nd mafter what happens, I
: 4now It will be Co£s,5^,^4^m
just taking things day by day#f
think Fve l)cen doing well I've
been improving every day But,
Vm not- assuming anything,**
Oliver said. -
'OFiver did not ,
recent victory over the Oak
land Raiders, afl important
gai^ for those people fighting
for a spot on the roster. It was
t*^ last game before the teams
*•« to cut the rostcf from 62
«own IP 49 players
1 i-i
was due to be cut the foliowmg -| had a int of f.« l./
Tuesday, (Oliver survived* the fh»n V^^i. "' * ^ "^'"'^
cut to 49 jinycrs) 5^ d * "''*''" ^^
Olfver's f^tball career be- *^ ^
-Ti^r-Oliver an AIT-Coast team
selection his last year at
UCLA, was drafted by the
Rams after the 1973 season,
bdt he signed with Hawaii of
the infamous World Football
League This d<^cision, Ofcver
and a myriad of other football
2l«n somewhat less than sp«:
V^^^^if* • "^ nard for
vaney Christian High School
in Cerritos, California "Well 1
didn't win any^si^ii/ awards
lor playing in high school, Alt
Backyvd maybe, but that's
•bout ji,- he sa^Mi -| %»n't . •
Oliver's Mb.^;.. ♦ u recruited at all coming dui' oL^^^'^^^^P^ they ever mader
«Ainc; however; couidT he a
food sign for him because he
had injured his anWe earlier ia
jpnctice ind miiJht Mve been
kept out at the ggmt to i^e-
vent afffaviting the injury
Such considcnsiion might not
nave been given someone who
added
^ After^-pliyiilg i^o y^^^ ^j
Ccrritos JC under Ernie John-
K^ OHvcr itioved oW to
UCLA to play for. head coach.
Pepper Rodgers -| really en-
joy^ college fooibajl" he said.
It was a bad decision - ju^
9^ ¥ thoscr things. But, I
JMttav hindsight is always '2(>r
20, he said. ^J
**Thc hardest adjust mcnfTvc
had to make since coming Into
^professional football Jvn^hcen
Icarhing how to pass" blo^L!!.
bc said Under Rodpm, the
Bruin ran a wishbone offense
an alignmlent' that docsn't-^ff
^^J "^^'^y 5»lraighi drop back
paaa«i •ficotinnn^ity' aI's lack
of experience at pass blocking.
"Also, the players are nujch
faster and better m thr ^ffoa,-
Therc^s really no comparison
witlr^ cpllege football,- he
alAAmA -
"^ ■,.'"' •
A I has had no complaints
with the way the Rams have
treated ftim so far m his
•.r ra.FM.
a-..
and he would like .to itay
with the team for a whileT
"^**?: J^^hings don't work^eut
here, 1 hope I slay on theWesi
Coast rvc i0t a wife and a
little boy to think fJMMit jmiw
.JBOii, .know." — ~-r^"' ■■^' '--^ ■ : '
if ■^ , '
1 ■■■■-
■'.-V»i^»-
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-'.-«,
director of
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\\
FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 3. 8 P
M.
I, ' ',
i^m
COMw«*t TiO«
1 !-*-
^;i;:;
• UVl
Cl.»t
'x*>^«^»»>i»Qu*riffiia.^a3<icgTT
UCLA sophomore goffer
Bretton takes second in Women's Amateur
^^cunAi/to^
s<-
llaiHui Rteonuitc
D0
•■«.
•'•tton IS not, a
in the world
ai women athleiict, but after
her recent folf accoMfrliih-
ments, she is as snoontful as
any Bruin female athlete
At the young aft of 18, the
UCLA sophomore fmiahed sec-
ond in the US Women's
Amateur golf championships
the most prestigious non-pro-
fessioaaJ tournament m this
country.
I J '■•■'** ■■* Mariamie
^v l« lie process of finishing
rwflner-up, Bretton not only
knocked off the number-one
seed and two defending cham-
pions, but created the most
interest invoT^uig • her and a
Porsche.
After Bretton ^on her first
round match, Bretton and her
mocher Gijidys^xame out of a
restaurant Itid saw a Porsche
parked in a lot.
''My mother asked me if it
(the Borsche) was my favorite
carr ghd I said yes She thai
' that she would hi^ t| for
if I won the tourfuynnii,**
y^ Bretton, a ^7, 120 p^urid-
tournament experience than
"^ »»»« pratuie a year be-
fore. -I tired in the fmal
•mmi Donna, and I was very
«^ous,- Mid Iretton -|
didn t sleep .t ^, ,^
heforc the fmal."
After beiag tied for mott of
the champioitship match. Hor-
ton wem ahead to lUy with a
•••4 GteiMlon Ave. w
er.
^___, - ^vering the U.S
Womcn^ Amateur at the Dct
-equntry Chih Jn J^or;h- .
crn. Cahfornia blew t'he'
Poftche incident out of ^n^
pw'ilon i|i tiewifepiipix.jMXounti,
^.•cpordmg to Brfctton^ ''Of
jcourse I would Juive liked W
have won the Porsche, but il
wasn;t the ffcasprt I was trying /
i^ ^itt jie tournamem,^*^^"^^^ '
MarUrnn* Jkvtton
vhij^die on the ^ 1st hok^ "Ooi?-
na told me allcj the match that
M«n she was runner-up ia«t
year she tJidnV sleep7l5~aM
This*yey she^told me it was
easier To relax bccaase she
knew how to handle the pm-
•urer added Bretton
; -■
Bretton; jirM,tlkc..Southern
Cahfomia* tnlercoUeguue Con-
^fcrence champion Vand finished
1 1th in the.AlAW NatioMl
Championshipa at a ifreshman
(she cottld* have won - IK'
A14WV if hot for oie iiid
roundl^ She was the most con-
;^cnt golfer over the maA
VS. AMieur pcriodl. but tired
in the filial nine holes of her
36-hold final match against
1975 runner-up D6nna Hor-
ton. V
ilorton, who is a 22-ycar-old
University of Florida graduate,
>»ad many more rounds of
_, ^^^^J^nipHshments jd the
No. IJUCLA Avomen;8, jolfer
ate anazing considenng the
iuck Of the draw ^made moit
people believe she c Would no
hom€ to San Dieio after ^
^jaoaM round.
In. the second round, Bretton
had to me^t 1973 women's
amateur charhpion Carol Ann
Semple; who had |yM> won the
British and t'anadtan amateur
.titles ••People just told me to
try my best, and I beat her one
up Oil the 19th hole," said
Bretton. It was a pressure
witch, and Bretton won it by
tapping in a short par putt on
the 19th, while Semple had to
settle for a hofry after hittuM
^^ approach shot a««r die
reen
"After I beat Carol I ^^
more confident and had the
Mief that I pould beat any-
one,** Bretton said She proirjj
ilut feelmg by smashing 1972
amateur champion and 1974
^oilciiaie titlitt Mary Budke 5
aad 4.
Even though Bretton had
pulled^'^two upsets, her streak
was scheduled to cqlnc to an
end in the <|iiarter41nal5
against tournament favorite
Nancy Lopez. Lopez, the de-
fending collegiate champion.
was playing the best Mutteur
golf in the country going into
the tournament The match
came ^down^to the 18ih and
final hole **^Nancy hit her tte-
ond shot mto the trap^ while I
put mine safely on the p«en. I
two-putted for the pf r and the
win," laid Bretton
in the semi-finals, Bretton
Wasted Rim Alexander of Ore-
gon State. 7 Mid 6. U was
pro^M^ Bretton's best per-
formance of the tournament at
she was three under par after
12 holes ^
Flna^ prtpao^e
' tretfon had won many^
tmallcr- amateur tournanjettts
and had played well ia oihar
nu^ior events, but ^^ jjug
^ never felt the pressure %t- i
V'S. Amateur fNMl- ~%iiBf^
against Horton —This fs the
l^tCgest amateur toumamem ia^
^ihe cpi^ury^^ .Mid if tt the beti
TSive ever doni> I ift^ lv#as
piaying *cll and f ithould have
' ^n." said Brett4^R
The blonde'^ired Bretton
plans to return to UCLX M
the fall She will continue W^,
play at Ian lunatcur,' bat has
definite professionaT amhitions.
Bretton tM iihr gMaiiaM lb
play in V -few profe|sjonal
loumami^Trts- next year. If the
continues to play M m^U as in
the U.S. Amateur, it is doubl-
ful that fhe will be back for
her junior and senior years at
UCLA, and she should be able
lo afford her own Portche
froth the professional money.
"I just pUin to uke golf day
by day and see what comes
aloag,- said Bretton.
Z rsandalmakeo
UCLA players picked in beach volleyball event
irr-i A —ui ....
UCLA athletes will be fa-
^°^«> »n the richest beach
voleyhal] toUnuuBem ever
held thit weekend at Will Ro-
fers Slate Beach.
^omffhmil Magaime » spoo-
JS;^ ^^ Olympia World
^-«*«pia^thip two-man beach
tournMieat all^day Saturday
dominated beach -volleyball a
year afo and ttartad out the
•wne way this year, but Lee
and Menges have been upset in
the last two events.
**l think the toumaoKal it
now wide open becaate the
other teams now believe they
can beat Lee and Meafia, plus
^itto^ week to go in the Intcrnaiional Volleyb
Aswmtion (IVA) taMn, El Paso and UCLA coach
™" •PPcj^j^«Mted for the Eastern Division title
m^i*^*'*^ ^*^ ■ ••"* ***^ ^^^^' Phoenix with three
r.l7!l!Iil£° .-"^ ^' ^"^ ^*»« ^ ^^ ^^^ ^^ Sol will
r.T ^^^^y ^« A^itlet next Tucaiay night m the play-
oil semi-finals. -
San Diego will boat the victor of the SaMa Bttvham-
rnoenix pUyoff nMrtch in the other semi-liMl match on
I uesday night.
The finals mrc scheduled for next Thursday nisht
J!^ptember 9 m San Diego
ly, with $3,000 in
put money The winning
team will split $1:566. with
•M^ fi«« dmdii^ $1,230.
Ooing iMo two weeks ago,
th^ oddt Ml favorites were the
•■•w of fonmH^ UCLA
Om Lee ind
^ •^ Oitg Lee and If^^.
Brum volleyhidl Att-Amerka|i
Jim Meages. The twosome
no one knows how the players
wiU iMct to the pratmre of
playing for to much money.**
said E>on Wdner. Editor of
Voikyhall M^azine
^ nad Mcafn are the top>
— <^ — •m lie 6# mum
ihai will compete. For-
mer UCLA stAr Tom Cha-
males will be second-seeded
and his fnttaer is likely to be
one of the aB time heach ttati
Ron Von Hagen, who played
at UCLA in the early IWO's.
Bruin 1976 AU-American
Fred Sturm will team with
former UC SanU Barhara per-
former Gary Hao|wr. -We won
the Lake Tahoe tounument a
week ago, aad wt heat Lee and
Menges, H^. ||.l,- uiid
Styrm. **I think we can wm the
tournament with anothar good
performance because we now
know UC can beat any of the
other laaat.*^
If Sturm were to win, it
would presem the prehitm of
his amateur status. Aotatcnrs
are allowed to phiy with pro-
fessionals under an NCAA
ruling, bm Sturm would haw
to forfeit any prize iBMKy fa
remaan eligible to cooipait as
the USA National teaat
The doubkrfiminatioa soar-
■■■•■s wMi ha^m M vt56~an
on Saturday. On Sunia^y be-
ginning at:9lBfli there wS be
the wiaao^ and loter bracket
^ »esi wood Blvd C /-v/» ^
«oe (21 1) 473 9549 ftf^^SjjBr
HocniM, MK ana ^ ,^g ^^S[mB|^^^
'-^-- SANiMis DelTS i^m, Hf s DURSes HA. J
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Hit r tranapthnltVfiM
Apna-Compiexion
Dermatology
Phona lor Personal -lagitiiinu,.! • Mmthrm\ i *♦•,.. -„ - ^*
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Ml
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An Evening With
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f<i«ilM. or M«. MoMkof IMPirily Bnaln'
••cmo ASUCLA Co«iiiN«nlcotlon«
**"^ 'Ma IHvooll^olod any of Iho aor-
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PORTRAITS
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CHEMISTRY - Rtiyslca. Stotlatto'a.
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RUTM C DISSERTATIOMS. THESES.
STATISTICAL FAST. OCPEImOASLE
SEVEN QAYS A yVESK MAMY TYPE
STYLES t3t-442S
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^ the key sgsinsf Arizoas
niolL CorrsJ also hmd foor of
siA punu fo for over 50
Dden»ive coordinAtur Dick
lomey indiCAted that the Sun
Devtir have one of the best
offrr>siYe attacks he
in
CMal as
•"Corral » fomg to be a hell
of a wcapM as a field foal
kicker and an outstanding
with outstanding playen **^^' •"« •« outsta
the tkilt pooitiOQs •*! can't P""*^'^ ^^" *»« i^* more coo-
really judge how far aiong our "•^^n^y.- oaid Brooks,
dclcnoe IS, but I ara pleaaod ^^^^"^^ ^^ succssful spadal
with the progress. I have osaii ^"'* ®^ ^^ I ^*" Francio^
defcnoeo look grefit ia'Tall
praclioe pad do ternbk in the
of pn^c^ct with a koee mjury.
Robiobaa is jmi lM>ldii^ oB
Brad Vassar at iMiir UoebM^. ff
9t, Robinson arissad two days ■•
of practice with a stomach
probtem that saw hio weight
drop from 213 to 197 Ro-
^^ binson is now back over 200
who P*'"«^ •«<* hopes to be at 210
- by game day next Thursday.
^tn last yeaJ^
with a week to go in poac-
TotrM at aaoe
let nek has taken charge at J
fint gaaK I remember a few **<*' ^••cre are still a few battles ^^^ J^^ ^^^ winning hi!. |
years ago when we upoet Ne- ^^^ ^""< «nng positions At *P^J''^"' ^^^ ^n other play- f.
braoka in the opener, our first •?*« «>^. Sarpy is ;u8t ahead ^" * ttrength and quickaass :■
String defense was beaten by
l*>« JV^i ia practiae the week
before the fame,** said Tomey
Last Satufday morning
of X: transfer Homer Butief
Sarpy is considered as th«
better blocker, with Butler as a
more explooive deep threat \
itrength and quick i
overcome his hei^ (5-11)
•nd weight (208) dcficienciei in
•r ■
The 1976 UCLA football h»
aal tcaM ooach Rick Broate Dank worth io just ahead of , J "/ /*/ ^ „
M^mim, ^..i...,.^ r Bukirh .t ^...^^.h.^^1. „ ... tcams look virtually as strong^
as the 1975 f psc Bowl cham- #
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bad a htU-scale scramuige of Bukich at quarterback, with
pMiit aad iick returns, plus ^**^ likelihood that both will
field goal kicking and punting ••^ Action in svtfy game.
Corral highlighted the activities Walker is ninn ins first stris* n.t.^«.i u
*y boon ftr» 57-yard field aoal at ti-JT*.^ l1 ' . ^** natioaal powerhouse Arizona
under tl^press^V^W * lU' P J!^. "^*^"^™*" ^'*'" ^"^ "«' ^»'^ * Big-« aloo
nc praiurr^p^^ -nard Don Pcderson missed a week raa like lows Sute
pions at t^ stage of
•Mt tills swaf s opener is with
national powerhouse Arizona
I
(25 Otr)
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3017 Santa Monica Wtd
Santa Monica
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SUMMER Rptos Spacious singtoa
10 2 biiropiiM. Largo courtyard SS2
Vatoron Aaa. Np. WSiblii. 470-
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(20 QU)
NICE PRRTATE ROOMS PHMto PaPt
cooomg focllltlas Utilltlos Inicudsd
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(SS S 2)
COMPLETE DINNERS
i^$2.95
Casual Dining
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HARRY'S OPEN PIT BBC
1404 CRESCENT
at Sur»aat Strip
11-11 7
h/Dlnnpr
to Roaorvations
1470 S. aaPULVEOA
1 Block So of Wifahlrp
ACADEMIC GUIDANCE
SERVICES
go.
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Esporla«Moe - Ibooos. disaortafiona
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WLA 3O1-04O4 ^^
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FURNISHED _ ^ __ _
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UCLA: 47a-4BSS
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• Opans 7 am for bfaaWBat.,kinch. and ^tr^mtx
• LufKhaon Specials Daily
• Dinner Spacials from $4 50
• Tropical gaMan aattin9
• Sundays Champaone Bruhch-li:00 to 3:
114i'l Sunaat BhiC, Loa Angalaa, Ca
i?13) 47g.t871
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AW op«n#r on« w«*k away
I Depth may ba problem for Bruins
. ^Jiff Dankviorai tn Saturday's •chmmaga. &••
UCLA's 'oaMTlMk, I
" Hot weather aw
from
10 mi^ 1 1 far a stolon
onahur
f y MIcluifl SoadlMtecr
DB Sparti Writer
Depth is the key probicm
facing VCt^ ftrtt yaar foot-
ball coach Terry Dooalaie with
the leason opener at Arizona
State only one week away
_^ The Bruins first string of-
feasc and defense were impres-
sive last Saturday afternoon m
a controlled tcrimnuige to
close put two-a-day drills at
Spaulding field, but the ma-
jority of other players were
inconsistent.
The first stnng offense ,used
a strong ground attack to score
three touchduwnv while the
first siring defense allowed
only rtirce first downs to
sccDnd string offense in tile
one-hour scrimmage The sec-
ond.' third and fourth stnngk
scrin|i]Rmged an additional
hour, but the majority of play-
ers did not mppczT ready to
Qhftjjenigtp for first striijig. po-
sitions
. Irtexpcfienced second anll^
"We have/a lot of incxpcT-
c .ic<fd players or ihe second
uriit, and^^4§ going to take
time." said Donahue "I arA
concerned with the depth in
the offensive line, ptus^ my
second unit d^fehse.^id not
play as wel] as I hoped. r
It iMM a tirad Bruin
team that scrimmaged Satur-
day after foing through hard
two-a-day drilk ia pads for the
last six days in almost 90-
dafrae weather.
^"Personally 1 felt like
I didn't have any wind or legr
today (Saturday), and I was
sluggith and tired." said quar-
terback Jeff Dankworth. 'M
know the team is happy to be
iieisnian trophy candidate
Tyler electrified a larfc UCLA
practice crowd of over 250 by
going 59 yards for a touch-
down on the third play from
•crimmage behind a iiddme
clearing block from Sarpy.^
Brown got the second touclw
dowji on a seven-yard power
run on a-^^aer option play to
the left side., Je^erl Thomaa
got thr last score on a one-
!*■■ I »«
UCLA
Summer
Vol
XCIX. Number 16
Unhreralty of California. Loa
-r^lilZV
Thuraday, Saplambar t, 197i
New parking plan debuts in fall quarter
If today were the Arizona State fjame, the Bruins would
probably Jine up with the following on.ofTeni^ and drfrnike:
Split end. Jame% Sarpy; left tackle, R(»b Ke/irian; left
guard, Keith fcak^'cenler^ Mitch kahn; right x^ard, («ref
Taylor; right tackle, C^im C oppens: tight end/ Rick V^alker;
jjl^ :iXZjq^rterback, Jeff llankiforth; left halfback, UendeH lyler:
right halfback. Iheotis Bro^n; »nd flankerback. ^alh
Henry. »
Defense: Left ti^kle« Pete Pete; no>e guard, Steve Tetrickt
ri|(ht tackle, Maliu Tuia\os<ipo; left inside linebacker,
Raymond Bell; ri|;ht inside linebacker, Jerry Robinson;
strons side <iutside linebacker, Raymond Burks; neakside
outside lineback^er, -Frank Stephens; left tornerback, levi
Armslrone; riflii cornerback. Harold Hardin; strong safety,
Oscar M^ardik; and frac lalelyrPat Schmidt. I- rank ( orral
has wcMi the job as bol# glneekicker iind punter.
WiU provide 2,000 additional
parking permits for students
.done with two-a-day practices
and I am >ery happy to come
out of two-a-days healthy.*'
Dankworth quarierbtf^lTed
the first string offense *to two
yard
side
•*f ""~ '--
DB
Jeff Later
Sports Writer
«L,. ►
4'
4'
t
1^-
^S,r4<;
-<<
Mudgm^Ht Day" WHh. the Sun Devils fs (,)nK a week awaviPbr
Ske 4;^LA football team al the Bruins-'^o ilir^jugh fmsrt
'gfepa rat ions before flyihjg ifexX:_Wcdncsday lo 7 cmpe-io^fpcet a
Rationally-ranked An/o'na, '•Starrieim.^ ^4i*- — — t; :; ^
Brum first yaw head coach ~Terryl^ona+iuei is ool pt all
unhappy about recent -:jK)ar^ijig tempcraiurcs m l.os Aif||ekn, af
the game next week will ITk^ly. be played under* si ntilar"
.. condition^ The^ 5ilO^ Pacrtfc starting time, scheduled to suit the
-p^ whinis^ of natmrurl television, is not likely to help the Bruins
Donahue and h4s staff thoroughly l^cwed tfic Sun 4)evils last
'weekend, and Ttie Bruins' head man was impressed by what he
- saw. , _., ^ \ •'*=^-- .■"'"'.
"-"^AStl. is'^highly-irankcd in the prc-season pofls- 1 hey are
__ extremely tatt and- explosive on offense," stated Donahue ,la&t
Mondays ir^ts first press breakfast , ^
Win with offeme,
"Last year they won- many games with ihcit defense This year
kush (Frank; ^he ASH coach) claims that the offense will have to
carrv more of the load Their skill positions oo offense ai'e well
played, but they're explosive as well. -
"We'll have to control the ball The key (to the game) is
„ turnovers. K we handle the ball well, we'll be tn the contest. If we
lay the ball on the ground three or tour times, we'll have a hard
time staying in the game," said Donahue *
The coach also had praise for the Sun Devil quarterbak and
_ receivers "Dennis Sproul (the quarterback) is a winner; he gets
the job done. John Jefferson is the most aggressive wide receiver
' Tve ever seen. He'll go for the ball with reckless abandon. He
appears to have the temperament of a defensive back/ 1 don't
believe he can be intimidated "
Ball control
Donahue added, "The way to stop them is to control the ball.
IfNve execute our techniques on defense properly, we'll be all
right We'vie just got to try and contain them, ehminate the big
plays; and if wc do this I^^hink we'll be in the comcsi."
The Sun Devils arc about seven-point favorites over the
Bruins, and this is reflected m that they are ranked much, higher
than UCLA in pre-season polls. Donahue said, "I would hope at
the end of the leaaon our^jeam is ranked I think the rraaon
we're not ranked is my inexpenence, coupled with the loas of
John Sciarra and Cliff Frazier."
The Bruins will likely pass more this year (IS'to 18 tiroes a
fame, after oflly 10 times a year ago) including utilizing their
hacks. Btit Donahue sutes that Wendell Tyler will be used to full
advantafc. "Tyler will carry the ball enough. We want to make
certain he has an opportunity to make some big plays"
Improved paning
On offenie, Donahue openly admits that the Bruins don't have
the overall size and strength that they had last year. But he
believes also that there has been improvement in other thiafi^
including the paaaiag game.
On the ASU dc^nnse, Donahue said. "Thi^ Wilz a let, so you
have to be pattetit. They'll try and create conTusTon"
The BniiiH are currently working out once a day up until the
game The Sun Devils may be favored, but Paaiahuc aad his
HftTtff UCLA has an tJiitHf !if^rl—Br uf wiiiiiiiig witli
AP Poll
-i^
A
NO
PTl
fTha Top M AF
with first plac« votes in
IttoaatlJoaton records tor 1W7%
and IMI points. Points bassM on
20Tia-t«-t4-ii>ia-a-a*7^$-4-3-
2-Tirr
It t^ ^
- ^^ __ ^.
Naifraiii (2S) rKf'2-f^
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Aftaona Slalt (7)U-0-0
0»>ioStals<3> 11-1<0
Otelaaswa m
(3)
PNnoilr^H (1 )
Pafm Stale
1
2.
3.
4.
5.
a.
7.
a.
9.
to
It
12
13
14
IS
ia
17
ia
19.
20.
919
790
749
Arkansas
Toaaa AaM
UCLA
Kl
Miami.
Ot>k>
11-1-0
10-2-0
a-4-0
9-4-0
9-3-0
9-d-p
9^-1
ia-a-0
10-2-0
9-3-0
9-3-0
9-2-1
9-3-0
7-S-O
It-t-O
«ia
$17
416
349
319
211
193
139
121
101
S2
37
f%
UP! Poll
(Tfio top 20 \M
wItt) first
and total
^^-S-4-3-2•
1|:
jkim
HCMMI P|S
4.
$.
a.
7
9.
%
10.
11.
12.
i3.
14.
1$.
19.
17.
19.
19.
20.
(11)
MichiyliM^)
Ohio Stala (•7)
Taxat {2}
C>lrl«hoMa(1)
use ii)
Porm sii
PMtsPurgh (1)
10-2-0
9-2-2
ll*W.
11-1-ia
10-2-0
ta-1-o
12-0-0
9-4-0
9-3-0
9-4-0
9>^
223
199
191
^7t
139
130
112
94
- 90
72
29
24
Notre Di
UCLA
Teone Mi^Uh
9-3-0
10-2-0
-fO-2-0
9-S-O
ia-2-o
7-9-0
22
19
19
7
S
4
M^
While Donahue thought the
scrimmage was "very, very,
mediocre," the players feh it
was a good effort and that the
offense and defei^K had come
along well tn the 10 days of
last Saturday and had
runs of 30 and 39 yeards on
veer option plays, Steve Bu-
hich quarterbacked the other
score and had a 54-yard run
on aa option play.
smash over the fijtht
. **Tlir Tfchniciam"
The experienced offensive
line of Kc7rfi»n. Ecrk. Kahn;
Taylor^ and Coppch* was im-
pressive in optTifngliotes. and
the /smallish unit (the average
^weight is only a.round 240
pojuadK has be^rf'hiefcnamcd
"The Technicians *'
Donahue said:.. "M the of-
fHtsive line, continues to im-
.^ prove, they Will^iargood unit,
..but they arc: not ar physical as
last year's line i? • .;.__1 i ,
"We havf^^^i^prefty exper^:
fenced iVflensc. with godd
bacW-fh. Wendell and Thcotis.
r would like to sec a^ pass a
Jittle more, but ^s long 4» the'
ftinnmg is. gtH)d. I c*n%-t:omr
j)laiti,** said Henry,' who has
(ceover^d fr-om'a sprai^M^uwe^
at the start of practice
Buriis. 'l!^hb'haj» iswitclnht ttr;
the outside hneba^kcr on the"
tight end" Or sirohg iWe to take
advantage of hS strength and
the speed of weak^ide Itne-
backer Stephens, said of the
defense, "I thought wc did
pretty well today (Saturday).
We are about as far along as
last year early. It «huld be the
same with this year's defensg^,
that the longer we play to-
gether, the better we will get*
DdeiMe key -^
The defense, which played so
outstanding in last year's Rose
Bowl chnching win over VSC
and m the Pasadena Uiumph
over Ohio Sute, will; fprohably
(C ontinued on Page 19)
-=75;=— r-
*f.-,jL».«^'
Mme D. WHcox
DB Staff Reporter
. In a letter received by all
ItCLA parking permit holders,
tk€ Campus Parking. Facility
announced a liew parking plaa
to begin fall quarter
The new plao^ will provide
approximately 2,000 additional
student parking permits. No
change in quarterly parking
fees will he made.
The p^n, known as Stack
Parking, 19 only a temporary
IMaaf of parking more cars iti
the aJHpc apaicc.' in involves
parkuig cars two or three deep
by attendants and will be oaaa^
monly wad at athletic events *
A parking servide employae
noted that students a rnvmg aT
the parfcitig structures before ^
am .will be able ^o- ^park in
f- *.'
nanwal ipacc^ and tai» ^eir — -stirff parking**
key with them. Students arriv-
iiigi at the 'stinictures after 8 am
iMiy^ hiVj^lheir car$ parked m
i he. aisles and .wave car keys
with7?9at)^iAg attendant^ If
stack parked, students should
retrieve their keys by 5 pm on
the sami;: day
Structures affected by 9tack
parking will be 3 (roof only).
5 (level 4 only). « (all levels)
and 9. (roof only) Surface lots
affected will be Hospital lota^
6, 7, IT and 12 The new
pafking system' will .employ
flon-student' attendants from
an independent firm Mary
Hook/ Manager of Student
Parking Service, said, "We are
cont ract 1 ng 10 x major park ing
firm , to handle suck parking*'
Mike Galizu), studaat
ernment infornration coordina-
tor, 9«id, /^The OCLA staft
workers wM have more -^ a
tJTo hie m -with stac> parking
than 9tiKlents . because ' the
Structure* affected are mostly:"*
tM^f
Six pir^t drop at UCLA
Gait? 10 also no|cC"**Siudcnt
government has b^ri' left m the
dark Over 9ti6t pafknig* aiKl
we do not kno»^ who is spon-
sfinng* this 'program ** * ... -
* - ■ ^
■ — >i^.
1
-.
*
'" ■■4
1-.
'
•
u
,..,
_
My J>iaae 1>. Wicoa , said, ^h 19 everyone s reapon-
DB Stair Wi^9flr ^^- .Jibility to maintain safety and
Senout crimes such at rape, prevent crime — the public
'^
r execution on
ail tJlltTTf!!! L
offente and defeiMc.
murder and iHiHilt are dowii
9IX per cent at UCLA» aceaa^^
iag to the University's Sute-
wide 1975 Summa^^ Crime
JIfjpCNt. However, there" is still
aoHijor need for improvement
Sergeant Joe Ares, com-
a9aiider of UC Falipl! Oetec^
tive Divisionv said. -Theft of
pcra^aal aad University pro-
perty it curn^ntly tiK highest
cnme on the UCLA campus.**
A'dwt ■MMaa
The Sammaty ^inne Repoil
that 83 per cent of all
rreated for crimes on
UC campuaet com-
continued to be adult,
le and non-ttudent. The
large number of arretts by
Uiiivcrtity police of non-
aad pcr90«9 over 21
ai a§e i9, according to
the mpwt, **an indication of
the vulnerabdity of the cam-
pM9ei to nearby trantieitt
papaktiont."
Lieutenant Jymes Carter,
OORimander of UCLA Police
Special Operations Division,
must get involved and report
any suspicious activity in
dorms or on campus to tjhe VC
polwt**'
Carter we,nt on to outhne hit
cnme prevention program for
the 1976 fall quarter at UCLA
**ff stud<;rits know what you
are doing to hclgi'Blem, they
are more likely to cooperate
with our UC Police Depart-
Carter added '
maay. cuIjs
compjeie;
annied for
Story on SLC
vote incorrect
Laat Thuraday. the Daiiy
Brum incorrectly stated Meg
McCormack was unani-
moaaly censured by SLC In
actuality, the oensure vote
waa.l-4-l. the four vota^g
againat censure voted for a
comn:)ittee to investigate
cha^B9i afaiaat McCor-
madL The Daily
apoi
Mr Its error
His **Lady Beware Program"
schedukd to begin in the fall.
will include student escorts for
female students at mght, spe-
cial routes to walk with better
and more ppbce pa-
and non-com operated
emergency extension phones
along these detignated routes
Carter alao hopet to have the
women's gym area under
tighter security during night-
time hours this fall.
The Special Operations Di-
viaicm ako inchidet a tpecial
retponte unit made up of noo-
uniformed policemea to take
care of crisis situations on
campiu. Carter added. **Thit
unit includes six desk lieu-
tenant commanders and wilt
not reduce the number of re-
gularly uniformed police on
rotitine
Carter suted in his stratcfy
report to UC Police Chief
Boyd Lynn that he piaai tp
have, membcfi of the Special
Operatioot Dtvition meet with
studem groups, Univenity re-
presentatives, community
mutaal concern relating to '^
police problems ** Vc^^-jt^.^-
Carter: commented, "1 plan
to' personally commit myself.
I^oth day and night to ex-
pounding the philosophical
wtufOM of crinic prevention aJ^
everyone!f >oh/'aiid aaaking
community support to bring
about its] "fruition " ^~~
In comparing the number of
Part I crimes (criminal homi
cide, cape^ robbery, aggravated
a99au|t. burglary, larceny-theft
and' auto theft) per 100,000
people. UC rates were well
below comparable statistics for
the state of Cakfornia and the
nation as a whole, according to
the 1975 Suauaary Crunc Re-
port.
La99 thaa one per cent
From 1969 to 1975, the total
number of Part I crimes within
the University community in-
creased by lets than one per
cent, while the total University
population increased by 24 per
cent, according to the 1975
Sufluaary Criape Repoft. '
By cent raat, the vohtme of
terious crimet in the State
increal^d 30 per cent, while the
ttate population grew lata than
teven per cent, accofding to
the Summary Report.
On a national basts. Part \
crimes increated 51' per cent
while the population growth
lest than six per cent
Smnmary Report con-
cluded. *X*oroparison of the
rates for teven maior offenses
hetween the campus and con-
current juritdictiatts . . sup-
ports the general obtervation
that all nine campuses are
indtad among the s^
P^IMUp^
and area muM iii »>»t ^'^" ''^ <
schools to *^di
nia
t
various comipjssioners
" By Raat Wolpert
-OR Sapir Writer »-
Aftier spending almott^he entire suajriaer tiytiqPto%ork
out an operating budget for this yai^, and after addmg
S2lj000 from ^4hewHfl|r|>lus account. StudenT legislative
Council (SLC) is still S22.6I3 over their maximum budget.
according to hinance Committee Chairman John Withers
SLC IS now in its fourth round of the budget hei^rings
When they meet tonight, it is expected that members will
push for an across thr hoard «cut from all SI C commis-
sions, although certain coflMnittions are likely to be given a
higher percentage cut than others. Up to now. cuts have
been made line by line to preserve worthy programs and
scrap unnecessary ones. ^.v
Last week. General Repreientative Jay Bundy introduced
a motion tQ^i;ut the stipends of SLC members from the
present $125 to $100 Bundy said "'we cut the shit out of
everyone*s stipends but our own. Since are have less money
to .work with than last year (due to a decline in under-
gndtiate student enfollment), we should shoulder scNae otf
the cuts.-
This opinion, however, was shared by a minority of SLC.
as It voted down this proposal. Those voting for the cut
were Jay Bundy, Willie Bankt, and Jim Roten. Thote
voting no were Gary Collitter, Lou Rarasik, John Kahara,
Cynthia McClain, and Diana Shepherd Brian Fisbcrg and
administrative representative Monroe Wooten ahaiained
During the firtt two stages of the budgeury proce99. SLC
went through every budget request hne by line. SH^ three
was called the '^torpedo'* stage by McCormack.
The four piagiami cat out of the SLC budget in this
manner were the UCLA Panhelleaic Couocii the Westwood
Consumer Profaaai, »the Student Housing Raaad. and the
Student Awareness Tatk Fatae In addition. McCormack
broke tie votes to preserve funding for the carpaol paaiian>
and the 4>ntted Veterans Aaaaciation
The UCLA Panhellenic Council is the governing hody far
the eighteen national tara^dica at UCLA. Daipiie the fact
that their male counterpart, the Intcrfraterm
been funded for one year by SLC, SLC ha9 never fi
Panhellenic
Alto cut was the West! wood Consumer Projact
would have etublished a Wc99apaad d
rd to invettrgaie ttadcat rpipplaimt againtt Wenufaad
ints The haatd wtmld have 919a *>rayidad
consumer co
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TOGETHER NEEDS YOUj
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9y Alaa Micbad Karl^lnig
Dl Stair Writer
A man wIm pJradiirf fuihy
i0 chargcf of stcaltng tome 700
hiftoncal documents from
. UCLA and tKe I'niversity oi
Texas was sentenced to one
year in County Jail, accordiaf
to the public information office
here.
Ronald Eliis Wade, 25. re-
ceived an additional three years
of probation from the Santa
Monica Superior Court Judge
lad wm ordered to help au-
thonties recover the mis&ing
documents
Brooke Whitihg, assistant
head of the department of
special collections here, esti-
mated the value of the 50
documents stolen from UCLA
at $10,000
Although most' of the valu-
able' letters and documents
taken from UCLA have been
recovered, some are still miss-
ing.
According to Jim ^Watu a
reporter for the Dath ^Texan in
Atistin, Texas, Wade is now
wanted^ in Texas for stealing
over 600 documentsi from the
^taie University there.. War-
rants for his lirrett m two
counts of grand theft have
keen received by the UCPD,
said SergMMit Joe Arcs How-
ever, he caimot be tried there
until he finishes serving his
Man arraigned
for campus
acid attacks
Robert Stanley Baker, a sus-
pect charged with committee,
the acid attacks on campus.
Was arraigned in West»Los
Angeles Superior Court on
September 1
Baker ptejird not guilty to
charges that he violated Sec-
tion 244 of the Penal Code,
which makes it r <felony 'to
assault a person with a caustic
chemical The— preliminary
hearing date is set f Or Nov-
ember I; Bt 8:30 am^4*r-i^^-
sion 9^ of the same court
lime in California -r^
Last spring. Charles Hami^
ton, a New York manuscript
auctiMter aad UCLA fnidu-
ate. notified UCLA and pohcc
when he received a historical
letter for sale from Wade
which he recognized as bein^
part of the UCLA colleciion
Wade tent him a letter off^T;ing.=^
for sale a letter which Mark
Twain wrote to Senator Corn-
elius Cole and it valued at
about $500. according to Whit-
ing.
As tooa at UCLA was in-
formed of the missing letter.
the spetial collections dcpan- ~
mcnt checked their records and '
found Wade had checked out
many letters m his own name,
many of which were discovered
missing "He was mostly aft^i
presidential stuff with presi-
dential Signatures/* Whiting
said. ^. ^ * I' ^""
Wade i^ifas arrested and
Baker*s attorney tried t<^ get charged with grand thett. a
the arraignment delayed' on
grounds there was not enough
tin]|r to analyze polygraph test
results^ but the judge, denied
the motion
- Atin .
felony, on May 20 after- UC
police found a whole cache ot
documents at his honjc in La
Quihta Archivist James Mmk
estimated the total value of the
recovered docupients -gt^
WOO.OOO ..._ w.
.*'
Organizer describes humaiitst
for s
e
_ • » ....
By Sy»aii Silton .*
. DB ^toir WrHer
Indication to iocial change
tik StQye J^o&e's business, and
money is hot the rewaoJ for
his efforts.
Afeont a year afo last April.
Rote, a studiefit here, .started A
Hu^iTrrmt' Movement (AHM)
on Campus, de'signcdr to raise
(k>JiticaI'^a1iiif social conscious-
ness of ^students and noi^-^^
$tudetits aftd to thereby effect".
change. He it usually stationed
3min.Waik
In the short timd VA Human-
ist Movement itas rxistcd. ^^
Rose ha^ organi/ed^ general
discussion groups oh campus
on various subjects, su^h as
Senati^ Bill "1 fa ^codification <
of the nati^n'^s criihmal law ^
aillowing for oppressive regula-
tions.'' Rose explained), re-
pression in Eastern EuropeTriwH'
writing and. social change
In addition. Rose, along'
with what he : described a$^a
Suinmer Bruin
VoHimeXCIX, Number 1« TlHiraday.Se0efitbeff,1976
• wtOT tfurln9<vai« Mcooi ■ymwiT Msstoo.
■ys laatnhii taaaayft, cne •■•mMiaiidn p*riodt. ^ Mm
ASUCLA CommunlcaitonB Board 30t Westwood Wimzm. Lot Anf«l««
'*"'" '- tOOM Copyright 1t7S by tti* AtUCLA Coiff«Mufitc«ttom ao«rd
POM at Itio La^ Amof Root Offloo *
; • '*\
r • • '• * • •'•■• *..... .^ A Qeoff Quinn
• • ♦ • •■* •♦♦-•-»^» ♦».,.»». , , ,
NpwtEdHort
CdHortol D«f«ctor«
aporHadHof
Hioto Editor
Copy Roodort
. . AHce Short
Frank^taiiworth
.^(
^^. Susan Kano^
Tad Shapiro
Frank Widder Saily Gamer
Kim Wildman Michelle DuvaJ
David Whitney Joanne Eglash
Michael SorKShoimor
Jeff Lapin
Joe Jones Patti Croat
ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS
Let us ship your pononai effect home We are specialtsts m mterna-
iionai packaging and shipping We also sell appliances for 220 volts
PACirrC-KING
1215 West 6th St . Los Angeles 17
482 Me2
AUTO
r.*!
WT VAN NUYS liVI
rAWUfiAmA tlfjr ?s atKs so or
094-7D75
**small grou^ilji fairly heavilv
committed' people,*' has coro^'
piled a card catalog for a
People's YcIIqw Pajjes Direc-
toryra listing of social change"
groups In L0S. Angele$ v ^
fisi also cited a ' newsfettcr
.w>ii€h^ »-AHM 4«rtnbulcd la^t
year. ■'*intendedj0 help buT*4ti
network of social change
groups on campus aiid^ out side
and tretp bring those jgroups
together to develop pfogran;)^ "
Eliminating starvation, buf;
ing the Amount of sufferii
in the world and decreasinaf wie
intensity of war and opprc^)n
in the world are some of hi!»
i<ieats.
In his initial outline ot A
Hum^anist Movement. Rose
explained his movement at-
tempts to "'simply and modest-
ly, chMige the whole damn
world " ^ ''
He said the way social^
change has come at>out has not
been strong enough in the past
There has not been a strong
enough commitment or con-
sciousness of simple problems.
Rege explained
''The masses of people are
not actively aware of the prob-
lems of the world,** he said
Citing the approximately
"500 million people iUrving to
death throughout the world."
Rose stressed, **The number of
people that have to be fed jjjst
to keep the level ol misery
going is incrediMe.**
His tone changed from one
of agitation «id concern to
melancholy k% he wondered
how many people were willing
to possibly hurt their own
(CMUinucd on Page h
90
To help^you pt^fHtre for
l.$.A.T. — Coune begim 2wpi ^
C.R.f. — Coune begins Sept. 1^
C,M.A.T. - Course begim Sepi 25
A) hr». review and practice testing
Writing SliiMi — Speed Relidinff
Carevr Guidance .
The CyMMce Center
3017 Santa Monica Blvd.
29
group
lifestyle for the purpose oi
helping other people !
**! don't know how tlT the
I'm i9tti^.to teir people
they can't have their foifr
Rose
He added one of his major
desires is to '**have humanity
start taking control over -Hs
own future and not be maiii^
pulated by forces outside its
tjonsciousncii.* V
.Social change cafr
Rpie eiLplaihed j^ "when
t^lize .ihey: iHMfe ji raaie, ^
freeidom in thetr-Hictions and
that -^ pftop le ca n -expand ' t he i r
ra^ ot. Ircei^oni i/ they reahze
they have an effect on other
people and oh the worfd'"
Once people have become
aware of thcrr freedom. Rose
continued, they should det^elop^
ftmdcrstanding and in-
consciousnesiS of evpry-
Thmf-™-' to some degree of
The mse 1 ves an^. foa^ laflfter
degree, of how a person
cffectj. *«i*ange
• **,You can thrn hcj
stahd^ng and act xng^ft^xi how
your ^ own degnpe^ qf ^freedom
can influence the world to the
greatest degree towards the
itnd-of" social change you be-
Tj^vejis right." RoK laid / "^
It is imporunt $^ P^op^ to
then 'balance and question their
actions. weigjung^ ^incans
ajpinst^ ends. Rose aMad.
r HUoat said he hope^ thr««^|l|
AHIi to influeiwr p^cople ai
litLA UL trying to mfiuence
othcfS'aad M> help people w^orj^
for 'the lifestyle the^ wbuid like
to Icaid. V.
Right liow, twcJI^ded, there's
not enough Ciilitioysness Jor
*1^op1e fo wmtA to change' or
realise how they can change^
'^Vm not sure I have the
Film versions of 'King
Lear; 'As Y6u tike
If screen tomorrow
Tomprrow evening's Shake-
spearian films in Royce Hall
will be kinf^ l^ar. directed by
Peter Brook and starring Paul
Scofield Also showing will be
A5^ You Like It, directed by
Paul Czinner ^nd starring
Laurence Ohvier and Elisabeth
7 pni, aad tickets ($1.50 for
students) can be bought at the
door
Festival of Jazz
Septeml>er 17
LA's own Festival of iaz2 is
a three-day event which will be
at the Wilshire Ebell Theater
September 17. 18 aad 19. Fri>
day September 17 will be "A
Night With the Blues" starring
John Lee Hooker Saturday.
September If will be *'A Night
In New Orleans** stanuig^joe
Venuti Sunday September 19
will he '"Memories of Satch-
WtoT with Teddy Buckner as
Louis Armstrong Tickets
range from S4 fo S7 aad can
be bought at the box olAce or
at all Matual agencies and
Liberty out leu
UCLA iNSTANTPERSbWNEL StftVICE
Temporary 6n-Cgll Campu3 Clerical Assignnients
— , Ex-UGLA Stafi, Deaired . • ;_
ContactTyf>n Read or Bobbe Akafonu 825^74
MNfAeT-ttNStS
KfcHI T£
VI
DR ALFRED R BECKER
OptoiiKtrt«t
10959 Weyhurn Ave
f
/a QOfSera]
FIZZA
*\AJL "_ ijt
GR 8-0123
Op9n 7 Dmy9
n AM to 2 AM
Between Barnngtqn ar>d Bundy
IIStSWilBMnBtvd. 47S-ai23
I
*
I
ngfirio say that I am^'fhr
moveiiieiii tnat^wMi \k tut
-Ux^reate change, b'ul I believe
I hlive the right to •lay I am a
i-^itrying — lo* crsatc
changes, or Jtclp. huitd^ the
movement that will in turn
hdp build change/'jjtosc said
Rose hopcf HI thi ,^a1t to
encourage specific projects
aside from the regular dis-
0 gfp^?« on what AHM
ry ing ^ to aeeomplish
tti iM if people could fec-
ojgp4/e ^hc iimall arnopnt they*
.^0oirld do individualiy and the
-iremepdoU!! amai|in t i hgy . ^ **j^»M
do wH^ctively. rhey wwHidc^
niore. ;^ . _^..\. ,. ■ ' ^-«r.;,~ ,
i4c explained he \% working
^jpiwjlrds hcing^a giiwe rtfrrtive
lijidcr in' ui4errte sipeaplieR
the mt)vcn[icm antf^evcnTually
citect social _t)i an ge ' Ihai;
means: 1 will he ctlcctivc, Ihat
means I better be effective "
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BQUUS
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Dl SUIT Witter
A propcMNiU to upgrade tlK
equipment of the Media Cen-
ter. tJCLA*i television and
motion picture tervice, hat
been stalled until a study deter-
mines the campus* exact needs.
UCLA officials have said.
The original SI. 2 million
proposal, which mainly pro-
vides for new color television
equipment, was postponed hy
Chancellor Y^ii^Rg tTntii the
Office of Learning {Resources
and the Planning Office in-
vestigate the Media Center*s
role on campMs
Donna Obgny of the Plan-
ning.^.Office said Young "gen-
erally ^pported upgrading the
Media Center, but he wants to
know wh<> needs it, how much
do we need and what are other
technical alternatives "
I he study js to he completed
by (Xtober I.
Headed by James Loren. the
M«dia Center hopes to kwiich
\ lis tt^ljc^ision service' to_caU>r,
mcluding a new mobile color
unit for U5C between their two
mafn television locations.
Other Medui Center depart-
to receive funds are the
Campus Learning Center, mo-
tion pictures and the media
library
However, all the reqsMlt are
tentative and subject to thange
dcpaaiing on the outcome of
the study
**T]Ky aft i.Q the process of
examining the requot,** Loren
HHd. *The basic problem is not
the req«Mlv«it*Ar which way the
U niversity wants to go.**
Malcolm. Nicol. interim di-
rector of the Office of Learn-
ing Resources, said his office
waab to see **what the rela-
tionship of the^edia Center is
to campus instructional needi.
but I don*t think it would be
appropriate to §e iftto great
detail at this time."
Additional space for the
Media Center may also present
some problems, but offic^i«L
are hoping to do the best with
what they have.
Phillip E Frands'on. dean of
Extefl.sion arid overseer of the
Media Center, said," '*We do
not anticipate a new structure
but a re-aisignment of jSpace,
Iherc ts ho proposal to take
L
942 to
in Sorority rush
A traditional prelude to the upcoming school year,
Sorority RmI^ Week, begins thu Saturday.
Janie Wigod, president of Panhellenic Council, explained
that the 17 soronties at UCLA participau in Rath Week in
an effort to introduce girii to tiK sorority system Most
^rls §0 through Rush to see if sorority life is for tliem, but
there are others who rush at a way of OMiting new friends
Rush week begins with open hoMfli at the sororities,
where rushees meet^ the sorority members and learn the
functions and purpoaat of the house. The rushees receive
ihvitations throughout the week from the ''sororities to
return and visit the members again. The girls accept
inviutions from the houses they preferred, and by the end
of t>he week they narrow their choices down to the two
houses they want to join. The following Saturday the girb
receive their «orortty bids and are pkdfrd into the house
Wigod went on to say that this year a total of 94? girls
are expected to participate The itumbcrii slightly lower
this year due tb a shortage of sorority housing and a 28%
cutback in freshman enrollment. 4c
All undergraduate gtrls have the option of ru^i^g. The
only requirentcnts are a 2.0 average ami enrbUmeat for at
least 12 units in the fall quarter.
By belonging to the P^hellenic C^ncil, all sororities
participate in certain set activities, such as the UCLA
Mardi Gi^i» and Blood Week. Thfry also hive theif own
activities such as exchanges with fraternities and other
iororiiies. The differem*"«fctivities and types of girU arc the
major things to look* for when rushing, according to Chris
Fish burn, assistant dean of students 'in charge.
rInjIefftalJMal Student Center plans
t=-^
Itdyce Wall and the Ontcr for"
Health Sciences
lohn C^: Rics. associate vice
chancellor of u4»deT||^raduatc
affaira. said'the Media Center ^te decisions wilij)c mide.as to The lnternat>anal Studciu
must have color to coritinAe its ad4:^t4#nal \^spacc uiTffl th^" Center (ISC) will be the site q(
>crvke because biac)/„ and Chancellor approvers ,|,h^-4^c- a frstiv^^aribKean Carnivafat
-wiiSb cquipchent IS no Umecr qucut and afbfttraiTcrat tt-
in production _ , *- rartgcments are piade - /^^h+r
-. Ihtf iC arn>\a! a^tU featurr-a
I rnhicil Rjir. _ \Vcsl-lndian
3
i^ .. : Th^foauoerS'Of EQOUS
- -^>aye^^^jltia^ ava»taiH^60
I special on^-sta^^MtM
for each performance
Friday and Saturday
e\»enings'$6.00r all uHwf
peffopwa.nces includrng
rriatinees $5-00 tickets
afe ^ avariabie ait |^
Hu/tting.lon Hartford
••^i■^,'1^
f-
^c--,.->early . one out ^s>i tourr ;w<>-
jijen in T~l^ A isiu^v^ nvri-
OfjHily CO !>;« id cred -co m m m i ng
rrniiivjil^ j|_illB|Wt due (o
maligna: ;The surv.sy^^^-
cludcd 3+ couples aint ■'«ias
^conducted b\ : m^estigatorjk
from the hi euVops wh lat ric Itl-
^yi^:::^^ Caribbean Carnival dinnerand sho^
Planning Office said absolutely
lamoBs bj&^MaJTyLSelaioait^nr^
the 50*s
This mui^ical'^-c«i>cmt)lc,''*'La .
Kttlte Caribbean,** (^n»ii«t< of •
two grotipa|,\ The i; ...dad
MusiV Makers Ste^i Band^^M^ -^
The rrmida4 CaiVpso ]S1^5r.7
B^nd. '.y^ -
A buffet; supper of currir«?
chicken, ham iiqcks *nd ^nc
.\{ f
here
J--
^.■■.■*^. '
Klentifidaiidn .
. For information call:
* 462
1«1f Vmi ST.. HOLLYWOOD
I he. projccl evaluated several
p4rych44ogicar and social as-
pects of masiectomr; mcludrng^
responses of male partncj> for
rhe first time I ts .-Kav
citi.sch.^and
Robert Pasnau of the MCLA
DepaH^Tient of Psychiatry and
Biobchavior^il Sciences did the
research. " *
The survey dealt wn^ -res-
ponses to the discovelry of the
d.isi.ist'. iht '1 >i >n to ha\e
■ the rr. ixhJ tlie sjir-
^^ , I. Itom the petspi
/)! J?oU4 men: and Vk^»mcTl~Ajv
proxlmatel\ . ot the wo^
— int n ifiiJitated their ^<vnsTdef-
ation of 4kUicide. a friuch hT|!hcr
percentage t han-h||dr-been prjr-
L^iM<i -^^"^^^^^fri^^ of emo-
JpiNil adjustment t-at^grd from
*'poor** to **exccllerii." with the
tr. ty dispbymg a sense of
e— Jidcncc in their abilitv to
cope . ;
Both TTicn'and women were
'questioned aboiS^ their sexual
fclationv before and after the
opcraiKin. Nearly all oT the
women feh that there had been
"ho chanfc" and that the mast-
ectomy had no effect upoa
their abihty to" cniov sexr' —
.....r. a via
coniejkl The
y
hiL'H
ftowc\Tr.' u ..
an^
'^'ht
brrf'r'
a ......
ttf lb'* '^bcf>^. nowcvTT. u ... or
ii\(jc.. .,)»o rni^sicplavcd eon- ^ will hc:.;A4aulahle^ as weilS
iiriu<»'i-'y ^^'^ a Wic^-thdi£,vl'hiJttk, pf champagne, t-
mmsKu .... ,. . blc, led' by cow- wtMec of the, Limho fi
poserr^fite Lord Melody, iv^J^^^^ tcxerxc ticket
no^nld^frtf his^ songs rngde tion callJSC at 411=4^7
Mm<
ANNOUJIC£M£NTt
. -AppticaiMi ivaMiMs 4pr, cONfirector ot
the dC ^lucfent Lobby m Sacramento
Position 7s-"lull hme to? o«e -ttiree years
^ Visil Kerckt»o.ft..3Q6 tof details
— U\u\im tW»catt^-Uiyf^
rffom UCLA-8-11 pm Saturtfays Inter
nattonat Student Center Calf S^spSM if
you are jnterestfd m pertbrmino
-Enfliih CeevfrMtien tree informal
practice for foretgn students and visitors,
10 am-noon Msndtys and Wsiaii^Mi.,
Acfcerman .1S17 - . '
-Pregraei Sfawtn otters summer ^o^.
"ind field ^^^orh pjace»»>«nt in coinmuni|y
d^
Courses in Architecture and Urban
Planning for Undergraduates
FALL
SAUP 190 Man and His Environment:
.Los Angeles: Model for the Future
or Dead-End?
Do you think you know what mtktm a city \K:k'> What s good or bad
about our citi«*'' How w« can create tMtter urban environments'' This
course will challenge you to try to understand the subttetiesof peoples
behavior iir^ the gity what km0s of architecture they want what kir>dfl of
piar>ning and controls they are willing to accept
ft will challenge yot* to think in new ways about atternative paMaiiii of
livir>g and working and the kinda of envtronments that are needed to
achieve Iheee
Lot Angeles provides a ^^rh framework for getting at these questions
and tor posing the issue of WHAT FUTURE DO WE WANT*?
Tuesday /Thursday 11 00-1230. Architecture ByMdiog. Room 1224
WINTER
SAUP 191 MOOERN ARO^. I ECTURE
A brief history of modern architecluae in Europe in the first half of this
century Starting with Behrens and the German Wer>t>und the course
explofes De Sti}! m Holland. Purism in France^ Conatructivism in Russia
Futurism and Rationalism in Italy the Bertin School and WmB^/i0mm m
Germany
SPRING
SAUP 192 HOUSING PATTERNS ^'"^
A w^ range of fKHitl^ and aettletwnts from many larxls and periods
of hiktory IS explored to illustrate how spatial patterns act to reflect and
relnflMDe prevailing arttitudes of the societies which produce theiVr^^
attitudes toward ttie individual the family the ownership of land andthe
TICKETS NOW!
EUBV HEGKART
luiiiuriiy ui im lUii
— \ — ^—
Events
service Vi&it Kinsey 394 br call 825-3731^
. .f4iirii8liMi JMIiLJiRMt 8.10 pm
llediissdays. Internatior^iff Student Center..
Free
will fsature a Frerv^
10 Potpom'
international Student Center S5 per pf
son Reseryations rsquiftd call 825-3364
CWCgiTI
— Utoi Kappsa will pertotm ^reeii ouita;
hhisic. 6 30-6 20 pm Wednesdays Intirfis-
tional Student Center Free
~ — AiMtl.l!|.,Alsar plays classical
7-9 pm. Tuesdays International Studsfrt
Center frm
There !§ a *^
difference!!! V
(^wB)Feert
aiidMccfti
e
e
»tiidy NMttft^f
^ ARLENE STADD
MICHAEL KAHN. director
TWO WEEKS. ONLY!
SEPT. 13-25
•fWi
genuine article
inio Wm
'Eleensr.' **
-^a,.- , 7 Cttlcego Tribune
o^mmid nioht s«pi 13 soto oi/r to itM CAiii«f».. >>--
^•rty (213) 931 nei »o me caJifemta Democratic
4 ftO . Fn, 4 Sat avM U SO 7 50 S »P * ^' •^ * ^
ft 80 . ThMta mala te SO S SO 4 SO. 3 90 ' V4I iCIr"^ rTN.iTrT>
AMnciaa Paciftc, tiarvp. S97 8 Hiii
Wall'""* ' ^ -
VallicDt A Libartv
OAHMANSON
Sf^>'
i MCAT
: OAT
: LSATI
: 6RE
fATBSB
: OOKT
: CMT
: FLEX
:ECFIIG
: Him. MEO BOS :
; SAT- VAT :
Cevrtes tti*t 919 •
cewstantiy ueiiM •
:
Tape factittiet ^ e
rtvwwsef ciau e
mm
2174
Lot A
'2'J> 477-3S1S
DB Editorial
Need
GSA Budget
In o mm^m fe crvote oddifionol porking 99% comput, the
UCIA parking s«rvic« km duddmd lo impUmiit • ''stock
porking plon.
Sf udonH wiN loiiv^ thotr koys wHfi porking ottondonft if
fH«y arrive during pook Hours. This progrom will be ruh by
00 iodapendonf, off -campus ogency
Although if is uncUor of fhis fimejmtho Cfoolod fho
progrom, ono fhing is corfoin: student govemrnont know
nothing about the proppeof . "^
Any pkin fhof so offocfs UCLA tfudenfs^ dosorves studbnf
9®>^*rnment input.
Wo encourage the administration to sbtkit student
^overnmont opinion before impiementir>g this Pfipgrom.
Letters to the Editor
Tl^ir"dinbnruily is < oniriry to the
"Open Government InformOlioih
A(1" which reiniiiei th^f ade
^^^ : quite tntocmalioo be pr eserrtecf
During the T5.7^^SA Ad-Tor revien. and approval in arr^
mmivtration I was appointed pic time before votj^ng Budgbt.
^SA Sudil?et Cf)mrrM%Monf^r Qne informdfipn should be rcbuscd
of ftiy duties was To present to early, a^ fo aWo*^ 4ime lo vcVu-
, the GSA Senate a propoi»edbud' trni/e all budget itemf.. weh
get. Due to rhe late timifif ot be^o^e the hxst ^nit^rneHinfi
- -my-eppoirttrT>ent, I presented a All graduate Mu dents %ho(jld
i>udgel^^ prepared by soiwone havfe an id* a hoi* thetrll^SiWO
else. Th'i^l'e was not enough time *re spent, -:^ "
to thot^Mhi^ givalGafe'pa^r bud- I anj, suggp^ting rhat C^A pyb-
get^ry trendy and develop sound lish its proposed budg^ in the
. Umt\ objective fT>easu rev None ^pg^stration H»ue oi thert> # '
o^ the Senator! tsf graduate stu- ^tm^ on the day Ot the fiHt GSA
dents had edoqu'ate nme tp^jiieeting the graduate stu<iim-
-investiK riy particular budget body il^niuousl^ awaits a reply to'^
iterri prior to the; first C^A Sen* tht%^pfopoMl
-'iBte meetiog At ihe itrst Stenate . ^ ^^lei Sp^tMu
trteeti^ mapY.^^>^d .pomh were ' r''*'"''^ :*,'iil ^ C£ad., f tig|/
r^Tsed, "But'yofKffu0i.v^ discus- .
-sron could nc>f Occ^r for twci^ ^ NPU/ NfVFth
^^.JLime 4n6 rnfrjrmafion lfle(!ibA ^ idHw: - —^- - ■ .
=i-r^buciget apprr>vdfi..was rri lirnbie- Many thanks to the Dai/Vf^«/-
f tor too ^^K-Pfag rams and ff^^jn t6r letting fhe (ampus lm€>w
-^ular bu'si suffered ^frorh ' ^^^ . - . -
hir^k+gbt; i4,„.»-» no%5, ( lear t^
- Htiat we
[
r
V"'"''
'■* ;■<
■vii»"
-t-T,-.^
M I IHre Mini Ihiuptritim Ik, Tm |«ina sua ip for tr^fHig py/tliMlo tffil
•i.>,i.«;(.«J|.j<
. i
■•' -■««•
'.- .^;
i4,~.*-» no%5, (lear t^" me
matfe sev^eral r^rna^-"
incaiion^-r
Part of the blame for la< k ol
adequate time rests ¥yif]^^e-XaO
that agenda packets 4ie nor-
rn.iMv'Lmailed oniff four~tfays
J. tg^ Senate meetings
last ThuisiiaV rha4 rhe^ ' »4^
VVagon was about to t>e
no longer Somehovv il^i^uldif*t
have been f-rgtrt h> find* rhe jirfle
c>ld eye vufe gorre^ and-never
havf^ known .t]r was obbut to
happen
We d lilu^'^Turth^f^tHe canyius
' ommunit\ ff>f puftiri{^Sipa*Wlfh^
t:
the «*'agon during the ipring ar^<i
summer As you cin Understand:,
now, it jy|» rtocesiary for us to
f*«pe it 10 mak^ way f(3» the
ck^elppmeru (>f the NortbXam- ^
pus MtSlent Center fat iliJty flut
we mtt ^amed 8p '•continue to:^
60 whaf we;:fould to prOvMlf
fppd for the' ndrfb campi|s folks
<*inng xJSSt TrwMruction period.
Now all of thai" IS o^et^M\d we
ycKjr ^iiowwtai atKc,
Vye do plan, tpopco the; rjMfM^
facility on Wednesday* Sepfem-
ber %, tfui we hope tfwM^ fCttts
will sfdp by and t^e # Ibok.
More Mnportantly. we hope
vouff like what you ioe.
_Ai_ the same— Hnre -we also
hople^e rommunity wrM under- -
stand that <tif^ng up a hew
food service c$erat(pr\.takes a
ioile'dothg and that everything
won't «bc; «per feci at f+wt^^Wje
4iiave to lear« how lo ruo 11%
facility, train cxjr student staff,"
aiuj get up to the fast service*'
ipeed you iia^e ti^ht to tKpieci
^^orp us AI*o. ftome of the furni-
tOre wiH'tnirbe enr route. But
you'll be able toj iee what* it's *
going to bk Ifke.anld.^one way or
another, "-we'll be able to iorve
you during the firsr lew: uo^
cef4ai'n^iirje«ks ahead By "t*he
tirwe scim9f k*m full swing, we
ihiiiild be yp to speed
tAs alwayv ^^SUCIA wants in-
pm fpom t> riipuC^wnmunify
pair any of «s sertice* »nd^rt^
cility IS ncf^Mceptic^ It yon
have >uggesffohv please let the
staff kncjw. Qr write me* directly
, Donald I, HnSey
ff- E«ecMliire Dtrertor.
"?*^7
'M
North*
SMtfht U-
rmg your
coltrmrrs, fetters
.and cartoons
for the fall
reg ^slie to
Kerckhoff 110
-«/-. . .. I
•^
^•^■i •. V
-Mtei'
Should public employees have the right
(l(^or'$ noisi. li4cHuKh n the
Chief Shop Steward for Af SCMf
(oca/ 2070. Afl-C/0>
In tf»e last few weeks, there
have been several editorials in
the LA press radio, and TV
which have heen openly
temptuous of public employees
»f\6 our JJnions. Pafttrffy Tn
10 the LA bus strike,
editorials have m^ide all
OPINION
of
empk>yees which ^re not tflM^.
And #iey have tried to argoc
that our society would be a kM
better if this part of the work
lorce were not aNosvod to or-
ganize into Unions, bargain r >'
lectively. 9nd urikm wktn nmom
lary.
There is one myth that I
would like to dopeJ right away.
the myth that public employees
make more money than their
counterparts in private industry
The taw in^California clearly
states that public agencies shall
pay their employotft at a rate
found to be convmensurate with
Ihe pay for the same or similar
-m private rifdustry, ix-
penbi^e surveys m^ conducted
by such agencies fihckiding tt^
University of Califcxnia) lo de-
termir>e what these "prevatfblg
rales" are. and then employ oil
9re paid approximately this
amount. There is, however, a
Hoie kig biween the 8iirvey and
the adfUilNiont in the wages.
Earlier this year, the State Per-
sonnel Board caleolated from
survey dat^ that pay for stare
workers was 9.7 per cent behind
prevailing rates. At approximate-
ly the same time ffhis pa8t April)
a survey by ttie University of
California sfKltved that the
weighted average salary of U.C.
employees was $200 a month
less than that of State Chit Ser-
vice employees. (This is partly
^ktt to ifie somewhat autono-
by Duffy McH^jgh
mous and elitist pcKllion of the
Regents ) Workers here at the
University, then, ere rwt only
not mafcmg mme mortey, but
are making iignificanfly leu than
people domg similar work on
the outside.
Why are these oiope conserva-
tn^ elements in our sodoty so
anxiotis to depict public workers
as greedy, ungrateful public
"servants ' (!) who are solely
responsible (they say) for tf>e
financial crisis of our big cities
arni states? It is -because tfiey
mmd a scapegoat, arni. rmhm
than point the finger at the
inequitable tax structures and
privileged, inefficiewt high-level
bureaucrats, which are really to
blame, they find it more con-
venient to blame the mass of
low-paid workers and
Uniofil.
In fact, m the cyrreni labor
IS a "bur«'V
wofkor an every
five in today's ooonooiy is
I
V*
our
market.
ployed in the pubhc sector.
With unemployment as high as
It is, we do not have the option,
as these people would have us
believe, to leave our |obs "if we
don't like it." WcKkir>g people
have to take work where they
car^ fif>d it, in order to feed tf>eir
families. Why shoukin't
peoplir one-fifth of all wi
Americans, have the same rights
as everyooe ehd hft so the rich
can shift the blame for the fiscal
crisis, wfiile we -have deteriorat-
ing sgdal wnmm 9nd oduca-
This year we are celebrating
tf>e 200th birthday c>f our "dem-
ocratK ropuWic, " and yet. large
sodiBils of our population stiH
live as second-class citizens.
Public employees and farmwork-
ers are stiH fKK covered by tfie
'Nfllional Labor Relatiom Aa, as
ofher %vofkois are. California has
bCigun. tP dMBge Ibo lor farm-
workers, but not for public em-
ployees. If the suGOgis
cratK iiiugieM can br
by the extent to which aN of IIB
ditizem are able to participate
.^ually m the social, economic
and civic life of the society (and
I think it can), tfien it is clear
that we have a long way yet to
go. To deny one or two seg-
nr>ents ot soooty a basic rigfti
that all other segments enioy
can only hurt the quality of all
our liles. We dO not need 'ser-
vants" anymore. We do not
r^eed ihe oeecgpt of master /sef-
vant. which, hopetuiiy, we out-
lived long ago
AfSCMf (The Arevlcaii fed-
eratioh of Stale, County, and
Municipal Iinpiuyees) is taking
the lead natibnally, as well as in
CaMfomia. in the fight to reform
our tax structures, so tfsat our
social services. Universities, etc,
can meet the needs of ou^ so>
octy and in tf>e fieht for Af-
firmative Action ana CoiedlM
Bargaining, so that rK>ne of us
are lerond rim dliscns and we
can be proud afibi of our
Nc •mtftutiom.
-Chm li )ust UIlc
Bt love« tQ score
S411U1 Bftrbftf^v has
Water Polo begins Monday
of tlK rimpi •ttenti^n it on toaiflH*t foocbsll
group c4~ Brums is alM prcparuig for
upcoiniii'ji sBMOB.
UCLAf ymnmy wmtr polo ma «paM ils 1976
VC Sanu Bsrbmi at 2 pm MoMiy. Scptenber 13, tn te Meat
Gym pool.
It'i bea» lo«r yean siact the
knd coadi Ub Hora Ms 197^
dMmptonshjp drought ends.
**We*re reaOy optimistic shout this year's teaai,** said Hont,
*^WiUi the perionnci KM have, 1 think we have s good sboc at the
a aa NCAA title, hut
he the year UCLA's'
Horn has km ir75 Att-Ameriams Itkk Coyle. Jim Hoief,
Irian McKinley^and Robert Web|b to graduation Hit llni^
however, should have a deep, #ell balanced tci|fl|^ Eleven
lettermen return, lacftiiding Joe Vargas, last year's kadiag scorer
and John Norris, both All- American candidates.
"Vargas could he the best pokMst in the country,*' Horn
explained "HeV very aggressive, hut Joe has Thr'niiirlraias and
aaobihty to play almost any place in the pool** \
Almost unnoticed by. the opposition last yearr Norris was a
steady contnbuter «ath 17 gosils, fifth highest 'on the sqapd. He
had the decisive goal in last year's NCAA thiid pk^ gaaie over
Stanford ~
"John's one of the those, guys whojiobody notices until he's
burned you for three or four goab,** said Horn. "We're lookii^
to him have a big year."
Other suiters returning* from last year tndiide JefTjStitcs, Don
Spicer, John Stephens and Rjck Shert>oume
Joining UCLA this season win be two M the natian't aMMt
„^ sought after recruits. JC All-Americafi Chris Vargas, (Joe's
brother) from iMt. Sa^a Anlonio Co^ppe and prep All^ American
Pavid Rosen a goalje from Puna ho u High.,i» MotaaliilaK,
""^ft^fim iUK ill the tools to he one of tM mbbI aaas," said
i|or% "lie triight even be starting for us.**
' A KrathpiiH shooter. Vargat has an unorthodox deUvery
can givc'goaltenders fttt. Like his dicier brother, V
1*1 .>,j,.
prolific scorer at h|t SAC He should add extra punch to ~^tlir
Brufirr' offensM«'>^^^:~- -.
■^,-
brother * Horn said. "Big and strong and
polo ichoc^.
The Gauchos are coached by t^nte Detumanti. who surred and
coached under Horn in the W%, Lcft^ handfd AU-Aa^ncan Russ
HafriCy|lpp.,^s the Sanu Barbara quarteflMck. Other top Gaucho
players include Jeff \Boyer.' Tim.. jEreeman and another All-
Aniencan Sdsif'Folley
7 Following the Santa Barbara niatch, UCLAIiosts Pepperdiac.
J « 3:30 pm September-14, m the Subset Caayea J^l The arxt
week-end. ICLA competes m;lh^JLljC.Ji^yi'M^^*^*>''^ir
ccMMiacnpd the top pre-season water polo mviutioiaal in the
'--St.-
(,,., .. \.
• -cr^f-'-
atisA-
seven
starter
to
^asaer, who had a good shot
r
against
The defense cOr-
hp left the team and probably^
plaas to tiiMfer to a Nonhera
at QB
The job oT leading tl^ ASU
defense will go to senior
quarterback Jeff Dankworth,
who has beaten out Steve
Bukich for the surtmg spot
Ha will have Heisman Trophy
' ite WendeU Tyler, who
Kush say^ "^is probably as
■i any back 1 have ever
riha" aad
Thcotis limaia m the
field Donahue said '^ball coa-
troP IS the Brum offensive
must
T)onahuc has faith in Daak*
worth's throwing ak»lity aad
wiB have
ter WalK Henr>. split end
Sarpy (Homer Butler
wdl also see action) and tight
end Rick \^alker to throw the
ball to Don Pederson a 1975
i-timc surter. is almost 100
per cent following an early
pracnee kaec iafury and he
tbottid sae some action at tight
end. according to Doaahue.
the Bruins will
be iMHilir than a year ago, but
much quicker Steve Tctrick
looked .
"Hvcmghout fall practice at
Dttvis has been
moved to aaie gaard as
T^tnck's hick up Jerry Robia-
soa aad Raymond BeH will hr
California school, i^ar hrs
The defensive
been the most ailld pnrt
througlMMSt practice and the
bnck four should be put to the
test against ASU.
aged 30 poiiMi a gMar ia I97S,
Corral aaetfMr hay
Placekicker and punter
Frank Corral wiU be
key, aaeaadiag to
**Tbe kickiag game will be
more conairteBt in practice as a
punter aad he has sbtMva good
field goal range (he kicked a
57-yaffider ia practice). If he
continues to improve, he will
be ooe of the mmti valaabk
try." said Daoakue.
l^9mkmt plHM to be "care-
fur on bit fint.iaMi oa ^
fense. He reanflibert two years
I Dick Vermetl wm
ing his first fBflK. Oa the
play fron scnmmage
agAiast Tennessee, qaarterback
Coadfadgr llafcmay tbfcw a
74-yard touchdowa pass to
Su
. <
Bf&^ U
effort
event" baeaaae he
to succeed, whie Vermeil Pep-
per Ro^pn aad Toouny Pro-
ibro, coaid aat '^'^
jSiMftHrlmei
UCLAs 1«b*77 ba^etbali
is tpainendoys If om a
standpoint for men's
atbtetic director j O, Morgan
•'kJ bener for second ye^r
coach Cer>e Barto«»
ConsKJenng rh^f lasr \^zr Bar-
for Bartow
Michael SondheHner
t>e- ready for revenge m thr
OveralT the wKedule m^^ be
diHicuh fHan J year agcK
and rhat can be directly ji-^
tributed to the fmancial rr^asiery
oi Morgan
t<onal .television garr^v ome
rifN m the middle .of rtM Pac-g
UCLA 1976-77 Iton't BMketbaN Schedule
NIGHT OATf
toMT had the ur>dfS«rable task ^
COachmg h« hrst IXIA gam^
agaifHt ri7S-7i NCAA champion
Indiana, the 1f76-77 schedule is
opens rhr"«eason with
14-$traighr Koffie gaiaas in Paul-
ey Pavilion. ifKludmg fhf Pac-d
oprner on January 7 with Ore-
gon. Since Oregon yvas the team
ton, 6S-4S, m the fihai regular
season game Wi Pai]iliy P:avilton.
liiltr payers
Ah^ the Varsity Previfw gan^
^this year ir iirlft^ an mtrasquad^
scrimmagei the brums begin at
home with NiC>!tA playoff rearm.
S»nlD»ega1kate afKtO^auT The
Bryim ifeo prfay the iough gra*-
zihan ~ N»af lonat jeam -Th^, the
daV' aher fail quartef . f irtab are
oc;nl0leted BjrtoU ' ijbos< have
his laam f^^/dm f»>^j$lay NoCi%
Dame * ' .
Morpjan- has' H^ioduM Sundav
finan< mI block buvier national
television road :. games with
Notre Dame danuary 23i anti
Tennesiae .«januar> 10 *Mfh
HoinaiMI as another Sunday r>^
tional TV game on lanuarv ;
The finblain h UCi A pL c
on lanuary 2| if> Pauley Pavthon.
leaving little nnrie. tor pfcipp'
prnfl^allor^ '
The playef> *Mlf natu '^t
to dbiifell with the nati<;)na. W
expoifar^. #hKi> pais ^m^»
on ' tarieaur:' HlB-' aar.'.rhis-- laam
n'>entailv'' ready tor 'S*^ "tig
HafTies m %even .,*,, fven
rhough Xofre Dame #*»ier \ft\-
^gi»fee. do fiat count .t^%ms oK
ffie ra< -f iiaiiflii^ ^^^_^..
thov^ fw0 'gafnec against n^-
Tionarty-rank^ teanrn mV^ have
nnOf e Mifwrtafk e 10 the 'player
than t'^ rhe Trofans ^x^
having arsotlNm*^- «|^^ . bad
To complKase r^iticrs turther
the Bruin* pla^ 'f#»gh»
%iaT»^ with Washingaln afi<a[
W a>^rigi<m >tate m tbfr tol-
lo**in^ jwo week^ after T«^
ilasit two wasMyo^
W 00 the road, vrid^i^
week after the Bruim must, piav
bac k - td-back games m Oi^egpf^
«^hKf\ nr^kin the fbiiir fiobs«^u"
'*- 'oughest-ij^ft'
#t<. < ';>edi#le K good
cRito-naaanoe
iBtes
students
Call Day or Niaht i-^<21 3) 479.9721
1
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Mte
■*^
^
liv*
I
for lis and betti'r thac la^t year.."'
saKl Barrow ' Haviryg, 4# games.
a;^ t>ome 1.0 ■ su^t " rhe ^m^ «.'
^ceHenit "' ♦gi_^ 'n* , ^ .■ ^
^^^ thing h fbf sore. If B^utn
^P^J aiurnni ani^ st^den^yi^i|l
gi¥e.ftar^iift a chance m\:w?6'^
iwUbam t>>e cqgtiMig
there is i» good |X^
schedule comes in the lattir/ oi*.*ls0. be ,n» j.m^ jtead
As
soccer
B^ MilLc FlacgoM
EHT^pMs Wrte
UCLA efBbaris aa
ifts
tenth season 0f filCAA soccer
compctitiuTi. t|
of theu toughest schedules
portion of \iirns^T\^,,
Mf>gles> »mefsecti0ihal iia^
opens ^n
Saturday at tCLA (Noiijh IM
Field) The kickers will try to-
gel off to T better <t*n thaii
last Tear when thev «yerc 1-3-1 r
LCIA ba<k lo'fhe ipJ^WJkt
SEPI'S GIANT
SUBMARINE
iJV-i-A'
^-■'
pr\ any
with this cqpp^^^
good th ro ug h 1976
Last year The Bruins had
their worst srasoaal record (I I-
^.6-2). so second year coach
^te\e Gay hai#added several
early contest!^ to. the Uclan's
^ — , , vi m^mmj,
September 1 2th). the Jrui^
have a I pm'liOme encounter
wfcith rastl> improving Tnrvcr-
sit> of Nevada. Las Vega Ciay
iaid the Rcbcb have "devel-
oped tiKtr piagram more than
sUte, in an effort to uapc^ve^ ever before" and *lasi vear
tbey were equal to West mo nt,"
loag-tmie Brum nvaT This
the squad
The Brums open the season
smh Chapman College, a
Uraag NAIA school t'CLA
has never played Chapman
before The opener against
Chapman is set for 1 1 am
the first time the Bruins and
Rebels have met
In what figures to he the
highlight of the Brums'^ Sep-
tember ^hedulc, LICLA ukcs
OAKLEY'S*
Hftircutting
at Its best
toog & Short Hair
on
Oft
lati
on the Vaivefsti > o* M c* •
another home "match/' at j> pm
Wodncvdav. Scptraibcr 1 5th
Last yea*, t
•o a J-l lie fhts ts the first
tifTkr thc^ coniesr » "^ »unt as a
regular^««|aoa |U'i>c for
LCLA
liCLA ^ pbi>& >t« fourth
match ur eifhr~diys when it
takes on East t os Angeles
College at ICLA 10 30am
September I8tb . Tbis^ is the
lititial time the Bruias have
sqtafed off against the team
which advanced to the State
Junior College C
Finals last vear
lonesco's
ACT OF DUTY
Chekhov's
NifiHT BEFORE TME TRIAL
.14 mmtm tmrwiy
Fn gJOaai
$3.50, Studantg$2.50
TMa Ad Good Tlmi
DELIVERY #?«5aH -478 5117
.V- I \ I I// V H IS I ^
1076GArLFY • WESTvvOOO
_ — i«
_._^-3i_.
2^~^^^H
O" r
•■ ■ '
••
f
??"*'!!C''"f»'ia!ir"
. -N
\, 7 vWiV
L^lt P
Daily^ruin Sports Football Predictions
!l
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GAME
UCLA at ArisofM Si
M use
at
at
ArtaofM at UCLA (Sa^ IS)
CaMlorrUa at OIUaliaMa (SafM. IS)
Otiio St4at Pmnn St (Sapi IS)
Caiara^ ai Waihiwtiaw |Sapl. IS)
Stanford at Michigan (Sapt. IS) :
OteiaNaaM SI. at Arttansat (fapt. IS)
Sondheimer (0^-0) Yogerst (04)-0f
UCLA Sy 4 ASU by 10
Later (04M)) Farhi (0-0-0)
. — ^
by IS
by 2
OCLA by 12
CMUa. by 7
OSU by S
Cd. by $
Mich, by S
Afti. by 7
use by •
NO by 14
Cat by 2
UCLA br^
Obla. by 17
Pmm si. by S
Col. by 14
Mich, by 10
ArlL by S.
by a
use by S
Mi by 1
Cal>y S
UCLA %y U
. by S
by 2
by S
by 7
by 1
UCLA by S
by 14
bf I
Cal by 3
UCLA by S
OMa. by IS
OSU by 4
Col. by IS
by tS
by S
(0-0-0)
UK by 7
Mi by S
Cal by 7
by S
by IS
•i by S
by 7
by •
by IS
<«;•
Mt-atf-
mt
Pacific Soutliwest Tennis at UCLA
f--.
• • «
ScKi week's ARCO Pacific
Southwest Open Tcrinis
Championships, beginnins
Sepiember 18 at Piuley Pa-
vilion ' will provide a homc^
coming for many of the com-
petitors.
Many UCLA tennis afumni
have-«ifsed . to appear in ttie
touinajncnt; or are expected to
sign. A majority of the top
iisk'j^i^ers in the workkare
slated Is npfcar m the prcs
tourtlfey
ring the. list -of stAfs is
JormcT VX:V^ Ali-AsKricsfi
Arthur Ashe^ the dcfesdiiig
^-chanrp^ton and numbcr-ene-
rated player ifi the world much
.xKf.4sftt >car '^
Olbei; former Bri^MH expect-
ed* lo participate are t975
NCAA singles champion. Billy
Martin. r9Jj^ All- American
°^.cter Flemif^g. Haroon Rahrm.
Jeff Borowiak. C harks Ps^s^-
rell and 1976 All-Amcrtcan
Brian Teachet Also expected
to be in the competition . it
Jimmy Connors, who since
leaving UCLA has had numcr-
OMS tennis successes and -<Imm<
been /arrked number one in the
world severai timcs^
Other^,lop players expected,
enter are Guiller mo Vilas,
Raul Ramirez. Stan Smith.
R<|iC0e Tanner. Dick Stock-
4as, iddji Pibbi; Brian Goi-
tfield and Harok? iU^mon,
:xiiiOfig the top players in the
world
The tour nameiH. now in its
I5lii yesr. will be- offeriag.
lly
.-• ■ >»•,•■
in
XE
$125,000 in prizir money, the
largcsi amount t>f- cash offered
in the history of the evenu*
The tournament runs
through September 27 On
opening diyr September 18.
there will be a special Tennis
Grand Masters Miatchv with
eight pi the sH^time gr^ts
^cotflqpe.fing
At SB added incentive to
^thosecpmpeting. points will be
swarded toward the Gommer-
cisf^ffiion Grand Prix of Tcn-
nii.
Tickett for the tournament
are avaiUble st the Kerck- ' *
hoff Hall ticket office, with
Bruin^ students receiving a dis-
count, '■■■■t.
Weekly Football Contest
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
S
9
10
f » • •
.-'•**>•;'•
■^^ '"'""m!^' ' * -r^-fn
• • • • •
Of S«pt. 11 mm S«pt 1S^
Cbtl9 riMM •! wbMbis Imm and wilii bi
OT9 RMMSSC flf pMMS n WIS WVI 'by.
UCLA at Arizona St.
Miiaoun at USC— i""^""* ' "^^^
Pmaburgh at Notre Dame*
OalMornia at Gaorgia
A^ona at UCLA ($api. IS)
QalMornif at Oklahof^ |9spt IS)
Om SLm Pant) St (Sapt ISf -r-^-^-' ■[
Cdlprado at Washmf^on (S«^ .tS) Y \ . .
l^SmnfO^tfW Michigan (Sept tsr*' ' ^. > •'^i
OMIahoma St at Arkanfat (Sspl. 18)
:^.- ».
■ • •* r.
r.,£5nEi
bySpmligby
lis.
-MlSyvi;-
■ p f • • • • •h»""
»"• I
' < ^
'.f^
.,»■■. ^.^
■f4
I J.. Il
■^
■AmhiM
■:^
■t ^'flAV
reasons
*.« *
- iww*'
' IT •«:'.■;
1 '■ ■—
^« ••■?
1 i~
resumes
Oil Campus and open
hours convenient \o fOM
N you bnng ut your material by
Thursday at 10 00. we 11 get it
out by Tuesday tioon — or g*«e
if it • convenient
We re a fuN -service Print Shop
studefTts working here, and ttiey
to student needs and wants
— It
J^
■*■ '
UCLA
sensMive
We know what we re doir>g. and
have been st it s k>f>g^lMwie —
which m^ant we krH>w the im-
portance of presenting first-
class resumes
vaHety ol type
you want Our
If you want top ^velity c^^^^
guarantee thM ypyH get M, bi
"^^ up to 200
lo<p0U.
We could tell you lots more, but left t>e reasonable
open mortday-friday 8 00-5 00
121 kerckhoff half.
11 i(2S2
I pfinting A dupticjting
X
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—-—^^-—^M^ THIS SECTION ''^Z^^ ^-^
OUT HOUSIiyG SECTION
Complete Fall-Term Apartment Guide
^
( t
'•1
\l».v.i\i.
TV RENTALS
IS.SS
NedimCAt
OelW«ry and
U
nr-raao
iit»fT-A'Tv. tio.aa
>nt e^lscounts Delivery le f :M
(tOtr)'
UNFUflNISHEO tCASCS
MCLA. CetpelBd, Oiepsd
MOySSS: tftOOtSSt Two snd three
""* bedrdofiii- Fenced ysrds Enclosed
gersoes. Ohitd. Pet
AFTS: iJM'S^it . T wo bedroom studios
• r- baths Woodburntng fireplaces,
formsi dming rooms $37S mctuding
utilities
111 » .
<TT 7731. 477-gSil.
m^
UflEPIf
FURNfTURi
STUDENT OiSCOUNT
MnfiCfS offfw^Ml
HAVINC A ^ROSLEM WITH
VOUR LANOLOHO?
OH. If VOU*W€ A LANOLORO.
WITH A TCMANT?^
^ set US FOR ASSISTANCf
•1S1 CAS»SSLL HALL
NtlO NCLF ^ACKMO VOUR isSnFAL
TPUCK7 CALL CASiPUS tCMVICEt
ita. ASK POR mnn
•s-^ (list)
■pto fumishii
meni Praftlwood Utillttas included
9mm^ eidy No fara^* NonsmoSer
-*-
Ac
SOS OAYLCV
Dyttatra
Singles,
pioi'inG ?
Tlie ortgmai
Grad
' Omt %mym- 7 iiMaa «aai
_^
CAMPUS SERVICES
tit
MIOVING Resldannal aparlmanlsi.
efpa/s«Mall lebs Uaad fu^niiura
»t/seldgLeall Sarnay 3ea-t7Sf
N sava
Cut Lipina
Expenmem!
I v«ryon«' see^s to have bright
Mieasor^'h(>vt to be^iTififWMon
r)0/VT y^'^AR CLBTH^^'
If that's : .at style. ^ j
: home or aparlilM liilth
SOMFONE CaMPATIBli:
To f ind iWat Highf pirrsbn call _
t^uLm-GTAm Dnumtted-
Co i^hatnf bL>u9it«4
^I:* 4ftttMR.^ 7l4 ^12 4114
FUnNltHCD'Uhfurnlshad bachaler
S140 tinflas I1SS ^ool Haart of
Wasiweed^ tSta4 Lindbrooii 475.^»a4
(2«i Olr)
WALK TO CAMPUS
Omm bedroom Furnished. Pool
SIS Glenrocli
Single at SS4 Glenrocii
to eltlce on 4th floor
-~ SS4 Qlenrock
S7S-SS0S. 47^7S444 .
u
I
MOMTH LuBuftous 2
> fiery "tewwitous
rodM. dining room
Seers 2 tsretsi
Menh of WMaftira '^ry euiai
le UCLA Viiiag* •2t Midvala 47t
Tsrs
117 t t)
V
WALK TO UCLA
Spacious 'Bect«aiofs $<
1
4.
10841 imamwQKa Poqi ffevaiers
^---r-Secont^-qaifafr'""™ ""
RPCClAi SUMMCP flATCS at
n-^a«r T«ffac« Al^lQi'i
43 Landtair
I
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t
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—;ir
SOS GAVLEV across from Oyhsira
lort singles, ona bedrooeis 473
47^'etM
(2fO!r)
v<wr,;
t17S0O CUTi single Courtyard pool
Me pets Oulet Aewlt building ttso
Cetfaraugua iSS-SSTtt-
(Mtf)
BACHELOR
APT. :
set VETERAN AVE
•▼ ratHFireted'. sacunty bldg
aiocli Saach a bus Vantca Partly
Hirmshe4~ieeh. tao t.iOO sinfia tUS
1140 1 sir«tsir-tiT5..ias 1001
(27 Olr)
$300 LAflOft
iif«pteM .aelto
'V»A V «-*" < .Vi)Si
!
I ■
semi 71
llD««
-T
3240
477-
127 S 0)
SEAUTIFUL large 2 BEDROOM
3 Lofts. 2 Seths Towrthouse
• .j AH Bullt-ms
North of Olym^c. nmmt UCLA
No Pets
S4SQ
47S-SSSi<473-S4SS evenings)
flU tiNQtl.SUIl. Aei 1
ef Wilshira uttm1as4MciueeO. f^
eeriied 0217 Osaegi 094 00 it ivas^
277-1174 _, .
. (27 0 01
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$175.^MONTH
^^ALL 478-7297
0271.00 ¥SmCT
room and dan. 'h OlecJi leSaacb on quiaf
co*«rt clean arid br«g9*t^ Olova and rafrlg.
127 sii)
^
* ■! In
"jm ' 'L-
•pt, unfurfiishfKl
irMut m SM Own
reem OeWt 0 ttoo^n«ser eeec^: §2
e«M Kaesn 025-7707 (days) 303^2042:
308-74^ ievanings).
• ; ^ (27 SO)
tlOO MAMOSOOM
Quiet
Nsl^ OM Fraa
way al Weaer,lseii JOOolElttarauaMS
y^
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4-
1.
(IS SO)
— rvic— gftefd
MOVlNQ: Seeldenttel. e^ertwenle
S
nsoori
ItATTWStSSl - UC
Dent
110
(J^JI
apt» fiimish^d
0170 MODCRH
477-4
PtSO)
iS7.
t^ rOU are s4elUng a eu«et. dJiiKtlad
"' - ■■" «ALWU' ' —
Oh Beech. condomlnlMm. 7'hed-
rooms. 1% bath, fireplace. 30
Sekrony. view. po!0»., tenn«s niar
Leo Carrmo Seech. -famlaheS er
untum^ilied leeee $40S/i
I1SS. 34S 3050
Va
., I A-""-'—
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A.. I
X
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(270 0)
' FUflOilSHeD/UNFURNISHEO
-t14S
^^ _ $1S5
Neen ev wt
L
47S>SSS4
«i HAM usrrwQff
CaS27(
(to SSI
TOWNHOUSC
S7S0 wtewSi. l—MrteMi 2
2 story
#ry room, dkninq room Regger S
Grooven Soors^2 geraiQee«gfcewSc
It. OMfwi ef wsompo ' vetif
aSi IS UCLA. oStege. «»
47S-737S.
vffNiCf iiereie A«M Oioo^i
•pis hoom te eyNd ai«ia«iisiar
022-7130 aveninga. waakawds
(27 0 0
Oeel- I
I
10712 HWNhUa
270-2110 er 272-^10
*^
(27 0 01
WptSaJD
OAT eiela wawsmehsr Shera 2 SR. SSI
Oeeeti. IS eitn. la UCLA tiOO/inenRi
• wtllHles 302-4S04. merninfs 7-10.
'^'^ fOOOOl
rt« « e«
Vr-TON EXPfieSS
agi Two Mks cempMS Qmrnqit Ofiera
0137 00 Cea 477-2003 anytlma ^ ^
070-1033 Ssys/ 030 1012
0104
ISO SO)
hrsiiry i%»ff%kmt%m4 apt en
1140 mo V 477
isiso)
0isoi
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477.7t«
GARY OR MICHAEL
7004 Melrose Aye near LoDrca Pbbnc 9^136^1
eiti
StMSS. MCLA 10"!
4 ^etto SyMMiis. OSS-
SO)
otso
msii
f\
f>tss»
■ J
•. s^e :jh9s 7>kc.,
sme 7HSS ymt.
JUL,
■ ^^ '^-- SAVE THIS SECTION-- '
f ^ ■ ■■■
OUT HOUSING SECTION
1
Complete Fall-Term Apartment Guide
I
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Hi. «.
•pts, toshars
FCMALt to ••»#« 2 Mfw
Pf«l«r ••fitor/vrad SiS*^ > utHIII«t.
«A^DUATf«
-5721
(2t t f)
f :•• pm. •3»-M#2.
(Ittt)
■"•^i^Jlv
SMAMC LUXUHy,
t^curtty Townl
" ir VMS
"f'ljii^'eom. 1 Vt b
'--■' $175
9tt-%013
r-»jJ"C'.
WORKING t^mate «Mnl«d 23-30
lltZ.SO r«nt pluf^ »4«ctfic •2i;:.1742
(h0m» aflvf too) or 2Z3 Hit («llle*l
Aali tor Shelly BlocJi
(MS >
-ij
Wi*-^
■-iSt-"*-,- -teij
LAMGIE^. ImIiIwmM* .(ilipWi LMn5| rm..
wf^piBCOT — •Bwws fWHW, KitcnfBn, own
sroofii 1200 §30 VoWraci 477-32Sft.
_^ :> > ratstt
MAUTIFUL sptirtmonl to thor* M hNI».
•« conwiwHwcn - 14 mki dr»w« - SiM
•60-2433. 4S1-tO20
(30 SO)
nOQWMATC Young uimm^ 10 fliit#»
wtlh samo: proforaiMy coMofo iWidowt
^'"
In ^ttLtdXm Fay* 473^1431
tfitti
«-^
WOMAN on GAY MAtlE
-^i
^..-•--^*'-,
■*■•)
• Modio
SMoclioUCLA,
rn^T LAME llOdil, liai/iiie
tat-3270 o««*g^^ •
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MCLA> 470-4033 ovaMMf*. 003-40^
#^rt. Slit wm.m^m. jwijmoio.
■-• . ^-v^ - , •-. - (IPSO)
FtMALf ^"^^ '
0110 K 4i0.
•}
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Ft MALI
?,
474-^04.
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FtMALE f»Mtl4 \m tlMra attracliwiy
tfocoraiotf 2 bo4/2 tem wllH tomato
(lost)
aroa Two tlory: 2
0112M AM
lOOMMA
i»r«llPlo4
tl<
iiirfwpioa «m jatf yr.
^tmo Cra#/i
$112.00/ mo • %
NKCO S^ACE TO IIOOtT?
^Ow aBowf awn ^aa^R la aMRfvy,
teoaao • iMio trtptaa ■parlwum-
FUMUL 22. 3 Bod apt S1t2/ WUL
Ca«2T0.004l 0-12 pm.
(Mtt)
§•••••••
# OM-Mbarn'ol
A iTMi UCLA.
apto, to shara
SHAhk BEL Am
W«Man thara two bedroom apt
•ffi floacomara, ••l-Air. OcL 1.
StMra of rofiL $1f6 ^ % uflMlM
« dapoatt of $1§0. Lovaly poot
wMi S3 yr. oM
Mko flPHl-
Ipr UCLA.
VNHNip to flIlBfa
C«M Carat OiWiliil.'»>om« 473.4224
ofNWH-.411W
HUMPY. Ono privalo roaai S batti.
C«w ipt 2 Or. 2 bo laPf Acfaat UCLA.^ V
Tai 473*1tao. .*- . ^*
1 (20 S •)
hoinaa
WESTWOOO HOliE
WLA 3 OiOriiai. Pan. 1%
'Un4/Ei
rafflparatar. pacPanar ft watar Inel.
1-4
houaa
LIVEFfldr
■tiava «p<. rtoar campus ft MaP^
If $140 - 70»t0014. ^^
J* (2tJJ0>
^^U • - -"-'-, "
pbmalc Moanuviaiv waMtaa. oviafa l ^m
lipt on LanPtair $132.00/ mo 001-0046
•vo« or RoPIn Zlnimpf man, Hor«t«oy Halk,
sap. 10-10 ^3,1^
for Mibl<
v^FOR SUBLET
>
VWW UVffUfTffPliaQ Wfo^ia
oupitiiiom in Bronhpood. Fkot pnd
IPPI imonlh rofit and cHiillwg and
Opcurtty havf oli—dy boon ppld.
lip occupppfcy. $177 pof
4S1-3S53pftortra.
■■ '-ji
Wi
EAPBaoakVanlao.tbPfariNpwaaOft
Ml. TawlbaPraaai bauaa mi Vh
tola. T«»a af P»faa'Wfy
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UCU
lMStl
$4i0 AVAILABLE S4pl IS 3
SI.
V
1-1
MPPC OCflOOtOt OP^ppiMPt irPMP*:
poilpiyii. Coffvlury 21, Hmn S2S-
TTSTJdpyo). SB2-74S4. SiB-»4^
houaa
r<«Q BCDIIOOM HOUBE
I -^
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BUB-iirmfllNISHED BIMOLi
'., , AT BEACH, .,
~^$1iiDil. bopL^ -■■'
, Oct. Biry Dpp.
Qi
IH-
i I-
.^M'
I CLOSE UCLA
CtipniiinB IrapMlpiMl l»Puaa aouBi
of Simoal ft noor UCLA WM fooaa
uwliwPloliaU poflioi i4^i<oiiod or
unlumlohod 1 yoor. LMm rpom
^p^Wv' ^w^Macai fwvfVBai wmiMH ^voiWf
RNOppp aPwi oppHoncoo B RPOP.
Don arfpi firaplooo. 2 badroom.
^ 1^/» bath. S«r¥ica porch with
waahar/Prypr. Larpa bacliyard.
~ ' sldawalkt. Includat pardatipr.
Nawfy dacoralad A |ual rIgM lor
_^j|ppta parson; cpypip or omatl
iandirrtP7i/pi4.Aop|loliii Bppi 1. ;
.*-. (SBB S)
PPa. Yi
«7S-3107.
iSISSI
Houii \ u imm -
Mko la
/Otym-
alc at Oct 1. $27s/a»onth for owp
i«n-.i..
„UMM« I
houaa for aala
CAHpur
2
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FiFpkiia. Mi).
2210 OaiPawi
LJ^.^CA. 00034
Ji
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iMaala fraP. $1t3.Sp;pacao«i. Olana
- I'
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fuso
fa(MK
$000. 3 BCM. fh ba. Faad. Pai.
Oryar Vtaw. WaataiPa vnippa. nimmf
UCtJL 404-9242 mvusf^snm.
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0S7-0730.
(S0$0)
V 1
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2SS2IR
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WESTWOOO
ChBfmiog 2 k ten Houbb,
1 ^h iMttis, convMlont UCLA.
EndoBBd lovBly rBBr yBid.
MBriBfi SctiBiBrtz 47S-S533
2
401-3041.
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IP OllPM 2
tits.
ISO*.')/
1% boPM. Laa. Oa
nn. 2
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11.
ft tf«Pt
277-3700.
<S0 )
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^^^W • • WM W4Nll"lflB
CtOBB to WBBlWOOd.
BKR 474-9605
477-
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IS ad. (I
ly) B
.V. acta Ipl iMh ttaao pnd Ipfva paBo «
^ araa. 1 Badroom (w/flraplaca). 1 Bath, small dan. oflica' ml ^
^ PNtaidaanlranca. Idaalforcwipla Do9OK.$3SB/nM.(>$3B0aacurtty). *
Availabla Bop«. IS. Cradit rata, t^^^fm^. 1 yr. loaaa prafarrad. *
* aiBI conaldar S mo. 7B4-777B. B
X9^
p4f^'
/ifl
C^
«>f POSITS^
^0« LANDLORD TENANT INPOtMATlON
A^wica
MatorioU
SEE THE UCLA MOUSING OFFICE
Bt03 Compboll Noil
or Phono
825 4491
SAVE THIS SgCTIQM— --' w>^^,^ ^«, — ,^-
i
I
f
OUT HOUSING SECTION
Complete Fall-Terni Apartment Guide
c^
•DANISM (M«««ii atv^Mi. «aH. M.
S77-1P11. ^^
^ fsosoi
Fan
lU.
($2 0 0)
A»«-9
room and board
axohanoa lor halp
(praf«
$fS/«li
UCLA CaO
•2770 BaOa
(22 SS)
v^/U *''
VISfTfNO prataaaar tookt furnithod
. 2;3 baPraom famal Oac 70-May 77 Twa
' iOMphlact apaal . 7. (213) 474-011^ 4
apartmant ta tharo. tiapatMMy^naar
oampva and.unpar tl 10/ month, but aa l\
Pan^ imaw Pw araa wrtto aayway;
Lataad Tralman. 2000 No wb wry, •A.
^Xa 04703 gc call f 4I0N <0 I WS.
(23 SO)
/^
__'r,-.s-,
ROOM aPP ia
RRfPATE
doPy) In ai
|S>tS)
1 ai
room and board
^B^k%#PPB^a^^^^B ^^^a pa^Bl
w
RRIVATE room. liHchan tacMltlotf In
w^w^^w^^^v ^^^ ^^^^^^m wi^v* wa^w Maww ca*
SSO-0142.
rnso)
Ovabi
I. IbHi
mi. IS bra
(ST SO)
(2
POOil with prtvata IMth In Facltic
>> and 0 iiiiOii. ONiraaani
'ai
Ff«.
ipKw'Aw. m lanipa tar N^iit
ft habyaltlinf (ano child) tampla
^•aso contact Mrs Galtas Patora
10:00AM and aMor 4 30FM 472-PSOO
' ' • • . . (37 SO)
STUOENT tar chNd ^m^ m9*4 Npht
IVtmbat locampua
aam. SS7-7073
(27 S S|
pulat furniat»#a raaai (badraom In
(IPrSO F.M. - 11
'"Or 212-i
WW pay up la $70/
Jt^^ 714-401-0440-
SO P.M Syn. • ToaO:
Tlmra ft Fdday %4l^
YOGA
\X'~
:jr
H— ♦-•'■■«~.l.
tBdBH
Oxchaiifla for hahi
J ' ■-■■-i-^^P I LI * I ■ ■ o^
^%^
BOOM, bamd phM miary.
far »ioyaowo«tt.-MMst hovo car.^
fTOTOOO tlTt. ir^'OOOO. -T- \.
427 SO)
OI^L NEEDEO
(37 S 0)
RESIOtNTlAA.
(21 S#)
rani
CKIIET prtoela roami'batb Kitchan
pdwIUf f Laimary Wootwood WMatilr*
Htola taauPy alMdant CaM atlor S:30 pm
^'•-'^« (20 0 0)
FURfitBHED
IVb
Btudont pni^wrm4
H sss-ssao
RENTALS m ALL AREA
rrUOCN^S WELCOMItl
TO^ilEWTALB _
11S44 Waat Rlcp
Loa Anitas
477.JS77
"3
RENT-A-HOME
s:
"s!
HOtSm DoPtlll^ rpts
CALIFORNIA'S BESt
RENTAL SERVICE
Wa Halp You 1 Yaar ^
\
.^.
lldViNQS ON THE
COBI^LETE WCSTSIDE
$2S waably SBI turnlahad rooms
sis 1 BEDROOM houaa SM
$11».NEAR School Compldta
lumtahad Oli>f ta Llnan ft diahas.
414$ ROOM ft Ba«« noar Baaclh.
PptOK. • .... . .:■■: ^
-i:^:-:rttS| CQMFY 1
W taiMiad ward
m IP BibyoN Bpr S yr: PNI
./Nftel hottaataorli/
PasaBaBJo ■ NaslBIa 4S4.
-X
braabtast • $lSi'«ppBi. BNtPb. aaa.
nan. 0NW47
;
^^'^^^w^B ^B^^^^^WBO 0 Vt B^SBS
'ApiOrtaa
T^-J..
(srsB
f7S2
iSTsai
HBL» WITH HOUBEWORKT
atudPR«« as.
■'■• -■s
prad-at«*daalJ»t«h aar. #
Bspaa. $S0. 07S-SSSS. '
|17S SUMNt 1
fssrsi
St)
•X
TPiBJBBiBNNriiSBlOP dpoiffp rp-
WLA
Sl47/tNP. Upr Vlalo.
kooM.
balh. poai, lacaul. aaitiia
Oi
BEFORE YOU
SIGN . ...
yf CHECK our LISTINGS
•I
^ CHECK with «t far ADVICE
yf CHECK out w^n STANDARD Lf ASE
t^ CHECK tKo LANDLORD
. TENANT HANOSOOK
Ktlahan f^mm^. Mo«-aP»abaf $40/
ataab. 473^4700. BS3-0771 Marparot
"J||*^^^I^^^^^130S01
>OOL BIOE ROOBI
Tp rant witli kflpBan prtvilappo.
S21S/IPP
FBp 4B1'BBBB,^
SBBB.FURM. H#tMP 1 Bd PPar
OPBBPi';:.. -i_
■ «i" •■ *i ' '* ■
|W
(^i^^^^B 4^^^W 9 W^B*
Saas BSCUMlBB
■ — - -ff
yapp. ^Ow wH '
j-- y -. Y.» ■ •■ ►■''
393-9245
174t UnMki. •.•!.
^^^B» ^^0 ^^^^^^BSP IS^^^BS^BBI » 1
$1SS
IBSSSI
BWabsw prtvttapat Short dNvo tram
1S0 ma. 473-7701. Naw imabsr.
mm
THE UCLA MOUSING OFFICE
SI 0-3 Compboll Noli
Phono 825 4491
TB.
OAJlTmRVICS TB. PLA^D
•too FEE TO OWWERT'^
BM^TRAVi
LT 0
STUDCNTS PLACEMENT
RITTBL REAL ESTATE
Our Sondps
TOSBBPS YOU
OUALfTY SCRVtdf''
UPOATSB RBNTALS
. ft FURN. RBNYALS
$t1B WtA, UCLA AREA
StBS liLA, UCLA AREA.
BapRal^ pad All ptilltlas paid.
S1SB WLA
AVi
Not* la boatUot torm o« ovor tas
ftAPTOTi
pooataTY
Sp»«i
ROOT OP C
SITS WLA 1
S21SFALMB2I
AvMMBIp Bi 1 tat
$240 WLA 2 Badri
Bppar.
WLA S
OTMBRS TO CI
0MayOBmrW<
473-1
a
879-0101.
11744 mcO BLVO
■»spg»p*<,
B'..^
I-
>mim
M
A.
1-
jS iSB rrUOENt Bpppial. ) h%4
BUMY MORE*CALL FOR OfTACS
FREE BCRVtCE TO LAMOLOROS
Ipi B Bun. TOOl
I
^\
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:^;wr
"ylWS ^iVJi" 7i
S/Wt -JHSS
s^yevHSSJA^,
-1 •_!-
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SSii~-JJji^
Jr-i-
-4h ^
:-A-
^N
1)
Grand Re-opening
9 •
Our newly remodeled
V.'.>
360 M
tt
Now there's an e|/en
greater selection of
easual-to-dress looks
' (•
aw
fAVi
Sf*:>:-^t.
^ij.,.^:v y:_
.c^'?%:-4.";-^
':;'"I:.'*»*-"H
. -^
^•^^
*^
^ ■ I
*■ « 1
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/ '
f,'- .
-H.
^■"■^. n^^iii.
#»:*-•.
» -
c^\
m
FASHION DENIM PANTS with European and •
j trouser styling; leather, braid t. .ms
PANT & JACKET COORDINATES in denim..
corduroy and I eathsfer- trimmed fabric
/
THREE-PIECE VESTED SUITS in •
brushed denim, corduroy, gabardine
GREAT SELECTION OF SHIRTS in gauze.,
slick prints, tailbred dress styles
SWEATERS in wrap, cardigan, pullover styles.
Left:
Three-piece
vested suit in corduroy.
brushed denim or gabardine
With pleated pockets and back. $B5
White-collar shirt
in an assortment of
colorful cotton plaids. $15
^ i
7
\Ht
^i«?'
^Closed fbr
••vetral mon^s
due to a fire.
H
the store
is now ready
^ with hew,
larger assortments
olJedns
:Z|clothes.>^^ -
' leisure-time
oqifrisand the ' <
/accessories ->**'**
■ ■'- ' tooo4 •
, r ,j -y^ifh them
Come-see these
--.I
unique looks
at Jeans West prrces"^ /
you can affxjrtfH . " '
M-
-^
/.
<
•/•
-/
.. t
/
Right
So c'moffi into
\i}:
Leather-trimmed jeans
in washed denim with two •
leather-piped stars in' back.
Machine washabie! $24
Matching blazer with leather
frpnt and back yokes, leather piping
Also machine washable. $37.50
Slick print shirt in assorted
prints and colors. $20 /
and \mVm niak# frionds
: I
uln coaches comment on ASU
■ %,^'
Th« follow ing mtt ccMnments
from tlic I C LA fooOiell m^m.
ant c(micIn»i on towijlu't game
witli Arizona State.
DWAIN PAINTER {Comck oT
9Herterbacks wm4 |mm «•»
crimen): ^Aftcr having pkiycd
Arizona State the list two
yesn at BYU. I know ymk
must expect them to have great
athletes, be well coached and
have an excellent kicking
game. Their offcnte it ex-
ploaive and they have a rtck-
les» defence that likes to bliu.
The key to UCLA winning »
bail; control and no turnovers.**
J£0 HUGHES (CMdi oC kh
tide liscbacliert): **To beat
ASU. No. I you can't afford to
make mistakes m assignhnents
on offeme and defense. ASU is
a fo«d-lS>MlMill te^m that relies,
on the big play, so you can't
give them good field position.
^ We are a food team mM if we
"can do things like practice,
then we can win."
EICH BROOKS (CiMcli of tiM *
MrtMt NM^ackcrt and special
tcMM coadi): "The key to our
defense is to contr6l Arizona
State on first down Statistics
•Ikrw that^ when Arizona State
lain make between four and six
yards consisicntiy^^on first
down they kmmXty score, but if
we Cln fprce the second ^ and
seven or socond and eight situ*
Jif^*<>ws, then it is very difficult
lor ttiOB to pick up the first
ii*« -fligl their scormg ratio
dropt coBsiderably With
ASU'v jpn#, wc Gtti*t mHot^
tke open 4icJd- ^kJe
Mitt tec turn the bail
•vcr to give them chimcin to
m tho'%pliy.-^ -f"""^
BILLIC MAITHEWS (Cooib
or mmfUm ki»d^ ''We wiH
have \o play ai fl»wli»§ foot>
ImiH m puiiile to beat Ari-^
Scale Wc ^an'^\ make
misiiikai or turn ihc ball aver.
bccauj»c wc don't >%an( to |{ive
1^ ^cmpe crowd a chance to
rev up Also we must plav WKih
super intensity and we have to
intimidate where wc have the
chknces. We have to let ASU
koow wc intend lo win the
football game If we do those
two thing!., plus wc get the
help from out kicking game to
fct us on the scoreboard, then
we can win.r
DON EILEY (Coodi of ceo-
•«» nM fMMa): -We must
play with intensity and have a
strong kicking game to win
We must eliminate the mental
and physical errors, which
realy ehcompattct the whole
thiog, and if we' do thit then
we have a chance to win.."
DICK TOMEY (Coodi oT^
ftnstve backs , and deieiisive
coordinator): ^Playing Arizona
State ii a real challenge for us
•fid It Ls the kind ol thallcngc
that will ;nakc us better this
season because in my opinion
It IS better JO open with a
formidable opponent ASU it
going to make yards against
us, but 1^ Jiave got to try to
keep them from makihg the
big plays. I dont think the
hea^s goijng lo be a factor and
I would "1>e extremely duap-
pointed if conditioning be-
comes a factor Ml^ Ike jp^ine **
BILL M€PH£RSOJN (CoiUk
Of m iHeoiiis iM^Tlf we
CM pii)^ error>free football on
dcicnig with ^v^typg^ dainf
kil jok, t|wi we can w«. ASU
it ao txpioiiW oi offense that
tf yoo-pokf ■ ffiisukc. you
etidHap- waving at their-baeka'
We must diagnose their plays
ond blocking patterns qOick)>u"
TRANK GANSr (ciofk of
,4.,.T
••d^i. "Wc lu'cj a u»i ul exact-
ness to techniques u> come out
oo top \^c cannot turn the
baU over withour punting it.
hecawr o1 the big pla> o{-
fctMe of An/oha 5iate "
— MkhaH^Soodlieioier
Grid Breakfast
After finally beating USC
on the football field a year
age to go to the Rose Bowl.
UCLA IS now trying to
cat^h the Trojans in aiumni
and student support by
Starting j^ Friday nnorning
weekly bfjeakfast m the
Sports Deli restaurant in
Century City.i _
Over 60 peofki attended
the opening meeting, whic^
included appearaiices by
UCLA head football coach
Terry r>qnahue.J radio pcr-
st>nalit>- and ^former Herald^
Lxantmer Sporty tdilor Bud
Furilk), KM PC Sports Di-
ff roetor Fred Hessler^ UCLA
Men's AthJeiic Director J D
Mdrgairand JUCLA Promb
tions Pirector Jerry Long
According to Long, who
IS' orgaounof Hie breakfast
program. Bruin alumni, stu-
dents aad football fans are
invited every Friday mom-
iof at 7 ^#m to Ihe Sportsi
Deii. Either Donahue or one
of bu ■itiitaON wdj attend
virtualfy evciry work dur4ng
the fntiH|aH,iaaa0« aad dur-
ing the week pf hdme games
^ visilint. team's athietic
director witl |^ 'invited
l^oi olKr said itarkly high
lights of the past UCLA
#ooil>all gait)e.:will be shoVn
k«.A.
M
l# l«l
k'
.1- . ^
Vl
y" "• ' 1^'" '
* ^^ \^ VtM^tW^^ •'•*Tfl« Wl«^
•JOB
i^ttt^
ope»*
CVtBt
HlTEOTTHt
YEAR
TILI«2ISIIL
wS5^
r»oi«
iOlCB*
iji>^?n
<,%f\\ iu.
r;s^ii inr^Htvtir i^tiir m
vco Center
Cinema I
47yo7n
CAt WASH (Ka)
3:00, 4:00. 5 SS. 7rSi, f S5
Aw(0 G«>W(|<
Avco Center
Cinema II
WMK^ood Ovd ^~"
47S-071I
^ork ^m4mm Avco Gs*
w
Avco Center
Cinema Ul
Wil«h«f« nm^%
W«ttwM^ akd
475 0711
ST IS^ (FG)
tlii#f»-9r« a 10, 1:0$, 10:00
Swfi a IS, 4;tS. 4 10, 4:05 10:00
^^ . ' ea ' 'r#
v-
SIUENT MOVIi (PG)
):00. J SS. 7S0. 4 SO.
I.
Pfi< iU\ I
Beverly Hills
I bUi EoM^el a^vwly Or
271 n^i
M-f
Dwid Can
CANNONBAU (PG)
BIG BUS (PG)
^^m9\ 4:00 S«f-SMfi
Brentwood I
2924 Wilfhir*
ONE RiW OVEi THi
CUCKOO'S NiST
•torrinf Jed
H-
Ch«irU«
■jf
HARP TIMES
t
BrentwoQcL
2524 WU«K*««
lot 2^ St )
•79 3366 •35*3347
•'■ '— t
GUMftAm^Y
' -H
i. i
MUiOEi BY DEATH (F6
MS, 9:JB. 4:4S, 4:)0. 4: IS, 10^
«#H
Century
iPtazat^
3040 kf»% of Siprt
353-4291
j><i«
M. ZHIVAGO
^WBW^vw ^:^W» 4:4np
-"^vesr-. -^^-
-llif.Sif4rS:i0.S M 4 40
Stw^cffit D««c»uftt Tidi«f« i^vilahlt. ^
-^
Mf#l
Century
Plaza n
2040 Av«.^af Snks
GONE WITH THE WIND
M.TTh.^i^O-
W^,S«tASvn2 30.4:OC
M-
l*««M«t(
Cinerama
Dome
Swn««t n«or Vtn#
•44 340 V
ifi 70fnm atHi tfi
BETUtN Of A MAN
CAUED HORSE (PG)
•t ta;JO. 3:00. S:JO, 4:00, 10:30
Crest
Cinema
1 262 w««t«»Md Mv4
272 5S76
474-7866
' »-.
WITOtE WORLD
Stuffy at 4 30
i
DEL A^R
5036 W Pico Wn6.
935-6424
soc*
•hr HM 7 ^.
SAILOR WHO FEU FROM
GRACE WITH THE SEA
tNEBIGBUS
Fox Venice
630b««MUil^
W6.42I5
A4i^ •%>
CMM SI 00
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Manns Westwood I '
THE TENANT (i)
OfVQ
CHINATOWN (R)
Manns Westwood II
ALICE IN WONDERLAND
1 00, 2 30 4:00 3 30, 7tOO,i.JD, 10:30
Manns Westwood
Bndt Thuridoy
THf ASTROLOGER (R)
^' '..,., Storting fridoy
LOGANS RUN (PGj
A Lammmlm Thmahm ^*^»<» Summ., in».floinm«W» Arthur Kmght
» . , HARRY AND WAITER
Monica I GO TO NEW YORK
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Ingmor A^rgmon't
FACE TO FACE
Starring Uv Uflmonn
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— 'Joyioyjunr
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SHADOW Of THE HAWK
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'*ixqui«ito Entortoinmonf"
— Timo Mofozin*
OBSESSION
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12Alf .llomAslpmofily
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De Raima's 'Obsession' with iHitchcock
^h»iokL mmkmam
^'■''^■i^ti^iiMaj
jgigc reviews
.....^-riir-' ' ; - ^-
By Adam Parfrey
Brian dc Palma's
i» one of Umbc unique and
frustrating films that has fp
much virtuoso directorial tcch-^ ,
nioue It detracts irom the pic-
tilre*s intended premise
, A mutated throw||ack to
Alfred Hitchcock*s psyd;hologi-
cal suspense melodramas. Oh-
sessi(M2,cycn contains ao over-
bearing 1940s HitchcoclLian
score by the late Bernard Her-
rmann But Obsession doi^n't
afford us a clear point of View
and it_d:neasi.iy te^ers betw^een
nostalgic ffBipBct and parody
Paul Schrader's screenptt^^^^
bBaed on i'ltory byJ>e,Palma \
and S c h r ad w , -^als w i th- a
high-powered businessman
(Cliff Robertson) who behevcs^
^iimsc4f^fc*ponslible for the
violent deaths of hii kidnapped
wife (Genevieve Bujold)yand-
daughter (Wax4 aiJckfnan).
Schrader, an ex-Calvinist,
combines »i religiously morhid
overtone with basic surprise-
twist-in-thc-ending suspense.
i .^
*■>'
-(•'.•(
B)f Mary
The Synthaxis- Theatre's
-^People's Lib^" and **Lily Pad
l^auncb" ire one-act plavs con-
cerning well disctissdif pr^^
lems; liberatToh a|K| seaith tor
Tdeniity.. W^itte^ and directed
by^liCL A graduate eyftdi Jm-
pcdove, the plays are presented
in a frohcsome fashion which
keepf the audience sailing
throughout
''Peoples tib"^ aTarcoOlectibn
of fi\c skits presenting the
male and female sides pf^ar-
gUfTienis, and portraying ^an
Wonfian as various o
^and ,^K;arth, hockciy
OthctL,^tnenwrable characters
are Fredda^ ICnapp as -Meta
Morphosis. (a c1ianjfablc.wjU;h)
and BUly Brown iif M Fibi^n
fa detective) aric^ Ron*de Vu (a
french €hcf).' ' ^^ i ' >
The two one-acts, pl^y Fri>
days ahd Saturdays at 8:30
pm. Student tickets are $2. 50-
^ ft^ /i''»t F'^** n t a t4^ ttr
"Fe^frTDrcam;" is an abstract
and tasteful mime^ «»eff«iaB in
human ^m<»ion '^» and a tri-
bute t^ director Sandcf^VJphn*
^lon^t insight as well as the
poTormers; talent S^r^ly
clorhed and weanng full-face
neutral (whiteT ' maskii, the
W;!
at^d ^ucKl
Although "People's Lib's"
messagc-bevomes loo repeat ive
and obvious at times (in ^^Ice
Hockey'' .|he is tired of being
kicked around), ''the show is
held intact by the humorous
situations and the high spirits
of the actors.
, In one scene, typfcaT^^lfe
entire theme of, the play. Salt
(Billy Brown) and Pepper
(Cyndi Turtledove) argue over
structure and simplicity vs^
uniqueness, and Brown makes
the profound statement "Salt
IS closer to God "
In the most thought-pro-
voking of the skits, "The Spi-
der and the 'Fly." Turtledove as
the spider shows Brown (the
fly) what it is like to be en-
snared, trapped and smothered
in a relationship
The second play, "Lily Pad
Launch," is a fairy taie about
Tad Pole, a singing and danc-
ing frog who resists being
pushed into ▼ahoua expected
frog careers (lab specimen,
fourmet meal and witch's brew
ingredteat). ^
Brad Fit her portrays young
lad Pole with charm and ainrtt
that makes you believe he is
truly happy to be a frog. The
entire cast of "Lily Pad
launch" maintaiat this same
playful air alld delightfully
recreates the happy atmosphere
Masliactoct: leverkli
^j Bm kamlii
The dramatic elements of
ancient and modern theater are
rarely combined successfully in
a contemporary production
But The Los Angeles Mask
Theatre, now in the midst of
an all-too-bnef four-week run
at the Odyssey Theatre, is
doing just that.
This theater ensemble, com-
prised of only three performers
(Tery Arnold. Joanne Curry
and Dean Hensley), mbi om
of the theater's •Meat means of
expression, the facial OMBk, in
two separate, thought pro-
voking scenarios. The group
simultaneously employs prova-
cattve and experimenul
iwniiudv^ — '
three players depict the as-
simulation of primal instincts
into mail's ctlrrent state of
humamty. Cycles of captivity
and freedom, fear and security,
love and rape, and violence
and brotherhood are ritual-
istically dramatized in this act.
While the masks domied at
first lack expression, forcing
focal attention to body move-
ment alone, -the movement h-
•clf, a blend o( modem dance
and ancient mime, soon lends
expression to the masks The
performers execute their ac-
Uojs carefully and sensitively,
betanong their preasion with
artistic improvisation. Al-
though the mtent<> phy«.o«i
prowess demamrated becomes
while De T9imd\iPkmtom of
the Paradise) reaches for a
cei^ain hip-noampc styliam
(It doeaa't eaanect. Mainly,
becauiic ielf<onsciotti cameca
tricks OWIipii dolly shota»
slow motion, rack -focusing,
filtered camera) are used too
often aad are all too distract-
ing.
ViijQos J^aigmod's cinema-
tography is ratponsible fpr the
hazy, dream-like quahty of the
film, 'this- works well, but is
jiscd mucif too often now-
Car Wash' all wet
^i u^ ^^ *" ^^ *'^" cif those at a dowmown LA
car wash But inMad of seeing a raw slice of Btack sum
cukure. we get a piece of cliche-ridden cxploitatioh
nort«..TT^ *" "^^ a plaHaia. pointless sehe. of charaaer
portraitt and stones that one quickly gives up looking for
Lhui . "^^ T"*' ^"^^ Schumacher and director Michael
Schuitz try. to lure their audience
anybody- Thms a traasvestite. ridiculously overpkyed by
Antonio Fa^^ . rebellious black Muslim and an
cverpresem hooker One of the few believable
dUte
Bujold, in a JiwU rok, is
natural and delightfiir —an
acting triumph for such a-4€cL
nically weighty and stylistic
production. |U»bertson has lit-
tle more to do thga laeai wi^g*
fyed and victimiiii, aad John
ItitJ^foW.is 9liBvely sinister as
kkif venal basin e $ s par! ne^r^
OpMession endi up^daflilii^'
it* potentially pungent Hitch-
cockian souffle of suspense ahd
pervisjon. De Palma's imtta-
tion IS just half-baked
w^^l Su^lyBoyar]s convincingly beleaguered as the
wmu owner of the car wash.
-JT"
inextncaijie, f rom , the dramaT
the physical difficulHts the ^
actors overcome st^nd out.
^(Ofie actress j^Ut hen through. a
box HsF- acrohatir maneuvers).
^cl it isVthis combination ot
P^jysici^ and dramatic effect
wttkh makes this "Fevf^r
Dream" : am interesting
- The leaond scene, '•Last
Sunday," is more tradxtiowB^'
or at least yerbaf. reveahag^
slice of the hves of the resi-
enis m a very downtown hotcl-
boardirtf house on any Sun-
day.i As with the first piece,
"Last Sunday" does not maia>
tain a Hagl^ theme or plot, but
encompasses -many ideas
There, the similarities end.
The masks and chBaacteta
aie stereotypical classics, but
the three actors must be com-
mended for fulfilliag the re-
quirements of several roles
each. Indeed, the ease with
which they slide on and off
•■f for costume and char-
acter changes aMkes this sif-
mem admirable But these
masks denSad stereotypes the
alcoholic aad decisively slo-
venly janitor, the hip-swingmg
Yidduh spinster, the middie-
•fBd lady whose msecunty is
•• gwat^ she can't speak, the
vengful hooker and the hip
drug dealer begin to seem as
unreal as they do familar
Ahhough ""Last Sunday"
bat many clever moments, aad
some equally touching
sions, it arrives at no
P^iat. The scenario reveals a
number of chmaiic evenu but
iftcks a much aeeded oonclu-
non. It eads, after dragging oa
toojong, with the same two
rhalBLIus it opened with, and
Jnatter-aMMly, goes no fur-
ther.
For those with an imerest in
aew and experimenul fhfatrr
techmques or an affection for
cither mask or mime. The Los
Angeles Mask Theatre is un-
deniably intnguetng. It's fauHs
*''g-fyw ind It hai thr pntrntial
Pryor, Pointer Satersrfu^ a ipadi
Comedian Richard Pryor and rnw rininirr Birn receive
top billing but only appear for a fivSmfnuie seaaMatv Pryor
plays^lhc wealthy "D^ddy Rich" wh©l\appears at lh^.car
^ash to have a speck removed from \ his hinbusinc The
Ppirjiier Sisters dance briefly Another^drtpdian who majfces
a cameo appeai;ancc (and whose talent i^alariBtsled) iV
George Carhn He plaja a uxi driver whoWnds most of
the film looking f9r the hooker; who is trying to dodie
paying her fare. \
The score, by Norman Whitrield;~ii uninierrMpted dis^
music Wherever the laughs or the action or t^ directing
lags, the music picks up In Pryor's iciene, Duane. t^e Bhick
Mushm. berates him for leaving ^e ghetto and fdrsaking
his fellow Blaaks In response, Pryor dances for\ few
minutes to show he's still as soulful as ever, and then ieaycs.
Duane is not convinced Neither are we. ^^-^
Earth/Wind and Fire
Earth, Wind and Fire, with the help of over 30
amphfiers, a ranting, screaming, SRO crowd, and a lof of
talent, gave a spectacular Concert at the Forum last
weekend. _i
The group, wearing spvkhng red capes and equally
stunning outfits underneath, entered from giam colhipaiM
P3rramids and clouds of smoke. The music easily surpaMad
the costumes, however, sustaining a rocking tempo
throughout There were no relaxing moments as each
rhythnuc tuae owshed into the next
Moat selBClioas were from the That's ike Way of the
Warid aad Gratitude albums, and the group thankfully
matched their sharp^ precise LP soub4 Blessed with
instrumenul and vocal talent, the soul-jazz-rock baad
performed favontes "Happy Feelings." "Gratitude." and
"Can't Hide Love" with the tight vocal harmonies
instrumenu^ arrangements they are known for.
Older hits "Shining Sur," **Sii^ a Sai^" aad "R
were especially well received, as was the group's hMBBl hit
"Get Away." High spints were mainuined not only by the
music but also by leader Maurice White's knack for
drawing enthuaiaitac respoaaes from, the audienc^ ('•Can I
hear a *nght oaT^.
Adding to the hirtriaaics were a disappeariag act by bass
guiurist Berdiae W^, red halloas falltag from the roof
and frantic prancing on stage by any member not tied down
by his instrument Earth, Wind aad Fire was definitely in
Its element.
UA Cinema
Center I
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THE TWO KfNNiDYS
2:aa, 4:oa, a OS, a os loia
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Center II
MAN WMOFEUTOIAtTH
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THEATRE
BEAHNG A DEAD HOtSi
^f a v.* • 00 A 10 St
■ I ■ I ■ ^^
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FELLOWSHIPS
IF YOU PLAN TO BEGIN GRADU-
i^''
TE WOflK IN FALL 1>77 and
intend to pursue a career in college
teaching, you may be eligible to
apply for a Danforth Fellowship.
Potential candidates must take the
GRE r^ later ttian October 16, 1976
(for which applications must reach
the Berkeley EtS office by Sept-
ember 24). Orientation meetings for
possLible. candidates have been
scheduled for September 28, 29,
and 30th in 167 Dodd Hall from 3:.3d
to 5:00 P.M. Further information is
available at the Honors Programs
Office, 1331 Murphy HafI, window
iO. ' '
i
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MeUB'S
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OUARTET\
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WUNOERBYRO\
ttorring
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THE STONER
2n3Si«M9r Ay*
W«t« LA 9002S
477-7339
Food, GofiiM 4 m
t/1 M NfHi W
S«pf f.12
THE ORIGINAL HAZE
NOUY
^
"TTrjt
FootiMin.
1
r
<( ofilifiurd frcHii Page 2*)
Jeffeuon combined for 85
catches and 10 touchdowns a
year ago. The tight end. Bruce
Hardy, wai tkiB Htfflfif quart
fijrhark in tne opening game a
year ago. He is a tremendous
all-apund athlete and was on
the cover of Sports Illustrated
in 1974 ior being considered as
the beat high school athlete in
the United Sutes^
The offensive line has two
starters back, sc/ overall the
SuD Devil offerise should b^__
^ne of the finest, in the
country. Donahue said, -We
m^st ktep Arizona State from
getting the rheap touchdowrt
"They Tiave an explosive of-
fense, but we must make them
work for their scores.*^
Defensive line wcakiiMfi
Dctcnsivcly. the linebac^king
aruJ '^U^nsivc backfield cores
are strong, but the line is the
key Both tackles graduated
and the two returning nose
guards have been dropped
from the team for disciplinary
reasons Willie Scroggins, a
standout defensive end a year
ago, has been moved to tackle
Mark Gastineau (6-6, ^54), a
iC transfer, .has the key ttmc
guard position. '
The key to UCLA being able
to execute its veer ofiense is to
read the Arizona State defense
ICush likes to blitz often' and
he- will show various ali^n-
. ^ (C ontinued )>n Page >)^-
UCLA, ASLi Rosters
UCLA
aiat9 wfii v#f sMy
1
2
••
Hm^Hfk, HaroM
Ft
AC
4
7
8
t
10
14
If
20
21
'*Wa4k«r Rick
**H«nry. WaNy
Mlcfc
Molina. MNm
"DankworHi. ^
NIchoAt. Pvrry
23
24
2S
27
Lyfm, iMBMmy
91
33
34
35
at
37
10
40
41
47
43
44
SO
51
52
54
«l
57
*Hard»n. WN^yr
Brown, Thaogt
*Coult«r MichMl
Cannon, jGlon
■agfott, Brian
•*taa K«nny ...
*Artnttronf , L^
** Brown, Jimai
Nona. Bobby
Ford. ff%^
Pao Pao. Anthony
*Thoma». J«w«r1
NtHBOrd, PtiM
^Tiiiiinapg, Mami
'Stipimw. Frank
Cornl. Frank
7
31
32
34
. tfCLA continuing students
litvfifftiti To attiend die Knumih-^
home opener, at 7:3ir pm, Sep-
laaiibar IS, m,ust have identic
^fTcatlon thai' he M/r-iillm~M •
cMftgHti^iiiMmtiir.
The niirnrtl-^urgoae^ ^i^F
4cftloii .cird will >e iMedi for
admission for all hoitoe gHlhct,
but if a sTiideht ^rgor.4o get^
the ID shot lasT Skoring Qiiar-,
41
•2
63
64
65
••
67
Sinimafijvan)' «lltn
MuffiKy, Tom
'T«trk:k. S%wm
Tflansor. OhFli
Novalt. WMMa ,
•Pola,Pa«#...."
A^ilna, B^yca
Chrtftlanaofi,
"~>^ann, MMoK^
: rVaaaar. Brad
Mortbft. Oava
■*Maw^
10
12
Tim — w
8€ IS
TC 16
Ft 17
OB 16
OB If
S 21
OB 22
FL 23
8 24
LH 26
RC 26
LH JB
LC
PH
S
LH
XC
LH
LC
* ^M
S
PH
OLB
PH 45
PC 47
OPT SO
OLB 51.
OLB ssr*"
PK-P 53
ILB 55
OPT 67
ILB 50
NG %i
NG 62
NO 63
LG 65
MG 66
DLT 67
66
70
71
pPT-i^fl-
PLT ^
>ii ' <
CLASSIFIED i4D
Bruc* Hardy
TE
ArBmr Larw
Btocihall Edwards
Oarrick Martin
Mark La««ti
Stan Pohlnaon
PaylErvin
HB
TC
FB
OIALnS-2212
y\
Andia McGanC
•.,•%•• {
U^
41
42
43
Bam WMIs
Dan
OavM Qhfon
MthaMarHnaz
Pon Borwiar
Fraddia Wllliamt
Pon Waahlngton
Gaorga Parry
Jolm Harris
Dava Barthal
OarralGIN '
Qiarry Galdian
Brian ^w^m
Norm Ehaaz
Pod Erha
Chrit Mott
QIan Larvkar
Norrlt WMIamt
Poto P«lai
*»■«**•«.,
fUcfc Tofbart
Gary Pad^n
Mark Oorria
Hmrry Qarbarini
Oava T
\
PC
ILB
Gary WInchaalar
Tim Pataraan
Sim Chambava
Puas Symmaa"
. . LC
PC
St
WB
WS
. BB
CC
■^FB
FB
WB
HB
WS
LLB
ss
ss
LC
PLB
C
PQ
C
C
OPE
LG
PG
LLB
to
PLB
PG
LG
PT
LLB
PT
LT
Get
DISCOUNT PHOTC
FINISHING right
here on campus
f^mpus sfvdie
150 ketckho^f hall 825 06 1 1 b27I
open mon hi 8 30 4 3C
4 # .-•••-I
ter, he or she will (be admitted
to the first gaffie with a re^ia^
J/ation card and supportive
Ali^ ^new and re-enter-
.ing students sliotild have re-
ceived ticfccti tor the Arizona
and. Septemhar^S Air Force
fame in the mail. Continuing
students will be required fo
show the all-purpose ID at the
Air Force game. The new IO
cards can he shot on the third
floor of Ackerman I nion be-
ginning September 21.
■ . -ft
70 Tnppiwi, gut
7T~J«Dav4a. Bfuoa . .-i .
I* *Boyd d9anf
^*T 76
OLT 7B
PT 60
^3 ^Gfo^ndt. Pandy
74^,, ClarfcTTom
75 N|(»rtloya. Max'
76 Wollard Pon
77 Woolay. Don
78
78
81
82
'^i'aylar. Qmg .-^ . . .
^ ;Mufo. Jalf
Butfaf. Hwnf
84 'Poblnaon. Jarry
85 "PadarKm. Don
86 *BaM. Paymond. \
87 ***Burks. Paymond
SS *Schmldt.^ Pat
8B **Crawford, Bdto
82 *Fowlar. John
84 Bhtbin, Kant
"Indlcaias UCLA waralty
LG 86
LG 86
cm
BT 68
PT 8B
PG 81
ILB « 82
SE 83
»LB 84
TE 85
ILB 86
OLB 97
$ 86
OLB
OLB
TE
pou9 D«drH^»
Larhr Muckar
Al Harrta. r»
"T " rigi
John Jaftvrson
Slavi Scott
J^WBIa Scrogglna -^
BradKlt>ur2 v; V
Klffc Car1*#
Tim Baumgartan
Mark Jonas*
Ckfton Alapha
Kit Lathrop y ,
PoBan Allison
Clarence War*
JImmie Malona
Brodahck Oiggs
Mark GaaBnaau
MIkaShradar .
Coacl^ — FrarHi
SunMl Canyon
Racraalion
Center
OELI&
SNACKBAR
ts open
Monday-Fftday
^ '11:00-5:00
Saturdaysr Sundays
antf Holidays
11:004:00
, r
-«i«-
bjM^r
opportMnlM—
(13 8 8)
,— A0aWHI6TIUTt¥i
UCLA
ACMt. PSOPIABIS. C2CBMA
PATIEMTS
8AIIN 11888/
•rsnto/conlraats. ai«oas«l«. ^.
typ^nf. accoyfillfia ^r«f#r •eclsl
Tiiipaim jii^ras
. 88>
(13 88)
"•••wna irvatiiivffi^ M
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sii Ci
8440 NOWt
for
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(12 6 f)
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(10 8 8)
WOODCN Bonols . Ksfs 8
katckoo^yrs. notllnf a rmp; Iwaky
8 aoMs. oM cactiM, a»i«a8ai
(10 Otr,
S5S60/ month for Bload Plasnui
HYLAHO DONOP CENTEP
1001 Gaylay Aiw Wastwooo
478-0051
FANTASTIC
OPPORTUNITY
lavasl 126.00 A maka 83. 800 00
to 2apaatk. Band lo N.Im. PuON-
cations. 1128 Kant NW AlBu-
i \%>""
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BOUND REDUCTION
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121 kerckhoff hall
025-oei 1 1258
CAfttBBEA
CALCULATORS
Tl 6P MA. 6P |1 A. aa 52. SP §4. ale
HP - CrilQ Corvut Nowu*
*a«*y. *anason<if , ianyc
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PCE8 ELECTPONICS
"Cl< 471-aoaO tor b«st pnc«»
CA8H ar iroas y<i^ .^,p^.^ ^
Music Odysasy . 1 if 10 W>fh*r»(bsftwsn
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(laOlr)
BEVBPty HNIs mmf
Hatisiyn
27l.a23l TuM Sat
^lo call
(laOlr)
FULL-TIME EMPLOYEES
J _ NEEDED
Start at 1800 par mofrtP
(8:00 AM la 8:80 PJI., i
^ ly BmbmbN PiiiB^
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wantiji
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bkthatons ki T4KI OpkS Lsdy • "Wj
'^^ (10 8 8)
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social avants
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from Trmidad A Tobai
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T«x«f tostra
Tl9m Mi A4*^ 9*,. TftMA^ 43 u TisaMMa^J*
'tH8 TPliaiOAD' MUSIC MAKEPf
^v-- itiCLSAHO-.
LIMiO COHTtKti%i Pr»»a 2 ^^Odlii
2nd.8rna^Uggttt^
champagr>a'
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Kuah
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education
A
tian Proca
and
WmiCLA,
TSC stadswr ^
$7 50 Sludants
M (X) iSCyTnaskkara*
$5.00 Qanara) Puoitc
'For informatton on mambarahi^'i^ai
■V contact 825-3304
. pwt Khool Ooni ,
••H •tan*f matura tspaHarvcia*
itaraaoas. ^U| aai
' t?|8 6|
AArl
Blandal* Jvdaral Bld« 10th Floor
8004 Wllahira Bl«d (Cornar of Bairany
Or 8 WllahliaT B»«*«iy ^Wf
69
Mora„j||hon HP 4&
4 ^ • aPM rpihi* BiMii •
L k 10 • • r.^ (aai. Cm Tan'
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UWGfCMT!
|P*r«oo«l r>««d*d for all lyp^fPdf
If ny.n»^«, •••dical 4.afliM. T.ch"niciii
HnduiirLai; Jdanaaarh^nt Clarir ai a
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pndaa appaa)tm«nt ■■uMiiji 80,0$^^
w>— ^"< w.wr.T.si • *9<>Mr salary, ptm 8aw^»e ■ Wariws Pa*
*>"**•**<: 9'M*^**^ * Mndararai^iiiii :~ Bay._liaiirs 4,00 to #00 r«l 8la|or
'•«ea*wa^ _.__' ". Ftnanciaf 8«nM«#« Companyr :84^«
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9 00 AM to S 00 PAI 422 -4308 r /I.
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1 1 i|93 &*ota Montcs S* WL A
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8C1EMTIFIC Cakndators aniy §48. . if
oparatlont. AC/DC AC -adaptarra
cHaraaPiabaf lariat Inciudad C«a»
Call iaoml«»f s. 478*
(8 0k1
NUMAN SkgPs t12.iO •. %MJm 478-
— ' fill T18f il 1^ III wS^
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Bruins open at home with Arizona
MKHrrtSSOPl Class lar ukOdiaw 1^
8. Mornifif snd aftamoon sassions.
#a aai
,/,«,■ ■»'■
\ WOLLCNBA9 Paal la faal Mps
~~ -' S \8»8sal aflsc. PHana: 818-8688.
•MlSASfTA 8S086iCA
By Michael SondlieinKT
DB Sports Wntar
The tute of Aiizona has two
very good coljegiAte foothall
teami. UCLA hms to open
tonight with supposedly the
better of the tw& teams in
Arirona Sute, but the Arizona
Wildcats Will be a tough home
opener in the Coliseum at 7 30
pm on Saturday, September
18.
Under former Michigan as-
sistant CoBch Jim Young, the
Wildcats have bacn ranked in
the top 20 teams in the country
the past two y^an. Arizona
has hsd 9-2 records the pist
two iCBSoni Slid just missed
going to the FiesU Bowl when
the Wildcats were edged 24-21
by Arizona Sute in last year's
^Hile .
Arizona returns only eight
starters from last year's squad,
but there are experienced let
tcrnwi in 21 of the 22 posi-
^o«8, snd Young is confident
the WildcB68 CBB kcat out, Ari-
zona Stale for the Western
iihk'iie O'PiifugiiLt' lltte.
Offensively, MarT Lunsford
takes over at <|UAfterhack for
graduated All-Conference sel-
ection Bruce Hill. Fullback
Dean Schock and leading rush-
er Dave Randolph arc also
back. Keith Jackson and JC
transfer Lynn Oickerson are
other fine riyinmg backs.
Two year letterman Keith
Hartwig. Michigan Stale trans-
fer Reed May (he went to the
same high school as Lunsford),
speedster Charles. Nash and
Oscar Harvey give Arizona the
kind of receiving crew that
co4id give UCLA trouble
Geofie Greaihouse (6-2, 250)
is more of a blocker than a
receiver at tight end
The offensive line of Craig
Inrtfi (6,5, 251), Neil Orr (6-
2, 242). Kirk Orummond (6-2,
213), Greg Hsitriiin (6-6, 246)
and Bifl SegBl (6^, 260) is
bigfer overall than the Brums
and couid try to overpower the
smaller UCLA dsToMe.
Defensively, the Wildcats
have a look similar to Mich-
but Anzona.gave up over
2p points a game a year ago
Six starters do • return, and
Young thinks the defense will
be improved.
Returning starters included
middle pnrd Jon Abbott (^2,
238); defensive end Gilbert
Lewis (6-4, 210), left linebacker
Obra (the Cobra) Erby, the
Wildcats' leading All-American
candid^^tc. right linebacker
Mark Jacobs and defensive
bBcks Greg Preston and Van
Cooper
AnzoBB has an additional
threat in kicking speciaiial Lst
PiStor. who led the country in
field goal accuracy a year ago
He made 15 of 19 field goals
and 35 of 38 extra points.
The Brtttm and Wildcats last
met in 1972, with UCLA win-
ning th^ high konng affair,
42-31 Several poHi and laag-
azines fcave rated Arizona
higher than UCLA, which
should ^reatc an interesting
home opbner depending on the
outcom^ gf tonight^ Rriiifi,
L C* I ' i
rant
ADX
RUSH
^jf''.^'.' ,'>^'.'r»i
rt8S8>
(18 8 81
<!!JX
nrrunMa«G CyrMa mmbi ssa i
isi«vi»ia«i liao Maia sunotti'
.477.
ta-a
(18 8 6)
KV ins 08a8
wit. 477-6M7
campus
campus
campus
SEPTEMBER
EVENTS
Join Nawly Arrivad Intarnational
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help wahi»d
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tor ••fly ffi«ff«tM^ «»«rli Drams o^
rid— offgifr
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pMffMi cora or lata aboro coat of aMIar
I oon proatda momtiif irompwMtoli lo
Uf f from Waalwood/Sol Ak. ffmm
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teat w«ai«o0a O'tKi i a »ck;?s t„ 4'', v*'
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travel
*• iMra aapa^ta^.
ridoo
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Itronlfita and tModaya. Waalwood
~^~ 477^1 7i or 477-7394.
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poaHlon, fMrt-llma mornlnfa> cor.
arranda. fialp afilpping clarli Lodfaa
•ofiafa lOohiona SofMo MomIoo - aion
ia.7lbr r wiini. 472-Jt7t. ^^ . ^
ftf 1 1|
CAmUd-CASTtNO for film. TV. a«o«a.
A oiodiiA^ ttt-4M4 l|f ippelntmowt
EX^iniENCiO In Liquor Control,
ordarlnf. bonan^lng ISM bMiro
tly Com m-0t77 tor jjiTim _ I
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iXCELLENT 2nd mcoi
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offered
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'iHJSUl^^ •"* ^» #•• TIm
aito»
•>♦,' 4
IoiMkI
monant part tima \^. Tranportollon
17 dflor 0
472-0007
(It ft)
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UCLA
AUTO INSURANCE
MOTOHCYCLC INS^flANCC
PI«luoMl7 . . Too i^U^7
Low MofNhly ^oyiMiilo
8TUOCNT oiscouirrt
. . . Aak for Kon
TENNIS IrtatrucdoM oo a prlaola court
Alao court rantof Jranfwood oroo. 472-
Airto-Llfo-Homaownofa mt*4 Aonlol
Inourooco. VIMofo Off lea ..ifarnor
RoObMon. lift QiondOd Mli 1t>1
477»2007. 070-Otfl
do^, Mp^k, proy 0 — — .. ...^
bid IPVOd. 472-2470 or 472-Mt7
lb- ^. . rouos
No. 2%
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2r2?*!!t?^***^ ^'•^ »<ciiMP^daO»a»w
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(20 SO)
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ClJEir MoM4b 2-2 TO. 1000 i#laa. P'9
^ t a^ P parly. 470 2212 272 fdA
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t0X>L00«O»ILt Jatalor 00 Aolomod^
Fawyr alaartnf brafcpa Na« llraa.
•tiONAl fyp«n« ai raawdi.a «'*
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<41 t 0)
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FLUTE Loooono: «**'^»-^ - / "^ V-^ . ^. '•^ ^ioT«aia fra«i tronoodhbdon
MO^^^^ IWtblii dteboo / (20 fO) t apoad ftO 000 mMM iLolMM otU;
<** 1 0» pae#««M^<wA. ...^ ■- • Alii. tii-Jat/ daya 120 IdlO 0*00.
MA^^^.^-^- .... - zS^ ^ ^'Pb'Odb o« popara Pool ~ - ^ '■'- ' ' ^"'-^ ' - '
•d-bodjrSSTvi??;;^^ ^ canoioon t14M or boat of.ar-472SS
-' ' (24 ^j *^*** *1»in niuwu. ici^u Miriilii ' \ <4iio>
MBcn i^^. . — T ' — ^•^■♦♦'••O ^MJk«0< dMNPfy 200^2027 70 TAlUblPii k^mm» ^i^^^^^it^^ >>_ '
NEED Holp In Enbaab.T l^imtimm a i*^ i^. • ^ "TT T'*'^'* "■"■Itli Now
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IdMlb^. fy Pbl^ 20) 0100
(24 Ob)
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MAm CUT! -.02.d0 - WOMEN dy
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CoM207-40dO.
(Itt^)
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Bru*S*lt
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hovloral mo<l)pda. Tuaa. avaa trofd
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foo. CoH bwmadlplaly for Info or anroN-
2J«t»pooa Ibbited SMrtoy Sobnaby v W
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' cc
477-21*2.
(to
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PNOFESStQNAL DnriQboidMlon tof>-< * «*tdb
tdcoa. Wdbog. adHbif. wiiagBh. obidy ***<'>■
doalon A prodyeboirio vour riMiin i 'tt^
VW ^^AWf oooJuaUaly. 01%"
poriK A Igfbor). 040 broba
" job Fraa
Hawaii mnti N»«r Vorti (rnfT« $169 OC
b amft. 4 o.yhi* M«/<iit«n from $»96 (X}#
Inf^rnationai S:.;dont Canfpr
1023 Hiigard A^f
9 6 OoMy
473 200« • n;»s 7IS4
2027 70 TAIUMPM
(2»0«r) JJ5J. dbjpoi^loo AM/Pm:\
•Niot todf lidl
(41 iO)
117
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0«d Mfa. w.10.000; i»«Hng ibiPimoi.
OH, 000-0070
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Enrolling Smotf Girou0o For
Uataone
(41 SO)
-4^
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i »lia> now
LAAT
11
(ttOlb)
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(41 -tO)
Com tffT I3di for
for infornsbtipn pnd rpgittrvtion
B of A A Mboioacfioroo Acci
MCtLLENT TypM WHI lypa papar.
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Fifty temporary jobs open
starting September 12 —day
or evemng hours. Hefp with the
banquet and lunchepns for the
Engineering and Management
Seminar Sept. 12-18 (sponsored
by UCLA Engineering Depart-
">ent). or the Arco - Pocific
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III Pauley Pavilion Sept, 18-27.
Apply at ASUCLA Per-
sonnel Office to arrange
for an Interview appoint-
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RIDING LESSONS
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11*11 T
. r
Donahue begins 'new era' tonight at ASU
•y Micliacl ^
Terry
TFMPE —
will not mate
on toni^ht^
my
9\
f
icrionft
^ , television
season football o^ner with
An/ona Sute (5 pm on PST,
ch^anet 7, KM PC radio), but
he will &ay be it ctmMim in
hi» prepftrattM «r the Bruins
The first ye«r 1i«id coach,
his staff. 60 pjaycw, the band.
chccr]cadcr>j -nionglcaders.
Daih Brum «4K)rts writers and
about 500 VCi A fans are in
lempc awaiting lowght's kick-
off, ^hkh will hepm the >*Tcn>
Donahue era at t^Cl.A,^
I* our standpoints
**! am con f idem about the
Ari/ona State gamf from the
'^~— — — ■
ICuih*s sqiuid if mvor
•even points in ehe TVLiipenmg
0nteit wiLh tbc Brutna and the
batit ii the Sun Devik' 12-0
season a year ago
Ranked No. 3
'..^ Arizona Slate m rated at
high a& No 3 in tj|ir polls, but
Kui^ thinks his team is over-
rated at this lime **liCl A if
one of the perennial powers in
college footbatf and I ani
ama/ed that, they are not
ranked m the top 10 and that
we are ranked so high^ iaid
Kush. who led hi^^ teas lathe
fiesta ^-Bo:wi — trpfri — tfV{
Nebraska last season "Last
yeaf5 we had one of the better
^defenses, but this year there
are question ma^ks and voii
->•
4
» *
Rl
FootbaH
t;\vm
4
'57
hi
79
n
7
l«>
22
27
• ■
ICIA I
Namr
Jame^ Smtpy (* I . IIMI)
krifli Kcr (ft-4. 2.%
Milch Kahn \i-X, l»)t
ahn
KU%7iyS\ STAIl
PcM. Smm >
SK JiTliiR^ JrffferiMNi («-i. I Mr
IT Bob Pfteter {h-4, 242)
iC. (.«<j^gr Ksauk J*-.V 2.^5)
C (;ieti I anker «*-!. 2^1
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51
Milch kabn (*-.l^ ui)
<.rn Taylor <#-3, 221)
Rc>b ke/iriafi (*-4. 2401 RT Sieve < Iwmibtn (*-4. 2M) 7t
Kiel© Walker {hM. IIM) H arvce Hm4y (♦^^ 241) 15
Jeff l>«aik»<irtb (4-i, 2t«> Qt Diimim Sfrovl <^2. 215) If
Wendell Tyler <M«. 1*1) I.H Sum RoMmm («-•, ia4) 22
^»»«»^ i?!f*" <*-^' W5) RH TreMif WMa^m (5-11. 1*4^
WaNy Henry .(5-f. 171) V\ iMty Mucker <4-«. Itl) M
235 — Line 4»c^te — 241
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Cdi (76) and Gus Coppgw (70) wM ba « bay factor
3 ra«9d Arttona iiato. Haaa
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(7t).
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ARIZONA STATr .
Robcirt AIHmni (4-4. 23*) 93
Tbn P«lcrwn ^3, 2rf ) if-
Mark (.aHMWMi (t^, 254) f7
CWnM Aiapa (#-2. 237) tl
Wiii& Scirotibw |^=r^25)i§
Al Weifandt (i-3. 225)" ' 72
Rod Petersen (a^3. 23t) ffi
^MiS4r7Maniiwf~(a<. llRtV^^
Uerrick Martbi:(5-li. J 75) If
Jobn HM-rk f*.2. t<H)) 41
Pal Sca«^<l*< J7^-^) S ;(^,^ Wldie«-|a^ i^ 44
23a - l.iM^ Averafe — 2Ji.
20a .^ |:iiiebacker Avennie -'
mi ^ i>eep 4 Averige — |4t
I -.-.„ ia4' ~ leam^-.T^eratr o— 2T7
4M, 245) IT ,
••%<ii:'3. 127) dm
SirVe lefrick (5-U«*M) '^C.
iwry Robtrtit^i ♦-1. 2ii) II B
Maiiif tiMaMMH>po lA-3. 23t)Rf
R«ym<m4 Rurk^ (♦-2Vrit^)UJ •
Frank S^pbew. (b-2. IW) Ol.i
I »▼* Anii«m>n« Tf-X ip5) \X"^
^•r4fM 444rift/ (♦-•.^ 4>l RjCT'
G^t f4«%artf% (4^[ 117) S'
» better than last year
and their defense i^T underrated.
Some ASU reporters that have
talked 'to jrne on the phone
have-«aid ihat the ^efense
lookji/ tough -rn juactice and
tbat^Catach Ku»h is piaying ir
■ • ' • '■..-■ - '■■■ / '"
condition." said DoMhoe/'-ir""^;etn|- of <^iiMlimg t UCLAr-_
^
four standpoints that ar^ The
basis orf I ICLA football." said
Deojihuc. **l"rofn a fundamen-
tal, conditionmg. discipline and
teamwork standpoint. I am
very confident in how we have
prepared If we can play bur
best from these four aspects,
then we will be all right-
Sun DeviL head, coach frank
Kush enters his 19th year at
Afi/ona State and |:>eople in
Tempe are calling 1976 "ryear
to make history" because the
fans believe this ASU team can
Win .the national championship
SondheJmer Says .
J
win with dcfensr " .^
' Kush gives the impf&sioin
he nright rtot have angther
"great*^ team at Arizona State,
but the UCLA coaches don't
believe him According to the
coaches the Sun Devils scored
61 points^ in .their final scrim-
mage a week ago and the de-
fense is being "downplayed "
lekNig in t€»p If
"In my opinioo Arizona
State certainly belongs in the
top 10 on their returning ex-
perience, plus the Fiesta Bowl
win," said Donahue "Their
Another factor in Arizona
Slate being favored is ihe
^nrme field advantage, t^m-
bmed with the heat" The game
T5T*ITO people, will ^ Tootij%
for ASU Over the last. 10
years the ^ua £l9¥ils are 49^
at home ain^^isl^,liaf a¥
overall winning record erf i$\-
39-1, second in victory per*
caCHafe ameng activje coactiet,
; r-^-^-^ lit degrees _ ' -
Teffiperaturt at ganHftinKTs
schedul«;d to ^.he around 100
tbe temperature is around HO,
degrees, Irdwever, even the'
most corfditioned. team in th^
world will need to substitute -
Dapth proMein
: /:^ problem is
ifl the d(e'f>th department The
surfing 22 are caj^ble of play-
mi the :same type of football
'it in the Rose Bowl, but the
depth at molrt positions is
ASU Quaf^ejbavk Dennis
' is Oipvtbad by Dona
hue ift^ i>tgit4ijMr mmmmht
never M*iBi« to ldi(p |otng back
to ^ high schtfttl 4iays at Los
Alc»s. He ia« an^ lytitanding
running N<;k lo '^Fait** Ffaddie
Williams, uhii lua rusbad f or
over 1,000 ytrds tTT-pHl two
yean Stair KoBlT^ioa ia t&e
ocber biik ami ha. is a t^ifd"
Are the
t^ five
Jehsive line backups
weakest, with none of
having game experience
, _i_ir - ^,.p,,-_"We Jia,%^ KHne depth prob-
degrees, arhicb mram around fctns at fcertaln posjtions but
no degrees on the field Kush based on practice, I have con-
inexpcr
experienced ' individuals on da- ^cioekinr itH ligh ichool
leni*» which i«^an, advantage *~-"-* Jobn iffffr««afi
tmce^ def eiMive playen tend to. The moiM «ir ' M^ve Himg
tii^st^ m thehot dimatc^^bout AStfcjtJ^- rrceivcrr
•«M«« to defensive coor^^ Split end U>liii icffrrspu is
dinator Oick Tomey T Ik «l|.' called bf' t%^ "^^W^-^Hm tf^
ceiver
(
does not think the weather will
be a factor m^h^ game, even
though his squailf is used to the
conditions^
"I don't think the weather
will be a significant factor,
because the only teams it
would affect would be teaat
from the Northwest or Mid-
west." said Kush.^
''I hope if I have done my
job, then we are in proper
fidenca in all of our second
string people,- mid Donahue
Coniparable to Cal
Arizona Sute itxa compar-
able team to California (the
W75 yCAA offensive leader)
offensively The Sun Devils are
perhaps the most explosive
team in the j^ountry
Tomey said the Arizona
offense IS the toughest to de- iid ^ui
fense he has seen in his six
J hivi ev^» r a
liaa ni.tneroQs pio*8 in-
Chat ley faylor, J.p.
Hilf^ ierrv irmnb.mad'^eA
Hawkim.) lU is only a junior,
but most |tn) jciuta iaej he
could ^y in tli^; NFL fight
now Ht hia 4 4 spaad ia the
40 mmt"\ (N4Mafi<iing jttmpifjg
ability "Ori frlm le is the bast
c(^lle§e reitet^er I have ever
seen and lie bii^ the Temper-
ament of fi ite(}»sivL back,**
aaid Donaiiue.
The •^othiT- mde itceiver,
Larry Muck.T, » ilmott as fast
• i^dly. He. and
(Ca<i Ha acdaa Page i^)
V • ■»
Bruins
prove that 1 975
^ i^
■-:■«•■
The goal of the 1976 football team is to
^ifovit to students, alunmi and fans that
the 1975 season was not a fluke
People stiN don't believe UCLA was
the best team in the Fac-B and find it
hard to imagine t"he Bruim beat Ohio
Slate to win the Rose Bewl.
tvea ThCHJgK ITli^ Bru7ns~wdfrthe Rose
Bowl and return se>f^a\ of the stars from
a year ago. virtually no one is picking
UCLA to -do anything more than go 7-4.
The Skywriters, who cover the Pac-8
conference, selected LiCLA for fourth m
a pr .son poll behind USC. CalMornia
and Manford
few indi¥idtiah the Brums will
beat Arizona State ohi* Siait. Cal or
USC and -many people are - ' ical
about UCLA defeating Ariaona. w«»sh
inflon (in Seattle, where UCLA has Hoc
won *mce 1958) Of ^anlord
The negatives .ig^mo l Tl . ^.p.
posed to include a first y^^t head coach
in Terry Donahue and the loss of All-
American quarterback John Sctarra ^f>i^
All-An^ican rM>»e guard Cliff Frazier.
The critics argue, how can a m^)OT
college kiotball team wm with a 5-11. 208
pound nos^ guard (Steve TeirickJ/
UCLA has not received higjhi rar>klfifi
in the poHs (14th in UPI ^r^ 17th m AF).
This fact has given iha Brylns »66^
incentive going into tonighr"! Arizona
State game since the Sun Devth ar^ rmmd
as high as No. 3 and the opaf)ir>g contest
IS on national television.
From watching foott>all practice the
last two weeks. Donahue is rapaMe of
making UCLA imo the same type of team
a* a year ago The defense will he
stronger overall and the offense is alm^t
as powerful as a y^m afo.
The main qxtmmotk ts m rbe depth
^hniild tniiifnii in t Ml |ii»i ifiai hi«il
coach Vhck Vermefl had the kixury of
free-substitution at most positions^ but
Donahue will have lo bring his young
players a'ong slowhr. If plans work out.
the n>a|ortty of sacimd stringer^ should
be vaad^ to contHbma by #>e confafwca
Siafila««r-
Micha8i;i4i!iilhejiner
opener against
The kicking game with fC transfer
Frank Corral should be the strongest it
has been at UCLA in a long time* but
everyone will have to wait for pfoof after
the big buildup of Srett White two years
ago: Corral has "done it all" in practice,
but so did White. Corral ippasn to be
•i^oee comoteni and it is almost impos-
sible for Mm to cause »^^-» iWartaches that
White did.
What might be the biggest positive
influence lor the Brums is the together-
"«* *^ yrit of the players. This team
will suppoft each other fn every manner
JMU II li iim.i6.see second stringers
rooting for first seiiai
gethernass was a b^; f»
success and it is even t
year When there ai i
on a team like the fc li
years ago. it can c ilf
mem bars. To*
or in
^^9f^ €¥kdmyit this
^•'nal problafm
ill team of fhvaa
iptll
ew tottrh to pet
d altar viewing
^na State fMms. I
I ^n first ganfie^ I
f PonaliMa M*,m
^ €M.il
li h important witl a
off to a footf Man a
Brum practice md 4 . Ui
believe Donahue will mi
iust hope psapii wHi'l p
"»ore of a diama a* i
than they gave batJur
Bartow
Ciyeh the opponu^M i jm convin<
Donahue will proa/ %/ at UCLA R
member Tommy ^i^f^. Pepper Rod-
gers «nd Vecmail dL) fat win tbe Hist
n^m^ they coaataad t t CLA jnr/ Obn
ahue IS a seven pf
MtiUhl: UCLA m, iiiiaiiia
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